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Show .,.L THE WHOM TIMES-NEW- NEPUI, UTAH. S, By MARGARET COUNTY CANDIDATES ARE Short Sketches of The Men Who Are Asking For Your Vote on November 7th- FOB COUNTY COMMISSIONER YEAR TERM 4 In the selection ol Win. G. Orme, as nominee for the office of County Oommlssoner of Juab County, on the Republican ticke we have another case of the office seeking the man. Mr. Orme is a native of Juab County, and comes from guod pioneer stock. He was born in Nephi 50 years ago, and was educated in the public schools of his native city. He is heavily interested in sheep, cattle and farm lands, and his individual tax for the year 1922 will be approximately $1,500.00. Mr. Orme is a public spirited man and takes a keen interest in the affairs of state. He has held a great many positions of honor and trust both civilly and religiously in the com munity in which he resides. He served six years as a city councilman of Nephi City. He has held the position of Federal and State Sheep Inspector, Deputy County Assessor and during the war took an active part in the war activities, the most important position of which (he held during the war was that of County Food Admin- istrator. FOR E. W. REDMOND For County Recorder, no better choice could have been made than E. W. Redmond of Eureka. Mr. Redmond has had years of experience in clerical work, and was for several yeai postmaster of Eureka City. In the keeping of records and the routine work of this office Mr. Red-mois well qualified and will make a most efficient officer. He is an expert penman, a qualification which is very necessary in the conduct of this office. If Mr. Redmond is elected, he can be depended upon to serve the people of Juab County efficiently in this office. A vote for Mr. Redmond will insure the highest type of public service tiat can be obtained. OlllUl J.V 1.11l. fUlt LUl'.Ul iiutjui ui pUunc tic vice, laiimuuj, uuu eiiAiicntiy reilueieu, nave iioiiliii- ui', vvuiiuiu jauviiiau oi j.ovau, wau ib liitt vi'tuut iiiuuiiiijciiL, aiiii Wwj uao uuiu me unite lor mo past iwu tars. Mr. Orme is a good road enthusist, j vv miuui jacnuiduu was uoiu at end he believes that people in all ago, alia rcctiiveu ui.au, parts of the county should be treated UiS tuucauou jcais m lllb seuools oi in with equal justice and fair playf y ana lu lue uiiguaiu louiig the construction of public highways. xur. ja.cK.wau at uutu, i'iovu, He is a man above reproach and came io cms uuice 110111 on me ia.nu whose word is as good as his bond. wtiure ae was earning iiis living U mow. ui. Jdtumaii i ue sweat oi ni 'OR COMMISSIONER FOR TWO is a taxpayer, ueiug me owner oi ins Home ana a larni auu cousioeraint YEAR TERM livestock. Me is a mamea man at Hit The Republicans of Juab County nead oi a taiuiiy, and believes that ail have nominated for the office . of property snouiu be fairly ana equitau-;- y assessed. He is always on tue job County Commissioner for the two year term Alma C. Dalby of Levan, and is ever ready to assist the in every way possible. Utah. Mr. Dalby was born at Levan .36 years ago, his grandfather being FOR COUNTY TREASURER one of the pioneers of that place. He Charles E Stephenson, the nominee obtained his early education in the ' common schools of Levan and atten-e- d on me Kepuolican ticket for County the Brigham Young University at Treasurer, is an old resident of Uie Provo Utah, for five years, from imuc .Mining District. He received which institution he graduated in the nis education in the public schools year 1909. He is engaged at the pres- of Nephi, anu the B. Y. U. at Provo. ent time in farming and stock rais- For a great many years Mr. Stephing, which avocation he has followed enson was connected with the Adams Lumber company, for which company practically all of his life. Mr. Dalby has always taken an act- he performed long, faithful and effiive interest in public affairs and In cient service. After severing his conhe the development of his community. nection with tae lumber company, beHe Is a firm believer in good roads moved back to Nephi where he pnd believes that the money spent for came heavily interested in farming and stock raising which vocation he public roads should be equally to all sections of the county is at present engagedj Mr. Stephenson, Is a native of NeMr. Dalby has held a great many and City, having been born here over the phi of trust in honor