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Show OKEM-GENEVA TIMES $tultv story Shows Shows Importance Of Genealogy The following story Illustrating Illustrat-ing the value of genealogical work is related by Mrs. Ida Stewart Peay, 257 South Fifth West: "My grandfather, the late Dr. John Riggs, resident of Provo 1851 tn 1893, visited his childhood child-hood home at Oxford, Conn., to 1875 to collect as many names of his ancestors as possible. Al though he obtained many names vi reiauves, ne was unable to learn of any forebearers aside - from his grandfather end great grandfather. "After his return, to Utah, Dr. Riggs had a visitor, a Mr. Wallace, Wal-lace, millionaire published fcf New York Cityr who had tome all the way to Utah to locate John Riggs, son of Major Gldean Riggs. Mr. Wallace said he was compiling a book of Riggs gene-aology gene-aology because his grandmother was a Riggs and a fine Christian woman. "When Mr. Wallace's book was completed, It came into the hands of Dr. Riggs' daughter, the late Mrs. Melissa Riggs Stewart. Upon examining the book she found It contained the names and brief life sketches of all of her grandslres and arand-dames arand-dames and their children back to Edward Riggs, who came ito America from England In 1838. "Mr. Wallace spent the oulk of his fortune collecting the data and publishing the book, and while it was a mere whim to him, it has served a great purpose pur-pose In our family." Additional articles on genealogy geneal-ogy will appear In this column each week. William D. Stueler. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE TO WATER USERS The following applications have been filed with the State Engineer to appropriate water in Utah County, State of Utah, throughout the entire year unless un-less otherwise designated, all locations being from SLB&M. 17500 Mike Pietrafesa, Louis Pietrafesa and Victor Guerclo, Provo, RFD Route 2, Ut., 1 sec. ft. of water for domestic purposes pur-poses from springs In Hathen-bruck Hathen-bruck tunnel, Slate Canyon, tributary to Jordan River, at a point N. 89' 02 E. 75 ft. from EV4 Cor. Sec. 8, T7S, R3E. 17770 Lugi Nicolatti, 7615 So. State St., Midvale, Ut., .015 sec. ft. of water for domestic purposes from a dug well, 4 ft. in diameter bet. 5 and 15 ft. deep at a point N. 1220 ft. and E. 2120 ft. from SW Cor. Sec. 17, T5S, R2W. 17796 John D. Roundy, Pleasant Grove, Ut., .10 sec. ft. of water for irrigation purposes from a developed spring, tributary tribu-tary to Utah Lake, at a point S. 432.5 ft. and E- 1288.2 ft. lrom NW Cor, Sec. 17, T5S, R2E. The diverting and carrying works will consist of 100 ft. of 2-in pipe. The water will be used from Apr. 1 to Oct. 31 to irrigate 5 acres of land embraced in NWV4 Sec. 17, T5S, R2E, and for. year-round incidental do mestic and stockwatering. 17805 Clarence T. Jones, 264 W. 1st S. St., American Fork, Ut., .5 sec. ft. of water for irri cation purposes from an Un named Spring, tributary to Dry Creek, to Utah Lake, at a point S. 72'25' W. 2264.3 ft. from SE Cor. Sec. 33, T4S, R1E. The diverting and carrying works will consist of a small earth dam, ditch and 100 ft. of 4-in. pipe. The water will be used from Apr. 1 to Nov. 1 to irri gate 2 5 acres of land embraced in WV4SEV4 Sec. 4, T5S, R1E. and for year-round incidental domestic and stockwatering. 17811 Rhodes Jcppesen, Pro vo RFD No. 1, Box 505, Ut., .5 Sec. ft. of water for miscellaneous miscellane-ous purposes from a 4-in. well bet. 175. and 410 ft. deep at a point N. 1035 ft. and W. 1115 ft. from SE Cor. Sec. 2, T7S, R2E. The water will be used for manufacturing man-ufacturing of food products and incidental domestic and irrigation. irriga-tion. 17842 C. H. Durrant, Route 1, Box 290, Provo, Ut., .67 sec. ft. of water for miscellaneous purposes from a 4-in- well bet. 100 and 200 ft. deep at a point S. 847 ft. and E. 2618 ft. from NW Cor. Sec. 10, T7S, R2E. The I water will be used for domestic, irrigation, stock watering and celery washing. 17852 Adolphus Pulley and John Pulley, American Fork, Ut., 2 sec. ft. of water for irrigation irri-gation purposes from a 12-In. well bet. 300 and 500 ft. deep at a point N. 2619.6 ft. and E. 53 ft. from SW Cor. Sec 7, T5S. R2E, The water will be used from May 1 to Oct. 1 to irrigate 80 acres of land embraced in WV4SWV4 Sec. 7, T5S, R2E. 17874 Bonneville Development Develop-ment Company, Henry D. Taylor, 295 West Center St., Provo, Ut., 3 sec. ft. of water for municipal purposes from a 12-in. well bet. 50 and 150 ft. deep at a point N. 1700 ft. and E. 3994.60 ft. from SW Cor. Sec. 29, T6S, R3E. Protests resisting the granting of any of the foregoing applications applica-tions with reasons therefor must be in affidavit form with extra copy and filed with the State Engineer, 403 State Capitol, Salt Lake City 1, Utah, on or before November 23, 1948. Ed. H. Watson, STATE ENGINEER. Published Sept. 27, Oct. 4, 11, 18, 25, 1946. SUMMONS IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY. LAURA SHEPPARD WISE and JOHN WISE, husband and wife, Plaintiffs: vs. HAROLD H. MARBLE and ELIZABETH MARBLE, husband hus-band and wife. Defendants. