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Show r " nM-W! FRIDAY, JANUARY TH 1930 3, Ey DOUGLAS Published every Friday at Paysou. Utah, a city of 3,500 loyal, progres-- ! sive and contented citizens. 34 Jaj, vQ-- t I MALLOCH IEMRVBLR tlut hum. to . .imp, pull. it none, 1;iLp hU n.iii mi.) sli'TIL on. nil (lie ruin lie nhxnxs got. So'iiet if eil ot nut. hiM l i. i hilicnnt tie cii'iie nr I hi etv no; iilne ue .time I it .x nli) he i;sim1 i! y CHRONICLE. J, H. MOUNTFORD, Publisher 1 , PAYSON (THE THE OLD GUM J ? Klnfi!(-- , Untered at the Postoffice at Paysou Utah County, Utah, as second-clas- s ifi-- ' matter. 1 I I''hl a li'Hl ' in,. de ji l'e Iqis I e. ii '.eil tn s l! a '! .t.dl.ter IPl I ,,'l at tin ..t Ii i.'i'.'il n : i hi n j 0 1, ul ii, .i V n the oinV 'in ui ii'.l em!'' n i i in r ; oil e fill .'lie I! .1' U.I'I Of ini'! I.e. a pawn I'liped the Notices Consult County Clerk or respective signers for further information Probate and Guardianship t;,e,,(t dev, ? ot . NOTICE TO CREDITORS i. me ro to ,n c n vl:5 m l.eit t, ,. ,,m t,e Css. Ot t: ' ,:i vonie ; I'lVeil I., '' . ; if to v. Im tin.i.e tie triet Al.ll I 'll lint, I i I ;b IIIUM ? w. in v..., ii in o iiie Had lie hm hii.iM'if (o blame? . IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH, IN AND FOR UTAH COUN- I TY. No. 48G0 Probate. ESTATE ell, the old Imm no ntoie ffii Cr-- nt .V nl'ioe door llli' e lien Sei. eiers liei hi n me V, oi n llo Cieditois ei' rex ,d o! ; I It, lB'J'J urn. I), X'olh.i.l D 193-0- THINK ABOUT A. Dorter, WALKER A. usasaodtt. T'P.OSi: a ssu wo CfW.V.Y.VAV.V.VAY.V.Ta HOURS ?. iiiirefiil Pier i New Years Surprise i By lAly Rutherford Morris i persons who conepec't good lortuae lnl i"i londint the gold it ltd purple in s.e I'lety, nnd possibly exnlled leaffi-- - lap in tlieii pai'lii ill ir -- )ilei'e. of erdetiv or. will discover sooner or In'er ihd is it I - to in iii,ie neco-sni- ulxxuys to . strict attention to the passing Is nothin-- ; hour-Tlic- so eliiMxe its v ( re 1: awaits our lihhht'g cun It respects neiiher pilnce nor on pauper as it proceeds s;e.idf.i-- t' Us way to he ahus. it pushed rud. !j aside nnd wantonly reU'ct'd All of oar gnat ,i 'lirnti'ius are home to ns eil t tie silent xx a - ' f gohieii houis itc.il unless xxe give tin mediate attention to the inspiration which ure phued at onr disposal we are li'.tely to find that xxe liaxe missed it is n failing a preciu.is opportunity it though stantl.v. D. Stewart, Administrator. Attorney for Administrator. First Publication December 20, 1929 Last Publication January 10, 1930 SOMETHING TO TV.TNTY-FCJ- . L. E. F. present claims with will I avrrn By Charles Cravens, Deceased. vouchers to the undersigned at his o, live in Fayson City, Utah, on or L, li.ee the 2 ith of day February, A. h Iumi eM:ix t;. n.ie ot j.i'i'le Pe hmi n p to turn ns de lien lie day s lee i.i.it i,s ," I ri men, her lh.it old tun i i. OF I i $2.00 --- Rates on Application. iei u e I I'.nmi lii.e the nion.in, One Year Advertising tiit-,- ,, .. WAW.VAWWWJVa rsi TETl RACE DAVIS looked up from her office disk Into the eyes s- -. of a strange young man. Ue was smiling down on her. Would you please write me a letter tomorrow? Im going home for the holidays, and heres my address, depositing a slip of paper be. of ours to live in a delicious vague ness of xx hut we shall do at a later day to astonish our friend-- , when we Anally settle doxxn to carxe onr wonderful monument. We have not jet confided onr s ;ref resolution to our mo-- t intimate adfriends, who in their solicitous monitions have frequently hurt out sensilixe souls by reminding us Ilia the 2) hours of yesterday xxere throxvr away, ns xxere the importuning hou.-of the dead and buried vest' days of the long ngo. It would not do to dio''U:.s mis n. ter. It is not an agreeable sufiVct. for 'he re.. son that it would bring tG as nn unpleasant realization of our We have promised that out faults. of sins yesterday should tie our last, hut here we are today among the orf transgi essors unable to reform Wlit'ii we were twenty we started we began to nravely ; at twenty-lixtxvn or I. slip away; at thirlet nn out the habit of frank he to quite ty, t: ken so strong had time sttutindi 'tig - nold ol us that xve yielded to it wills int a murmur, still dreaming of the th great things we should do when x- -x fore her. Grace stared incredulously. Impertinence I I dont even you Such know ! dont mean to be impertinent, I cant explain now why Im really. making the request, but I will on my 1 return after Christmas. But It is most important that 1 receive at least one letter from you. Say anything you wish, but please write. Lie left without another word and Grace sat motibnless, staring aftei him. There was no one In the office to talk to, so she just stared