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Show HELPER (Utah) JOURNAL IMTlCJALDrTOR!AL Cui'siAIE'Pielfi' ASSOCLUIOY 'KLASSOCIATION The Published Every Thursday JOURNAL FUHI.I8HINQ COMPANY HELPER. UTAH THIS Entered PACE As Second Class Matttw At The Post Office At Helper, TWO THURSDAY, APRIL 20, Increase Awards 4-- H Uto 1961 In Expanded Junior leader Training Program completed three years of club work with emphasis on leadership projects. 12 Scholarships, The state Extension staff will name state winners. A Trips to Chicago committee of 12 Extension For the first time in its 37 workers will judge state winyear history, the 4 II leader- ners' records to determine ship program in 1961 will offer those worthy of national 12 national $400 college schol- awards. From the outset of organized Club arships to outstanding club work in the 1920's, junior members. Previously two $400 college leadership training has been recognized as a vital composcholarships nent of were granted, growth, according to Mr. Mindrum. Definite and the top leadership projects were oftight winners fered by a few states as early nationally as 1923. were brought The present leadership Club ;to the awards program is being amin 'Congress ' plified, Mindrum said, and it is Chicago. Gold-fill;:- ! medals expected that current enrollment will exceed the 170,000 of honor for Medal Award touiiiy champions will be in boys and girls who participated . in 19G0. Of this number, apti t ;: ;. d from two to four, twrman C. Mindrum, direc- proximately 109,000 served as tor of the National 4 II Service assistant or project leaders. t'oiiiniittee, announced that Leader training is directed the v.:v expanded awards pro- by the Cooperative Extension Service and carried out by gram also provides an trip to the national volunteer adult leaders in each club. Congress for It is estimated that 25 per winner in each state. Awards this year will be cent of the 302,500 adult volun provided for the first time by teer leaders now serving the Foundation, were former junior leaders, he said, which also sponsors Mindrum declared. the national 4 II home improve-.men- t Additional information reprogram. garding the leadership To be eligible for a state awards program can be obnational ar award, the club tained from county Extension member must be over 14 years agents, local leaders, or the of age and have satisfactorily state Extension office, he said. Sears Provides 4-- 4-- 4-- 4-- first-plac- e 4-- Sears-Roebuc- k 4-- H -- UTERINE BONDS AUTHORIZED A department of the Investment Bankers Assn. of America reports that state and local bond authorizations approved by American voters last high, of year reached an all-ti6,1 billion. That Is 30 per cent more than the previous peak, which was approved in 1956. CAMGER gov-eernm- DEATHS SHOW per 100,000 povvMion flm if 1 g DROP 1 I j Washington News-Lett- er AH By ROBERT N. TAYLOR Washington Correspondent TOO PEOPLE MUST TOOL-U- P Some people, a lot of people, in fact have got this automa Carbon tion thing all wrong. when it paper is automation, saves a worker frcm having to write the same thing half a doz en times so that the information may ibe sent to six different places. So is the "late, late show when it presents in a million homes the work that a bunch of actors did 30 years ago. con Instead erf juring up armies of robots with Frankensteins (for second lieuten ants, automation is merely the current name for the force that through the ages has been liber ating human beings from draft-hors- e jobs and giving man-tyjobs to increasing numibers, and making economically practical the multitude of products and serpe vices that support our present standard of living. One hundred and fifty years ago or more, when the automatic loom began scaring the wits out of weavers who thought they would starve if hand looms were obsoleted, it was called the industrial revolution.' In the 19 30s, when the mass production ideas of the auto wizards began to be adopted toy industry at large, some writers raised the bugaboo of "technocracy." So now, with electronic "brains" to do our engineering sums faster and production machines contoll ed and sycled by punched tapes instead of people, it's called automation. And the common denominator is the production of more comforts for everybody at prices everybody can pay, with over-a- ll number of jobs and a a comparable increase in the spectacular advance in the kind of work required of humans. The real misfortune is we have only the beginnings of automation in this country. As a result, we are increasingly unable to compete in many major markets. These are the things that Roger W. Bolz, (P.E., publisher and editor of Automation (Magazine, has 'been trying to explain to the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. As an outstanding national authority on the subject, Mr. Bolz' presentation has been considerably more technical than this, and takes into consideration the enormous industrial investment, employment arid years of time involved in tooling up for automation, and stressing the futility of manufacturers trying to match high-pric- ed VS. labor