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Show fonit. OCTOBER JO, 1925 AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925 IUUSTRAT10NS iSLf If rf : ytJ ' f y WTER XIII -Continued. I . " : ''i f bugiiv - -- f?: nin .. They would fii department store restaurants C.f their friends ever came. W ot afternoon hours In the ,feu Af th motion- I0" tttinr in the back Ui nothing of the film, talk-fit, talk-fit, whinners that Jailed to ,! Kittertfl devotee In the , af the house. When Jhey drove I v. nn verv beautiful ner hboniht There was about ner U th flow. 'lie roseate exhala-t. exhala-t. . th woman In l lull ""'"- - l0eDtlr ihe Irritated Dirk. At r . . V. r M AMI be grew quieter ma nf reared. As he involuntarily t ihe advanced, someumes no ,t be bated her her hot, eager w- .win? Hklne eyes, her an ii""1"!-! - - -d mouth, her sallow, heart- , Oplilte face, ner penumcu ber air or ownersnip. ti Her posse, veness. - ouujc-. Dlrt.sondered.,v;;haLTheodore thought and knew Denina mai i hhv white mask of his. met plenty of other girls. wu clever enougn 10 see w She asked them to share her M the opera, she naa tnem ai rs. She affected great into in-to their effect on him. She when he talked to one of them. why don't you take out tnat 'iraham glrir ihenke?" eH, bra t she? You were talking er long enough at the Kirks' i. What were you talking about?" KikS." l Books. She's awfully nice intelligent, If n't she? A lovely ' She was suddenly happy, i e Farnham girl was a nice girl. u the kind of girl one should in love with and doesn't. The tun girl was one of many well-Chicago well-Chicago girls of her day and . Fine, honest, clear-headed, L capable, good-looking In an ln-ite ln-ite and unarresting sort of way. colored hair, good teeth, good fh eyes, clear skin, sensible me-. me-. .hands and . feet ; skated well, ti well, talked well, Read the i you' had read. A companion-girl. companion-girl. Loads of money but never i of It Traveled. Her hand rwra firmly-aiul it ws Just a . at the contact no current dart-irongh dart-irongh you, sending its shaft with tie ling to your heart, it wben Paula showed you t book mil a she stood next you, 4 somehow at Into the curve of ' and you w ere conscious of the ner soft slim side against you. taew many girla. There waa a W type know n as the North rW. 811m, tall, exquisite; 5jo, hlglu sweet sllght-voice, sllght-voice, ear rings, a cigarette. T Huyle r s All these girls q iiiiuuigiy alike. Dirk thought? ji mucn alike. They all wch with a pretty good ae-Canced ae-Canced ictrict rnntmH C' mi " new books: had the Patter. The.r prefaced." Inter-p Inter-p .wnclnded their remarks to I WSf with "f . A-.i. m rttem. urprlw, sympathy, - rmicuie, horror, resigns- J dfnh ' . . . Wi u iUU ""ouia nave "ydeeahr-horror. Their "U almimf , ... .. . lkM.. -T ",u' wun mat !tgi . hta office. lood kid," they said, sneak. C JJ ,f frnkM. In t day Ct""Ud 10 "creaming atE,":!'1.,:"? 'hM . """ l" oroer to 18 B0t ced ..n . . m,i. . ' wora VZ'"ly ohcener The H Sf? 'I' tMr "weet clear C from their iartl'i.,l':'y- w'nuItln't work so f letting They were for- fJL lMlN for charity: Ven- In th. 'Pmal bazMar8. Parity tt ai.,V . ume Performance '.'etter than mt letter, ftS !l perfmce.' On ; ,i,v'hed thousands KwTrn , (rntlon8' reclv' Plir,,', ,' ,ll0U8an'l which Wi, f nR ",dlcrou" in t,,i: Scon! :n' -nture, de- too. She or one of 1ier friends were forever opening blouse shops ; starting Gifts Shoppes; burgeoning into tea rooms decorated In crude green and vermilion and orange and black; announcing an-nouncing their affiliation with an advertising ad-vertising agency. These adventures blossomed, withered, died. They were the result of post-war restlessness. Many of these girls had worked In defatlgably during the 1917-1918 period pe-riod ; had driven smice cnr9, managed man-aged ambulances, nursed, scrubbed, conducted canteens. They missed the excitement, the satisfaction of achievement achieve-ment They found Dirk fair game, resented resent-ed Paula's proprietorship. Susans and Junes and Kates and Bettys and ba' ly Plain old-fashioned names for modern, erotic misses -they talked to Dirk, danced with him, rode with him, flirted with him. Ills very unattaln-ableness unattaln-ableness gave him piquancy. That Paula Storm had him fast. Lie didn't care a hoot about girls. "Oh, Mr. DeJong," they said, "your name's Dirk, isn't it? What a slick name! What does It mean?" . "Nothing, I suppose. It's a Dutch