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Show HOT OFF THE WIRE j About People and Events of Local Interest Hfray Illt of Information Gathered tit Itandom und Arranged for llupld Ikwidorn Mrs. Tom MorrlHy loft for the cast lflHt week. W oil IpHon of Reaver was In the ' city Thursday. Mrs. George Jefferson la enjoying a visit In Denver. M. L. Illgloy of Ogden was In Mllford Thursday. W. A. Lowry of Prlco, Utah, was In town yesterday. F. E. Brenner of Lund was in town this wook on business. R. I. Jackson of Washington. D. C, was here yesterday. L. J. Lyon, of Beaver was a Mllford Mll-ford visitor Wednesday. R. W. King of Fillmore came to Mllford yesterday on business. Five cent' Embroidery Sale; Mc-CULLEY'S, Mc-CULLEY'S, MONDAY ONLY. It Eugene Buchanan was down from the Red Warrior mine this past week. Warren Nlolson and E. N. Thompson Thomp-son were here from Beaver Tuesday night. E. L. Buterbaugh, of Newhouse, made a business trip to Mllford on Tuesday. Have you seen the big values in embroidory offered at McOulley's Monday only? It Mrs. Ralph Pitchforth returned Tuesday from a very enjoyable trip to Salt Lake City. Frank Richardson of Salt Lake made another business trip to Mil-ford Mil-ford this past week. Gus Holsten, 11. P. Ryan and Thos. Johanson were visitors from New-house New-house last Wednesday. Born, on Sunday. January 29, 1917, to the wife of Bon Croft of Minersville, a daughter. Mrs. Buzzo was a passenger who joined the Los Angeles excursion the 31st ult. from Mllford. Wm. Yardley, a prominent capitalist capi-talist of Beaver county spent most of the week in Mllford. Edgar McArthur and Lee L. Gil- liin registered from Chicago at a luual hotel lust Thursday. W. M. Shepherd, an old time barber bar-ber of this county, has taken a position po-sition with J. W. McAllister. Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Manwell and Dr. Manwell of Lund, were busy In Mllford Monifky and Tuesday. Messrs Zeno ana Everett Hanson of Frisco, have been enoying life in Mllford for the past ten days. Call and see the most up-to-date spring and summer line in town. Mathenon, th Tailor. 1-19-41 W .F .Charlton and wife spent Monday and Tuesday In Milford. Mr. Charlton is an official of the road. William Hurst, of Beaver, was over getting witnesses and jurors for the Hamilton case for this term of court. The many friends of Mrs. Hicks will regret to hear that her health condition Is not improving as was hoped for. Mrs. Angus Buchanan Is enjoying her mountain home, as greatly as the one she left among the flowers In California. Mrs. D. D. Ashworth of Beaver came to Milford en route to Moscow, being called there by the Illness of her grandson. Fred Thomas, head cook at the Moscow, is spending some time In Milford resting up and enjoying himself him-self In this city. Dick KIrkland is the very efficient cook at the Monitor mine. They say that Dick's culinary art la only little short of marvelous. Dr. Hoxle, Host Hoxle and V. L. Barnes of Los Angeles said Milford looked good to them while visiting here this past week. Commercial Embassador Anderson of the California Hardware- Co., Los Angeles, visited local hardware merchants Tuesday. Miss Gertrude P. Holmes returned from Salt Lake the first of the week, after attending the funeral of the late Mrs. Walter Moody. -- F. R. Hamilton and wife of Los Angeles stopped off at Milford Tuesday Tues-day evening with a view to making an investment here later. If you want a house with a roof that won't leak, a chimney that will draw, water that won't freeze up, see Joe Mathews. Feb-2-8t-p Frank Mclntyre and Mr. A. R. Mc-Intyre Mc-Intyre now of Ogden, but formerly of Milford, spent Wednesday in this city dooking after their ranch Interests. In-terests. Charley Alsop will, the coming spring and summer, have charge of the promotion of a large irrigation project to be opened in Nevada near Baker. The Monitor mine was granted three cars for ore shipments yesterday. yester-day. Shipping has been greatly hampered recently because of car shortage. The local medical examiner for the new lodge of the Maccabees was kept up until one o'clock Wednesday Wednes-day morning examining new applicants appli-cants to the lodge. Mrs. E. Mears, an enterprising land owner at Lund was in Milford this week. This lady will make extensive ex-tensive Improvements on her farm the coming spring. J. F.VanWagonen and son Morris, of Los Angeles are in Milford contemplating con-templating a business venture. Mr. VanWagonen owns considerable property in this locality. ' John Wearne, a well known miner here and who has operated extensively exten-sively in the Butte, Montana, mining min-ing country, has taken the position of foreman at the Monitor. Dr. Julius Koebig of Los Angeles is here this week investigating land and water conditions for Los Angeles Ange-les