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Show -- 1 irf nltSii k JteAk&ii FEBRUARY FRIDAY, 6, 1931 THE PAYSON' CHRONICLE. PAYSON. UTAH WORLDS MOST NOTED omm r& RfcJISVRT Made AN ORDINANCE. BATTLEFIELD AN ORDINANCE LEVYING BANK COMMISSION OF THE IRRIGATION TAX FOR THE YEAR STATE OF UTAH 1931 ON THE LANDS FOR WHICH of the Condition of PAVSON CITY DISTRIBUTES! The Payson Building & Loan Society WATER AND PROVIDING FOR1 Located at Payson in the county of THE DELINQUENCY Ul SAIL) Utah, State of Utah, at the close of TAX. on the 31st day of Decbusiness PE IT ORDAINED BY THE ember, 1930. CITY COUNCIL OK PAYSON CITY, The amount of authorized capital and UTAH. the par value of each share SECTION 1. There is hereby 1500,000.00 levied and assessed .75 per acre-foThe number of shares sold during on all water distributed by .. 278 the year Payson including fields and The number of shares cancelled and meadow City lands not w.thin the corp. withdrawn during the year, . 11 Number of shares in force at the , end of year 2,002 Statement of receipts and disbursements during the preceding year. January 1, 1930 to Decemocr 31, 1930. RECEIPTS Payment J on Installment Stock $100,932.15 . 8,232.43 Interest and Discounts Membership or Withdrawal Fees 140 50 7,663.95 Surplus Fines 214.41 . Total Receipts 117,183.44 ! DISBURSEMENTS Loans on First Mortgage Securities $107,920.00 Loans on Installment Stock 4,450.00 .... 398.16 Expenses, Inc. Salaries .. Cash on hand at close of Fiscal Yeai Total Disbursements 4,415.2s 117,183.44 of its Assests and Liabilities at the close of the year: ASSETS Cash on hand and in Banks $4,415.28 Loans on Real Estate (1st Mortgage) A Statement 107,920.00 Loans on Installment Stock, 4,450.00 Total Assets 116,785 28 LIABILITIES Surplus ... Installment Stock, $10,206.44 All Classes 106,578.84 Total Liabilities Number of shareholders 116,785.28 Dec. 31, 1930 171 Ray Monsen being first duly sworn aecocrling to law deposes and says, that he is Secretary & Treasurer of the above named company; that the statements made in the foregoing report are true and correct and that said statement contains a full and correct exhibit of the condition of said companys business at the close of the year 1930 (Seal) Ray Monsen Subscribed and sworn to before me this 19th day of January 1931. Glenn F. Cowan, Notary Public. My Commission expires November 1 1938. ) STATE OF UTAH, Qffice of Bank Commissioner ) I, W. H. Hadlock, Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of the statement of the above named company, now on file in my office this 20 day of January 1931. W. H. Hadlock, . Bank Comissioner.'-- ' NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL PROPERTY THE FOURTH DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE) OF UTAH, IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY IN Federal Building ation, a corporation, Robert L. hia wife, & LLoan Associ- Plaintiff, vs. Bill and Amy Bills, Defendants. at Sheriffs sale on Monday the 16th day of February 1931, at eleven oclock a. m. of said day, at the front door of the County Court House, in the City and County Biulding, situate in Provo City, Utah County, State of Utah, all the right, title and interest of the above named defendants, of, in and to the following described real property, in Utah County, State of Utah, Commencing 16.21 chains East and 6.95 chains North, )4 degrees East of the Southwest corner of the Southeast quarter of Section 7, Township 9 South, Range 2 East of the Salt Lake Base and Meridian; thence North 1 degree, East 6.28 chains; thence South 89)4 degree, East 15.50 chains; thence South 1 degree, West 6.28 chains; thence North 89)4 degrees, West 15.50 chains to the place of beginning. Area 9.76 acres. Together with appurtenant water right. Purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated at Provo City, Utah County, State of Utah, this 17th day of January 1931. E. G. Durnell, Sheriff, of Utah County, State of Utah. Deputy By Chas. W. Mitchell, Sheriff. George S. Baliff, Attorney for Plaintiff, Provo, Utah. Publication in Payson Chronicle, 1931 January, 0 and Feb. Sale at 11 a. m. Monday, Febraury To be sold to-w- it: '1 .1 1 1 - . A. I). 