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Show W im LOCALS The Friday Afternoon Bridge Club members were entertained at the home of Mrs. J. M. Christensen on Friday of last week. The small tables were centered with pink roses in crystal vases. The Electric Club had a 4-- H total attendance of 15 during June. We went to the power Don Cooper, who has lived at the Cooper home in Aurora during Mr. Coopers employment in Arizona, has moved to Freedonia, and joined her husband there. Mrs. Covers were marked for eight. Guests of the hostess were Mrs. Mary Ellen Draper, Mrs. Stanley Barrett, Mrs. Alvilda Anderson and club members Score prizes were win by Mrs. Leon Newton and Mrs. Barrett. Visiting Sunday and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Heber Allred were Clarence Allred and sons, Mark, Steve and Mike, of Sait Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Claude Edwards of Cedar City, and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Madsen and sons (Mrs. Izanna Exton and Walter of Spring City. Monger of Oregon City, Oregon, Mr. and Mrs. Terrel Lazenby were here to attend the funeral services held Saturday for James of Hatch, were week end visitors Franklin Monger, who died Tues- at the home of Mr. and Mrs. day of a heart attack. They were Leland Lazenby in Aurora. The s sister and brother to the de- group attended the reunion, held at Beaver, Saturceased. plant; up the canyon to look at transformers, and learned how Dick (o put an iron together. Liddiard is our instructor, and treated us to refreshments. Kevin Cherry, reporter The Merry Breakfast Cooks met at the home of Charlene Jensen this week, with Karren Mason, president, in charge. The group made cream of wheat cereal. Last week, the club was held at the home of Rosalie Was-deand the girls made cinnamon toast and scrambled eggs. Sherron Curtis, reporter n, We opened our meeting and saw Lulas beautiful garden.- - All the flowers were pretty. We named different flowers in the day. garden. Lula gave us each some Dr. and Mrs. Milton Marshall Cantaberry. Janet Davies and of Brigham Young University in Gay Peterson were visitors. We Provo, visited at the home of had banana splits for refreshMr. and Mrs. A1 Brown, Thurs- ments. day and Friday of last week. While here, the gentlemen made several trips to Southern Utah Oil collecting rock specimens. Stuart-Adam- Mr. and Mrs. Nyals Andreasen and sons, Nyals Jr., Aaron and Jon, of Norwalk, Calif , are visiting at the home of Nyals parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thorvald Andreasen. Mrs. Denny Thompson and Mrs. LaMont Anderson of Anna-bell- e, Utah visited Wednesday with Mrs. Merrill Thompson. Denny is employed on construction at Page, Arizona, and Mrs. Thompson, residing in Salt Lake, visited here for a week. Company Establishes Hew Travel Service Wyatt, who was transbusiness in Montana the acting past week, made a stop over in Salina enroute to his home in Phoenix, Arizona. While here, he A. J. BadSalt Lake City visited with Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Oil RefinUtah Mr. ger, and and with president, and Mrs. Bill Overson Mr. and Christensen, has announced the E. A. Mrs. Clawson. Company, ing of Sacramento, daughter, Joy, establishment of a new travel Calif., visited with Mrs. Mae Steve and Jerry Burr, grand- information service at Utoco staSorenson in Salina. They were in Utah, Idaho, Oregon, Fish-lak- e children to Mr. and Mrs. Derail tions a at week end for joined Jenat are the Washington and Nevada. Utoco visiting by Mr. and Mrs. Ned Sor- Jensen, enson of Richfield, and Mr. and sen home in Salina. The 'boys is also joining with Amoco Mrs. Clell Sorenson of Salina. are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Jack (American Oil) and Standard Burr of Kearns. They will visit Oil (Indiana) to give the travelMrs. George Hudgins and dau- here until after the July 4th ing public this unique service in a total of 45 states. As You ghters, Susan and Mary, arrived celebration. to is Us Ask Travel extenddesigned an in Utah last week for Mrs. Boyd Edwards and child- provide complete, accurate traed visit. Mrs. Hudgins is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. P. ren, Michael, Lynn and Debra vel information on both a naNielson, and before coming to Lee, of Middletown, Pa., arrived tional and local basis with major Salina, she visited with Mr. and in Salina, Saturday. They plan emphasis on local areas. a summers visit with Mr. and Mrs. Evan Nielson in Beaver. About 200 Utoco dealers will Mrs. Heber