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Show wt yr w nr vseasonal dilemma is Kane County, which has the dubious distinction of having, the highest rate of unemployment in the state. By CURT BURNETT Deseret New Staff Writer 'Less federal funds for tourism and more for projects that would create jobs may be the answer to the d ONLY IN SUMMER .Tourism, ragging unemployment that plagues several Utah areas. movie-makin- .This solution is proposed in Department of Employment Security in its monthly newsletter. It was written by Don Perkins. Despite the aboveto this mentioned drawbacks type of job creation, which centers around tourism, it is often the best solution since many Utah areas dont possess a sufficient mix of resources and locations to war- rant industrial expansion. -- d Wwrcoi IMob Doporlmont joK - AREAS LISTED 'Eleven areas of "high unemployment" wefe named. These were Beaver, Box Elder, of AmpJoy moat bocvrity SIMILAR PRGBLEMS Shaded sections show areas of high unemployment. Figures indicate percentage of unemployed workers. of any society, Carbo Grand-Sd- n Duchesne, Garfield, Juan, Juab, Kane, Sanpete, Summit, and Wasatch. Conditions on the Indian reservations, which derive a great percentage of their income from tourist trade, are said to be worse than else- where. As a group, the Ute a$d Navajo Indians have the lqpvest educational attainment apd the lowest annual income continue to fur- g Kane neighboring Garfield County, County is to an subject extremely wide fluctuation in the demand for labor due to the summer tour; ism there. Under the Public Works and Economic Development Act of 1965, more than $9,000,000 in federal aiJ has been aimed at these "depressed areas" rrtost of it for tourism. The re-p-rt calls for "a reexamina-tip- n of PWEDA funding practice.. which have only channeled 25 per cent of Utah high unemployment area aid into project which help to gener-a- t year-roun- sr CORNER.ON COMMERCE , s HIGHER PERCENTAGE statistical survey showed that while only 10.4 percent of the state's population e in A Month Away? Thursday, August 7, 1969 6B 1 SEG Rule To Keep Machines On Level . . a potential vent computers from conspiring with each other and unscrupulous human beings to The SEC proposed a rule which would prohibit automated trading information systems unless the system operator devises rules acceptto able to the commission manipulate the stock market But it conceded it doesn't know just how to go about it. The basic federal securities law mentions only people. In 1934 machines didnt talk to in the opposite ' direction, for improved monitoring and recording of trading information. prevent abuse and assure curate record keeping. ac- TIRE CENTERS EM OOST OF LIVING VIE PAY THE EXCISE TAXES ON YOUR HEW TICES The IAM District 141 represents 18,000 UAL mechanics, store workers and dining personnel in the pay dispute. George J. Robinson, district president, said Saturday the National Mediation Board is required now to make an offer The Air Force this week awarded a $1.1 million con-- tract to Sperry-Ran-d Corp., . Sperry was given a contract ,ni for the YF-1- 9 plane earlier this year. The . aircraft is., expected to be the latest ver-sion of secret unmanned cam- - , era planes to be used for intelligence flights over hostile areas. New Bank Assistant Office Okayed To Aid Exports John C. Jarman has been assistant .elected credit manage, department, First An export origin service office will be established Sept. 1 in the new Salt Lake Customs Office, said E. Moss, Jarman is a graduate of die University of Utah. - . (8 Master Mind Bought just purchased 80 per cent of R the stock of Master Mind Pro-- v ductions, Ltd., of Calgary,.-Alta.- , Sen.