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Show The Tooele Transcript, Fri., October 25, 1968 Flu Outbreak Expected By Public Health Service The flu warning flag is up again! The U. S. Public Health Service Advisory Committee now warns that a new strain of Asian flu may give the nation another outbreak of this troublesome ailment this winter. THE COMMITTEE, which earlier had given the country an "all clear, revised its flu prediction following the identification of a new strain in Hong Kong in July. Already the Hong Kong vims, a variant of the A2 type that gave the country the miseries . V-last year, is lieginning to spread. 4 T It is felt that the present mmmi in the influenza vims, change smile i May not be the largest, but certainly a buck to put a reports the Public Health Seron a mans face. Downed by Calvin Green of Clover opent vice, increases the probability ing day of the hunt in Vickory Canyon. A huge 7 point that influenza A2 will occur exf inches. spread measuring from tip to tip 33 and tensively in the United States season. in the 1968-6Current vaccines may provide ..Veterans! only limited protection against the new A2 Hong Kong vims, accordYour ing to the Public Health Service. Answer Better protection against it will a newly formulated vacrequire unQ. I am attending college t. The cine. development, manufac,der the GI Bill. I plan to enter by Verla McFarland to physicians distribution and ture ,a, different college this next such a vaccine will require of adVA in CONFINED IN HOSPITAL ;; term. Must I notify considerable time and only a vance? Mrs. Stella Russell was adlimited numlier of doses will lie Y'A A. Yes. This will allow mitted to the LDS Hospital on initially available, the agency retq process your payments much the 16th to be treated for bronchitis. She had been ill at home ports. . quicker and will permit them to IN THE meantime the Pubof Certificate for several days. We hope she issue you a new Health Service recommends lic Eligibility for the school of your will begin to improve soon. that currently available flu vacchoice. be given primarily to eldercines J Q. MAY I borrow on my ATTEND FUNERAL or the chronically ill. ly persons Mr. and Mrs. James Neilsen Cl insurance to help my college is a viral infection Influenza expenses for my son or daughter? and family, and Mr. Paul Neiltract. It difof the ' respiratory A. If you have a permanent sen, attended funeral services fers from a cold in severity and insurance for Cl policy, you in Mona, Utah, last Friday 4 plan the extent of complications. Its may borrow up to 94 per cent of five year old Marlaine Neilsen, include sudden chillisymptoms The of the policy. the cash value daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin ness, fatigue, headache, and 'Interest charge is 4 per cent. Neilsen. She was killed Monday aches, with temperatures general 1 am a d Q. Oct. 14 when she darted in the Sore 101 to 104 degrees. disabled veteran rated 50 percent path of a car passing their home of also and throat may coughing disabled. My son is 22 years of on Highway 91. as symptoms. occur n veteran, The little girl is a neiee and age, is a If you become a flu victim this and is enrolled in school under cousin of the Neilsens in St. follow the advice recomwinter, elithe new Cl bill. Am I still John. mended during an earlier epidemic for additional compensagible stay in by the Surgeon General tion? have no dependents. take aspirin, and drink bed, A. YES, you may le eligible A. You may le if your inof fluids. for additional compensation (uncome is not more than $1,800 plenty N. J. COOKE, president of til your son reaches age 23) a year. Your VA pension eligiThe Bayer Company, leading educais he receiving although bility is based upon all income, maker of aspirin tablets, reports tional benefits as a veteran. not just Social Security. Visit or that supplies of this medication SeSocial I am Q. drawing write your nearest Veterans Adare being increased throughout curity. Am I also entitled to a ministration Office for informathe country as a result of the VA? husband from My tion and assistance in applying pension latest warning of the Public Health .was a World War I veteran. I for pension. Service. The Asian flu A2 strain first appeared on the world scene in 1957 and is believed to have started in Hong Kong. From there this virus, which affects people of all ages, has traveled around the world.