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Show The Tooele Transcript, Friday, Oct. 4, 1968 GAX7G CTirca 'u,C3G0G FALL VALGDGG 10-O-z. 23-O- Can- s- Sego Betty Crocker Pkg. z. BROWNIE mix :r 46-O- z. AT Cans Western Family Pkg. of 400 Assfd scohies TISSUES 8-O- z. Cans No. 300 Cans Hunt's Lindsay, Ex. Large, Ripe Tender, Lean, Beef PITTED TOMATO SAUCE fcrU OLIVES Mr. George Cochrane, President of the Tooele Aerie No. 164 of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, presents a check to Mrs. Lorraine Bergren, President of the Tooele United Action Organization. The money will provide funds to help Tooele County students further their technical education. V. J Kraft Brand V, Utah Falling Behind In Per Capita Income Big Rolls Government has become the largest single factor in the Utah economy, according to a report just completed by Utah Foundation, the private research organization. The study which was based on information compiled by the U.S. Department of Commerce, shows that personal income in Utah during 1967 totaled of which $798,000,000, or nearly 30 per cent was obtained from direct government payments (Federal, slate, and local). By comparison, government payments accounted for 26 per cent of Utahs personal income in 1963, 23 per cent in 1960; and 22 per cent in 1950. These direct government payments do not include payments derived from private employers engaged activities. in government-relateThese are included as private industry payments. from Income government sources has been rising much more rapidly than income from private sources in Utah during recent years. Foundation analysts note that between 1960 and 1967 personal income derived from Federal, state and local government in Utah rose 95 per cent compared with only a 37 per cent increase for income from private nonfarm sources. At the present time private nonfarin income constitutes about 67.6 per cent of the total income in Utah compared with 76.2 per cent in the nation. During the past year, total personal income in Utah rose by $154 million, the report continues. Approximately $100 mil$2,667,-000,00- 0, d Guaranteed Boat Paint new dripless marine paint guaranteed to prevent bottom fouling for at least 12 months may dramatically end mariners battle against barnacles. age-ol- d The paint. Super Dripless No. 8, is manufactured by Chilton Company, which believes' it to be the first guaranteed bottom paint ever manufactured. g The new, paint was tested for over three years in the laboratory and on the waterways. During this time, Chiltons Super Dripless No. 8 all substantially conventional bottom paints tested with it. In many cases, it com-- , pletely prevented marine growth on hulls of commercial and pleasure craft for over three years. Two coats of the paint form a coating ten mils thick, the equivalent of 4 to 6 coats of conventional bottom paint. Its thick, p consistency also eliminates splattered clothing and skin. Surface preparation for the new dripless is similar to that of bottom paints. other Available only by mail order from Chilton Paint Company, 109-0- 9 Fifteenth Ave., College Point, N.Y., the new paint costs $39.95 a gallon, $10.95 per quart. A gallon covers '300 square feet, a quart 75 square feet. A anti-foulin- no-dri- anti-foulin- g Make Housework 60 Easier With a Mud room s of' this inlion, or the result was Whats a mudroom? Its a crease, however, of larger government payments. room that traps dirt before it Federal civilian wage payments gets into the rest of the house in Utah rose by $38 million. by controlling the traffic patFederal military pay increased tern. According to the Information Buby $4 million, state and local payrolls climbed by $28 mil- reau it should have at least a lion, and all other government sink with hot and cold water and payments went up $29 million room to clean muddy boots and last year. hang damp clothes. The study notes that Utah It becomes even more conhas fallen further behind the venient if you include a water rest of the nation in average in- closet and shower, and a work come per capita. Last year per counter for arranging flowers or capita income in Utah amounted cleaning vegetables fresh from to $2,604, approximately 18 per the garden. cent below the U.S. average of Keeping house becomes 60 cent easier when you have a In Utahs 1960 per $3,159. per capita income was only 10 per cent mudroom, the Bureau notes. Thats under the U.S. average. Utah probably why homemaker surveys now ranks 36th among the fifty consistently put this facility near d this measure of econo- the top of their states two-third- Plumbing-Ileating-Cooli- most-wante- by MON No. 8 . EA. IIVICH BAR PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., FRL, SAT. OCT. 3, 4, 5 was cave items. mic activity. The Foundation analysis explains that an important factor TEACHERS A teacher constantly struggles in Utahs relatively low per capita income is that the state has a to get across the relevance of larger percentage in its labor what he is teaching, and tries to find the frame of reference that force employed in the lower-paiwill make a new fact a vital part service occupations with a corof previous learning or present ensmaller respondingly portion manufacexperience. The feeling that edugaged in higher-pai- d asserts itturing jobs. For example, only cation is worthwhile when one self most strongly 15 per cent of Utahs nonagri-culturrecognizes that isolated facts have employment is in manuwith 30 per grown into a general understandfacturing, compared Kenneth E. Eble, A Percent for the nation as a whole. ing. fect Education (Macmillan) Another factor in Utahs relatively low per capita income is the large size of families in SPRING the state. In analyzing personal This is the time between the baincome on a per household sleep and the waking, when the sis, the Foundation found that wind softens and winters sullen Utah was 10 per cent below the moods, follies and cold humors U.S. average and ranked 30th It is in the air, the change with an average income of $8, pass. will not be denied, the earths that 975 per household in 1966. The to spring. yielding complaint U.S. average was $10,002 per The horse gallops in the sodhousehold. den meadow, the warm coddling sun stirs the wild ginger, the d Helping Wttltm Famlllat Ut Battar STAMPS Where You See Thi Sign :ensed The fellow who owns an is really the only son who can afford to go to :p at the switch. elec-blank- et 1 dog runs yelping along the river edge. The sense of yesterday slowly expires as new life comes out of old decay. John Ferris, N.Y. World Telegram |