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Show cy a a sttpt pt ant nnnnn hur np utahs r.w - T- GOOD LIVING IN FINS volume 19. number is OREM, UTAH, THURSDAY, MAY 10. 1951 PRICK 10 CENTSJJ Lincoln Seniors tI Graduate May 25 equation exercises for 114 ' G?in high school seniors will SSay evening, May 25, fm n the Scera auditor-at auditor-at Ccalaureate services are m,r 130 Tpm. Sunday, May fs era wUhDr. Ernest L. SnS as principal speaker. "Today's youui "Toaay theme of Traders theTbfllsetSof' graduates includes tfnfAnderson, Jeanette Sm Bertien Adams, Mar-Sffi Mar-Sffi Adams, Florence Ell-:AB, Ell-:AB, Noreen Allred, Don- A na as"-". - . n T .Ann i jean nius". v.- - C egg, Nyra Colvin, Maxine j n Croft, Diane Davis, Rulene Sman, Evelyn GlendJ . Draper, chirieen Ericksen, Joan Griffiths Griff-iths Colleen Jenkins, Monta ae Jeppson, Marian Johnson, See Johnson, Betty Jean KaU- Pearl Lola Lees, : Patricia LeMond, Beth Lunce-ford Lunce-ford Ha Jean Macdonald, Kath-ryn Kath-ryn Ann Memmott, Janice Miller Mill-er Frances Myrlene Monsen, Jacqueline Mott, LaRae Muhles-tein, Muhles-tein, Inez Maxine Muhlestein, Pearl Juliai Nelson, Yoshiko Nodzu, Deon Olsen, Laurene Doris E. Paulson, Dorothy Jean Poulson, Sharleen Rose .Peacock, Donna A. Pitts, Jean Ray, Leone Reynolds, L.omse ; Reynolds, Eva Colleen Rice, Pat-' ricia Ann Smith, Emma Louise j : Sundquist," Geralee Swan, Joan .Terry, Bessie Rae Tolbert, Lor- ' et:a Twomey, Yolanda Voorhees, ' ; Norma Jean Wagstaff, Carole j Swan Walker, Ardis Jean West-! I wood, Rey L. Allred, Dovavon Clar- W Mrs. J. W. Gillman, Orem'i first lady, mother of 10 and resident of Orem for over 40 years, is typical of mothers here and througout the nation as she shows the family portrait of her five sons, five daughters, herself and Mayor Gillman. Mother of 10. resident of Orem since 1908. grand mother to 22. shy, yet charming, we salute Mrs. Gillman as representative of mothers throughout our community. SURVEY UNDERWAY FOR CHANGE IN OREM MAIL DELIVERY PROGRAM I ence Ashton, Sherman Bigelow, I Ronald Buchanan, John 'Raymond 'Ray-mond Caley, Levell Campoell, ? Alvin R. Carl'le, Gilbert Robert Childs, Conway Clayton, Morris ; G. Clegg, Lloyd Cluff, Paul W. 1 Ccnrad, Raymond G. Coroner, c Fred CowL'y, I Ned Cowley, Robert Curtis. f. Norman Er!ou?h, Robert Emm-t Emm-t ons, Alton -kins, Paul Ekins, . LaMar Evans, L. Floyd Farley, '. Levis Gappmayer, Grant Gib-: Gib-: sen, James Gary Goodman, Rob-err Rob-err Gordon, Charles Warren Hanks Roger Hansen, Richard V. Heaps, Mako Hideshima, Wil liam A. Isakson, Richard LeRoy Jacobson, E. Jean Jepperson, JayLorus Johnson, Oliver T. Johnson, Cree L. Kofford, Jack MacDonald, Johnny MacDon-ald, MacDon-ald, Garn L. Mecham, John R. Miller, Berney Mon-drapon, Mon-drapon, Harvey P. Mott, Bob Nielsen, Dale J. Peterson, Ray Alvin Peterson, Richard Kay Peterson, Terry Fenton Prince, Delwyn F. Pugh, Paul Reese, Roy Dean Rowland, Gordon H. Sakamoto, Thomas Dean Shurtz, Karl Lloyd Taylor, Blaine M. Tippetts, Boyd L. Williams, Joe F. Wright. Certificates of . equivalency TOlbe presented to Kenneth Burr, Herbert W. Carter, Gerald " hooper and James E. May- fon Hatch Elected Lincoln High Student President Ronald Hatch, son of Mr. and Mrs i. Adelbert Hatch, was named a dent body president of Lin- ln high school for 1951-52 at wHoni held last Friday on the mpus. He succeeds Richard Person. Named vice president' was an ? eyl0lds- daughter of Mr. d Mn. Dave Reynolds. Carma daughter of Mr. and Lowell Varley, was elected 2fy;,and Nita Doman, iiainen n ctnnnn Will Cox, son of Mr and Mrs. Prospects for door-to-door mail service in some Orem subdivisions sub-divisions brightened this week with the arrival here of J. T. Gardner, postal inspector, who is conducting a survey to establish estab-lish the needs of the city and to determine if the city can qualify qual-ify for changes iin postal service. serv-ice. . . Mr. Gardner stated early this week that some changes will no doubt be made, pointing out that some subdivisions are not getting get-ting the service which is normally normal-ly given areas which are as urban ur-ban as Morningsiide Heights, LaMero, Chrisleele Acres, tiie Beverly area and the Drage-Memmo Drage-Memmo Gardens area. He said that some of the sub-divisions would probably be recommended recommend-ed for door-to-door delivery, others may be recommended for a "mounted carrier" type of delivery. de-livery. Mr. Gardner pointed out that Orem's widely dispersed population popula-tion made an unusual problem for mail deliivery. Postal itgu-lations itgu-lations are set up to provide gradually enlarging