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Show Locals and Personals L. G. Clay went to Fillmore yes-lerday yes-lerday on business. Al McKeon went up to Salt Lai Monday. Mrs. Rachel Jefferson is now located lo-cated at Hotel Atkin. W. E. Boyle has returned from hl3 Los Angeles trip. Mrs. Charles Lynch made a business bus-iness trip to Salt Lake this week. E. E. Mueller was with us again this week. I B. G. Clay of Garrison, is spending spend-ing a few days here on business. Merril Miller and J. I. Sanders motored mo-tored up to Salt Lake last Frldav. Harry Martin killed twenty wild ducks last Sunday and never brot 1 to the News office. Miss Eleanor Poulton was a g'-at g'-at the Poulton ranch the first i m. week. Miss Bessie Hursh will spend Thanssgiving at her home in Pay-son. Pay-son. A large number of Thanksgivln-dinner, Thanksgivln-dinner, parties are being arranged for. B. J. Naughton and U. D. G '' of Salt Lake City, are here tr-n-"" ing busencss. Mrs. Chas. Schow and Mrs. Earl Gleasoh went up to Salt Lake yesterday yester-day to spend the Thanksgiving vacation. va-cation. Harry Allen has been transferred and promoted to c.ir foremm at the Provo shops. LeRoy Harris, A. T. Barraelough of Beaver, were Milford .visitors the past week. T. L. Wilden, a Salt Lake mining man spent some time in this visin-ity visin-ity this past week. J. C. Whitaker Jr. was transact-, ing important business here last Saturday. Alex Ross and Jack Lightner, two historic figures, of this section, were with us Monday and Tuesday. j Mrs. Boyd White gave a party on Tuesday afternoon to celebrate the 9th birthday of her son Dan Greenwood. Green-wood. The Service Star Legion will hold a very Important session on Friday next at the Victory Theatre at two o'clock. D. A. Kelley. N. C. Fields and Har-ry Har-ry Freedman, traveling men, arrived here the first of the week trying to sell goods. The Milford Realty Company has moved their office from the McGarry block to the room formerly occupied by the t'neda. Bite cafe. i LeRue Duffin has purchased the Interest in the pool hall formerly owned by Jo. Kinney. Mr. Duffin will continue to operate the hall, as a first class amusement parlor. ! Special matinee on Thanksgiving day at the Victory Th eMre. Mrv Pickford. in "Heart of th Hills" a drama of the mountain region of Kentucky. I . F. C. Crookston of Delta, is here in Milford. He was accompanied by Mr. Thornton, of drug fame, who is looking over the business outlook for Milford. Joe Kinney has purchased the Milford Mil-ford Pharmacy from Ruth Brooks, and has taken possession. Mr. Kinney Kin-ney says that a competent registered pharmacist will be employed and that a share of your patronage will be appreciated. The store will he open for business tomorrow. ! Muskrat hides, onoe worth about .10 cents, sold for $7.50 at the St. Louis fur auction last spring. Fur buyers say the supply of muskrats dtins in the market is decreasing at ihe rate of GO per cent per year. j F. Clark Kesler, manager of the ! Victory Theatre, made a special ef- j I'ort to get a good feature for Thanks i giving day, and as a result, he is ab-j le to present to hi3 patrons, Mary HILLS." This will be in addition to HILLS". Thic will be in addition to '.he regular serial "Ruth of the Rockies." Rock-ies." A matinee is also billed for the afternoon at 2:30. An announcement of the candidacy candida-cy of Joseph C. Smith for School Board member from Milford, has been filed with the Board of Educa-1 tion. Thdfe signing the announce- ' ment are: D. A. Baxter, C. T. Woodbury, Wood-bury, Royden Zook, E. H. Bird, C. A. Arrington, Mrs. Susan Baxter and J. F. Sherwood. j We have heard of some 'boners' being pulled by election judges, hut Summit county has the only Ivory in the state. The judges in one precinct pre-cinct VP there, carefully sorted ( it all the straight tickets, then counted the scratched ones and proceeded to forget to count the straights; sealed up the ballots and sent them in to the county clerk. We wonder if that was in u Democratic precinct. Joe Flemming who owns a ranch south of town is experimenting with the manufacture of a wooden well casing, w hich bids fair to be a good thing tor tr.e shallow well irrigation It s almost impossible to get a good .- seel casing at the present time and the invention of Mr. Flem-ming's Flem-ming's may be of vast value to our ranchers. After reading the Irish headlines, in the paper yesterday morning. Alex Al-ex Ross sprung this one on the editor. edi-tor. "An old lady, a pacificist and r.ieuiber of the W. C. T. U., was sympathising with an Irish soldier, home on a furlough, just after one of the hi? 1'flitles in France Tat.' she rays, it is an awful- bad war." 'Yes' says Pat. 'it F ire is, but it's better than nowsr." Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Haskell entertained enter-tained last Thursday evening at the home southeast of town, in honor of Mrs. Haskell's birthday. The evening ev-ening was spent in playing "500" Mr. Hardy won the prize for high score and Mrs. Baxter the consolation. consola-tion. The guestsxwere Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Baxter, Mr: and Mrs. Jack Sherwood, Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Hardy, Har-dy, Mr. and Mrs. Hendrickson and Dr. Bybee. Former Speaker Champ Clark, who was defeated for reelection to Congress, will go upon the lecture platform for two years, and then be a candidate to succeed James A. Reed in the Senate, according to re-norts re-norts that reached Washington this '"-e?k. The former Speaker was the third eldest man in point of service in the house. "I'ncle Joe" Canro-i and Sneaker Gil'ett alone have ser-l ved longer. 44 and 28 years, respec-1 tively. Mr. Clark wi'l h-vp hee" ir. the House 26 years when hij present pres-ent terra expires. The announcement of Representative Representa-tive Albert Johnson, of Washington, chairman of the House committee on immigration, that at the forthcoming forthcom-ing session of Congress a hill will be Vrged placing stringent restrictions nnon immignation. will meet with general approval. Undoubtedly it Is the prevailing opinion i nthis country coun-try that the time has come to sift more carefully the immigration that ' has set in since the closing of the 1 war. I |