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Show i i l i I . i i THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1962 Page Three Simpson Attends Agricultural Meet Orville L. Freeman, Secretary of Agriculture held a series of meetings which began January 4 th and continuing on through the 12th. A committee of forty carefully selected people representing farm organizations consumer interests, the agri-busine- ss com-munity, commodity groups, and the mass communications media from all over tne nat.o with Secretay on Agricultural public relations on January 4 and 5. On January 9 and 10 the Na-tional Agricultural Advisory Commission and the Secretary and his staff discussed and stu-died all phases of agriculture. A National Dairy Committee meet-ing was held January 11 and 12 to set up a national dairy pro-gram for the dairy industry. Mr. Douglas T. Simpson, past president of Utah Farmers Union, who is a member of the National Agricultural Advisory Commis-sion, was invited by Secretary Freeman to be in Washington, D.C. for the first meeting of the public relations committee. ' Graphic Arts Institute Opens on Friday The Graphic Arts Technical Institute in connection with Printing Week in Utah will be conducted in Salt Lake City on Friday, January 19, and Satur-day, January 20. Events will be-gin at 4 p m. Friday afternoon with an open house and buffet at Deseret News Press featuring their new web offset press. Regis-tration at "convention headquar-ters," the Prudential Plaza audi-torium at 33rd South and State Streets, will get underway at 5 pm. The first general session will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Plaza Keynote speaker will be Dr. Carlton Culmsee, Dean of the College of Humanities and Sci-ences, Utah State University, Logan. His address will feature the Printing Week in Utah theme: "Printing: Key to the Storehouse of Knowledge." On Saturday, registration will continue from 8 until 9 a.m. at the Plaza, with two major gen eral sessions planned for morn ;ng meetings. The first session. "How to Make a Profit," will feature discussion by experts in the fields of production control and scheduling, machine ac-counting, Porte price lists and management practices. The other morning session will be on Graphic Arts Processes, includ-ing such topics as wrap-aroun- d, silk screen, copy preparation, zerography, hot metal and cold type. The material will be valu-able to everyone in the industry. The noon luncheon will honor the scholarship winner of the Printing Week essay contest. The annual Printing Week Banquet will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m., and will feature Oliver R. Sperry, President of The Printing Industry of Amer-ica. Restoration Program To Start Immediatley On Young Residence Restoration of the Brighamj Young Winter Home at St George will begin immediately, the Utah Park and Recreation Commission announced Monday The restoration will take sev-eral months and is expected tc be practically completed in time for the 1962 tourist season. Work will include removal of a back room added after the original structure was completed by the Utah colonizer and first governor, Brigham Young, ir 1869. The east porch also added later, will also be removed. An other major project will include removal of the staircase inside the home from the center to the east side of the building. The work, to cost approxi-mately $58,000, will be under the supervision of Glen Swenson Director of the State Building Board, and Aldin Hayward, Di rector of the State Park and Rec reation Commission. Salt Lake architect, George Cannon Young a grnadson of Brigham Young will be supervising architect. He also directed the recently com pleted restoration of the Beehive House in Salt Lake City, also a residence of Brigham Young. The Winter Home is a two-stor- y buff adobe building with an upper and lower porch, stand-ing behind a wooden picket fence and shaded by tall trees at 1st West and 2nd North. A white plastered one-stor- y building at the east end of the house was used by Brigham Young as an office. When he was in St. George and southern Utah during the winters, the home was a center for social and religious gather-ings. Present for the beginning of restoration were members of the State Park and Recreation Com-mission which has the home un-der its jurisdiction. The structure was a gift to the state from the descendants of Brigham Young. One example is worth more than a thousand arguments. Gladstone. Medical Assn. Okehs Goals of New Medic Political Unit The Council of the Utah State Medical Association approved the purposes and goals