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Show I Page Six THE 10, 1957 in jail. Stella L. Hill entered a plea of guilty to a charge of improper use of restricted drivers license. Defendant was fined $10. Good cause appearing, the court ordered the fine suspended. . , Edward J. Silver entered a plea of guilty to a charge of failure to keep car under proper control. It was the judgment of the court that the defendant pay a fine of $50 and serve five days in jail. Good cause appearing, the court ordered that $15 of the fine and the jail sentence to be suspended upon payment of the fine. Stay was granted to pay the fine by September 17. Magin Paige entered a plea of guilty to a charge of no drivers license. Defendant was fined $10. Bud R. Pilling entered a plea of guilty to a charge of no safety inspection and improper registration. Defendant was fined $20. John W. Pierson entered a plea of guilty to a charge of no drivers license. Defendant was fined $10. Hayden Larsen entered a plea of guilty to a charge of speeding. Defendant was fined $15. Stay was granted to pay the fine by September 20. September 11: Myrtle A. Anderson entered a plea of guilty to a charge of improper mufflers. Defendant was fined $5. September 13 : S. Lyle Davis entered a plea of guilty to a charge of overloading. Defendant was fined $50. Good cause appearing, $25 of the fine was suspended. September 14: Jimmie Dueane Wilstead appeared on a charge of reckless driving and at thd conclusion of the evidence and the arguments, the court found the defendant not guilty of the charge anc the ordered that he be released from all obligation thereunder. Ted H. Niwa entered a plea of guilty to a charge of speeding. Defendant was fined $10. Peter S. Cox entered a plea of guilty to a charge of gross weight not displayed on truck. Defendant was fined $5. Charles G. Cram entered a plea of guilty to a charge of no registration on semitrailer and improper display of gross weight. Defendant was fined $15. September 16 : David E. Valerio appeared on two counts with failure to appear on a traffic ticket. Good cause appearing, the court ordered the two charges against the defendant dismissed. Lorenzo H. Roberts entered a plea of guilty to a charge of passing on a hillcrest. It was the judgment of the court that the defendant pay a fine of $10 and serve two days in jail. Jail sentence is to be suspended upon payment of the fine. Stay was granted to pay the fine by October 5. Dahl Roland Henrie entered a plea of guilty to a charge of speeding. Defendant was fined $10. Ralph R. Dunn entered a plea of guilty to a charge of overloading. Defendant was fined $50. Good cause appearing, $20 of the fine was suspended. September 17: Pete Morales entered a plea of not guilty to a charge of drunk driving. Trial in the matter was set for September 25. Defendant was released upon his own recognizance to ap' pear at that time. Reid M. Hales entered a plea of guilty to a charge of no gross weight displayed on truck. Defendant was fined $5. Good cause appearing, the fine was suspended. John Vatsis entered a plea of not guilty to three charge of failure to deliver certificate of title to Emma Floyd Alger, Ken Olson and Reuben Hunt. Trial in the matter was set for October 9. The court ordered the defendant released on his own recognizance. Anthony Marvidikis appeared for arraignment on a traffic ticket and asked the court for more time before entering a plea on a charge of no drivers license. The court ordered the arraignment continued until September 30. Udell T. Jackson entered a plea of guilty to a charge of gross weight not displayed on truck. Defendant was fined $5. Gus Vouros appeared for preliminary hearing on a charge of failure to make and file an individual income tax return. At the conclusion of the states case the defendants attorney moved the . awajffiQ i. t Trrfpa " CTU'-C- CjHHUj) tmn an. oc . emu QtJuj litQHt a Licensed Funeral Director Dick Mitchell, Mortician ME7-266- 8 Phone In The City Court September 10: Ruth Alice Nail-Io- n entered a plea of guilty to a charge of disturbing the peace. It was the judgment of the court that the defendant serve ten days Wallace Mortuary Mitchell Funeral Home SUN-ADVOCA- Thursday, October and Embalmer Phone Prke. Utah ME7-358- Q SDflSth LESSON FOR HUMANS . . . Lassie is one of the star performers in Officer Pressleys Safety Circus scheduled to be shown to the elementary school children of Price and Helper October 14. The Safety Circus will be presented at the Price municipal auditorium at 10 a.m. for all elementary school children of the city and a repeat performance will be given at the Helper Central school