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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON. UTAH LOST TIME IS LOST MONEY Nothing is more provoking than to enter a store and find clerks or salesmen all so busy serving a few people, that other customers are compelled to wait ten, twenty and oftimes thirty minutes. Such procedure is a great loss of time, and consequently, a great loss of The majority money. of retail stores have help sufficient only to care for their patrons properly in normal rushes and are unable to render, even fairly pleasing service at big rush times. The first ward MIA will hold their opening Tuesday September 10 at 8 P. M. An evening in the South Sea Islands will be presented by Mr. Charles Senn and company from the Islands accom. panied with Hawiian music. The drama entitled A Story Book Wedding, will be given by members of the Ward, also other preliminary parts. Program begins promptly at iti. all are invited to attend. 8 P. Mrs George A. Cheever and children spent last week in Manti with her mother, Mrs Rose Braithwate. Experienced Practical Nurse. Mrs. Betty Keeler. 192 South 1st West Paynon, Utah 6tpd. would be possible where eggs of widely varying characteristics are mixed together. How to Raise I do not recommend the use of pulAll breeding hens should be of good size for the breed and from 1 to 2 years of age. If pullets are used at all for breeders, they should be well matured, lay good size eggs and be mated to o let eggs for hatching. Poultry By Ur. L. D. LeGear, V. S St. Lcuij, Mo. Dr. LeGear is a graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, 1892. Thirty-si- x years of veter- inary practice on disea sesof live stock and poultry. Eminent authority on poultry and stock raising. Nationally known poultry breeder. Noted author and : : popular lecturer. Eggs Is Eggs But Not For Hatching Raymond Wilson and Kermit returned home Saturday from Editors Note This is another story Yellowstone Park where they have in a series of 52 stories on poultry summer. been for the raising written by the well known Mr. and Mrs. E. II. Street, Miss aational poultry authority, Dr. L. D. Folland and Miss Vera Calder LeGear, V. S., of St. Louis. The entire Grace SAVE THEM were in Salt Lake for the wedding series will appear in this paper. Our readers are urged to read them careof Miss Tressa Peterson. BOTH HERE fully and clip them out for future reference. American of Miss Edith Young Founders of the O. P. Fork returned home Sunday after Skaggs System had servisiting for a week in Payson, the Too Great Care Cannot Be Observed vice" uppermost in their guest of Miss Virginia Street. in the Selection of Eggs for Hatchminds when they perfecing In choosing the Right Egg? NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION for the Purpose Lies Much of the ted our store arrange(PUBLISHER) Secret of Successful Incubation. ment and merchandising is pigs, Pigs according to th. plan. It is never necesDEPARMENT OF THE INTERIOR sary for our patrons to U. S. LAND OFFICE at Salt Lake famous story by Ellis Parker Butler, wait more than two or City, Utah, Aug., 12, 1929. of the way in which eggs, regardless NOTICE is hereby given that Danthree minutes, even on and to great many people egg3 is of Santaquin, Utha, Saturday afternoons, or iel Throckmorton, When it con. they are to be used. on Nov. 11. 1924, made homewho, cerns eggs for any purpose but hatat other times when a stead entry. No. 034635, for NEj. ching, that view may be as good single store serves hun27, SW4 NWJ4SEJ4, Section as any other, but eggs for hatching dreds of people within Township 9 South, Range 1 East, should be selected with ex. an hour. Those who Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice treme certainly care if best results are to be shop at an O. P. Skaggs of intention to make final Proof, to obtained. There is no great mysestablsh claim to the land above deSystem store save both tery about the process of making scribed, before A. E. Wall, Notary time and money. . We selection. On the contrary, proper Public, at Santaguin, Utah, on the know you will appreciis a very simple matter. I have it 24th day of Sept., 1929. seen so much of random selection, ate our store and become Claimant names as witnessess: however, that I am sure a tew pointa regular patron if you E. R. Nelson, James A. Draper, Willers on the subject will not be amiss. try shopping here once or iam T. Ewell Jr. &. Z. II. Ewell all First of all, let me say what kind of Santaquin, Utah.. twice. of eggs not to use. Discard all eggs Eli F. Taylor, that are small, abnormally large, Register. very dirty, irregularly formed and 1929 First publication Aug. 23, with cracked, rough, thin or those Last publication Sept. 13, 1929 irregular shells. I would especially fir warn everyone against accepting the common belief that large eggs are Years of careful best for hatching. experimentation and close observa. tion of the work of others has convinced me that the average size egg of regular form and color is the best The Greatest Display of Utah Countys Resources The exact size will for hatching. of with different Ever Assembled at the Utah course, vary, County Fair. breeds. The same is true of color. Any chicken raiser can easily judge the size of eggs to use according to this advice and detailed instructions SEPTEMBER are not necessary. The hatching egg should be sound shell. It should bt smooth, free of FAIR GROUNDS PROVO from uneven or rough spots; should not be mottled or uneven of color; should not be thinner in one port than in another; should )iot have ridges, bumps, humps or buldges, but should be as near to the true egg Tbe Finest herd of dairy catle ever shown in A slight unevena3 possible. shape Utah county. ness or variation from the ideal shape does not necessarily mean poor hatches, but if the uneveness of what, ever kind you may use is pry noticeable, better put such eggs aside A Modern Poultry Utility Plant in full operation. for market or table use. Youll profit by this if you are interested in Eggs with unusually thin or por. ous shells are undesirable for hatchPoultry. ing. The thin shelled egg is easily broken in turning. To many people it .will come as a surprise when they learn that dirty eggs should not be used. I speak If Your Tpwns community display equals those from experience, however, wjien I of other towns of the county. Do your bit now say that such is the case. Slightly to make it tbe best. soiled eggs may be used if they are first carefully cleaned by rubbing lightly with a damp cloth or sponge, If that will not clean them, they should be put aside for other uses The Beautiful display of Womens Work, Under no circumstances should eggs The thorbe washed thoroughly. The art exhibit and Industrial Art work. and hard rubbing will ough wetting natures protective surface destroy film, thus hastening evaporation "of 47 the contents and allowing harmful to penetrate the porous shell odors The beautiful and unique displays of individual All eggs in any one hatch should exhibitors. be as nearly uniform as possible in size, weight and thickness of shell. ir.n They should also be of approximately the same age and from the same variety of fowl. Thin Bhelled eggs it that you, Mr. Citizen of Utah county, do hatch more easily, as a rule, than White eggs thick shelled ones. your bit to make the 1929 county fair a success. more quickly than hatch usually Bring your family. Urge your neighbor to visit darker ones. Leghorn eggs will probthe fair. ably hatch 24 hours sooner than those from Plymouth Rocks. It will Admission: therfore, be easy to see why uniAdults 25c formity in all the ways just mentioned is desirable whenever pract-cablChildren under If this rule is followed, prac14 years 10c tically all eggs will hatch at or very near the same time, thus far greater tmm 6 chance for complete success than j Til-so- roosters. h Another important factor that great ly influences the chances for successful incubation is the relative freshness of eggs. .Those from 1 to 4 or 6 days old show Utjle difference as to hat ;hing quality, 'but after that they deteriorate rapidly. This is easily explained. A fresh egg contains just enough water to develop the embryo while it is gradually developing into a chick. As an egg shell is porous,' the water will evaporate more or less n . rapidly, the exact degree Theodor Von Eltz, William Powell, Richard Arlen and Clive Brook in a scene from the Paramount Picture The Four Feathers depending COMES TO FOUR FEATHERS on the temperature and relative humidity of the place in which the eggs are kept. After that natural internal moisture has passed out of the shell, there is no way on earth of restoring it in such a way that it can contribute to the building up of bone, muscle or nerve tissues in the baby chick. Exactly how long eggs may be safely held before their hatching qualities v PROVO PARAMOUNT Four ' Paramounts steep incline into water. One after well known novel, and in many ways the other. It is a gripping scene, reminiscent of the glorious adventure perhaps the most effective Cooper and and stirring romance so effectively Schoedsack, have ever brought to the dramatized a few years ago in Beau screen. And when one remembers Geste, will be shown at the Para, te round up of the wild elephant herd are seriously affected cannot be arbi- mount Theatre for a run of three days in Chang, an idea may be obtained trarily stated. It is worthy of note, beginning Tuesday. September 10 'of the tremendous effect created dur however, that many commercial hatch and featuring a particularly popular