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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON. UTAH FRIADAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1929 An Ordinance granting to D. P. Abercrombie, as Receiver for the Salt Lake and Utah Railroad Company, his successors and assigns, a franchise and for the construction, y of a single and maintenance operation or double electric railroad spur track from the main line of the Salt Lake and Utah Railroad on First North Street, formerly D Street to the property line on the South side of said be accepted 'in writing by the grantee within thirty (30) days and 'he track or tracks constructed within one hundred twenty (120) days from the passage of this ordinance, the same shall be null and void. Section 7. This ordinance shall take effect upon its filst publication. Passed by the City Council of Pay-so- n City, Utah, this 16th day of September, 1929. L. D. STEWART, Mayor of Payson City, Utah. street. ATTEST: BE IT ORDAINED by the City Coined of Payson City, Utah: Section 1. A franchise and right-of-wa- y is hereby granted and given to D. P. Abercrombie as Receiver for the Salt Lake and Utah Railroad Company, a corporation of the State of Maine, his successors and assigns, to construct, maintain and operate a single or double electric railroad spur track with all necessary trolley poles and trolley wires from its main line W. R. WIGHTMAN, Recorder of Payson City, Utah. Cty (SEAL) STATE OF UTAH, ) ORDINANCE right-of-wa- First North Street, formerly D Street, in Payson City to the property line of Lot 1, Block 36, Plat A Payson City Survey, said property line being on tre South side of D Street. Section 2. During tre term of this franchise the grantee shall be subject on - to the S. ) County of Utah, I, Wayland R. Wightman, the duly elected, qualified and acting city Recorer of Payson City, Utah, hereby certify tdat the above and foregoing is a full, true, and correct copy of an ordinance passed by the city council of Payson City, Utah, on the 16th day of September, 1929, and entitled: An Ordinance granting to D. P. Abercrombie, as Receiver for the Salt Lake and Utah Railroad Company, his successors and assigns, a franchise and right-of-wa- y for the construction, operation and maintenance of a single or double electric spur track from the main line of the Salt and Utah Railroad on Frst North Street, formerly D Street, to the porperty line on the South side of said street. following conditions: The track shall be laid upon and conform to the established grade of said street, and if the grade is afterwards changed by ordinance of the City Council the grantee shall at his own expense change the eleva(SEAL) tion of the track to conform thereto In witness whereof I have hereun(b) The grantee, his successors to set my hand and affixed the corpand assigns shall pave that portion orate seal of Payson City, this 25th of First North Street, formely D of September, A. D. 1929. Street, over which sa:d spur track or day Wayland R. Wightman, tracks shall be laid, and all ties shall City Recorder of Payson City, be laid upon a concrete base of such Utah. thickness as shall be directed by the City Council IN THE UNITED STATES LAND passage of this ordinance, the same OFFICE, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, (c) The grantee shall put in and SEPT. 9, 1929. maintain such crossngs over said NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR spur track or tracks as shall from PATENT FOR PAYSON PLACER time to time be required by the City MINING CLAIM. Council. (d) The track or tracks shall be NOTICE is hereby given that in laid and the road operated so as to pursuance of an act of Congress, apcause no unnecessary impediment to May 10, 1872, Benjamin S the common or ordinry use of the proved whose Crow, postoffice address is street and the trolley wires shall be Bartlett Building in the City of Los suspended at a safe distance above State of California, has made the surface of the street so as to Angeles, to the United States for cause no danger or interference with application the for Payson Placer mining patent pedestrains and passing vehicles. claim comprising of the Northeast J$ The cars and engines shall not be of Section 27. Township 9 South, permitted to stand on said spur track Range 1 East, Salt Lake Base & Merior tracks on First North Street, for. dian in the Eldorado Mining District, merly D Street. Utah County, State of Utah, contain(e) Good and sufficient conduits ing valuable deposits of calcium carto convey water shall be laid and bonate, commonly known as limestone, maintained in good condition at the and calcium and magnesium carbonexpense of the grantee in all the ate, commonly known as dolomite. water ditches crossed by the track Notice of location of the said Pay-so- n sq as to admit of free passage of watPlacer mining claim was filed in er. (f) Payson City reserves the right the office of the County Recorder of to regulate and control the speed of said Utah County on the 6th day of all trains, engines and cars operated May. 1924, and thereafter recorded at by the grantee, its successors or page 252 of Book 234 of the official records of said Utah County. assigns, within the city. Adjoining