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Show THE TIMES-NEW- NEPHI, UTAH S. James O'Connell 3 Camilla Kenyon PANISH I WEEKLY MARKETGRAM UTAH Wit Doubloons nmmi)nj COPYRIGHT 1 THE COMPANY www TREASURE Well, here's a "Treasure Iiland" 4 ISLAND. new kind of a kind that Stevnnton would himself chuckle over, could he come back to read it. And by a woman, too! So, as you may easily imagane, it's different from the rank and file of the many stories about treasure islands. Just the same, it's a real treasure island story an uninhabited island, adventurers who have adventures, mystery, treajk-ry- , violence and Spanish doubloons. And this time, for ' goed measure, love and romance and humor are thrown in. The autjor, Camilla Kenyon, was born in San Francisco, with legend of a buccaneer ancei-to- r in the family. She says she sometimes thinks the old rover's soul may have got by mistake into her ear'.hly frame. Anyway, she always has doted on sea tales of adventure and now she has written one of her own that's better readin; than most of those she has read. Yes; it's sure different the d heroine tells the story herself I An interesting young person with a yarn that will keep you reading far beyond bedtime. i e one-fourt- h red-heade- CHAPTER wuw at the end and reading backward-A- unt Jane's letters are usually most IntelMgible that way you managed to piece together some explanation of and her this Miss Higglesby-Hrown- e place in the scheme of tilings. It was through Miss Hrowne, whom she had met at a lecture uhhi that Aunt Jane h l come to realize her claims as aa Individual upon the Cosmos, also to discover that she was by nature a woman of affairs with a talent for directing large enterprises, although adverse Influences hud hitherto kept her from recognizing her powers. There was a dark significance in these "adverse influences." though whether they meant me or the family lawyer I was not sure. Miss HIggleshy-Brownhowever, bud assisted Aunt Jane to find herself, und as a consequence Aunt Jane, for the comparatively trifling outlay needexful to finance the Harding-Brownpedition, would shortly be the richer of a vast treasure of by Spanish doubloons. The knowledge of this hoard was Miss Higg'esby-Browne'- s alone. It had been revealed to her by a dying sailor in a London hospital, whither she had gone on a mission of kindness you gathered that Miss Browne was precisely the sort to take advantage when people were helpless and unable to fly from her. Why the dying sailor chose to make Miss Brown the repository of his secret, I don't know this still remains for me the unsolved mystery. But when the sailor closed his eyes the secret and the map of course there was a map had become Miss H i gg! est wne's. Miss Browne now hud clear before her the road to fortune, but unfortunately it led across the sea and quite out of the route of steamer travel. Capital in excess of Miss Browne's resources was required. London proving cold before its great opportunity. off Its dust Miss Browne had and come to New York, where a mysteriously potent influence had guided her to Aunt Jane. Through Miss I. ' An Aunt Errant. Never hnd life seemed more fair and smiling 1n) n at the moment when Aunt Jane's letter descended upon me like a bolt from the blue. The fact Is, I was taking a vacation from Aunt clerk, and at the cool negation of his tone my heart gave a sickening downward swoop. "Miss Jane Harding and party have left the hotel !" "For the Island?" 1 gasped. He raised his eyebrows. "Can't He gave me an apsay, I'm sure." praising stare. Perhaps the woe In my face touched hlui, for he descended from the eminence of the hotel clerk where he dwelt apart sufficiently to add. "Is It Important that you should see her?" "I am her niece. I have come all the way from Sun Francisco expecting to Join her here." The clerk meditated, his shrewd eyes piercing the very secrets of my soul. "She knew nothing about It," I hastened to add. "I Intended It for a surprise." This candor helped my cause. "Well," he said, "that explains her not leaving any word. As you are her niece, I suppose It will do no harm to tell you that Miss Harding and ber party embarked this morning on the freighter Bufus Smith, and I think It very likely that the steamer has not left port. If you like I will send a man to the water-fron- t with you and you may be able to go on board and have a talk with your aunt. Did I thank him? I have often wondered when I waked up In the night. I have a vision of myself dashing out of the hotel, and then the hacK that brought me Is bearing me awry. Bellboys hurled my bags In