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Show , i ..fljpCflOltl Mr. and Mrs. A. G. James of Black Hock were Milford visitors Tuesday. Mrs. George Ranson and son Bill spent the week-end in Salt Lake City. Carl Shugren left Saturday for Seattle, Washington, for a two weeks vacation. State Senator George Jefferson is' spending the week in Salt Lake on business. F:irrell Peterson returned last week-end from a three weeks visit in! California. Miss Lorain Bowman of Provo is here visiting her sister, Mrs. R. N. i 1'anks, and family. "' I i t W. E. Martin, local express agent,' was operated on Monday for the re- j moval of tonsils. Miss Margarette Davis was oper-n'.ed oper-n'.ed for appendicitis Monday at the local hospital. j Mr. a"d Mrs. Roland Ashby return-j cd homo Monday from Leamington and other upstate points. ' Mrs. Thomas Gadberry returned Monday from a months visit with home folks in Missouri. I Mr. and Mrs. Ross Smith of Salt! Lake arrived Thursday of last week ' to spend several days here. j Naomi . Yither left Monday for Riverside and Los Angeles, California, Califor-nia, where she will spend two weeks. Sylvia McBride left Saturday for her home at Trenton after a period as operator at the Paris Beauty Shoppe. Henry White of Las Vegas arrived Sunday for a weeks visit with his mother, Mrs. W. H. Tinder, and l'amily. Miss Madeleine Keough returned home Thursday of last week from a three weeks visit in Tooele and Salt Lake City. Loretta Class and J. H. (Bud) Handley, Milford young people, are reported to have been married Tuesday Tues-day at Ely, Nevada. I. Altman, manager of the Progressive Pro-gressive Clothes shop, returned Wednesday Wed-nesday morning from a business trip to Salt Lake, having left Sunday. Miss Janet Taggart of Billings, Montana, and Miss Ada Joy Cannon of Cedar City, nieces of Mrs. Rue Nielsen, are visiting with the Nielsens Niel-sens for several days. Another 50-ton carload of ore from the Honey Boy mine was shipped Sunday, making the seventh shipment ship-ment and fourth carload lot since development de-velopment work began. John M. Williams jr. has been acting act-ing as local agent for the Railway express during the absence of W. E. Martin, who underwent a tonsillectomy tonsillec-tomy the first of the week. Mrs. L. G. Clay and children returned re-turned Sunday from Fillmore, where they had been visiting for a couple of weeks. . Les drove to Fillmore Saturday to get them. Dern Osborne and family returned Wednesday from a vacation trip to Salt Lake City. Lawrence Easton took Dern's place in the White Market Mar-ket during his absence. The past month has set a new record re-cord for the feeding of transients, according to Marshal Teddy Kron-holm, Kron-holm, who issued a total of 821 20-cent checks during the month. The total for July was 450. N. W. Bliss of Salt Lake, maintenance mainten-ance supervisor for airways radio stations, was in Milford Monday, taking inventory and checking the cost system at the local station. j Lawrence Webb and niece, Betty Jean Berry, returned home Thursday after spending the summer at Portland, Port-land, Oregon. Mrs. Webb, who was with them, went on to Kansas where she was called on account of sickness. Mrs. R. S. Rennison left the last 1 of the week for her home at Santa I Ana, California, after spending the past three months at the home of her sister, Mrs. H. A. Stahl, on north I Main street. Harry C. Cook, wellknown relief agent on the Salt Lake-Los Angeles 1 division of the Union Pacific system, I is acting as agent at Milford in the j absence of F. E. Casterline, who is on vacation. Attendance at the annual American Ameri-can Legion Auxiliary convention at I Logan of Mrs. O. R. Smith and Mrs. j Rudolph Nielsen, as additional dele-! dele-! gates from Milford, was overlooked I last week by The News. ! Mrs M. H. Pool entertained her bridge club Saturday afternoon with Mrs. J. R. Murdock winning high points prize, Mrs. W. C. Cates high honors prize, Mrs. Fred Levi guest prize and Mrs. George Fernley con- j solation prize. Mi-, and Mrs. Bruce Taggart of Billings, Montana, Miss Mabel Chris-tensen Chris-tensen of Salt Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Reed Cannon of Cedar City were guests of the Rudolph Nielsen home Friday. Mrs. Bruce, Mrs. Cannon Can-non and Miss Christensen are sisters of Mrs. Nielsen. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baker and two daughters, who reside near Blackfoot, Idaho, are spending a couple of weeks in the county, visiting visit-ing here with Mr. Baker's brother, i W. J. Baker, and family, and also in J Beaver. I Lois Altman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. Altman, who finished her I junior year in high school last spring, ifeft Wednesday for Asuza, I California, where she will attend a ! girls' boarding school this coming j school year. J Fred Cottrell, graduate of the Mil-'! Mil-'! ford schools, later instructor in the I local high school and now professor : of sociology and government at Mi- ami university in Ohio, was guest of honor at a big weiner roast Monday i evening. The affair was in charge of some of Fred's old friends, with some 32 young people joining in a most enjoyable event. Mr. and Mrs. Fred .Cottrell, who are here from Ohio for a visit with j home folks, last week joined Mr. and ! Mrs. Lee Gray of Cedar City in a j trip to Boulder dam, where they i were permitted a detailed and in-. in-. tensely interesting inspection of the huge project under the guidance of Jack Davis, former agent here and j at Cedar City. I j Orlyn Johnson and Henry Couch, : two local boys, recently found an old I but serviceable 38-calibre pistol containing con-taining one unfired cartridge in a hole under the platform of the freight warehouse, turning the weapon wea-pon over to Marshal Teddy Kron-holnt. Kron-holnt. The news item was furnished us by little Misses Ruth English and Janice Couch. |