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Show may 31. 1952 What They're Saying In Washington last Tuesday to begin economizing in terms of dollars instead of pennies. After a consultation with representatives of the Post Office Department and the General Accounting Officeie announced his plans to1 introduce a bi. calling for the gradual dissolution of the Postal Savings System. As a member of the Senate Post Office and Civil Service committee, Sen. Bennett has long believed that the PSS is no longer needed to accomplish the purpose for which it was established. In 1910 Sen. Bennett said, the system 'was needed to attract the savings of potential small depositors who lacked confidence in the private banking system or whose cided , TWO SCORE AND f (t O, tutions. non-essenti- ers V J 39-ye- ar I Beal Estate lor Sale New Listingl CLEARFIELD Attract. frame with full Bsmt., gas heat, carpeting, garage, nice yard, 14 fruit trees, Irrig. water, choice Res. area. Asking $11,950.00. 2-b- dr. wall-to-wa- ll Nice Home, Good Location. shake, extra Bdr, in full Bsmt, garage, car- CLEARFIELD 2-B- dr. pet, gas range, fridge, auto washer. $10,500.00. Want a Home CLEARFIELD a Little Ground? Let us show frame you this modern with Bsmt., gas heat, Approx. 2 acres choice farm land. Only 2-B- dr. - $9,950.00, New CLEARFIELD frame, Attach, garage, gas heat, 2-b- dr. Lg. lot, $9,000.00. DOES YOUR WORK take you to OGDEN ? Were sure you will brick like this Attract. home in choice new home area in South Ogden. This lovely home, just 3 yrs. old, has fullI Bsmt., gas heat. Clean as a pin Owner must sell before June 15th. This 2-b- dr. $8,-457,0- 33. Vi 'X $4"- , - ' T1 V ' j u is A REAL BUY at $10,050. Dont miss this opportunity. w Sv , v.w ss yv sva f Let us show you this shake bungalow. Attract. It has Attach, garage, gas heat, Lg. spacious kitchen; house completely decorated. Youll love it LAYTON 4 jS 2-b- dr. O. WALLER, 81, of New Baltimore, N. Y. received an DR. PERCY award as the states outstanding general practitioner of 1951 at the ty annual dinner of the Medical York. Dr. New of the State of Waller, who has practiced medicine in New Baltimore 57 years, still uses a horse to answer calls on wintry days. He holds a picture of motor buggy he once drove on his rounds. (International) So-cie- of the states provide in their laws that United States citizenship is mandatory before a license to prac-- 1 tice can be issued. and it is only $9,250.00. - Youre sure to like of these Attract. frame homes with full Bsmts, gas heat. Both have garages. One has an extra Bdr. in Bsmt. Lots of extras. Dont fail to see these. Asking $11,200.00 and $11,950.00. LAYTON- one 2-B- dr. BARLOW REALTY LAYTON REALTOR Layton ... . Phone Kays. 755 1 Beck Sibbett, 779 Mitchell 430-J- 1 Barlow 357-J- 4 355-R1- Alene Sessions entertained dinner on Thursday evening. TVIrs. at - Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Beecher at- tended a funeral in Malta, Idaho on Monday and visited with friends. Sprina Holdout OLD GLORY' WAVES AT THE POLE T- - y .v VWy f Club Any statement that this is a young mans world can be successfully challenged by the International Smelting & Refining Company plant at Tooele, where an employee with less than 20 years of service falls into the Johnny come lately category. Originally designed to handle According to T. K. Voyer, plant ore from Bingham, the plant copper personnel head, International is well above the average as far as started smelting lead ores in 1911 of employees with long service is con- and producing zinc, in the form flotaselective concentrates from cerned. Of a total of 579 regular or 211, have been tion, in 1934. Today, copper proemplqyees, with the company for 20 years or duction is a secondary operation, or 163, have 25 years and the plant turns out monthly more; of service; or 77, started with eight to nine million pounds of lead bullion and 4,500,000 pounds of zinc International 30 years ago and in the form of zinc concentrate. or 22, go back 40 years or more. Slag Processed Statistical Figure In 1941 the company started to To make the statistical picture zinc from lead blast furrecover even more impressive, nine emnace slag. Some 400,000 tons of ployees started in 1910 with International even before the plant was dump slag havein been processed addition to all first operated, as a copper smelter. since that date, currently produced. Dean of the old timers is Hugh slag International takes pride in its J. Gowans, head assayer, who was record, which Mr. Voyer ata member of the original surveying safety tributes in part to the good examparty that laid the groundwork for ple set by the old timers. In 1950 construction in 1908 when the plant the company received the Joseph was still in the blueprint stage. H. Holmes Safety Assn, awagi for Mr. Voyer is enthusiastic over progressive decline in accident rate. the work records of Internationals Over a 10 year period the rate had long-tim- e new- dropped from 43.875 accidents per employees. A comer himself, with, just 15 years million man hours worked, to 7.875 of service, Mr. Voyer believes the accidents. The figure for 1951 is Older men maintain a high degree about the same as for 1950. of efficiency, show outstanding deUnusual Record pendability and are tops in undercomes In summing up the reasons for standing- of a job that Internationals unusual employee largely from years of experience. 