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Show August The Eureka (Utah) Reporter Page Four PUZZLES GAMES PICTURES PUZZLE PATCH 10 Thus 11 Encounter 13 New Hampshire U. S. Coin Rebus (ab.) a ter opT i'llcSIVB SLVM fur our YOU A ANNIVERSARY- - i'r Lka DOWN 1 ACROSS 1 S 5 Italian river lb i PfcrLIVEH- - THIS Help Stull Hiid's home Alleged (nice Negative reply Males Exclamation of inquiry ' MY DO CAN FOLLOW AUV Parent Vowel-les- s, Spaceless These puzzles are about one Wo've left out the vowels and or another pushed the words so they run to- Either Wttfler i AF4HRI NICKE1 Mix-Up- s Three English units of exchange ore in these strange lines. Rearrange the letters in each line to find their names: SING HILL HANG RIFT NU POD I i PUZZLE ANSWERS AMERICAN COINS Silver Dollar; Cent; Nickel and Dime. REM'S: Quarter; VOWEL LESS. SPACELESS: The franc Is the monetary unit of France. -- FIELPMI CE EVffAVERIRP OF SOUTH AMERiOA RJILDS ns nest With the entrance IN A 100 ACRE FIELD WILL-EA- T OP YEARL-Y- 11 TONS OSLASS ATTHEBOTTOW M1X-CP- S: Shilling; Farthing; found. just couldn't make it themw whipped, and used some perty tmil language, tint ole Nell just could not make it. Onx Imy said ' to the other, "Say Tom, I beard Apoiigy please. Folks we hud my Grandfather Kay one time a only do so much. MayN planned to hr with you nil every mule eau A new pump arrived for use at hour, during the Grand Old Sil- that ks what is wrong with ole ver Jubilee, but no could make it Nell." Well the boys unhitched ole the North Lily Mine. Supt. John for which we nrv more than sorry. Nell from the hiickltourd. let her S. Finlay, stated that within the Hut. we done all a mule could do. eat grass and rest a while, then week, the new pump would lie but nun- - done our bent. Hindu made hitehed her up again, rubbed her ready for use. This pump, tome think hack when I was a little heal, talked to her a little and gether with the others then in use e shaver two how was haulin' wood they Maid. Get up." ole Nell Just at the mine, would make it off with the Nys. to handle 1'iOn to 1600 galfor their Grandmother with an ol walked rightword-aii-all. In a short lons of water per minute. Karly buckbourd an one ole mule which huektwiard. in July the flow of water excocd-e- d waa 'bout ntntecn yearn ole an time all was home. OOO gallons, the flow her name wan Net! well these moving Folks, this is true. I was the two little tioya hail worked ole other Isiy, yes sir, Ole Sam. May- up to that hiint within a few ' Nell pretty hard all day. was pel- be that was our trouble, kindu like lays. The increase was so starttin dark, the hoys had on the last ole Nell, ju-s- l could not git any ling. that it liiisct mining operaloud o wood. When ready to go longer Willi oul some h.-l- and rest. tions on n couple of the levels and order for a resulted in a hurry-uBetter luck next time, hnc. rr.derginund plant, largerpumpir;; wife Folks, there is nothing my ami I like tietter than friends. We conditions at the mini apeir to have a few. we hope, and art he as pleasing as ever am! the usual heavy shipments of splendid very fond of them. We wvie both ora- wen couiim; from this new raised to try to have just a few mine. friends at least. Making friends Two cars of ore wcie slopped sometimes is easy. Imt keeping them is harder, an' when you loose trom the Goshen Sir.vtter Pump. one. to my way of Ihinkiu to loose Victor Bray and Farris Mc.ikm. after havin' hurts more th.iu not who wen busy shipping tin old havin' at all. dump liad already scut out two the Folks, we don't intend to te carloinls and were working on unthird. Most of the dump was to or hard get along der water on the Jensen farm, ami eontvinptahlo with, but if wc a it- - in anyway, tell the owner of the property wasn't us what you want and we will in favor of hiving the point draindo our Nst like the ole mule We ed. heeauae he had some fish plantare not perfect, jest human beings. ed there Keturns had Nam rerri-veProvo, from otte shipment, the net wmiwKMnimMiaMiiiiiKiiiiiiHiHiroiiiiiiiiiniiiiiuiiiiintXMHiiiiHiUHiiiiiiiutiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiniNMKWHuiHiHuim value being $12 a ton. M Punng the week two carloads of dump mnterinl were sent out from tin Ft ah (oils, properly, where Finkle and Griffith were CHIEF BRAND LIME operating a lease, which wan once held by (rooks ami Scott. Joseph Trelonr. aged IS years (known as Kuinniy Joe) died at one of the Salt Like hospitals, CII1KF DRAM) lie hail followed mining in the district for many years. HIGH CALCIUM LIMK Plans wvre well under w ay f r I he Silver Jubilee The Ladv Klks were assigned the details for rhoocug a lady to In "Mi Tintu The parade promised to tn We Specialize in Hinh Calcium Chemical about the best part of the eelebrn-tioSeveral Kinds were to provide abundance of very fine mu5 sic OCiocrs of tile Miiose Lodge of Kiircku hid completed arrangeHydrate for Mills and Smelters ments for the admission into Shore Thing ile Nell Twenty Years Ago I . . Tintic... In pos-Hibl- p d 'caving Rvd. age Ga!i-.-biu- Mihwlidirt it ut ion l'KRTILIZKKS O PLASTERING educational in-- m-kon- 608 Dooly Huilding MINING CO. Salt Lake City Plant: Saddle, Utah g. Thom is Randle, look over the Conover Service station, owned by the Continental Oil Co. of Salt Lake City. For several months the station had been operated un der a lease, by lander Carter, who closed his affairs here and moved his family to California. a new business house There opened in Kureka. The Chapman Co., operating stores in Richfield. Price and Park City. The building was opposite the lihraray but'.ding. The company known as Chapman's Variety Store, earned candies, notions, novelty gids. Join Harrington, who for eight years had lei-- .a student nl the Pnlversiiy ef Notre Dame, at South I tend, Iml , wns spending several weeks with hw parents, Mr and Mrs Dennis Harrington. The young man had twvn studying for the priesthood and after his vacation will go to Washington, D C, to continue his studies for the next four years. This would complete Ins education. The Tintie Stake Fathers ami '' being planned for s"::" AK " P m Nephi Canyon. s st . what did you all think 'Null uir Jubilee, pretty good liuh, for h little berg like we'ims hive, I stoking forward to belter luck and better limes next lime. Folks, there are very nice ole lathes like to say something about, but will wait tiil next week ir the Isml Is witlin! Ias be friends not enemies 8lnecrely 8am and Helen Hernando yrs. ot Folks, CHIEF CONSOLIDATED S h. of the three children of the late Ivan lfnrper of Mammoth Mr. ami Mrs Harper having both passed away during the same year I Jean, r n. the 4. old and Bou.nie aged 4. ably the Announcement of the appoint- Arkansas. ment of John V. Fennell, as district deputy for the first district of Utah State Knights of (?olum-hu- s was made by Voiv I McCarthy. Mr. Fennell's territory inS ilt Isikc, Kiircku and cluded Price. Mayor Dan Fields stated that preparations were being mink for a program to he broadcast over radio station KSI, for the purpose of bringing to the attention of the public "The Silver Jubilee" on August 2i. M mbers of the New Testament class of the 1 .1S church enjoyed a Jaminose lawn party at the home of Ciri Bradlw. voting daughter f Mr. and Mis. F.. K. Bradley. Games and luncheon won enjoyed bv. Adele Towers. Ruth Taylor. Kam.on.i Banks. Thelma Whitehead. Virginia Rlenstroin. Mildred Rife. F.'.v.i Allred. Doris Taylor anil I.nVon Pradlcy. The teachers wie I Von Webb ami Krma Broderick. Prizes were won by Por.s Tiylor and Mildred Rife 'III- p.ntv was planned by Cora Bradley and Verona Williams. Mr. ami Mrs. Melvin H. Shrivcr Mr. of HI., when Shriver was manager of a very prosperous .1 C Penny store, were at the home of Mr .and i nests Mrs. W. F. Shriver. They came to 1lah bv utilo K'.ireka Odd Fellows I,odgc No. 12 will repsvseiil Kiircku at Delta. Olln-lodges to lie present were American Fork, lrovo. Puv-aSpanish Fork and Mam-m- I f Ml KDOCll tree-notc- gt-lhc- 8 River barrier Nu one was there. h He climbed to his MAN onre boasted he was a mighty hunter An old man of the tribe, sitting nearby, raised one eyebrow at him. There Is a hunter far mightier than you," the old man grunted. Is that so? cried the man. And who is he?" The old man shrugged. Nobody has ever seen hi in or heard him. Before you know it, he's upon you!" The man was Impressed. When does he kill by day or by night?" The old man smiled. He doesn't kilL He just makes you blind and deaf. Usually, he stalks at night If you evade him, he follows you all day. One moment of weakness, or forgetfulness and he pounres!" anThe younger man slapped his again, and made ready with held he This arrow. other time, chest Ill challenge this hunter! his knife ready in his hand. Ill capture him!" The stars wheeled overhead. The old man shrugged again, a strange force crept over Again and the, hunter snorted. He arhis eyes, his ears, his him, closing ranged the quiver of arrows on lus him sidewards. mind, pushing lnuscncd flexed his bow, shoulder, he shouted. Got you! the knife at his belt. Hut and plunged his he grabbed "Where docs he hunt?" he knife at empty air. He lost balasked. Who knows?" answered the old ance, slipped, tumbled all the way man. Hes everywhere and no- down to the ground. There he lay, wondering