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Show featuring Emery County '"'A f V4 ft Entertainment Guide Professional Building Room Castle Dale, Utah Telephone 748-243- Volume Number 79 18 May projects underway and four more in the planning stages, With four the Castle Valley Special Service District is getting into full swing meeting the needs of Emery Countys growing communities. A project to upgrade and increase the capacity of Ferrons water treatment plant will be completed hopefully in three to four weeks, according to Darrel Leamaster, general manager of the district. Work on the transmission lines the Castle sewer is progressing ahead of schedule, with 70 per cent of the line connecting the two cities completed and part of lower Castle Dale completed. Crews began digging trenches for the sewer collection lines in for Orangeville Dale-Orangevil- le this week. That project should be finished this fall about the same time lagoons for the sewer system are completed north of Castle Dale. Workers are getting ready to SIF0U plant for Leamaster said the change Department and within three project has already been approved for funding. sewage treatment 1 VvrKllI W 1 . L 5 ! J' drawings and surveys of the Huntington streets Upgrading those streets should begin soon, rounding out the projects presented to the county when Cleveland and Elmo's joint : t 5, i - - j wn i- -ii s , ji Gmi m .ft ;;v: - Itw- - r . - V ' I 5 w m J. ' v : fff w 1 imxr I ,vS 2 . t.-....- : "V ,s - ' 'i- - vu & 0 tv 14 i ,v S-- ! if. in March 23 tire theft Peace V L. Peacock for a preliminary hearing on May 18, said Sheriff Lamar Guymon Bail for Suit has been set at of the Two Salt Lake City men have been arrested and charged in connection with a March 23 theft at Tracys Conoco in Castle Dale. Leo Suit, 30, 118 West 500 North, Salt Lake City, was arrested April 27 in Salt Lake by Emery County detectives Tim Holt and Sgt. Mark Pratt and has been charged with the theft of $3,000 worth of tires taken from the service station Suit is being held in the Emery County Detention Center and has been scheduled to go before Justice : w llVit Two SLC men arrested ? e , i in fvi 4 1 r 4, V $7,500 Steven Hadley, 32, 1326 West North Temple, Salt Lake City is being held by Salt Lake police and has been charged with possession ot stolen property, Sheriff Guymon said. Hadley was scheduled for a preliminary hearing in Salt Lake Wednesday. Trnck topples pole Parts of Castle Dale were without electricity about three hours Monday after a truck hauling a road grader pulled down a utility pole in the back alley which serves the rear entrance to UP&L's Castle Dale office and other businesses. for The grader apparently snagged a power line and the truck snapped the pole from the ground before the driver realized what had happened. A UP&L cost around offical said the pole alone would $2000 to Caring causes change women told at meet By ELIZABETH HANSON Progress Correspondent Pm a mess. My house is a mess and the children are a mess, but you can come in if you want to, Sue told the Relief Society visiting teachers who had come to call for the first time. In the ensuing weeks the teachers helped Sue straighten up her house and life and kick a The Emery High School band place trophy at the Utah State University band festival over the weekend. The local band finished first in their division and competed with 12 other bands from Utah in the competition at Logan. Under the direction of Dennis won a first habit. Sue became drinking beautiful physically and responsible as a wife and mother. Caring caused the change, explained LDS Relief Society general board President Barbara B. Smith as she related the incident at an Relief Society conLDS ference Saturday. The visiting teacher program is (Continued on page 2) replace. Rabies clinic Pet owners can have their animals vaccinated for rabies at either of two clinics to be held Saturday in Huntington and Castle Dale. Veterinarians will be in Huntington at the city park from 11 a m. to 2 p.m. and in Castle Dale at the city park from 2:30 to 5 p.m. Cost for the vaccinations will be $4, a savings of $3 over that done at an animal hospital.. The clinic is being sponsored by the Emery County Chamber of Commerce in conjunction with Doctors Thayn, Plotts and Griggs. For county offices Bacon the group performed Centennial Fanfare March, Concertino for Percussion and Bands and the Choral Alleluia. Recently returning from a several-da- y tour to Durango, Colo., the band will be