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Show Eureka GHft PUBLISHED ?port?r Twenty Years Ago ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY Sprinffvlllo, Uteh u neeond-eln- u mntter February 10, 1948, at the poet at Eureka, Utah, under the Act of March 8, 1879." Subecriptlon In Advance Per Year, 84.00; Per Copy, 10c "Entered office - HARRISON CONOVER MRS. BELLE COFFEY Member; Editor and Manager Reporter ,, NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION V1L Nnw. Novto I1MSMTAIIV4I CMnp Business Column Market MARKET LAIRD'S FTeeh Meata, Graoerien, Dnliy P red acta and Produce Free Del. Service to your home FOR SALE HOME on Church St. IMce $3500 or will rent to dependable party C. O. Hogan, Lynndall, Utah. a23tfc TREES, Shruba and Roeea are available at your Sunny View Nureery In SpringvlUe now. 900 m30 8a 4th Eeet, HU HAVE CHANGED on to gee. Gen. Two-year-o- ld Elea Coat $149, now S52. 8094 So. W. Temple, Salt Lake. a6p Phonee 68 or 59 water heater. Newspaper EUREKA REPORTER OrtBiHt Create in me n clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away Local News Local Sporte Local Society Local Advertising Subecriptlon per year PHONE 108 St-0- 0 Service Station Auto Service Oil. One Lubrication PHONE 84 V (Continued from page 1) winning peach waa "City Beautification. At tha conclusion of the contest, the winner was awarded tha medal by R. L. Conyers, who sponsored the contest every year. The Judges of the contest were Mrs James Cullen of Dividend, Mrs. P. E. Olsen and C. N. Lester-bur- g of Eureka. Miss Edith Singleton and Burke Wilson tied for second place. Other contestants were Charlotte Sullivan, Lola Kor ak, Madeline Haynes, Betty Hopes, Myrla Blackett, Bonner Black, Bryce Jonea, Jay Wheeler, Ralph Christopherson and Jack Russell. The following students who had received recognition in haring their compositions printed In the Tribune's High School Comer were Ronald Vance, who wrote The Last Straw; Mies Meraleen Hogan, Victory; Raymond Hansen, "In the Woods; and Edith Single-toA Sudden Change." The members of the Columbia Rebecca lodge gave a surprise party for Mrs. Etta Gear, the occasion being the ladys birthday anniversary, card playing was the diversion for which first prize went to Mrs. Anna McDonell, second to Mrs. Rose Taylor and consolation to Mrs. Lucy Bell. A delicious luncheon was served. The Ladles Auxiliary No. 23, met at the Miners Union hall. Features of the evening were card playing and a major Bowes ama-tu- er program. Tha members attended all dressed as rubes and at the close of the session were served with a lovely alx course dinner. Mra. Heber Cushing waa hostess to the LaJollaa club mem-beThe features of the party were cards, and a delicious luncheon. The prize winners were Mra Robert Gsisford, high score, Mrs. Bert Thomas, honor, and Mrs. Wilfred Farren, all cut. Others attending were Mra Lee Bird, Mrs. Ed Thomas, Mra. Robert Gourley, Mra Floyd Nash, Mra Curtis Phipps, Mrs. LaRes Andre ason. Mias LaVem Sanderson and Clyde Briskey, prominent young people of this city, were Joined In marriage at Salt Lake City. The bride la a daughter of Mr. and n, n. FIRST IN Eureka Our (Great America WEEKLY AT EUREKA, UTAH Printed By from Thy holy presents. (Psalm 51, 10-11- .) It la only when wa have gained, through devout prayer. Our Father! everlasting mercy, that we can gain alao a clean heart and a right spirit. Then we will know Hia pretence, enveloping and filling us, and find therein a strength uperhuman, a peace beyond description. Have mercy upon me, O Lord, I am weak; O Lord, heal Bteee (Psalm 6, 2.) The great Abraham Lincoln spoke often of the many timea he had fallen, to hie kneea because he had no place else to ga The realization of our human weakness and insufficiency ia the first etep toward Goda mercy and help ao freely granted to heal us and save us. through devout prayer and faith. CARD pastor OF THANKS A. F. dovannonl, St. Patricks Oath-oli- o Church, and the committees n chnrge of the St. Patrick's Ball, wish to extend their thanks and appreciation to nil those who assisted In any way toward the success of the dance, which was a derided success both from n soc- ial and financial standpoint. They wish to extend special thanks to our friends, who so generously patronized the dance, and assisted In so many ways In a manner. non-cathol- Origin 1 i d the!Tomato Frank Briskey. and Mra Mr. son of la the groom Mr. and Mra. Loren Atheriey, 40 in Mr. and Mra. Freeman T region, and Mra D. 7. Atheriey left for San Francisco, Calif., for a visit The sale of last year's tomato with relatives and friends. Members of Tintlc Elks lodge crop to canners brought Utah and other had received an Invita- farmers 40 per cent more money tion from Las Vegas order to at- than in 1954, according to the tend a four day show in that city American Can Company. Utah farmers received $1,449,-00- 0 depicting the days of 49. A three from canners for their tomaday rodeo under the RAA rules in conjunction with Helldorado at to crop in 1955, compared with night waa assured all a full twenty-f- tha $1,025,000 they received in our hours of fun. 1954, it ia stated. The weekly ore shipments twenFor tht U.S. aa a whole, increasty years ago totaled 82 carloads. ed acreage led to a rising production figure, resulting in America'! Now ia the time to make your tomato growers receiving more definite plans for beautifying your than $80 million from processors if last year, almost $15 million more yard and garden. Remember: you don't do it, nobody will dd it than they received the previous for you. year. Crop Up Past Year hand-me-do- ds "salt-mea- , zation. Salami, the worlds oldest "fancy sausage waa invented aa a victory meat in riotous celebration over the defeat of King Salamla Just 2,436 years ago. Steak comes from the Scandi- - lifeyfor proemie The ancient Egyptian ankh waa for .navian atolk meaning "meat oa a stick which ta how tha early Norsemen cooked their meat Beef is a from Their the Norman conquerors of Engwhose name for aa ox waa Our language la filled with a land "hoe de(hence the popular name of number of words and phrases rived from the livestock Industry. Bossy for cows). The French used Hidden in such prosaic words as the word boef meaning beef or teak, pork, wiener, bologna, etc., are many stories of high adven- beef cattle. ture. and phrases The meat-woroffer an Intimate panorama of mankind's 10,000 year struggle diving hia march serosa Asia, across Europe and to the United e i. d States. Take the simple word "meat. It cornea from the Saxon words mete or mad meaning moist food. Sausage literally means t, the Journey meat of mankind since the dawn of civili- Meat Words and THIS WILL DO FOR A START. J. C. Jaaa Maa-- y Rea, the Jamp stag, wombs coBMlteat oa the MehUgas lag-jac-k as aa sate eveat starter. tactics that have made him fei Agajaaiaa will bo haadltag the flags far the flftk time ta the Lea Ran whea it starts fnm Angeles far Calends Spriaga, Mar. ll symbol Mgr. or March 30, 1956 The Eureka (Utah) Reporter Page Two symbol of both copper and life. Today that relationship atill exists. Take the case of the preemie the premature baby whose life may hang by a thread. In a modem hospital he is placed in an isolette the new, improved incubator. There he is shielded from outside danger while electrically controlled heat and humidity help him win his battle for life. And copper, as the metal that controls the special .conditions he must have, is a key to his survival There is a special problem involved in producing copper for the isolette that helps save a preemieV life as well as in producing copper for the many thousands of other products needed for modem living. Because the ore at Kennecott's Bingham Mine averages only about eight-tentof one percent copper, mass production methods must be used to recover the metaL And that requires the investment of millions of dollars in special equipment. Such an investment must be based on the hope of making a profit. Profits were are the reason why the incentive for the establishment of Kennecott Copper-th- ey this enterprise continues in business. By earning a profit Kennecott is able to produce the metal symbolized by the ankh. And that symbol still stands for life, because copper is the heart of the better modem electrical living that is vital to defense, industry, the home and the farm. Do you have idle space la your home, a niche formed by k comer In a room, for a instance? HOME MODERNISING magazines editors, who are always appalled by unused areas, feature this desk as a means of filling such spacea Completed desk is a handsome furniture that piece of built-i- n is within the capabilities of the addict average set-bac- hs Corned beef, the gastronomic delight of the Irish and English, has nothing to do with the cereal but the process of curing with ''corns of salt Hamburger, of course, is a lesson in city pride from Germany transported to America by early German butchers. - The sandwich plate of cold cute goes back to the Earl of Sandwich George III and the American revolution. Captain Cook named the Sandwich Islands after him (now the Hawaiian Islands). First Shipment of Surplus Wheat to Italy Kennecott Copper Corporation A Good Neighbor Helping to Build d Better Utah? The first shipload of surplus wheat for overseas distribution to the hungry people of the world under the U. S. Department of Agriculture's expanded program of food donations left the Port of Houston, Texas, recently under the auspices of Catholle Relief Services N.C.W.C, bound for Naples, Italy. The shipment of 168,000 bueKela was loaded from the Houston public elevator aboard the S.S. Lipscomb Lykea under the supervision af Port Captain J. M. Dunn (left), end Father John J. Roach, director af Catholle Charities la Houston. They ere pictured looking Into tha hold ei the grain flows In from the loading tube. Other shipments are scheduled to loevo U. S. ports for distrlbu- by CRS through funds raised by the annuel Laetaro Sunday Catholic Bishops' Relief Fund Appeal In addition to who at. Secretary Ezra T. Bentons Agriculture aartmone program else Includes the export ef corn. rice end dried X |