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Show Ail OrdlnKnoeft An ftrdlnnnee Amending Section IS, eposr ol thu Urvtaed Ordinance of Spanish Vork 'I'ltv, pi.mhI on the ind day o( Snntenitw. I(mA. lis ii ontutncd by the ouy rount'll ul bpeini.il Pork Ulty: Seotioud That Section km. Chsnter 19 of the Uevliied Ordinance of SDanNh Fork l!lt be. tnd the kumu hereby eiucudcd to read h follows, 10 wit: 124. r'IKK LIMITS. The following are here- tire limits of Spanish fork by established vu: west The hlf of blocks 47. M, end city,and the east half of blocks 74, tw, f3 r.d 4H, 71 of Plat "A" of Spanish Fork l'lty Survey of Hulldlng Lota: and within said limit it shall be unlawful to erect or repair any building or shed, the outer wall of which are tn part constructed of wood, except no much aa may be necessary for door and window f rumen, cornice, doorK sash and shutters; and the roof of all buildings hereafter erected or newly roofed within said Umlu ahull be covered with metal lw or other Incombustible malerUI. Kacb building shall be separate from all other building by a partition wall of brick, adobe, rot'k or remont, not less than nine Inches thick If between building, und one tout thick if between building more than one story from the foundation to tbe roof from front to rear, and extending through and above the root not loan than two feet, no as to entirely Be pur me any communication of wood between nuch buildings and any other. In any building where tire la kept there shall be Uu or chiniDryH built of rock, brick, adobe or cement, and all stove pipe Khali be conducted tnto flue or chlmuoys. and If they pints through a wooden purtltluu or floor they umit be protected from the aume by metal venti luted thimbles: and In no cumo aball a atove pipe be lllowed to pas through tbe roof or out of the aide wall of auy building: Provided, Tbut the above Khali not apply to tbe erection of out houses not exceeding ten feet square and eight feet high. Section a This ordinnnce "hull go Into effect immediately upon it tint publication. PiiKNUd by the City Council of Spanish Fork City, Huh. county, I'tub, thl Slxtday of June, K M HNKLL. Mavor. A. L. Ittow. L. W. NIKI.sEN. Kecorder. Attest: State itl V tun. County of Utah, ipanmb Fork one-sto- LXWMJ Wyjf, Nielsen, recorder In and forSpanUh Fork C'ltv. County of Utah, Male of Utah, hereby certify that the above and foregoing I trie, full and correct copy of an ordinance entitled "An Ordinance Amending Section 124, Chapter IV of the Kevlsed Ordinance of Spanish Fork City, passed on the 2nd day of September. IWft.' Panned by the City Council of aaid Spanish Fork City, on the 21st duv of June, A U. I WW. It. W. NllXSKN, Kecorder. 1st pub June it. last July IS. otf Ordluauoo An Ordinance Amending Section 24. Chapter 7 of the Revised Urdinunce of Spanish, Fork City, passed on the 2nd day of September. IWft. He it ordained by tbe City Council ol Spanish Fork City: Section I That Section 44. Chapter T of the Revised Ordinance of Spanish tork City be, and the aame is hereby amended to read aa follow, 24. INSPKCTOR TO BB NOTIFIED. It I hereby made the duty of every person, corporation, or association boif erect an? public building wltblu the limits of this city to notify the said inspector at least three days before the aame: and within tbe tire commencing limit, every, person, corporation or association before proceeding to erect any kind of building, or to repair, or titer any buildiug already erected shall notify the Inspector and obtain hi written permit therefor: and all such building, repairs, or alterations, aball be subject to his Inspection, and the applicant for auch permit shall state the exact site to be occupied, the materlul, dimensions and estimated cost of tbe proposed building or atruclure, and the probable time to be occupied In building it. If tbe and specifications - aball be In accordance plan with the ordinances of Spanish Fork City, the aaid Inspector ahull thereupon, arter an inspection of the premises, or without an inspection a be may see ht, lsu a building permit to the applicant, giving him permission to erect a building or structure at tbe place and of the material and dimensions mention in tbe application, and authorizing of the roadhim to use not more than lf of the aldewalk In front of way and , aaid premise, and limiting tbe time aaid permit shall continue, Section t Tbi ordinance shall take effect Immediately on its arst publication. Passed by the City Council of Spanish Fork City, Utah County. Utah. June 21st, A. D. WOV. Attest: K.M.SNELL, Mayor. L. W. N1KLSEN. Kecorder. State of Utah, County of Utah, Spanish Fork ' t: one-thi- one-ha- City.. I. L. W. Nielsen, recorder In and for Spanish Fork City, County of Utah, State of Utah, hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a true, full and correct copy of an ordinance entitled, "An Ordinance Amending Section 24. Chapter f of tbe Revised Ordinance of Spanish Fork City, passed on tne 2nd day of September, 1805." Passed by tbe City Council of said Spanish Fork City, on tbe 21st day June A. I. Ittuw. L. W, NIELSEN, Kecorder. 