OCR Text |
Show FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1930 THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH NEW BOOKS IN LIBRARY Its a great war, by Mary Lee. Prize " The $25,000 war novel prize was divided between this Look and "God have Mercy on us. The best novel of the war. It is a great piece of work and worthy of first place on the list of publications Trousers of taffeta, by Margaret Wilson. A novel of the trousered, cloistered women the story of their heart aches and blinding happiness seen by an American Missionary doctor, It is full of anedote, pathos and humor; vividly described, sympathetically felt. Revolt in the Desert, by T. E. Lawrence. You must read Lawrences book for you will never see the like of it again. It is a great book by a great man. It can only be said that the greatest individual adventure of the war has reached the almost incredible climaxi of a book that is worthy of it. novel. I lbZ.ce ting the leeds of Zillions of People m Mr. and Mrs. David Mitchell of Los Angeles are visiting here with their parents Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Reece and Mrs Emma Mitchell and are being extensively!. - entertained during their stay here On Sunday they were the guests of honor at a dinner party given by Mr. and Glenn Simmons at their home in Provo. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs Stanley Wilson of Pay-soand Mr. and Mrs Abe Taylor of Provo n Mr. and Mrs. Ammon Nebeker Jr. and Mrs. L V Nebeker came in from the Nebeker Ranch, in Wyoming and The automobile hat brought greater opportunity and added lwurt of recreation to millions of men and women. lotc-pric- the automobile is such an im BECAUSE factor in the lives and prosperity of so many people, the purpose of the Ford Motor Company is something more than the mere manufacture of a motor car. There is no service in simply setting up a machine or a plant and letting it turn out goods. The service extends into design, every detail of the business production, the wages paid and the selling price. All are a part of the plan. The Ford Motor Company looks upon itself as charged with making an automobile that will meet the needs of millions of people and to pro ide it at a low price. That is its mission. That is its duty and its obligation to the public. The search for better ways of doing There is ceasethings is never-endinless, untiring effort to find new methods and new machines that will save steps and time in manufacturing. The Ford plants are,' in reality, a great mechanical dedicated to the advancement of Industry. Many manufacturers come to see and share the progress made. The greatest progress comes by never standing still. Todays methods, however successful, can never be taken as wholly right. They represent simply the best efforts of the moment. Tomorrow most bring an improve g. uni-Tersit- y, ment in the methods of the day before. Hard work usually finds the way. Once it was thought imposclble to cast gray iron by the endless chain method. All precedent was against it and every previous experiment had failed. But fair prices to the public demanded that wasteful methods be eliminated. Finally the way was found. Abetter way of making axle shafts saved million dollars in four years. thirty-si- x A new method of cutting crankcases reduced the cost by $300,000 a year. The perfection of a new machine saved a similar amount on such a little thing a3 one bolt. Then electric welding was developed to make many bolts unnecessary and to increase structural strength. Just a little while ago, an endless chain conveyor almost four miles long was installed at the Rouge plant. This conveyor has a daily capacity of 300,000 parts weighing more than 2,000,000 pounds. By substituting the tireless, unvarying machine for tasks formerly done by hund, it has made the days work easier for thousands of workers and saved time and money in the manufacture of the car. All of these things are done in the so that the interest of the public benefits of reliable, economical spent the week-en- with relatives. d Their mother, Mrs. Ammon Nebeker who has spent several weeks at the ranch, accompanied them homo. Mr. and E. E. Robinson had for their guests over the week end Mr Robinsons mother and sister, Mrs Ju- lia Robinson and Mrs. Guy. Collins from Californi, another sister, Mrs. Ralph Gillmore of Salt Lake and a brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Robinson of iMarysvale, Utah. Vacation T 1-- a, con-veye- to-w- it: t 100-acr- We arc auntlELorized S&sisssiiomiiS TIRE Travel GUJAUBANTIEIE By Coecb fa Coats Loss Us yst is 9 Uagir. W l trwrwl tyttsm, Sj'inilllllllll!lllllllll!lll!llllllllll!lllll!lll!lllllllllllllllllllllllll!ll9 ft I We guarantee this Miller t E5 1 Denver $16.45 Omaha 29.65 28.80 