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Show Page 4 Sugar House, Utah Thursday February 5, 1959 INDEPENDENT SUGAR HOUSE B.P.W. (Continued from page 1) show a group of pictures. M;ary Ann Nation, mem-bership chairman, will install new members. Assisting the program chairman will be Irene Con-if- f, Colleen Williams, Eliz-abeth . Mitchell and ' Irene Miller. Gail Seaman is publicity chairman for the club. Holladay Church Will Hold Lenten School The Holladay Community Church will hold its annual Lenten School every Sunday evening during Lent, begin-ning .on Sunday, February 15th. The meetings will be held iii the homes of the church members. The subject to be studied this year is , "Paul's Letters To The Ro-mans". Leadership training for class directors began on February 1st, with Mrs. Henry Plenk as chairman. Salt Lake Tops Savings Bond Goal Purchases of U. S. Savings Bonds by Utahns in 1958 exceeded those for 1957 by $1,450,000 it was announced today by Fredrick P. Champ, state savings bonds chairman. Sales totaled $19,107,236 for the year as compared with $17,656,162 in 1957, and - the state has attained. 106 of its sales goal, Mr. Champ stated. Frank A. Wardlaw, Jr., Salt Lake County bonds chair-man, reports that sales credited to this county for the year 1958 totaled $8,111,348, or 106.7 of the sales quota assigned. "The state's sales record practically equals that of the year 1956, which was the best yearly record established in Utah since the end of the war. Fifteen of Utah's 29 counties topped their assigned quotas, with four runners-u- p with over 90. Every citizen who purchased bonds and stamps, and every volunteer who devoted time and effort, contributed to the result and is to be congratulated," Mr. Champ said. V "We are facing the New Year with determination that it will exceed 1958 in the United States savings bonds program, which means so much to the people of America as an anti- - inflationary pro-gram for practicing thrift and building personal' and com-munity reserves," he con-tinued. Washington topped the list of counties exceeding their goal, with 192.9, according to sales figures released. The other fourteen counties attain-ing 100 or more are: Wasatch, Juab, Box Elder, Morgan, Iron, Sanpete, Utah, Beaver, Davis, Carbon,. Salt Lake, Cache , Weber and Tooele. : ; Overseas Teachers Needed By Navy The Navy today hung out "WANTED" signs for teachers to fill teaching positions in Pacific Island areas, it was disclosed by the Navy Over-seas Employment Office, 45 Hyde St., Sanfrancisco. The vacancies exist in the Navy's dependent schools at Midway, Kwajalein, Formosa, Japan and the Philippine Islands with salaries ranging from $3925 to $4120 annually, plus differential payments in most areas. Qualifications include a bach-elor's dlegrtee and at least four semesters of teaching experience within the past five years. Single teachers and man-and-wi- fe teaching teams without dependents are pre-ferred. Transportation over-seas is furnished at Navy expense. Interested applicants should apply at the Hyde Street address or telephone MArket Ext. 535, SanFrancisco. Call your NEWS and ADVER. TISING to HU r --y - " ?k u The majestic Rocky Mountains of Colorado and progressive operation of Rio Grande, and Utah are your assurance of weather-proo- f Supplementing this rail service, Rio scheduling on the Rio Grande. These huge J Grande maintains a coordinated truck serv-wonde- rs of nature act as giant snow fences; ice Rio Grande Motorway, Larson Trans-mak- e it almost impossible for wind-forme- d 'portation Company principally for less-drif- ts to delay your Rio Grande shipmentJ 1 th&n-carloa- d shipments. ' The Direct Central Transcontinental "Whether you're shipping a carton or a Route, weather-proofe- d as it is by Nature,' is carload, you can forget the weather when further enhanced by the modern equipment you chip direct ... via Rio Grande. i ' .. u: ; For help with all your transportation, call the Rio Grande representative In your community. the direct central transcontinental route i DENVER & RIO GRANDE WESTERN RAILROAD L i il 1 ' ; :hy ,: l . J. ; I " M!BABY ! at your house? js Spread the news A , hy long distunoo ' Kafet crt lowst ofr 6 p.m. and oil day Svnday olwayi low wfca you coll $toHontostatIo(V lonntala States Telephoao EMEWG from tho " i r n Army PFC Fredrick J. Montoya, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Antonio N. Montoya, 662 Green st., recently partici-pated with the 4th Armored Division's 54th Infantry in combat effeciency training tests in Germany. Montoya, an automatic rifle-man in the infantry's Com-pany C, entered the Army in June 1957 and arrived in Europe in January 1958. He is a 1957 graduate of South High School. |