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Show TIMES, MAGNA, UTAH L'J-Zri- Ja Tlwrdayr5cpt. 10,1934 -- Pc7C3te Urged to There are a greater number of parents of elementary school children in this area than ever before who will have to give more than cursory attention to this matter of safety in traffic for their youngsters this year. This situation arises becauses many of the youngsters may be going to school over unfamiliar routes to new schools, including the Lake Ridge Elementary, 7400 West 3400 South, which will open its doors for the first time this fall, or to one of the other elementary schools to which enrollment problems have made it necessary for them to be transferred, or to schools in areas into which their families have moved. The procedure recommended to parents in all such eases is the same as recommended in the instances of first timers. Explore the area for the best and safest route for them to taka, then walk them over it a few times after the opening of the school term on Tuesday, Sept. I. Point out just where and how it is safest to make Intersection crossings. Many will, of course, be bussed to school. Everywhere the now indispen sable School Safety Patrolmen will be on duty to help their schoolmates to safety. Also, police safety measures will be amplified by use of adult Crossing Guards. But these precautions can not cover all eventualities, and neither can they be at peak efficiency until after the school term has started. One way of assuring the interest of young children in learning the safest routes to and from school is to prepare a block by block map of the area over which they will have to travel, and then induce them to help chart the safe course on the map. Basic cautions to be drilled into the very young, who will get more of this during their classroom work, are the following: street in the Never cron piddle of a block. Go to the intersection. Never cron an intersection without looking both left ' and right for oncoming cars, to make sure it is safe. Never cron when the light is red. Wait until it is green. Yellow is not safe enough. Make sure no cars are turning. Then Hunter Stdio Safe Way to School 'Hep' Nous cal schools, the police and Magna Lions Club, which stress safeNever, never dart out into to protect your safety. Local school children have ty at all times. a street between cars parked at built up an enviable record of A FAREWELL testimonial was the curl). Parents can help keep that held in the School mind safety from traffic hazards, your Hunter 5th Ward on Always of the lo record improving. Aug. 30 in honor of Herald H. Safety patrolmen. They are there thanks to the efforts and Dollie G. Heaton, prior to cross. Papaniholas Furniture Opens Display Room their departure for the Northern Indian Mission, located the Dakotas. The Heatons were happy to have their five children, Eudora Thompson, Mary Deen Jeppson, Xf';, - - 5 ;, ' I r- .. Furniture store at 8987 W. 2700 South, and is used by the firm as a storage site for their Shown cleaning the MAGNA IMPROVEMENT exterior of a building owned by the Papa-nikolFurniture Co. in a move to provide a as rapidly expanding business. The building has been painted, cleaned and renovated. Part of this building will be used for additional display space of the Papanikolas Furniture Co. more attractive appearance are George and Merwin Gillis. The building is across the street from the Papanikolas directly Papa-nikol- as Betfrie Orgcn Pci'di Lhus Class Sthodohd RELIGION classes begin this THE ALTAR Society started its fall season Tuesday evening. The week as follows: (a) 9th to 12th grades, daily, bemeeting opened at the church, 7:30 p.m., with ginning Tuesday. Rosary and (b) Tuesday at 3:30, the 7th Benediction, and the meeting was concluded at the new Religion Center. ON WEDNESDAY, the C.C.D. training courses For and 8th grade students will have class at the Religion Center. (c) Saturday at the Parish Hall, 2nd, 3rd and 4th grades will have class at 9:30. (d) Saturday at the Religion Center, 5th and 6th grades will have classes at 9:30. (e) Kindergarten will begin on Monday, Sept 14, 12:45 p.m. in the Religion Center. More are sought to sign up. The classroom and method of teaching are very started in Method training. The Father Spollen classes started at 7:30 at the Religion Center, conducted by two Missionary Sis- commendable. People are surprised They call others to the phono. You tck yourself why you waited so long to visit You don't need a special occasion to call Long Distance. ? -l ADULT CONVERT and Information Class will be given every Monday evening at the Religion Center beginning Sept 14 at 7:15. Everyone is invited. TATKS Q ur 466-87- 486-766- 1. MEETING will be held Thursday at the Religion Center at 7:30. All workers interested in the work are asked to be present