perimeters for door-to-door delivery within a city. Such a policy cannot apply to Orem, which ha- no centralization of population except ex-cept in outlying sub-divisions. Mr. Gardner's survey will be completed within the next few days, and his recommendations will be acted upon by Washington Washing-ton officials. Orem's mail .service now consists con-sists of three rural carriers who deliver to roadside boxes, with nnp section of the city still get- tin iits mail from the Provo postoffice through a rural carri er from there OREM STAKE OFFICERS PLAN FAMILY PARTY Vets to Organize Orem DAV Chapter Wednesday Night A group of disabled Orem veterans vet-erans met Tuesday night at the Veterans Memorial building for the purpose of organizing a local chapater of the Disabled American Amer-ican Veterans. The meeting was conducted by Fred Fielding, commander of the Wasatch chapter of the DAV, who intro duced state and national DAV officials. The group, which included Neldon R. Bishop, Clyde E. Weeks Jr., Blake J. Liston, Wesley Wes-ley Graff, Walter M. Corbet, Bill Baker, Fred Fielding and Irving Johnnson, voted to hold an organization meeting at 8 p m. Wednesday, May 16, at the Veterans Memorial building for the purpose of completing the organization and electing officers. offic-ers. All disabled veterans, including includ-ing those listed above, who present pres-ent eligibility papers and pay dues before May 31 will be list ed as charter members of the chapter. A special invitation was issu ed to all disabled veterans, veterans' vet-erans' widows and families of disabled veterans to attend the organizational meeting. Activities Activ-ities of the organization will be outlined and a name for the new chapter will be chosen. Orem Safety Council Discusses Traffic Problems Members of the Orem Safety Council met this week to discuss the traffic problem at the 4th North and State intersection near the new Safeway store. Albert Knowles of Salt Lake City, Safeway representative, and Lewis Pearce, manager of the Orem store, met with the council. It was decided that Mr. Knowles and Ralph Peters, Orem Or-em police chief, would meet with the state road commission 'o attempt to find a solution to the problem. Chairman Amert Martin was in charge of the meeting. Ezra Taft Benson To Speak at Sharon Conference Elder Ezra Taft Benson of tne council of the Quorum of Twelve will represent general LDS church authorities at the Sharon Shar-on s'ake quarterly conference scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, Sun-day, according to Henry D. Taylor, Tay-lor, stake president. Walter Dan-sie Dan-sie of the general welfare committee com-mittee will also be in attendance. General sessions of the confer-1 ence are set for Sunday at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m- in the Scera auditorium- Priesthood leadership leader-ship meeting will be held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Timp-anogos Timp-anogos ward chapel. The welfare wel-fare session will be held Saturday Satur-day at 7:30 in the Timpanogos chapel. Music for the first general session will be furnished by the High Priests of the stake. The six stake chorus, comprising singers from the two Orem stakes and six Provo stakes, will sing at the Sunday evening session. Orem stake executive officers and members of the high council and their partners will attend a Stala Family Party on Thursday, Thurs-day, May 17 at 8 p.m. in the Vermont-Orem First ward hall. The party is being sponsored by the Relief Society stake officers. offic-ers. The evening's entertainment will include a program and a Smorgasbord. Mr and Mrs. Ivan Sanderson Sander-son and family spent the weekend week-end at Cove, Utah with Mrs. Snnderscn's sister and husband, senior and primary girls, are ex Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Day. pected to be in attendance. SOFTBALL LEADERS TO MEET WEDNESDAY Leaders and directors of soft-ball soft-ball teams expecting to play in the summer recreation leagues will meet Wednesday evening, May 16 at 8 p.m. to make plans for the coming season, according to Parlell Peterson, director of the program. Tha meeting will be held in the Lincoln high activity act-ivity room, west of the gymn. Leaders of all teams in the Scout league, cubs, and junior, r.loro IVgIcf fcr Orem Scon IViili Aqueduct Connection Undonvay Completion within two weeks of the connection to the Salt Lake aqueduct designed to enable Orem City to utilize its own Deer Creek water in the city's culinary system as seen this week, it was reported to the Orem city council on Monday ntht by Councilman Philo