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Show lEitrska HUportpr Ij to head drive PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT EUREKA, UTAH Printed By ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY SprlngvUle, Utah matter February 10, 1948, at the Entered as second-clas- s post office, Eureka, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription In Advance, Per Year, MRS. BELLE COFFEY HARRISON CONOVER WOODROW WEIGHT $1-00- ; Per Copy, 10c. Correspondent Publisher Editor NAMember: UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION WEEKLY TIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES, INC. ..- - 1 L1.1 CLASSIFIEDS Rat: 5c per word; minimum 1.00. Rerun Rate: 50c (up to 5 lines). Alcoholic study LAIRD'S MARKET Fresh Meats, Groc., Dairy Products and Produce. Frozen Foods may help Delivery - Tues.-Thurs.-S- Phone 438-68- populated areas at ENGINEERING Registered professional engineer. Mining metallurgy. Consulting and field by appointment. G. B. Riding, 70 Spring-villW. 3rd N., 489-540- study, conducted in Salt Lake County by Fenton E. Moss University of Utah professor, may become a A 08 e. 0, AlOtfc FOR SALE 22 choice location. Good lots. building Reasonable. Also homes, all kinds and prices. See Hurst Realty, 379 North Main, A30tfc Spanish Fork. IN PAYSON PEACHES, large juicy, ready for canning this week only. $4 bu., pick your own. Orchard, Genola, off Santaquin, Eureka just 50-A13 Highway Mc-Mulli- ns 6. five-ye- ar valuable tool in helping heavily populated areas deal with problem alcoholics. Mr. Moss, assistant clinical professor in the Universitys Graduate School of Social Work says though the county docs not have the problem found in larger coastal areas, there were more alcoholics found there than originally estimated. He said, however, that Utah in general does not have the heavy case load of some other areas. "For effective rehabilitation the alcoholics must be taken out of jails and hospitals," Mr. Moss says. Three types of management facilities" are recommended in the report. These icnlude a public works center for the with poor skills, a skilled work center for those who have developed skills and a convalescent center for those unable to work. Many agencies in the densely peopled areas of the West in the study and have indicated a desire to experiment able-bodi- ed 'brains' three times faster nowadays U of U The University of Utahs brains" are running three electimes faster these days tronically. The brains" are in the form of a new computer which has been installed in the Universitys Computer Center. The former electronic magician, an IBM 7040, has been replaced by a virtual wizard, the IBM 7044. Joseph Price, manager of the programs and applications, said the 7044 operates three times faster than its predecessor. His illustration is that the 7040 could make 70,000 additions per second. 7044 whips off 250,000 every second with wind to spare. The acquisition of the 7044 means a lot to the University and the community served by it. It means more students can learn about computers, more research projects can be processed for porfessors and students and more time can be made available to private industry. When the 7044 made its home here it placed the University among the top 20 computer centers in the nation. It also makes the general area more beautiful to potential new industries, Mr. Price said. 7044 is no homely fellow. It is a expensive machine, only two years old. It's just about the newest thing blue-bloode- d, Farm field labor is a skill, just like any other specialized job. We well recall the ridiculous statement of a Dept, of Labor employee in Casper at a labor meeting some months ago when he said flatly, 'We can teach a teen-agto be a field beet worker in 30 sugar minutes. Fortunately, Wyoming has escaped an emergency situation in our beet fields because enough Texas labor turned out to be available." Riverton, Wyo. Ranger. er in computers. Through grants from National Science Foundation, International Busin ess and research, the University is able to pay the monthly $23, 900 rental fee. Director of the Computer Center is Paul Tuan. There are 25 full and part-tim- e employees there, most of them stu- dents. The Center was founded in 1958, primarily as a tool for research. The University was one of the first six in the nation to boast of a center with the method of one electronic brain letting talk to another via telephone. As well as being a tool for others, the Computer Center does research projects of its own. It is a classroom. Projects deal primarily with computers and their perfection and use. Tele-processi- Machine made emeralds Gordon Owen i The Utah Chapter Arthritis Foundation named Mr. Gordon Owen to head its 1965 campaign for funds to fight arthritis. The drive will begin here September 1965, according to Mr. Ray S. Tanner, president of the chapter. Mr. Tanner expressed confidence that Gordon Owens acceptance of the voluntary post will bolster the chapters efforts to expand services to arthritis sufferers in Utah. Mr. Owen occupies a unique niche in intermountain radio and television. Having been a part of early radio, he moved smoothly into television when this medium became popular. Mr. Owen declared that there must be no let-u- p in the struggle to improve patient care and to increase research efforts in arthritis. No one is immune from this crippling disease. During the coming year some quarter of a million new victims will join the nation's more than 12,000,000 sufferers. that Mr. Owen stressed the in funds raised coming drive will go to improve treatment services for arthritis sufferers in Utah and help step up nationwide efforts to find a cure. The Utah chapter has stepped up its program by organizing the state to help througout Utah, by education, treatment, workshops, and training physicians. There