positions community in which he resides all of f.O years ago. His parents being a He is the early pioneers. which he has filled with honor to himself and credit to the oontituency. married man with a large family and He was postmaster for two years, has taken great pride in the educatCity Councilman for two years. Presi- ion of his children for future citizendent of the Board of Trustees of the ship. Mr. Stephenson is well qualiTown of Levan for two years, and fied to take hold of the duties and reDeputy Assessor of Juab County. He sponsibilities of the office of County is a married man, and at the head Treasurer, and if elected to the office of a family. He is Interested in real the funds of the county will be in the and personal property and is a good hands of an honest, trustworthy offiaverage tax payer. If elected to office, cial who has the confidence, respect the affairs of the county will be ad- and good will of the people among ministered in a thorough business whom he resides. The voters of Juab County will like and economical manner. make no mistake in electing Mr. Stephenson to the office of County AVM, ROYER FOR COUNTY Treasurer of Juab County. Le-ta- a Uiii-teisn- tax-laye- SHERIFF The nominee for County Sheriff is well known on the West side of the county, and is vouched for by his num erous friends In the Tlntlc District. For two years he served the City of Eureka City as marshal, and made a most enviable record for enforcement of law. A vote for Wm Boyer, Is a vote for law enforcement. The people who are in the habit of breaking the laws of the land are in dread fear of election of this man. Voters of East Juab County, If you believe in law enforcement, and want the majesty of the law upheld, then cast your vote lor Mr. Boyer of Eureka, whose election will strike terror throInto the hearts of ughout the county. rs COUNTY ATTORNEY Thos. H. Burton, nominee for County Attorney on the Republican Ticket was born at Nephi, Utah, 44 years ago. He graduated from the ijiigiiam Young University at Provo, L'tan, in 1900. He was admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of the State of Utah in 1911, and during the same year was admitted to practice law in the United District Court aud Circuit Court. Mr Burton has held many positions .I honor and trust in this community, lie was County Recorder of Juao County during the years of 1914 and 915; lie served as City Attorney ot Nephi City for about 8 years and Uui ing the past two years he has held the position of County Attorney of Juab County, Utah. In the recent Juab County Road Bond Election, Mr. Burton took care of all of the work connected with the Bond Election, and thereby seved to the Taxpayers of Juab County, the hundred ,sum of about twenty-tw- o dollars. Our information is to the effect that in all other counties where bonds were issued for roads, bond attorneys were employed at the expen-p- e of the taxpayers to carry on this work. During his incumbancy in office Mr with the Burton in conjunction County Auditor have checked up all from the year 1917, of the tax-salback to the date of the incorporation of Juab County, and hundreds of old erroneous tax sales have been wiped off the records, and the County Treasury has been enriched from tax sales und redemptions which has resulted from said work in the sum of about $8,000.00. During the two years that he has served as County Attorney of Juab County he has had the respect and good will of all classes of people. He is a man who believes in peace making and promoting good will and is not enternally hunting trouble. He believes in the inforcement ot the law and is always willing to give the repentant sinner a chance. . It can be said without fear of successful contradiction that no man in Juab County has a better record for public services freely, faithfully and efficiently rendered than Thos. H. es Burton. In casting your vote for Mr. Burton, you are votin gfor a man who la ripe In experience and who is well qutlified to handle the position of County Attorney. IOR COUNTY CLERK. BAILEY WILFORD Wilford Bailey, nominee on the Republican ticket for County Clerk, Is the son of L. A. Bailey Sr, one of the early pioneers of Nephi City, Utah He wsf born at Nephi, 29 years ago where he has resided ever since. He is a married man with a family and a good average taxpayer. He received hit- - early education In the common rohoolq at Nephi, end is