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Show PAYSON, UTAH THE PAYSON CHRONBT The Payson Chronicle ' ; : a tiiy of und contented !i..7'i0 loyal, prugn-w- i. I.' s ,r i citicn. : i I'tali Gouiov, ...ail matter. Pay.-o- taa, as f n, st rood S-- a on- f r r r. g r a' w !! four X indy of ar.d tho h ' i . -- - apt uied t r. The T. ui II o r. h . si list itin ions 1 Year 6 Months.. $2.0(1 .. ADVERTISING . RAILS $1.00 ON AITI.1C.VI ION. i t.i t i nil.e of 1 O. J- - Arthur Lha.ru.ai Branch, Amer Kan kv -- UTAH INDLS'I Salt Lake Citv Ft nEW3 c v Hams ry struction Co. com four miles of r,a'! n yon with rock Salt Lake City Company of Utah , ,v,u,bup . Plans be.ng Ogden construction Con-i- d of chapel for ward ty-fir- st p in new this city " CHRONICLE jv WANTADsp - a methods, afet v tia.n pie i yellow fevir " i.napi la, Honduras, loaned equip-mi-ra d nodical tupplii , to !h:r A dead of offb-u,--toce! r.nu nt. n! a with the Medical Of-i-- i t. organ:!- relief work, vvh.i-ip to that Uuie was without sy-- t, . .iien remained ashore ur.tii he ( oidemi'- was under control. '1 h.a1 ic. c Nautical Novelties" 'in- fund-dieby the U. S. Na-- y .Station, Salt Luke City, tub. Additional onev will be fu r. ou" l.i euk g i.n Life-Savin- g -- hPZ- tip- :: i Aid and yj " ' e .jj program, it is tiniated that hundreds of lives a'e aut , avid each year, not to mention thou ands f injuries prevented. interest is shown in Red Iuorea-e- d Eir-- t Aid by large manufactCiu-.- s fi-- e urers, public utilities police and d,-artments and schools. In the last .e!y war .724 persons were tra.ned in lied Cross first aid in Utah. Aside pec fro rnthose who received certificates, w a i ' many others attended demonstrations dm d or took a part of the instruction. The interest in the First Aid prodegram by industry is showing a of the cour As result a luded growth. these manufacturing plants save of working hours because a their employees have become acci-- 1 out dint cor.cious. w week; i ' ar. a I to - ! rrn ' .i. i ' i in . ."I li a m . ; t. a ' Lie liter, a IT HO or puut: j , a' ; festered at the Post Office at to t! i.;t u ' tah, irurtbin- -- Xavv. lb g .'. Lb I :: -! J. IIAKOLIJ MOL'M LORD, lUILISIILK rublished every I'riday at Payton, .'.a' a The JijcGss Selected The:: i- & A A in i d by the h P7 pa s i. r- ed t:.i veil Lie-- , ia- - e i - WAYNE KERR 0 IN 13 K Sa S3 It-- ; : .'I-- ' IN THE f1 toal a it I -- CONOCO $10,000 - f the 1 bed e.i Really truly great men are few many good things to be forgotten. And so let November tifh. he an a1. and hard to find. Very few stories of i of not as o' tier annmention the vera anniversary ry to you history it really has no place iversaries are, but as a remii.d November Cth in history. It has no name, and to that the world is somtimes ciu"l an.! harsh and relentless. the world it is all but forgotten. is of Cth Novemebr But deserving more trenchant distinction than men Loves Labors Lost are inclined to give it so, too, is the And we shall be the best of pa' name of William Larks deserving of As we grind out reel after red While 1 supply the animals higher eminence than that which is accorded our heroes and statesnu n You lend the Sex Appeal. and politics. Perhaps it was because William Farks had a greatness too Another ehalk mark on the ,o!I noble for mortal man to understand. I was paying a visit to the Tribune perhaps it was because he shunned pri,ss rooms the ollu,r afl(.rnoon an fame, or perhaps he had. as sometht. fl(w of conversation, like it is have said, An aspiration too infinite everywhere else was circulating abo': to become common. finance. Depression, unemployment, The story of this man is very sim- the silver question, all came m fo ple, indeed, and it should be dear to their share of the diseussion. O i us because it is a story of our own reporter offered his suggwest and our own people. estion one that is almost threadbare It was in Arizona