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Show had .aion 5 Business, ch Meet Results r (V her. high school business and speech Friday have been announced iSsS11" hortor . " 'ersary. a k yji" debator w 5 who um- - highest rankingSeeley, AlterEmery Brasher, North Eaine North Emery; Arnold, South Emery and I Juhion Umtah, (Six TSieVon f t ' kSlNannette ''jfnSr Mar- - ?nd Lloy fetttah, & first; Business AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Skills First year typewriting Aleene Black, San Juan high, first; Alison Shepherd, San Juan high, second, and Darius Burke, Uintah high, third. Second year typewriting Max Uintah high, first; Caldwell, Nancy Nielson, San Juan high, second, and Elizabeth Williams, Price junior high, third. (60 words Shorthand per minute) Mary Bacca, Carbon high, first; Leta M. Haddock, Roosevelt high, second, and Karen Simper, Uintah high, third. Shorthand (80 words per minute) Joanne Christensen, Uintah high, first; Rachel Franco, Carbon high, second, and Aleene Black, San Juan high, third. Volume 59 & I anmLr 5 X South Emery, Shorthand (100 per $ fourth. Emery, Mary Austin, Carbon 6 minute) Nor- first. (Scares of other con- X reading Roma high, and Rita Cur- - testants were too low to be- ' words place Emery, tied for first place, cause of too many errors.) second; Fullmer, Uintah, ( 120 words per Shorthand Umtah, third, juice Calder, minute) Marilyn Mead, Carbon Uintah, fourth, m McGraw, high, first (Other contestants Blackburn, South made too Nedra many errors to place.) fifth First Max bookkeeping Flossie Caldwell,year : incrous reading Uintah Donhigh, first;' Mary North Emery, first; ald Uintah high, sec'.Lj Umtah, second; Jayme ond, Hacking, and Mary Austin, Carbon Nolen third; Uintah, mi fourth; high, third. South Emery, ens Second year bookkeeping , North Emery Richards, lene Donna Woodruff, Carbon high, South Peacock, Joanne I1 and first, and Connie Jones, Carbon StMThe two names listed high, second, de- each school comprised a GREATEST ACREAGE OF Kay Cook and Terry team) won SUGAR BEETS IN HISTORY South Emery, L lost none; Bobby Mortenson V. A. Meek, chief agriculturist North Emery, John Piccolo, for the Holly Sugar company from Fullmer Dale lost one; 1: toe, JoAnn DeJourner, Uintah, Grand Junction, Colorado, was in area Tuesday checking on three, lost one; Lila Bartlett this Burl Haslam, Alterra, won the beet situation, according to L lost one; Eda Nielson and Ray Branch, local representative. ux Moffat, North Emery, Mr. Branch states that 11,000 two, lost two; Kay Bnnker-- " acres of sugar beets have been almore and Peggy Huntington, South ready signed up by farmers, than any previous year in history. :i7, lost two, won two. s X h X i $A $ X v X A , Y i m X Oc per Copy April 1 Saturday), you fk n our door at most any can expect the census tune- - Be Prepared to' queftlons. about yu and your family. It is your hent- American and your duty as a citizen to help your fnnnn!eiitPrVlde the accurate statistics necessary to plan the future of this great nation. Caensus taker is a sworn United States government em- f,nd carries identification to prove it. Personal informa- be beld in the strictest confidence. Subject "yU glve Wl11Provided by law, even the Federal Bureau of . pr.0VlsIons iglven and thatcannot forhave access to the personal information goes any and all taxation groups, too. Your city, county, state and federal governments need and se. e.very answer you give. These answers will be used on a statistical basis but will effect every man, woman and child in The three major schedules taken up in the 1950 TW oun.try' Wl11 be Popuiation, housing and agriculture, V. Max Moffitt, regional census supervisor, says. B?ry manufacturer, distributor, businessman and Jst A1 thls country will use ther9Abersu7Tnfo7mrtwn"forten long years. This is a complete survey and there is no sub- stitute for a quality census. in Carbon county are Jessie and Richard R. Barker. Census takers who attended Holdaway a school in the Price municipal auditorium Tuesday and Wednesday include rUls Bezyack, Lois Anderson, Bessie Mahleres, Elaine Jensen, bimone C. Greenland, Lena Dowd, Norma Baker, Alice Christ- ensen, Irene Abeyta, Dora Smith, Claude Abrams, Verna Cro- ffunf Charmaine Matthews, Lawrence Young, Esther S? Lowell, Lillian Hendrickson, Arleyn Oliphant and John L. Driscoll. jT? age, Advisory Board Elects & b 'I $vh $ eir Work Pleases Junior Prom Patrons X 5 Si i the Stars Sf?irwy Unior AGE ww wbM Prom is Theme of Annual Slated for Tomorrow Evening fcIJiorProm-on- f ston, Joanne Fassio, David rn(bng social Chris Platis, Rex Mchlgh WlU be held Thompson, Dick Fnday March Arthur and Melvin Wall. in Jones and Dallas Herring are asrc ici. ACarbon colIeoe committee sisting with the