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Show SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS, Kanab, Utah Page Two SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER About Town OF KANE COUNTY, UTAH A Published every Thursday at Kanab, Utah MEMBER UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION Utah's Board of Big Game Control in setting the 19G7 deer hunts establishes a general for animals of October of either sex along with grant3".-so- ing extensions on the season foi six hunJng units, short five-dahunts on six other areas eleven-dahunts and buck-onlon Units 11, 53 and 61E. There will be 4,750 control this year available irermits where hunting pressure is need ed to balance deer herds with the available forage. Some of these control permits will be on five-dapost season hunts whirl i are designed to control problems in specific areas as deer move into these areas and hunters holding this type of per.nl! will be given at least five days notice prior to the hunt opening. There will not be any hunts opening prior to October 21 for the regular license holders and hunters will have to check the proclamation carefully. Archery hunters will open their season August 26 and will continue for animals of either sex on a statewide basis until September 10. Archery permits are again considered special permits and archers may not purchase another deer permit in addition to the archery tag. In other action, the Board set the same weapon regulations as last year which means you may hunt with bow and arrow, muz y B. Brown, Publisher Subscriptions $4.00 per year, $2.50 for Entered as second-clas- Six Months matter October 6, 1944 at the s post office in Kanab, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879 ALCOHOL AND DIVORCE The widespread disease of alcoholism is directly related to marital problems, according to Dr James A. Knight, assistant dean and professor of psychiatry, Tulane University School of Medicine. The Louisiana psychiatrist recently spoke on Alcohol and the Family at the University of Utahs 16th Annual School of Alcohol Studies in Salt Lake City. He said lack of communication and forgiveness between husband and wife, conflicting cone cepts of love, and basic psychic differences send some couples to the divorce courts, but these three major problems may also be uncorking the widespread disease of alcoholism, Americas number four health problem. It is a rare alcoholic who does not have a problem in his marriage, Dr. Knight said. He added that the alcoholics marital problems may be compounded by his own personality traits. The super sensitivity, strong ties to the present, dependency, inability to handle anxity and depression ( characteristic of many alcoholics are important causal factors, he said. male-femal- ) Although Dr. Knight believes an unde standof the personality problems of the alcoholic is ing the major prerequisite to treatment, he admits it is difficult to discern which traits the patient brought into alcoholism and how many were bred and accentuated by the strain of life and alcohol itself. It is imperative that the clinician look at alcoholism in the same perspective r.s he does other phyical illness, says Dr. Knight. The total picture must be considered the patient, his family and the community in which he lives. Only then can the clinician determine what kind of changes are necessary in these areas to restore the alcohol addict to health. In his observations of the families of alcoholDr. ics, Knight has found that wives of male alcoholics are recognizable types the mother-wife- , child-wif- e and rescue wife. The managerial-wife- , latter type usually has a father who is an alcoholic and she operates under the illusion that by saving her husband she will save her father. In families where one or both parents are alcoholics, children will have neuroti : tendencies all of their intimate relationships will be colored or distorted. Dr. Knight says the youngsters develop a reactive disorder to the physical and emotional neglect of their parents and at the s: me time have guilt feelings because they hate their parents for this neglect. The fact that 40-6- 0 per cent of the nations alcoholics come from families where there is one alcoholic parent is startling evidence of the effect of parental alcoholism on children, he said. Dr. Knight is one of 60 recognized authorities on alcoholism participating in the Utah School of Alcohol Studies this summer. The workshop, lauded by the executive director of the National Council on Alcoholism is the most superior effort of this sort going on in the United States today, was held June 3 on the University of Utah campus. Last year more than 600 participants from 36 states attended the workshop. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received by .he Kane County School District for the construction of the Valley Elementary School at Order-vill- e, Utah. Bids will be rifle firing a center fire with an expanding Forace Green car'-ridg- type bullet. in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by Paul K. Evans, A.I.A. Architect, Salt Lake City, Utah, and one set may be obtained from the office of the Superiniendent of the Kane County School District at Kanab, Utah, or from the office of the Architect, upon receipt of $50.00 deposit per set, made payable to Paul K. Evans, which deposit will be refunded if a bid is entered, and upon return of such plans and specifications in good condition within ten days of the date set for the bid opening. Those securing plans and specifications and not entering a bid wlil be charged $15.00 for print- ing costs. Additional plans and specifications can be secured for an additional $50.00 per set, and upon returning complete plans and specifications, in good condition to the architect, a refund of $50.00 per set will be made. Plans and specifications will be available for inspection at the architect's office. 