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Show rage Two THE EUREKA REPORTER rUIJMSMKl) WKKKI.Y AT KL'KEKA, UTAH Printed Si'kincvm.i.f., econd-daa- a matter February 10, 1048, at the "Entered 1879." poat office at Eureka, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 10c Subscription In Advance, Per Year, $1.00; IVr Copy, u Harrison Conovkr Mrs. Bklle Coffky Reporter MATIONAl SOVIITIIINO national ItrllJlNTAllVl cmkaoo scattlC hw tom IAN TlANCIKO Isnt Frlghtininf school WHEN DUDLEY IIALL, Skancatcles, N. Y., was In hlfih In enviable. think would most record that a people he made his second year he was on the football team and was president of his class. His junior year found him captain of the football team, on the basketball team, and again class president. The last year, he was captain of both the football and the basketball teams, played on the baseball team, and still class president. Whew! Then he enrolled In a large eastern university. In his freshman year, lie was captain of the of Ids class. In football team and his junior year, he was still with the football team mention. The year and received an he graduated he had just gone through a thrilling menperiod: on the football team, tion, permanent second marshall of his class. nt Carnegie With such a record of outward accomplishment, wouldn't you think he would have enjoyed some feeling of success? Well, he didn't. More than that, he wasn't even happy. Why? IU was filled with fear! lie was terrified at the thought of going out into the world and facing people near at hand whom he had never before seen. Performing before 80,000 spectators at a game didn't fcaze him in the least, lint the very suggestion of appearing before email groups of people, even of talking to some unknown man who night not even judge him favorably, brought terror. soul-wrenchi- ng Then nil of a sudden he realized that he wasn't afraid of that with which he was familiar. He realized that he had to become familiar with what lie wanted to conquer. So he got a job of selling from door to door. The first day was an agonizing experience, but after a few weeks he was thrilled at seeing how many of those who oH'iied their doors could be influenced by his persuasions to come across." Years Ago... (Continued from page One) well enough to leave hilt not to leave Sail slie was still under the hospital, I .nkr where the doctor's ruiv. She and Mrs. Kite were re aiding with Mr. ami Mrs. M. Hills until Mildred was well enough to return home. Mr. and Mra. Adolph Atherley and daughter returned t Ktircku after a two and a half month trip hy motor to vimons parts of the United three-year-o- Slates and Canada. Attorney and Mrs. Claude F. linker were rejoicing over the arrival of a baby girl This was their first child and to say it was given a warm welcome was putting it mildly. Mr. and Mra. Wilson Izv were rejoicing over the arrival of twin baby boys bom at the Spanish Fork hospital. Mrs. Itcrt Fields entertained a numlicr of little folks in honor of her mm Dick's birthday, (lames of various kinds were played followed by a delirious luncheon. Those attending were Marvin Lynn Jones, Frank Morgan, Jinuny liant. Jack OTIurc. .Icne Wall, Dranris MeCnrnuek, Kent Kussell and Ilol Coffey. LiAJh Ted ANTICS Edwards, Atlanta. Jumps ovrr on, Ted, Jr., In New York City Khrlnera' parade. SIIRINK.RS three-year-ol- State won fieri Picture tided "Rest Period Bleb pr'ne In inters rv Ice phot contest. It waa taken by Jerry rrson, Jr., USN, Lee Anfriee. Contest was open to all armed forces personnel. wheat, barley, oats, and rye were announced today for Utah by J. Vern Hopkins, chairman of the State Agricultural Mobilization committee. According to Mr. Hopkins, the state's acreage goals for these crops are as follows 0 wheat, 130,000 acres; barley, acres; and rye, 7,000 acres. These goals apply only to crops. Goals for spring' seeded crops will be announced later. In making this announcement, Mr. Hopkins explained that these acreages are considered to be Utah's share of the national goals for each of these crops. The national goals for wheat of 78.830,018) acres; for barley of 12.863.000 acres; for oats of 6,- 033.000 acres; and for rye the 1951 harvested acreage, are in line with good land use and for all possible expansion of feed crops including hay and pasture. The national wheat goal calls for a slightly larger acreage than was seeded In the fall of 1950 for harvest in 1931. The state goal of 130.000 acres compares with 128.000 acres seeded In 1930. These goals are designed to fill all known requirements anti to maintain a safe reserve for emergency. The national barley goal, in line with the effort to increase the production of feed for livestock is about 15 per cent higher than last year's planted acreage. 