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Show Universal Klcrr.fllalir: t 141 Pierep-.n- C-- rp. Avenue A Build Vour Future A Good Place to Live and Raise a Family VOLl ME Promoting All Progressive Enterprises For a Bigger, Better Lehi LEHI. I'TAH. Tin'RSDAV. SEPTEMBER TWENTY-SEVE- Mia Maids, Explorers Make Timp Hikej Lehi Armory Dedication Set September B3 20 some 68 Mia On August With September 20 as the date, the Lehi National Guard Armory, Maids and Explorers, accompanied home of Lehi's own Company B, by their leaders, undertook the 1457th Engineer Battalion (C) (A) first Timp Hike sponsored by Lehi will be the scene of a gala event Stake. The hikers met at the when the dedication of this build- Timpanoke Ranger Station in American Fork Canyon and by 2:15 ing takes place. The events will start at 7:30 a.m. they were ready for the long p.m., with a turkey dinner ban haul. quet and dedicatory services, folEveryone voted the hike a huge lowed by dancing at 9:30 p m. The success and 63 persons made it to cost will be $2.50 per person for the summit of mount Timpanogos. both the dinner and dance, and The leaders were gratified with all proceeds will be used for the the good conduct of their charges, installation of the basketball and it is hoped that this first banks in the Armory. hike will become an annual affair. There will be only 600 tickets Leaders who participated and available for this outstanding af- worked hard to make the hike fair, which will include guard a success were, Dick Christoffer-son- , Dick Eddington, Blaine Thommembers, guests and the public. Some tickets are still available as, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sly, Mrs. and it is pointed out that should Eva Oxborrow, Mrs. Calvin (Maranyone wish to attend the dance ion Fox, Phillip Boltz, Miss Jan-ic- " and is unable to be at the banNorberg, Bud Hutchings and quet, tickets to the dance may be Miss Marilyn Anderson. purchased at the door. Included in the hikers were In reply to questions received Nancv Fox, Jeanine Fox Lynda concerning the use of proceeds to- Gray, Gloria Whipple, Donna Fow ward the installation of the bas- ler, Gayoln Pugh. Linda Kay 1st Smith, Paulette Smuin, Neva ketball banks in the Aimo'-yLt. Ned F. Wilson stated the Smith, Joe Shelton. Karma Alona Oxborrow, Bonnie building was designed prrn.'.rily for the purpose of training sol- Taylor, Kathleen McKee, Judy diers. All other facilities ii. the Fowler, Sharon Zimmerman, Kay building, such as the basketball Fox, Kathleen Singleton, Cindy banks, the target range, flie re- Peck, Barbara Phillips, Jolene frigerator and range in the kitch- Gordon, Ken Greenwood, R e t a en, which were paid for. inci- Wing, Sharon Marshall, Juanita dentally, by the men of fhe unit, Jones, Stephen T r a n e, Dennis are being included as a public Greenwood, Pam Wells bUSan service to the people of Lehi lor Holbrook, Linda Brown, Keitn Glover, Paul Hardman. Gary Hard community use. It was pointed out that the man, Calvin Urry. J. Brent Larbanks will be available to th3 sen, Max Gerber, Lavell Colledge, the high school, the lian-ta- Phillip Boltz, Glen Allred, Ralph League; the small bore target Powell, Patricia Sly, Ranae Lund, range will likewise be used by Lorraine Peterson, Naomi Bird, interested groups; the kitchen and Patsy Hall, D. Peck, Steven Hou-toDixie Peck. Sandy Phillips, dining facilities may be used by civic and club groups for their Jean Tossey, Hyium Asay and Bob entertainment, thus making the Casey. Armory a focal point of many varied activities. The original plans for the armory did not call for any "extras" therefore they 22-2- 3, if' , '1 J' DAY OF FUX ADDS $2100.00 TO MUSEUM FUND Virgil H. Peterson, left, general chairman of the Lehi Community Carnival, presents check for $2100.00 to George T. Strasburg, treasurer of the Ilutrhings Museum Board, while Calvin Swenson, second from left, finance chairman of the day's activities, and George V. Leany, memher of the general committee, look on. i United Effort of Lehi Clubs, Civic Groups Result in Successful Drive The big Lehi Community Carni- val to raise funds for the Hutch-ing- s Lehi Museum is now history and a most profitable day it was! The Fire Ladies' clubs, civic