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Show THE PAYSOX CIIROXICI.E, PAYSOX, UTAH Payson Chronicle! - fee J . IlAKOLIl MULMIOKII F. W. M0L.1T1 4 ft - Utah aa a ' - 7 i . 7 ear AD R Tills Ad Clip With this can h"se approved are: Mrs Inei Peterson and Rulon W Taylor, lx h, ; E:c-eFerguson, American e Pleasart VVadley, Fork, Flea-aRuth Ashton, Crove, Y.ew , lone Tuckett, Mrs. Haggie Proiljndty and MOTie Bennett, 1 $1.00 EKTISI.NG -- sen. $2.00 6 Montlw fc of extra Approva. of a group treasurers woiku, for the county voted by the Utan off, ce w Monday af county cornmi ssioners submitted were names r the ter Jen- Andrew Treasurer Count by SUBSCKIRi IONS 1 -- t0F Fvtra Work Oki, 1'UiLISHUU at the Foal Office at Fa)on, Utah County, wcimd-tlasmail matter. Entered t 4 Members of the Nebo Stake Re ,;h a penal feature, ta,h ,,.7'' ifcniher lief Society Board entertained at uaj a j,Lr.onal tr Lu to home the a luncheon last week at of honor. Thc-- e nr gue-- t be. of Mrs Annie Cuitis m huor of a embied into a Look n vn aty Mri Mary P. Hard.ng, , uf the beard Group Approved VIES ON All'LKATION. Clipping you Luc-iLl- nt WESTERN NOVEL STRIKES NEW KEY County Agents Department p rv i-- i v i ! i i 'C i 'I iv v i-- c l Tlt UIET rKMEBS TO Author of Winter Range OIK ON ItFI LRKNDUM Add Mystery Touch Shull the government whiat adto Cowboy Yam. --1" -- ! h Payson and Hand, Benjamin. Salt m ; Carol Iluish, i le extended through 1P.VJ to 95.t with .Home modifications, w the question that will lie asked of all wheat growers in the United States on May 25, according to a recent announcement received by Director William Peterson from the Agricui'ura Adjustment Admin miration Flans in every wheat growing state aie being made to fully inform all wheat growers on the present woild wheat situation, to encourage discussion of the problem, and finally to permit each grower to register his own opinion on the subject in a national referendum. Some of the provisions of the new proposed wheat program are: (1) voluntary contracts calling for adjustment to meet consumption needs and export possibilities dur. ing the crop years 1936 through 1939, (2) additional emphasis or inducements to bhift land to grasi in drought and dust storm areas, (3) amount of adjustment and rate and condition of benefit iwyments to be determined each year, but no adjustment to involve reduction of more than 25 per cent of individual lasc acreage, and (4) the base period to remain the same as in the present program. The final detai s of the proposed wheat program are not available yet, according to William Peterson, but will lie announced soon, he states, by county agents and wheat allotment committees who will be called upon to direct the referendum in their respective counties. Total benefit payments to Utah farmers who signed up in the wheat production control program had reached $1,054,014 55 on February 2X, the last date for which figures are available, Pearl justment program L I' T Lj 't 7 i P tl ALAN LEMAY young master of 'Western" llitlon, whose latest thriller appears In the columns of this newspaper, brings to this virile type of American literature a fresh ami a roistering, picviewpoint turesque style. In "Winter Bunge" he achieves the tiLlque accomplishment of combining a gun smoking, hoof beating tale of a cattle war with a fascinating mystery that rivals the technique of todays outstanding writers Alan u I c i': 1 LeMay, of detective" stories. Ills goose-fles- h suspense keeps the reader hanging on to the very last word. EeMay, who makes his home in Ban Diego, Calif., numbers among his successes Fainted Fonles," "One of Us Is a Murderer," Uun-slgTrail," and "Thunder In the Dust. He Is known for his contrl buttons to Colliers, Cosmopolitan and the Suturday Evening Fost. Now we Invite yon to seek adventure with him In Winter Bunge." It will appear serially in this news- paper. Blood stained the snow on a FORESTRY TREE DISTRIBUTION ENDS More