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Show V JANUARY 12, 1983 V U(73' Mr. and Mrs. Glen Walker entertained Christmas Eve for their traditional Walker family party with 39 family members attending. WT VX', 4ft- Mr. and Mrs. Verl A. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Craig Taylor and children were guests Christmas Eve of Mr. and Mrs. Craig Fisher and family. Mr. and Mrs. LaVar Godfrey, Mr. and Mrs. Joe F. Thome visited in Magna with his brother, LaMar Thorne Mrs. Joseph S. Hill were their daughter and family, Brian and and with her sister and Rebecca Fielden and three Mr. and Mrs. brother-in-laJack Ahlquist and in West Valley City with Mrs. Evelyn Thome. Mr. and Mrs. Ly'e Porter of Weston, Ida., were holiday guests at the home of their son. Bishop and Mrs. Gary Porter and family. daughters of Lakewood, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Ham- mer and daughter Mary of Rapid City, South Dakota spent Christmas in Kaysville with their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Ferdon. Mr. and Mrs. DeWayne Preece attended the Nut Cracker Ballet in Salt Lake City at the Capitol Theater Wasatch Mountain State Park Gets New Director Wednesday, Dec. 29. Mrs. Agnes Kinsman is con- valescing at her home after 'llVV,,rvr,mil,,v 4 '' 7 ys ' 1 rf 40 ,.! Neal Nelson and daughter ' Brandy of San Diego, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bramwell "Mm !., Fourth Circuit Court Judges were sworn in last week by Senior Chief Judge of Utah Thornley K. Swan. Taking the oath for another term were K. Roger Bean, Layton, left; Cornell McKay Jensen, Clearfield; and S. Mark Johnson, Bountiful. JUDGES SWORN IN By DONETA GATHERUM ar raised from $400 to WHEN THE CIRCUIT court system was finally adopted in 1978, it was a balanced judicial program. It is . : : : : JUDGE SWAN pointed out that the Jan. 4th ceremony was the first time in Utahs s history that judges had assumed the circuit court office after being elected to the posi- tion. Judge Swan briefly traced the history of ; ; the circuit court system. He said the circuit court came into being on July 1, 1978 when the Utah State Supreme Court administered j the oath of office to 25 former city court j judges and eight newly appointed circuit court judges in a ceremony that was held in j the state capitol building rotunda. THE CREATION of a circuit court ) Judge Swan stated, was the biggest - step forward in Utahs judicial system since statehood. When the circuit court system replaced the city courts, the judges were appointed to four and one-hayear terms of office. After this beginning, the circuit court judge would have to every six years through our general election system. ALL 33 CIRCUIT court judges were retained in office at the November election. Judge Swan claims this is proof that the circuit court system is working well. The creation of a circuit court system took considerable planning. It started in 1976 when the judicial council began a leng- : thy study of the city court system and the ' justice of the peace system in Utah. Both of these courts were tied closely to the execu-- : tive branch of city government and somewhat to the legislative branch. The judicial branch of government under the old system wasnt allowed to act independent of the other branches of government. THE CIRCUIT court system was an improvement over the city court concept because more jurisdiction was given to the court. The judicial branch for the first time could manage its own affairs. To gain support for the circuit court, members of the judicial council visited with each city council in Utah. Endorsement came slowly first from the governor, the Farm Bureau, the League of Women Voters and labor organizations and later from individual cities. sys-ter- n. ' lf : : : and possibly $600 higher. OTHER PROPOSED legislation would strengthen the hand of the judge by defining accountability of judges and giving him more authority to control the calendar and move cases along. It is possible that the legislature might put the juvenile court system into the position of voting members of the judicial council, dmg d, CLEARFIELD - In what was described as a historic event by Senior Chief Judge Honorable Thornley K. Swan, three judges for the Fourth Circuit Court of Utah took the oath of office at a special ceremony held Jan. 4 in the Clearfield Fourth Circuit Court chambers. THE OATH of office was administered by Judge Thornley K. Swan. Sworn in for six year terms were S. Mark Johnson, Cornell M. Jensen and K. Roger Bean. All three judges are incumbents, hav-- : ing already served as circuit court judges. -- . undergoing major surgery last week at the McKay Hospital in Ogden. Mrs. Helen M. Wadleigh of Price spent a week for the holiday with her son and his family, Bishop and Mrs. A. Neal Smith. Tuesday night dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Bennett were Mr. and Mrs. v working well, Judge Swan pointed out. Some proposed legislation that will be introduced to the state legislature this year could improve the circuit court system, one speaker at the oath of office ceremony pointed out. Some financial adjustments could give the circuit court jurisdiction up to $ 10,000 with the small claims amounts being hosted the Study Group at their home Sunday evening. The program was given by Mrs. Bea Johnson who told of her trip to Europe and showed film. Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Larkins and family were Mr. and Mrs. Terry Larkins and son Riley of Heber City; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larkins and daughter Avery and son L.D. of Layton. k Mr. and Mrs. Edwin returned from Phoenix, Ariz. where they were guests of their son and family. Attorney and Mrs. Kent Cammack for the Christmas holidays. Holiday guests of Mr. and Cam-mac- manpower supervisor and was subsequently promoted to Su- Utah State Division of Parks and Recreation Director Ross pervisor of Manpower Programs where he administered the Young Adult Conservation Corps., Youth Conservation Corps, Comprehensive Employment Training Act, and helped establish the volunteer program for the Department of B. Elliott announced the appointment of R. Bard Ferrin as the new Superintendent of Wasatch Mountain State Park. Ferrin succeeds retiring Supt. Earl J. Kohler. Ferrin will immediately assume duties at Utahs largest and most highly developed State Park. Natural Resources and Energy. MR. FERRIN is a veteran with the Division of Parks and Recreation. He began his service in 1973 after graduating from the University of Utah with a B.S. Degree in Park Administration. Ferrin has served on the Divisions Recreation Vehicle Crew; as Park Ranger at Kodachrome State Park; and as superintendent of Escalante, Otter Creek and Snow Canyon State Parks. ar Ferrin currently lives in Salt Lake City with his wife and two daughters. DUTIES for the new superintendent will entail the opera- tion of Wasatch Mountain State Park's 27 hole golf course, an expansive campground complex, and a burgeoning winter recreation program, including a CPR Now Duo Affair team has now become a two-ma-n team and there is a standard technique set down for the proper sequence of this duel effort. Periodically, a two-ma- n team will swap places, to relieve each other. The CPR course will teach potential rescuers such maneuvers, which in order to be effective must be learned well, so that when two rescuers change positions, the sequence and harmony of the resusitation effort will not be lost. By HAROLD B. LIGON, MD Time Hflglh. We Learned To Sldmp By FLORENCE BITTNER My generation learned to manage with very little, but some of the lessons we had pounded into out very bones are being learned hard by to- days young people. We didnt have to be told to make do, make it over, do without; that was automatic. No one had new unless the old was past any use. IT COMES as a surprise that people are writing books on how to skrimp. Who has to be taught that? Suggestions such as cut tissues in half because people dont need a whole tissue for a single blow may seem like good skrimping to todays generation. My contemporaries would have raised their eyebrows at such extravagance. Tissues were for show. We used hankies because they could be washed and FURNITURE was never thrown out, and every father knew how to repair and reupholster, not that we needed much reupholstering because most of our furniture was not the upholstered variety. Wood doesnt wear out. If you need pading, make a cushion; it can be washed and reused. And reused. A DOG WOULD be thin trying to live on the throw-ou- t from the tables of our hard times days. Thats probably why we fight the bulge today because no one was permitted to throw out food. We didnt always have refrigerators, but we knew dozens of ways to reuse leftovers. When all else failed, there was the soup pot on the back of the stove. I was greatly amazed when recipes for soup and stew came out. Who needed a recipe? Whatever was left went into the pot. If it was thick it was stew and if it was thin it was soup. That kind of thrifty wasnt fun, but it was accepted. One thing about the great depress ion was that people were not judgemental about other peoples need to sknmp. If everyone was doing it, no one raised eyebrows. WE DIDNT notice shabby. That was the style and what we noticed was new. The grubby styles that have come into fashion during the past decade or