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Show Universal Microfilnin- I4I Pierep-.n- t Avenue Ch Stake MIA Slates Gold and Gieen Ball April 7 in First-SixWard Hall ft th Teen Gold and Green April 9 A highlight of the social season, the annual Gold and Green Ball will be held Saturday, April 7, in the Ward hall, under the direction of the Stake MIA organization. The big affair will be and there will be First-Sixt- semi-form- h al no admission charge. The dance will follow the theme, "Treasures of Our MIA," and will feature an elaborate floor show. Dances which will be included are "Royalty Waltz," a couples dance: "Red, White and Blue," all girls dance. "Stars in Your Eyes,' a beautiful number, will be danced by a group from Salt Lake City, Included in by special request. the group will be Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Shaw, formerly of Lehi, who are dance directors in a Salt Lake City stake. The dance will begin at 9 p. m. and the floor show is set at 10:30 p. m. to enable those attending the General Priesthood meeting to view the show upon their return. The stake superin tendency and Duane Woffinden, presidency, Horace Hadfield and Michael Kearney; Ruth Stephensen, Alta Ash and Beda Peck, are in charge, assisted by the stake board members. Dorothy Bone and Carl Mellor are assisting with decorations which will display the MIA colors, gold and green with rainbow and other insignia. Evelyn Larson will assist with advertising. Bert Murdock's orchestra will furnish the music for this dance. Tee n Gold and Green Monday Especially planned for all Beehive Girls and Scouts and those of corresponding ages, the Teen Gold and Green dance will be held the following Monday, April 9, in the same hall and using the same lavish decorations. Howard Nelson's orchestra will furnish the music for this always popular affair. With attire in order, the dance will be a "no-datevent. The dance will begin at 8 p. m. and the floor show will take place at 9:30 p. m. Dances will be the "To-tur- " Sandra Danish and mixer. For both dances, stake officers ask the cooperation of young people end their parents in upholding the LDS standards for evening dress. Ror any questions or details, contact the ward MIA officers. Stake dance directors, who have taken charge of preparations for the floor shows are Mr. and Mrs. Wayman Winslow. Ward directors include, Norine Felt and Blaine Anderson, First Ward; Margaret Webb and Joe Shelton, Second Ward; Dorothea Kalmar and Paul Thayn, Third Ward; LuAnn Kenneth and Russon, Fourth Ward; Cherie Southwick and Niel Young, Sixth Ward. The Fifth and Seventh Wards are combining with the other groups. semi-form- VOLUME if lupin f ' I , Jf sym-tom- Ground Observer Volunteers to Meet Tonight NUMBERTHIRTY-SI- X ON BO AT HAR Lions Call for Volunteer Help ' .'V; t V' in - - ' ' j - i F "MS VT JrM Lehi Lions are calling for volunteers to help build a road to Lehi's new boat harbor Saturday. All persons interested in boating or in helping with this fine civic project are urged to report for work Saturday armed with a rake, fork or shovel. Neldon S. (Dick) Evans, Lions the Club reports president, National Guard will begin work .vith their heavy equipment at 9 a. m. Lehi City has also pledged the use of it's loader and trucks for the project. The new road will be approximately 30 rods in length and will run north and south from the Saratoga Road to a spot east of the entrance to the Jordan Pumping Station. Dee Hanson, Soil Conservation Service engineer and active member of the Lions Club, has survey ed the road and staked out the Cattle guards proposed road. will be installed, and gravel hauled into the harbor area as part of the project. The new harbor will require no dredging. Permission for use of River channel has beep granted by the Board of Canal Presidents, giving boating enthusiasts almost unlimited space for launching at the site. With increased interest in boat-nthe project has been received .vith enthusiastic support from nany sources. A Salt Lake county xat club has been offered to lelp, Mr. Evans said. Rules and regulations for oper g, se Only through intensive education and the progression of research can the future be