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Show I I 1973 Thursday. F ebruary 22, Sun Chronicle coi Ceisnjrui0ir You can help your Nations energy conservation efforts, live comfortably, and save money too. Each of us can help accomplish these worthwhile ends - on a daily basis in our own homes, and where we work, according to Darrell M. Trent, Acting Director of the of Office Presidents Emergency saves oil, gas and coal. Save energy, and you save money. Preparedness. All we need to do is d practice conservation habits that help save energy. As our country continues to grow, we must face up to the fact that energy of many kinds is in short supply, Mr. Trent says. Its time to tighten our fuel belt and stop wasting electricity and heat. This in turn Nation can keep warm, get to work, and keep industry humming with much less energy than is now being used. An OEP energy conservation study shows that there are many ways you can help conserve fuel and electric energy at home, on the road, and on the job. Here are some: America now consumes about 29 percent of its energy in industry, 25 percent in transportation, including getting back and forth to work, 21 percent for residential and commercial purposes, and 25 perBut the cent for utilities. - Weatherstrip and caulk around windows and doors. Properly applied, this can keep out cold air and seal in warm air so effectively that your familys heating bill can be cut 15 to 30 percent. Its easy and inexpensive to install weatherstripping at moveable joints and to caulk the frames of all windows and doors. Keep at it until you find that in quite cold weather light but excessive fog or moisture occurs occasionally on windows on the downwind side. When that point is reached you will not only have accomplished substantial heat savings but will have provided the proper Employer of Year being sought ployer division is limited to firms or individuals who employ more than 200 employees. The small employer category is for employers with 200 or fewer employees. Nominations for this years Employer of the Year Awards are now being received by the Governors Committee on Employment of the Han- dicapped. According to Maurice War-shaCommittee Chairman, two Utah employers will receive Employer of the Year Awards for promoting gainful employment for Utahs handicapped citizens. The awards are given to one large employer and one small. Eligibility in the large em- - The two awards LeBaron, Executive Secretary, Utah Governors Committee on Employment of the Handicapped, 1202 University Club Building, 136 East South Temple, Salt Lake City. Utah 84111. at the annual meeting of the Governors Committee to be held on April 11. The Utah winners will be eligible to compte with other state winners for national honors to be presented by the Presidents Committee on All nominations must be received or postmarked not later than March 23, 1973. Liquid Slender Miracle Whip Folgers Coffee interior wood sash registered a warm 59 degrees, metal, a chilly 32 degrees. A costly 22 percent more heat was lost through metal windows with an 80 percent glass area than through wood sash windows of the same size. of 20 degrees, Also, weatherstripped wood windows with insulating glass stayed free of condensation in outdoor temperatures of 30 degrees below zero, while moisture formed on metal sash windows in temperatures of 20 degrees above. - Keep your heating and air conditioning equipment in top operating efficiency. Vacuum dust and lint from air intake registers. Replace your furnace air filters every two to four months or when they become loaded with dust or lint. Have the heat exchange surfaces of your heating plant cleaned when needed and have the combustion air adjustment checked or improved by service professionals. -- ""TZ7 Yel Detergent Lucerne 'Choc Fresh Mint Liquid Carnation Diet Food Kroft Salad Dressing Jar i. Nominations, or requests for further information, should be directed to Charles be will Han- dicapped. presented zzr Instant Employment of the humidity conditions for your comfort. - Install storm windows or insulated glass to cut in half the heat that is needlessly lost through the windows in your house. This extra window investment will pay for itself within 10 years, and there after return you an annual divident of 13 to 18 percent or more in areas of the United States where the average winter temperature is lower than 45 degrees. - Increase insulation in your attics and walls when possible. You cannot afford to have less than the equivalent of six inches of good thermal insulation over your ceiling. - Install wood sash windows whenever possible. Wood is a poor conductor of heat and moisture and therefore an exIn cellent nature insulator. comparative tests with other sash and frame materials, wood rated a much better insulator than metal. In tests with an outdoor temperature in) Chocolate Flavored II.' IT Canned Hams Sliced Bacon Chunk Bologna Small Turkeys Turbot Fillets Fully Cooked, Safeway Boneless and Waste Free From Icy Greenland O lb. Tom Turkeys 0) Fryer Breasts iTo a Grade A Fryers 92" g!1 ZZ' . :"' Turkey Roast Boneless Hams 49 lb. Pkg. 45 BoundSfetjks.w, 36" Bar-- S u 79 Chou O A Pur No By The Norbest or Manor House 5 to 7 Lbs. Piece o)c Ql lb. Chose 95" 1.14 1.69 1.14 w Sr IOw'i Fat Added kf i;i9 u.73" Pork Party Roast Suit. is. 1.19 Skinless Wieners Fish & Cheese Whole Hog Sausage Bravo Beef Tacos (omIUhv jCailOpS 98" lb. 1.49 .129 Greater 98" I Vicks Cough Drops 'si,, fapT Cherry, Blue Mint or Medicated tt4 Fancy Bananas Idaho Russets Canned Beverages All Purpose Potatoes Fine Quality Safeway US. No. .9. Cragmont Regular or Diet Can " '. Captain' Chose Soafood trodd A Fully Coekd 98", Lamb Rtli Chops chLl .VJST Leg O' Lamb Discounts Box Grade A U.S.D.A. Fryer-Roast- Can 9.06 USOA. Boneless Hams Ground Turkey ,.. 