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Show STATICFUUH upto(I of FixociA. Dcmvrioe P. 0. BX W salt utf cm. uim who KKXT OF COCmCN OF ' of Vtrn.l. Utah iastii loas, me. ia tne SUa ot limit ASSETS Dollar 1. Uai and &m fTxa depository institutions , 2. Securities 3. a. Loans and aimiLB (net) t. Uases (net Including resloutl values) C Otner receivables (net) L less tl lanes Air less. e. Total net receivables 4. Odiar Invesncnts 5. Institution's praises, furniture 1 flxtires aid otner assets representing tne Institution's praises 6. kel estate and otner Oun Institution's praises 7. Investunts In unconsolidated subsidiaries 8. Deferred charges xd prepaid expenses J. Other assets W.TOTL ASSETS (Sua of ttas 1 thru 9) 11 .Thrift certificates, passbook. accourtj, otner tt.ttotes payable a. Barks b. Ccoerclal and other lenders. c Otner UJkxrued Interest on thrift and other borrowings M Jtrtaages payable 15. Interest, taws and other expenses accrued and unpaid. 16.Sbbord1nited capital notes and d&emms a. long term. b. Snort tera laaturing in less than 1 year) 17.0ther liabilities 18.TUM. LIABILITIES (Sua of Itea 11 thru 17 STOOHUEBS GQUTTT 19.Com stoat ZO.Preferred stock 21. su-pits 22. Net fertfi Certificates 23. Uidlvldsd profits 24. neserve for contingencies a.Total stockholders eoulty 26.T0TAL L1A3IHTIES AM) EQUITY CAPITAL (Sua of Item 18 and I, 'r'ot reltch , of the 9Wnm that Oils report or condition is true and correct, to 1 State of Utah, County of Stem to and subscribed before STATE (F MM KMCTKNT (F ntWCUL' 1, G. Edward leary that the foreooing is a true ana correct In this office on August 5, 1986 KIIE: A copy of the Industrial Loan Corporation's statarent, copy of nils torn and sent to tne itmiMNi u- rum.!, Published in Manila Clara Robinson Phone 784-3463 Election count from Manila There were 57 percent of the Daggett County voters voting in the primary election conducted in Manila and Dutch John Aug. 19. Daggett County has 557 registered voters and 319 people voted. In the local competition, there were only two people competing on each ticket. For the position of clerk, auditor, recorder and treasurer, incumbent Gene Briggs won 181 votes to Albert H. Neff's 39 votes. Of this number Briggs won 132 votes in Manila and 49 in Dutch John with Neff receiving 36 in Manila and 3 in Dutch John. On the Democratic ticket Joseph S. Johnson was running against incumbent incum-bent LaRay Sadlier. LaRay Sadlier received 61 votes to Johnson's 35 votes. For state senator on the Republican ticket, Glade M. Sowards received 103 votes to Alarik Myrin's 90. Of these Myrin received 65 in Manila and 25 in Dutch John. Sowards had 77 in Manila. On the Democratic ticket for U.S. Senator, Craig Oliver received 35 and Terry Lee Williams 34. Of these Oliver received 29 in Manila and 6 in Dutch John. Williams received 25 in Manila and 9 in Dutch John. For state Board of Education, Ardell Dehart received 35 votes, Harold S. Jensen, 51 ; Valerie J. Kelson, 36; Alice Buchner, 31; and Carol T. Ovard, 16. Richard Walker, area representative represen-tative from the State Department of Community and Economic Development, Develop-ment, and judges from the Community Communi-ty Progress Program flew to Manila Aug. 11. They arrived at 9 a.m. and spent an hour looking at the senior citizen center rennovation, the new Town office, and the new fire house. They will be making a 2-year evaluation evalua-tion of these projects In deciding an award in community progress. Manila Is competing for this award. Wanda Cook'i farewell testimonial wrvlcw were conducted Sunday, Aug. 24 at the Manila LDS Chapel during the regular Sacrament meeting. Mrs. Cook will be entering the mission home in Provo Sept. 10. She then will be prrpared to go on her mission to San Ikrnadino, Calif. After the testimonial, a family dinner din-ner was enjoyed at the senior citizen center. Attending the testimonial and dinner were Her thililirti and families. Mr. and Mrs Larry Cook and daughter of Price. Mr, and Mrs. lU-rt I Yvonne) tomb and daughter of Mrrl!wm. Vo . Mr and Mrs. Dean Co and son of McKinnon. Wyo , and Mr. and Mrs, Lee Reed of Manila. Other out i'f town guests were Mr. and Mrs. David Potter and Mr, and Mrs. 1 hck tamb ami Mr. and Mrs. Jim t Vickie I tiryart and children of Rock Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Merril Mead and Mr and Mrs Mm in ( of Well-infinn. Well-infinn. I tah, Mr and Mrs John liar ring and children of Price. Mrs. (twreo tpreeyl Bath and children of MwVr Coin , Stephanie Bifhon of rrff.ii. Itah. Mr. and Mrs Gale Iflmb and rhildren of McKinnon and lYhate and Mrs. Todd Cock of Sari tne close ot txzimi m" 30 Jua T T T tent la Thousands! Ml. I Thou. I KnL I nV 12. 