OCR Text |
Show I I Sun Chronicle, Morch 6, 1980. Page 7 Sun Times, March 5, 1 980. Page 7 Clearfield Courier, March Ben Lomond Beacon, March 6, 1 980, Page 7 Bergen urges the use of fingerprints on legal papers, as wOll as signature -- By Hazel E. Park Our phone kept ringing constantly from Roy Sun Chronicle readers, March 1, and 2, as enthusiastic country music fans in Utah, were jubilant over the Country Music Marathon on KUED as broadcasted nationally through the Public Broadcasting System which originated over WSM from Nashville. Live from the Grand Ole Opry, featuring The Greats, The Nearly Greats and the Gratefuls of the Music, Country Marathon was the greatest Show Biz ever saw on television. All-Ti- s, Roy Acuff who has been with the Grand Ole Opry since 1937, Minnie Pearl, the unpolished gem of Music City U.S.A. with 40 years in country music, Grandpa Jones and the Jones Family, a pillar in the Hank industry, old-tim- er Locklin who came to Nashville with a guitar on his back and a dream in his heart, also made the pinnacle of success. ' Stonewall Jackson, Skeeter Davis, Little Jimmy Dickens, David Houston, plugging his new Gospel Album, Ernie Ashworth, Charley Louvin, Porter Wagoner, his gray afro hair muted by the glittering and spangled suit, were all there, in one of the worlds most d extravaganzas in the history of country star-studde- music! Jeanie Shephard, Loretta Lynn who plugged the Motion Picture of her life. Hie Coal Miners Daughter, Larry Gatlin, Skeeter Davis, Justin Tubb, Teddy and Doyle Wilburn, the great comedian, Whitey Ford, better known as The Duke of Paduka, Ronnie Milsap, and many others coming live from the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. June Wilson of Clinton called and asked for a review on the television special. Alice Moore, Washington Terrace, one member of our party who made Fan Fair last year, called to point out special effects of the broadcast. Wilma Lee, an oldster and bright star in Show Biz did a showy job on A Daisy a Day Del Wood, and Ralph Stones Cloggers, rounded out a spectacular event and tribute to The Grand Ole Opry, the foundation from which country music stars are made. One sad note in the musical marathon was the news that our good friend, the Grand Marshall of Country Music, Ernest Tubb, is ill. By Jane Bergen It isnt love that makes the world go aropnd, it is signatures. Personal and business checks, contracts, loans, wills, Social Security Cards, Drivers Licenses, autographs, bank deposit slips, Bills of Sale, bible entries, registers of many kinds, business license applications, employment applications, criminal records, credit cards, deeds, Marriage Licenses, divorce papers, gate records at Defense Plants, greeting cards, Christmas cards, hospital papers, hotel and motel registers, identification cards, leases, Real property, letters both personal and business, library cards, life insurance papers, medicine records in drug stores, pension applications, and promissory notes are just a few instances where personal signatures are of great importance. Everyones signature is just as individualistic as fingerprints. The oldest signature in the world is either a fingerprint or a thumbprint. Today if fingerprints were placed below signatures on important papers, it would be an added protection to those papers and their owners. Fingerprints cannot be forged. Many forgers are not too familiar with Writing Identification Experts and what can be detected by them, but most criminals all over the world do understand fingerprint identification. telephone call from A Houston, Texas, where Grace Mikel, Editor of Texas Proud, and Jay Singletary, manager of the River Road Boys, lauded the Roy Publications and this column for exceptional support of Country Music. We can expect a national award at Fan Fair 1980 in Nashville this year! Snow survey taken for March water content 134 percent of normal at 5.0 inches. Reports Compiled By Earl Spendlove District Conservationist Soil Conservation Service Snow surveys for the March 1 report were made in warm, sunny weather, according to Earl Spendlove, District Conservationist in the Ogden Soil Conservation Service office. The crew, normally dressed in caps, heavy coats and mittens, did their work in their shirt the sleeves. Although weather was like summer, tlfe snowpack on the headwaters of the Ogden and Weber Rivers was good, and the water content about 140 percent of normal. The report said the snow depth on Ben Lomond Peak is 120 inches compared to 119 inches last year with water content 44.4 inches compared to 38.4 inches last year. Ihe average water content is 29.1 inches making the content 153 percent of normal this year. Ben Lomond Trail, at the base of the