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Show Thursday, April 28, 1960 Page 5 THE VALLEY VIEW NEWS Kearns Library News A games party will be held Satland for Bannock, Idaho, during urday, at 8:15 p.m., in St. Francis the 1862 gold rush. In this mining Parish Hall. The jackpot holds town she finds hardship, adventure $200,00 this time. Besides the big and romance. jackpot prize, the winner of the 10th game will recive a $25.00 CHILDREN cash prize. stories and THE BIG JUMP other St. Pauls Lutheran Church will by Benjamin Elkin. Delightful stories for children be host at the Boy Scout Court of written in the Beginner Book series. Honor, Tuesday, April 26, at St. MOON JUMPERS by Janice May Francis Parish Hall. Udry. Rev. and Mrs. Carl E. Samuel-so- n Here is a childs exhilaration and are attending a Lutheran enchantment with the Ipveliness of summer nights, with the magic of Church Conference in Missoula, Montana, this week. Mr. Calvin moonlight Following is a list of the new goes deep into the jungle to find books available at the Kearns out the truth about the death of an Branch Library American painter. ADULT JUVENILE THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MARK VAN DOREN. Reminiscences of a serene scholarly life filled with friends, family, a happy marriage, and work as teacher, writer and editor. THE THIRTEENTH APOSTLE by Eugene Vale. Donald Webb, an American consul stationed in the main port city of a Central American country, WHITE PATCH, A CITY SPARROW by Olive L. Eearle. Everyone will enjoy reading about White Patch and looking at the beautiful, lifelike pictures on almost every page of this thoroughly engaging book. MISS GAIL by Helen Markley Miller. Orphaned at 16, Abilgail Meredith is forced to leave New Eng : Hammel of Kearns is also attending as delegate of St. Pauls Lutheran Church. The acappella choir from Concordia Teachers College, Seward, Neracka, will sing at the Lincoln Jr. High auditorium Monday, at 8 p.m. There wil be no charge, only a free-wi- ll offering. Rev. and Mrs. Carl E. Samuelson served a delicious Easter breakfast of ham and eggs to the members and friends of St. Pauls Lutheran Church after the Sunrise Easter Service. n . . church i gQQdl uCaGta - oa rallay - pten m tareQSfl enad ompttG? Dry areas of the tailings pond near Kennecotts Magna and Arthur Mills are being plowed and irrigated. But these familiar farming practices are not being used to raise crops. Instead, they are the newest weapon in a long battle against dust. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of water carry stream finely ground waste rock in a never-endin- g from the mills to the 5300 acre tailings pond. Sometimes dust results when wind blows across dried out -- sections of the pond. To help meet this problem, Kennecott bought a unique vehicle. Mounted on eight, low pressure, e-shaped tires, the machine can pull itself to almost any part of the pond through water and over soft, wet surfaces. Starting at the waters edge, the machine hauls a multiple plow to cut rows of furrows hundreds of feet long. Plowing turns under the dry surface. Then, water from the pond is channeled along the furrows to irrigate the area. The result dust is kept down. Considerable success has been attained by adaptprobing farming practices to meet a lem of a mining company. But this does not mean Kennecott is satisfied. Studies will be continued to develop better methods to achieve greater success. sausag- long-standi- ng I Wtiah hpp3F Division Jfennecoti Cbppas Oorpomtilcm PROUD TO BE PART OF A GROWING UTAH |