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE : SAID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after service Of this summons upon vou. if served within the County in which this action is brought, otherwise, within thirty days UN GLASSES! MAIL ORDERS FILLED Bausch & Lomb RAY-BAN - $773 American Optical CALOBAR . . . 3.95 up American Optical ' COOL-RAY 7.50 ESQUIRE sunglasses 7.50 PACE THE SUMMER WITH OPTICALLY RIGHT SUNGLASSES FROM BUY NOW! OPTICALLY GROUND J 1 AND POLISHED ; SUNGLASSES x FOR SCIENTIFIC PROTECTION -o" : MODERN OPTICAL OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE WEST tJBBBI BNaBBBBatiBBBaBSfl 161 West Center in Provo and 273 South lain in Salt Lake. after service, nd defend the above entitled action; and In case of your failure so to do, Judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand de-mand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. This action is brought to re cover a Judgment quieting title in the plaintiffs to the following described property located Id Utah County, State of Utah:Be-ginning Utah:Be-ginning 125.00 feet South from the Northwest Corner of Block 16, Plat 'O" Payson City Survey of Building Lots; thence East 123.75 feet; thence South 80.00 feet; thence West 123.75 feet; thence North 80.00 feet to the place of beginning. I. E. BROCKBANK, Plaintiffs Attorney. P. O. Address: Suite 211, Knight Bldg., Provo, Utah. , Published, Sept. 20, 27, Oct. 4, 11, 18, 1946. mains ati sewers: construction and gracing of roads and furnishing furn-ishing irrigation water for use on lancu as a requirement for approval of any subdivision or building permit. Said ordinance has been sub mitted by the Orem City planning plan-ning and zoning commission and passed upon by the Orem City Council. Every person present, shall have an opportunity to be heard concerning said ordinance. . This notice is given in accordance ac-cordance with title 15-8-100 of the Utah code annotated for 1943 and the ordinances ; of Orem City. ORLAND E. PYNE, Orem City Recorder. Published. Sept. 12, 19, 26, 1946. NOTIC TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF WILLIAM H. BAUM, DECEASED. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned undersign-ed administratrix at the office of Attorney I. E. Brockbank, Suite 211, Knight Building. Provo, Utah, on or before November No-vember 15, 1946. GRACE F. BAUM PEAY, Administratrix. Publication dates, September 6. 13, 20, 27, 1946. r NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice of Public Hearing to (he citizens of Orem City and all parties having any interest in anyway in the zoning regulations regula-tions of Orem City. Notice is hereby given that on the 30th day of September, A- D., 1946 at the Orem City Hall at Orem City, County of Utah, State of Utah at the hour of 8 o'clock P. M., a public hearing hear-ing will be held relative to the adoption of an ordinance regulating regu-lating and controlling the sub division of land, relative to in stalling and connecting water Sunk afternoon MEM IW SUMMER ELECTRIC HOUg wim ANNE JAMISON ( -: i BOB sHANunr tMMUUM tMAMT Mmmimmu occmhtm 1:30 MA-Station KSL Brought to you by UTAH POWER LIGHT CO. TI RE REPAIRING VULCANIZING BATTERIES BRIMHALL BROS. 121 W. 1st N. Pre, f Bon 200 HAVE YOURTIRES LOST THEIR .H VITALITY?. 1 ,0 ...to CM uH,ttfiU7iun:u irm n;r taa LOANS and REAL ESTATE SEE FRED E. RAY INSURANCE Office: 79 South, Second West You'll Find Brilliantly Written ; true stories by the world's best writers every SUNDAY in THE AMERICAN WEEKLY. This week, read the "ROMANCE OF IRVING BERLIN AND ELLIN MACKAY", plus Peter Levin's true crime mystery, "THE EIGHTH BULLET" plus "FONG WING'S BET", by Dan Parker, plus "KILLERS IN THE KITCHEN", KITCH-EN", by Dr. Fichbein. All these and many other features in the American Weekly with your copy of next Sunday's Los Angl-les Angl-les Examiner. Roll Film A vailabl 127-120 - 620 - 616-116 Limit Two to Customer M & R Photo Finishing SIUBIO PHONE 048J11 sWattst fat Staa mdkt U fast mtt f tUt Jbtsla, tsttt wkk mm pmUrnrn mi 1st mm kaafll tf aat