OCR Text |
Show 4 ho Tooclo Transcript Friday, October What is a Newspaper? trimnaiaapa Enirrrd at Second Issurd each Friday at Toorla Ciiy. Utah. CLu Matter at the lot Otlxe at Teorla City, Utah. Auut 14. 194. mW Act of March I. 1171. Publish'd by Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company I re, e U No;h Mm Street. Tooela City, Utah. Addreaa all to Boa J90, Tooele, Utah, Subset ptton rail: $5 per year RFD, PO. BoM. and foreign mad. U per year Carrier or Cuy Delivery. r ALLTC DUNN. Publiihar Dont Get Lost Hunting Humeri owe tome reiponiibtlity to the tommunity tthen they venture forth to hunt in Tooele County other than abid ing by the law. Annually a doren or more calls are received by the Tooele County Sheriff! Office reporting hunteri lott. TOO OFTEN they have been either the remit of alarm or carelewnei on the part of the hunter. No one wants to deprive anyone of the awurance that they will be aided if lost or Injured but houri of needlevi effort and expense on the part of persons making the search la a high price to pay for thoughtlewnei. The hills and deserts of Tooele County are the same ones that esused hardship and suffering to the pioneers They esn still do just thst. T1IE OUTDOORS hss always given it greatest reward to the skilled woodsman and exacted its sevens! penalties from tho green horn. Respect Is still needed of what the outdoors can do snd a little thought before and during an extensive hunt can not only prevent difficulty but add to the enjoyment for all concerned Preparation for hunting Includes equipping yourself with a few necessary mental tools including planning and caution. e aome 5200 billion in liabilities, the net worth still stands at 5900 billion. i r j i cr r7 SALE-Dress- es H' hu .i Bags $35B HATS , e "Dead Man Staved at Hotel late In I960" Lead e, up over '.,5?.. m vilie, Colorado Herald- - Indepen-denM at hotel refuse to harbor fugitives from graveyards 4 Freefca In Your Future JP ' . ! t. With 0.1 Swlnjs EcrJs m&en kJ f J '' per cent. and "THE INCREASE In numbers of 525 to 510 bonds sold Is undoubtedly due to the increase in Payroll Savings participation." Mr. Schramm continued. "The larger denomination are usually purchased by Investors because of the tax saving features. Interest earned need not be reported for Federal income tax until the bonds are redeemed; or, they may be exchanged for current-incom- e H bonds and the reportInterest furing of the ther deferred for the life of the H bonds. The owner can plan to redeem his bonds at a time that will be most favorable to him from a tax standpoint." Mr. Schramm also pointed out that interest earned on both E 510 000 Keep Reduced $3 t j mere ml'lioa duller Lionel W. Olsen, Vice President. FI's Security Bank. Too-elsnd Tooele County Bonds Chairman, has received word from State Chairman Frederick P. Champ that total purchases of Series E and H bonds reached JI.S1I.01J, up 151 per cent over Septemoer 1962, making It also the highest September since H bonds were first sold In 1952. THE STATE'S nine months sales total of 510 million Is a IS- year high and represents II per cent of our 19GJ goal." Mr. Champ noted. Residents of Tooele County purchased 1127,410 In Series E and H bonds during September, according to Chairman Olsen, sales to bringing the year' 11.055, 991, or MS per cent of the county's 1962 goal. The high volume of sales Indicates thst Utahns are following the national trend in S. purchasing." said Clem Schramm, State Director of the Treasury' Savings Bonds Division. "The latest national figures on sales by Individual pieces (January- - May) show Increases over the same period of 1962 as follows: 525 and 550 denomination!, up 7 per cent; 5100, up 10 9 per cent; 5200 and 5590. up over 30 per cent; 51.000 't. Going hunting? ff you're a city dweller, don't try to keep up with rugged mountain men; don't strain to keep up with younger men or to Impress your buddies, your Heart Association urges. The net financial assets of American citizens (not business) at the end of last year totalled SI 1 trillion after deducting solve almost Government any problem faring It by spendcould Ven-dom- What is a newspaper ft la ink made A newspaper Is lumber made malleable, into wrds and picture It is conceived, born, grows up and d.ta of old age in a day Yesterday's newspaper is ued to wrap today's fsh. Or to start a kg fire, which brings It back w its origin MOST OF ALL, a nrwspaper is current information. It la the bridge between a home and the rest of the world, ft tells of people ard events swiftly and in detail. It listens to the threats of a dictator, the craik of a bat against a baseball, the anguish of a lost child, and the recipe for making cookies Newspapers, like people, come in many sues, and many Some are fat and tedentary; others are lean peraonahiies. and hysterical. And, like people, aome are reliable and aome are not. There are newspapers which scream for attention and there are others, on the same newsstand, which whisper the newr All newspapers