and low-waforeign labor on equal production terms. The human problem, as Mr. Bolz pointed out, is not over-a- ll employment, since studies of automated industries clearly show an increase in personnel. Rather, the problem is to train people up to the demands the new jbs will' make on their intelligence. They will be better-payijobs, more interesting jobs, less physically demanding, but more mentally challenging, Mr Bolz is telling us. And with this prospect ahead, the 'boys and girls now in school had 'better do their homework! ge SWEAT OF OUR 1UGHBROWS There has been a faint suspicion in the public mind as researach laboratories became more numerous and kept growing fancier and fancier that this double-doactiv mysterious, ity might just possibly be me co-por- window-dressin- g. Bu perish the thought! Ceremonies marking the dedication of the Olin Research Center in New Haven, Conn., the other day, revealed laboratory break-througon two divergent scientific fronts as a curtain-rais- er for the new heaadquarters of the expanded and consolidated Olin Mathieson research activities. hs Progress that could make the U.S.. in the, pro- self-suffici- duction aluminum and the of a laboratory development tough new plastic that stops bullets were announced by Dr.. W. E. Hanford, vice president for research, as dramatic examples of the dependence of industry on research, for its future.. Now in the pilot stage, the research chief revealed, is a process for producing aluminum from' shales that ace presently coal mine waste and from clays that are in abundant supply all of " over America. This development by research scientists could ultimately free us from our present dependence on bauxite from foreign countries. It would eliminate costly ocean shipping and the uncertainty of availability in wartime. Plants could then ibe built close to the source of both raw material and needed power without comprimis step-by-st- ep .? 4? $ I960 figurt u estimated Good Reading for the $ Whole Family This substantial decline in the death rate from cancer of the uterus is the brightest phase of the current cancer picture, says the American Cancer Society. Uterine cancer still claims the Jives of some 14,000 women Annually. Yet the cure rate of uterine cancer when discovered arly is nearly 100. The Society stresses the importance to every woman of the annual health checkup, which should include a pelvic examination, a part of which should be the lit; Facts I AM fascinated by figures. One of my favorite forms of relaxation is to tackle mathematical problems. Since my operation for cancer two years ago, I have become very of cancer statistics because I am one. Let's consider what would happen to six per sons who get cancer today. Numbers 1 and 2 ' will be saved. Number 3 will die, but might have ; been saved had proper treatment been received , in time. Numbers 4, 5 and 6 will die of cancer ' because research has not yet come up with methods of controlling their cancers. . umber d should be the first target of all cause something can be done now about him. Saving number 3 would mean the saving of an j additional 85,000 lives a year, bringing the total of those saved from cancer each year up to 'S, 255,000. ( Family Feature The Christian Science Monitor One Norway St., Boston 15, Malt. Send your newspaper for the time checked. Enclosed find my check or money order. 1 year $20 O 3 months J5 6 months $10 ""cell examination for mterine cancer" (the smear test) 'Tap" . Nam cre ioo we can do something today. The American Cancer Society has more requests for funds for worthwhile research projects than it can support. Thus, research is being held back. I am not one to take away anyone's pleasures, but this fact interests me: In 1959, the public voluntarily gave $32,000,000 to cancer control, while it voluntarily spent 300 times as much, or ?9,GUO,000,000 on alcoholic beverages. Arthur Godfrey pct 4- Feeding ths Pregnant Dog Females carrying puppies require only a small increase in food consumption. It is the ' j: nu- trient quality of the ration that is of most importance during this period. A V -- aA-v J 5" An" Nr 1 - nlains that of al- - los. one of Ontario t Here, a seaplane "buzzes" a resort on Muskoka some 250 000 on located resorts fine the to Vou can fly many lake areas. the fresh water lakes in the province. Center' your octivit.es around water, or hunt, play tennis, see the signrs. nutrients are being stored in the developing pupa, the female becomes less active and uses her food more efficiently For this reason, her food consumption is increased only slightly. Even during this time, the female needs only a nutritionally complete commercial dog food and water. After giving birth to the litter, increased consumption of the food takes place to enable quantities of milk to be pro- :.L ,' n n y i duced. When the maximum quantity of milk is being produced (about the fourth week) the female will require about twice the normal quantity of food. If there is a normal number of pups in the litter, additional 13 supplementation is usually not necessary. kma.r o.rrn in fh nreat outdoors, are features of a refreshing