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Show congress Inn limilv I'st.iMislii'il tra-- 1 winks mils in lli.it Congress m ii iv;l i J'urvl.ix llmisil.iv Inn iiianx iiiniiln'is leave 'TIiiiimI.ix night ami limi t return 'until Mnnilas nilit. That's a lielier Hiisliiii' than any uiiinu demands. anil Congress is ostensibly ll MISS DEB . . . answer! question s about Junior Miss etiquette, grooming and interests. nnor--ganize- Chet Ihmtlev, "What World!" Iiv Allen Calvin, In TinKamilv weekly - Q. My friends and I think the feminine look of ruffles, ruffles, ruffles is yummy. But the inside of the collars get dirty in just a few hours. Can we get around washing them every time we wear them and then ironing aU those ruffles? Ugh! A. Ugh is right! Keeping those pretty pastel ruffles clean is a problem for everyone. Carry a Kleenex tissues purse pack. Whenever you get the chance, pat the back of your neck firmly. Some of the oils and perspiration and the dirt before will be absorbed theyre absorbed on your clean collar! An additional trick: after "wearing the fclouse or dress the first time, wash only the inside of the collar with a tightly wrung out washcloth or sponge. Hang the garment on a plastic hanger, and stuff Kleenex paper towels in the shoulders. Not only will the collar dry quickly, but you won't have to get out the iron at all! BAD CREDIT?? we DON'T CARE, , WE CARRY OUR OWN CONTRACTS. ARE YOU TIRED OR BEING TURNED DOWN? SEE US WE SINCERELY WANT YOUR BUSI- - ' VO MOTORS 860 n Pine Nut Crop Expected to be Average i 1 S. Main, S.L.C. 364-566- 9 Why The Christian Science Monitor recommends you read your local Q. Is kere any way to keep clothes with wide necklines or thin strapes from falling off the hanger? Especially the groovy new sun dresses. thin-strapp- It's really frustrating. A. It is frustrating, but the solution is easy. Coat a hanger with glue. Wrap yam, in a color that blends or contrasts with the color of your room, around the entire hanger. Zany, isn't it? But it works beautifully. Q. I love the Pow-colpatent shoes this year! I must have five pairs! But, how do I or do I polish polish them them? A. You're right! are great accents for all and maxis the mod minis and midis and the accompanying wild hosiery. , Before you even wear them, apply a thin coat of Vaseline with a Kleenex paper towel. Leave it on overnight. Wipe off any excess in the morning, and they're already partially protected from dirt! When the shoes do become dirty, use a Kleenex paper towel with soap 'n water to wash and rinse them. A soft brush might be needed for stubborn scratches. Last step: a dry e paper towel can be used to buff back the natural glow and color. Powy-pa-ten- ts lint-fre- newspaper 'Your u local newspaper keeps you informed of what's happening in your area community events, public meetings, stories about people in and your vicinity. These you can't do without. shouldn't HOW THE YOUR MONITOR PAPER MOTORCYCLES - DEATH Deaths of motorcycle riders reached 1580 in 1965, a 41 per cent increase over the year before. The toll was even higher last year, and this year it is obvious another new death record will be established. What every parent should know is that the death rate for motorcycles is much higher than the comparable rate for automobiles and other motor vehicles. One expert, civil engineering associate professor John J. OMara of the University of Iowa, estimates a cyclist has 20 times as much chance of leing basis. killed, on a vehicle-mil- e And injuries, in the words of Dr. Paul Joliet, chief of the USPHS accident Prevention Diviserious sion, have become a national health problem. Harris Edward Dark, 'Tour Youngster and the Motorcycle Todays Health COMPLEMENTS LOCAL The Monitor specializes in analyzing and interpreting national and world news . . . with exclusive dispatches from one of the largest news bureaus in the nation's capital and from Monitor news experts in 40 overseas countries and all 50 states. TRY THE MONITOR THE WHOLE FAMILY i f ' i e ir$ A WILL PAPER ENJOY The Christian Science Monitor One Norway Street Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. 02115 Please start my Monitor subscription tor the period checked below. I enclose S O 1 YEAR $24 3 months $6 (U.S. funds). 