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Show hiii Schtici I Sfilddri ,....m...g,. mbilidut , Of -- Work-, Pam Smith, Olympus High, tells customer, Mrs. Jack Green, about obletidiart as clerk in after-scho- ol gift Mop . - , ft Allowance Worti-Vs- whilkport-iimos-shoesolesmo- pp..0..4..-:.::- nie Ronald Henriksen, Olympus n, High, shows Brenda Butler the lotést h -- IDOotery. j HCoc Meted ond Bon--earns High) money as'a waitress A but It's really in the bog for Gary Bywater who works after school in a grocery store- - , ?...0.110.-i.-:;:.-S- By Deseret Newt nigh Selma Correspondents You may, have noticed an hiflux of very Young faces in ' restaurants, department stores and other working places, - - - -SA- I , ably are. Some teensuyworkingwkile going to school can be either impediment to study or an idd terlearning finance.Should a high school student Work? Or should he rely on an allowance and devote more time to school? DeanCall, state superintendent of services to youth, says work during the school year often provides the money a student needs to stay in school and still keep up thhIssocIobllg- , - atIons. --- Onves 2 By' epmeret ',.1;::ej.0.-..w,i,li..so'.6.0.;- 0 BOB ICOT24110 News Stall Writer MIDEAST Salt Lake City wM receive a recordlieaking $894,962.65 in inteeeit from municipal money durini the current fiscal e per cent of the viewers on last week's "Great In Downtown Plannhig Associa- - projects. Mr. Wallace also sire'. year, city Treasurer Jennings Dedsions't on "Egypt and the Middle EastCan Sta. panel don's Second Century Plan will pared a teatibility study and Phillips said Wednesday. would support Arab unity if it is achieved by Survive," bility for Park Cityltecsucceed, even though most of master In a report to Mayor J. Brack- free choice of Arabs-annot imposed by force:, ' town would Iva! in 1959. the gamblers around Project were tabulated from ballots dipped from the en said Mr. $735,Opinions Lee, Phillips give odds that Tier- y little of our News after-thwas airtd by:a panel on tele. 102.28 represents interest on $11.9 subject wM ever ,.see- the light- of plan million million left In Due. to Increased water usage day ; trom119 Lieven. per generajbb1Igatioli-ki&-liddiorgrotmds that a united 1111iiiefifidence was expresed pettapita-an- d interests would Arab bloc and inimical to the U.S. have policies capital improvement projects. DPA the United States is Tuesday by On the attitude the U.S. should adopt toward Total money invested is ripfaced with severe water prob- President M.- Waller Wallace hostility, 56 per cent voted to support any settlement of out, proximately $15,846,930. , .. lems. at the group's aptual meeting standing issues reached by Israelis and Arabs themselves. In Best Condition Salt Lake City is fortuna' te, in the Utah Power & Light Co. to cent voted ,to give unconditional support the Thirty per ' however, because it saw a water auditorium. Despite outstanding debts II Security and integrity of Israelis. Two per cent voted to back took and Now Chairman steps problem long ago unprecedented proportions, the ;tab dab to all 'of Palestine. Eighteen per cent urged a - Si.. Meeting By 'DECISIONS' VIEWERS Problems Sixty-fiv- 1 -- u ' allowance.- rr. CITYi-UT- LT-IAKE Growing Population - elass president 9Errns El - Summer Jobs Most Popular s for tèñá are still the However, Mr. Call said, summer-lobInost 'popular, and that the employment service seeks to pro-- , vide "casual" jobs for them, such farm work, yard and house-wor- k and baby tdtting. Students have both pro and con views in working vs the - , , UlraZULIZIA prol)-- enough-to-be-- in -- - - ' ri d Valor Usage s - e - -- - attimth,--saitt-ilketude- n ce,ITIP--unitTo'- nt shouldn't be expected to keep a job that will interfere with his education, but all high school students should have summer, - newly-electe-d Arab-Israe-li - ' . , - . Mrs. WM)ur P. Lund, 428 E. 13th' South; mother of a high :, school sophomore, says if 11 student is capable of handling a Job and keeping up his ,echool work, a part-tim- e Job is a good experience to face it city is still "In the best financial MryWallace succeeds James ' 'Can't Budget, Don't Save' condition--by- 9 This was part of the message E7Hogl who has served its farn It has ever - ntudtmts who don't earn their own money usually can't of William C, liague, manager president during the four and been In, he said. 