| OCR Text |
Show Hinckley Happenings Continued from page 1.) in a canyon trip the last week. Each swarm of the Bee Hive girls and all the scouts had chap-heron's. chap-heron's. Over fifty people, both young and old, were there and enjoyed the cool, balmy breezes, mountain hikes, fishing, gathering gather-ing berries, and at night playing games, singing and dancing around huge bonfires. Hinckley has made an acquisition acquisi-tion in the form of anew butcher shop, which the proprietor, Wm. Drysdale, believes to be as clean and hygenic as anything in the county. Read his ad in this week's Chronicle. Dr. Anna Louise Strong, prominent prom-inent lecturer and worker for the National Bureau of Labor and Child Welfare, spent a few hours of last Thursday in our little town. She visited at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Broaddus. Our skilled blacksmith, Mr. Jackson is in Salt Lake, at the present writing. Emil, son of Nate Badger, sustained sus-tained a rather severe injury last week when he fell from a wagon, breaking his right leg. Our town is certainly getting ! prosperous. There are three new automobiles flashing along ourj roads; a Ford belonging to Will I Bishop, and an Overland and a Regal belonging respectively to' R. A. Gary and Fay Theobald. j Lyman Curtis, of Provo, came1 down recentla to help his father, on the farm. |