made brighter for cancer sufferers. Many types of cancer can be cured but early treatment is most important. Educational literature and meetings are useful in helping thes victims to recognize early and thus lead to control or cure. A percentage of the fund is always assigned to this field. Some 30 volunteer workers have consented to conduct the canvass during the assigned week. Aided by a corps of assistants, chairmen of the various ward districts are as follows: First Ward Dean Worlton. Second Ward Faye Boltz Third Ward Lela Kalmar Fourth Ward Rose Ashton. Fifth Ward N. S. Peck. Sixth Ward Phebe Innes. Seventh Ward Norma Webb. Cedar Fort and Fairfield are conducting a separate campaign, with James E. Peterson as director. 5, 1956 WORK PROG lHt;U!Wm" ; canvass which will be held during the week of April 16 to 21, Mr. Jackson said. This will provide opportunity for every family to aid in the nation-wid- e campagin for the control of this devastating enemy of old and young alike. "Every time the clock ticks, someone dies of cancer," is a well known authentic expression. Cancer shows no favorites and neither young nor old are immune. LEHI, UTAH. THURSDAY, APRIL R al . Clell Jackson, prominent local church and community worker, has accepted the chairmanship of the local cancer control drive, and announces the month of April as 'Cancer Control Month.' lnstruc- tions were received at a district meeting with Elmer Bates serving as general chairman for North Utah County. Committees have been chosen and plans are complete for the house-to-hou- TWENTY-FOU- e" lyiiiU'. Named For Canvass wtt i Promoting All Progressive Enterprises For a Better Lehi Clell Jackson Named Chairman of Local Cancer Fund Campaign Committees 4 Y " The third in a series of top iyceum entertainments, Joseph El-'iworld traveler, will appear at he stake tabernacle, next Wednesday, April 11 at 8 p. m. Sponsored is a benefit for the stake Semin- s, Lehi Jaycees to Elect New Officers Tonight New officers, of the Junior Chamber of Commerce will be elected tonight (Thursday) at a meeting in ihe National Guard Armory. Elections will be'under the general supervision of George Reynolds, current secretary." Outgoing officers will include Rex Southwick, president; Joe Zupan and JulAlvin'Schow, director; ian Clover, two-yeRichard Clover and Lewis Smith, Bank to Close Monday, Open Saturday Morning Due to the Arbor Day holiday, the State Bank of Lehi will be closed all day, Monday, April 9, but will be open on Saturday morning, April 7, from 9 a. m. to 12 noon. ar directors, and Dean Kirk-hastate director. Holdover director is Dale Clark. ar New officers h v' Mobile Chest X-R- Unit ay r will be installed banquet in at an inauguration Wanda Bushman New Junior High President May. P-T- Two Lehi Nurses To Attend Nat. Convention Mrs. Wanda Bushman has been elected president of the Lehi AsJunior High Parent-Teachsociation at elections held last Thursday in the high school auditorium. Mrs. Bushman succeeds Mrs. Glenn E. Smith, who has headed the organization for the past two years. Mrs. Smith and her corps of officers and committee chairmen will serve out the remainder of the school year, and the new officers will be formally installed n the fall. However, newly elected officers will attend state P. T. A. conventions and sessions this month in Salt Lake City, representing the local P. T. A. Elected to serve as of the P. T. A. was Mrs. Bessie Roberts. A secretary and other officers will be appointed soon. Music for the P. T. A meeting was presented by thc Junior High Boys and Girls choruses, under the direction of Melvin Burton, choral music director. The choruses sang several selections they are scheduled to give Wednesday at the district music festival in American Fork. The chorus of Seventh and Eighth Grade boys sang "He Who is Noble" and "The Rolling Stone." The girls Eighth Grade chorus sang "Steal Away." Two numbers were also sung by two double trios of Eighth Grade girls. A resume of the year's work was given by Mrs. Smith, and Principal J. Fenin Gurney spoke briefly on the responsibilities of parents of teenagers. nurses from the Lehi Hospital will attend a national Nurses Convention in Seattle, Washington, later