13... "16. 1c. "Id. It. 1 15. "16. 17. I 152,1 402 I 959,902. T 887.1 122 , , , , , 5,1 698. 26.1 215. 3.1 706. 22,1 77. 19. "110. 097.1 620. I f f f f " I" f j f f f -555 111. 112. la. lb. 11. 115. 116. la. lb. 117. 118. 525. I 1 119; "120. 121. 122. 122. 123. "124. 125. I r .. f f 24) f 50 J 000. 250, 000. ! 5?2l m HE above - raoed lndstrlal Loan Corporation, do solemnly clipped frog tne r uouiuiiuo. attached to a the Vernal Express Aug. 27, 1986. Diego, Calif. Manila ribbon winners in the floricultural division of the Sweetwater Sweet-water County Fair were Louise Gosar , Ferl Briggs, Mike Briggs, Niki Briggs, and Bernice Lamb. Louise Gosar was over all grand champion. In the needlecraft division, ribbon winners were Peggy Briggs, Wendy Christensen, Edie Pallesen. In the culinary department, ribbon winners were Margery Hullinger, Clara Robinson and Gloria Neff, over all grand champion. Angelea Hullinger Hull-inger was grand champion in her age group and Kristopher Hullinger was . winner in his age group. Manila ribbons winners in the craft department were Terri Gutz, WaNeta Lamb and Celia Slagowski. In the horse competition, winners were Celia Slagowski, Louise Gosar, Stan Slagowski, Steve Douglas, Jolynn Douglas, Angelea Hullinger, Jay Schofield and Missy Schofield. In the horse show events, winners were Scott Slagowski, . Scott Briggs, Sawn Pallesen, Jolynn Douglas, Jay Schofield, Bob Slagowski, Floyd Briggs, Missy Slagowski, Toni Pallesen, and Marjon Tinker. All around champion was Derlene Reed Olsen. In the art department, Sherry Ken-drick Ken-drick won two ribbons. Twenty people (including members and husbands) attended the M&L Homemaking Club's steak fry at the Palisades picnic area Aug. 21. Guests were Judy and Roger Adams who recently moved to Manila from Ogden. Roger is the new postmaster at Manila. "It" packages were won by Mari Gean Campbell. Aleta Ellsworth, Judy Rogers, Fon Slagowski and Mary Steinakcr. Hostesses were Ora Iver-son, Iver-son, Fon Slagowski, Aleta Ellsworth and Clara Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Coleman and their friends, Leo and Shirley McConnell of Clinton, Utah, enjoyed a two-week trip recently. The main purpose of the trip was to attend the National Gem and Mineral Convention in Mcdford, Ore., Aug. 7, 8. 9 and 10. They spent two days at Dincsmore, Calif., with Lee's nephew Bill Hulse. They then went to Oregon and visited the Shore Acre Gardens at Coos Bay. From there they traveled to Port Angles, Wash,, and took the ferry to Victoria, Canada where they saw the Burr hart Gardens, They then went to Burlington, Wash., and visited Leo McConnell's sister Stella Synder. They then visited in Bellevue with Mrs. Coleman's aunt and uncle Mr. and Mrs. Ariel Rawlins. They then traveled to Coeur D'Alenc. Idaho, Missoula, Mont., Idaho Falls. Idaho, and back to Utah, visiting with Coleman's daughter Mrs. Dean Bodily Bodi-ly and Mrs, Jeff Clark In Clearfield. While at their daughter's. Melna Coleman Col-eman was honored with a birthday dinner. din-ner. They returned to Manila Aug. 17. The Town of Manila is running a survey to see if the people would like them to take over the Cable TV system which is being offered to them free of charge. They plan to bring the system tip to standard and sell the service to the town residents at the same charge as the old system Daggett School convened Monday. Aug. 25 with one sulratitute teacher. Mrs. Turpin. the business teacher last year, informed a week ago that she tamild nut be returning Mrs. Paul Mattson is substituting tins first week The Manila Town Council is plann- ne-uespor iryeoga and btl lef , 19 V ptsW 3 Directors arityier Thri fts of Financial Irstltutions, dhereay certify copyTffiuja!Siient of 0&XeAJfnX, filed e&xa&C snoule-Be iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiititiiiiiiiitiii iiiiiiitiiii iiiiiiiiitiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiijiitimif ii i luuxtiJ tut t iiiiiiiitttti Lets go to the moms: . 