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Show WXXI, No. 40 PAYSoN, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, FRIDAY, OCTOBER :onomical - Odd 5, 19A4 Santaquin to Stage but TRUE Home Coming Fete A two day Home Coming celebration is to be staged at Santaquin October 12 and 13. Committees are using every effort to make the affair the mo.-- t impressive in the Hundreds of personal invitations are going out to former residents who will be special guests for the occasion. The general plans are as follows: evenof gue-t- s, Friday and at ing program presentation night of a drama by the Santaquin Dramatic dub. Saturday Special program, banquet and in conclusion a grand ball. This social will be the last of its kind to be held in the historic Opera House", now the First ward Amusement Hall, as the building is to be razed to furnish material toward the building of the new 1st ward chapel which is about to lie constructed. Former residents as well as local residents will take important program features. ighlights That .n ,is. town-histor- Affect the Dinner Checks and Tax National Every Indvidual. international Problems Insep-I'.iFrom Local Welfare. Dividend U of d griot sea disaster is drama in Nothing presen-,1na:, manner. the tage or through the print-ur.- l, can approach it in tragedy, Good newsmen, power. uiig or.e of these rare events, or m u e flowery writing they present the simiand that is enough, an;-, turn- the general .public forgets r. But the law doesnt. Many covering iitant regulations and operation of modern disasters which tern from 1 , over-drama- -t n con-;tio- $2.00 PER YEAR -- i d in American Legion Officers Installed at Springville n New York Times, which the influence of tiaced itly on marine law, every t maiitime disaster of recent in new protective s has 'Ac New FERA Project on a The improvement will consist of two cement tennis courts, a swimming pool, play ground for children, ground, pagola garden, and a prospective open air theatre. The east half of the park formerly used as a camp ground will be utilized for the improvements and the road which has separated the two blocks will be closed and used. The other project approved was the graveling and grading of roads on the east half of the First ward with an expenditure. of $3,990. -- oft-ball o Quarterly Conference Held Saturday, Sunday nine American re.-ult- the ilation. TvftWt V4ERI JfcPftNESE PAINT THEtft. TO LACQttEP. CfcdtCTS M fVlOHJ OUST AN0 TO CAUSE THE LACQUER TO OtOi HAP.OE. HO ic c, re-u- lt -- e. ht sinking of the oat resulted in an Lusitania by agreement the five to a be-?- n great naval powers attack merchantmen in time rar. the UNITED STfkTtS 60 TEPk&S &G0 IN 1929 came A by life-boa- ts In Game Friday A special program featuring the Improvement Era is to be given in the Payson First ward M. I. A. Conservice joint evening at 8 After playing a tie game with Lin- o'clock to whichSunday the public is invited. coln the preceding week, the Payson The program is as follows. Hymn, Lions came through in fine shape Sowing"; piayer, Frank Thomas; la-t Friday and trounc'd the Spring-vill- e presentation of M. I. A. slogan, Reid Bills; vocal duet, Mrs. Laura Elmer Red Devils 27 to 0. and Mrs. Sybil Amo-- ; Story with inCoach Stan Wilsons Lions marched down the field for two touch- troduction, Paul Dixon; discussion of Mrs. Lois Noon Huff; retold downs in the first quarter and foll- poetry, with introduction, Blanche tory owed with one each in the third and review of religious article, Jordhalf-bacscork fourth. Spencer, left an A. Law; hymn; benediction, Mrs. Manson ed three touchdowns and Vest. drove over the line with the other. Ruby o Neither team completed a forward pass. Springville made but one first Public Mass Meeting down from scrimmage. Held Thursday Night Manson made two points after touchdown and Clark scored another A public mass meeting yas held at on a line buck after Spencer made the Junior high school Thursday nite a long run to score in the third for the purpose of giving informaperiod. tion to the tax payers on the purpose of the special bond election to lie held at the Centra School building Adelbert Searle Dies Da-vi- At Home in Union - nn October ' Mrs. Phoebe Ilepsia Mather Porter ii2, the oldest resident of Payson died .shortly after midnight Wednesday at jthc home of her son, Attorney R. A. Porter, where she has resided for the past seven years. Death was due to the infirmities of Mrs. Porter was born October 20, 1842 in Naperville, Illinois a daughter of) Israel and Hannah Royre Mather. She was married to Charles Asa Porter on November 14, 1 S72. They resided in Illinois, Virginia and Kansas, until 1912 when they came to Utah where members of their family had located Mr. Porter died two years later. Mrs. Porter was a school teacher previous to her marriage and was always an ardent student of the cultured things in life and retained her faculties actively until the time of her death. She is survived by a daughter and three sons, Miss Hannah Porter and R. A. Porter, Payson; Wilford D. Porter, Grissly Flats, California; Charles A. Porter, Los Angeles; one sister, Mrs. Jessie Colman, San six grandchildren. The body is at the Claudin Ftiner-a- l