OCR Text |
Show CLEARFIELD Roy Post Office to Be Dedicated Saturday COPS UTAH TITLE Gov. George D. Clyde. Invitations are also extended to the county commisioners, local and county officials in all depart ments and the civic club mem- THIS BEAUTIFUL new Post Office will be dedicated Saturday Oct. 1. Containing over 4,628 square feet this building features the latest in modern equipment. Many city, state bers, besides the general pub- Post Office officials expected to be in attendance are W. D. Brewer, Regional controller of the Post Office Department of Denver, George McDonald, Senior Field Service Officers of Salt Lake City and postmasters throughout the state. and county officials will take part in the dedication ceremonies at 1 p.m. An open house will follow. Local church officials will also be present to participate ; in the event. Following the services, guid-bed tours will conducted throughout the beautiful new $40,000, 4,256 sq ft. building The walls are constructed of cement slabs which are welded to the foundation. Pro stressed concrete slabs used for the rooting are welded to the walls This is the second post office in the state of this unique construction which is considered to make the building almost mdestructable. Emma Postmaster Russell, who is in charge of the anange-mentfor the dedication, extends a sincere invitation to the general public to attend the ceremony. e d s Saturday Oct. 1, 6:30 p.m. missionary meeting. MISS UTAH OF v Saturday Oct. 1, is the dale set for the dedication of the new Roy post office located at 1925 W. 5700 So. Dedicatory services will begin at 1 p.m. The special guest list includes Aldous Dixon, Congressman Rep. David King, Sen. Frank Moss, Sen. Wallace Bennett and The time of Stake conference meetings are as follows: MISS Special Program To Note DUP Start CLEARFIELD There are At 8 p.m. general priesthood 320 Daughters of the Utah Piomeeting. These are to be held neers expected to attend the beClearfield indeed felt honor- at the Lake View Stake House. ginning of this years program Irom the North Davis Stake ed when the lovely blue-eyeSunday Oct. 2 at the taber- area. girl from Clearfield, Karen Ann Winterbottom, whose specialty nacle in Ogden, conference sesA special DUP board meeting is modern dance, won the I960 sions 8.30 a m. and 2 p.m. will be held at the Clearfield Utah State Fair queen contest,! last Saturday evening it the Sunday Oct. 2 at 7 p.m. Fire- Stake House Saturday Oct. 1. side at the Lake View Slake All captains, registrars and lesUtah Stale Fair. house lor all 14 years of age son leaders are requested to be Miss Winterbottom will reand older. A program will be there. ceive $200 and a waiver of tuiPresident Kate Carter of Salt tion at Utah State University for presented by the stake, followed by a closed circuit from the Salt Lake City will be on hand 'to one vear. Lake tabernacle by President answer all questions afld help Her attendalns are 19y(ar-ol- David O McKav. solve any problems you have. of AmeriMary Ann Gray can Fork and 17 year-olAlice Stout of Hurrican. d Earlier thi$year Miss Winter-bottowas named Miss Clearfield and reigned over festivities on the Fourth of July Karen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Winterbottom of Clearfield. She is 19 and stands 5 feet 8 inches tall. Mormon Leader To Visit t Lake View Conference Bishop Thorpe B. Isaacson, first counselor in the Presiding Bishopric of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints from Salt Lake City, will be the featured speaker Saturday and Sunday, October 1 and 2. during quarterly conference of the Lake View Stake. Roy . The City with a Future . . Post Office Tradition ADULT CHAMBER MEET Backbone Of Early Roy This is one in a series of articles that will present this history of Roys Post Office of which we are to celebrate the dedication of a new and modern building. ORSON FIELD The town in Kuy, struggling lor existence upon a uiy aim winUswepi sanu ndge, was scarcely ZU years om wuen u began to ieei a suigo loi independence aim peuuomm me ms Government ior a poai omce aim a name. A citizen's commit.ee, headed by tne xtevereiiu uaviu Eeeoiea oi tne Gungiegationai Lnurcn, sent in a imnmer ox names io me post omce ueparlmeni asK-mair tneir choice, tne name oi Koy, winch