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Iron County Record:
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Vol 1. Cedar Gty, Iron CountyUtah, Saturday, Jan. 307J9047 NoTl. IhhVhI
HEBRON JOINS
; WITH ENTERPRISE.
Old Town to be Abandoned to Rein-
j force the New One.
i I -
STAKE PRESIDENCY DECIDES QUESTION
"v.
' I Residents of Hebron Relinquish all
' Wnlcr Rights for $17,500
Stock In Company,.
fDlxIe Advocate
" The future- of ths town of Entorpriso
- is now assured. The residents and
1 water p,wnors of nebron will relinquish
all claims to water of that locality hi
- " favor of the Enterprise company for
consideration of $17,500 stock in tho
company. This is tho decision handed
down last Saturday by the Stako Pros
"" idency of tho St. Gcorgo stake, after
listening to the statements of tho inter
ested parties, it having been mutually
" agreed by tho water owners and tho
Enterprise company to abido by tho
decision of tho arbitrators
This means that tho old town of Hc
bron yill, as fast as practicable bo do
erted and uow homes will spring up in
Itho promising town of Enterprise.
And with tho living water thus secured
for the valley, tho futuro of tlio now
town looks bright, indeed.
Tho proposition has been ponding
for uioro than a year, on account of tho
inability of tho parties concerned to
arrlro at a mutually satisfactory price
for tho water. Hebron peoplo insisted
that tholr claims were worth $18,000,
and tho stockholders of tho company
hud advanced step by stop from 812,00o
until they reached $10,000 at which fig
ure they balked and refused to yield
rn.i. -another point, until It was finally do
- m r teiHiliTjod'lo arbitrate, h .ju'ghttijf&.
' supposed somo of tho stockholders nro
not well pleased with tho verdict, but
a thousand or two of dollars stock in
tho company is a trivial matter,
woighed against tho loss that has been
resulting from a failure of tho parties
to "get together." Hebron peoplo
haVo been practically doing nothing
for a year or moro, pending tho result
- of tho negotiations, but all will find
" amplo to employ their tlm now
1 BRIGHT PROSPECTS.
I Thoro isn't a fanning community in
tho stato with brighter prospt-ctsahead
than tho town of Enterprise. JTho
town is located in u largo valley of 'tho
most fortilo land in tho stato admirably
adapted for dry land farming, and has
ono of tho stato dry iand farms lo-
' cated thoro. Abovo them is tho far
famed Entorpriso reservoir, capablo
' when completed of irrigating an im-
monso tract of land. It, would bo hard
to conceive of n better natural sito for
a reservoir than tho Enterprise com
pany has secured. It required only
tho darning of a narrow gorge to cover
a largo basin or valley. Tho dam has
be on thiis far constructed in a substan
tial manner of masonry and Portland
, cement, and as tho canyoii drains a
largo area of country seasons are raro
- f when it cannot be filled with water.
Thoro Is little doubt now that tho dam
' - will be rushed to completion, and a
-- - town, second to nono in tho county,
rapidly spring up at Enterprise.
V Monument to Philosopher.
1 1 Flans aro being made to erect a
monument to tho philosopher Kant in
1' Borlin, to bo unveiled on tho occasion
I of tho ono hundredth anniversary of
I his death, in 1904.
I ' The dance last night at tho Ilranch
.1 ' Normal which took tho place of tho
I 'students bocluty, is said to havo been a
I very enjoyable affair. It was gotten
I up and'managed by tho students them-
I selves from start to finish, but two of
the Instructors being present. The
I students made their own music, and it
M is said it was of most excellent quality.
I Unique Spirit of Loyalty,
It Is not all war in tho Industrial
world. Hero aro 0,000 einployos of
I United Stataa Express Company
B voluntooiiuK to furnish pieces of skin
for tho boneutof Aeslstnnt Gonoral
I Supertotondoat Fredericks, who was
I leahkvl in a twin wreck. Thoro Is
still n.motlilng left of tho old-Jiuman;
H rolaimnB between captalna and pri-
rates of industry.
Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machines.