1931 SECTION 3. This Ordinance shall take effect upon its passage and publication in one issue of the Payson Chronicle, a newspaper published weeklv at Payson City, Utah. Passed by the city council of Payson City, county of Utah, state of Utah, this 2nd day of February. D., 1931. L. D STEWART, Mayor of Payson City, Utah ATTEST: :W. R. WIGHTMAN, City Recorder of Payson City. Utah. (SEAL) State of Utah, ) County of Utah, ) S S. ) I. W. R. Wightman, city recorder of Payson City, Utah, hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a full, true, and correct copy of an ordinance of Payson Citv, entitled; AN ORDINANCE LEVYING AN IRRIGATION TAX FOR THE YEAR 1931 ON THE LANDS CITY PAYSON WHICH FOR DISTRIBUTES WATER AND PROVIDING FOR THE DELINQUENCY OF SAID TAX. passed by the city council of Payson City, Utah, on the 2nd day of February, A. D. 1931. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the corporate seal of Payson City, Utah, this 2nd day of February, A. D., 1931. W. R. Wightman, City Recorder of Payson City, Utah o NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL PROPERTY nsliii glim Sold ; The site of Armageildi.il. in Palestine, to American nrcl:eo!o'Ms. for SvWV. meet "Arm.igeddnn is the world' famous battlefield, says a bulletin from the National Geographic society. In tl e Pool, of Revelations St. John tile Divine predicts 'the kings of the earth and of the whole world are tv he gathered here tn the Inst great eontliet Armageddon has nude its waj into oar language ns a -- wionym fer 'the tu.lt to end lighting' Main li,.ttles have been fought nt Armageddon, and in turn the dust of marching imdes of Assyrians, Egyptians, U'e'i.s, Homans, Arabs, Grn sade'-sClench, Turks, nnd English has risen from Its sun parched plain. Hut tlie battle of the centurir mnst till be ala nd. Today group nt Jew lah colonists, by settling these fertile fluids, wage a silent but constant economic warfare with ttie local Arab It was at Armageddon that the army of Necho, king of Egypt, ovtw whelmed Josinh. king of Judah, about COi) It O. Napoleon followed the (Yu sailers trail by way, of Armageddon, and lost the only battle of bis Syrian campaign nt Acre, nearby. Lord A1 commander of the British lenliv, forces in the Near Kant, fought one of tlie final battles of the World war (appropriately enough, It was thought Ht tlie time) at Armageddon, when be vanquished a Turkish army gathered . a tbe plain. In Sight of Nazareth. "The Plain of Megiddo, a Aruiagwd-duis called in Palestine today, la a wedgo shaped triangle a few lullaa south of Nazareth, and la perched Ui a uiouataiu saddle shunt midway be tweeu Uie sunken valley of tba Jor dau and tbe Medlterraueau sea. It U the plain over which Jesua gazed when the people of Nazareth took hlui up uu the hill to cast him down. Tha daxxliLg white walls of the little towu rise from oue of the little valley which run northward Into the 011-leahills. The main rod between Haifa sad Jerusalem crosses the Klshon river at the point where the Held of Armageddon widen toward the Interior. The railroad line from Haifa to Damaacns bisect the plain. Althungh the plain la lower than the amTonnding barren hllla, there are low ridge across it, and these ridges are used by th modem highway. All the rock for this road had tn he brought from the nearby limestone hills, while basalt for the surface had to be transported from the Jordan valley. As tlie site of the ancient fortified town of Armageddon, from which the battlefield took Its name, Is not on the mala road and was Isolated dnrlng the rainy season, an American financier recently built a branch road from Tell el Kas-lto the tell, er mound, on which the archeologists are at work. Walla 2 Feet Thick. The site of the town of Armeged don is about midway along the southern side ef tbe triangle. In Biblical dry' It was a place of considerable strategic Importance, but the modern is a rathArab settlement, er sorry remnant of an Illustrious past. The place lay at or near the crossing of two great trade routes; that from Egypt to the Hast via Damascua, and the caravan routes from the desert to Acre on the Mediterranean. A castle dating from the Twentieth century B. C. with walls 23 feet thick attest the Importance ef the place. a s IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF TH STATE OF UTAH UTAH, IN AND FOR COUNTY. State Bank of Payson, a corporation. Plaintiff, vs. Julia Ercanbrack, and O. L. Ercan-bracwife and husband; Itermoun-tai- n Association of Credit Men, a corporation; Northey ManufacturEuing Company, a corporation; reka Banking Company, a corporation; William A. McClellan, as administrator with all annexed of the estate of Hyrum Lemmon; deceased; Manti City Sa 'ings Bank, a Lumber Santaquin coroporation; Samuel a coroporation; Cmopany, Campbell; Mary A. Allen; and Provo Commercial and Savings Bank, a