organizations Mrs. J. Freeman Royle Mr. and individuals combined their ef- wish toandthank Fire Chief Cloyed forts to make the day one of the Penrod and his efficient crew of most successful community affairs fire fighters for their quick handin Lehi's long history. ling of a fire situation at the Concession stands, children's Royle home. rides, a farm auction, merchandise Mr. Royle had been burning auction, food stands and the sale some old coops, which he had torn of tickets on a quilt all claimed a down, doing so under the direction share in raising slightly over of the fire department. Later, reto boost the Hutchings Mu maining trash was rekindled by seum fund. the wind and the fire department Many who attended have said returned quickly to the scene and the day not only was valuable handled the matter with dispatch. from a financial standpoint, but it also brought the entire community together in a united effort to put over a worthy cause. Numerous gifts and contribu tions were made to make the day a success and these will be properly recorded and due credit for each citizen's donation will be placed on the museum record William J. Skinner, well known book. resident of Lehi, reached his 80th Special Thanks 27. He was born milestone, The general committee, with in Provo, August 27, 1878, the son August Virgil H. Peterson as chairman, as of Amos and Mary Vaughan Skinsisted by George W. Leany and E. ner. Russell Innes, wish to publicly Mr. Skinner attended school in thank all the clubs and civic or- both Provo and Orem, where the ganizations, as well as indivduals, family later lived. His father died who helped to make the Lehi and his mother, who later married Community Carnival the huge suc- Ben Adams, lived and passed away cess that it was. in Lehi. Mr. Peterson expressed the hope Mr. Skinner worked in Beaver, that this day will be perpetuated Utah, where he was affiliated with to aid other worthy causes that the Beaver Mattress Co., and also arise from time to time in the at Marysvale, Utah, in the potash community. business. Later he was in a sheep raising business. He and Mrs. Skinner were marLehi Girls ried January 1, 1942, and have Prize Money to since made their home in Lehi. Mrs. Skinner is the former Alice Thanks Department Wm. J. Skinner Reaches 80th Milestone Contribute Museum Fund Two Lehi girls reflected a true spirit of unselfishness last week when they contributed the prize money each had won, to the Hutchings Museum fund. Miss Katherine Smuin. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Smuin, was the "super saleswoman" who proceeded to sell over 126 tickets on the appliqued quilt given away at the Community Carnival. The quilt was made and donated by Mrs. Mary Strasburg and her daughters, Mae S. Daly, Carrie Strasburg. Edith Strasburg and Edna Strasburg. A prize of $5 was offered to the young lady who sold the most tickets and Katherine was awarded the money. She promptly turned over her prize to the Hutchings Museum fund. Another teen was Miss Donna Fowler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Fowler. Donna g submitted the name for Lehi's celebration (Lehi Community Carnival) and won a prize of $5.00 offered by the general committee. She, also, promtly turned over the prize money to the museum building fund, thereby reflecting an appreciation of what the museum will mean to the future of Lehi and its young people. Older citizens might well remark and ponder the actions of these two fine representatives of the younger generation. Each and every resident of Lehi would do well to equal their .examples of true unselfishness. . Chris-tense- m will have to be financed by spe- cial projects. Tickets will be at a premium, therefore persons planning to attend are urged to purchase tickets early. They may be obtained from any National Guard member; at the Armory from MSgt. Knollin Haws; or at the Lehi City office from Lt. Ned F. Wilson. Tentative plans include the appearance of Governor George D. Clyde, as well as Major General Maxwell E. Rich adjutant general of the State of Utah, "and Brig. Gen. Maurice L. Watts, assistant adjutant general. Senator Arthur V. Watkins has announced that he plans to attend, and it is hoped that Senator Wallace