OCR Text |
Show Relief Socity Socials Post Office Speeds Parcel Post Service "Fuel for Thought' - from Rue Swindlehurst A new, fast, reliable parcel post service was begun Monwestern day over a nine-stat- e area including Boaver, Postmaster Farrer reported today. The new service will enable the window clerk at the Beaver Post Office to tell a mailer when his package will be delivered to any city within the nine states Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. The service will be available to more than 21 million persons in an area of 901,120 square miles. The Beaver Post Office is one of 3,121 post offices which will be linked in the service. wear out ryour ttoactoir eiragnime UteSosre nt gets started. im'tl: Postmaster Farrer noted that Postmaster General Lawrence 1 O'Brien hailed the program as S K lj Use Chevron Starting Fluid. Even at sub zero temperature it starts the biggest J: engines gasoline or diesel in seconds. This'prevents wear the cylinders and rings suffer on slow starts. Saves batteries and money, J You can use Chevron Starting Fluid with a capsule The Chevron cup installation or you can get it in a handy spray can. $; ABOVE ALL ' Either way, it's inexpensive. means service "' Another Motor Fuel starting aid: Chevron Ban-IcIce Preventive. Add a can to your fuel tank and it pre-- 1 vents fuel line icing. For either one give us a call. You . can count on fast delivery. e "postal progress which is highly dependent upon the public's increasing and continuing use of ZIP Code." Timothy May, General Coun sel for the Post Office Department initiated the service at a.m. Monday by mailing a package at Denver to Seattle. Mr. May also spoke Monday to the Denver Mail User's Council on the new service. nine-stat- e The scheduled parcel post service represents the most comprehensive and intricate planning of postal logistics in history, Postmaster Farrer noted. The program has been tested thoroughly and the tests indicate that a high degree of success can be expected, the Postmaster said. 8 ; u , Rue Swindlehurst! 1 5 1 Beaver Milford Your Standard Oil Distributor 438-232- 387-228- arrived home Tuesday after Franklin, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Gillins and completing an LDS Mission in Mr. and Mrs. C.K. Jameson Austria. family spent the weekend in Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roberts Salt Lake and visited the fair spent a few days in Salt .Lake Mrs. Ethel Mathews is in visiting their granddaughter, of California spent the past Karma O'Leary. They also weekend at the home of Mrs. Salt Lake City with her went to the Fair. Lois Hollingshead. mother, Mrs. V.D. Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Turley Mrs. Bessie Pearson and who is ill. of Pioche, Nevada called on daughter, Wynona, went to Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Jamerelatives here, Monday. Tooele, Utah during the week- son spent the weekend at Salt Dan Goff and friend, Miss end for the wedding of Miss Lake taking in the fair and Diane Weening were in town Pamela Robinson. visiting their son and his wife, over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Carter Allen and Colleen Jameson. Allen Dotson, son of Ruth and Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Tomorrow is usually the and the late Dale Dotson, spent the weekend at busiest day of the year. Postmaster Farrer Miners ville emphasi- zed 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 points, without intermediate delays for sorting and Postmaster Farrer said. This is the first scheduled parcel post service on such a The vast, multi state basis. service had previously been put into operation in 26 smaller areas, serving some 80 million people. en-rou- te Le-Fev- re -- Mrs. Bertha Holmes Dies In Cedar City ... one of 28 Chevy pickup models for 1967 Mrs. Bertha Gray Holmes,68 of Cedar City died Sept. 16 in a Cedar hospital following sur gery. She was born March 19, 1898 in St. George to Thomas L. and Charlotte Wood Gray. Married Harry Franklin Holmes, June 15, 1922 in Parowm Solemnized in the St. George LDS Temple. Member