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Show FRIDAY; PAGE EIGHT COUNTY K9CB&T Telephone 1S-- T VOLUME XXXV, No. 30 FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1935 (Continued from page vlsi-efriends and rel?.Uves here Subscription, $2.00 per year last and Sunday. Saturday $2.50 year per Foreign Mr. and MiM. Ivn Johnson Editor B. M. Roberts, C;;co, visited Mrs. Johnr .'t William Koweli Sat M. Published Every Friday Morning in andcl Mrs. this last week. day Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Green of Entered m the post office in Cas-t-te Thompsons visited friends hen- Dale, Utah, as second class man Sun lay. matter, under the act of March S, P G. Dufford of Grand Junction M79. Colorado, was in town on business 1-- fo-k?- . 4 1935 ABSTRACT CO J O. Sorenson , o 4 All C CORPS ll- . o THINGS TO REMEMBER By R. M. HOFER Betrlnnine December 15, 1934. an Oregon country editor kept track of the number of envelopes he re ceived containing publicity on dif- ferent subjects. On February 1, he had 102 stamped envelopes from private firms and 112 govern ment franked envelopes. Congressman Fish recently point ed out that the cost to the taxpayers for the franking privilege en1935, joyed by public officials, govern- mental departments, commissions, "authorities." etc..) had jumped from $14,000,000 to $23,000,000 the past year. messages stamp-fre- e from governmental sources, received by this editor In six weeks, exceeded all stamped' publicity he received from all private firms. Frank material drained the taxpayers stamped material maintained the post of flee Industrial News Review. Bishop John H. Taylor was a business visitor at Provo over the . week-en- , The The fmall daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bryant Jewkes has been very d. Mrs. Eliza Woodard is home af ter spending the winter with he children. Mrs. Julia McNeil is home after spending the winter with her daughter in Salt Lake City. Miss Merlle Anderson enter tamed 30 little guests Sunday afternoon, the occasion ,being her Refresh- birthday anniversary. ments were served. Fred Cox was home from the CCC camp a few days last week. Mrs. Clirty Cox spent a few days at Manti and Ephraim visit- tog relatives. The water bond, voted last rerulted In 122 for the bond and 8 against. Mater Tomy Humphrey entertained 20 guests Thursday after noon. The ocassion being his birthday.' Refreshments were serv ed. Wllfor Peterson of Ferron and were home mjesJohariej at our Sacrl-rnemeeting Sunday. Miss Ried of Oangeville spent week-ens the here as a guest of her sister. Mr. Aleonda Hansen and little son, of Spring Canyon is visiting H. M. Edwards of Rochester nere Paul Anderson of the B. Y. U. . was home for the week-enMr. and Mrs. G. E. Anderson went to Pice Sunday. d. Ferron this week-enMrs. Berth 01sen and Mrs. Sve- lyn Brodedck entertained at a rook social Friday evening at the home oi Mrs. iirodencK. A host of relatives and friends met at the home of Mrs. Stena Johnson on Wednesday to honor Mrs. Johnson's birthday anniverd. visitor in Price. Monday. Mrs. Nellie Tuttle entertained at a quoting bee Friday, afternoon. A hot chicken supper was served. Mrs. Lizie Robertson was very ill the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Van Buren were guests at the Orien ScovHl home lunday evening. Bishop Taylor and Lee Jewkes were our home missionaries Sunday afternoon. IThey gave us timely topics. Mrs. Elva Crawford entertained the Ladies Improvement club with 12 members present. A spring program was given. A number of friends surprised Mrs. Lydia Grange. Sunday evening. The occasion was her birthday anniversary. A very enjoyable evening was spent. Rod Swasey narrowly escaped death Saturday when a truck load of hay tipped over near Huntington. Mr. Swasey was rushed to the Price hospital with a number of broken ribs, a broken arm and a bad cut on his head and possible internal injuries. He is In a very critical condition. The high school presented a play "Fine Feathers," Wednesday night. Proceeds were to help finance the band's trip to Provo. Mrs. Maggie Cox visited to over the week-end- o Ken-ilwor- th CLAWSON (By Special Correspondent) a business a WBn PLEASE MENTION Melvto Pettey of Salt Lake was ADVERTISEMENTS ANSWERING business visior neTe. Monday. home A baby boy arrived at the of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Nelson, Erne ry will furnish the program BUSLNESS CARDS ADDED TO.THIS LIST AT 25 A We in P.