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Show FRIDAY, MAY, 24, 1929 THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH rzmr. MEXICO IS DUE FOR 2aBaBisaisaa3SBzxsissai2xaE3is33a33xiiaaiissiaEEiriM M NEW FORTUNE HUNTS You can bank on the quality of a cigarette that continues to be the biggest success in smoking history Camel CIGARETTES WHY CAMELS ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE Camels contain the choicest tobaccos grown . . . expertly blended for matchless taste these O 1929, R. J. Reynold, Tobecco N. C. Compeny, Winton-Slem- , T ,ment announces the general outline of pr0gram ag follows: College chimes, 6:30 a. m.; break- fast, 6:30 to 8:00 a. m.; display of exhibits, 8 to 9 a. m.; department 9 to 11 a. judging and COLLEGE, LOGAN, JULY I5,mcetines. 11 a. m. to m.; 12 noon; dinner, exhibits, TO 18 INCLUSIVE 12 noon to 2 p. m.; horse shoe pitchcontest, 1 p. m.; movies for childFor the past eight years farmers ing 2 to 4 p. m.; department meet ren, and farmers wives of the state have 2 to 3:30 p. m.; general asings, keen guests of the Extension Service 3:30 to 5 p. m.j baseball sembly, during ihe summer at the Utah State and other contests, 5 to 6 p. m.j band Agricultural College. 6 to 7 p. m.; hour, 7 play concert, This annual visit to the State Colto 8 p. m.; movies for hhildren, 7:30 lege has come to be known as the p. m.; evening program, 8 p. m. Farmers Encampment and that porOn Wednesday evening, July 17, tion of the campus which is reserved Miss Mary Wood Hinman, of t for the guests is known as the Tent Hinman school of dancing, New York, 'It y because tents are pitched as will supervise a folk dancing contest 1'ving quarters for the large number at which time couples from commun of farm families who attend. ities in which folk dancing has been naLeading agriculturists of the will compete for honors. taught tion are engaged to give special lecThis year for the first time, women ture work pertaining to the best meth- of the state will be allowed to enter An intensive schedods of farming. teams in the judging of dairy proand work play is carried out ducts and ule of perhaps in the judging of each year which holds the interest of dairy animals. young and old alike. Each county will be allowed to enter This year1 t'L Extension Service a judging team comprised of three feels unusually fortunate in securing men for the judging of animals in of the services of 0. F. Reed, chief the rings, States United of Dairying, the Bureau This year, also for the first time, Washingdepartment of Agriculture, diplomas will be given to seventeen in the program which ton, D. C. to lead women of the state who have attended will center around dairying. leaders three successive training is acclaimed to be the most schools conducted the Extension by in authority on dairying Service at the College. time. the present at States the United The committee in charge feels that He will spend two days at the encamp- the best program in the history of ment in July. the Extension Service in the state, in the deThe Bureau of Dairying has been planned for July 15 to 18, has recognizof agriculture, and it is expected that 5000' people partment industed Ihe importance of the dairy will register for the short course, chief of the ry in Utah when the conbureau at Washington, D. C. has at sented to appear on the program ANNOUNCEMENT OF 1929 HIGH CHIMNEY AID FARMERS ENCAMPMENT TO HEATING, CURE TO BE HELD AT THE UTAH FOR POOR DRAFTS STATE AGRICULTURAL fire in your heater tends to ' permanently asleep unless you are continually prodding it, or if when you open the heater door to add fuel it puffs a cloud of smoke in your face, dont be too sure that your heating plant Is at fault, warns the Holland Institute of Thermology, of Holland, Michigan. The trouble may' be in the chimney. Chimneys are not only smoke and They have another equal ly important duty, to supply oxygen to the fire. To supply enough oxygen for complete combustion, the chimney If the fall gas-vent- s. Jh I je Downdraft Chimney Too.Xow.. must be both big enough in dimpn Blon and tall enough. y Even in a home, the flue should not be less than 26 feet high, measured from the level of the heat ing plant grate to the top of the chimney. Thirty feet Is a safer minimum The chimney of a bouse should be at least 35 feet high. A flue should extend at least 'six .feet above a flat roof and two feel ole .above ridge of a hipped 'roof. If these rules are not observed, according to the Holland Institute of Thermology, downdraft will occur. Downdraft smothers the fire. It crein the firebox ates a ,whlch causes clouds of smoke and Digas to blow into the basement when the farmers encampment, said the firing door is opened. It may even rector William Peterson of the Utah on cause an explosion.' So a chimney Extension Service in commenting .that is too low is a defect in the interone Every coming. Mr. Reeds heating system which not even the ested in dairying is going to miss an opportunity if he fails to appear at the encampment this year where it' will be possible to come in personal contact with the chief of the bureau industOf dairying which heads the . ries in the United State.