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Show Urdversrl Xicrofilmins Corp. Avtnue 1J. Salt Txcrpont Lake OUR SUGGESTION r OUR Display Emergency News, (Deaths, Disasters, Accidents) Wednes. noon. Nephi, Juab County, Utah, Single Copy 10c . October Thursday, V'., " Regularly Speaking will speak this week but it won't be by REG. He is off to Chicago attending a National Convention. Again, representing Utah as he did last June when he traveled to Canada. We like to see boss take these trips for he gets helps & hints to make his paper better. For aweek he can sit back, relax, get the worries of Nephi out of his hair shall we say and attend meeting after meeting. Between meetings J , . 1 v. : ' ' f JlJu AJ I can cook up to do in their spare time you'll know REG will never have adull moment. Yes we do do like to see our boss take these trips!! Through all our fooling we do hope he has time to take in some of the sights of Chicago and comes home fully rested ready to straighten out the office and put things into full swing again. The Hired Help 1 I ' 1 Elder Earl C. Ockey t Leaving For Southern States Elder Robert C. Jarrett Leaving For Canadian Mission Elder Robert Clarence Jarrett a member of the Nephi First Ward, Juab Stake and son of Brother and Sister Ronald R. Jarrett has accepted a call to serve in the Western Canadian Mission of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-OaSaints. Mission Elder Earl Calvin Ockey son of Brother and Sister Calvin Ockey and member of the Nephi First Ward has accepted a call to serve in the Southern States Mission of the Church of Jesus Christ of Saints. Latter-Da- y Elder Ockey will enter the mission home in Salt Lake City on October 19, after which he will depart for Atlanta, Georgia mission headquarters. Elder Ockey is a graduate of Juab High School and Juab Stake Seminary. He also attended the y Elder Jarrett is a graduate of Juab High School, he was active in operetta and in the band. He B. Y. U. attended the U. S. A C at Logan. A joint farewell testimonial will An open house honoring the two be held for Elder Ockey and ElElders will be held following the der Jarrett, October 16 at 5:45 d Services at Bp. Paxmans Ward Chapel. p. m. in the lst-2n- A MIA Leadership Monday Stake MIA Leadership meeting will be held Monday, October 17, at 7:30 p. m. in the Fourth Ward Robert Beckstead Picked For Special Course At Robert W. Beckstead, son of Dr. and Mrs. F. H. Beckstead of twenty-si- x hand-picke- .rs is i - - A r -- . d students at the University of Utah this week buckled down to a course of study unique in the Intermountain West. Under direction of the faculty of the College of Business at the hilltop school, they are working for masters degrees in business administration. The majority of the students are married and are veterans of World War 11 or Korea. They a special have been assigned study room in the main Annex building on the U's upper cam- err . , v 1 Reading from left to right, Asa M. Sperry, mayor of Mona; E. S. Powell, Levan, president of the Juab County Farm Bureau; H. C. Taylor, mayor of Levan; R.E.Winn mayor of Nephi City; Luella Asther, Nephi, president of the Women's Committee of the Farm Bureau; and James H. Ellison, Nephi, secretary of the Juab County Farm Bureau. Tables Donated To City Parks The Juab County Farm Bur eau together with the women's Their course is tough. They committee of the organization must take 33 required hours dur- have just completed and presented to the cities of Nephi, Levan ing three quarters, plus an additional 12 hours in approved el- and Mona four tables to be One placed in the cities recreational ective graduate courses. course, offered during winter and parks, one in Mona, one in Levan spring quarters is devoted to the discilined writing of a thesis, often a delaying factor in graduate and two in Nephi, excluding one by the Ladles of the Farm presentation being made by E. S. Powell of Levan. presl-en- d of the County Farm Bureau. Ladies was financed through the sale of cakes during the summer. pus. Bur-eau-T- he work. Other courses cover managerbusiness report ial accounting, and writing, economics, business fluctindustrial surveys, business uation and fiscal policy, cases in 3 personnel management, statistics, business finance, policies and ad- ministration and marketing, planned to (1) acquaint the student with a common course of study with essential knowledge basic to nearly all business, (2) provide an - appreciation of the responsibilities of businessmen in our social order and 3 inculcate the habit of basing action on careful and systematic analysis of pertinent data. The course is offered only to a limited number of students in order to encourage active partici pation in discussion, group cohes reion and a close faculty-stude- t M. JsaL A mt... Ayifify nt lationship. Students Receive Polio Shots Last Week f All of the students of the second and third grades of the district were brought by bus to the new Health Center in the New Nephi Elementary School for the second innoculation of the anti-polvaccine. Last spring we had 212 students take the first innoculation. 