1 Cinematic Sentiments By Dr. Allen Hasson iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Rating system explained Starred ratings range from one to four stars, with half-star increments. Some critics avoid "giving" ratings because it's a conceit and an oversimplification. over-simplification. I do it anyway, but admit ad-mit that the ratings are not eternal absolutes. ab-solutes. I sometimes change my ratings as time goes on, and my perspective becomes clearer. But remember, the starred rating tells on ly one thing: The movie's overall effect ef-fect on the reviewer's own notions and emotions. "W," "C," "O," and "S." In addition addi-tion to starred ratings, we offer the following on a scale of one to four: "W." This tells whether I think most moviegoers will find the picture worthwhile wor-thwhile either as education or entertainment enter-tainment or both. I personally didn't care much for "The Money Pit," for example, but the audience laughed a lot, and laughter is good therapy, so I gave "Money Pit" a "W-3." "C," is the movie suitable for young children? I have spent 25 years teaching kindergarten through college levels and currently teach junior high. Here I am rendering a professional (hopefully more as a educator than film critic) judgment as to whether the picture is (a) wholesome experience for young children (ages 2-8), (b) suitable to their level of maturity and understanding, or (c) both. "0" means "offensive content." Here we compare the picture with other films with the same MPA rating (G, PG, PG-13, R). I report the relative amount of content that may offend some segments of the audience, . content such as violence, strong language, sex, nudity, vulgarity, religious humor and racial and stereotypical insults. The "0" rating does not say whether this reviewer is offended; it is merely a description of the relative amount of the above-mentioned above-mentioned content. "S" means production skill: Performances, Perfor-mances, directing, writing, production design, photographhy, music and editing. This rating is important to some of the more sophisticated students of cinema who get their kicks from seeing the products of highly skilled craftsmen. 'Manhunter' M W2 CI 02 S4 Ace cop and devoted family man William Peterson ("Live, Die L.A.") comes out of medical retirement to track down a vicious, brilliant, homosexual serial killer, in this, stylish, gripping, violent psychological drama from "Miami Vice's" writer-director writer-director Michael Mann ("Thief," "The Keep"). This inexplicable unheralded piece of work is tense, well-acted, and boasts classy camera work and evocative electronic score, but Peterson's soliloquies solilo-quies get a bit esoteric, the camera lingers much too long on the killer's grisly methods, and style wins out over substance. Rated R. 122 minutes. Violence, profanity, pro-fanity, sex. 'Armed and Dangerous' Wl CI 01 SI John Candy ("Volunteers, "Cum. wJUIal Levy mer Rental") and Eugene ("Splash") are security guards fighting their crooked labor union, in this tastelessly unfunny, utterly predictable unpleasantness written by Harold Ramis ("Animal House," "Meatballs," "Ghostbusters") and directed by Mark Lester ("Class of "84," "Firestarter," "Commando"). PG-13. 90 minutes. Lowbrow humor, profanity, partial nudity. 'The Fly' h W2 CI 01 S4 David Croenberg's ("Scanners." "Dead Zone") restructuring of the 1958 Vincent Price horror classic Is a 19H6 horror classic combining contemporary contem-porary monster-slimcexploding flesh repulsivcness with old-fashioned horror hor-ror and suspense. It's well done, but definitely not for children, the squeamish, sensitive, frail or tenderhearted, which still leaves a sizable audience to enjoy the most realistic grossout special effects ever, which spells big boxoffice gross. Rated H. 90 minutes, Ghastly violence, some profanity, sex and partial par-tial nudity. ing to have three of its council members attend the Utah League o( City and Towns Conference at the Satt Palace in Salt Lake City. The Manila senior citizens recently enjoyed a trip to the State Line Dam near Mutiertsnii, Wyo. This is the first time most of them had seen this area. Thry had lunch at Ft. Bridgrr and shopped in Mountain View. Hie Area Aging Board met in Manila Aug 11. Nine members were in attendance. Prior to the meeting they enjoyed dinner at the senior . citizen center. 'Mona Lisa1 Critically acclaimed Neil Jordan ("Company of Wolves") film about a London pimp, Bob Hoskins (screenwriter (screen-writer in "Sweet Liberty") who protects pro-tects and falls in love with prostitute Cathy Tyson (no relation to Cicely), eventually learning about respectability respectabili-ty and self esteem. Rated R. 102 minutes. Sex, kink, language, violence. 'Stand By Me' W3 CI 02 S3 Rob "Meathead" Reiner's ("Spinal Tap," "Sure Thing") third film explores ex-plores the lost innocence of youth, as four 12-year-old Oregon boys go on a 20-mile trek to find a body in the woods. This comedy-drama, set in 1959, rings true for the most part, and will give adults over 40 a good case of nostalgia. Rated R. 92 minutes. Much strong language; excremental humor. 'Extremeties' W3 CI 02 S3 Farrah Fawcett ("Charlie's Angels," "Burning Bed") gets trapped in her home by a psychotic killer (James Russo), captures him, and must decide whether to kill him or call the police. Horrific, very tense and violent; contrived but thought-provoking. thought-provoking. Director: Robert M. Young ("Ballad of Gregorio Cortez"). Rated R. 90 minutes. Strong violence and language; brief nudity. 