OCR Text |
Show X Microfilm Corp. 141 P'.erpont Awe. oiithem VOLUME XXV NO. 38 s c albumin. Camma Globulin: ..This part of contains antihodies. the plasma These are the bodys defense against infections bv germs and viruses. We all know of babies that have repeated colds, bronchitis, earaches and The laboraare puny and whinev. tory report of the blood shows low Give this infant gamma globulin. sufficient gamma blobulin and a normal healthy baby results almost over night. 5 pints of blood equal 1 dose of gamma globulin. Fribrinogen: This fraction is con cerned with the clotting of blood in pregnancy. Occasionally, following birth and during pregnancy, the mother begins to hemorrhage. Transfusions are given with poor or no results. When these fail, one or two doses of fibrinogen generally 15 pints stop the bleeding at once. of blood equal 1 dose of fibrinogen. Serum Albumin: This is the food part of the blood that feeds the body-cellthe necessary protein material for growth and good health. In severe Brights disease with marked albumin loss, in tire urine, the case shows marked improvement with serIn cases of severe um albumin. shock, without hemorrhage, serum albumin takes the place of blood transfusions. Following severe bums with marked loss of serum, the use of serum albumin is frequently a 5 pints of blood equal 1 dose of serum albumin. Another fraction, the antihaemophiliac, prevents bleeders from bleeding to death. These are just a few of the marvelous fractions formed in the blood stream, in addition to the blood cells themselves. Many others are being investigated by the American Red Cross with numerous scientists throughout the country. All of these are furnished to the Medical profession by the American Red Cross without charge. life-save- r. Gets Birthday Surprise Norman Swapp, Kanab Volunteer Fire Chief, was given a surprise birthday party Thursday evening in the fire department building. Volunteer Firemen and their wives turned out in good numbers to wash Norm happy tidings for the event. . m ' ' Weekly Hews Holes MTfiiv.', Earl Spendlove He 0 w A 1 n: :v V.W part of Utahs Tourist Reciprocity program. All Utah communities are urged to promote the project! Utahns - . See Utah First. Lake as Weekly flews Release Lifelong GIsndala from Resident Cnried Your County Agent d Recite Temple Vows D. Wayne Wednesday, June 19 Rose 1 have talked with a lot of are out Wedding announcements this past winter and almost this week announcing ttie marriage all of them agreed that we should of Miss Ina Randall, daughter of do something more than we are now Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Harvev Randall in the marketing of our of Holbrook. Arizona, and Mr. KIe doing Meetings were held during R. Macdonald, son of Mr. and Mrs. the winter to discuss this problem. G. D. Macdonald, of Kanab. At one of our first meetings a comThe popular young couple are mittee of livestockmen were selected being married in the Arizona Temple bv tlie stockmen present to review at Mesa, Arizona. They will ho alternate methods of marketing our feted at a reception in Holbrook livestixk. Those selected to serve that same evening, June 22nd, at on this committee were Fred E. 710 West Erie street. Heaton, Donald Swapp, Cecil Pugh, The newlyweds will he honored Cornell Chamberlain and Vard HeaThis group under the leaderJuly sixth in Fredonia at an open ton. house at the home of the brides ship of Chairman Cornell Chamber-lai- n has met a number of times this brother Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Ranwinter to talk over this marketing dall. A group of Utah The bride is a graduate of Hol- program. toured California to view brook schools and attended Arizona PalState College at Tempe, and has their marketing methods. Milo Plans Kane from went mer County. been employed in Fredonia for the were formulated on the bus while past year by the Kaibab Lumber Co. metThe groom is a local stockman and viewing Californias marketing is a graduate of Kanab schools. He hods. Morris Taylor, Market authority ashas served with the armed forces. from the Utah State University, The couple plan on ' making their sisted in. putting together all of the informajon and putting It down on home here following a honeymoon. papery' This tenative program was presented to our local committee which felt that this was a good proBig gram and a meeting was called the In Taylor Making? first of Maythisin which Morris marketHoprs presented cooperative New York American Newspaper ing program to livestockmen who Cuild President Joseph F. Collis is were present. asking delegates to the annual conWe now have the agreements and vention of the guild in July to set the method. of carrying them out all the unions sights on a $200 weekly worked up and it is now time to do four-day minimum pay and a week something about this marketing pro"The best and fastest way to ob- gram if we are going to. tain more money may be through A meeting will be held in the Kathe four-da- y week, Mr. Collis said, nab Courtroom at 8 p.m. on Monpointing out that the four day week day, June 24th, to explain this agreewont mean an extra day of recrea- ment and start the sign-uA simtion but will mean, in most cases, ilar meeting will be held in the Seman extra days