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Show v? 'U ' " I- ' v' ' ( I ' -- X The r r Suh - Qdvocate Thursday. June Third Section ji fe, Vrs'S Dr. Quinn Whiting To Return Here For Practice Dr. Quinn Whiting will re1, after spending the past two years post graduate work in the L.D.S. and Salt Lake General hospitals in Sait Lake City, and will engage in a limited practice in obstetrics and related fields. He resumes his practice in the Price Medical Center building where he had been associated with -- Utah Guardsmen Close y Summer Camp &t?p luff t mg&ys t 14-Da- summer training camp for some 4,5000 Utah Na-- i tional Guardsmen ended Sunday when the last unit moved in convoy to its home town armory. Heavy artillery firing tests were concluded Friday by four bat- talions, the 145th from Provo, the 222nd from Ogden, the 294th from Logan and the 213th from Cedar City. It ended tests in which hun- dreds of rounds of shells were Howitzers and final by eight-inc- h into the 155 mm Long Toms Oquirrh Mountains west of Camp A i r two-wee- Gains Scholastic Honor Roy M. McIntosh, son of Mr. and Mrs. John S. McIntosh, Price, is among students cited for scholColastic attainment at lege, Angola, Indiana, according to an announcement by Dr. Joseph E. Williams, vice president in charge of academic affairs. Mr. McIntosh holds a scholastic record of all Bs Dr. D. T. Madsen and Dr. Orson for the spring quarter at B. Spenser, before leaving here. College, where he is a student in the department of USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! chemical engineering. 27, 1957 ; ' A. turn to Price on July Tri-Sta- te Tri-Sta- te k f? : I I s Williams. Three battalions of engineers, numbering more than 1,500, comy graveled roadpleted a way. The project was began two years ago by the engineers. They spent one week of summer training in 1955 on the project, one week in 1956 and the entire two weeks of the 1957 encampment. Despite delays by rain, mud, hail, snow and equipment breakdowns, the project was completed as scheduled.' Even a mock war with agressor forces failed to stop work on the road. The roadway will be open to the public. However, Guard officials have urged motorists to drive slowly and use good common sense to avoid accidents while using the roadway. A maximum speed of 20 MPH is advised while traveling on the road The 1957 encampment marked the largest gathering of forces in the history of the Utah National Guard. Troops were hindered durk ing the first week of the training course by rain and cloudy weather. The second week proveded cleared weather and warm skies. A record payroll of $400,000 will be paid guardsmen at their home town armories From this, $80,000 will be withheld for income tax and other deductions. Most of the heavy vehicles and other machinery were placed in mothballs in the vehicle concentration site at Camp Williams, awaiting the return of the forces again next summer. two-wa- IDEAS . . . Two clinical nursing structors from Price, Mrs. Virginia R. Gamber, left, and Mrs. Lyle Lamph, right, discuss current educational problems with two Provo women, Miss Nellie Kujala, clinical instructor, tenter left, and Mrs. Maria Johnson who will foe practical nurse consultant for Provo beginning July 1. They met EXCHANGE in- $1600 Forestry 4-- H work conference on pracduring an 1 at Colorado tical nurse training held June State University, Port Collins, sponsored by the U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Representatives from seven states met to formulate plans for development of practical nurse training programs in the states. inter-region- al 18-2- Scholarships Offered Four high school graduates with Donor these valuable awards of a genuine interest in forestry and is Homelite, a division of Textron, club Inc., Port Chester, New York. three years or more of 4-- H work may each receive a $1600 college scholarship next fall to be applied to undergraduate work in forestry. Candidates will be recclub ommended by the state 4-- H office. Offered for the first time, the scholarships are intended to help qualified through four years of study. They may enroll in any accredited college or university. The only stipulation other than maintaining satifactory scholastic progress is that the student carry a major or minor in - The funds will be administered by the National Committee on Boys and Girls Club Work, Chicago, in cooperation with the Extension Service. The winners will receive the award during the naclub congress in Chitional cago next December. It is likely that one candidate from each of the four Extension geographical sections will be selected for the $1600 grant. The sum will be paid at the rate of $400 per year for four years. If. 4-- H ", a DR. WILLIAMS 9 1IE (HhiTI VZ DOOR extrude trtPirnmjnt M Veterinarian to Set two-wee- Up Practice in Price Dr. L. P. Williams, recently discharged from the U. S. Air Force, will begin veterinary practice in Price and the surrounding areas this week, it has been announced. He find his