name. My people my father's peoplewere peo-plewere Dutch, you know." "A dirk's a sort of sword, isn't it, or poniard! Anyway, it sounds very keen and cruel and fatal Dirk." He would flush a little (one of his assets) and smile, and look at them, and say nothing. He found that to be all that was necessary. He got on enormously. Between the girls he met In society and the girls that worked in his office of-fice there existed a similarity that struck and amused Dirk. He said, "Take a letter. Miss Roach," to a slim young, creature as exquisite as the girl with whom he had danced the day before; or ridden or played tennis or bridge. Their very clothes were fault-, less imitations. They even used the same perfume. He wondered. Idly, how they did It. They were eighteen, nineteen, twenty, and their faces and bodies and desires and natural equipment equip-ment made their presence in a business office a paradox, an absurdity. Yet they were capable, too, in a mechanical sort of way. Theirs were mechanical Jobs. They were lovely creatures with the minds of fourteen-year-old children. chil-dren. Their hair was shining, perfectly perfect-ly undulated, as fine and glossy and tenderly curling as a young child's. Their breasts were flat, their figures singularly sexless like that of a very young boy. They were wise with the wisdom of the serpent. Their legs were slim and sturdy. Their mouths were pouting, soft, pink, the lower Up a little curled back, petal-wise, like the moist mouth of a baby that has Just finished nursing. Their eyes were wide apart, empty, , knowledgeous. They managed their private affairs Ifle generals. They were cool, remote, disdainful. They reduced their boys to desperation. They were brigands, desperadoes, pirates, taking all, giving little. They came, for the most part, from sordid homes, yet they knew, In some miraculous way, all the fine arts that Paula knew and practiced. They were corsetlesaT pliant, bewildering, bewilder-ing, lovely, dangerous. Among them Dirk worked -Immune, aloof, untouched. He would have been surprised to learn that he was known among them as Frosty. They admired and resented him. Not one that did not secretly dream of the day when he would call her Into his office, shut the door, and say, "Loretta" (their names were burbanklan monstrosities, born of grafting the' original appellation appella-tion onto their own Idea of beauty In nomenclature hence Loretta, Imo-fene, Imo-fene, Nadlne, Natalie. Ardella), "Loretta, "Lor-etta, I have watched you for a long, long time and you must have noticed how deeply I admire you.", It wasn't Impossible. Those things hSDDen. The movies had taught them that Dirk, all unconscious of their pitiless all-absorbing scrutiny, would have been still further appalled to learn how fully aware they were of his personal and private affairs. They knew about Paula, for example. They admired and resented her, too. They despised her for the way In which she openly displayed her feeling for him (how they knew this was a miracle and a mystery, for she almost never came Into the office and disguised all her telephone talks with him). They thought he was grand to his mother. Sellna had been In his office twice, perhaps. per-haps. On one of these occasions she had spent -live, minutes. chatting sociably socia-bly with Ethellnda Qulnn, who had the face of a Da Vlncl cherub and the soul of a mun-eatlng shark. Sellna always talked to everyone. She enjoyed listening to street car conductors, con-ductors, washwomen, Janitors, landladies, land-ladies, clerks, doormen, chauffeurs, policemen po-licemen Something about her made them talk. They, ocsced to. hcra tfowers to the sun. They sensed her Interest, her ljklng.. As they talked Sellna would exclaim, "You oont savl Well, that terrible r Her eyes would be bright with sympathy. 1' ' SeUna had said,-on entering Dlrkl office. "My land! I don't see how, you can work among those pretty creatures ' and not be a sultan. I'm golna- to aak some of them down to the farm over' Miiiiluy." "Don't, Mother! They wouldn't un derstand. I scarcely see them. They're Just part of the office equipment." . j Afterward. Ethellnda Qulnn bad passed expert opinion. "Say, she's got!" ten times the guts that Krosty's got! I like her fine. Did you see her te1 rihlehnt! But say. it didn't look funny fun-ny on her, did It? Anybody else In' that getup would look comical, but j she's the klud that could walk off with ' anything. I don't know. She's got what I call an air. It beats style, j Nice, too. She said I was a pretty little thing. Can you beat It! At that shs's right. I cer'nly yam." j AH unconscious, "Take a letter, Miss Qutnn." said Dirk half an hour later. In the midst of this fiery furnace of femininity Dirk walked unscorched. 