Home, pending funeral arrangements. old age. -; 9. Reid Persson, water-work- s from th committee the heart of a Adelbert Searle, attack early Sunday morning at his City Council were in charge of the and the principal speaker home in Union, Utah. He was born meeting was ha? and 1875 Engineer A. Z. Richards of Salt in Payson October 24, Lake 17 City. the for years past resided in Union The election is on the question of childfive his widow, are Surviving a $25,000 bond issue to buy material ren eight brothers and sisters. for conducted improving and enlarging the preFuneral services were water works system. Iwd.v sent and the Union Wednesday at burial. for Roosevelt to taken was o Store Remodeled Ileler A. Curtis and assure the best privilege of regular clerk and teb'phom service. A few of their v'lf vtr',c' f !a,v specials appear on page Chronicle. edition of the their o ' About five West Indian hurriean-occur each year; they are more likely to occur during August. months. and October than in other Pen'-nMi- Ber-nadin- Sponsors Second Program o Infant Son Dies The Strawberry Water Users Association sponsored the second in a cries of programs under the direcTue-da- y tion of Dr. A. L. Curtis C. camp on CurrC. C. the at night ant Creek The fim- entertainment included instrumental music by Yon Taylor and Sidney Patten; reading of a one act play by Pearl Johnson; vocal elections. Pearl Johnson, Alene Badham and Lois Powell. David Leo Morgan, the infant son of William Leo and Maggie A. Taylor Morgan of Goshen, died late Sunday night in the Payson hospital. The child was born September 27, -- - 1924. Surviving are the parents and two grandmothers, Mrs. Elizabeth Morgan, Goshen and Mrs. Sarah Taylor, Mrs. o Salem and a of Goshen. Burraston Elizabeth 90, Hold first Meeting Graveside funeral services were meet-in. conducted Club Tuesday at 2 p. m. in the Tlu first regular Cultuwith burial under Salem cemetery Id ht was Wednesday of the year Claudin Funeral the of direction Mr-- . the Afton of home afternoon at the SiHome. Mina B. CarlMe with o Mrs. Iii- - Ballif mons in charge. Mrs. Dave Bigler and Mr. and vocal two and gave Current Events rendered by Miss Mr. and Mrs. Spense Snow returned w re (bcionN. Blaine home Sunday evening from a delightUei ald;e Peery. Principal school ful two weeks trip to the Pacific hu-Wirtci- - of the Junior coa t. They traveled more than 4000 of Wimpole Barretts nail the diama, miles going first by way of Boise to t." Portland, Seattle and Vancouver and -- o the gunthat Navy yards in Puget Sound. They show Japan, c records in the 12th Century went over the coast highway, through a- - used powder Mongols and Jap- the Redwood forests to San Francisco jr, a war between A visit to - used for the anti then to Los Angeles. anese Gun powder waDam was one of the most Boulder the at n Europe fjr-- t time m interesting features of their trip. battle of Crecy. -- r, Pre-ide- in stock arrDixon.- - Sanservice. and angement heir remodeled Marks t have itary - the customerstore to give their self service along with To - (H THE WiOVSTUtE Dies Wednesday Night 58, died Charlie chance tfirul ovv much he v Gaily- needs y'-- - OP Oldest Payson Resident Special Program Feature -- '! YfU. VWtOEt-V- Legion post Thirty officers of District Four were installed at a mass installation ceremony at Memorial hall in Springville last Thursday night. Officers installed were from Payson, American Fork, Lehi, Provo, Ileber, Nephi, Spanish Fork, Mapleton and Springville. Speakers included department commander Norman L. Sim, department adjutant, Otto A. Wiesley; Commander Frank Reynolds of alt Lake post; Clyde Shurtliff, Boy Scout Executive; Ray Adams, veterans placement officer all of Salt Lake City. Past department commanders John E. Booth of Spanish Fork and George S. Ballif of Provo were present. Preceding the installation, the Provo Legion bugle and drum corps gave a concert and demonstration on Main Street. Frank Salisbury gave the invocation and led in community singing. A dance concluded the entertainment. -- Lions Defeat Devils e, Remember that while 0n "ur vacation 1 4Vte T ,0ss has a pretty VAC.QUE& PRESENCE the Vestris disaster. storm, the ship listed until t with lo-- s of 110 people. The (iry developed that it had been loaded, that its were in f condition, and that there were nerahle oilier faults. It was said Funeral Services For Infant the 8. o. s. had been purposely ived, In cause the Captain did not Funeral services were conducted i to force his company to pay Wednesday afternoon for Marie Koy-lage co t . and infant son of Joseph and Inez preferred to take of the nance on making ConseMontague Kovle at the home port. in the Milton (Continued on page 8) Montague grandfathef, died Monday from It Second ward. the home in at affliction a heart Salem. Say, The child wa born August 21, 1934 and is survived by the parents, a si twin sister Maurine and another two years. La Verne, aged ter, Burial was In the Payson City Cemetery. i $13,211 city park, the la- -t of two Payson projects to be approved by the state committee. mar-tragedi- first of the wrecks that start-hi- s trend was that of La Bour-ion July 4, 1898. Bound from York to France with 725 passes