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Show V if j: : c , , ' : -v k i , . I ,- y .vh , ;v$) ' ' the CACHE VALLE IAUTY n. a IV UTAH $4221 LEWISTON, THURSDAY, SEPT. B, i laCdtktC House Okehs h River t V recommen-fo- r public works by jhn) House Appropriations committee recently was mon-M- r for further Investigation of the 'Bear River Project in Idaho and Utah. The committee recommended 8174,000 for the Idaho-Uto- h project phase and 174J)00 tor the second phase of the project i Ich would be primarily in i mh. The project includes a high dam in the Oneida Narrows on the Bear River along with othOr storage resarvdra and candle. Oner reservoirs uded In the EXECUTIVE COUNCIL View High School this Of Secretory; Dario Taylor, man; Demis Watkins, ton, vice chairman. The 'Eaeouttvs CbonoU, sponsored year. Adrison ar In tifepidi the flmt aaaenfaty of and Glen Ottversoo. Men; Janet Carina, ritfd, Brent Lundburg, Attttles; Pari I fa in-wo-rk Stake Music Drive Committee Named Adult Ed to Start Mrs. Douglas .Hendricks of hat bean named chairman of the Benson stake area tor the Cache Valley , Civic Mnii organisation. held will be at Sky View' and In South Cache far the annual Adult Education classes held in the Cache conjunction with .Utah State County School District Registration' will start at 7:90 p.m. at both places. According to Ray Cannon, director of Adult Education for the district a minimum of IS persona must register for earn class being offered university. Working with Mrs. dricks are Mrs. Calvin Funk, Richmond area; Mrs. Reed Rawlings, Trenton area; Mrs. McKay Raidings, Cornish area, and Mrs. Harold Pond, Lewiston area. The following courses will be offered: Beginning ' and advanced knitting, Leah Carlson; beginning and advanced knitting, Leak Pond; English end history combination, Horace ; Carlson; Spanish, Keith welding, Richard Campbell; furniture upholstering, Arthur Collins; beginning and advanced type, Tex Johnson; Grant business machines. council on the new service. ..The "I stole parcel poet service sents the moot live and Intricate plahningof postal logistics in history, The program has been tested thoroughly and the teats indicate mat a high degree of success' can be expected. R cant be emphkslxed too much that the program is dependent on ZIP code. The program is achieved at virtually no additional cost because ZIP code usage means that the mail can be dispatched directly between the 75 sectional centers in the nine states, which are mail massing prints, without Intermediate delays enroute for sorting and redirecting. This is the first scheduled parcel post service on such a vast multi-stat- e basis. The service had previously beat put into operation in 28 small' er areas, saving some 80 million people. When you bring your pared! in for mailing and you dont know the ZIP code we will be very happy to give you the ZIP numbers, workers said. Below la a list of ZIP coda numbers for the following post offices. Cove New Postal Service Piid Jeffrey Sta of Mr. and Mrs. Grant e( will have an artide a of The West The artide wtil be On. The and will be en-Batt- ie the (amass last battle at Mr. aeempraheMive study of Jt Ctay-son- . states-Ari-zo- na, ing. Brough. The service will be availAlso, body conditioning for able to more than 12 Mi milwomen, Karen Balling; swim- lion persons in an area of ming for men and women, 901,120 square miles. There Victor Jensen; oil painting, are 3121 post offices that will Kenneth Roe; Ceramics, Kenneth Roe; general sewing, Donna Stafford; general sewing, Da Bradshaw; tailoring, Ha Bradshaw; fundamentals of math, Paul Evans; bookkeeping, Melvin Russell; shorthand, Rena Tyson. In those classes which meet a minimum registration instruction will begin Am (Continued on page 4) be linked in the service Lewiston Postmaster Alva Boman said of the program as Postal progress which Is highly dependent upon the publics Increasing and continuing use of ZIP code. Timothy May, general counsel for the Post Office Department, initiated the service at 8 a.m. Monday by mailing a package at Denver to Seattle, fcr. May also spoke Monday Martin Gets UP&L District Post Here Utah Power A light Company today promoted Burton Preston division CLMartln to succeed A. N. (Scotty) Vendell who retires OfMHf L E. A Hunter, UPAL assistant manager, said the effect September 2?end that Mr. Martin win be responsible tor com operations in Preston comprising southern Idaho, northern Utah and a small area in eastern Wyoming. Mr. Martin, a