and wondered. Finally, she picked up the ing his address and read: ham, Avondale, Kentucky. Where had she heard that fore? Somewhere, surely. slip bear Ben Gra ; she looking chap anyway, mused; and there might be an hon- nice nnd sKpped quietly h,u U in the rent ranks Those of out friends who had 21 with wisdom apportioned thmt hours to duteous xvotk proper the and recreation are now aiming In ha.g lendirs whete tney rightfully anil where Ihex foi.e.l tlicmselxes hj r fimn tin h'ginn::i2 of u,eei i ilicii iriiimphai.l alter ' orable purpose back of the request. I think 1 11 give him a tryout It 'ras a queer letter that Grace sent but a nice one came buck from Ben so interesting that she sent another and was sorry that the holiday season lasted no longer. There was some doubt about knowing him after ward. On January 1 Grace agnlB looked up from her desk Into the eyes f Ben, and again lie was smiling. Happy New Year! I have come to explain, he said. "Well, Im waiting. Do satisfy my curiosity. That was a fraternity Initiation stunt I had to do It. "Oh ! Now I know why your name seemed familiar. You are In college te' i CE I . l.v Mr v lui- - " -- I"1 " I O' o :- SUPERSTITIOUS : SUE here. Yes. One of the fellows knew you and picked you out for me to come to xx Ith that request Am I to be forgiven for the impertinence? You are a good sport, Ben, and Im for you! holding out a hand which he eagerly seized, saying: What "Happy New Year again! about u dinner date for tonight?" (cX 1928. Western Newspaper Union.) Resolution Might Help young man asks a medical publicist what to do about a tendency to lose his balance in a dark room, New Maybe be should have made ft Years resolution. A j THAT HAS HEARD the kitchen manicuring breaks s, your apron string a 6'3n is it xetty dicketty stie is thinking of you. e In Icllure Ncwluer Syndicate. k n UTAH ttiiiiiiiiiiii;Hiii:iiiimiiiinimimiMiE( 1AKE IT FROM DAD By The Frank H. Cheey New Year and Evolution I Are All Politics Rotten? The Smithltuughs. father and son. were seated In their usual after-dinncorners. Boh at his books and father with his trade juurnul, magazines and pn pers. Dad, I'm going to be a lawyer after Bob's opening all." shot ! So," replied dud. laconically. 1 was going In foi public life possibly he a senator. said Boh. seriou .l.v. but Ive about come to the conclusion It Is not desirable after all. Dud are politics rotten?" Been reading the papers a bit eh. Boh?" queried dad. Well, 1 ran hard l.v liiame you for coming to such a conclusion with all the grafi and scandal in high places, yet. Bob. the law is a very highly respected profession nnd Just because here and there, now am! then, a man high in public office sells his birthright for a mess of poltage you must not conclude that all of onr vast army of public officials are crooks, by any means. America Is what she Is today as a nation, largely because of her type of government; a type of government which makes possible tremendous initiative on the part of officials, plus the fact that we still have vast natural resources easily exploited and wealth Is so comparatively easily attainable by fair means or foul. Remember how we all enjoyed the box of salted nuts the other evening. They were uuusually fine until you bit Into a rancid one and then you dklu't want any more. It would have been too bad to have concluded thut you would never eat salted nuts agalD because of one bad one to a box. ' Let's go a little further, Boh. The strength of American life 13 the quality of its citizenry. Most men are honorable and honest. Of the probably more than one hundred thousand public officials, a large part of the leaders of which have a legal truiuing, there is a very small per cent but hat have rendered their day and time and constituency thoroughgoing honorable service, many, at large personal sacrifice. Here I was Just now reading a splendid quotation from Roosevelt thut has an exact bearing on the By W. D. Pennypacker ? Tmiiiiiiiimuiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.c T WAS more than a quarter century ago that John, a ffl young man then, saw the present century ushered In As a tnan of mature years now, he looks back to that epochal midnight with interest. It strange that tbnt New Years eve appeared different from any other la his life. And yet, the reason Is not far to seek. There could be no other such midnight in nil his kiyH-st- - life. No other century would be ringing for him with such clamorous diu of bells and whistles. As he draws his chair close to the cheerful wood fire, the smoke from which lias given the room an aroma as of resinous Incense, he cannot but become reminiscent Before him are mental pictures impnn ed upon his mind twenty-nin- e years ago pictures which the coming and of many winters and the Joys