-Fran- k Moss said the decision by the Export Control Office of the Department of Commerce will make the establishment of the customs of- - fice complete. It will allow Utah companies to ship their products overseas ' directly from Salt Lake City. continued . With growth . of containerization in the transportation of var. ious goods, the Utah Freeport Center makes the state a natural location for export shipments, he added. Canada.. the Salt Lake D i v isiow of First Security Bank of Utah. former Utah man has been appointed manager, marine terminals department, and traffic for manager the Port of Oakland, port A Robert Crandall, unique case. The court held that geothermal steam may be taxed the same as gas. It produces power by coming out of the ground in great force to turn turbines and generators in the production of electric power. Also, the court held that the supply is potentially exhaustible, die same as natural gas and other mineral resources. manager . r for Kaiser Steel r . Corp. Crandall joined the Port of Oakland in Aoril 1966 as port traffic representative and traffic analyst. T - Hi-La- Milk Tests nd Dairy, 700 Vine St., Murray, will introduce protein v testing effective Sept. 1 In its quality bonus program for Class A milk products. William R. Godfrey, production manager, said the program will give'T Class A milk producers ap op-- ,d portunity to improve the price they receive for milk. has installed a spe-ci' analyzer which tests pro-tein .content of the milk from each producer. ;'l Hi-La- W. an native Ogden and University of Utah graduate, was previously traffic Hi-La- Produce Merkel eysers are a gas, missioners ruling here that a 'geyser produces water in the form of steam was overturned by a U.S. tax court in Washington, D.C., Monday in a - Traffic Manager officials announced today. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Gtaxwise, which may get the government a bit steamed up. An Internal Revenue com- r, President A. Wayne Baker n announced the transaction v and said that Master Mind has a nine-yecontract to v present Reveen, the Austra n lian concert hypnotist and s illusionist who has performed at Valley Music HalL . the Produce: CHICAGO (UPI) Cheese: processed loef MIWI1; Ched-derbrick S7444; Muepster single daisies 5tM4R4; lonphoms Swiss (wheels) blocks 0 too few to report; blocks lb.) grade A 6441; grade B 4247; grade C 40444. al Wholesale prices as reported by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Butter steady: 93 score 67'4; 92 score 474; 90 score 65Vs; 19 score 404. Car- lots: 90 score 444; 09 score 42. 10 White large extras 39; Eggs unsettled CM'CAGO livestock: mediums 37; standards 36, checks 224. 3,000. Barrows and silts steady) '" Hog Potatoes: Total shipments 145; new ar, fairly active; No rivals 23; track 1)9; supplies light, 35 head sorted 11 !? JJ.r5-M.0demand good; market firm. Ji lb M25; No 3 0 lb OOO U.S. lb Track sales: Miiwg. 2r. M7.50; No ieo.9i lb sots round reds 3 over 250 lb very acaree; lew lot: Onions: Arrivals 11; track 47; supplies weights 4 lb 25.00; sows steedy; feir-- , liberal; demand slow; market dull. 13 Nb 'i lb lb lb No 3 yw-fi23 No 3 lb ,in No lb 21.72275. Collie 200. Calves none. Slaughter steers and heifers scarce; supply largely NEW YORK AP) Spot nonferrous, I slaughter cows; active; mostly50 higher; metal prices Thursday: copper lew bulls steady; load standard end cents a pound, Connactlcut Valley; lead low good 1,200 lb part Holstelns 2100; utility 15V4 cents a pound, New York; zinc W2 and commercial tew cows 21 cants a pound. East St. Louis; tin 01.07VO high dressing ; canner a pound, Now York; gold 041 25 per troy and cutter 19.00-2-utility.50; utility and com- -- -ounce. New York; silver 01 425 per troy merefal bulls ounce. New York; quicksilver 0415.00 LOS ANGELES nominal par flask. New York. Llvd'"1 slock market at ArteSla tor Am 4: Cattle 450, celves 200; prices strong to ' ' 50 higher on representative classes spots ' " 1.00 up on calves; bulls scarce; trading"-, - - hihr; - ml TONIGHT! YORK Get a Room Air TODAY teSte FULL RANGE ftUjffr J OF POWERFUL. CASY.TO-INSTA- active,- Slaughter classes Steers yield grade 00; cows util law commercial Iter canner Ity 11.000 235 cut-'"- 0 utllltr""' Markets In Brfef r NEW YORK (AP) Stocks In fairly actlva trading. . ,.n Cotton Irregular. CHICAGO; Wheat Higher; increased demand. Lorn .... Lower, liquidation. Oats . Higher; better demand. ,1 Soybeans Higher;, lack bf selling , top 200. Steedy lo 50 cents to strong; Hogs Steedy Slaughter steers lower; top 35J0. 