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Show FRIDAY, APRIL THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON. UTAH tt I X 4 4 8 with the one-ha- r.v-- A 'v CASE HAltE Self-Dum-p THE LAST WORD in hay a light sulky rake of extra that picks the hue construction strong free of dust and it clean anl keeps up dirt. Specially curbed spring teeth carry HERES rather than drag the hay, and retarder teeth prevent rolling. The unusually sturdy wheels are Case-mad- e. Spokes are Middy staggered and riveted on both sides of rims and hubs. Channel steel tires protect rivet heads from wear and give extra rigidity and strength. All wearing parts are adjustable to take up wear. Dump rods reversible end for end and right for left giving! times the usual wear. Wheels easily changed from one side to the other and axles are reversible end for end. All this to give the Case rake extra long life. Come in soon and see it ask for interesting booklet. Headquarters for the best in farm implements. 18-- with amazing Flows Disk Hamncs Cultivator Crain Drills Crain Binders ease Corn Binders Rakes J Hay Loaders Corn and Cotton run ur k Full tins note include E-- It OSBORNE three-quarter- lf brushes on Trot tort Thrasher 9 Combines Hay Balers Silo Filters Payson, Utah J s Dfco TIPTON IMPLEMENT CO. Phone 13 seven-eighth- A".V? ; v is a date which an innumber of Americans are creasing obsurving as a day for honoring one of the great men of the nation. For it is the birthday of Thomas Jefferson, third President of the United States. Jefferson was not only a great President but he was also one of the most versatde men of his time. For s this Virginian was a writer, an indiameter. ventor, a scientist, an architect and llayers shall knuckle down on all shots. a patron of agricultural methods far Hunching shall not be permitted on any shots and where called by rein advance of his time, feree, the shot shall be played over. The referees decision shall govern in all cases of disagreement and shall icle appears an illustrated feature art-Ithis issue of the Payson Chron- be final. icle by Elmo Scott Watson which tells The Game of some of Jeffersons masy interests RINGER Be sure to read and achievements. Flay will be by group of six, who lag or pink for turns. Groups will lag Jeffersons Birthday in this issue. for a line marked on the ground from a distance of ten feet for the order of their turns in each game. Flayers tossing taw nearest the line gets first choice as to his turn, next gets second choice, etc. Mrs. James Harper spent the past The Ring shall be ten feet in diameter, and each player shall lay in two ten days at Richfield visiting with ducks on a cross line scratched in the center of the ring, ducks to be placed her son Rex and family. three inches apart on each cioss line. Starting the game each player in turn knuckles down on the ring line and shoots by lofting if possible to knock one or more of the ducks out of the ring, or to hit the shooter of a preceding player, if it happens to be in the ring. A player when shooting from outside of the ring must always knuckle clown from ring line. Ducks knocked out of the ring are kept by the player knocking them ont. Ducks knocked only part way out of the ring will be left w'here they come to rest and the player following will be permitted to shoot at them. A player whose taw goes outside the ring, at the same time he has been successful in shooting a duck out, will continue shooting from the ring line and is permitted to tal e roundsters. if after a miss the shooter comes to rest inside the ring it must be left there until the players next turn. If the shooter on a miss travels outside the ring, the player picks it up until his next turn, and may take roundstarfe on the ring at his next turn. A duck coming to rest exactly on ring line shall be considered as having been knocked out, but a duck w'ith its center resting on the ground inside the ring is considered still in the ring. A player hitting the shooter of opponent left inside the ring on a preceding miss, and knocking the opponents shooter outside the ring, is entitled to pick up one duck for the hit. If he hits the opponent's shooter out of the ring, that kills the opponent, and puts him out of the game, and entitles the shooting player to all the ducks that the opponent has won in the game. ! jAitetf hitting Yn opponent and taking a duck for the shot, or after knocking a duck out of the ring, or after knocking an opponents shooter out of the ring, a player shoots from where his shooter, comes to rest, providing his shooter does not go outside the circle, if shooter goes outside of circle Leading authorities on Home Deche will continue play by shooting from ring line oration say: Use colorful Duco freely Should opponent knock more than one duck or opponents shooter out of in every room. You will find Duco the mm-Mia In use. few ring on a single shot he shall be entitled to all marbles going outside of to easy delightfully the ring. its dry! Come in and let us show When a marble is knocked from line in center of ring and comes to rest you the new color schemes. near the rirg llrfe (but inside the ciiclc) it is not necessary that the marble DUCO . , . dries quickly has to tiavel the entire length of ring, when hit by a player following. It can be shot from ring at any angle but players must kunekle down on ring . . . easy to use line. A scorer must keep accurate count of all marbles each player scores, and & the player having the largest number after all marbles are out of the ring 127 w ill be declared winner of that game. The player who first wins three gfmes will be the winner of that group, and the other players are eliminated