a gradu-ft- e He of the Nephi High School. served twenty-si- x months as a missionary in Australia for the L. D. S. Church. He is a good church worker and has held many positions of honor 1. C. HOOD and trust In his church. His characFor representative to the next Leg- ter is beyond reproach, and be Is islature, the Republicans of this fully competent to fill the position county made a wise selection. P. C. of County Clerk of Juab County, and Hood of Eureka, Is well fitted for the the taxpayers will make no mistake duties of thlg office and if elected will In electing him for this office. work consistently for the welfare of every citizen of Juab County. II, I), GARDNER Mr Hood was the unanimous choice In the selection of R. D. Gardner of the Republican- County Convention, and on the West side of the coun- of Eureka for County Surveyor, no ty his aballlty lias been recognized mistake was made by the Republican on numerous occasions. He Is prom- Convention. .Mr. Gardner Is fast beinent In the social, religious and civic coming known as a most competent lifnf Eureka, and Is a man of good engineer, and if elected to this posijudgment and sound Idns. Voter tion will take care of the work perof Juab County will make no mistake taining to the office of county surIn casting their vote for P. C. Hood, veyor In a manner which will be emfor Representative to the Legislature. inently satisfactory to all the people. . - VOTE THE REPUBLICAN TICKET FOR EFFICIENCY, PROGRESS AND ECONOMY (Paid Political Advert Why Seek to Shift B am? nna a former time evil to attribute to led irtrtltlou .lrlt their troubles and afflict At un Then they turneii to the stars smirre of all their misfortunes; bus the habit resisted of slilftins personal responsibility. One uf the wImIw some lessons of life Is contained in Hie fact, unjust ot reasonable ns one muj choose to regard It, that Imppines sue- cess, attainment and position finally as the result of Individual tharacter aud effort. si. I wmmt) Decidedly Incomplete. don't like my KuihIh? wlinnl "You Mono! !u. BiiiHMinit"! rims'iit talk like Mint." tetintod her "I don't cure." Il"ii.-- a mother. "I ipm-her,- r per-sirrr- g "the teacher doesn't know a ; lip tnlil u ile;i!il slur) hihI never snld how It cnme out." "ivr Imps your brother could five '"U tie reft of the story," mini Monortu's mother. "If you tell him what it (tl.oiit." "Well, It was iitMiut Mows Slid be reer suld uml 'lie whether the hull got him." imy-thin- ? Linen Thousands of Years Old.' One of (he "fi'irN" mn!e In Thebes, In Kirypt. I the exK t,ttn of the nn a body Metropolian mueimi. wlilrh liad been hurlivl ih, appur Ther pritly, sit the liono.'liold Horn fm-rsere shout Uemitifiil liner, sheets, shvs M Wuiier llnuse'-- one of i ill! lofi. very the member of (hp The linen !ui! big and all frln.-nl- . turned to a Imefj xhiote of golden - in brown sti1 prrW'ii condition ilio--Some Of th pr SlilllS of .n ' no ruled. bavins l.epn . x m- : m i Cooper, Pyper & Co. HER STORY CAN i . ( by McClura A. SWEENEY Newppr Utah Nephi, Syndicate.) One night In late December- - a snapping cold night In 1918 Mrs. Haland told this story that I am about to repeat. Phoebe Haland, my husband's aunt, was then about seventy, a sincerely pious woman who was temporarily making her home with us while her two sons, both surgeons, were overseas with the Yankee division. My husband had Just finished reading aloud a newspaper article about a bouse In our neighborhood that was supposed to be haunted. The article gave the history of the house and a list of Its former owners, who had found it advisable to sell the place soon after moving In. The last owner had bought the place for almost nothing, and after a week's trial he, too, moved out, and told the world, through the newspapers, that he would have the place torn down In the spring. "That ghost talk ls all bosh," my husband declared. "A house gets a name for being haunted, and then everyone that moves Into it is on the lookout for spooks and and their imagination does the rest." The newspaper fluttered, and we, Mrs. Haland and I, continued with our knitting and waited to hear some more news. Then Mrs. Haland lookAl at me over the top of her spectacles and snld : "A good deal of It Is both, no doubt, but there are, I am sure, troubled aouls that for one reason or another return and make themselves seen or felt." Mrs. Haland put down her knitting, and her