than f4,000 small forest trees have been distributed for farm planting in Utah from the forest nursery this year, according to Paul M. Dunn, forester for the agricultural extension service at Iogan. Shipments for the 1935 season terminated Saturday, said New Mysfery of the Mr. Dunn, beacuse of the advanced growth, with the total exceedCattle Country ing the 1934 tree distribution by 57 per cent. The small hardwood and coniferous trees of 14 species were plantcx! on 300 farms in 20 countTwo murdered men cast ies of the state, the report shows over Bar Hook ranch a this is an increase of 4S per cent shadow of mystery as in the number of plantings. Siberian elm is the tree that was most deep as the winter night. in demand with more than 19,000 What was the answer? planted. Russian olive, blue spruce, Jean Ragland thought ponderoxa pine, honey locust, green she knew. Lone hand, ash, black locust, black walnut, golden willow, catalpa, Austrian ane played her terrible pine, Scotch pine and oriental secret against the law follow in the order named. and the range. Then Salt Lake county leads all other Kentucky Jones began counties in the state with 19,491 trees being planted in that section Guns investigatin'. this year, repoits Mr. Dunn. Box barked and the noose Elder county is second, Utah third, hung over a dozen Mil ard fourth and Cache fifth heads I and more than 3,000 trees were planted in each of the above coun- Action, romance and a This brings the total of small suspense that never lets ties. trees distributed from the nursery you down fill this swift at Logan to more than 204,000 tale of smoking guns and during the rast six years, 1930-3sturdy hearts, by a masThe trees have been planted on ter of Western fiction. farm land for and w'oodiot purposes, says Mr. Dunn, Watch for It Every Week as a part of the farm forestry project under the direction of the in This Newspaper Extension Service. The nursery is maintained by the Utah State Lemons for Rheumatism Agricultural college as a result of cooperation with the federal Bring Joyous Relief y government under the law. The .school of forestry to bo lid eg iteffloUon or nortli has the nursery in charge. polar Wont to t food, year potmfrr and for trees are still coni, Requests fait Well, tha again? jual nrxpenam try tmtaj and tSocam (oic motor. Cat t ing in, Mr. Dunn says, but the REV PRESCRIPTION. DuaoHw I orders wil be returned because of at beam In a quart of water, add the jute ci 4 l A tre can a day kill I ooata. B the advance of the spring weather. next poo 're not tree from pain and frettng bertax Th trees will lie available vfetua tew weeks you cam Irt yw monel year and are being made to plans Far Bale, recommended and guaranteed increase the capacity of the by tH leading druggists Any drumtwt wtll i r ttaEEV PRESCRIPTION tor in By Alan LeMay $23,000,000 Ford Plant Expaioa o 1 Ms a SWIM at ARROWHEAD for HALF of the Regular Price. ne McKenzie and Melva vo; Jis.-pne va M.ler, Springville; Joseph. Brown Mattel Peterson, Mapieton; Sjianish Forrk; Mildred Wtgnall, '. ! enjoy and Mrs. Ed Berlin and were daughter, Selma of Salt Lake the home of at for Easter guests Mr. and Mrs. Ed Patten. Mr. a Mis. Aldon Ludlow and Mrs. an spent Thursday ilj rum in Sait Lake. Mi-O- a a a THERE AINT NO ELK IN TUE SONG When the melody Home On 'Ihe Bin e" wa w.ili' n t ci u Erred only to the roaming of t k I ad , one to the hippy hunting leer and anti .uye Iln : , n : .'round and the i i ,s to bu.d this unique monument to their m i.c ; y ,n Yi du..to..e Nn'.iunal Puik Fhoto by Union Pacific P.aihuu '.!