and crew, she collided with a in ig ship in a fog and sank were saved 1(33 nimites. Only of these but one was a woman, It was gh 31(0 were aboard. en that the crew had failed its unsihility had saved themselves he expense of the passengers, was a tightening up of discipline throughout the world, 1 icn, in 1909, the Republic, carry-16off rammed was passenger, tucket. Though both holds filled, kept afloat long enough to bring son nip in response to an S. 0. Every passenger was saved, and necessity of radio was instantly zed comparatively few ships The so equipped at the time. t It was laws radio equip-making mandatory, first on liners, then freighters as well, le next great disaster, April 14, one of the worst in marine marvel of try was the Titanic, seas." Her bottom almost sliced by a submerged iceberg, she t down in three hours, and 1,517 is 2,340 persons aboard were lost, of that tragedy came the North mtic Ice Patrol, which checks on movement of ice and warns all s when danger appears. There not been a sinking due to ice started Wednesday morning FERA project at the Work y. o that could not be any other way. Accord-t- lemons ht Work Started On nt -- J we-br- o Former Payson Teacher Dies at Spanish Fork Miss Ellen Anderson 42, who taught school for a number of years in Payson and more recently in Spanish Fork, died unexpectedly Thursday morning at the home of her sister, Mrs. Esther A. Scott in Spanish Fork, fihe had been afflicted with heart ailment for a number of years. She was born July 30, 1892 at Lake Shore, a daughter of George and Rosetta M. Anderson. She graduated from the Spanish Fork high school and the normal department of the B. Y. U.. She taught in the Nebo school district until 1931. Surviving are four brothers and five sisters, Bishop Thomas Anderson, Lake Shore; Rufus Anderson. Benjamin; Edson Anderson, Payson; Mrs. Phyllis Hone, Blackfoot, Idaho; Mrs. Mrs. Etta Money, Palmyra; Saiah Evans, Mrs. Ilortense Argyle, Mrs. Esther Seottland, James A. Anderson, Spanish Fork. Funeral services were conducted Sunday in Spanish Fork. The regular Nebo Stake quarterly conference was held in the stake Tabernacle Saturday and Sunday. The first session was held Saturday evening with Arza C. Page of the Stake Presidency in charge. John II. Taylor of the first council of seventy was present as a reof the general church presentative authorities and delivered the principal address. Other speakers were S. Roland Lindsay of the high council and Bishop George A. Cheever of the Fourth ward. Music was provided by a male quartette and a mixed quartette from Santaquin Second! ward under the direction of Mr. Olson. President Lee R. Taylor presided on Sunday and the at both sessions music was furnished by the Fourth ward choir under the direction of Guy Johnson. Sermons were delivered by Elder Taylor exhorting church members to greater faith, Heber A. Curtis and Walter Ludlow of the high council. Paul Ludlow of Benjamin and former stake president, Joseph Reece. The regular M. I. A. conference was held Sunday evening with Superintendent William Madsen in charge. N. Blaine Winters of the Young Mens Board spoke on the subject Supervising and energizing the M. I. Mrs. Vera Cloward of A. program." the Young Womens Board spoke on llie subject Spiritualizing the M. I. A. progiam." Elder Taylor, who is al-- o a member of the M. I. A. general board gave a fine address on the subject of Good Sportsmanship." Two vocal selections were rendered by Miss Helen Ialfreyman, accompanied by Miss Pearl Barnett and a Male quartette, composed of Golden Tayloi, Carl (). Nelson, Arthur Jones and Dean Wightman, rendered a selection. Bi-h- o First tirade GovernFOR SALE ment Inspected Hay. Shipped through Sterling H. Nelson Brokerage Co. from Idaho. Prices F. 0. B. or delivered. See Grant Harris, Payson, Utah. o Sponsor Dance to Send Quartet to Kansas City for the people of this show to their public spirit locality and to take advantage of a privilege for some very fine publicity is given this Saturday night. The Bon Ton dance hall in cooperation with the future farmers of America and the Payson high school is sponsoring a dance for the purpose of sending the F. F. of A quartet hack to Kansas City. This quartet composed of local boys has been invited to sing before the national convention in that city and we believe the hoys should have the privilege of going. To help things along the high school has enlisted its support and will conduct an intensive ticket campaign during the remainder of the week. Such a worthy project we feel deserves the support of the entire district. The quartet will be featured during the evening singing some of its favorites. The music will be furnished by Le FYost and his Nationals. Dancing! from nine until twelve. A chance "He that itjys m the vdlley si l! new ever tlx hill. OCTOBER 1 Count Zeppelin maV.j successful flight. first 1900 S' art Mu-h- ru 19. t Boston, fire 1711 sail for warm t N ticca N 4 the ere; i f .. i Canadian troops I ranee 1914 rfo'd B IlnvM, resident. born 18-- 2. Gcim.m rcreat in Churn CfeV bioi iis. i 13. f,'1 6 5Q,00'i,Or'0 marks cqml one dollar in Germans. 1923. Crr--1 7 Three-mils e way M, rts Mass.. IF 25 horse r.I. in Q. uuy , |