6 months $12 Name. Street. City. State. ZIP Code. 7 GSl0d GDrucjs Doris Day essays her first western role since 1953 when she appeared in Calamity Jane, in Universals comedy photoThe graphed in Technicolor, Ballad of Josie. Ends Friday at the Motor Vu. AnonuGaD le(Mose Sole The pine nut crop in the Fillmore District, Bureau of Land Management, is geographically variable. Cone distribution and size vary considerably from area to area. Predictions are for an average crop. PINE VALLEY and the Wah Wah Mountain Range, Beaver County, have been popular commercial harvesting areas. Localized pinon pine stands in Juub, Millard, Sanpete, and Sevier Counties furnish pine nuts for personal users. Commercial harvesters Permit. Commerical picking rates have been established at 10 cents per pound of nuts, or 40 cents per bushel or gunny sack of cones. Application and payment must be made prior to harvest date, says Warren Brough, Fillmore District Manager. When making application please state, along with quantity of cones or nuts, the desired geographic harvest area. Anyone harvesting nuts or cones for public sale will be a Commercial Harvester, and must show the Special Use Permit when field checked. COMMERCIAL harvest date in the Fillmore District has been set from September 15th through October 15th. The ripening period is generally after the first frost, or during the month of September. Early harvest may result in shrivelled nuts. No permit or charge will be inrequired for family units or dividuals harvesting pine nuts for personal consumption. Free use harvesting will not exceed 10 pounds of nuts, or two bushels or gunny sacks of cones, per person per season. Special care should be taken in collecting cones from trees. The cutting of trees and branches of trees is prohibited. BACK MANY country roads are in poor condition because of recent heavy rains. Some roads are impassible. Caution should be used while traveling unfamiliar roads. Be prepared for inclement weather, washed out roads, and floods. Inquire locally about road conditions. Respect private property and remember Public Domain is Your Land, keep it clean. Good harvesting. Oddis n Endls now in progress first only one or two of a kind Many items no layaways no refunds come first served no exchanges. OVER 1,000 OFF must make application for Special Use (We must make room for Holiday merchandise) This Week Police Blotter price marked ITEMS now in discount section New items added daily to discount section Aug. 29 - The Tooele City Police issued a citation to Harold Narden of Tooele for a stop sign. Aug. 29 - Police issued citations for engaging in a racing contest to Clarence Lawrence Gonzales and to Alexander O. Mondragon, both of Tooele. AUG. 29 Donald D. Cow-del- l, living at the Canvon Motel in Tooele, was cited for driving with a revoked operators license. Aug. 30 - A citation was issued to Jerry Pat Hum, Salt Lake City, for failing to stop for a red light. Aug. 30 - Lawrence Charles Shell of Salt Lake City was cited for speeding. AUG. 30 A citation went to Jerold E. Ford, TEAD, for not having an operators permit in his possession. Marcus Jay Durfee Aug. 30 of Tooele was stopped and cited for acceleration exhibition. Aug. 30 - Courtney Lewis Wrathall, of Crantsville, was just a few items now in discount section Bar-b-q- ue 9xl2 Grilles and equipment vinyl Linoleum Rugs Light Bulbs Kitchen Utensils Swag Chain Lamps Phonographs Pyrex Ware Clothina Ajax Cleanser Candles 'll Electric lookout. SEPT. 1 - A citation was issued to Antonio Martinez for following too close and driving under the influence of alcohol. He was later found guilty and fined $150. Sept. 1 - A citation was issued to James T. Gochis of Tooele for reckless driving. Sept. 1 - Ralph Pascual Mae-sta- s of Tooele was cited for disobeying a stop sign. A citation was isSEPT. 1 sued to Rick Richard Gonzales of Magna for having a faulty ex- haust system. disobeying a stop sign. SEPT. 3 - Police charged Marcia J. Ekins of Tooele with making an illegal Sept. 3 - Radar citations were issued to Theodore Grott Jr., of Holiday; Bob N. Velis of Salt Lake City; Tony Guillermo Valerio of Tooele and David Lee Jones of Salt Lake City. All for exceeding the posted speed limit. Sept. 3 - Carole Worthington of Crantsville, was cited for speeding. SEPT. 3 - A citation was issued to William Lee Wright of Granger for speeding. Sept. 3 - A citation was issued to Harvey Richard Self of Murray for speeding. Sept. 3 - Peter Clegg Warbur-to- n of Tooele was cited for speed- On Customer Adults Please present this coupon ?GD(gJ 34 South Main ) v -- oi TOP QUALITY FITTINGS ALWAYS THE BEST BUY If you are planning to modernize an bath or install an additional one in vour home soon, be sure that you match top grade fixtures with the same quality in fittings, advises the Plumbing-Heating-Coolin- In- g formation Bureau. durable, dependable faucets and drain fittings will retain their brilliant finish and mechanical efficiency long after ther inferior