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Show NEW THRU BUS SERVICE SPANS THE NATION OMAHA WICAG0 -l"",' YORK CP "3030 MILE THRU ROUTE" SAN FRANCISCO I : : No longer is it necessary for cross country bus passengers to change coaches every 200 miles or so and look after the transfer of coats, luggage and packages. The new day in h.ghway transportation arrived September 1G when Continental Trailways Bus System inaugurated its new coast-to-coast through bus service between New York City and San Francisco, a distance of 3,030 miles with no change. Ihis new service operates through such metropolitan centers as Pittsburgh, Toledo, Cleveland, Chicago, Omaha, Cheyenne, Salt Lake City, Sacramento, Oakland and many smaller intermediate cities. NAM Predicts Utah Must Provide 63,000 New Jobs By 1960 For Increased Population Gains . "Needed for Utahns: New Job Opportunities by 1960." That's the prediction of the Western Division, National Association of Manufacturers, Manufact-urers, which has just released a study .showing' opportunities that will be open to Utahns by 1960 in some of the major occupational groups. The study, based on U.S. Census Bureau figures, recalls a previous NAM prediction that the state, now plowing at an average of nearly .'!60 new citizens a week, must be ready to provide jobs for over 63.000 new workers by 1960. Where will there be the most job opportunities by 1960? in Utah, if present trends continue, the chart shows, the largest number of workers work-ers will be .employed in the craftsman, crafts-man, or foreman, classification, closely followed by the clerical group. Also high on the list of the occupational groups included in this study are professional or technical tech-nical workers, operatives, and service ser-vice workers. Private household workers, on the other hand, are expected to decline in number by 1960. If private industry within the state is to furnish these jobs, says the NAM, it must find the capital to build new businesses and expand ex-pand the old investment capital from individuals and corporations' with money not now available largely because of present heavy personal and corporate taxes. It urges drastic government economy and the return of all possible government gov-ernment functions and tax resources resour-ces to the state and local levels as first steps toward lower taxes. Tax reduction, says the NAM, will aid materially in making such investment in-vestment capital available. |