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Show 3 Universal Microfilming Corp. 141 Pierpont Ave. Salt Lake City 1, Utah entemLer by Mrs. a K, Rife From the flleo of the Eureka Reporter, Twenty Team Age. Juab County Assessor Lester Belliston was in the district last week to name deputy assessors. They were: Harold Boyns for Eureka; Ivan Christensen for Mammoth and Wm. Griffith for the extreme west- The'Eureka (Utah) Reporter, Friday, January 19, 1962 Volume Sixty 10c per copy No. 3 ern end of the county. A special meeting of the city council was held with Maydb Lee presiding, to confirm appointments and name various committees. Mayor Lee reported that highway patrolmen had met with him and wanted designated coasting lanes for sleighriders. Anyone using oUier than designated streets to have their sleds confiscated. A new civic organization was formed in Untie, its purpose to formulate an organization to work for the betterment of Tin-ti- c District. Parker C. Fillmore was appointed chairman; Glo- Ail interesting meeting, and what could eventually be of considerable benefit to Juab County, was held Friday evening in the Memorial Building. ria Gear, secretary; Mrs. G. C. Lindsay, P. J. Fennell, Harry Randle, Alex Blight and Wilson Lee, members of Central Committee. At the first meeting committees were appointed. Lt. and Mrs. John Kurdy of Shoshone, Idaho were in Eureka for a visit with Mrs. Nora McCormick. Mrs. George Adams is at Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake receiving treatment for an infected foot. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gardner announced the engagement of their daughter Margaret to Stanley Sitek of Buffalo, N.Y. Richard Forsey entertained a number of friends at a coasting party. After coasting a delicious luncheon was served and indoor games played. Mrs. Dora Haynes visited in Provo last weekend where she made the acquaintance of her first grandchild, a baby boy bom to Mr. and Mrs. Loey Newren. On Friday evening the Senior class of Eureka ward Sunday School had a sleighing party. The group used the Fitch-vill- e road and the evening fun passed without mishap. After sleighing they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Cronin. Auto licenses were to be sold in Eureka this year, 1942, according to Lester H. Belliston, Juab county assessor. The Santaquin-Tinti- c Stake annual Seventy Quorums party was to be held Saturday night featuring program, luncheon & and dancing. Hot bargains for the week were: Motor tune-u$3.24; motor overhaul, $24.84; brakes rep, lined, $11.76. Recent visitors at the home of Mr and Mrs. Robert Thomas were her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Art Gotberg of Salt Lake City. Utah lay speakers, attending the Fall Men's Retreat, left to right, Leslie Tanner, lay assistant, Grace church. Salt lake City; Frank Bowman, Tooele church serving at Eureka; Walt Amen, Centenary church. Salt Lake City; and John Persinger of Christ church, Salt Lake City, associate conference lay leader In charge of the Conference lay speakers work. Mishaps blamed to bad weather Icy conditions in town, due to the extreme cold has caused several mishaps this past week, which resulted in some broken bones. Mrs. Arnold Swenson slipped on the ice as she was leaving theRaymond Archibal home last and a slight skull fracture. It required several stitches to close the wound. All the friends of the above are regretting the accidents and are wishing them the best in the way of a speedy recovery. Sunday, and suffered a broken left ankle. Earl Potts fell last Saturday while at work at the Randle Service Station, and suffered a broken left elbow. Mrs. Dean Rose of Mammoth fell in the yard at her home and received a serious head cut fS pulpit at local church The Tooele-Eurek- a Charge in Utah is carrying on a program meets Utah cagers Saturday BYU Brigham Youngs Cougars face the acid test this week against Billy McGill and his teammates on the Utah club. The game will be played at the Ute fieldhouse. McGill is the nations leading scorer with an average of 37 points per game. BYU will not only have a near impossible task this week, but the following Friday, they will run into the tough Utah Aggies on the Logan floor. The cougars beat Wyoming 3 last Friday but lost an 9 overtim to Colorado State Sat. top-ridi- ng 73-6- 75-6- Methodist church and parsonage at Eureka. Certified lay speakers give services each Sunday. unique in the Rocky Mountain Conference of the Methodist church. These two churches are 58 miles apart. Both have 11 oclock services regularly every Sunday. Certified Lay speakers make this possible. Two lay speakers, Dr. Robert Runnells, dentist of Salt Lake City and Frank Bowman, retired engineer of Tooele, each go to Eureka one Sunday a month. The Eureka congregation provides the leadership for the third Sunday. The pastor of the charge, the Rev. E. Russell Tanner, preaches the fourth Sunday. The Eureka Church is in a mining community of 771 persons. The success of this project is giving impetus to plans for additional supervised charges in other Utah situations. These projects can prove to be fruitful ministerial recruiting and training fields. Already one lay speaker, who served Eureka project, Russell Bryant, has been placed in the Copperton Church. Mr. Bryan, a railroad worker of Salt Lake City, is training for the accepted supply pastor status. Frank Bowman will be the lay speaker for the Sunday services at the Eureka Methodist Church at 11:00 a.m. Sunday school will be at the regular time, 11:00 a.m.