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Show qjERY COUNTY OFFERS iHF. HOMESEEKER 40 Excellent Schools, Modern Conveniences. jh Markets. Best Summer Winter Rang in Country ijjjnuite, ..f All the News of XO. 48. VOLIME XX. Emery County Population Figures are the official figures a preliminary announcement of population for Emery county locordlng to the 1920 census taken a The figures are months ago. ft furnished us direct rrom wasnington livh a are ouujcuu .v v v , ttvision, since some of the figures of being jjve every appearance on the face. Huntington, for stance, is given the same totnl fur both precinct and town which Is not no or- th other beineo prrnn. ,;t.tji IBOIuiir. fell off with the formation of Elmo precinct, and Desert Lake's good increase is accounted for in the recent settling of the Victor townsite. which is included in this precinct. Just where the Rochester people are included is not clear as Emery precinct's gain is more than accounted for in the gain within the corporate limits. Mohiiand is shown to have a very creditable population and would, if incorporated, rank a strong third in the Elmo precinct is also shown (county. to be a husky young infant and still i n ir V ....il.r nna.l 1, i ,,1 growing. Lawrence precinct appears iw i.ntinhtinn nf- -hprrnn tnun to have fewer people than twenty jl iiir ' I iljo unexplainable and there must be years ago, which is also hard to swali mistake here. Cleveland naturally low. Following tontained in us 1 Minor Civil Division Castle Dale Precinct, Clawson Precinct 1920 including Castle Dale Town. Precinct, including Cleveland Town Lake Frecinct Cleveland . . . Desert Elmo Precinct Emery Town Ferron Town Green River Precinct, including Green River City Huntington Precinct, including Huntington Town Lawrence Precinct Mohrland Precinct Emery Precinct, including Ferron Precinct, including Molen Precinct . . .' Orangeville Precinct, Woodside Precinct Including Orangevllle " Town EMERY COUNTY Incorporated I'laoe Castle Pale Town Cleveland Town Emery Town Ferron Town Green . River City Huntington Town Orangevllle Town IE0 AT CLEVELAND Clevland will hold a big rodeo cele- at that place Saturday, August 7th, and, from the way things are looking now, the celebration will be one of the most successful ever held in thee county. The entire day, beginning at 10 a.m., will be devoted to good live sports bed ginning with a dah, open to the county, for a prize of $10. There ...Kt o'ctooooo ehehe. Hresstep will be broncho and bull riding both morning and afternoon with expert riders and plenty of animals. One of the big features f the day will be the final baseball game of the league series between Cleveland and Ferron, purse of $10 being hung up for the winning team. Edwin Wycheriy challenges any man in the county up to 140 pounds to a wrestling match for $15 and Louis Timothy challenges any man in the county to a boxing match for a similar purse to the best man. Another big card is the ll horse race, open to all horses in the county, for a purse of $25. The big time will conclude with a big dance in the Davis hall the best hall in the county at night. bration 100-yar- . free-for-a- TWO NEW Miss TEACIIEKS FOR E. S. A. Ona King, a graduate of the I'tah Agricultural college, has been selected to have charge of the home economics department of the Emery Stake King Miss academy during 1920-2had the distinction of graduating lth the highest honor from the do- mestic 1. art department. Otto Strobbe, from the University of Utah, will have charge of the biology department. Mr. Strobbe has the past year been principal of a junior high school where good record. he made an exceptional Victor C. Anderson refirst of the week from a three weeks at Manti with Mrs. A. and the kiddies, who accompanied him home as did his mother, Mrs. N c. Anderson. Mr. Anderson left right after completing the course of teacher training at the Y. U. He expects to proceed at nce with the editing of the annual catalogue for the Academy, which will hc printed by the Progress in the nea future. Principal turned the vacation of five-'ee- STAKE CONFERENCE Quarterly conference of the Emery stake wil be held at Ferron, Saturday, "nd Sunday, August 7 and 8, 1920. High council meeting will be held at Ferron, Friday, August 6, at 8.30 "iAll are urged to be present. - Louis P. Oveson, Stake Clerk notice to stockholders To the Stockholders of the Blue Cut "anal Company: A petition signed by fourteen stockholders has been presented to the g "card, asking them to call a to consider the proposition of 'v'ying an assesment on the capital stock for the purpose of building a 'eservoir for the benefit of the Blue "ut Canal Company. All stockholders are accordingly hereby notified a massmeeting will be held In the astip Dale meeting house, Wednesday. August 11. 