3 Mb. Wieners S Sterling Brand Can Short Ribs of Beef Bar-- Morrells Golden Crisp Label 5lb. Can 3 66 r;r.r,BuA A (P)'C jJ Navel Oranges L. (09 Mb. 4 AO WO I09 Sue 10,. 99" Grapefruit 1 Selected Sit Fancy Carrots Jumbo Celery 38" 38" The Totai Discount Machine "fib Fudgesicles Band Box Ice Milk Deluxe Pack Frozen Dessert alfoiS Half. Gallon Pack Safeway Panty Hose Micro Compare With Any Brand QPepperori Pizza G Sausage Pizza Swanson Meat Pies 'lZ .14 0 Z 96" Combination Pizza 64" Bel-a- ir 24" New On All Matching Completer r.yo t Open Sts.k Guarantee Piece QNiblets Corn 34" 0 Rice Medley tZ 35" Orange Juice t Oipey erk 'Tooele, 'Orem, 'Roosevelt, Mt, Pleasant, Richfield, 'Price, Payson, 'Vernal, 'St. George, Spanish Fork, Cedar City, 'Provo, Tremonton, 'Loga.i, 'Ogden, 'Roy,- 'Brigham City, 'Layton, 'Murray, Heber City. WYOMING Kemmerer, Evanston, 'Rock Springs. 'These Stores Open Sunday Baggies Plastic MAROAtINE PI. letail Prices ttk 4 OTtydey lew Iwel JT -j- iSApWif 'Sandy, 'Bountiful, 'Midvale, Son&rfich Bags noc LJcJ A w leva! Effective At Safeway Discount In All Of These Towns: 'Salt Lake City, 'Granger, 'Magna, Green Peas lovors Large serving bowl Only 2 99 No purchase necessary This Advertisement Weight Watchers Heath Ice Cream Bars Lucerne Ice Cream This week on The true test of total discounts Come see lot vourseit . . . DISCOUNTING IN ALL DEPARTMENTS is the reason everyone's food cost Is much less at SAFEWAY DISCOUNT Air price M " CIS Me - 10c State in Utah torw Wyamktf Stares. tai Imlvded Toe in Priest A Ifsmt Effsetivs Today Thru Wednesday, February 38, 1973 corviGxr imo irtwr ljl FMclfoJ ul stoim iNCOrono tomes - In homes and apartments without storm windows, close This draperies at night. results in some deflection of drafts and mere comfort. A little heat may also be saved. - Regardless of where you live and work, turn off electric lights, TV, radio and other electric utilities when they are not needed. Every kilowatt-hou- r saved is a benefit to you and your country. Try to avoid prolonged use of major appliances during peak-use- " times - in the early morning and during late afternoon and early evening. Denise Hammon Phone 825-947- 4 Ben W. Barger, manager of the United Tire Co. was injured Tuesday afternoon by an exploding tire that was being inflated for repairs. He was listed in good condition at St. Benedicts Hospital after un- arm dergoing Tuesday night. surgery He also received facial injuries. He was released from the hospital Saturday. Sympathy is extended to Mrs. Virge Packer in the death of her sister, Mrs. Ollie Mantlo Bowen, of Beaver Dam, Box Elder County. Mrs. Bowen died in a Mesa, Arizona, hospital of a heart attack. Funeral services were held Thursday in the Beaver Dam Ward chapel with Bishop James Parkinson officiating. Burial took place in the Beaver Dam Cemetery. Timothy H. Stettler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Stettler has earned the rank of Eagle Scout. He is a member of Troop 306, sponsored by the Sunset Fifth Ward. Timothy is a high honor roll student at Sunset Jr. High. There were lots of new babies on the scene in the Sunset area the past week. Proud parents of a baby girl born Feb. 9 at the McKay Hospital are Mr. and Mrs. Clint Opheikens. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dnpps are parents of a baby boy born at McKay Hospital on Feb. 10. Mr. Mrs. and Gilbert Gabaldon are parents of a baby boy born Feb. 12 at St. Benedicts Hospital. On Valentines Day, a new bby girl made her debut at the St. Benedicts Hospital to ' proud parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Dayle Jellings are parents of a baby boy born Feb. 15 at the McKay Hospital. Congratulations to all the proud parents of these new babies. Of interest to her many friends in Sunset is the engagement and upcoming marriage of Miss Rebecca Koster to Randall John Zaugg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Zaugg of Syracuse. The bride-to-b- e is a daughter of Robert D. Kister, Sunset, and Mrs. Betty S. Koster, Provo. An early August wedding in the Salt Lake Temple is being planned, after which they will be honored at a reception at the Syracuse LDS Stake Cen- ter. Miss Koster is a graduate of Clearfield High and LDS Her fiance was Semiaary. also graduated from Clearfield High and Seminary and is presently