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Show AL. Letter to the Editor: This is America . . Permit No. 19 BULK RATE U S. Postage Paid Roy, Utah The City with a Future ROY Roads.. Ordinance Keep Roy Council Working Approval of the Ken-Ma- r Sub- division located west of was again not forthcoming from the city council when Milas Kenington and Fred Spahr, developers, appeared before the city council Tuesday night. The difficulty lies in running a water line to serve the 98 100 lot subdivision. Hal-Ver- n Hal Vern is serviced by a four inch pipe which ties into a six inch main running from the highway down 4000 So The thing that is trying to be avoid ed is jeopardising the water sup ply of Hal-Ver- Mayor O Dean Parker point ed out that to develope a subdi vision so far from the fire de partment and utilities would in crease the city taxes and that he would prefer seeing industry onung into Roy rather than so many new homes Mr Spahr then asked if it would be possi ble to de annex the 72 acres upon which the subdivision is planned. The section was of finally annexed by the city last fall. Mayor Parker said that it could be done alright Council man Charles F Hull objected as it would be to a step backward, "and we have to go ahead," he said. - After considerable more dis- pptttianef's.'-dckC-d cussion that the council approve the plans as they were recommend ing that an eight inch pipe be laid for the water line under the railroad tracks and that the city help defray the costs The installation of the eight inch line would be planning for the future development Coun cilman Dale Bingham said he felt that the city should approve its installation and pay the dif ference between the six inch and eight inch pipe Council man Charles F Hull and Dil worth Lyman were of the same opinion, stating that it w be to the advantage of the city to pay the difference The question then arose as to when the road was dedicated If it was dedicated after Apnl 1955, property owners are re sponsible for improvement of the road, Mayor Paiker stated Mr Bingham suggested that the hole be filled with crushed gra vel for the time being In the meantime, property owners would be required to install cuib and gutters before any per manent improvement in the road could be made. Mr Nelson and Mr Hartman said they were willing to go along with the city in any requirement made by it to get the ball rolling The section has not been included in this year's improvement district and it might mean some delay before the city can act upon including it, the mayor said City Attorney LaVar Stark presented an ordinance to the city council, upon the recom mendation of Nick Smith, bond mg company representative, concerning the publishing of notices on the improvement dis tnct, whcieby, the city will be to publish notices required twice and notify owners of the property twice as to intent The council must also appoint a board of equalization to hear protests and make adjustments. The ordinance was approved. Roy, Utah, Thursday, May 5, I960 WARD SLATE Installation Slated for Officers WELFARE FEAST The Lake View Ward vyill hold its annual welfaie dinner Friday May 13 from 5 to 7 p m in the ward recreation hall The dinner will cost $10 per family The purpose is to help raise funds for the welfare assignment The dinner is in lieu of an agricultural or building pr All members of the w'ard are invited and asked to b'ing their own silveiware. relatives call at the family home, West 5600 So. between above mentioned hours No please and may 2093 the gifts Announce Engagement Fair the engage The new ordinance government and approaching man,.., ing water rates was approved as of her daughter Marsh i lyin was the acceptance of responsi to AC2 Earl W Hill, son of of accident or injury bilily of Mr and Mrs Wiliam I caused by the bursting of the is Uintah The marriage da pipe line during bis'lllaion set for May 28th in I an bury under the railroad tracks for slot m darns Insurance carried the Miss Doran is a nurse by the city would pay the costs Fairbury Hospital. Doran of i i Mr Hull asked for the approv-- i Earl is an antenna an I hib'e at of Walter Thomas for an al- specialist now stationed at t h m ternate caretaker of the Mun ute Air Force Base in Rai t ml, icip.nl groi,ids and building, III over the weekends and a $200 Eail parents will o to F..ir wage set up to be divided be bui v to wtti nd the w c dd'.i. an increase of 300 per cent over the present quarters. The new facility has many features designed to make banking as modern and convenient as possible for the customer. The public is invited to visit this bank spectacle. 