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Show i I EmeryUOUntjAbStraCtGO The Emery County Progress CASTLE DALE, UTAH Lktnscd Abstracter of Titles J!e sure of . ...... i.. iuiviiair. true THE Published Every Saturday at Castle Dale, Utah. the title to the land you . ..n . ncvfr know the The without Investigation. Our Abstracts Tell It All ; Jr., Mgr. O. Soreiisoii PubUc and Votary rR SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Six Months. $1.00 One Year, $2.00 Advertising Rates on Application J.K.HEID Aituritey-ai-Iu- Editor and Proprietor DAVID S. WILLIAMS 1. , HENDERSON, CHIROPRACTOR B. NOT SURGERY NOT MEDICINE Office Hours 2 to - - j of the flu is often worse than the disease, leaving you vilh t spells ana a numwi ui uuici dumcuu, winch are ren.i ThSPINE-TI- IE HOME OF OUR TROUBLES. ct i.ri bjtljun.sof - .i)iTl!tion OF THE FLU. AFTER-EFFEC- T after-effe- j i CTAH EiffiRV COtSTT PROGRESS, CASTLE bAtE, 5 NOT and 7 to s p. m. OSTEOPiJ rrice, Utah Entered as second class mail matter at Castle Dale postoffice Orangeville, Utah DR. P. C. CHRISTEXSEN Dentist Castle Dale, Utah UTAH Work All Kinds of Dental at- to. Satisfaction Office at residence. tended guar-antee- STATilgSJSSOCIAnON WHY 1 d. GIGMEN Strintfent Game Laws Are Needed in America By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS. Albert L. Larsen at Attorney and Counselor What do you mean by re He kept spectable? Gig.' Thurtell's TrlaL As this old world jogs along, It may well strut and smile for It Is truly progressing. The test of Respectability no longer is measured by the rule of the GIgmen. The world man. CASTLE DALE, UTAH Castle Valley Abstract Co. J. Anderson, Manager O. A recent Washington dispatch conveyed the impression that, due to a decision of the Supreme court, the federal government could no longer enforce tike act to protect migratory birds. We are Informed by B. G. Merrill, United States game warden at Hinsdale, that the dispatch Is entire ly misleading. The litigation in question involved the act of 1913. whereas a new law based on a treaty with Great Britain was passed by congress last year. Mr. Merrill says this law gives the government full power to provide closed seasons tor migratory birds. All lovers of wild life, as well as every sportsman, will be glad to know that federal protection for these birds has not been withdrawn. They will not be so happy to learn that the legislature of New York has passed a law to extend the time within which ducks may be shot on Long island. The area Involved Is, of course, not very large, but any relaxation of the game laws should cause concern. In France, which has been thickly populated for centuries, there Is still wild game in the Argonne forest. Our men went gunning for rabbits, deer, and even wild boar. They are there because they are protected by rigid game laws. Unless we follow a policy of protecting the wild life in this country, France will still have game In Its forests after America Is entirely denuded. Chicago Tribune. "I always considered him a CASTLE DALE, UTAH -- abstruct-wit- h isn't half as interested in what you have as In care and dispatch. Vou can ' taws what you are. secure or Nell or land not safely buy Have you a Gig, a Moa loan without having an abstract of torcar, Estates, Bonds, the title to the same. Stocks what not? Well, no matter. They can neither add nor detract from We are irepared to da yoar your Respectublllty. Tou can't see Respectability yon have to FEEL it. Just the same as you have to feel Truth and Joy and Heroism. But Respectability in other people does not make Respectability in you, no, not even though you walk ou the same side of the street with Let no Gig Fancy get you. Let the Glgtnen take their way. Know that Respectability travels fast and far and B. W. DALTON Attorney-at-La- Notary Public w, right-minde- TRICE, ITAH it I j Cash Paid For Liberty theBonds at the last "stick-et- h closer than a brother." By . BOWEN MERCANTILE CO Huntington, Utah Why Hospitals tn Clouds. For many years medical men have been hunting for a place that would be and at last It absolutely germ-proohas been found, the Philadelphia North American states. Now that aviation Is becoming a pHrt of modem warfare, we have learned a great deal about the air that we never knew before. If we go high enough, there are no germs and the pressure Is less alfo as we go higher up. The question now Is. wouldn't It be a good thing to, put our hospitals up there, at least those dealing with open wounds and diseases that needs lots of fresh air. such as tuberculosis? Enormous airships could be anchored above our heads and the patients could be carried up in