are now 60,000 arthritis victims in Utah. This drive is a challenge to our community, and we need everyones either as a volparticipation to unteer or a contributor succeed. Everything we can do now will help these sufferers avoid severe crippling in the future. ar-thrit- ics n, pre-select- ed 556-692- The United Kingdom is the largest Importer of goods from Communist bloc nations, buying in 1963 over half a billion dollars worth of products from eastern countries, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was renominated for a fourth term and Harry S. Truman was the vice presidential candidate. gems from the force of and on the earth over milacting lions of years. Forecasts hold that stones of several carats will be available for less than thirty dollars. And women can feel asscured that only a will know the high-temperatu- high-pressu- Alford Webb of Pueblo, Colorado, arrived in Eureka on Sunday for a visit with his mother, Mrs. Hilda Webb and his brother and family, the Ed intentions but potholes are popping up along the right of way It would be unfortunate, indeed, if strategic planning from a bureau in Washington were allowed to override as a matter of course the people who have been in the front lines of the war on poverty for a great many years. Charity began at home in America. At least some of it ought to remain there." Cushing, Okla., ... Sunday for a visit with her niece and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Jensen. Mrs. Brennan Hannifin was in Salt Lake on Thursday to be with her sister, Mrs. Gordon Frisby, who underwent surgery that morning at the Holy Cross Hospital. Her many friends are wishing her the best in the way of a speedy recovery. Citizen. Luster of pearl is created by the prism-lik- e play of light through the crystals of its nacre. Shortly before his untimely death in London, Adlai Stevenson said: Aggression begets aggression. Retreat begets retreat. We either stand, as we discovered in Europe, and hold the line at appropriate places or we dont. And if we dont and aggression succeeds, they knock on door after door and find that they open. Ultimately they come to the ultimate door where resistance becomes imperative. Then you have a holocaust. You have a major war. This is what we are trying desperately to avoid in South Viet Nam." The Wholesale Price Index for Pharmaceuticals has declined for the sixth straight year. It fell during 1964 from a level of 86.2 to e low of 86.0 (1949 an equals 100). This index, which measures price changes annually, has been prepared by Dr. John M. Firestone of the City College of the City University of New York. We're Exeifed About Our New Be ! Bob Goddard so-call- ed Secretary of Commerce John T. Connor says that the truck user charge package is essential and an important part of the Presidents program" and that the Administration plans to push the tax program this year." Ethical all-tim- wo- One of the best things that can happen to a is a part time Job. which is also an educational experience in real life. We have listened too much tol socia planners about the evils of child labor. A worse situation is the evil of idleness for a youngster bubbling over with excess energy. It is very likely that any juvenile problem is due to this situation as much as any lack of parental concern. Tonganoxie, Kan., Mirror. OFFSET iPRINTING i i i CLASS Day & Evening Programs Classes Begin Sept. 8, 1965 i I i Salt Lake Trade Technical Institute 431 SOUTH 6th EAST UTAH SALT LAKE CITY, Phone 328-852- 1 Send for Free Information! YOUR CHILDREN MINING JOBS For experienced metal min- ers 21-4- 5 years of age with good work records who are interested In steady employment. A limited number of Inexperienced men 21-3- 0 years of age Interested In a mining career can be trained provided they qualify. Passing a physical examination Is required. Alternating 5 and 6 day work week. Good wages, benefits and working conditions. Board and room avail- able. Apply in person at mine office. U. S. & LARK MINE LARK, UTAH ist The road to the Great Society may be paved with good Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sandstrom drove to Brigham City on And then there was the re re gem-molog- Webbs. On Monday, Mrs. Webb and her son drove to Evanston, Wyoming on Monday, where they visited with Mrs. Webb's daughter and family, Mrs. Mina Griggs. They returned home Wednesday morning. did and he is. September 12, 1965 Coast Guard Offcer Candidate School class has a limited number of vacancies open for college graduates. The most highly qualified will be given a chance to attend the September Class at the Coast Guard Reserve Training Center. York-towVirginia. There is also opportunity to be for flight training. Upon commissioning a s Coast Guard officers, graduates will receive the same pay and benefits as all other officers in the Armed Forces. This includes 30 days annual leave with pay and free medical and dental care. The peace time duties of the Coast Guard include law enforcement, search and rescue, oceanograph research, and the maintenance of aids to navigation. Those interested should contact the Personnel Procurement Office, Twelfth Coast Guard District, 630 'Sansome Street, San Francisco, by call2 ing immediately. 1944, n. an angel and let me drive." He The Quality emeralds that are inexpensive and indistinguishable from real stones can now be turned out by a machine in two minutes flat The process developed by the Navy is able to copy natures, which creates Sunday visitors at the home of Mrs. Stella Shea were her niece and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Maston Wentz of Maple-to- man who told her husband Toast Guard has vacancies In 13y 1965 August THE EUREKA (UTAH) REPORTER Page Two How long has It been since you've heard their voices, listened to their news? Call them. Long Distance. Mountain States Telephone |