1 uuia, the North shore girls, well-bred and professional business women he occasionally met In the course of business, the enticing little nymphs he encountered In his own office, all practiced prac-ticed ou him their warm and perfumed iles. He moved among them cool and serene. Perhaps his sudden success had had something to do with this; and his quiet ambition for further success. suc-cess. For he really was nccounted successful now, even lu the spectacular spectacu-lar whirl of Chicago's meteoric financial finan-cial Constellation. North-side mammas regarded his Income, his career, and his future witli eyes of respect and wny speculation. There was always a neat little idle of Invitations In the mall that lay on the correct little console con-sole In the correct little npartnieut ministered by the correct little Jap on the correct North-side street near (but not too near) the lake, and overlooking overlook-ing It. The-apnrtment had- been furnished with ratlin's aid. Together she and Dirk had gone to Interior decorators. "But you've got to use your own tnste, too," Paula had said, "to give it the individual touch." The apartment apart-ment was furnished In a good deal of Italian furniture, the finish a dark cak or walnut, the whole massive and yet somehow unconvincing. The effect was somber without being impressive. There were long carved tables on which an ash tray seemed a desecration; desecra-tion; great chairs roomy enough for lolling, yet In which you did not relax; re-lax; dull silver candlesticks; vestments; vest-ments; Dante's saturnine features sneering down upon you from a correct cor-rect cabinet. There were not many books. Tiny foyer, large living-room, bedroom, dining-room, kitchen, and a cubby-hole for the Jap. j Dirk did not spend much of his time in the place. His upward climb was a treadmill, really. His office, the apartment, apart-ment, a dinner, a dance. His contacts were monotonous, and too few. His office was a great splendid office of-fice In a great splendid office building in I.nSalle street. He drove back and forth in a motor car along the boulevards. boule-vards. His i social engagements lay north. LaSalle street bounded him on the west. Lake Michigan on the east, Jackson boulevard on the south, Lake Forest on the north. He might have lived a thousand miles away for all he knew of the rest of Chicago the mighty, roaring, sweltering, pushing, screaming, magnificent hideous steel giant that was Chicago. Sellna had bad no hand In the furnishing fur-nishing of his apartment. When It was finished Dirk had brought her In triumph tri-umph to see It "Well," he had said, "what do you think of It Mother?" She had stood In the center of the room, a small plain figure In the midst of these massive somber carved tables, chairs, chests. A little smile bail quirked the corner of her mouth. "I think It's as cosy as a cathedral." Sometimes Sellna remonstrated with him, though of late she had taken on a strange reticence. She no longer asked him about the furnishings of the houses be visited, or the exotic food he ate at splendid dinners. The farm flourished. The great steel mills and factories to the south were closing In upon heir but had not yet set Iron foot on her rich green acres. She was rather rath-er famous now for the quality of her farm products and her pens, You saw "DeJong asparagus" on the menu at the Blackstone and the Drake hotels. Sometimes Dirk's friends twitted him about this and he did not always acknowledge ac-knowledge that the similarity of names was not a coincidence. "Dirk, you seem to see no one but Just these people," Sellna told hlin in one of her Infrequent rebukes. "You don't get the full flavor of life. Yoi-'ve got to have a vulgar curiosity about people and things. All kinds of people. peo-ple. All kinds of things. You revolve in the same little circle, over and over and over." - "Haven't time. Can't afford to tae the time. "You can't afford not to. Sometimes Sellna came into mnn for a week or ten days at a stretch, and indulged in what she called an orgy At such tltoes Julie Arnold would invite her to occupy one of the guest rooms at the Arnold