after me, and I threw them larges3 recklessly. Madly we clattered over cobbled ways. ( ut on the smooth waters of the roadstead lay ships great and small, ships with stripped masts and smokeless funnels, others with faint gray spirals wreathing from their stacks. Was one of these the Kufus Smith, and would I reach her or him before the thin gray feather became a thick black plume? I thought of my aunt at the mercy of these unknown adventurers with whom she had set forth, helpless as a little fat pigeon among hawks, and I felt, desperately, that I must reach her. must save her from them and bring her safe back to shore. How I was to do this at the n eleventh hour, plus about minutes, as at present, I hadn't considered. But experience had taught me that once in my clutches Aunt Jane would offer about as much resistance as a slightly melted wax doll. She gets so soft that you are almost afraid to touch her for fear of leaving dents. So to get there, get there, get there, was the one prayer of my soul. I got there, in a boat hastily commandeered by the hotel clerk's deputy. We brought up under the side of the little steamer, and the wide surprised face of a Swedish deckhand stared down at us. "Iet me abof.nl! I must come aboard," I cried. r. Other faces appeared, then a Somehow I was, mounting It a dizzy feat to which only the tumult of my emotions made me Indifferent. Bare brawny arms of sailors clutched at me and drew me to th deck. There at once I was the center of a circle of speechless and astonished persons, all men but one. "Well?" demanded a large breezy voice. "What's this mean? What do yiu want aboard my ship?" I looked up at a man In a large straw bat. "I want my aunt." I explained. "Your aunt?" he "Why the devil should yoti think I've got yout mint?" "You have got her." I replied with firmness. "I don't vee her, but she'll here somen here." The captain of the Rufus Smith two large red fists above his head. "Another lunatic!" he shouted. "I'd as soon have n white horse and a minIn a floating ister aboard as go to June. Being an orphan. I was supposed to be under Aunt Jane's wing, but this was the merest polite fiction, and I am sure that no hen with one chicken worries about it more than 2 did about Aunt Jane. I had spent the last three years, since Aunt Susan died and left Aunt Jane with all the money and no one to look after but me, In snatching her from the brink of disaster. Her most recent and narrow escape was from a person of half her years who turned out to be a convict on parole. She had her handbag packed for th'? elopement when I confronted her with this unpleasant fact. When she came to she was bitter Instead of grateful, and went about for weeks presenting a - spectacle of blighted affections which wae too much for the most conscience. So It ended with my packing her off to New York, where I wrote to her frequently ami kindly, urging her not to mind me but to stay as long as she liked. Meanwhile I came up to the ranch for "a long holiday with Hess and the baby, a holiday which luid already M retched Itself out to Thanksgiving, and threatened to last until Christmas. As to A nit Jane, my state of mind was fatuously calm. She was staying with cousins, who live In a suburb 1 nd are frightfully respectable. was sure they numbered no convicts among their acquaintance, or indeed any one from whom Aunt Jane was likely to require rescuing. And If :t came to a retired missionary I was perfectly willing. "I Must Get to Panama In Time to I5ut tee cousins and their respectSave Her." ability are of the passive order, whereas to manage Aunt Jane demands ag- Browne'R great organizing abilities. to speak of those newly brought gressive, and continuous action. Hence the bolt from the blue above alluded to llgl., in Aunt Jane, a party of to. stanch comrades had been assembled, I was swinging tranquilly In th" a steamer engaged to meet them at hammock, I reinemtier, when P.rss Panama, and It was ho, for the Island brought my letters and then hurried In the blue Pacific main! awer because the baby had fallen With this lyrical outburst Aunt downstairs. I'uwarned by the slight- Jane concluded the body of her letter. est ,jjpmottitory thrill. I kept Aunt A small cniificd postscript Informed June's tetter till the last and skimmed me that It was against Miss wishes thnt she revealed their plans thrjmgh all the others. I to anyone, but that she did want to At last I came to Aunt Jane. ripped open the envelope and drew hear from me before they sailed from out the letter a fat one. hut then 'annum, where a letter might reacli A tint Jane's letters are always fat. her If I was prompt. 