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Show JtXT ggAT. 1. THE Lines Bus Leming-- ; and Ruff ; cc Elva gville spent Sunday at ZLf, rf Bishop ?d Mr. John and Mrs. Hfn Liddell and n Crawford. Miss Barbara returned to Springville with them an extended visit, Mrs Ed Buchspice visited in Salt with L ke City over the week-en- d ; husband, who is still suffering 'from mine injuries. to Salt Clarence Nelson motored Lid-H- ir f w went to Salt Lake City I fast week, returning with Mrs. Kay on Sunday. I After visiting at the home of Bishop land Mrs. J. W. Liddell, Miss Rachel returned to her home last I Harry Kopasis and daughters, Maria and Carrie, have gone to 'California for vacation. Miss Hana Liddell left Wednesday L0 r pioche. Nevada, to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Holliman in Salt Lake City. f spent the week-en- d I Mr. and Mrs. Ed Braby and Mr. fand Mrs. Bill Harvey and family en- -I a fishing trip over the week- So-fph- ia. joyed Mr. and Mrs. Owen Dugmore and children, Owen, Jr., and Elden, of Elko, Nevada, visited friends in Mohrland last week. Mr. Dugmore was formerly a salesman with the Carbon-Emer- y stores at Mohrland, but is now with the J. C. Penney company at Elko. Patrol number two of the Mohrland Girl Scout troop had an enjoyable evening Tuesday when the members went on a scavenger hunt. Also on Tuesday evening, patrol number one were entertained at the home of the lieutenant, Mrs. Hazel Frazee. Miss Pauline Bailey of Moroni was a guest at the home of Miss Roma Story the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Dimick visited in Provo, Thursday with the family of their son Cecil. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Dimick are attending the summer session at the B. Y. U. Miss Alice Rathmill of Price is spending the week at the home of Mrs. G. F. Hall. Mrs. William Baldwin held a reception Saturday in honor of her sister, Mrs. J. D. Peterson, formerly Miss LaVea Day. Mr. and Mrs. Peterson will make their home in Woods Cross, Utah. Mrs. G. F. Hall, accompanied by her daughter Miss Vivian Hall and son, William, returned home Wednesday from a vacation spent with friends in California, Oregon and Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. LaMar Newton and piome. family of Price were guests at the H. W. Utterback home Sunday. Mohrland mine will not be idle I during July as it has been during the past summers. iDr. J. C. Frank Olsen has recovered from an Physician and Surgeon attack of tick fever from which he Office Hours, 2 to 5 p. m. was very sick for six weeks. He is Residence 234, Eastern able to resume his work. . ?Phone 246-I Utah Electric Building, Price, Utah etEdward and Marjorie Laird of I Wyoming have been visiting at the fjjome of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Buchspice. I Billie Lines and Bruce Pike of Price tspent last week at the William Lines PROFESSIONAL Hubbard, J, !r. F. McLaughlin, M. D. I Res. Phone 381 Bliss L. Finlayson,M. D. RAINS NEWS By A1 and Jo Mrs. Mary Giaretti of Chicago, Illinois, is visiting at the home of Mrs. Victor Orlandi. Kenneth Anderson is spending a Physicians and Surgeons few weeks in Burnt Fork, Wyoming, Office Phone 255 with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. 1 20 N. Carbon Ave. Claude Sardlier. Utah Price Mrs. I. W. Dalton has returned from a short trip through Wyoming where F. W. she visited her daughter. Miss Amelia Pavignano is visiting Attorney and Counsellor At Law 1 East. Utah Elec. Bldg. in Salt Lake City. Booms Mr. and Mrs. George Sitterud, Georgia, and Mrs. Lillis daughter, B. FRANK Jewkes and baby of Orangeville, were AT LAW recently guests at the home of Mr. j RoomsATTORNEY 1 and 2 and Mrs. Alton Blackburn. Silvagni Building Miss Anna Brozovich was hostess Phone 397 Price at the last Busy Bees club meeting. Mutual softball team defeated W. Spring Canyon, 13 to 3 in their last Professional Radio Service game. A successful dance was given i Phone 55 Price by the team Saturday night. Rudy Krissman and his Rhythm Artists S. J. played. After an enjoyable trip and sucLAWYER four berry pickers have cessful 9 E. Main St. TeL 141 returnedwork, to their homes here. KELLER 304-31- HANSON . J. POTTER I i RESIDE IN CARBON UTAH FERRON C. C. C. NOTES i President Of District 22 district inspector, made his F--regular Of Mine Workers To Have Quarters Locally Albert Roberts of Rock Springs, Wyoming, vice president of district 22 of the United Mine Workers of America, has announced that he is moving his headquarters from Rock Springs to Price in conformity with a ruling adopted recently at the district constitutional convention of the or- ganization. This regulation provides that one officer reside in Utah, while the secret- and another officer ary-treasurer reside in Wyoming. John M. Ross, district