192 students from the 2 and 3 grades were given the second dosage. There were 20 from Mona, 29 from Lestudents van, ' and 143 from Nephi. The County School Nurse, Mrs. Van Wagoner from Eureka planned the rogram and Dr. Steele gave his services which were most Jarrett and Nedra Starr Maxine Anderson, predated. of the Health Council of the local P. T. A. assisted. . io ap-Em- Volume 46, Number 41 A. Everyone Urged To Check Farm and Home Fire Hazards Phillips A nomination petition was filed Thursday at the office of County Clerk James P. Christensen for James A. Phillips for member of the Board of Education of Juab School District, for Representative District No. 3 Mr. Phillips is currently serv-i- n as president of the Board of Education. ELDER ALVIN W. WITT Leaving For Brazilian Mission Elder Alvin Wesley Witt, son of Brother and Sister Marvin M. Witt of the Nephi Third Ward has accepted a call to labor in the Brazilian Mission of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Elder Witt will enter the mission home on October 19 and sail from New York on the SS Brazil on November 10, 1955. Elder Witt is a graduate of Juab High School and the Juab Stake Seminary. He has recently returned from Fort Sill where he spent sixteen weeks with the 2nd enlisted Student Battery. While there he was called as a e part-timmissionary to labor in the West Oklahoma district. He has also attended the B Y U at Provo. Testimonial at 7:00 pjn. Sunday October 16, Third Ward Chapel . J.",-- , , n , wA J The Bell 8olar battery, be Ing used In experiments near Amerious, Georgia, 133 miles south of Atlanta, to develop mors and better rural telephone servlc. B. W. Ken n on, -- A i Dawn Gadd, a B Y U student spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Gadd. Lt. Kenneth D. Johnson of Wright-PattersAir Force Base at Dayton, Ohio, visited on Saturday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Johnson. Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Voil Howell were their son and daughter in law, Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Howell and baby of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Johnson reon cently attended a reunion for French Mormon boys held at Bountiful. They also visited for two days in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Smith of Van Nyes, California spent the past week in Nephi as guests of her mother, Mrs. Elsie SidwelL Airman Evan K. Green-haug- h son of Leland Greenhalgh and Mrs. Fred Painter arrived home October 4 for a ten day visit after completing basic train Funeral Services For Mrs. ing at Parks Air Force Base, CaL He leaves October 15 for Sedeiai Force Base, Missouri, where Mary Kay To Be Held At Air he will attend school on Air Maintenance. Mona Saturday Mrs. Donald Irons of San Deigo Funeral Services will be con ducted Saturday, October 5, at 12 California is visiting her parents-in-laDr. and Mrs. J. G. Irons. noon at the Mona Ward Chapel for Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Kay, 77 Mrs. Lamar Ray and two sons of Mona. Mrs. Kay died at her Provo visited over the weekhome following a lingering sick- of end with her mother, Mrs. Lula ness. Friends may call at the family Memmott. residence Friday evening and Ray Linton of Salt Lake City Saturday until time of services. was a dinner guest of his parMrs. Kay was born March 14, ents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Lin1878 at Kanarraville, Utah a dau- ton on Wednesday of last week. ghter of James and Elizabeth Steele Stapley. She was married Mr. and Mrs. Farrell Carter, to John S. Kay of Mona Decem- Mrs. Clarence Paxman, Vaughn ber 15, 1910 in the St. George and Elm an Paxman atPaxman, 1928. died Mr. in Kay Temple. tended the funerl services for Mrs. Kay received her educat- Johnathan Sudweeks, a brother- ion in Southern Utah and at the of Mrs. Paxman and Mr. actwas of Utah. She University Lake on Saturday. ive in the LDS Church and taught Carter, in Salt schools in Nephi and Southern Mrs. J. R. Munk of Manti Utah. spent several days last week in She is survived by 5 sons and Nephi visiting with relatives, Dr. daughters. Jesse S. of Harriman; Munk was in Nephi Sunday and Kathryn Karva of Chicago; Elsie Mrs. Munk returned home with Kay Smith of Salt Lake City; him. James C. and Josephine Kay of Mrs. Nell Crow of Huntington Mona; also six grandchildren and Park is visiting with her brother three Burial will be in the Mona in law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Stephenson. cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Alton Young & son Clark of Layton visited over Extension Class Started the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. The Juab School District has Henry Svedin and other relatives. started their inservice again Mrs. George Parkin has retraining program with a class given by the BYU Educational turned home after spending two Staff. The first course to be giv weeks in Provo with her son in en is a graduate course in