mountain has 60 inches of snow compared to 80 inches last year with water content- 20.0 inches which is 127 percent of normal at 15.7 inches. Monte Cristo has 73 inches of snow compared to 63 last year with water content 113 percent of normal at 22.0 inches. Creek At Beaver-Skun- k there was 39 inches of snow with a water content of 14.5 inches or 134 percent of the average of 10.8 inches. Dry Bread Pond has 65 inches of snow compared to 59 inches last year with water content 135 present of normal at 16.0 inches. Sagebrush Flat has 19 inches of snow compared to 21 inches last year with On the Weber River, Horse Ridge has 68 inches of snow with water content 21.8 in- ches compared to 66 inches last year. The average water content is 18.2 inches. Kilfoil Creek has 55 inches of snow with water content 17.0 inches compared to 55 inches of snow last year and 11.6 inches for an average water content. Chalk Creek No. 1 has 81 inches of snow with water content 24.6 inches compared to a normal of 18.0 inches. Chalk Creek No. 2 has 59 inches of snow compared to inches last year with present water ; content 137 percent of normal at 12.2 inches. has 51 inches of snow compared to 41 inches last year with present water content 136 percent of normal at 11.4 inches. Beaver Creek ranger station has 40 inches of snow compared to 31 inches last year with water content this year 163 percent of normal at 7.5 inches. Trial Lake has 100 inches of snow compared to 75 inches last year with water content 152 percent of nor 46 Smith-Morehou- At the head of the watershed, Parley Canyon Summit has 01 inches of snow compared to 64 inches last year with this years water content 106 percent of normal at 16.1 inches. On the Farmington upper course there was 96 inches of snow with a water content of 31.1 inches, or 123 percent of the long-tim- e average at 25.3 inches. Snow depth last year was 88 inches. The lower station in Farmington Canyon had 73 inches of snow compared to 80 inches last year. Water content was 24.8 or 135 percent of average at 18.4 inches. As the winter winds grow colder, the cost of heating a home grows ever higher. To help ease the burden of soaring fuel costs, the U.S. Department of Energy suggests 10 steps to take at little or no cost that can lower home energy costs by about 25 percent. The suggestions will be printed by this newspaper in a series. About half of them cost nothing to carry out. The others require an investment of less than $100. The estimate of savings is based on costs of 5 cents per kilowatt hour for electricity, 37 cents per therm for gas, and 80 cents per gallon for oil. If your fuel costs are higher, your savings will be, too. the winter, you can cut fuel bills by opening shades on the in the morning eastern and southern sides of the house and by closing them late in the day. If it is sunny in the afternoon, you can get additional solar heat by opening the shades on the west side of the house. The shades on the north windows should be kep( shut at all times during the "Wk These signatures are known as "turn around signature patterns. No matter how they are turned around, they look the same. Review the unusual black dots and their placement on the signatures. There is tremor in the signature Elder, but on different small upper looped letters. Alexander Graham Bell the inventor of the telephone. p, What? In It For You? I ? Women's club to meet, Art to discuss finances efits An Updated Ancient Powder Metallurgy: By Kempton H. Roll and Executive Director Metal Powder Industries Federation American Metallurgy Institute A practical answer to fastrising labor and energy costs and the continued escalation of raw materials prices can be found in the rediscovered ancient art of powder metallurgy. PM, as it is known, is a process in which metal powders are saueezed under intense pressure at room temperature, then metallur- gically bonded in a special into strong, often complex shapes. This cost and energy effi- cient technique was prac- ticed long before man learned how to melt and iron. It was used by the Egyptians to make iron tools and by the ancient Incas to fashion precious objects. Today, most metals can be made into powder and by powder techniques. materials features. than generating costly scrap, PM consumes scrap from other metal processes and recycles it into useful powders. That saves raw materials. Other metal forming processes can generate 30 or more scrap energy-savin- g Rather The March meeting of the Lakeview Business and Professional Womens Club will be held at the Country Garden Restaurant, 175 East 200 South, Clearfield, - on Thursday March 13 at 7 p.m. June Moss, a member of the losses, while PM uses 97 or more of the metal powder in the finished PM