128.000 were planted in 1951 and 125.000 acres in 1950. Nofziger fall-seed- ed 125,-00- fall-seed- (23. 13; Montana (20.67; Colorado (19.81; Idaho (19.28. The three Pacific Coast states ranked: Washington (11.67; California (31.91 & Oregon (26.21. In total expenditures from the state treasuries, Washington ranked highest in the nation, and Utah was 16th. lowest was New Jersey Tit (11.67 per capita. Lowest in state expenditures was Massnchii setts at (7.32 per capita, followed by Nebraska with (H.78 ami Ilhodi' Island with (9.71. The above mt capita figures for rxMnditurrs for education include state aid to the school districts which money is not spent under the control of tin stale government. When expenditures for schools at the state level are considered. It is found that the Utah cducutiimiil effort is among the highest in the nation. This state, tin report sliows, sant (1.7. 32 for education under direct state control that is the junior and senior colleges. This figure was higher than state funds spent for state controlled educational institutions In any other state except North Carolina and Delaware. North Carolina, as already pointed imt. operates from the state offices a public school system for nine months of each year! and Delaware also operates some of its schools through a state board. These states spent (21.89 ami (17.89 respectively, directly for education activities plus the maintenance of institutions of higher education. As compart'd with Utah's (13.52 per capita of population for education at schools under state control the 16 states show an average of (3.61; the eight mountain states an average of (9.31 and the three Pacific Coast states un avenge of (8.07 per capita. The western stales rank in the following order -9; ai'i-c- Board to Staff Regional Office Hindu Shrine to se.-m- 1 Cultural Center RESCUED , The ancient Hi mlu temple of in Somiuitli northwest India, which has lain in semi-rui- n for nearly 3iM) years, is being rebuilt. Thousands of pilgrims attended the solemn inauguration ceremony this spring which marked the of Somnath's return to former glory. In addition to being one of the main places of Hindu worship in India, the temple is to have a Sanskrit University which will make ft an intellectual center for scholars from all over the world. Earth and water from many lands were sent to be used in the of this famous shrine. Australia sent water from the southern Ocean, twigs from native forests amt soil from Canberra. Austria sent dirt from the grave of Mozart in Vienna, and for the time at any such great relig-- ; j ions occasion, men and women formerly regarded as iintourhables" were among the Hindu pilgrims. Jacqueline Wilson, Arlington, Vs., stood oa her head on contraption oa which oho should have sealed Frog Urged As Game Species ming, will be located at 160 New Customhouse, Denver. "Regional offices of the WSB will begin functioning probably within the next few weeks," Dr. Allen said, although the field offices of the Wage and Hour division of the U. S. Department of Labor will remain the point of first contact for companies and unions seeking wage stabilization information and rulings. Opening of WSB regional offices throughout the country will be announced by the National Wage Stabilization Board in Washington. Dr. Allen, who will head the board, is widely known throughout the region and nationally as a lead- er in relations nt M vey's estimate. recent visitor of note to the department's offices was Mr. A. E. Morrell, regional biologist for the U. s. Soil Conservation Service from Albiiiquerqiie, N. M. Mr. Horrell discussed the advantages to sportsmen of the sendee's of fish "farmers' sponsoring ponds." A new way for fat gals to lose excess tonnage. He soethes corpulent cutiea Into slumber with hypn tlsm and corrupts their subcos sclouses into disowning the sweet tooth gives them an apjatite for burnt toast and bitter coffee instead of pie and cake. 9 the nufHitudinma Its mitres dim down into sylphs. Aid Barons method of jettisoning girdti stuffing is easier than binding exer- cites. But if those great big uomt hate subconsciouses that easy to reach. theyd better keep them coined, m some scoundrel will trim more tban their feminine proportions. nice to re End Workers Sendee Commission rports that the number of veter-bt- il when we ch.mge the nature of !,,,H endoyed by the F.xecutlve of the government reached and goodness from Mind to matter, the beauty is marred, thru :l n'w high of 1.010.800 on April 1. a false conception, and. to the material senses, evil takes the Heauty is eternity gazing at of good Knhlil Gibran Mary linker Eddy self in a mirror. All beauty and goodness are in ami of Muni emulating from God: Convincing a fat girl