this month. They are Mrs. Ethel Ball, hospital superintend and Mrs. Eva Smith, nurse. Expenses for the trip have been approved by the Lehi City Council. Management of the hospital is under the direction of Councilmen E. B. Garrett and Harold D. West-rinTwo The second of two preliminary Lehi meetings for training Ground Observer volunteers will Water Lines be held tonight (Thursday) at 7:30 City officials have instructed E. p. m. in the Memorial Building. B. Garrett, waterworks chairman, chief Mrs. Monica W. Peterson, to see that all water lines in the observer, will supervise the in- city are flushed out prior to the struction. coming sprinkling season. First of the series of meetings Insurance was held Wednesday afternoon. Dean Kirkham has asked the Mrs. Peterson plans to begin tak- Council to consider adopting the ing out teams of observers to Blue Cross insurance plan for Joseph Lambert's next week. Firemen. He has also asked the Lamberts have been operating a City to set a policy of aid in upground observer post since last keep of the Veterans Memorial fall, and have consented to aid in Ballpark. training Lehi's volunteers. It is Wines Park E. B. Garrett, chairman of city planned to have the volunteers practice training there for periods property, reports that all leaves have been raked and cleared from of approximately 30 minutes. Eleven new volunteers have Wines Park. The Council is now signed with the Lehi Corps. They studying appointment of a careinclude Alfred G. Turner, Horace taker for the park. Hadfield, Glen Hadfield, Neldon S. New Truck authorized have Councilmen (Dick) Evans, Stanford Giles, Lela 1948 a of used truck for M. Jones, Don purchase Giles, June Smith, George Reynolds, Barbara Lewis the Water Department. The truck will be used by Douglas WiUes, and Leo Loveridge. g. H er vice-preside- nt ' ." i x ' i Coming Here business people Foodhandlers, and others who meet the public will be asked to participate in a Chest program held locally April 23 and 24, according to Mrs. Roy Peterson, local representative of the TB society. Arrangements are now being made to have a mobile chest y unit from the State Department of Health come to Lehi on the above dates. Preliminary plans call for the unit to spend approximately ... X-r- three hours at the General Refractories Plant so that employees It will may receive chest then be parked on State Street for the remainder of the first day, and on Main Street the second day. Mrs. Peterson emphasizes that the general public will not be asked to take part in this program, but will participate in one to be scheduled later. Among those to be during the April campaign will be all school teachers and persons in business who meet the public, as well as known TB suspects. s. food-handler- s, World Traveler to Appear in Third Lyceum Series Next Wednesday CLELL JACKSON one-ye- ation of the harbor are still in the planning stage, with legal work being carried out under the direction of Attorney Harvard R. Hinton. The harbor will probably be leased to a private operator who will charge a small fee for and also, operate a launching rental boat concession. ary building fund, Mr. Ellis and his exhibit promises to provide a long to be remembered experience for all who attend. Season tickets will be honored for this the final lyceum in a thus far very popular series, according to Warren L. Goates, general chairman. Tickets for the single performance may be obtained from the ward bishoprics. Mr. Ellis was reared in Java and has traveled extensively with a keen interest in the unusual and the remote. He has traveled as a worker on steamships to far countries and has learned the dialects of the island natives. He Dutch and speaks Malayan, Javanese. He has traveled around the world twice and crossed the Pacific four times. During the war he served with the Army Air Forces in the Pacific. He is listed in "Who's Who on the American Platform" and has eight seasons of extension and lyceum work to his credit. Included in his exhibit are native sarongs, jungle trophies, temple costumes, mounted wild-lifand native weapons musical instruments. He has studied at several American universities, including the University of Illinois. He