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Show THE PRICE. UTAH E. TOUGH WINTER IN BRITAIN LOOKS LIKE ANOTHER nications, manufacturing and mining. We Blm-Aiiimrahave tp out-fe- d and other naCOST' ONI ONI COVRRAOC, ONI NCWRPAPKR, tions because our citizens have been better Isiuso Evibt Thursday By Tmi prepared than those of other nations. It was the schools that supplied the CARBON COUNTY PUBLISHING COMPANY basic training, knowledge and technical skill Entered at the post office at Price, Utah, as second for this march to power. It is the public class matter under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rate $2.50 yearly in Utah; $3.00 yearly outside state. school system that has proved to be our best investment. HAL G. MacKNIGHT, J. VLAHOVICH, Publishers They tell us that education is expensive. But other things, far less useful, are costing us much more. This year, as a nation, we t MEMBEshall spend less than five billion dollars on UTAH STATE all our schools elementary, secondary, and NATIONAL EDITORIAL. higher institutions of learning. The same nsnvU ASSOCIATION year, we shall spend more than ten billion on liquor and tobacco. We shall yPlurJhA. dollars more on amusements than on all edu- spend cation, and twice as much on a peacetime and navy. army YOU TO BELONG SCHOOLS THE d Even the harassed and Yes, Mr. and Mrs. America, the schools English people are spending more than twice are yours, just as the children are yours. as much on education as the United States in proportion to their income, and Russia is What we do for the schools today will determine what Americas children can do tospending somewhere between three and five morrow. times as much as we are, in proportion to the income of the people. The kind of a world we have in the fuNovember 9 to 15 is American Educature does not rest entirely with the statesmen it depends chiefly with the parents tion Week. In view of your pride in your nation and your schools, visit your school and teachers, who are raising the children of today. during this period to see what it is doing to meet the challenge of tomorrow. Freedom, democracy, high living standA United States Chamber of Commerce ards, more and more gadgets, scientific proginvestigataion end will all reports that where schools are of atomic use energy ress, the in disillusionment and ruin unless we rear best, average incomes are highest; retail a generation that will cherish and employ sales and rentals are greatest; and civic these gifts to build a better world and a and cultural activities attain impressive Prom lb t Pilti of Tbt Sun on d Tbt standards. Good schools, this report shows, better society. are a communitys soundest investment. Not by accident, nor through the posArmistice Day was fittingly ob- service committee, which was that session of unsurpassed natural resources, men were given served in Price today (Friday) two SLOW ELECTION RETURNS nor through the free enterprise system alone, with one of the largest parades employment and immediate as- has the United States become the most Considerable criticism was heard about ever seen in the city. The pa- sistance, four families were taken schools the of on The nation earth. powerful town following the recent city election be- rade formed at the Central school care of. A small group of peop'e and marched down First North to contributed clothing, while five nation have played a major role in guiding cause of the slowness of returns, final re- Second West, thence to Main and families, flood sufferers, were giv- our nation to a position of eminence in world sults not being given out until past midnight. on Main to the city hall. The en assistance. affairs. Reason was that only one set of election parade was headed by servicemen Long before any other nation had emjudges were used whereas two have been in uniform of the army, navy and Harold V. Leonard spent Sat- -, barked upon a public school system, the employed in most previous elections in Price. marines. urday and Sunday in Salt Lake people of the United States had endorsed Helpers returns were completely in within City on business. He attended the the principal of compulsory universal edu- an hour of closing of the polls, two sets of W. F. Olson, running for mayor Creighton-Uta- h game while in the cation as a requisite of citizenship. Our judges being used there. The small differ- of Price on the Citizens ticket and city. people have been better educated. In turn, ence in cost, it seems, should hardly justify fighting both the Republicans and Mr. and Mrs. Matt Gilmour they have used their knowledge and skill to the inconvenience to the candidates and the Democrats, was elected to office and Dr. F. F. Fisk left Tuesday Tuesday by a tidal wave which ingeneral public. develop agriculture, transportation, commu morning for Palo Alto, California, out-finance- d, d, out-foug- ht hard-presse- lender Uncle Sam because the 'musk m an1 cards and instructions did not pleasant place ma 1)3110113 reach local workers in time for their leisure tiiT 40 the date set by most counties. The matter needed is now here and! Heber F Cr retUrned Mrs. C. H. Stevenson, chairman oflgundav w ,ft the Red Cross chapter, is in months in .0, bit charge oi .he work. hmc l" J'Idaho8 the heap., al but was rhiheJ rejected throat trouble. Whitmore returned Tuesday from Nephi, where he went to attend the funeral services for George C. Whitmore, and left last night to join Mrs. Whitmore in Kansas for a short visit. Both will return soon. J. M. 1 on e SCCOUflt Miss Ida Tanner has received word from her brother Happy that he has been promoted to the rank of corporal in the hospital corps at Rockford, Illinois, where he is stationed. No one. here who knows him will be surprised. the Mrs. Mat Gilmour went to Salt veml:)er Tuesday for a short outing. Superintendent Orson John H. Pace went to Salt Lake back in his office the Ryaa Sunday to take up his work as a week after spending several in member of the federal grand jury. various districts assisting The dining room at the Savoy the organization of Piret- has been turned into a lounging Teacher associations. j da-- Ntwt-AJvof- nlt COLLEGE STUDENTS TAKE ACTIVE PART AT U CONFERENCE Ten Carbon college students attended the Rocky Mountain conference of International Relations clubs held at the University of Utah campus Oct. 31 and Nov. 1. International relations from colleges and univer-- j of Colorado, Wyoming, Mon- tana, Idaho and Utah were pres- ent to participate in the various IJ sessions. Attending from Carbon were Douglas Johnson, John Daskalos, Maxine Vuksinick, Norma Anderson, Dick Scow, Iona Conover, Ferrill Persill, Beverly Thomas and Conrad Nelson. Successful participation in all sessions by Carbon college students is attested to by the fact that Dick Scow was elected chairman of the International Trade committee and Iona Conover was elected secretary of the Interna-club- s tional Trade Organizations com-sitimittee. Carbon delegates on the Korean question won their de- bate and were responsible for the es THE HOUR of CHARM THE ELECTRIC HOUR EVERY where they will visit with Craddock Gilmour. Mrs. Gilmour will remain in San Francisco while Dr. Fisk and Gilmour go golfing at Long Beach. They will return by way of New Mexico. Thirty Years Ago Carbon county women are not to be deprived of registering for SUNDAY-K- Featuring PHIL ALL-GIR- L SL 2:30 PM. AND HIS SPITALNY ORCHESTRA Brought to you by UTAH POWER & LIGHT COMPANY 00 Theyre the talk of the coffee stops! Seventy-fiv- e couples attended the Kiwanis club dance at Kenilworth Saturday evening. A large number of Price people were in attendance. Reed Thorpe of the high school in Salt faculty spent the week-en- d Lake City visiting relatives. Due to the muddy condition of the roads he was eight hours driving home. At a called meeting the Red Cross met in the commissioners room at the county court house last Wednesday. The principal re port was given by Mrs. Wallace Lowry, chairman of the home .'I ; ? HEAT COMFORT Prttb-ti-r Choos ChtvroUt trucks for Transportation UnTimrtodl mnd mbKI ntmp mtOmm oftinrml There a new 1 mtrn mtL Advance-Desig- n 107 models Chevrolet truck to meet your hauling or delivery requirements tee the cab that breathe." and eight wheelbase. See them at our showroom VI&OIL HI - a; KieiM KM? Gmmpamrjr 129 WEST MAIN PRICE, UTAH COAL & COKE CO. Producers BOTTLED COCA-COL- A o! County what surprised Wednlsdav Q,C' ln wh' Mrs. Barbara J county reorder, resumM work after a trip to Qj. , visit her mother k andbeing her name Mrs. Charles t10' The wedding was exPec4ed but was not looked T st oon; rLeger met Mrs. F res er n ScaUle ' and TWENTY YEARS AGO cluded every precinct in the city. Olson received a big vote over (drafting of a resolution to the as- both of his opponents, and was ten The sembly. delegates were a safe majority. The elected by also active members of a group election was one of the warmest representing small colleges who ones conducted in Price for many elected the new International Rewas and run and years squarely lations officers. without mud slinging. In addition to the sessions, the delegates heard outstanding auEmery county will appropriate thorities in the field of Internato meet an allotment of $8,000 tional Relations speak at the two-da- y $27,000 by the government to reconference. build the Ocean to Ocean highway in the vicinity of Woodside. At the height of operations during World War II the air force Robert W. Crockett, Jr., son of numbered 2,400,000 men, and 80,-0- Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Crockett of planes. Today it numbers Price, who is attending the state about 310,000 men and 12,000 university at Columbia, Missouri, planes. was operated on last Sunday night for appendicitis, the case being a very aggravated one and was the third attack for the young man. It L'tnj UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COL- COMPANY Y BOTTLING COMPANY 01947.P-- C 02. |