serious, kindly old eyes rowed and she took a long look Into the face of Time before she spoke. "It will be 50 years next May May 10 since I was married," she began, "and we started housekeeping in a little house that ls still standing In a small village a mile or two beyond Hartford, Conn. My nearest neighbor was a Mrs. Wright, and she called upon us almost as soon as we ' were settled. "She was a tall, thin woman, and I remember well the challle dress with little blue flowers in It that she wore that day. She had her little girl with hei- a sturdy child of six or seven, her black hair braided In two stiff braids that bung down her little square back. "I was twenty then." she continued, "and I think that Mrs. Wright was about thirty-eigh- t she was Just forty when she died, and we had been neighbors for two years. In that time I had learned to love Mrs. Wright she was like a mother to me. She was not a well woman some heart affection and her husband was a drinking man. She shielded him all she could. She was too proud to let the neighbors know that he had at times beaten her and his little daughter. "She was not long 111 a few days, and I was in and out all the time, and not once did she complain. Bessie, her little girl, seldom left the bedside, but that last day, when the child was out of hearing, Mrs. Wright said to me, 1 I don't mind It at all only for Bessie my poor Bessie!' It was having to leave Bessie that troubled her. "When it was all over the husband disappeared no one knew where, so I took Bessie home with me, and for a week I tried hard to lessen the grief In the childish heart. Then one evening, as I was about to send Bessie to bed, her father came In swaggered In without knocking growling and wild-eyeBessie at my knee, repeating the Lord's prayer, burled her face in my lap and I felt her little body quiver. He wanted Bessie to come right home he guessed he had 'a right to his own daughter.' "Well, he took Bessie took her screaming dragging her along. I could not reason with him and my husband had gone on some business to Hartford. My Instinct was to follow Bessie, bnt I was afraid of this man, and as I stood there In the kitchen, near the open door, praying that my husband would come soon, Mrs. Wright walked In. "I ssw her as plain as I see you now. She wore her dress with the little blue flowers In It, and he looked neither to the right nor left. Just passed roe as If I were a piece of furniture, and walked straight Into my bedroom. "Something the mystery, the awe of It overwhelmed me and brought me to my knees, and then suddenly I nrnse and ran out of the house and tip the road toward that man Wright's. "When nearlng the house I could bear Bessie still crying, and I went In I went In as brave as a lioness defending her cub, and I fsred him and I shouted at htm that my husband and all the men In town were mixing tar and getting feathers, and that If he wanted to save himself be had better clear out. "I think It must have sobered him, for he rsn so fsst, and till this day I don't know what made me tell him snch a a terrible He It Just popped Into my head. "I took Bessie horn again with me, and I wss sure sure beyond the shadow of s doubt that the troubled soul of Mrs. Wright had found peace." e" HI steel-rimme- d A Wonderful Oven Women knov? wKat this means. The Fuel Saving Hot Blast Draft in OLE' C O MASTER MALLEABLE ( buff-colore- d - HOT CLAST RANGE carries a sweep of clean, bright flame all around the Bakes eOenh? on all sides. The Fuel Saving Hot Blast Draft also saOes one-thito one-haon the range fuel till. Think what this will amount to in a year. Just what $ou have been wanting. All Cole's specialties are fuel savers. We v?ant also to call your attention to the great beauty of this range. It has many exclusive features that we want to tell y"ou about. See us before our supply is exhausted. rd lf Uu ijL3 li ZJ ti vita buff-colore- d Record Murder Prosecutions. The record of hevuig prosecuted more murderers than ; other man lltlng belongs to Sir Ksrry Tolsnd, London's oldest barrister, who Is now In his ninety-fiftyear, and tins been produced In the last twenty-siyears. x rrf This new sugar-coate- d gum delights c7 r H A young and old. N&'yfc A It "melts in your mouth" and the gum in the center remains to aid digestion, brighten teeth and soothe mouth and throat. There are the other WHIG LEY friends to choose from, toe: y C28 Vi- -i |