in the early by the way that if we would all seventies that William Farks was start spending more money we could carving a name for himself on the soon snow hard times under. Y ah, then uncut pages of the Wests early where are we going to get the money hitory. In all the land at that time to spend, there was not a man more outstanding There was not a character that mould And that same afternoon I dropped ed itself into the peoplo as did his in the Elite Gymnasium to watch He was respected and admired beJack Dempsey take his daily work out cause he did things honestly and sinDuring a brief breathing spell I ov'-cerely. He did for the love of doin', heard Jack tell one of his companions he fought for the west because he lovthat he had spent exactly six hunded the west and its people, not be- red and forty dollars on his recent cause he saw wealth and achievement hunting trip. What a snow storm for himself in what he did. that should make. Now Farks had a son that he loved dearly. In all his life of dealing with These fine fall days, with r like men and elements he had become har- wine and leaves under foo ehrisp dened and aloof. But his son always What is more pleasant to mount upon held the tender spot in his heart. to gallop with over hill and dale, to He loved this son because he was his reign in at last besides ones hitching own flesh and blood. lie taught hm post and dismount from, tired b it to be upright and virtuous and honest happy, than a horse? Everything that William Farks w he tried to make his son become. Gem. But nature has her queer quirks Todays Memory are not so bad as they seem Things and Thomas Farks was a waywa-- d tlierere worse. aon. In his blood there was a strain unkined to his fathers. No matter NAUTICAL NOVELTIES how gentle nor how firm were his fathers remonstrations Thomas Farks became everything that his father Are you informed of the fact that: opposed. During the past year, over a miliBut a fathers love cuts deeper than um books have been read in the naval blood or water and there was always service. Tle exact number is a kind spot in this fathers heart, for and this is divided as follows: his only son. Ho pleaded and cursed, psi from ships, libraries and read (ihLPfw begged and admonished, but all of no IN shore station libraries. from 1,014 avail. And Thomas Farks became one The Navy Department in its inte--of the most dangerous bandits that t in navigational subjects has rethe west had ever known. cently ordered an officer to ihe Then one day there was a bold office for the purpose of robbery in which three men were investigating methods and inmi-e-.ent- s intentially murdered in cold blood by utilized in air navigation with this bandit Farks. For an entire year a view towards their improvement. this crime blackened the stories of On the Naval Acadamys football Arizonas history. And William Farks squad of fifty-eigmen there are love for his son turned into a frenfrom sentatives repn thirty different zied craze. tates and one territory. Then one day, a year later, NovemOn the Short Range Hattie practice ber 6. 1881, William Farks met h.s l eently completed by the D. S. S. son in a saloon. All the emotions that West Virginia, I.-- caliber Turr had once been love and devotion flar- et No I was awarded the Navy E ' ed into fitful hate for a son who had fir excellence, making the fourth con blighted his fathers fondest hope, scout. ve v ear that this award baand Willia mFarks shot his Jon leen made to the Turret. down. Aocordmg to figures furnished bv William Farks was hanged for the tive Medua! Department. Company R murder of his own son. On the scaffold, Indore he died, his last wor Is were. "I did not do this awful thing because I hated my son, but because I could not boar seeing h.m living on the life that he was that is all. And so, all the good things that William Farks did was bloted out t wild he w i Id, u.i o openrers or, and soon forgotten by this single ac i ; i l.i -iotvgfuphs character of man strong lie was a of i o c and emotion and the love he had for c a ships at i ,i 'h, ft hi-i ms. his son was so great that it tore soul when it proved unfaithful. Am! cou-s!' A "a! Mi up in spite of the fact that he became a been has 'hied i to the vl.a too did murderer, William Farks high-witte- d 1 J-' h ' . -- : - t . the rmti u.