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Show It, Friday, March THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH 1929 NOTICE TO CREDITORS ! 'o ;rtI PAYSON HIGH SCHOOL PRESENTS Thu old ituaco kouto tnado attractie, teood tootring oaluablt, bf and tko Vito UM wx4 in Ik interior. Yov oa do tin tam otitk four old kouto. A COMIdUE OPERA DONT pld think your old house It can be ... made attractive, comfortable at moderate cost. The increased value of your property will be much more than the expendi- - XtftUFIED lure required to mod emize your old home an investment that will be a source of lasting new-lookin- g, Tuneful Melodics. Humor, Special Costumes, New Scenery, enlarged Chorus and Orchestra, Dancing. Curtain 8:15 with the widest variety of American Stand ard Lumber enough '"1 to Yvonne UTAH Graduation - Wedding Party Birth We Have Them in Stock Mrs. C. E. Cloward Jr. entertained at a charmingly arranged dinner party at her home Monday evening. Easter suggestions wene used with Easter baster baskets centering each table. Cards were placed for Mr. and Mrs. M. Burdick, Mr. and Mrs. Sid Coray, Mr. and Mrs. Laban Harding, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. McMullin, Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Powell, Mr. and Mrs. C. 0. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Amos, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Mortensen, Mr. Mrs. and Mrs Will McClellan, A. R. Wilson and Mrs. Clara Page. Progressive Rook was the diversion and prizes were awarded to Mr. and Mr3. Powell, Mr. McMullin and Mrs. Wilson. J. Mortensen, who is working in Nevada, visited here for a short Mrs. Martha Rasmussen, Mr. and time with his family this week. Mrs. W. A. Rasmussen and daughter Carol of Fillmore were the guests of Mrs. M. Burdick was in Salt Lake Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Mountford the during the week end. forepart of this week. M. The TOWN DOCTOR (The Doctor of Towns) 7SAYS Is there anyone who thinks that it isnt a good idea to make the town in which he lives just a little more attractive, a little more interesting, a little bit larger, and a little bit better, But, if a man came into your town a stranger and said to any twenty people on the street, or in the stores, "This look like a pretty good town here, what percentage of the replies do you suppose would be for the town ? If he were to put the question to you, what would you say? If you were working in a store and a customer said, This looks like a Frederic Madelon - Marquis de Houter his nephew Nannette Edmond son Rodrique, Baptiste, Roy Wightman, Reporello Zingara : a village Rene : Emilie Jacques Yvette Marcel Susanne Pierre Parthenay Paulino Santo Scene: (PUBLISHER) DEPARTMENT OF TIIE INTERIOR, U. S. LAND OFFICE at Salt Lake City, Utah, : Henri Hilaire Mme. Zenobie ' NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Erma Hansen Comtesse de Martigny Eileen Page her sister, also known as La Gitana Willie Spainhower Due dAntin Althea Hill his daughter Heloise PHONE 137 Mills. h CAST OF CHARACTERS Chase Lumber and Coal Co. "American Standard Lumber from America's Best flflft ADVENTURE fill every modemi. ing need. PAYSON I BEAUTY, our yard is stocked 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 ALVIRA V. A. DIXON, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers atttached to the undersigned administrator at his residence in !i Benjamin, Utah, on or before the ! bth day of May, 1929. Ill ROY SELMAN, ill Administrator of the Estate of Alviva V. A, Dixon, Deceased. a B. W. McMULLIN, Attorney for the Administrator, Payson, Utah bn First publication March 2. 1929 Last publication March 22, 1929 PAYSON JUNIOR HIGH AUDITORIUM satisfaction. Call at our offices or better yet, we will call upon you and talk over the things you want to do. We can help and advise you with your plana . . . V'ttNTUfUU NOTICE FRIDAY and SATURDAY MARCH 22 - 23 House New at Moderate Cost Make your IN TIIE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH. In the blatter of the Estate of MARGARET J. S. HUISH, Deceased Creditors will present claims with vouchers atttached to the undersigned administrator at his residence in Benjamin, Utah, on or before the 3th dav of May, 1929. ROY SELMAN, Administrator of the Estate of Margaret J. S. Iluish, Deceased. R. IV. McMULLIN, Attorney for the Administrator, Payson, Utah First publication March 2. 1929 Last publication March 22, 1929 - Vernon Finlayson Byron Gale Viola Pearl Spurrier February innkeeper her daughter Opal Schacrrcr of Mme, Zenobie highwayman Clyde Snow Jean, highwaymen friends of Edmond Howard Stevens, Howard Shuler Dean Wightman Gypsy Chief Neva Pickering a Gypsy girl Vcrl Patten youth in love with Nannette ' George Starke village boy Lenore Miles a village maid Clark Elmer servant Iris Garner servant at the inn crier notary-tow- n Henry Ewell a peddler Irving Schacrrer Charles Wictzcl bear Reporellos NE, Register. First publication February, 22, 1929 Last publication March 22, 1929 Flucrs, Northern France. FOR SALE: Good 5 acre pasture. Close in. Inquire of John J. Daniels. Payson, Utah. 4tpd. Early Eighteenth Century. Act I Afternoon Act II The Same Evening. Act III The Next Morning. Reserved Seats 75c at Schramm-Johnso- n Drugs Admission 10c Matinee Friday 3:00 P. M. for school children, Maurine Hinckley, Staging ft Dancing. C. O. Nelson, Director. Dewey McKell, Stage Manager. store is this, with, slow, dead, terrible," or any of those unprintable descriptions that you and I and everyone have heard people say about their town, you would be classed as a blithering idiot, mutton-heade- d numbskull, and