1 "And of Nevertheless, as I spread out the explained to Bess hi dlam !" close-fillepages I felt a mild wonder. ns I hurled things into my bags. "If a As the angry thunder letter can reach her so can I. At least died away captain's Writing so large, so black, so stagcame the small, anxious inI It. so take must the chance of What must gering, madly underlined, voice of Aunt Ji;ne. dicate something above even Aunt those people are tip to 1 don't know "What's the matter? Oh. tell June's usual emotional level. Per- probably they mean to hold her for me tthatXthe matter "' she please was sayranMtn and murder her outright if It ing as she edged her way Into the haps In sober truth there was a l not forthcoming. Or perhaps some ry group. Her eyes, round, pale, blinkTwenty minutes later I slavered of fhctii will marry her and share the ing a little In the tropical glare, . Hlgglesby-Bi-owueMiss Into Hess' room. spoils with roved over the circle until they Ht on must get to Panama In me. Kitrlit where Hush!" tdie said. "Ili.n't wake the Anyway. she stood Aunt Jam time to ive her." baby !" petrified. Her poor little chin dropped I viiii no to sav mkht or the go fir along Baby baby." whimpered until It disiipp nred altogether In the Bess. Island." agely. "I've put to have a tinie-tiilitfolds of her plump neck, and she reI I leave for the city tn'glit to catch paused to g'are at her. mained speechless, stricken. Immobile "I'ess! And let them murder me. as a wax figure In an exhibition. the first steamer fur Can. una !" Later, while the bnby slumbered trio?" "Aunt Jane." I said, "you must mine marry yon " coood Bess. and I packed. I explained. This was back to shore with me." I spoke right I was One month Inter climbing ont mlinly. for unless yon are riif.lcult; n'it that Hess Is as a genperfectly of a lumbering hack before (he Tivoll calm with Aunt Jane you fluster eral thing obtuse, but because the ber. of Aunt Jane embarking for hotel, which rises square and white She replied only by a slight gobon the low a the Pacific of and lone Isle green height bling In her throat, hut the olbet some wild, Imfsislng exe-clitlonlMive the old Spanish city of Pans the head of a treasure-seekinwoman ssike In a loud voice, was enough to shake the strong- ama. In spite of the melting troped not to me but to the universe est Intellect. And yet. amid the we- ical heat there was a chill fenr at my In general. lter of Ink and eloquence which filled heart, the fear thnt Aunt Jnne and "The Young Person Is mnd I" It w as had althose fateful pages, there was the cold her band of treasure-seeker- s unmistakably British Intonation. on their nnet. hard fact confronting you. Aunt Jane ready departed I crossed the broad gallery and was going to look for burled freaure. In company with one Violet Hlggleshy-F.rrwnplunged Into the cool dimness of th "Aevbody th t ain't rein' In Is we'eo-ne- r ! hat dire'li whom she sprung on yon lobby In the weke of the belllioys who. a helpless prey, hnd jurrp overboard.' without the slightest explanation, aa discerning though alluding to the queen of Rheba swooped en masse upon my bars "ills Jane Hardlngf repeated the ft the Siamese twins. By beglunlof velvot-tongue- tip-wa- rd fifty-seve- rope-ladde- nt red-face- s si-- d mis-alo- 1 "r p'c-lur- e n 4. ' ad-dre- 1';"'He7'IY t (U. & Bureau of Markata) Grain. Excepting In wheat )i(Eht rally on the ltlh price declined the first four day of the week on liquidation of long holdings, lark of apecuative buying, and dw-eraging business report. On the 22nd and 23rd sentiment mixed but prices advanced with rood export demand and buying by teaboard houe. Buying 8?ntlmnt more favorable on the 24: h and prices continued upward. There waa trnding in Mty whtat on the 24th at around $1.25. Country corn offerings li -eral. Cloning prices in Chicago eah market: No. 2 Red Winter Wheat $1.20: No. 2 Hard $1.10; No. 2 Mixed Corn 5fic ; No. 2 Yellow Jorn 5Sc ; No. 3 White Oats 82c. For the c closweek Chicago September wheat lost ing at $1.186 : September Corn down half cent at Mc. Minneapolis September Wheat down 1c at $1.27; Kan -- as City September ; Winnipeg October down iown IVjC at $1.0 Wheat clre-e- d 64c at $1.89. Chicago Decern Ik r M at $1.19; December Corn 54c; nneapolis December Wheat $1264: Kansas City December $1.11; Winnipeg December $1.32 V... 3 Hay. Heavi-- r receipts have caused a ilecl.ne in Timothy pViccw at principal cei.-txwestern markets. Stock yards buy ng at Chtnigo has cleared up' surplus. Lighter -KaMern markets our try loadings reported. lull and about 50c lower. Alfalfa and Pra'rie d rices huve also d. dined ahout 6Uc--$l Au the week. No. 1 Timo'.hy quoted 24 York New $30.50. Philadelphia $24. 