OCR Text |
Show Moose Disclose Added Details About Safety Leo Reid, Moose traffic safety chairman, announced further details of the lodges Child Safety Crusade at a meeting of the members this past week. Rather than setting rules, said Mr. Reid, we are going to urge that parents teach their ' children to save their own lives by assuming responsibility for setting seven safety examples." , The seven safety examples, upon which the Moose Child Safety Crusade will be based are as follows : (1) Lets stay out of streets (My child will never have respect for or fear of automobiles if either of us stands, loiters, works, talks, or plays in the street). (2) Lets walk on the left side, completely out of the Street, when there are no sidewalks. (3) Lets ride a bicycle, like an automobile, on the right side of the street. (4) Lets ride a bicycle single file, and as far off the road as ted by the Moose are now in the" process of being printed and will be circulated, first to all Moose members and thereafter to the ' general public. Most children, as well as auto drivers, fail to realize that it usually takes at least 73 feet to stop an automobile traveling within a 35 mile speed limit, even if the driver is completely sober, and fully alert, Mr. Reid stated. . To demonstrate the distance required to stop, a public demonstration will be held in the Price business district next Thursday, October 10. at 6 p.m. ' A driver selected by the police department will be required to make an emergency stop while traveling at a speed of 35 miles per hour. A gadget hung on the will leave colored bumper marks on the roadway, making the measurement of the stopping distance perfect, right down to the inch. Everyone is urged to see this demonstration. ,, ' . ad LDS Institute . . with information about the organization and to inform members of the participating teams as to their , ' Slated for standings. .' The membership drive this yqar Tomorrow Called Off will have two major objectives: first, to acquaint members of the in football organization with the activities, The second game succession on the Carbon high1 purposes and accomplishments of school schedule has been postponed because of the flu epideFall mic, it was announced yester' day, Tomorrow's game at Provo between the Carbon Dinosours Kills and the Provo Bulldogs,-- a conference game, has been postNo. poned to a yet undetermined date because of flu sickness at A roof fall near the Water Canthe Provo school. yon portal at the No. 2 mine of the here Last Friday the game Steel Corporation at SunKaiser between Carbon and Springville was postponed and that game nyside Monday at about 10 a.ni. has been tentatively set for the claimed the' life of a afternoon of October 9, .next miner. Killed instantly under the fallWednesday, at 3 oclock. ing coal and rock was Vernon Douglas Lund of Dragerton, Mr. Lund was employed. as a Flu Reported Moving shot firer and the crew with which he had been working had just Into Younger completed building a new concrete portal at the Water Canyon This Week Age Groups entry. The men were in the proThe flu epidemic which has held cess of enlarging the Water CanCarbon county in, its grip for the yon tunnel leading to the main occurpast several weeks is still preva- haulageway. The accident lent but seems to have shifted to red only a short distance away a younger age group, according to from the new ported. None of the information received from the other workers were injured. Mr. Lund had worked at the Board of Health oiffice based on reports from department nurses mine since 1949 and previous to ' - that was a teacher, at the Drain the area. It was reported that the junior gerton school. This was Carbon countys ninth high and high school age groups who have been hit hardesf are mine fatality this year, the third to their classrooms but at a Kaiser mine and the first in that absentee figures in the first the No. 2 workings. and second grades are now climbHe was born April 13, 1919, at ing. Spot checks by the depart- Mt, Pleasant, the son of Leslie ment of health at various indus- and Maiba Zabriski Lund. He martrial centers, indicates that the flu ried Marion Chryst in 1940 at has not as yet brought too much Farmington. absenteeism to the ranks of workSurviving besides his wife are two children, a son, Richard, and ers. The weekly report from the daughter, Diane; his parents, Mt. Utah State Department of Health Pleasant, and a brother, Leslie Indicates that there were 426 new Truxton Lund, Mt. Pleasant. cases of influenza reported from Funeral services were conducCarbon county during the week ted today at 1 p.m. in the Dragerending September 27. In a state- ton ward chapel, Church of Jesus wide front the total is 3205 new Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, and cases listed in the same report. graveside services were conducted A year ago there were 1565 influ- at the Mt. Pleasant cemetery unenza cases reported from through- der the direction of the Mitchell out the state. funeral home. Instruction in the basic missionary subjects will be given in a Brigham Young University Extension Services class to be taught at the Carbon LDS 'Institute of Religion in Price.' 