F. Bennett and Representative William A. Dawson may find time to be there, too. The entire ceremonies will be reigned over by three lovely Lehi girls, Queen Joyce Ann Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Jones, and her two attendants, Kaye Peterson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alma Peterson, and Janeane Whimpey Jacob, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Whimpey. Devey Hutchings. Mr. Skinner is a member of the LDS Church, and is the father of three children, one daughter and two sons: Mrs. Ted (Frances) Cor-ne- tt and Bill Skinner, both of Los Angeles, Calif., and Veil Skinner of Bell, Calif. Mr. Skinner remains active and in good health, and he and Mrs. Skinner enjoy trips and visiting with their families and their many friends. For 10 years Mr. Skinner & had the distinction of being "Santa Claus" to the children of Lehi, as well as the surrounding communities. He is well remembered in this annual role, which he enAn interesting dairy farm tour joys almost as well as his audwas conducted by Utah Power & iences. Light Co., Wednesday, August 27, in north Utah county. A group of Utah Power Light Company Conducts Dairy Farm Tour Contributions Boost Museum Fund Xl'MBEK FOUR Stake Conference to Start Here Saturday Sego Lily Committee P-T- Ray Fox Passes Away Suddenly Ray Fox, 52, died Monday at 12:30 p. m., in the American Fork hospital of complications following an operation. Mr. Fox was born in Lehi, Jan. 14, 1906, a son of Eli and Juliett Prestwick Fox. He attended school here and was later employed by the Utah-Idah- o Sugar Co. He was a member of the Fifth Ward. Mr. Fox is survived by his father; three brothers and five sisters: Sterling Fox, Mrs. Neil (Er-ma- ) Larson, Mrs. Cecil (Wanda) Chamberlain, all of Lehi; Darrell Fox, Idaho Falls, Ida.; Earl Fox, Mrs. George (Thelma) Orem; Thomas, Aberdeen, Idaho; Mrs. LaPearl Roberts, Provo; Mrs. Wil-lar- d (Eldai Monson, Pleasant Grove. Funeral services will be held Thursday (today) at 1 p.m. in the A. H. Wing Mortuary chapel. Burial will be in the Lehi cemetery. t f ft J f, ' Chairmen Named President Mrs. Sego Lily Byron Whipple, announces the appointment of heads of the various committees who will work with executive comthe Sego Lily mittee for the coming year. The executive committee includes Mrs. Whipple, as president; Mrs. Evan L. Colledge, Jr., 1st vice president; Principal Dale Burgess, 2nd vice president; Mrs. Dean Worlton, secretary and treasurer. Assisting these officers will be the following chairmen of the var ious committees: Membership, Mrs. Philip Spjut, Mrs. Arnold project, Jones and Mrs. B. J. Lott; ipro-graMr. and Mrs. Eldred Fox; Mr. and hospitality, Mrs. Elmo Gray and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roberts; publication. Mrs. Richard Worthen; historian and reporter, Mrs. Dale Whimpey; ad ult education, Mrs. John Zanni room representative, Mrs. Alta Ed ,..nrHc- rvmcrninA Mrc TlalA Plarlf safety! Mrs. Glenn Mott; health. Mrs. Grant Evans. The various committee members to assist the above named chairmen will be appointed at a later P-T- A P-T- A date Second Ward MIA Plan Banquet Sept. ?5 fV ! v. h I Pv til Jh prize-winnin- t, Break up with honesty, according to better views To get to know life fully doesn't Americanism: People in the I am a man, and whatever concerns humanity Is of Interest to mean that one has to eet down country trying to get Into the into the gutter. cities, and vice versa. me. Terence.'" '" 10 The Second Ward Mutual will sponsor a banquet and program to be held Wednesday, September 10, beginning at 6 p.m., in the Second Ward Amusement Hall, according to Raymond Hardman, superintendent of the YMMIA. All proceeds from the banquet will be used towards the purchase of a record player for the use of the ward. The charge will be $2.00 per plate for all of Mutual age (12 years) and over. All under 12 years of age will be served at $1.00 per plate. Working with Superintendent Hardman is LaMar Goates, counselor, Mrs. Jack Sly, president of the YWMIA, and her counselors, Mrs. Boyd Larsen and Mrs. Mer-ri- l Thornton. All Mutual officers are helping with the arrangements and it is hoped that all ward members will plan to attend this evening of fine entertainment. 