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Show iummi FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, Pifffi THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH 19110. IN THE FOUR' ll JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY. IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DIST-TRICNOTRE 'TO CREDITORS COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH: IN AND FOR UTAH COUNIn the Mattter of the Estate of TY. Annie Moore Iluish, deeeased. Creditors will pre: ent claims with The Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, vouchers to the undersigned Executors a corporation, Plaintiff. at the -- osidence of Nellie Huish l VS ayso.i. Utah, on or befoie DeJohn Ockerman, also known as John cember 10, 1930. Nellie Huish McBeih. Rolla G. 0. Okernian, Amanda J. Ockerman, his Mari-nus Huish, Marinus Exccjtor for th" Estate of Johnson, Trustee; wife; Johnson. Katie H. Johnson, his Annie Moore Uni h, Deceased. R. W. M Mulin, Attorney for the wife; Bonneville Lumber Company, a Addison Cain; Y. Yas-ud- Executors, Pavson. Utah. corporation; Mrs. Y. Yasuda his wife; David NOIRE Or iHERliT-SALE OF Garrick, Jane Doe Garrick, his wife; REAL PROi EKTY Allen Garrick, Mary Roe Garrick, his wife; First Doe, Second Doe Third in The Fourth judical district Court of The otate ol Utah: Doe, Fourth Doe, Fifth Doe, and Sixth In And Lor Utah County, Doe. Defendants. To be sold at Sheriffs Sale on Mon- Beneficial Life Insurance Company, corporation, day the 25th. day of August 1959, at Plaintiff. eleven oclock a. m. of said day at Vs. the front door of the County Court Loren S. DeGraw, a widower, L. S. Junior, unmarried, Mamie L. House, at the City and County Budding, situate in Provo City, Utah Coun- DeGraw, and Intermountain Associaty, State of Utah, all the .right, title tion of Credit men, a corporation. Defendants. and interest of the above named deTo be sold at Fb. rills sale on Monfendants. of. in and to the lollowing described real property, in Utan Coun- day the 18th day of August, 1930, at eleven oclock a. m. of said day at the ty, State of Ctan, front door o: the County Court House, rarcel 1: The West half of the Northwest at the City and County Building, City, Utah County, quarter of Section 52, Township j situateof in Provo Utah, ai! .he right, title and South, Range 1 East, Salt Lake Base State and Meridian; containing, 8u acres inteiest of the above named defendants, of, in a id to the following desmore or less. cribed real piojeny, in Utah County, Parcel 2: . Beginning at the Northeast corne. State of Utah, Commencing li.oJ chains South of of Section 31, Township 9 South. Range 1 East. Salt Lake Base ami the Northwest co...rt of the Northeast Meridian, running thence West 4o quarter of Section 25, Township 9 1 Fa t of the Salt Lake rods; thence South 160 rods; thence South, Lange East 40 rods; thence North 160 rod.-t- o Base and Meridian; thence East 18 the place of beginning; contain chains; ther.ee f orth 6 degrees West 1.30 chains; theme South 16)4 deing 40 acres, more or less. in the aggregate 129 grees East 2.17 chains, thence South Containing 42 degrees West 5.71 chains; thence acres more or less. South 89 degrees East 12.24 Together with a water right conthenci N rth 4.07 chains; feet per annum chains; sisting of for 50 acres of the above describee thence East 4.29 u sins; thence South land irom what is known as the Straw- 6.88 chains; thence West 32.52 chains; berry Reclamation Project whicn has thence North 9.07 chains to the place been constructed by the United jstate.-o-f of beginning the same being situate in the Northers! quarter of said Section America. an area of 22.03 with 165 'Together shares of tnc 25, and containing stock of the East Warm Cree acres, together with the appurtenance, capital to use of water for Irrigation & Canal Company, &aui and all rights soul ands, however evidenced, bhaies being represented by Ceit.n as well as a'l rights in ditches or latcate No. 41. erals Used to .'ni fy such water. Together with ail tenements, bored, Purchase pri o payable i i lawfu tanients and appurtenances thweurii. belonging or in any wise appertain- money of the Ur.ilel States. Hated at Provo rity, Utah this 23rd ing. Purchase price payable in lav. fV lay of July 1930 J. D. 1ovd Sheriff of Utah County. money of the United States. State of Utah. Dated at Provo City, Utah, Bv Hl as A. f Deputy Sheriff. day of July 1930. & Rovle, Yeung attorneys for nlain D. J. Boyd Sheriff of Utah Countiff, Vermont Building, Salt Lake ty, fttaUj of Utah. fitv, Utah. ny Elias A. Gee Deputy Sheriff. Geo. S. Bahtf attorney lor Plaintil;. Publication