T. Edwards and Ray E. Loveless and City Enjrineer Leonard V. Beckman. The project, which has been in the planning stage for a long time, involves the cutting into the concrete pipeline at a point just above Orem's two-million gallon reservoir. The work is being financed by the Orem Metropolitian Water board. Over a period of years Orem City will repay up to 50 percent of the cost. In addition to the connection to the aqueduct the city must lay a pipe and connect it to the reservoir. Mayor J. W. Gillman reported on a mee Jg with officials of rther cities ol Utah county in rcpard to standardizing license ng fees charged by cities througout the county. He pointed point-ed out that some cities are licensing lic-ensing barbers, doctors and other oth-er profes-ional men from $15.00 to $50 00 per year. The council cgreed hat it would bewell for city offic'als throughout the county to work closely together In enacting and enforcing such legislation. Meetings are planned for the future where matters of common interest to the-cit'es can be studied, the mayor said. yK - x - x 1 I i J ..;;., . v.,i:y... -r-r-- -..-.,; ,, I I I Mr. and Mrs. Clark Carter f have returned from an extend-1 Ann Reynolds, left, and Carma Varley who havs been selected ed vacation trip in California, as Orem's representatives to Girls Stat thi summer. TIL'. 2 T t T3 rr n awA I Los Angeles, and returned home JLliN iULiiN vjIKLO via San Francisco. At San Bruno , Mr. and Mrs. Orla Olesen SFT.FrTFD FOR they Visitea wim .mer juene . and son Peter, arrive'd here Buckner, son of Bishop and Mrs. Den. Dean Buckner of the Grand ' View ward. Elder Buckner is mrk- They were metby his serving on a mission and is stat- s'ster and brother-in-law, Mr. ioned now at San Bruno. and Mrs. Claudi Nielsen. nam a rr I'udeni ; ux' was elected 7ft body judge. amed cheer leaders for next kelson y and Billie Lou i?Plt0aiceri deluding ionaM Pteterson- Ha Jean Mac-agstaff Mac-agstaff nice Miller Norma vS&T 01iver Johnson-aect"i Johnson-aect"i e "ew oicers at the ing. n H(-Down Friday even- eeknf 1 !lections climaxed a h'ch foil" enlve campaigning ! pfi we.d primary elecH Canrt ,a.y' APril 27. I CeWteswhran in the! "Winn TS were Glen Par-i v' nrT arJean Stratton for for 'dent. Virginia Stubbs mon 8'. and Eugene Gam- ?l: ta Jer toy " w whu nun I finals were Doris ..... ... ' , .'...v.. : ?s 4 -v . : , ' ifieri ' Readers who qual ChUds, t Vnals were Doris !eli liSan RWley and Jan ' iwww---" ' - u;nU crlinnl tKi tvoalr with th fSnF.1 VAfina tat ftiud- Electioneering came 10 Rona,d Halch pres5deBl; Carma Variey. ent body 0"'"r0" historiao; Bill Cox. Judge, MarJean Stratton. Billi. Lou Erick.en and oMwT ! cheerleaders. Ann Reynolds. vice president, was not present when the picture WT,h.8 newly-elecled officer, will t.k. offiic n.xt September. GIRLS STATE Ann Reynolds, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Reynolds, and Carma Varley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Varley, have been named to represent Orem at the annual Girls State, slated June 24 to July 1 at the USAC campus. Girls State is sponsored by the Utah Department of the American Amer-ican Legion auxiliary, and has as its purpose the education of our young women in the duties, privileges, rights and responsibilities respons-ibilities of American citizenship-Donna citizenship-Donna Ashton represented Orem Or-em last year. Sponsoring groups for the two girls are the Orem Legion auxiliary aux-iliary and the Orem chapter of Business and Professional Women. Wom-en. The girls were selected on the basis of leadership qualities, character, scholastic standing and cooperativeness. Only members of the junior class at Lincoln high school were eligible- Girls were nominated nomin-ated by a committee of faculty members and the final selection was made following interviews, senior next year at Lincoln high by a committee of the sponsor-i school. She helps in the store Member of the staff of the Creer Contracting company poises digger to begin excavation which will join Orem's 2.000.000 gallon gal-lon reservoir, background, with the Deer Creek reservoir-Salt Lake City aqueduct. When the link is completed Orem can util ize part of the 2000 sere feet of Deer Creek reservoir it owns for culinary purposes. The link is expected to be completed within the next three weeks. Use of the aqueduct for transporting the Orem water was crranged fcr through ai agreement between the alt Lake municipal water board and Orem City, according to Meyor J. W. Gillman. Cost for the service will depend upon the amount of water conveyed. I m FiL'IMACY MES REST ANNIVERSARY, BOOSTS