50c mission vited ighaii A i e s.ii ile ,m pupa nlei i.iinc is ,u'tl 'Hu m piihlm Vanda on bids will be lailv at to each CpriMfar Unlrl IlClU pAf ()0y Hit By rape or murder. Darkness attracts some verv stiange birds, but the penetiat-inpower of modern street lighting sends them on their way. Neighborhood streetcrimes are headlined all over the United States, but they dont occur in lighted situations. Muggings in the dark neighborhoods of Washington D.C.; Rape in a dark ChiMurcago apartment alley-wader under the uncertain lighting conditions of Norfolk ; Assault in of Camden. the dark We can't patrol every area of every city every moment, say police. Modern street lighting is a partner of the law. by-wa- Bt v te 'U ndiiig Roy Chamber , AUTO Meet Wednesday The merce Rov Clumber meeting Wednesday, Mav Ma's and Pas of Com- 11 he'd be will noon at at Blaine Kay, dislnct engineer, and Ernest Balch a number of the state road commission will be the guest speakeis Councilmen, chamber members, businessmen and the general public are invited to attend This will be a public meet.ng on the new six lane highway and how the access and left hand turns will be planned. City Teens of Roy Third Ward'Dance Saturday The teenagers of the Rov Thud Ward will hold a platter partv Saturdav May 7 at 8 pm at the new hapel in the rec rea'ion lull Tlieie will be food dancing and fun for all Admis sion is onlv 50i per person Mu a sic wi'l be furnished by pike box provided by Mr and M's Bud Turnbow c Off.o c h ii gi of the MI nf the affair i ale s m si hestitate attitude keteers, the cities use the excuse that they "have no legal grounds to refuse a license to a peddler if that peddling does not violate a statute or ordinance. Lets listen, also, to the house- wife of our community. They are the targets of all salesmen. My guess is that they would really appreciate a salesman of Mr Binghams calibre one who has a feeling for their feelings one who knows when to leave ne who knows when not to put his foot in the door and one who can take no for an answer! It is unfortunate, however, that too many salesmen are too persistent, too aggressive, and too anxious to make a sale. One cannot entirely blame them (they are working to make a living) because they have learned that persistence results in sales. It also results in the Green River ordinonce. The Roy City council must make a decision based upon (1) Is anly oidinance or what is the best interests of a law un Ameiican when a major- majority, and (2) what is clearly desired by that majority. It ity of the citizens of a desire it.' is unfortunate, and sometimes Our "hole system of Ameri- enfair, but certainly not that a certain minorcan g ncinmenl is based on the rule of the majority. That rule ity may be hurt. is not always good for everyone, If the majority of Roy City and it is tiue that some diswishes, that certain charitable crimination is always present groups be permitted to make but thats how the ball bounces! r solieations, but to I wouldn't say that it is exclude commercial operations, however, if the ball let them make their views does not bounce the way I known to the council; if they want it to. wish unrestricted selling or solIf the majority of the citizens iciting, or restricted selling let of Roy want the Green River them make those views known ordinance revised, let them say also. The immediate way to- do so; if they want it enforced, let this is to attend the public them giv ethe city a clear man- hearing; but the best way, per- i haps, is to put the issue on an date to do so. sainted- - election ballot wbere-eacb ,i. There is, it should per- out. un inherent and serious son can have his own personal danger in reving the ordinace, "say with the vote he or she merely to make it a licensing or- casts. dinance Equitable control is Robert G. Sanderson difficult to achieve, and persons on u control board or what-ivc- r il muv be culled, aie subj eit to main pressures politi cal. personal, religious and Salt Lake City and economic Ogden bo'li have licensing or (brume-- - and both cities, in dispci. ,tc financial stiaits use There will be another meet'ho (.I iliii.nicc s j., a source of ing with the city council to deit vi niio i hoi than as a means termine whether or not there mtend-- i oi c nut ul as oiuinally will be one new shopping cend ter in Clearfield or two I hi sell licenses to all cornThere is a possibility of anels good ami bad, and when an other shopping center being i flint is made to stop the licensing of undesiiable and lac built between 250 and 450 So. If it is decided that at the rate Clearfield is growing that one Roy 12, Valley 1 shopping center will not be sufThe Rov Junior High girls ficient to meet the needs of the softball team stacked up 14 hits people with two of them homeruns by Lo'a t louder to tally 12 tunes and whip Valley Junior High in a Weber ( minty league softball Last Saturday many women game turned out to try out the new The v ict (Tv made two in a laundry which opened in Clearlow for the Roy ites as they up field The laundry will be in operaset smith Junior 25 20 in last weeks contest. tion 24 hours a day. bad I that such an would