OCR Text |
Show I Mrs. Dave Evans has returned from a weeks visit at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Jex at Spanish Fork. On the return, she was accompanied by Mr. Evans on Wednesday. Mrs. Rude Casto of Salina, and Mrs. Carl J. Anderson of Redmond, have returned from a week end visit with near relatives in Nevada. At Ruth, they visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack R. Casto, and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dee J. Balle. Mrs. Casto is mother to Mr. Casto and Mrs Balle. Mrs. Casto, a daughter of Mrs. Anderson, returned with the visitors to Salina for a medical check-up- . Members in the Young Matrons Club were entertained at the home of Mrs. Rae E. Noyes, Thursday evening of last week. Dinner was served a t Moms Cafe, with covers marked for 12. Following the hour, bridge was played at the Noyes home. When scores were totaled, prizes were won by Mrs. Stanley Burgess and Mrs. Charles Larsen, 1st and 2nd, and the draw prize went to Mrs. Othello Madsen. Special guests of the hostess were Mrs. J. M. Christensen, Mrs. Stanley Burgess, Mrs. Marlin Sorenson and Mrs. Kenneth Roberts. Mr. and Mrs. Riley Newion and children have returned to Mrs. Clayton Rasmussen left Salt Lake City, following a week Sunday for Salt Lake. She is end visit at the home of Mr. and visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Ivie. Mr. Newton Mrs. Carlos Taylor. Mrs. Taylor is under observation at a was here for the opening of the Salt Lake hospital. pheasant hunt. Mrs. Harry Steele, Mrs. James Pidd, Mrs. Ross Lund and Mrs. Bell Sorenson left Friday for the North. They visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Steele, and at the home of Tad Sorenson, returning Monday evening. Mrs. Lund, who visited in Salina the past month, joined Mr. Lund in Salt Lake, where they will reside. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Morgan and daughters, Dalores and Launa, of Salt Lake City, visited over the week end at the home of Mrs. Flora Cooper in Aurora, and with friends in Salina. Mrs. Morgan, the former Beulah Cooper, and Mr. Morgan were married September 15th in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Morgan is a teacher in the Jackson Elementary School in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Smed-le- y, who called at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Louis Merrill in Salina, Friday, have returned to their home in Salt Lake City. Mr. Smedley, an artist of note, had been in Richfield for a lecture, in honor of Art Week, and also visited the display at the Rainbow Cafe. Mrs. Lida Liddiard, 31n&$aUnuiviuii Mrs. Cecil Shepherd Terry of Provo, visited over the week Cedar City, visited last week at end with Mrs. Daphne Robins. Salina, Sevier County, Utah brated the anniversary of her the home of her mother, Mrs. Fri., Nov. 16, 1956 Page 2 natal day with an open house at Minnie Shepherd, in Salina. the Liddiard home Saturday from 3 to 6 in the afternoon. Mrs. Wilford Stevens of RedTOE SALINA SUN LOOKING AHEAD However, the real anniversary mond, left Monday for Califby Dr. George S. Benson day was Sunday, November 11. ornia. She plans to visit during Published every Friday at SaVisiting was the pastime, and the winter months with Mrs. W. Director National Education lina, Utah. Entered at the Post Lida served a dinner at 4 p.m. L. Gibbs and Mrs. Donell ThursProgram Office at Salina, Utah, as second-clas- s Covers were placed for 15, with ton, who reside in Los Angeles. Searcy, Arkansas matter, under the act of little children seated at a small of March 3, 1879, Congress table. Those from out of town Mr. and Mrs. Max Robins of Opportunity who were here for the birthday Richfield, were Sunday visitors America Unlimited event were Mr. and Mrs. Gail of Mrs. Laurene Corya. MEMBtft , There are publications being UTAH STAT Association Liddiard and children, Terri Mr. and Mrs. Neal Mortensen distributed throughout America Lynn and Joan, and Mr. and seekto millions of people Mrs. Paul Curtis of Salt Lake of Ely, Nevada, were NATIONAL EDITORIAL transacting ing to undermine respect for the City; Mrs. Farrell Anderson, business in Salina, Tuesday. business and industrial leaderMiss Valden Anderson and Mrs. V Calden Nielsen of Ephraim; Mrs. Mrs. Newell Morley, Mrs. ship of the nation. Regardless of teim.Ti.'irrzf'.ii'iHg waitAdley Peterson of Las Vegas, Herod Crane, Mrs. Elmer Colby the purpose behind such Nevada, and Miss Donette Peter- and Mrs. Clell Sorenson motor- ings, they greatly aid the efforts son of Salt Lake City. ed to Oak City and Leamington, of the Communists and Socialists honest claims, but the propaganMonday. They visited with near to weaken and ultimately destroy dists hope, by repeating untruths our American system. A favorite over and over Here for the opening of the relatives in the area. again, to overof these propagandists