Ele- law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. It is ex- Vick Gadd and family while mentary Curriculum. pected that emphasis will be giv- there Mrs. Parkin welcommed a en the exceptional child. This new great granddaughter at the course will be given each Tues home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren day in the High School Library Ray Hayden. The baby girl was from 4:00 until 6:00 P. M. The born September 23. first meeting was held October 11 Mrs. Dan Johnson gave a birthNorth Sanpete School District is party on Monday, October 9 expected to participate with us, & day honor of her daughter Annany of our school patrons who in are working toward their college ette on her eighth birthday. degrees would find this course very valuable to them. Tutition teen guests enjoyed games and will be $15.00 for three quarter of Read Belliston Recent hours credit. The course will run were Mr. guests and Mrs. Joe Belliston through ten weeks. and baby of Long Beach, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Haw and of St. George, Utah-Mr- s. Adult Course In Typing family Ferry J. Ostler entertained for her dauhgter Virginia, Mon To Be Started day OctoberlO. The occasion was Miss Ann Sorenson of the her nineth birthday. The afterJuab High School Staff will teach noon was enjoed by twelve of a course in adult typing. This will Virinia friends, playing games. be for both beginning and ad Mrs. Ostler served refreshments vanced typists. The ocurse will to them. run for five weeks: Monday, Wed Mrs. Sorena Ostler, Miss Char-olett- a and Thursday nights nesday from 7:00 to 9:00 P. VL, or a totKnapp of Moroni and Mrs. al of 30 Instructional hours for Dorthy Clark of Spring City, visited Tuesday at the home of Mr. $5.00 and Mrs. Ferry J. Ostler. They are Ferrys mother, sister and 3-- -C in-la- w n. Marriage Announced f 9 -- ft-? a cable repairman Js adjusting the device to pick up the light. The solar prevailing battery Is an Invention of Bell anLaboratories, Telephone nounced last year. Mr. and Mrs. Mureal Nielson of Nephi are announcing the marri to age or their daughter Betty Bernoll Sherwood of Levan. Mother of the groom Is Mrs. Edna Sherwood. The rites will be solemnized at the brides home on October 14. Later in the evening a recept ion honoring the couple will be held in the Levan Ward Hall. Everyone is cordially Invited to attend the reception starting at 9:00 p. m, During Fire Prevention Week Utah's Dairy Darling To Visit Nephi Local and Nephi Tuesday Utah next week will observe its traditional Cheese Festival. Social Items highlighted by a second annual w Hall University of Utah 1955 J if he should Elder Jarrett will enter the Allen, REGS son went on the mission home on October 19, 1955 more time to trip and he'll have find the exists and see the city. leaving from Salt Lake City to the mission field on October 28, If anyone knows what boys of 14 1955. Nephi is one of .. " 13, School Board Nomination Filed For James want to see part of the big city he ducks out the nearest excit and plunges right into a sea people. People everywhere, coming and going so fast you's think there was a fire. He looks around and all he can see are cars honk- ink their horns, policemen directing traffic (fop he hit the noon hour rush just right) and a taxi with a cabby yelling, "Hey mister need a lift." Well in these two short minutes REG needs more than just a life so he goes back to his room, loosens his tie rolls up his shirt sleeves and patiently paces, the floor until the next meeting. DEADLINES Photographs, Monday 5 p. m. General Advertising, News and Want Ads, Tuesday, 12 o'clock noon Shop and Save In Nephi! Patronize our merchants who are paying taxes in Juab County; who are giving of their time and tal- - Missionaries To Be Honored At Farewells Sunday 1 city Utah goodwill tour which will bring Utah's Dairy Darling into Neohi on Tuesday, October 18. Leading a caravan that will spend five days on the highways and byways of the state, Utahs Dairy Darling of 1956, Pay Ob-ra- y, will call upon mayors, news paper publishers and radio and television executives in 30 communities. To these people she will present gifts of Utah Swiss and cheddar cheeses. While here, Miss Obray and her party will present their gifts to Mayor R. E. Winn and Roy E. Gibson publisher of the Times- News: The tour is an expression of the confidence of Utahs dairy industry in .the superior uality of its own "Utah's Swiss products. cheese has been well received in from markets coast to coast, and our chedder cheese is" popular in western states," declared Calvin L. Nelson of Salt Lake City, chairman of the Utah Cheese Festival committee. Some 17 Per cent of Utah's annual milk productions is processed into cheese, and more than 5 per cent of the total cheese production is exported from the state, the chairman noted. Mr. Nelson will accompany Miss Obray, who is a Utah State Ag ricultural College coad and the daughter of a milk trucker at Paradise, Cache Valley. Her car-arvwill also include one of her attendants, Carole Howe of Mur ray, and