auditorium court to dismiss the charge against him on the grounds that sufficient evidence has not been presented to constitute reasonable cause that the offense had been committed and that the defendant was guilty thereof. The epurt ordered the charge against the defendant be dismissed and that he he released from all obligation thereunder. EVIDENCE TAMPERING A prim little lady was telling a friend about her awful consternation upon finding two empty whisky bottles in her garbage can. You can imagine my embarrassment, she said. I got them otu fast, because I didnt want the garbage man to think I drink. What did you do with them? asked the friend. Well, the preacher lives next door, was the reply, so I put them in his can. Everybody knows he doesnt drink. SS Price City Priscello Sez: One advantage in leaving late is that you miss the thousands who started early to avoid the crowd. SS Once the President throws. out the first baseball, it is about the last time anyone in Washington will play ball with him. Farmers Advised to Check Soil For Phosphate Needs Farmers may need to apply phosphate fertilizer if they have added none for several years, advises Dr. Paul D. Christensen, extension soil conservationist a t Utah State University. Crops which respond to phosphate fertilizer when the soil is deficient in this nutrient include alfalfa, potatoes, sugar beets, and vegetables. If you are a consistent phosphate uSer you may not need to apply any this fall, Dr. Christensen says. The phosphate you apply is not all used the first season. It is not leached out of the soil and part of it remains available to plants for several years. Apply the phosphate this fall so that winter and spring mois- - at 2 p.m. the same day. Officer Pressley with his trained dogs is brought here by the American Trucking Associations, Inc., national sponsors of the show which teaches safety lessons to the boys and girls of America. Each act presented with the dog troupe points up the importance of observing traffic regulations. OOJL and Tiny Electronic Meter Can Be Inserted Into Veins, Pushed Ipto Heart to. Measure Blood A tiny electronic meter for measuring blood pleasure has opened a new field for understanding heart failure, shock, and other blood circulation disorders, Veterans Administration said today. The meter, about the size of the end of a match stick, is inserted into a vein and may be gently pushed up and into the chambers of the heart and blood vessels of the lungs. Dr. Herbert O. Sieker, assistant chief of medical service at the VA hospital in Durham, North Carolina, has used the tiny guage to measure blood pressure in the veins of 10 normal persons and 15 persons with symptoms of heart disease. He said he usually takes from 50 to 100 different readings for each patient. Althoughdoctors have long been able to measure the pulse of the blood as it is pumped by the heart through the arteries, measurement of pressures involved in return of blood through the veins has been difficult, Dr. Sieker explained. His work holds promise of helping clarify the forces that return blood to the heart, VA said. The little meter, called a manometer, is fastened to the end of a thin, flexible plastic wire and inserted into' a vein at a convenient point on the arm. Slight variations in the low pressure of blood in the veins make a plunger in the meter move and cause electrical impulses which are transmitted along the wire to an amplifier and recording device. Dr. Sieker said several forces may cause blood to flow back to ture will carry it into the root zone in the soil. Check phosphate needs through soil tests. Carbon county fanners should contact Robert L. Hassell, agricultural extension agent, for instructions on how to take soil samples. Samples are analyzed by the soil testing laboratory at USU for $1 each. Up to 10 acres may be checked with a single sample. Fanners should allow a week to 10 days for processing of the heart from parts of the body. One is a muscular contraction around the veins, he said, and another is a sucking action created by the heart and lungs. m The Finest Hosts and Hostesses Serve "jij" ITU KENTUCKY BOURBON AT ITS BEST t 1,111 11111 C- D- L0UISVII1E KEMTUCKY. KENTUCKY DISTRIBUTED STRAIGHT BOURBON DISTILLERS BY: NATIONAL 8S WHISKEY Vi .V VALLEY BUILDERS SUPPLY GUNNISON, UTAH Quality Builders for Over 50 Years i Invites You to Enjoy the Thrift of a New, Modern Home! YOU RECEIVE ... OF OWNERSHIP GREATER PRIDE GREATER VALUE GREATER GREATER COMFORT CONVENIENCE GREATER SECURITY GREATER PLEASURE GREATER ECONOMY GREATER PRESTIGE We Offer the Best Package Deal of Our Times . . 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