of DUP Cedar Survivors: husband, City; sons, Robert G. and Franklin H., both of Cedar City; William Wendell, Mrs. McKay (Mildred) Davis, of Salt Lake; Mrs. E. Lynn (Charlotte) Reed Blackfoot, Idaho; Mrs. Carl (Janet) Parry, Pleasant Grove grandchildren, Twenty - six brother, James M. Gray, Beaver; sister, Mrs. Evan (Myrtle) Seegmiller, Richfield. Funeral services were held Monday, September 19 in the Cedar Eighth LDS Ward. Burial was in the Minersville Cemetery. Handjom. new Flaotsida t.. J) ...:.J' L'.L:C Grouse Hunt Begins Saturday, Sept. 24 Here's the brand new Chevy pickup! Strikingly new in styling, its trim appearance puts many cars to ter. New box provides shame. And tough new body sheet metal resists rust bet new '67 all-ste- better visibility plus many added safety features. The new '67 Chevy pickup looks so good and is built so well you can use it for almost anything! pickup el full-dept- h side panels and tailgate. And the attractive double-wal- l cab inte-riis roomier. Also, there's color-keye- d or NEW LENGTH! MORE LOAD SPACE ON A LONGER WHEELBASEI U jww i i t ii M ' f New jjP ilii itli l i CHEVY'VAR Chevy-Van- t jte IN (W fHHLIAJO In two sizes for s All new for '67 is the Chevy- Van 108 with 108" wheel-bas- e load and the Or Chevy. pick space. Van 90 with cargo area. Both can be equipped 25G-cu.-- ft. 209-cu.-- wiVl ft WW miED '67. . . new V8 H (W WHKUAJD power, tool with hustling V8 power. There's a brand new breed of Chevy trucks at your Chevrolet dealer's, so stop by soon! tmtfnimntM wiitiwwii.......,,.,M,,t1tltttMlt 430553 RON'S CHEVROLET AND EQUIPMENT North Main St. Beaver, Utah Phone 438-56- t will Utah scattergunners starthave their big week-en- d ing this Saturday, September 24, with the opening of season for chuckar, Hungarian partridge, forest and sage grouse. All hunts will open at day light and many hunters are expected to try their luck beis fore the opening week-en- d over. The entire State will be open for chukar and Hungari an partridge with the season on both of these birds contin uing through January 15, 1967. The bag and possession limits are five and ten respectively on each species. Data from last year's hunt shows 16,431 chukar hunters taking 35,335 birds. There were 4,408 hunters out after Hungarian partridge last year and they harvested 12,183 birds. In 1965, 6,005 hunters after forest grouse harvested 8,669 birds. This year's hunt on these birds continues through Oct, 21 with an aggregate bag of four birds and a possession limit of eight. The entire slate is open to forest grouse hunting. This year's sage grouse hunt is limited to Beaver, Duchesne Emery, Garfield, Grand, Iron, Kane, Millard, Piute, San Juan Sevier, Uintah, Wash, and Way ne Counties. In addition, Daggett County east of the Green River and Flaming Gorge Reservoir and Carbon County north and east of Highway 50-and south and east of Highway 6 74 Relief Society will commence In the three Beaver Wards next week and the officers extend an invitation to all the women of the community to attend the opening socials and the weekly meetings. The F;rst Ward Social will begin with a one o'clock luncheon on Wednesday, Sept. 28, at the First-Thir- d Ward. The Second Ward Social will be held Tuesday, Sept. 27, at two o'clock in the Relief Society Room of the Second Ward Church. The Third Ward Social will be held at 2 o'clock on Tuesday, Sept. 27th at the First-Thir- d Ward. These socials are just- - the beginning of a worthwhile and interesting schedule of lessons and activities which will continue until next spring. THE BEAVER (Utah) PRESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1966 1 Alim ininr States ft ssJ ik&akii So V r " 3 - ..- .