Activities will be outlined for the year. eighty-year-o- - , MOUNTAIN TILIPHONe two-ho- A FAREWELL party was held Sunday in the Parish Hall by the TJoy Scout Troop to bid Pat Vaculin, one of their Eagle Scouts, goodbye. Pat, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Vaculin, left for Kind words produce their own St Josephs Seminary in Menlo image in mens souls, and a beautiful image it is. We have Park, on Monday. not yet begun to use kind words PARISHIONERS are now re- in such abundance as they ought to be used. ceiving $12 worth of tickets for Blaise Pascal a Parish dinner to be held Sunday, Oct 4. Everyones cooperation is sought Proceeds will be used for the debt on the school. Jjy ... ld -- . Payo y laMWBawJ ki M-M- . 10-we- ek , V , A.CJ. - John-Hutchinso- Invited were high school stuA C.CJ. CONVENTION will dents and men and ladies of the be held Sept. 19 and 20 at Ogden. parish: Even if one does not plan Reservations should be made imto teach, the classes are useful. mediately for the parley. Things happen when you call Long Distance. Class officers Erna Lee Searl, president; Kim Davis, representative; Mary Green, Gleaner representative; DeWon Wardle, secretary, along with ward council members, - report that one well attended, successful event led to another, and that the stake class leaders, Norma end Rawlin Evans, are doing outstanding work. DESPITE the abnormally cold weather, the first Hunter Stake track and field meet; held Aug. 28, was an unqualified success. Sponsored by the Stake Aaronic Priesthood Committee, the meet was directed by Dr. Kenneth Hill, assisted by Every ward participated in the Stake meet and each ward held individual meets during July and August, preparing for the stake meet. A trophy was awarded to the Hunter Third Ward for the first place 100 points; Hunter Fourth followed with 71 points; Hunter Sixth with 61; Hunter Second with 25, Hunter with 8 and Hunter Fifth, 1. Each boy was limited to three events. Advlls 13, 7-- p.m. 8 Stake MIA in charge of program. Guest speaker, Vern Woolf of South High Seminary. The entire stake membership is invited. AVDAGE TEACIIL1 ATTENDS COLLEGE F03 4 YEARS STUDY More than four years of college figure in the training of the average school teacher among the 1.5 million cn the job in the nations elementary and second- -' ary schools, according to a study made by the Ford Foundation.. Most of these teachers have a Bachelor of Arts degree and many have a master's degree which requires a fifth year of college work. But comparatively few though the number seems to be growing have a doctorate degree. An average of 100,000 teachers enter the profession each year, nowhere near enough to fill the ever increasing need for more of them. THIS SUMMER has proven to be an exciting one for the and Gleaners of Hunter Stake. 12, pm. Bowling, swimming, Volleyball, 1. Hootenanny. lawn parties, testimony meetings, 2. Dance. As it is the characteristic of and special speakers-a- t firesides have kept them welld occupied. Young people from 14 years of great wits to say much in few The group has met twice a month age to married are invited. words, so it is of small wits to Third Session: Sunday, Sept talk much and say nothing. with nine other stakes to enjoy additional functions. course tor beginners and advanced students on the electric organ will begin Wednesday at 7 p.m., Sept 23, under auspices of the Granite School Districts Adult Education program. Classes will foe held at the conveniently located organ studios at 33rd South and State Streets, where several types of organs will be available for class use. Among other facets of music, the course will include technique, styling, rhythms, and registration. Enrollment will be limited, so there can be a great deal of personal attention given dursession. The fee ing the is $10 for the 10 classes. Innkeeping Born. To enroll, call Mr. Blackburn More than 2,000 years ago a at or Dr. W. Melvin traveler who had spent the night School at Granite the Dis Strong in a strangers territory paid him trict offices, for the privilege and one of the worlds oldest professions was Coffee Uses? bom innkeeping. The first inns were in the Orient a plot of In Osaka, Japan, ' an piece of paper was ground by a stream. Later they found which listed what were were walled and roofed, food was once claimed to be the medical served, and the true inn was properties of coffee:' Coffee is bom. Oldest known hotels were a medical drink and when one in Pompeii. British inns were drinks it, the heat in the stomach famous but after the Revoluincreases. It is good for tubertion, Americas became the culosis, rheumatism, beriberi, worlds finest. Todays communtoothache in fact, coffee will ity that has a hotel or motel has heal 10,000 diseases. It must not, i big business and a cultural plus. however, be drunk when it is According to the Department of raining heavily, or 'in time of Commerce, a town that develops Its tourist potential has the thunder and lightning. equivalent of an industry with niore than a $100,000 a year payA ters. SATURDAY afternoon, the Girls Club will begin a new season of meetings and activities at the Parish HalL Mrs. Mary Grohowski will be in charge and invites girls from 1st to 8th grade to attend. lord -- 7-- - Count On It 7. M-M- en , Filmstrip on the Aaronic Priesthood Missionary Program. 