If you dlslro to buy a llrst class up-to
date, light running sewing machine
you will do well to en II at the real
dencc of Samuel H. Webster.
Or I can furnish you with an organ
or piano as cheap as they can bo bad
Old sewing machines and live stock
taken In part payment
The Secretiiry of the Farmers Insti
tute of this city is In receipt of u letter
from Director John A. Widtsoo of t In
State Agriculture Colleir,. stating that
the faculty 1 f thntins itutiun wonhlllUo
t hnlil a convention in the Interebt if
tho farmers in Iron County some time
next month and inviting the Farmers
Iimiltuto of our city to take
the matter in hand and make arrange
ments to havo representatives present
from nil parts of the county to get. the
benefit of tho Instutlons. Prof Wldt
soo suggests that It would add to th
Interest of the convention If nrrangi
ineiits were made to have a few far
mers tako part In the proceedings, and
relate their experience along certnln
lines he also suggests a sooial entertain
ment of some kind would add interest
to the affair. A two days convention
is contemplated. Notice of a meeting
of the Farmers Institute will be given
out to-morrow to convene at tho ear
liest prnctteable moment to make ar
rangements for carrying out the planN
outlined in the Director's letter; and no
pains will he spared to give the repre
sentatives of tho State '"Agricultural
CoUre a welcome, worthy of the impor
tant cause they represent. Every far
mer in Cedar ought to bo present at
the institute meeting at the tlmo that
shall bo set. Tho convention is just
what wo need in this connty.
HOW GIRLS ARE LOST.
Salt Lake Police Offlcal Sounds
The following, taken from nn ex
change, merely reiterates the-oft re
peated warning to young ladtes Of the
outlying settlements to shun the larger
cities. If heeded it will bo the means
of preyenting much sorrow and ang
uish: "Go home and tell j'our neighbors
who have daughters not to let them
come to Salt Lake as domestics," was
the advice given by a police officer to a
gray-haired man from Springvillc who
had just found his child in a rooming
house with three dlssoluto companions.
"Too often," explained the officer,
"domestic service is simply tho first
step towards a girl's ruin. An enor
mous percentage of the young women
who come to Salt Lake to work in prl
vato fumllles becomo knowu as fast
women. You hear of the temptations
encountered by women clerks and sten
ograpbers, but I can assure you that
for every one of them who goes wrong,
a half dozen servant girls full by tho
wayside. Every policeman knows this.
Thero is no theory about it; it is a fact,
and I think it time tha. parents living
In tho country should know what their
daughters are coming to when they
look for work ns domestics.
"I don't pretend to say why this hap
pens, but if you want my opinion, I'll
tell you that the hired girl is made to
feel In most cases that she is different
from tho 'young ladles' of tho house.
She does not go out with them or meet
tholr company, and If she hds company
of her own she baa It In the kitchen, or
on tho back steps or around tho corner
Sho make's her acqulntnnecs on tho
streets and they aro not of the kind an
lnnocont girl ought to know. It might
bo hard on tho folks In town if. they
had to do tholr own work, hftt it
wouldn't hurt them any worse than it
does tho girls who are ruined, and tho
country peoplo who see their own ilesh
and blood poisoned and corrupted."
Tho girl found yesterday camo from
Spring villa about a year acoto work as
a domestic, nor father could not hear
from her and camo to tho city to look
her up. An otllcor found her occupy
Ing a singlo room in tho Nevada room
ing house in company with two young
mon and another girl. Sho 'lookod a
picture of degradation and misery and
was about to become a mother. Sho
consented to go homo with' her heart
broken father.
Tho teachers of tho District schools
of Iron County mot In Institute meet
ng In this city today.
HOW T0MJ)ID
TAKlf COLD.
Plenty of Good Pure Air One of the
Main Requisites,
GOOD COOL BATH EVERY HORNING.
-
"Cold" Nature's Attempt to Effect n
Cure People iihjlood Health
Never "Take Cold."
