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Show lit. i'iaiBrnaiiMrgtfi 4 h y4$ IfT r. i. iffni.ru I V'. jiiLjiLiiLjliiilii'JM aifmiir iiriirn THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH I0 FBIDAY, AN AUTOMOBILE TIRE TESTERS LIFE IS NO SINECURE is the Miles of Conveyors in Ford Plant j JULY A- 11, 1930 SUMMER COMFORT Thats what the group of Miller tire testers, who took part in a gruel. ling test which covered a total of more than 3,000,000 tire miles, have Are you going to suffer weary, sleepconcluded. They averaged fifty miles less nights during the forthcoming hot mouths of July and August, or are y an hour and 329 miles each per you going to he one of the fortunate weekafter day and week after few who even though they do not driving over hot southern roads in have a summer cottage alongside a hours two shifts of six and lake, will enjoy comfort and SECEETREVEALEOj unsurpassable day-da- UAHAMTIEffi one-hal- f cooling each. refreshing sleep though the night be But they were forced to go through torrid and sultry? queries the Holland this performance under a plan to test Institute of Thermology. Cool, comfortable sleeping rooms tjhe new (MieiJ Geaed-ti-the-Roof weather conditions are tire, says Mr. Paul Davis, head of regardless no longer an Idle wish of those who the Seagull Service Station. have homes of their own equipped The test required a total of sev- with what heating and ventilating eneral months, despite the high aver- gineers have styled age speed and the number of miles systems. These are nothing more or traveled aily, because on the results less than the latest type warm atr of this test Milller hoped to base the heating systems that fimctlon in such as to render owners year nation-wid- e merchandising campaign a manner and year 'round comfort. service 'round calnow being carried on. The plan Iu summer they produce Indoor comd led for running the fort by means of an electrically opthe tire against leading comerated air propeller unit Installed la petitive makes of tires of the same the top of the furnace Jacket In op-standard class until one or both wore era tlon, the effect of this fan is to proout. More than 3,000,000 tire miles duce a definite yet draftless current of air that circulates through tha were covered by the testers. Th actual road tests, under these trying conditions, which included the and driving of tires under-inflate- d added proof to brought that which had been established in the Miller factory tests. Te result tire guar was the antee. Through magazine and newspaper advertising, window displays, direct mail, billboards and other media, the company i3 broadcasting the gurantee that has CREATED a Sensation ad Geared-to-the-Ro&- Thla picture shows two types of conveyors in use in the Rouge Plant of the Ford Motor Company. ENDLESS chain conveyor, sembly lino a moving track on which three and a half to four miles cars in the process of assembly wem long, s&ld to be the longest in to the workmen Instead of the work the world, has Just been completed at men carrying parts to the car. The the Rouge Plant of the Fofd Motor assembly line, perfected la many ways Company at Dearborn, Michigan. On Is now used by automobile manufac It parta ot Ford cars in the process turers generally. The value of the conveyor In redut of manufacture are transported from one building to another and completed lng physical labor. In saving time, in parta are carried direct to railroad preserving system and in cutting cosU soon became apparent and its use was cara for shipment to branch assembly extended to other purposos about the plants. The conveyor, which carries Its plant. Now there are literally miles ot cargo on suspended hooks, has a dally conveyors of various types In the Ford capacity for 300,000 parts weighing plant. Some of them carry parts frotr ever 2,000,000 pounds. It supplants one building to another and are care freight cars and trucks which have fully synchronized so that the partr been used for the transfer of many arrive at precisely the right momen' parta from one point to another in the and in the exact spot where they an needed. Others transport red hot In Ford plant. This longest conveyor of them all is gots of steel weighing nearly a ton a development of the Ford policy that each. Still others move outgoing ship nothing should be done by manual ments. labor that could better be done by If It were not for the conveyors, ac machine. cording