kmm ftaa ft b attwoduced list m . , i - 1947 Production Goals for Sugar Doofo Annoiineod PRODUCTION GOALS for Beet sugar as set by the Government for 1947 are the largest oa retted. Th production goal of sugar beets for 1947 has been announced as 1,037,000 acres which should product 1,900,-000 1,900,-000 tons of refilled sugar. This production is to vital that assurance has been given that th government will do all that can be done to make it possible for the sugar beet Industry to reach this goal The Utah-Idaho Sugar Company believes that ft It of mutual importance to both the processor and die grower ft meet our full allotment of sugar production. Therefore, the Company wants to be well informed of your needs for 1947 and take all possible steps to help you provide for those needs. During the next thirty days we are asking your company Fieldman to contact you and check over your 1947 seeds so that action can be started on them now. You can facilitate the gathering of this information if you will contact your company com-pany representative as the opportunity arises. The following brief discussion of some of the Important questions you and the Company must answer U presented in the hope that it will stimulate your thinking and place you in a better position to know what your needs are and how thev r- ' ' - - -. 7 1 How many acres of beets will you plant In 1947? This question must be answered before it is possible to adequately survey your requirements for machinery, labor, teed and fertilizer. The Company stands ready to work with you to the fullest extent in helping you meet your r-riirements if we can arrive at proper basis for evaluating them. 2 What will be your machinery needs ? a. PLANTING EQUIPMENT. The Company has taken the lead in the entire sugar beet industry in developing and making available avail-able to growers seed of the highest quality and precision planters. These two factors have greatly reduced the spring labor requirements and lengthened the period over which the thinning operation may be carried on. Several implement manufacturers will have available new precision type drills for 1947. Conversion bundles for use in con-verting con-verting certain plate-feed beet drills to precision planters will also be available. Your Fieldman can advise you. The Company will make its shop facilities available at cost for repairing or making conversions of your present drilling equipment. rCD;DI4ING EQUIPMENT FOR COMMERCIAL t'tRIILIZERS. Commercial fertilizers are most efficiently utilized by row crops when applied in a band along side the row. Experimental work has shown that 100 pounds of fertilizer applied in a band with a side-dressing machine is frequently as beneficial as 200 pounds applied broadcast. The Company has built several hundred side-dressing side-dressing attachments on farmers' cultivators; both horse drawn and tractor equipment. j c. HARVESTING" EQUIPMENT. The forthcoming beet harvest har-vest is going to be an important one and it is going to be a real job getting it done. Every available worker must be recruited. Mexican Nationals will be "available and the Company is lending every effort to secure Spanish American laborers from labor surplus areas. One of the bright spots in the sugar beet harvest picture is the increased use of mechanical harvesters. There will be approximately 200 bet harvesters used in the area in which the Company operates ior te 1C45 harvest. These will be mainly John Deere, Interna-tuau, Interna-tuau, ...uet and Kiest harvesters. By 1947 it should be possible for every farmer who wants to buy harvester equipment, to be inde-pendent inde-pendent of outside labor. In California 75 of the beets were harvested har-vested mechanically in 1945 and it is estimated that at least 90 of the crop will be harvested by machinery in 1946. Every farmer should become well acquainted with these machines as they are in operation tins fall and decide which is best adapted to his soil and farming conditions. Mechanical harvesting is here to stay, and machines are sold long before they are manufactured. The C-rn- has done everything possible to make the largest - - --r. vesters available to their growers. year. To produce this amount on the farm it would be necessary to fatten 1,000 lambs for 120 days, or 100 head of cattle for 134 days. This of course requires study and planning. Fanners who do not care to take the full risk of a fattening operation at first can usually feed livestock on a contract or gain basis in cooperation witS com-mercial com-mercial feeders. PULP Sugar beet by-products are an