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Show Thursday. January TU 11. 1962 Published by the LEADER PUBLISHING COMPANY, Inc. Entered at the post office at Tremonton, Utah as Second A. N. Rytting Class matter October 15, 1925, Editor and Publisher under act of March 3, 1879. RATES (in advance 54.00 1 $3.50 outside State of Utah per year 't 3, 0, out-of-sta- te non-reside- nt November 1st following grad- uation of the teacher graduates has changed significantly over the years for which State School Office surveys have been conducted. Of the number who do not enter the teachimmediately, ing profession more than half are girls who marry and begin homemaking, or are students who continue their formal study toward graduate degrees or in specialized training. Military service is another activity taking size able numbers of the teacher emgraduates. ployment attracted only 5.4 of the 1960 graduates. School Office reports indicate that 149 Utah teachers who did not return to Utah schools in 1960-6were listed as having moved out of the state, Utah, however, employed 219 new teachers in 1969-6- 1 who taught elsewhere during the previous year. teachers who came to Utah last year were from 31 different states and 7 foreign countries, with the largest number coming from California (59), Idaho (44), Arizona (12), Nevada (10), Wyoming (10), and New York (6). An analysis of the reasons given by teachers who taught in other, states the previous year indicates that family and personal reasons are major considerations in determining where a teacher will teach. As noted, Utah recruited more teachers who taught the prev ious year in California than from any other state, despite the fact that teacher salary levels are higher in California. There also appears to be a marked improvement in the quality of Utah teachers during recent years. The number of "authorized" or "noncertl-ficated- " teachers in Utah public schools has been reduced progressively since the World War II emergency period. In of the Utah Public 1945, 33.3 School faculties were teachers. The proportion was reduced to 23-in 1955, and in 1959, 17.2 7.8 in 1960, with a further in 1961 indidecline to 6.4 cated by preliminary figures. Nearly 99 of Utah secondary school teachers had a bachelor's or higher degree in 1960-6- 1 in compared with 95.5 1953-5The improvement in the elementary teacher ranks was even more marked, with 78.9 having the bachelor's or comhigher degree in 1953-5- 4 1960-694.6 in with pared Non-teachi- 1 Out-of-sta- te 4. 1. January Clearance WAS Automatic Bell and Howell SLIDE PROJECTOR ....... 179.95 NOW 115.00 "' Zoom Lens Remote Control Bell and Howell 159.95 SLIDE PROJECTOR 99.00 Anscomatic - Remote Control SLIDE PROJECTOR 119.50 Electric Eye Howell Bell TURRET MOVIE 3 lens 119.95 & Bell & Howell Electric Eye 99.95 MOVIE FIG. LENS Pistol Grip Zoom Sanko F18 119.95 ELECTRIC EYE MOVIE Sun Gun MOVIE LIGHTS 24.95 . . New Single Light MOVIE LIGHT SET . Wollen Sak STEREO TAPE RECORDER . . Zoom Power Wolleri Sak CAMERA MOVIE Electric Eye 199.95 259.95 . 39.50' , Kodak Electric Eye 35MM COLOR CAMERA & .... with case 7x50 BINOCULARS 77.00 89.00 16.00 9.00 9.00 169.00 165.00 29.00 179.00 18.00 CANS . . 74.50 74.50 39.50 49.00 49.00 25.00 .. SPECIAL gg$ ' Used REVERE MOVIE CAMERA (5 speed) ' .... 20.00 Used' POLOROID MODEL 80A 45.00 Ustd KODAK MOVIE CAMERA COLOR MOVIE FILM With processing Rolls C. War I runaway inflation that in Germany prepared the way for Hitler. He has known inflation first hand. But for the past 25 years he has taught in colleges and universities in this country (including Harding College), serving also as an economic and financial con sultant. During this time he has turned his keen, incisive intellect upon American facts and statistics. His diagnoses and predictions have been amazingly accurate; More' than 10 years ago, for example, Dr. Palyi was talking about a pos sible "dollar crisis" that re cently became po critical. It Is made clear in this reached the end of an era. reached the the end of an ear, It will not be possible much longer to continue "rolling over" the national debt, print ing more cheap money, and indulging in deficit spending. Yet, powerful politicians and pressure groups do not and will not recognize that this is the case. They seem determined to continue spending and borrowing, headless of warnings of the coming chaos. "Legalized Bobbery" These spenders also seem determined to .continue spend ing and borrowing regardless of moral and ethical responsibility, which ought to be implicit in government, for maintenance of the stability of our economy and the value of the dollar. The masses of the people are the willing victims. Those owning insurance and having an interest in Social Security funds (and that's nearly everyone) have watched helplessly while their dol lars lost half their purchasing " power. 