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Show Universal Microfllwing Corp. 141 Pierpont Ave. Salt leke City 1, Utah Methodist An guest speaker will have charge of the Sunout-of-to- day morning services at the Methodist Church which will begin at 11 a.m. Sunday School will be at 10 a.m. preceding the regular church services. No. 35 LI)S Eureka Ward William Thompson conduct- ed the Sunday evening services at the ward. The music was by Norma Jameson at the organ and Barbara Bartschi, chorister. Opening prayer was given a by Lorin Thompson. Mrs. Hansen talked on her trip to Washington, D.C., and John is Castleton told of his son, mission work. Mrs. Rosalie Fawsen spoke on the testimony of the gospel. Benediction was offered by Verl Phillips. Ro-an- Ni-ch- Santaquin-Tinti- c Stake Friday night, August 27, a gigantic building fund project dinner will be held at the Park. Contact the ward leaders and purchase tickets, it is asked. The funds derived from the dinner will go toward making the final building payment on the stake center. Continuous serving from 5 p.m. to San-taqu- Eureka hunters Weather given reminders With the start of the 1965 hunting season sportsmen are reminded by the Fish and Game Department to pick up a proclamation from a license agent or the regional Fish and Game office in Provo and read the regulation. There have been some changes made this year. Mourning dove hunt scheduled in 7 p.m. Saturday is the date for the shooting of film for the movie being prepared by BYU for the Church. The details are known to all the members. Wear pioneer costume and be at the Central School at 8 p.m. The film was to have been made but the weather prevented it from being completed. The stake representatives of the YMMIA Slow Pitch Soft-ba- ll Tournament won the championship. The First and Second Ward MIA presidencies and superin- tendencies are meeting this week to lay plans and to consider MIA of both wards to be held on the same evening (on Tuesday) in order that the full stake can hold Family Home Evenings on Wednesday. Mrs. Nettie Mulliner of Mur- ray, spent the weekend here with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Walker. Dennis Drussel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerald Drussel, returned home Tuesday afternoon after being confined to the Utah Valley Hospital in Provo, where he underwent major surgery on his leg. His host of friends are wishing him a quick and complete recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tromas, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Thomas and son, J. S. Finch, Mr and Mrs. R. E. Finch of Payson and Mrs. Golden White of Goshen, were in Tooele, Monday night, attending a birthday party honoring Mrs Howard Jensen. A turkey dinner and all the trimmings was served. Mrs. Jensen is a niece of Mrs. Thomas. She received many lovely gifts and a very enjoyable evening was spent by all those attending. The famed statue of the Christ of the Andes stands high in the Andes mountains on the boundary between Argentina and Chile. The average man now has his first cigar at age 21. Ten years ago the age was 38. The new small cigars are now smoked by 600,000 women. Utahs 1965 Mourning Dove season gets undeiway across the State at one-ha- lf hour before sunrise on Wednesday, September 1. Northern counties will remain open to the taking of doves through September 15, with an extension of shooting through September 30 in the balance of the State. Portions of Salt Lake and Utah Counties will be closed to hunting during the dove season. In an effort to cooperate with private landowners, the Department of Fish and Game in conjunction with the State Triangle, or Landowner-Sportsman-Gam- e Department Cooperative Committee, has ' once again made available a number of signs designed by the Committee to aid the landowner. Signs are available, free of charge, through Department Regional Offices, conservation officers, and county agents throughout the State. In line with the Triangle Committee Report, Department spokesmen urged hunters to keep in mind the rule of good sportsmanship at all times while afield, also to stay clear of orchards and unharvested crops while in the field. Daily bag limit this year is 12 with possession limit of 21. Bow and arrow or shotguns are the only legal weapons. Shotguns capable of holding more than three shells must be plugged. OIJE SHIPMENTS Filtrol Corp., 1110 tons hal-loysi- te clay. The Exchange magazine reports that a decade ago, when the nation's population was about 165 million, Disposable Personal Income (which is personal income less federal, state and local taxes) amounted to $1,661 per person. 0 far this year it has been running at an annual rate of $2,311 per capita arid the population is almost 191 million. The weather so far this week (Wednesday) has lxen a big improvement over last week. Pleasant, sunny days, and NO RAIN. Last Wednesdays storm left .40 of an inch of rain in about 20 minutes. From Friday at 5 p.111. till noon on Saturday the weather station reported .90 of an inch of rain. After that we quit checking. From the first of August up to this writing, over four inches of rain has been reported. Tltis has been the most unusual summer? remembered by many residents, and all are hoping for one of our pleasant Indian summers which are usually delightful. School bells beckon students School bells sounded for Tin-ti- c students Wednesday, August 25, when a full day of work was carried out. Many of the students are happy to be back again and even those who pretend they arent pleased about the opening of school, are happier than they will admit. When school work gets into full swing and the activities get going, they will all be glad to be back at school, even if some are saying about now "Oh Yeh! Mr. and Mrs. Dick Willett and son, Shane, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Greenhalgh, returned home Sunday, from an enjoyable vacation trip to Lake