family, wife and year-ol- d daughter, have purchased, a home in Price and are now completing plans to move here. Dr. Williams stated that for the time being he will treat small animals at his home and will go out on calls for treatment of larger animals. He is a graduate of Colorado A&M having received a .doctor of veterinary medicine degree in June of 1955. I J" DR. PAUL NATURALE Carbon Native Adds Dr. to Name After Graduation in Ohio Dr. Paul C. Naturale, son of Mrs. Amelia Naturale of Ogden, is a member of the 1957 graduating class of the College of Medicine, University, of Cincinnati, Ohio, where he has been training for the past four years. Dr. Naturale is a native of Carbon county, having attended public schools at Wellington and Price. After graduating from Carbon county high school, he served in the U. S. Navy, after which he attended Weber College in Ogden, and the University of Utah before going east to complete his schooling. He has been an active member of the Phi Chi medical fraternity. Dr.f Naturale and his wife, the former Barbara Rasmussen, daughter of Mrs. Mary Jane Rasmussen and the late Lawrence M. Rasmussen of Price, are returning e in to Utah where the graduate has been accepted for an internship at the Salt Lake county General hospital. mid-Jun- Your cancelled checks are your receipts, which you receive automatically for every bill ydU pay by check. We return all cancelled checks to you, with your periodic bank statements. You are cordially invited to open a ing account of your own here at our bank. CARBON EMERY BANK NEW SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT For Your Convenience Drive-I- n Teller Window Utah Price Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System NOW! This new FORD SIX PER MONTH AFTER DOWN PAYMENT O I I . Former Price Youth o tlzdJi painting i TftT mCHJ37D tnrrril1 tMDNO Here's lifetime beauty with these plus features: n action. Substantial and streamlined for prim, door use. Locks from .ither side without key but key is required to unlock from outside. NEW CONCEALED HINGES of stainless steel with Oilit. bearings for lifetime service. COMPLETELY Keep door locked and talk to callers through opened louvers. Come in now and see the Lifetime Vacol Extruded Aluminum Jalousie Door for yourselfl NEW LOCK with i Gets Naval Appointment Douglas Holbrook, son of Mrs. Neven Wetzel of Salt Lake City and grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Gomer Peacock, Price, left this week for Annapolis to enter the naval acadenjy, He received the appointment by Senator Wallace F. Bennett, Utah. He graduated from Carbon high and attended the University of Utah for one year and the School of Mines at Butte, Montana, for two years. I push-butto- Brewers Foundation To Salute Counties PROWLER-PROO- AT PRIME ALUMINUM FRAME AVAILABLE FOR DIRECT APPLICATION TO MASONRY EXTRA COST NO WOOD.n Why Repair Your Old Door? Up to $10 Trade-I- n on Wood Doer Up to $20 Trade-I- n on Metal Door NO SCREENS OR GLASSES TO CHANGE FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL ITEMS GARBER & SEPPl, Inc. Dial ME 78 Price, Utah Utahs counties will take their turn in the spotlight beginning this week in a series of advertisements sponsored by the United States' Brewers Foundation. First, advertisement in the se-ries, appearing on Page 3, 3rd Section, this issue, salutes the scenic wonders of Kane county. Subsequent works will describe highlights of other Utah counties and will appear in newspapers throughout the state. The U. S. Brewers Foundation, a trade association of the brewing industry, is creating the series as a public service. John C. Campbell, director of the Foundation Utah - Wyoming Division said, We Our 57 for $57 a month plan on this '57 Custom Fordor Ford Six includes: two-toexterior . . . MagicAire heater . . . turn sigoil filter . . . state and nals . . . federal taxes . . .. license and title. ne Full-Flo- w 1: This Custom Tudor Ford Six is your familys best of the year, and we can prove it! Your familys hard-wo- n car dollars go farther in this big beautiful new kind of Ford Six for 57! For as little as $57 a month, you get the only modern Six in the field. And its 144 horsepower makes it the most powerful, tool Heres over 16 feet of brilliant new car on Ford's new, longer wheelbase. Ford I are pleased to have an opportunity to salute the counties of our great state. The Foundation is especially happy to launch this series at a time when the tourist season is nearing its summer peak. The U. S. Brewers Foundation) opened its Utah offices this year in Salt Lake City to carry out the program of the beer industry. The work involves constant associa- tion with public officials, Jaw enforcement officers, civic leaders and members of the industry to insure continuance of high standards of operation wherever beer is sold. car-bu- y low-fricti- mBoo$d We m companion on offers fresh new. style, too, built around a heart of quality we call the Inner Ford. 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