house, or Dirk wou'd offer her his bedroom and tell her that5 he would be romf'.rf mM Uu.Ujs hlg.coucli in the living room, or that he would take a room i i" versify club. , She always declined. Site would tuke a room in a hotel,, sometimes some-times 'north, sometimes south. Her h(lMdiiv b'efore her. she would go off roaming gaily as a small hoy on Saturday morning, with the day stretching, gorgeously and. adyentnre- dme!y-atiei(T &f hthj; satlles'down the street without plan or appointment, knowing that richness In one form or another lies before blm for the choosing. choos-ing. A sociable woman, Sellna, savor lng life, she liked the lights, the color, the n;!i, the noise." Herrearsof grinding work, with ber face pressed down to the very soil Itself, had failed to kill her test for living. She prowled Into the c!ty'g foreign quarters ItalUn, r.reek, Chinese, Jewish. She loved the Michigan hmiUvaril and state street shop windows In! whl.-h haughty waxed ladles In glitter? Inv 'evening gowns postured, Angers elegantly crooked as they held a fan, a rose a program, meanwhile smiling Con:. s,-endIngly out upon an envious world thittenlng its nose against the plate ii,g barrier. She penetrated the Black belt, where Chicago's vast and growing negro population pop-ulation shifted and moved and stretched its great limbs ominously, reaching out and out In protest and overflowing the bounds that Irked It Her s.rene face and her quiet manne- her l !..o(i Interest and friendly look proti-rted her. They thought her a soil.il worker, perhaps; one of the uplifttrs. she bought and read the Independent.-, the negro newspaper In which herb doctors advertised magic roots, she even sent the twenty-flve cents ivfiired for a box of these, cbaiiied by their names Adam and Eve roots, Muster of the Woods, Dragon s Blood, High John the Conqueror, Con-queror, Jezebel Hoots, Grains of Para-dlta- "Look here. Mother," Dirk would protest, "you can't wander around like that. It isn't safe. This isn't High Prairie, yon know. If you want to go round I'll get Sukl to drive you," "That would be nice," she said, mildly. mild-ly. Hut she never availed herself of till offer. She would go over to South Water street, changed now, and swollen to such proportions that It threatened to burst !t.i oonllties. She liked to stroll For Sale Pickling f cucumbers. Mrs. Will Condor. American - Fork. - 10-17-lp Lost Black traveling bag. Be tween point of mountain and Lehi. S. M. Mendenhali, 139W Springvitle 10-10-21. Horse Pasture for Rent. Good alfa!lfa usture for rent. Plenty of teed and water. Apply to. George F. Shelley, Phone 77J1 Am. Fork. For Sale A modern three room house with 2tt acres of fruit. See John & Told.- -2-3p. FOR SALE Dahlias, GladloU, and everbearing strawberry plants. Mrs. Ella Cox at C. E. Watson , place. American Fork. 10-3-lt. Earn 1140 to $200 a month. Learn telearaDhr. Clean eaay work. Free catalogue. American Telegraph Coi leire. 162 So. Main. Salt Lake. -26-4t For rent Furnished house keeping apartments. Mrs. Annie Green, Phone 167J. 9-19-tt. She Liktd to Stroll Along the Crowded v Sldawalks. Sottl SlcknM Mt soul Is sick with every day's re port of wrong and outrage with which earth is filled. Cowper. Before the Heat 1$ On "The saddest hour. sings the poet. Is lust after sunset." Evidently he doesn't have to get up at six o'clock In the morning In the winter time. Boston Transcript. i o Most Fathom Stoic EplctetUL, was a Greek Stoic philos opher who lived approximately be tween the years 60 and 12f'. He was born a slave In Phrygla, banished from Rome by Domitlan and taught philosophy In Eplrus. The nobility and mom! earnestness of the man and slmplic, of his style have made blm a favorite with many not otherwise Interested In . the subject which he taught and of which he wrote. -o Clarinefa Probable Orxjin The clarinet la an old Instrument. It was Invented by L C. Denner, a German, In 1600. and has been a permanent per-manent member of the orchestra since then. It ma; possibly have some connection con-nection with the ancient Shawn, because be-cause the English sbawn and German schalmey are closely related. along the crowded sidewalks, lined with crates and boxes and barrels of fruits, vegetables, poultry. Swarthy foreign faces predominated now. Where the red-faced overalled men had been alie now saw lean muscular lads in old army shirts and khaki pants and scuffed puttees wheeling trucks, loading load-ing