corporation; Nephi National Bank, a corporation; Defendants. To be sold at Sheriffs Sale on Monday, the 2nd day of March said 1931, at eleven oclock a. m. of of the Coundoor front the at day the City and ty Court House, in in Provo County Building, situate of Utah, State Utah County, City, all the right, title and interest of the above named defendants, of, in and to the following described real of property, in Utah County, State Utah, South Commencing 1.25 chains of the North West corner of the South West quarter of Section 35, 1 West in Township 9 South Range Meridand Base Lake of the Salt 30 ian; thence South 98 degrees minutes East 12.50 chains; thence South 0 degrees 30 minutes West 11 00 chains; thence North 89 30 minutes West 12.37 chains; the thence North 11.00 chains to an containing of beginning; place less. or more 13.68 Acres, of area Purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated at Provo City, Urah, this 4th day of February 1931 E. G. Durnell Sheriff of Utah Countv, State of Utah. By "Chas. W. Mitchell, Deputy . Sheriff. R. A. Porter, Attorney for Plaintiff, Pavson, Utah. Publication in the Payson Chronicle to-w- it: British Admiral Book Reveal Naval Slang When a British sailor says Schooner on the rocks he le not re porting some disaster at sea but mors ly referring to roast meat on potatoes. Ilils Is one of tbe tit bits of British naval slang revealed In Naval Customs and Traditions, a buuk recently written by Rear Admiral Gerard Wells. Every Britisher loves to cull a sailor a tar, but few know that the ten originated from the ancient habit of a sailor palutlng bis trousers with tar in order to make them waterproof. At the admiralty Is kept a Black Kook containing writings and aea laws dating from the reign of Henry VI. One of the laws dealing with murder at sea ordains that "Anybody who commits a murder at sea le to be bound to the corpse and burled alive with It. Lotdon. English Food Price Maintain High Level 3, $3,-58- 7 he fi ' i ic London. Although food prices dur leg September were allghtly lower than prices during the same month In 1929, prices are still about 57 per cent above thoe ef September, 1914. Milk prirei la most areas rose to winter levels In August and 190 per rent shove 1911-1Both British and Imported chilled beef dropped a halfpenny en th 1931. February pound in SopUmber, a compared with o- 18, 1931. the same month of 1919. Flour and OGDEN- - Larsen & Sons recieved bread also sold a trifle chesper and ESTATE OF LOVIN A DONE: went across the grocontract for construction of city eggs and Creditors will present claims with to be cery counter at lowered quotations. and shed garage, vouchers to the undersigned at the equipment station. office of G. H. & M. V. Backman, located south of police Indian Monad Found 215-1- 6 Templeton Bldg., Salt Lake N. T. Wht Is believed to Sydney, City, Utah, on or before March 24, BRIGHAM CANYON- - Utah Apex he n ancient Indian mound was 1931. shipped 40 carloads earthed while bridge huildees were H. R. Done, administra- Mining Company smelters during November excavating far a new span here. to tor of estate of Lovina of ore in this mines place. its from deceased. Done, G. H. & M. V. Backman 23-3- ! orate limits of Payson City. And there is hereby levied and a- vessed an additional $ ;nr am on all water distnliL.ed witr n the uncorporate limits of Taywm t . der Irrigation Dist,- t No 1; provided. that the niinin uni tax on any piece of property for which layson City acts as distributing agent shall be the sum of $1.00. SECTION 2. All taxes for the year 1931 resulting from the levy made by this ordinance shall lie payable in cash and shall be due on the first day of March, A. D.. 1931, and shall be delinquent, if not paid, on the first day of April, A. SOLD Armageddon Bought by the AN' Amer! can Archeologists. to the Attorney for Adminiatrator. Nevertheless on tbe death of Ids Mr. Viscount Hare or Ennis-morwill be regarded as a member of tlie Ho we of Lords, whether his own personal views may be. Yon cant fool the House of Lords! English Earl Drops His Title for Plain Mister r NEW YORK CITY.