2. Seminary on Parent-Yout- h Relationships to include introduction, guest speaker, panel discussion of four young people and four adults, the discussion to be based on questions from' the young 'people who are present Joe Hancock, is chairman and master of ceremonies. Music will be furnished by Mark Coonpad Marilyn Laughlin. Young people from 12 years of age to married are invited. Second Session: Saturday, Sept . well program. President E. Verne Breeze of the Hunter Stake states that the Heatons entered the mission home f . p.m. 9 1. President o r a May Breese Cheney, Karma Clark, and H. Grant Heaton back home to participate on the fare- ,; Ycil!) F!:n Ccafcrcata A special plan for a special the group of young people young group of Hunter Stake has been worked out for the coming Quarterly Stake Conference. It has been developed by a special committee of young people especially selected to represent each ward in the stake, working together with Piesident Matthew Pettersson, of the Stake Aaronic Priesthood Committee, and Stake MIA leaders. The plans they have molded include the following: First Session: Friday, Sept 11, 7-- 1 Sept lifter roll. TICKETS S. HOW AT Ei 3. L Tribes CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT No. 1 A JOINT RESOLUTION PRO- - exemptions shall accrue to the POSING- TO AMEND ARTl- - benent of the users of water oo CLE XIU, SECTION 2 OF THE pumped under such regulations CONSTITUTION OF THE as the legislature may prescribe. STATE OF UTAH, RELATING The taxes of the indigent poor TO AN AD VALOREM TAX may be remitted or abated at EXEMPTION; P R O V I D ING such times and in such manner THAT TANGIBLE PERSONAL as may be provided by law. The PROPERTY WHICH IS SHIP-- legislature may provide for the PED BEYOND THE STATE exemption from taxation of OF UTAH WITHIN A PERIOD homos, homesteads, and person- OF ONE YEAR MAY BE EX- - al property, not to exceed $2,000 EMPTED FROM AD VALOR- - - ha .value for homes and home- - -EM TAX. steads, and all household fura- B it resolved by the Legisla- - ishings, furniture, and tquip-- . tore of the State of Utah, ment used exclusively by the two-thirof all members owner thereof at his plaoe of elected to each of the two abode in maintaining a home for houses voting in favor there- - himself and family. Property - not to exceed $3,000 in value, of: Sefftbn i. I is proposed to owned by disabled persona who Article XIII, Section 2 aerved in any war in the mili-the Constitution of the Stott tory service of the United States or of the state of Utah and by of Utah to read as follows: Section 2. All prop- - the unmarried widows and min- orphans of such disabled erty in the state, not exempt orna or of persons who while the laws of thr United States or tinder this constitu serving in the military service tion. shall be taxedin proper- - of the United SUtes or the state tion to its value, to be ascer- - of Utah were killed in action or as provided by law. The died as a result of such service ba exempted as the legia-property of the state, counties, may cities, towns, school districts, tatore may provide, The legislature shall provide , municipal corporations and pub- an annual tax suf-inlie libraries, lots with the build- - by, law-fothereon used exclusively ficient, with other sources of,, for either religious worship or revenue, to defray the estimated charitable purposes, and places ordinary expenses of the state of burial not held or used for for each fiscal year. For the ' private or corporate benefit, purpose of paying the state.. shall be exempt from taxation, debt, if any there be, the legia-, Tangible personal property pre- - lature shall provide for levying sufficient to tax sent in Utah on January 1, m., a annually, pay ' which is held for sale or pro- - the annual interest and to pay ' r cessing and which is shipped to the principal of such debt, with-final destination outsida this in twenty years from the final state within 12 months may ba passage of tho law creating the deemed by law to have acquired debt. Section 3. Die secretary of no situs in Utah for purposes of ad valorem property taxation state is directed to submit this and may ba axempted by law proposed amendment to the electron! such taxation, whether tors of the state of Utah at tho manufactured, processed or pro- - next general