'We ire ' budgetanaflowance and don't save for the things they need," of the Metropolitan Water D$:, one-ha-lf years since die organhandling this 'debt pradent.ly!L, -trict of Salt Lake City,, ti a ization was founded. Mr. Bogle Voters overwhelmingly ap-1160 Michigan Ave Another parent, Mrs. Arne C. Or proved the sale of $19 Tnillion in luncheon meeting a)116' Elks Is now chairman of the board remarked that after-schobonds for capital improvements jobs helped students appreciate the Lodge, 139 E. Sou ll Temple, of directors. --value of money." In 196L The bonds were sold downtown In the that toting On the other band, student Lee Malone, East High, who Wpdnesday. , will early last year. succeed, development plan Increase Drastic ' .14 WORK en Page )341 Mr. Wallace in stated a prefrom the bonds Is now Mone3r "Because the majotity of will lai..... ' text that c suc ess of ap- at pared the rate, being spent water works are under control proximately $500,000 , a Mar of local boards or commissions, come "if we all put ow best for' such projects as Ihe Metro. there can be no centralized efforts ,into this program." He :. , was unable to attend the meet,, politan Hall of Justice and Cen-policy-maldn-g body for the Inbecause. he tral Public Library,' both , lo- ing Mr. .4,4111is,..4, Hague. It dustly," said an illness. cated on the block east of the .iii,'14:-Holt.:k10.---Atté.iiJiS..it.imd taket.PUblk.111111 PralsielDliector atvZötintrEiardig. , awareness of water problems to "it is that obvious Total Interest ,--perhaps meet thechallenge.--'. odds are wrong - Executive-Director-M- ., Interest invest. Quick thinldng by the intended mzm's dirty, shabbyappearance, With a projected U.S. popu- (DPAwas the biggest ment of the $15.8 million from tictims left some would-b-e ban- she asked, "How much do you lation of 260 mMion by 1980 ris E. Jolmson) in my deciding to the capitalbond - fund and 12 ' , these problems can only increase single factor - dits otzt in the cold !, Tuesday in needr Mr. Walthe nomination," accept other funds totals $781,979.61. esti-added. he It ,is be re. drastically, a pair of Salaare sZormty rob- "Give me all of said la praise of the full-tiThe additional $112,98104 will mated $16 billion will be needed lace director of the project re- to Meet acme by June 30, according to plied, pulling a snub-nosebery attempts Others elected to executive poChief Deputy Treasurer George A 4 ' A "dirty, shabby", man tried volver out of the Pocket ot his water needs.population growth's' sitions LOW, Tooele County 'ruesday were Harold J. transport plane with 21 passen- Zolintalds. to bold up a loan office but dirty green overcoat lAck Of Awareness Steele, chairman of the execu- - was scared away when the clerk , gers and a crew of six made an In a breakdown of sources of Mr. Hague said,,tmforttmately tive Rape On Window committee, succeeding Eric emergency landing near here the interest, Mr. Zolintalds listed made him believe other customJust then three men, ono a many communities throughout C. Aaberg: D Louis Broussard, time certificates on deposit in - ers were in the door. customer of the loan office, the nation are not aware of the vice chairman, succeeding Wen- Wednesday after one engine local banks ($581,199.31), U.S. failed. hold to two tried men strolled by and rapped on the seriousness of the water prob- dell Mendenhall, and Jule S. Later, bills ($284,745.97), U.S. Treasmy route was The from en drive-in plane snack bar but windowi and waved. up a lem in Dreyfous, vice president: : n I o, Treasury bonds $14,59599), h 0 ATM, were gtdcidy locked out by emthere's one of yotii. cus- Ileaders have failed in manageHeads Center -- Treasury savings bo nds to Sacramento, Calif. No-o- ne ployes and had to leave empty tomers," Mrs., Maw told the id- - ment and in enlisting-th- e inter- 078), U.S. Treasury notes ($2,- Mr. Wallace, associated with aboard was htut ready-nervobandit At this est and support of the public. 