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Show .'WOV NSASWAWW Crippled Kids W to Benefit from I Dance Revue Funds iiousewamtsr service The Crippled Childrens hospital in Salt Lake City, will be the recipient of all proceeds derived from the dance revue to be presented in Price and Helper performances for Mrs. Elaine Eaquinta and her students. The revue will be held in the Price municipal auditorium V. Kr- yXotJlfcAW nuu DANCE FOR BENEFIT &, A , , s The Crippled Childrens hospital at Salt Lake City will be the recipient of proceeds derived from the dance revue which will be presented by Mrs. Elaine Eaquinta and her students to be staged at the Price municipal auditorium November 8 and in the Helper civic auditorium . . . Nov- ember 8 beginning at 7:45 p.m. and in the Helper civic auditorium November 22 starting at 7 :45 p.m. Theme of the revue is The Woman in the Shoe and it will asNovember 22. Shown above is one group of stu sure all spectators a treat to see dents in a ballet number. Left to right are Nanette the tiny tots spilling out of the Marshall, Beverly Giacoletto, Susan Pace, Jolene shoe as they ballet and tap dance. Bene, Achella Livingston, Christine Herzog, Annette Also to be admired will be the Dennison and Dorothy Smith. older students with their poise and charm as they toe dance, perform acrobatics, ballet and tap. Included on the program will be many and varied acts. Music for the dances will include the soft, Glow-worsweet refrains of "Aloha, etc., and bouncy rythms Buttons such as ABC Boogey, and Bows and many others. Mrs. Eaquinta conducts classes n, at Price and Helper and her stu- dents range in age from three to eighteen. Some of the tiny ones have had less than six months training but they have the manship of professionals in ing to perform to please. v L lirttlSoMiawMIg THE DANCE IS THE THING . . . Youngsters who will take part in the glow worm ballet number during the dance revue at, the Price municipal auditorium November 8 at 7:45 p.m. p.m. and at the Helper civic auditorium November 22 to 7:45 p.m. are shown above. Left to right are Danielle Welsh, e Sun - Third Section .$' Excessive Payments ' ' VV. Disabled Vets Subject to Recovery To Overpayments to disabled veterans receiving extra compensaBarbara Johnson, Katherine Patterson, Mara San-t- i, tion for dependents are subject to Harry Dragatis, Peggy Johnson, Marce Dusserre, recovery' by the government, but Suzanne Pitts, Pamela Poloni and Paula Wilson. can be avoided if the veteran reAll are students of Mrs. Elaine Eaquinta, and pro- ports promptly any change of deceeds from the two performances will be contribu- pendency to the Veterans Adminited to the Crippled Childrens hospital. stration. VA said additional payments because of dependents are authorized by law for veterans whose disabilities are rated at 50 percent or more. Overpayment of these allowances is usually the result of change Thursday, October 31, 1957 es of marital status, death, or dependent children marrying or reaching the age of 18, VA ex- ffldfr&cate Price Girl Scouts Push Ticket Sales for Uncle Roscoe Shows Girls Scouts of Price are pushing ticket sales for the staging of Uncle Roscoes Paytime Party which will be presented in two performances at the municipal auditorium November 2, Saturday, a .matinee performance at 3:30 p.m. and an evening performance at .. 7:30. Funds derived from this program will go to enlarge the Girl Scout program in Price. Uncle Roscoe sent the follow- ing advance information regarding his show: I have good, good news regarding talent for the Girl Scout show in Price Saturday, Novem-- 4 ber 2.' The following artists have expressed a desire to be present: Judith Barrus xylophone. This , charming young lady, featured on TV, at Hotel Utah and Saltair with the Uncle Roscoe show, spent the summer at Ted Macks Music School in Massachusetts. Judy is one of the very finest young instrumentalists, in 1 the state of Utah. LaRue Billeter, accordion and piano. LaRue invites the audience to join in on her cowboy songs. She is a real cowgirl who plays and sings and yodels. She is just as pretty as she is nice, and in a private life she is the wife of n doctor. She has chil-- . dren of her own and knows how to get children to sing and laugh and applaud and enjoy the show. Michael Dowd. Handsome cur boy alto from Utah who . . lf two-mon- UUiynCi ...of d styling in action, in a new '58 Studebaker or Packar(L come in for your nowl Hawk-inspire- test-driv- n fuel-savin- low-cos- 1 new-looki- Call your Housewarmer Standard Man your Standard Heating Oil Distributor or local STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA re ' Miss Veronica Heinlein, instructor in English and member of the Carbon College faculty, is currently engaged in delivering a series of lectures before clubs and organizations in the Carbon county area upon the subject of modern European customs and attitudes. Having recently returned from tour of Germany, Italy, France, Spain, Holland and Belgium, Miss Heinlein has become a popular speaker on the subject of her travels and has been invited to appear before the Price Sorosis Club on November 4. She addressed the Business and Professional Womens club October 8, and the Price Rotary club MISS HEINLEIN fuel! n Your Housewarmer prides himself on prompt, deliveries. One call brings convenient, autog matic oil heat all season long PLUS tips that really pay off! THRIFTIER ! Standard No. 2 Burner Oil with Detergent-Actio- n t, Thermisol keeps your burner system clean for efficient operation. WARMER! Standard No. 2 Burner Oil is specially refined for furnaces alone to bring you more pure heat per gallon. No other type of fuel has higher burning efficiency Every drop of Standard No. 1 Stove Oil turns to golden warmth not a drop is wasted. CLEANER! Standard Heating Oils bum so clean, fabrics, walls, much longer. and woodwork stay fresh and , Prompt reporting of dependency changes, VA emphasized, enables the. agency to keep its records current and prevent overpayment, the recovery of which often comes as a hardship to the veteran and gorgeous never his family. Carbon Facultywoman in Demand as Speaker Following Recent Tour of Europe Countries PRO AND CON Teacher: Since pro means the opposite of con, can you give me an illustration? Student: Progress and Congress. Detergent-Actio- QUICKER! neat-as-a-pi- plained. - well-know- UVvjj VT YU n lo seen-befo- plus service-connect- has been on Ted Macks big TV million dollar smiles, network show from New York costumes, and exquisite dance routines. City. Michael at school plays base-baDebbie Barrus clowns and sings just as well as he plays piano. He is modest, quiet, and talen- and dances.' The small fry just ted. Hollywod and Broadway have love her and so do the grandmas both enjoyed his beautiful Voice, and grandpas. his song styling, and his musical Virginia Marrufo features aucomedy dances. Girls and women thentic Spanish dances from South go wild over his Songs. He is our of the Border, down Mexico way. special treat for Girl Scouts. They Her La Paloma is pensive and will never forget him. exquisite. Her Mexican Hat Dance Kathy Cooper is our comedien- is wild and exotic. ne. She is the only young girl I Terry and Jerry have a novelty know of who can get laughs on act combining dialogue, songs, every song every time. She has cartwheels, flip flops, and ventriloappeared for years on Uncle Ros- quism. Terry is a real George coes TV Playtime Party and has Pitts protege. Jerry is only a had her own series of nighttime "dummy. television shows on KSLrTV acAnd then, of course, well recompanied by a full western band. cruit talent from the audience for Kathy and her guitar are a real prizes and surprises to help out treat for men and boys who like with Uncle Roscoes giant cartons and new stage magic. good western comedy songs. The Given dancers are real We do hope you pack the house troupers. Trained by their mo- for both the matinee and evening ther, who danced professionally in performances and that you make England and Australia, these love- a lot of money. We are sure peoly girls have pretty black eyes, ple will enjoy the show. S3 RIGHT AND WRONG Here lies the body of Jonothan Gay; He died maintaing his right of way. He was right, dead right, as he sped along. But hes just as dead as if hed been wrong. show- want- th October 23. She departed for her foreign tour on June 5 and returned to Price August 21, having visited many of the principal cities of Europe and also spent considerable time in rural communities. While in Germany, she visited 9 nephew who is a teacher in one of the U. S. Army schools. Miss Heinlein joined the Carbon College faculty when the college was opened in 1938, having taught in Carbon county high school for a number of years previously. She obtained a bachelor of arts degree from Duchesne College in Omaha, Nothing newer AROUND THE WORLD oemotr FMRIS GENEVA 6ICM REAP POMS. ATHENS ISTANBUL. ANKARA PENANG CALCUTTA JAIPUR. TEHRAN The 58 Ford has been proved around the world. This is the most dramatic and most grueling test ever given a new car before its public announcement. The whole world was used as a test track for the 58 Ford. The car drove through England, France, Switzerland, Italy, Yugoslavia, Greece, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Malaya, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, and finally back, to the place it started Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A. The Ford powered over the great mountain ranges of three continents: from the Alps to the Himalayas and the Rockies. It crossed the great rivers of history: the Thames, the Seine, the Tiber, the Arno, the Tigris, the Euphrates, the Indus, the Ganges. This car stood at Buckingham Palace, rolled up the Champs Flysees to the Arc de Triomphe, and paused at the Eiffel Tower. It was greeted by the great Paris couturieres at the famous fashion salons where its "sculptured in steel styling was applauded by the most audience in the world. style-conscio- , The 58 Ford rode smoothly down the rugged, beautiful seacoast of Titos country, to a festival in Dubrovnik, and into Greece to Athens, where this newest classic met such ancient classics at the Parthenon and the Temple of Poseidon. Into Turkey: and the 58 Ford passed the great white lacework palaces of the Sultans aloog the . Bosporus and the Golden Horn. Then the Ford went where few but nomads travel, up into the hot days and chill nights of the ancient mountains of Afghanistan. And thence along the route Alexander the Great followed with his chariots to cross the his-- . tone Indus river. On and on the Ford moved, down into the heat of mysterious India, through New Delhi to the Taj Mahal, and to the great pink palace of the Maharajah of Jaipur. This great new car met the challenge of the monsoons rains that for centuries have stopped all road movement throughbut didnt stop the 53 out Ford. It drove on to Penang in Malaya, and then north to Bangkok. Indo-Chin- a, Further on came Saigon, the Paris of the Orient, at the farthest tip of Southeast Asia. Finally, Michigan. The 58 Ford Studebaker-Packar- d See your local Dealer today I -- o issued since May 1, 1951. The new form of bond will be serviced by electronc machines, saving labor, time and money. , d round-the-worl- d The 1958 Ford is value: hard-dolla- r value. It is also style, power, performance, and a dozen great new features. But above all, it is value. This is the car youve been waiting for. See it November 7 theres nothing newer In the world than the 58 Fordl tost trick UNITED MOTOR CO. 280 EAST MAIN PRICE, ... has been proved and approved around the world. A natural question arises. Why did Ford go to such great lengths with its 1958 model? Why spend so much money and time and go through all the problems of negotiations, customs, border transit, diplomacy in so many countries? The answer: in the competitive automobile market of today, only the best in value can survive. And this test is the most decisive possible demonstration of the best. proved and approved around the world Tbo lint car ovor to us thi wholo world m it powered across the great Rockies and plains of North America and back, at long last, to Detroit, Nebraska, and has done graduate work at the University of Utah. The new punch-car- d form of Series E U. S. Savings Bonds, issued since October first, supplants the old- - paper bonds, of which more than two billion had been PNOM PENH BANGKOK UTAH |