in the Pavson Chronicle Provo City. Utan. July 25, August 8 15. Publication in the Payson Chronicle NOTICE TO WATER USERS August State Engineers Office, Why pay ?100 a gallon for Castei Salt Lake Ctiy, July 15, 1930. Machine Oil? When you can buy same Notice is hereby given that James at Ace Service Station at 75c pel Rulon Creer, whose post office address is Spanish Fork, Utah, has made gallon. application in accordance with the requirements of Sac. 8, Chapter 67, Ses DELINQUENT NOTICE sion Laws of Utah, 1919 to change the of use point of diversion and Summit Creek Irrigation and Canal of 10 c. f. s. of water place from SaleVn Company, a corportion, with place of Slough or Salem Pond in Utah Counbusiness at Santaquin, Utah County; ty, Utah. Heretofore said water was State of Utah. to have been diverted at a point which There are delinquent on the books bears N. 35 deg. 15 min. W. 1645 ft. of the company the following described from S'j cor. of Sec. 2, T. 9 S., R. stock on account of an asssessment 2 E., S. L. B. & M. and used from levid on the 28th day of May, 1930, Apr. 1st to Oct. 1st of each year for irrigation of 91.5 acres of land aced in the NW. iSec. 2, T. 9 2 2 E., S. L. B. & M. It is now NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL PROPERTY SPEC! A LS T r St. Louis, Mo. Me-Bet- h, a, De-Gra- to-w- it: FOR THIS WEEK AND NEXT Dr. L. D. I Gear, V. S. ill ! "" l)r. LcGear is a graduate of Ontario years of Veterinary College, 1892. Thirty-eig- ht f veterinary work. Eminent authority on diseases anil raising of duiry cows, other livestock, and jxjultry. Nationally known lecturer, writer anil author. FLOUR FLOUR Editors Note This is another story in a series of articles on dairying written by the well known national dairy and poultry authority, Dr. L D. V. S., of St. Louis, Mo. The entire series will appear in this paper. Our readers are urged to read them carefully and clip them out for future reference. DAIRY COWS REDUCE WHEN ON A DIET But the Reduction Is In Net Profits From the Milk and Not In the Weight of the Animal duetiun of milk will not hold when the cow is fed too little, lor the simple reason that the body needs comes first. When they are satisfied, then production starts. Take a cow weighing a 1,000 pounds, that produces three galons of 4 per cent butterfat milk when fed normally. She will produce that same amount of milk if overfed but possibly only half that amount if underfed. The amount that goes for body maintenance remains the same in i.ll three cases. A study of thousands upon thousands of individual records shows that a cow which produces twice the milk the amount of another cow will eat about 50 per cent more than the second cow. A 100 per cent increase volume from a 50 per cent increase in investment is a pretty good bargain. There are a number of geneual rules for feeding dairy cows. An old one is to feed Holsteins one pound1 of grain for every three pounds (pints) of milk produced. Jerseys are supposed to require one pound of grain to every four pounds of milk, with Guerneys in begood Dieiing for the purpose of reducing weight, has become a great habit, especially among the women folks. More bathroom scales has been sold in the last few years than during any period in history. A lot of harm has been done as a result of unwise and rigid diets. It is surprising the number of people who are willing to risk health for a graceful figure. In the dairy industry we find a similar situation although for a different reason. In the last few years tween. a good deal has been said about keepCows are just as individual in their ing records. Every modern dairy faras humans. Y'ou have to study eating mer maintains an accurate check on each cow and feed according to her the milk production of his herd, and Y'ou must also study the also the cost of feed. Naturally, in production. combinations of food. Silage, legume order to show a profit, all efforts are and grains when fed to the dairy hays directed to ward securing big produccow in the right proportions will protion at a low feeding cost, and there duce milk at a profit. For every dolis where the trouble is apt to start. lar spent for feed you should receive J. C. McDowell, of th U.S. Bureau from two to three dollars in milk. of dairy industry, tells us that a Study your records, weed out the poor study of the records of the half mil-io- ones and buy new cows to replace dairy cows on test in them. Weigh your food and your associations has indi-aie- milk. It is much safer than measurthat few dairy herds are o vering. Or better yet, if you do not algd, that quite a number are underfed, have a testing association