80 in v; Lehi Stake quarterly conference will be held next Saturday and Sunday. Sept. 6 and 7, in the Leh: Stake tabernacle, according to an made by Stak? announcement President Herman C. Goates. President Goates stated that Elder Antoine R. Ivins, a member of the First Council of Seventy, and Elder A. Lewis Elggren, a member of the church welfare committee, will be featured speakers at conference sessions. Elder Ivins is one of the seven men assigned to the world-wi- d work of the LDS missionary Church. A native of St. George. Utah, he has also served as mission president in Mexico. Elder Elggren is a director of the famed church welfare plan. On Saturday evening, a stake welfare meeting will be held, beginning at 6:30 p.m. The meeting will be for all ward and stake A n, dairymen and others interested the dairy industry spent the day Contributions made to the learning of new methods of dairy with modern electrical Hutchings Muesum during the past farming week have been as follows, ac- equipment. Two large buses were used for transcording to George Strasburg, treaportation. surer: A luncheon was served at the Ernest Larsen, $50; Mr. and Mrs. Odell Peck, $10; Mr. and Joseph Smith building on the BYU Mrs. Leonard Peterson, $10; Mrs. campus, courtesy Utah Power & Clinton J. Barnes, $25; Mrs. Inez Light Co. Speakers at the lunchPeterson Smith, $5; Miss Donna eon were Phil Shumway, professor, Fowler, $5; Miss Katherine Smuin Animal Husbandy department, and Olin H. Ririe, assistant $5. to the president, Utah Power & Light 9a Newel J. Stephens, BOY SCOUT COURT southern division manager, UP&L OF HONOR SLATED Co., conducted the meeting. FOR SEPTEMBER 7 The September Bov Scout Court The group visited the Utah State of Honor will be held Sunday, Sep College Experimental farm in tember 7, at 7:30 p.m., in the tab- south Pleasant Grove; the Walter ernacle, according to Alvin Broad-ben- R. Holdaway farm in Vineyard; advancement chairman. the Ray Gammon dairy farm In cliques, level wealth All scouts, scouters and parents Vineyard; the D.H.I. Computing let worth be judged wisdom, and we get of scouts are requested to be in Service in Provo, and the BYU attendance. of humanity. dairy farm In Edgemont. civic-mind- 4, 1958 ?1'v:-..;v;:f- . I "At.. Antoine R. Ivins member of First Council of Seventy, will address stake conference sessions in Lehi Saturday and Sunday. Telephone Co. Breaks Ground For New Building welfare committees and stake High Council members. Immediately following the welfare meeting, a priesthood leadership meeting will convene at 8 p.m The following are requested to be in attendance, according to President Goates : The stake presidency, clerks, High Council, stake patriarch, quorum presidencies, group s leaders, quorum and group of all High Priests, Seventy and Elders quorums stake mission presidency; stake Sunday School and YMMIA superintendencies, bishops counselors and ward clerks stake and ward Aaronic priesthood committees, including group advisors and general secretaries, ward d and teaching supervisors, Seminary instructors. secre-traie- Ground was broken at 2:30 p.m., ; August 25 for the new telephone dial building at North Merchant St., in American Fork, according to Ralph K. Ryan, manager of the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. The building will be one story of masonry construction stake-warwith a Norman brick facing. It will be 62 feet wide by 87 feet On Sunday, Sept. 7, two genera! deep. Cost of the new building with the associated central office sessions will be held at 10 a.m. equipment and additional outside and 2:30 p.m. Musical numbers for the morning session will be lines will be approximately furnished by the Seventh Ward To provide for the future growth choir, under the direction of Paul in the vicinity, the new structure Hanson, with Arva Bone, organist is so designed that a second story At the afternoon session the Third choir will furnish the mumay be added. The building will Ward numbers. sical Marjorie Magnus-so- n accomodate the business office, wil the be director, with Kaye plant headquarters and the dial Webb as organist. equipment. Loud speakers will be installed Relocating the equipment in the in the basement