- -I used to rrite a good deal about what 1 read in the papers. But you know i been reading a lot of these other Writers of Sun- da.va, and they mostly about themselvs, and they seem to be doing mighty well too. It seems that away back In t'aesar's or Heflins or somebody e.irlv J.n s was some old Writer called lepy, and all he did was just wrue what he did. Well he didenl do nuidi. thut wnte) for there wasent much to do in those days. Oh yes, drink Well bo had mine klud of Pei uliar ways of saying things and his spelling w as had (1 rant pet soually stand anybody with had spelling, am uQ anybody that cant spell ) But this uld le.iuvv luuld nial.e noth Ing sound good tlie way he laid it on a iiad two the Ena. expie.sM.qib. and if lie Just hudeiit happened lo use them, why none of our modem Wnteis could have copied him. lui t lat.s ail they cau copy him in. they just use llie.id two lines over again and again and think they are doing a l'eiys One was La ye late, and the oilier was Woko betimes" Well I am going to do soma of that and Lay luting Woke belnues 1 will start on my trip cast fiom Call fornia a couple of weeks ago. The night heioie 1 started I Lay Late. No I dnient. It was two nights before started that lay late. The moining that 1 started dident lay so lute, hi fact dident lay hardly at all. I had to catch an Aeroplane that was leaving away over In Burbank. Cal. (Thais not Burbanks home, Its Jiui Jefleriea) and was away out at my little rauch at Santa Monica. It was leaving around Five o'clock aud you cant do much Laying late" and make that kind of a there London. The twenty four j ear old son uf the earl of Llstovvcl, by courtesy called Viscount Ennismore, nus decide to drop his courtesy title ami assume tbe name of his first ancestor nid be known In future ns plain Mr. ' illmm Francis Hare. Moreover he Is going to Join the and has paid his dues to that i.iintlv radios! body known as the "1 uhlans, In England they are known ns the Pink Parlor Socialists. "lien at Cambridge university Mr. Mure was designated with bis full title nnd courtesies of a viscounty. But It bored him. So he Informed the faculty at tlie university that lie wished, to drop his title and become a plain Mister His reason was that he was tired of the servility from tradesmen! and college servants, who were sen do me'ilv because of tlie title, lie also s'd it gave him an unfair adv .mince. father. e Tourists Given Facts About Nelson Statue London. Thousands of American tourists who fed the pigeons nt Trafalgar square and wondered at the dimensions of the stately Nelson column may be Interested In these figures : Tbe figure of Nelson nlnne Is 17 feet inches tall. Tbe width of tbe cocked hat is three feet Oi Inches. 4 The admiral's sword irn ht Is 7 feet 9 long The three blocks of stone which i.,. weigh 10 tons. Tlie distance from the cocked hut to the base of the column Is 10s' feet f, ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 getaway. Burbank and Glendale look mighty sparkling like from tbe early dawn, then out over Los Angeles. Its sptead out. well you have to look at it by lights to see how far It Is spread out. then out over Los Angeles. Then nothing to see till we hit Phoenix, or near Phoenix where the Irrigation lads start in. Those thousands of fiat squares are beautiful from the air At Phoenix was met by a band ot Citizens that wanted me to slay over or come back to a big affair where they were going to have 17 rail road Piesi dents at the Fruit Shippers Conven The Colonial atmosphere created by furniture and Is carried out In curtains echoing the framed sampler at the right. vogue for Colonial Pictures must be carefully chosen. In tlie tjpical homo of The shops are now showing excelcalls for ninth care In lent copies of the rare Currier and the selection of furnishings If the Ives prints and one of theso, framed in dark wood or maple, may be simple charm of the early Amerlcun fireside is to be achieved. bung to advantage. Silhouettes, in The choice of the major furnish- square or oval frames, are also good. Curtains constitute an Insistent ings has been much Simplified. A gate-letable or a butterfly, a bidproblem of the Coloniul home. der chair or a Windsor, a secretary there have appeared new or a spinet debk may be selected patterns in luce curtains designed to carry out the simple Colonial from and authentic reproductions and will be quite at home nlmosphere. Lurelle Guild, homo with any treasured anauthority on early American antiques." tiques, is said to have created the It rests with the accessories, how- designs from his owm collection of old samplers. They are all In natever, to achieve the final touch. ural color suggestive ot die Teal They must he consistent throughout, or the entire effect of tlie "unbleached linens of old, and room Is lost. Pewter vessels and combine effectively with blue Willow-waron the shelves, of chintz, cretonne or hooked rugs, a