1920, at 8 p. m. By. order of the Blue Cut Canal fcarff. C. E LARS EN, Secretary Fi rst publication July 31, 1920. Last publication August 7, 1920. mass-meetin- i sec 1S3 490 154 200 739 931 771 1285 139 1910 1900 84S 159 651 123 718 127 632 1022 824 161 572 660 222 944 160 129 649 124 141 762 132 164 623 114 7411 6750 4657 1920 1910 1900 715 693 559 244 650 453 645 1285 553 525 651 628 800 648 1293 691 overcharge battery ii H H lis Esa sa MUCH Jl I.Y 31, 1920. $2.00 A YEAR FOOD United States Has Pe'haps the Most Valuable Fishery it Which All Coast States Share. D The United States his vliat is said to Me tlie moM valuable fishery in the vorld. hut probably not one person In ten can name it. It is conducted in eveiy scaooast stale from Cnpe Cod to the Kio Crande, and from Ptiyet sound up to San Francisco, and It yields annually shout ll'i.iXMi tons of food as prepared for consumption, an "piivalent of 4i Hum dressed steers. It employs about 07,(hn persons, anil it? annual product, as it comes from the water, is valued at over $1 "i.Olxt.. oik). There are other fisheries that possibly exceed it In the ultimate value of their products, hut in such cases much labor and material and a heavy investment of capital have been concerned in manufacturing operations to prepare the product for the consumer ; as, for example, the canned-f-nlnioindustry of the Pacific coast The American fishery for codfish on the Atlantic coast, which has been th cause of much diplomatic discussion and of grave international negotiations, appears almost insignificant in comparison. Its value in normal times before the great war being about (XMi.ihk) yearly; and the shad fishery, lhe prospects of which each spring call forth much comment in the public as much pi ess, produces not food. The, most valuable fishery is that which furnishes us with oysters. The bureau of fis'ieries has more than once called attention to this vast food resource and the possibilities for increasing it and using it to better advantage. - Oh, Sec Who's Here D If .cs I H n 31)3 653 one-tent- CHINESE TURNING TO SPORTS Necessity for Physical Culture Is ginning to Be Recognized in the New Republic. STORAGE BATTERIES Don't FURNISHES Be- WHY WALK TO WORK WHEN A TEASPOONFUL r' owtty OF GAS WILL TAKE YOU THERE AND BACK fi or Physical culture and all types of athletics were, until very recently, held in contempt by the Chinese, and charged. consequently the Shanghai hoys did Don't let acid fall below top not know what the joy of indulging in of plates. baseball and other sports meant, says Don't short circuit battery. l'oys' Life. Apres ago chariot driving, Don't use anything but dist rchery and the other classic sports tilled water for refilling. played an Important part in Chinese Don't use commercial acid With the dawning of education. China's literary golden age. however. buy storage battery electrolyte. Don't allow metal tools to the scholnrs could not sop how mental IC come in contact' with battery. iw.;,-I u'H vouni or aiiamni 11 flioa miir. l'n in Don't allow acid to spill over was any thought of athletic prowess. the top of battery. Muscles and brawn, they said, beDon't keep battery in cold, longed to the peasant, and the gentle-i.ia- n room. of culture should show his good damp Don't allow battery jars to breeding by a scholary pallor, stooped come in contact with each other. shoulders and a general unhealthy apDon't let the e. in. f. of some pearance. cells fall below that of others. This attitude toward physical develDon't let connections get persisted for centuries, and It opment t loose. lifts been only within the last few decades that interest has been vouchsafed in sports. With the introducIN CANADA IS SECOND PLACE tion of now educational methods and the entrance of occidental theories athletics once more Ranks Next to United States in Num- !no tli! orient, own and the Chinese their into cmiie ber of Cars Built and Owned cue and his his tucked student up Employs 15,000 Workers. went in for and pole vaulting dignity and hurdling. Canada now ranks second among China has now the idea that a nathe countries of the world in the numeconomic progress depends largetion's and manufactured ber of automobiles owned and the number per capita, ac- ly on the healthy bodies and minds of its citizens, and missionaries find cording to statistics furnished by the little difficulty in winning