OCR Text |
Show City and Local Happenings Dr. A. D. Rogers' is a Salt ' !', Lake City visitor this week. !y - Miss Bell Mitchell of Parowan i ; . . t was in town Monday on a com-bied com-bied pleasure and business trip. The Misses Ruby Leigh and k" Mary Bergstrom arj visiting , Miss Gladys McConnell at '' :. Quitchapa. -"' J. H. Hunter delivers ice. for 7 - lc a pound, Leave your order ':' s with him for the summer. ' (Advertisement.) County Superintendent Parley Par-ley Dalley is attending the National Educational Convention at Salt Lake City. , rV4 On Tuesday of this week W.S. ,' , M usser and family removed to the A. S. Higbee property on North Main street John Joseph of Adamsville, ; - '. ' ' who taught in the public schools v of this city last tsrm, was a Pourth visitor in the city. Thomas 0. Sheckles, attorney for the Utah Association of ,:'', Credit Men, arrived in .the city Wednesday on a business trip. '-. President and Mrs. David H. V ;': -' Cannon of St. George spent sev- "'-' eral days last week and a part ',H ; of this in this city visiting rela tives. Mr. and Mrs. Hackhoff of Los .; : Angeles are inthe city visiting ' .at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Houchen, parents of Mrs. Hockhoff. J. R. Rickards will leave to- morrow for his iron mines we 7-' , men, in openingtM'shaVfjnd tV; tunnels. x '?. -'" '. The Misses Mae and Ida $. .. l"t ;'1, li shaw and mother of Beaver " were visitors in the city last week, having come down from Enoch, where they visited for several days. H. W. Barton of Lund was a Cedar City visitor Tuesday. Mr. . " Barton is one of the leading dry farmers of the west end ot the county. ' He was formerly a resident of Ohio. Books'for Girls! Just received, "Not Like Other Girls," by . . Rosa Carey, "Daddy's Girl," by Mrs. L. T. Meade, "Don'ts '., for Girls," by Minna Antrim. Record Stationery Department. Orson J. Bryant canie down from the mountains Tuesday after an absence of nearly two months, during which time he has been in charge of the sheep flocks ot W. V. Walker. Jas. Robb, the"" hustling gen eral agent, for the Intermountain Life Insurance Co., returned to Cedar City- Monday after an absence of several weeks' in ICane and Garfield counties. N. Donald Forsyth of Newcastle New-castle was in town to spend the Fourth, and on returning home lie was accompanied by Mrs. Forsyth, who has been sojourning sojourn-ing in Cedar City for several weeks. Dr. C. M. Clark, assistant physician in the State Mental Hospital at Provo, is a visitor in the city, having .arrjved Fri- " . day afternoon. The doctor ex- , i ' pects to remain here a week or ' . ; ten days. Dr. F. L. Govver came down Sunday on a hurried trip, returning re-turning the same day. The doctor has been on the sick list v for some time, finding it very . i hard to keep costantly at 'his practice. ,':-' - , sir - "" ' Ed Wink, the jewelei, has erected a new awnin? for the fa v aii store, which bears a neat and attractive sign, adding add-ing materially to the appearance of the building and the comfort of patrons. There are still other stores that should follow suit. Although organized less than a month, the Cedar Lumber & Commission Company during that time has received four car loads of lumber ,qnd one car of cement to fill the orders for customers in Cedar City and vicinity. Among the large sales made by the company is the lumber for the Leigh Furniture Company building and the Thor-ley Thor-ley theatre. This week The Record job department de-partment has turned out business cards, calling cards, wedding invitations, corporation warrants, war-rants, stock certificates, envelopes, envel-opes, letter 'heads, dodgers; circular cir-cular letters, postal card notices and butter wrappers. Quite a variety for one week, and scattered scat-tered from Paragonah to Enterprise. Enter-prise. Every customer saved money, besides getting "better printing." Walter K. Granger, who has had charge of the Cedars hotel for the past year, on Tuesday moved to the Dalley residenc on First Wet street, his lease on the hotel having expired on the first of the month. During the time Mr. Granger has been in chanre of the Cedars he has st made many friends with tl ill travelinpr-ituihlie.vi-wW22Zl l'WBiB(W'jhJt'l'glSf'!6'' BIS' coIT nected with that popular host lery. R. E. Fletcher and John I. Brown, who have been enga.ged in building and contracting in this city for several months, have formed a partnership under the firm name of Brown & Fletcher Flet-cher and will locate in Enterprise Enter-prise where thev will continue in the same line of work. These men are skilled workmen and we commend them to the people of Enterprise and the west end of the county who may need anything any-thing in the line of building. Their announcement appears elsewhere in today's paper. Miss Irene Macleprang returned re-turned Tuesday from Logan, where she had been attending the summer school of the Argi-cultural Argi-cultural College. She says she enjoyed herself immensely during dur-ing her stay in Logan, and speaks most enthusiastically of the officials and faculty of the Agricultural College. She says it is the intention of the officials to make the branch college here I a college in every sense of the term, so far as lies in their power, which will be happy news to local people, who had learned to look upon the school here as merely a side issue of the State University. P. A. Clark returned home Wednesday from Montana, after an absence of a month, where he has been engaged in shearing shear-ing sheep. Mr. Clark is a member mem-ber of the Executive Board of the sheep shearers' national association, associa-tion, and for the last ten days has been in the office of the association as-sociation at Butte, having been called in by the president to look after business matters dur- ing his absence on account of I 'sickness. Mr. Clark will leave I I within a few days to attend the annual convention, which is to be held at Butte, . commencing' on the 15th of the present) month. . .T.-we1 ti- ' " s - . I '"-"""'" " - T Since the Fourth, the City ,Court of Justice E. J. Palmer has been rather busy listening to the pleas of those who so far forgot themselves as to djsturb the peace and dignity of the city. Two men were arrested for fighting, one of whom plead guilty and was fined $10, and the otherdischargd, it appar-ing appar-ing that he acted only in self-defense. self-defense. Another man was fined $2.60 for imbibing just a little more of a cup that cheers than was really good for him, and two young fellows were fined $5 each for "boozing" and saying things Another case is yet to be disposed of. What's the use to knock? The Fourth of July committee would have had an aeroplane flight if sufficient time had been given them in which to engage a man, our contemporary to the contrary notwithstanding. As to why a deliberate mis-statement should be made, we are at a loss to understand. There was no "$10,000 for an expert" mentioned men-tioned or considered in the committee's com-mittee's negotiations, although some individual at Lund, through who3e hands one of the messages mes-sages passed, disclosed a partial contents of the message, and it was in this way that the rumor was started respecting the ten thousands. It was merely a lack of time, ar.d nothing more, that interfered. Those who wish to be rightly informed can see the correspondence and a copy of the messages by calling at The Record office. he A. R. Ivins of Enterprise, or WeSieiluPosnntown Tuesday and Wednesday, on buisness. Mr. Ivans says that some astonishing aston-ishing results in the growing of alfalfa have been secured by farmers in and around Enterprise Enter-prise with a single application of water by irriagtion. On his own land he has just harvested the first crop, which was irrigated irri-gated but once this season, which measured forty-eight inches in heighth jn many places. Geo. O. Holt of the' same place has just secured forty-five loads of alfalfa from fifteen acres of ground, with one application of water, or about two and a half tons per acre. This would seem to bear out the contentions of agricultural agricul-tural experts who have recently looked over farming conditions in this section,- that the water now used for irrigation is ample to water three times the present amount of land under cultivation. |