claims are Maiben and Section 3. Nothing in this grant shall be construed to prevent Payson Raymond Placer claims and Pleasant No. City or any person or corporation Valley No. 1 and Pleasant Valley to whom a franchise may have been 5 lode claims. Conflicting claims, ot may hereafter be granted from Sugar Lime Placer No. 6. Date of posting this notice on claim paving, sewering, laying gas or water mains or pipes, or altering, sewering, September 6th, 1929. Eli F. Taylor. laying gas or water mains or pipes Register or altering, repairing or in any manner improvig said street, but all such First publication Friday September November improvements shall be made with as 13, 1929. Last publication 1929. little injury as possible to said track 8, and the operation thereof. Section 4. The grantee, his sucPlus cessors and assigns, shall upon his Coat and Skirt Sleeveless Jumper acceptance of the privileges and franchises herein granted and in consider, ation of the same, does bind himself, his successors and assigns, upon his acceptance of his franchise to save Payson City harmless from all suits, claims, demands and judgments which shall be asserted, found or rendered in any manner against said city for injury or damages to abutting property or otherwise, by reason of the granting of this franchise or by reason of the operation of the track; and the grantee, his successors and assigns, will pay the amount of any judgment, determination or adjudication, which, in any suit or proceed ing, may or shall be found against Payson City, provided that the grantee, his successors and assigns, shall have had notice of such suits and an opportunity to appear and defend the same; and the grantee, his successors and assigns, shall appear in and defend all actions brought against Payson City for any injury or damage The moment you look at this by reason of the construction, or swanky foursome, you sense its pracmaintenance or operation of the spur ticality. Four pieces, count em t circular skirt, sleeveless coat, track. Long n Section 5. This franchise is gran- jumper and white washable silk tuck-ias the book of or skirt blouse ted for a period of (100) fashion records it This model Is years from and after October 10th, fashioned of tweed contrasted with e 1912. The kasha borderlngs. Section 6. Unless this grant and idea Is alSQ shown In the knitted . . all the terms and conditions thereof realm. "" (a) : ) S. Homes Now an Actuality Slight Change Converts Heating Plant From d Air Conditioning System. Into One-Seas- Affair on Year-Roun- y x- x- Heres x x x- - ; How Much Heat Your Body Generate From a Single Dinner I.bime that unfortunate it of eating, and not only the uti weather, fur the feel in summer!" tie IIol land Institute of 1 hci inning) of Holland, Midi. Iiating is like fueling n beat ing plant. Heat is generated in both cases. Hut the beat values of feeds and ef fuel'll re d ffeient bv measured standards. Tlie t i!erj is tin beat unit fur feeds. The lint isli Thermal Cnit is tin mens ure which heating enuin. eis up Tims one eubi. pl.v to fuels. foot of manufactured gas ceil tains 550 15. T. U.s, and one pound of coal from 9,000 to 16 000 15. T. Us. Here is a typical hot wealhei dinner the menu, showing amount of heat It generates In lie body: Calories COO Cold boiled ham 100 Escalloped potatoes Vegetable salad (tomato, cucumber, lettuce, with 200 french dressing 200 Roil and butter 300 Ice cream 200 Frosted cake Black ccffee with sugar 100 sjs of them. 1,300 When the heat wave is at its hottest, when the baby's skin is red wit It rash and its stom acli is upset, when grandmother and are grandfather gasping for breath with high idood pressure and rapid pulses, and when every hour that mot iter must spend In the kitchen seems a torment don't just curse the weather man, advises the Holland Institute of Thermology of Holland, Mich. Potential relief waits in the basement of nearly every home, ready to spread the comfort of coolness. lor, just ns modern air condition Ing science lias made it pos'ilde to keep the movie theater 70 degrees cool while the temperature outdoors is above 150, so it is possible to keep the dwelling house a refuge from outdoors heat during the hottest weeks of summer. Only, whereas the cooling of public buildings and other big structures requires complicated and expensive machinery, home cooling can he accomplished at a minimum of expense with slight changes in the same equipment that supplies heat in win ter. To understand why tins is so, the engineers of the institute of explain. It is necessary to know something about how excessive heat gets into the human body and the body gets rid of it. Human Body Like Furnace. y In the first place, the body is just like a furnace. Eating is just like burning up fuel. The food is oxi dized in the body tissues, producing energy. But the body is like an engine, too. Just as the boiler and pistons of a locomotive convert heat energy into or Carried Off by Air. mechanical energy to keep the wheels going round, so the body converts part of the energy in its food into muscular energy for the performance of work. Most of us, though, dont turn ail the heat energy of the food we eat into muscular energy consumed in exertion. Much of it remains