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Show CO County group meets 1976 8, July Bernard F. Hillenbrand, Executive Director of the National Association of Counties (NACo) recently challenged county officials to make it your own mission to talk to the Cautioning of things counties. Record Juan concern while giving unemployment welfare reform. The secret- of Utah ary-treasurer TsagSir n As- sociation of Counties, and member Public Lands Steering Committee and Energy and Environment Steering Committee, attended and participated in the annual conference. labor-managem- fr y in- surance careful scrutiny (2) Provide income maintenance for the unemployable and provide special help for. such persons as children, working mothers, the sick, the handicapped and those with special problems such as alcoholics and drug addicts. The NACo executive said the candidates also should know that counties want to be relations handled on the local level and we dont want federal action. Cal Black, chairman, San San we (1) Separate the employable persons from the unemployable, and perfect job training to Speaking here to sessions of the 41st Annual Conference of NACo atSalt Lake City, Hillenbrand urged county officials to talk to the candidates about ' Juan County Commission, & v conference-goer- s are talking about human beings, Hillenbrand outlined two basic necessary welfare reform actions: that Presidential candidates about the ' ent still deface the once -- beautiful GRIMY REMINDERS area of Sugar flood-strick- en City-Rexbu- River Valley in Idaho. The will take years to be restored to a semblance of rg what it once was. upper-Sna- ke Teton flood damage devastating by Janet Wilcox The marquee outside the drive-i- n theater north of Rex- - The Way We Were, and to residents of the Idaho farming communities burg reads, FOOD STORE Prices Good Thursday, Friday & July 8, 9 Saturday & 10 Open 8 a.m, to 7 p.m. ravaged by the rampaging water of the Teton Dam flood, the way they remembering were is the saddest thing about the flood. Over 112,000 acres offer-til- e productive farmland were directly affected by the flood, which devastated one of the countrys most beautiful farming areas, the upper Snake River Valley. Hardest hit was Madison County, which listed 45,000 acres of farmland inundated. Of that total, some 32,000 acres of cropland suffered 80 per cent loss. Three weeks after the flood there are still lakes of water OIL VEGETABLE 48 oz. Western Family SHORTENING Pur Vegetable 3 lb. Western Family GRAHAM CRACKERS 2 lb. Keebler SUGAR $1.35 $1.29 25 lb. Western Family CHOCOLATE SYRUP NAPKINS FEUS 16 oz. 360-- s WS7 J LORN ' 15 3 Margarine GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 24 oz. 12 oz. SPANISH PEANUTS 3 SPINACH Varieties 40 oz. Skippy GRAPEFRUIT JUICE DOG FOOD ONION SALT Pink FRENCH FRIES Dry 3 10 1b. VEGETABLES SPINACH CATSUP ANACIN BUFFERIN 43( lb. BREAD WAFFLES Top Dog PECAN 303 Western Family 5$l per case $4 , 80 303 Larsens All 303 Western Family 20 oz. Western Family 12 0. i0s 389$ 495$ 49$ PIES ICE CREAM 3$l 35$ 51$ lb. Western Family oz. Minute Maid 16 Loaves 11 5$l oz. Pasco 6 5 39$ 17$ oz. Western Family oz. Western Family 10 JUICE ORANGE 46 oz. Texsun HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS: VI S I 1 oz. Western Family 10 1 LEMONADE 38 oz. Schillings BEANS Cut or French GREEN 2 Beef, Chicken, Orient 303 LaChoy Leaf 12 BRUSSEL SPROUTS lb. Western Family 1 Varieties Fudge, Pitter Patter, rnniTITC Chocolate 16 oz. LUUMLO French Vanilla Creme MEIN Nucoa 64 oz. JUICE PEANUT BUTTER varieties oz. Hormel HAWAIIAN PUNCH 8 $1.49 oz. Niblets 12 TAMALES PUDDINGS Junket Zee lb. oz. REALEMON Hersheys so-- s CRUNCHOLA CHOW RIB STEAK $1.19 Rhodes 53$ oz. Eggo 9 12 $1.89 Johnston 89$ gal. Round LAST 3 PRODUCE ITEMS NOT AVAILABLE UNTIL FRIDAY ORANGES lb. Choice per case LEMONS $1.29 CHERRIES $1.49 iK 99$ ZUCCHINI yorni l? 2nanpi?tt fflontt ft uns2 0Q $3.99 each w w 1 8C in many sections of the Sugar and Rexburg areas. City Farms with crops well established seemed to have less soil damage and will have some harvest, though the fields are strewn with debris, mangled machinery and trees. There are a thousand and one stories that can and will be written about the flood, as its cause and effects are manifold and touch all aspects of society in the intermountain west. The loss of human life, of livestock, farm land, homes, personal property and businesses these losses are gigantic, but there has not been a loss of faith or drive, as the people in the communities of Wilford, Sugar City, Rexburg, Menan, Roberts, Black-foo- t, Firth, and countless smaller towns struggle to rebuild what once was. Buoying up their spirits has been the thousands of volunteer workers, men, women, and teen-age- rs from Idaho, Wyoming and Utah who have come to help out. Over 20,000 of these volunteers had worked hours days by the last of June, and more are 8-- 12 still coming. As if the flood damage to crops in southeastern Idaho was not enough, a severe and damaging late frost on June 25 did great damage to potato crops not affected by the flood, as well as to grain which was starting to head out. Many tests of faith, of character and resiliance continue to face the thousands who are still homeless in the flood-ravag- ed area, but almost to a woman and child they are man, to rebuild, redo, revise going and revamp their lives to meet the challenges which face them. lb. lb. 39 c 190 Seeks position Mrs. Dorothy Corbin Clark of Provo, a Moab native and a former Republican State Vice Chairman, has announced her intention of seeking the of Republican position National Committee Womenof Utah in the upcoming State Republican Convention. |