Allred. They will be join with Standard (Indiana) The birthday anniversary of joined later by Captain Edwards, and Amoco in providing this Durell Mickelson was celebrated who is stationed at the Olmsted service at 9,500 travel centers. ' : Here answers to typical quesSaturday evening with an out- Air Force Base in Pa. door party on thepatio at the tions will be available such as Which route shall I take? American Legion Hall. Hostesses Do Your Trading At Homo A good place were Mrs. Barney Jeffery.anU Where to eat? Shop In North Seyier to sleep? Mrs. Kent Jeffery.,. The table was Places of interest? ladden with picnic dainties, and and in case of emergency, to covers were laid for the guest of assist in obtaining aid. Mr. and Mrs. Rue Heath achonor and 14 close friends. A The local As You Travel companied by Mrs. Dora Hoggan Ask Us centers social evening followed. will cooperate of Gunnison, motored to Idaho and visited a week with Mr. and with the central Utoco Travel Mrs. George Upchurch in Pres- Center at 918 Michigan Avenue, ton, and with Mr. and Mrs. Car- Chicago, Illinois, in furnishing p routing. Stations prolyle Hoggan in Rockland. They pre-trithe service will be the viding returned Friday. finest, most modern dealer outMrs. Paul Bastian, Mrs. Arlon lets, conveniently located. These Nielson and Mrs. Ellis Hatch travel centers will offer, in adwere hostesses at an outing din- dition, the best in service station home clean rest ner at Maple Grove, Saturday cleanliness, REPEAT OFFER and the ultimate in perrooms, s all with the Steaks night. were served in the late evening. sonalized service. ABSOLUTELY Through this plan, Utah Oil Twenty close friends in the were Company and its Utoco Refining present. group THE LOWEST dealers are looking forward to Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Gardner the opportunity of further proKELLYS! and son, Dickie, of Hollywood, moting the scenic attractions of Calif., are visitors this week at this area. NOW AS LOW AS the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Barrett. Mr. Gardner is an uncle to Mrs. Barrett. They were by Craig Barrett on accompanied 6.70-1- 5 leaving Thursday for the coast RAYON state. W. H. p fix-in- ON $' TUBE-TYP- E NYLON 6.70-1- 5 PLUS TAX AND RETREADABIE TIRE Mr. and Mrs. Arvard Vogel of Danville, Calif., visited with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Vogel, parents of Mr. Vogel, in Salina the past week. The visitors, teachers in the Danville schools, were enroute to Colorado, where they have accepted positions teaching in the summer session at the schools in Greeley. The Vogels also plan on taking instructions in special subjects during the sessions. Support Local Advertisers It Pays U.5. SAVINGS BONDS jsfaetfiss' EUROPEAN TRAVEL All through Europe most roads are still built like the Romans began building them 2000 years ago. A few super highways are coming, and the main highways are usually cement or asphalt. Germany has a very good road clear through the country from Munich t o Dusseldorf. Their word for super highway is and traffic really moves along. We drove 70 mph, and everyone was passing us. The result is quite a few accidents. We saw 40 different cars with fenders smashed, in a distance of 250 miles on the autobaun. We also got in a traffic jam, when a truck jackknifed and blocked the road. One good idea the Europeans have developed is a roadside service. Every few miles there is a side road, which connects the motorist with a local automobile club. When a call is made, the club sends a mechanic to the phone, and the car is repaired. Also, there are motorcycles patrolling all the time to help anyone in trouble. If one is a club member, this service is free. If not, it must be paid by the motorist. Other than the autobaun, the highways are the same throughout Europe. They are about the same as the road to Scipio, only a little more narrow. The worst part of driving is all the bikes and motorcycles on the highway. They surely make driving difficult. In the cities, when stopping at a stop light first the road is clear ahead, but one by one, boys, girls and all ages put their bikes in front of the car. When the light turns green, the bikes peddle like mad, 'Awhile the driver (me) gets mad. It is certainly exasperating to wait for these at every light. However the foul shot to break a tie in a basketball game, acid .test, or whatever you call the most difficult test comes in England. TMs is the country which drives on the left side of the road. I have always thought I could adjust