was suggested by l ne fteverend in memory ot a son wno uied, was chosen by me postal authorities. By this act, ivoy became tne lirst city ever lo be named by tne post omce department. cnosen to act as first by me entei prising citizen s committee was urson field, a son oi one oi the earnest seitiers in Koy. lie was ol liciaiiy appointed postmaster by Posiinaster Geneial Wilson b Kissed and toon oath ot otfice may zo, loan. Giover Lieve-lanwas tnen presiuent and me i ei rnoi y ox man nad not yet become a state. Uisun Hern was born Dec 28, 18b 7 in Alton Warwickshire, ana England, tne son oi Baian Ann Baxer rieia. wnen be was lour yeais old, his parents wno were conveiis io me Ems Lnurcn came with their Jamuy to tne Inned Elates, set lung in Hooper, Utah. Eariy in me spnng ot 1873, William E. Baser, orother-in-lavox Item Hmd, bum tne lirst house on tne solid ridge now caned Roy and shortly Mr. Field bum his home, n.ey were soon jomc2 Justin i. Giover anu mus, m,. oy one tne iiihe smiemem post-masie- future. Eight months before his appointment as potsmaster, Orson had married Margaret Jones. They were living in the home that Henry Field had built. Post office business was conducted in one corner of the small kitchen. Orson widow, who is now in her 96th year, with their youngest daughter. Ivy, are still In mg in the old homestead. Orson Field was of a mechanical turn of mind and when electricity first came into use, contrived a small motor to attach lo his wife's butter churn. With his electrically powered steam boiler he was probably the first one in Roy to start canning tomatoes Although a blacksmith by trade, he was among the first to realize that the gasoline buggy was here to stay and consequently began to learn the intricies of the mechanism of the automobile and how to repair it. Roys first postmaster died Feb. 1, 1936 leaving as survivors his wife and the following son and daughters. Harold Field, Mrs. Ed (Evelyn) Barnes, Mrs. Clarence (Adella) Milburn and Ivy all of whom live in Roy. and Mrs. Raymond (Lillian) Hinsdale of Slaterville. old lime observer saiu, "iXotiouy tiau enougn gm lo uy to nidive someining oui ox lives sparked with new vigor and interest during meeting sponsored by the Roy Chamber the next nine weeks. The adult high school just inof Commerce will be held Wednesday, Oct. 12 at 7 30 p.m. at augurated at Bonneville Higr the Lakeview School. School has an enrollment of 127. Candidates for positions of Opportunity to complete reWeber County commissioner will speak on current governfor a high school ment trends, present his own quirements views and election platform. will be afforded certificate Questions and answers will be- those who participate in the taken from the floor. new program. of The purpose the meeting is Thirteen classes arc being to bring together the voter and each week. Popular courtaught the candidate. Only if a taxpayer attends meetings such as ses according to enrollment figthis can he know what to expect ures are English, Mathematics. of the candidate that is elected Algebra, American H i s tory, to represent the people. Bookkeeping, Tvping, Auto Me chanics, and Health Education adwho The candidates will The high caliber staff of in dress the group are N. Russell struetors for the program has Tanner, Arthur P. Brown, R. Ekins and Elmer Car- been recruited from the teach ver. mg staff of Weber County School District. The meeting is being arrangFall quarter will end Dec. 9 ed by the program committee of the Chamber of Commerce. It Winter quarter will begin Dec will take the place of the reg- 12. ular monthly membership A public Flr-ne- Brings in Early History This weld scam State and national elections blacksmiths. shows where two caisson axles are of no greater important , were welded back to back for to the students of the Hooper the whole length of the shaft to the other. It School than their own elec- from one end has withstood the creaking tions for student officers. An strain for many years as it was ; ciive campaign is being car- pulled round and round by a with on ried posters everywhere horse. extolling the virtues of each w candidate. three-fourth- Nominees It will be TV a teach- - school administrator before he became a prominent life insurance and real estate figure. He 35 served 12 years on the Boar ofd Trustees at Utah State ELDER THORPE B. ISAACSON Firtt Counwlor, Pretiding Biihopric Church of Jetut Chritl of Latter-do- v Sointt seven the general public. Each member of the Chamber of Commerce will he displaying a copy of his place of business Baptists to Observe during the week. Free copies be available at some of the Sunday School Week will lirms and can also be obtained at the Chamber of Commerce office. 