pay at overtime rates. inary building in Orderville on Wednesday, June 26th. I sincerely hope that all livestockmen in Kane County Card of will attend this important meeting. If your wives are interested bring We wish to take this means of exthem too. thanks and gratitude pressing our They say when you stick your to the many who assisted at the time of the passing of our loved neck out you may get it chopped Brother and Uncle. We especially off. Have you ever watched a turappreciated the many beautiful flow- tle? He doesnt go anywhere until ers and expressions of sympathy. he sticks his neck out. See you at The Young Family the meetings. live-stex- k. Wages, Shorter The p. Thanks Funeral services held in Glendale, Wednesday, June 19, 1957 for Lois Spencer and conducted bv Bishop Rex Bauer in the Glendale Ward Chapel, 4vere as follows; Song, "Oh Myj Father" by the Glendale singing tnothers and daughters, accompanied by Elizalieth Esplin. Prayer by Bishop Lue- H. - Brinkerhoff. Maurine A trjo, Verla Iverson, Mackelprang and Lillith Pugh sang That Wonderful Mother of Mine, with Elizabeth Esplin at the piano. Bishop Rex Bauer was the first speaker, followed with a talk by Lane Tait of Maurine Mackelprang. Orderville played a trumpet solo, accompanied by Mercy Chamberlain. Edward T. Lamb of Mt. Carmel spoke on the life. 'of the deceased, followed with a vocal solo by Bert Carpenter of Cedar City, accompaniKeith ed by Mercy Chtmberlain. Anderson of Fredonia was the third speaker, followed with another talk by Joseph Swapp pf Provo. Sentiments were, read by Beatrice Workman, with the choir singing "Beyond The Sunset with the musical reading given by Lillith Pugh, accompanied by Elizabeth Esplin. Closing prayer was by Malcolm L. Robinson and dedication of the grave by Kent S. Anderson. Aunt Lois Spencer was 84 years old. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs, Iva S. Sorenson and Mrs. Leween Anderson both of Glendale, three sons, Karl Spencer, Glendale; Eldon of St. George and of Orderville, also a number of grandchildren. Former Resident, Robert Pugh, In Top Rating7 Robert Pugh, native of Kanab who is representiative for Standard Insurance Co. in Salt Lake City, is among those recently notified that they have met the qualificaions for membership in the 1957 Million Dollar Round Table. The Round Table is an intemation aj organization of leading life insurance producers who have sold a million dollars or more of life insurance in the previous calendar year or who are life members through having sold a million a year for 3 consecutive years. Programs at the annual meetings of the Million Dollar Round Table offer ideas to help members keep their professional service to their clientJ abrest of new - developments in taxation, estate planning, business insurance, and other aspects of inn surance. resorts are the usual sites for meetings, this years being at the Greenbrier Hotel, at Whie Sulphur Springs, W. Va., on 3. June Well-know- 30-Ju- ly Serviso Waits St. Gcsrge Fixing Airport iasitl Board Lines Up Decisions, Policies On Damsite School Land Dealings Soil Conservation 1 Don Hurley Palmer, Alton, was listed as among the graduates at Utah State University at graduation -exercises held June 1st in Logan. Don is a graduate of the College 'l of Agriculture and was among the eight hundred and forty students to Allen Cameron, left, of Panguitch hear Dr. Daryl Chase, USU president colored portrait of Brvcc presents and T. S. Peterson, president of the to Clarence-We- st for display Canyon Standard Oil Co. gie the principal in Hotel in Salt Temple Square addresses. More than 100 candidates for advanced degrees also received their degrees in the commencement exercises. Randall-Macdonal- UMoeitM Mir ) T 0 ,r( Alton Resident Gets Diploma At U.S.U $3.50 Yearly, 10c Single Copy Panguitch Man Helps Promote Tourist Trade Meet Deficit Last Year More Heeds Kandb's quota for blood donations have been set for 100 units this year, said Mrs. Anita Aiken, chairman of the bloodmobile, in announcing the June 26th date set to appear at the Kanab Ward Hall between the hours of 3 and 7 p.'m. for your donation to this worthy cause. "We didnt fill our quota last year Mrs. Aiken said and we need to hit the 100 units Your complete badly this year. support is asked for, and needed. Fractions of Blood Blood is satisfactory for transfusions onlv 21 days. Following this period, the plasma is drawn off and after being .cultured and checked for contaminiuTtm, is sent to be proThus a fractionated. cessed or number of valuable parts are obtained for use; the main ones being fibrinogen, and gamma globulin, serum Ia5,&' KANAB, UTAH, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1957 Bloodmobile To Be In Kanab June 26, Chairman Asks Added Donations To Nation ai editorial From The Salt Lake Tribune Whats the matter with you? asked Llovd Heaton when I shopped at his sheep camp in Sink Valiev. he You used to be a grass man, continued, but now all you write alxiut is concrete lined ditches. I dont mind having people comat least plain about this column it shows that some one reads it. OK, this time I'll write about grass. After seeing what last falls plantings look like I am a more confirmed grass man than I ever was. The