to most any situation. After all, a man with three kids should be up to most anything, but I must admit it, England is for the starklings! That driving on the left side is enough to send any foreigner to the nearest embassy and request asylum. Not ony do they drive on the left side of the road, but their roads are narrow and slow. We got caught in a traffic jam in London that stretched 23 miles. It took us over two hours to go 23 miles. As a pedestrian, I was almost done in too. When we stopped at Buckingham Palace, we got out and started across the road. We looked to our left first as a matter of habit. As we turned to look right, we saw a large car coming at us like J. Bracken Lee after taxes. We were saved only by a narrow cement dividing lane, which we just reached. Another problem is entering thru roads from a stop sign. Automatically, I would look the wrong way before pulling onto the thru read. One time, we came to a Mexican stand off when we were going down the right side and a car was coming up the left side. I kept moving more to the right, which was natural for me. Also, it was natural for the Englishman to move to his left. We both stopped, looking like two kissing beetles. Did I feel stupid auto-bau- n, five-mi- le when the light finally dawned that I was on the wrong side. Italy is behind us now, nothing but a memory. A memory of how difficult it is to speak a foreign language; of different people, who have different ways. Gone from our sight, but not from memory, are the huge domed churches, the flat roofed buildings, the small cars and narrow streets. It is strange for us to come home, where the stores stay open all day, rather than close for a three-hou- r stretch from twelve to three. Also, we are happy to come home to the super market, where we can buy all the food m one place, rather than chase from the milk store to the meat store, then to the vegetable store and the bread store. In fact, it is nice to come home just so we can have a loaf of bread. The bread in Italy is all in rolls, and quite hard. To us, loaf bread is a real treat. The most satisfying thing was to reach America, and be able to speak the language and understand when others speak. After landing in New York, we still thought in Italian. We had been asking directions in Italian for seven months, and it was hard 1o change. Dove, the Italian for where is, actually is easier for me to use than the American words. Other words also are part of our speech. LaRae was telling a friend about our troubles getting all our luggage in our little car, and she told him that without our Portopacci, it would have been impossible to carry our stuff home. She didn't know what we called a luggage carrier for the top of the car, so she used the Italian word, and then she couldnt understand why he didnt understand portopacci. Aside from the language, we miss the sight seeing. While we saw most of the well known sights, we could have spent many more days, and even years seeing the little known places that rre away from the beaten path. Every week end, and in all our spare time, we would travel. Venice was only thirty miles away; Germany, six hours; Austria and Yugoslavia, Four hours; Switzerland, ten hours. At the time, we could only think of the problems connected with traveling, such as the lack of pure water and the restrooms. Now we have forgotten the problems, and all we remember are the pleasant things. Of course, throughout the world, people who travel worry about the food and water. I was reading about the Chinaman who came to America to visit. He had all the money he needed, and he was very concerned about his health. When he docked, and the customs officials went through his trunks, they found a large store of bean sprouts, dry noodles and other Chinese food. They asked the old man why he brought these things with him, and he answered, Why, you know that you cannot trust the native food. Possibly we were like the Chinaman, afraid when there was nothing to fear. However, just after Nancy began going to school, we had quite an experience. She came home one day and told us that she didnt have to go to school for a week. We found out that the teacher and three students had diptheria and the school had been quarantined. This was a real shock for us, and SALE-PRICE- NON-DRIHKE- Uyiuu?jut IRE, feyv Wovu-fiie- LOOK FOR e, THIS SIGN OF QUALITY AT Burr Motor Co. 30 West Main Phone JA 9-77- 21 RS NOW! LESS Pay A for the BEST tlA A AutaOndMAance And Fire PHONE JA Bernice Mickelsen , (ukAlutuai. DES MOINES. So control Johnson grass