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Show C- LOOKING BACKWARD j35 ltoms of interest tuken from the -AWIa 10 $t)L. Kiles of the MUford News of Fifteen years ago this week Rally nay services were to be held at the M. E. church and the program iiK'tuded tlie followinir numbers: Recitations by Ruth Elmer, May Ilowen, Freil Cottrell, Virginia Nichols Nich-ols Kldred Cleeson, August Nichols, Kverett liryans, (.'hester Gleeson. leRay Carlson, Alice Ward, Salina Isaacs, May Vincent, Vaughn Kinder,! Ethel Oleeson and Charles Glenn; and songs by Delia Cottrell and Helen Hel-en Ward, H. T. Kaminka was reported to have 100 acres of wheat and 200 acres of rye under cultivation at Malone, over the line in Millard county, and it was his intention to put in 00 acres of beans as soon as spring weather permitted. Letters from France, one to Dr. H. O. Hunter from George T. Larson and another from Rtilph Bolm to his sister, sis-ter, Alice Bohn, were reproduced in Tlie News, also a note from Sam Cline. stationed at Angel Island, California, Cali-fornia, to "Friend Berg," town cle.-k at that tinvs apparently, from the wording of the note. Cline had been assigned to work with tJie war risk insurance bureau. 1 Notices of intention to make final proof to land claims were being published pub-lished in behalf of Morris H. Wilson of Pomona, California; Mrs. Ethel Andrews Crockett of Saratoga, California; Cali-fornia; and James Posik and HermMi T. Kaminska of Milford. Proofs were xo be made before Herbert Nichols, United. State? commissioner, in each case. The Horn Silver mine was adver-, tising for men, paying S5.25 for tim-bermen tim-bermen and machine men; S5 for hand miners, timber helpers and ma-1 chine helpers; and $4.75 for mucker:.! Board and room was SI. 25 a day. ! ''Beautiful, darling, alert Ruth Ro-hnd." Ro-hnd." in the 'wonderful western Pathe serial, "Hands Up," w-as scheduled sche-duled for showing in the Utah the-: atre, with plenty of "suspense, thrills, pep, surprises, action and zip." D. N, Hickman had purchased a house in the country and was moving his family there. T. Kuranogo, a merchant of Los Angeles, was visiting his old friend, 11. M. Okohira. H. T. Hanks had returned from attending at-tending the Republican state convention conven-tion and the state fair at Salt I-ake. Dan Ferguson had arrived home on a furlough from military camp in Texas and his sister, Mrs. Beth Martin Mar-tin of Denver, was also here on a visit. Dan had left here over a year lefore and had been stationed in Cuba for a period of time. He looked the part of a well-trained and well-1 groomed soldier. The scourge of "Spanish" influenva or "three-day fever" was just beginning begin-ning to get going and directions for diagnosing the disease and precautions precau-tions to check its spread were being given wide publicity. " Services at the L. D. S. church for the next Sunday were to be under the auspices of the Primary organization and were to include a song by Beth Hanks, a welcome talk by Miss Sarah A. Shepherd, memory gems by Celia Jones, lesson by Verne Oakden, mus:c by Minersville representatives, and stories by Ethel Hutching and Thel-ma Thel-ma Robinson. News had been received that Jack B. Smithson, who was in France with the 348th F. A., had been promoted to the rank of sergeant. |