more were accepted by a young generation who had never known make it over, make it do. Their closets were bulging with new and stylish, ANOTHER bit of advice on so of course they valued shabby. During the real depression, how to scrimp is to buy two new was so unusual it was dispair of panty hose the same size and when you get holes, played. The problem for people cut off one leg to each pair. No caught in the squeeze now is one is suggesting the needle that not everyone is having to and thread remedy we used. be near with a nickel. Its hard When a pair of hose, rayon, to go to school without when had more than half a dozen most of the kids have. Holes in sewn up runs, they could be the knees of jeans are okay if considered for second best. youve got three new pair not Department stores hired yet worn and youre wearing women to mend runs in hose these because theyre old and with little' crochet hooks. We friendly. Its quite a different paid by the inch to have our matter to wear jeans with holes hose mended As for mens stockings, we because thats all youve got and you know there is slim darned, then we darned the dams. Ive seen my mother rechance of getting more. whole heel rather than YOUNG people today are weave a throw out a pair of socks. told the how to change being oil in their cars, how to do their THE THRIFTY are telling JJK? Son Furnaces Energy Saving Package W Written Guaranteed 35 own maintenance, how to conserve on gas. Its good advice, but it would have been laughed at by us during the real depression. Who had a car? If you knew someone who had the use of the family car, you took up a collection to try to come up with a dollar for gas. Even at twenty-fiv- e cents a gallon, we couldnt afford to ride in cars. - Those of us who were working were paid maybe twenty-fiv- e cents an hour, so a gallon of gas cost us an hours wages. Didn't worry us much though, because who had cars? We walked or we rode the bus, which cost a nickel. But even a nickel for a bus cut into the available spending money. We could buy a hamburger or a huge ice cream cone tor that nickel, so mostly we walked. WA littiebitcf Francisco con be found at the beautiful Bratten's Cove in Bountiful" , AS FOR conserving one-ma- n down efforts-s- et a standard procedure and sequence, which will be learned in the CPR training course. in ASSUMING the telephone caller has the necessary skill or training, he can immediately relieve the first rescuer in the hand pumping action, the most tiring of the two simultaneous n CPR techniques. The one-ma- f FACTORY SECONDS AtiD USED WINDSHIELDS SAVE $1 OVER 1,000 IN STOCK on the air conditioning. Imagine being cool in summer. That was the ultimate luxury. I wouldnt want todays generation or anyone to have to learn the lessons on thrifty we all knew. We had to learn to spend, and we all know once youre poor youre always OPEN SATURDAY TIL1 NOON poor. We didnt need to learn to be careful, and I suspect its too late for todays generation. It hurts too much. YOU KNOW how few closets there are in most old houses? That was because they had little to put in closets. I only hope tomorrows houses still need lots of storage space. I wouldnt want anyone else to have to learn to get along without. It is no fun to be poor. A-- l QUALITY GLASS ; On these top quality Hon SUPERB SEAFOOD & STEAKS FAST, COURTEOUS SERVICE Saving ery electric device is expen- sive forever. My father made us heat the electric iron on the wood stove because heating an iron is expensive. There is definite technique for 4 y! Sr people how to conserve on heating and electric bills, but the kind of skrimping we did isnt even being considered. Imagine heat in the bedrooms. Gross extravagance in our hard times days You dont need to heat rooms where you arent sitting down. If youre going to be under the bed clothes, it doesnt need heat, and if youre only passing through, it doesnt need heat. As for electricity, that was to see by. All the electric motors in a house now which open cans, stir cake mix, slice meat, dry hair. Luxuries. Ev- Home Files CALL O Mon. thru Thws. m your Haw flown, I : Don't waste time wondering about a fast way to get your bearings. Call me your WELCOME WAGON Representative. When - : : you've just moved, you're for time. And the gifts, commu-- : pressed information I bring will business nity and time and money. Let me save your family hear from you soon. SOLID RESOURCES It Seafood 1353 $. 500 Wttt 544-521- 5 I A Phono the comfort of your home Personal Business - Partnership in - 9 P.M. Closed Sundays 255-233-4 4 Drawer reg. $132.13 k'.r C-C- HIAD tui 15 Years Experience Bonnie Sharon 544-447- 544-036- 3 9 - 116 So. 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