OCR Text |
Show Page i April UTAH NEWS 15, 1965, SOUTHERN SOUTilirtlJ Ttso UTAH KHV8 Sties! Cctrd f.?:r.b:rs LWzzi Otslca CtaYtnlita OFF1GAL NEWSPAPER OF KANE COUNTY, UTAH Published every Thursday et Kanab, Utah Errol G. Brown, Publisher matter October 6, 19X4 at toe Entered as second-des- s the Act of March 3, 1879. under In office Utah, Kanab, post Thomas Major, vice preside.it the Kane County School Board,., and Kent Carpenter, member, returned this past weekend from Boston Mass., where they spent four days attending the NSBA 25th Anniversary Convention. Both member of the School board said that the convention was very educational and beneficial to them In carrying out their work as members of our school board. The convention was held in the Boston War Memorial Audifrom torium and convened April 3 through the 6th. Members of the National School Boards Association from th entire nation were on hand for the convention. Mr. Carpenter and Major drove to Salt Lake City and took a plane from there. of MEMEBER UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION Subscriptions $4.0Q per year, $2.50 for Sis Months Ldca PokcIITo Get Fish 5' Ilillisn Fled, C!::k Csss end Treat Former Rcs!isr,l Carried In Sell Uis Weiecsiiy Funeral services were held in Salt Lake City Wednesday, April 14 at the Kenwood Ward chapel, 3080 South 1765 East, for Barton Williams Swapp, 52, who died Sunday in a Salt Lake hospital of leukemia. Bom October 29, 1912, In Kanab, he was a son of William S. and Lettie Young Swapp. He married Mae Evans, December 19, 1932 in Panguitch, with the marriage later solemnired in the St. George LDS Temple. He was an Elder in the Kenwood Ward and had served ns stake missionary and superintendent of the Sunday School. He moved from Kanab to Suit Lake following World War 11 m 1945. He was a veteran of World War II. Survivors: sons, daughter, Ramon E.,' B. LaVell. Mrs. Dee (Norma) Matson, Linda, Myia, all Salt Lake City; brothers, Ellsworth, Fredonia; Blaine, Ogden; Dale (Lenore) sisters, Mrs. Mrs. Earl (Wilma) Kanab; Judd, Topham, Salt Lake; eight grandchildren. Burial was in the Wasatch Lawn Memorial park in Salt I eke City. fkir.s Ceding, thxi K:sr Gsrc&l Fine rams, with. some snow, continued to fall over most ( bur area during the past week, with a total of 7 22 inches le 1 corded by Sterling Johnson October the Kanab station since 1. 1964 through April 9th. The 722 inches brings us within .43 of an inch of our all time normal precipitation, and with storms since the 9ih should put us up to or over ttut normal of around 12 inches. Precipitation during the week inches. o( 4 3 to 4 9 totaled 1 Since the 9th we have received .50 on the 10th, 03 on the 11th, .09 on the 12th and .05 on the 13th. Skies have cleared with i.o moisture falling since the 13th to this date, leaving us with 7 89 inches of moisture since October I, 1964, which ts the stait of of our weather year. Ktntb News Holes Mr and Mrs. George Swapp returned to Kanab recently after emoymg a visit in Phoenix with their daughter and family. Their grandson, Keith Swapp. is here visiting with them and planning to seek employment hete. million fish Five and one-hal- l go flying through the air starting April 3Q. according to terms of a contract between will Aviation of Mar-anArizona, and the Bureau of Sports Fisheries agd Wildlife. Regional Director John C. Gal tin of the Department of the Interior wildlife agency announced that Intermountain Aviation was the successful bidder on a contract calling for aerial shipment of one million black bass from the Bureau's hatcheries in Texas to Keystone near Tulsa, Oklahoma, on April 30; million three and one-halrainbow trout to be flown from Kingman and Winslow, Arizona, to Lake Powell on the border starting May 11; and another million bass to be flown from Ardmore, Oklahoma, to Cheney and Wilson Reservoirs In Kansas on May 21. AH fish were produced in national fish hatcheries, and all will he air dropped at their desAviatination. Intermountain tion's bid was $10.07925. "This is the third successive year, in which Lake PoweH has been stocked by airplanes because of the absence of access roads over which hatchery trucks can move," Galtin said. "Long distance aerial shipments of large 'numbers of fish have allowed speedy delivery resuming in decreased mortality. Long distance air shipment has also decreased proect cost" Galtin stated. "The obvious success of the aerial plants In Lake large-scalPowell guided the Bureau in choosing air shipment of fish to the new Kansas and Oklahoma Reservoirs,' Galtin said a, f (Jtah-Ari-zo- MSI 'PS ! i ...BuTGMCtR. ymucfc mm our. Klt H9 A DUCTS uvt A Much uttca cnancc Today MLA IV6 MORfc TO MOM, CSU Receives Recognition Ctnctr Facts and Figures . Over a half million Americans will first learn this year that they have cancer. The American Cancer Society says that the prospects of cure depend on how early tha cancer was found and how promptly treated. Do Rot take a chance, see your doctor every year for a health examination and learn and act on Cancer's 7 Danger Signals. Prefetter An estimated 850,000 Americans are currently being treated for cancer. New methods of treatment and diagnosis have improved tha cancer eure rate over tha last 25 years. With aarlier detection and prompt treatment, one out of two could bo saved instead of the one out of three now saved, according to the American Cancer Society. Dr. Kent E. CEDAR CITY Myers, Associate Professor cf English here at CSU, has been advised that four research projects which he has completed during the past year will be published in national publications. Research for the articles was completed at CSU and U of U. SPECIAL FEATURE w. ...of a 1910 CROXTON-KEETO- N was its top-quali- ty construction. . Two Freni Kizzb Li CSU CEDAR Drcna CITY - College of Southern Utah's spnnq quarter major drama production. 'Vbit to a Small Planet." will be presented at CSU Auditorium April 29 30 and May 1, said Fred C. Adams, drama director, who will also fill The role of Creton in'TKe drama. Others cast in the play are Ralph Driggs. Pleasant Grove; Jim Robinson, Kanab; Mary Arm Palmer, Cedar City Aho Doni Christensen. American Fork; Tun Kelly. St Louis. Mo ; Joe Ward, Cedar Cil. Wayne Heaton. Kanab; Greg Langley, Boulder City. Richard Baldwin, Beaver, and Barry gaard. Salt Lake City are television technicians A scientist ruviicd into the control room of the missile crit cr and unnouwed. Ive ust there discovered something are women tm the moon Ue shot a communication tockit up there and got a busy signal ...of our popular BANK AUTO LOANS is the clear-c- ut statement of terms (combining convenience with low cost). See us ULi) PANGUITCH fstby cheut ftnandiis ycur next cor I TM TI SAUNA KANAB MEMBER FEDERAL DEl'OSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION |