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Show v'ous end was thought to have re- EUREKA REPORTER covered, Gust Hendrickson and Anna Son-doboth of Eureka, were married at Suit Luke City. Published on Thursday of each week The officers who look over the at Eureka, Utah. . reins for Mammoth In 1918 were: K. KIKE ( J. P. Anderson, mayor; John Smith, J. VE11N KIKE Publishers llyrum Ilurrlinan, Charles Brown, Duvld Lnrson, John Mordue, cuuncil- Entered In the postoffice at Ku- Anderson, recorder; Mrs. ,ec0,,,, c,aM maH Alrretl Molp. treasurer; 8. Stewart, IuarHhul: 1,arrr Elmer, fire chief; nr- - 8,oc,p Dailey, Jr., physician, ,T,1P nw offlpera of the Women of 'Vo,,,lcraft of Eureka were: Emma Man Acquitted Of Silver Ful,rlt,le. Hcbekr.h Mitchell, Agnes. r,e,1,ah Bowden. Eunice City Manslaughter Charges shofu,,ll- Bacon, Ellen Os- Fillmore, Martha Eldon Layton Reese, uged 25, of j')108 Mlu Dear and Provo, was acquitted by n uni1, Jury in the , rf,na whitehead. Fifth District Court at Xeplil last A ufttor from Fred Stoueman Thursday of involuntary mansIauRb-Nort- h ' ,1B wna Iwaled at Camp ter for the alleged accidental alay- "I Rpkford, 111. Me was h jng of Jack McNulty. The mishap n,p"pr of the ISth Engineers Corps, took place on the highway at Sliver .. Ml" 8,p,,a Sn,,lva11- - daushter of nty 0n the evening or July 24. 1837. a,V Sullivan, formerly of Reese, his wife and brother-in-la,'ureta wa married to M g, MINTNG NOTES Three mines of Eureka the Ceniini. ltldge oid Vul- ley und Eureka Mines received NEW SEMLOH HOTEL new smelting contracts which culled N.tl.T LAKE CITY for 2500 tons of ore a mouth; the Under New Management bulk or which would come from the Gemini, the controlling company of ( Different Atmosphere) the three. James ( relghtim, Tlntle Modern, rooms, mining man left Tor American Fork newly furnished with Simmons t anynn, where he was going to tain Beds. Inner-sprin- g mattresses. of the Earl-Eagl- e (barge property. Popular prices. Coffee Shop, A lurue hoist, toii'u u of capacity Barber larlor, Beauty Shop, 1P0O feet depth, was tlr.j' installed at Tailor Shop for your convenlleck In North Tlntic. Man- ience; Garage In connection ager Thomas Holduwuy stated ilia. most of all at rates that and a comparatively large cave had been you get more for your money. encountered on the 1700 level ut th $l.tO to $1.60 without bath Tlntic Central; the width of th Single. cave was about 5ii feet wiih an nn- known depth. Directors or the $1.60 to $S.OO with private y,"r" ot Spring City and with the former shooting from the ieka Bullion levied an assessment of hath. 1"" "irgaret Gpapp rronln of En- - rbr's fender as the rabbits ran In H cent per share. May Day levied a IIAItr.Y K. MILES, Mgr. cent Prt? marr,ed n January, 1918. front of the headlights.. Reese was u and assessment, iy i ecu!, J. F. McCORMICK, Asst. Mgr. r ort UK" accused of assessment was due nn the stock of , having fired a shot that the Central Standard Mining com- - H" at Sn'f Ijke City, where he was Ktruck McNulty as the latter was enter S. Army. It was stated that the Mam- walking along the road, moth Mining Co. earned nearly a EXPLAINED. . .half million dollars in 1917. The Judge What Is the meaning of Atlantic SCft COM! Teems Dragon Mining Co. declared a divi-- , I With Isles Of Romance denl f 1 cent per share 20 years this expression "Sex you?" Counsel it would M'lud, appear. ago. The Iron Blossom company passed up its usual quarterly divi- that it is a slang phrase of American! Scattering along our eaitern which linn gained regrettable hoard or In the Carribbe&ii are dend. In the language of onr poo- - scores of islands, whose romantic new Eureka city officers who currency The ' plo the insidious agency of histories are buried In the forgotten through assumed their duties early In Jan- the cinema, and Is. I am given