( with Superintendent Roger Banghart in charge. Ray Badertscher was in Salt Lake last Wednesday combining business and pleasure. Representatives from Nephi and Eureka were in attendance, which included Juab County Commissioners and mayors of the cities in the County and Supt. Alexander Blight. The purpose of the meeting was to discuss plans for developing new industries and furthering the economic resources in the County. The Government has devised a plan whereby loans or grants can be had for low interest rates for any number of projects given for purposes to improve the economic conditions and to provide permanent employment in depressed areas. In order to qualify for these loans the area must be desigarea. nated as a In order to be designated it is necessary to prepare an Over-A- ll Development Plan program and submit it thru the proper channels to theDept. of Labor, who will' in turn provide assistance for the project they determine tobe workable. Tourist potentialities in Tin-tisuch as providing motel accommodations and other ways and means of advertising Tin-ti- c and reviving interest in mining were discussed. Representatives from the west end of the county advanced ideas to bring new industries and advancement of agricultural pursuits in Nephi, Mona and Levan areas. Commissioner Elgin Gardner of Nephi was in charge of the meeting and the group appointed Alton Gadd, County Commissioner, general chairman of the organization, and he will call on townspeople in his area to help formulate plans for setting up the program. Carl Galloway, County Commissioner from this end of the County was appointed to head a committee in this area, with Supt. Blight and Curtis Butler to assist in studying the needs of Tintic. Representatives from t h 4 State Employment Agency, Jennings Lee and Larry Wardle, were in attendance to give the group assistance in setting up the program, and to explain the benefits that could be derived from the Government program. The men from Tintic advanced a number of workable projects for the Tintic area, aa did the representatives from Nephi, Mona and Levan for their area. Further meetings will be held when definite plans will be presented and acted upon. c, Mrs. Wesley Robinson and daughter, Mrs. Collette Dolinar and her two children, Robin and John R. of Provo, were back in town on Wednesday, visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Robinson and calling on friends. Plates Anion Garfield, Juab County Assessor, will be in Eureka on Frida)', January 26th to Issue ear license plates. He will be at the County Court House here from 10:00 ajn. to 4:00 p.m. Services held for former Dividend man Ambrose Nor, 83, formerly of Dividend, died in a Gulfport, Fla. hospital January 7, of natural causes. He was bom Jan. 18, 1878 in Champion, Mich. Married Alice George in 1901. She died in 1957. He lived in Dividend for a number of years, until his retirement in 1947. Prior to his employment at the Tintic Standard Mining Co. at Dividend, he was associated with United States Smelting and Refining and Mining Co. in Salt Lake City. He had been living in St. Petersburg, Fla., for the past five years. He was a member of First Presbyterian Church and the Thirty-secon- d degree Mason, Argents Lodge, F&AM, Scottish Rite, El Kalah Shrine. Survivors: daughters, Mrs. Leigh Nord Fisher, St. Peters- burg, Fla.; Virginia, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Andrew H. Price, Palos Verdes Estates, Calif.; slaters, Mrs. William Ishpeming, Mich. Burial was in St. Petersburg, Fla., on Jan. 10. Lock-woo- d, Accident victim returns home Steri Laird, who was injured in a mine accident a few weeks ago, returned home last Saturday after being confined to the Utah Valley Hospital in Provo since the accident. His injuries were much more serious than 'they were thought to be at the .time of the accident. He suffered a broken left ankle, and considerable damage to ligaments and cartilages on the rightknee. He underwent extensive surgery at the hospital, and his many friends in the district will be pleased to leam that he is recuperating nicely, and all are hoping that the improvement in his condition will continue. Ore shipments. Filtrol Corporation, 690 tons hallosite clay. |