89-0- 0 10.00 This is clearly a form of 'legalized robbery, hut as Dr. Paly! says, "you cant put the government in its own peni- tentary." In a most immoral fashion, it not only takes away the purchasing power of the people who permit it, it also saddles future generations with debts they did not create. 27 WV Main Tremonton f I IF WE automomile tires You save money Replacing is expensive. by practicing driving habits that enable you to get more wear from them. Here's how to do it: Drive at reasonable speeds. Tire treads wear almost twice as rapidly at 70 miles an hour than they do at 45 miles an hour. Avoid striking sharp objects such as curbs, rocks or holes in pavement that pinch and break the tire fabric. Bruises and cuts in sidewalls Shorten tire life. Avoid sudden starts and! stops that scuff tire tread. Skids leave tire rubber on the pavement and takes miles off tire life. Keep brakes adjusted, so no in Inspect your tires frequently for sharp materials that might have been picked tip ll and for blisters and bruises. Remove bits of glass, stone or metal embedded in the tread. Make sure your wheels are properly aligned and balanced. Wheels out of line or unbalanced can greatly shorten tire life. Abnormal LESSONS Learn Latest Your Pop Music Instrument or rent One from Us lo Learn the in play GUITAR ' side-wa- steering causes rapid and spot ty tire wear. Avoid getting oil and grease on the tire if possible. They cause tire deterioration. Children 9 years and older Contact JEAN G. STOKES Before driving on a tollway or expressway that is new to you, consult a map to find out which exit leads to your des AL 7-24- 07 I I jfi - Acclaimed for its fashionable design, blazing perform ance, distinctive beauty . . . it's no wonder Oldsmobfle baa been chosen Miss America's Official Car! You can make it your car, too, for less than you'd guess! 1 CAN DO 'GESOL.aSIVIOBIi.Er i I There's "SOMETHING EXTRA" about owning an OLDS I . socanYouJ iffiK rN f V , V, 8P w. ,?w,s,st Wc, - - - " ' - ' ' SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED "aa 'rm!?Sr"' " dlDSMOBILE East Main AW1( w:v.w.fsvw.v.vw.w.v.-.v. X HP quality standards keep shape. Pastels Novelty crew neck! Short sleeve polo shirts, easy snap shoulders. 3 for 1.88 2 for 8Sc Sizes 1 to 4 . 1 Juvenile - COMPANY Phone AL Tremonton, Utah A beautiful collection of baby things at baby-size-d Cotton knit layette gowns made to QUALITY DEALER- FROM CHEVROLET AS V ., (o)(o) prices! VgggMyy i W.A X -- mi i Nursery printed cotton printed receiving muslin cotton blanket. Close crib sheets, rein- crib blankets. Ace weave construction. forced edges. tate binding.' 3 for 88c 80c 2 for 2.88 Printed fitted ose-wea- ve AH Penney Sheets ; NOW GET TEDDinr CAVIMftCI NO SECONDS, EVERY ONE '"J FIRST QUALITY! LAD TEST ebjU Plan Group Visit The Masonic No. 5 of I sleeve cotton shirt of fine quality pants, training double fabric body, 3 for 88c 3 for 88c pull-ove- r combed yarn. . Sizes (Lodge short Combed Easy-int- o, 0 to 3 triple crotch. Sizes 1 to 3 Ut, will visit the Tre monton Community Methodist Church in a group, Sunday, January 14. The Corinne Lodge was the first lodge of Masons to be or ganized for meeting. Being the early settlement of many of the pioneers who came from the East, meetings were first held at Corinne. Because of the time elapsing between the first meetings and the application for final charter, it is known as the fifth such lodge to be recognized. Many of the visiting members reside in Tremon ton and Brigham City. peopta crevl NATION-WID- E reduced! our famous white cotton muslins, full 81"xl08" or full long-wearin- g 43 Sanforized fitted 1.62 72" x twin 108" twin cases 42"x36" 2 for 73 1 Sanforized fitted registered ill YV 1 VO V PLASTIC COATED RAYON - KNIT PANTS Full cut, water proof White - Pastels Sizes 0 to 2 1 FOR FEMALE : our h silky-smoot- reduced! fine, combed white cotton percales. full 81"xl08" or full Sanforlied fitted 1.94 cases 42"x382" 2 tor 97 v ( ' . 