5533 So. 1900 W. There ROY Sunday School Prep- is also a supply of the informaaration Week is being observed tion booklets at the Roy and at the Weber County this week by the First Baptist Commission otfice in Ogden. Church 2025' W 5700 So. The colorful little folder is City-offic- Saturday evening care for the welfare of its bers. meetings s and world-widmissionary program and the Church Welfare 130 years ago, membership has Plan. grown throughout the world to thousands of flourishThe Church maintains an ex- include An extensive ing congregations. tensive educational system and is working program building has erected 12 sacred temples on at least 600 continually and North in America, Europe to provide for Its exand operates farms, churches Oceana, and branches. wards canneries and warehouses to panding e the newly-establishe- r . o Utah Motorists paid $49,879 000 in state and letleral gasoline and other automove levies last year, it was disclosed today. Mr. A. Peterson, Weber County area chairman of the Utah petroleum said the biggest hit was placed on the motorist in. the form of the gasolnne tax Utah took in $19, 625, 000 Irom this scorn- in 1959 and Uncle Sam reli.ed $ 9.473.000 - The rest of the reveune came from a variety of lev iesv including registratoin tees, taxes on new eais .parts and accessories, imposts on lubricating oil and other sales taxes . 3 Hooper-Kanesvill- e Site Chosen at HAFB An alterCLEARFIELD nate site for the Clearfield refer voir will be on the Hill AFB military reservation. This site has been labeled just as good as the old site" by the Weber Basin Water Conservancy District. According to E. J. Fjeldsted, district manager of the new site offered by- Air Force eng.neers is just a lew hundred feet south of the original proposed site of the storage reservoir. Air Force officials said the original site was in on area which might he used n the construction of missile facilities at the base. - The reservoir will provide a one million and a half ballons of water storage to be used jointly by the district and munities of Clearfield and cotn-is- t Sun-servic- e. living j ' ; philosophies! By K. F. Cottle - - 1960 finite philosophy of life and salesmanship which sees man's desire for new merchandise and peace of mind. - I - Alternate Reservoir R , It? Win: y Throughout the world, the Church has more than 6,000 missionaries, mostly young men and women, serving from two to three years at their own set. Council Report -- mem- Since the translation of the Book of Mormon and restoration of the Church more than will be for lay church leaders, devoted to the Church's local Theb rochure tells briefly the Public Invited To by topography ot the city, its repastor, John L Smith There is sources, schools, churches and Education to be 10 classes of 45 minutes business lacihties. Program each in order to meet the reIt leat tires a host of pictures quirements and those complet on the many CLEARFIELD For the secphases of communwill receive ing the course life and highlights the vari- ond time Davis County has been awards from the Baptist Sun ity ous types of homes to he found selected by the Utah State Uniday School Board, Nashville in Roy. versity Extension service, as the site tor one of their Consumer Education shows cover The an aerial The book is a study course of the city and on the programs concerning the purfor teaching and training the of view hack page a map points out the chase and care of clothing Deers and teachers of the SunLast year, the first program of proximity of the various govday School. It deals with plans ernment SEGO LILY CAMP MEET and industrial mstnila this type was staged in Bounti-ior enlisting and developing ul. Tms year, a similar proturns. Sunday School workers, discovwill he held in Clearfield. gram t The Sego Lily Camp ot In Title of the symposium