515 East Broadway, Salt Lake, at the school district office, the Contractor office at 436 West 9th South, Salt Lake City, Utah, and the A.G.C. oftice crossshotguns, Handguns, bows and rim fire cartridges in rifles remain illegal weapons. The 1967 deer proclamation listing all iules and regulations will be available about REPORT FISHING Panguitth Lake: Very good. Trout Bait fishing good: night crawlers, fish eggs, 11-1- 6. cheese, corn, marshmallows and dough balls. Fly fishing, flat fishing, trolling with catspoons and other small lures best in the morning and evening. Panguiteh Creek : Some browns Rock area. Good. " in White Lake Powell: Reservoir rising slowly. Bass fishing poor, crap-pifishing fair in lower portion of lake. Trout fishing near dam at night is good averaging 1 to 11 lbs. Catfishing excellenJ throughout reservoir. Weather in area: warm days and cool e nights with afternoon thunder showers and light winds. Navajo Lake: Good fishing for brook trout up to 15. Planted rainbow fair on bait; trolling good around springs. Johnson Reservoir: Fair. Has had very little pressure. at 1135 So. West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah. Bids will be received at the Kane County School District Office in Kanab until the closing of 4:00 P.M. Friday, July 28, 1967 at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. Bids received after the closing time will be returned to the bidder unopened. A certified check, bid bond or cashiers check in the amount of the bid, of five percent made payable to the Kane County School District, shall accom (5) T El fi Mr. Green PARIA PLACE OF BEAUTY On July 4th we revisited with friend the old Paria town site. We are increasingly amazed at the beauty of this spot each time we go there. Because of the movie there is increased act.v-itthere. The road tlirough the movie set is open and fer the first time we drove through it. There has also been a new road cut across the stream so that cars can easily drive to the old town site. The new movie set is a remarkable thing. It is not as yet open to the public but it should be made available soon. It is the mountain of gold that is the subject of the title of the film. Dont know how long the gold would remain on the side of 'he cliff, but we would like to see it left there and some kind of enclosed bulletin board with colored pictures erected so that the place could become a per- manent tourist attraction. Markers should be erected at the cemetaries (there are two there) and on some of the old buildings. A bulletin board should also be erected at the old movie set site giving a history of its construction and the films that have been made there. While there we talked to two or three oldtime natives of the area and asked them questions about the history of Paria. T hey knew pratically nothing about it. We mentioned before that we have talked to natives of Kanab who have never visited the place. If there were nothing there but scenery, it would be more than worth while visaing. We have never seen anywhere so colorful a spot. There is just nothing to compare with the way the hills around the area blend. It is a combination of the national parks and the painted desert. The Editor of The Improvement Era, a monthly magacirzine with a quarter-millioculation, was with us. He is a world traveler. He said he has never seen anything like it. It could well be the subject of an ERA article in the near future. If it is we should have Paria ready for the visitors who will come as a result. n NOBODY TOLD US Years ago before tanker trucks were so common when we came south we used tp gas up at Marysvale because it was the end of the railroad and the price went up from there south. Cedar City was the nearest railroad to the west. Last summer we drove to Flagstaff to meet our daughter who returned from the east by train. So imagine our surprise awhile ago when we were driving north on first west between second and third south here in Kanab and encountered a railroad crossing and railroad tracks sign across the street. Whether the railroad came to town a long time ago and we have passed it without noticing, or whether it has just recently been installed we do not know. Certainly such an event should have received world-wid- e publicity. But we missed it. We have speculated a little. Perhaps the movies needed a shot. The only other thing we can think about is that someone wanted a chuckle. If this is the case whoever did it can have the satisfaction of knowing that they gave us one too, as we aic sure they have done for many who have noticed it. WE HOPE IT HAPPENS The other day we were going into the hospital and glanced up and saw a place on the side of the hill being leveled off for a building. We had heard Boyd McAllister talk about a new home and had seen the road going up from behind but had not noticed it from in front before. This is the kind of thing that adds joy to living. The Marriner Joneses have a beautiful tinted photograph of Kanab hanging in their living room. It was taken by Norman Boardman on commission from on top of the ridge by the TV transmission station. They gave permission to have it used in the Utah Cattleman magazine convention issue. The Joneses have a feeling about iheir town that very few get because they see it daily from above in a beautiful picture. This feeling would be enhanced to anyone who could sit in a living room or on a front porch and actually look out over the town. We hope some way, or some day, the McAllisters can make their plans for a home up there come to pass. We shouldn't suggest that they might not ever finish it, but even if they never do they will have been the better for having started it and living with a dream. pany bid. A statement from a company approved by the board and architect that it will furnish a reand quired Performance-Labo- r Material Payment Bond made out on A.I.A. form A311, to cover performance of the contract and payment of labor and material shall be enclosed with the bid and certified check, bid bond or cashiers check. The Kane County School District reserves the right to reject any or all bids or to waive an formality or technicality in any bid in the interest of the Dis- Buy Bonds where you work; trict.. She does. Kane County School District S. KENT CARPENTER President of the Board DOYLE K. SWALLOW Inter-mountai- n Superintendent of Schools Published in the Southern Utah News July 6 and 13, 1967. CUSTOM PRINTING Money and postage stamps we do not 18-2- print -- - Bui, rr.osl cnyihing else WE DO! 0i tiiniiHniniir go 3I5ISPS qggpqHaMSIHB (2 Dorothy Jungerman works in Long Binh, Republic of South Vietnam. As a nurse with the U.S. Army, she serves her countrys soldiers and also Vietnamese civilians like young "Ngoc. Dorothy invests regularly in U.S. Savings Bonds, too (as do more than seven out of ten of our military personnel in Vietnam). Theres a good way for you to show brave Americans like Dorothy youre with them: Buy Savings Bonds where you bank or join the Payroll Savings Plan where you work.. ft SOUTHERN UTAH PUBLISHING COMPANY 6, 1967 What helps my neighbor , helps me. n 21-3- 1 Marlin by zle loading lifle or any other DEER III NT SEASON Thursday, July Freedom Shares IV Americans F' new plan for who want to help Savings Notes, "Freedom Shares," as a bonus opportunity. Freedom Shares when held to maturity of pay 4.74 just years (redeemable after one year), and are available on e a basis with Savings Bonds. Get the facts where you work or bank. Join up. America needs your help. US. Savings Bonds, new Freedom Shares their country. Now, when you join the Payroll SavPlan. ings Plan or the Bond-a-Mont- 7 I The V S. Gux eminent dues net pay for this advertisement. It is presented as a pubUo tervKe tn cooperation Kith the Treasury Department and The Advertising Council. |