of the recent-ly organized Utah Medical Polit-ical Action Committee and urged all physicians, their wives and interested friends to join UM-PAC and other political action committees in their states and communities. "Effective political action must be carried on at the local levei and effective implementation must be done by local groups of physicians," President Ralph E. Jorgenson, USMA, said. "The for-mation of UMPAC recognizes the need for a national medical polit-ica- n action committee to coordi-nate the political activities of physicians groups at all levels throughout the country." The purposes of UMPAC, which is an organization separate and distinct from the Utah State Medical Association as required by federal law, are: 1. To promote and strive for the improvement of government by encouraging and stimulating physicians and others to take a more active and effective part in governmental affairs. 2. To encourage physicians and others to understand the nature and actions of their government as to important political issues and as to the records and posi-tions of political parties, office-holders and candidates for elec-tive office. 3. To assist physicians and others in organizing themselves for more effective political ac-tion and for carrying out their civic responsibilities. - "Medical care in America is the finest in the world and the physicians want to keep it that way," reported Harold Bowman, executive secretary of the Utah State Medical Association. "As guardians of the public health, the doctors feel it their responsibility to steer away from socialized medicine. There are politicians and others who would have us go in that direction but experience has proved that it would be a sorry step backwards. We will fight socialized medicine through UMPAC, along with any other measures we know are not for the public good," said Mr. Bowman. "At the same time we will support any legislation through UMPAC, in or out of the field of medicine, that we feel is sound and beneficial." SCOTCH BLENDED WHISKY, 86 PROOF IMPORTED BY L0NS JOHN IMPORTING CO., A DIVISION OF SCHENLEY, H.Y. ' SCHENLEY brings you "the Scotch they prefer in Scotland" ; tvXvXx 'x:x:::x:.:: fy IMPORTED (1 '45& toe ita 3 CJ ybP SCOTCH MHtW " AGED iYEABS y''f P IN PiWM QUALITY Long on age, long on flavor, too, Long John is the world's gentlest whisky... g CTJES- - delightful, sociable, friendly to all. .Aged twice as long as ordinary scotches. gpTig ANOTHER FINE AGED IMPORT FROM Chenleij THE HOUSE OF AGED WHISKIES If It's Printing . . . Call EM 4-84- 64 Turkeys Planted in Utah Canyon Twelve turkeys have been wild trapped and transplanted to the Salina Canyon section during recent days, according to the Utah Department of Fish and Game. The birds, nine hens and three gobblers, were trapped on the North LaSal Mountain by depart-ment field men. Ten birds were stocked into the same section a year ago, with summer field observations indi-cating at least two young broods had been produced by the ori-ginal plant. Officials said the trapping pro-gram is continuing in the LaSal area where original plants of the big birds were made several years ago. They have done very well and present plans call for stocking turkeys as they can be trapped into several sections of the state. Sites selected and the counties where they are located include: Yankee Meadows (Iron County); Mt. Dutton (Garfield); Leeds (Washington); Beaver Mts (Beaver); Tropic (Washington); Dowd Mt. (Daggett). Only a portion of the plants may be made this winter, depen-ding upon weather conditions and success of the continuing trapping program. Birds have been planted dur-ing recent years in five sites over the state. They are doing well in most of these areas. GOP Women Date Capital Meeting The Tenth Anniversary Repub-lican Women's Conference will be held April 15 to 17, 1962, at the Statler Hilton in Washington, D.C. Previewing the Conference program, Assistant GOP Chair-man, Clare B. Williams termed it "a landmark in American poli-tics." "This event is a notable 'first' for either political party," she said. "The Conferences are vo-luntary gatherings of women citi-zens motivated only by a desire for political effectiveness to achieve good government. When we convene in April, the meet-ings will have spanned a decade, an event unmatched in the an-nals of either party." Republican leaders, including senators, congressmen and gover-nors, will address delegates who travel to Washington at their own expense. Training in cam-paign techniques and policy briefings are part of the Con-ference schedule, all under the direction of Mrs. Williams. |