9 A missionary approach to the gospel will be presented every Thursday, October 17 through December 5, from 7:30. to 9:30 p.m. at the Carbon LDS Institute of Religion. The course is designed to aid all members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints in the increase of their .knowledge of basic evidences of the divinity of the LDS church. Although not required for missionaries, the course will be help-fto such persons. A Dean director of the LDS Institute of Religion at Carbon College, will conduct the class. Various subjects to be included in class discussions include missionary problems of presentation, stages of mans existence, faith as a builder, the Book of Mormon as truth, and the whats and whys of the gospel. and inThe course is formation may be abtained through the Extension Services, BYU campus, or the Carbon LDS Institute of Religion. .Price, THE SUN AND NEWS-ADVOCA- Ready for board of governors will be conducted as a part of the breakfast meeting. Speakers t the breakfast will include Amel Denison, who will give the invocation, William J. Welsh, Jr., who will speak on This is a selling job; Harold O. Patterick, whose speech will describe Chamber of Commerce activities; John O. Barton, president, whose subject will be Lets look at our sales kits, and Boyd Bun Number 40 Membership Drive nell, who will describe the rules qf the contest among the teams participating in the drive in a speech entitled Battle Royal. Activities of t the Chamber of Commerce this year .have been highlighted by two outstanding business promotion campaigns, one of which was held in April and the other at the end of August. Both promotions were outstanding in the nature of the attractions presented and both campaigns 2 AN IMPOSING ADDITION . . . Breaking the hereskyline in the Parkdale section of Price is the addition to the hospital tofore TE Carbon County, Utah, Thursday, October 31957 Monday Miner At Sunnyside Missionary Course To be .Taught At 0c per Copy 1 Headquarters for the member- the Chamber of Commerce, and ship drive of the Price Chamber second, to increase the dues paid of Commerce, scheduled to be held by. those members whoseipresent Monday and Tuesday, October 7 payments do not comply lith the and 8, will be set up in the Silvag-n- i requirements of the constitution of v building at 12 East Main. Dis- the organization. The membership drive will open plays showing Chamber of Commerce activities, standings of the with a breakfast at 8 a.m. at the teams participating in the mem-- , Towne Cafe as a joint meeting bership drive, charts showing the of the board of governors of the amoynts of dues of the Chamber organization and of those particisince it was organized in 1950, and pating in the drjve itself. The reexhibits listing the firms and in- gular monthly meeting of the dividuals belonging to the organization, will be arranged around the walls so as to create interest in the drive, to provide visitors Roof . CONSOLIDATION A Game Carbon-Prov- o , . -- r Chamber of Commerce - (6) When my child is walking with me, I must take a little extra time , to let him look both ways, around corners, and then tell me when it is safe to cross. " (7) I must let my childs decision generally stand as final, even if I know that several opportunities to cross safely nave been overlooked. Experience, indicates that training, by example, is the most effective method of teaching a child to save his life,1 said Mr. Reid. The seven safety examples adop- - INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Volume 66 , possible. (5) Lets keep bicycles off the sidewalk, (As a parent, I may be liable for damages in base of injuries to a person by a bicycle on a sidewalk). AN one-stor- y City-Coun- ty brought large numbers of shoppers to Price during the two days each sale was held. The Price Chamber of Commerce again this year has pushed road promotion. Gomer Peacock, who heads the roads committee, has taken part in important road meetings at Vernal, Salt Lake City and other communities. He was accompanied to Salt Lake City by Vem Davis and was assisted in the presentation of Chamber views before the Carbon county commissioners by a number of the members of the organization. Activities of the Chamber which are not so quickly noticed by residents include the distribution of pamphlets throughout the United States advertising this community and area, 50,000 of these pamphlets having been distributed in the past few years. Place mats advertising the area are used in local cafes, restaurants and motels throughout the tourist season and some one hundred thousand of these were purchased in 1955. Tourists regularly visit the office of the Chamber ofvCommerce inquiring about travel in this area. The operation of the Blue Card committee remains one of the outstanding accomplishments of the Chamber of Commerce. Innumer-- l able requests for permission to make solicitations with Chamber of Commerce approval have been rejects and it has been estimated that last year businessmen saved over $4500 through the rejection of applications for permission to canvass when the programs they