--- - w 4 in w one-hal- 9 St. John Clover News Heres , service-connecte- 1 Post-Korea- ADVERTISING If advertising persuades some men to live beyond their means, so does matrimony. If advertising speaks to thousands in order to influence a few, so does the Church. If advertising is often redundant and tiresome, so is the United States Senate. Bruce Barton, Horizons y. When' youve got Elvis Presley and Nancy Sinatra romancing, singing and dancing together, youve got DOUBLE STAR entertainment. Thats whats offered in MGMs tuneful and action-fillecomedy, Speedway, racy story with an exciting stock car racing background. Its in Panavision and Metrocolor. Now playing at the Ritz Theatre. AMERICA We have become the richest, most powerful nation on earth, but we are not happy. We are not happy because the quality of our life does not match our affluence. We have let change rule us, rather than accepting change and shaping it to our own desires. We search for meaning and purpose. Fred R. Harris, Alarms and Hopes (Harper and Row) d This is a difficult job really means that the speaker is a soft drill, on a hard surface. ATTENTION ALL REGISTERED World Records Conference Set for 1969 "Within the shadows of the everlasting hills will lie the scene of a World Conference on Records, to lie held during the week of August 4 to 8, 1969. The Genealogical Society, founded seventy-fiv- e years ago in Salt Lake City, Utah, will lie host to thousands of dignitaries throughout the world, who have distinguished themselves as genealogists, archivists, librarians, microfilmers, demographers, sociologists and historians. The theme of the World Conference on Records is Records Protection in an Uncertain World Each generation of man has left the marks of his civilization for the present, by means of the records he has kept, but because of the events over the past few decades, many have become concerned over the protection, not only of the worlds great art treasures, literature, and priceless antiquities, but for the protection and preservation of all vital records of the peoples and nations of the world. Floods, fire, earthquake, insects, hurricane, and natural deterioration have destroyed much vital, statistical, historical and genealogical records. Because of the accumulated records-gatherin- HOLIC BEVERAGES CONTROL ACT OF 1968; PROVIDING FOR THE SALE AND DISPENSING OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES BY THE INDIVIDUAL DRINK ON LICENSED PREMISES BY LICENSEES REGULATED AND CONTROLLED BY APPROPRIATE AUTHORITY; PROVIDING FOR LICENSING OF HOTELS, RESORT HOTELS, RESTAURANTS AND CLUBS; SETTING FORTH THE TIONS OF LICENSEES AND THE CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH LICENSES ARE TO BE ISSUED, RENEWED, REISSUED, SUSPENDED AND CANCELLED; PROHIBITING THE SALE OR DISPENSING BY LICENSEES OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES TO AND THE POSSESSION, PURCHASE OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES BY PERSONS UNDER TWENTY-ONYEARS OF AGE; PROHIBITING THE SALE OR DISPENSING OF LIQUOR BY THE PACKAGE OR BOTTLE BY LICENSEES AND CLUBS AND THE CONSUMPTION OF LIQUOR FROM ANY PACKAGE OR BOTTLE IN E LIQUOR INITIATIVE PETITION Some e sophisticated may help solve school prob- lems. in the State. Board of Edu- hi " cation office. , t A University of Pennsylvania professor is helping train a state school office task force in an called simulation. To simulate is to pretend, to act like, to look like. The task force is planning to create a computer program which will act, and react, like Utahs school system. Different alternatives, or simulated programs then will be put through the computer model. Hopefully the simulated reaction will be very much like what would result if an actual program were tried in the schools. If the method works, school changes can be tried to determine if they would be helpful or beneficial. Don K. Richards, administrator of the State Boards Division of Planning and Internal Services, says the first attempt will be refined until a valuable tool emerges which can help make better educational decisions. Secretary of VaWey sc Highland Drive First Second 200 South 14 1(X) South 8 21 9 8 o 1 Third 400 13 South u4 rs co u (X -G X 3 3. 10 make-believ- , on 32-1-- 16-6-- The reasons . . . vital to Utah This is a Republican year. Richard M. Nixon will be elected President. The Utah S I legislature is, and will remain, Republi-- I I can. All other elective State officers (Sec-Lretary of State, Treasurer, Auditor, Attorney General) will be Republicans. Three of Utah's four members of Congress are, and will remain, Republican. Therefore, to prevent a stalemate in State administration, the only sensible thing to do is to elect a Republican Governor who will work harmoniously with the Republican team, both here at home and in Washington, D.C. Imagine, then . . . the vetoes . . . the lack of teamwork . . . the contentions . . . most likely to occur if a Democrat were elected Governor, especially one widely proclaimed as an ardent supporter of Johnson and Humphrey. J Gov. Rampton has already demonstrated his unwillingness to work with our Republican State legislature. He vetoed 21 bills; many for supposed defects that were minor or technical, Marijuana Control Bill including the . . . yet he vetoed but very few of the bills of the legislature bills preceding Democrat-controllewhich ones included that plunged our State, for the first