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Show Thursday, June 11, 1970 SOUTH SALT LAKE NEWS Piafpe 4 town, but they visit us fre- Ask Mike Dear Jumpy: mother-in-la- w Editors Note: The South Salt Lake News is pleased to announce that Michael Palin-drom- e has joined the staff. Are you bugged by someone or something? Do you need to share some problem? to Ask Mike. He will attempt give you the straight scoop. Questions of general interest will be answered in this paper each week. Write to Mike at The South Salt Lake News, 3106 So. Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah 84115. Dear Mike: Do you believe in the silent ma- jority. Quiet Quentin Dear Quiet: I do not believe a majority of the people anywhere are silent. I think a majority of the people are lazy. They will bore their barbers, bartenders and brothers-in-lawith their opinions about Vietnam, riots, etc., but they won't bother to write a short note to their senators or even go to the polls to vote. So lets call them "the lazy majority" who dont care enough to do anything but complain about every . Ill WASHINGTON Tourist visits to National parks, recreation areas, monuments, and historic sites in Utah increased by about 12 per cent in 1969 over 1968, Sen. Wallace F. Bennett reported today. Visits to 14 areas increased from 3,567,-01- 0 in 1968 to 4,025,060 in 1969. Jumpy trade my for your father-in-la- w. False teeth sitting in the sink are at least silent. Arent they? No doubt gramps has always left his teeth in the sink and cant imagine any other sensible place to leave them. All older people should realize that even the habits of a lifetime can be changed. My granddaddy who had smoked steadily for 68 years stopped cold two months ago and swears hell never start again. However, your problem may be trickier to solve. I suggest you get a small colored plastic container with a lid. Have your husband present it to gramps on his next visit and teU him its for his teeth. Let him keep it in the sink if he wishes and hope that out of sight will be out of mind. 83-year-- Contest Nears For Miss w one else. Dear Mike: I'm a girl who loves to watch TV. The Brady Bunch is my favorite program. Could you tell me what are your favorite TV shows? ld One of the Bunch Dear One: You must never tell anyone, but my TV favorites are Johnny Cash, Wide World of Sports and Sesame Street! ! ! Dear Mike: My mother is so dumb. Im 14 and quite mature for my age. She refuses to let me date except as part of a group. Why are some parents so far behind the times? Tell it like it really is, Mike, I dare you. Now Girl Dear Now: Hear now. Parents may get a bit out of date when it comes to the current jargon or fads of their offspring, but some things never change. Far from being "dumb your Mom sounds like one of the smarter mothers around and you ought to be glad shes all yours. Unfortunately for us humans, we are physically mature long before we reach emotional or mental maturity. Trust your mothers Judgment now and it wont be so very long before she knows she can trust yours. Dear Mike: My problem may sound silly, but it bogs me so much I've just got to do something about it. My father-in-lais a real sweetie, and I can't bear the thought of hurting his feelings. He and my husbandls mother live in another w Dental Service Help To Welfare Travel Time quently to se. their grandchildren. Whfn they come they usually spend the night with us. Here's the problem. Gramps wears false teeth. It throws me into a real tizzy to walk into my kitchen at 6 a.m. to be met by a set of false teeth glaring up at me from a glass in the sink. What can I do? Black Utah The first Miss Black Utah Pageant will be held Friday, June 26 8:00 P.M., in the Terrace Ballroom in Salt Lake City. Contestants from Logan, Brigham City, Ogden, Salt Lake and other Utah communities will be participating for the coveted crown. The winner of the Utah Pageant will go on to compete in the third annual Miss Black America Pageant to be hed in Madison Square Garden, New York, later this Fall. The local coi test will be ar enfeaturing the tertainment group Moses Dillard and the Textown Display, plus the lovely 1969 Miss Black ever-popul- America, Miss G. 0. Smith who currently wears the crown will also be appearing. Girls who wish to enter the Miss Black Utah Pageant must have their entries in no later than Wednesday June 10. They may submit their entry by call7 or by writing to ing Miss Black Utah Pageant, 11 South 3rd West, Salt Lake City. Qualifications for entry include the following: Contestant must be between the must be single ages of and have no children. She must have a talent and be a high 355-949- 18-2- 5, school graduate. The Senator said the figures are contained in material from the Department of Interiors National Park newly-release- d Service. Since some 75 per cent of the land area in Utah is Federally owned, it is vital that we continue to increase tourist trade, which can be & signifi-ca- n part of four states nomic life blood, eco- couraging, I am convinced that with faster, more steady development of roads and trails in these areas, our tourist visits will climb at a significantly higher rate. The Utahn reported that increases were noted at all but three of the national areas in the Beehive State. One of the three, Canyon-land- s National Park, dipped from 26,300 visits in 