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Show THE Page Four and Cancer Drive at Spring Glen Successful The Cancer Drive with Mrs. Phyllis Stovar, chairman, and Mrs. Hary H. Pinarelli and Mrs. Mary Duke, committee members, report that the drive was a complete success. The total amount received from the Spring Glen drive was $117.79, which is a good record. The committee wishes to take this means to thank everyone who donated in any way to this drive. The committee also wishes to say that it appreciated the cooperation of the townspeople in making this one of the most successful drives ever completed in Spring Glen. Mrs. Alice Phillips of Salt Lake City spent last week end visiting at the home of Mrs. Crystal Fullerton. Mrs. Phillips is a former resident of Spring Glen and will be remembered by many of the people now living here. Clifford Haycock, Jr., of Grand Junction, Colorado spent the week end visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Haycock. Mr. and Mrs. Haycock are Cliffs grand- parents. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Rowley of Salt Lake City visited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Rowley, this week while en route to Moab on a business trip. ' Mr. and Mrs. Gary Orr of Salt Lake City visited Friday at the home of Wayne Rowley while they were en route to Long Beach, California. Mr. Orr was a companion of Waynes while the two were stationed in Germany. Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Nick Nikas arrived at the home of Mrs. Nikas parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Snyder, where they plan to spend a week visiting before they leave again for San Francisco, California. club The Capper Cutters under the leadership of Kathleen Dunn met Friday at the home of Judy Koss. The meeting was call- 4-- H You Can Sell Anything with a WANT-A- D PHONE For FAST-ACTIO- N Results! son-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Wel-d- o Bushnell. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Richardson, ed to order by Janet Clarico and who have spent the winter in dues were collected by Judy Koss. Mesa, Arizona, returned home Minutes were read by Karyn Tuesday to spend the Spring and Refreshments were served summer months at their home in Spring Glen. by Judy. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence RasmusMr. and Mrs. Libley Martinez of Salt Lake City spent the week sen and son and daughter, Tommy visiting at the home of Mr. and and Murna spent the week end Mrs. Fidell Sanchez. The ' Mar- visiting in Salt Lake City at the tinez's are cousins of Mrs. San- home of their son, Mr. and Mrs. chez. Jay Rasmussen. The Wycotah Oil and Uranium Visiting for the past two weeks at the home of Mrs. Sarah John- Company is drilling its Uranium son were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Davis property east of Ferron. George of Ephraim. Mr. and Mrs. Davis A. Rowley, director and chief geolare former residents of Spring ogist for the company, is superGlen. vising the drilling. Fred Rowley left Saturday for Mrs. John Fercik Sr. spent the Vallejo, California, where he will week end visiting in Salt Lake visit with his brother and sister, City at the home of her daughter Mr. and Mrs.Aseal Rowley and and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Charley ONeil. Wayne Ashworth. Mrs. Edith Hunter and her son, Vincent Guirre of Salt Lake City Ray, spent the week end in Salt snent Saturday evening visiting at Lake City visiting at the 'home the home of Mr. and Mrs. David of her sister, Mrs. La Rue DonRowley, Jr. aldson. She also visited with Mr. Bob Robertson, Jim Burr, and and Mrs. Cliff Saline. The Salines Johnny Mack of Moab spent also are former resident of Spring Thursday and Friday at the home Glen. of Jim Morgan. The boys were Mrs. Ina Rugg of Oklahoma is up here for the band festival. visiting at the home of her sister, Saturday, Wayne Rowley, Bob Mrs. Dorothy Timmons. Olsen, and Nick Gustas left for Mr. and Mrs. Glen James an4 Florida by way of Maryland and daughters, Kathy, Peggy, Paula Washington. D. C. When they get and Jamie Lynn, spent Friday af- to Maryland they planned to drop ternoon at the birthday party of Nick at his army base and the little Jimmy Mullins, son of Mr. other two will continue to Florida and Mrs. Jim Mullins. where they plan to spend some Mrs. Audrey Greener left Sun- time. I aFawn Jones, Joan Boyack, day for Denver to join her husband, Master Sergeant Devon Judy Hansen. Mary Lou Sherman, Greener. Mrs. Greener has been and Gerald Marchello went with visiting at the home of her par- the Helper Seminary Saturday to ents, Mr. and Mrs. Thill Mar- the Manti Temple where they shall. were baptised for the dead. Mr. and Mrs. James L. McFall Monday night the Relief Society visited in Salt Lake City Monday, held its weekly meeting with Mrs. Tuesday and Wednesday. On their Sarah Rowley giving the theology way in Mrs. Charlie Ellis of Help- lesson. er rode with them as far as Sunday there was no church American Fork where she visited held at the tabernacle in Price. her parents. Many of the people from Spring The Friendly Circle Sewing Glen attended the services that club met Thursday at the home were held there. of Mrs. Edith Hunter. The ladies Warren Jones, who is presently present were Crystal Fullerton, employed at Pleasant Grove, Mae Monroe, Edith Piccione, Virspent the week end visiting with ginia Tomsic, Dorothy Timmons, his wife and children. and Dorothy Losik. Mrs. Losik is Mr. and Mrs. George. A. Rowley a new member of the club. A returned recently from Grand special visitor at the meeting was Junction where they had been on Mrs. Ina Rugg of Oklahoma. a business trip. Joseph Holman of Salt Lake Mr. and Mrs. Marian G. Romney City spent Sunday visiting at the of the general LDS authorities and home of his mother, Mrs. Sarah Earnest Wilkings had dinner SunJohnson. day afternoon at the home of Mr. Mrs. Sarah Rowley returned and Mrs. Standley Judd. home Sunday from Meadow where A complete line of Show Card she had spent the last week visoffice iting at the home of her daughter colors at the Pic-co- ni. son-in-la- Thursday, May 5, 1955 SUN-ADVOCA- Veteran Coal Mining Mali Turns to Uranium After 40 years of probing the earth of Utah for buried treasure, veteran mining man W. H. Sweet is getting ready to pioneer again. This time its uranium! A veteran coal mining man, Mr. Sweet