-Professor J. B. Fitch, head of the of the dairy husbandly department will College, Kansas State Agricultural at the encampment. be also present Professor Fitch is considered to rank dairy among the three He will STKcinlistfi'Mn the country. megive instructions on modern dairy thods. Chimney With Good Draft, There will also be representatives warm air cir most modern vapor-aire- , frem the National Dairy Council; bree dilating plant can overcome. associations and leading Utahns Poor draft can be tested accurately ers in the redairy industry. instruments. Any with scientific will be Modern dairy equipment liable heating company should be able know If this. do to nt various you land willing points on the dh ployed none that will give you this service, enmons where the farmers will be write the Holland Institute of Therm-loiogyto examine the derices, rewhich will. give you names ot 1 a? to their uses but instruction ceive concerns In your city that will render be given, will talks no pales without service this scientific testing Vv W. Owens, chnirpi.in of the pro, charge. gram committee for tre 1929 encamp- one-stor- Mr.-Ree- two-stor- y back-pressu- " I of s' N. ; j a - Chiffonier - Ladies Desk 5 $15.00 $5.00 Leather Bottom Chairs $10.00 - Sewing Chairs each $2.50 2 - Leather Covered Coaches - each $10.00 - Flat Top Office Desk Chair $15.00 5 - Odd Chairs - each $1.00 Cupboard $3.00 - Large Mirror $4.00 Dining Table $18.00 I Phone Payson, Utah Eagle Pass, Texas. It will soon he time for new stories of buried money 1 and treasure of fabulous value to come out of Mexico. Following each 7 of the previous revolutions full tales g of this kind have been told and many 2 g are the expeditions that have gone forth In futile search for the hidden wenith. It has long been the practice of rebel leaders to take advantage of 1 war-tim- e & conditions and confiscate .... bank funds wherever they could be found. The present revolution Is no exception to this old established cus1 tom. From the banks of Monterey, g Saltillo, Durango and Toreon, money 1 which was said to belong to the fedg eral and state governments, aggre1 gating approximately $1,500,000, has g been taken by the different rebel 120-J- . army leaders. In each Instance the army officers gave their personal memorandum that the funds had been taken nnd would lBBZBKSK993XBBBia3a&!3aS53aEBI33Si:SIS32S&EXBeXlBBia be repaid when the new regime got Into power. It is from money obtained in this manner that the sol- LOWER COST AND THE MAN ON THE RIGHT diers of the rebel armies are dally HAS THE RIGHT OF WAY BETTER SERVICE paid. It was stated by arrivals here from Torreon that during the time Salt Lake City, May 22 Approxthe revolutionists occupied that city While the cost of living today is the privates were lined up each morn- two and 10, 100 persons were killed and imately f times what it was C 10,000 were ing while the paymaster handed to in seriously injured in the 1890, the cost of electricity is but each man one and f pesos, United last year because of States d of what it was at that time, equivalent to 75 cents American failure to give right of way. This issued to review a by according money. just one cause alone 'is responsible for more AssociaCash the National Electric Along. Carry Light than 40 percent of all traffic acciThe cash is carried along with the tion. dents from statistics gathered by The fighting contingents in big motor With the exceptions of 1918 and trucks. If by any chance the rebels Utah State Automobile Association. 1925, electricity has decreased in cost are defeated, the custodian or the In attentiveness or misjudgement funds make a wild drive for some every year since 1890. The average and ignorance of the law are pointed remote spot where the wealth is bur- price of electricity for domestic use ned to await a propitious time for Its in the United States is now 25 per out by the safety department of the Utah State Automobile Association as recovery. cent under pre-wa- r prices, though the the One of the most striking stories of principle reasons for not giving buried treasure In Mexico relates to cost of living is 70 per cent aoove. the right of way. Compared with 1919, the first postthe fortune which Francisco Villa Is The greater percentage of accidents asserted to have concealed in some war year, the cost of electricity has do not occur on the congested disremote spot la the Sierra