in the form of heat Physiology tells us that the internal temperature of the healthy body is 98.0 degrees. When, for any reason, K gets above that air condi- NOTICE: There are delinquent the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the .oih day of January, 1929 (15th assess ment) the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholers, as follows: upon Name Wm. Amount Shares Bringhurst, 79.86 10.00 Dora M. T. Briggs, Elmer Bjarnson care of Wm. 27.71 40.92 Bingham, 25.12 Bingham 5.54 Q. B. Betts, Berry care of S. R, 17.94 Barnett 37.78 Thayne Alpheus Kathryn Geo. A. Nelson, Joseph E. P, C. Halsey care of D. Bona Julia Colvin 7.22 78.72 53 30.30 22.39 20.21 58.50 15.33 Alilin, Mor-rot- t, 9.71 14.33 7.24 1.97 6.29 13.23 2.53 27.56 18.55 10.61 7.84 7.08 20.48 Glenn F. Cowan, Glade Cowan, Clarence E. Cowan, Sid Coray, I. A. Cooper, Bessia A. Cole & Elmira John R. Cloward, 7.50 Franklin & Goldie Clayson, $27.96 3.50 5.37 2.63 . Electrified Propeller Unit Speeds the Velocity of Air Through Heating Plant to Produce Summer Cooling and Enhance Winter Heating. Put one of tlie most important safety valves Converted is the lliird, convection. heat is conveyed by the atmosphere, if tlie air is cooler than your body, it brushes some of tlie heat oil! your body and curries it away. But if the air is warmer than your body, it carries beat to you and helps to warm you. If body temperature and uir temperature are tlie same, there is no beat exchange between them. So there are conditions in which these three safety valves can't operate to release Hie exoccssive heat generated iu the body. These are tlie extreme summer conditions which we call stifling and sweltering, when all Hie objects surrounding the body ure too warm to absorb its radiant heat and the air is too warm to convey any of its heat away. What can happen to serve as an emergency valve? As a matter of fact, what does happen? Tlie body perspires, and tlie sweat is evaporated. Now, one of the basic principles of physics is that evaporation causes coolness. So per spirulion really is one of tlie important heat regulating functions of f tlie body. It Is one of the most Orient safety valves for the e.mape of excessive warmth. Anything .that promotes the evaporation of perspiration is a great aid to comfort. Humidity Important Factor. Of course, tlie relative humidity of me air lias much to do with tills When tlie relative humidity is high, when the weather is muggy ns well ns warm, that we complain, It Knt tlie neat; its tlie humidity, the air contains so much moisture obtained from other sources that it can't absorb much heat from the skin. That's the condition when tlie humidity is high and the air is stagnant. But suppose that the air isnt stagnant, but is moving past and around tlie body with a lively veWhenever a locity. particle of moisture is taken from the body, It will be borne away quickly and more nir - will come nlnng to re- peat the process. So evaporation. Air motion, moreover, is tlie chief thing that aids convection. Of course, when tin air is hot and moving rapidly, it conveys heat to tlie body rather than from it. Put conditions seldom are so severe that this occurs. Usually, air motion, with a temperature even slightly below that of the body, is helpful. So we see that radiation, convection and evaporation are the body's three great safety valves, that conduct Ion Is a minor one, and that air motion is a factor that influences two the Punkah Gave Relief From the Heat. present-da- y Name of corporation, Strawberry High Line Canal Company, Prin. cipal place of business, Payson, Utah County, State of Utah. sub-lance- s. Heat ttie air's movement will give us relief by InIn Ancient Days All tioning engineering, the Holland Institute of Thermology states, is based on these facts of physiology. Moving Air Brings Coolness. In fact, one of the basic principles of tliis branch of science, as given in tlie engineers Guide Book is that "Air motion makes any moderate condition feci cooler." One of the technical men who aided In the twelve years of research that ascertained these facts put it this way: Air motion exerts a cooling effect on the human body in atmospheres where the temperature is less than that of the body." This principle Is applied In many industrial plants to- improve working conditions. In two English tinplate factories through which tlie air was driven at moderate velocity, the production during hot weather was found to be 12 per 'cent higher than In two other similar mills that were unventilated. On Atlantic liners, the temperature in engine rooms has actually been reduced from 150 to 70 degrees by means of air motion. Similar effects have been obtained in American industries. Forced air blasts have been introduced to blow uir over the heads of the workers. s One calory equals nearly font B. T. U.s. So 1,300 calories is equivalent to the heat that would result from burning more than nine cubic feet of gas This illustrates why, ns the Iloi land Institute of Thermolog.v explains, excessive heat must he carried away if the body temperature is not to work up to fever pitch iu hot weather Tlior-moiog- point, the condition Is called fever. Wliy aren't we always burning lip in a lev or V" For, of course, we