to but whose real or legendary uary, 1917, were: Major Church, understand employed to Indicate a j.gst, loom large in the backgrounds mayor; Fred Richen. hold over counof dubtiy in the mind of the rnial or America, beginnings cilman; C. V. Firth, John Bunnell, as to the veracity of a state- cording to a release by Postmaster! Wilford Freckle! on and Dan Fields, rnent made to him. D,krr. Put Your Valuables in couneilmen. Mayor Churrh and The Judge Oh, yeah! Montreal Lyman Marthas Vineyard and Nantucket. Freckle! on ww Socialists were discovered by Bartholomew' four were elected on the 's Our Fire Proof Vault. before the Pilgrims Gosnold years party ticket and there was a landed on Plymouth Rock; Long Isdisagreement enisling between the Rates as low as $2.20 per land for years was a bone of contwo factions with regard to the aptention between early English and offices. pointive year. Dutch settlers; and the nearby IsThe following ladies had Just land of Manhattan was secured from in completed a Red Cross roar. the Indiana by Peter Mlnuit for $25 surgical dressings and muslin banworth of beads, cloth and trinkets. dages: Mrs. E. Weel, Miss Lenoic Cape Rreton was controlled by Ilenrlod. Mrs. Elsie Rrewster, Mrs either British or French on two or T. Lee. Mrs. W. F. Adams, Mrs. E. more ocrasions before It finally beWanless. Mrs. C. Bacon. Mrs. Hattie came British, and it bears evidence Sullivan, Mrs. I.ee Thorne. Mrs. of both Norse and Icelandic visits John Donnelly, Mrs. John Hannifin before Columbus was born. Eureka, Utah. and Miss Verda Fullmer. San Salvador end Haiti, visited by David R. Kacar and Mis Blanch the Genoese navigator on hia first L. II both of Mammoth, were voyage In 1492, ere stepping-stone- s married twenty years : go. cf continental history- - More warMiss Olivrft Fryer, fare has been waged on Haiti than A set of false teeth, carved from in nny other spot of the Western d Fry-haof Mr. and Mr. John Ivory, used by George Washington, daughter Hemisphere when Spanish, Frenrh, such a complicated mechanicians pr f Mammoth, p.v.rd away sud-o- f British or Negro struggled for Its spring that they were liable to denly. She had suffered iri.rn acase of diphtheria some weeks prepossession. The West Indies abound stick open and refuse to close. with talea of the Spanish Main. Steeped In rotoninl lore Is the archipelago which lies oft the coast In 1662, long fiction. of South Carolina. tective the before arrived at Mayflower one so takes Nothing completely setHuguenot out of himself and at the same Plymouth, Frenrh AEEWAYiSTiODE Quality Foods at the Lowest Possible Prices. " n,W. i,0,' Effective Friday & Saturday, Jan. 10 & 11 tella AIRWAY Ground for any method of brewing w a' TOMATOES Ox. Cans JUICE iWIN'fruit FLOUR S3T . UTAHNA aea-orig- ln Deposit Box col-sta- Cloth Bag lOlbs. Lb. 15c , Rent a Satety SUIAB COFFEE CHEESE 59c 3 cans 25c each 29c 48 pounds $1.49 48 Founds $1.09 pound 19c Mild le PORK FRESH Roasts lb. 19c lb. 15c Picnics FRESH J Clti-sen- The Commercial LETTUCE ST YAMS Service Corporation CRANBERRIES each 8c pound 5c bushel 39c 2 pounds 25c LABD MILK JONATHANS Armours Star All Brands 4 cans 8 lbs. $1.09 time furnishes inspiration and men- tled on IYrrls Island, near Port tal stimulus, as the reading of good Royal, and built a fort. A few yeara books. But how much time does a later ramo the Spaniards, leaving person daily employed give to read- behind them two other forts. All ing? How many books does the of them were burned or destroyed. Centuries later the roads of the average business man read? Truly, HOME TALK he reads the daily paper and mag- Islands echoed to the marching feet azines on finance and other econom- of 17. 