she detests pie and cake takes some dots, and when the subrnnsi inus IW out its power, It'll run fast and loose. Now It'll know it can t vlnce her she's the Queen of si May, or anything. Pretty soon, h Baron'a patients will he runnis murk and danrlng around h Maypole, or something. WJ Reducing will be forgotten. discard dimension when a W voice deep Inside you says yj can romp with the nymphs s obesity satyrs Just as lightly with of This as without? problem inhibited fat folks is going 10 mighty big. f If it wasn't for the yards u drapes required to cover them, tw protect the family's privacy, large picture windows probs no longer could be cln.'if an extravagance. Vet I The Civil ty ce Prictd from Also Large Selection brain budget of . . . ELGIN'S and GRUENS MIEA1TER PEN and PENCIL SETS Columbia I'lirs crossed the ire pursued by whlrh: Momthuiimlx, (r) bears? 1. 2. (a) the marines, IDnniKti crossed the Alps with whlrh: (a) elephants, Jeep, ii) ramrls? -3. The die Is east," Caesar rroased whlrh riven 1 l; '. b Ktiine, r) Kuldroa? 4 H.i-- 'i crossed the Delaware on whlrh day: (a) Chii-.ie. tM New Year's Eve, (c) Lincoln's birthday? F' army at Stalingrad crossed the Volga ea which: M Uniting craft, (r) submerged bridge? ex-.I- AsawrK vino VH )! H1S MMM.U (' Tru-F- it ( eramics, English Rone China Cups and Sauiors, life and Rally Hen Clocks, Wcddinff Gifts. (lI I I Fast and Dcpcndahk' WEBB'S JEWELRY ISI ( and Feature Loclt Diamond Rings as low as $67.50 " atrh Repairing f s s the conscious keeps it beat down Mr allowing just a few quirks, but Subconscious can become a reg lar Simon Legrce and whip your brain into outlandish antics. Beloved children, the world has need of you; and more as children than ns men and women: It, needs your innocence, unselfishness, faithful affection, uncontam mated lives. Mary Baker Eddy I Behold. I li lint give lectures or Wtn-a litrle clur.ty I give I Watt Whitman gne mvself BRAIN doc in Chlcif A SMART Edwin Baron, hss invented i YOU PLUMP WOMEN will and has served as an arbitrator for the iast eight years. During World 'War II, while Dean of Arts and Sciences at the University of Den-fir- st ver. he was a public member of the Ninth Regional War Labor Hoard and Wage Stabilization! Hoard. Prior to that time he served ns Regional Economic ConWomen will outnumber men tn sultant and State Price Director the United States by alxmt 700.-iii- for the Office of Price by I960, Recording to a sur- herself. Firemen had to sao holt ratters to froe fa or. Hatchery Fish Food ' NUUAMU0 straw-bos- Bull state-operate- ABOVE THE it's dangerous to let a frlh-- tamThe Wage Stabilization Board is with your subconscious and enin the process of staffing its 11th per courage it to play tricks. A suregional office. Dr. Edward J. Al- bconscious is the imp deep inside len, regional director, said today your mind that wants to The board, which will be responthe whole works, nr.d it hasn't sible for stabilizing wages in Coloa of horse sense. Generally, speck rado, New Mexico. Utah and Wyo- Soon Become Introduction of lf s Wage Stabilization Introduced As !' produetkin goals for 1932 fall-seed- fall-seed- fr tin-mo- ld By Ed JOE BEAVER" Nevada, (10.51; Wyoming. (9.-8Colorado, (9.62; Arizona, (7.8,7; Montana, (7.28 and Idnho (6.16; lta-eowhile on the Pacific Const the ranking is: Washington. (.6.17 per capita from state sources. California. (7.XH and Oregon. (7.73. according to a tabulation in the govfair ernment report. If early experiments lw Meat loaf practically prepared Some of the western states, howmany thousands of you. Ilere'a bow. flare the example contents of two cans of corned Utah's sMrtsmen's dollars art due ever. and Wyoming in particular, beef hHKh tn your regular loaf to be saved by the use of ground lunl proportionately large expendiheat raw chub me.At us a hatchery fish tures during the year for building pun or in u ring mold, th anil equipment at these d in n moderate oven for alxmt 30 fatal Institutions of learning; and minutes. Over (lie past two and one-haFollowing heating, on a large platter and gar- months, this food has been fed Wyoming and New Mexico both nish with a hot vegetable. four of each week's six fettling surpass Utah in total expendidays to all the legal size trout tures for higher education, because f such additions to their plants. at tlt Mntway Hatchery Excellent results with these fish give real California spent nenrl.v (23 million for such purposes: Oregon $6.3 milpromiM- for dollar savings. Many of the state's larger lakes lion: Washington (7 million; New an infested with this Common Mexico. (:t.H million: Wyoming and trash fish, the chub The supply Arizona each (.7 million'; Idaho (2 9 presently apHnrs limitless They million, Colorado (2.8 million; Utah have previously been used ns a (I I million, Montana (I 2 million fish food, but only after cooking anil Nevada less than (tmt.iio In silt'll form they proved useful only as an occasional feed hatchery fish fond now appe'irs The present cost of these fish tremendous if entititnicil I ceding ns they come from the seiners is of raw ehllb proves as successful one cent per pound, as comp'ired as it now seems tli.it it will. to meal at five cents per pound Increased seining of these fish The probable savings in cost of from our trout w .iters will result in a two-fol- d hettetment of the tntnl fishing picture, as it relates to this experiment Uredit is tint IVmti'.'