vacation in Ontario. Hundreds of campsites, provide fine outdoor recreation. parks, picnic areas dot the province the met Algonquin, Ouetko, and Rondeau Provincial Parks are among maximum milk production, using one part horse meat or raw hamburger to three parts of dry ration. Although many vitamin and mineral supplements are avail- popular. For further information write: Dept. of Travel and Publicity, 67 Collect Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. r-- However, if the litter is large, the female's rations might be supplemented for M u Hanford pointed out at New Haven, it is research that must provide jobs for those displaced by that must insure automation, diet. stockholders profits to maintain the flow of needed capital, that must so improve processes and on locations can that handle ing deep-wat- er ships. The day is nearer when vast aluminum re fineries can be located at coal mines where millions of tons of aluminum-bearin- g shale may be converted into metal by electric power generated by burning coal. able, they are not necessary when rations are being fed in a normal dg's equipment as to enable American industries to compete with low-wa- ge producers around the world i that must provide the tools oi national defense and the means an ever-risiof supporting standard of living. ng frcrcTflTwi Research that has produced a new plastic so tough that a five- eighths-incsheet has stopped a bullet at five to 20 feet, is now turning to the study of uses such as armor for combat troops, impregnable auto bodies and boats, protective tank coverings and shoe soles that would outwear the uppers. It should therefor be apparent to any thoughful American that industrial research is no publicity gimmick, but our best hope of progress and survival. As Dr. h' "Less than a year ago I graduated from. school. In June I enrolled at Stevens Henager College for a Secretariat Finishing Course, including shorthand, typing, and Nancy Taylor charm instruction. Stevens Henager placed me in my present position . . . doing secretarial work in a large wholesale and retail firm ir. Salt Lake City. This is the kind of work I've really wanted . . . interesting things to week, and wonderdo, good pay, ful people to work with. And I'm only 18 1" Mary Austin Nephi, Utah Juab High i l If I'll i" -- I96T Grcduofes: You Can Soon Ecrn Up to $300 A Month American College There are many young women who graduated from high school last spring now in good paying secretarial positions, thanks to a course at Stevens Henager. Free placement service. Pay as you learn terms. 22 Board Tests MARY AUSTIN will be administered by Dr. Dave Cox on Saturday, April 22, at Carbon College. This will mark the third time the test has been given during the 196061 school year. Test scores may be used for admission to th ecollege of the students choice. Student,, who take the test now will not be required to take the Cooperative Yt, tivd EngliKh moteHicrt test, Dr. Cox states. Students planning to enter college next Sept., but who desire to take the test later in the summer, will have an opportunity before the beginning of the Fall Nephi, Utch Enroll Now: Summer term begins June 19. Stevens Henoger it the only Utah school au- Secretarial, accounting, business management general business, office automation, Nancy Taylor Finishing, typing, IBM card punch, and others. thorized to teach Speedwriting, the easy ABC shorthand. CUP AND MAIL TODAY without obrrgatkwi a copy of your bulic'm in stcriaryihpf aid descnpfiaptcMrung opportunittot on you cour htm fr s. Nome Addreni Start ..fhooo.. Quarter. Envelopes, oil sizes, gold at tht now sold by the Helper Journal. UNVEILS DREAM CAR FIGHT CANCER WITH A CHECSUP WD A CHECK IT. Clarence C Fawcett of the Purina Dog- Care Center ex- - At Carbon April . lJLil.:ki JuUI s it College Board Tests Back Cancer Research WMM J About -- ng By ARTHUR GODFREY- Honorary Education Chairman of the American Cancer Society's 1961 Crusade m Vacationland Ontario-Refreshi- ng tastes i :H: Kitten' refreshing i "'; "ItoT; AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY 4, GET A SPRING LIFT WITH A QUICK CASH LOAN fx 4. J i 1 ft t feopEeiiifow!. i Prompt, private loans for any worthy purpose, Just pick up your ptione, then pick up your loan. $25 to $2000 CITY FINANCE CORPORATION Loom 71 E. Mow $600 Mala St mad II tor of styling. The stylists assume that the vehicle could be stabilized by means of a gyroscope mounted just behind the passenger compartment. Two small outrigger wheels at the rear would retract when the1 e above in three views, the dream car gyro was In operation. A steering dial be- -j w . r ad tween two contoured seats replaces developed by the con- -' vanced (tyllsti undtr the direction of George ventional steering wheel and makes it posil- -' W. Wlker, b!e for the car to b fteered from Rhr t. Two running wheels instead of the usual four, together with a unique delta shape, mark the Gyron as a novel experiment in possible future automotive styling. Shown full-siz- by City Finance Co. MEdford Price Ifk eau , . i ' " h i f '; - ! OittrUnaed by HELPER UERCANTTLB, CO, Helper, VUik |