of the tabernacle telephone office and construction of the new building is necessary with plenty of seating space for to economically service the ranid those unable to obtain seats upstairs. expanding American Fork area and meet the demands, for improved telephone service. Figures show that there are now 2545 telephones here, compared with only 305 just 25 years ago. and 1285 ten years ago. The dial equipment will be designed for prefix telephone numbers necessary for direct long disoffice The candidates for tance dialing. The numbers in Am- on the Democratic public Ticket will erican Fork will have a prefix of be present at a party meeting callSkyline 6, followed by four numer- ed by local precinct officers for als. All telephone numbers will be Friday, September 5, at 8 p.m., changed when the dial equipment in the large assembly room of the is placed in service nxt summer. Lehi Memorial Hall. These canPlans are underway for a new didates will present their views on building and installation of dial important issues facing Utah service in Lehi. It is expected County voters. All Democrats and that an expenditure in excess of anyone interested in sound and $300,000 will be required. The constructive programs are urged change to dial service in Lehi to attend, according to Dean Prior, and American Fork will bp made Lehi Precinct chairman. at the same time next year. The local committee has sent for invitations to all Democratic can- The construction contract the American Pork budding ".as didates, whether they are involved awarded to the low bidder, the Al- - jn the September 9th primary or fred Brown Construction Co. Sub- - not. Each candidate will be given contractors will be A. N. Sisam el- - the opportunity to speak and contractor and Habco Diain h,s Droeram and plans to Plumbing and Heating, mechanical perform the duties of his office contractor. The contract has not efficientely and in the best inbeen let as yet on the Lehi build- terests of the public. ing. The following candidates have been invited and some have alBee ready indicated their intention to commisbe in attendance: sioner, Marion Hinkley and Hilton 9 Robertson. commissioner, Marcellus Neilsen Clark Eland Bee The Lehi Stake Queen and mer. Smith Earl Assessor, Round Table will be held in the Vest Tabernacle on Tuesday evening, Guy Ivins. Recorder: Thelma Smurthwaite. Clerk: Mark F. Boy-acSeptembe 9, beginning at 7:30 Treasurer: Grant L. Atwood. p.m., according to Mrs. Boyd Auditor: Robert Strong. Sheriff: Bee Stake keep(Pauline) Smuin, Roscoe and Peters Kay. SurRalph er. , Vern Green. State Senate: veyor: imMrs. Smuin states that this Harvard R. Hinton and George portant meeting will be held for Scott. State Representative: Ernbeehive second all first and year est Dean. girls and their mothers. It is esLehi Democratic committee pecially urgent that the mothers members urge all Lehi voters inattend in order to hear of the in good sound government terested changes which will be made in the beehive program. A fashion show operated in the interest of the puband social will follow the business lic, to attend this meeting. They meeting. are urged to come out and meet Mrs. Betty Fowler is the stake their candidates and find put what bee keeper in charge of the first-yefor and what. theyjWill stand In they Smuin Mrs. with girls, girls. do for the voters, if elected. charge of the second-yea- r $600,-000.0- 0. Democrats Plan Lehi Rally September Stake Queen Round Table Slated September 5 ar ar k. Mormons Complete Temple Near London The $1.5 million London Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Saints has been completed after three years of construction lor dedication Sunday, Sept. 7, by President David O. McKay, left inset, world leader of the church. McKay flew from Salt Lake City to conduct the three-daceremony, celebrating his 85th birthday in England, Sept. 8. The church leader dedicated a aimilar structure near Hamilton. New Zealand, five months ago. Appointed president of Britain' first Mormon temple is Selvoy J. Boyer, innet right, former Utah State legislator and official who had served as president of the church's British Mission for live year following World War II. Latter-da- y globe-circlin- g ar |