native of Preston, Joined UPAL in 1961 as a bookkeeper at Montpel He later worked as a in Rexburg and Preston, and since 1968 he has served as sales manager for Preston, division. Mr. Vendell joined UPAL in 1917 and will end a career with the electric utility. He was appointed Preston division manager in June; Martin has been a member of Preston Klwanis Chib for 12 years and was named in president of the local January. He is an active member and former Exalted Ruler of the Preston Elks Mir. $8,-38- 9, e. For families in the $10,000-a-ye-ar Eldon Stage Food Dinner , Utah include: (The budget figure is in parentheses when mare is a variance; only one figdre is given when budget ant committee recommends-tlod- s ' are Identical) .2 ' Idaho Construction (Engineers) : Dworshak Reservoir $20,000,-000- ;' Heise Roberts extension $43MX)0; Portneuf Rivw A Marsh Creek $2.000,000. General investigations (Engineers): Asotin Lode ' Columbia-Nort- h Pacific Region 8417,000; Palouse Rlv- rmooo: Portneuf .Rivw $moar Salman River,1 Chil lis $10,000; Spokane River, and 0; . (Bureau): $115,-00- 0. h $20,-00- 0; The Reflef Society Distribution Center, servic-NEW DISTRIBUTION CENTER ing North Cache Valley, wus opened this week on North State in Preston, ii wil be managed by Mrs. Lode Ohoules. The hours tor the center will be from U am to 5 pm. The Citixen Photos Citizen Earns Second Place The front page of The Cache Citizen, August 11, 1986, has been chosqn as sc ond place winner in the Front Page of the Month1 competition for August.. The monthly judging is conducted by faculty members of the Communications Department at Brigham Young University. More than 50 weekly newspapers in Utah are analysed each month. Winners are selected on the basis of their use of headlines, ypography, , placement and landling of stories and illustrations, and reproductions. Wlnnw of this month's competition was The Sprlngville Valley .'.'ll! Elect New Officers Officers tor the Boys and Girls League at the Lewiston Junior , high school were named Friday with Roland Griffin presidant of the Boys organization and Jeanette of the GoodseU. president Girls League.;, Othw officers of the Boys League Include Brad vice president; Paul . secretary-treasurer- ;' Murray Larson, ninth Curtis Kade representative; aeventh grade representative, and David Anderson, eighth grade representative. vr, The young men will have the responsibility of running the affairs tor the boys tor the 1968-6-7 yew. Vernon Park is the faculty advliw. Othw officers In the Girls League Include Jone Clark, vice president; Carle Lapray, secretary; Darlene Butters, ninth grade representative, Jody Lawrence, eighth grade representative, aeventh grade represen tative. The will have charge of tho jjlrb throughout the yew and grint Valentine's Day dance lerald.' assembly. ariTnil A Lewiston student entered his wise Holstein cow in the Utah State Fair recently and came home with the Grand Champion ribbon along with seven other blue ribbons for the one animal He has been Invited to show the animal In the Junior show in Vermont The student was Jerry son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Simmonds of Lewiston. The cow won the grand n in the Holstein-fourt- h an . Sim-end- s, year herd rating of 88 out of a possible 97. He has hem active in dairying tor 10 years with Ms! dairy herd and also has an FFA sugarbeet project He will be a student at Utah State University this fall on an Union Pacific scholarship. See Picture Page 8 4-- H s- . Auxiliary Sob InrinllnHin dess. 4--H He received right blue ribbons from the Hristein-Frielan association. The Judge was Prof. Robert J. Selkirk from Fresno College In Fresno, Calif. Terry has a herd of 17 registered Holstein cows with a The Lewiston American Legion Auxiliary will Install new officers during the annual membership banquet Friday. The banquet will be brid at 7:80 p.m. Mrs. Nathan Anderson president of the auxiliary, said that all auxiliary bars and ben are asked to attend. . . Sob Utoticg A meeting will bo held Wed- nesday for all depqeiton of Prudential Savings and Lon association. The meeting will be held at ' 10:30 a.m. In the basement of the Franklin county ZIP code numbers and we can give you these numbers upon request ed ' IN SALT LAKE LEWISTON Mr. and Mrs. C. MARTIN . ' 25j)0Q. Oties such as Pocatello, Oghave ninmiN -- Construction Mann Greek project $1,946,000. Bureau Loan program: King Hill Irrigation District, - Russ Layne spent the past week in Salt Lake