Spokane 30.20 Albuquerque New York City 57.95 PI OK WICK - GREYHOUND Tire to outwear any other lire of equal price when run under the same conditions. Genred-to-tlie-Roa- 1 a within the means of every one. "A State Engineers Office, IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DIST-TRIC- Salt Lake City, Utah, June 25, 1930 Notice is hereby given that Lynn COURT OF THE STATE OF D. Stewart, whose post office address UTAH: IN AND FOR UTAH is Payson, Utah, has made application in accordance with the requirements The Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, of the Session Laws of Utah, 1919 to 1929 incl. to appropriate 5 c. f. s. of a corporation, water from two unnamed springs in Plaintiff. Utah County. Said water is to be vs John Oekerman, also known as John diverted as follows: No. 1, S 13 deg. O. Okerman, Amanda J. Oekerman, his 10 nun. E. 1000 ft. from the Wtf Sec. 32, T. 9 S., R. 2 E., S. L. wife; Marinus Johnson, Trustee; Mari- cor. nas Johnson. Katie H. Johnson, his B. & M. No. 2, S. 59 deg. 20 min. E.. 495 ft. from point of diversion of wife; Bonneville Lumber Company, a 1. Said water will De Addison Cain; Y. Yas-ud- Spring No. corporation; d at Spring No. 1 and Mrs. Y. Yasuda his wife; David comming-le- d Garrick, Jane Doe Garrick, his wife; lined by means of a pipe to a cement6 regulation reservoir located Allen Garrick, Mary Roe Garrick, his wife; First Doe, Second Doe TTiird rods N. and 10 rods W. of the EXA cor. Doe, Fourth Doe, Fifth Doe, and Sixth Sec. 31, said township and range from where it will be conveyed a distance i Doe, Defendants. of 1500 ft. and used from April 1st To be sold at Sheriffs Sale on Mon- to October 31st incl. of each year for day the 25th. day of August 1930, at the irrigation of 30 acres of land emeleven oclork a. m. of said day at braced in the SEJ4NEJ4 said Sec. the front door of the County Court 31. As much water as necessary will House at the City and County Build- be used during the entire year for ing, situate in Provo City, Utah Coun- domestic and culinary purposes. ty, State of Utah, all the eight, title1 This application is designated in and interest of the above named de- the State Engineers Office as File fendants. of in and to the following No. 10903. All protests against the granting of described real property, in Utah Coun-- 1 said application, Btating the reasons of State Utah, ty, therefor, must be by affidavit in dupParcel 1 : IThe West half of the Northwest licate, accompanied with a fee of $1.00, this office within thirty quarter of Section 32, Township 9 and filed in South, Range 1 East, Salt Lake Base (30) days after the completion of the and Meridian; containing, 80 acres publication of this notice. Geo. M. Bacon, more or less. State Engineer Parcel 2: Date of first publication, July 3, 1930 corner the Northeast at , Beginning of publication, 9 South, Date of completion of Section 31, Township 1930 Range 1 East Salt Lake Base and July 31, Meridian, running thence West 40 shares being represented by Certifirods; thence South 160 irods; thence cate No. 41. East 40 rods; thence North 160 rods Together with all tenements, heredto the place of beginning; contain- itaments and appurtenances thereunto ing 40 acres, more or less. belonging or in any wise appertainContaining in the aggregate 120 ing. acres more or less. Purchase price payable in lawful Together with a water right con- money of the United States. e feet per annum Dated at Provo City, Utah, this sisting of for 50 acres of the above described 28th. day of July 1930. land from what is known as the StrawJ. D. Boyd Sheriff of Utah Counberry Reclamation Project which has ty, Stake of Utah. been constructed by the United States By Elias A. Gee Deputy Sheriff. Geo. S. Baliff attorney for Plaintiff. of America. Together with 165 shares of. the Provo City. Utah. capital stock of the East Warm Creek Publication in the Payson Chronicle Irrigation & Canal Company, said August to iiiako you this transportation may be placed FORD MOTOR COMPANY NOTICE TO WATER USERS NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL PROPERTY I il ELITE CAFE Phone 12 this means the correct feeding of PAYSON, UTAH dairy cat le was being reduced to a science. The results of this scientific knowledge are now available to every farmer, and1 there is little excuse today for the owner of dairy I I not knowing how to keep his cattle Loui, Mo. herd on a profitable production basis. .jfrhA-'fimHOUNDj graduate of Ontario years of Veterinary College, 1892. Thirty-eigWe have to the referred already "3 veterinary work. Eminent authority on diseases and dairy cow as an example of a mod7 raising of dairy cows, other livestock, and poultry. Nationally known lecturer, writer and author. ern machine perfected throughout