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Show "r. i v r - .- 11 1 ? 1 1 f1 3 ?r - .! t PUrpcnt nlt Uko Pity, '.til: ip" v hi" je v- - a - "m ,i mum - Murray's Vounfeer Firemen Sell Tickets For Annual Turkey Dance 1 ) Wf mmmrn-turke- vJLm n!Ltanr!Thi:lchlis Rq - ( hours of Plans for the event are being Murray. Murray's volunteer firemen this handled by Earl Healy, chief; . week are being spent handling ticket sales for their annual Picture at Kight dance Nov. 23. Off-du- ty chief; distant . . iviiu wain 0 vji- music by j mon, captains. are N.igt0 '"- Hl"Tones beSlnmn John Stauffer, Frank Gordon " r and Ray Limberg. ien turKeys ana live uoor prizes will be awarded during the evening. Tickets are $1. dance feature will t Glavas- -- - itwv.k 1 - f j II FAMED UTAH SYMPHONY, which present its first concert in Murray. . will - ft.t ' ; I - Students At MHS Observe - Four Offenders Veferon's Day Murray. Veteran's Day was Appear In Court observed at Murray high school ragfcA. take place at The event wil auditorium. Saturday evening high school Murray Utah Svmohonv Will Present Concert Safurdav Murray. A concert, under the sented Saturday evening at 8 5th in Murray high school's of Murray sponsorship of Elders, will be pre- - torium. ' Maestro Maurice Abravanel and the internationally celebrated Utah Symphony Orchestra will present the first concert to be held in Murray. Two years ago the Utah Symphony played to a packed auditorium for a Murray high school assembly concert, but Murray. According to police this week's concert will be the records here bicycle thefts top first that has been open to the general public. complaints. A bicycle belonging to Bobby Realizing that there will be Holm, 4608 So. State was re- many in the audience who are ported stolen from his residence attending their first "live" symFriday. phony concert, Maestro AbraPolice received a report from vanel has scheduled a program Richard L. Riley, 1574 W. 4470 of varied works he feels certain South Friday that sometime will delight both novice and sea- during the morning hours, persons unknown broke' into his car while it was parked at Olympus bowling lanes. Articles taken from the car were an 8.00x14 white sidewall tire and a continental kit for a 1955 Thunderbird. A spare tire and rim were reported stolen from the premises Murray. "International Afof Harold Watt, 5571 Sanford fair" will be the theme for the Dr. Saturday. 7th ward Relief A red and white bicycle was Murray bazaar Friday (tomorrow) from stolen Ronnie reported commencing at 6:30 p.m. Richens, 4518 So. 9th East SatFeatured will be foods that urday.. The bicycle was parked are favorites in various counat 20 E. 4800 South. tries, among them the celebratT. R. Trojan, 5292 E. Raven ed American hot dog and of a the theft reported bicycle taken from his residence some- "Sloppy Joe." Handiwork of all kinds will time during the night Monday. Mr. Val Church. McMillan be displayed and sold in the school principal, reported that various booths. The items are sometime during the night Mon- suitable as Christmas gifts. The bazaar will also have u day persons unknown entered the school building by breaking toy booth and a used clothing out the window in the princi- counter, a white elephant stall and booths of aprons and chil pal's office. The thieves broke open a soft dren s clothing. drink machine and stole $8. Also Climaxing the. evening will missing was a black leather- - be a musical program with an bound transistor radio. International air. ; audi-Quoru- m Bicycle Thefts Top Complaints List In Murray Murray 7th To Hold Bazaar On Friday Night So-cie- by Jim C&rrr!l L-ti ' i Lincoln Elehost an an- WINDER BY Murray. Winder 7th ward Re. a is sponsoring special demonstration here Nov. at 21. car he' driving wwkly t 1.15 E. 4!05 Soulh, in Mum;, by the Murray Printing at Salt Lake City, tub Salt Lake County, Utah, Second claaa postage paid MURRAY, SALT LAKE Eagle-Advertis- . .... . , Idcntl-doesn- j e ! "' Ji e ""' -i . , -- --rj- f . I " men tary