500) and savings, deposit Corp., is A spokesman from - Needed Money news, be walkedItuicIdy to the Widespread utilization of air, president of Walker Center said the plane bad taken oft , ($1,843.39). Mrs. Carol Maw, 25, 165 Leslie door and then ran to a Tacked Conditioning, , automati- c- wash- Corp. and is a director and mem- about 11 SUM after refuelln& at WM Drop Profits Ave. (2620 South) a clerk at Na- car two men - and ing machines, garbage disposals ber of the executive 'committee the base. However, the Profits wM t 4 -- - and other .iterns have --boosted of Walker Bank and Trust tional Finance 03" 4860 S. State, drove 'away. after-thi- s The plane's pilot,--CapW. are year,--alVra er wciuld-be U.S.-pcame tObbentii about in man He is also a pm:tiler police a 'capita daily consimiMcDowell, said the antra en- In the peak year for investing p.m. imd said be Aeeded even less effective when they ptionfrom 100 gallons in 1910 to Creek Angus Ranch,Itimballs gine lost power shortly the money we have available for ' some money. approached the Arctic Circle 150 gallons today, -- said,..31r. Junction, and in Industrial Cen- takeoff and be decided make such purposes, particularly the b ' See nANDrrs on Page 2 Hague. With a doubtful look at the ter Development, Redwood Road an emergency from the sale of the cap!. - landing-at- the money f and 2Ist South. Low ahstrip - See INVEST an Page 541 member-oHe served &i iistaff the Boston Cit yr Planning Board from 1950 to 1953, leaving as senior planner in charge of is) to rim the - preliminary master plan - program. num-195to i955 he was vice -EoLtAriAT man, whosi house looks ters,- Peter McQuade New York president of National Pbumhig IS-- more like a museum than a home, has aneResearch, Inc, Boston and Amazon Bitters, Zimmerman's Mail a.: Phihtdelphia, a firm engaged 'Order Whiskey, F. Tullege Pure stuck ft rich at Altain the 1960s. in development of regional shopand Panther Pop CornWhiskey1868 Robert W. Woolley, a toughened, ping centers and other planning - Milk outdootsmim since be was 10, found a deposit; the bottles to "In order must -be valuable, - not of silver, but of rare oklbottles. be glass-blow- n and this art became nones,-- - Lake' Islands- Display , Mr. Woolley, who has tramped istent in about 1375," Mr. W. said. -Readied For Capitol through, ghost towns in Utah, Idaho, -- - Atter he had unearthed several of the hot; Dev io ties, Mr. Woolley said a men approached him FAInfINGTON Montana, Wyoming and Nevada, has and him was asked be what Tremont collection valuable of ment and western a of doing. Antelope relics, ; will Lake Salt in Islands Great to items from Pony Express ,ranging oldbottl es,'tdr. "Diggingnptheoo be depicted early American rifles. replied. representing Davis County in n To this collection, he added 500 , ,"Why? Aro they worth omythhig?" Abe the Utah Capitol. , ' man queried. bottles unearthed last fail from three once-fThe display, about S by 15 mous saloons in Alta, which were covered by "Nope, Jost old bottles. I collect 'em,". feature industries and feetwM a snow slide in 1872. said Mr. , ' attractions of the area. tourist --p - "The bottles, Is sevens colors and the toles when you It wilt shapes,Okay, but cover-u- came , from the notoriots Gold Miners' get through. Somebody could fall in them and which has been in the Capitol for fivé years, said Hazoldllpof Blood Bucket Club the Alta and 17 Daughter, get themselves killed," the man said. Mr. recalled. "I couldn't tell him the bottles were .worth petts, county planning director. , saloons," Woolley several thousand dollars. He have "I had researched the area extensively and I claimed them for himself and might , had after I SECTION B knew about where to start digging to find the done all the work digging them up," --11r,- Woocontinued collector. the "Some of the - saloons," lley commented. 