clients. He visited Beaver Thursday Thurs-day and went to Minersville today. The few delinquent shares of the stock of the Beaver Lake Metals will be sold on February 13, at the Felt Building. Salt Lake City to pay the assessment made on December 8. Albert McLease returned from Los Angeles last Saturday and went to Salt Lake City Sunday night. Mrs. McLease decided to remain In the land of sunshine until warm weather. weath-er. A number of teamsters came through from Parawan this week for' freight and supplier. Thy report the roads in very good condition. Parawan is sixty-two miles from Mil-; Mil-; ford. Dr. J. J. liuswell, optrolinlc specialist of Salt Lake will be at the Milford Hotel Sunday and Monday, February 11 and 12. No charge for testing eyes . Reference, Thomas Sloan. F-2-2t. A splendid carload of ore from the Klondyke mine in the Newhouse district was shipped this week by Supt. Paul Klml all. The lease is owned by Messrs. Kimball and Mc-Culley. Mc-Culley. Laurette Rogerson, Bonlta Roger-son, Roger-son, Viola Patterson, Doral Patterson Patter-son and Gideon Cooley of Beaver "composed a party at Hotel Milford and in attendance at the Maccabees dance Tuesday night. Grover C. Guthrie and Vivian C. Waddoups of Malone made final proof on their homesteads near Malone Ma-lone last Wednesday before Land Commissioner Bert Nichols. The other witnesses were Messrs. Johnson John-son and Raymond. It has been difficult for the mining companies to procure sufficient carB for ore shipments. The cars have been called in to break the coal famine fam-ine existing because of car shortage. A few cars were released to the miners Wednesday. Marion Smithson, the only Milford boy in the National Guard now in service on the Mexican border writes that he has been promoted to the nnuiHnn of Pnrnnral TVTr Rmithann expects to entrain for home on the first of the month. The editor and Mrs. Webster were In Salt Lake the first of the week, the former participating In the meeting of the Utah Stat-3 Press Association as recording secretary, while MrB. Webster visited rublic Institutions schools, picture shows, etc. An improvement has been made in the Milford State Bank by the shifting shift-ing of partitions whereby there is more room for the ever increasing deposits of patrons and, incidentally, for the cashier and assistants who handle the growing business. J. O. Mcintosh has closed a deal lv liid iiuit.ua.-)c ui a naiuuii tiiiu pool room business at Baker, Nevada, which is a few miles over the Utah state line. He will, we are informed, inform-ed, remove to that city when this state's dry law goes into effect. W. J. Bevan and wife of Seward, Alaska, stopped off at Milford this week for a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. Hal. Stephens. They were returning re-turning to their northern home after af-ter an extended trip through California. Cali-fornia. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. S. Wilkenson of Cedar City were in Milford a short time yesterday morning. Mr. Wilkenson Wil-kenson is the able editor of the' Iron County Record and was returning from Salt Lake City, where he participated par-ticipated in the meeting of the Utah State Press Association. F. G. Rothmeir has received the news of the death of his grandmother at Marrissa, HI., at the age of 98 years. The deceased was a native of Germany and mother of eight children, child-ren, grandmother of 28 and great grandmother of 11. Mr. Rothmeir's grandfather is still living at the age of 99 years. No. 1 on the Salt Lake went over the Provo district route today for the first time in nearly a week. Snow blockades have caused considerable obstruction and delay in traffic, both passenger and freight. Freight has been delayed in some instances because be-cause of the necessity of using the freight locomotives as extras in moving the numerous excursion trains en route to California. George Moffitt, the well and favorably favor-ably known manager of the Salt Lake Route eating house, at Milford, was the unfortunate victim of a painful, though not serious accident one day this week, when a case of goods that slipped and fell from the top of a stack of goods in the warehouse striking him on the leg. The injury is reported not serious though very inconvenient, and Mr. Moffett expects to be back at the "beane'ry" again in a few days. The Delta Land & Water Company has moved by its attorneys before the United States Court to transfer the hearing from Los Angeles-to Utah where the lends sold are located and where the misrepresentations, if any", were made. This is the latest move in the suits filed by eighty-five settlers set-tlers who charged misrepresentation in the sale of the Milford project lands. If the eases are transferred to Utah they will be tried at Ogden' or Salt Lake City before tha Federal Court. |