variety has worn out and been replaced. Water hjs a naturally corrosive action on inferior grade products. To resist this corrosion, top grade fittings are cast of brass with a high copper content, chromuim finished, and given a heavy undercoating of worry a I t'h.r't TV i) VOTE Edward A. Watson Utah State Representative LT PIERCE District 58 Receives Bronze Star Army First Lieutenant James Pierce, son of Mrs. Cliff 118 S. Mill Badgley, Street, F. Scholarships "To live and be fully alive, we must grow and change, for to stagnate and look backward is to die. This is true for individuals, for Countries and for political parties. there are problems and obstacles which tend to keep individual citizens away from the fullest possible realization of meaningful and productive lives. Today our society is faced with problems of increased crime rate, racial justice and unrest, inflation, tax increases, increasing population, a younger population, unrest in Southeast Asia and technological breakthroughs resulting in demands for better education. These problems are Tooele County problems, for our young people, our taxes, our educational programs are paying the price for their solution. In every Society a Business and Industrial Problem: Too much of our County's economic base rests upon governmental mili- tary installations the stability of which is subject to constant and unpredictable change relative to events on the national and scene. We need to promote a favorable climate in Tooele County for new and existing private business and in- -. dustry. To encourage Tooele County citizens to patronize and support our County business by purchasing their products whenever possible. M ' Tooele County has inter-nation- : i was most concerned how near Tooele County came to losing the proposed fifty three million dollar Beryllium Plant on our shores of the Great Salt Lake. We need to make the Legislature, ' the Utah Industrial Promotion Commission, and other influential organizations aware that there is more to Utah that is interested in progress than just the Wasatch Front. I Tooele County has an Agricultural Problem: Those who have lived in Tooele County in the past twenty five years have witnessed the decline of the agricultural industry as many producWe should tive farms in the County have fallen into non-usrevitalize the and effort to form, family preserve support every to work towards furnishing an adequate supply of food at reasonable prices in line with cost production and to bring farm prices to a parity level. We should encourage and support pro- Available Thirty five scholarships covering registration and tuition fees of some $53.00 plus transportation expenses for field trips are available to Utah's teachers of social and natural sciences for a Field Study of Utahs Mineral Industries. Dr. Bussell C. Hales, administrator of classes. Division of Continuing Education, made the comment. ElRoy Nelson, Vice President and Economist of First Security Corporation and Osmond L. Har-linDirector of the University of Utah's Long Range Planning, will direct the course, which is slanted primarily to teacher's in Utahs elementary and secondary schools, with a preference to those in the natural und social science. A limited number of counselors and school administrators will be accepted, if otherwise qualified. Dr. grams for water conservation and development of water resources in our County through expanded water research activities and the preparation of state water plans. Tooele County has an Educational Problem: Our School system is in constant need of revenue to meet the present and future demands of education. I believe every Tooele County student is entitled to an opportunity to be educated to his fullest potential, We need an enriched and expanded public school program in our county. A program which will provide the facilities and teachers' for smaller classes, particularly tn the elementary school level program which will place more emphasis on preparation and training to qualify interested young people in a trade that will give them an adequate return for a good living, for many of our County students do not desire nor are they suited for various reasons to continue their education at the University level an aim which our present school curriculum seems to be oriented toward. Increased industry, participation in federal and state programs can bring to the County the necessary revenue to expand our educational program in these areas. Hales said. lf all-da- The Crime Problem: The Utah Legislature in its next session is going to be faced with the important and tremendous task of revising