about where. Every minute, somewhere the mysterious enemy. How could in the world, he stalks a victim. "Well, if he is in this forest," he climb a tree without rustling even a leaf or shaking even one said the hunter, Til find him!" bough? How rould he come close enough to push a mans shoulder, JNTO the fnrert went the hunter. yet slip out of his clutches so Cleverly, cunningly, he searched, and disappear so silently but he found only the familiar smoothly into the night? wild beasts. He got up, groaning at his cuts At night, remembering the old and bruises. man's winds, he thought: Can the old man be right? he Now hell stalk me. He thinks Is there really a hunter I'm weaned w ;th my day's hunt- thought. so mighty and swift? ing. We'll sec! He chose a tree standing alone In the center of a clearing. High JJE kept moving now. He flitted from spot to spot, stood still a up into it he rlimbed, settling himin its big while, then moved again. Hut he self comfortably branches. He fitted an arrow to got neither sight nor sound of his enemy. his bowstring, and waited. The sun rose, lighting the forest, Hours passed. Suddenly his eyes closed, his mind went blank. At awakening the birds and the butonre he ierked up his head, and terflies. StiU after me! thought the let the arrow fly. So far, ita a draw beAha! he shouted. Thought hunter. tween us, and he must be very you had me!" He leaped to the ground, knife angry, and jealous of my skill." He found a large rock standing In hand. He tramped ell around. DAN BY but you can solve thii by reversing the process: TlifrnrkthmnlrynlfFrne. 6 Lair 2 3 4 5 7 9 12 Jfa What Do You Know About Coins of the World? On Opiiaw (puftts $hetrt dbunish i residents of Eureka. de Soto was pmh-- 4 19, Wft What'll Jala I Do? The situation: One of your In the middle of the field, and posed friends, jealous of clambered to the top. Nobody could approach without being seen Even if anybody got to the rock, he'd still have to climb it The sun beat down on the hunter, parching his throat, reddening his eyes. Again something crept over him, overpowering him, stealing his mind and his senses. Then, suddenly, it was evening. Antelopes grazed peacefully around the rock where he lay. Hours had passed, hours in which the unseen hunter had conquered him! Painfully he limped back to the village. You were right," croaked the Three times he young hunter. me. he nearly got Twice stalked me. The third time, it was broad daylight. 1 could see In all directions. Yet he fell on me and conquered me. How dues he do this? Who is this mighty hunter?" Now that youve stopped bragging," answered the old man, I'll tell you." Tell me, tell me!" cried the man. The mighty hunter you couldn't see or hear, whom you couldn't catch or escape, is named Sleep! WD. yo school standing, has been p,tild. ing around a false statement that you cheated tn an examination What will you do? 1. Id plan to give this awful character some of her own medi-cine. 2. Id be so furious Id go to the and make tier taka trouble-mak- er bark what she said or cite. 3. Id ignore the whole affair unless someone asked if what sha I'd derj Landlord Style it indignantly. Two small girls were playing. 4. Id go to the trouble-makOne pretended she was the land- and calmly try to And why she lord and the other was renting a said such a thing. house. 5. Id meet the situation quietly Do you have any parents? with the true story. asked the playhouse owner. The solution: Performance No, Yes, two," replied the other 1 is the worst, No. 5 is the best little girl. The others rank 3, 4, 2, in that I'm sorry, but I never rent to order. children with parents." said were true, and then er Party Game Solos Promotion Next time you give a party and want to matrh partners, say it Shine yuiir shoes. Mister? asked the young fellow on the with shoes. The boys remove theirs. Jumble the footar tostreet. No time," replied the elderly gether tn a pile. At the go signal, contestants race from a startgentleman. Well, to start the day right. I'll ing line some distance away, had do one job for nothing." their brogans, put them on propIt's a deal. Go ahead. erly, and return to the starting The young man polished a shoe point Note the winner, the runnHow er-up, Then asked: the third arrival etc. diligently. does she look, boss? After the girls play the same gamt Fine." too, the first to get home" beWell, for 10 cents, Ill do the comes the partner of the winning other. boy. And so on down the line I have always thought the ac- - first white man to we tions of men the best interpreters of their thoughts. Locke. i Farm income semed its tr.f advances during reo-- notable years. |