of many summers can never efface. For more than a decade prior to 1900, John, his parents, and groups hours and wild festivities are no of the present life of one who b3v reached adult life when the bells clanged and whistles tooted, and horns blew, as 1900 was ushered In. Children, and in some cases grandchildren are out In the wild Jazziness of the night. Every one Is doing It, he thinks, but himself. A world pleasure-mad is seeing a new years arrival amidst a gaiety and thoughtless frivol that is astounding. It Is all in the way we are brought up, he admits, to himself, and is enough to recognize that with the turning of the wheel of time a gradual hut none the less effective evolution has taken place. He Is conscious that the young man and young woman of today those of the flapper age he calls It are as different In their thoughts and mental reactions as are our present highly bred domestic animals and their prehistoric ancestors of the Stone age. As he takes another long pull on Ids friendly pipe there is a glow, followed by a dense cloud of smoke. The curling rings ascending in the half light of a lessening fire give the appearance of, and. In reality, cause the full effect of dreundness. Ills mind flic backward and he is again In the happy events and great accomplishments of the past. How long John slo ps in the quiet rooui, while younger members of ids family are out to vxeleome a New Year, we could not sa.v. la the oppressive silence, the tick of the man tel clock can be tieard distinctly. It's regularity would not suggest that u year is dying, nor would it suggest the Joy of the coming of a New Year and the possibility of 1930 being one of earth's happiest New Years. Save for the clock, all Is silent Then there Is the outbreak of wldstle8, the din of tin horns and bells. For a moment, protracted into ten minutes or more the darkness of the night Is rent with distracting broad-minde- d State' Hce , lii said Sta of Congrevter teC b, as Indomnit,roved July 19 ihuj , NEK NEJ4 tuool Lands, 'W tense .2 Weil. 047491, Copies lYP-J- eriai Listm L.V ot said lis Never Too Late Any day is a good day to start tb New Year right for persons who Uv net done so already. , tbey relate to said W tlve have subdivisions, posted in this office fepection by any person inthfestel r uf public generally. ' of the period During pub don of this notice, or any time t!Lafter, and before final approval aXcerj,i. fication, under departmental Vula- - . tions of April 25, 1907, protj or contests against the claim a the State to any of the tracts or,ub- 5 divisions hereinbefore, describe on the ground that the same' ts e. valuable for mineral than for aj, cultural purposes will be received hd noted for report to the General La, Office at Washington, D. C FailuX so to protest or contest, "within th time specified, nvill be considered suf ficient evidence of the character of the tracts and the 8mA lections thereof, being otherwise freey from objection, will be approved to the State. Eli F. Taylor, - non-miner- First publication T nt publication December January Register. 20,- 17, 192'1 1930, GABBY GERTIE of younger and older folk In a small town met for A ,i'2 a soefa! evening and remained to In welcome the New Year. It was In those times when noises. John rouses with young folks and their elders frea start His pipe has fallen to the quently spent social evenings to floor, and the fire Is out. ne Is still gether. As John peers alone. Into the ruddy emAs he had dozed bers be wonders if away John had, in such things could fancy, been back In be possible now. the old days. He He knows that had returned to his parents and chilyoung manhood, dren are rarely If ever seen together and the big recepnow at social functions and that they tion every one gave are seldom seen at theaters or In to the coming m of the new century. church In the same groups. It Is only another New Year now. point But we did it, anyway," he murMileposts seem much closer than they Tn our history there is now pracmurs In a tone of somewhat sup- - did then. He has seen many of them tically uo mention of any great finan- pressed wonder that It could ever so many. In fact that they mean cier, of any great business man, who have been possible! little except to suggest In its widest When a girl has a heavy dats aha merely made money for himself. If And this Is as he recalls It: sense, a common brotherhood of all be said to lean toward oboaitjr way at some crisis In tiie nation's history mankind. -- f that financier rendered a great naThe evening was cool and crisp; tional service, or If be Identified him- the sky bright and cloudless, the When Alice and Jack returned home self in useful fashion with some great ground covered with 6now. heavily In the wee hours the color was Just movement for