in and that many of the herds are fed ready your community, get a few herd ownnjudiciously. ers together and start one. Then you Take the case of the farmers who can have an experienced cow tester feed all their cows alike, regardless visit your farm once a month. of the size age and amount of milk r..duced. Only an accident will enable REVIEW UTAH INDUSTRIAL them to make profits in most cases. from page four) (Continued But if those same farmers will keep ter meters to be installed at resid an individual milk and feed record on ences of city. ach cow, and sell off the poor proManti Road improvement south of ducers and feed the remainder corhere on project No. 89, which is berectly, profits are sure to follow. and graveled preparatory Time after time it has been proven ing graded to oiling, progressing rapidly. that cows which eat the most in doConstruction of bridge Sterling llars worth of feed produce the most and fill across creek bottoms here, milk, the most butterfat, the greatcompleted. est gross income and, most important Rainfall register installed at Co of all, the greatest average income operative office of U. S. Weather over cost of feed. bureau. Work of eliminating 18 cross . A little study will show why this ings along branch line of I). & R. G. is true. A cow needs food for two pur W., in Salina Canyon, started. Appliposes, to keep alive and to produce cations for gas franchises filed by milk. Under normal conditions about Utah Valley Gas& Coke Co., with half of the food is used for the main- cities of Lehi, American Fork, Pleastenance of the body and the other ant Grove, Salem and Payson. half goes into milk. But that does Plans being made by Utah Ogden not mean that if you increase the rawater storage commission for detailed tions above what the cow ought t survey of site of proposed dam at will give more milk. Ir head of 1809 ft. from S54 cor. of said Sec. 2 have, she Ogden canyon just above ad used for the irrigation of 300 other words, there is a well defined Pine View. Work started on Elsinore :res of land embraced in the Wtz limit. Sevier road. ec. 2, EM Sec. 3, T 9 S., E. 2 E A cow that is fed to much will proManti Improvements being com& M. B. L duce the same amount of milk she on pleted This application is designated in skyline drive which now ex would if she "rus fed just enough. tends along tops of east mountains to The excess food will be utilized to admiles Bouth point one and one-haAll protests against the granting ding weight. That extra weight is of of Duck Fork. f said application, stating the rea-on- no value unless the cow happens to Cedar City Work progressing on therefor, must be by affidavit be underweight, unless she happens Uncle Bim mine. to be preparing for a period when it Installation started on Murray in thirty (30) days after the comple-o- f will be necessary to draw upon a re- new iron pipe at mouth of Little the publication of this noti serve. Overfeeding, therefore, leads to Cottonwood canyon to local powet Geo. M. Bacon, reduced profits. house. State Engineer. Underfeeding also leads to reduced Eureka Date of first publication, July 17, new truck. 1930. Date of completion of publica profits but from another cause. comes first always. That tion, August 14, 1930. Cedar City J. M. Foster develop0 division of food between what ing coal property about one and one is needed to maintain the body and half miles northeast of here. NOTICE TO WATER USERS the amount that goes into the pro Salt Lake City 11,000,000 pound State Engneers Office, wool pledged for marketing by of Salt Lake City, Utah, August 5, 1930. NOTICE TO WATER USERS newly organized Utah Wool Market Notice is hereby given that Lynn Rio Grande Motor D. Stewart, whose post office address ing association. State Engineers Office, is Payson, Utah, has made applicato operate certificate filed Inc., Way, Salt Lake City, July 21, 1930. tion in accordance with the requireNotice is hereby given that C. F. bus passenger, baggage and express ments of the Session Laws of Utah Dixon, whose post office address is service between S. L and Price. Fis- 1919 to 1929 incl. to appropriate 1.0 c . . , , TT Payson, Utah, has made application ini !. f. s. of water from an Unnamed Spring accordance with the requirements of :8ure : in Utah County, Utah. Said water is the Session Laws of Utah, 1919 to ing of shaft started to cut ore bodies. Park City Laying of rails started to be diverted at the point of issuance 1929 incl. to appropriate 4.0 c. f. s. of of the spring which bears N. 74 deg. water from Salem Slough in Utah for new spur to property of Park 45 min. E. 5330 ft from (the SW cor. County, Utah. Said water is to be City Consolidated. Sec. 29, T. 9 S., R. 2 E S, L, B. & M. diverted at a point which bears 1015 and conveyed by means of a pipeline ft. S and 1770 ft. W. of the NE cor. Highest Market Prices Paid for a distance of 5,000 ft. where it will be See. il, T. 9 S., R. 2 E., S. L, B, & M. when brought to the Mut1st Butterfat November 3500 ft. to of distance used from April 1st and conveyed a incl. of each year for the irrigation of where it will be used from April 1st ual Creamery Station, 35 West Utah 60 acres of land embraced in part of to Njv. 30th incl. of each year for the Avenue, Payson. Utah. the SE V NE 'A Sec. 31, SMNW'4 irrigation of 214.96 acres of land emSec. 