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Show Page Twelve THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD November 196Q : fmA m saD far rest Mi kmimg Some 90,000 Utah pheasant hunters can ex-pect to take an "average" harvest of birds as this popular upland game hunt gets underway Saturday, Nov. 4, at 8 a.m., according to the department of fish and game. Late season brood counts in-dicate there will be about the same number of birds as a year ago, though less than during the 1958 season when the pheasant cycle was at a peak. In Springville, the West Field hunting unit, which com-prises the area west of the city, is offering hunting per-- ; mits as in the past years. Funds from the sale of these permits go toward recreation programs in the Springville area, and is directed by Bill Ruff, chamber of commerce, with a committee made up of a representative from various civic clubs. Tickets for the hunt can be purchased at Art City Bowling, Averett-Rowlan- d Barber Shop, Wright Planing Mill or Ruff's Garage. The department reminded all hunters to respect the rights of the private landholder where practically all pheasant hunt-ing takes place. The law, as written on each fish and game license, decres that it is ille-gal to trespass upon private property at any time without the express permission of the landholder or person in charge of such lands. Work on the State Triangle Committee during th past four years has done much to bet-ter these problems of trespass. The committee functions on state, county and local level in an effort to better the prob-lems of private land use for hunting and at the same time project an equitable harvest of the game resources produced upon these lands. On each level of operation the committee is composed of representatives from the or-ganized landholders, organized sportsmen and department per-sone- l. In meetings held throughout the year the problems common to private land use are discus-sed and solutions arrived upon to better them for all concern-ed. Increasingly during the past year the County Agents have taken part in these meet-ings, as has the Wildlife from Utah State University- - As a result of medical re-search, rheumatic fever, a fore-runner of rheumatic heart dis-ease, can now be prevented, the Utah Heart Association points out. I I: wtovaJjajM-- .. ' v- ' iM.mrr,f.1mgaa NEW SOLAR CELL mounted on a copper block and surrounded by a coating of white phosphor material is ready for testino The new type cell which can convert sunlight to electricity, eve ; under intense atomic radiation, is placed in the chamber of 0 Van de Graaf particle accelerator to test its atomic endurance The tiny cell, developed by the U.S. Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory, Fort Monmouth, N.J. , being tested by a scientist at the Radfo Corporation of America Laboratories, Princeton, New Jersey. lpriiig!ille High ire Springville's Red Devil grid-der- s will play the Provo Bull-dogs in. the BYU Stadium to day at 2:30 p.m. in the final grid game of league play. The Devils, who lost to the Spanish Fork Dons 14-- 6 last Friday, still hold a slim math-ematical chance of tieing for the region title. This could only happen if the Devils can win over Provo today and pro-viding Carbon upsets the fav-ored and league-leadin- g Pay-so- n club Friday at Payson. This would throw the league into a three-wa- y tie with Pay-so- n, Carbon and Springville sharing the honors. Payson, however is picked to win the title by defeating the Carbon club whom Provo defeated last week. The Bulldogs are slight favorites to take the Devils and thus the grid season for all but Payson would be over come Friday night. Devils lose Springville failed to play the brand of ball they did the week previous and coupled with an alert and hard charg-ing Don eleven, came out on the short end of a 14-- 6 score. Springville was unable to hold the winners throughout the first half and left the field in arrears 14-- 0. An 80 yard ...... .... -- . . . . . . .. . , the Red Devils their only score. Felix and Bleggie and Palfrey-ma- n carried on the drives- A line plunge was stopped at the line. Both squads looked good throughout the second half but neither could pene-trate for a score thereafter. Region Five Standings: W L T Payson 3 10 Provo 2 1 1 Springville 2 2 0 Carbon 2 2 0 Orem .'. 12 1 Spanish Fork . 