president of the union, will make his home in Rock Springs for the present, while Virgil Wright, secretary-treasure- r, will remain in Cheyenne to have charge of district headquarters. It is expected that Mr. Ross and Mr. Roberts will alternate in residing in Utah. monthly inspection of Camp Ferron last week. cCc Educational Adviser Dan E. Sweet, who for the past week had been attending an educational conference in Los Angeles, returned to Camp l, Ferron, to continue his duties. Mr. Sweet reports that the conference stressed vocational training for the enrollees. To help the advisers institute vocational training programs in their camps the Frank Wiggins Trade school of Los Angeles was carefully studied, and each member of the faculty of that school was interviewed by the advisers for information concerning teaching problems and opportunities for employment in the respective trades. It is hoped that in the future educational advisers will be able to obtain the necessary equipment for a practicable vocational training program. F-l- Coal Production In Vets May Enroll In Conservation Corps Instructions have been received from the veterans administration at Washington that enrollment of veterans in the veterans contingent of the civilian conservation corps will begin July 1, 1937, and end July 20, according to Manager Walter D. Daugherty of the national reemployment service here. The replacement quota seventy-seve- n. honorably discharged war veterans who are able to perform manual labor and who have not been discharged from the civilian conservation corps since June 30, 1936, should call or write the Veterans Administration, 12 th Avenue and E Street, Salt Lake City, for application forms. Application forms are also available at the U. S. employment service offices. Authority is given to fill the anwithnounced quota of seventy-seve- n out regard to public relief requireThose at ll State Records Rise Production of coal in Utah increased substantially during the week ending June 12, as compared with the previous week, it is shown in a report issued by the division of mines of the United States department of interior. The output of Utahs mines during the period covered by the report was 30,000 net tons, an increase of 7000 tons over the previous seven-da- y period. It was a gain of 1000 tons over the figure for the corresponding week of The nations production of bituminous coal during the week which closed June 12 was 6,995,000 tons, as compared with 6,600,000 tons during the previous week and 6,697,000 ton during the same week a year ago. Card punches for sale at The sight-seei- ng Fords Grenfield Village, New Orleans, Chicago and scores of other interesting points. Many parties will travel one way by the southern route returning the northern and vice versa. All groups will make daily stops to inspect points of interest along the route, climaxing their trips with ten in days of camping and Washington which will include tours to all points of historical interest in and around the capital city. On the Washington list of trips which each of the 25,000 Scouts will have the opportunity of making will be: Mount Vernon and Washingtons grave, the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, White House, capitol building, Supreme Court building, Library of Congress, Government Printing offices, Smithsonian institution, Arlington cemetery and for Sea Scouts only Annapolis. sight-seei- ng MMMmmtiiiHiiiiimHiHiMiiiimiiiiiHiiiiiimiiiiimmuuiimmiiuMUUtiUiimimmtimmiiuimuiiinimimiiMmittuuuitiiumiiMiitumiHtmimtiiMuiiimHiiuiimm ATTEND ANNUAL OUTING Games and entertainments were enjoyed by young and old, and prizes Attendance reports from the annual given for stake driving, needle outing of the Loyal Order of Moose, threading, sawing. Also for the largheld in Park Ro Shea on June 20, est Moose family present and the showed the Helper chapter as having youngest Moose baby. Picnic lunchthe largest representation of any oth- es, swimming, bowling and baseball were among the pleasures. er group of the state organization. PHONE CAMPBELL'S TRANSFER j M0YE MOVING PACKING IS. STORAGE SHIPPING 309 CAJU N AVC Good morning I" Standard Service Men prove their personal interest by taking such good care of me. I just spot one of these signs of Standard Service and the rest takes care of itself! NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Salt Lake City, Utah, June 25, Office, Veterans interested in enrolling in 1937. the civilian conservation corps should NOTICE is hereby given that Vermake application immediately. nal Warren, of Consumers, Utah, who, ment. Welfare Commodity Schedule Arranged on July 25, 1932, made stockraising homestead entry, No. 048492, for Lots 3, 4, 5, Sec. 6. NEy4SWV4, SWy4-SW- y4 Sec. 5, NWyiNWVi Sec. 8, Ws-NEy- 4, NEy4NEy4 Sec. 7, NEy4SEy4 26, Township 