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Show paoe 4 Sugar House, Utah Thursday, August 21, 1958 INDEPENDENT ' ' ' " M?m' " I .i pn ii. u, j, i in TT V' ! P . ! ,'. .0.-,;-V- - l 1 . v- - J '. M A s r'N' i (V i . u l '7 --:V( --6 ; ttnnnHfli-ifiWiiiii-'- rT-- "1 J2L "'IIHHn il A.x..tokaMMi bridesmaids. Following the wedding re-hearsal on the 3rd, the parents of the bride will host a buffet supper for the wedding party. Miss Sanders and Miss Beverly King will also entertain for the bride on September 11. The prospective groom at-tended Pomona Jr. College and Redlands University and is currently serving with the U.S. Army at Dugway, where the couple will make their future home. October Wedding Of Miss Carolie Hiner Announced Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hiner, 612 So. 12th E., announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Miss Carolie Hiner, to Robert Brenan. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Brenan of Vista, Calif. The betrothed couple plan an October 4th wedding in the First Methodist Church and will be honored at a reception immediately following the ceremony. Bidden to attend the bride are Mrs. Margie Montrose, matron-o- f --honor; and Joyce Warburton and Alice Sanders, Servicemen Army Lt. Col. John O. Her-sta- d, 44, (right) of Salt Lake City, rccieves an oak leaf cluster to his Commendation Ribbon from Lt. Gen. Charles E. Hart, commander of the U. S. Army Air Defense Command, Colorado Springs, Colo. Colonel Hcrstad, son of J.Irs. Johanna Herstad,619 East South Temple, was commended for meritorious service as chief, installations division and plans and pro-grams division of the command's Logistics Section. The colonel, in the Army since 1034, has served in Europe. A graduate of West High School, he is a 1939 graduate of the U. S. Military Academy. (Continued from Page 1) of medical education. This has enlisting Mr. Leland B. Flint as General Chairman of the campagn. By his acceptance he has indicated the belief and support of some of Utah's out-standing business and financial leaders, with whom he has already been in contact. Mr. Flint will tell you he is enlisting a group' of these leaders. They will serve as the management of of the drive as well as solicit sizeable con-tributions from business and industry both within and out of the state. air. O'Connor introduced Mr. Flint, who said: "Over the years, the people of Utah, with great pride of accomplishment, have taken significant steps forward. They have built a great religious center, an area of great bus-iness, industrial and mining activity, a center of cultural importance, ' an outstanding center. Now we stand on the threshold of another sizable step forward - building a Medical Center commensurate with the leadership and achieve-ments already established in the field of medicine". It is generally conceded in educational and scientific circles that the Utah College of Med-icine has grown more rapidly in scientific prestige and teach-ing prowees than almost any other school in the nation. We should be very proud of the fact. But the College of Medicine's progress has been despite some of the worst facilities in the nation. This is something of which we can't be proud. The dedicated teacher, re-search scientists and students have had to cope, at every turn with the most severe physical and financial obstacles. Still, they have given Utah air outstanding reputation in the field of medicine, plus some of the finest doctors in the country caring for our ills and afflictions. "That is why I consider it a great privilege to head this drive. I am sure that all the people as well as business and industry of this state and the Intermountain region will get behind the College of Medicine and put this campaign over the top in short order". The new Medical Center will be located on the Fort Douglas campus. It will house research laboratories, medical and nursing classrooms and lecture halls, library, rehabilitation center, out-patie- nt clinics and a 200-be- d teaching and research hospital. The existing Cancer Research Wing and Radiobiology Lab-oratory will be incorporated into the new construction. In accordance with an agree-ment between the Board of Regents and the Salt Lake County Commission, activities now being conducted at the County Hospital - bed care of acutely ill patients, emergency department, out-patie- nt and re-habilitation clinics, research and teaching laboratories and ancillary facilities - will be transferred to the New Med-ical Center. The larger and more substantial of the present Co-unty Hospital building will make possible an expansion of the County Infirmary and facilities of that institution to care for the chronically ill indigent. According to terms of the agreement, the College of Med-icine will continue to proviide necessary medical care for these services at no cost to the County. Visits Miss Carolie Hiner traveled to Vista, California, Thursday where she visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Brenan. She returned Monday. Gems of Thought We should examine ourselves and learn what is the affect-ion and purpose of the heart, for in this way only can we learn what we honestly are. Entertains Mary Baker Eddy Carolyn Zuercher enter-tained recently with a Sarah Coventry Jewelry Showing. Those present were Jean Hol-land, Judy Ferrar, Ruth Price, Katherine Hogan, Beverly King, Patty Wixom, Lucile Bohn and Meriam Jacobsen. Light refreshments were ser-ved in the late evening by the hostess. Zemo Great for Minor Burns,Cuts Eemo, a doctor's formula, liquid or ointment, soothes, helps heal minor burns, cuts, bruises. Family antiseptic, eases itch of surface rashes, eczema, teen-ag- e pimples, athlete's foot. Stops scratching, so aids faster healing. For stubborn cases, get Extra Strength Zemo. Your "GOOD MUSIC" Station YOU CAN "H EAR" THE DIFFERENCE "NEWS PULSE" ON" THE IIOUIl BLOND BART & CRAMPS YAWN PATROL 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. GB's "IIOMEMAKERS 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Platter Parade "STRINGING ALONG with Doug Stringfellow p.m. to 4 p.m. "Wes Bowen's Bit" 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. RAY TOWNSENDS "NIGHT SPOT" 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. O "Meet The Classic" 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. Wes Bowen's "JUST EASY JAZZ 10 p.m. to 12 p.m. .,, IIIMIMtllllMII MIIIIIIIIIIIM Illlllllllllll Illlllllll IIMIMIIIIIIIIII I Illl Back To School Special' Lanolin Permanent ! $7-5- 0 ! I "Including Hair Style i pv;T VSrI ! Open Evenings fi''X K L For Appointments , v ! Call IN7-628- 4 ''l 1 1 Salon Of Switzerland Only Experienced & Qualified Operators f 1 1027 East 21st South in Sugar House S.atiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiituiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitt imiimmiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiii lib it quiet when you talk? "r ' ' " i&m A handy den telephone lets you talk without noisy inter-ruptions. Costs only pennies a day. Easy to order. Just call our business office. modern homes have handy phones in cfi$t Mountain States Telephone j ORTHOPEDIC I S SUB SHOE SERVICE -- guns- V-- JX WATERPR0OFIN& ' fcr-- J-i PRESCRIPTIONS F1LIE0 FETCHING jOrr 'BfSSft : ARCH SUPPUES .SHININCr ?tKf : ACCESSORIES f ijHftnj J V MEN'S WORK SHOES OF ALL KINDS REPAIRED M min inn uoiuiootip pas uia iaqvnj mosa qi tnwujapun umsaq suaq8Dn fWOinO itwu i uaoj3ui jo uidaunuuuouiR;ia!J piesaiq aupq flpOttDXTlO i 8doJP t V ridjag I p5v |