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Show Orem-Geneva Times Thursday. March 24, I960, 14,420,543 meals served to school children A total of 14,420,543 complete com-plete meals were served m Utah during the 1958-59 scnooi year Dy the School Lunch Program, Ivy M. Johnson said recently as the state ob served its first School Luxich week. Mrs. Johnston Is Dre sident of the Utah School Food Service Association. In charge of the school lunch program in the Provo district Is Nona Morgan of Levan. ..vu or. xnese meals were school lunches, each served 1(7311 WE HAVE Fuel Oil For All Your Heating Needs! No. 1 Fuel No. 2 Fuel No. 3 Fuel Phone FR 3-1630 For quick - courteous service McCoard Oil Co.9 Inc. 533 So. State, Provo with a half pint of milk as a beverage," Mrs. Johnson said, "This represents a remarkable growth in this program. Dur ing 1953-54 there were 9,451, 833 school lunches served in Utah, and in 1955-56 the figure was 11,659,958." She noted that receipts from school lunch sales during 1958-59 totaled nearly $5 million, including $716,329 in Federal cash and $628,000 from the state fund Approximately $3.5 million of the year's total receipts came from lunch sales. Schools and PTA organiza t'ons throughout the state this week are telling both students and parents the Importance of the school lunch program with special programs, demonstra tions and exhibits. r 'V; V Lawrence Black new chairman of bond drive Lawrence F. Black, manager of Utah operation of U.S. Steel's Columbia-Geneva Steel Division, has been appointed State Payroll Savings Chair man lor I960, Frederick P Camp, chairman of the Utah Savings Bonds Committee, an nounced recently. One of Utah's leadings in dustrialists, Mr. Black accept ed the appointment at a lunch' eon with Ivy Baker Priest in Salt Lake City. Mr. Black has served in many community activities in Salt Lake City and Provo including president of the Utah Safety Council for two terms. In his new re sponsibil'ty he will be calling on business ana industrial organizations throughout Utah to encourage them to conduct Payroll Savings campaigns during the coming three months. PRETTY SALAD, TOO Vivacious Sharon Baxter, Utah's 1960 Dairy Princess, serves Harold L. Peterson, formerly of Orem, a delicious salad made with Utah cot tage cheese as the state observes a Cottage Cheese Festival Fes-tival continuing until April 17. Mr. Peterson is manager manag-er of the Americcan Dairy Association of Utah. YOU and YOUR STATE DOLLARS AHEAD when you shop where you see this sign ' YOU'RE dollars ahead because your S&H Green Stamps give you extra values in Distinguished Merchandise at ho added cost to you. YOUR STATE is dollars ahead, too, because S&H is a big buyer of your State's manufactured products for 600 Green Stamp redemption centers across the nation. . So shop where you see the sign the sign that means extra values for your home State, too. II 1 m 3nr -titD -tu tn m, u i i iigi i a. i i m ax Youth theater sets play. Tom Sawyer' The cast for the Brigham Young University Youtheatre production, "Tom Sawyer," which will be presented March 23-26 in College Hall, was announced today by Dr. Albert O. Mitchell, professor of Speech and Dramatic Arts and Youth theatre director. In the title role will be Steve Mitcheil, with Rusty Anderson as understudy. Cousin Sid will be played by Mike Slack and Roger Sheffield, and Huck Finn will be played by Larry Denham. Vicki Wentz will be Becky Thatcher. BYU students will be seen In the adult roles which will Include In-clude Deanna Turner as Aunt Polly, Sandra Ward as Mrs. Harper, Nancy Higginson as Mrs. Thatcher, Ed Vaughan as Judge Thatcher, Elaine Rogers as the Widow Douglas, Dee Dearinger as the schoolteacher, Roger Bale as Muff Potter, Frank Hatch as Injun Joe, Owen Jensen and Merril Car ter as lawyers, Dale Hilton as Dr. Rob'nson, and Ron Pierce as sheriff. Mr. Scott finishes army schooling FORT SLOCUM, N.Y. (AH TNC) Army Pvt. Jasper D. Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. I. Scott, Orem was graduated March 4 from The Information School at Fort Slocum, N.Y. Scott received eight weeks of LtraJiing in public and troop information, newspaper, press-photography press-photography and radio-television scriptwriting and broadcasting techniques. He entered the Army last October and received basic training at Fort Ord, Calif. The 23-year-old soldier is a 1955 graduate of American Fork High School and a 1959 graduate of Brigham Young University. King introduces bill to aid small Merchants to expand operations Small businessmen could nue," Mr. King said. Under Mr. King's bill. In come reinvested In the business busi-ness in three ways expansion expan-sion of depreciable assets (plant and equipment), inventory, inven-tory, and accounts receivable could be counted in the de-dw de-dw tion. plow as much as 20 percent of their profi's back into their business and deduct this amount from their annual fed eral tax under a bill introduc . d Thursday by Rep. David S. King (D-Utah). "Taken as a whole, small business has not grown as oth er segments of our economy have in the last six or seven years, because it has been crippled by the tax burden," Mr. King said. This bill would ease that burden, and give the small businesses which are badly pinched for capital the opport unity to plow some of their profits Into their own expan sions, he said. Eas ng the tax burden would not necessarily reduce the federal revenue from this seg ment of the