,
The time has arrived wlicu many peo
ple will bo troubled wlMi.colds Some
will not be. to any extent There Js "a
good reason why they will not be, as
well ns why others will suffer These
things do not cotno by chance. All
trouble In this line can be avoided,
practically. It it merely a question of
whether you will listen to and bo gov
erned by common sense, or whether
you will go on in tho old careless,
thoughtless way. The truth is simplo
and easy to understand Error blinds
and mystifles tho simple fact and truth,
that colds do not come without easily
prcyentable causes, fuMamental causes.
Remove these causes and they will not
trouble you. What are some of the
main causes? Probably breathing im
pure air comes first. Yon need the
amount of oxygen th-is in pure, out
of door air to purify yonr blood in tho
lungs properly, Air'bi enthed over and
over again in a closejroom does not no
sier the -purpose.- Thtu almost every
one eatB moro food than is needed to
support the body. Thus, poorly digest
ed food gets into the circulation,- put
tlpg more than tho utual work, onto
tho organs that would purify the blgod,
Or one eats unwholesome fpo$ orj-'SSj
not take tlrao tohef"t,in owl VwWh
trotiblcrwmfh eflitetm, of doors, most
of the time. SliutiuBMn Impure afr,
thjisj lessen Ing the ability of the, lungs
tO'throw ofFiropuriite'a, yiHrcold may
soon come. And lack limine usual and
sufficient exercise, whieh helps to use
up food, will hurry thetcold along. If
you do not cat stach food, and take such
exercise as to cause the bowels to move
freely nnd regularly-",! will assist
about bringing on a 'Vj. If you do
not keep the skin clean and active and
healthy by proper batlilng and rubbing
your chances for having colds are in-
nrnnorl A ntn Imtli K.,.fv mnrntn(f.
creased. A cool oath 'every morning,
followed by brisk rubbing Is very help
ful along this line. You cannot keep
the slcln perfectly healthy and active
If you dress too warralyforhaye clothes
lit too snugly, thus checking full deep
breathing. In general, loss of sleep,
Irregular habltB of any kind, or sudden
and great changes In I your habits, or
anything else that lowers you vitality,
may help about bringing on a cold. It
should be known to all that simple ex
posure to cold, going, aijt without your
overcoat, say, the wind blowing on you
etc., will never bring, on a so-called
cold unless thero hasten something
wrong in your way of .living before
that. To use my old illustration again,
a lighted match will -cause tho gas
which is formed from gasoline under
certain conditions to explode. You may
light mutches until a end of time and
there will be no explosion if thero is no
gasoline around. Th,us the exposure to
cold Is simply the lighted match, harm
less of itself; if tho 'conditions of the
body are what they should be. Advo
cates of the germ tho'cry should re
member what is a well known fact,
that no germ in existence, can harm a
person iu good heaHJi, - Whon a cold
goes through a family, nr a neighbor
hood, the conditions thaf bring on one
ease are present wlUtlm others. These
may bo Impure air imthe homo, butch
ering time, when toojnmeh meat has
beou eaten, coinparauviiUetiesa, etc..
If thoro are such things as germs that
can bring on 11 coldjRjey And In tho
whole family, so'met' proper feed
ing ground? Hut nar(!fflf there is one
member of the amllyvwtfo gives reason
able attention to theofiittuV. ho or sho
will bo practically eSjjjjSL' from theso
colds thatgo througfflBffifamtly. A cold
Isslraply nature's eljSjEtb throw off Im
purities that have accumulated in the
system because y nuJhgSl breathed Im
pure air, ale too nAngVc, The regu
lar organs became WCil and were
no longer- ablejBofco this. You
have often been cxposeMo severe cold,
f
wind, otc, and no harm resulted. Tills
wt-n because your system was all right.
V011 had been living fairly in accor
dance with nature's laws. She allows
quite a little 'latitude, but abuse her
too much and she rebels, and you can
blow your nose, hayo your eyes un and
cough until the excess has been re
moved. A cold is always a curative
process. It is better to avoid tho cause
and not have one. Hut If you do not
and one comes on, you will surely got
over It quicker by breathing only air as
pure as it Is out of doors, by not eating
a mouthful for some tweuty-four hours
or until you ar real hungry, by bath
ing and rubbing the skin, by taking nn
I injection, to cause thu bowels to
move freolv and bv drinktntr alt tho
pure water you havo the least desire for.