election in the dueed or otherwise originating manner provided by law. Section 4. If adopted by the within or without tho state. Water rights, ditehes, canals, electors of this state, this reservoirs, power plants, pomp- amendment shall take effect ing plants, transmission lines, upon January 1, 1965. I, LAMONT F. TORONTO, ' ' pipes and flumes owned and used by individuals or corpora-- Secretary of State of tho State tiona tor irrigating land within of Utah. DO HEREBY CER-th- o state owned by such indi- - TIFY that the 'foregoing is a viduals or corporations, or the .full, true, and correct copy of individual nimbe rs thereof, the . constitutional amendment shall not bo separately taxed ae - proposed by the regular session long as they shall be owned of the Thirty-Fift- h Legislature, and used exclusively for such 1963, as appears of record in purposes. Power plants, power my office, transmission lines and other m WITNESS WHEREOF. I property used tor .generating have hereunto ret my hand and and delivering electrical power, affixed the Great Seal of the a portion of which to used for state of Utah, at Salt Lake furalshing ppwer for pumping city, this 29th day of August, water for Irrigation purposes on iggg. -- ds of per-und- er -- r gs - iahont p. tosonto Secretary of State the extent that such property is used for such purposes. These (SEAL) I CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT U W(XJI: mtiti i nnm io T:u:::3EnTLiT&!."viT days t United Armed Forces Exhibits g::ly t Agriculture end Livestock Exhibits Monte Young's Midway Rides end Shows Home tad Fine Arts Exhibits All Breeds Horse Show o Horse Raring with yeur purctass of 2 sxtra cjuerti ef MXK Gwaranfoocf Unbreakable Highly stain resistant Unharmed by boifing or freezing Dishwasher safe Decorator-style- d flipt Stock Git Racing Sept Sept t, 21-2- , 8 subFeirCcirs 23-2- 5 18-1- y 8 1 Aortal Fireworks Nightly at 8:45 KIDS DAYS Sept WindreR ft Jerry Mahoney. The Stilt Man. Utah's Terry Sisters Riding Clubs Sept. HOLIDAY ON ICE-Nig- 28-2- 7 Villus 3TTiTii f A 4.1 h. Vl S3T. frrtUlHUVl '( tfl!r ISlfcn SKSAYSStSMT : MATBS& V- J 8at Sept AftlUt Sun. Sept. 20 28 pm 5:00 pm Wed. Sept 23 FrL Sept. 25 pm 1 S.-C- e Set Sept 28 e Sun. Septil ft Spm v l ALil - uji - tn.n FricM be. Tes M.7I FAMILY kAKOAIft ts.tr - waftTiir tow Ctm. Aim. tl.tl All For Information Ca3 AMERICAN DAIRY ASSOCIATION OF UTAH Sponsored by Utahs Dairy Farmers t l9pjn.aL3r! FK3AY, - e and Matinees htly ml j , ; in beautiful neutral burnt gold Vimmw. M ft 223-0- 4 MU orniii cjogjQ Gram .ittri MAIL ORDERS ? U oUm of netpt. Stmd tumfU, rmwru nmlopt with rtmitttmrt tf VTAH, STATE EA1R, City, VtU. Ut Ukt Bn 1600 , Jlo. 2 A JOINT RESOLUTION PRO- - Rees; rand (2) to adopt such POSING TO ADD SECTION 82 measures as may be necessary TO ARTICLE VI OF THE toad proper for biauring the OF THE faulty governmental opera-STAT-E OF UTAH, RELATING -- tieim including, but not limited TO TEMPORARY 8UCCES-rt- o, the financing thereof, but SION TO THE POWERS AND' Subsections 1 and 2 of 'this sec- DUTIES OF PUBLIC OF-- tion shall not permit tho public FlCES IN PERIODS OF .officers so appointed to act on EMERGENCY KSSUUTING Mho roeasuroe ro adopted to bo FROM DISASTER- - GAUGED da contravention of the Consti-B- Y ENEMY ATTACK. tution and applicable law. Be it resolved by th Legisla- Section 2. The secretary of ef'tha .Utah,, state to directod to submit this bwodklrda aof all' Insabam proposed amendment to the to each of the two tor of the State of Utah at the ' beams mtSsj. ln fcrwrvtbtre-vnex- t : gvneral election in the ' of: ' . - ... manner provided 1. pwpored to-, 'Section! If adoptaTby the VI-- c tire Coo- electors , amoad.Artide state, this sbsU taka efect the ,tmannent fo fcdJiirf EeetJon-LLt- o read aa 'first day of January, 1964. ,:foHss: I, LAMONT F. TORONTO. Section 82. Notwithstanding Secretary of State of the State any general or special pro vi- - of Utah. DO HEREBY CER-ioof the Constitution, the TIFY thst the foregoing is a Legislature- in order to insure full, true and correct copy of constitutional 7'i continuity- of ? state read local amendment government ;peftioBS ia ,per- 'proposed by the regular session emergency resulting of the Thirty-Fift- h Legislature, p 1663, as appears of record in : attack shall have the power khd my office. ; immediate IN WITNESS duty (1) t tor prompt and temporary sue- - have hereunto setWHEREOF, hand and cesaten to the powers and duties .affixed the Groat my Seal of the of public offices of whatever na- - State of Utah, at Salt Lake tOT and whether filled elee- - CIty, this 29th day of August, tion or appointment, the Incam- - 1964. . bents of which may. become LAMONT F. TORONTO unavailable tor carrying on tho Secretary of State powers and duties of such of- - (SEAL) &atef -- elec-hleet- ed f-t- his ,, ns cad eny . |