to officials of the Ford Com In the early days of hla manufacturpany, mass production would not be ing career, Mr. Ford devised the as- - possible on Its present scale. AN w. GUARANTEE THIS MILLER GEARED-TO-TRE-ROA- D TIRE TO OUTWEAR ANY OTHER TIRE OF EQUAL PRICE WHEN RUN UNDER THE SAME CONDITIONS. Liberal Allowance On Your Old Tires over-loade- Geared-to-the-Roa- FOR SALE OR RENT: 3 Room house and lot. Mrs. Millie Bingham residence on Utah Avenue, Payson, Utah. Inquire of Mrs. G. F. Tilson, Phone 85 W. Payson. Utah. Fool-Pro- of Garden and Domestic Insecticides Should Be Securely Locked Up. Summer Care ot Heating Plant Explained by Smoke Official This Is the guarantee Miller authorizes us to extend to local tire buyers. Come In and let ns explain the tests that made this remarkable guarantee possible. Seagull Service Station Phone 49 Payson, Utah Authorized Dealer f: ted. 12 Brin Creamery your Cream to the Mutual Station now located at 15 West Utah Avenue, Payson, Utah. SALESMAN WANTED: Inquiry of Benj. H. Knud sen, Provo, Utah, FOR SALE Tam, Harness, Wagon, Mower and Registered Yearling Bull. Thomas N. Terry, Payson, Utah 2tp. Lawn Mowers sharpened so they cut as good as new. Stove parts furnished to fit any stove. Leave orders at Coombs Electric Shop, South Main Payson, Utah. tf. Highest Market Prices Paid for Butterfat when hrought to the Mutual Creamery Station, 35 West Utah Avenue, Payson, Utah. Chicago. A thorough going over of the home heating plant in prepara- tlon for the next beating season and the use of u smokeless fuel, are urged by Frank A. Chambers, chief city smoke Inspector, Id bis instructions Issued to householders for the care of their home heating plants during the warm months. Smoke, Mr. Chambers pointed out. Is a serious health hazard. IJe said neglect of heating plants helps to pro duce more smoke. His instructions for the care of heating pluurs in t lie summer are: See that the ash pit, grates, tubes and all gas passages are clean. Clean thoroughly the smoke pipe connecting the heating plant and chimney noun out the chimney. This will Improve the draft as well as prevent smoke from backing out of the heating plant Into the basement, which usually causes the living rooms ubove to nil with smoke. Points Out Fire Hazard. "The smoke pipe or breeching should be examined thoroughly for leaks, and If rusted badly or leaking should be repaired or a new one Installed. Defective flues often cause tires where the plaster ubove falls olt, exposing woodwork to the flame coming through cracks Id the pipe or masonry. Examine the grates and see If any sections are burned out Burned out grates cause holes In the tire, rear. II lng In a loss of heat and a fuel waste See that grates shake properly and return to a level position. Adjust damper so that It opens full and close properly. Fill all cracks with flreprot cement or stove putty. Air teakag causes the fire to draw poorly and Increases the fuel consumption. See that all out doors on the chimney, la boiler or furnace, close air tight For Care of Heating Plant. If the basement or boiler room Is damp during the summer cover the outside surfaces with a coat of preservative point or a mineral oil that will prevent rusting." Tests have shown, according to the Holland Institute of Thermology, Holland, Mich., that a quarter Inch of soot, a 'nonconductor of heat, on the heating surface, requires 50 per cent more coal than Is necessary If the boiler surfaces are clean. The most efficient means yet found for cleaning the heating plant and chimney Is a huge vacuum cleaner which comes mounted on an auto truck and In which a motor driven fan provides powerful suction. This machine, operated on the same principle as the household vacuum cleaner, sucks the dirt and soot out of the most remote and Inaccessible parts of both heatlDg plant and chimney, drawing the soot and dust Into an enormous dustproof bag. No dust Is raised In the house und there Is no aftermath of grimy dirt iu the basement or on the walks or lawns. The additional advantage Is that it usually includes a thorough inspection service which reveals existing defects In chimney and heating plant Itself, and enables repairs to b made during the summer months. Place for All Poisons drive In e d throughout the country (Phon or for on JppraUal) d, by th United State of Agriculture ) Department Poisons such as garden and domestic insecticides, today almost a household