part. Energy savings averaging 50 or greater are realized by usin lower density pM hi d f f - , we 0densty steel Partsmeans we'2ht savin '7 Lakeview Club, will speak on Financial Problems of Elderly Women. contact For reservations Darlene Davis 376-187- Charlotte Koehler Lorraine Webster 376-876- 0 Your local Army Reserve unit has openings for someone with your experience. Youll enjoy comparable rank, plus pay thats increased almost 20 the last two years If you were a Petty Officer 3rd Class, a Marine Girporal, or a Senior Airman, you aiuld make $80 a weekend or more, serving part time with us. Over $1,200 a year. Just call your Army Representative, m the Yellow Pages under Recruiting" Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite, left his vast fortune to promote world peace and advance knowledge through the Nobel prizes. , Over 21 years experience in Roy w.th-fuma- out cnf,c,n propert.es. Thats important in the ef-fort to hold down prices of such consumer products as cars, appliances and power tools, office copying farm implements chines, and recreational vehicles, just a few of the industries where PM plays a promi-metnent role. Updating an ancient art another way to help prove Americas productiv-metallurg- y ity, ecology and makes PM so vital sufficiency in energy and today are its ecological ben- - raw materials. ma-ca- Kenneth R. Colby mmJ mm INCOME TAX Itemized Forms $11.00 st SERVICE Short Forms NONE TOO DIFFICULT (ANY STATE) $5.00 al All work computer checked, typed and guaranteed correct. For appointment call self-Wh- YOUR STRETCH or 731-58- 38 731-578- 7 DOLLARS!!! FOOD Hie Lowest Prices on Top Qucfrty Meets m the Ogden Volley MORE MEAT FOR LESS MONEY! Groat for Hamburgers, Moat Loaf, Chili, and many more! C SUPER BURGER OR MORE S. 57S SPARE RIDS 5 Lean Strips of Pork iT 57.30)' (10-lB- S. f FRENCH STYLE Csef Ground with Beef Hearts Try and 7Q (o)SV - X youll buy V- 20-l- b. 5 J u 2 BUT EVERYDAY LOW PRICES- !- FREEZE MEAT PRICES BY STOCKING YOUR FREEZER! Boneless 18-lb18-lb- Delicious ARMY RESERVE. T-Bc- Every house is a solar collector. The trouble is, it may be collecting the sun's heat when you don't want it and ne ASST. 100-L- B. liens. MEETTOIWrS & Sirloin Steeks Lb. 570 ...ib. so Broken SSced Cecon Try it and youll buy 20-lb- 2 Lb. Csef Ribs s. s. Asst. Stssks (SOU Asst, loests Burner Super Lean Pork Steaks CAM 60-L12-l30-L- Pork Country Sausage Loon Beef Bits 25-l- Largo A 61-L- b. 68-l- b. Lamb Chops b. Credo Fryers ASST. 400-L- B. M MAM) 30-l- or Cut Up) (W Kola 32-l100-Lb- Ant. Stubs (sue. cm n mam) Asst. Isosts Super Burger Loon Pork Steaks Psrk bung Lnmk or Pork Chops , Loan Beef Ribs Largo A Credo Fryers cutup) Lean Center Cut Pot Rocst 90 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT ANY ITEM BASED ON SUPPLY. OPEN From feet, hands, elbows. Doctors find that hard, thick calluses often can be softened and removed medically. The same ingredient doctors find so effective is available in Medical ForDERMASOFT mula for Hard Callused Skin. 97 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS v. DAYS SAMI AS CASH ON Our new computer digital $cale$ lets PERSONALIZED FRIENDLY SERVICE. D aM$ $200.00 01 1 PORK you $ee the exact weight and price of each cut of meat before it i$ wrapped. RIVERO or 376-406- IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR NAVY, AIR FORCE AND MARINE VETS. In winter. ZFXXill a downstroke, a large lower-looa circle through the downstroke continuing on to write the full name without any breaks. This signature begins with Kent Hunter, left and Sherm Lewis check snow and on precipitation gauge Ogden River watershed. releasing that heat when you do. If you use air conditioning, you can save from $25 to $30 each cooling season by keeping windows closed and shades or curtains tightly drawn, especially on the sunny sides of the house. The ridges or whirls on finger tips do not change from birth until death and decomposition. Scars made on the finger tips remain throughout life, and are valuable for identification purposes. It would be an aid to bankers, lawyers, credit managers, credit card companies, etc., to have a signature card with (1) a cursive signature, or two of their clients and customers, (2) a sentence printed, (3) a copy of personal pattern of making out the face of their checks, (4) written figures, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 0, and of copse (5) a fingerprint and a thumbprint. Quick comparisonawould be possible in cases of suspect forgery. Thomas A. Edison, the inventors signature. SURVEYORS How to save energy without spending money a mal at 20.0 inches. - SNOW Page 7 5, 1980, WHO LI 01 NAIF FM YOUR FXitZIl! CulS (INCLUDES Horn Souooge Ml' A Bacon Smoked, Saoond) 03 V ' |