which is moving along well on its construction schedule. The four-stor- y structure is expected to be ready for occupancy early next year. Hospital Construction on Schedule Work on the new . addition at the hospital is moving along on schedule and it is expected the building will be ready for occupancy in the. spring of next year, according to Melvin Engstrom, hospital superintendent. y structure is now The represented were judged to have no merit. Many otjier inquiries as to the requirements for securing Chamber of Commrce approval of solicitations did not reach the point of making formal aplicpation for public Blue Cards. . The Chamber of Commerce is again this year joining with Price city in the purchase of Christmas i decorations for the city streets. These decorations are of permanent nature, consisting of wire and bulbs and large plastic figures which will be useful for many years. By the end of next year $3000 will have been spent by the Chamber of Commerce and the city for these decorations and it is anticipated that the city will have decorations at Christmas time that will compare with any other city of equal size. The Junior Chamber of Commerce assumes responsibility for selecting the decorations, assembling and installing them and removing and preparing them for storage at the end of the Christmas season. . The membership campaign this year will.be conducted along the lines followed a year ago. Appro- -, ximately thirty teams of two men each will canvass the business on Page Eight) The first floor will be taken up taking shape and makes an imposing apperance in the Parkdale with the administration offices, e area. The coloring makes dietary kitchen, laundry artd other the building unique in this area similar services. When complete, the and is a radical departure from the conventional masonry struchospital of Price will be one ture of most buildiqgs of this cha- of the finest facilities in the state. Contractor on the construction racter. The .exterior is of steel paneling with a porcelain' finish is the Dorlnnd Construction Comand a baked-o- n insulation, which pany of Salt Lake City.1 Civil Defense Course has the same insulation qualities of a concrete, wall. This For Area Nurses type of building is reportedly necinasmuch as the ground Continues Next Month essary structure offers no solid footing. A building of this type is 16 times The basic course for civil defense lighter than a similar masonry designed especially for the nurs- building. i es of this area will be continued The fourth story, which yill November 6 following its start house the obstetrical services and last Thursday and Friday, it has patients, is complete except for been announced by Mary Bon and the floor covering, which will be Lorraine Giocoletti, local nurses of vinyl tile, and the painting. who are handling arrangements The plasterers are now completfor the training. the third floor which will ing The course is being conducted house the surgical services. New Hotel Board under the direction of Mrs. Beasecond floor will house the The trice A. McHarg, chief of nursing medical, and diDiscusses Sale laboratory, service for the Utah State Civil Also included facilities. agnostic Defense Corps. theron this floor will be an Of Local Property Highlight of the course last apy and pathological laboratory. week was instruction and demonDirectors and officers of the stration of securing a patient to New Hotel company met WedColdance. be is will Keith nominated Irel a stretcher and lowering from a Burnett, Karbons Kampus Kingdom queen by Tot nesday noon at the Towne Cafe in the theme of the. Carbon College parade; Eldon Miller and lege classes and clubs Friday, Oc- window in a high building. These Price to discuss a proposed sale floats; Leah tober 4. High school classes and and other .demonstrations are Homecoming celebration set for Charles Menzies of the partically completed hotel ralwill Alan Bartlett pep clubs .DpNROSS choose candidates for bringing practical instruction to October 17, it was announced this Jessen and building on the comer of Carbon local nurses and Price city fireweek by Ron Shaw and Charlene ly; Art Jeanselme, Walter Wright princess at the; same time. Avenue and First North street. Member School Board enof Woodward and tween Jack for to were floats men student be, invited Competition who burning Anderson, particiThe hotel project was started AnC" on Wood Hill; Charlene the event. tering the parade will be in three pate in these demonstrations last 11 years ago by sale of abdut Files pro- categories. Prizes will be award- week. Festivities will begin on the eve- derson and Neil Warren Candidacy stock as a community endeavor, Deanna most ed Sandra 16 for floats displaying the Schmidt, with a bonfire gram; Dennis Ray Martinez, ning of October All nurses in this area are urged but lack of funds stopped comson of Daniel and Clara Mar- For Coming Election pep rally on the campus. A pro- Rogers, LuWanna Harris and Al- beauty, those which are most hu- to attend the remaining two days pletion. e activities. morous, and the best gram in the Price municipal audi- vin Wardle of the course. tinez, Hiawatha, drowned