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Show Thursday. August 2. Sun Chronicle Tips given for Business Portrait y Er.i3rson SJamps V Local stamp collectors will be pleased to know that there is now a store located in the Roy Shopping Center dealing strictly in high quality stamps Emerson's Stamps for Collectors, located at 1932 W 5700 So , offers to the public both foreign and domestic stamps There is no waiting for stamps that are purchased and each stamp is of the highest quality Emersons is jointly owned by Emerson Goss and Ed Hamblin and has on stock over a million stamps The price of the stamps range from two cents to. $000 with customers erjoying discounts of 15 to 80 percent. Mr. Hamblin, an has been collecting stamps for 45 years and Mr Goss had enjoyed 25 years of collecting Mr Goss said that the most popular stamps in the shop are the art stamps These stamps feature reproductions of famous paintings and area colorful addition to any collection The store deals exclusively in stamp., in order to offer its customers a v, ider variety of stamps to choose from If you are a stamp collector in the Weber-Daviarea Emersons holds many exciting additions to your collections .1 summer vacationer " .fUV tyif f, r t. ;f . . Gasoline shortage inconvenience isnt a crisis if motorists in cars, campers, trailers and motor homes follow tips on traveling in the Mountain West are followed, says Stephen A. Jeffs, head salesman of the Ogden Trailer situation. National Guardsmen Major General Maurice L. Utah Watts, Adjutant General, announced that Guardsmen from Utah as well as Guardsmen and Army Reservists from New Hampshire, New York, Montana, Oregon, Ohio, Oklahoma, Colorado, Mississippi, Texas and California will train at Camp Williams. Nearly 500 Utah Guardsmen will undergo their annual training in California, Wyoming and General Watts Washington s estimated that of the men training at Camp Williams will be from other states He said Camp Williams was selected as a training site because th terrain is ideal for a variety of military maneuvers. The Utah Guards military police and Army band will undergo their training at Camp Williams. Guard engineer units will undertake a road building project in the Fillmore area. Artillery units from Utah and other states will practice and perfect their skills at Dugway. A special team from Sixth United States Army will evaluate all units. Leaving the state for training, the 144th Evacuation Hospital will send 240 men to Madigan General Hospital in Washington. Another 186 men from the 142nd Military Intwo-third- samea-iou- ' i 2 gene-rule- d fey 5 f Com- 6-- " pany will go to Fort MacAr-thu- r, California, 90 men from the (Target Aquisition) Field Artillery Battalion will train at Fort Irwin, California and 150 more from that unit will go to Camp Guernsey, Belirifll or not neteriil useful thoughts were in there. creased automobile dependability and fuel economy, to tune up their car before they go. We are finding that our decline in sales because of the costs have skyrocketed over the past two years. Its no wonder that the cost of wood to the builder and the homeowner are so great, McKay said. In the past two years, the cost of raw lumber tro the processor has increased from between $2 and $5 per thousand board feet to between $90 and $100 for the mwT telligence (Linguist) lumber lumber prices are regulated by the Forest Service, and that V'' THE LOWER FALLS of Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone River plunge 308 feet into the canyon - a gaping yellow-hue- d chasm of volcanic rock. This sight and other surprises of nature attract visitors from around the world. -- nt. College lumber program All public relations functions at Weber State College have been consolidated and placed under the supervision of Dean W. Hurst, assistant to the president for College Development. - Besides serving as director of College Development, Mr. Hurst is for the present also director of financial development. Twi o Sffiiro 0 yv BOUNTY BURGER imm Other directors in the office and their principal function are: Louis A. Gladwell, news bureau; Michael C. alumni relations; L. Winslow Hurst, Jr., student relations Don Spainhower, college relations and Mrs. Herschel G. Hester 3rd, publications. Mac-farlan- e, For the past several years Mr. Spainhower has served as sports information director. He will continue in that capacity until a new sports writer is added, President Bishop said. tint; : vs?: - JiMjnJcL) PGP f?Q D0OQC3GOOS h They actually adjust by themselves to the sun, to give you just the right amount of protection and visibility you need. When you need it. As you go from indoois to outdoors they go from clear to a comforting gray tint. And clear again when you come in again. And royjSTAGRAY II II has a light gray tint for those who need a darker lens. indoors. Subjected to sunlight, it darkens even more than regular to give your eye.