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Show THE EUREKA (UTAH) REPORTER Page Two GUp? lurpha PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT EUREKA, UTAH 84628 Printed By ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY Sprlngvllle, Utah 84688 Subscription in Advance, Per Year, 44)0; Per Copy, 10c Second class postage paid at Eureka, Utah 84628. Entered as second-clamatter February 10, 1048, at the office, post Eureka, Utah 84628, under the Act of March ss 3, 1879. Device will aid handicapped in use of telephone service than More Utahns 1,000 could benefit from a new vice being developed by. Bell T e 1 ephone Laboratories and Western Electric. According to Jack Dalton, district manager for Mountain States Telephone, the invenwill help the tion, Code-Cordeaf-blin- d to feel and the deaf to see telephone conversations. Through a simple system of amplifiers and oscillators, the set will convert impulses from telephone lines into both touch and flashing light signals. By caller communicates with a deaf-blin-d person over a vibradisc on d the set The ting person will actually feel the message. In addition to the vibrating disc, the new device will have a light that blinks according de- n, MRS. BELLE COFFEY .................... Correspondent HARRISON CONOVER Publisher WOODROW WEIGHT Editor Member: UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION WEEKLY NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES, INC. August 1, 1969 Yjtwd TJoteS . . . to the code. This will allow g persons to read in- deaf-seein- coming messages. Persons using the set will be able to communicate with calls lers by talking into a will be able to return phone mouthpiece. Mute indicodes with a telegraph-lik- e key that is part of the set In Utah there are 1,143 deaf persons (about 850 of these are also mute) and six deaf-blin-d who could use the new device. tele-vidua- Mayor and Mrs. Curtis Butler and daughter, Barbara returned home on Tuesday. They had vacationed for a few days at Green River, Wyoming, where they were guests of Albert Johnson. Mrs. Helen Brown left last Friday for Salt Lake, where she will spend a few days with her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Brown, before returning to her home in Kellog, Idaho. She has spent the past several weeks here with her sister, Mrs. Dora Randle. deaf-blin- Early travelers usually stayed over. HISHT AT ABBEYS AND MONASTERIES, INNKEEPERS WERE OFTEN IN COLLUSION I HI6HWAYMEN JBnuititi by Mary Lou Roonoy Conoumor Education Spaclafot . . . Summer is the happiest time of year at our house. And the messiest one as well. I have to overwork the washer and dryer to keep up with assorted summer Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Nash and Jimmy drove to Ephraim last Saturday where they visited with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lee. They were accompanied to Eureka by Patty and Andy Jo Robinson, who had spent a week at the Lee home. shenanigans. Sometimes Im ready to to a nudapply ist camp after lugging the ket of dirty i UNDTR A JACKSONVILLE, FLA BVRSf',EK7,a BRITISH A Strvua of t&c MPCUWHEBER Unite! hanapartaUai lUoa TT VOYAGE TOOK 18 BAYS AADTHE MASTS AND FURNITURE WERE TO COMPLETE TOE RUN V. room. L. Anderson returned returned home Sunday from a vacation spent in Iowa. He visited in Galva, Iowa, with Mrs. Anderson's mother, Mrs. F. H. Weildanl, and in Strom Lake with his sister, Mrs. Ruby Turner. En route to Iowa he had a short visit in Denver with his son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Anderson. Remember Last Year Last year, I thought we were ready for summers spilling and staining. I was ready to let the dryer do the ironing turn out those wrinkle-fre- e ml blouses, sport shirts, even babys clothes. Instead we found ourselves wearing our summer duds, complete with wrinkle-fre- e stains. Sommer Is Stain Tima Cedi Livingston is confined to the Payson Hospital, where he underwent surgery on Monday for an ulcer condition. His host of friends in Tintic are wishing him the best in the way of a speedy and complete Summer Plum Peachy Salad Mrs. Roonty summer clothes to the laundry M NOEL ISiSSSSS, IN 1858, THE umpteenth bas- There are just too many supentainere associated with summers fun and work. Even Mother Nature is igainrf Take grass stains, for in- stance. In the morning, grass is still somewhat wet with dew, a u recovery. FOB SALE Miscellaneous STOKERMATTC new Titi used stoves. Complete service. Will modernize your old stove. .Call Hansen Phone Stoker-mati- c, Gunnison, Utah, 84634. A29 528-331- 9. . hy late afternoon the kids are inside hollering for something to spoil their supper with while my husband is concentrating on some baseball wnw, But Not This Year But this year Ive got them - Meanwhile, Im offering my experience with soil release to you, hoping it will help you enjoy this summer outsioe having fun with friends and family instead of in the laundry room struggling to feed mounds of soiled clothing into hungry washers and dryers. f reah pcachea and am now in local markets andwill be available from now plums until late September. wUl hon?enfe r take advantage of these fresh fruits. P1 colorful salad is .9n peach halves, brushed with lemon juice, and whole pitted open stuffed with plums, dieese and topped with diced nuts, on atedof wrf? iiiythse endive and top or softened cream cheese, and mayonnaise wjtt you have a perfect luncheon salad or a side dish salad for dinner. Summer Plum Peachy Salad Freh California peaches Chopped nuts' Fresh California plums Mayonnaise Cream cheese Endive salad, peel one peach, cut in half and remove pit1 in half and remova am cheese and push back together. Top with SJlSSF rfS5i"SSi a whole plum on each of the eacn bed, other sides. Top the peaches with a spoonful of mayonnaise, ciiiit . ?5". ottou - DEADLY BITS A HUEY COBRA, decorated with tuth on the Flying Tigers of World War H fame, prepares to engage the awraom. firepowr. Thb feroelon. lookbg helicopter b one of s v- ,- - but III mmr with Ha ski ia m, |