is come the claim truth. One of the most pheasant hunt in Sevier County, Mrs. Dail Prows and son, that people in lower economic dramatic of all the success and who were house guests at a chance, un- stories in 20th the Allen Martin home, were: Steven, motored to Provo, Fri- categories havent Century America der to rise concerns the life American at and visited the of home capitalism, day, Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Christiansen of the foreMr. and Mrs. Franklin Nelson, to the top. most symbol of American capand daughters, Suzanne and Jill, Of course there are literally italism, Benjamin parents of Mrs. Prows. Fairless, reof Orem; Mr. and Mrs. Lester tens of thousands of life stories retired president and cently Quick, Diann and Ginger Quick, Patricia Robins, a student at in the literature of American board chairman of one of Amerand Laurie Quick of Salt Lake. Brigham Young University In progress which refute such dis- - icas biggest corporations, United States Steel. popular clerk at the Salina Drug, cele- rTTTTVVTTTTT AAAAAAAAAAA association U O From Humble Origin The Ben Fairless story, in Life Magazine, offers three great values to America: (1) it once again exposes the dishonesty of the propaganda against American capitalism; (2) it inspires every boy and girl in America to unlimited achievement; and (3) it creates respect and admiration for the industrial leadership of America, on which our continued economic progress so greatly depends. Ben Fairless was born 66 years a ago in Pigeon Run, Ohio, town that had dirt road, ash sidewalks and white frame houses occupied by perhaps 200 citizens. Most of the men were coal miners, as was Ben Fairless dad. When Ben was two years old, his mother was badly injured in an accident, and thereafter, he lived with an aunt and uncle. However, he lived close to his parents, and their influence helped set the pattern of his life. Mothers Influence a My mother, he writes, was truly great woman. She had almost no education, but her in- stincts were always right. She believed that everybody should work, that everybody should be honest, that no one should expect something for nothing. Young Ben didnt mind work. Across the road lived the first capitalist I ever knew Clark a lumberman with a big house. Ben, when he became school age, worked in the summers for McClintock: I mowed the lawn, took care of his horses, and plowed the ground of a farm. I was a hired man in overalls at a cash salary of $9 a month. In his first three years of high school, he was the school janitor: I got to the school building at 6 a.m., fired up the coal furnace and dusted the desks and chairs in the four classrooms. After school, I swept the floors. I considered the job a great privilege, even though the salary was only $65 a year (not per month per year). no substitute can do what copper does ! Copper carries the electricity that powers electrical appliances better than any other commercial metal. Copper, too, conducts heat faster than any other commercial metal. No other metal lends itself so readily to such a variety of manufacturing operations . . . drawing, forming, shaping or stamping. There is no substitute for the non-precio- us qualities of copper or its alloys in electrical appliances or in thousands of other products for modem living. Copper in the appliances you choose for your home helps support an industry that directly benefits the state through Kennecott payrolls, supply purchases and tax payments! Kennecott Copper Corporation A Good Neighbor Helping to Build a Better Utah Fabricating Subsidiaries: Chase Brass m m & Copper Co. Kennecott Wire and Cable Co. Climbing The Ladder At the ripe old age of 17, with three years of high school behind me, writes Ben Fairless. I became a teacher, with 17 pupils, on a salary of $48. He was supposed to pay the Janitor out of his salary; so he did the janitor work himself. He taught three years, and in the summers made up his fourth year high school credits. By working summers and by borrowing $200.00 from neighbor McClintock (the capitalist), Ben completed a college course in engineering, and went to work on the railroad with a construction gang. His first job in the steel industry was transit man on a construction job building a steel at $75 a month. When plant the plant was built, the boss offered him a Job. He took it. He worked hard, putting in long hourB, every step of the way as he rose to the summit of American industrial leadership. I naturally think, says Ben Fairless, that our way of life today is the greatest thing that ever happened. To me, it means the ultimate in freedom: freedom not only to live where a man chooses to live and to work in a field of his choice, but also to have unlimited opoprtunity, so that a boy from the wrong side of the tracks can go just as far as a rich mans son. oper-etio- Support Local Enterprise ns |