13 0 THOUSANDS VISIT TOMB OF ABEL This simple shrine near Damascus, capital of the Syrian of the United Arab Republic, is probably the most ancient ourist site in the world. The tomb is Juilt on the spot where Abel, the son of Adam vho was killed by his brother Cain, reputedly lies buried. The. listoric marker has become a pilgrimage center and is visited by housands of tourists yearly. dowiinq. Scores COMMERCIAL LEAGUE League Standings Team V L Pete's Chevron 22 17 Greyhound Bus .... 22 17 Frank and Kellys .... 22 18 Kolob Lumber 22 18 Dot and Martys 18 22 Kolob Realty 13 27 Week's Results Pete's Chevron. 3 3138 Greyhound Bus 3023 Dot and Martys 1 2834 Kolob Realty 3 3054 Kolob Lumber 0 2946 Frank and Kellys .... 4 3042 High Team Game Pete's Chevron, 1075; Grey-hound Depot, 1075; Kolob Real-ty, 1065; Frank and Kellys, 1065; Dot and Martys, 1028. Individual High Series Liz Bale, Frank and Kellys, 570; Mlaine Frazier, Frank and Kellys, 538; Marty Perrero, Dot and Martys, 535. Individual High Game Marty Perrero, Dot and Martys,. 214; Blaine Frazier, Frank and Kellys, 214; Larry Rayburn, Kolob Realty, 203; Liz Bale, Frank and Kellys, 203. To assume that a person close with money in small things is stingy in life's larg-er pursuits is often incorrect. ,j t , (r'V 'V?- - f I ': V U. ? v f ' Vjv . i , .VV:- - . limmin- ttriTihMTfn-r- null i inn immf mi Pictured above is Calvin Robertson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Ribertson, posed beside the 7 point buck his daddy and party shot down as it came wandering into camp, west of Indianola the opening day of the hunt. Don re-ported that the camp was suddenly changed into a shoot-ing gallery as everyone opened fire. In the party besides Don and his son were John Robertson, Phil Anderson, Allan Klauck, Louis Thorn, Jim Rich and Paul Ence. Our Increased Spending for Health WHAT AMERICANS SPEND FOR HEALTH CARc C By Age and Sex ) Expenditures Per Person (Dollars) Age and Sex Per Cent 1952-5- 3 1957-5- 8 Increase All Persons 66 94 42.4 Under 5 28 43 71.4 7 38 49 28.9 13-3- 70 93 40.0 35-1- 4 80 1C3 35.0 55-6- 4 96 129 34.4 65 and over 102 177 73.5 Males 51 ,77 51.0 Females 80 111 33.8 Source' Hsalth Information Foundation The amount of money a person spends on health care physicians, hospitals, drugs, dentists, and other goods and services varies erreatlv according to age and sex, Health Information Foundation points out. In a study made by the Foun-dation in cooperation with the National Opinion Research Center of the University of Chicago, a representative cross-sectio- n of American families were interviewed at length about the kinds of services they used in a th period dur-ing 1957-5- 8 and how they paid for these services. Average expenditures rose steadily by age, H.I.F. found from $48 a person in the under-- 6 age group to $177 for each person 65 or older. For the studied population as a whole, the average was $95 a person. Females, the Foundation an average of $111 apiece on health care during the period substan-tially higher thanathe $77 aver-age for males. Comparing the 1957-5- 8 fig- - finse of a similar study done five years earlier, the Foundation pointed out that increased spending was the rule for all age groups. The greatest increases, however, were among the youngest and oldest groups. Per capita spending for children under 6 rose by 71.4 per cent, while the average for those 65 and older went up 73.5 per cent. The increase for all ages combined was 42.4 per cent. George Bugbee, Foundation President, commented that in-creased spending at the ex-tremes of the age scale are "particularly gratifying at the younger ages because early treatment is likely to ward off more serious trouble in later life, at the older ages because there has been so much discus-sion recently as to whether peo-ple 65 and over adequately uti-lize available services." I :1 ATTENTION ?