-- ' n for '1 mf 11, ,v i g! :: eel,. i: t ' t . PRIZE. ..$5,000.00 FIRST HERBERT E. LAKE hud b , e.-- I. "V He' riot, Midi., Twenty years ago ids pa-- t week an infant company destined for a hardy growth enUi hi- family of automotive manufaetw-rs- . ,, u L C I i -- h.g Hat-coc- h chi-c-- Dorchester may 1927 m-l- NV. Twenty-secon- Street d Oklahoma City, Oklahoma tom McDonald J. THEO Care National Supply Company bcnnnole, Oklahoma HORNE Box 84, Malta, Idaho $25.00 PRIZES J CK WELLER 510 Wt it lJabcock Street Bozeman. Ml r.tana T. K. U.LIASON i 624 Nli Avenue, East Minnesota Duluth : 153 i y IYNN A. MAY SolLl' Indianapolis Tu. 4r.. Oklahoma E. L congi-atuhiLen- W1NNETT J. FITE S26 East Yampa Strict Colorado Springs, Colo. ROY BAY, D.D.S Florence, Missouri EVERETT BARRY 10UO Eat Henry Street Mount Pleasant, Iowa C. WILSON Rooms 313-1- 9 Bank Bldg. 6th St. and Carrison Fort Smith Arkansas First Natl MRS. GLADYS MERICA 5427 Florence BivJ. Omaha, Nebraska W. E. SARGENT 403 Ryan Building St. Paul Minnesota PEGGY HOLMES 2T2o Central Avenue Great Falls, Montana tUJBELL 73 Yu.n Nebraska CLUB CRAIG Route 7, Victory Drive M.uhul3, Tixa ' JOE L. MAJORS MRS. JAS. T. HARRIS Rural Route No. 1 SatfordviJle, Kansas M. E. BLAKE General Delivery KaiLpell, Montana Rural Letter Carrier No.1 Stafford. Arkansas R. D. LATSCH 1113 "O' Street Lincoln, Nebraska - A Word to All Contestants -- -- yr. sin.'crely thank you for your interest in the HiJJen Quart Contcrt ar.J for vour entry. Almost all of you understood that the "b quart of Cunoci O.r.n Processed Oil sta$ up in the motor, where .t ch to penetrates snJ combines with metal surfaces and never drams a. a.. -o r- o- L. R. RADLEY 201S P. 0. liox 702, Claypool, Arizona I1'-- ' -,e- -e-f W. B. McCORKLE North Seventeenth Street Fort Smith. Arkansas $50.00 PRIZES HAYDUKE GEORGE , . 102 North Morris Street Mesa, Arizona ndi-nvin- . MRS. EDNA JARVIS Hematite, Missouri ALEXANDER J. PETRIE i 11 00.00 PRIZES SI MRS. LUELLA HUFFORD l.'iH Ah Streot Harper, Kansaj ' ji MRS. W. A. INGRAM Morganton. Ari.an.aa VERNON ADAMS Hemphill St., Fort Worth, Texas 1 De-iroi- 00 ETHEL $500.00 PRIZES t the 1 J ' ... $1 ,000 B. CHANCE 124 West Lynn Street, Norman, Oklahoma MRS. n Salt .. . ith the incorporation, on Nov-nii.ciy u Ik R li. -- f l.i l'.tll of the Chevrolet Motoi ' d. b f t ho Na ional Company of Michigan. R 8 k ,y of the L. 1).' That tpan of two decades covers e t ( ay I' n S. 7 vmr probably the most remarkable growth an of the bait Lake n this most remarkable of all indusv ''Iv-i-'of the Red Gross: tries. During the twenty years .iLo an opportunity of thfc completion of the firs, I g a d - re I ha' c Lmg had 'hevrok-lunits had 8,000.000 nearly 1(1 .el! a h.o.v I api-- i aeon built a record unequalled by a'.- 'ne work of your fire organi-.- any oilier automotive manufacturer m. Amro, or ihe Red Cross ex-- i in the world. 'he Re! ef Society is alway Tvvi nty years ago the cradle of the ov to co- pera-e- , and many splen-- 1 - ' w or), Infant company was a small vvork-liohave I,, cn done t. on Grand River Avenue, '' ':"n t! i ini al relations vvhi h where Louis Chevrolet built ex- ixbt hi ' wi on mi- o. gimiation- a nlendld - gilt to perimental cars, not more than fmc - "bi " Yen have profited r five that first year. Today the r on k it numbci.-twentthe i.n lb d Gr ) tin y production organization domestic plants which proand' '! v. for vmir contnu-- l duced a four average of more that '' d su a million cars a year. ry a hire e no e than Although operations were started Lhb'ik die eon,n Detroit, the small shop where t! f - i e ii l car was built soon yielded to reipi're. of 9 ':i,7 ,,e- the t larger lant, also in the Motor Citv. neiit.