important and economical feed m any fatt""ng program. Beet pulp and beet molasses is widely used. The Company is installing pulp driers at each of their factories as rapidly as they can be obtained. This will make this valuable feed available to a larger number of growers and make it available throucb-out throucb-out the feeding period. BEET TOPS Beet tops are the most widely misused feed that a farmer has available. Beet tops are frequently told for from 50 to 75 cents per ton of beets. Some farmers this year will realize $3.00 for the tops of each ton of beets they produce. Just how much of this $3.00 per ton you get largely depends on you. If you sell your tops to be pastured in the field you will likely realize the smallest amount for them. If you feed your own tops, the method in which you feed them will largely deternune your return. Tops should be fed at the feed lot, either as . dried tops or sdage. You get the most value out of your tops as sil.nge. Beet tops are easily made into silage. Merely pile them while they are !' nd.cIean s you can in racks 10 to 12 feet wide and with a setded height of 6 to 8 feet. At present feed prices the tops from each ton of beets is worth $3.00 if fed as silage. Extensive feeding tests conducted by four different State Experi-ment Experi-ment stations have dinun Ko u i t , t , . , . ",c -icu wps irom one ion ot beets 77 t?u r 8 y,uc 10 ,0 Pu" ot corn plus 150 poun of alfalfa hay. With corn at $65.00 ,per ton and hay at $20.00 p T t . 7 V- TO caIculate tna cured beet tops from each s.. ., i"'Yv' " moul e emphasized again, these are not cda ,. a nn ir , .-..nuns, ii you are a iy ton grower you have $45.00 worth of tops per acre if you silo them and feed them. !S! r 7 T not much if yu iust "'-1 trample and waste them but then grain -r ilH'- - ' much if treated in a similar manner. ids Do you Fall Plow ac; ? 3 Fertilizer Requirements ? a. Pounds of Nitrogen fertilizer.... b. Pounds of Phosphate fertilizer.. toAK The.Compan7 J1" conducted extensive fertilizer tests during 1945 and 1946. In better than 90 percent of the tests there was a marked response from the fertilizer applied. In most cases the greatest returns from the commercial fertilizer were realized when nitrogen and phosphate fertilizer was used in combination of about 2 bags of nitrogen fertilizer for one of phosphate fertilizer. We may not be able to get sufficient nitrogen fertilizer to supply all you might want for 1947 but it will help greatly if we know four nees now. Commercial fertilizers are most effective when used in combination combina-tion with barnyard manure and green manure crops. 4 Do you have feeding operations to utilize your hay, train, and sugar beet by-products ? a. b, Number of Beef Cattle fed Number of Dairy Cattle Fed L Number of Lambs Livestock feeding It an integral part of successful farming. You" tflf tb. question-To feed or not to feedr Actually fo should ask the question To feed or not to farm?" Successful Msung require, manure and manure comes from feeding. An 80 acre IW anould have an application of around 300 tons of manure each 5 are riSr? TSt-n Value f fal1 P is generafiV ?J? ?XpOSeS 8011 Part'cles more complete absorhgan ' ' ? ?f Pl-ant fd materia,s- lt Prepares soils to of an Ml? ' jtTm$ mistUre and cables the preparation start wlTv rrdbed the beet crP can 8" off to an earlv lack 'of izuJUt0te farme;s,fal Plow? Well, we recognize that grain Ja ' " "iT f reasons- Yet h aes tC weed'S ad?K nd,d0 Te COuld bc watered to sprout How Ifv T ? Pj"edJbefcre beet and Pta' harvest starts? "therhUyfanreS f f'falfa. 6 yU tav that mu e broken out TlfalfalurnS , 7 X SP"ng? know Aat gd g"h you can 1 f-rff I?, manUre adds as "i'rogen as Kve the Zn.L ? V P" acre' 315(1 addo you you need fhe fid 1 .added organic matt? Yo 7 Size vl? Lit , "'I ' WC.,ha.Ve Pinted A" if you fully torn Tofalfllfa LvP wt t in fecding valuc to V to 2 alfalfa? 7 toPs for hay and plow under to wah'twrth86 bCll lTd at,didn't g Pwed because we had have aUadv eSLT f' Mvestock Pasture the tops. We seU8u?emSfor 1, 1?. P ? f true value of row op when you 5ar bS f fEf H "i t tWO toM of A cre next creased v,VU.T:J .fl to. 30 P6' acfe you can get from in- Phosohorus In tC 7 on toe "mount of nitrogen and CTad 1 aiftTO. L worth more "than :$6 twice kpf-. k. ernuzer. tsvery farmer should think rSurbX 'PP0 to a" Plow for the .ak.of nent Wt must plan together now to make sugar feet farming perma- on a h'j lL ' put your farm in? otrmiinn. sugar liTJjSKnSS- 1 CM Ota if -Id a h o S u g i c o n pa m y 432 West Canter Phone 104. e 8th North & Highway, 0rem, Utah |