subscripFirestone Tire & Rubber Co., Akron. for athletic fields for the schools. tions emautomotive Canada's Industry an ploys 15,000 workers, represents investment of $50,000,000 and turns First Jap Woman Journalist. out $100,000,000 worth of cars a year. The first Japanese woman to edit a A total of 94,000 cars were built last woman's page in her country. Miyo Knhnshi. is studying journalism at Coyear. Latest registration records show lumbia university In preparation for In the Tokyo 350,000 motor vehicles In operation in teaching journalism the dominion, an Increase of 13 per Cnion college next year. A decade ngo cent over 1918. One person in every women journalists were unheard of owns a car in Canada. and unthought nf In .Tnpan. Now twenty-thre- e In this country the proportion is one ninny worn en are growing interested in motor vehicle owned for every sixteen the profession, but very few of tbem have had special training for the work. persons. That is why Miss Kohashi is preparing "Women in PLAN TO SAVE TIRE CHAINS to teach the subject. Japan are liking the tipwspaper proMiss Kohashi. "and alGood Idea to Shift Cross Links Occa- fession." says we have a club of in Tokyo ready sionally to Proprly Distribute twenty women journalists." Miss KoWear and Tear. hashi is the Japanese representative of an interesting group of women stucross shift the to Idea a Is It good 33 nationalities who form the links of the tire chains occasionally. dents of International Foyer of the Y. W. C. A. Move them so that they do not depend Columbia at university. chain main the on the same link of all the time. The drag and wear In Simple Logic. the chain center at the links to which The earl of Poctarlington. who was the cross chains are fastened Is considerable, and by moving from time to one of the first to volunteer for service during the railway strike in Engtime the wear Is distributed. land, relates the following story: A hoy scout on duty St one of tr.e London termini, feeling the pangs of hunger about eleven o'clock one morning, began a vigorous attack on a substantial lunch he had brought with him. A gentleman passing by was moved Don't leave your car standing with to remark: "My boy. If yon eat much the engine running. now you won't have any appetite for your dinner." To which the smart Unless youVlsh to crack the leather, little fellow replied: "Well, I guess do not use gasoline in cleaning it. if I haven't any appetite I shan't want no siny dinner." The gentleman had A single stray strand of wire may more to say. produce a ground which will stall thf ! . . engiittn t i i i f "THE EMPIRE OF EMERY" All of the Time CASTLE I) A I.E. ITAII. SATURDAY, SEA H KMKKY COUXTY OFFERS THE CAPITALIST Thousands uf Acres of Finest Coal Promising Oil ifrospects. Inexhaustible Supply Best Timber. Ideal Territory for Sugar Beet Factories discharge it at too high a rate. Don't let battery stand dis- AVTOrtOBILK 1 XM CLEVELAND Cine of the best celebrations ever held in Cleveland was that on Monday, July 26th, when the program outlined in last week's paper for our celebration of Pioneer day was carried out in its completeness with but one or two Miss La Von Carlow repexceptions. resented Utah of 1920 in a very fiiUr.i? manner but, owing to the very short Lime for preparation, she was unable to deliver the oration and this feature was well given by Wm. T Ulster, on? An oxce'lent hisof the committee. tory of the early pioneer. was given by .Mrs. llelga Stokes, who represented ("tab of 18 4 7. There was also a good The sports in tiara de in the morning. be afternoon consisted of racing and other contests. The Twin Cities ball team was scheduled to play ball but. as they faikd to put in their appearance, the married men played the sin gle men in one of the best games of ball every played in the county. At the end of the ninth inning the core stood 1 too 1 and two more innings were played but the score stood the As it was nearly dark they same. were obliged to quit and everybody is waiting anxiously for the finish of the satiie. Over $30 was turned over to the ward after all expenses had been paid. Neatly every camp in Carbon That old necessity of walking to werk, with the alternative of depend log on the pleasure of railway workers has been eliminated by the latest in auto construction, called the "Beauty." The "'Beauty" is the invention of Sydney Isaccason of New York city, It weighing 475 pounds. It has a 20 horse power engine, capable of going at the rate of f0 miles per hour, and will go 40 miles on n gallon of gasoline. In oilier words a teaspoonful of gas will take