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Show THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1947 THE LEHI SUN, LEHI, UTAH THURSDAY, JULY 2 Descendants of John and Emma Grace Austin are holding a family reunion Sunday, July 27 at Fairmont Fair-mont Park in Salt Lake City, beginning be-ginning at noon. This is the 100th anniversary of the marriage of the pioneer couple, who now have 500 living descendants, nearly one hundred hun-dred having died. Mrs. Lucile Rhodes and Miss Lexia Bateman entertained at a dinner Sunday for Misses Thelma Arleen and LaPriel Goodwin of In-glwood, In-glwood, California, and Mrs. Rulon Fox and Miss Norine Fox. Elder Alvin Schow, who is in the New England States mission field, writes that he is now traveling trav-eling in the country areas of New Hampshire, and is making many new contacts. Earl Stice,' station agent at Truckee, California, telephoned his mother, Mrs. Alice Stice, Thursday Thurs-day evening. 0cut Tom Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Diehl of La-guna La-guna Beach, California are visiting this week with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Powell and other relatives. Ralph and Arthur Powell returned re-turned Wednesday from Poison, Montana, where they had been called cal-led due to the serious illness of their mother, Mrs. J. T. Powell. Another brother, Dean, arrived there by plane Friday. Mrs. Edward Ed-ward Fox remained in Poison with her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Busker, who are visiting here from Rockford, Illinois, spent Monday in Provo visiting with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Owen and family of Palo Alto, California are visiting this week With Mr. and Mrs. Walter Webb. Mr. Owen is in the stake presidency at Palo Alto. Mr. and Mrs. Don Trane and family of Salt Lake City spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew And-rew Trane. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Winn and two children, Lorelei and Richard, of Maricopa, California are visiting with Mr. Winn's mother, Mrs. Mary Winn. They attended "The Restoration" in the Salt Lake Tabernacle Tab-ernacle Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Av C. Schow attended at-tended "The Restoration" in Salt Lake City Sunday evening. Mr. & Mrs.. Ernest Reimschissel of Provo called at the Junius Banks home Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Beck and Miss Maurine Brown spent Wednesday in Provo with Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Pat-rick Gaines, and Saturday and Sunday in Elberta with Mr. and Mrs. Kay Jolley. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Burgess and family of Salt Lake and Miss Lois Shepard of Alpine spent Monday Mon-day evening with Mr. and Mrs. Junius Banks. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Marti, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Patterson, Mrs. Mattie Coult, and Miss Judy Con- radi of Salt Lake City visited with Mrs. Theo Pierson Sunday aner-noon. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Busker of Rockford, Illinois arrived Friday Have you had One of Our New Television WAVES? Leaves hair soft, silky, easy to manage. No fuzzy ends. SPECIAL Television Wave 10.00 Complete with hair shaping, creme shampoo, and hairstyle FREDA PETERSON NORMA LARSON, Operators Freda's Beauty Salon ' Open Evenings by Appointment Phone 20-J Main Street evenincr to attend the Centennial celebration. They are guests of Mr. Busker's brother, Lloyd DusKer and family. His father, Edward Busker, who has been visiting here for three months, will return to Rockford with them next week. Irvin Ir-vin Busker is branch president at Rockford. Mrs. Mary F. Smith of San Francisco. California and Mrs. El- oise Fillmore of Provo visited Sun day with Mrs. Smith's daughter, Mrs. Wallace Banks and family. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Zimmerman and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Zimmerman Zimmer-man enjoyed supper in Provo canyon can-yon Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Robinson, Robin-son, Miss Marjorie Wilkins, Mrs. George G. Robinson and Miss Marie Ma-rie Robinson enjoyed a two day trip to Bryce Canyon Wednesday and Thursday. Mrs. Richard McMillan and two children of Salt Lake City spent Friday and Saturday with Mrs. McMillan's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil H. Peterson. Mr. and Mrs. Leon S. Taylor and four children of San Jose, California Calif-ornia are visiting with relatives in Lehi and Provo. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Beck of Inglewood, California are visiting here for two weeks with Mr. Beck's sister, Mrs. Robert Allred and family. Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Beck visited with relatives in Salt Lake City, returning in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Kartchner and four children of Napa, California Calif-ornia are visiting this week with Mrs. Kartchner's sister, Mrs. Wal lace Banks and family. Mr. and Mrs. Randall Schow joined Mr. and Mrs. Russell Schow of Provo and Mrs. Ada Greenwell of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, last week, spending a day at each of the Idaho Falls, Logan, Manti and St. George temples. Mrs. Theo Pierson is visiting in Salt Lake City this week with her son, Fred. Mr. and Mrs. Vern W. Webb and family have returned to their home in Blackfoot, Idaho, after spending three weeks here with Mr. and Mrs. Heber C. Webb and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Owen West and family of Denver, Colorado are visiting Mrs. West's mother, Mrs. Alice Stice this week. They came to bring their son, Owen Jr., to the Centennial Scout Camp. WE HAVE A FULL STOCK OF axinin C JSuppl les O SUGAR PECTIN O FRUIT JARS O LIDS O RUBBERS O PARAFFIN SPICES and many other items to make this Your Biggest Canning Year LARSEN BROS. "Where Quality and Courtesy go hand in hand" Mrs. Lettie Gudmundsen, Mrs. Julia Brown and Mrs. Andrew Trane attended the Blackhawk celebration in Heber Wednesday through Friday. I Uncle Sam Says r f t This is a good story and it's about you. nop. The chapter I am read ing is entitled "Security." It tells about your Payroll Savings, the easy, automatic way you are building build-ing up a comfortable nestegg for the future of yourself and your family. fam-ily. Best part of all, pop, is the fact that millions of my nieces and nephews neph-ews have the same Important place la this story of a happy future as yourself. They, too, are buying Unit ed States Savings Bonds regularly, U. S. Treasury Dtpartmnt Search for Metals Requires More Capital 4 f f T , 1 -c. 1 - i 1 - i V More underground work such as these men are doing is required in present day mining. The popular conception that mines were developed from the grass roots is far from fact. True, some of the great mines were found at or near the surface, but today prospecting calls for the expenditure expendi-ture of hundreds of thousands of dollars for exploration. Many millions of dollars have been poured into prospecting and exploration throughout Utah, that brought no ore returns, and many millions more spent upon successful success-ful seeking of ore. An example of this is the Silver King Coalition at Park City, which brings to mind men so well known that theirs are household names today in Utah Messrs. Keith, Kearns, Ferry, Ivers and Judge. ; : " Mining Activity Spreads They' were not rich men in those early days; in fact, they knew want and privation as they struggled with a lease on the old Mayower claims. Tenaciously, desperately, these men sunk a shaft. Hiring others when they had funds; work-a work-a shift for wages in adjacent properties prop-erties at times, and then duplicating duplicat-ing their efforts on their own workings. work-ings. By their stoic determination and sacrifice they overcame the adverse circumstances and finally succeeded succeed-ed in sinking a shaft to the 700 foot level and ore. This was the beginning of Silver King, a mine that has been in almost continuous production for over 75 years. Their accomplishments presents a challenge chal-lenge to present generations. t v 5 O . Around the rail at Salt Lake Stock Exchange where recent trading has broken all records. i - During the past nine months, the flow creates new payrolls, new Salt Lake Stock Exchange, the na- commerce and industry,, and new tion's leading mining market has communities, wi'nessed one of its most active , periods in the long and historic , " w true that money has been career of the institution, reflecting loST and w"l he lost in mine devel- tbe need for more metals to supply opment and those who cannot afford the post war demand. to ilose should not speculate. It is ,. , .. .. ,. pIeo true that great fortunes have Born shortly after the discovery been made by many who have back- of ore in Utah, the Salt Lake Stock ed a mining venture-Exchange venture-Exchange has been an important center for the development oflmin- Salt Lake Stock Exchange ing in Utah and the west. Many neld its nrst sessions on the street tmies throughout its history news west on Second South in 1888. of and ore discovery has virtually From the street it moved to a small rocked the walls of the old building Daclc room and is now housed in its on Exchange place with feverish own building on Exchange Place. mooing on tne noor lor tnis or that After manv vears f irart.ivitv. it is BTatifvinB' tn Rpe a rptnrn nf An active mining Exchange activity on the exchange, which Btock. makes for a free flow of venture capital for speculative enterprise, lends credence to the belief that mining once again will get