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Show i JVanV llfPiis of inWrt-Nt taken from the I WASL l''il,'H "f Milfo"1 IS,,WM of - '- liSla"" Fifteen years ago this week A big rabbit cannery was about U be established in Milford ill order to make use of ll.e vast hordes of wild jackrabbits.. J. Maitlnnd ('line was to install over .-ji.'JOOO worth of special canning machinery in .Milford, if he could secure the proper cooperation, and stated that the factory would turn out the first cans of Jack Rabbit Rab-bit Spanish and rabbit tumules in the United States witlin the near future, later increasing production to at least 8000 cans weekly. Chester Barton of the Beaver-Mil-ford Auto company had sold his interest in-terest in the business -to his brother Ezra, who became the sole owner. Sheriff Fotheringham anil County Attorney Parsons-had returned from Long Beach, California, where they had been on criminal business. Des Hickman had left the employ of T. W. Sloan & Co. and the first of the week had begun work in one of the nearby mines, running an engine, but had suffered a very painful accident. acci-dent. In starting the engine, a spark had ignited some gasoline which had burned Mr. Hickman's hands and the side of his body quite -severely. - Mrs. Bert Loekhart and Mrs. Des Hickman had entertained at cards at the home of the latter, in honor of their sister, Zella Skillicom, of Salt Lake. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. T. Hemstreen, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Will Elmer, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Kirk, and Misses Theissen and Skillicom.. Mrs. Abbie Anderson of the Milford Mil-ford News office had returned from a short visit with her brother in Salt Lake City. Horace Palmer and his little niece, Alice Ward, had celebrated their 29th and 9th birthdays with a party at the Ward home. Those present included in-cluded Mr. and Mrs. Horace Palmer, Mr. anil Mrs. H. Ward, Mrs. V. M. Palmer and Alice and her brother. The editor (Karl S. Carlton) had accepted the invitation of C. N. Edwards Ed-wards to visit the property of the Dixie Oil company and had enjoyed the run to La Verkin, with its "handsome "hand-some homes, prosperous ranches, eautiful flowers, delicious fruits, fine cattle, good men and attractive women in very fact, a . bit of sou- j thern California spilled over. o .Miss Tobin, under Marcel Varnel's direction. Bringing back to perpetuity the words that once thrilled the civilized world, UKO-Radio has reproduced tlie actual voice of Woodrow Wilson for the living public. To do this the studio technicians are re-recording a phonograph . record made by the great war-time president several years before his death and have inserted in-serted it in the spectacular picture production, "The Conquerors," which shows at the Victory Sunday, Monday Mon-day and Tuesday of next week. On the screen the great man is shown in a motion picture study made on the occasion of his last public appearance. appear-ance. His lips move, and from them issue the academic phrases which changed the political structure of the world. .This novel bringing back to life of a voice long stilled by death, the same voice that talked to the assembled as-sembled nations at Versailles anil pleaded for "peace without victory," is utilized in a dramatic sequence of "The-Conquerors." The film co-stars Richard Dix and Ann Harding in a drama embracing four significant epochs in American history, and the lost Wilson . voice . vitalizes a stirring phase of post-war unrest. All the ingredients that go to make an exciting Western picture speed, action, danger, romance, and scenic beauty have been crowded into "Wild Horse Mesa," the Zane Grey film which Ls the offering for family night, Wednesday June 14. Here again is a story of strong men and lawless justice, placed in a setting of wild natural beauty.- The setting named in the title, was a high tableland table-land which served as the last refuge for the great wild horse herd in the West, defendants of blooded animals that had escaped from early Spanish explorers. The land, and the horse; thereon, belonged to the ndians, according ac-cording to government decree, and the story deals with the efforts of a band of horse thieves to capture and sell the wild horses. |