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Show FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1929 THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON, UTAH STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULA TION, ETC, REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 21, STEAiY-RuarjViBr- q MWffJK around thats built the oil holes' Case-Osbor- smoother-runnin- ne Mower oil never more economical and downright g, dependable machine. Its extremely simple in constructionare eliminated. And its al! built to last working parts are oversize the crank pin bearing is of high cjuality non-essenti- als bronze unusually X 1 ? i and re- well-lubricat- ed placeable. Tlio cutter bar is unusually free from vibead bration due to a strongly and has a wide range of up and dawn movement to allow smooth, easy work on the roughest ground. Undcrslung construction reduces friction on cutting parts. Ily means of an eccentric bushing, the cutter bar can be kept in proper alignment. All these features mean fast, efficient cutting ud light draft. .Youll want to see this popular Mower come in any time. Our store !s headquarters for farm equipment try our service. Case-Osbor- ne X X T r X TIPTON IMPLEMENT CO. 5 t Phone 18-- Payson, Utah J X Full Bnetuno Include E-- B OIBORNE GRAND DETOUR Youll Smile Too, When You Have U Put In Your COAL You will smile for several reasons. Tb bill will be less. The quality of the coal better. Tbe 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 ICE & COAL FOR RENT: Furnished or unfurn- C. 0. Nielson, Mr. and Mrs. R. II. ished Rooms. Phone 39, Payson, Utah Clayton of Midvale, Mr. and Mrs. Ar-z-a C. Papge, Mr. and Mrs. Laban Mrs. John F. Olcson entertained Harding, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wilson, Mrs. Clara Page, and Mrs. A. R. twenty-fiv- e guests at a dinner party Saturday evening at her home lovely-nehome on South Main Street. Mrs. J. D. Gray was hostess at a Spring flowers were used to decorate series of two bridge parties last week. the rooms, sweet peas being used on On Friday afternoon her guests inthe tables. Covers were placed for cluded the members of the Senior Mr. and Mrs. E. II. Street, Mr. and Bridge Club with Mrs. W. C. McCorMrs. Lee R. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. A. mick, Mrs. E. E. Robinson, Mrs. Ray Monsen, Mrs. O. C. Nielson, Mrs. H. Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Sid Coray, .Mr. asd Mrs. Flint Dixon, Mr. and! Floyd Wilson, Mrs. Stanley Wilson, Mrs. R. W. McMullin, Mr. and Mrs Mrs. Wendell Erlandson, Mrs. T. E. Reece, Mrs. James Clove, Mrs. E, II. Street and Mrs. Eustace Mendenhall as special gues s. Mrs. Henry ErVISIT landson teceicd the club prize and Mrs. Mendenhall the guest favor. Saturday evening Mrs. Gray enterD. T. R. Co. tained at a Bridge dinner with cards placed for Mr. and Mrs. George Chase, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Earl, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. McCormick, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs Fearn Graf, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dixon Mr. and Mrs and Ray Stevens, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blair, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stevens, Mr. and Mrs. Bert NOW! Stevens, Mrs. Eustace Mendenhall, George F. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Ileu-- y Erlandson and J. D. Gray. DEPT. is a UP wonder on the hill Of The Payson Chronicle published weekly at Payson, Utah for April 1929. State of Utah ) )ss. ) County of Utah Before me, a notary Public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared James II. Mount-forwho, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the publisher of the Payson Chronicle and that thefollowing is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management etc, of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this . . YOUR HOME jVi WITH D. T. R. Co. CURTAINS YOU wont find many hills th-- .t you can't take "in high when you drive the new Ford. Watch, too, how it gets av.ay in trainc ns smooth speed and balance on the open road. Combine these features with riding comfort and you will know why so many people say "its a to-wi- t, Payson, Utah. 2. That owner is: James II. Mount-ford- , Payson, Utah. 3. That known bond holders mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: Western Newspaper Union, Salt Lake City, Utah, Guy Bolognese, Salt Lake City, Utah, Payson Exchange Savings Bank, Payson, Utah. 4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company but also, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee s acting, is given also; that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiants full knowledge and belief as