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Show I THURSDAY, THE PAGE SIXTEEN 8 U N - A D V O C A T E Base Trait Becomes Admirable Asset In PAYMENTS IN CARBON COUNTY UNDER JOBLESS COMPENSATION LAW SHOWN less than Price Post Contest 10 nine-tent- hs Le-igi- eight-tent- hs Resettlement firhnn Registration Blanks Forwarded To Pupils cCc First Lieutenant Kenneth W. Craig, who for the past three weeks has been working with this company, was transferred to company 593 at Price, effective April 10. cCc First Lieutenant Herbert H. LiBour-e- l is being transferred to this company, effective April 16, from company 3240, Big Cottonwood, Murray, Thursday (today). Utah. 1 CALIFORNIA WINE ,20 camp inspections, speeches and refreshments. Tables were beautifully decorated with bouquets of tulips and colored candles. At the head table was plac-- 1 ed a twenty pound birthday cake dec-- 1 orated with the company number 529 small American flags, and forty-eiginvited At 3:30 p. m. forty-fiv- e guests partook of a birthday dinner, During the banquet Captain Carlton G Rockey gave a speech of welcome land bricly explained the purpose of! the C. C. C. and expressed the desire of the C. C. C. organization being of service to the community. Mayor A. ID. Keller gave a speech of response! and expressed heartfelt appreciation in behalf of the citizens of the for the service, cooperation land benefit the company has been to the people in various ways. At the conclusion of the banquet open house was held for the entire were population. Scores of people buildconducted through the various Full explanations in groups. ings were made to each group by the officer directing them. Many questions were asked by visitors and fully j com-jmuni- t a10Teve TEACHERS ATTEND I V conttsti J. B. Thompson, Miss Esther u and Miss Gwendolyn Hansen ? structors in the commercial a M ment of the Carbon county" school, went to Provo Friday tn tend the annual intermountam v 4 school commercial conw by Brigham Young universal students from Carbon were 1 I enters Social security outfits The for Sun-Advoca- te. CAMPBELL'S TRANSFER MOVING-PACKIN- S5lt STORAGE SmpplHG male quartet. A ft ? ?? of the civilian conservation corps was fittingly observed Sunday, April 4, in the Castle Dale camp, with dinner, ht Heat Comfort It is the cross to water for now impossible work is thi! situation It overing flume ls conte plated to repair the permanently in the near future. and A new section will be installed, to several large piers will be built the present of ends and the it support flume. The S. C. S. plans to construct some rock jetties in the stream bed creek to protect the base of and the present concrete abutments work this All the proposed new piers. Carbon js in cooperation with the Water company which is furnishing the material. The soil conservation and service is supplying the labor ? ? ? r ? ?$ The fourth anniversary of the birth IN Work was started recently soil conservation service on a p for repair of the Miller Creek flume SALT LAKES NEWEST HOTEL CASTLE DALE C. C. C. NEWS THE BEST BUY Service Officials Begin Outline Of Plans For Work At Scofield Dam Soil been Arrangements have virtually of the by James Littlejohn Littlejohn Theatres, Inc., for news regional reel coverage of the nations was anit music contest here in May, of nounced Monday following receiptMr. company. Pathe a letter from the that Jean M. Littlejohn was advised Pathe cameraF Dubois of Denver, for the contest. man, plans to be here take pictures to Mr. Dubois intended unforseen but tournament, 1936 of the his coming. circumstances prevented on However, he is planning definitely which event, the forthcoming ' already nationwide reputation of the leading student muin in the United States cCc -- mmvM TO IMPROVE FLUME will be a five-sta- te affair. News reel shots of the would considerably enhance th 49 Company 959 celebrated the fourth anniversary of the civilian conservation corps on April 5 with open house and a program. Residents of Emery county were invited to come and participate in the days events. An inspection tour of the camp was made. Captain Veronon Peterson, district T" inspector, made an official monthly Principal Melvin C. Wilson of the inspection of this company April 9. cCc Carbon county high school announced this week that registration blanks are Supervising Engineer Stewart Udell spent last week being sent to all schools in the dis- from the Ogden office While here he this camp. visiting adwhich from students will trict, the work instructions regarding gave vance to the high school during the projects that are being carried on by 1937-3- 8 . term. the company. The temporary registration of Carbon students who will return to the high school next year has been 7 NEWS REEL FIRM UNIT CONSERVATION PLANS OF MUSIC MEET LAUNCHES PROJECT u A.PBJL supervision. Plans and specifications for the Scofield dam improvement project ion. are being outlined by Paul T. Walton, In Utah $1,781,928.98 has been ad- engineer, and W. W. West, camp supvanced to rehabilitate 3121 clients erintendent, in order to determine who were of former relief status. Re- costs and estimates for the work. It near payments to date were listed at $326,-162.