,He moderate, ot course, in all changes
in air, bathing etc.i oven when they are
for the better. It is terribly unwiso to
coax a person who has u cold to eat.
You are simply adding to tho trouble.
It will tako naturo longer to set things
right. She plainly Indicates what you
should do by taking away tho appetite,
generally. Feed a cold and you will
bring on more fever and may cause se
rious trouble. Under such circum
stances it is awfully wrong to coax tho
appetite ot tho ailing one with some
tempting dish. Thousands havo gono
to their gives ns a result. Trouble
need never comes from a cold if It Is
properly treated. When a person be
comes real hungry for plain food, all
right. Nature shows that she Is ready
for it then. Hut because you do not
eat, by no means stop drinking wncr.
l'uro water, so far as yon havo any de
sire for It, helps to carry out impurities
through the kidneys. Food is a hin
drance to recovery, water a help.
T. H. Terry In Practical Farmer.
MM FROMPARQWAH, I
'I CommUftloner' Day's Visit to OreRjv.
I Parowan, .Tun. 27, 100. I
I Tho Stake offluors of tho Hellef So-1
cloty aridiPrlmury Association, visited I
PnrngoonttVpn Sunday to hold ward
conference with thnso organizations.
Both meetings were well attended and a
goodly feeling prevailed. Hetwcon tho
meetings tho ward officers of the Prl
mary invited all tho visitors to par
take of as sutnptous a feast as could bo
deslrod. The affair was gotten un as a
surpriBo, which was a positive success.
Bishop Barton and others extended a
warm invitation for u. ronctltion of tho
visit. All hands oxpressed themselves
as having passed 11 well spent day.
Commissioner Day, who has been
gono for tho past twenty days, returned
last night. Ho loft to attend the Live
Stock Convention at Portland, Oregon,
and spent a number ol days in San
Franciaco. IJo wus accompanied by
hia wifo and baby. At this writing ho
is spinning yarns of the wonders ho has
seen, and declares he has had an all
around good time aim that tho trip cost
him over nineteen dollars.
The Recorder of Iron Co. would like
to show the peoplo of saidi county tho
necessity of plnoing releases of mort
gages on file or record, by publishing
tho yearly report to tho Stato Bureau
of Statistics.
Valid mortgages on fllo or record
Dee. 41, 1002; number, 58; value 845,
418 50.
Mortgages filed or recorded during
1903; numbor, 33; valpo $50,044,477.00.
ff & ... h -m h. lb A nil ki,l.innH 1ft fill F -
Mortgages satlsoed, released or out
lawed during 1003; numbor, 10; value
$12,008.00.
Valid mortgages on file- or of record
dec. 31, 1003; number 81; value 850,
070,027.50.' This report Includes a R. R. mort
gage of $50,000,000, reducing tho
amount for our county to $70,027.50,
and wo aro convinced if the satlsfuc
tionfl were on our records tho amount
would bo greatly dcmlnlshed. It Is
evident tho releases havo benn given
or legal steps would bo takon to collect.
On or boforo February 8th tho assessor
of th.o counties in which mortgagees
reside havo to bo notified uecording to
tho showing of our records, which are
olten orroneons on account of sho dls
charge of obligations not appourlng
Stake conforonco of tho mutual lm
provoinent owwiailonj will convene In
l'nrowan pmgrrow. A number of our
young peoplo are making preparations
' to attend.
MMMaMiHHMMMM H
BULLION CANYON MM
TO THE FRONT.