has appeared many times before school assemblies and has provided much first-han- d information to students, appealing sidelights which cannot be found in books. Widely recognized critics name him as possessing a rare humor, an attractive stage manner and an appeal to groups of all ages. e, head-hunte- rs - CO.WENTIOX COMMITTEE PKEI'AKES 1 OK FEDERATED LL'B MEET Presidents of the seven Lehi clubs are in charge. Left to right. Mrs. John Ernst, Olympian; Mrs. Gary Cooper, Lctitian; Mrs. Wane E. Christensen, Auctus; Mrs Koosevelt Smith, Llahonian; Mrs. Don Southwick, Leliila; Mrs. Paul Peterson, Serimpian (convention chairman), and Mrs. E. Russell Innes, Athenian, 'Mrs. Eriist is president of the club presidents council. Plans Complete For Federated Club Keep Children Convention Here Saturday, April 14 Parents Cautioned From Sewer Trenches With sewer work progressing rapidly through the residential area now, city officials are urging parents to keep small children away from the sewer trenches and manhole excavations. The soil is soft, and in some areas caves in easily. Parents should be very careful to make sure their children are not killed Alor injured by falls or cave-inthough the sewer engineers are backfilling the sewer trenches as rapidly as possible, the manhole excavations must be left open until the manholes can be installed. City officials also report that some teenagers are driving over and breaking the sections of sewer pipe which have been laid along the roads to be excavated. They are urged to give some consideration to the added expense and delay to this important project such thoughtless action can cause. s. Immunization Clinic Friday fit City Hall Plans are in readiness for the ninth spring convention of the Timpanogos First District, Fede rated Women's Clubs, according to Mrs. Paul Peterson, convention chairman. The seven Lehi member clubs of the district federation will play of all host to the assemblage federated clubs in the area, Saturday, April 14, in the First-Sixt- h Ward church, the convention to begin at 10 a. m. "You are the Light of the World," is the theme selected and Dean Welsey P. Lloyd of Brigham Young University, will be the principal speaker of the day. Mrs. L. S. Maycock of Orem, will be in charge of the conven- - Geo. Reynolds to Head Co. Wildlife Federation George Reynolds, young Lehi leader, has been elected president of the Utah County Wildlife Federation, succeeding Thad Hansen of Provo. For the past two years, Mr. Reynolds has been of the organization. civic . vice-preside- nt The regular immunization clinic will be held Friday, April 6, at 7 p. m. in the Memorial Building, it is announced by Nurse Mable Jones. Shots will be available for tetanus, typhoid, both series and booster, vaccinations for small-poand the DPT shots for children. Families are reminded to take ad vantage of this service, which is i such an important part of the defense program as well as an aid in maintaining family health. Clinics will continue on the first Friday of succeeding months. x, tion as district president. Mrs. Lovina Fugal of Pleasant Grove, American Mother of the Year, will be introduced at the morning Mrs. Walter C. Ewing session. will deliver the message from the state president. Reports will be given and election of officers will take place, followed by departmental sessions. Chantante Chorus To Sing Mrs. E. A. Harding will preside at the 12:30 luncheon, and during that time the Chantante Chorus, directed by Dr. Frank Madsen, will furnish special music. ' Local Art Display Another outstanding feature of the day will be an exhibit of local art, both professional and amateur. It is expected that this will prove to be one of the finest display of paintings yet held in Lehi. Specimens from the priceless collections of John Hutchings will also be on view. The local women's clubs are in full support of the new building to be constructed to accomodate the Hutchings Museum. The presidents of the Lehi clubs are serving on the general convention committee, assisted by the club members. With Mrs. Paul Peterson, Serimpian president, as chairman, Mrs. Russell Innes, Athenian, will serve as n, Mrs. Roosevelt Smith, invitations; Mrs. Wane