to say is com-inunit- door-to-doo- - -- Clearfield Fathers lo Decide New Centers Fate i Who will succeed her? Laundry Opens iimmiiHiittiiimtiinitiiimti'i imitmdidiinNMimiimitimiiimiimiiMim By R. F. ihe living pj i That is the question running thiough the minds f millions of American homemakers as the time foi selectin',' a succissm to the reigning Mrs. America, Maigaiet Pricbe of Dcs Moines, Iov.u, (above) draws near. Contests to select state winners from all 50" and the Distiict of with the national finals Columbia will be completed by ' following in Ft. Lauderdale, Flonda, June 2 to 14 to Among the $50,000 in puzes be awarded this year is a $30,000 the proficiency of each finalist in home equipped with a complete all aicas of hometnaking This inRCA Whirlpool Mrs. America gas cludes baking, dishcooking, kitchen which includes a refrig- washing. launduing, dyeing fabwasher-dryeerator, combination rics, and table placement, to built-irange, counter-tomention a few. Each state winr dish- ner will have burner and proven herself the washer. In addition, the new Mrs. most outstanding in all these America will receive a swimming categories befoie arriving in Ft. vacation in Lauderdale, and receive the new pool and Florida for her husband and her- RCA Whirlpool gas refrigeiator, self. Husbands of all finalists will shown above, as top prize. be on hand in Ft. Laudeidale to Entry blanks for the Mrs. watch their wives vie for the America contest are available at Mis. America crown. Coronation will be before a na- RCA Whirlpool appliance dealer tional television audience direct stores in vutually all sections of from the War Memorial auditori- the country. Blanks may also be um In Ft. Lauderdale. Leading obtained on request fiom Mrs. up to the final selection will be a America, Inc , 527 Madison Ave., aeries of judgings to determine New Yoik 22, N. Y. I put 1960 QSOpliieS T ITS WORD certain obligations to life We have V e - Cottle TAKE LIFE but y; SECURITY BANK to open COMMERCIAL new $1,250,000 main office Monday, May 0th at one of Ogden's busiest corners, Washington Boulevard and 25th Street. The new building provides 43,000 square feet of space a ( g JS.V the I v now a mobile jopulation brings danger to our zery doorsteps. Police officers agree that the oossibility of being seen is the most powerful detei rent to crime. Modern street lighting provides this protection, for it leaves no shadowy places between spots of light. It gives the potential criminal no dark place to hide anil epi ing on an unsuspecting victim. It leaves no dai K landscaped areas to serve as cover for robbeiy, x lcatuiing the Hawa.ian c tween the present caretaker and Mr Thomas It was also stipulated that to set up this wage, STAKE CHART SERIES more woik on the upkeep of it would be necessary to extend the building and grounds would the backstop at the Roy Park OF TEEN DANCES Mayor Parker then stated that be required The request was to keep balls out of the grounds The Lake View Stake MIA are the best way to come to a de approved Some $175 will be of the County Chronic Hospital a senes of dances sponsoring cision on the matter would be p.id by the police department Dilworth Lyman asked the each Saturdav for those who are to invite the ciljy engineers a id $75 by the fire department city to allow Fire Chief Pruitt 14 .wars of age and over The to be present at council meeting to buy the hose necessary for fust dance will be held on Mav next week, to discuss the probthe fire department, to replace 7th feat m mg Baris in Spring lem with the idea of coming to a of walks and the completion of the old hose, at his own discre- as the theme An orchestra will defmate settlement concerning1., .the parking lot at the Munici- - tion s long as he didn't go provide the music the subdivision Prior to the dance which will! pal Paik he taken care of by over ihe budgrt set up for that LaCar Nelson and Kim Hart ic Lciieral improvement fund, purpose This was met with ap begin at 8 30 p m A half hour man protested to the board derived fiom the Municipal pi oval of dance instruction will be giv about an undesirable condition Acre Fund, instead of the regen bv stake dance directors, Mr Mr Lyman slated that reand Mrs Jerrv Biown existing at 2050 West 5400 So ular park budget as the budget ceipts from fines and forfeit desiring that the council in- could not take care of the re- ures for last month amounted Sport dress are the order with no lev is or peddlepushers allow clude it in th eproposed improv-men- t creational program planned for to $3,242, $2,000 of which were this summer and the improveed There will be no admission district. One drunk ments too This was approved for drunken driving Refreshments will be The problem is a sump that by the council Mr Hull stated driver had his license revolked charge sold He received a jail sentence plus is full of water most of the that they had obtained