scenery. Class on tee details advisors are Carl Olsen and this yearS affair Harold Bithell and class officers which if not surPass include Tom Ossana, president; Junior Pr611131 Promsoffoe, years. Rex Me Arthur, vice president; H is Storwf the Pr0m this Merlene Jeanselme, secretary-treasure-r, t0 1116 Stars and Ernest Etzel, repthe del & resentative. actual decoratthat theme and 0ations wil1 not be fc'led Invitations were mailed several Pm. tomor- - weeks ago to patrons, parents and friends of the school. PoSTct1" Charge of de- ?Jfrester of Joyce PARKING SPACES WILL aSSiSt6d by Sage pene Jeari' fharon Stoddard, BE WIDER IN PRICES h-Ca- roi John- - it e af-tw- m. gym-'k?'M- 7 S it iced, et OOB It h T? BUSINESS DISTRICT UONS DATE and Mmuu r MINSTREL show for tee second M Club .wuhS minstrel benefjt have been Ap5ei3enatatjn ft15' r, Project Committee Members Being At il 1atreulns fjwu this at Drag- - ne at the leit?dltortem on other Ps- nn6d Wltb one club kl,teow from wiu'be' y of local club Changing of parking meters in Prices business district started early this week from the present 10 to 12 feet widths to allow for easier parking, according to city officials. This will eliminate five meters in each block. There are approximately 228 meters in the city. Parallel parking will be effective on the north side of First South between Carbon avenue and First East. Parking meters will be taken out of the area in te front of the postoffice and installed will be signs there. The meter zone will also be extended along Main street between First and Second East. five-minu- Studied For C of Tentative selection of 17 C of 22 standing committees for the Price Chamber of Commerce were made at a noon meeting of a special committee named recently by President Henry H. Mills, consisting of F. A.. Norton, chairman, George Patterick, A. N. Smith, Hal MacKnight and A. D. Keller. All committees must be approved by tfte directors. The group went over a list of be project objectives which will the general for promoted actively benefit of the city and area. One project now receiving particular attention is work in getting the Nine Mile highway completed. At the regular meeting of the board of directors Monday, routine business was attended to. Discussed was the possibility of er losing the Monarch-Challengairlines stop here. The group will also sponsor a resolution opposing the socialized medical plan now being promoted by the federal government. Two Disease Cases cases were Only two disease for reported from Carbon county 24. One March week ending the of the cases was measles and the reother syphilis. No report was of officer health the from ceived Price city. General Bxcelleme Awards Number 13 1949 Go On Ballot v No Flying Saucer, 4) Just a Jet X V Fighter Over Price S '' MEETING district meeting of the Utah State Home Economics association will be held at the Price junior high school, Saturday, April 1, at 2:30 p.m., it A working agreement under which the hospital will be operated by a joint Price county institution has now been signed by the Price city council and the Carbon county commissioners. The signing of the agreement by the city was held up until some amendments could be affixed to the agreement and these, along with the original agreement, have now been signed. The signing of this agreement by both parties leaves the way open for the two governing bodies to appoint a six-mhospital board which will operate the institution. As soon as this board has been named the hospital will actually go under joint operation and will function as a unit separate and apart from the city and the county. All hospital accounts will be separated from both the city and the county and will be operated as a separate unit. The hospital board will consist of three appointees from the city and three from the county with at least one city councilman and one county commissioner on the panel. It has been reported that the three county commissioners may serve on the board until the first of the year inasmuch as two of them come up for reelection this fall and in the event of any changes the new commissioner or commissioners may have a voice in the appointments. ty city-Carb- on Carbon N E. vl., Utah State Press Association building in north Price. $ $X has been announced by Ellen Aageson and Lois Sedgwick, of the southeastern Utah district. All home economics graduates living in Carbon, Emery and San Juan counties are invited to attend. The district chairmen have arranged a program which will be of interest to all home economists homemakers, teachers, extension workers and others who make up the group. The program will feature demonstrations in the latest ideas in home equipment, new food and household products on the market, spring fabrics available locally and