from the contest. In ease one of the players should be killed during the course of the game this does not eliminate him from the contest, but only from the game in This contest will be conducted in fohr distinct units, one for Taylor School, one for Peteetneet School, one for Central School, and one for Junior High April gb 'Tr;i: -- ' LOOK! ORIND DETOUR Why Charles Carroll Added Of Carrollton According to one of our most cherished legends, Charles Curroll added of Carrollton to his signature on the Declaration of Independence so that Klug George III would have no difficulty In determining which Charles Carroll he was. It Is said that after Carroll had stepped up and signed the document one of Ids colleagues jestingly reminded him that there were others of the same nume in Maryland and that therefore he was taking no risk In signing, whereupon he wrote "of Carrollton after his name. The legend Is without historical basis. In 1765 Carroll returned from Europe, where he had been educated, and took possession of Currollton, a large family estate In Frederick county. It was at this time that he began to sign his name Charles Carroll of Carrollton to distinguish himself from his father, who was known as Charles Carroll of Annapolis. Many of Carroll's letters written in 1765 and the years following are still preserved. They contain the signature Charles Carroll of It Is probable that he would use the same form on the Declaration of Independence that he had been using on letters and other documents for more than ten years. Pathfinder Magazine. Car-rellto- I I t es Chase Lumber Coal Company Phone Payson, Utah CONFERENCE Excursion Rates via SALT LAKE UTAH R. R. ONE CENT PER MILE. minimum fare 50 cents, on sale April 3rd to 7th, inch; return limited to date of sale only. April 3rd to 7th, inch; return ONE FARE AND for round trip, on sale limit April 9th. MEEK-EN- EXCURSION D RATES on sale April 5th after 2:30 p. m., April 6th and 7th; return limit April 8th. 9e00 a. m. leaves Salt Lake for Arrives Salt Lake Returning and intermediate points at 9:30 p. m. For Detailed Information Ask Agents. RIDE THE BIG RED CARS1 Youll Smile Too, When COAL Graduation Wedding You will smile for several reasons. The bill will be less. The quality of the coal better. The promptness with which we handle your order, the care with which we deliver will please you. Phone 1 0 for this better coal service. Games will be played on the .respective schoolgrounds during the week of April 8 to April 12, with the finish being held on April 12. Teacher shall act as judges of contests. An extra good pocket knife will be awarded to the marble champion of each school by Commander James Clove of Payson Post No. 48 of the American Legion. Louis Bates, Adjutant. AMERICAN WOMEN SUFFER FROM SLOW SMOTHERING Women In American homes me disnlr heating system changes the air In criminated against In the healthful each room of the house from one to ness ano comfort of the air they have one and a half times an hour. to breathe, ns compared with their The latest development of this type of equipment is children, declares the Holland Int! by tute of Thermology of Uollano, Mich. which the air Is moved by a median "The housekeeper In the average leal propeller Instead of gravity. This dwelling Is subjected to a process of results, according to tests conducted slow smothering comparable to slow by the Holland engineers in with the University of Michigan. starvation, and the result Is Infinite suffering from headache, strained In a complete change of air from four to six times an hour. nerves, lack of 'pep and general las situde. Suppose the housewife Is confined Supporting their contention that to her kitchen, which Is 10 by 10 feet most women are the In dimension with an eight-foo- t cellg ing. The engineers of the Insystem, if stitute point out that the average It works at an average of five nlr adult takes Into his or her system changes an hour, supplies 4,000 cubic about four pounds of food and the same feet of freshened air duramount of water, but 27 pounds of nlr, ing Hint time. This Is more than twice dally. Theres nothing about the the 1,800 cubic feet required to give respiratory system as compared with her the same amount that the law as the digestive tract, the engineers point stires her children In school." out, which makes good air less vital Is a recognized prln to health and comfort than good food ciple in the ventilation of theaters, and water. schools and auditoriums. It works Many state laws require that 30 just like circulation In the body, blood cubic feet of air per minute per pupil being pumped to the lungs and there be supplied in schools, and present-dapurified by oxidation before being dis ventilating standards dictate the same tributed to the rest of the body. Just for theaters, hotels and so, air In the living rooms of a home even ninny factories. To meet these heated by the system I drawn through cold air returns to standards, ventilating systems are In stalled which completely change the the furnace, where it Is purified by the air In end part of the building from Intense heat Inside the casiug, and 5 to 30 tines an hour. then Is through the home. But In the average home the only The reason why Is so Important to health, comfort and the supply of fresh air comes from leakage around doors and windows. The beauty of the skin Is that the normal owner of a small house cant be exbody heat is 0S.6 degr ees. When more heat than that is generated, It must pected to Install expensive ventilating equipment. Yet It Is possible, without be passed off to the air. If the air is tills expense, to Improve the quality moving, it carries away the excess of air In