1st pub june 24, last luly 15, OW. Notice to Water Users. State Engineer's Office, Salt Lake City. Utah. June 22, Notice la hereby given that the Spanish Fork Institution. by Its preldent.IVter Nielsen, whose postofllce address bpanlsh made application In accordhus Fork, Utah, ance with the requirements of Chapter lot, Session Laws of Utah, I win, aa amended by the Session Lawa of Utah. IU07. to approplate sixty (60) ruble feet per second of water from Spanish Fork River. Utah county, Utah. Said water will be diverted by mean of a dam and a canal, t a point from which the southwest corner nf tbe northwest quarter of Section S3, Township south, range least. Salt Lake base and meridian, bears south 07 degrees AO minutes eust 1.518 feet distant, from which point It will be conveyed for a distance of 15.510 feet and there used from January I to December HI, Inclusive, of eacb year, tn develop power for the purpose ofeleotrio lighting and propelling machinery In Spanish Fork, Utah. After having bee a o diverted and used, the water will be returned to Spanish Fork Klver, at the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of Section in. Township 8 south, range a east.e Halt Lake base and 1.2ns feet long. meridian, through a Tbi application Is designated In the Slate En gineer omce as no. tsia. All protests against the granting of aaid api Icatlou. stating the reasons therefor, must be made by adlilavlt la duplicate and tiled in this offloe witbin thirty (So) days after tbe com oi tins notice. pletion ot tne publication CALEB TAN NEK. State Engineer. Date ef first publication June 24, luw.dateof completion Juiy so, iw. lt. 1 whip-stealin- A Strange Hoosier Waterpower By A. E. MARSH. State Engineer's OUce, Salt Lakg Clty.Utab, June 22, Itutf. Notice Is hereby given that the United States Reclamation service, by Its engineer, J. L. T -- , ATEIt POWER was the foundation of our industries. But this hum-ble agent of producing energy i. V I wa. abandoned In favor of the more flexible and available steam when the coal fields were opened. Steam was hailed as the giant of civilization, but had scarcely established Itself when it, too, was found too clumsy, and the electric current, which could be carried many miles over a slender wire, while steam could be carried only as many feet through a cumbrous pipe, became the monarch of our mills. In the last decade gasoline, which does not need even the slender wire, but can be carried in the most convenient tin can, has assumed a large share of the burden of relieving man And now, after the of physical exertton. others have had their Inning, millions are being spent to develop waterpower again. Niagara, which for years was useful only as an artist's model aud a spooning ground for Mr. and Mrs. Newlywed, has been "harnessed" to light the streets of Buffalo. Tbe Great Falls of Montana, the International Falls on the. Canadian-Minnesotborder, the mountain tor t rents of Switzerland, the Victoria Falls In cenTh Voltaire Mining A Milling Company! tral Africa, which, 15 years ago were almost principal place of business al Spanish Fork, regarded as a myth of the explorer; even the Utah, Notice la hereby given that apeolal stock- - humble St. Anthony "falls" at Minneapolis are Holders meeting of the above named oomawny will ke held at their oRlce, In the freer build earning their living. ing. Hnanlsh Fork. Utah. Wednesday, July 7lh Ivos. at k o'clock d. m.. for the purpose of volThe turning of water Into horsepower has Ing to amend Article A of the Articles of Incorto the wits of our greatest poration of aaid company, thereby Increasing given employment most complicated projects the and Soti.OUO l.ouO.nun to the capital stock from shares; engineers, the additional shares to be placed In the tress- - have been put through to adapt the power nry of th company ror development purposes found in the IlKNJ AKOYI.K, President. plants to tbe varying condlrioaj It. TIITTLK. JR.. a.llNi.ia lu lh,vn I't has made application In accordance with the of Chapter Session Lawa of requirements Utah, I won, aa amended by tbe Session Laws nf Utah. IM), to appropriate three hundred ('bo) eubio-feper second of water from Spanish Fork River, Utah county, Utah. Said water will be diverted by means of a dam and a canal at a point wblcb lie 110 feet west and Vi feet aeuth from the southeast corner of Section 2, Township V aouth, range it east, Salt Lake base and meridian, from where It will be conveyed for a distance of loft.oix) feet and there used from January I to December HI, Inclusive, of each year, to Irrigate 3:i.w.'0 acres of land embraced In Sections 5, 6 and 7, Township V south, range 1 east: Sections 7, S, 17, 18, ID, 20, 2l. 80, SI, 32 and M. Township H south, range S east; Sections I to 1.1, Inclusive, 14 to 20, Inclusive, 2K, SO and 31. Township V south, range I east: Hoe- tlon II, 12. 