time, into $71.5 million of bonded indebtedness and which resulted in a 99 increase in personal income taxes collected during the Rampton reign. Obviously, a mix of Ramptonism and Republicanism won't work! much-neede- d d A all-o- society program . . . with its shocking failure to solve our nations problems. Yet Gov. Rampton has been an LBJHHH fan! How can he now expect to work well with Republicans? AGAINST Electors desiring to vote for the proposed Act shall place a cross within the square following the word For and those desiring to vote against shall place a cross within the square following the word Against State the affairs of Utah are to be gov-- f erned and administered in accord- If I The people of Utah are fed up with the Johnson and Humphrey great FOR ... are simple and clear! 1 1953. w CLYDE L. MILLER Utah Ave. Study Made To Help Solve School Problems VOTERS: An Act providing for control and limited licensing of qualified restaurants, hotels and private clubs for sale of liquor by the drink and providing for local option prohibiting the same; prohibiting consumption of liquor in public facilities except liquor purchased by the drink from licensees, providof certain acts of local authorities and the Liquor Control ing for court-revieCommission; authorizing supplemental state and local regulation, requiring public officers to enforce all liquor laws and providing funds therefor from license fees; prohibiting undesirable practices including sale of liquor to minors; and providing for license revocation and penalties for violations. v 6 g, ANY UNLICENSED CLUB OR PUBLIC PLACE AND CONTAINING OTHER PROHIBITIONS ON THE SALE, DISPENSING, TRANSPORTATION, STORAGE, PURCHASE AND CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES; RESTRICTING THE LOCKER CLUB SYSTEM; PROVIDING FOR ENFORCEMENT OF ALL STATE AND LOCAL LIQUOR LAWS BY ALL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS; PROVIDING FOR PROHIBITION OF THE SALE OR DISPENSING OF LIQUOR BY LICENSEES IN LOCALITIES WHICH VOTE TO DO SO; AMENDING SECTIONS UTAH CODE ANNOTATED 1953, AND REPEALING SECTIONS UTAH CODE ANNOTATED UTAH CODE ANNO1953, TATED 1953, AS AMENDED BY CHAPTER 25, LAWS OF UTAH 1955, UTAH CODE ANNOTATED 1953, AS ENACTED BY CHAPAND TER 25, LAWS OF UTAH 1955, UTAH CODE ANNOTATED 1953, SECTION UTAH CODE ANNOTATED 1953, AS AMENDED BY CHAPTER 26, LAWS OF UTAH 1967 AND SECTIONS AND UTAH CODE ANNO- TATED 12 Second North experience in protection and indexing of this Society, it will assume the responsibility and leadership in bringing these people together. There will be an exciting exchange of ideas and presentation of papers on all types of genealogical problems by scholars, researchers and interested amateurs. In view of the worldwide interest in preserving and organizing the records of the world, es- -' pecially in- microfilm form, and because of the wide interest in ' the science of genealogy, it is expected to be one of the most unique, interesting, and one of the largest conventions hosted by the United States next year. In conformity with State Statute, Clyde L. Miller, Secretary of State of the State of Utah, has qualified the following Initiative Petition to be placed on the November 5th , 1968 General Election Ballot. AN ACT RELATING TO ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES; AMENDING THE LIQUOR CONTROL ACT BY ADDING A NEW CHAPTER 9 TO TITLE 32, UTAH CODE ANNOTATED 1953, TO BE KNOWN AS THE ALCO- Third 500 North 1 f I L, ance with the principles and philosophy of the GOP, a Republican must occupy the Governors office. It is out of this office that commissioners heading up key State divisions, members of boards of regents of State universities and department heads are appointed. Utah can't afford to have part of its govern-- . ment run by Rampton appointees committed to costly great society" type programs! Richard M. Nixon has personally endorsed Carl W. Buehner for Governor and has pledged that, as President, he will work with Carl Buehner to help solve problems relating to Utah and the federal government. Carl Buehner, not Cal Rampton, is the man who Richard Nixon has said will always be welcome at the White House." Utah government must be a team show! effort . . . not a one-man One of the biggest businesses in Utah is our State by government. The type of man experience to direct a big business is the successful corporation executive accustomed to directing the efforts of a team of specialists to whom he delegates authority and whom he holds responsible for the efficient performance of their depart-ments- . best-equippe- Such a man ... a top administrator ... a suc- cessful corporation and bank president, who already has developed much industry within Utah man who believes in the virtues of honesty, responsibility, hard work, economy and dignity ... is Carl W. Buehner. ...a Paid by Citizens for Buehner Committee. Ralph Marsh, Chairman LRJ Republican for Governor . i d m |