-, 7 hi io m.v m Here tiie company remained umil -' n- - in ' America who li Id. and then transferred operations i'.ave ;a id ihe-,- . R( ,j tc.-tcni,s to Mint, Mich., although New Yur hir-- t id L fo Saving d C.ty and Tarrytovvn, N. Y., also ( ,1 i:i ,v .,H, p. eminent places in ihe ea.'lv n Dirts f the coint U s year--- . i Court, Viaukegan, Ili.nuu THIRD PRIZE .,atlon ' hi, C. S. PAVEY 102 Glen a. r o- li SECOND PRIZE... $2,000.00 v. tl- - - b ,y s also I. Milton :g .! a. I the 'p' ,.. .1 : 206 Manufacturers Exchange Building, Kan.as City, Missouri tide !.e,, iiar.- - Mi ip. Chevrolet Nevs -- s. a'-.-- l occ-qdi- cot-.'i,- I As long ago as 101.1 the company the volume field with the ;n-- . induction of the 40ti" model, named fur its price. This wa :he lowest price at which a Chevrole-aever sold until the base price on the 1 03 1 series was reduced, upo: .he introduction of this line last fail, to $ tTo. Production of 1HiV the first yeai was 7O.HO0 cm s , many times that o my previous yem's output. The com pany was thus definitely launched in the colume field, in which it laier ua-- ; to leadership. that Since early time the history of the company reads like a Horatio lger romance of industry. The story is one of almo-- t constant growth and expansion. Ore of the daws mo.-- t prominent in the developmet of t ti.it torv is May 2, HMS, when General Motors took over ihe company. changes in personnel and methods followed in the succeeding nti-i'c- o"-- c - u otf,r a, ""'I' : 1 U'11 :1 i r ' u- mv. ip v eth n.y I - .V . ' l.y ed al - f'U es in Is , GERM PROCESSED PARAFFINBASE tun methods r. ting iiijnhe-- , reof v.ati r accidi nt and MOTOR OIL - ANY OIL WOULD r " Gne R (v,s from Headaches, Colds and Sore Throat Neuritis, Neuralgia Dont !o a chronic sidTcn r head aches, or any other j ..in. '! !iere liardiv .in ache or pain Ikiytr Uliieti, cannot relieve; ar.d i'uy are a great comfort to women v.l-,nfier peri. xJu ally. '1 hey areal wavs to relied upon lor breaking up chi-- . It may be only a sirup!" headache or it may le neuralgia or neuritis! Khrar.uiiMn. 1 unibago. lhi i r Aspirin is still the sensible thii g t i t..'r-- . -- - ha'.f-m-llio- BETTER OIL IF GERM PROCESSED ZSEZSZCE3SIEIBKBIBHKZlEElEBI!IIKBIllllEIZiHllll,i Under the stimulus of new blood and now policies, production in 1927 n went over the mark for Two tints the first years later it exceeded a million cars. Just Up to tins time the output of the !e ceriain its U.uer v, n't- - .hi"-- ; it company for many years was exclu- does not hurt the hi art. ( a :! e mdne v sively four cylinder cars. On Nov. Is tablets, in th.is famiiiar j ..." 1228, tin company announced ,ts of the four cylinder field, where it had won pro omim no out a six. In the very first new type t weeded all the year n cords of the four, and today the company is ioadn g tin . BE c;,. t i1 years. of p!ac Tho-- e ' " 11 phy-ic- - tr cn,."!i guard-- , OIL COMPANY Sole Manufacturers advimid attended !y a h . ! ' CONTINENTAL , amt. g am! a: once-famo- I I Drain & Refill Your Crankcase AT Conoco Superj I Service Formerly J. M. Nichols WASHING GREASING : . . in mdu-tr- y The , g, . W. f i ; rr i M. 8. Kr.ud-o- r, perse-ni're-.- o' o.. ii K .. H. ,L K'.in sale- - m.r a "al and dent pen- mral mannger; ;o - e , executive present onpii-e- - 1 tl-.- li Esddera Qigasl Corsst I ..-"- :t' M 1. oy ,c ;i ami nr; .A r. v FA T'.i: Wether. J dl, EL' punAirtT. a" Turn to Page 3 of This Edition and Read the Fire' stone Advertisement WE ARE PAYSONS FIRESTONE DEALER AND CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF PRODUCTS FlRb-STON- a u'u p! r. SIMONIZING P, Wduiii I'v.il . . b - 'V v ,.N- - ONS Service is not our Motto Its our Busine ElllSliaillSlIBiBaiBISlSZBBIBBBlIBBBlIiSEIIIll1 E |