to the circu mstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than affiant has no reason to believe that that of a bona fide owner; and this any other person, association, or corp oration has any interest direct or in direct in the said stock, bonds, or other securities as so stated by him. James II. Mountford, Publisher. Sworn to and subscribed before me 17 day of April 1929. R. W. McMullin, Notary Public. (SEAL) My Commission expires AND great car. form, 1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are: Publisher, Editor, Managing Editor, Business Managers, James II. Mount-for- Call or ulcphone for demonstration Tudor S'dru, Roadster, $450 PLntoo, Lusitiess Coupe, $'25 t;'n Sport Cot t (All prices . I ota o. It. Detroit. and 1 We must not have tin cans scattered around our yard. If we have the outside clean and do not have the inside clean our work is not done. If a home is clean and does not have any flowers or lawn the place is not beautiful. If you have a lawn and have trees grow mg on it rake the leaves off and Plant all kinds of trim the trees. flovve,rs and a lawn to make your home more beautiful.. Fourth Grade $525 Coupe, $550 ami ie seat, $550 t ta..i i, f )25 - ' ' jer fr iyie trie extra,) and delivery, L. tnpers WHETMAN MOTOR CO Payson, Utah PETEETNEET NOTES By Emma Jane Wilson of Miss Clay-son- s Third Grade. The Second Grade have made individual picture books in which they The fourth grade in Miss Hulls draw a picture every day, have been studying about loom They are learning a poem called her and the Amazon basin in geog Return. Miss Gardners third grade are mnk-- , ial by Ibis The children of the fourth and fifth ing health booklets in the shape of milk bottles. Each day they add one grade room are very anxious to know more health chore until the bottle is; 5' hat sort of class they are going to ihave Friday. It is a surprise class. filled. They are also studying about seeds. Can you tell us what it is. Each child wrote a story about some! The maible tournament will be using themselves as the veg- - ished this week and some boys ae etable. hoping they will be the ones to re- The fourth grade is learning a coive first prize, spring poem called Sir Robin. We ' The next game that wrill be played have been interested in watching the w ill be Horse-shoEvery room will about the grounds. We want be given a place to play their own to coax them to stay here with us. game. Each pupil has written an essay on The boys and girls in the Fifth our homes are working independently of beautand Grade keeping gardens iful. each other so that it wont be very IIow To Make Your City Beautiful long ur.td some will be through thier rub-Rohi- e. sea-gul- ls book. You must clean your lot, plant Panel work is being done in Geog w ork and two panels have been flowers, plant lawn, if you havent any, and pjant tnees. After yonir completed on Venezuela and the other lawn is grown you must wateg iton Columbia, and mow it. Water your flowers when they need it. When leaves get KEEPING HOMES CLEAN on your lawn rake them off. Take cans to the dump ground. Weed your Language Thelma Brandon garden. Plant a vegetable garden and water it. Clean house every spring We should keep our homes clean July 19, 1929. and fall when your house needs paint- because if we dont the mosquitos and Mrs. E. II. Street, Mrs. Fearn Gray, ing paint it. Keep your fence up. flys will bring diseass of many kinds. and Mrs. Floyd Wilson left Thursday morning for Logan as delegates from the ulCtus Club to attend the annual convention of Utah State Federation of Womens Clubs. Mrs. B. L. (The Doctor of Towns') Jensen, president of the first district SAYS' and Mrs. Dave Bigler, secretary, went The TOWN DOCTOR as district representatives. at Mrs, Dean Schaerrer entertained a charmingly arranged dinner party and social Saturday evening. NO TOWN EVER LOST A CUSTOMER FROM BEING TOO CLEAN Quick, wonderfully easy Ir.t7wi i i ZOU can transform cch familiar room with Duco. 1 k.'a Co? ca 'on cn fm I it a smoothly quickly. deli ttht to apply. And j uco clrus quie'kly . Come in ansi Lr is give you color suggestions. DUCO . . . . . dri-- . Ctisy $ .jiddh L Chase Lumber '& Coal Company Phone 127 Payson, Utah TAYLOR SCHOOL NOTES In connection with their study of inventors in history work, the fifth grade worked out a very splendid During art periods, the girls and boys, working in groups, did paper project. cutting of the inventors1 product. The and inventions following inventors were featured: Steamboat Robert Fulton Cotton Gm Eli Whitney Airplane Wright Bros. Electric Light Thomas Edison Stove and Clock Benj. Franklin Morse Telegraph Holland Submarine Count Zeppelin Dirigible McCormick Reaper Cable Field Bell and Gray Telephone Process for