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Show ma it," he said. He predicted that changing conditions in the nation will lead to more industries locating in Utah, and analyzed the geographic and other advantages that will aid the states industrial development. The annual meeting attracted business and civic leaders from all parts of the state. It was held in the Mountain Fuel Supply Co. auditorium. A warning againpt a selfish attitude in the field of industrial promotion was voiced annual today at the meeting. John W. Godfrey, Omaha, chief executive officer of the Union Pacific iand division, guest speaker at the meeting, noted that county industrial Pro-Uta- h promotion groups will find difficulty in turning over to another county ir. the state a prospect who seems to be slipping away. Such action will be hard to take as long as the first county sees a shred of hope that it still can land the prospect, Gov. Calvin L. Rampton expressed a need for continued Pro-Uta- Selfishness Js the thing that will keepyoufrom achieving what you want to achieve in placing Utah in the position in which you would like to see , y V. 4.- - m p 1 e menting each others efforts is a necessity if we are going to broaden our economic base, he said. Co ' r ,.'f LOS ANGELES Western Airlines reported third quarter earnings of $5,476,000 or $1.12 a fhare compared to a loss of $4,780,000 or 97 cents a share in last years strike-affecte- d third quarter. In the third quarter of 1968, - $9.5-milli- battlefield illuminating flares for the U.S. Air Force. Nearly 100;000 battlefield parachute flares will be produced during 1971, James M. Stone, Thiokol vice president and WaaMi general manager, said today. The contract was signed with the Air Development Test Center at Elgin Air Force Base, Fla. Preparations for the new manufacturing program wi'l begin immediately and the first flare deliveries are scheduled for March 1971, Stone said. contract This production culminates three years of de- velopment work, he pointed out, and Is the first of a series of candidate products to reach production which are being explored for diversification at the Wasatch Division. LThe flare contract places Wasatch firmly in a new field Of endeavor, he noted, i 150 people Approximately Wi'l be assigned to the high Volume production contract, Store said. He estimated that about 80 new employes will need to be hired early next year. OGDEN (AP) (U30A1 Idaho, Utah,' Eastern Nevada feed t and range sales:; Slaughter steer Ana heifer trade slow,' about steady; feeder cattle not yet estab, 1 Sheep: confirmed 2,800; choice 110115 lb wooled slaughter iambs 27.75 , delivered Utah packers. Slaughter cattle f.o.b. feedlots 45 per cent shrink, immediate delivery; sheep 4 percent shrink. OMAHA Hogs 7,500; lb barrows and gilts steady to 25 lb steady to 25 lower; 13 higher; 0 lb lb lb 16.2517.00; a few loads lb sows weax to lb lower; 0 lb 29.10; choice good and low choice high choice and prime 1,040 lb heifers 28 35; choice and prime lb 20.25; choice good and low choice utility and canner and commercial cows cutter Woo! Market Malfil Murlaf VIUIMI IILMinWI NEW YORK (A?) Spot nonferrous me:a! prices Wednesday: Copper cents a pound, Connecticut Vailey; lead 1 4V1 5 cents a pound, New York; zinc 15 cents a poo, id, East St. Lcui tin $1.7434 a pound, New York; gold $39.30 per troy odnee. New York? silver, $17.95 per tro, New York; quicksilver 4350.00 ounce, nbmina! per flask, New York. City, Regional Weather Map Obituaries Action Ads Bjg Freezer'll Cool Hot Dogs The largest food freezing unit ever built by Louis A. Roser Co. has been shipped from the Salt Lake companys plant to North Little Rock, Ark.; where it will be used to freeze Corn Dogs (frankfurters covered with a blanket of corn meal, batter and fried in deep fat). The freezer is 4 feet long, 9 feet high and 9 feet wide. It will freeze about 1,500 pounds of Corn stainless steel conveyor belt made by Dogs an hour on a Cyclone Fence. 300-foot-lo- - plans for big investments In Goodbody by Utilities & Induand Loews stries Corp. Theatres, Inc. The two were tq put up $20 million. Existing partners in Goodbody have agreed to put $10 million more into the firm. The stock exchange had said it was formulating an alternative plan to save Good-bod- y if the Utilities & Industries deal falls through but refused . to elaborate. But news leaked out generally that the exchange planned to turn to Merrill Lynch as the only firm big enough to take over Goodbody. .. NOW YOU CAN EARN FROM 816 TO 9 INTEREST WITH S$.&$dcMuAS&nA',s&ic. CHECK-A-MONT- H BOND PLAN Yes, a sizable three figure check can be yours every month from your investment of a minimum of bonds like: $60,000 in General Telephone of California Consolidated Edison Co. Southern Union Gas Co. Incidentally, if you dont have $60,000 to invest, we can arrange a plan for you in a mutual fund specializing in bonds, ... Interested in knowing more about bonds? or perhaps you would like to examine other possibilities to increase your income from your savings. A good first step would be to send in the coupon below. Please send me information on: A. G. Edwards & Sons, Inc.: Check - A - Month - Bond - Plan Increasing My Income Special Seminars NAME ADDRESS. CITY -- STATE, -- ZIP- TELEPHONE, r WASH IN TOWN Low Sods Bio Dc;ta (fable No Residua ESTABLISHED 1887 MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE AND OTHER LEADING SECURITY AND COMMODITY EXCHANGES 174 South Main Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 At Your local Grocer $53,762, Financial check-a-mont- h Wool NEW YORK (AP) futures closed unchanged to 1.0 cent higher, rac. 83.3, 83.3, Z82.5; Mar. 88.5, 88.5, 87.5, Ju! 91 5, 91.5, 291.0; Oct. 92.8, 92.8 Z92.0. Certificated wool spot s82.0. Wool tons futures closed