back on Capital makes new mines and new its feet, and that we soon witness an productive industry. Venture capi- end to restrictive taxes and legis-tal legis-tal is the blood stream of resource lat.ion that stifle development and development, and its unhampered growth of the state's resources. FURNITURE REPAIRING Overstuffed Sets Bottoms Re-tied DAVS $15.00 CHAIRS $10.00 Refinishing Upholstering RerGlueing Custom Made Slip Covers . Rug Cleaning Furniture Cleaning m . New Mattresses All sizes PHONE 331-W FOR FREE ESTEUATE ZION'S Furniture Exchange Located Across Street North From Hospital Uncle Sam Says ir ( ass. I, c " i Tou, too, can be a harvester and not tnce or twice a year but every month. What farmer even the wheat men and women of Kansas and the Dakotas ho at this moment mo-ment are reaping the greatest harvest har-vest In history would not prize a harvest every month.-.The harvest-a-month plan has popular name the Bond-a-Month Flan." Begin today to-day sowing financial ' seeds.; . For every $18.75 yon plant during x montb In the form af ' a . United States Savings Bond $25 win sprout 18 yeara later. ' .- ' 1 l U.S.Trttnry Dtpartmtnl Armed Forces Study Defense Board of Five Generals to Work With Civilians on Various Problems. WASHINGTON. Alarmed at th frightful lessons learned in th a'tom-shattered cities of Japan and the Bikini tests, the armed forces have set experts to work on defensa plans for American cities and fighting fight-ing men. The army disclosed creation of s board of five generals, ith an advisory ad-visory group of other officers, "to study the question of civil defense for the United States insofar as it pertains to war department particfc pation n this essential part of na tional defense planning." The board will work with' outstanding civilian authorities. ' The board's president is Maj. Gen. Harold R. Bull, .chief of operations for General Eisenhower when he commanded the European theater. The navy meanwhile Jias appointed appoint-ed a "director of atomic defense," Rear Adm. William S. Parsons, physicist and technical chief for the joint army-navy task force at the Bikini atomic bomb experiments. Seek to Prevent Chaos. Studies of the army board, it Is .understood, are directed not only at anti-atom-bomb measures but any other methods of modern mass destruction, de-struction, including bacteriological warfare. One official explained that procedure must be perfected to prevent pre-vent chaotic conditions, such as occurred oc-curred In Hiroshima, from arising out of any form of enemy attack. Such eonditions could be exploited militarily by an attacker. Those discussing the survey emphasized em-phasized that it should be viewed only as spadework, the presentation of problems to be expected, with some recommendations for meeting them. Persons familiar with the policy underlying establishment of the board reasoned this way: A national plan for defense against atomic age attack, involving as it does such questions as dispersion of industry and possible shifts of populations, involves in-volves fundamentals definitely not the responsibility of the military. The military, however, is in a position to advise on such subjects as underground under-ground shelters for populations and factories as well as to carry out active ac-tive defense measures against an attacking force. - The navy, with a mission somewhat some-what different from the army's, centers cen-ters its major interest on protection of its own ships and shore installations. installa-tions. However, Parsons, who has worked on the atomic bomb project since its inception, also is directly interested in civilian protection against the weapon. Descendant of Chan The mesgel was consider scendant of the chard, used as a vegetable by th? In 300 B. C. u little . f look jrffl Tfl reac I ri asce I ijt 'ons - Wai KM 'grai Demure and sweet in ruffles puffed sleeves, and a i tenr sho i!Sun Make it with, McCall aIIpr;sho Vinrr pattern , 6944. A dream ibriii in dotted swiss or chami;Br tinu We Sell thrc wee Arc! the ginr Printed Pattei YARD GOODS-NOTKp ord. Broadbent & k nd mob McCAU , effo dun funs flitic . T , exP ovei held unti v t; Ions Lak 29 t lead 3ou' ing i. t; pari Undi firsl twei the irsi' 3rc -arc A )e b rod Ver: Aug "V , : Aug A : Heaping Dish of Goodneg;1 The best pickrup.in the world when you're fee!iC0U! hot and tired is a heaping dish of our delicious fe ing, creamy-rich ice cream. Your favorite fresh fr'3! flavors to enjoy at home or at our fountain. & in bulk.' -- - t g S1.60 gallon for parties . ' EVANS CAFE i ' s M gra tip-S Sati men ami! swir will A cont so 1 Post beer dres i M City Eva orac folic Mrs Dow Second West and Main Lehi 9:ty, Mirl ,ican Phone Am. Fork 678-J for Club or Party Reserve Dan DANCE Every Tuesday and Saturda; IVIusic by Fremont River Rangers LUCKY 7 Barn Dane |