the outmoded Utah Penal Code. Such legislation to be effective in protecting the legal and constitutional rights of the violator and the citizenry must be precise and accurate. Tooele County and its citizens have a responsibility in facing its share of these problems. I make an appeal to that citizenry to let me serve you and help you in your solution of them. I, as one of you, have a direct interest in their proper solution, for was born and raised in Tooele County and know its problems and potential. am presently practicing law in the Grants-vill- e - Tooele area and at thirty two look forward to many years of involvement in County affairs as I make this my home. have an intense feeling that the future of this County is just beginning to witness its unlimited potential and ask your support in helping me to help you reach its very best by voting me, in the primary elections on September 10, 1968 as your representative in the Utah House of Representatives. I I I I Respectfully, Edward A. Watson Paid political ad Bonneville Motors 1968 Ford CLOSEOUT Over 60 new models to choose from Good-lookin- nickel. i e. The seminar will meet each Wednesday evening for two hours. There will be and one-hay six or seven Saturday field trips to Utahs major economic regions, including the states copper, lead, zinc, uranium, Utah's iron, steel, oil, and gas industries as well as salt and fertilizer plants. The course carries four hours of University credit and can he used for recertification purposes, Dr. Hale points out. It will commence on Sept. 25, and will run through Dec. 11, 1968. A descriptive brochure is available on request from the Division of Continuing Education. Additional ining. SEPT. 3 - For having faulty formation and application blanks equipment Henry Floyd Lopez may be obtained by calling the Division or by visiting The Annex, was cited. Sept. 3 - A citation was issu- East Wing. ed to Susan Kay Hales of Tooele for failure to yield y Foreign aid: Deficit sending. to a pedestrian. Joseph F. Morris 3 F. Prince Sept. Stephen of Tooele was cited for having no valid operators license and improper vehicle registration. SEPT. 4 - David Bickmore reported an 8 track stereo tape deck stolen from his car. Sept. 4 - Richard Carson reported a window of his car was broken by a thrown rock. Sept. 4 - A citation was issued to Nicole C. Leonardson of Tooele for disobeying a stop Laredo drunkard: Souse the border. Shelby Friedman ians and -- $38.65. Mrs. Brown: fi e. Sept. 2 - A citation was issued to Charles E. Lawrence Jr., of Tooele, for disobeying a stop sign. Sept. 2 - Police cited Robert Wayne Perkins of Tooele for sign. Coolers Many other items too numerous to mention. Free Per Plastic Shopping Dag limit Cosmetics Gift Items Soaps j qcvss-'L. l,out, that' nL send J0'1 a away. Mreigntill. Lady wrestler: Belle of the Now dont you brawl. A. S. Flaumenhaft Banker (telephoning): Tin sorry to inform you, Mrs. Brown, that your account is overdrawn charged with speeding. AUG. 30 - Lowell Duane Alrerdeen, Washington, received the Bronze Star Medal during Shields of Tooele, cited for speedceremonies near Nha Trang, ing. Vietnam, July 26. Aug. 31 - A Citation was issuLt. Pierce received the award ed to Benny Francis Valario for failure to yield the right of way for outstanding meritorious service in Vietnam from June 1967 to oncoming traffic. Cited for speeding to June 1968. Aug. 31 Lt. Pierce, assistant supply was Ralph II. Lloyd of Tooele. officer for the logistics A citation was is- and AUG. 31 sued to Wayne Roy Barger of 864th Engineer Battalion near Tooele for a noisy exhaust sys- Nha Trang, entered the Army in February 1955 and arrived in tem. 31 Aug. Douglas Stephen Vietnam in July 1967. While was cited for acceleration exhi- serving his tour of duty in Vietbition. His residence was listed nam, he was assigned with the 572nd Engineer Company near as Salt Lake City. Hoa. Tuy Aug. 31 Donald LaMar DickHis father, George L. Pierce, erson, of Tooele, was cited for lives on Route 1, Tooele. The speeding. AUG. 31 - City Police arrest- lieutenant, whose wife, Bonni, ed Eli Joe Martinez for public lives at 500 S. Mill St., Aberintoxication. He was later found deen, is a 1954 graduate of Elma High School (Washington), and guilty and fined $40. received an A.A. degree in 1966 Aug. 31 City Police arrested Larry Cene Herrera of Tooele from the Crays Harbor College, Aberdeen, Wash. for public intoxication. 1 - Bert LaVan Dennis Sept. of Tooele cited for improper Teachers Have right-of-wa- j The Tooele Transcript, Friday, Sept. 6, 1968 i reductions as high as SI, 000 9 Now open weekdays till p.m. |