ering and providing for the peoDaughters of the Utah Pioneers ple and using goals for develop the manufacturing, sellServiceman Returns held their first meeting of ing and wearing of clothes made mg the work of the Sunday at the home of Dina Sum School from the new fabrics will be ' You and What You Wear mers in Clinton. Laura Stewart The preparation week will be was New officer Charles C Nicholas son of It will be held in the Clear-Mwere installed with 11a Mae G r climaxed with Promotion Day and Mrs 0 C. Nicholas of field Stake House on Thursdav, her as captain, Ada P. Child, 1st Sunday, .Sept. 25 Qualified 303 Ai izona St Clearfield. Sept 29th at 1 30 p in vice captain, Emma Beus, 2nd members of each Sunday School graduated from remnt training. Being asked to participate on vice captain and Ruth Estep as members of each Sunday School Sept. 2 at the Naval Training the symposium are one d the secretary-treasurer- . There were class being promoted will re Center, San Diego Calif managers of Bee Gees Clothing Stoic, Josephine Taylor, pro19 members present. ceive promotion certificates. Roy Baker, son of Mr and of Rea Jo s Apparel, Mrs Mrs. E. E. Raker. Clearfield, is prietor Henry Slater, Clearfield spending al cave with his parDorothy Beedy, proCape Canaveral: 10 Years Of Progress ents from duty at the Navy prietor ot Dorlhy's Juvenile base San in Calil. Center Diego, To From Sand Strip Space .simp. Wayne F Butler, Ogden manufacturer of ladies ready-lweal, and Miss Theta John son, textile and clothing special-Utah Petroleum from the LSU Extension 'Outreach for Unreachcd" is being tjught The book i hand-forge- Bishop Isaacson was designed to attract new busi- week in ness, new industry and new famRoy beginning Monday The Roy ilies into the city and also to University including C hamber of Commerce has tie build a sense of pride in the terms as chairman, and is now signated the week in which to comlnumty among those who al- on the University of Utah Board of Regents. introduce its datest brochure to ready live here. ROY n J'7 WEEK - , - 19 1 Old Mill In Hooper tin-le- 'B' CHAMBER TO PROMOTE SOON No Many people in our area will find their ROY 7 TO BOOST ROY PUBLIC INTEREST LAKEVIEW SCHOOL The roller sections are from inch the thick for positions are: of the freight wagons, lit tires President, Hal Johnson and and welded to form perfect a iiKe Kov except me Bart Manning, Vice President pioe Even tng the bolts, its , , Jsveiyoo,. eiae just passcu Jeanne Ballif and Wayne Cul- cylinders. shims were hand it oy. Lesput ine sanu ano lens; Secretary, Holly Fowers washers onand an anvil. The gears forged me wind aim me lack ox water, and Larry Stokes. were treighted in from the East lue nine community dij liour-nby ox team. on y ox tne iiiuusny ' . and tin.- uele. iiunalion ox ? ' In the early spring of 1920, t . wno sow in Ine Thomas A. Ross ot Hooper, Beginning luai "ivoy Was me- City wan a lather of the present owner, discovered this old mill half buried in a pasture near the PTA WILL MEET home of Levi Earner of Hooper, William Schofield, the orig-- ! 7 he RiVERDALE firs. inal owner of this farm, had Thursday oi each month has brought it from Salt Lake City been decided upon as the meetin early pioneer days and made sorghum (molasses) for his ing time tor me Riverdale family. Scnool PTA this year. Thus the first meeting oi this school The mill had lain there in 111 disuse for several decades. year will be on Oct. 6. Thomas Ross purchased it The personel of the local orfrom Mr. Parker, now of Roy, ganization for the current yeat dug up the various parts, moved has been announced by the and assembled it on his farm president, Wilford Tesch. Servand made sorghum with it from ii&Avrt 1920 to the fall of 1939. ing as lirst vice president is Mary Kellerstrass, 2nd vice A blacksmith trade, by president Darwin Taylor, secretary-trThomas suspected for some t easurer; Elvira Jacobsen, time that the mill had been J- 'I made tv historian; Olive Thompson, ex from the iron parts of a ceptional child; Agnes Moosman, heavy built wagon. After some inquiry and research, he discovhealth; Cleoma Allen, hospitalered that it was one of three ity, Ida Henderson; juvenile This old cane mill, a relic of mills built of the axles and thick Ken Kellerstrass, the