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Show In Our Town... ian-American Oil Co. It was then that Chester and his mother retunrned to Utah and Springville, mostly because they wanted to live where the grass and the trees were just a little greener and the mountains were more beautiful than any place they had ever before seen. They bought a home at 251 East 4th North. Between his work at Springville Floral and some landscaping jobs, he has found time to remodel the home. He has kept so busy it's no wonder the girls haven't discovered discov-ered that he is one of our few remaining re-maining eligible young bachelors. I don't suppose there's any hurry, though. He's only 28 and, whoever the girl is, she will have to put up with hunting and fishing along with his other earthy pursuits. Add two more to your score of the kind of people Springville needs. THE CATALYST. CHESTER SLAUGH Another of those lucky people whose life work is also their hobby. hob-by. Chester is a botanist and horticulturist hor-ticulturist par excellence, and, because be-cause of a tendency to mind his own business, he is comparatively unknown in Springville even after af-ter living here for the past year and a half. A native Utahn, with Vernal as a springboard, he majored in botany bot-any at U. S. A. C. and, after graduating, grad-uating, he taught there for a year while working for his Master's Degree. About this time his father, the noted Agriculturist, Forest S. Slaugh, moved to North Dakota. Whereupon, Chester taught in the Indian schools for two years, followed fol-lowed by a year of 4-H Club work in the same state. In 1943, Chester's Ches-ter's father had the opportunity of going to Arabia with the Arab- |