boxes, charging down the street In huge rumbling auto vans. Their faces were hard, their talk terse. Any one of these, she reflected, was more vital, more native, functioned more usefully and honestly than her successful son. Dirk DeJong. "Where V beansT "In th' ol' beanery." "Tough." "Beit you can get" "Keep 'em." Many of the older men knew her, shook hands with her, chatted a moment mo-ment friendlily. William Talcott a little more dried up, more wrinkled, hie sparse hair quite gray now,1 still leaned up against the aide of his door way In his shirt sleeves end his neat DDDer-and-aaIt Dants and vest clear. ! unllghted, in his mouth, the heavy gold watch chain spanning his middle. "Well yon certainly made good, Mrs. DeJong. Remember the day you come here with your first load?" Oh, yes. She remembered. 1 "That boy of yours has made his mark, too, I see. Doing grand, ain't heT Wa al, great satisfaction having a son turn out well like that Yes, slrreel Why, look at my da'ter CarTIne-" Life at High Prairie had Its savor, too. Frequently you saw strange visitors vis-itors there for a week or ten days at a time boys and girls whose city pallor j gave way to a rich tan; tired-looking ! w omen with sagging figures who drank Sellna's cream and ate her abundant j vegetables and tender chickens as I though they expected these viands to ; be momentarily snatched from them. 1 Sellna picked these jipJn odd corners ' of the city. Dirk protested against Uils, too. Sellna was a member of the High I'ralrle school board now. She was on the Good Honda committee and the Truck Farmers association val-ued..,her,..upto val-ued..,her,..upto pleasant, prolific. Grammatical Slip "Educated men don't say 'don't'" remarked a great mayor of New York, now gone to rest. But they do. They did, even then. They also say "ain't" when they" are nonthinking about It and may yet come to saying It delib erately. While they are about It they mar even take "It's me" under their protecting wings. New York World. LEGAL ADVERTISING (To Be Continued) o Pneumatic Organ Old The pneumatic style of organ made Us appearance In the Fourth century. It was used on festive occasions for secular purposes. 8UMMON8 In the District Court of Utah County, State of Utah. Julia A. Lowe, Plaintiff vs. J, F, Lowe, Defendant Summons. The State of Utah To Said Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear ap-pear within twenty days after service of this summons upon you. If served within the county in which this action Is brought otherwise with to - thirty days after such service, and defend the above, entitled action; and iu case of your failure so to do, Judg ment will he rendered against you according to the , demands of the complaint which within ten days will be filed with the Clerk ofTiaid Court. This action is brought to dissolve the grounds of matrimony heretofore hereto-fore and now existing between you and the plaintiff, and for alimony and attorney's fees, -v MARTIN M. "LARSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. P. O. Address: Knight Block, Provp. Utah, First Publication October 3. 1923. Last Publication October 17. 1925. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District in and for Utah County, State of Utah. In the Matter ' of the Estate of Peter D. Miller, Deceased, Notice to Creditors. , 4 Creditors will present claims with ' vouchers to the undersigned at her residence In American Fork, Utah, on or. before the 9th day of December, 1923. MAE MILLER. Administratrix of the estate of Peter I. Miller -deceased. J. W. ROBINSON. . Attorney for administratrix. First Publication October 10, 1925. Last Publication October 31, 19?S. : M. A. Serial No. 036270 APPLICATION FOR MINERAL PATENT In the United States Land Office Salt Lake City. Utah. Notice is hereby given that the Utah Centennial Mining Company, a corporation, by Its duly authorized agent and Attorney In Fact, L. L. Nelson, whose postoffice address Is Provo, Utah, has made application for patent for the Florence, Silver Plume, South Humbug and Uncle 8am, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, lodes, Mineral Survey Sur-vey No. 68.12 In the American Fork Mining District, Utah County, State of Utah, described, with magnetic variation var-iation at 16 degrees, C5 minutes east as follows, to-wlt: Beginning at Cor. No. 1 of the Florence Flor-ence lode (from which U. S. M. M. No. 2 bears N. 42 degrees 22 minutes W. 3723.3 feet) and running thence N. S3 degrees 17 minutes E. 