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Show o c sl s Mi--. Charles Tullis leu Saturday' to spend a ftw days in Salt Lake. Win. Roberts of .M inersville, was in town Tuesday. i )r to Stetnboch is again ou the iin-; iin-; sine board. j jav Williams of Salt Lake City, is hoiking on the engine board here. .Mr. and -Mrs. Wm. Dobson made a I riii to Heaver Tuesday on business. Henry K Cowman Jr. was in Beaver Bea-ver Tuesday on business. Attorneys Sam Cline and C. T. Woodbury were in Beaver the first of the week attending court. Mrs. Sarah Jones of Paragoonah, is the guest of Mrs. Bert Tate. Mr. and Mrs. Will Morris of New-house, New-house, spent Tuesday in town. Mrs. Charles Moore and son returned re-turned Friday night from a trip to California. Jacob Fa nth returned, Saturday, from an extended Eastern trip to his old home in the state of Maine. Count y Attorney and Mrs. C. T. Woodbury and family, spent Monday at Beaver. Sam Cline, Clark Kesler, Hy Davis and W. D. Coon attended District court at Beaver Monday. of the Army store, is here for a time in the interests of his business. The G. I. A. sisters will spend the afternoon, Friday with Mrs. Charles Husbands at the Husband's ranch. Mrs. Smith of Salt Lake, is here visiting her sister. Mrs. Jack Raymond. Ray-mond. Henry Larsen of St. George, has been spending a week here with his brother's Harry and Oscar. Mrs. Ross Smith returned home Saturday after spending two weeks in Pleasant'Grove and Salt Lake City. Proof of the pudding is in the eating' eat-ing' thereor. Thousands praise Tan-lae. Tan-lae. So will you. Milford Pharmacy. Pharma-cy. If you feel tired, worn out, nervous ner-vous and-oil unstrung, take Tanlac. Tt will straighten you out. Milford Pharmacy. Russell Parsons left Sunday for the oil fields at. Virgin City, where lit will spend a few days and then go en to Los Angeles, California. Miss Alice Garvey of West, Va., and sister, Miss Martha Hurst, who have been spending ten days in Salt Lake City, returned to Beaver Sunday. Sun-day. Miss Dorothy Murdock of Reed, was the guest of M,iss Iris Knudsen, Thursday and Friday of last week, and attended the children's dance on Thursday night. Mrs. L. E. Dorman, of Concrete. Colorado, is spending a few weeks here with her sister, Mrs. Lulu Ger-mo Ger-mo and family. She will also spend some time with her brother, Mr. Ben Davis, of Beaver. Mrs. Ruth Brooks, who has been spending a couple of weeks here, returned re-turned to her home at Long Beach, Tuesday. While here she was entertained enter-tained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George. Jeffrson. Mr. and Mrs. D. P. VanFleet and their daug-hters, Mrs. Heidenrich and Mrs. Manuel, returned Wednesday morning from a ten days' fishing trip to Fish Lake and report a splendid time. Mr. and Mrs. James Boyter left on Tuesday for Salt Lake City on a two weeks' visit with relatives. They will also spend a few days at Richfield. Ben Roberts, Democrat, of Salt Lake was in Milford Monday, looking over the politicians. He had just come from Beaver, where he said he found plenty of Democrats, but he found the picking in Milford pretty short.. Fred Cottrell leaves Friday night to attend the Epworth League Institute Insti-tute held in Middle Creek canyon. He expects to be gone ten days. Mrs. J. C. Smith will leave for Hinckley Thursday, where she will spend two . weeks visiting -with her : sister, Mrs. John Parry. Tanlac overcomes rheumatism by toning up and invigorating the vital organs, thereby enabling them to eliminate eli-minate poisons from the system. Milford Pharmacy. : Mr. and. Mrs. Ferd Jefferson and children and Miss Alice Frizzell left j Wednesday for a two weeks' outing at Puffer's lake in (he Beaver mountains. moun-tains. Mrs, Lew Patterson. Mrs. Will Fra-zer Fra-zer and Mrs. Jos. n. Murdock, of I Reed, were in town shopping Tues-I Tues-I day afternoon. ; Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Beard and family, of Lavan. arrived here ou Wednesday to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Killam and family. Thousands of people are familiar with the fiiscinal ing sfory, "Short Skirts." in which Gladys Walton will -star at the Victory Theatre Saturday, fo,- it originally appeared in the Saturday Sat-urday evening Pest. In magazine form it was called "Cabella Drives the Nail" and was regarded as one of the snappiest, tales from the versatile ver-satile pen of Alice L. Tlldesley. B. M. Prescou of Los Angeles, spent a few days here this week. Rev. and Mrs. Royden Zook left Tuesday evening by auto for Salt Lake City to meet Mrs. Zook's sister. Mrs. Carter and family, of Blue Island, Is-land, 111., who will spend several weeks here. Mrs. I. Cline. of Los Angeles. California, Cal-ifornia, who has been at Beaver visiting vis-iting her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. William Cline, went to Salt Lake on Tuesday, morning to visit her son Albert Al-bert Cline. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Sportsman, and Mr. and Mrs. G. Cuddy, with their families, spent Sunday in the Beaver canyon. They were accompanied accom-panied by Mrs. Cuddy's sister, Mrs. Frank Gardner of Kanosh. Mrs. Ed. Bardsley, with her daughter, dau-ghter, Maxine, and son Jack, arrived here Thursday of last week and will spend the summer with their husband hus-band and father, Mr. Ed. Bardsley, at the Independent Silver mine. Miss Kathleen Bonn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Bohn, returned Saturday from Salt Lake City, where she has been spending a short vacation vaca-tion with her friends, since her graduation grad-uation at the St. Mark's Academy. Mrs. Charles Kelley and little son Ernest, left Weduesda nomyrnthere Ernest, left Wednesday morning to visit friends and relatives at Los An-ecles An-ecles and San Francisco. California. They will spend some time with Rev. and .Mrsi C. C. Kinder, at Tranquility, Tranquil-ity, California. Ralph Pitchforth and daughter, Betty, returned Tuesday from Salt Lake where they went to be with their mother and grandmother, Mrs. H. H. Pitchforth, who underwent a serious operation at the Holy Cross hospital, Monday morning. They left her doing nicely. Miss Winnie Esterak, assistant secretary sec-retary at Westminster college, in Salt Lake, arrived here Tuesday morning and will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Cottrell for several weeks.. Miss Esterak has visited here several times before and has many friends who will be glad to hear of her return. A number of the members of the Christian Science church at Beaver, motored, over Tuesday evening to hear the splendid lecture delivered by Paul Stark Seeley, of Portland, Oregon. They were: Mrs. Jos. R. Murdock, Mrs. Silas Cox, Mrs. E. O. Puffer, Mrs. Elizabeth Neil-sen, Mrs. Mayme Dunshee, Percy Puffer, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Fotheringham. . Miss Hattie Whornham, county librarian li-brarian of Beaver, arrived here Tuesday Tues-day evening to begin her work of cat-alogueing cat-alogueing the books for the Milford branch library. The building which is being papered and painted and put in excellent shape by Harry Ward and his assistants, is nearly completed aim ivin iiiant; a bymuuui place 101 our city offices and library. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Murdock, Jr. and family, of Reed, motored in on Tuesday evening to meet train No. 4 and had a short visit with Mrs. Murdock's auut and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Clark, of Los Angeles, California, Cal-ifornia, who were en route to visit relatives in Salt Lake and Montana. Mr. Clark is a railroad man formerly former-ly connected with tne Salt Lake railroad rail-road company. They were traveling in their private car. Al. McKeon arrived home from Ka nab Thursday of last week, where he has been selling lighting plants to the farmers in that part of the country. He says the farmers are very busy cutting their fine hay crop and that the cattle are very fat. Mr. audi MJrs. McKeon loft Wednesday for Kanab by the way of Bryce canyon. can-yon. They will also visit the Grand canyon and will return home in time for the 4th of July celebration. Kittenish grandmothers and sophisticated soph-isticated grand-daughters are cleverly clever-ly 'kidded' in the. prologue to "Short Skirts," the comedy drama in which Gladys Walton will be seen at the Victory Theatre Saturday. The star's york is said to be even more brilliant brilli-ant than in her previous features, which' is an assertion that Walton fans will demand to be proved. Leaving the story, direction, photography pho-tography and other elements out, the acting alone in "Wild Honey," promises prom-ises something interesting when that picture is seen next Sunday and Monday Mon-day at the Victory Theatre, starring Priscilla Dean. The story is essentially essen-tially dramatic, and the players were chosen from the top ranks with an eye to their abilities in this particular particu-lar type of picture. |