E. Christensen, Auctus, tickets; Mrs. John Ernst, Olympian, publicity; Mrs. Don Southwick, Lehila, exhibits; Mrs. Gary Cooper, Letitian, decorations and favors. Election Ballot Mrs. Karl Banks -- of Pleasant Grove, currently serving as first is on the ballot for president. Candidates for first are Mrs. Francis Mortenson of American Fork, and Mrs. Stan-Taylor, Lehi. For second candidates are Mrs. Ralph H. Harsh-ma- n, Provo, and Mrs. J. D. Pyne, Orem; for recording secretary, Mrs. L. B. Bennett, Orem, and Mrs. D. D. Bushnell, Provo; for treasurer, Mrs. Frank Greenwood, A.merican Fork, and Mrs. Guy Pleasant Grove; for Hillman, historian, Mrs. Ronald Price, Lehi, ind Mrs. Elvis B. Terry, Orem; for auditor, Mrs. Vern Hollindrake (Theda Henke), American Fork, and Mrs. W. Woolf, Provo. Lia-honia- vice-preside- ( Bazaar Successful "r? If ' nt The Seventh Ward Relief Society bazaar was very success ful, and Mrs. Marvel Smith, Re lief Society president, and the of ficers of the group wish to extend GEORGE II. REYNOLDS a hearty thank you to all who The election was held in conassisted in the project. There are still some choice gift items avail nection with a District No. 3 meet ing of the Utah Wildlife Fede able ration held recently at the Regal Recreation Center in Provo. Elect of the County ed Abbott club was Pete Ludlow of Spanish Suffers Eye Injury Fork. Mr. Reynolds has been particu In Accident active in wildlife affairs havIn protesting the first well fil- larlyserved as a director of the Lehi well known Abbott, Stanley ing ing, the North Utah County group Wildlife Association for several former Lehi resident, now living has ked that the hearing be held years. He is also of th; in Salt Lake City, suffered eye inin the Memorial Building. No date Junior Chamber ofsecretary Commerce and juries in a firearms accident in has been set by the State Engi- a member of the Lehi Fire Depart- Cedar Valley, last Thursday, neer, although officials of his"of-fic- e ment. March 30. Family members reindicated that it will be that there is a possibility Approimately 40 persons repre- ported around two months from the date of the loss of his eyesight. He wildlife the groups eight the request was made, March 28 senting which are affili- underwent surgery Friday evening of Utah in a Salt Lake City hospital. Regarding the most recent well ated withCounty the state organization Mr. Abbott is a senior student filings, Mayor Sharp explained Provo Guest the meeting. at the University of Utah, studythat Lehi Irrigation Company has attended was Roy Ohlander, presi390 shares of stock in the Provo speaker ing medicine, and expected to Reservoir Water Users Company. dent of the Utah Wildlife Fede- graduate this spring. Until now, Lehi has received it's ration. Delegates from Salt Lake water from the syphon which County Wildlife groups were also r. and Mrs. O. A. Hunsaker of carries water to Salt Lake valley. In attendance. Long Beach, California, spent last Attending the meeting from Monday here with Mr. and Mrs. The company now proposes to take all the water to Salt Lake Lehi in addition to Mr. Reynolds Roy Peterson. Mrs. Hunsaker is valley and give Lehi water which were Merlin Bourne, Dale Peter- a niece to the Petersons. On a is developed in this area and which son, Gerald Turner, Jack Sly, week's vacation, they also visited is in competition with our own Harold Hutchings and W. D. Wat In Salt Lake City with Mr. IIun kins. wells, he declared. saker's mother. . . North Utah County Water Group Requests Hearing on Well Protests The North Utah County Water Conservation group has filed a formal request for hearing on the protests they have made against well filings in the Dry Creek area Reservoir made by the Provo Water Users Company, according to Mayor Frank Sharp. Mayor Sharp declared that 26 protests were filed with the State Engineer against the filing for a well in Harmon Hollow made by the compary. Since that time the company has filed for two additional wells in the Dry Creek area on the Ben Russon property. The wells, each proposed to develop 10 second feet of water, would be dug approximately two miles north and one mile east of Lehi atyi-- SO: vice-preside- nt Stanley Hunting , |