1 fBi
New Shaft Recently Put Down 78 Feet
by Deary & Canfield. .H
A TRUE FISSURE VEIN OF ORE. '
H
Prospects fornMlncarcQood Num. H
bcrs of Claims Taken. Corry, I
Ryan & Company Tunnel. i H
Very encouraging reports reach us , B
from Hulliou Canyon this week. Mr. H
Deary, nn experienced mining man '
from California, and Mr. Prutt Can-
field, have been working their cluims
iu that District for some tlmo paet,-and
are said to have a shaft down about-'. H
seventy feet, on a four foot vein of Hfl
mixed lead copper and silver ore, An
assay which they got recently from H
bomo of what Mr. Deary considered ou, H
ly second clnss ore, at best, showcel; H
over twenty three per cent of lead and ' tH
some copper and also somo silver. Mr.
Deary and his co-worker aro euthusl- '
astlc uver the prospect they have and H
feel assured that they have a mine H
Mr. Daniel Pago who is also a man of HI
considerable experience iu mining i
matters has been down tho shaft and
was very favorably impressed with the H
appeurauce of the vein which be says i
gives indications of being a very valu- H
able piece of property. The parties are '
said to buvu secured a group of claims ' M
burroundlug thelrshuft, or at least ad-
joining It. Mr. James A. Bunsou, and H
lSllus J. Wurd, of Parowan, und James !
I liud Ueilrt'R Pllltt nf Plntn linnn mwl Vi i
locations In thu vicinity, und intend to - V J
begin development work theru boon. - -j&gji'-fc.. tl
1 Mr, P. U. Nelson and Daniel 1'ago huvecSpr v f -"'V Jl
also becurcd Rrqun'ajUieru.. -'l'hiv.CorryBKiS ' Ai
jl.uu T?..t n-.. .- I'ju,! ' X-ViBi
far otf. ' 'ri8"q"uartotfrorelfa TtiSJrf ,"'r " H
'company of tpoir intetestu and tho H
I stock lias been on thu market for somo
mouths; but they have nut been doing
much work lately, probably for the H
want of funds, and also on account of H
the parties being busy in other dlrec- I
lions. It is more than likely that with- ,
in the next taw months the ground in H
Thu Bullion canyon will be thoroughly H
prospected. When men lileo Daniel
Page, J. II. Richards, Mr. Deary, who is H
said to have spent a life tlmo in mining H
in the great mining districts of Call- H
iornia and Nevada, and Win. II. Corry
who while not an exnerlenced mluluir !
man is well known us a shrewd and H
careful business man, take hold qf a H
dlbtrict of country as they aro doing It H
goes without baying that there is bomo ,"
thing worth having. We shall watch ' '"
with interest the movements of the
several owners in this interesting sec- H
tion of thu country which is said to not
bo more than 15 miles from tho railroad
track in the western part of our coun-
ty. M
Since welting the foregoing we havo 'H
learned from Mr. Daulel Pago that iu- H
stead of a four foot vein on the claim H
that Messrs Deary and Canfiold arc H
I working, they have a true fissure vein H
eight feet deep and that an absay of tho H
average of tho vein gave over twenty H
per cent lead with some silver, but just H
bow much silver Mr. Page did not -!
know. Mr. Page says that it Is the in- H
tention of himself und Mr. Nelson to jJ
work their claim next spring or sura-
mer, and that hu has no doubt that J
liullion Canyon will be tho scene of H
lively operations before long, as there H
is undoubtedly the btuff to pay for tho v
working of the claims. jH
m i HHHI
Mrs. Nellie Dallcy ot Enoch, who H
lost her husband a short time since is , V i
visiting tier brother, David Uibson, in, . H
Salt Lake City. ti " " H
The dance that was given by the Ofd, jH
llrass Hand last night is said to have KM
been one of tho best parties that has IH
been held in Cedur for many a day. Mfl
Hut this is not surprising, for these jlfl
Old llrass Hand parties aro noted for H
being among thu best parties that aro M
given. There seems to be an nir of so- ' M
elabillty about these old baud fellows M
that makes f verytliiiig go off with thu M
best of feelings Alarge number of tue M
middle-ugcd people w'Qti) iivs0Ut' md H
thu old cotillion bad nn innings' with HI
gratifying results; " the uWmiltious HI
watt, haying to tuke a back scat occua Hi
ioniilly. H