attending school in South Carolina. He served an LDS Mission in North Carolina and Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Garcia and daughter, Jennifer, were week-envisitors of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Garcia and family. - Check has been stationed at Chanute AFB, Illinois, with the Air Force Reserves. He will return to Illinois to finish his training, while his wife, Marcene, and baby will return to Cedar City where she is attending Southern Utah State College. The Sandridge Camp of DUP met on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Nola Kimber. The lesson entitled The Apportioning Land was given by Bonnie Jenkins. After the lesson refreshments were served to e Hansen, Bonnie Jenkins, Nola Kimber, Flora eibaurj Kathryn Brady, Norma Dalton, and Louella Carver. Among those absent were Cora Wilson, Lucy Smith, Ruth Larsen, and Donna Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Jerold Dalt"i were among members of the Wasatch Riders Club who toured the Utah Historical Society Building in Salt Lake City, with Dr. Glen Leonard, one of the directors of the society. The Davis County Teen Club injoyed a tubing party at Morgan on Sautrday night which was hosted by Morgan teens. Don W.lkey from Davis County and Steve Burmngham from Morgan were in charge d Ber-niec- 4-- of the event. The Belle Ain.es Club met at the Mansion House on Saturday evening for dinner. The husbands of the members were guests of honor. They included Mr. and Mrs Gene Burns, Mr. and Mrs Boyd Call, Mr. and Mrs. Jack DeWitt, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Egbert, Mr. and Mrs. Osmer Knight, Mr. and Mrs. June Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Moffitt, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Perry, Mr. and Mrs. Glendon Porter, Mr. and Mrs. Georp Reid, and Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Stettler. The Sunset 3rd Ward held a ward dinner on Saturday evening. It was sponsored by the scouts. A special event of the evening was the presentation of the Eagle Scout Award to Blair Bateman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bateman. Mr. and Mrs. Verdun Nicholas and son, Randy, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Nicholas and children, Kelly and Troy, and Mr. and Mrs. Brent Nicholas and son, Brandon, enjoyed dinner at Papa Quongs Pier 54 restaurant in Salt Lake recently in honor of Verdun Nicholass birthday niversary. On Friday and Saturday an- the Stake Presidency, all high souncilmen, and all bishoprics and their wives from the Sunset Stake attended a Bishops Seminar and training session held at Coveys Little America Motel in Salt Lake. On Friday evening they enjoyed seeing a Stars basketball game. On Saturday morning while the men were meeting, what ladies did 6me shopping,'and Saturday afternoon they had the privilege of hearing Mrs. Marvin O. Ashton speak on grajiousness. They also attended a fashion show put on by Clearfield. On Saturday evening, they all met together in the conference room of the motel for a social hour where sandwiches and ligut refreshments were served. Steven Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Anderson, visiting spent the week-en- d with his parents. He is serving in the Air Force and is stationed at Lowry AFB, Den- ver, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. Conroy Whipple from Fort Huahuca, Ariz , visited with his mother, Mrs. Florence Whipple, and family. They were on their way to Rigby, Idaho, where Mrs Whipple will stay with her parents while Conroy is in Florida attending school for two months. Conroy is in the Air Force. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Anderson and family are moving from the Sunset area. His work has transferred him to Denver, Colorado. They will be missed by their many friends in Sun- set. Duwain Larsen spent Sunday in Ephriam to help celebrate his fathers 75th bir- thday anniversary. Dr. and Mrs. E.O. Larsen and family spent Friday and Saturday in Salt Lake where Dr. Larsen attended a dental seminar. They attended the Stars basketball game on Friday evening. Dr. Larsen attending meetings, and they returned spent Saturday home Satw day night. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wood and family visited in Pocatello, with Idaho, over the week-en- d Mrs. Woods sister and family, Mrs. and Mrs. Ben Hair. Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Kendall r.nd family spent the week-envisiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Barfuss of Downey, Idaho. enjoyed also They snowmobiling. Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Jenkins were her parents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Pitcher, of Smithfield, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jensen and daughter, Paula, of Trenton, Scott Heiner of Morgan, David Howard Williams and Rawlings, both of Ogden. Jeff Jenkins recently returned home from a mission to Spain and he gave his mission report at Sacrament meeting. They all returned to the Jenkins home after the meeting for dinner. d |