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S. 56 degrees 45 min utes E. 600 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S. 24 degrees 32 minutes E. 599.7 ft to Cor. No. 3 Silver Plume lode: thence N. S3 degrees 17 minutes E. 58.4 ft. to Cor. No. 2 Uncle Sam No. 6 lode; thence 8. 45 degrees 10 min utes E. 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S.53 degrees 17 minutes W. 1529.5 ft. to Cor, No. 3 Uncle Sam No. 3 lode; thence S. 43 degrees 39 minutes W. 1434.2 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence N. 57 degrees 15 minutes W. 1258.7 ft. to Cor. No. 1 Uncle Sam 0. 1 lode (Iden tical with Cor. 4 Uncle 8am No. I lode) and from which U. S. M. M. No. bears N. 26 degrees 36 min utes W. 5485.4 ft.; thence N. 45 degrees 10 minutes. W. 610.5 ft. to Cor. No. 1 Uncle Sam No. 1 lode and from which U. S. M. M. No. 2 bears N. 24 degrees 19 minutes 43 seconds W. 4910.4 ft.; thence N. 14 degrees de-grees 32 minutes W. 699.7 ft. to Cor. No. 1 South Humbug lode and from Which U. 8. M. M. No. 2 bears N. 24 degrees 18 minutes W. 4310.77 ft: thence N. 55 degrees 32 minutes E. 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 4 Florence lode (identical with Cor. No. 1 - Silver Plume lode) and from which U. S. M. M. No. 2 bears N. 44 degrees 21 mln- ' utes W. 4307.1 ft; thence N. B6 de- grees 45 minutes W. 600 ft. to Cor. No. 1 Florence lode, the place ot begin nlng. Said lode mining claims are located In the unsurveyed part of T. 8. SM R. E., S. L. Mer., and contain a net area of 173.041 acres, the areas In conflict with Sur.:616S "A" Wagner lode having been excluded. - . The nearest known locations are the aforesaid excluded claims and the Giddy Shell No. 3 lode, Sur. 5939, and Silver King No. 3 lode. Sur. 6168a. 8ald claims are all recorded In the office of the County Recorder of Utah County, at Provo, Utah. I direct that the foregoing notice be published In the American Fork Citizen, a weekly newspaper publish ed at American Fork. Utah, and being be-ing the newspaper published nearest said claims, for a period ot 60 days. , ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. First Publication August 8 1925. i, Last Publication October 10, 1925. D. DUNN, Attorney, Salt Lake ' City, Utah. Utah of NOTICE TO CREDITOR8 la the District Court of County, State of Utah. In the matter of the estate Elizabeth Hirschmaji, formerly Eliza beth Gibbons, Deceased. Notice To Creditors. No. 3104 Probate. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned, at his residence in Pleasant Grove, Utah, on or before the 5th day of December, i925; ror be forever barred.- .r,: . C P,- HARPER.' '..-;; .. Administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Hlrschman formerly Elizabeth Gibbons, deceased. MARTIN M. LARSON, Attorney for the Administrator. ' First Publication October 3, 192." Last Publication October 24, 1923. STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, HAHAGEITEJOV CLRCULATIOK, ETC; REQUIRED BT THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST It, U Of American Fork Citizen, published weekly at American Fork, Utah, for October 1, 1925. State of Utah, County ot Utah, as: Before me, a. Notary In and for the state and coqnty aforesaid, personally appeared A. F. " ' Oalsford - Jr.; ' who having been dnly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the editor of the American Fork Citizen and that the following Is, to the heat ot his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management manage-ment etc., ot the aforesaid publication for the date shown In the above caption, cap-tion, required by the Act of August 24, 19,12, embodied In section 443,- Pos- , tal Laws and Regulations. 1. That the names and addressee ofTfierliblisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are: Publisher Alpine Publishing Co., American Fork. Utah. Managing Editor A. F. Galsford Jt.. American Fork, Utah. 2. That the owners are: A. F. Galsford, Gals-ford, Lehl, Utah, A. F. Galsford Jr., American Fork, Utah, Edward Gals-ford, Gals-ford, American Fork and Victor Gals ford, Lehi, Utah. 3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders hol-ders owntng or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgage A. F. GAISFORD, Jr., Mgr. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 6thi day of October, 1925. H. C. JOHNSON. (Seal) , Notary Public My commlslon expires August 24th, 1927, nn ite-ot m -wet f |