banjo clock, a framed tolle. Chintz, however, Is Just a bit sampler will all help to achieve an smarter, particularly In the new Interior of distinction. semi glazed finish. THE tion, and they was going to have a Golf Game, between the seventeen and seventeen Vice Presidents were to Caddy for them. That would be noth lng new, they have been carrying the Bag for em all the time. Then on down over Tombstone, Anz , and tlie next gas stop was Tuscon. Another Dellgation had some kind of a Racket" they wanted me to stop over and enter into No it was Douglas where this bunch was. It was on the Mexican line wouldcnt bavo minded stopping thvic Then on to El Paso, had Lunch, changed Pilots, got there about 1:30 P. M. about three days ride on the train, then started across Texas. Now you have started something Oh Yes am leaving out some of these Woke Betimes. At euch stop I Woke Betimes for I slept all the icst of the way. Well I "Lay late at Big Springs and like to not "Woke Be times to aee another Dellgation, that wanted to draw my attention to a 15 story brick hotel that I would pass over a we passed over tbe town on leaving Associated Pi ess man there, and be got everything wrong but tbe name of tbe Town and misspelled It. Then to Ablline (Sweet Abihne, My Abiiine, In all my dreams). I bavent sung that old song since 1920. TLere I woke betimes and Amon G. Carter - had a special Plane to meet me to take me to Ft. Worth. For he didenl want me to have to aee Dallas. Had a nice night there, woke betimes, met a lot of nice folk that was going tp handle my little Charity tour through the Stale, then flew up to Tulsa, where met equally as nice bunch for Okia. Then drove my Auto 45 miles to Chelsea, and spent the night at my only Slsteis home, saw a new Niece baby, nice Baby too, had fine visit, lots of my family. Lay late No not there, awoke betimes, then caught tbe plane for St. Louis, was going to Chicago, but Just as both planes was pulling out grabbed the one for Columbus, Ohio, and New York. Comedians never know what they are doing. Wouldent take the money for my fare on the plane so everybody had to wait till they went and got the ticket fixed up. They will trust the Pilots with your life but not with $19 which was the fare to Columbus. Got to Indianapolis, was met by some Newspaper friends and Co work ers of the Indianapolis News. Talked about Kin Hubbard, the late Humorist, "Abe Martin. They told me my junk had took his old place on the back page, (which It bad occupied for 23 years). Imagine me trying to replace blm. That would be like Clara Bow replacing Mrs. Chapman Catt. So long, I am going to Lay late. PJI. MrS'riht Svndlca's, tec) ( I I : ly well-style- over-draperi- e ; !i Curtain and Coverlet Ensemble 1 -- S - W wm m rl P irV-ri- v ! -- ,v ? ; - n,. 'ji A mBmm The qua.nt charm of th io early Ame rican bedroom it accentuated by It net curtains and harrhcnic.rg cover let reproducing the sampler figure. DECGKMIVE unity ; ml window year's style led mu furnishing. If tiie spre.-- t and ovi rdmpes are de-v- il ipir.i nt in flowered r liintz nr f : .Minn, a floral if ninction motif is an urtuiiiH. On the for Milady's gla'-othi-- r hand, for th" i i ulmc room, wheie simplicity is desirable, a plain or small g om'drlc figured glass curtain will be belli r. With the vogue for furnishing in periods such ns the Colonial, Georgian, Trench, and otlur schools. new designs in m t mains and har'noniing reverb ta aru keeping par , paid ins authentb ally styled to jrnod rooms are appearing Fur tbe bcdiooin in the eariy Amei.r.i.i manner, there are Colonial i.ct m.i tains, nprodmlne sampler figui. i tvp ini of the raught neidkvvurk cf old, and i rented es - s pecially to companion them are coveiletH designed In pastel colorings. Borne reproduce sampler figures similar to those In the curtains. Tiie woman clever with her needlo can rarry her bedroom ensemble still further by copying and these design for dresser-scar- f runners. Other designs are drawn from the patterns or .simulate tufted candle'vick spreads. In tune with the more elaborate of furnishing, there English-stylare spreads which carry rich embroidery dOFigns on a natural backThese spreads are remi ground. nlscent of the embroideries on linen popular fn the early 18th century, and harmonize with new Georgian designs In net curtain which also find their Inspiration In needlepoint and embroidery motifs. The coverlet should harmonize with, rather than match, the curtain according to general preference. hand-blocke- e t - |