-- T. A meeting here on Thursday. March 28. Mrs. Cora Charilesworth is visiting in the HH1 home. Reece Pettey Member Federal Ruerr Grant Leslie and WALLACE MORTT ARY CARBON-EMERand Neal Wilcox are home from the BiSl A distinctive funeral service CCC camp for a VisitPrioe, Utah tl Man-Ranger Jorgensen of the Total Deposits fc Ptoone 128, open day and night Forest, was in town Tuesday. a was Cook Prices at your Suiting Member Federal DepoU Farm Demonstrator business visitor here Tuesday. Insurance CorporaiSii A. N. WalLxco, Mgr. Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Williams of Castle Dale viited here, Sunday. Elders Ward and Oveson of Cleveland were home missionaries reports ty and r.nld urpnt.Vun. here Sunday. the lower reefs est eof hare Washof Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Beach w head Ellis of Mr. and Mrs. Dave the Ices of seventy-fivThese wesk. week. last here last visited from poison ington, fheep herd bedside of Mrs. BeachVbfift p o sheep belong to the seventy-fiv- e The Joseph Petersen. ANNIE J. PETERSON KLG Ferron. fvom Willie Whitlock has died all to one night. to be with his father, Mrs- Anne MONTICELLO uuiiu ine. Peterson King, 52, wife of are suffering heavilly from pover William T. King or Monuceiio. d'ed at a Moab hospital Wednesday morning of heart disease. Mrs. King was bom December 8, 1382. in Castle Dale, a daughter of the late James and Annie E. Peter sen. She attended the Utah state Agricultural college at Logan and later taught school in San Juan md Emery counties. She also attended summer school sessions at the Univerity of Utah. Active m S. church work, he served a mis sion to Australia with her husband. She held a number of offices to church activities. Surviving, besides her husband, are a daughter, Delia King Funer; seven brothers and! sisters: MtrS; Elsina M. Christensen. Parley and Myrtle Petertsfen, Salt Lake City; Leo and Vern Petersen, Castle Dale; Mrs- A. O. Larson, Oorvallis, Wjft m . THE RECKLESS PEDESTRIAN Last year the automobile fatality Oscar Blackburn of Wellington, recced touched an high, was a business visitor in town last with a total of 36,000 killed. One riday. Mr. and Mrs. A. c. Gardner, who of the worst aspects of the record have spent the past week visiting was the pedestrian toll. Those who believe that accidents r?iatives m Huntington, have re to their home, here. Involving a car and a pedestrian turned H. O. Barney made a business are always the fault ol the motorto Moicn. jmaay. ist, are sadly mistaken. In five out trip The F. E. R. A. workers have of every eignt acciaemts in wmcn a neison on foot was killed by a made quite an improvement on the sidewalks, on which they car, the pedestrian was entirely to town nave oeen working for the past blame. Thirty-fo- ur days per cent of the ped lew A number of our youne folks at estrians who were killed because of their own carelessness, were tended the Junior Prom at Ferron struck while crossing In tne mid- Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Price have return dle of the block or against traffic ed from Schoffied where Mrs. Price signals. Seventeen per cent were has been attending her sic,k father, killed while walking on the wrong side of the road. Eleven per cent James Metcalf, who recently died of the pedestrian fatalities involv alter a period or mness. A cottage meeting was held at ed children playing in the streets Nine ter cent of the fatalities re the home of Mr. Kirtly Tucker sulted from walkers stepping sud- Wednesday night. Franklin Jensen has recovered, denly out from behinl parked carsks from a period of illness. into the stream of traffic. It Hcmer Duncan made a trio to a significant, fact that, in 1934, the rate of death per pedestrian acci- Lawrence on business, Saturday. dent was 45 per cent worse cros Mr. Johnson, tne rehabilitation agent, has been in town on busising in the middle or tne diock than at the Intersection, and 74 ness the past few days. a meeting was neid m town Sat per cent worse crossing against urday night fot the purpose of signals than with them. like a water board for the new the The careless walker, careless driver, constitutes grave town water system. The follow ing were chosen as board mem problem that must be definitely solved if we are to lower the auto- bers: H. O. Barney. Luther Tat- mobile toll. The cure for pedestri tcn, Ray Reid. Marion Blackburn an recklessness is purely up to the and Andrew Wright. individual all the traffic laws to Mr. and Mrs. OSCar BlaCKDUrn the world cannot make a person and family of Wellington and Mr. wallk properly on streets and high and Mrs. Bill Davis of OrangevUle ways if he is congennauiy careiess. were visitors in the home of Mr. Mrs. Alvto Blackburn, Sunday. Obey the signals, never crass to and Mrs. Nina Price and children of the middle of a block and keep her your eyes open and your mind busy Emery visited the home of Monwith the problem of safetly reach mother, Mrs. William Reid, all-iti- me g- : or cal- Delana Jensen fell from the slide on the school play ground and suffered .a broken wrist. A. will give the The Emery p.