8. Marines, preparing for seric affairs in which he is interest- vice In Frsnre. Then historians re-- 1 ed; but how much reading Is done membered Its earlier Inhabitants, for cultural development alone? The nnd soon apades of the Marines unreading of good books gives us a earthed what they believed to lie culture without which we miss Charleston, built by tlie Huguenots. much of the true blessedness of Later the foundations living. A library is an index of a of the fort were found to be that of man's inner soul or personality. San Marcos, built by tbe Spaniards' It tells us what he thinks of in In 1677. his free moments. It reveals to us Today a monument to the Huguehis hopes and aspirations. The size nots stands near the site of these of a library docs not determine its U. 8. Marines while the forta, early worth, except in terms of its finan- hare a training station on what la cial value. A small number of America's most historic Isbooks advantageously selected is probably As a symbol of national unity land. worth far more than a larger li- the Stars and wave over brary of cheap literature. It is not Parris Islands, Stripes where Huguenots, the mere possession of books that counts: it is what you get out of Spanish pioneers and primitive Inthe books and retain afterward dians once dwelt, but have long ,nr6 faded Into the shadows of early and use In a larger understanding new Another Hubby What I of life. Lincoln had one of the gown? Perhaps you will tell me, smallest libraries in his day, but he how I shall get the money The world's oldest known tree Is madam, found in each book that which ento for it. pay In Santa Marla del Tula, You must excuse me. I larged his life and made it ready crowing Wifey Mexico. It is a bald cypress, with for the deeper experiences. am your wife, not your financial We read not only for information, an estimated age of 5000 years. but because we are seeking per- sonality, the power of a great hit-man being breathing through the printed page. Books on the sci- ences and philosophies are con- - j stantly changing because of new discoveries, but the books which reveal the struggles and triumphs of the spirit of man are great constants. They do not change: for life is constant. Such latter books are intellectual dynamos from which we receive mental and spiritual energy. We read books to learn truth: truth not only related to the facts of science, history, and other fields of knowledge, but truth as It reveals the great purposes, meanings and values of life itself: truths to i live by. to mean What docs your library you? Is it only s loafing place for nn hour or two of relaxation? Is it a sort of sham pretense where shelves are lined with books whose pages have never been cut? Is it only a secluded den, a store room for trophies and curios? Or is it a great silent sanctuary where you meet the souls of men and women and hear them speak, offering to you the best of their sacrificial work 96-PIH- T which is the product of time and talent: the essence of labor end naked soul? One whose library Is CENTURY DirrtLUNa CO., KORIA, also a study, may say with sinis." a mind kingdom My cerity: Union. 29c I well-preserv- ed ! ! ; , I can decrease long hours of tedious labor and drudgery." Electricity, for its many uses, such as the milking machine, milk cooler, poultry brooder, hay hoist and many others, proves not only a wonderful help, but a source of increased profits. It's a paying investment that returns big dividends. - Let's Talk It Over I QUART e Utah Power I &. Light Co. tu. C Western Newspaper Opportunity's door la never lockIt always opens by pushing. Ethiopians fast nearly of the year. Faithful members of tha Ethiopian church are bound to six fast periods, which range from 16 to 51 daya In duration. During these fast periods, they must eat no flesh, butter, milk, nor other animal product. ed. two-thir- da Neil ODonnell Mortuary Service A Dignified at a Nominal Charge, PHONE 54 Call Any Time Day or Night. Ambulance Service |