'A Fine Mess' Wl CI 01 SI Blake Edwards' ("Pink Panther," "Micki & Maude") all-star comedy about a racehorse scam is the worst comedy in years, failing in every conceivable con-ceivable way. PG. 88 minutes. Profanity, vulgarity, vulgari-ty, sex, partial nudity. n:!j:r: in: iff hcrnj That's why, advertisers, it PAYS to appear in The Vernal READ twice "A Wednesdoy, August 27, 1986 Vernal hptitt 9 Utah is losing out in high wage growth Utah experienced moderate economic growth during 1985, although there were some rough spots in the economic picture, according to year-end year-end figures just released by the Bureau, of Economic and Business Research at the University of Utah. "On average, we did reasonably well, about like the national and regional economy," says R. Thayne Robson, BEBR director. Statewide nonagricultural for 1985 was 3.8 percent above 1984. The gain was "not as great as the 6.0 percent gain for 1984 over 1983 but significantly greater than the small gains for every other year since 1979," says the year-end year-end BEBR report. Nonagricultural wages were up 2.2 percent. However, says Robson, some growth may be the "wrong kind." Utah, like other areas of the nation, is losing high paying industrial and mining min-ing jobs. The jobs are being replaced and new jobs added by "dramatic growth in the service sector." The problem is that the service sector sec-tor pays lower wages than heavy industry in-dustry and therefore generates less income in-come tax revenue. It doesn't produce projects subject to sales and other taxes, and tends not to own large production pro-duction facilities subject to property tax. Consequently, employment growth is not generating corresponding growth in local and state tax revenues needed to keep up with education and . other public service demands. "If you look at the employment level, it's reasonable. You look at growth, and it has been good. But you look at tax revenues and it's flat," says Robson. The 1985 figures show a 6.5 percent increase in gross taxable sales (those subject to sales taxes). That barely kept up with growth in personal income in-come and "is one of the lower increases in-creases we've had," says Robson. "And it's going to be even lower this year." Because of declines in oil, coal and metals mining, including closure of Kennecott, mining employment has dropped from about 21.000 in 1981 to 8,500 presently. During the fiscal year that ended June 30, Utah collected $42.8 million in oil and mineral severance taxes, com He wlh ipy yon ccs dwifi) money to buy a newspaper will read his purchase" Express weekly in over 5000 Palil-For Paper pared to $47 million the previous fiscal year. Mineral lease collections for 1985 were $34.2 million down from $37.5 million the previous year. And further declines are predicted in coming years. Construction volume during 1985 was down 3.6 percent compared to 1984. The main reason was a dip in home building with permit-authorized units dropping from about 18,800 in 1984 to 15,250 in 1985. Construction industry performance would have dropped even more if 1985 had not been a "banner year" for nonresidential construction (office buildings, schools, churches, etc.), says the BEBR report. Nonresidential volume hit an all-time high of $567 million. Meanwhile, statewide figures also mask the fact that growth varied widely wide-ly with locality. Some counties boomed, boom-ed, but more than 10 counties showed declines in population andor employment. Millard, Washington and Kane counties coun-ties had significant gains on early all indicators. Millard is continuing to show benefits from construction and startup of the Intermountain Power Project, while Washington is still experiencing ex-periencing recreation and retirement-related retirement-related growth. Kane County has benefited from opening of a uranium operation across the Arizona line near Fredonia, from tourism growth, and from population reaching a sufficient level to generate retail expansion. The Wasatch Front Weber, Davis, Salt Lake and Utah counties continued con-tinued to account for the bulk of statewide growth. Those counties showed gains on most 1985 indicators. But Daggett, Uintah, Emery and San Juan counties in the eastern Utah energy belt continued to slump. San Juan appears to be one of the most depressed counties in the state. It registered declines in population, jobs, wages and property taxes charged. Sevier County, which has suffered from hard time in agriculture, also registered declines on a number of indicators. homes. |