1.1. 14. 21. 24. 3. 2n. IVi and M. Town-shi- p I south, range I east, and Sections I, t. II. 12, i.'l, 14. 2.'l, 24. 2A, 24. X and Sri, Township B south, range I east, Salt Lake base and inert-dluAs much wstcr as may be necessary will be used during the entire year for domestic purposes. This application Is designated In tbe state engineer omce a no. mro. All nrutests against the granting of said p reasons therefor, must be plication, stating the made bvamdnvll In duplicate and filed in this office within thirty (SO) days after the comple- CAur.u inflr.n, lion of this notice. State Engineer. Date of first publication June 24, lino, date ef completion of publication July so, iuuv. 1 A f II et n. a Notice i Secretary. Date! at Spaulih Fork, Utah, June 10, ivofc fJ5 . I two guns and each of the others witk a gun, came to the rescue of their comrade, and before Weaver was aware, they had five ugly guns polntea" at his head and his own hands' and Mc-Ke- e, Notice to Water Users. hA.,i.lll. MMW M'M old-tim- e tail-rac- uI t!. ZZJ Anti-Hors- City.. I, L. W. A.XM. glarlzed a l route was escaped from Jail. II XyfBSX learned, and there being no regular train soon, a special was chartered, and with a bunch of Antlg. aa the members of the A. 11. T. A. are called, aboard, started In pursuit. When It returned a few hours later It had ; aboard the policeman-burglar- . e The Thief association is rather a novel organization now flour ishing In tbe middle west, having members as far east as Ohio, and as far west as New Mexico, and a total membership of 40,000. It Is organized on the lodge system, and combines both protection and detection in its plan of operation protection. In that its members unite in guarding the person, home and property of each member against unlawful interference by others; and detection, in that the members will hunt and capture any persons who transgress on the rights of any member, and hunts for and recovers stolen property. The detective feature are for the ournoae of making the Drotectivn ton more successful and effective. The order often spends ten times the value of a stolen article in recovering it, but it teaches thieves what to expect if they molest the property of any member. Hiring a train to.chase a thief is a heavier expense than any public officer will, or can, afford to incur, but that expense was small when divided among hundreds of members, and they consider it well spent. A big thief is In the penlten-tiarSIAJOG, and an Impressive lesson has been taught to other thieves in that localty. There Is a marked difference between the A. It. T. A. and the nresm. steal from a to e m b e r latlons of that nature. The vigilantes, about Thieves have been known whom our fathers sometimes speak, often set to pass by tbe horse of a themselves up as Judge. Jury and executioners. member and take that of They sometimes held "necktie" oartles In same his neighbor. The thief secluded spot In the woods on a dark nieht. knew It was easier to elude and perhaps there would be a llKht-f- i uttered one man than many. gentleman missing from that community the This unique, next morning. The regulators, about which we practical and have read, sometimes forced people to leave useful organization was first organised in Clark the neighborhood or "take the consequences." Their motives for such action were often quescounty, Missouri, during the tionable. Not so with the A. II. T. A. It does civil war. MaJ. David a brave soldier, was not violate one law to uphold another. It imposes a strict obligation upon its members to its first president, and his first efforts was to suppress obey the law themselves. It then commands others to do likewise or suffer the penalty the bushwhacking in northeast law provides. It catches criminals, but turns Missouri. The disorganized them at once over to the officers of the law. condition of the country Some have styled the A. H. T. A. an officers-ai- d gave the order men