grades. " ;v." Marlene full-t'm- e A c h j V - 1 ' m , 4,500 Bulbs Are ted the expansion of services to the secondary level. Youngsters In Murray schools Planted , Park In Murray. The new botanical gardens adjoining Murray park oe ng to overcome will bloom with thousands of helped flowers next spring through the speech handicaps total 155 this of the Artistic Design-er- s year. They range from kinder- efforts club. to school age. garten high Members met with park em- fnsr fnmmnn sliff iMiltine an- P108 ?aturday and planted countered by Mrs. Jones and ips' ,hya" Miss Monson are those of artl- - 4;5?? P1 b,ulbs- daffodilJ R"d narcissus culation, stuttering and hear- - cin,H18 a area a Ing. Speech problems associat- - w, ' ed with hearing are detected in t)l05 '""S- nn ' f About ,12 Red b,,rbs large part by hearing tests ad- ministered each year in first Emperor tulips and will bloomat tne "ame tlme 88 tne dafgrades fodils. Others will flower to therapists. itKlicany According throUgh thc spring? overcome Thft hlllhB .ujjr youngsters speech handicaps of early years with funds received from the foundation for community improvement The MISS MARLENE MONSON, speech therapist, works MURRAYITE ELECTED TO grant, second largest awarded with longview elementary students Bryce McMillan and in the state this year, was made POSITION as a result of Artistic Design- Sandy Wood during her weekly visit to the school. Murray. Mrs. Clifford (Carol) m- wort 0n thc project prior Hutchlngs, 5364 Avalon Dr., t0 judging. Was elected secretary to the! Mrs. Martin (Joan) HacUo Fra-- 1 board of trustees. president, said the entire leruai vrucr oi eagles, curing amount of the grant will be a convention in Salt Lake usea ror pianungs In the Murand Sunday. ray garden. Utah. Idaho and Wvnmlne Murray members of the club (By Khlrlry JohBMit) hchool?" Mr. Johnson noted ' compose the organi- - assisting with the bulb planting r- i.i i i.. ,'i ti. n.u ik.i iii)...! ... i..i. -v v..v. vv. zauon. Airs, nuunmgs is ireas. were Mrs. Wilford tEvclvnt ' comes the ,", friendly greeting open. urcr of the Murray Eagles Tuttle. Mrs. J. Lowry (Idal from Granite Park junior cnn RO ,nto human auxiliary. Smith and Mrs. Hardle ' high's advanced French class. r(.!alionSi understand people Under thc capable direction i,iipr Ad manv nhases of for- ., of Mr. Mahlon Johnmin. the 24 oj.n wor, rc available. Only mil I... MI..;H. j , ,t students (all eighth graders lwo nmbasMulors speak are now In their second year's ,h(. fou.Kn language they ate wrlInvolved ln." . . , Using the ALM (Aural-ling- ual Method! approach, students E uroe. foreign language Is In foreign language rlasaea gain their basic foundation by 1 ,r,Mrp "l K,8nt first listening; second, speak- readthe third, language: Ing it and fourth wi iling the taught In the second grade and Words. Tills system was estab- - by the time students reach the are lished by thc National IMcnse sixth grade rlnsw-ducted In the language. act Mr. Johnson, pointed out that k 0 universities present , a Institutes during the sum ". mer and teachers arc selected to attend. Utah State University offers a class in French and Spanish. Mr. Johnson has attended two Institutes lien- (iranitc I'ark. "Teacher Apties. France mid Montana. When slnrlenU hreiti wilh Plvelntlnf, Pay Will be CClCgrammar and structure of the hinted at Lincoln elementary language, Mr. Johnson applies Friday.4::to At p.m. in the faculty It to the class in a meaningful a l'k dinner will be situation. Some of the first "Who served y members of the IT A. things thev Irsrn Mrs. Ted Olscn. PTA president Is this?" "Is It a bov or girl Mrs Hill Wtnlher. hos- tr.d "Hello" ilionjnurl. In addition to the advanced pltality chaiiman will be In and French class. Mr Johni.n has rhaige of the 11 srvcnlh grade Fieurh sut- - picpsiathms. derts. "These students ste "Hip parents at Lincoln are real shaip and the seventh grateful for the full, accredited grade Is a good Ume to begin," taff and the many extras our he stated. teachers do for om children." Xtr. Johnson remaikcd thai icmarked Mrs. Joe Mattch, She also the district has been plesseil puMirity thaiiman wilh the prngtvss rr the note,! that thn 1TA will join rign langusges throughout the with patents In sending a per- Uitt let's schools. 