airare than that planes. Stranger things happening every day around us. ami physicians say that the Idea even now Is more tliun a pipe dream. Such n hospital would be Ideal for children with the rickets. Up In the clouds, where there was nothing but pure air and sunlight, the very lack of which caused their disease, they would prob ably come down In a few weeks totally cured. f, Stewart, Alexander & Waddoups ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW j PRICE, UTAH Nllvagnl Bldg. Ads. as Reputation Props ! Let us build you n Inch ad. in this paper; a column ad., a page ad., or any old size ad. Let it tell in forceful terms: What you've got to sell What it's worth Why it's best at that price advertisement an pai'cr will bring who hardly knew existed before you $ How Soft Coal la Made Hard. Converting bituminous coal Into an equivalent of hard coal Is a late development that will have a effect on American Industry, according to Popular Mechanics maga nine. The new fuel Is entirely smokeless and under the new process byproducts now 'wasted are recovered. These largely compensate for the cost of conversion. A plant has been In operation In the East for some time, perfecting the process and making tests of a practical character. The raw coal Is subjected to a distillation process at low temperatures, the residue being pressed Into hard, durable bricks that are again subjected to distillation and produce an Intense heat. advertised. How Bobby Got Dirty. John and Robert had just been dressed In their new white suits and were waiting near the porch for their mother to take them downtown. When their mother came out John's suit was still clean, but Robert's suit was soiled. "Why, Robert, I have a notion to leave yon at home," said his mother. "Oh, don't, mother," said Robert, half crying; "you know the dirt hlowa right past John and sticks on me." ESS . is u. WS.S. TOR SAYINGS STAMPS it SUE BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT WISE .i in 1 flu d PROVISION OF ,', ;, i.Jf i THIS PAKT V OP AN LOON S MG. npin.D1 tmrpr. isn't S'Ni-vvorv HERE TvvT CSf Talk ro oini A vmi lrr "vVMie qah it. im il r rcopi pyf e I -- -- 5S:- t 4 iiv r,1 Jf " f -- 1 f v5 m fc' Thos. uht p y Xvivj) A. Edison's Masterpiece: The Diamond Amberola "No Needles To Change" - will convince you. We offer same machine that you buy in Chicago same price. A Trial n ce, com shouldn't ro mis We have a Shipment for New Records Every Month-Se- nd No Substitutions. Hear Your Records efore You Buy Them. for a Catalog. the the of b- A. R. COE DRUG CO. CASTLE DALE, UTAH I k, you MODEL 30 AND 12 RECORDS, $48.20 MODEL 50 AND 12 RECORDS, $75.20 Why Japan Has Few Autos. A report just Issued by the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce says that as a general rule there are no suitable roads to be found throughout the Chinese republic. Shanghai Is the center for motorcars, as a result of its foreign population of approximately 0,0(10. Registered cars in the city number about 1,000, and some two or three hundred are in storage. There are only 2,700 cars In all of Japan, but the recent prosperity has greatly stimulated the demand. Americans have had most of the business since the war started. The abundance of money among the buying class and the desire to own cars Is, however, offset by the lack of suitable roads and bridges. i s i No Mrs. Smart's evening f hav" -- NATURE DOINGS OF THE VAN LOONS iU ' 1 1 f' "Most scouts know that the ermine weasel changes to white on the coming of cold weather," says Er. E. F. Bige-low- , the Scout naturalist In Boys' Life, "William E. Cram tells why the tip of the tall Is black. " 'Late in the autumn, or early In the winter, the ermine changes from reddish brown to white, sometimes slightly washed with greenish yellow or cream color, and again as brilliantly white as anything In nature or art ; the end of the tail, however, remains Intensely black and at first thought It might be supposed that this would make the animals conspicuous on the white background of snow; but in reality It has just the opposite effect. Plnce an ermine on snow In such a way that it casts no shadow and you will find that the black point holds your eye In spite of yourself and that at a little distance It Is quite Impossible to follow the outline of the weasel Itself. Cover the tail with snow and you can begin to make out the position of the rest of the animal, but ns long as the tip of the tall is In sight you see that and that only." new-falle- ut R. 5 & tfwis t Why the Tip of Ermine Weasel's Tail Is Black Is Explained by Naturalist. j in, v I , 'TTTTT r f !. 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