121 Corinne Masons ik - "'""" lu"' c US.SAVNGS held by in dividuals (savings such as in mortgages, bonds, paid-u-p surance, savings accounts), which account for 60 per cent of the annual accumulation of capital, have lost through in flation in the past 20 years more than $200 billion of pur- - "w, 'T" -- V:''L4 7V Fixed-dollar-asse- ts 5.Q0 Harrison's JV SEAT 6S tire bears more than its share tination. A single exit a of pressure when brakes are metropolitiau area generally applied. Switch wheels at 5,000 leads to many streets and desmile intervals. tinations. Usually only the Maintain the manufacturer-recommende-d name of the street to which pressure. Check the ramp connects Is shown on it when the tires are cold and an exit sign, so the motorist before starting on a trip. must know in advance the Never drive on a soft or flat name of the exit that leads to tire, except to get your car his destination. entirely off the road for y, Corinne, Ansco; 35MM Ft. REELS 12.95 229.50 STEREO TAPE RECORDER with Amplifier Concord COLOR CAMERA with case . 300 12.95 89.00 One of the most significant J chasing power, Dr. PaJyi books published in 1961 was a shows. Policies Lack Morality thin volume (150 pages) that was perhaps not expected to Congress has continued to make the best seller lists Its allow the misuse of the Fedn impact, however, ought to have eral Reserve System for of the national debt kept it from being generally ignored by the reviewer, for it As Dr. Palyi so unerringly carries a message which, if chows, this is the crux of the heeded, could save the nation problem. Over and over the from calamity of tragic pro- Congress votes to spend, withportions. This calamity is not out having the revenues to conuclear war, yet the effects of ver the spending. This action, it are as ruinous as the des- itself lacking in moral basis, truction of real property in serves another wretched cause, the hottest kind of war. The that of inflating our currency. little book warns us again of The government keeps "rolling an abyss toward which we the debt over," borrowing have been creeping for 20 more and more and swelling the currency, so that price years. levels are forced up and up, g econo This kind of chaos is Apparently Dr. Palyi is con mic. We teeter dangerously on the brink over which lies the vinced that we have already inflationary collapse of our reached the point where it is national financial structure. most unsafe to keep refinanc The book is fairly easy read- ing the debt and printing more ing, but prophetically as tough money. If the politicians are as Jeremiah. It is Dr. Melchior going to keep on spending at Palyi's An Inflation Primer a rate so nerce that balanced Regnery budgets are unattainable, then (Chicago: Henry Com-pan$4). Written for the we can be sure that "adjust ordinary reader by a great ments" will come. They may economist of our time, the be drastic In nature!. Let us book goes right to the heart hope we come to our senses, of the problem, with no words taking what steps are necesto spare and no equivocation. sary to achieve fiscal sanity. Its arguments are both cogent The only possible remedy and pointed. Perhaps more im if we can do it soon enoughs is to balance the budget and portant: They are urgent. stop monetizing the national Known Inflation debt Dr. Palyi was teaching in Berlin during the post World mone-tizatio- Utah Foundation Analysis Shows Increase of Teachers Utah colleges are graduat ing a greater number of ele mentary and secondary teach ers, and a significantly larger proportion are accepting teaching positions in Utah during recent years, This point was brought out in a Utah Foundation analysis of teaching personnel studies published by the State Department of Public Instruction. Utah colleges In 1952-5graduated 1,005 candidates for teaching certificates, of whom 332 or 33 accepted teaching positions in Utah the followUtah coling year. In 1959-6leges graduated 1,678 candidates, with 841 taking Utah teaching posts, or 50 of the total graduated. An analysis made by the State School Office showed that of the 1,678 teacher graduates from Utah colleges in 1900, 510 or more than 30 were residents of other states or foreign countries. Twenty-tw- o percent or 371 of the graduating group took teaching positions out of state. Of the total number who accepted anywhere teaching positions (1,212 out of 1,678) the proportion taking positions was almost precisely the same proportion who were from students other states or countries, Utah, in turn, recruited approximately 100 new .teachers who did not teach anywhere the previous year and received their training outside of Utah. The pattern of occupation on SHE DRIVER'S A TVvijrrfi Times SUBSCRIPTION Tremonton, Utah LOOKING AHEAD AO) HIE HIGarland The LEADER twin 72" x 108" twin Sanforized fitted 'JjfoVp tn |