1968 to 26,000 in 1969. It is a prime example of an area that must be developed and made more accessible on a realistic schedule to increase usage, Sen. Bennett said. Other areas recording a drop in visitors include Timpanogos Cave National Monument, which went from 221,400 in 1968 to 192,800 in 1969, and Hovenweep National Monument, from 8,200 in 1968 to 7,200 in 1969. Sen. Bennett said areas registering the largest numerical increase in 1969 over 1968 included: Capitol Reef National Monument, 210,600 in 1969 compared with 171,000 in 1968; Cedar Breaks National Monument, 298,400 compared with 233,000; Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, 781,300 compared with 654,500; Rainbow Bridge National Monument, 36,400 compared with 28,000; and Golden Spike National Historic Monument, 169,600, 52,300. Other National areas in Utah, listed with their 1969 and 1968 tourist figures respectively, include, Arches National Monument, 162,600, 135,600; Bryce Canyon National Park, 366,900, 320,800; Dinosaur National Monument, 308,300 ; the agreement represents a forward step in control of Title XIX Federal Medicaid Program costs to the State. He emphasized that further attempts will be made with other medical providers to negotiate on a fixed contract basis to provide services throughout an entire fiscal year for welfare recipients. Getting Acquainted Ethel Newton Campbell Sen. Ben- nett stated. Although the latest recorded increase is en- 337,800, The contract calls for provision of dental services to eligible welfare recipients on a fixed fee basis for the craning year. Mr. Lindsay noted that The Division of Family Services and the States dentists operating under the Delta Plan, Saturday approved a final contract agreement for the States dentists to supply dental services to welfare recipients for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1970, Dr. Charles E. Parkin, President, Delta Plan and Richard P. Lindsay, Director, Division of Family Services, signed the agreement which will be submitted for approval of the State Finance Department and the Attorney General. Flaming Recreation Gorge National Area, 493,900, 492,800; Natural Bridges National Monument, 37,800 in both years; Zion National Park, 904,300, Ethel Newton Campbell was born in Salt Lake City on May to James Leigh Newton and Sarah Greenha.ch. She 1885 26, had three brothers and three sisters of whom one brother is now living. Her mother and father were converts fom England. Her father was first counselor to President J. L. Walker of the Manchester Branch for about five years. He had been a member of the church for eight years when he left England for Zion in 1853. Her mother came to Zion a few years later. Her father worked at the Tithing yard for President Brigham Young for a number of years. Her mother died when she was six years old, which left her to do many of the things a young girl would be unable to do today. They lived in the Tenth Ward until she was ten then they moved to Sugarhouse Ward. She attended school in the Central School, where the Irving Junior High is now. She became a Sunday School teacher when she was sixteen and taught for three years. She was a religion class teacher for five years. She married John W. Potter on October 2, 1905 and had two daughters. When the youngest was only five weeks old, her husband was killed after only three years of marriage on September 26, 1908. She remarried to George William Kilpack on March 24, 1914. They cared for her father for many years until he passed away at 93 years of age. They had three sons and four daughters. He died September 3, 1933. She worked at Deseret Clothing where she helped pattern the present L.D.S. garments. She also worked at Wefare Square for many years. She married to Robert W. Campbell July 15, 1944 and lived in Rupert, Idaho. He died February 12, 1949. She then moved back to Salt Lake City to live in Granite Park Ward. She has four daughters and two sons living, thirty grandchildren and 32 great grandchildren. She has been a Relief Society Visiting teacher for 35 years. She was the teacher for Visiting Teacher Message Class for 8 years. I j I MobMeJUa c aed, Sac. South Salt Lake News Hill Top Times The Hub Law.BooJcs Magazines IRSNeWSCope 14 South Main Kaysville, Utah 84037 376-551- 8 fifes CEdQ? 877,100. Kennecott and Air Condition The Utah Air Conservation Committee has announced the Kennecott Copper Corporation requested the Committee to reconsider the adoption of standards regulating levels of SO2 in the air we breathe. Mr. J. P. OKeefe General Manager of Kennecott, states his company cannot in the foreseeable future comply with the standards approved last week by the Air Conservation Committee and State Board of Health. Kennecotts request has been referred to the States Attorney Genera for study by the Utah State Division of Health Air Quality Section. As soon as the problem has been analyzed and a course of action decided upon the Air Conservation Committee will give first priority towards resolving the conflict in views. Protection of the health and welfare of the people of Utah will remain their primary objective. This action obviously requires some rescheduling of Air Quality program priorities, lffTW!ilro (SDQGI WE FEATURE Steak -- Lobster -- Chicken Thursday - Friday - Saturday o I (Serving People Since & Oltti'l'ttiH) (fit fiVt 1905) |