82, T. 9 S.. R. 2 E.. S. L B & M. braced in the NWJ4. NNEJ4 Sec. IBE3RBRBBRB This application Is designated In the 10. T. 9 S R. 2 E., S. L. B, & M. the in is No. This designated File anplication as State Engineers Off.ce State Engineers Office as File No. HIGHEST CASH PRICES 10914. All protests against the granting 10865. All protests against the granting of of said application, stating the reasons said in application, stating the reasons dupPAID FOR WHEAT threfor, must be by affidavit must he by affidavit in therefor, $1.00. of fee a with accompanied licate, of fee with a accompanied and filed in this office within thirty duplicate, $1.00 and filed in this office within the of H. & T. FEED AND the after completion (30) days thirty (301 davs after the completion notice. this of publication of this notice. ELEVATOR CO. the if publication GEO. M. BACON. Goo rye M. Bacon, State Engineer. SPANISH FORK, UTAH State Engineer. Date of first publication, August 14, Date of first publication, July 24. to-wi- t. White Fawn and Snow Ball (SALT LAKE) Turkey Red per 50 lb. sack (LEHI) GLOBE A- -l LAYING MASH, per Cwt., in 500 lb. Lots on Car (Same at Store $2.30) $2.05 NEW HONEY, GO POUNDS, LONS, Per Can $4.50 5 GAL- Shoe Repairing Neatly Done at .the Lowest Prices Possible Seat Feed & Produce Co. UTAH PAYSON, V00X000000000000000000000000000000S RBEBREERgBaRREflHERBBaEBBRBbBBBEBBRBBMBBBBRBBBBBBBRRS 3-- 100-ac- re thi-2M- THERES AN OLD Welsh myth about an enchanted horse made of fungus, whch was splendid and handsome for one day until he crumbled to bits. Thats the way it is with cheaply constructed buildings: thy satisfy for a time. Better it is to buy sound Chase Lumber & Coal Co. materials which insure PERMANENT satisfaction. n H Estimates Given Telephone 127 I Chase Lumber and Coal Co. j Anything in Lumber PAYSON " Everything in Service UTAH S IBI EEEEIEBEIEBEEEEEBBEEBEEEBEBBBBEEIHEEBBEIBBBEBBIEEB . lf s' 50-5- . And in accordance with law and an order of the Bord of Directors, made on the 28th day of May. 1930, so many shares of each r&rcel of stock as nifty be necessary will be sold t the office of the Secretary, Santaquin, Utah County, Utah, on the 1 5th dav of September, 1930, at 2 oclock P. M., to pav the delinquent assessment jheron. together with costs of advertising and expense of sale. C. A. JOHNSON. 1930. Secretary. Date of completion First publication August 8. 1930. Second publication August 13, 1930. ,11. 1930. 1 1930. . Date September 11, I August of completion of publication, 21, 1930. Phone 140 it's hot . the weather and our offer of Free Coal. But rold days are coming, when healthful Heat rola warmth and Free Coal are not to be sneezed at. A house full of cozy comfort fewer colds and sniffles and Free Coal to keep the home fires burning, A $2.00 deposit enrolls yon. After that, you pay only $2.00 a week until we in stall your genuine Heatrola and deliver if your ton of Free Coal. (A half-to- n you choose the Lei.-oIjunior.) Then you may begin paying the balunce on our convenient monthly payment plan. Remember, this offer is limited. August 30th is the last day. So come in, or telephone and invite us to call-a, , your home. XTES, we koow . a Model One of three models from vhlcn you may choose. Each with the exclusive fuel-savin- Intensi-tir- g e dir Duct. , t M m THERE IS ONLY ONE HEATROLA We Sell It Estate Builds It The Lowest Prices Large Scale Specialized Buying Affords Dixon - Taylor - Russell Co. The Home Furnishers of CENTRAL, SOUTHERN & EASTERN UTAH For those who prefer another premium than coal, we are giving, with the large size Heatrola, a lovely 42 piece set of dinnerware. These dishes are of ex- cellnt quality, cHstinctively designed and decorated with gay floral patterns. For those who purchase the Junior size Heatrola, a 32 piece set will be given. BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBIBBSBSBIBBBlMBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB jpf1 m m m m S jj jj |