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Show I I I , vv . Utahns Lost f r 7 V-- J , i, s Vr s 1 , - . V w ? v - f. 1 rA .- 3.- - T' Wfc ; 7k - (a - o K.o$i ' - I - 4-- - 4lZ! Afl - i 6 ) Ll ; ' Muglesten Family Band entertains delegates with music Friday during afternoon sessions of the annual conference of the Mutual Improvement Associations, which continues through Sunday. Listen, Love, Lead, 7,000 MIA Officers Hear missing aboard the e Cessna 310, which became missing during a flight Thursday from Vancouver, B.C., to Seattle were identified as Mr. and Mrs. Lynn R. Silver, 2031 Lincoln Cl. (4085 South), and Mrs. and Mrs. William L. Ferguson, East. Their last radio contact' with ground personnel occurred when me craft was somewhere in the vicinity of 70 about Port Townsend, miles northwest of Seattle, a commission spokesman said. There was no indication of problems at that time, he said, and there is not a great deal of concrete evidence to work with. He said the search area several hundred miles of Puget Sound, the Strait of Juan de Fuca and inland areas. covered ( nntinued From Page 23 mg WO! the gospel the peuple to the of Id. Mrs. Jackson emphasized, MIA (is) a powerful, moving organization that develops the gifts within and builds testimonies and happiness in the heart3 of its members. Its leaders are ordinary per- sons with extra ordinary determination and conviction. J And, at the conclusion of talking about some leader and youth programs, Mrs. Holt told those attending the 73rd annual MIA conference. Our youth can benefit from the inspired programs given by leaders if we use the lines of communication which are available to us. Firs and foremost, (there should with our Heavenly he) communication Father. the YWMIA second counselor to explained, (then) communication b b imSD0CBC5 000 00 00(300 Learn how $500.00 invested in LAND was pyramided into a $50,000.00 The FORMULA will Call or Write 0 0 0 0 0 0 m be sent k matters tance. FORTUNE. FREE a a INC. P.0 Box 126 Salt Lako City, Utah 841 10 Or Phone 466-483- 2 0 OCCUPATION of ... more fundamental impor- Mr. Hill recommended the stake leadwhat you do and how ers you do it so that those with whom you work will receive what they need. They want to succeed. To be chosen is to be chosen to work, the YMMIA leader continued. "Acceptance of a call implies a commitment to prepare yourself by study, faith, prayer and work. It implies a revitalized determination to fulfill your assignment so well that those you direct will have all of the help you can give them that they too can succeed. Utah Honor Queen Named For Jobs Daughters NOW UNITED LAND INVESTMENTS AGF follow-up- Lord will progress. George Richard Hill, first assistant superintendent of the YMMIA, quoted from a letter written by Wayne Scott, formerly a superintendent of the Cumo-ra- h LDS Stake fMMLA, which said, in part. . . . we arent even beginning to derive the power from the youth programs that has been envisioned by those w ho have developed them. For the most part, this is not due to lack of dedication, discouraged although many become when they see so little in the way of progress, despite diligent efforts. Often we have limited success because we lack the skills, and tools for accurately assess qTiririFuipjUTnnnnmmjip 0 0 ing needs, planning, com umcating and . As a result, we either attack the wrong problems with gusto, work on the right ones too late to have any significant impact, or become preoccupied and miss busy-worwith region, stake and ward, and, especially, the important communication from leader to youth. If all of these lines of communication are kept open and are functioning, the work of the leaucs other mm oooDDaoDaoaaoapyiioBQ Mary Lou Emerson, honor queen of Jobs Daughters Bethel No. 1, Salt Lake City, was chosen Frdiay night to represent Utah in the SuMiss International preme Jobs Daughter ceremonies in Selected as alternate was Carol Tonnesen, d a u g hter of Mr. and Mrs. Lorin C. To5331 nnesen, August. Bayvvood Miss Emerson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Emerson, 3231 Teton Dr., (3070 South), was one of 15 chapter representatives from Job's Daughter Bethels throughout Utah. (1885 Cir. East). Miss Tonnesen r e p r esented Bethel No. 7 in Salt Lake City honor as SILVERTOWN BELTED WIDE FACTS BENEFITS Belted Construction 113 50 28 Polyester Cord Body High Strength Fiberglass Cord Belts Wide '70 Profile. More Mileage Stronger Wider Tread Smarter Styling Tread Design Single Wh'te Stripe All Comparison! to B.F.O. long Mllor B. F. - mony in Anaheim, Calif., Aug. Also attending will be Mrs. Robert Utah Kelm, grand guardian, and Jeff Davis, associate grand guardian. The 15 girls represent approximately 1,500 members of Job's Daughters in Utah. Members are between 12 and 20 years of age. All of the chapter representatives were selected by the members of their Bethel to participate in the state event. Judges during Friday night's ceremony included Mrs. Ray Fadel, Bountiful, Miss Utah ;n 1950; Mrs. Ralph Powers, American Fork. Rose Festival Princess in 1953; and idit&L PLUS F.E.T. $2.15 $3.11 Mrs. Mildivd Dubois. Salt Lake club and civic worker. The girls were judged on poise, personality, civic and chapter participation, and on their answers to three questions posed by the judges. The ceremony, held at the First Congregational Church, 2155 Foothill Dr. (1960 East). Goodrich SILVERTOWN GLASS BELTED Riles Saturday To Dedicate Geyser Project ALL SIZES PLUS F.E.T. AND