a preview of one or two new films. The home economists will also visit the new department at the Price junior high which is the newest of its type in the state. Central committee members shown include, seated, left to right: Carol Johnston, Joyce Forrester and Rosana Sage. Standing, left to right: Sharon Stoddard, Merlene Jeanselme, Rex McArthur and Tom Parry. E The Carbon county board of education, meeting in special session Tuesday evening, set April 26 as the date for the $500,000 bond election which, if accepted by the voters of the county, will see an expansion in the countys school system to provide more class room units in three of the countys schools and the construction of a new elementary school v Joint Operating Hospital Agreement high school junior class well wound up their annual social event, the T11 be hld tomorrow eve-- e college gymnasium. NEWS-ADVOCAT- Legal Notice of Vote, Poll Judges, Polling Places to Be Issued April 6 Church Authority $ $ City, County Sign Barbon Iwn shn,f m nrln, have, pretty Lot pLlPariug or tbe to $500,000, X A southeastern City-Coun- 30, 1950 X & GET CALI FOR SATURDAY THE SUN Ded&ini Seft ApiHiD of Question Raising Money, t HOME ECONOMISTS An election for advisory board members for the San Rafael grazing district is being held today in the Price city hall. The terms of three advisors expire including Lawrence E. Thorderson, Harry Mahleres and Seely J. Peterson. CONSOLIDATION Price, Carbon County, Utah, Thursday, March America Counts OH Saturday V iv 1 A Stories of flying saucers and such prevalent in the na- tions newspapers and LEGRAND RICHARDS Carbon LDS Stake Sets Week-en- d Quarterly Confab Bishop LeGrand Richards of the presiding bishopric of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints will be the visiting author ity at the quarterly conference of the Carbon stake scheduled to be held in the Price tabernacle on April 1 and 2, Saturday and Sunday, it has been announced by Elton L. Taylor, stake president. Saturday at 7:00 p. m. the priesthood leadership meeting will be held with the bishoprics, branch presidencies, stake com- mitteemen, patnachs, all ek priesthood quorum presidencies and secretaries and Aaronic priesthood general secretaries expected to attend. The annual Carbon stake Gold and Green ball will be held that evening commencing at 9:00 p. m. in the Carbon college gymnasium. Ward budget tickets will be honored. Sunday at 10:00 a. m. and 2:00 p. m. the general sessions will be held. The Primary association of the stake will furnish the music for the morning session and the Price First ward choir will furnish the music for the afternoon session in addition to a special number to be given by the Price Third ward Aaronic priesthood chorus. Besides Mr. Taylor, the Carbon stake presidency consists of Arvel R. Stevens, first counselor; Asa L. Draper, second counselor, and Robert G. Timpson, clerk. maga- zines seem to have the populace on edge and Carbon county is no exception. Yesterday, a flying object was seen hurtling through the skies over Price which left a trail of smoke that prevailed for over a half an hour. We received many telephone calls about this object but from information we have gathered (our flying saucer expert having been laid up at home by a barrage of saucers thrown by the little woman) we found that the object was a jet fighter plane. This information came from some people who took time out to closely observe the ob- ject The plane approached Price from the east and near the east limits it went into a climb and sailed over the city at a high speed. Sorry to disappoint some imaginations but the jet plane story seemed to us to be the most logical and as far as we are concerned, a jet plane It was. New Bishop ( ur College Men Form Industrial Club A new trades industry club for Carbon college men has been organized, it has been announced by Irel Longhurst, director of the vocational school. Maurice Nay is acting chairman of the group and is being assisted by Willis John Palacios, Mike Branch, Dougherty, Louie Golosimo, Mike Kolovich and Bernard Taylor. of Carbon County School District, Carbon County, State of Utah, be authorized to issue and sell bonds of the district in the amount of Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000), in the denomination of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000) each, numbered one (1) to five hundred (500), both inclusive, the bonds to mature in numerical order without option of prior pay, ment $50,000 one year from the date of the bonds and $75,000 each year from the second year to and including the seventh year from the date of the bonds, to bear interest at a rate of not to exceed three per cent per annum, for the purpose of raising money for purchasing school (Continued