4 . , i record, Mr. Voyer said: Its hard ... to put your finger on the reason, M I guess you can trace it all to the of General but superintendent , a is Carlos the fact International is a good , Tooel Bardwell, plant man who started with in- place to work and Tooele a good ternational the day after he was place in which to live. As a result, e per Eraduated from the University of they stay with us. Fifty-fivto him, the plant cent of our men own their own "was" constructed to replace the homes and 68 fathers hae sons Highland Boy copper smelter in who are fellow employees. Our men Sait Lake Valley which closed down. consider this a permanent job. 37, 28, 13, I al The Bennett billf which has not In the meantime, Sen. Bennett yet been fully drafter, will not chop was informed late Friday that a off the traditional system immedi- public hearing will be held Wedately but will prohibit the Post Of- nesday on S. J. Res. 130. This is fice Department from accepting the proposed constitutional amenddeposits after the effective date of ment, introduced by Sen. John the act. An orderly liquidation of Bricker (R.t Ohio) and the PSS over two or three years both Sen. Bennett and Sen. by will follow the cutoff date. Arthur V, Watkins, which states In 1950, the PSS showed a deficit specifically that- executive agree-mtnt- s shall not be made in lieu of of $32(5,024 with an ever larger d congress-approveadtreaties and outlay going to salaries and ministrative costs paid for from that no treaty or executive agreethe general Post Office appropria- ment shall alter or abridge laws tion. Extra expenses of the Post of the United States or the constiOffice allocated to the PSS and ap- tutions or laws of any of the 48 states. propriated by congress totaled Monthly withdrawals exIn light of the growing arrogance ceeded deposits by $15,000,000 in of the past two Democratic presi 1950 and $26,000,000 in 1951. dents, it has become necessary to spell out from time to time just THREE YEARS AGO what the chief executive can and cannot do. The Yalta agreement and similar executive action dem onstrated the need for such an Hugh J. Gowans, amendment. head assayer at International Sen. Bennett pointed out two reSmelting & cent examples of how treaties can Refining Co. Tooele plant, is over-rid- e domestic law. The Calioldest employee fornia courts recently declared with 43 years their own alien land laws invalid service. He is because their provisions against shown here using balance so certain orientals holding property delicate it can were contrary to the United Naweigh a pencil tions charter. Since the UN charline on paper. has Company ter is, under existing conditions, a exceptional treaty, the courts said that it took number of precedence over other laws. employees with long employThe second example noted by the ment records. Utahn is the pending treaty with Israel which specifies that alien professional men can practice in the United States without regard to citizenship, even though most Smelter ioasts Super Top Family Doctor up. Seeking Permanent Job? Id-Yim- 7 communities lacked other savings Economy cannot be accomplishfacilities. Now that the government ed by mere percentage reductions, stands behind deposits up to Sen. Bennett said. All small depositors have segovernment programs must be curity. Then, too, almost every eliminated and here is one which community in the United States is no longer needed to accomplish has local or nearby savings insti- the purposes for which it was set $10,-(H)O.O- Wallace F. Bennett '(R., Utah) de- . THE JOURNAL N 4, C Av vV'S Carolyn Norton, of Hyattsvllle, McL, always watches TWO-YEAR-OL- D f expedition that landed their equipped transport plane at the geographic North Pole are shown planting the Stars and Stripes atop an oil drum cairn. An Air Force flag flies beside it This Is the first picture of the expedition that made historys first successful landing at the Pole. Glass jars at base of drums contain dated notes which the Air Force hopes will contribute to knowledge of Arctic Ocean currents when found at later date. TWO MEMBERS OF THE U. S. AIR FORCE ski-and-wh- eel the birdie or at least after the birdie, when she visits her Grandma In Washington. D. C; Here, Carolyn presents a nice fat worm to the baby robin that has taken up residence on Grandmas window sill. It wont be long before her little feathered friend finds cut for himself where the worms come from. (International) |