much socfety. and In fact Its record entitles it to to do, and It grew and that appellation. It opposes mob violence with spread until It now extends all of Its influence, and has prevented more over seven states. than one lynching. It has recently been makJohn V. Wall of Parsons. ing Hs plans to prevent if possible the IntroKans., Is the supreme presiduction of "nlglit-rlding- " in Arkansas , and dent. Wall is a born detecOklahoma. "Protect' the Innocent; bring the tive and a crack shot with guilty to Justice." Is Its motto. a Winchester at long range. A mistaken idea some, people have of the He lead the crowd that A. H. T. A. Is that it looks after horse thieves chartered the special train only. Every kind of stealing, as well as other to seek the fleeing police violations of the law, comes within the scope man. Tnrotieb the thorof its work. Cases are oa record where the oughness of the organization Wall Is able to call to his aid. by secret methods If needed, A. H. T. A. spent ten dollars to recover a dollar whip. One such rase usually puts an end members of the order almost anywhere he may in that community. Its object to go. and with this assistance his work has In doing so Is not the value of the whip, but given rise to the saying "If Wall goes after tbe lesson taught. It convinces thieves it Is thera he will bring them In." not profitable, and is extremely hazardous, to Some of the experiences of the order read different streams, and some of these stand today ns our greatest triumphs of engineering. TJut for native ingenuity doing something with nothing, getting results wltb neither tools nor materials, nothing but pure Yankee Ingenuity, the mill which stood for many years on the brink of a little waterfall In Jefferson county, .Indiana, between the little Presbyterian college town of Hanover and the Ohio river, and only recently has fallen into disuse, deserves a Carnegie medal. The stream, which has less than three miles of length from Its source In tbe hillside springs to its mouth in the Ohio, was so insignificant that it was never graced with a name. But In the old days, before some plained geologic changes occurred, it carried a (low of water 20 feet wide and three deep, with the speed of a mountain torrent,' About half a mile from the Ohio It spread out suddenly over a flat rock 40 or 50 feet wide, and plunged over its brink a sheer 90 feet. The rock was of hardest limestone, but underneath was a stratum of schist and rotting slate, so that a cave, like the Cave of the Winds at Niagara, was hollowed out. It made a Quite roomy, and, strange to say, dry apartment, and was approachable In but one point, which was hard to find. During the War of 1812 a hermit lived in a hut built in this cave and spent his time com- pounjnK Bajt petre which he sold to the pow- He disappeared as mysteriously as he came, and for a year or two the falls were left to roar nut their own destinies. In 1815, nmong the settlers who rushed west after leaving the army was a shrewd miller, William Gordon, In whom tbe bard sense or his Scotch heredity was well mixed with a shrewdness acquired of Yankee environment. He came down the Ohio In a flatboat'and stopped at every settlement seeking a location for a mill. He stopped at Hanover, and while rambling through the bills on a hunting expedition, stumbled on tbe falls. He was struck with the vast waterpower going to waste, and when be made Inquiries about it he was an- - like sketches from Conan Doyle, but they are happenings. The work ot William Weaver in capturing two yegmen at Carl Junction, Mo., holds the record for grit, daring and activity among the antls. Weaver arrested a man be knew was wanted, and started off with him. Four strangers nearby, one with actual swered that the people had neither the means or the materials to make use of it. But Gordon was not that kind of man. He pitched his tent near the falls and lived with them day and night for several weeks studying how to overcome the handicap which the lack of the proper facilities made to developing the power. He finally discovered the entrance to the hermit's cave, and explored the falls from the rear. He finally announced to the farmers of the settlement that he would have a mill running, ready to grind their corn by the time of the fall harvest. He announced at the same time that he would buy all the cow's boms that could be found in tbe community. The idea of mixing cow's horns and a grist mill was rather confusing to the country folk, but they were .willing to be shown, and came from miles around, and even from Kentucky, across the river, bringing all the horns they could find, which