13 South, Range The schedule for distribution of re- .8Section Salt Lake Meridian, has filed East, lief commodities in Carbon county notice of intention to make final this month was announced Tuesday Proof, to establish claim to the land ' by John Maulsby, director of the above described, before Frank HanCarbon welfare department. sen, Notary Public, at Price, Utah, on . S. Clothing will be distributed on only the 3rd day of August, 1937. Claimant names as witnesses: Henone day, July 20. Following is the Attorney At Law schedule for food distribution: July ry Laramie, & Wendell Laramie, of Room 5, Silvagni Bldg. Nick Uzelack, & Nat 12, Sunnyside and Wellington; July National, Utah, Phone 16 Price Coal of Bowcutt, City, Utah. 13, Heiner, Royal, Castle Gate and THOMAS F. THOMAS, fTHOMAS-DESERE- T Kenilworth; July 14, Scofield; July Register. Mortgage 15, Helpef-July 16, Price; July 19, Date of first pub., July 1, 1937 Fed. to E. et First ux West Rollo Glen. and Consumers Date of last pub., July 29, 1937 Spring Sav. &Loan, local surv lot 4, blk 10. 1 LICENSED EMBALMERS Willis E. Bean et ux to Union Mort. I Day or Night Ambulance Service Co., Highland Park lot 7. TeL 164-We are grateful for the cooperation we have received from Price Kosmas Andrulakis et ux to First our patrons and stockgrowers during our four years in business, National Bank, Braffet sub lots 5, 6, blk 26. fF. B. and hope that the same good will may continue in our new locaet ux to Carbon Emery James Seppi Law At tion Attorney from Price on the highway to Helper. Jj lot Bank, Price tws surv N of Commercial Bank Building 4, blk 30. PHONE 368 fPrice James Liddell et ux to Res. Adm. Utah prop in sec 26, 35 twp 13, mg 13. PHONE 242-Clarence Anderson et al to Mrs. THE PERFECT TRIBUTE COSTS UTAH PRICE sec 15, 21, j Martin Anderson, prop in NO MORE I twp 15, mg 10. Merlin D. Jones et ux to Kenneth Flynn per prop. Smith, I No. Eastern Utah Electric Satisfaction Mortgage $8 Carbon Ave. Phone 29 Mario Seppi et ux to Fred Larcher. Carbon Emery Bank to Kosmas AnWallace drulakis, release mortgage. Price Trading Co., corp to Kanakis I LICENSED EMBALMERS Gianalakis; rel chat mort. A. N. Wallace, Mgr. I Ed Virden to Elmer W. Powell et I 41 No. 1st East rel mort margin. ux, Phone 158 Price, Uta Notice of Pendency Gust Diamanti to Peter Jouflas, Pratt surv Welby tws. Chattel Mortgage Lincoln Marshall to Farm Cred. EAL ESTATE Transactions ; MORTUARY Jerry Olson and Phillip Jensen of Price are two of the 25,000 boys who are seeing America first this summer thanks to the first national Boy Scout jamboree which will bring many of them across the continent to an encampment upon the banks of the Potomac river in the nations capital. Traveling almost entirely by special train, groups will take advantage of opportunities to visit national parks and monuments, spots of historical interest, cities and towns enroute. Scout leaders report plans for interesting tours which will make the Jamboree experience a trip of a lifetime. Although all boys will not be able to visit all places of interest, the various trips have been planned to take in such points as tiie Civil War battlefields. New York Citys wonders. West Point, Niagara Falls, 1936. SWEETRING HORSLEY pAGE FIFTEEN PRICE BOYS SEE AMERICA FIRST 45 RESULT OF JAMBOREE ATTENDANCE I Captain Charles R. Nate, assistant Vice is Res. Phone 318 1 . I By Leona ?Mvers PRICK E, MOHRLAND NEWS UNION OFFICER TO COLUMBIA NEWS Sunday. jake Delbert Kay SUN-ADVOCAT- STANDARD SERVICE INCLUDES Complete Lubrication Service. Servicing t Tire, Batteriei, Ra- diator!, Windshield, and Headlamps. Clean Reit Room.. Road Maps. Travel Information, and many Motoring Acccuoriei. W HAMMOND E, , Funeral Home Mortuary F. Beard et ux to Res. ops and livestock, Ut. Farm ig B. Olsen et ux to 1s d. Asen. P. Elder to Carbon Emery ase to Res. Adm., crop and Staker and Clive E. Gordon on Emery bank, cattle. Liddell et ux to Res. Adm. I livestock. Affidavit acken I The Public 7. Quit Claim Deed Mary Young, Co. clerk to D. a; correction of Q. C. ti R Powell to Mutual10.Lbr in sec 21, twp 14, mg Sheriff Deed Bliss to Home Owner Loan elvedere Add., lot 1, blk 1. Warranty Deed J. Grames et ux to Price, 11. rp., local surv lot 2, blkmum. i Co. School Dist.. lota 1, blk Price, muni, corp., There Is An ABERDEEN Lee to Park lot DEALER In Your awnard et ux to Price, muni rice twn surv lot 1, blk 4, Community Miller to Martha Focounis, tws blk 4. -t Gunderson to Clarence An21, twp 16, sec in al, prop ath W Stevenson to Mercy lot 2, s et al, Tidwell surv fe PRODUCERS et ux to ti Francis Olsen tws blk 5. Herring, Parkdale of Mortgage identure ran Trust Co. to Columbia de- rp., reconveyence and i Army Discharge Hickman. Army to Ernest lVi-mil- es BECKEL PACKING CO. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA |