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Show Universal Micrnfllmirr: Crp. Piarep-.n- t Avenue A Good Place to Live- and - Raise a Family Future nSbv I fit r! UM ,n Ill Promoting All Progressive Enterpiises For a Bigger, Better Lehi VOLUME LEHI, UTAH, TIIUKSUVl. TWEXTY-FIV- E Council flsked to Participate in Widening oi Railroad Street A proposal for the city's partiRailroad cipation in widening g Street to permit future has been received from representatives of the Union Pacific Railroad. In a letter from C. C. Larkhi, superintendent of the U. P. Decity partment of Operation, officials were informed that the project will involve the relocation of four telegraph poles at an estimated cost of $314, to be paid by the City, and some relocation of the roadway to take full advantage of the room made available. In addition to this cost, the Railroad would have the expense of relocating the tracks. Mr. Larkin's letter declared that a lease covering the prospal is being submitted to the railroad management for approval. authorized Councilmen City Harold D. Westring to work with railroad representatives in carrying out the project. Service Garage The need for a city garage to service city equipment was discussed by Councilmen. A tentative decision was made to advertise the old power building near Stewart's Lumber for sale. Water Service Councilmen reviewed the request of a citizen to provide water service to a lot outside the city limits. They turned down the request, and Council-me- n pointed out that the new sewer and water ordinance gives no authority to install such service outside the city limits. They declared that if the area were annexed into the city, and sufficient building was done to warrant the line, the service could probably be offered in such a way as to satisfy the city bondholders. hard-surfacin- Street Paving Val Christiansen met with the Council concerning future" street paving projects. He urged city officials to investigate the asphalt macadam he installs, and invited . city officials to accompany him on a tour of road projects in the area. Police Car Authorization was given for the purchase of emergency blankets, first aid equipment and a fire extinguisher for the police car. The blankets will be placed in plastic bags and stored in the trunk of the car for use in accidents and emergencies. Veterans Ballpark Kirkham Dean urged the Council to include the Veterans Ballpark in "city property" when they begin drawing up the city budget for the coming year, and Dairy Princess To Visit Lehi Monday Three Days Left To Register to make suitable appropriation for maintenance of the ballfield. Frank Sharp proposed that the American Legion trade the ballpark for the city's power equipment storeyard north of the rodeo grounds. He suggested that the storeyard would be better located, would be used more, and would be good for the people and good lor the rodeo grounds. The field could provide parking for cars during the rodeo. (Continued on Inside Page) Cedar Fort Ward Slates Banquet Next Saturday For Nov. Election the Registration days before November 6 general election be held on October 16, 30 31. All registration stations be open on those dates from m. to 9 p. m. Persons who voted in the will and will 8 a. last election and who have not moved from their districts should be properly registered. Those concerned should be citizens turned 21 for the first time prior to an election, and newcomers who need to register properly in their dis- trict. Cedar Valley Ward banquet is arranged for Saturday, October 13, at 7:30 p. m. Former ward members and the public is invited to attend. Proceeds will go towards the ward building fund, it is reported by Mrs. Owen Ault, publicity chairman. Lehi's registration stations are: District 1 Mame Thomes residence, 394 West Main St. District 2 Edith Evans residence, 138 West 4th North St. Kate F. Austin District 3 residence, 189 East 4th North St. District 4 Mrs. Jay Gordon residence, 93 North 1st East St. Elder Stanley Allison Called to Central Atlantic States Mission two years and was a member of the debating team directed by Farewell in Sixth Ward Sunday Cleone Skousen. as He served student body president and graduson of ated from, the Lehi high school as Elder Stanley Allison, Mr. and Mrs. Don Allison, enter- valedictorian of his class. u mm ed the LDS Mission Home in ii Salt Lake City, October 10, prior c to leaving for the States Mission, October 17 A farewell testimonial in his honor will be held in the Ward chapel, Sunday, October 14, I4 at 5:30 p. m., with Bishop Calvin Swenson of the Sixth Ward in Awe charge. A. A . nl Elder Allison has attended Brigham Young University for He Central-Atlanti- First-Sixt- h . . . I i. . Funeral Held Monday For Mrs. ML P. Ipsen services were held Monday at 12 noon in the Ward chapel for Mrs. Elder Don Stanley Allison Michael P. Ipsen (Elizabeth Folkman), 81, with Harry G. achieved second place rating in of the Third Ward the "Voice of Democracy" conManning bishopric conducting. Mrs. Ipsen test and played the leading role died last Wednesday, after a in- the high school play. Band short illness. was included in his activities. He sang in his ward choir and has served as president and secretary He of his Priesthood quorums. has been employed in farming operations. The opening song will be, "Hope of Israel," followed by the opening prayer by Ray Lester, an uncle of the missionary. The ward choir will sing the sacramental song, "God Loved Us so He Sent His Son," directed by Audrey Wilson and accompanied by Ila Powell. The choir will also "How sing the closing song. Beautiful Thy Temples, Lord." Speakers will be Stake President Herman C Goates, Bishop Swenson, the missionary and his mother, and J. W. Brailsford and " Elden Harding, his former teach' ers. A trio, Norma Smith, Lorna ; v " ' " ' " ' s" Backus and Dwayne Mecham, will sing, "My Testimony," and the two ladies will sing, "Hold MRS. M. P. IPSEN Thou My Hand." Kay Backus She was born in Plain City, will be the accompanist. A piano Utah, January 31, 1875, a daugh- solo, "Evening Prayer," will be and played by Claudia Jean Allison, Olsen ter of Christopher Maximiliana Lingvall Folkman. sister of Elder Allison. Viva Her father was an LDS convert Tayor, an aunt, will offer the from Denmark and her mother benediction. She graduated from Sweden. from Weber Academy in Ogden and followed the vocation of Funeral Third-Seven- th - ry: Utah's 1957 Dairy Princess, Shirley Chugg, will make an official visit to Lehi on Monday, October 15, as part of the state's third annual Cheese Festival. Leading a caravan that will travel 10 days on the highways and byways of the state, Miss Merris Chugg and attendants Hendricks, Richmond, and Connie Burgon, Midvale, will call upon mayors and newspaper publishers and other local leaders in 37 communities. To those people they will present gifts of Utah Swiss and cheddar cheeses. Scheduled to greet the caravan in Lehi is Miss DeAnn Long, Utah County Dairy Princess, of Orem. Vhile here, Miss Chugg and her party will present their gifts professional dressmaker. She was married to Michael to Mayor Frank Sharp and Russell Innes, publisher of the Lehi Peter Ipsen, June 18, 1903, in the Salt Lake Temple. Free Press. The Cheese Festival tour is They lived in Ogden, and later an expression of the confidence in Arborn Valley, Bennett County, of Utah's dairy industry in the Idaho and later in Blackfoot. They superior quality of its own pro- later returned to Ogden and also ducts. "Utah's Swiss cheese has lived in Salt Lake City and been well received in markets Mesa, Arizona. They came to from coast to coast, and our Lehi to make their home ten Cheddar cheese is popular in years ago. A member of the Stake Relief western states," declared Calvin L. Nelson of Salt L.ake City, Society Board in Ogden, she also chairman of the Utah Cheese taught in Mutual and Sunday Theme of School. She was Relief Society Festival committee. the festival is "Please with Utah president for nine years in Black-foand continued as a visiting Cheese." Participating on the tour with teacher in that organization until the girls will be Mr. Nelson, Wel-b- y the past year. Always active In W. Young, president of the church work she was the first American Dairy Association of president of the Religion Class in Utah and vice president of the Blackfoot. Her husband fulfilled several Utah Milk Foundation; A. J. Morris, managing director of the missions, including one to Sweden. American Dairy Association of While he was away, she mainfarm in Idaho and also Utah; and Wallace O. Parrish, tained the on her dressmaking chairman of the Utah Dairy carried (Continued on Inside Pace) Princess contest. ., v 'f -- j - ot Lehi Dance Set Hallowe'en Party Saturday An outstanding event of the autumn season will be the Hallowe'en party for the Lehi Dance Set, Saturday, October 13. The h group will meet in the Ward hall which will ba decorated in the seasonal theme. An entertaining program from Bountiful will bo a special feature. Refreshments will be served. All members are reminded to attend. First-Sixt- Lucky Clover Dance At Cedar Fort Oct. 16 The Stake Lucky Clover dance for everyone Mutual Age, will be held next Tuesday, Oct. 16 in the Cedar Fort Hall, following the ward MIA meetings. Howard Nelson'3 orchestra will furnish the music. . OCTOBER 11. 19:6 NUMBER NINE 11 ace Candidates H 11 r or upine o coooi ooar d Post Dix ei . 1 n m mvk Six Lehi men :'.ac filed wiih the Utah Counly e'l.'rk's offioe as candidates 1: the Alpine Board of Education representing the Lehi area. Running for the School Boan! will be George I. Bone, incumbent. Jay K. Haws. Calvin H. Swen..n. Lester N. Norberg, A. Clark Nelson lid Dean D. Nuttall. The elections will be held November 6, at til'' same time a the general elections. CALVIN SWENSON Calvin Swenson is a native of Pleasant Grove and a graduate of Pleasant Grove High School and B. Y. U. For seven years he was employed as assistant cashier of the Pleasant Grove Bank, before coming to Lehi in 1943 as cashier of the State Bank of Lehi, a position which he still holds. He has been active in banking circles as president of the Utah County Banker's Assn., and member of the Utah County chap ter, American Institute of Banking. He is currently secretary-treasurof the Utah Conference of the National Association of a Bank Auditors and Comptrollers, an organization which meets He has been enrolled monthly. in several banking study courses given at B. Y. U. In Pleasant Grove Mr. Swenson was an offiqer of the Chamber of Commerce and the Lions Club, and is a past president of the Lehi Lions Club. Active in L. D. S. church work, he fulfilled a mission in Norway. While' in Timpanogos .Stake, he served as: Stake Y. Mv, M. I.t A. President, Stake Mission President and Seventies Quorum president. In the Lehi Ward he has been ward drama and speeh director, Sunday School teacher, president of the Seventies Quorum, and Stake Mission president For the past four years he has been bishop of the Sixth Ward. Mr. Swenson declared the filing of his candidacy was done in his behalf by others. He is interested in the continued growth of our schools. He declared that although he has taken some part in the activity for selection of a school site, he feels that unity in getting the new high school is the most importantr factor to be considered now. As the parent of six children, only four of whom have reached school age, Mr. Swenson feels he has a vital concert with the operation of our school system. ' , V'.V 'v fay- vli - I ; : il h s L Lit.lJ4 GEORGE I. LESTER NORBERG CALVIN II. SWENSON - ?r i 1 BQNE er . LESTER M. NORBERG Lester M. Norberg was born in Salt Lake City, and attended schools here. He graduated from the University of Utah, and later received his master's degree from that institution in the field of history. He has also studied at B. Y. U. during the summer sessions. He taught history and speech at Vernal High School for a time, and later instructed in English and Speech at Park City. For 13 years, Mr. Norberg taught in the L. D. S. Seminary at Coalville and for nine years taught seminary in Lehi. For the past few years he has been employed at Deseret Chemical. Mr. Norberg has taken an active part in L. D. S. church work, mission having served a In Summitt Stake, in Canada. he served five years in the Stake Presidency, and in Lehi he was bishop of the Fourth Ward for three years. He has also served on the Stake Sunday School Board and the Stake Ward Teaching committee. For the past ten years he has taught the M. I. A. Special Interest class in his ward. Mr. and Mrs. Norberg are the parents of five children, one of whom is currently attending Lehi High School. Immediately after filing for the School Board, Mr. Norberg loft for California, and so was not available to make a statement concerning his candidacy. th GEORGE I. BONE incumbent George I. Bone, School Board member, was born and educated in Lehi. He gradu- ated from B. Y. U., then taught mi C7 I 4 A n 1 V 3v';v! JV''f r rj 1 ....... JAY R. 1 HAWS been superintendent of the Pleasant Grove plant of the Pleasant Grove Canning Company. Active in L. D. S. Church work, he has been a leader in the M. I. A. "and Seventies Quorum, and has been particularly active in Boy Scouting. Mr. Bone has served four years on the School Board during the Alpine School District's greatest period of expansion, and has seen the school population double since he has been in office. During this period the entire school district set-u- p has been reorganized. New principals have been appointed in all four high schools, and separation of the senior and junior high school has been started, with the appointment of new Junior High principals in the four communities. Two bond elections have been passed, one for $1,250,000 for construction of the new Orem High School, and the other for $2,900,-00- 0 for the construction of additional schools. Seven new elementary schools have been constructed, including Lehi's new Sego Lily school, and the Cedar Fort and Lindon schools have been remodeled and enlarged. The Cedar Fort gymnasium has been turned over to the church, as has the Fairfield school. Locally,' the old elementary school buidings have been razed, school grounds blacktopped and landscaped, and a well sunk for the Lehi Elementary school. Heating has been reinstalled in the high school gymnasium for greater convenience. With all the construction projects undertaken, the school taxes have been raised less than 2 mills. Mr. Bone was one of the leaders in