'iut Cincinnati $19 50. Chicago t'12. Atlanta $2t. Memphis $23.50. No. 1 Alfalfa Memphis $2? Minneapolis $20. No 1 Prairie Mtnneapolif ?14.50. Chicago $17. Feed. No material change hi feed situs-.ion- . P-stocks in xr.M nt re ti rements ice slightly lower. Demand g nerolly light. Lin seed Gluten and hominy let d un- hani-dtieal and rottorwetd mal dull. Deferred ship-necottonseed meal Inclined about $3 per on s nce a week airo. Stocks and movement a "air.' Quoted August 24 bran $150. $14. fWmr middlings $49. Minneapolis; white Ju'en fed $30 50 Chicago; hominy 1 ed 22 St Lous; No Alfalfa meal '.7 51 KanfSi City; linseed mai $38 Minne-ol- is : S6 per cent cottonseed meal $33 AU mta, $26 Memphis. markets have Dairy Products. Butter een weak but arc steady now, prices averse $c lowtr than a week ago. P reduction lowing slight increase following more favor-bl- e wea'her conditions in some producing ctinna. Rwent high prices have apparent-hur- t coiwumnt ve demand. Closing prices, 2 score! New York 43c; Chicago 87c; PhilaMore confdtnc delphia 40'.c; Boston 41c. Vtwn in 'hecse markets and undertone much ore settled than a week ago Trading at ha markets 'sconsin rrima-- y especially own considerable Improvement August 23rd rice average: Twin lft.e. Daisies 20c. Daisief oubl 194 ; Youn America 20c ; onghorns 19&4c from California Salmon T'nt Cantaloupe eastern "urtock Section n arly steady in larketa at $2.50-$- 3 per standard crate. The Chicago market continued slow and weak nd price closed 25c lower at $1.75-1- 2 per rate. Deleware and Maryland Green meats tandards 45', closed unchanged in New r ork for second consecutive week at $1.25- - future ' J watt- Treasurer of Metal Trades Union. He was a member of the executive committee on labor of She Council of National Defense in 1917. From 1891 to 1910 he was president of the International Association of Machinists. NEW LABOR LAWS Important Legislation in Interest of Workers. Statutes Enacted Since the Signing of the Armistice Are Matters for Congratulation. Substantial progress has been mads since the signing of the armistice In erecting additional legal safeguards for working men and women, according to the summary of labor laws enacted, made public by the American Association for Labor Legislation. The statutes passed by forty states and by congress were examined In compiling the summary, and the conclusion Is reached that the advance In the field of social insurance la particularly marked. Four more states adopted workmen's compensation laws last year, making a total of forty-fiv- e states and territories having such legislation In addition to the model act of the federal government Tor Its civilian employees and the soldiers' and sailors' Insurance act. "Matter of Sound Economics." Besides this, almost every state amended Its compensation law, "with the trend," says Dr. John B. Andrews, secretary of the association, "encouragingly toward more liberal benefits, shorter waiting periods and wider scope. Indicating that protective laws for labor are regarded by legislators not as a matter of sentiment but of sound economics." North Dakota, one of the new states to join the compensation group, has now an "enlightened provision for an exclusive state fund." Ten states raised their scale of compensation, and at present twenty-thre- e states In all require employers to pay workers when Injured from 60 to 66 per cent of their wages. Only six states, all of them In the South, lack workmen's compensation acts. Even more significant. Dr. Andrews thinks, than the compensation Insurance legislation Is "the Impetus gives to the movement for compulsory workmen's health Insurance to pros tect and their families agnlnst the hazards of sickness as workmen's compensation now safeguards tlTem when accidentally Injured." Women Workers Benefited. Progress was also made, the report states. In obtaining legislation limiting the employment of women and children. In half a dozen states the hours of women workers were relimit duced. Including an eight-hou- r In Massachusetts, won "after s full n North struggle." passed minimum wage legislation for women and children, bringing the total of states having such laws up to 14. In addition to the District of Columbia. Klght states Improved their child labor acts, while congress child labor regulations declared unconstitutional by the Supreme court, using Its taxing power as the means of enforcement. "While congress continued to hold back." says Doctor Andrews, "well