LOCAL SALES Another in a series of features dosi jned to acquaint Orsn people with the business and industrial establishments which are paying Orm tar:s and which sore providing Orem's payrolls. The series v. Ill feature members cf the Orem Chamber of Commerce boosters for the development develop-ment of Utah's fastest growing city. "Your Best Buy is Orom" that's the slogan coined by Olenn Kobertson, genial owner of Orem Pharmacy, and adopt ed by the Orem Chamber of Commerce as a battle cry for Business, it expresses tne sentiments or Ulenn Robertson and his wife, Izetta, who celebrated the first anniversary of their drug store located at 8th South and State Street on February 25, 1951 A native of Lovell, Wyoming, Mr. Robertson received his grade and hiprh school education there. His collece work was taken at BYU, University of Wyoming, and Idaho State College. At the latter school he received hisi Bachelor of Science degree in Pharmacy. According to the Robertsons, when the time came for them to select a place to make their permanent home "We chose Or em because we think it has the greatest potential for develop ment of any city. In the country, possesses an ideal climate. A-bove A-bove all, we wanted to be with the fnest people in the world." Prescription Counter Center of attraction at Orem Pharmacy is Mr. Robertson s open prescription counter. By following a policy of keeping only the freshest drugs in stock and having a registered pharmacist pharm-acist on duty at all times, he has developed one of the finest prescription pres-cription counters in the area. Assisting in the operation or the drug store are Robert Allred, Evelyne Terry, Hilda Park and Mrs. Robertson. A native of this area, Mrs. Robertson was born in Provo and received her college degree from BYU. Although she has lived in Wyoming the past 13 years she says her heart has al ways been in Utah county. The Robertsons have one daughter, Amyee, who will be a Friends and relatives called call-ed to ex'end birthday greetings to Mrs. Seth Rawlings Wednesday Wednes-day at her home. Many cards and flowers were presented to Mrs. Rswlings- let-, Garbage Service The council considered tcr from an organization in San Francisco which was interested in taking over Orem's garbage disposal srrvice on a contract basis- The council voted to inform in-form the group that the city is ' not interested in euch a propospl at this time. The council authorized Kayor Gilhnan to sign agreements vvhkh havt been cornpkteil on U. S. 91 where the city is iii-:;tu!ling iii-:;tu!ling six and tight-inch lines n the final p i;.., j of the $210,-uv,j $210,-uv,j water wjiii, improvement program. "HA RON K INDKRG ARTEN 'ECISTHATION IS UNDERWAY Registration for kindergarten, at the Sharon School is now underway un-derway for children who will be six years old by October 31, it was announced today. Parents may register their children every ev-ery school day except Wednes day from 3:15 to 4:30 p.m, until May 28 when classes will begin. Janice Craig, daugter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Craig of Beverly Bev-erly Place, is able to be out a gain after having rheumatic fever fev-er for the past six weeks. Clorene Lamb, Scera sec-re'ary sec-re'ary left by air Wednesday fer a vacation in the Northwest. She will visit Portland and Seattle and will take a tei. day steamship tour as far as Alaska- 'IT L ng group. The Legion Auxiliary selected Miss Varley, and the BPW named Miss Reynolds. Miss Varley is active in the music department at Lincoln and has been band room secretary. secret-ary. She was named secretary of the student body at recent elections. elect-ions. Miss Reynolds came to Lin-coin Lin-coin last year from Springville and has been active in debate and forensic activities. She was named student body vice presid" ent at the recent elections. Announcement of the Legion auxiliary selection was made by during the summer months. Orem Booster Boosting Orem is a job Glenn Kobertson enjoys in his capacity ( as a director of the Orem Chamber Cham-ber of Commerce. He is enthusiastic enthus-iastic about his business, about he city, and about the people. He's one of the many newcomers who say they like it here! I l i.i ''II miL '-'-: "J .' r ,") m--. Mrs. Ray Loveless, president anad Girls State chairman; while Mrs. Bessie Meiling, Orem BPW president, announced the selection of Miss Reynolds. At work behind his up-io-dai prescription counter is Glenn Robertson, owner of Orem Pharmacy. Glenn is an enthusiastic worker for civic betterment. He believes in shopping at home and promote thsi idea wherever he goes. |