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Show THE Page Six It s Getting Close to Show Time for These Youngsters Thursday, April 12, 1951 SUN-ADVOCA- Wholesale, Retail Grocers to Get OPS Rules Direct ( Getting ready for a stock show is exciting for youngsters who are going to have animals in competition and the group of Price lads shown above is no exception. The animal each will show has been a project under H club work and the youngster has devoted his time towards raising the animal in the best possible manner. . '' t, 4-- 4-- H ' Sc1 y " ,v w . The boys pictured above with the animals they hope will win blue ribbons in the Southeastern Utah Livestock show this year include, left to right, Stanley Harden, Jerry Brinley, Jim Pulli, John Winn, Harry Watkins, David Pizzuto, Leader Wayne E. Johnston holding Vion Johnstons calf, Ioirainc Henderson and Leon Smith. Carbon Youths Prepare Calves for Stock Show II Carbon county boys and girls are busily preparing their animals for the southeastern Utah Junior Livestock show at Fer-ro- n on May 3, 4 and 5. Calves have been on feed since late last fail and in many cases have done exceptionally well. Both boys and girls are hoping that their calves will rate in the better classes at show time. This will be the first showing of Carbon county calves at the show. Wayne L. J'hnston of Price has pushed the project this last year v, 5 - - j and a great deal of credit goes to him in organizing a club of his own and helping other boys and girls to obtain good calves. Stockmen of Carbon county cooperated with Mr. Johnston and the county agent in contributing the best calf from their herds for the boys and girls to feed. The stockmen will be especially interested in going to the show and seeing how their calves rate with other livestock produced in the state. Besides the group of boys in Mr. Johnston's club there are oth. er clubs working in the county lead by Roy Campbell of Wellington, Ervin Erickson of Wellington, Henry Anderson of Spring Glen and Joe Pollock of Miller Creek. Although the boys and girls in all these clubs have been working, all of the calves will not be shown in the Emery county show clue to the fact that some of the calves are too small for show purposes and will be held for later shows. County Agent Robert Hassell is proud of the work that has been done this winter by these boys and It girls and their leaders in is only a start," he says, In what H we could have in livestock work in Carbon county. 4-- H. 4-- Wholesale and retail grocers in Utah will receive copies of OP'S regulations affecting them direct from the regional OPS office in Denver, Delbert M. Draper, Utah district OPS director, informed The Standard Examiner Saturday. Grocerymen are urged to be patient, Mr. Draper warned, because it will take several days for mailing crews to address the regulations to more than 3000 grocers in Utah. The OPS official said that in the meantime, his office in Salt Lake City, 22 South West Temple street, would answer any questions grocers from this area might have concerning the new OPS regulations. Doings at the Some new books are available at the Price Carnegie library and the following summaries are brief sketches of a few which have been added: Far Side of Paradise, a biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald by Arthur Moore Mizner in a th product which incorporates some critical studies of his writings. Thfe author has had access to Fitzgeralds papers and to the reminiscences of his daughter and his friends. A book in the full-leng- general subject classification. Alexandra Orme In "Comes the Conrade has written an entertaining novel based upon the conquests of the red armies In Europe. Beginning with December 22, 1944, this diary of a polish woman, Lida," married to a Hungarian artistocrat, covers the days to the 28th day of March, 1945. During that time the Russians were supposed to haveli-beratethat section of Hungary. At first Lida had welcomed the Russians but as it became apparent that their ideas of liberation were very acute, she devoted all her time and intelligence to the task of keeping one step ahead of them. This novel was recently condensed in the Readers d" Bend . Tom Cutter was in love with airplanes from his boyhood. He might have lived happily and successfully in England all his life, working on other men's planes. Instead he bought an ancient aircraft and organized his own transport service on the Persian Gulf. There the tempo of eastern life opened his mind to the possibilities of immortality. Little by little, the lovely girl whose very and name meant England home faded from his dream soon to be replaced by quite a girl with quite another different heritage. Detective Book Club: The Missing Widow, Anthony Gilbert; The Scarlet Feather, Frank Gruber; I want to go Home, Richard and Frances Lockridge; There is Tide, Agatha Christie; T as in Trapped, Lawrence Treat; Borderline Murder, Alan Amos; Five Passengers from Lisbon, Mignon C. Eberhart; Wake for a Lady, H. W. Roden; The Murder in the Stork Club, Vera Caspary. a BY LEWIS Digest. WATCHES William Sansom South; asand images from Corsica, Italy and southern France. At his best there is no living author who can be more interesting or who can more thoroughly absorb the reader into his own vision," writes Sir Osbert Sitwell of William Sansom. South is a volume of nine stories by the young English author written with the humor and descriptive power that marked his first novel, The For Sansom, body. South means southern Europe. Corsica, Italy, and the Riviera are the overheated, fatal landscapes which breed the romance and shrouded violence of his tales. Anya Seton Story of the marriage of a cultured Eastern girl and a mining engineer who is one quarter Apache. Though deeply in love, when marriage means living in an isolated mining town and sharing her husbands interest with his work, Amanda in her craving for better things nearly wrecks the relationship but an adventurous trip into a mysterious lost valley brings understanding and happiness. Nevil Shute Round the pects DIAMONDS RINGS COMPACTS GLASSWARE NECKLACES ORNAMENTS PURSES if she' GREETING CARDS no longer Good at petting For All Occasions Perhaps a gem You should be getting. Its worth cultivating the habit of shopping here for your gift items. We feature a large stock of nation-Se- e our diamonds. merchandise, watches, silverware. ally-advertis- ed PRICE LEWIS JEWELRY UTAH GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Sunnit&tde Beautiful to look at Beautiful to drive 'daie has been Floyd McFarland home on leave from the U. S. He has visited for two navy. weeks with his parents and sisters, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse McFarland, June and Vera Mae. He has been stationed at the navy base in the Great Lakes region but goes on to California where he will leave for sea duty on a destroyer. He left on April 7th. Art Self, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Self flew home for a weeks visit with his parents. Art is with the U. S. army. L. Mark Jeffs is home on a 20-ifurlough. He is a sergeant in the air force and will return to his base at Larson AFB Moses Lake, Washington on April 19th. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Warren and family; Mr. and Mrs. John Pearson and family and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Stevenson and family have all moved to Sunnydale from Hiawatha. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Jeffs motor, ed to Manti and back last Wednesday. They brought Mrs. Ethel Stevenson home with them. Mrs. Stevenson visited at the Jeffs home and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Stevenson and family until Sunday. Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Keith G. Stevenson, Dennis and Richie of Manti came and stayed until Sunday when they took Mrs. Stevenson home with ' them. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thomas from Castle. Gate moved to 825 Pine street last week end. Mr. Walker and Mr. Hoagland of Salt Lake and Mr. j Ordway from Oakland, California, were business visitors in Carbon county last week and they spent most of their time in Sunnyside and Sunnydale. Little Susan Jones had her tonsils taken out Tuesday of last week at the Dragerton hospital. ld She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vern T. Jones who are moving to Salt Lake City soon. Susan is feeling fine. '! r 3GUS ay -- Cf! 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Amo ng them are the most basic new ideas in any cars tor many years Like the revolutionary new FirePower engine, of 180 horsepower, which gives owners of Chrysler Imperial and New Yorker cars the most powerful, most efficient, most economical powerplant in any car today! And like the amazing new Chrysler Oriflow shock absorbers, which give every new Chrysler car riding ease with twice the power of anv other cars at any price. And with all their newnesi theyre built to stand by you like no cer you can buy! shock-absorbi- 200 East Main |