'Suet1or stu- - sonal rote of appreciation to E"i n'mirfiri'i rtenta take language." he coin- their child's leather on Friday, ni ir rm. i..L., j mented. on this occasion Friday, Mr. GRANITE PARK JUNIOR in Mr. john-son- 'i In reply to the question. rJaty Martin, who has been high tudenls French clan study their lesion as 0 group "tf v ran foreign lang1lBe, apjwrtnted ptlncipal at Lincoln, during benefit studcDts after high wjll be welcomed. ftench pronunciction. Picture at Left ' T" r. ,ive-fo- ot - " nrrhH Sears-Roebuc- k - Granite Park Students Learn French The Easy Way At School Irl-sta- te Sat-turd- trl-sta- tc i '- . I II us I te . , this year of Monson as a second therapist has permit- j k ' Number on their own but others do not and need specialized help to do this. The total program is aimed at assisting this group. M:ss Monson, a native of California, is a BYU graduate. Mrs, Jones, formerly a first grade teacher ln Murray schools for many years, completed graduate work at the University of Utah in the field of speech therapy... . . tTThe"" addition .j nt -- rate: 11.00 a year Volume 82 UTAH Started four years ago, the program got underway . with the appointment of Mrs. Lucy Jones as therapist for the pie- er i o Subscription Murray. An expanded speech therapy program in Murray district this year includes junior and senior high pupils as well as elementary school chil- x b Folks are always getting re suits with want ads. They buy from, them; sell from them; use them o, rent, trade or A typical example is Mrs. 't Because they could not Millcreek. What boy or girl like to bring something fy them. Mrs. Ijiwrencc to school to show his i gestetl they contact Dr. Stanley Craig faeiiey, Mulick. University of Utah fourth grader at Millcreek clc- - Zoology department. However, before the class contacted him. menlary did just this. When his father returned he visited school that day, from southern Utah recently, he Dr. Mulllck explained It Is brought Craig mine small tint- - an "npim" and related to the niul.4 that he found on the des- - crab and lob.tter family. It Is .rt. Craig In turn took them to alwiul two Inchea long, has a wh ol to hn:-- thew unUMinl long abdomen and is cream aiiinmls with his da: Miuites and color. The apus lives in mud teacher. Mr. Ivalou Ijtwrence. holes and ponds, P"" COUNTY, Co. dren. Members Of The Mollusk Family 00-da- (See Page Eight) Speech Therapy Program Expands In Murray District This Year . ? DERBY HUBl!-5- ? Thursday, Nov. 14, 1963 Furniture Sold By Ad In Classifieds, Murray Woman Says ) clas-smates- Earl 7:30 p.m. Students At Millcreek Research e, Firemen's Dance are THE SAFETY (See Page 4B) The evening's topic will be "Christmas Ideas and Foods." According to Mrs. Keith Benson a gift sale will be held after the program and light refreshments win be served. 'T for Murray PLANS department officials Sam Bennion, Ray Limberg, Healy, Chris Glavas and Frank Gordon. IUUIM Published nef Society MAKING u ANNUAL PHEASANT SHOW RVING THE 7TH I - Itfy ami-dow- FOR SERVICE SPECIAL DEMONSTRATION SLATED Sa-wa- (See Page IB) nual meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Granite Park junior high school auditorium. Lincoln PTA received permission from the Granite board of education to use the building ' for their meetings. Guest speaker for the evening will be Mr. Normand Gibbons. His topic for discussion will be "Pornography." Job-hu- j Ever wondered about the I date - line. I I which reflects possibility of giving a paper a I the volume and ring on the 'phone and giving number of that particular Is. some Information which was sue. If you'll glance over false? 