- A bank is an institution of service in our case, of "Full Service" for you, your family, your business. For whatever your banking service need may be, you'll probably find that at least one of the many services conveniently available here under one roof will meet that need . . . promptly, efficiently, economically. Telephone is pulling ahead in its lengthy battle to keep Utah gophers from controlling the company's underground telephone lines. After the expenditure of many thousands of dollars for underground cable replace ment and the investment of countless in their repair, a new type of "gopher-proo- f man-hou- 1 OUR BANK IS AN INSTITUTION OF "FULL SERVICE" FOR ALL! Telephone Company Notes Progress In Battle With Gophers Mountain pr -- For uFo Service," bank here , . . now! BEAVER CITY BRANCH of the MILFORD STATE BANK rs Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $10,000 coaxial cable has been developed. It has all but eliminated the "gnawing" problem of gophers shorting out the underground telephone lines by chewing through their outer coverings. Referred to as 'H' Cable, this new design in gopher protection consists of alternate layers of hard plastic, corrugated soldered seam steel, thermoplastic cement and polyethylene, each tightly wrapped the telephone wires inside. This formidable arrangement of protection has proved successful where previously-use- d outer coverings were no Utah match for the foot-lon- g gophers. Prior to the development of new outthis highly-resistaer sheath for cacxes, the gopher menace was a very real one for telephone customers in some areas of the state. Richmond, Huntsville, Kaysville, and Richfield were among the areas bothered by the appetites of local gophers. The gophers would chew through the outer coverings of underground gables, allowing water to enter and short out the line, thus interrupting telephone service. The new cable was developed over a number of years in tests actual gopher-gnawin- g conducted at Bell Telephone Laboratories' 212 acre Outside Plant Laboratory at Chester. New Jersey. mm CAROL LANE SHQJLOILCCMfW nt kjf MoNfTri. w act. scye.ii: TW i'sm icoes, school Bases will AlWAS SMAtfS Va)R ROPO. yiEipRjarroFWAy. THC VbcWGSTERS - SAf- CRfIMS R3kCTiCeC. 7 'egoist- - Reduce household annoyance by red and black box-eldbugs by eliminating unwanted female boxelder trees, says Dr. George E. Knowlton, Utah State University Extension Entomologist. Elimination of a single seed producing boxelder tree in the neighborhood often gives marked relief from the bugs, he said. "Spray now to get rid of nymphal and adult boxelder bugs," Dr. Knowlton said. "Control boxelder bugs Extensive indoor use of household sprays makes walls, carpets, curtains and draperies oily. Use your vacuum cleaner to gather heavy indoor infestations." With the arrival of cold weather the winged boxelder bugs seek shelter, many of them crawling Into cracks around doors and windows. Large numbers of bugs even tually get into homes, school rooms and offices, he said. Ti-- r v er are open for sage grouse. Bag and possession limit this year is two and four respectivseason ely during the two-da- y September 24 and 25. Full details on other regulations are available in the 1966 upland game proclamation 53 The 1966 turkey season opens October 1 this year and Utah hunters who have not tried this unique sport will find it a challenge ,to their skill as turkeys are one of the most elusive game birds." Applications for turkey permits are now being accepted at the Cedar City office of the Utah Department of Fish and Games, 622 North Main St, by mail or personal applica tion. These applications must contain the hunter's name, address, game bird or combination license number and check or money order to cover he $3 fee. A zones?. XxW6CrEf2S we stiiL use? Tb vkattcs FRPOM. creep frf(m& i Boxelder Bugs OW With SOtOOLTAu; lb WlOKBti sruREN-r- c rbcbv& pe SCHOOL OfTOfS COURSES, pve& ACHAT ! WVRr Pt ANNOUNCING S - SHE!- . . . OUR ANNUAL FALL FEEDER & STOCKER All IE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1966 Plan now to consign your calves and yearlings to this SPECIAL SALE where competitive bidding will bring TOP prices DELTA LIVESTOCK AUCTION, DELTA, UTAH Located on Main Line Union Pacific Railroad Buyers from several states will be here ... - SALE STARTS AT 10 A.M. - All singles and odd cattle will be sold last BONDED FOR YOUR PROTECTION Delta Livestock Auction DELTA, UTAH Elwin L. Pace, Owner PHONE 864-236- 1 Phone 864-229- 1 |