considered measures for a federal state employment service, as embod'ed In the Ken.von-Nolabill, and vocational rehabilitation for Industrial cripples, several states took action to meet these urgent needs. Four states. In addition to Massachusetts, where beginnings were made a year ago, aid In and finding employment for Industrial cripples, and the bill, extending (he present federal stn'e system of vocational education to cover the maimed vlct'ms of Industrial accidents, passed the United States senate." Labor Unions Legalized. Labor unions were expressly legal- .ed In three states during the year, vhlle In two of these the oe of Injunctions in labor disputes Is strictly limited. Oregon created a stale board of conciliation for Industrial disputes, such as New Turk has, while South Carolina passed a law establishing penalties for violation- - of Its conciliation and arbitration act. Six more stales passed criminal syndicalism and sabotage laws. California, Minnesota and Oklahoma Increased the powers of their Industrial commissions to facilitate enforcement of safety regulations and ifjier lah'r laws. S1.60. Lire Slock and Meats. The trend of Chicago live stock prices was downward th ast week net declines on beef steers ranging Butcher cows and per 100 pounds. icifers and feeder steers were generally 25c ower. Both fat and feeding lambs declined c, Hog fat ewes generally steady. irices show net declines of 15c-6per 10C Aurounds, l'ght weights declining most. gust 24 Chicago prices : hogs, top $9.60 bulk beef of sale $7 medium and good steers $6.25-$- 9 40 ; butcher cows and heifert $.V5O-$8.6-0 : ; feeder stem $5.2K-$7.light fa4 tnd medium weight veal calves amh $7 75 $10; feeding lambs $6 25-; ycarl-jjg$6.25-$fat ewes $3.25-$5.2Stock er and feeder shipments from 11 im ortant markets during the week ending Aug 9th were: Cattle and calve 88,498 ; hop 2.710; sheep 45,669. As for some time past, veal was the only meat that showed and upward price trerwl n eastern wholesale fresh meat markets. Th advance for the week amounting generally fc. $1 per 100 pounds. Beef lost 50c; lamb an de nut ton steady to $1 lower : pork loin lined $l-$good grac August 24 pr'en Ism' veal $16-tlmeats; beef 21 -- $24; mutton $U-$1light pork loins $25 ?t 29; heavy loins DENIES AU IS DESIRABLE Here Is One Person, at Least, Whe Enjoys Youth and Is Loth to Part With It. 2-- 3 wage-earner- Da-ko- 's n Smltli-Bankhea- STATE NEVIS Provoa oldest woman, Mra. Elz heth Conrad Hooks, 01 years of age, home, CM lOust Sixth North street, where she had lived forty-ninyears. e The city commission of Provo Tnfc, off $1(10,000 of They went to the highest bid, dcrs, the Harris Trust and Saving hank of Chicago. The hid uveiVi was at par for 6 per oomls. Jay auctioned rty-bond- Kapns, Creen & Co. of Salt take were awarded the contract for the building of the mile of concrete road between Hooper and the Ogdcn angnr factory by the counlv commission at Ogilen Weitfiesdav. The b:d wa $17,. 900.S0. Sunday nToruing Hay IJllywblte, 0 old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe. It. Rrlghain City, wag heidly urneiTaliout the face, hands and iHrmii Sunday morning when an explosion o." furred after the lad hit a bajs; em lainlng itowder with n Tin miner. year Lilly-while- Miss Florence Jones has been chosen act as queen of the carnival for Peuch day, to be held in Ilrigliam city; on September 14. "Miss Jones will oc, l ctrpy ttie place of honor in the club float in the Peach lo Vn.-mercin- , i The real harvest of the Elbetfa pencil crop will begin the latter part' of the week at Brigham City. Tfc first picking will be made In the aoatlt part of the city and at Wlllard and Berry but by next week, the work at garnering the Wg peach crop will be on hi reuT earnest. The cfTy commission of Ixignn at the regular meeting held recently appro-- : printed $.'500 to be used by the entertainment committee of the chamber of commerce for the reception of th traveling passnnger agents of the United States and Canada who will spend Thursday, September 15, lti Ijogan and Logan canyon ns the concluding nunw ber of their convention, which la t take place at Salt lAke. j With the opening of the Ogden-Ho- t Springs concrete road, an -highway now connects the city of den with Brigiiam City in P.oelder' county. The new road eliminates truck near the Hot Springs, for which consideration the Utah-Idah- o Central paid $40(10 of construction costs. Tbej balance of .'T i ,O00 was pnld. one-hal- f by the federal government and one quarter cm li by the xtate and county Soules, vice president of tbej Trust company