Quiet. No sales. Certificated spot wool tops S134.5. BRIGHTEST are tax-fre- e veloped by Wurlitzer a few years ago for use in teaching. v' t. 2 ; 'i 7 - a S y Xh rM ' 'Jiim Keys and actions, manufactured at the companys plant in Holly Springs, Miss., will be brought into the Logan factory. Otherwise, the pianos will be built from scratch in Utah, Rolfing said. The piano market is holding up fine for us, said Rolfing. We make about one out of every five pianos in the U.S. Were first in the domes- tic market. if R. . . C. Rolfing . visits Utah plant He noted that the piano industry usually loses money or has a very small profit in the first six months of the year. Wurlitzers loss during the first six months of this year was greater than the 1969 loss for the same period. LAST CALL Only (9) 1970 Lincoln Left Continental Cpe. 4-D- rs. LOOK AT THESE EXAMPLES 1970 Lincoln Cpe. The NEW YORK (UPI) worlds biggest stock brokerage firm may be asked by the New York Stock Exchange to take over troubled Goodbody & . Co. unless $30 million in fresh money can be raised by Goodbody by Nov. 2. Donald T. Regan, chairman of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith, Inc., conceded Tuesday night that his firm may be the stock exchanges last resort in an effort to salvage the accounts of Good-bodcustomers. ' The stock exchange said Tuesday afternoon that a complication had developed in lambs steady; ewes 500; choice and prime shorn lambs choice wooled and prime -jyv and Ron- Wurlitzers Logan plant, now under construction, will be one of the most modern in the U.S. and in the world, said R. C. Rolfing, chairman of the board, in Salt Lake City, Tuesday. The entire Wurlitzer board was in town for an extraordithe second nary session, time the directors have met anywhere other than in offices of the company, Rolfing said. They met at the clfices of First Security Corp. in the Deseret Building. First Security Dank of Utah, N.A., purchased $2.5 million of industrial revenue bonds to finance the Logan plant. The bonds will mature over a period. met today Tne directors with lagan business and civic leader and viewed progress at the principal reathe plant son for their coming to Utah, according to Rolfing. He said the facility is scheduled for completion by the end of the year and that it eventually will employ 400 persons. Production at the plant will be limited to pianos, he conventional type, and to electronic pianos, instruments de- - SECTION C Merrill Lynch Funds For Ailing Broker? 4,500; slaughter 4,000; feeders Cattle 500; calves 10; steers and heifers steady to strong; cows weak to 25 lower; high lb steers choice and prime lb 29.50; choice with end prime FOR THE year-to-dat- r, ald E. McMillin, assistant manager. Burton reported total income during the past year of $42,825 and expenditures of $42,037. Funds on hand at the start of the new fiscal year C The flare, which has been designated the LUU2B, was developed by Thiokol for the Air Force and is being introduced into the Am Force, inventory.; The flare is used to provide battlefield illumination for ground operations and target illumination for air strikes. lished; slaughter lambs 25 higher for two, weeks. Slaughter steers: confirmed 420; choice 1,0001,150 lb yield grades 4 28.5029.00; lb hoisteins good 1,2001,400 confirmed heifers: 200; Slaughter 3 lb choice yield grades f secretary-manage- Western reported a profit of $1,562,000 or 93 cents a share. The third quarter profit ree (nine sulted in of income net months) $475,000, or 10c a share compared to a loss of $5,324,000 or $1.00 a share last year. ' Livestock Market ?heep . b v. October 28, 1970 Thiokol BRIGHAM CITY Chemical Corp., Wasatch Division, has been awarded a contract to produce scarce; velop statewide rapport Dan Meyer, oil and mining consultant and owner of the Saif Lake Golden Eagles Hockey Team, urged that more effort be made to keep the industry and business we have and make it viable. Notes Profit Thiokol Awarded $9.5 Million Flare Contract 28.00; recently-appoi- nted Utah can be proud of being a little square. he said, but suggested that the liquor laws need improvement and that the banks need to be more reto the financial sponsive needs of the mineral industry. In a board of directors meeting preceding the annual meeting, new officers were elected as follows: Harold Woolley, president; Ted C. Jacobsen, first vice president; E. Allan Hunter, second vice president; M. L. Dye, treasur-er- ; C. Taylor Burton, i s , to help bring economic growth. He introduced the 31 area representatives of Pro Utah, stating that their purpose is to de- s rt ' Wednesday Pro-Uta- govern- mental and private industrial promotion efforts as embodied in the Industrial Promotion Division of the state and Godfrey said. - between cooperation The attitude of the community is the most important single factor affecting the decision of a company to locate or not to locate in that area, he told the group. M. M. Fidlar, outgoing presh ident of and president of Mountain Fuel Supply Co., called for the financial community, banks and institutions, merchants, manufacturers and al segments of business, as well as ndividuals, Wurlitzer Board In Logan To View Progress Of Plant (801) 1, 2 -- 3, 4, 12 4 4 1 Full power, factory air. Bal. 5 Yr.50,000 mile warranty. 4,895 $500 DOWN 36x $147.69 $4,395.00 Unpaid Bal. 921.84 Finance Charge 5,316.84 Total of Payments Deferred Pymt. Price 5,316.84 Annual Percentage Due 12.75 Will lease for very low monthly rental!!! ATTENTION LUXURY CAR BUYERS 'We he't o large selection of 1970 and 1971 Lincoln Continentqls and Mark Ill's tor immediate delivery. We lease for very low monthly rental!.!! Also full maintenance lease up to 60,000 miles. For Lease information call 359-866- RICHARDS DON South Main 633 359-866- 6 ' |