Tahoe, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, where thej' visited with Mr. Greenhalghs sister, Miss lone Greenhalgh. Enroute home they stopped at Las Vegas for a couple of days. Donald Greenhalgh flew to Vegas on Saturday and returned home with the group, on Sunday. Members of the John Bauer family, formerly of Elberta, now residing in California, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Bauer and wife, of Denver; Mr. and Mrs. Gale Bauer, of Santa Maria, California; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bauer of Lakewood, Calif.; an;d Mary Bauer (married name not remembered) were in Eureka over the weekend enjoying a family get-togeth- er. The New products, some still in test markets or partial distribution, include a coconut beverage; frozen frankfurters, smoked sausage links and cooked sausage links, each wrapped individually in waffle batter; puffed com flakes; French fries (conventional ones, in case you hadnt Reid family members, formerly of Mammoth, Mr. and Mrs. Don Reid, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Reid, Bonnie Reid Bauer, and other members of the Reid family, names not remembered, were in town over the weekend haveing a family get-togeth- er. six-sid- ed noticed, are four-sided- ). We get our word 'canasta from the Spanish which means "basket. Mrs. Jerald Drussel returned home last Saturday, after week a in American spending Fork with her pother, Mrs. D. B. Lindstrom and her sister, Mrs. W. E. Spainhower. Youths provoke fight; officers moke arrests youth, mistaken fur another, Eureka residents were much incensed, and rightly so, over bore the brunt of the beating. The incident wras apparently unpleasant publicity given the town Sunday evening when a group of teenagers from a neighboring town invaded a local cafe and proceded to beat up a Eureka teenager. The YJew 5 YjoteA .... Frankie and Roger Bridge-ma- n of Las Vegas, are spending the week at the Harold Spencer home. They are the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Bridgeman, former Eurekans. Mr. Bridgeman is out-number- ed employed in Israel at the present time. As soon as he can find suitable housing and schooling, Mrs. Bridgeman and Mike will join him. Roger will attend the University of Nevada this coming year, and Frankie will complete her senior year at the high school there before joining her parents. Mr .and Mrs. Jay Chatter-to- n spent four days last week in Las Vegas. Mr. Chattertons sister, Mrs. Henry Hadley of Salt Lake, visited iwth Mrs. Chattertons mother, Mrs. Agnes Platt, during their absence. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Quinlan and four boys of Las Vegas, were recent visitors at the home of Mrs. Agnes Platt and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Chatterton. Mrs. Quinlan is the former Maude Hanley, a former resident of Eureka and a niece of Mrs. Platts. Dinner guests last Thursday at the home of Mrs. Elsie Nil-so- provoked by a fight Saturday night when a group of Tooele youths got into a fight with some Eureka teenagers. Spectators said it w'as a fair fight, and denied reports that the Tooele boys had been ganged up on. Sunday night, a group from Tooele, established at "more than 50 returned to Eureka for a revenge fight. There were very few Eureka teenagers down towrn Sunday evening, so several adults pitched in to Eureka help the teenagers. The outsiders soon left towrn and no damage was reported. City officers and a few of the men from town remained dowm town for several hours in case of further trouble, but there w'as no further disturb- n were her niece and her husband. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bryan (Sharon Allen) of Salt Lake, and Mrs. Nilsons sister Mr .and and brother-in-laOrem. The Mrs. Glen Storrs of Bryans will leave next week for New York, where Mr. Bryan will teach in Utica, N.Y.. and Mrs. Bryan will attend Cornell University. w, ance. Highway patrol officers and deputies set up a road block five miles south of the Dugway turn-of- f and stopped the youths. Their names were taken and several arrests are pending. Hearings will be held later and it will be decided then w'hat action will be taken. The sum and substance of the whole incident was that it wras a fight, and not a "riot as reported, and as usual, giving Eureka a black eye as being the instigator of the trouble, which w'as reportedly not the case. out-of-to- Juab County Fair September 2, 3 The 1965 Juab County. Fair w'ill be held on Thursday and Friday, September 2 and 3 in Nephi. Mrs. Lucille Bigler, a director on the executive committee reminds anyone entering ar- ticles in the fair must have them in by Monday August 30. She asks that she be contacted or anyone can bring entries to her home or call and she will pick them up. Jack OHare of Great Falls, Mont., w'as in Eureka last Saturday and Sunday, visiting with friends, and attending the class reunion cf the 1911 and 1915 graduates from Tintic High School. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Markham and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jerman spent the weekend here attend- ing the class reunion for the 1911 and 1945 graduates from Tintic High School. Mrs. Virginia Bradford and her mother, Mrs. Joan Campbell were In Granger last Sunday visiting with Mrs. Bradford's son and family, Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell. Little Trade Campbell, who had spent a week here with her grandmo-tre- r, Mrs. Bradford, returned home with them. , n Mr .and Mrs. William and Mr. and Mrs. William B. Dumas of Murray, returned home on Tuesday, after spending three days at Fish Lake. They report wonderful wreather and good fishing. Par-ma- Mr .and Mrs. Bill Bossand daughter, Bonnie of Fort Car-soat Colorado Springs, spent a day here last week with his father, John Boss and with his sister and family, Mr. and n, Mrs. George Dale. Mr .and Mrs. Sherill Holden are vacationing for the week at Moab and the Grand |