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Show "V Pcge Eight FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1960 THE SALT LAKE TIMES, " - Kennedy Appears to Have Won Most Utah Delegation Support Roosevelt; and a three way tie among Donald Adams, Monti-cell- o; Mrs. Lucille Greenwood, Richfield and James P. Alger, Price. Six other delegates with one-ha- lf vote each were also named without participation in the delegates contest. They will have votes under rules adopted by the national committee and the state convention. I ' They are Calvin W. Rawlings, national committeeman; Mrs. Roxey Romney, national com-mitteewom- an; William T. Thur-ma- n, state chairman; Mrs. Kath-leen Meikle, Smithfield, state vice chairman; Sen. Frank Mpss and Rep. David S. King. Presidential electors named: J. Clark Elmer, Payson; Benja-min Hampton, Salt Lake City; Richard Layton, Layton, and Frieda Bradshaw, Ogden. (Continued from Page 1) . Farmington. Delegates elected from First Congressional district were State Sen. Frank M. Browning, Mrs. Elizabeth Vance and Carl Taylor, all of Ogden; Heber Bennion Jr., Manila; Mrs. Eleanor Nelson, Lo-- 1 gan; Walter K. Granger, Cedar; City and Frank Memmott, Price, i Alternates were David Welling and State Sen. J. Francis Fowles both of Ogden; Dr. R. V. Larson, I Zemo Great for Minor Burns, Cuts Zemo, a doctor's formula, liquid or ointment, soothes, helps heal minor burns, cuts, bruises. Family antiseptic, eases itch of surface rashes, eczema, teen-ag- e pimples, athlete's foot. Stops scratching, so aids faster healing. For stubborn cases, get Extra Strength Zemo. 'i . . f 2 QQ - GO 6P0p - B Nro98fiW Tta alloy pta Gri flrcffasto? h, Dry areas of the tailings pond near Kennecott's l SW Magna and Arthur Mills are being plowed and irri-- Jif 4 fPtj f$$Jm fII gated. But these familiar farming practices are not fpy) li II being used to raise crops. Instead, they are the new- - f jjjjjjSlf flt JvA W est weapon in a long battle against dust. t'JfWllfn I 0 Hundreds of thousands of gallons of water carry cjl'If J&f rW finely ground waste rock in a never-endin- g stream HvlB from the mills to the 5300 -- acre tailings pond. Some IlA times dust results when wind blows across dried out 'w p To help meet this problem, Kennecott bought a ' unique vehicle. Mounted on eight, low pressure, sau- - Plfet Cvllf1 sage-shape- d tires, the machine can pull itself to W2 IW WHIk almost any part of the pond through water and 11 fV SvPr over soft, wet surfaces. 1 Starting at the water's edge, the machine hauls a 1 2 I IIVKj ' multiple plow to cut rows of furrows hundreds of feet Iw&S vll lwfe ? long. Plowing turns under the dry surface. Then, flSf I1FTll water from the pond is channeled along the furrows lllrci i to irrigate the area. The result dust is kept down. M- - wlr Considerable success has been attained by adapt-- Vssi jujf IpSlL ) ing farming practices to meet a long-standi- ng prob-- AwP ? !em of a mining company. But this does not mean s IffSl "J' jPk Kennecott is satisfied. Studies will be continued to plSk develop better methods to achieve greater success. . a .j jj PROUD TO BE PART OF A GROWING UTAH |