-- and Mrs. Clifford Ostler, Mon attended the funeral, except Mrs, Ore-- , Larsen. those from a distrance attending were: Mr. King's mothdr and brother, Mrs. Edison King of salt Lafce city and Warren King and wife of Grace, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Bicknell Robbins, Mr. and Mrs. Potter and Mr. Spence of Salt Lake City. all. with the ex ception of Mrs. Robbins, were com panion missionaries to Austialiai, ana Miss ciata Harvey of Salt Lake, a L- D. S convert who Mrs. King when she re turned from Australia. Funeral services were conducted fjaturday, March 23 to Castle Dale ward chapel. Burial was made in' Castle Dale Cemetery. A. O- - Among - o CLEVELAND T. program at the meetingonoi tne soutn Emerf high school Thursday evening. Mrs. Weldon Olsen had the misfortune to break her foot, when crossing a rough piece of road on returning from the show last week. parent-rteacher- s' o (Continued from page 1.) Arthur Shepherd underwent a very serious operation for appendicitis and stomach trouble at the Price hospital last week. He is reported improving. Errol Litster is taking a course t the B- Y. U. at Provo under a special professor. Paul and Kenneth Carlon of Mutual are busy preparing the home recently bought fcy their father;, Oscar Carlon from Andrew Larsen. The family expects to move down to the near future. Mr. and Mrs. Evan Jones, who nave spent the past three months in alt Lake, where Mr. Jones has served in the legislature, have returned home. Sunday School conference was held here last Sunday. Stake aids Guy Brown and Mary Roper were m attendance and gave some very good instructions. Births the past week are: Mrs. Lawrence Thordersen a girl, (thei first); Mr. and Mrs. Levi Anderson, a boy; Mr. and Davis, a girl; Mr- and Mrs Loren Wells, a boy. Miss Delcina Curtis, who is' work at Helper, visited home folks a lig few days this week. Parley Thordersen Woi tv dersen and Arvid Larsen, who are uie a- x. u. at Povo, viso"euui"g aed home folks over the weekend-Thomaand William Guymon of OrangeviUe wore here in the of hrtmp miccm..i wsi Sunday. Ollena, the small daughter Cf Curte' 18 critic' aSv m ' Nellie Bawden brcther and Air and Mrs Victor Johnson of at the Whim-Mr- SS - FERRON (By Special Correspondent) Mrs. Will Hitchcock of Montna here because of the serious illness of hsi mother, Mrs. John Duncan. Mr. and Mrs-- H. A. Pettey visit. ed in Mohrland last Roland Henrie and children are visiting relatives in Castle Dale. Mrs. Dora Larsen of Roosevelt attended the Baiiey funeral Saturday and now is visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Hunter of Castle Dale visited' here Friday is week-Mrs- Prof-Pardoe- , Foods are More Mr-an- Mrs-Rober- t - Lillian Nelson and little Miss Hope Behiing of Price spent tne week-enhere. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cox of National were visitors here. Friday. Mesdames William Penney and Authony Whitlock of Kanosh visited their sister, Mrs. John Bailey, here, last week. Bruce and Reece Killpack visited in Provo, Thursday. They returned Friday with Dean Killpack, who came home from the B. Y. U. Mrs. Kate Swensen came home from Provo, Friday. miss Joye Bachelor and Mrs. Da Costa Clark of Provo visited here over the week-en- d. Dr. Clark returned with them to Provo for a lew days. Miss Faye Hills and Herman Behiing came down from Salt Lake and Mrs. for the Junior Prom, returning on who have been Russell atErickson Sunny-tid- e visiting omuraay. have returned home. Messrs and Mesdames Clark Jed Knight, who has the Frie, Harvey Allred, G. E. Ander past few weeks visiting spent with h son of Emery were visitors here children in, various parts of the state, has returned home. Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs- - L. P. Ralphs enter tatoed a number of their friends d with - o "uu!g - Mrs. Andrew Christiansen entertained at an afternoon social on Friday. Mable Anderson came down from Cleveland and spent the week eno. George Q. Edwards was a busi ness visitor at Castle Dale and at was in w BE GtJIDE - EMERY L. W. merit your suplS date, and YOU AND up-t- o Co-o- (By Special Correspondent) "Ralphs Malne Jewkes was a business ler here Monday. SHOPPING. N Y , sary. OUT-OF-TOW- - nt Authority has Just been receiv ed oy tn veterans' Aamimstrati nm to select .veterans for enrollment in the veterans' contingent of the Civilian Conservation Corps to fill vacancies at uamp