on Page Two) (3) Carlyle Pace Named Carlyle Pace, Price city treasurer, was sustained as bishop of the Price First ward, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, at a reorganization meeting held Sunday nit CARLYLE PACE Wellington Woman Chosen to Represent Eastern Utah for Utah Mother Title He evening. succeeds James W. Fausett Who has served as bishop of the ward for the past five years. Mr. Pace, in LDS church work, has served on the Carbon stake Sunday school board and at the time of his appointment as bishop Sunday evening he was chairman of the First ward building fund committee and was secretary of the Carbon stake long-acti- an Utahs 1950 mother will be selected tomorrow (Friday) at the Box Elder tabernacle in Brigham City and she will be chosen from a group of district mothers. Representing the eastern Utah district will be Mrs. Esther Milner Tidwell, Wellington, who will be sponsored by the' Sarah Jane Powell camp, Daughters of the Utah Pioneers. Mrs. Tidwell is the mother of eight children four of whom are graduates of the Brigham Young university at Provo and two are tional $500,000. The April 26 election will submit to the registered voters who have paid a property tax within the district during the year next proceeding such election the following question: Shall the Board of Education Price First Ward old-ti- Mine Workers of America president who won the eight-hoday. a new elementary school building in Price. The entire program as outlined by the school board will entail an expenditure of some $700,000 but the school district has in its building fund a sum near the $200,000 mark which will necis-sita- te a bond issue for the addi- As Bishop of John Mitchell Day April 1, Saturday, Is the traditional miners holiday. It began years ago as John Mitchell day United in honor of the The program to be placed up for the approval of the voters will include additions at the Helper junior high school, at the East Carbon junior high school and the Southside school In Price and ve high priests quorum. The appointment was made by the presiding bishopric of the Carbon stake. Mr. Pace has announced that he has appointed Roy H. Maughan as his first counselor, Leonard Williams as second counselor, Floyd Marx as ward clerk, Harry R. Smith as finance clerk and Jess R. Higgins as assistant ward clerk. These newly named ward officers replace Clifford Warren, first counselor, and James C. Young, second counselor. Mr. Marx, Mr. Smith and Mr. Higgins were retained in their same positions. The First ward of Price consists of the area between Second East and the city limits on the east and between Second North and the Denver and Rio Grande railroad on the south. Mr. Pace has been busy receivof his ing the congratulations friends on his new appointment. on the Primary stake board and was president of the MIA for five years. She also served as a Sunday school teacher and as a Relief society class leader for many years and has been an active member of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers In Carbon county for many years. Mrs. Tidwell exemplifies all the qualifications for the American Mother, stated Mrs. L. W. Sarah Jane Powell Reynolds, camp captain, "in that first, she is a successful mother as evidenced by the character and achievements of her individual children; second, that she reflects a strong religious and spiritual integrity; third, that she embodies Lindsfrom candidates for graduation this Three of her children spring. have served on LDS missions and two are graduates of beauty operators school. Two of her sons served in the army, one as a those traits highly regarded in chaplain who is now teaching in mothers courage, cheerfulness, a seminary In Salina. The other patience, affection and kindness, was a corporal. understanding and homemaking Seven of the Tidwell children ability; fourth, that she has a were in Carbon county bands at. sense of civic and international the same time and one daughter understanding, and has been acwas a member of the Carbon high tive in community betterment or school band which won national in service for the public benefit, honors at the Chicago World Fair. and fifth, that she is qualified to Mrs. Tidwells father lived with represent the mothers of America in all responsibilities attached to the family for 25 years, As a church worker, she served her role as The American Mother." Represents Carbon at Conference Brent Lindstrom, senior class president at Carbon high, has been chosen by the senior class to represent it at the annual youth conference which is sponsored by the Salt Lake City Rotary club. Representatives of all high school senior classes in the state will meet in the capital city on April 22 and will discuss national problems until April 25. |