generate far more heat than is required for the vvoik we do and to keep the body at its normal temperature. The re: son is (ha! the human body lias tin1 lemarkahle faculty of controlling its own temporal are, just as a tliermo-Meauionmti '..l!y controls the tern pc. at ".i e of a house, school or other budding Ccdy Throws Off Heat. ale instruments placed on tie walks of rooms, eileli one so ..daisied ili it. when the temperature lal's to a ce.fiun point, an eledric cu vi m is sent to a motor down in I lie basement. This then operates a simple mechanism to open the draft door of the heating plant. When the li aa cu, line ot tin room upstairs gets hath to the lequitcd point, tlie mecli an' m shuts o'T tlie draft- - In closely similar niaiimr the Holland Institute of Thermolo'.'y explains, tlie body eon trols its own temperature. This is done through four safety valves. tme of these is radiation. Tlie body Just throws off its excessive heat to surrounding objects. Rut during extreme hot weather, this safety valve won't work. For t lion the surrounding objects are just as warm ns tlie body itself; so they can't absorb any of its heat. Conduction is the sec-enhut least impor-- t mt, outlet for excessive bent. Conducted leaf is tlie kind that passes from one tiling to another by direct contact, just ns electro ity is conducted along a copper wire. Conducted heat is a small factor in air engineering because oidlnariiy only a small part of our body surfaces just tlie sides of cur feet when we stand are in contact with other objects ! -- four-in-on- NOTICE OF SALE Weather for Tailor-Mad- e creasing a system greatly lowered the temperature and improved the summer-time efficiency In a tube plant in Pittsburgh. Its use also has been effectual in overcoming adverse heat conditions in bottle works and tinplate factories. Heating System Used for Cooling. If mere air motion proves such a mighty comfort producer in industrial biddings, why cant it also be used for the same purpose )n homos? It an, the engineers of the Holland Institute reply; and that is precisely what 1ms been done by the leaders of tlie warm air heating industry. They have converted the home heatn affair ing system from a into an air conditioning system, which circulates cooling breez'-through the home during summer ns well as currents of warmth iu the winter. Taking the modern "vaporaire healing system as the basis of their operations, these air conditioning ex ports built into it a noiseless electrified propeller unit, of which the function is to speed up the circulation of air through tlie home to a much higher velocity than the ordinary warm air circulating plant maintains. Those propellers can be run In summer as well as in winter. During hot weather they keep op a steady motion of air through the room between the grille which in winter is used to introduce warm air and the ventilating grille which is used in cold weather to draw cool air down to tlie central heating plant. This means that in every room there is n spot of maximum comfort near the grille. But the velocity of the air as discharged through this opening carrries clear across the room until it is finally drawn down to the basement through the ventilating grille. In winter, too, these propeller units maintain a high velocity of warm air. Tliis improves circulation, shortens the time needed to warm up the house on cold mornings, makes it possible to heat even the rooms farthest from tlie central heating plant and promotes heating efficiency. It eliminates tlie costly necessity of forcing tiie heating plant and decreases heat losses from the heater and its pipes into the basement. Two types of vaporaire systems that contulute summer coolness and winter warmth to the home have 'been devised, tlie Holland Institute of Thermology reports. One is complete system Intended to be installed in new homes or In others where tlie heating equipment Is obsolete. Put also the propeller units can be added to already installed warm air circulating plants if they are In good condition. This Is a simple and inexpensive remodeling operation. And furthermore, engineering tests have established that the cost of operating either system for cooling In lmt weather Is less than a cent on hour. Sueli one-seaso- s Bank of Payson, State Guy L. Shoemaker, Geo. A. Schaerrer, John II. Taylor. John C. Taylor, Seth Tanner, H. C. Tanner, 42.24 3.50 16.65 5.42 10.85 10.55 4.94 7.00 7.40 11.55 11.97 6.92 21.72 120.67 10.00 47.54 15.47 31.00 30.13 14.11 Denzil Wride, 20,00 21.98 Melvin Wilson, 33.00 Ivan II. Wilson, 34 .20 Howard Wilson, John R. & H. Warren, 19.75 62.04 Alfred B. Warner. And in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Directors so many shares of each parcel of such stock, as may be necessary, will be sold at the office of the Strawberry High Line Canal Company, at Pay-soUtah County, State of Utah, on the first day of October, 1929, at the hour of 2 oclock P. M., to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, togeth. er with the costs of advertising and expense of the sale. R. E. Huber, Secretary. Office Strawberry High Line Canal Company building, Payson, Utah Date of first publication, September Date of second publication 20, 1929. September 27, 1929. . n, |