making rubGoodyear ber usable. Sholes Typewriter Howe Sewing Machines For language work, each group composed a playlet about the inventor. The entire room composed songs about the group of inventors. On one day, known as Fifth Grade Day, the room entertained the school with the original plays, songs, and paragraphs 'about the inventors. The fourth grade entertained the school with a vitaphone movie of the North Frigid Zone and the people who live there. Jack Simmons, Gordon Mendenhall and Florence Page did the talking for the movie." The third, fourth, and fifth grades made posters for the Humane Week Poster Contest. Leona Winnie and Arthur Clark made the best posters in the fifth grade, Dorothy Pulver and Florence Page in the fourth, and William Me Kell and Florence Manwill in the third grade. Mrs. Betts second' grade boys have been making bird houses, Max Bigler and Keith Johnson made the best houses and these are on exhibitioi:n the room now. In the marble playing try outs held in each room, the following were winners and will represent their rooms in the final contest to be held later Ned Loveless, Hugh In the week: Heath, and Max Coray. Fifth grade; Max Jones, Max Searles asd Merl Tanner; Fourth grade; Vern Davis, Glade Brimhall and Reed Hill, Third grade; Junior Perkins, Willis Jones, and Sylvan Tanner, Second grade; Jack Snow, LaRay Hancock, and Ross Montague, First grade. We are all anxiously waiting for the finals to see who will be tre winner for the school. Calvin Coolidge, addressing The Amciiean Federation of Arts and The American Association of Music, said, If clothes make the man, and certainly and poise, how much more is it good dress gives one a sense of true that clean, beautiful surroundings lend a moral tone to a community, And added, We are gradually getting rid of the oppressive ugliness of our communities. Oppressive ugliness: a good house next to a shack; a beautiful lawn vacant lot overgrown with weeds adjacent; Unsightly outbuildings; with highway entrances cluttered up with nondescript, claptrap, unpainted and otherwise obnoxious billboards; store signs of every sort, shape and descrip tion protruding at all sorts of angles from store buildings some high, some low all deroitory to any sense of attractiveness; poorly kept streets, open dumps, unpainted buildings, a dilapidated square, tin can alleys, visible pollu tion streams, and ugliest and most oppressive of all a citizenship with an inferiority complex one devoid of civic pride. Oppressive ugliness is that which makes residents of a community say, Oh, you wont mind that after youve lived here awhile; and the absence of which makes a stranger say, I like this place. Oppressive ugliness is that which creates atmosphere. IIow often have you gone into communities or mercantile establishments and given as a reason for not being sold on the place that there is no atmosphere? Atmosphere is that which invites or repus; atmosphere is the making or losing of sales, prestige and good will. Oppressive ugliness relates materially to appearance. How does your community look to a customer, Eighty percent of those things purchased sold through, or influenced by the eye. Therefore, how your town today-a- re LOST Brown Sample Case. Conor community looks is important. Harvester Co. International taining This is the season of the year when everything oppressive should be Literature. Return to the Chronicle ofannihilated. Nature is ready to help make things attractive. Start now to fice. Reward. help take your town or community to a good clean it up scrub it up dress it up and keep it up! LOST: between Payson and BenjaInclude yourself in the cleaning: get rid of the mental cobwebs that make min, 1 black leather traveling bag coneverything about your place of abode so commonplace. Rid yourself of the taining ladies and little girls clothing. superstition and prejudice that your town cannot be as modern, attractive Also letter addressed to Mrs. Ramona and interesting as ary city anywhere. Smith. Finder please return same to Like life, your town or community is what you and the rest of the peoMrs. F. M. Smith, Payson, Utah. ple 1 ke you work to make it. It is just as big as bttle as the people in it. Mrs. Winslow Cole of Delta and Copyright, 1929, A. D. Stone, Reproduction prohibited in whole or in Mrs. Dave Huish of Roosevelt have part. ben visiting here this week with their This Town Doctor Article is published bv 'The Payson Chronicle mother, Mrs. Emma Douglass who cooperation with the Payson Lions Club. has just returned from Salt Lake where she had spent six weeks. self-respe- j DRAPERY The New 3? brd 1912 BRIGHTEN d, HATS WIIAT they say about the rai a. and as a matter of fuot, its just about true. saw a ii house-cleanin- g: |