ing the desperate charge of these eries invariably show a very high per cast headed by Richard Arlen, from the Clive, colossal monsters centage of eggs successfully hatched William Powell, Fay Wray and spreading fire. in each setting, and they are oTten set George Fawcett. Richard Arlen, the of when from 10 to 12 days old. The tempo of Four Feathers, is Wings and last seen in support of typicl of imaginative, romantic youth; George Bancroft in Thunderbolt, (Copyrighted, 1929 beautiful in ts fath, courageous in its plays the role of Harry Faversham, L. V. Dr. D. LeGear, by s.) Its appeal is the young boy who sets out to prove unswerving purpose. human ann completely understandable to those he loves that he is not a Mrs Earl Page was hostess at a In brief it ran be said that it is de- coward. Clive Brook, William Bridge Luncheon last Friday given adventure in the theatre of ell and Theodore von Elts, are cast as in honor of. Miss Jennie Reece who which all too little is seen in these the three friends who send him the leaves soon for Tennessee specdays so addicted to stark realism. white feathers. Fay Wray, the beauial educational work . Those present The background of this picture, for tiful leading lady of The Legion of included, Mrs Ray Moosen, Miss Kath- the most part, was actually photo- - the Condemneed, and The Weding ryn Douglass, Mrs Stanley Wilson. graphed in the wilderness of the Sudan March. portrays the role of Faver. Mrs Eugene Hillman, Mrs C. H. Dixon by Cooper and Schoedsack, the mak- - shams sweetheart. Ail these players Mrs Don Barney of Ogden, Miss An- ers of Chang and Grass. There give superb performances, seeming na Page, the hostess and honor guest are many beautiful and eyefilling particularly well suited to the type shotaV' the like of which are seldom characters they protray. Others in if ever, seen on- the screen. In par. the cast who do good work are Noah Mr and Mrs Ray Monsen and Mri there ls a forest fire- from Eerry, George Fawcett, Phillippe de ticlar and Mrs P. C. AVightman were Foun- Wlld animals try to escape Lacey and Noble Johnson, not to whlch the e tain Green visitors Saturday night for Hundreds of hippopotami rush thro- - get the hundreds of natives of the Lions Club Charter ugh the jungle, thundering over a African Sudan. ..... Feathers, wild-Broo- k, hero-aviat- j Pow-lightf- ul to-d- j - - j for-th- - list fr Eeeeemlcet f Trantpartmtlon SE-E- Remarkable er Vi WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 25, 26 27 velvet-lik- V flow of power which is char- e acteristic of the truly fine automobile! :: 9KCtt :: - that prove die Value of SE- E- ulieNew :: CHEVROLET SIX SE- E- The new Chevrolet Six is shattering every previous record of Chevrolet success not only because it provides the greatest value In Chevrolet history, but because it gives you more for the dollar than any other car in the world at or near its price! Facts tell the story! Modern features afford the proof! Read the adjoining column and you will know why over a MILLION careful buyers have chosen the Chevrolet Six in less than eight months. Then come in and get a ride In this sensational SE- E- :: Beautiful Fisher Bodies With their low, graceful, sweeping lines and smart silhouette, their ample room for passengers and their sparkling color combinations and rich upholsteries the new Fisher bodies on the Chevrolet Six represent one of Fishers greatest achievements. . . Outstanding Economy Six is an unusually economical car to operate. Not The new Chevrolet only does It deliver better than twenty m ties to the gallon of gasoline, but its oil economy is equal to, if not actually greater than, that of ita famous predecessor. four-cylind- er six-cylin- SE-E- automobile which actually in the price range of the four! tells The COACH SE- E- SE-E- Engine er Chevrolets remarkable engine impresses you most vividly by its sensationally smooth performance. At every speed you enjoy that silent, Tkc ROADSTXR. The PHAETON . . The COUPE Th Sport COUPE . . . . Th a SEDAN r."rY 525 525 595 645 675 595 The Imperial SEDAN The Sedan Delivery ZQE Thm 545 fLEA ChUwithCb'' Ml pricer f. e. h. factory, flint, :: Amazing Low Prices :: a quality car! tSQC 7J Esjias.Noo Ton (ihatrit Th I H Ton Remarkable Dependability In order to appreciate what outstanding value the Chevrolet Six represents, it is necessary to remember that it is built to the worlds highest standards. In design, in materials and in workmanship it is every inch Uichifn An achievement no less remarkable than the design and quality of the Chevrolet Six la the fact that it is sold at prices so amazingly low! Furthermore, Chevrolet delivered prices include the lowest financing and handling charges available. To SHULER MOTOR CO. PAYSON, UTAH e. A SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR |