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Show - ., , tm , , ,, - mm . Ill - - 1 !! I I II" I 1 - AiM'"""i"tH"itmifHmmMiiHinimiiimmiittrtiiftMtmiHimmiM CORRESPONDENCE iiMMiiinniiiiiiiHiilMlMilininMMiH!MMiiiniiiiiMiiiiiiiiniilMiMiMiiiMinniMMMnMnMiiiliiiliiMiiniiMlinMiiiiiiliiiiiMli'iiiiiiiiilnM""iii'ii"..l!;"imr.i.iiiiill NADA Nndn, Utnh, Februnry 2,-1920. Cnrleton Culmsee is spending his vncntion nt home, nwniting tho reopening re-opening of tho B. A. C. Burns Tcbbs is spending n few days nt home. Ernest LcFevro is in chnrgo of the sheep herd. Tho ense of J. D. Leigh vs. J. C. Hnrter of Nndn hns been postponed until the April term of court. Leon LcFevrc was cnllcd to tho bedside bed-side of his nged father nt Pnnguiich the other dny. At the present writ- irig ho hns not returned. O. II. Moore hns returned to his rnnch. Since before the holidny season sea-son ho has been employed nt Lund in the J. D. Leigh Mercantile Co. Store. Forest Gnlpin, who has spent tho winter with his nunt, Mrs. H. E. Smith, left Tucsdny for Cnstle Rock, Utnh, where his parents' nre located for tho present. A Mr. Smith representing tho Department De-partment of tho Interior, has spent several days hero inquiring into the residence of Mrs. Knthrcno Houghton nnd of Miss Ann Drier, prior to their finnl proof on homestends. II. E. Smith nnd L. A. Culmsee hnvo dug wells down to wnter level. The former struck water nt 38 feet nnd the lntter nt 10 feet. They both expect ex-pect to go down to second strntum of wnter With n drill nnd will then install in-stall engines and plnnt nlfnlfn. Last Saturday was payday for the section crew. They spent tho dny in Lund where they report for their checks. O. H. Moore nccompanicd them home, hnving spent tho dny there. Ray McGinty is spending a week with L. McGinty nnd O. Stephenson. As Ray and Leo arc both first-cluss nrmy cooks, tho former with experience exper-ience oversens, nnd tho lntter nt Cnmp Kearney, Oscnr Stephenson is living high rcgnrdlcss of tho II. C. L. Mr. Mike Schoof, who recently pur-chnsed pur-chnsed some school Innd adjoining L. A. Culmsee's, returned from Snlt Lake Monday morning nnd will purchnso n team, as well as make nrrnngements to put down a deep well for irrign-tion. irrign-tion. He wns mnrricd in Snlt Lnko. Inst week. The census cnumerntors of Iron nnd Beaver counties hnve visited Nndn recently. We nre smnll, but one county isn't lnrgo enough to hold us nnd we nre growing fnst! This yenr we hnvo tho honor of being represented represent-ed in the Treasury department Internal Inter-nal Revenue Service. One name only, thnt of J. E. Moore, nppenrs on the list ns filing income tax returns. The cooperntivo observer's mctcor-ologicnl mctcor-ologicnl record for Jnnunry, 1920, is ns follows: Precipitation, .88 inches; grentest in 24 hours, .30; totnl snow-fnll, snow-fnll, 7.G inches; on ground 15th, 4 inches; in-ches; nt end of month, 1 inch. No of days with .01 or more precipitation, 4; clenr dnys, 19; pnrtly cloudy C; cloudy, 0. L. A. Culmsee, Coopern-tive Coopern-tive observer. ' .1 I I SUMMIT 1 L Summit, Utnh, Februnry G, 1920. Charlie nnd Lcslio Prntt were in town u dny or two Inst week on business. busi-ness. Chnrlcs Dnlley hns bought several smnll bunches of sheep lntely, so thnt he hns increased his herd considerably. consider-ably. Sumner O'Donnell hns gone to Lund to meet his brother Frank O'Donnell ' nnd fnmily, who nro coming from New Mexico to mnko their home in Summit. Joseph B. Dnlley hns exchnnged hi3 homo for thnt of Herbert White, so1 n move is expected almost nny dny. Mrs, Mnry Dnlley nnd son Orien hnvc returned from Cednr City since tho school closed, but hnvo hnd to serve their time under quarantine, as hnvo others who have come from out of town. ' The school hns been closed for more than a week on nccount of tho Pri-ninry Pri-ninry tenchcr Miss Blnncho Jones hnving the "flu." So fnr tho health officer hns been successful in keeping the epidemic out of town, though there hnve been sevcrnl enscs nt the Winn fnrm south of Summit. |