seeding Llovd and I was looking at So does in Sink Valley looks good. the weeds. With the start it has had, I am sure the grass will make a go of it. but if the weeds were killed, I believe the grass would be it ready to be grazed a year would if the weeds were allowed to grow. After we looked at Lloyds, grass, we crossed the wash and looked at a Tall Wheatgrass planting that Mil-toRoundy made a few years ago. The grass is practically all dead. From my oliservations, I would say that the cause of the death is a combination of drouth and early spring Crass just cant be grazed grazing. ever year until after the soil moisture is gone and there is no chance for regrowth. From what I have seen ... n and read, Tall Wheatgrass doesn't stand the drouth that the others will stand anyway. At Glendale, Rex Bauer has one of the best plantings of Intermediate Wheatgrass that I have ever seen. He put on about 20 pounds of Nitrogen per acre this year, and the grass is thrifty, has a dark green color and some of the leaves are as much as an inch wide. He should be able to harvest a lot of seed this fall. The Utah State Land Board decided Tuesday to take the in a program aimed at the solution of the over-al- l problem of exchange of state school lands for federal lands. In line with this policy the board: ve Voted to defer action on any disposal of Section 32, a school section adjacent to the Glen Canyon Dam area which is being sought by private bidders and the! Bureau of Reclamation, 1. To Seek Agreements Kanab High School Bids Let On Tuesday 2. Designated A. G. Nord, a board and Director Lee E. Young to seek agreements with the federal Bureau of Land Management for a general exchange of school sections which have been withdrawn in connection with the project and many of which will be covered by the reservoir. ' 3. Took under advisement bids received at Kanab last Friday for 22parcels of land in school sections along the route of the road from Kanab to the damsite. These bids, however, were taken under advisement- with the understanding that sales will be confirmed unless persuasive reasons against such sales are produced at a hearing scheduled for July 1. niemlx-r- , At the bid opening by the Kane County Board or Education, June 18, for work on the Kanab high school shower, locker and basement' rooms, the following were the apparent low bids, said Mrs. Rachel S. Findlay, Clerk of the Board. Rasmussen Construction Co. from Provo, Utah was low on the general contract in the amount of $31,927. Sail iv an Plumbing & Heating Co. of Hurricane, Utah won the plumbing bid with a total of $6,634.84. L. C. Guvmon Co. also of Provo won the nod on the electrical work with a bid of $1,700. Total amount for the tlifee bids Work is ti came to $40,261.84. begin immediately and Is to be completed by August 15, 1957. - Extends Time to Kane The board further indicated that title to these parcels (ranging in size from 320 to 10 acres) will be withheld until Kane County has an opportunity to develop and adopt a toning ordinance to control the 20-Ye- ar utilization of the properties. Board members pointed out, in discussing future policy, that Section 32, on which attention has been i S. D. Green, weather bureau in- focused by objections of the Bureau of Reclamation to the state sale of spector from Salt Lake City, was in Kanab this week making some Im- the land to private interests for a bid of 9107 per acre, is but me small provements at the local station and " fo award 'to' CTurnsey Brown" the item fn a large exchange problem pin for excel- involving some 150,00 acres of the Departments school lands within the Clen Canlent and faithful service. yon withdrawal and almost a half as Brown Mr. Creen cited Mr. million acres in all withdrawals. finest weather observers Ycathsr Observer Gets Service Award Pin East of Kanab, on Donald Swapns the seeding pronounced a failure ty experts like Earl Spendlove looks like a million dollars. This has been a good year for Crass, and seedings one of the everywhere look good. in the state. Derember 2, 1938 the equipment used for observation in Kanab was set up with Mr. Brown Movie appointed official U. S. Weather Previous to Mr. Bureau Observer. Looking Kanab Brown taking the job, Mr. Green furnished us with the following in20-ye- ar Productions Over For Locations According to Fay Hamblin, stock-ma- n and location promoter for this area, several Hollywood movie companies are here this week looking over various locations for at least two big films to be made in the near future. Mr. Hamblin said that Paramount Studios were here Monday, with Warner Brothers here Tuesday and Wednesday. Warners plan on two or three days of construction before starting to shoot, which will be abuot July 10th, Mr. Hamblin said. One of the films planned by the Warner studios will be Arrows In The Sun, written by a former resident of this area, Jonreed Lauritzen. Mr. Lauritzen wiotc the hook several years ago at his ranch home in the Arizona Strip country, and should be a natural for this area in filming. Cornell Wilde purchased the book from Mr. Lauritzen sometime ago. formation. Fragmentary and incomplete records were kept from January 1875 to October 1879 here and broken records kept from December 1899 to August 1900. Tlie