Wallace A. Parrish of Logan, vice chairman of the fest ival committee. an Army Recruiter To Be In Nephi Tuesday Oct. 18 5. spark-throwin- rules to the letter. Keep heaters and stoves in good repair and always follow makers instructions when operating them. Combustible materials should be stored a good safe distance from these heat sources. Clean the soot from chimneys. When building, repairing or re matmodeling, erials whenever possible. Protect roofs with asphalt shingles, or other fire retardant roofing. Stone, brick, concrete or cinder block walls slow down the spread of fire. And before the wintry winds start blowing, make sure your TV antenna is firmly attached to its mounting and is well grounded. Dont ever mount the antenna on a chimney one of the quickest ways to loosen a chimney, even pull it down. School Census To Be Taken In District The Juab School Board of Education has authorized census takers in each of the five respective precincts. These ladies will call at vry home in Juab School District and complete detailed data is requested of each household whether there are chil dren in the home or not. Incidentally, many of the census cards were destroyed in the robbery of the High School last yar and we must start from the beginning. These data are so important to the better oeration of our schools and for adequate and correct Marie Wilkey of Nephi was plannig. Superintendant Ander elected Sophomore clas3 secretary son appeals to every household in tne recent class and club to be cooperative and cordial to elections held at Snow College. the census takers. U. F. H. Clifton, S. Army Recruiter for this area will be in Nephi during the afternoon of Tuesday, October 18. Anyone interested in enlisting in the U. S. Army or anyone with uestions the concerning Armed Forces Reserve Act of 1955 are urged to contact Set. Clifton during his visit to Nephi or at the U. S. Army Recruiting Station, Post Office Building in Provo. M-S- us Joseph Christensen, president; Mark Memmott, 1st Counselor; Jean Royce, bara Garrett; secretary; 2nd Bar- Counselor. Seminary Students Elect Officers The Juab Stake Seminary at evening a dance and program will be held at the Seminary Building. The committee in charge of the opening social consists of the following: Mark Memmott, chair- Nephi, Utah, has enjoyed a successful beginning of what appears to be a promising school ytar. A total number of 223 students are enrolled in eleven classes in Old Testament, New Testament, Church History, and 8th Grade. At elections held recently, the following students were chosen to act as students officers during the coming year: President, Joe aunt. Christensen; 1st Counselor, Mark have D. Davis T. Mr. and Mrs. Memmott: 2nd Counselor, Barbthe North- ara Garrett; Secretary, Jean just returned from visited with west where they Royce. A program their children, Mr. and Mrs. Jack of social and religious activities Davis; Mr. and Mrs. Max Davis has been outlined for the year and families of Seattle and Mr. by the newly-Tie- d ed officers. and Mrs. Howard Pratt of Tac-om- a. The first social of the year will Max is teaching Dental Labora- be held on Thursday, October 13. vt A Canyon Party has been planne tory, to Junior and Senior at tha TTnlvnnrftv of Wash for the afternoon to be held at his Dad's and Son's, where games ington. Jack is continuing and a picnic supper will be en- studies and specializing in In the Joyed by the students. well-round- stu-H,.r- Your farm will be safe from fire if you don't give fire a place to start, says the National Fire Protection Association. That's why the Association urges everyone to eliminate all fire hazards from their homes, buildings, and . land during Fire Prevention Week, October It's also a good time to get your home and yards ready foe winter, the season when the fire menace is severe. For winter safety, the NFPA, sponsor of Fire Prevention Week, in cooperation wnn tne u. . Department of Agriculture and Utah Agricultural Extension Service, says to do these things now: Clean up all trash, for it can be fuel for unwanted fires. Oily rags should be stored in covered metal containers, well away from stoves or g equipment. Replace badly worn wiring. Circuits are likely to overheat and be a fire hazard if fuses are not the correct amperage. No bmoking" signs should be machine posted in hay barns, shops, and wherever flammable liquids are stored. Obey man; Mina Lou Broadhead, Bessie Mangelson, Fred Gowers, Nell Greenhalgh, Nan Christensen, and Gordon Keller. The Seminary faculty this Insyear includes two full-tim- e tructors James Glenn and Melvin Done. Mr. Done and his family have moved to Nephi this year from Salina, where he taught in the seminary there for four years Mr. Done is a native of Texas and a long-tim- e resident of Salt Lake City. He and his wife Lillian are the parents of six children, five girls and one boy. Both Mr. and Mrs. Done filled missions in the Spanish American Mission. The new instructor is a graduate of the University of Utah, t which Institution he Is now doing graduate work. |