a loony nincompoop and who wants to be that? Maybe you have never thought of it that way. Well, one cant think of everything, but here is something every resident of every city must think about sooner or later, and for your own personal betterment it had better be sooner: Start thinking about your oommunity as a business look at it. just aa if it were a store business a business of which you are a part. Put out of your head the old fashioned idea of your town being something that just happened somethiny that you cant yet ahold of an intanyible thing so big that whatever you do as an individual wont make any difference one way or another. You dont have to be mayor, president of a civic club, head of a bank or a store to be important; your vote counts just as much as that of any banker, dortor, lawyer, merchant, or city official, and its the attitude you take toward your community the things yon do for or against it that makes it alive or dead, good or bad, forging ahead or standing still. When industry considers yaur town, it is the people they want to know about, not just the few shining lights the big boys alone and hafe their men study. Itsyou they feel out, often without your knowing it, and on you, your attitude, how you look at, act toward, and talk aboutt your community, depends on whether their report is faforable for a new factory, distributing point, headquarters for representatives, or for whatever they are considering your town. As ,a citizen you are a salesperson for your community the same as a clerk is a salesperson of a store; the merchants, bankers and professional people are the sam as department heads of a store, and the policemn of your community ar th floorwalkers. Its always up to the sales force of any business. Your town is a business your business and just the same its up to you. Reproduction prohibited in whole or in part is This Town Doctor Article, one of a series of fifty-tw- o published by The Payson Chronicle in cooperation with the Payson Copyright, 1929, A. D. Stone. Lions Club. Note: These articles are written by The Town Doctor, without prejudice or malice and are impersonal. They treat each subject as applied In general not to a particular town. Opinions favorable or otherwise on subjects covered are solicited and may he addressed to the paper in which these articles appear, or to The Town Doctor, Suite 350, iMcCormick Building, Chicago, Illinois. HOW TO CARE FOR YOUR BATTERIES If an automobile battery should go dry in the Gobi Desert, said Mr. Harry Tipton, the local Exide Dealer, the motorist would be in for a little stilled water for the expeditions battery equipment, demonstrated the resourcefulness of Dr. Andrews motor transport chief. But the members of this expedition had to be resourceful. Many thousands of miles from civilization, they were forced to depend entirely upon themselves as they met all extremes of temperature and conditions. One doesnt associate deserts with o weather but Mr. Young, in his letter, refers to temperatures varying from 40 degrees below zero to 120 degrees above in which his Exides have always responded. In terrific blizzards, mud snow and rain, they have hever failed to act. Naturally, we are proud of this fine record made by Exide and also value the warm letter of appreciation we received from Dr. Roy Chapman Andrews, himself, which reads in part: I wish to say that we have used these batteries for a long time an the Expeditions and have found them to be perfectly splendid. Of course, continued Mr. Ilarry Tipton, Mr. Young deserves credit for I the care he gave his batteries. am sorry to say that many motorists, located around the corner from a battery service station, do not give their work and inconvenience. He could not drive his car into a nearby battery service etation, like the average American motorist. He would have to work either his ingenuity or the crank. When Roy Champman Andrews, drove the famous . scientist-explorhis fleet of trucks into the wilds of Asias great Gobi Desert, in search of the cradle of mankind, he did not have a service station to call upon for battery service.. Instead, he had to depend upon tthe ingenuty of his chief of motor transport, J. McKenzie Young Mr. Young, in a letter to the Exide factory at Philadelphia, describes the ingenious device with which he distilled his water for the Exide batteries used on his trucks and radio set. From an old oil can, a length of copper tubing, such as is used for gas lines in automobiles, and a painters gasoline torch, he made a water still. The tubing furnished the coil and the torch supplied the heat. Although simple, the improvised apparatus, which furnished enough di batteries as good care a3 Mr. Young. .s5 5" t. 1 V h i sub-zer- er n, NWNE. E2SE, Time: Admission 50c Reserved Seats on Sale Mar- Santa-qui- Utah, who, on March 8, 1920, made stock raising homestead entry. No. 025553, for SW14 Sec. 4, SWj Sec. 5, SE14, Section 8, TownNWjqJ, Sec. 9, ship 10 South. Range 1 East, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice cf intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Edwin Okelberry, Notary Public, at Goshen, Utah, on the 3th day of April 1929, Claimant names 83 witnesses: B. M. Thomas, of Santaquin, Utah, W. S. Thomas, Rex White & Donald B. White of Goshen, Utah. Eli F. Taylor (The Golden Lamb) des that garet Eurraston llartvigsen, of SYNOPSIS Court Yard of the Inn L'Agneau dOr" Village of Champs 4, 1929 NOTICE is hereby given Youll Smile Too, When You Have Us Put In Your COAL ' .. 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 10 for this better coal service. MUTUAL and STANDARD COAL PAYSON ICS & CCAL COMPANY |