service was revived by Z. K. Judd, September 1902 with records kept during the following years by Edwin E. Ford, D. D. Rust, Lucy C. Roak, Mrs. h Florian Johnson, Mrs. Ora W. and Mrs. Israel Heaton for varying lengths of time until 1936 when Mr. Brown took over. Besides inspecting the local equipment while here Mr. Green relocated The equipsame and painted it. ment is located at the Southern Utah Power plant here. Eat-oug- Kanab Principal Is Attending BYU Course I Provo Cafe, Dairy Queen Added To Kanabs Ever Growing Business Ernest C. Kirby, 6th grade teacher and principal at Kanab, is mirrentlv attending the fifth annual Utah Workshop on Economic Education at Brigham Young University. ( Mr. Kirby is one of 24 educators and administrators from Utah chosen clinic stagto attend the three-wee- k ed each year at BYU. - His scholarand board and ship coveiif-roo- m other expenses. The workshop is concerned with economic education in Utah schools, and deals with nearly all phases of Industrial leaders and economics. representatives of labor have been featured speakers, and the subjects have ranged from Utahs resources The opening of another new business in Kanab this week is the Cafe and Dairy Queen operation, under the management of Carol and Charolette Bamson. Mr. and Mrs. Bamson formerly operated the Piute Cafe in Circilville Utah. Thev opened their new cafe Tom Sterlhere Monday morning. for Dairy holder franchise State ing, Queen has spent the week here help- to taxation. ing the Barnsons get the operation Mr. Kirby is chairman of the pub- Role of Protection The members took the position that as custodians of the school lands they should seek to protect tlie Interests of the school trust funds by obtaining exchanges for all the school lands to be utilized by die federal project rather than to exchange a section or two of highly desirable land. Some expressed the view that if the exchange of Section 32 can lie worked out there is no reason why a program aimed at a solution of the whole exchange program cannot be iniated now; that this section should be used to get the overall problem recognized. The board took the position that while the state should cooperate in every way possible to support the project, board members did not feel school trust funds should be used or sacraficed for this purpose. Funeral Services Held For Kanab Resident Funeral services conducted last Friday in Kanab, with Bishop Claud M. Glazier conducting for Howard Young were as follows. Opening song by the choir, Sli.dl We Meet Beyond The River, conducted - by LeRoy Judd with Mrs. Leona Ffost , at the piano. Prayer was offered by Ami Judd. Dean McAllister sang In Happy Moments Day By Day accompanied Fred Heaton, by Charlotte Young. a neighbor talked on the life of the deceased. Julia Young and LeRoy Heaton sang In Tlie Garden with by Charlotte Young. accomanyment Eleanor Hall, a niece, spoke on the life of tlie deceased, followed with a talk by President Daniel S. Frost. The choir sang Abide With Me Tis Eventide. Closing prayer was offered by Mace with dedication of tlie George and editor the committee of, licity Clifton Young. Burial was by grave workshop newspaper. the Kanab City cemetery. Mr. Kirby was also one of four in recently appointed to go to Salt Lake to report on findings of the new State Curriculum Committee on the new state course of study. underway. as their official openFridays sotIthev are offering two ing day and sundaies, cf any flavor, for the price of one to everyone attending their found An Advertisement opening. on page four of the S.U.N. gives the details on their opening. merce pointed out The new operation is located in the improved facilities Among The United States Public Health the recently completed new building needed is a 5,600 foot black-to- p the Johnson property on Service urges all adults, under the on built runway and a building with office east center street by Calvin Johnson. age of 35, or even 40, to get at and restroom space. least one Salk polio shot as a proMembers of the Chamber of Comjection against the paralytic, form merce 'expressed hope that the citTime was when Dad was king of polomyelities. izens of St Ceorge will back the of the cave. He had only to trick "Slow Down and Live i can mean dinosaur , into the airport program and assist in secur- an occasional ing daily air service here from Salt family stewpot to rate an affection- a longer life because youre driving Lake City and Phoenix, Arizona safer. ate pat on the head. St. George With the awarding of a franchise to Bonanza Airlines to include St Ceorge in its daily flights, some improvements are needed at the local airport, officials of the St. Ceorge Chamber of Com- , AIR FORCE HELPERS -- Electronic equipment show above is now being used at Hill Air Force Base near Ogden, Utah, to master the mountains of paperwork connected with acquisition, stor. age and Inventory accounting of more than 250,000 different aircraft parts needed to overhaul jet fighter planes maintained by the base. The new IBM data processing system, which stores materiel information on rolls cf rr agnetic tape, is the first of its kind to be installed between Denver and Sen Francisco. ,sCv Of all human Inventions, the most worthless is an ex euseP . |