economy, the congressman con-gressman observed. "I am convinced that this legislation- in the long run would stimulate e n o ugh growth In small business to more than offset the Immedi ate slackening in the reve- letter references. This Infor- PTA scholarships available to hich school Sr. The Utah Congress of Parents and Teachers invites qualified high school seniors who are interested in teaching as a career to apply for a PTA scholarship. April 1, 1960, is the deadline for making application ap-plication for these $100 grants. Information, available in the office of all high school principals, prin-cipals, instructs candidates to provide a written statement indicating their interest In teaching and to ob'ain three mation, along with an evaluation evalua-tion of the student provided by the high school principal, Is '.hen reviewed by the PTA director of the region who interviews in-terviews each applicant. The PTA director of this region is Mrs. J. D. Christensen of Pay-son. Shortly after the filing deadline, the State PTA Scholarship Committee headed by Herald L. Carlston, Salt Lake City, will meet to consider con-sider the applications from the twelve regions in the State. Scholarship recipients then may enter the Utah institution institu-tion of their choice to begin their teacher education programs. WORLD'S LARGEST MOST TRUSTED MOVERS BAILEYS MOVING AND STORAGE Representing ALLIED VAN LINES 4580 South State, Orem Ph. AC 5-4543 Ready Mixed Concrete Washed Sand and Gravel Heated Concrete for Cold Weather Operations Spends Hours Crocheting Every Day GENEVA ROCK PRODUCTS 1565 W. 400 N, Ph. AC 5-0718 Garages Close On Saturdays The following Orem garages will close their places of business every Saturday, beginning be-ginning Saturday, March 19, 1960. However, the garages listed below will extend their business hours on Monday thru Friday until at least 6 p. m. in order to accommodate our customers after-they come home from work. Hall Motor Service 1797 South State Hilltop Auto Works 1785 South State Don's Automotive Service 4th North and .State Orem Auto 600 North State Wrights Garage 1700 North State Bert's Garage 464 South State (rear) "Others have made it in five days, thought VICTIM OF BURNS RELEASED Barbara Lucas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lucas, has been released from the hospital following treatment of severe burns on her back. Barbara Bar-bara was burned Feb. 4 nd will be confined to her home for another month, but her condition is satisfactory. 87 10 WOMEN GET RELIEF from nervousness and "hot flashes" of CHANGE-OF-LIFE In doctor's clinical tests 1 Every case tested got striking relief re-lief from awful discomforts of change-of-life. Nervousness was reduced for as many as 87 . . . "hot flashes" 757i , No Costly Shots Needed-Female Needed-Female Ailments Relieved) Results were credited entirely to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Acting through the sympathetic nervous system, it has remarKaoie power u reuevc uiu functionally-caused distress. Don't suffer neeaiessiy. bee u that tension, irritability aren't relieved re-lieved with Pinkham's. See if you don't escape suliocating not flashes" that made change-of-life so hard to bear. Today, get Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at all drug stores. SLEEP 8 HOURS-WAKE UP TIRED? When due to simple Iron deficiency defi-ciency anemia, take Plnkham Tablets. Rich In Iron, they start to strengthen your blood In one day. Beat Your Douse With PROPANE (bottled) GAS Available now at Phillips 66 Service Station Phone FR 3-1415 (Joe Adams Manager) North of Provo Biver Bridge Open 24 Hours Per Day te-T 111.71 M . in f , ttt 417, 431 317. fa X I 401. 12 1 V TT7. 411 I i 3 U . rf ' It 1 I 5attt7 0 I C jji, 7 D I Iff J 50. 760 D I WM 1371 H I I J i7 77? I W i m I I fit 1 I - , , , lufj I I I tii.ru j Double urprise Neu light tastf ...new light price: . Idih Hi one woinlorful Imjnrtcd 'whisk.v! IMI'OUTKI) CANAbiAN WJIISKY r".v 1 i;vi'jV;T,r lifHD hILD 80 HOOf SCHENIEY IMPORT (0. N. fj The continual introduction of modem equipment equip-ment has kept copper production a successful business in Utah. At Kennecott's Bingham Mine, for example, huge electric shovels handle enormous enor-mous quantities of ore and waste rock efficiently - something men with picks and hand shovels couldn't possibly do. In the same tradition, accounting machines are used by Kennecott's comptroller's department.. This machine accounting system supplies management man-agement with information vital to operations more promptly and accurately than could have been achieved by yesterday's methods. Working with enormous numbers of facts and figures, machine accounting is fast, efficient and thorough. For example, it calculates pay rate, hours worked and any of 200 payroll deductions to produce 1,000 pay checks an hour. It keeps an up-to-date inventory of 46,000 supply items and makes information on them available at a moment's notice. It provides needed metallurgical metallur-gical data in less than a tenth of the time it would have taken before machines came on the job. Even now, plans are under way to achieve tomorrow what is impossible today. The machine accounting system will be expanded to be a more valuable aid to management in the future. This is another step by Kennecott to help assure continued con-tinued copper production by improving operations. Utah Coyp3sDivioion Hennecott Ostppss Corporation 1 we'd try." PROUD TO BE PART OF A GROWING UTAH |