the home beyond eouvarison body heat quickly enough to keep the with Its usual condition. person from developing a fever or feelTests conducted at the en.iheerlng and oppressed. Also, It ing dopey experiment station of the University evaporates the body moisture so rapidof Illinois have shown, the thermolo-gistly ns to prevent the perspiration point out, that the modern warm tfnlch Is one sign of excessive body heat super-circulatio- Party Birth We Have Them in Stock Motors I., tue source of all the color schemes wnuh enhance every Geneial Moiois cm iiom the graceful Cheviolet to the buroiTial Cadillac. Hole coiuis are evolved sj stemat.cady, the same degice of efficiency prevailing tiiat is found in the sales and Nothing is manufacturing divisions. left to guess work, the studio, in charge of Captain il. LeUyard Towle, has a research without any Known duplicate m tue worid. Chief among functions is to keep the art staff constantly posted as to the iluctuating color preferesces in Ameiica and for stjlcs in colors, as in other things, are known to move in cycles. Constant check is bang made to ascertain which is the reigning coloir blend in the erclusive dress making salosS, in the kitchens and bathrooms of America, m the art galleries of the world. A complete libiary of art magazines and automobile trade journals is kept on f.le. bales figures from all uenerai Motors units are studied with referesc to color. Although the arti is might know with certainty that ilk color most popular on the Riviera winter was green, no restraint n placed on their While captain Towles originality. staff attempts to give tne public what it wants during a paiticular season, ,t is axiomatic that some new hue will be favored next season and General Motors artists in the opinion of Cap-tai- s Towle might just as well be sponsor to the new vogue as some leading Parisian gown maker. Original color ideas come from everywhere and everything. The biend-isg- s of a new car might derive from a Persian rug, a famous painting, the plumage ot a bird, the glint of a precious stone. When a new car is about to be narketed or a color change desired on an existing model, the artists busy themselves at their palettes, each achieving his idea of the proper color harony. When half a dozen or more suitable cobinations are finished the work is submitted to the manufacturer. Here are a group of artists so sales minded that they have forgotten the tradional artistic ego. They listen willingly, eagerly to the reactions of the shrewd salles manager and the practical production chief. At these conferences the jury system prevails, and thus from a group of possible combinations, the salesman, the artist and the production expert finally upon which is to be used. Towle credits pyroxylin Captain with the current color invasion of industry. By its use cars which formerly required days to paint can now be completed in a few hours. Now that beauty can be had without costly delay, industry in almost every line is busy coloring its products. People are growing to like colored objerts more and more each day,- Captain Towle says, and he points to colas ored clocks, pencils and bath-tub- s proof of his assertion. rAll of these signs indicate, he believes, that America is entering into an artistic renaissance comparable to the famous Italian renaissance with American industrialists acting as patrons as did the nobles of the other period. ci'ul i.i ee lung-starved,- super-circulatin- y super-circulatin- g n MUTUAL and STANDARD COAL PAYSON ICE & COAL COMPANY School. ONE-THIR- D SPECIAL TRAIN on April 6:15 a. m. 7th leaves Payson You Have Us Put In Your NEWS soscs, 4 Times the Weais Vfr READ! 1929 auhmg uie new Chevrolet as it graceiully through traffic or MARBLE TOURNAMENT, Conducted by Payson Post No. 48. presses, forwaid eagerly on some highAmerican Legion during the month of April for every BOY in Payson way, juu may have wutidertd how in Grade Schools and Junior High School. its various color blendings ate conceived, and why they appear in such Rules of the Game You might have guessed All games shall be fur Fair Marbles to be returned to owners after each piotusion. so aleit an oigasization as Genthat game. eral Moiois does nothing haphazardly, Flayers shall provide their own shooters and ducks far the games. Material that tm.ie inu.il be a special depait oi quality of marbles shall not be prescribed. nunt in charge of color creation. And .Shooters shall not be less that inch, nor more than if such was you..- guess you were right inch in diameter. Tile Ait ai.cl Cuior Division of Gen Ducks shall be not less than in or more than ienh PRESIDENT '.? i STOP! MOST VERSATILE rS CHEVROLET i THIS BIRTHDAY RECALLS G, s WHY Indoor Plants Should Be Carefully Watered The question of watering in maintaining healthy indoor plants can hardly be given too much attention for it actually involves the life of the plant. It cannot be expected that plains will thrive when they are alternately perched and drowned, with never an attempt made for a happy medium. Regard your plants much the same as the pets by observing regular watering periods and watch them carefully for signs of ailing. Habitual overwatering results In soggy, sour soil and rotting at the roots; while on the other hand, water meahs that the plant's circulatory system does not function properly and consequently the plant weakens and dies. One good method for testing the pots for moisture employed generally by greenhouse keepers is to tap on the pot. If there is a hollow sound the pot is dry. Water each pot thoroughly every time. If necessary submerge the pot in a tub of water until the entire ball of earth is completely saturated. |