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Show U; 3V.-,.t- :. VOLl'ME . 1 av.Microfilming po us m si-- 71. NUMBER 6 c FRIDAY, JANULRY 2, 1D53 SIBSCRIPTION Here and There Still Study Sewer Army Pfc. Jay A. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Florin A. Brown, 4 635 Atwood Blvd., Murray, Utah, recently completed 10 months service in Korea and is now serving with the 7th infantry division. Since making the amphibious landing at Inchon in the fall of 1950, the "th Division has fought in every sector of the Korean Elements of the 7th peninsula. were the only V. S. forces to reach the Ynlu river. Brown was employed by the Mountain States Telephone & Salt Lake City, before Telegraph, the entering Army in March, 1951. M. YEAR Ciiy Fathers Okeh Budget for '53 In the Service With 'Our Boys' Army Pvt. Robert $2JM) The Murray City oommisfiion Monday night adopted a budget il i if .fix m for 1953 with estimated expenditures of $282,500 for general funds, $447,696.12 for the power plant and $72,000 for the water Best wishes for hanni- - m1 ness in the New Year, may you and yours j$ rind peace and content- ment with the success 1 j l nidi, i j j j unrigs. ' Frost, whose wife, Maxine. lives at 176 W. Central ave., Murray, is serving in Korea with the 5th regi- mental combat team. A flexible, unit, the 5th RCT is fighting with the U. S. Eighth Army. Frost, a rifleman with Company I of the 5th RCT, was employed by the Continental Baking Co.. Salt Lake City, before entering the Army in January this year. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Frost, 833 So. 7th East, Salt Ijike City. Birthday Calendar Lions Club Slaies Speakers Eulogize Makes '53 Debut Talk on Traffic Julian Clawson, 54 Happy to be back in Utah for the holidays is Eldo Cough. He was transferred recently to the Veterans hospital in Salt Lake With the advent of 1953 the City after spending many months in an army hospital in Colorado. Community Birthday Calendar He was wounded several months once is being used by many again Korea. in The war hero is a ago son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Cough. Murray residents in keeping track of the friends, relatives and neigh4723 So. 2nd West. bors birthdays. Guy Stringham was graduated The calendar is from basic training at Parks Air after an absence of a reappearing year. This Force base recently and now is calendar is sponsored by year's stationed at Keesler AFB, Miss. the Murray Junior Chamber of He is training in electronics and and the Murray Lions now is on leave and will be home Commerce until Jan. 4. He was mighty happy club. This year's calendar sets new to make it home for Christmas, records both in the number of 20. Dec. arriving here names and in the number of cal endars distributed. Maurine Johnson, daughter of The of the calendar conMr. and Mrs. James C. Johnson, tains afront large photo of the Salt 20S Elm St.. spent the Christmas Lake horseshoe pitching holidavs at home on furlough from courts, County scene of the national tourthe Women's Air Force. Miss nament for many years. Johnson recently completed The calendar, called "an adven- on back page) ture in friendship to make a friendly community more friendly" 17 advertisements Women's Clubs ofalsolocalcontains merchants, 13 of which offer free gifts or discounts to Joint Meeting persons whose names appear on The annual joint meeting of the the calendar but, of course only three Murray women's civic or- on their birthday. New Year's Day find five celeganizations will be held at the City Firemen's Hall at 8 p. m. brating birthdays: Clarence Mills, Thursday, Jan. 8. The clubs are Gloria Stephenson, Fally Nielsen, the Murray Women's Club, the Sally Nielsen and Barbara Ball. Others who will celebrate birthMurray Junior Women's Club and the Murray Ladies Civic Guild. days in the week ahead include: The following variety program Jan. 2. Louise Seymour. Dick has been arranged under the di- Robinson. Ruth Elaine Somsen rection of Mrs. L. C. Winter: Baton and Alan J. Angerb.iuer; Jan. 3. twirling. Karen Joyce Berger; Mina Gordon. John N. Padjen and tenor solo, Roy Bishop: reading, Harriet Matic: Jan. 4. none: Jan. Carol Given Booth; ballet dance, 5, Robert Shelley and Ida Sun Jan. 6. George H. Berryman. Patty Snarr; vocal solo. Pat Pet-tihula dance, Carolyn Bennion, Minnie Thompson. Vernal Larson, and two numbers by The Ballad-ier- Orval Forbush and Cheryl Jean Kreiter; Jan. 7 (Millard Filmore Tea will be served. (continued on back page) train-(eontinu- Three Plan - t: s. At the next meeting of the Mur-- ' ray Lions club on Monday, Jan. 5, the speaker will be E. G. Johnson, chief engineer of the state road For his honesty, his devotion, his courage, his energy and hi3 desire to live a full life, Julion