(' I i . Christen--e- Mr and Mrs. Le Roy and family of Mt. n Pleasant and spent Easter here with Mr. Mrs Vernon Chi istensen. o r Theres No Excuse Party Booked On Ship, But Nobody Knows Who They Arc, Not Even Themselves! - x'WM'hiv ifV 'f t &'j i k 'tWi if f-- - Top photo shows construction work on the new Ford steel hot rolling and cold finishing mills; left, Installation of furnaces and other equ.pment In foundry for easting alloy steel parts; right, Rouge plant power house. i TJEXRY FORD is well under way 1 1 on one of the years largest single industrial construction projects in the United States a $23,000,000 program designed to Improve and expand the facilities of the great Rouge Plant of the Ford Motor Company at Dearborn, Mich. Among the projects are: New hot strip steel rolling mill, $6,330,000; new sheet steel cold finishing mill, $3,460,000; modernization of main power house into the largest high for feeling blue sf1. ; ' ' jj when you can always gel a laugh from A REGLAR FELLERS the clever comic strip by Gene Byrnes A It"- - SXt 4 r murirr nr mirr e'x t "r THIS PAPER ' . X WJlWinf regular feature of 'V' i Li 'l - ''T v Tha 8.8. Normandie of the French Line, newest and longest ship world. first party to bo booked for passage on tho French Llne'a Normandie, newest and largest ship In the world, la composed of twenty Americans, yet nobody now s w ho they are not even the passengers themselves. If you dont think such a situation as this could develop you Just haven't taken into account tho vagaries ami imaginations of the buslnees The twenty passages in ouo.t'on t have been hoolu d by the mllE JL 1 to'gitc-Palmolve-Fce- Company of Ju-eCity for no fewer than twenty i y conwinners In a test. The object of the contest is to get the best expressed reasons why tne pioxpoetive travel .8 like a certain biand of soap ill le Tho score of wmi'i- brought first fum t pi.1 hot to- - to New York, whence they v ill ul aboard the luxurious Not muni' - on July 31 for four weeks la scion letter-writin- pressure steam power house jn the world, $4,600,000; new glass plant, $3,000,000; modernization of foundry and installation of furnaces and other equipment for production of cast alloy steel parts, $073,000; and reconstruction of one blast furnace to increase its capacity from 600 to 800 tons daily, to cost $800,000. In addition, new tools, machinery and other equipment and facilities in all departments to increase daily output, totals $3,000,000. In the Euiopean countiies, and then back to New Voile again on September 2. Not only aro all expenses to be paid for t.e conte .ants, hut as an e.La" the TalmulLe people are to give v y winner $100 in cash and such. to squander on Tl o Nornimcl'e, 1029 feet long, with a Rises tonnage of 79,280 tons ami a bum of 119 and a half feet. Is ro.v b' mg Tin bed to completion in a s; e iul'y built turn basin at St. Nazaire, Fiuei i SI" i ix iei t .I to be the l'tn-pait of May and to have ll.ivie on her maiden voyage on May 29 J'- In trav.l contest, xx In. H ito i Jo .e 15, are to be Emil Rohde, pie-int of the Hit d a wi is and Cosmotol- s Imireil .vs .i tn .. F.ivanL pu at of the Antonian i Cos.e i ai i.uiou, and Miss I.ii .bith Woodward, associate editor cf the Lad iV II uno Journal. HP he -- . i Universal Cai con-sir- tl' -- il ' o x-- -: - jAij ztksrti ' J V w w'snrn .. GASOLINE JPECIALLY One REFINED FOR The description The Lctst Word In Motor Fuel lm.C thfs'vmhl T? m Fach yu - ' because it bail, I reTT Tlm hai SCrViCC been a F'ord funde- cons,antb' being added in die way of extra value. rS Trn hVidc"eJ if appeal by increasing its usefulness IS iT Th mo, or 1 qn!ckly t0 mind when think rf The Universal Car. distinctively Ford. No other car is used by so many of thc world- Evervwhere it is CVCry part IVOmCn is ' 'Tdj Frd ' 8 ls morc thaa ever S c-.- T T rcrformanT ce" Cm aTm0bile Clarke-Mc-N'ar- of operation The Universal Car' TdS 0f m0re pCOf,e ,hai1 any other Ford P in' fdJs because it has everjddng TndTip-keep Thc FurJ combines 'W firit CS a"d l0"' CS There b1'5other car like it. V-- 3 peak-fiotll- a . ilia., 7w it in ijou t Cat tOO STATIONS AND DEALERS IN UTAH AND IDAHO 5 F-- vv up ter-- fob , Detroit. Standard thnugh Universal Credit FORD ComoAo'LTmS body bumr.ers have npe, V--8 P'nt cot 'Pare tire extra. Small down ?xr Clabs throughout at ! |