past, is in the possession iron tires protection; salvaged from General LeRoy legislation; Bouwhuis, of Nephi Ross of West Point. Johnson's Army who tried to membership; Audrey ones, mag The mill, which was made from invade Utah in 1857. azine; Lois Flaig, program chair- iron taken from wagons of Nephi plans to present the man; Margaret Fuller, pre- Johnson's army, had a definite in the pioneering of mill to the museum in Salt Lake place school; Norma Champneys, of City in the near future. room mother chairman; Berdean Hoper. It is still capable PTA will squeezing out sorghum juice. Jene Jacobsen, Crabtree, safety; Note the large, sturdy, long, hold a program school lunch; Virginia Anderweld in the drive next Wednesday, Sept. 21 at the shaft made by early pioneer eshool at 8 p.m. son, publicity, Betty Child. one As EDUCATION SLATE START WEDNESDAY Is Vol Roy, Utah, Thursday, September 29, 1960 Sunday's general sessions, to which the public is invited, will be held at 8 30 a m. and 2 p.m. in Ogden, Utah. Conducting the conference will be Stake President Henry A. Mans, 5512 South 2425 West, Rov, Utah. Two niiilr pliotoo, ten vcr npnrl. spun liUtory of manured Ciipr (numeral, Flu. On Julv 21, 930, Bumper 8 lireil from relutiselv mule lutim'liing pm! I later miile no-- o (act tin photo, left). Ten tears rone (right) flirt record 9,000 mile. Cape Canaveral, launching cilities tremendously'. site for many of this natioi. An example of one of the most spectacular space successes, Cnpes many missile triumphs celebrates its tenth anniversary wus the recent this year. The managed 9,000 mile flight of the General Bumper 8 was fired fro'n deso- Electric Missile and Space Veshores late by a handful of civil- hicle Mark 3 nose ian and military engineers. To- cone, Departments than any a longer flight day the Cape, which is the missile other recorded ballistic missile launching area for the Air shot in the world.The Mark 8 Forces Missile Test Center, emAtlas (right) ploys about 8,000 persons and can be seen atop the G-- record-breakin- g G-- E has expanded its launching fa Utah imposes a 6c a g illon tax on gasoline and the U S. goverment has a 4c levy. Nationally, the state and federal governments took in more than $9 5 billion last year from special taxes imposed on the motorist, Mr. A R. Peterson noted. Some $16 Billion of the federal tax revenue alone was directed to spending, he said. as it starts its historic flight. The already staggering sizes the motorsit's tax burden makes it imperative that gasoline taxes go no higher, Mr. Peterson declared, the fourth cent of the current federal levy is slated to expire next June 30 and it is essental that it do so. The motorists is hit hard enough already." of 'hants. 1 love the best of them. Most of the money made in my liftinie came from I first selling, then selecting, and supervising training salesmen. I have learned a few things about salesmanship. I'll share them here. Salesmanship is; Mingling with men in a friendly fashion, going out of the way to meet strangers, keeping eyes and ears pealed for sales situations. a Doing good everything salesman ought to do and insisting, from the first day in business, that the only proper conduct is that conduct which builds prestige, A Belief in stretching the inind in order to be able to converse Intelligently with men in all walks of life. To resolve to pay the price of intensive study to be able talk the language. The development of a de- - The person who can capture and hold attention is the person who can cflectively influence human behavior; what we attend to controls our behavior. What we can get others to attend to controls their behavior. Its the sizzle that sells the steak, not the cow! Whatever you are going to talk about has a sizzle. THE SIZZLE is usually the emotional side of the sale, the side that makes people want to buy more than the money it may cost, or the time it may take! The biggest sale in any is the service the free-wil- l offering of courtesy and kindness. This ia store the finest produce, there can be no substitue. There youve got the big sil-zlThe first important emotional urge for what you are selling. You ve put it right into favorable mmd of your cus-t- o tomer or prospect. Lets think together next e. week. |