.ssiniicr K ENJOY YOURSELF E. HiilliH-for fir-suggesting tin possibility of such feeding At lus suggestion, he. director .1 and Dave IVrry Egan WHERE FRIENDS MEET Wright, superintendent of hatcheries, made a tup mtii Id ihn to Investigate reat the sults of ground raw rluili feeding it a private hat.herv Knowledge' ! .gamed there led to the present micnt at Midway. n. contact with it by i,lr,u animals that were dead. Cm.,, ? ly death is not yet her mind with a great ,.nse loss or of sorrow. Therefore, in answering s. question I would suggest that i a very inatter-of-ft way you tell your daughter that death comes when a person's foidy worn out or sometimes when h. has a bad accident. In this nZ you can say that ,mtZ died bicauiie her body wore out Is That probably all you need tn say. Do not go into any of the u. tails concerning her death. Chan, the aubject to something else In this way you are answering it honestly, and at the same time you are avoiding that sort of dwelling upon death that might cause great emotional upset fear on her part. If you should find that after hearing you and your neighbor talking about this death, your daughter seems to be unusually nervous, cant sleep at night, aM is restless and irritable, it may be that the idea of death Ixithers her more than you realize. She may have the idea, for example, that when one is sick he dies. If you think there may lie this misunderstanding in her mind, refer to someone who has been sick but who now is well beruuse the doctors knew how to help her get well, and content casually that most people who are sick get well. W Acres Says Officer that Its 17; d Utah Wheat Goal 450 Thousand expenditures for education were about onehalf of 1 per rent of total state expenditures higher than was the case in Utah. On a population basis, the eight mountain states spent from state funds for education as follows: New Mexico (17.10 per capita; Utah (37.67; Wyoming (31.49; Arizona (27.28; Nevada Raw Chub Meat Is iJ5l ai Death does not mean a great deal to a girl, alsome had have she may though supports the district schools at the state level, up to a minimum program, while spending only (31.41 Tor per capita of population for education, had total state exjiend-iturc- s for operational costs of atate controlled educational institutions. Utah. (13.32; New Mexico. (11 ld wer to tlda? went to schiNils and colleges. This is in ailditinn, of course, to the amounts raised by the aeveral school districts, chiefly from property taxes, levied locally, that was not disbursed through state channels. In exienilitures for education, In fiscal 1950, Utah was surpassed in amount per capita by only two states, New Mexico and Washington - both western or ''public land" states. New Mexico's (17.40 per capita was nearly 43 per cent of the total state disbursements in that state. Washingtons (11.67 per capital for schools, however, was only 20 per cent of the total atate disbursements of (143.61 per capita, However, North Carolina, which of only (76.99, so :j, DONALD M. MAYNARD heard a Mv nelgiilHir and myself talking about a person that had died four days ago. Just now alia asked mi! mother "How come did Is'es die?" What would I your ans- so-call- all-east- 20 Problems the total state expenditures in Utah nearly (II out of every (UN) 73 K vice-preside- Expenditures High for Schools s EDITORIAL Thi Familiar Parents In tlio list nl year 1950, Hume 48 state giivi rniiieiils throughout the United States expended (78.39 per cupda for all purposes, according to u United Slates Department of Commerce report Just received by the state tax commission. Of this amount (Jo 82 was sjtent for the schools Hint colleges of tin nation or nearly $27 of every (100 that mss through Ihc state treasuries. Total by the atate government of Utah in the same year were (9.7.53 according to the reKirt, of whieh (.'7.67 went for the MijpMiit of education. Thus, of Utah Editor and Manager Utah Per Capita By by ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY -- August The Eureka (Utah) Reporter Spanish Fork, Utah Ifrforv You liny A Gift! |