fighting the move to consolidate the high schools of the Alpine District. lie has three children, all of whom have attended or are attending schools of Lehi. , ' JAY K. HAWS A native of Tremonton, Utah, Mr. Haws has made his home in Lehi since 1934. He received his education in school? of Boxelder County. Mr. Haws has been in business in Lehi for the past 22 years, and for the last 10 years has been a Civil Service employee in the Fire Department at Dugway Proving Ground. Mr. Haws has a long record of service in civic and church affairs. He was a member of the Fifth Ward bishopric from 1937 high school for eight years in Springville, and one year in Lehi, where he was an instructor to 1946, and for ten years has in mechanical arts and mathe- been on the Stake Genealogy matics. . , Board, In charge of instruction. For a number of years he has For many years he has taught in DEAN t l NUTTALL D. A. CLARK the Sunday , School a,nd M. I. A.;. and at present is- - instructing Junior in his ward. He served a term on the City Council in 1940-4during which time he took an active part in the formulation and adoption of the City Zoning Ordinance He has been a member of the for City Board of Adjustment 15 years. Mr. Haws and his wife are the parents of four children, all of whom have attended the local schooL. Two are now enrolled in the high school. M-M- en two-ye- ar 1, ' DEAN D. NUTTALL Dean D. Nuttall is a native of Provo, and attended schools in that city and in the Alpine School District. He graduated from Lincoln High School, and later fulfilled a mission for the L. D. S. Church in the Eastern States, during which time he presided over the Hudson District. Since that time he has completed two home missions and th is completing a present time. third at the Mr. Nuttall has been in the dairy farm business all his life, and now has a herd of purebred and registered Jersey cattle operates his own retail dairy business. Exceptionally active in church work, he served in the Presidency of Sharon Stake M. I. A. for four years, in the Presidency of the Seventies Quorum for seven years, of the and in the Presidency Elders Quorum for five years. He has been in the presidency or superintendency of the Sunday School and M. I. A., and is a He was a scoutMaster master for seven years in the Fourth Ward, during which time he won his Scoutmaster's Key. In his field of business, he has been chairman of the Zoning Committee of the Utah County Farm Bureau, and currently is a director of the Utah organization, American Jersey Cattle Club. Mr. and Mrs. Nuttall are the parents of five children. In a statement concerning his candidacy, Mr. Nuttall declared that he had not given much thought to becoming a candidate until requested to ru i by a group of local citizens.' He stated that he is vitally interested in the future growth and welfare of Lehi, and Is interested in looking to the best interests of the entire The promotion of community. sound school policies will also be his aim, If elected. M-ma- n. , v.,; atom NELSON A CLARK NELSON A native of Utah County, A. Clark (Brig) Nelson has made his home in Lehi for 19 years. He in' the received his education Schools of Lake View and Vineyard, and also attended Pleasant Grove and Lincoln High Schools. A prominent dairyman and has been farmer, Mr. Nelson vitally interested in the development and conservation of water. For three years he has served on the Board of Directors of Lehi Irrigation Company, during which time the pipeline was constructed to carry water from the two city drains down to irrigate more than 700 acres of farm land. For six years he has been on the state board of directors for the Federated Milk Producers Assn. Mr. Nelson has wide experience in the construction, mining and milling fields. For three years he was foreman of the lime quarry, and he has worked at various times in mining and milling. Active in L. D. S. Church Work, he has taught in the Elders Quorum and the Sunday School. He is married and is-- the father of two children who have attended the Lehi schools. Mr. Nelson states that he is interested in better and more ef ficient schools, and in more efficient and economical use of the taxpayer's money. Hit-Ru- n Driver Apprehended By Lehi Police A Provo motorist allegedly inaccident volved in a with an ambulance in Salt Lake County was apprehended Sunday night by Police Chict George Ricks. Chief Ricks stonrjed the motor of Provo, ist, Golden Knudsen moments after he had been alert ed by radio to be on the lookout for a Pontiac with the left front damaged. Knudsen was turned over to Salt Lake County officers, who charged that his car had struck an ambulance carrying a patient from Southern Utah to Salt Lnke City for treatment. The patient a man with a broken back, was transfered to another ambulance after the accident wrecked the one in which he was traveling. |