the years for the manufacture of A I WHEN SCIENCE STUDIES The average public is not aware milk. I think We will have a greater THE COWS STOMACH of the fact that similar method-- regard for the humble cow and will manufacture of milk. A cud Will have been employed for years in the be far more considerate of her com three to four ounces. Each one Mordern Feeding Methods are the study of the care and feeding of fort and surroundings if we knew weigh is chewed about a minute before it is Result of Experimenting to Find cattle. a little more about the mechanism returned for digestion. bv the Proper Combinations which she produces milk. I visited a Recently A cow in reality has four stomachs, State experimental station. As we How any times, far instance, are each one of which performs a certain went thrugh one bam I was shown we neglectful, in cold weather, of function. The first stomach acts as n Editors Note This is another story We do not churn where further mastication takes in a aeries of articles on dairying writ- a new horn calf and informed thaj, water for the cattle? hours it would realize that their bodies consist of place. The second apparently has no ten by the well known national dairy within twenty-fou- r and poultry authority, Dr. L. D. not be alive. In fact, it was doomed from 70 to 90 percent liquid Water digestive juices but is a sort of policeV. S., of St. Louis, Mo. The en- to die before it was ever bom. The performs many important functions man to the food, removing stones, tire aeries will appear in this paper. reason for this was that its mother in the body. It dissolves the food nails, and otherfi foreign objects which Our readers are urged to read them had been a certain ration. For acts as a carrier of food and waste, may happen to be in it. The third fed for out them and future clip carefully reference. twenty years cows fed this ration and is a more important element in stomach has powerful muscles which had not produced a single calf which the chemistry of the body. Any in- squeeze the moisture out of the food The expression is frequently used lived. In eery case the offspring terference with the normal amount and prepare it for entering the true that we are living in a laboratory would be undersized, abnormal, and of drinking water .may be serious stomach. From there on the processes Nearly everything we eat and in many cases blind. The ration was and it should be supplied to live are very1 similar to those in other aniagx wear-anuse must first go through wheat straw, wheat meal, wheat stock in large amounts in all seasons mals. several experimental stages. of the year. In the winter time gluten and common salt. It is a fact that this is a more comA few years ago, I visited the The interesting thing about the drinking 'water should not be cold plicated procedure than the digestive The digestive organs of the cow processes in other animals. Therefore, factory of a experiment was that in this same automobile and was told that every barn the cows fed with the same are extremely interesting. As most it is very necessary that the cow be part of the engine was inspected ration plus the bone meal and cod of us know, the dairy cow chews her quite and comfortable during the perminutes during the liver oil produced healthy calves food just enough to moisten it, be- iod when she is tranforming her food every forty-fiv- e process of manufacture. Finally which later became larye producers of fore she swallows it. It is held in into milk. A cow, when disturbed, the engine was placed on a testing milk the paunch until she is ready to bring immediately ceases chewing he.r cud. block and run at full speed contin-ouslAll through this experinn nt sta it back in the form of a cud, when which means that at the next milking for four hours before it was lions similar were lieing made she masticates it and mixes it with period her supply will be greatly reever put into the finished car. on various combinations of food By alia. This is thei first step in the duced if the disturbance continues. Liberal 4" " Allowance j On Your Hnes ht Old Tires ( Phone or drive in for an appraisal) I i i Le-Gea- well-know- n high-pric- ed y well-know- n a tire dealer claims his tires will WHENEVER other tire, ash him if he can guarantee it. To our knowledge only the Miller Rubber Products makes such a Company Incorporated, Akron, Ohio, guarantee. If your Miller Tire fails to outwear any other tire of same conditions, we equal price when ran under the are coming new customers lose not you. Thats why Miller Tires. of set to us every day for their first Come in and get all the facts about the most sensible users. guarantee ever offered tire MILLED Seagull Service Station Phone 49 Payson, Utah s Authorized Dealer ' '1. 12 ' tfTgr- |