of KiIj Luke, and L. C. Slubbtns, engineer, were In Nephl recently looking oven prospects and conditions whereby more' water ran be obtained for Irrigation In east Juab county. After a survey that prospects were bright mil It Is believed that In the near fo-- J lure rtlls part of the county can t supplied with a large flow of watet, for irrigation purposes. L. V. Ifcillorati-Jinlg- e they-reporte- for the elixir of life have been subjected to pnbllr ridicule. This, however, merely prove that the majority of people dislike havW. It. Hoppe, manager of the Smllh- -j ing their attention directed to their fleM TTTe Brick company of Logan, infirmities. Since Cicero wrote "Ie has made a contribution of tile for we down the have repeated Senectute" Oonn- -' to Cache the purposes drnlnag Is iiges the pious untruth that old age a proud and denlrable state and ly Fair association, nccordlng to M. xecretnry. The title will lx ihat regrets for a loxt youth are misused to drnin swntnp section near ttw In our hearts not It Is and go, placed. we know It. Youth Is as much to be grandstand at the fair grounds. Mr,; preferred to ape as life to death, and ll'ivfy Fnid that all Improvements ende If we possessed any means of pre construction at the fair grounds been completed by the opening of ervlng our youth we should use those I be fair, Septenmer 20. means. Nor Is there any absolute reason why a human life should not bf continued at Its full power Indefinitely. Ijihor flay tliia year in Trovo promi.' We age, apparently. In the siimt ses to bicnk all previous tabor day mnnner as we puss from childhood to records set In this part of Utah. The adult atrenlh; the process of devel- day will start' with a monster parade opment Is reversed. A great number at 10 a. m., funning on FnlversHy, 'if recent experiments Mipgest that the iivcmie, north and south, and on Cenreversal may, In miitiible Instances, be ter, east and west. The innrvh will he delayed. It Is true these are motly ens I ward on Center tin HI all division experiments on animals and. for the tire in line, then a countermarch west-war- d Yet most part. lH(k eoiillrrnntlon. to Pioneer park, where the pro. few who have I nd opportunities of gram wig start with community sing-- , following the trend of events doubt on 'hut a measure of success hns been ng. "America" will be first a Nor that should the fact achieved. particular old man or woman who hns The Ogden-lloSprings fond was undergone some otteratlon or treatafternoon. Th penod ment and afterward died, be allowed to weigh either for or against concrete roaiT from Pleasant View dl. In Boxelder any scientific hypothesis. Thiwe who 'rlct to the pa are engaged on the mof adxetituroiis f nuily. with Hie new road around th dge of the bill at the Chin H.. research which man hns ever conceived tlerve. If we will be honeit Spr!ng-- , Is now rompeted. It wae "liiilt ot a cot of f77,(""0, v:th lh with ourselves, our support and rather tbun our ridicule. government pnylng one-haof the -- London Times. inioiint n n 1 ttie state nnd county pay. each. The t'tnh-ldnlmg Central Tl.iltroad rnntjmny paid $.1t Small Cir" Ccrerots OfTer. rlhnln-!t:ie- t '.Ittlc Kn.-- e v n pinyii. with her .if the ofcost d the result of the the double of the h.-crossing the wig fell oT. Just tleo .loll trucks at the springs. ii mini aine ali'tij who had no bn!r on the top of his bend. Iti.se ran up The city of American Forks w11 lo h'm and Mi'd : "Say. tnls'er. you thl xrason a Carnegie library nn have this wig to rover thnt .ret hen completed will cost mpty spot on tli t.ip of your hesl vbo-f 20.01 0. tf you want It." Seeker commonly ... ; . will-hav- t y lf one-fourt- to the schedule annonsv ago the AVestersj K'i'Pire Petroleum corporation spudded In Its tet well Wednesday aftemoos) m the Coalville anticline, less than mile east of the business section of the town. In observance of the oces-t'o-n the town was In holiday atllre ana hit business bo isrs were rloeed during trie nfterrtoon. AIo there were many towns and b'for from he! nKrP 'ban a score of persons motored over from !'a'f tji;e to be Included am.rfig t - interested Confirm Hard Question '3 Answer. lUibble was fund of big words, and nevr let a chance slip by of uliig one. He did not, lion ever, alua.vs get them In the right place. Me was sick ated with an attack of tnenles. The doctor railing one dsy. took up a hanrt mirror and showed Hobble how he j Hobble gased a Ms mottled . looked. fare disgustedly lo the mirror, and thsi looking up to Uie nWtor, asked I "When do you think 1 will t bat te j civilisation 7" I red tienrly h- a week |