helped open up many of the major coal fields of Utah. With his brothers, F. A. and C. N. Sweet, and his son, Victor, he pioneered the search for coal in Utah and particularly in Carbon county. The Sweets were instrumental in building branch railroads throughout the Utah coal fields, developing raw coal deposits into profitable ventures, and fathering important Utah industry. Now, with 40 years of success behind them, with their place in mining history intact, the Sweets have decided to pioneer again. The magic metal uranium has tickled the imagination of the veteran, and his miners heart started pounding with reports of the past two years that men were taking millions from Utah ground. Uranium is power, he points out, and power is progress! We looked for coal for four decades because coal was needed to power the wheels of western progress. Now its uranium the wheels So well produce urneed anium. Power has always been the Sweets gauge of success. Coal has been their major project, although like all western engineers they have dabbled successfully with gold mines, silver claims and quick-silvdeposits. But, Mr. Sweet pointed out, power is basic . . . when you find a metal with energy like coal and uranium you find wealth . . . and progress . . . power can always be marketed. There is never a shortage. Unlike the influx of . amateurs in the business, the Sweets have ... er approached the uranium dream like practical mining men. They realize that uranium is not a stock certificate, a pretty prospectus, an oral promise. There is only one yardstick a mining man uses to judge mining land, Mr. Sweet said, and is there something in that is the ground. The Sweets intend to find out. At the present time the Sweets control 409 potential uranium claims in the Colorado Plateau and Wyoming uranium fields. A Drilling will start soon staff of trained, geologists and engineers have been hired. With a gleam in his eye, with a veteran smile, Mr. Sweet now 85 says it will be good to be back in the field! To prevent child accidents, keep which are harmless when taken all medicines out of reach of chil- as directed, may become lethal poeven ordinary dren. Medicines tions for small children. ones like aspirin and laxatives CAMPBELL CO. Phone 102 TRANSFER & STORAGE 295 No. Carbon Ave. S ... hard-worki- Oxygen Moving A. A v .cored aqaAM; ng Price CW4L Mothers of Seventh Day Adventist Church to be Feted Mothers at the Seventh-da- y Adventist Sabbath school will be honored at a program Saturday, May 7, at 2:30 p.m., it has been announced by Mrs. L. E. Averett, Sabbath school superintendent. Adventist church services are held on Saturdays which brings the annual Mothers Day observance a day early for the congregation as a whole. A special program of songs and recitations will be presented by the primary and youth departments of the Sabbath school. Doris van Uden, secretary of the Young Peoples Society, will serve as master of ceremonies and will pin a corsage on the oldest mother present. Each mother will receive a carnation. Humdrum isnt where you live but what you are. eueui ounce, a. McuiiS lJh&ki KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY . WHISKY . 86 PROOF LOUISVILLE 1, KENTUCKY Sun-Advoc- Theres not enough food for you and the bugs As any backyard gardener knows, you have a fight on your hands from the moment you turn over your first spadeful of earth. At every step, fungus growths, weeds and in- sects wait to destroy your lawns, trees, plants, flowers. A disheartening struggle k a for Greenthumbers commercial farmers. for fight ... round-the-cloc- But, theres a growing list of weapons you can wield against bugs. Some of the most effective have been developed by Standards subsidiary, California Corporation. In 1907, we brought out the first basic lead arsenate tft stop the codling moth, a fruit crop destroyer; later, e summer and dormant oil sprays that safely checked scale and other insects. Spray-Chemic- al Other Standard research achievements have been chemicals to kill aphis, mites, thrips, and similar sucking insects . . . dusts' to destroy fjungus diseases like rust, blight, mildew . . . sprays and dusts custom-mad- e to knock out such enemies as the grasshopper, boll weevil, hornworm. Other pest-kille- rs boost milk production from our dairy herds, help beef cattle fatten faster. One good reason you live in the worlds best-fe- d nation i3 because insect invaders have been held back on our farms, ranches, and orchards, thanks in part to Standards constant hunt for new ways to make petroleum do more things for you. new-typ- Standard plans ahead to serve yoo better Class of 1985 It would take a long time to determine who won the bet but wed be willing to wager that the lad in the picture winds up owning a Cadillac! We feel so confident because he is starting out like a typical Cadillac owner. men. Preponderately, Cadillac owners are They just emerge from everywhere. But they are usually marked, quite early in life, by industry and thrift and the will to succeed. Thats why we say that this wonderful lad out is earning money to make himself very likely to wind up owning a Cadillac. Looking at him, as he labors, we estimate the class of 1985 ! We hope we are around to deliver his car when the great day arrives for its a great thrill to hand out the keys when an owner comes in for his first Cadillac. Its worth a lot to see the smile on his face and the gleam in his eye as he settles himself behind the wheel self-ma- de nt ! studies the instrument panel to make sure of the controls and floats away in the direction of home and a family celebration. Of course, for the lad in the picture, the thrill of that first Cadillac is still a great many years away. But how about you? Is the time coming close for your dream of a Cadillac to come to a happy ending? If so, wed be happy indeed to see you. This is a wonderful year for owning a new Cadillac whether its your first or your fifth or your tenth. Never before has Cadillac performance been so marvelous its beauty so arresting its comfort and handling ease so delightful. It is more decisively than ever the Standard of the World! Why not come in today and check this for your- Well give you the keys and a car for the most revealing hour you ever spent in a motor car. self? Walton Motors 301 East Main STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA Price Can You See, Steer, Stop Srr A- - |