necessity, should be securely locked up or carefully stoied beyond the reach of children," says Dr. I. Ik Dunbar, assistant chief of the food, drug, and Insecticide administration, United States Department of Agriculture. A package of poison on the puntry shelf is as dangerous as a loaded gun. Some one conies along who doesnt know the package contains poison that the gun is loaded and the result Like preis injury or even death. cautions are essential In food stores, restaurants, and food factories." Keep Poieon Locked Up. This warning to housewives to keep poison locked away is made by the food, drug, and Insecticide administration following a recent case of accidental poisoning in which holiday fruit cakes were the loaded guns. Nine cakes, baked by a woman living nenr Washington, D. C., were sold to neighbors and friends, and one to an une known sales agent. The first to eat of one of the poisoned cakes wag a doctor who, recognizing the symptoms of poisoning, called on the administration to analyze the cake. Chemists soon determined that the sample contained arsenic poison, and an inspector was dispatched to round p the cakes. Eight were readily located and recovered from neighbors of the cake baker, but the ninth, the inspector learned, had been shipped to Canada. The Canadian family was finally reached and warned of the danger by long distance telephone. Fortunately the package had not been pened. Quick work on the part of the administration officials, no doubt, prevented serious illness and possibly death in n(ne homes- house-to-hous- ' ! ORDER FROM US The Operation of the Unit in Heating Plants of the Vapor-Ai- r Type Eliminates the 8ultry, Stuffy Atmosphere That Characterizes Bedrooms on Hot Nights. house by way of the heat ducts and cold air returns. This gentle air motion suffices to carry away bodily heat and moisture, and the sensibility of comfort thu3 produced Is equivalent to a drop In temperature of 15 to 20 degrees, though in actuality the decrease in temperature is but two or three degrees. The comfort factor Is further augmented by the elimination of pockets of stagnant air so oppressive and During stifling In muggy weather. the heating season, the function of the air propeller unit is to uniformly distribute warmed air throughout the house. In this respect It Is highly efficient, as it virtually eliminates the wide differences in temperatures at ceiling and floor levels so generally characteristic of artificially heated homes. Though standard equipment with warm-ai- r systems of the humidifying or vapor-ai- r type, the design and construction of the air propeller units is such that they may be installed io most types of warm-ai- r heating systems now in use. the Corn and Barley Right for Hogs on Alfalfa Corn and barley are the two best grains to be fed to pigs on alfalfa pasture though some oats or some mill feed can also be used to good advantage. If It Is intended to make the growing pigs on alfalfa pasture ready for market at the earliest possible date, they can he fed to very good advantage by putting corn or barley and oats or middlings nnd tankage each In separate compartments of a and be allowed to eat as much as they care for each of the feeds, A good slop can be made by first making a dry mixture of 50 per cent ground corn or ground barley, 40 per cent middlings or reddog flour, and 10 per cent tankage, then mak-ln- g this Into a swill by mixing It with skim milk, buttermilk, or water. It should not be necessary, however, to feed any swill to pigs receiving while on algrain from a falfa pasture, unless one Is desirous of getting the most rapid gains possl--blrather than the most economical gains. self-feed- self-feed- THE PAYSON CHRONICLE NOW is the time to make those improvements that you have been thinking about LOOK your screens over and see that they are ready for Fly time. We can repair them for you or sell you the material. A little Paint used now will more than pay for its self in protection to your property. -- S S COMPLETE LINE OF BAKERY PRODUCTS LUNCHEON AND PICNIC SUPPLIES 5 2 We cater to all social functions and try to merit the good will of the community we serve. I S City Bakery Payson BERT TAYLOR, Mgr. inniiiiHiiisiHiiaiMimifiiiaiiiiainaiBHiiiii I g S CHASE LUMBER & COAL CO. PHONE 127 PAYSON, UTAH Du Pont Raints And Varnishes IsaiaiiKiiiEssssiiiiiassBEissiaiaxzixsassBBaiOTiiiaiiisisizsiaaassiBSiiBiiiiBBRiiiaBiisssssaiiiiKssssssBss e, j j' j |