veyo near st, George, Utah. A veteran of any war who was na can nonoraDiy cuscnargea, puss a eood physical examination is eligible to mke application. If the veteran has been previohislly enrolled in the Civilian Conservation Corps and was honorably disAppll charged he may catons may be submitted at any time, out win oe new until tne en rollment period which will beerto April 1st, 1935. Application blanks may be secured by applying to the Veterans' hospital Salt Lake City, f , utan. The quota for Utah has not been set. but It Is the desire of the Veterans' Administration that as many applications as possible be on hand on or before April 1, 1935. to ssure complete enrollment or the quota set lor uie state oi utan. , , (By Special Correspondent) Jr., Mgr. VETERANS' C. by kindergarten; OR ANG E VILLE Be sure of the title to the land you purchase. You can never Know tne true conoi- tlon without Investigating. It cifcials; song ' licensed Abstracter of Titles Oar Abstracts TeU Calif- School conference was held here Sunday. The Stake officials were present. The follow ing program was re naarea: we mentation of stake, ward and church o Castle Dale, Utah ' to Alns-wort- town. - trp Sesstce, THE FOLLOWING PRICE UERrm YOUR TAKEHIS DIRECTORY WITH OrangeviUe Miss Ruh Reid of have visaed here Monday. I iTmTjol 9 EMERY COUNTY , .atrhvizE d- Mrs. Marintha Arnold of Provo is visiting her sister, Mrs. Tea Fu reading. Neva Nutxau; song oy me nard Aniierson of Church HSstoy idepatment; talk, Virginia German.; Sunday. Hugh Kallagher was a Grand Instrumental duet, Bill Grange and Junction visitor Sunday and Mon- - Hugh Leonard; talks, Feton Moffit and Mr. Christensen; Closing song. day. Merlin and Elmo Geary spent the Levi Reynolds of Provo visited at home, to attend Sun- the George Beebe home 1st week- - week-en- d end. day school conference. Bruce Weighing of Rocky Ford, Al Gardner, who has spent the Colorado, visited friends here a past few months in the ManU temfew days last week. ple, returned with his bride. Mrs. Robert Beebe left for h, The Primary meeting day has Nebraska, last week upon been changed to Thursday. They receipt of word of her mother's are working hard on their May illness. Day Festival The Green River Civic club met Eva Marshall and Melvin Mills Monday evening in the Midland were married Tuesday, March 26. hotel. H. C. GallaEher renorted he Miss Roama ColDard, who has would go to Salt Lake Wednesday been working in Price, returned in a fourth attempt to get the Saturday for a short visit at home. Utah State Road Commission to o locate the new road through this SalMoTnlWeThFrlSal 3 week-en- Sunday c--f were vlsitots was Gertrude Fredirckson the over Gate Castle from home MUNTtNGTOtf returned from their ornia. d fr evening-Mis- s ,9 Mr. and Mrs. Glen Jones ) w Brinkerhoff here Friday i GREEN RIVER OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF EMERY COUNTY MARCH . ing your destination. That advice day. amounts to "life insurance" for the pedestrian. Industrial News Review. o See us for Butter Wrappers. FROCRXtS ExUbllahed 1909 1935 MARCH UTAH fcSflEIY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE PALE. itv - Je Te&J ILICflDC SaS Thursday night. M. D. Wayman returned from a MOLEN (By Special Correspondent) trip to Clearfield, Monday. Miss Carrie Peterscjn is visiting relatives in urana junction, Colorado. Chester Pettey and Marvin Bryan, who are attending school at 9$ I 4 (Too Late For Last Week) Manon McDonald d week-enCedar city, spent the City, where he is attending06? here. Lyle Bryan drove them back h001 of the Utah Agricultural college. Saturday, returning flUnday. Mr. and Mrs. Cheer McNeil vis beginning 0f the - ited in OrangevUle, Tuesday. Mrs. Clell Hatters or Duchesne is visiting in the L. E. Edwards home. Mark WUHams of Roosevelt, vis ited here, Friday. Mrs. Kate KUloacK wno nas the winter in Fort Collins, Colorado, with her son. Hugh Stev ens. Is visiting here a few days be fore going to salt uuce ior tne summer. Miss Jane Killpack, who is teacher in Columbia, visited here Friday and Saturday. Mesdames ia vera Aoenn ana nt lasfSte- & wU? esides the regular M study engineering. MSusan .llrs. Beach of visited at the home of her Sana son, Llcyd CCIIM1' It does not boil valuable vitamins out of food, to be poured down drain pipes . Heating speeds are set exactly for recipe temperatures, avoiding excessive boiling, and retaining food values. Why one-fift- h of your pour food money into the sink? - her first acquXKe her new greaugrandson Among those suffenne waS Sht frnr Ttr.. ana son. Clawscn, were business here. Tuesdav News from a large sheep herd on Tiilino ,ua . t?f ML PWBE ETC. |