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Show Oscar Beebe was an Emery visitor the first of the week. Huntington Co-op is paying top price for alfalfa seed, spot cash. C. E. Larsen transacted business in Price the first of the week. We have an up-to-date cleaning plant and we buy alfalfa seed, or clean it for you. J. W. Nixon. Students We can supply board anp room for a limited number at $3.00 per week. F. M. Reynolds. 51-2 D. H. Williams returned the first of the week from the fire district up north, and has gone back to his forest district at Emery. Huntington Co-op will get your honey and alfalfa seed if you give them a chance. Why, because they pay more than the other fellow. A boy was born at the home of Mr. and Mrs Ray Jensen on Saturday morning, morn-ing, September 10, 1910. This is boy No 4. Wm. Howard was a pleasant caller at this office while down to the democratic convention. He received the honor of being made chairman of the delegation to Provo. Zeke Billington of Mt Pleasant has been visiting at Joe Lund's this week and shaking hands with old friends. He is acquainted with about all the old timers here. Nephi 'Williams, Sr., is now a resident resi-dent of Castledale, having moved up from Emery to give his children the advantages of the schools here. He has rented the R. C. Miller property and is living there. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is today the best known medicine in use for the relief and cure of bowel complaints. It cures griping, grip-ing, diarrhoea, dysentery, and should be taken at the first unnatural looseness of the bowels. It is equally valuable for children and adults. It always cures. Sold by all dealers. Milton and David Tuttle are back from California where they have worked work-ed at mining since last spring for the Sovereign Mines Co. The report that the prospects of the mine are exceedingly exceed-ingly bright and that the;"pay streak" will soon be reached. This sounds good to the stockholders around here, of whom there are quite a number. L. G; Kelly and wife of Salt Lake visited relatives and old friends at Orangeville the first of the week. Mr. Kelly is deputy state auditor and put in a few days checking up the books of the county officials while here. It is a small job. to check up the officers here as they are both competent and honest keeping their books straight and in a manner that makes inspection a pleasure to officials or taxpayers. Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Olsen were down from Huntington Monday and were pleasant callers at this office. Mrs. Olsen is the Huntington milliner who has made such a success of the business there. She is just back from Provo and Salt Lake where she has learned the latest styles of headwear and had shipped ship-ped a large stock of all kinds of goods for her fall trade. She has an announcement an-nouncement elsewhere which it will pay to read if you want a dressy hat. Jos. Meyer marketed fruit and vegetables veg-etables here one day last week and handed us a sample of his 20 ounce apples. They are pound and a half apples but he says they are not as large as last year when they weighed 26 ounces. He blames the hot weather for stopping their growth this year, saying he expected them to get as large as a wagon wheel, but as soon as the weather got real hot they began to ripen and did not grow much more. The Castledale Co-op has just completed com-pleted some decided improvements in their store. The west room has been ceiled with a metal ceiling and all the counters and shelves remodeled, besides this the inside work has been painted and the roof tarred. The west room is the main room now and it is certainly packed with goods of all kinds. In fact they have bought to be able to supply all comers with goods and have a large and well selected stock. I Joe Lund handed us a sample of corn the other day which he states has been ripe for about a month. As the corn is well filled and solid we can see no raason why this is not a corn section. Corn yields a good lot of both fodder and grain to the acre and with a little corn for hogs it would not be a hard matter to raise enough meat for home use and stop the payment of high prices for meat shipped in. Everyone would rather have meat grown right here at home. Baby carriages, go-carts, furniture and everything you want at Nixon's. Primary tonight at court house. Milo Dyches has gone to Ephraim where he will attend school. Miss Rose Reynolds started Tuesday for Holden, Utah, where she has a position as a teacher in the public school. FOR SALE In Huntington, a house and lot. Apply to Ellis Johnson, Manti Utah. 52-4- Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Nicholson are the proud parents of an 8-pound girl, born Saturday morning, September 10th. The Castle Valley road has ordered a 156,000 pounds freight locomotive from the American Locomotive works. Lost July 24th, on road south of Castledale, a white woolen shawl. Finder will please bring to this office. 522. Huntington Co-op got 12 cars alfalfa seed last season, they say they a.re going go-ing to get 20 this, get their prices before be-fore selling. Many a housewife has been helped and made happy by getting a Revonoc Washer since we cut the price down to $12, only a few left better get one. J. W. Nixon. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Knudsen passed through Castledale yesterday on their way home from Salt Lake where they were married in the Temple on Wednesday. Wed-nesday. The grandest and largest line of ladies and childrens coats, fall dress goods and mens and boys suits you ever saw or we ever had. Prices to suit you. J. W. Nixon. The republican primary for Castledale will be held tonight at the court house. There are nine delegates to select and a full attendance is desired. See the call on another page. j Isaac Black has gone to Ferron where he will operate the Hour mill this season j It has been in charge of his son J E. Black, who desires on occount of his health to give his attention to farming. Mr. Black, Sr., is a thoroughly practical miller and Ferron people are fortunate in securing him to prepare their bread stuff. Alma Anderson and a passenger had a rather bad night of it Wednesday. As they got to the top of the big dug- j way on the road to Emery they encount- j ered a tremendous downpour of rain j and hail which swelled all the washes J to raging torrents. The stage box dipped water in some of them. They reached the Muddy late and found it I impassable. They got through in time to make Emery at one o'clock. The mud has been bad down that way all the week. Houston Brown and Morrel Morris came up from San Rafael the first of the week with a four-horse load of watermelons which they sold to the people. Mr. Brown is a brother of the Brown sisters and visited them while here. Through the kindness of the boys and E. F. Marshall the editor was supplied sup-plied with one of the melons, and if they were all like the one we got they were certainly a great treat to our people. The Progress scribe feels that he is a good judge of melons as he lived five years in a melon country where someone brought him a melon nearly every day. For genuine quality this melon from the San Rafael beat them all. Several others who sampled it gave a similar verdict. Here's hoping that the oil boom may make a town of San Rafael and that the boys and Mr. Marshall may make a fortune selling melons to the oil kings. You have lost money on your honey by not getting Huntington Co-op prices. |