EXCHANGE r YELIDW STONE NATIONA AL PARK (AP) visitor complex will be dedicated Saturday at Old Faithful Geyser. The dedication, featuring a speech by Sen. Cliff Hansen, is part of the yearlong National Park's Centen nid honoring the lOOlh anniversary of Yellow store, the fust national park in the three-buildin- g Plot Federal Excise Tax from $2.15 to $3.50 'S i? wol Id. The Cefweer Main BANK & MAJOR OIL CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED A State decomplex, igned to improve tourists 'at the gey set. tin ee theaters, a mation center, rest uomv and lectrically oprr-- i led "prediction boards giving the approximate time of the next eruption of Old FaithX ful. visitor cur-ini- i$ifJ t Itwflllin) 49 East 9th South Opet Mon. thru Sat. 8 .m. to 6 p.m. 521-612- 'f 3 Americas Premier Radial Tire Maker Fluoride Unit Nantes i;. ' I Health Department, Friday refused to name the members of a special committee which advised the department of fluoridation water on supplies. have called for the names of the special committee members charging that the day nameless people, can meet in secret council and intimidate thoughtful citizens by on their recommendations to an is issues coming public end. In lor m Letter The charge was made in a form letter prepared by Gin-to- n R. Miller, legislative advocate of the National Health Federa!on, Washington, D.C. Dr. Gibbons said he did not want to name members of the group to spare them from Dr. Gibbons said his life has been threatened three times since the issue came up early this year. Dr. Orson Wright, director. Dental Health Section, Utah Division of Health, said it is ridiculous for backers of fluoridation to be put on the and that the opposspot itions questions about the advisory or any oilier group should not be answered until they explain why the information is requested. 1 think its the job of the to state their purposes in wanting these questions answered before theyre answered. Ir. my mind, those who oppo e fluoridation are on the spot rather than the ones who advocate dental preventative good, Dr. Wright said. medicine, 7 L A - "- - TYg x Ti 7'--... died early injuries suffered in woman oi Lake a Friday traffic accident May 20. LdRu Aidruh. b47 E. 9th South, apparently lost control her automobile on near 24th South, plunged over a guardrail and suffered head and internal injuries when she was thrown of 50 feet from the vehicle. Inter-state-1- 3 - - (4' ' v 1 . YT-- i 7 f'-s- -- ' & rj s New building for Jean Paee VVeegs houses storage space, display room and school for wig business. The building represents $175,000 cost. Jean Paree Weegs Moves Into New Home Jean Paree Weegs, Salt Lake City, has moved into a new building at 555 S. 2nd East. The building was designed by Bernson Van Frank & Architects and represents an investment of $175,000. The building was designed to accommodate the firms wig import and distribution It includes a showroom for the disolav of wigs. The firm also operates a school for wij stylists. The business founded by Jerry Wellington, a former electronics technician, seven vearc ago. Mr. Wellington reported business has inwithin the past four year'. creased ld Californians Charge Prying Suit Attacks U.S. Bank Secrecy Act SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The California Bankers Assn., the government representing all major banks in the state, has filed suit claiming new parts of the Bank Secrecy Act are account. The a'.'ociation of 158 banks-xeek- s an injunction to block provisions of the federal act, they allow he'-au'- anyone's set to go into effect July 1. The new provisions require all banks to keep records or microfilms of each transaction in all checking and savings accounts. Tile suit claims this information coud be obtained by any government pry into bank private to aeenev. Investors Still Ponder. So N.Y. Stocks Drift New York Times Service - A dispirited NEW YORK stock market drifted steadily lower Friday as worry-ladeinvestors pondered the twin developments of higher prime rates at home and the decision by Great Britain to let the pound float in value. Given these facts and a flock of uncertainties fears of Sen. George McGovern's as the leading platform Democratic contender for the nomination, fears of tax increases and a ballooning federal deficit in 1973, and fears of stocks with high it was ratios wonder small that prices n Merger Deal bv Okayed j Two Firms Cites Dlegality are illegally beirg required by the scheme of governmental surveillance encompassed within the act and regulations to be perpetrators of illegal searches and seizures as well as a coconspir-ato- r with the government in the freedom of suppressing speech and assembly and the civil rights of customers and the suit says. depositors, Banks closed at their lowest level of the session. Worries Intensified The Industrial Dow-Jon- es Average sank 5.95 to 944.76. This is less than one point below its close only a week ago, but the worries somehow seem to have intensified on Wall Street. that One analyst noted declining issues this week have advancing outpaced stocks, thereby weakening the markets technical position. Gold stocks, which seem to come to life when the market suffers any currency jitters, ran true to form. The gold gainers li cluded Campbell Red Lake Mines, up 2V8 to 41 ; American-Sout- h African Investment, up 1 to Homestake Mining, up a point to 2834 ; ana Dome Mines, up Di to 79. International Mining rose 1 point to It was filed