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Show for the counties as well as for the entire state. A SLatistcial Review of Utah's Economy is available free of charge to public libraries, schools and other institutions which can make use of such information, from the Bureau of Economics and Business Research, University of Utah. i Finance, Construction, Transportation Transpor-tation and Communications, Agriculture, Agri-culture, Mineral Industry, and Government. The Review was compiled by the University of Utah for the express purpose of aiding government gov-ernment and business leaders, teachers, researchers, and students stu-dents who are interested in obtaining ob-taining both general and detailed statistics on the Utah economy. The historical series in some cases go as far back as 1850 and most include 1959 or 1960. In most sections data are included Statics Available On Beaver County i Statistics comparing Beaver County and all other counties ol the slate in nearly every phase of economic life are now avail able in the recently released publication, pub-lication, "A Statistical Review o Utah's Economy," compiled and published by the Bureau of Economic Eco-nomic and Business Research, University of Utah. The volume represents one of the most comprehensive com-prehensive compilations ever made of historical and up to-date data on Utah. Included among these statistics are such things as the following: Beaver County's population as of April 1, 1960, was 4331. In 1940 this figure was 5041. In 1958 there were 110 births in the county. The average farm size in Beaver County in 1880 was 60 acres. By 1954 this figure fig-ure had grown to 555 acres. Min- I eral production in the county in 1951 was valued at $112,000; in 1958 it had decreased to $57,000. The foregoing are only a few of the hundreds of facts obtainable obtain-able from the Bureau's Statistical Statisti-cal Review. Its 101 tables are distributed among the following sections: Population, Vital Statistics, Sta-tistics, Education, Employment, Income, Manufacturing, Trade, |