you to your work and back." KHIVA BECOMES A REPUBLIC Famous Khanate of Central Asia Has Definitely Rejected the Chains of Gaspotism. So Khiva, the khanate In Central Asia through which Col. Fred Buriiiiby once rode on horseback to the capital, has declared Itself an independent republic! That prodigious English soldier and traveler who won military glory fighting outside the endangered square at Abu Klea, In the Sudan, would smile hugely, no doubt, were he able to read the news. For the city "of Khiva as he found It on that famous ride In the seventies, or rather as the Russians found It just two or three years before, to be exact, was filled with slaves captured from the Persians by Turkoman raiders. Its whitewashed houses, scattered amid the elms and poplars, produced a welcome effect, however, after the countless miles of arid steppes which had to be negotiated before it could be Its citizens were those reached. of the weirdly named "cousins" s Turks, the L'zbegs. Kirghiz, Sarfs. or Black and the Bonnets of the Turkl tribe whom the caliph would fain gather Into the family fold. The khRnate Is but the relic of the once great kingdom of Choras-mia- , over which King Darius ruled by means of his satraps. Christian Science Monitor. seinf-barbarl- c Ta-Jak- Kara-Kalpak- PLAN SCHOOL ON SHIPBOARD Socialistic Council of Bradford, England, Is Considering the Adoption of Remarkable Scheme. When It became necessary to erect a new secondary school In Bradford, the rich wool textile center of England, the usual estimates were asked for. and reported, In the total sum of $500,000. Socialists, wjjo bare a considerable on the Bradford education committee, at once decided to break free from tradition, and adopted the Idea of buying a suitable seagoing ship for that amount, one big enough for a These couple of hundred children. children will be sent to sea for a or period. If a subis sequent suggestion adopted. It is still to be settled whether the ship schoolhouse will remain moored In Bradford canal docks, only going to sea as a freighter during vacation periods, or whether it would not be In the Interests of a general education to let the scholars see glimpses of foreign ports, learning their languages among natives, the ship at the same time being loaded with cargoes that would pay full maintenance expenses, probably even of the boarding of the children. majority Auto Worked Change. a pretty easy-goinfellow before he bought bis mix bine. Some days his name would decorate the spare board at the car barn and some days It wouldn't, for he and work were not firm friends. But now how different. He contracted the automobile fever. The machine was the result. Now, buying an auto Is easy. But keeping it running and taking your girl out Is another thing. That requires coin of the realm. He has developed into a terrible shark. His face Is now a familiar figure on the North Easton line and if there are any spare trips laying around loose he is right up to the window leaning on both elbows. We should have made an 'exception ns to Sunday. Ah. that Is tjie day be shines. The little machinerolls merrily along. "It's worth It at that, to beia millionaire one day a week," he renin rked as be unllmbered his portly form aftrr 11 hours' labor the other night on a North Easton hack. Brockton Enterprise. lie used to be county was represented at the celebration besides all of Elmo and some from Castle li.ile. Orangevllle, Huntington and Lawrence. We appreciate your patronage and invite you to come aain to the big rodeo on August 7th the closing day of the baseball You can't afford to miss it an league. it promises to be one of the big events of the season. (To be continued next week.) MOLEN Holidays being over, we have g i set- tled down to the old routine of summer faim work. The 24th celebration as one of the best ever held here. Everybody was out for a good time and found it. out of town visitors for the 24th were Mr. and Mrs. Throvald Rasmus-seand family. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McDonald and babies, Mrs. John F. Larsen and family, and Mr. and Mrs. ijester Wareham and family. Alhough a trip on the mountains is enjoyed for the vacation, yet it is notaltogether necessarv as a fishing outing. Farmers' tables are well supplied Willi this delicasy from the irrigation ditches and no license is required for gathering tbem. Suckers, chub, and rout are the main kinds found here. A monster flood Sunday evening has given us some dirty water, leaving-somof the canals empty. n ' Has Your Subscription Expired? Come in and renew it next time you are in town. |