1, 2, 11, 12, 20 bottles were buried under nine feet of dirt." City, Regional --- -ilis bottle he ,which collection, Several of the bottles are the only ones Sports started four or five years ago now Radio-Tof their type blown- in existence, Mr. Woolley Highlights nurnbera'about 8, 9 2,000 containers. Financial asserted, Most of them are worth $51 to $100 10 Imagine trying to find places to store 2,000 Solid Beat , , apiece," be said. j, 'rare bottles in your own bornethat's about Comics 10 The bottle collection contains such the same as taking up living quarters in a Obituaries 12, titles as the Baron Alex- intriguing Planning presentations for Outlook conference are, china shop. 13 , Weather Map , . ander Von liumboldt 'Stcrmach - R. Th ayne Robson- - and J.-- Reed Action Ads sDél Via Orden .. - ' - - U.N. settlement binding on both sides. -- --- , . On U.S. policy toward Egypt, .66 per cent voted to continue to provide ieconomic aid if it is effectively used to raise Egyp s tian economic development Only 15 per cent voted to provide economic aid on the condition that Nasser cuts expenditures for arms, and 15 per cent said to abolish or decrease all economic aid to Egypt, Thirty Per cent of the voters said to assist Nasser only if he cuts or weakens his economic and other ties to the Soviet bloc, and 20 per cent said to assist Nasser only if he abandons nonalignment and supports Western policies in the cold wax -- imd-promo- living-standard- te , , Transport Lands - In Emergency d, C-5- - cog ' ' geneals-or-commun- ity Wright-Patterso- Wallace-McConaugh- , y e-- after - B-1- VOICE.'" Minos Bottio Treasure T- :b 3 tan-skinn- - - By DON WOODWARD Deseret News Business Editor Utah's unemployment problem among young people, already bad, is destined to get worse. The question is, what measure can be taken now help . soften the blow? This problem, and possitda solutions, will be taken up at the fourth animal Occupational Out. look Conference Thursday at the University of Utah's Orson Spencer Hall. The meeting, which starts at 730 p.m., is b to the reach 12.5 per cent by 1965. That eompa'res with a statewide --unemployment average of about : 4.5 per cent. Include Mr. Harding, . Speakers Dr. Lowell L. Bennion; assistant dean of students at the Univert. sity of Utah; It Thayne Robson, lecturer in management at the - university; Dr. J. Reed Call, I of H k principal Granger g , School, and Frank V. Nelson, legal counsel and administrator of the Utah Manufacturers As- - - iodation. It is cosponsored by the State 7 Curt's P. Harding, one of the Department of Employment and the Deseret News. principal speakers at tho meeting, has already warned the Joblessness among teenagers state's employers that unem- b- considered more and more a 4 win social problem. As the rate in- ployment in the age creases, It brings with it rising Juvenile dellnquincy and spiraling crime rates in most large cities. - Relief rolls swell, not because of disabled people unable to find employment, but because increasing millions7of teen-ag- e mothers are abandoned by their boy friends, who are themselves unable to find work,. according to a recent survey by the Wall ' Street Journal. open pohlitt. tly - 14-2- - - . -- !I 7! (IC - a. place-the-old-display - V . re - from left, Frank V. Nelson,, Call. , :11 - 4 4, oe-- o Olk A Ak 41 ,dp WIN Ak JO At At ,A AAA ft f'q A W o A lk ,41, .1 ,a 4 49 9 9. a - -- 3-- 5 - r Two men were booked bt on charges if forgery follows, big an extensive Investigation We the theft of Si payroll checks from the Utah State Department of flume -Charged-we- re Steven - WIls; lard Locke, 23, 8194th East, and Paul Walter Thomas, 48, US Vagabond Dr. (41l3 South) Murray; Complanta were signed bes: fore City Judge Borace C. Beck by Police Officer. Cary Jenldna. Ball was set at 81,r, 3 -each. ' Sgt. Max Knudson saki checks were taken In Ja!y 1183. Most of theaa were re- turned by mall b August. Eight w Woo et, bad been cask& glass-blow- 7- (11 9-- 9, 9, 41 i A tk ok k k. . . - |