Madres. decreased 15 per cent. It is estimated tricts where traffic lights control the Villa made a number of large hauls that electricity represents but one perfrom banks, stores and private Indiright of way, but are consentrated cent of the family budget. in an area approximately viduals from time to time. In the one mile Of even greater importance is the from the center of town, statistics city of Chihuahua he found $500,000 of gold coins concealed in one of the fact that electric service has improved gathered in Salt Lake City show. This hollow pillars in the vestibule of the In direct proportion to the decrease has been attributed to the fact that Banco de Mineral and he carried the in cost. This was made possible by many drivers relax mentally and phyoff into the mountains. money During the principle of mass production-smal- l sically as soon as they are out of the brief time that he and Emiliano and a large turnover. The profits the in Morelos were the heavy traffic; they do not have bandit, Zapata, Joint control of Mexico City, they small local plants, with their high unit their cars under control at street interwere said to have depleted the na- cost and their comparative inefficien- sections and they fail to give the tional treasury of more than $2,000,-000- . cy are rapidly disappearing and their of right way. The treasuries of several states place is taken by the great interconIt should be a simple matter to were also looted by Villa. nected systems. remember that The man on the Acquired Big Roil. It is not stating the case too for- RIGHT has the RIGHT of way, At the time he was assassinated it cibly to say that our industrial and the Automobile Association officials was estimated by several of his Inti- social progress has been dependent on say, and it should be even easier to mate associates that he had accumuthe made by the electric in- remember progress lated a fortune of more than $6,000,-00that over one quarter millaccomion people were killed or seriously during his banditry and rebel ac- dustry. And what has been tivities. Tbi3 wealth, according to plished for the city home is now being injured because they forgot, or did current belief, was burled in the accomplished for the farm home and not heed this simple rule. mountains about two days mule-bacime smallest communities. ride to the west of Parral, state of Chihuahua. The hidden hoard, it was NOTICE OF APPLICATION said, was drawn upon secretly by FOR UNITED STATES Villa on several occasions after he GHOSTLY CHORDS settled down upon the big ranch In PATENT STARTLE FAMILY the state of Durango which the federal government had given him as a United States Land Office, peace offering. Following Villas Lake City, Utah, Mar. 30, 1929 Mysterious Notes Come From Salt at was an outfitted death, expedition Parral and spent several weeks NOTICE is hereby given that in Piano at Night. searching for the fortune, but it was never located. From time to time pursuance of an act of congress, apNottingham, England. Eerie chords since then other searches have been proved May 10, 1872, Benjamin S. struck from an unattended piano in made for the treasure, but all of them Crow, whose postoffice address is the dead of night have nearly sne-- j Bartlett Building in the City of Los (ceded in convincing the skeptical failed. Manly rebel leaders and bandit Angeles, State of California, has made Eason family of Cottesmore road, Notchiefs of lesser notoriety are credapplication to the United States for tingham, Unit there are sueh things ited with having burled their loot In for the Payson Placer mining as ghosts. various places, from one end of the patent Recently after Mrs. Arthur Eason, claim of comprising the Northeast country to the other, and these stories who is seventy-siyears old, and her have been the cause pf many treasure Section 27, Township 9 South, Range three daughters had retired for the hunts. East, Salt Lake Base & Meridian night they were startled to hear in the Eldorado Mining District, Utah chords struck on the piano downheard and simultaneously County, State of Utah, containisg val- stairs. Boy Babies Shown to Be uable deposits of calcium carbonate, sounds as if furniture was being moved Weaker Than Sisters commonly known as limestone, and about. Washington. Despite the general calcium and Describing her spooky experience magnesium carbonate, Miss Alice Eason, one of the daughbelief that the male constitution is known as dolomite. Inherently stronger than the female, commonly ters, told a reporter: Notice of location of the said Pay-so- n "We had been in bed about half an girl babies have a 30 per cent better chance of living than have boys, the Placer mining claim was fLed in hour when we heard a chord struck Labor departments children's bureau the office of the County