pornus The dances will be held in the a $250 fine Other infractions tine cans, time, buckets, etc, sion from the school board to Lake View Stake gym of the law included passing the which the children leave while use the school grounds for soft school bus, petty larceny, obplaying there The place is nev- ball practice and playing. scene language and driving on er free of debree and is an Residential Modern Street He also told the council that the wrong side of the road. unsightly mess, Mr. Nelson said. Lighting Chases Crime Years ago. Cleveland, Ohio itreet attacks and assault5; wue jretty much confined to the bad . Ni chi in how v i Iar tioi pt of dance revu cbv Joyce oTci; uut l itic Lawiences J5 luxe Hawaiian dancers wiI be h'dd Saturdav in. lit. Mav 7 a ihe t nter d Lake lew S' i k Funeral sirvices for Sanford Erad K.iy 4 year old - m of Mr. and M's Rulon Km 2086 West 4000 South, were held WVdnesduv at the Lake lew Stake House bv Bishop Lai on O. Kay of the Roy Sixth .ard The child was struck In a passing automobile m front (f his home Saturday evenn; a 7 45 pm dnvcn by Mrs Vern W Young who was moving the last of their belongings to their new home in South Ogdt n She did not see the child who J rt cd past another car into the path of her approaching iar State Highway patrolman. Cliff Green who investigated the accident, stated that was not to blai.i bhe calf only eomg 20 miles fin hour when the accident occuriul and she stopped immediatelv witn out skid marks or passing over the child He died three hours later in the I)ce Ilospral oi multiple head injuries, Sanford Kay was born in Og On Mav 4 the weekly Kiwanis ,en Sept 7 j955 Sunivin!! a,0 meeting vva held at the Pagoda his parents, a brother Rochu taie m Roy The speaker wasdn(j three sixers. Mary Lynn Truman Carver Jodie, and Wendy The grmd Mr Carver is associated with parents, Mr and Mr- - Loien ground safety at Hill AFB He, Kay of Sunset and Mi and Mrs showed a film and gave a talk Herbcit Ziegler Smithfmu' habits and on safe driving i ground .safety neighborhoods, a' let InivtMlv Don An open house will be held Sunday May 8 from 2 to 6 pm It will be m honor of Thomas (libby who is ulchruung his 87 h hirlhrfhy v Hawaii Club of Storey, historian. OPEN HOUSE SET Mable A that end - better under mding we should examine the 'other side of the coin Is the Green River ordinance un American as charged Courts have upheld it Citizens of many small western cities have adopt ed it in the face of bitter on fiom companies and in dividuals who are engaged in door to door selling. The story of why the little community of Green River adopted the ordinance originally is bv now well known and need not be repeated here but the gist of it is that the people the .American people of that community desired protection fiom all solicitors, good and To Jay-eette- Outgoing officers are Mrs. Shreck, president, Mrs Charles Morgan, vice president; and Mis. Clark Puffer, secre- tary. Mrs. Set May 7 s New leaders for the Roy will be installed May 28 at the ceremonies of the Roy Junior Chamber of Commerce. New officers for the coming year are Mrs Charles Morgan, president, Mrs Norman Thedell, Mrs Blaine vice president, Lemon, sccietary, Mrs Clark Puffer, treasurer and Mrs Max Mr and Mrs Harvey Sehenck are general chairmen of the occasion They will be assisted by the ward Relief Society FOR THOMAS GIBBY No. 50 Night in Hawaii j Two year directors arc Mrs. Donald Schreck and Mrs Lyle Hamilton with Mrs Sherd Shepherd and Mrs Lte Atashake as hold over dii ectors Inends Volume 6 Mr Binghams letter to the editor in last weeks issue was ail excellent and reasonable presentation of the case for liberalization of Roys Green River oidmanre His thesis that the citizens should hear both sides bi tin e making a decision eer laiiily is the democratic way. We owe life service. oie indebted to those who came to life before us hose who first fed our bodies, our minds and our souls. Iaiheis and mothers fnrndx and neighbors aie the best ol mu lives These tnlks sent us to school with their gifts taxi's and a hundred things and mid-Ma- more- - T hev taught us lo be honest, generous, kind, virtuous and useful. I.iie feeds us knowledge. Our reward is experience. Experience expects us to pass on to generations here and unborn, an unbroken chain of affection, faith and service. r, p n under-counte- two-wee- k .. i Take life at its vvciul All the things we do affect our life day of the week every Ideals and standards are precious thinks life gave to us for our safety and happiness. Lifes word to us is develop your mind and body to the It emphasizes, your richest and most last-11- 1 fullest opportunity rewards will come to you from your achievements through learning, living, sharing and serving. ... it feels better Stay in tune with life better . . . and is better, this way. Lets think together next week. j. 'A , . . . and sounds |