and Ogden as guest of Rex Layne, lire. David Layne of Ogden and Bishop Brandt Layne. They attended the State Fair, the Ice Follies and alio tho Festival Polynesia at the Highland high idiunl. ! J den, and Salt Lake City A graduate 1 by The Lewiston Fourth ward General Investigations (BuElders quorum held a misBear Rivw, with reau): nmd sionary raising banquet Utah, $174,000; CriumMa-NortFriday, under the direction of Pacific compreregion the Elders quorum presiden- hensive with Oregon, survey, cy. Columbia Rivw genMembers of the presidency $460,000; eral studies, - with C are Jerry Jorgensen. Leins $100,000; Lower Snake River Wiser and 'Denton Coleman with Basin, Washington, and Garth LeFevre, secreSouthwest Idaho water tary. $240,000; Uppw The chef Was Hen Stocks, development, Snake Rivw, $162,000, and and special musical numbers were riven by Darlis Noble Upper Snake, Jackson Lake storage, and Lorraine Hawkes of replacem ' Franklin. (Omtinued at page 4) Borgeson' multi-number- ) - Prudential ." (rf Utah State Mr. College, Agricultural Martin is active in Civic affairs. A member of the Preston Chamber of Commerce and Preston Golf and Country Chib, he has served as a dir- - recommended tributaries Me-Knlg- Mr.. Martin and hie wife, Colleen, are the parents of three Children. The family lives at 281 East 2nd South, Preston. 49-yea-r 19SS. postal - services as in 1965 will cost situation, they point to heavy residents of the local area government mending, union some $1,893,000 more this year pressure for big waffs hikes, at present price levels. shortage of labor, factories Creeping Inflation in the running at near maximum capast 12 months has boosted pacity and the huge consumthe cost of food, housing, er demand for ail kinds of transportation, medical care commodities. Although many pepole think and other necessities by over 2.8 percent, according to the that higher food prices were . government composite find- - Chiefly responsible for the rise in the cost of living, they were ings. a breakdown shows. They It was the biggest rise In not, accounted tor only a fourth , many years. By way of com- of it The cost of services inparison, the Increase in the creased nearly twice as much.' cost of living from 1963 to Fortunately for most Cache 1964 was only 1.4 percent and, tunty families, their incomes in the following year, 1 perhave been going up at a faster V cent. , ,? than consumer prices, The sudden surge upward pace so that they have been able has the experts worried.' Once to maintain their standard of real inflation gets under way living. It tends to spiral upward, past Those on pensions or other experience shows. et income, however, have As to the Inflationary forces.,had to tighten their betts that have created the present somewhat J the committee la Idaho and $30,-00- He Is currently assisting In the Itorary at Utoh State University end Is ,411 celpost service was begun on Monday over a nine-stat-e western area Including Cache Valley. The ftew service will enable the post office workers to tdl a mailer when his package will be delivered to any city within the nine Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyom- (Special to the Cache Valley Citizen) In Cache county, as in most other parts of the country, the cost of living is several per cent higher today than it was a year ago. On the basis of the latest Labor Department findings, the average local family need a approximately gi66 more per year than it did in 1968 to buy the same amount of goods and services. That is the size of the increase tor a family that has a net, after-to- x income of which is the local aver-ag- category, an additional on dfffwdpiy $280 Is needed and, for those a dim on Cub River. the $4,000 level, $104. Oe' amounts recommended atAn told, to purchase the the same as suggested President's budget ap-- same amount of goods and StadoatCai Story 7 - mps Money war include, seated, left to iy court-hous- e. ' ' BOYS LEAGUE OFFICERS Instiled as officers of. Lewiston Junior Hiffi School's Boys League for 398967 are from left to rigrt, Brad McKnlght, Murray Larson,' Curtis Taylor, Roland Griffin, David Antler-mem Stotd nantMinw Aiuf Vimn Pack. arkHtw GIRLS LEAGUE OFFICERS First row, Terri Jeanette Goods cil, Carle Laprey. Second row: Jody Lawrence, Darlene Butters, Jaw Clark, Marilyn (Griffith aitviinr. Tadbot, Items to be presented to thuf grou? will be the increasing ' of capitalisation of the aaaV' elation and moving the prior cipal office from ta f Ritrlow V |