good, whether in art or crusted. coming into the eastern sky. They philanthropy or otherwise, then his Consciously, he was not aware that wished Dad a happy New Year and name remains. But even under these this was different from any other meant It though, both they conditions It remains as a secondary night Yet subconsciously he realized were conscious sincerely that he belonged to a value. Americas contribution to persomething was unusual. He might see different epoch. manent world history has been made ninny more New Years eves as, inThe breaking day, with an auspl by the statesmen and soldiers whose deed, he has been privileged to declous opening, was a happy one for devotion to the country equaled their but he would never again see the the entire Ross family, and all were efficiency, by men of science, men ot passing of an old century, with its conscious that It marked more than a art, men of letters, by sane and honNew Year they sensed that It marked great epochal struggles and momentest reformers and social workers, who ous achievements, and the arrival of the beginning of another cycle In the did great work and treated that work a new one with a clean slate upon evolution of the race. as In Itself a great reward.' which humanity mus transcribe Its 1929, Western Newspaper Union.) what of record The history of our growth and deaccomplishment After New Years velopment os a nation is largely the would the next one be? For tbe fastest longdistance After New Year's the country can men White, and unmarked, the page of story of the lives of who have devoted themselves to the an unwritten book the y ar spread settle buck to a long run of hard work, telep.hone service, call by service of their fellows In some one before him. He was to b -- ne of the with no disturbing Influence until the number. Usually youll get vc part of the thousand ramifications of out worlds billions of people t. appearance of the vacation literature. while you connection new a In record. transcribing life. your public . was I;;'-;The Impressive. thought Entitled to Cover Charge hold the "True it is. my boy, that we have an oversupply of small fry In the The farmer, having provided the f A broad grin sweeps his face, tn viands for a dinner on New Years eve. legal profession, but It Is also true in nsists on Inquiring why he cannot the other professions. Human nature noticed by others In the room. Th dim light and the crackling warmth dm a sliate In the cover charge. is no different in politics than In busiot the fireside made all drowsy. l4t ness or medicine or the other sci- ITTJ ills v'7- - J! (, number high-minde- d name beUe was a e spirit inovoi us. At forty ,ve became so monstrously overwhelmed that we ered too late! PAYSPN CHRONICLE, PAYSO ences. "Some one has told us that the real great lives is to fertilize the imaginations of our youth. When you think politics, think of the great game that Washington played with his Continental congress; think of the great game that Lincoln played with millions of human lives at stake. Think of the great and fascinating game that Herbert Hoover played to feed the starving children of the world. Do not let your ideals and conclusions be reached by dwelling too much on the petty graft and mistakes of the greedy and overly ambitious few. True American citizenship means loyal service to God and country. Boys of sterling quality must be trained to enter politics yes, to become fighting politicians; citizens who do their share of the public work, and Bob, you dont need to wait until yon are a senator. Be a value of live-wir- good hard-hittin- straight-shootin- In e g In school; your club; politician your camp; yes. In your gang. We must recognize that there are defects In our land and weaknesses In our systems: that our plan of things Is not perfect ; that all our Institutions can be bettered; and that only by to make preparation and America the great democracy where there is less and less fear, more and more confidence In each other and a united hope for even better things, will a new day come. Good and bad politics, Bob, brlnf np another point, too, that it is well to consider. Good politics is simply Everybody likes the fellow loyalty. who stands up for his family nnd bis school, his friends, his team, and bis country all of that is not so hard In to do." (. It!. Wetera Newepaper 1 Cnluo.) J. ad a tackling dummy Special football paraphernalia which included a Lucking machine were placed aboard the S. S. Maui for the Santa Clara Football T4im to train aboard ship on its way to Honolulu to meet the University of Hawaii. A Chevrolet truck transported the background. Matson the equipment from Santa Clara to the Maui which is choyn. of the apparatus. Navigatiotf Company officials supervised the unloadinsTf-tallatio- A |