5. 7 , t A How would you like toy forms a. dividond chock - Ject Plug It In. Buy Yours : I at Kmart Available EACH MONTH? For $3,009 or mem, you con tocgWg a ehack aach monHv In varying amounts, from Why Fry Dy mom? Air Condition ELECTRICALLY your invtstmtnf account. Your money wiM bo sprooj ovor moro thsn 256 soiodod so carefree American eOmparJOG, ; -t--' OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 10-1- 0, SUN,- -1 S. J. lied, !m., 0 Uerfftwri t : vja fork. N.Y., 11J74 0--7 Jj, Pleeee ir a w irttn first 4670 South 9th East 262-268- 3 J I : Foothill Blvd., & Parley's Way 484-324- 1 t 4100 South q -- 17000 DTU ' 0;'2 pressure. 138 Holsttlns 17.00-15- - 6.000 DTU 8.000 DTU e and''-choic- pood land commercjtl beef breeds 20.00-2- 2 40; cutter 15.10-W: canner calves standard and good 0 If0 J .20 50, packaged choice 525 lb 31.50)VO one lot standard and pood 45 lb 27.5 feeder classes steers good and choice 148 IbV'S 0 lb 24 good 25.25-2lb 50; ftw standard 23 4 20; halters few good and choice 0 lb 25.00 20.75; ftw low bod 1 lb 23.40-2steers- - pood and 50; calves 0 choice mind Stan-- . a lb good a 4 dard and good lb and choice lb , U. AUGUST SIDEVAUC SALE All 115 Volt ,r; , Advertising . Management, Inc., a Utah corporation, has Geysers Are Taxable COATS . Wins Contract Sal Lake City, for production The SE0 invited comments ' e items for a on the proposal until Aug. 26. of aircraft. secret reconnaisance Then it will decide if the reguThe project is expected to lation should be placed in cost $9 million. effect. Court Rules at!:ms No strike can be called until after both sides reject the boards proposals, Robinson said. ' t 97.1 He said per cent of the 'voters in the System-wid- e s ' tally voted for strike authori- - v zation. ' IAM members on May 12, n voted to reject an offer that would increase wages by 29.25 1 con- per cent in the three-yea- r tract. Present scales were not " made public. The previous contract expired last Dec. 3L 30 days voted i WASHINGTON - UPR- - -The Securities and Exchange Commission said today it plans to develop a rule to pre- "depressed areas also suffer from similar each other. problems. Increased mechani-- . The SEC said four computer zation in the coal mines of these areas, they account for Carbon-Emerstock systems which could exhave, pushed 15.2 per cent of the change information between unemployment up, with no traders and even execute or' new industrial openings availders are now planned. None able. Utahs areas of high unemhas yet gone into effect ployment are characterized, In the northern part of the among other things, by a These create a special state, the demise of the misseasonally fluctuating demand need for preventing this .new in has Utah sile industry for workers. Surplus labor Box Elders technology from being used to conditions exist during the undermined One base. hope facilitate fictitious or misleademployment winter months, while labor is the ing quotations or for other the residents area for shortages hold sway during of mineral manipulative or deceptive development the tourist season. the SEC said. extraction operations around purposes, An excellent example of the Such systems may also have the Great Salt Lake. "FIGHTS THE to arbitrate the deadlocked contract dispute. CITY, CALIF. of the InterLeaders (AP) national Association of Machinists say its members have to overwhelmingly strike United Air Lines but they say a walkout would not come for at least a month. y Taking these areas as a group, the report states that "a disproportionate share of workers in these generally depressed areas find themseives jobless." The other i 'j states-unemploy- talned. .' UALV" Strike lumber and Like i preferred vyvx' v yfTt n REDWOOD nish employment, but on a seasonal basis all in the summer, the report continued. a .report lsrued by the Utah e 'o laafibiml1 BvDj2)l year-roun- vW v yyy v v WTTryv v wyei i QablMjr ! laiauwiwT . ' ' a Redwood Rd. 299-177- 5 I S |