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Show tBits of Local Information JjL Concerning the MoxtemenU and Doing f of Our 'People in Totvn and County, y Judge F. E. Woods is attending court in Grand and San Juan counties this week. County Clerk Tuttle made a business trip to Salt Lake this week, getting back Thursday. B. F. Luke of the Orangeville Co-op started the first of the week for Salt Lake and from there will go for a trio through Colorado. He expects to be gone for about a month. ' The Progress has been doing fine on subscriptions the past few weeks-many weeks-many new names have been added and a good many have paid up their arrearages. arrear-ages. It looks good to us and we hope it will continue. j We have a swell line of ladies ! pera veils and scarfs, back combs, barretts and fancy hair; pins, also some new designs in ! dishes. Sure to please the ladies ! Orangeville Qo'Gp... ! A number of Orangeville farmers passed through' here Wednesday with anew Minn, sota thrasher and traction engine. It certainly looks like business to see machines like this coming into the country. It was said to have been purchased by twenty-six farmers of the town. Crop prospects are good and with a machine like that Orangeville is surely coming to the front as a farming community. WANTED -To rent a good piano for the winter, in Castledale. Will guarantee guaran-tee good care. Address, Box 1 05, Green River, Utah. .47 2 Conference last Saturday and Sunday brought a large delegation of the people! peo-ple! of the cmnly t:i the county seat. Tha rn.'-.-tiner! vver; heU at tht'.new ' Academy and vver? all well attended, i The Progress office was visited by ! many who were well pleased with its new location and left substantial reminders re-minders of their appreciation of the paper. Most of Emery county people are very appreciative of anything that helps the Valley. If anyone has an idea that the 24th of July is not a day that brings back memories of hardships and troubles to the pioneers we ask that they read the article on snother page of this paper concerning the trip of Christene Loven-dahl Loven-dahl across the plains. Experiences like that become a part of the life and memory of the person and the pleasure of meeting people who can really appreciate ap-preciate the situation is like the pleasure pleas-ure of the soldier who meets his comrade com-rade in the annual reunion. FOR SALE In Huntington, a house and lot. Apply to Ellis Johnson, Manti,.: Utah. 47 4 ' j As we go to press a big celebration I is being held at Cleveland in honor of the twentieth anniversary of the found- I ing of the ward and the severing of the j ties that have held President Oveson ! there forall of th it timeas their bishop, j It i : something to have served a people j twenty years and know at the last that your efforts have been appreciated. : Many Castledale people are attending and the hull nine is playing there today. I Tally Evans who has been here with his family for the past three weeks, leaves today for Winter Quarters where he will again take his regular shift in the mines. He is thinking of puitting the camps for a farm. Dr. O. E. Coleman fitsglasses. Examination Exam-ination free. Hans Christensen of Salina has visited the Humphreys at their Rock Canyon ranch this week and looking over the country with a view of finding him a home here, This is pretty good evidence evi-dence that some one has done a little boosting for the advantages of Castle Valley. This is Humphrey Bros, first year here but they have raised so much crop they are not able to get it all taken care of. They live on their ranch though and this may in part explain why they have so much stuff. In ordero t raise the standard of poultry poul-try in Emery county, I propose to sell (not kill) my beautiful white leghome ; roosters at 50c each. Imported stock which among regular breeders would cost two to three dollars. S. A. Harris, j Castledale. Be sure and take a bottle of Chamb-j Chamb-j erlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea I Remedy with you when you are start- ing on your trip this summer. It can-i can-i not be obtained on board the trains or steamers. Changes of water and cli-i cli-i mate often cause sudden attacks of diarrhoea, and it is best to be prepared. Sold by all dealers. As Tom Humphreys handed in a sub-j sub-j scription to the editor this week he I happened to mention something he had seen in the paper. He noticed it and said: "Yes. I am like all the rest I have read the paper whether I have taken it or not. " ' LOST Between Geo. Miller's camp yard in Huntington and Castledale on July 23, a purse containing $48. Finder will be rewarded by returning to Pea cock's store at Emery. 