Thursday in U.S. District Court. A hearing date has not been set. The new banking act also requires that all transactions above $5,000 entering or leaving the country be disclosed to the Treasury Department, as well as each bank deposit or withdrawal exceeding $10,000 except in cases of established for whom such customers tiansaetions are ordinary. Good Will Essential 52; 12. Highest Ever standout among the easwas ing glamour group A Directors of American Resources Management Corp., Salt Lake Gty, and EG Industries, Inc., Beverly Hills, flalif f have agreed in principle for merger. Plans call for combining assets in a new corporation. Merger is subject to review of authorities regulatory and acstockholders approval, cording to officers. The exchange ratio provides for about of the to be company surviving owned Reby American d sources stockholders and by EG stockholders. American Resources is engaged in management of oil, gas and real estate' limited two-third- s one-thir- partnerships. EG is involved in development and sale of recreational of land, and construction cable TV und electronic systems. The new company would be headquartered in Salt Lake Gty. Schering-Plougclimbing 1 to 119, its highest price ever. This stock jumped 3 TKnroHott rornrtarIIit nmntc i benefiting from a brokerage house recommendation. It was among the 29 issues posting yearly highs, compared with 115 lows another sign of the general market's technical weakness. Curtiss-Wrighthe biggest point loser on the active list, fell 1 to 49 in its stake in the Wankel Engine had powered Curtiss-Wrigh- t to record prices this week. American Airlines, down 1 to 39, has been soft since the carrier recently reported its net los for May exceeded the deficil. year-agThe glamour losers included losses of more than 2 points each in Simplicity Pattern, ARA services, Natomas and Control Data. (Copyright) -- t, profit-takin- o Nixon Okays Money Bill A Sail - - . Injuries Claim For Am Irak Operation Traffic Victim WASHINGTON (APt annual A - v price-earnin- I want those advisers to be able to help with fluoridation without being subjected to threatening phone calls, the garbage mail and general harassment, he said. He said members of the committee mostly represent he scientific community. Yes, its a biased group, Its a Dr. Gibbons said. group of scientists who know fluoride is good. But its not a money group. These are persons interested in good health, not quackery. He said the group first met last fall and since has evolved into an advisory committee. Three Threats V 1 - uncon-situticn- Dr. Hairy L. Gibbons, diand County rector, Gty from participants in the event will attend the national cere- ON NEW B.F. GOODRICH 25 City Refuses queen. All SAVE a. 3935-290- 0 ' i 'V 6 - 'traj. twin-engin- , fc. .; '': ! r- "St A Those 7,1., ' '. r i 4 miles. yj Page 30 4. 1972 - 'v BANS ' A search SEATTLE (AP) for a light aircraft missing with two Salt Lake couples aboard was crippled from the start Friday by low ciouds, mis and ra,n that hung over a wide area of Puget Sound. The Washington State Aeronautics Commission, which is directing the operation, said the grubby weather grounded six planes, while five helicopters tried to comb an area of ..everal hundred square g.1 ;i.-- Q'Ly.v) ;i, rr ; 'Cr'. - - f - Saturday .Morning, June On Flight Near Seattle , - .5. (si S v M. -- MIL - "s .aJ V' ' v ISWr "&$ rA r jtV V. l u X a!tf grilmtu gait authorizing $325 million in grants and loan guarantees bill for the National Railroad Passenger Corp. plus $2 million a year for service laiks to Canada and Mexico was signed by President Nixon Friday. to spur the In an effort financially troubled corporaas Amtrak, known tion, toward greater profits, the the iS giriation salary come only from net profit. a Amtrak. goveniment-backe- corporntit.i time. Named in the suit were former Treasury Secretary John B. Connaiiy, Treasury Secretary - designate George and other federal offincluding Johnnie M Walters, commissioner of trie Internal Revenue Service Also named were the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Fedetal Home Loan Bank Board, the Insurance Federal Deposit and Corp. and the Securities Exchange Commission. icials Utalm Supports California Rankers Stand of Don Carlson, presideni the Utah Bankers Assn., expressed support of California bankers action Friday in a court contest of the Federal Bank Secrecy Acl. From a banking standpoint, we feel the treasury reguations would be very burdensome. It becomes an infringement upon individual rights. of the to president corporation's $60,000 with anything more to $123,000 The suit said enactment of new provisions of the act, originally passed in 1970, will result in hanks losing the good will and confidence essential to the operation of a bank. The bankers suit is a companion to one filed earlier this month by the American Gvil Liberties Union and asks that they be heard at the same We have been operating a all semifiduciary business for in be to We hate these years. a posnition to have to de'ei-nunwhat information can be revealed. We'd rather not be We don t m that position . . e d cteuled under a 1970 law to run the nations intercity passenger trams until July 1973, began life wnh a $40 million federal grant, $100 million in loan guarantees, and $197 million from prticiprding lailmads. . even let the wife look at a her if husbands account name isnt on it Mr. Carlson is executive vice president of the Bex Elder Couny Bank in Brigham City |