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Show Childs, the wellknown monumenc dealer of Springville, made a hurried visit through the county this week. Mrs. Dalton and son Ardeth of Manassa, Colo., are visiting with their son and brother, Attorney Bart Dalton and family. A fine baby boy made his appearance at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Larsen a week ago Thursday. All con- j cerned doing w ell at last report. Calvin C. Jensen, one of Ferron's in- dustrious young honey producers placed an order with the Progress Printerv yesterday for a thousand honey labels. We expect to have the complete list of teachers for the county for insertion next week, some eleventh-hour changes having made the list unavailable until now. Former Bishop Peter I. Akelund. now located at Altona, is in the county for a week assisting with the harvesting on his farm which is being run by his son, Laverne. Mrs. G. F. Hickman entertained at a family gathering last Saturday in honor of her sister, Mrs. J. S. Bills jr., of Payson, who, with her children, left for home the day following. Mr. and Mrs. Nephi L. Williams and frmily left this week for Salt Lake. .. Mr. Williams has accepted an exceptionally excep-tionally good position in one of the largest schools of the district. 1 A representative from the Ephraim ! experiment station made a trip through J the valley this week securing specimens of the different insects inhabiting the i lucern and other fields of ths valley. Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Bowen left last Saturday for Chicago where they will make their future home. They were accompanied to Salt Lake by Mr. and Mrs. Sam Snow who are visiting there. Dr. M. H. Dearden; the eyestrain j specialist, arrived in town yesterday on. one of his regular 10-week visits and has been busy attending local patents. pa-tents. He leaves this morning for a flying trio on south. One has but to step inside the Crawford Luke store to learn that that store is pleasing its customers. The management manage-ment reports a rushing business, en-' en-' abling them to keep the best of goods ! at fair prices. The Castledale ball team went down to defeat last Saturday afternoon in the last few innings of a game with the ' Ferron team. The score was 7-0 in the ' Dale's favor at the end of the fifth when our yqungsters "got bad." The Ferron athletic club was celebra ting Club day yesterday as we went to Press and from all preparations made for the occasion, all participating are sure to have had a right good time. We expect to publish the outcome of some of the events nexr. week. The Brigham Young University at Provo, Utah, will begin its fortieth academic year September 23, 1915. Registration days, Thursday and Friday, Fri-day, September 23 and 24. Class work begins Monday, September 27. Write i for catalogue. All inquiries will receive ; prompt attention, (ndv) 23-20 j The Progress pen-pusher cordialh j thanks the Saint George Commercial j club for an invitation ami tickets to the annual Fruit Festival to be given m tlie Dixie capital, Sept. 9:h -i'id lO.b, and regrets sincerely his inability to lie present this year though wc have nope.s of joining them at some future celebration. celebra-tion. Some nineteen Bee Hive girls from Price, chaperoned by Pres. Mary Math-is Math-is and Mrs. Wilson, beekeeper, helped make things lively in the Dale the middle mid-dle of the week when they joined the local girls in a campfire picnic Tuesday ' evening, and sports and dancing on Wednesday. An escort of local girls on horseback met the visitors some 5 j miles out of town. H. A. Fowler of Huntington brought i his son D. A. Fowler over to the "local i hospital last night that the latter might j receive treatment for a bad sliver in the i palm of hi3 hand. The accident occur- red at the Huntington saw mill when j I Mr. Fowler was placing wood in the j J furnace, a large sliver entering his hand i and breaking off, causing his arm to be-1 gin to swell. j |