Recorder of on the piano, immediately followed has found. said Utah County on the 6th day of by the whining and scratching of More boys than girls are' born our little fox terrier, who recorded at Tony, each year In the United States reg- May, 1924, and thereafter sleeps in the front room. istration area, but for every 100 fe- page 252 of Book 234 of the official Then to our alarm two more male Infant deaths there are 130 records of said Utah County. chords were struck. male mortalities among children un I was too scared to move, but one Adjoining claims are Maiben and der one year old, It was found. of my sisters went down to investiclaims Pleasant Placer and The boys greater need of sunlight Raymond gate. The room was empty, but the 1 and Pleasant Valley No. accounts for this difference in death Valley No. dog was trembling visibly. rates. It was said. Males, deprived 5 lode claims. Conflicting claims, SuAccording to Mrs. Eason the notes of the Buns beneficial rays, soon de- gar Lime Placer No. 6. heard were similar to those which velop such diseases as rickets and Date of posting this notice on claim used to be played by her blind broth-- , Girls are said to have a tetania. er, who died two years ago, and who January 31st, 1929. was for many years organist at the higher resistance to these maladies. Date of posting this notice in Artificial sunlight, it is believed by local Wesleyan church. the bureau, is strongly Indicated as States Land Office at Salt Lake Im not psychic, nnd I dont bea method of reducing the present City, Utah, January 31st, 1929. lieve in ghosts, said Mrs. Eason. I mortality sex ratio. was certain that the sounds bad been ELI F. TAYLOR caused by some practical joker, and Register the next day I set out to find who Stonehenge Will Be I hereby designate the Payson had broken into our house and played Preserved by British Chronicle, a newspaper published the piano. I was confronted first with London. Stonehenge, ancient monu- weekly in the City of Payson, Utah the fact that ad the windows and ment of mans worship during the late State of Utah, as the paper in the doors were locked tight SearchStone age, Is to be preserved for fu County, neighbors failed to which the above notice shall be pub- ing inquiry among ture generations. shed any light on the occurance. The huge stone monuments, set In lished. we heard have Subsequently the shape of a horseshoe on Salisbury ELI F. TAYLOR sounds nt night as though of furniPlains, had been threatened by a bun ture being moved about dowmstairs, Register operation. Altogether and once a blind suddenly flew up First publication April 5, 1929. 1,444 acres have been purchased with no one near it 1929 Last pubication May 31, around the lonely plateau at a cost No. I still dont believe in ghosts, of about $155,000, subscribed by the but all the same I am beginning to general pubjic. 3 FOR SALE: by 12 rod choice wonder. At present there Is a barbed-wtr- e admls-siefence around the site and an building lot. . Corner of 6th West & fee Is charged visitors. It Is ex Utah Ave. ..Inquire of Chase Lumber FOR RENT: Furnished or unfurnipccted the fence will be removed and & Coal Company, Payson, Utah. 61 pd. shed Rooms. Phone 39, Payson, Utah site opened to the public tree. one-thir- never tire your taste. The quality of Camels is never permitted to vary. Only a superior cigarette could have won for all 1 one-hal- Smoke them as often as you like, Camels leadership has done. Camel as years Special Stories. one-hal- and fragrance. mildThey have a welcome mellowness and ness that you will find in no other cigarette. and held world Household Goods For Sale f Every Revolution Ha Own First False Teeth Worn by Woman of 300 B. C. Santa Monica, Calit The first false teeth, so far as we know today, were worn by a woman of Sidon In Iliocnicia about 300 B. C., according n anto Dr. Roy L. Hoodie, well-know- atomist The Phoenician womans Jaw, with the false teeth, is preserved In the Louvre, in Paris. The two right Incisors are represented by artificial teeth, held In place and bound to each other by gold wire. The wire has been drawn through careful perforations in the artificial teeth. Although the Egyptians pioneered in treatment of many diseased conditions of the body, this sort of dental replacement apparently was never devised by Egyptian physicians. Thousands of mummies, representing 7,000 years of life in Egypt, have been ex nmined hut no clear evidence of sucli repair work has ever been found. It appears that we not only owe our al pluibot and numerous geographic discoveries to the restless, inquiring minds of the Phoenicians, Doctor Moodie points out, but also we are Indebted to them for this entrance Into prosthetics, which Is a particularly valuable tfcld of dentistry. 0 k x galow-bulldin- g |