reflect the character of their owsers. A good newspaper must show a profit. All newspaper owners know this. That la why they establish good character In their papers, and maintain it. CHARACTER IS an Indefinable quality best understood by women. They live by it. They can detect It In merchandise, In people, m publicstions. They, more than their husbands, understand the newspaper they buy. .Men usually read the front page news, the sports section, and their favorite featurre. Women leaf through a newspaper slowly, carefully, concentrating more on local news than International, assessing the advertisements, relishing the woman's page, with Its club meetings, lawn partiea and gossip, and reading the obituary notices. The average newspaper contains 150.000 words or more of Informal This Is the daily equivalent of two novels. It Is never perfect, never completely accurate. It is as near perfect as a chain of human minds leading from editor to city desk to reporter to rewrite man to copy desk to composing room can make it. A good newspaper maintains a balance of 40 per cent news to 60 per cent advertising. When the wage go up, and the price of newsprint s hiked, the ratio can slip further apart, particularly on larger newspapers. No one it short changed, however, because increased advertising has simply meant more space for news. A NEWSPAPER Is private enterprise for the public good. It relies on msny minds to fill It every day. In addition to machines which chatter Incessantly about news coming from Rome, from Bangkok, from Tokyo and Topeka. A boy on a bicvcle can take all of these things, roll them up. and tots them onto a front porch while chewing gum and preparing a good excuse for a poor report card. A blind newsdealer can tell all this Information for a small coin without ever seeing It. In some countries, the newspapers are the Instruments of the government. In this one. the government Is sometimes the Instrument of newspapers. Perhaps the best thing which can be said about newspapers in the United States is (hat they are In chronic disagreement with each other. THIS IS WIIAT it meant by a free press A newspaper is always a little more than the sum total of its parts It Is also a friend who can be dropped, or picked up at will. What is a newspaper? turn-pondewe- Oldrtr remember the pro- Infls'lon good old days hea the Utah Savings Ronds Purchases Reach A New Record 18, 1S63 a. and up r SLACKS SUITS M6 75 up BELTS SKIRTS Sfuau. $3 Scuffie SHOES up M ''jXtAiAKOUtll 17 tral School this year. She is shown here with same of the members of her class. NEW TEACHER . . . Mrs. John Power la amone the new teachers at Tooele Cen A pood neighbor tries to he "Only 2,497.706 people are now the best of friends, not get the employed by the Government," best of them says a federal official. "Only. he says. Never before has this word been used so erroneously. SOUTH MAIN A new kind of Pontiac with a new kind of Pontiac power Automation will continue to ' provide openings for peace officers to cope with those engaged in the various kinds of activities which the devil suggests to idle minds. leader who had been preaching that death was only imaginary was buried the other day. He imagined he was dead. SloflCadS )D$7DDfl( A cult Some of us spent part of Columbus Day wishing Christopher had sailed west for at least 530, COO miles before discovering America. Hard work - an accumulation of easy things we dont do when we should. v, Nothing dries like the dean quick-dryin- g GAS flame No wait. Gas warm-u- p is fast responds instantly! Friday and Saturday Only BOYS SKI PARKAS Nylon. With acetate filler, Reversable, with the 100 $C88 under the collar hoods Sizes 6 to 20 No wasted time or money. Gas not it saves only gets the job done fast costly wear and tear on clothes and dryer. Gentle. With gentle Gas heat, clothes come out soft, clean, bright. Reg. 9.95 Mens Red HUNTING COATS Fiber glass quilted lining ior extra warmth, water prooi zipper game bag, shell pockets. Detachable Hood, Hand Wanner $1188 1 25a Waltz through washday with a new automatic GIRLS COATS Just the thing to keep them warm. Fir trimmed hoods, imwnr FOREGROUND. 64 TEMPEST frftiiTififrfiii ajRfirthGiiiwtftiTTfiiyirtfTirn'n'Tri CUSTOM CONVERTIBLE BACKGROUND '64 TEMPEST Pontiac Tempest with a new SIX for savers and a V- - 8 for swingers. It's the '64 Wide-Trac- k 6 develops 140 horsepower from 215 cubic inches, Tempest's new and it'll please everybody but the gas station man. And Tempest's in-li- ne optional-at-extra-co- 326-cub- SEE THE ONLY inch ic DEALER WHO V-- 8 SELLS THE CARS YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC Sizes 3-- 6 5.88 DEALER 6.88 7-- Brand BOYS T - SHIRTS Allen-- A st puts out up to 280 horsepower for swingers. Sizes 6-- Reg. $2.65 3 for Stoker Motor Company 44 East First North Tooele. Utah Phone 882-106- Gas Clothes Dryer quilted lining, washable. nnlinfiniiiinrtfii SEDAN Buy from your Gas Appliance Dealer 1 99 MOUNTAIN SUPPLY 6 24 North Main St. -- Ya&'Ui COMPANY Gas FEJOI. |