'Course not. there under the name-platMost people wouldn't ci'cn consider doing you'll sec it now Volume 82 Number 1. something like that. As time passes, we'd guess But two women in Virginia that's not so long ago. But In recently pulled Mich a Umi the workaday world of the sending false birth notices to weekly newspaper, that rcpro. newspapers In two communi. aents a long, long scries of tics. For their "little prank." deadlines. they were each fined $100 and If you're statistically-Incliney Jail sentences. given you might write it down as Seems In Virginia, like most Ov4,212 successive pressdays. other slates, the courts take a er 4,000 times in which a staff dim view of such goings-on- . has collected the assorted news The ambition of the aver-agthat constitutes a community's young today couple activity, blended It into a concoction of typogMi'im to be to imn n nice, home with all the raphy, stcrco-cas- t. engravings, ink and paper and delivered it lutrftt appliance and lovely to the door of local people who furnishing. Then they also wunt a new rar to get away fully expected to find therein most anything from the birth from It In. of a child to the death of a There's nothing particularly ndchbor. There wan once a time when hignjricant about It, except Unit v,o!le the men who believed thcnwlvcs !l n1UKi of averages. But the experts on the subject pro- law nounced suburban communities Missus and Your Truly have a lout cukc for the weekly an Interest in three Midwest Since War II. high mhools the one the atnewnpapcr. the one where we they've been proved wrong In tended; so many cities acros the struggled and a third where we length and breadth of Amcil. both lived several years. All thirc have had their upv ca that today's analyxta believe In vnrtous field! of Suburbia to be as substantial a supporter of Its Comniunity achievement from music to depaper as the outlying, more bate to athletic. And genremote towns further from erally while one vn up, the other two were down. metropolitan media. The thing the This football senm luid experts overlooked a quarter-centurprogressed about four Ramr. ago and finally came to real. before we came to the rc.il. Ize In the lat decade, la that Iftatlnn nil three high wh"l people enjoy seeing their names had unbeaten football teams. and thtwe of friend In print. A each week's Issue of True. Americans have an newspapers in the Ihiec low it demand to be crossed our detk, we engerly and Ihry likc to know rhecked to see how lh homeabout Saudi Arabia. Berlin, town giiddrrs had fatnl. SurKorea and the South role. prisingly rtwiigh. all three have But even the grne unblrmWied throueh tl.e are folks who agree the most entire siimwi. without a Ms i IC'Ufi' ant thing In print tan a tie. Tlint Is. up ti the final we wtm'l have the ntlen be their own name or pic gamcs-Mu- id hire and that a windstorm ftn result on this fur a few As we saM,' it's iml the maw street In their town slssnificanl. But ltd U eqnelly as Important as a be nn Interesting achicvemnit tidal wave off Okinawa. So the Eagle, like hundreds to have these time partinilar t 'nffl cf suburban community news- schools field In same don't serous the the season, country, papers moves Into another year of think? We've apologies Well, anyway we Jo. publication. week-to-wec- Park. PTA will LAUDED South Cottonwood stake quarterly conference will be held Saturday and Sunday in South Cottonwood 2nd and 7th building, SUOl So. HOC Bessie Tuckett, 187 Mountain Prist V.ew Dr. She used the want will begin ads to sell furniture. meetings . Saturday .: n.nn L 4. hum I'tmiiiiuv"We not only sold it," Mrs. throughout the afternoon and Tuckett reported, "but we had evening. At the 7:30 p.m. sesLIVING room at. Larft sion. all husbands and wives roach, big chair. Two cod laalan. are invited. too Corday lampa, good condlUon. General sessions on Sunday more m calls than we really nd wjll bc nel(, at 10:00 a 2:30 p.m. MIA meetings wiill needed. We're very pleased with the results." commence at 7:00 p.m S. Dilworth Young, first counYou. too, can use the want cil of seventy, will be the gen- - ad columns to buy, sell, rent, eral authority presiding at the trade look for help or find a or conference. He has been a i job. Just dial AM of llio Council since write Box 7187. Murray. j May 23, 1015. They're inexpensive, too! daily d, Granite mentary Murray. ' ment on the now. Hosts Speaker Conference for our omiss'ons, regrets for our mistakes, pride in our ac complishments and considerable optimism for the future in which we feel certain papers Today marks the beginning likc ours. are going t0 con. volume uf, ,a nZ. tinue to play a vital role in That's comparable to cilies likerlhi.s Eagle. one. Killing up ine first day after The guy told an auto salesman the other day thiit your birthday. Most less-tha- n he just couldn't afford to buy a new car. Said he't wt ill I paying Installments on the jnewspap-e r a likc ours car he swapped for the car keep track of he trailed ln an a down payI the passage or LtV f Vr l weeks by I means of a Lincoln School Host Quarterly I A somewhat cynical friend of ours insists the best place to find a helping hand l at the end of your arm. -- 't Cottonwood To f. 1 ' ex-tar- Noc-turn- .1 here's a point or that they will be out of place at the concert because they won't know what to pect," he added, "And some think I know a about music," he said, '.'bl't I really don't. I just stand ln front uf tne orchestra and wav mY baton and try to get roun me same ume me mu' sicians do." soned concert goers. Opening the program will be the festive "Trumpet Volun- by Purcell, which will be followed by the familiar "Lar- go" by Handel. An introduction to the clas- sics will be in the form of the first movement of Schubert's The "Unfinished Symphony". first half of the program will conclude with the overture to Wagner's opera "Tannhauser." "The Pilgrims' Chorus" from "Tannhauser" is one of the best-love- d themes in musical literature and surges to a tremendous climax in the overture," said Abravanel. Following intermission Maestro Abravanel and the Utah Symphony will play "Roman Carnival Overture" by Berlioz. For an abrupt change of pace the orchestra will then play an e excerpt from Debussy's entitled "Festivals", followed by the Pastorale from the Book of Mormon Oratorio by Utah's composer, Leroy J. Robertson. A familiar favorite, "The Wind Is a Lion" from Crawford Gates' centennial production. Promised Valley, will conclude the evening. "It is always a thrill to play lor an audience wnicn includes many who are attending their first symphony concert," said Mr. Abravanel. "Some people are afraid the music will be over their heads Records here show Monday with a patriotic assemin the the entire student body. for bly S. Post 60 American Legionthis week. naires posted the colors and Improper changing of lanes cost Richard Alton Foster, demonstrated how to fold the flag. SanHy a 525 fine. Jerry Towers, junior class Spring-stea- d Cecil C. Francisco, led the pledge of alpresident, M N. was Trading Post, and the pep band led legiance in sentenced to five days jail and fined $25 for running a red by Eddie Coe played the national anthem. "Old Glory," a light. The jail sentence was sus- film on the story of the flag, pended upon payment of the was shown. fine. Scott Clark, senior president, A $20 fine was slapped on Robert Rulon Goff, Midvale for discussed reverence for the flag. One minute of silence was running a red light. Two days in jail were sus- observed at 11 a.m. The program concluded with pended and a $10 fine imposed on Dennis Jerry Barker, Salt the retreat of colors by the Lake for improper passing. American Legion. Murray. four people appeared court of Judge James nil MM ,111,1 II in. II - J' ---- Ing s Granite Park nine-wee- r n l; V- y - ."V. ' ' - j PTA To Thank ( School Teachers - . - y ll ' lnl .1 . , d "i " ' " i ' ; ' m- - IT t, cily-dwcll- : ' dy. l j yi I - ' . .. I , n r T"-0- tmm m ; 4 1 tail I, i MlltCREtK STUDENTS Croia forfey, Oebto Titnpson find Sutoti Ooidner, with (he oid of their teocher, Mu. Uolon Lowtente, rojeoith a wembet of the mollusk family tailed the Apus. llj - fXhhX i i n, "ajTrrif |