competing in the large group music festival in Rich- Four more enter races field today. The group will finish the year with a concert at the high school the end of May. Emery County High Band Pres. Katy Fail and leader Dennis Bacon admire trophy band won at Logan music festival. Candidates have until next unopposed in November, are inRaces for county offices in the Lamar Guymon, upcoming election heated up this Wednesday to file for offices in the cumbents Democrat, for sheriff, Glen Bott, week with four new candidates election. Republican for Clerk and Gerald entering contests. Two new commission candidates Other candidates now running Stanton, Republican, for assessor. have filed. John I. Parker, a Republican from Huntington, and Jethro Majors, a Democrat also from Huntington, will oppose each commission other for the four-year 'hi seat. more Democrats entered the race. Ina Lee Magnuson, Castle Dale, will run for county recorder for the Democrats and Pauline Cox, Ferron, will represent that party in the contest for county treasurer. Two $. iMiitfrl. G: f ) i, iU iimmhij $ ' TT : f? X vmmmr d'" tJ -- . eta Mrs. Magnuson will oppose Carol Burdick, Lawrence, who is running on the Republican Ticket. Mrs. Cox will face Republican Eleanore George. ft tJ vo Neither incumbent for the recorder and treasurer spots are this year. seeking Parker and Majors will run for the seat now held by Commission Chairman Gardell Snow. Snow has filed for the commission seat to be vacated by Glenn Jones. Parker ran an unsuccessful campaign two years ago for the commission seat, against Jones. two-ye- Award-winnin- g u Sbj approval of a $5 million bond was sought by the district the first of last year. The district still faces decisions in finding permanent office space, equipment and storage, personnel and engineering, but bit by bit many of the pieces are falling into place as the needs of local com-- ( Continued on page 2) Emery band captures 1st at festival ' I o sewage treatment plant project got a shot in the arm recently when public comment at a public hearing boosted the plant on a statewide priority list trom 35th place to 16th place. started. Projects that are in the planning stages include a new water system for Emery, and an improvement in Orangevilles water system as well as a plan to upgrade Huntingtons streets and the building of a b t, u T - This placed the Cleveland-Elmproject in the number two place among those projects to be funded. and Tuttle Johansen is completing Engineering two-inc- northwest section of town. The contractor for that project is expected to move in and begin laying the lines any time. Leamaster said a delay in the delivery of equipment had held the district back for a time, but with that equipment delivered, projects throughout the county are getting fti.ninif T' Dale-Orangevil- le weeks bids for new distribution lines for the system will be advertised. The entire water treatment and distribution system for Emery will be revamped, according to Leamaster. The present system, h which consists of a water line throughout the town, will be replaced. Specifications for the new Orangeville water treatment plant are ready to go to the state health department for approval. digging the lagoons, Leamaster said. The same is true of a project in Huntington for 22 blocks of new sewer lines in the V Tf 1 . almost insures funding for the Cleveland and Elmo. The Emery water project has project. The first 14 projects in the been approved by the State Health list which included the Castle start 1 4, 1978 'I of fast 5 two-ye- Emery County High band. - -- ar ar Immunization clinic to be held Monday y immunization clinic will be held Monday for children 3 months to 6 years at the county health nurses new office north of the Emery Medical Center in Castle Dale. Immunizations will be given to children from the Elmo, Cleveland, Huntington and Lawrence areas from 9 a.m. to noon. Children from the Castle Dale, Orangeville, Clawson, Ferron and Emery areas will be immunized from 1 to 4 p.m. Immunization given at no charge will include those for measles, reubella (German measles), tetanus, polio, diptheria and pertussis (whooping cough). The clinic is sponsored by the Southeastern Utah Health District. The new office building, a brown and tan double-wid- e mobile home recently erected by the county, is in the center of the block occupied by the medical center. It can be reached through a driveway on 100 West between Main Street and 100 North in Castle Dale. A well-bab- f |