they gladly donated when the plan was explained to them. Cordon and his two sons bad rigged up a stout oaken shaft across the brink of the falls, on which was mounted a wooden wheel three feet in diameter, with wide flanges. Over thiB ran a pair ot log chains, joined at Intervals by cross chains, much tn the form of the chains used on automobile wheels. To these cross chains, which were about six Inches apart, they riveted the cow's horns, tips downward. The chain carried over a thousand horns, and they served as an excellent substitute for the buckets which Gordon had neither the materials nor the tools to make. A little mill was set up on the bank, and Falls was the busiest spot In soon Chain-Mil- l the county, For 15 years the cow horns sang their little song as they ground their grist, until finally the mill could not take care ot the business, and Gordon had to turn engineer again. He explored behind the falls, and found that a portion of the rock had scale-- , away, leaving the shelf over which the water flowed a bare 20 feet thick. This gave him the idea, and ' guns were extending upward toward high heaven. The leader of the gang told the others to get away while he took care of Weaver with his two guns. "Drop that gun or you die," came the command to Weaver In no uncertain tones. A pause, and again the command was repeated, Tbe two men stood staring into eacb other's eyes, every nerve at high tension. It was a trying moment, one In which most men would have dropped the gun. Weaver is small and lithe. Ho knows no such thing as showing tho As president of tho white feather. grand lodge of the A. II. T. A. In Missouri he bad been drilling others for just such work. He, their leader, must do bis duty. He dropped to tbe ground like a flash, and as he dropped be sent two bullets through the body of the stranger, while two others went whizzing over his own head. "I'm all In," said the stranger. Weaver kicked the dying man's guns beyond bis reach and started after bis first man. and in a few minutes had him on tbe way to jail. An hour later It became known that yeggmen had blown a safe In a nearby town during the night, and that Weaver had put an end to the career of two of the men who did tho work. Bill Rudolph, the Ironton, Mo- bank robber, who bad eluded tho I'inkertons for months and had killed one of the best detectives In the country, was captured by the antls near Paola, Kans., not long after be made his daring escape from the St Louis Jail by dashing through the jailer's house In broad daylight. The newspapers said he was captured by a bunch of farmers, bat they were men who had been preparing for months for Just such cases, and were acting under direction of their chosen leader. Bob Worthman, a noted criminal, who was sent to the penitentiary from the Indian TerrV tory a couple of years ago, got gay, and he and two of his pals caught an active antl while oa his way home from church one Sunday night They started to hang this antl, but after compelling him to take an oath of their own making, they released him. This particular antl dropped out of the hunt, but the other members kept It up until the rascal was put la safekeeping, where he still remains. These are only a few of many cases, bat they serve to show the work of the order. The A. II. T. A, is organized on the lodge system the same as tbe many other fraternal orders, except that it has a different object in view. Its workings are secret only in so far as Is necessary to its success and to protect it from Impostors. The cost ot maintenance is a trifle. It seldom costs a member more than a dollar a year, aud often less that that The activity of the A. II. T. A. has a reaching Influence. It Is a poteut factor In the line of moral uplifting. It leads aright those who will be led, but lays a heavy hand on those who persist In their efforts to live from the fruits of other men's toil. It preveaU crime. It la a public benefactor, for a thief In jail can steal from no man. An active A. 1L T, A. lodge is a blessing to any community. he proceeded to put it' Into, execution at once. The stream was dammed to one side, exposing the rocky bed half way across, above tho falls. Gordon procured dynamite and sunk a shaft 6 by 15 feet to the cave below, about ten feet back from the brink of the falls. A dam was built at the brink, so the entire flow was diverted through this hole. A new two story mill was built and a bigger chain hung in the shaft, to which huge wooden bucket were fastened, and Gordon found to his joy that he had more power than he had any uso for, and actually hud to remove every thin! bucket to lessen the apeed. |