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Show -- -' - - - -- - "T"wi"'wmirrTr?T sCity and Local Happenings! . Miss Amy ilkins of Washington Washing-ton is in Cedar again, and will 'spend some time here. If you want to keep cool these hot days have J. H. Hunter deliver de-liver you ice each morning. The price is lc a pound. I Enoch Rasmussen of Parowan, after spending the 24th at home, has resumed his labors at this place. ' Peroxide Cream, best for tan, freckles and sunburn. Cedar City Drug Store. The House of Quality. Qual-ity. Tho town clock, which has been out of repair for .some time, has 'been fixed this week and is again chiming forth the fleeting hours. Mis. Edith Gregory became the mother of a fine son last Monday. Congratulatio: s t j the L proud parents. Don't fail to see the "Battle of Bunker Hill" at the Gem Photoplay Pho-toplay Theatre tonight and tomorrow to-morrow night. Mrs. Amanda Johnson and her daughter, Mrs. Webster, have i come over from Cedar City for a brief visit. Kane County News. ! The best fountain service in town, and the best Ice Cream, too. The Cedar City Drug Store. The House of Quality. Miss Belle Armstrong, who has spent the summer in Idaho with relatives is home again, and will shortly resume her position as clerk in the Equitable Co-op. Store. Fact, by thunder! A building isto be erected just south of the aEquitable.storothis, ILon-the, r ",,il"'can bo secured. Now what do you know about that! LOST.A boy's coat, on the road between Cedar City and jlyi Lund. Finder is requested to 7. leave informati.n at The Record ;" office. A lot of people are answering t the query, "Which would you rather do or go a-fishing?" in the affirmative these days. The creeks must be kept pretty well fc' lined in the mountains. Delicious Velvet Ice Cream, ji,J best in the county. "Just as I good as a kiss from your sweet p heart," only at the Cedar City : Drug Store. Where the BIG bright light shines. f The Rex Electrical Theatre at K Parowan is putting on a baby K show this week, which isapleas- f- ing and amusing diversion from , " the regular performance. Thir- ty or more babies have been en- . tered, and their portraits are I shown at each performance. I The beautiful rains that have I . fallen during the past few days will do an immense amount of ' good to growing crops, the rang- i es and the country in general. i Th rainy season is a little later IJ than the schedule time this year, w but is none the less welcome. It fk would be hard to compute the ' value in dollars and cents of these summer rains. : Our enterprising fellow-towns- man, John V. Adams, has com- f l menced work on a 6-foot cement Y . walk along the west front of his v- lot on upper main street. Other 'r property owners on this street 't are talking of paving, and it is hoped that in a short time the IR entire block will be traversed by 3& a handsome cement walk. This 1 ?w is a, commendable improvement W r which the Record feels to most . ? heartily encourage. It leaves a pleasant, lasting taste Snow Flake Ice Cream at the Royal Bakery. Mr. Jed Fawcett, who spent the Twenty-fourth in this city, returned Monday to his work at the Parowan saw-mill. Friday and Saturday nights at the Gem Photoplay, "The Battle of Bunker Hill." Don't miss it. Regular prices of admission. Come in and have a Pinoche Sundae. One of the new ones at the Cedar City Drug Store. The House of Quality. Editor A. D. McGuire spent the first part of this week in Salt Lake City, occupied with preparations for the removal of his family to this place, where they will make their future home. FOR HIRE.A good buggy, and a team of excellent drivers, by the day or for longer periods. A good saddle horse also. WALTER JONES. The rains which fell about the first of the week, and which were particularly heavy in the vicinity of Lund, made travel by automobile automo-bile impracticable, and Mr. B. F. Knell, who happened to be at the station with his car, has been compelled, to remain there some days waiting for better roads. R. G. Siewert of Milford and L. L. Hudson of Kansas, were in this city yesterday. They are taking a motorcycle camping trip through the country to see the boasted scenery of this part of Utah. They came from Mil-ford, Mil-ford, will visit the Parowan mountains and return by Beav- Dr. Leonard has purchased a fine 40-h. p. 5-passenger Jackson touring car, and is now in a position po-sition to respond to longdistance professional calls as promptly as gasoline and pneumatic tires can carry him. llie automobile is quite a boon to patients as well as doctors in the medical profession. profes-sion. The doctor has cur congratulations. con-gratulations. "Hello, say, cut out cur ad in The Record! we're completely swamped with crders; got more than we will be able to fill this season. When it comes to getting get-ting the business, The Record is certainly there." The forefroinc is the substance of a conversation conversa-tion received by this office the first of the week. "There's a reason." M. M. Bush, Sheriff of Tooele county, and candidate for Congressman Con-gressman before the Republican State convention, spent a few days in Iron county the fori part of this week, getting acquainted with local members of the Republican Re-publican party, both in Cedar City and Parowan. Mr. Bush is a pleasant gentleman to meet, and is well spoken of in his own county. Elsewhere in The Record will be found the official notice of the Iron County Fair, to be held in this city September 17th, 18(h and 19th. The Fair Committee consists of Jas. A. Tweed ie, Thos. Dix and E. B. Dalley. These men, in addition to being well qualified for the work of directing an enterprise of such magnitude, are real huslters, -the sort that act es well as talk and the people of this part of the country may confidently expect ex-pect to enjoy an industrial exposition ex-position eclipsing anything of its kind ever attempted in this part of the state. |