in Field crops Its economical grass killer. Instead of chopping or cultivating all season, just apply Dowpon to your fields in the spring before planting, or in the fall, after harvest DOWPON--th- e Trademark of Th 4 Dour Chemical Company Utah Poultry & Farmers Jtcpreseflfinji GhleVtetl way fiow-ccs- S and youll be rid of tough problem grasses. Thats because Dowpon, sprayed on the leaves, kills the whole grass plant, from the tops to the deepest roots at a rock bottom cost per acre. Also use selectively in some crops. SALINA UTAH : IKS. CO. Co-Operati- ve SALINA, UTAH IOWA I Published eveiy Friday at S hna. Utah. Entered at the Post Office at Salina, Utah, as second-clas- s matter, under the act 'A Congress of March 3, 1879. Weslev Cherry, Editor-Publish- er - MEMBER Of THE SS0C1AH0N UTAH STATE national editorial ggiAsK0,,N never eaten bananas. Also, after the small part of the world that we have, we are really convinced that there is no place like Utah. Probably a better way to say it would be to use that old saying, There is no place like home! Now, our experience is over, and while there is much that I have said, and badly, and more that I have left unsaid, I hope that some part had some interest. More important, I hope that a better understanding of Italy has come from these articles. seeing of Bapp"iess, the American . - V T.rSitsfKiriSa blessings PP an individual, May.6 han n oUt of out otthy e D PlndependenCe glorious heritage (This Bank will not be open on July 4tli, Independence Da .) FIRST STATE BANK OF SAUNA Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation by JOANNE WALTERS special correspondent seventeen MAGAZINE The billing for the Hollywood teleseries "Happy YVONNE LIME and RONNIE BURNS one week and RONNIE BURNS and YVONNE LIME the next otherwise no show" say the stars . . . ANNETTE and PAUL ANKA are still going strong . . . SAL MINEO made his brother, MIKE, his business manager . . . GARY CROSBY is helping BARBARA LUNA SHERRY , c. forget MARLON BRANDO JACKSON left home and now has reads ... an apartment all to ladiot Unt herself... GEORGE HAMILTON and SUSAN KOHNER are back together again ...BOBBY DARIN will definitely marry JOANNE CAMPBELL in the fall e confided this last week at SEVENTEENs annual fall fashion show at the Waldorf. By the way, wait until you see the fashions in the Giant TAB August issue Youll HUNTER will Stock Boom "Bachelor At Large" cartoonist in flip... play a successful young a new TV series called . . . JOHN SMITH E FONDA romance is strictly movie publicity . . . GEORGE PEPPARD's stock has really zoomed since "Home From The Hill" . . . BRIGITTE BARDOT wears glasses in her newest film , . . DWAYNE HICKMAN, his hair brown again, is going steady with SHERRY JACKSON fabian, Tuesday weld Nothing sonom ond BING CROSBY hit it off fine on the set of "High Time"... TUESDAY, incidentally, is still seeing RICHARD BEYMER . . . ELVIS has really fallen for his Gl Blues" leading lady, JULIET PROWSE GLENN 2 THE SALINA SUN W and PERKINS-JAN- D EIBLE.Y ,e Salina, Sevier County, Utah Page Fri., July 1, I960 and LUANA PATTEN couldn't be happier... That TONY MANY OTHER TYPES AND SIZES UltvaUmFun after that, we were very careful about what we ate and drank Before we left for Italy, we had enough shots to protect us from everything except Russian missiles and Italian drivers, and I guess the doctor had the needle lodged right, because we didnt have a sick day. Really, the United States is much better than Europe in most things. The Italians insist that we work too hard, and we have too many ulcer, heart and mental patients because of our pace of life, but I suppose that is part of progress. To the average Italian, this phase of our life :s useless, and if a job causes ulcers, then do away with the job. On Padova there are large clocks in almost every square, and no two tell the same time. They vary as much as fifteen minutes. People set appointments by early afternoon, afternoon or late afternoon. None of this living by the clock for them. Hard work and punctuality are not part of the Italians way of life. Next generation may change, but now it is easy to live in Italy. One thing I found, we take what we have too much for granted. We cuss this and that when we really dont know. It is difficult to say that apples are better than bananas if one has . . . DEBBIE REYNOLDS FORD are and continuously "off again; on again" . . . TROY DONAHUE and CONNIE STEVENS are currently filming "Parrish in Connecticut then TROY goes into the new hour television series "Surfside Six . . . |