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Show ABOVE THI PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT EUREKA, Printed by SOME ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY Spki novim.e, Utah matter February 10, 1948, at the u poet office at Eureka, Utah, under the Act of March 8, 1879." "Entered aecond-daa- a Subscription In Advance, Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10c Editor and Manager Harrison Conover Mrs. Belle Coffey - - . MtlONAt AOVflTIHNG NATIONAL tintUNTAllVl EDITORIAI 5SJ HPfofr NEW TOU SEATTLE SAN FRANCISCO PAieCARIffCiE AUTHOR OFIHOW TO STOP WORRYING AND START LIVING Dont Fiar Failuro of a young man who was so afraid of failing that all he could do was to faiL He is Wiltham M. Brass, who has told me this story in the hope that it will help someone else who is beset by nervous fears. He awoke one morning nervous and ill at ease. Perspiration was actually pouring from his body before he had done anything to warrant first job, and felt he it He dohadno failed atin hisanother. better And he had a would family to take care of. This morning, with his nervousness at an high, he went to the kitchen for a cup of coffee to bolster his morale. Ills father was visiting him at the time and as Rill entered the kitchen, there he stood. UERES THE PERSONS are cheered no by all the gruesome details. Count the folks you know whose conversational lore is smack up to date and replete with accounts of all the broken legs, colic and contagion, wife beating, strangulation, blood letting, mortuary proceeding and moral deviation of the town. Count them, and concede the championship to my Aunt Gee-Ge- e. So preoccupied is she with others' bereavement, business bamboozlement, and amorous skulduggery that she has no time for consideration of self, especially concerning romance, which has bypassed Gee-GeShe had a swain once who kept her mouth stuffed with popcorn to prevent her rehearsing the local agonies. She was busting to tell him how Effie Spindleshanks trapped the traveling snake oil salesman into marriage by pretending the public library was her palatial home, only to find he had two other wives. Gee-Ge- e finally threw herself upon her beau's lap, anchored a foot to a rung of the chair and hastily recounted every bone fracture in the county. The young man never came back, for her description of Mr. SteepbeUy'a fractured skull was pretty graphic and gory. Gee-Ge- e keeps book on the sick. The bedridden she aends stacks of sympathy cards. Outpatients she corners with little clucka of regret and extravagant words of sorrow. All the ailing get magnificent publicity while Gee-Ge- e sympathizes. When someone dies, she beats the body to the undertaker's so she can sign the register and observe the deceased first She can't see to write as well as formerly and signs her name with a rubber stamp which she wears on a ribbon around her neck. Ofttimes she sits In the funeral parlor awaiting completion of an embalming. She has been known to set in" before rigormortis. Such a busy dabbler in dVdress is Gee-Ge- e that if pity and rapt attention to affliction ever pay oft she'll be ripe to turn professionaL If the town council should create a new office misfortune recorder she's well quulified for the job. She minds ether peoples mishaps as diligently as the devout mind their beads. The crack of a collar bone would sound as sweet to her as the crack of DiMaggioa bat 00 horschide to a baseball fan. e. CMICAOO We have yet to 4 performed some lesser services, too. The company's messengers American citizen who onJlIi? have been asked to perform such localism" that put m2? into as feeding pigeons, throw- his pocket. chores Is a rice at rescuing newlyweds, ing woman cornered by a mouse, servThe Western union Telegraph ing as a fourth at bridge, walking a Bermuda-boun-d 1 OAK Dining Table Company, which each year handles dogs, and teaching ride a bicycle, it to woman and table); 1 Ornate plctK over 200.000,000 telegrams not less than 36x36. Call more than 8,500,000 money orders U reported by Cosmopolitan jug Eureka. on its 1.749,844 miles of wires, has mi Never Boring Probate and Guardianship Notices UTAH STORY all-ti- "Bill, what's wrong?" he inquired. Bill told him he was afraid to tackle the job ahead of him, for since he had failed at the other one, there seemed little hope for this one. "Bill," said his father, you had to fail, first because you have had no experience; second, youre too young, but, third, and far more important than the other reasons, you were so darned afraid of failing that it was the only thing you could do. Now knowing this, it's up to you to figure out what to do. Bill's new job was selling. He decided he'd lick it, and this is how he won: lie placed himself in the position of meeting and talking with a lot of people. 2 He made up his mind to use youth as an asset. He had the strength of youth, and could do more than some older people who hadn't his physical stamina. Nut a day passes without the 3 lie would not think about failure and he wouldn't mails bringing some special letter from a publicity firm that is ready worry. to send us without That was two years ago. Just now Bill is leading his firm in a just the compensation to print thing right sales contest. We suspect that the Chinese 1 wanted f?J Consult County Clerk or the Renimctlve Signers for further Information NOTICE OF SCHOOL BOARD ELECTION A school board election will be held In Eureka Precinct No. S, Wednesday, December 6, 1950 for the purpose of electing one member of the board of education of the Tlntic School Diatrlct from said precinct for a term of five Telephone Company When You See One?o Of course theres no distinguishing mark 20, 1950. (Signed) about a telephone company stockholder. Theyre just everyday people nearly a million of them Joale Sullivan Clerk, Board of Education Tintic School District Eureka, Utah. (Continued from Fage One) being conducted between all lodges of the state for the silver cup which la awarded each year to the best degree team. Following the lodge work, dancing and luncheon was enjoyed. Stockholders are an important part of good telephone service. Their invested savings have helped build the Dell System which serves so many people and gives employment to 600,000 men and women. The modem puzzle is how the old folks managed to raise their children without a book on child care. The Mountain I - : id V O living in cities, towns and rural communities all over America. Many of them are telephone employees; over half are women. Twenty Years Ago The free, public school system the bulwark of a free people even if it costa money. a Do You Know years. Qualifications are that every member of a board of education shall be and remain a resident and a qualified and registered elector in the school representative precinct from which he is elected. It shall be necessary for each candidate, or at least five citizens in behalf of each candidate, to file with the clerk of the board of education not leas than fifteen days proceeding the day of election signed statement announcing that he or she is a candidate. William D. Gear is the retiring member of the board. He is eligible for reelection. DEADLINE FOR FILING IS NOVEMBER 17, 195, Messenger's Life Legal Notices HULLABALOO THE EUREKA REPORTER Reporter November The Eureka (Utah) Reporter Page Two . States Telephone & Telegraph . 5A Vi ,i-- : to 6 s and Russian communists would be delighted to see somebody stop the United Nations forces but, so far, each is willing to leave it to r & vr m M ft v i V .A Vi A I.ONG, LONG TIME 4 Irogrens Three miles of laundry, 16.000 George Washington feet, are hung each year by the broadjump 23 feet, a record in the other. An autoaverage homemaker. matic clotheadryer aavea all the those days." Today we have poliWhen any phase of life occupies lifting, pinning up and weather ticians who can sidestep farther your entire thought you are unthan that. 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