46-2- i Dr. C. H. Wilson returned Wednesday Wednes-day from an extended trip over the reservation and northwest Colorado, i He had hardly got into town when he I was called to Lawrence to attend a j sick horse. He will be here right along now. He has seen lots of country since he left here but Castle Valley seems to look the best to him. j i Jas- T. Johnson, the Rawleigh man, made a trip over the most of the valley this week with his remedies, extracts, etc. He was not able to call on Castledale Castle-dale people owing to the license being too high. He expects to get a better rate on the proposition. He will be a welcome visitor when his goods have been introduced as the Rawleigh brands are winners wherever they are known. When the digestion is all right, the action of the bowels regular, there is a natural craving and relish for food. When this is lacking you may know that you need a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach, and Liver Tablets. They strengthen the digestive organs, improve im-prove the appetite and regulate the bowels. Sold by all dealers. f Jack Swasey died at Price last week from the effects of blood poisoning and was buried there the same day. He ' had been cared for at the jail there for . some time and was a county charge. Jack had many friends in these parts who will be sorry to learn of this sad ending of his life. I The Emery County Progress is now a ' i fiye-column quarto instead of a seven-column seven-column folio as heretofore. All the ad-t ad-t vertising has been taken off the front page, and the paper in its new form has a very attractive appearance. Times, Moab. 1 Another car of shingles just received at J. W. Nixon's. LOST Between Joseph Cunha's residence resi-dence and his farm in Castledale, one seamless sack containing the following tools: two hammers, three wrenches, two hobbles, some bolts and articles not mentioned. Finder please leave at Emery County Progress office and oblige the owner, Hector Evans. The bridge contractors practically completed their work the first of the week and have gone other fields. The work of grading the approaches u in progress in charge of Road Commissioner Commission-er Peacock. It will take some time to get them all in shape for crossing but once done Emery county will be placed a long way ahead in the way of bridges. They certainly look like they would withstand all the storms and floods that may come against them during the existence of the present generation. Lawrence is to have a steam engine for threshing this fall. E. S. Day, Hans Jensen, John Hansen and Nelson Day are the buyers of the engine a fifteen horse. They already have a 'arge separator to be operated by the new engine. Cement and wall plaster two cars at Nixon's. Dysentery is a dangerous disease but can be cured. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has been successfully used in nine epidemics of dysentery. In has never been known to fail. It is equally valuable for children child-ren and adults, and when reduced with water and sweetened, it is pleasant to take. Sold by all dealers. After the ball game last Friday there was a foot race between A. B. Willey and Mr. Clark of Huntington. Willey took first and there was to have been another race at Huntington Thursday when the boys went up to play ball, however the ball game did not come off so the race did not either. There was a little rain Thursday and the boys did not go up. It seems there was some mis-understanding over the phone as to whether it was too wet or not. At any rate there was no game. Marti flour at special prices for ton lots at J. W. Nixon's. Amos Tolboe has sold his interest in the firm of Tolboe Bros, to his brother broth-er and gone back to Salt Lake and Sandy where he will reside. Amos is a jolly young fellow and has made many friends among the young people who will miss him very much especially the young ladies. Nephi Williams and Frank Petty were in Emery a couple of days this week laying the foundation of their future fortunes or filing on oil claims. Six cents spot cash for honey is the price at Nixon's. j A couple of Austrians were brought j in from Mounds the first of the week by Sheriff Beebe accused of assaulting and robbing the section boss there. They were tried before Judge Sorenson Tuesday and discharged as evidence enough could not be found on which to hold thetri over. They were captured at Sunnyside the morning after the I assault and admitted that they had been at Mounds the night before, yet evidence that they were the guilty" par- ties could not be found. That Jos. Meyer, the Ferron fruit and vegetable raiser, is up to the same old tricks was evidenced by a nice lot of ripe tomatoes handed the editor the first of the week. He says his crop is hardly as good as usual this year. Vic Olsen returned from the reservation reserva-tion the first of the week where he had been working ditch for some time. He ' says they were so glad to get the Prog- j ress at times that they would let their! supper, including a big plate of trout, ! stand and cool while they looked over ! the news. It is different with some of us we have had too much Progress and ' not enough trout. I |