- is planned to put a side camp the in work dam-site and begin or approximately 18 per cent. the A total of $428,056.72 was loaned to near future. Definite plans, however, Utahns under the Utah Rural Rehab- have not yet been made. ilitation corporation organized under the emergency relief administration STUDENTS HEAR EDUCATOR, FORMER CARBON OFFICIAL and now being liquidated by the resettlement administration, of which Dr. LeRoy C. Cowles, former prin$326,162.49 has been repaid. high cipal of the Carbon countyinstituRESTAURANT REDECORATED school, returned to the local tion Thursday this time in the interof the upstairs Redecoration pacity of speaker in a tour group repior of the Rinetti and Capitolo restau- resenting the University of Utah. rant was started Monday. Custom- - Dr. Cowles is dean of the lower di- -ers were served in the basement ban-- 1 vision of the state university, He adquet rooms while the work was being dressed Carbon students at a special done, and serving was scheduled to be student body assembly, which also resumed in the main dining room featured selections by the universitys FERRON C. C. C. CAMP NOTES Two divorce suits charging cruelty were filed in district court this week. Elmer Hartzel asks a decree of separation from Alberta Hartzel, alleging she failed to care for him during an illness and frequently called him vile and abusive names. They were married at Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, on August 11, 1917. The plaintiff agrees to pay alimony of $40 a month and asks that his wife be given custody of six minor children, two of whom are wage earners. The other suit was filed by Doyline Jones against Edward Inen Clinton Jones. They were married at Castle Dale on March 28, 1930. Monthly alimony of $25 and attorney fees are sought by the plaintiff. on ek Cruelty Alleged In Two Divorce Actions PRICE. UTAH coverage Ability to prevaricate, usually reper cent and that collections exceeded the original estimate garded as an unworthy trait, will be by more than $150,000. The rate of ,an admirable asset at the meeting of contribution for 1936 was Price post No. 3 of the American of one per cent of the pay roll. The Thursday (tonight), when the rate for 1937 will be one and local organization sponsors its anper cent. nual liars contest for legionnaires of The unemployment compensation the Fifth district, comprising Carbon, fund is created to provide a weekly Emery, Grand, San Juan, Duchesne benefit for persons who have had a and Uintah counties. job but have lost it. Benefits are based upon half pay, but not to exceed so Keen that Lion Hacking oi trice, $15 per week, and to continue for a defending champion actually thought weeks period of not to exceed sixteen it necessary to tram for the event. will Benefits m any period. The committee in charge of the be payable after January 1, 1938. To secure benefits, the applicant must meeting includes Arthur E.L. Craven, and Ervin Wright. present himself at a state employment Lloyd Perigo work for available and be office, Loans which his registration record will show he is capable of doing. If, after In iveveaieu tal $787,248.24, there being 67,457 em- two weeks, the state is unable to get start. will a benefits covered the the job, person unemployment by ployees Seventy-tw- o loans totaling $40,- insurance. Daggett county reports The weekly amount and the duration the of 350.06 time unwere in Carbon county made which come the length depends upon only four employees der this new law. Salt Lake county applicant has worked and the amount by the resettlement administration reports 44,304 and Utah county 3,349. he has earned. Only employers con- down to February 28, 1937, according Ray R. Adams, director of the di- tribute to the unemployment compen- to information received by Allen T. Sanford, state director of the national vision, stated that delinquencies were sation fund. MiiimmiiimmHiiiiiiiiHiiiHimiiHininiiMHiiiiiiiiiimHmiHtimiiHmimnminiimimimimimmHWWMimiimmmmiimninmmnmmmiwmiimwiMmiiimmi emergency council from C. O. Stott, head of the rural rehabilitation divisMore than 98 employers in Carbon, Emery, Grand and San Juan counties contributed $38,667.98 to the state unemployment compensation fund on their 1936 pay rolls, according to figures released by the unemployment compensation division of the state industrial commission. There are 3,780 employees protected by unemployment compensation in tTiese counties, which constitute Region No. 5. The tabulation for this district as released by the unemployment compensation division shows the number of employers, employees and the amounts paid, respectively, as follows: Carbon, 84, 3,452, $34,966.86; Emery, 8, 212, $2,386.41; Grand, 5, 112, $1,275.74; San Juan, 1, 4, $38.97. Collections throughout the state to- . ? ? j rv? Hotel T f ?T Temple Square ? ? Rates $1.50 to $3.00 POPULAR AND DISTINCTIVE Ernest C. Rossiter, General Mgr. EASTERN UTAH ELECTRIC CO. fT 9 West Main V Price Phone 55 ty ' A NATIONAL v4 DISTILLERS BOURBON 93 PROOF FORMER PRICE INSTRUCTOR SERVES AS CONTEST JUDGE Glen Guyrnon, former instructor in dramatics at the Carbon county high school, served as one of the judges of the sixth annual San Diego county one-aplay tournament sponsored recently by the Pasadena Community playhouse. Mr. Guyrnon, who left here a year and a half ago, is now dramatics instructor at the Oceanside Carlsbad junior college. The first play he directed for that institution was The Whole Towns Talking, which was one of his most successful productions when he was a member of the Carbon high faculty. ct Then Is ABERDEEN An DEALER In Your Community Never The Twain Shall Meet Every drop of Windsor', aged in the wood MONTHS before bottling. A product of National Distillers one of the nations largest distilling organizations -- .18 Now thats a good phrase to be used In connection with east is east and west is west, but its an different situation altogether when prospective customer and advertiser are concerned. For the latter two meet, and that regularly every week, in The largest paid weekly circulation in Utah, which contacts hundreds of homes in eastern Utah every week to make possible the tapping of this splendid market at cost, very low, too. Join the popular procession toward the advertising columns of The Superior Circulation Supreme Reader Interest. - Windsor kept in its entire ageing period. warehouses during te, PRODUCERS is 50 one-mediu- Sun-Advoca- te .... STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY noxALBimujnuwohtCTBcoaroaanos.iftwTOBK.ST 5 t |