- fu'l sunglass protection. Stan-G,a- y - stan-Gray- AND . . . Gera, Val and Doug are ready to serve you with great new looks for Fall ! and Finest Men's Store! Roy's If i 4 Agency. K. Franklin Brough, executive director of the Utah ( formerly Lung Association and Tuberculosis the Respiratory Ricky L. Totten Roy serviceman Man graduates ROY Airman Ricky L. Totten, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen F. Totten, 2587 W. 4900 S., has graduated with honors at Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the U.S. Air Force aircraft mechanic course conducted by the Air Training Command. The airman, who was trained to repair current Air Force jet fightes, is being assigned to Mo uitain Home AFB, Idaho, for duty with a unit of the Tactical Air Command. Airman Totten is a 1972 graduate of Roy High. OBITUARY Mrs. Clara May Dixon Berrett, 84, of Nyssa, formerly of Roy, died Friday at the Malhuer Memorial in Nyssa. Mrs. Berrett was born J"'y 13, 1889, in Salt Lake City, a daughter of James Albert and Loretta Gray Dixon. She was married to Orson Toone Berrett on Jan. 29, 1908, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He died Feb. 9, 1970. She had lived in North Ogden and in Roy for 51 years and moved to New Plymouth, Idaho, in 1970. She recently moved to Nyssa. Sl.e had been active in the Roy 1st LDS Ward where she had worked in the Primary and Relief Society. Surviving are one son and two daughters, Wayne L. Berrett, Nyssa, Ore.; Mrs. Grant (Vera) Patterson, New Plymouth, Idaho; Mrs. Earl 'Fern) Beesley, Sunset, 14 grandchildren; 16 great- grandchildren. so surviving Leonard Also specialists in: Fashion Formal Wear Rental and Sales Disease Association of Utah) announced the results of the elections. The officers were elected du.,i-'- g a board of directors meeting held in Cedar City July 28. Other officers named were Joseph Sehee, first Dr. Elton Newman, Mrs second James E. Cole, secretary and D William Backman, treasurer. Maurice Abravanel and Zelmo Beaty will serve as Honorary brothers cv,y 5421 South 19th West, Roy - 2443 Washington Blvd., Ogden Also in Salt Lake Logan - Provo The Utah Lung Association has chosen Lyman F. Smart to serve as president for 1973-7Mr. Smart has been serving in the office since 1970. In addition, Mr. Smart is the present Director of the Utah Intergovernmental Personnel Clara Berrett We're still under construction but ... UJG'QG President chosen The directors and other personnel in the move that are concerned can benefit from using each others talents in working on their specific programs, which are all related to some degree, he said. The central office is located on the third floor, Administration Building. to. .outlook good The purpose of this move is to bring together in one central office location all the existing public relations and related functions on campus in the interest of unity and WSC said economy, President Joseph L. Bishop. pricing policies. The Forest Service uses date that is one or two years old, and the processors claimed this difference is very critical. . . t; changes pricing index. The Northwest, he explained, because of the dense timber stands and the larger and more economical operations, are able to absorb the increasing prices more readily. These increases would be very damaging to the industry in Utah, McKay said. The Forest Service would make no firm commitments to change their policies, but they were receptive to our suggestions and agreed to review their practices. Among the suggestions, McKay said, was a proposal to Wyoming. The Governor has been invited to spend a day with the Utah National Guard to observe unit training. Esaflasoa gasoline inconvenience has been off recently, but we look ahead for things getting back 0 normal, and sales showing a 10 per cent or more increase during the remainder of the year. Things are leveling off to normal again. One of the problems, said McKay, is that Utah forest land is classed with that of the Northwest in a regional update Stephen A. Jeffs -- McKay explained that raw report at camps National Guardsmen at Camp W G. Williams this summer. following a meeting with Governor Calvin Rampton and the Utah Travel Council, and we are passing them on to drivers on trips They include: "Travel on the top half of your gasoline tank. Stop every 100 miles for gas instead of every 200 miles. Carry several different oil company or bank credit cards - you may. want to shop around a bit. travel - 10 Avoid odd-ho- as there wont 6 to a.m. p.m. stations be as many open. Best time to fill up your gasoline tank is between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Plan a gas stop for lunch, too. We also advise our customers that for in- cost protest peculiar Services Development Congressman Gunn McKay recently joined with Utah lumber harvesters to protest pricing policies m Utah. We met recently with Deputy Forest Service Chief Rex Reslor, McKay said, and he told us that the Forest Service would Utahs Flurry of activity heralds the opening of annual active duty training for some 5,500 gas-savin- g McKay joins s A Company, Ogden. The tips are offered by Utahs Department of are two and one sister. F. Dixon, Walter Dixon, Mrs. Joseph (Naomi) Knott, all of Salt Lake City Funeral services were it.i V con- ducted Wednesday in the Myers Mortuary Chapel in Roy with Bishop Lewis O. Bambrough officiating. Burial in the North Ogden enietvrv |