Clawson was eulogized at final memorial rites Wednesday in Salt Lake City. commission. Mr. Clawson, 54, had been a Mr. Johnson will .speak on Salt resident of Murray for about two Lake county's congested highways, years, residing with his family what can be done to eliminate at 555 East 56th South. bottleknecks and what the 30 High praises for the Utah and Lions clubs of the county can do Idaho business leader were spoken by Dr. Paul S. Richards, a lifelong to help solve the problem. friend, and Richard L. Evans, also Also in attendance will be D. a lifelonc friend and a member Howe Moffat of the South of the LDS Council of Twelve. tonwood Lions club, who is chair- Officiating at the services in his man of the county Lions commit- ward was Bishop Earl Maw of tee studying the highway problem. the Eighteenth LDS ward. Burial was in Salt Lake City cemetery. Lee Bowen of the Murray club is Mr. Clawson, president of the a member of the committee. Consolidated Holding Co., was The program is being arranged killed earlv Sunday mornine in a intersection crash at 17th by the attendance and member- grinding South and State St. He was en with Clarence route for a breakfast ship committee, appointment Mills as chairman. The Lions offi- with Dr Richards. The. crash also claimed the life cials urge every member to be in attendance at this very important of Luther E. Foley. 51. of El Monte. Calif., who was the driver meeting. of the east bound automobile which collided with Mr. Clawson's northbound vehicle. Schools Mr. Clawson. loner a T" f h businessman, 5 in recent years had acouirrd vat agriculture Murray City schools will reopen r.ronort i" T!aho and spent Monday, Jan. 5. aflei the year- - much of his time in and nenr ' of holdings. end holidays. Schools Supt. J. Rupert. ! A man of varied abilities, Mr. Easton Parratt Wednesday repor- Clawson was an salested that the students and teachers man fo- - the old advertising Salt Lake Herald will find the schools newly cleaned and FnU Lake Telegram for sevand floors newly waxed. Also dur- eral vears. H later was nresident Western Building and Loan Co. ing the holidays a new storage of and Consolidated Bu'ld'nsr and hoom has been built at Liberty Lofin the r-try Blt I)Ve Citv. In school. """) (continued on back Cleanser Ud For Opening Jan. and sewer revenue fund. The bud- get was adopted without increas tax rate, one of ing the present the lowest in the state. The new year, no doubt, will 'find the city spending more money than ever before in history. That will be due to the proposed city-- : wide sewer system and sewage disposal plant to be constructed Mayor J. Clifford Hansen still is 'working on the proposals and the sewage plant now is up for second bids, the design having been re-- j vised to turn costs, The sewer system and sewage disposal plant costs are not in-- : eluded in the budpet, as plans for same stil are indefinite, Two of the major increases in ithis year's budget include $20,000 for road repairs due to the sewer project, and an increase from $21,064.39 to $36,300 for the rotute land streets departments. Many street improvements this year ' were delayed because of the im- pend'ng work which wiil b ne res-- . filiated by the sewer project. I ' Establishment cf the police department in the present city jail building brought an increase in the police and prison budget from ; well-know- n h-'- s " page) to $22,245.21 $26,920. Street light- ing also gets a big boost for improvements and extensions. The 1952 expenditures were $8 651 60 compared with the 1953 budget of $13,000. Legal and engineering expenses also are anticipated to be considerably higher in the cominf; year. The increase is from $9,419 expended in 1952 to $19,900 estimated for the coming year. Funds on hand were set at $65,000 and property taxes were anticipated at $95,000, although this year's property taxes totaled $109,576.84. MHS Caaers Go To West Tonight Tonight (Fridavi at 7 n. m. the Murrav High school's 1953 basketball edition will test its power against the West High school Panthers in the latter's new gym- nasium in Salt Lake City. The pane will b pait of a double header in which the West ""uad w'll he snlit to take on M.,r..v and a. S:30 to tangle with the Preston. Idaho five. Murray won a thriller from the "''"IE class B team of Lincoln H school last Friday night by the narrow margin of 39 to 38. Lincoln has been rated one of the ton B sum ds in the state and the Spartan victorv indicates M.irrav mnv be a dark horse threat in the Jordan division this year. Tuesday night the South IPgh d Cubs, the A team of the state, Invaded the Murray srvm and walked away with a d 62 to 41 victory over the locals. Wide as the margin was. South (Continued on back page) u--h top-rate- lop-side- |