-- VOTERS !) SPRINGVILLE yl LeRoy D. Tingey is well qualified to represent District 5 (SPRINGVILLE) IN THE STATE LEGISLATURE His leadership in church and civic affairs has pre- - pared him for this position. He will protect the public from such laws as the boat and trailer law passed by the last legislature. He is not obligated to any group or faction. Vote for LeRoy Tingey and the Republican Party Tues., Nov. 8 Pd. Pol. Adv. DO YOU REALLY WANT YOUR CHILDREN TO GROW UP BELIEVING IN SOMETHING FOR NOTHING GOVERNMENT? ! SIIERM LLOYD . REPUBLICAN f- - ' " j CANDIDATE ' I . FOR CONGRESS A . . . ' 2nd District . A dynamic, thoroughly informed ' candidate for Congress with a x r i j proved background in Utah's i j problems based on an outstand- - 4 f ing record of success in business i j and government. I PRESERVE YOUR FREEDOM! VOTE LLOYD NOVEMBER 8T1I Paid Pol.' Adv. by Robert H. Nightingale, M.D. i ( y yf jk y Lx; ,fn7checkbook1 Xworki: for mjy A Springville Bank checkbook is the easiest and most business like way j to keep track of your money and more important, to balance your budget. And your cancelled check gives you a permanent, legal re- - cord of all payments. Take a few minutes tomor-- row and open your Springville Bank checking ac-- count. Pay-bill- s, avoids ties . . . and take care of all your financial affairs . . .this easy, modern, conven ient way. I wnw ii " ii ii ii, i. ii, ,mv v J ii A Few Decades Past A NEWSPAPER WAS A RARITY ' H MANY p!Qll AMERICAN C0MMUN,T,ESI W' i fi ' f J ' Then7- -a newspaper was a thing to be marveled at H ! - : Pi-- - I - ( 't'j -- ior memories of the Press' fight for freedom were yy' - A I ' ' .freshmmind. Although newspapers are common Il2;"v Auf :fht7,-- ' our country today, their existence should not be f-- W' i k ihri n for panted. It is a wonderful fact that al- - V y t i Kfilr 1 P dl f OUr modern communities have their own b! lf I H' JV " : Tet Wn newsPaPs, freely edited by members N M t ' : li'jMC' V. tcl eir communities-spread- ing the news, A V tli ; : J?W stimulating the business of the community, and f! I M:9 1 if d'-"- ; jMcS : keeping their readers informed of important events HF ffcV 1 ! "J elsewhere. It is well to keep in mind that a fre9 : press and a free people are an unbeatable team. Xp Vs "Nr - HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER k is a heritage to protect KJtctft . PRESS ASSOCIATION I w,T .ADWA tAir lAKI c.Tt.ot. October jobs up over same period in 1959 People at work in Utah dur-ing October this year surpas-sed last year's level by more than 18,000 jobs, reported Cur-tis P. Harding, Administrator of Utah's Employment Secur-ity Department. He pointed out, however, that comparison with October, 1959 should be done with re-servations due to the fact that last year the economy was be-ing held down by nt disputes in steel and copper. Mr. Harding explained that although the job level in con-struction was not radically be-low a year ago, periods of em-ployment were shorter than normal, and lay-of- fs were ap-parently coming earlier than usual. "Road building is using size-able numbers of workers, but the slump in home building is causing unemployment among workers whose skills do not adapt to highway construc-tion, he said. "Another record was broken in manufacturing as an all-tim- e high for October, of 49,-50- 0 workers were estimated to be on the job. Ordnance and transportation Utah's missile industry showed signs of re-newed growth as the industry added another 200 workers be-tween er and Oc-tober." Mr. Harding said mining employment, at an estimated 14,500 jobs, was the highest October estimate since 1957. Captive coal mines, down in September due to inventory adjustments, were producing as of r. Service and finance indus-tries showed a 5 and 4 percent increase respectively over a year ago, Mr. Harding said, but gains in trade were held t,o a lesser rate of increase. "No significant change over a year ago was noted in trans-portation and public utilities, but government, mostly state and local, with 1,700 more on payrolls than a year ago, re-gistered a 3 percent gain over October, 1959." Mr. Harding said the non-far- m work force was estimat-ed sat 272,900 as of r. SVJfib it iJ' ifi more and more women behind the 'ifVf I ''A wheels of the nation's autos they iBrS'' 2 S'10U'C' know about basic maintenance. wSj1 t Spring cleaning applies to the car as r well as the house. A good washing and ' waxing will remove winter's grime so "CwPC"! r " arna9'n9 finish and chrome. Nothing appeals to 1 - ""w5" road wolves more ' - --U1 than a pretty gal """j&r-T- " y!!r". stranded with a flat 'SP'i-TCfok-tire. It's wise to have fS CT. IK' W jlW tires checked frequent-- ij?-a-:- " "'SN'-:Tr-V- V Cooling System Maintenance jj 'l A Week May 16 through 22 flL: tiid'fy wi" remind the aals if's ffT . ' Jlfff jif "me remove winter-wor- n anti-freez- e and add fresh rust l 'inhibitor and water to the 'KTwz&l .coou,ngf system' insur,;n3 v v? Jr' th warm HL' driving. K |