yesterThe board voted postponement the in first The 17 for coming will torium at 9 a.m. October Candidates Homecoming entries. day about ll;a.m. in the Hiawa- school boardactivity of any action until certain legal race in the Carbon be followed by a parade at 11 a.m. tha septic' tank. problems can be settled. evidenwas school district county At 1 :30 in the afternoon Carbon Deputy Sheriff Frank Stavar, College will meet Ricks College who investigated, reported the ced this week with the filing of in a league football game at the child and three playmates crawled candidacy by Don Ross, incumbent Garage Carbon stadium and special actiunder a wire fence surrounding representative from District which comprises the East Carbon Permit Issued e vities are planned for the the septic tank. by period. Homecoming Day will end J Dennis fell in and a playmate, area Dragerton, Sunnyside and Columbia. is This the only repre- City in September with a student body dance in the Pat Gomez, 5, threw some branchevening. es to him and tried to pull him sentative district which comes up for election this year. Construction of a new commerout. The other playmates were Serving on the general comMr. Ross, now serving as presi- cial building in Price on the cormittee with Miss Anderson and Goand 4, brother, Rudy, Ralph Mr. Shaw are Phyllis Tatton, Donmez, 2. The body was recovered dent of the board of education, is ner of Third East and First South term to house the Kraync Motor ComMiald Carr, Barbara Dixon and by Bernard Christensen and Tom completing his first board. on the chael Migliori. Mrs. Verda Peterpany was undertaken a few days Jackson. The deadline for filings for this ago under a building permit issued sen and Neil Warren are faculty He was bom in Price in 1954 advisors. Other committee memson of Daniel and Clara Martinez. office is this Saturday at 12 noon in the amount of $60,000. The conbers include : Judy Rodish, Larene Surviving: parents; eight brothers at the office of the Carbon county tractor is the Continental ConPetersen and Ted Warren Queen and sisters, Dannie, Leonard, John, clerk. The election, along with the struction Company. and princess contest; Connie Vou-roThis building, plus three new Rudy, Gilbert, Evelyn, May and municipal election, will be Novemhomes valued at $19,000, three Reid Oliver, Claude Cowley-rber 5. Betty, all of Hiawatha. Mass of the Angels will be said pirvate garages valued at $3,000 and remodeling and addition proSaturday at 10 a.m. at the Notre Notre Dame Students Price Junior High Dame Catholic church in Price jects brought Price citys building and burial will be in the Price permits during September to Elect New Officers Elects Officers according to a, report issued city cemetery under the direction this week by George B. Wallace, of the Mitchell funeral home. Student body officers were elec- building inspector. Kent Powell, the only candidate ted at .Notre Dame last week and from the Blue Party successful The other permits issued are as Price Librarian Resigns the students chose Lynn Thomas follows : in the recent Price junior high Albert Weber, garage, $1,000; Mrs. Stanley Nelson, city libra- as president, Wayne Massey, election, is the new student body Herman Nevenner, sec Dean Jensen, home, $5,000; Joe rian for the past four years, has president winning out over James Joan McKinney, Hansen, home, $9,000; Mrs. J. M. Draper, candidate on the White resigned her post and leaving for Salt Lake City where she senior class president; Margie Pre- Alexander, garage, $1,000; August Party ticket. Mike Orfanakis and Pat Stanwill make her home. In a letter to tiger, junior president; George F. Priebe, remodeling, $1,000; Mrs. Nelson, signed by all mem- Schoenberger, sophomore class Tony Beacco, garage, $1,000; The-ro- n field, candidates on the White bers of the library board, it was president, and Dean Malencik, Oviatt, home, $5,000; Oscar Party slate, were the successful GET PLANNING UNDER WAY . . . Ron Shaw, left, campus event is scheduled for October 17, and the freshman class president bidders for vice president and sec- and Charlene Anderson, recently - appointed Blackburn, addition, $1,000; Steve -co will be "Karbons Kampus Kingdom. theme The stated that through her assistance The four class presidents will Karras, addition, $1,000; Christenretary, respectively. Ronnie Hen- chairmen for the 1957 Carbon College Homecoming Homecoming day football game will be between the Price library had made many sen Brothers, remodeling, $4,000, derson and Marie Powell were celebration, go over preliminary plans with Harry the Carbon College Eagles and the Ricks Vikings progressive strides and the letter serve on the council as class and E. B. Reid, car port, $1,000. ' their opponents. commended "her for her work. Halamandaris, student body president. The big of Rexburg, Idaho. ui Wen-gree- non-cred- n, it, City-Coun- ty two-ton- City-Coun- four-stor- . 16-in- . 5-- x-r- Carbon Homecoming Plans Started Long-hur- x-r- Hiawatha st ty Dies Of Drowning in Towns Septic Tank ld half-tim- , . $60,000 half-tim- five-ye- ar s, . , $90,-00- 0, vice-preside- is-- . " retary-treasure- r; |