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Show EACH-A- O VERTISQ MURRAY (UTAI OB 70 THE Thursday, Oct. 3, 1968 LETTERS Pupils Name Own Leaders SO. COTTONWOOD. The Woodstock elementary student body has elected officers for the school's student cou- hi Bo i ncil. Heading the student govern- ment will be Kelly Egli, president, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Egli re-wr- ite per day 'expense" money regardless. This is a subterfuge This fetwipspar is happy to accept any Letter to the MUerl which is aet Ubeloai, maUelooa cr arofane. It U nnected they act exeeef Z&O words. AU letter! mart ke aifned; however, the acme of the aether wlU be withheld aaa a Bern ie Blame asea If aeeeatei to bring the daily pay to $40 while in session. Multiply this by 60 days and we get a grand total of $2400 per session plus additional pay for special sessions. The legislators coming in from Moab, St. George or even Tooele and requiring nightly lodging and 3 meals daily while away from home would barely meet these expenses at $15 per diem. $40 per day for local and nearby legislators not requiring lodging and meals. $40 per day for out of town legislators out of which they must pay for and meals. lodging Where's the fairness. For this reason alone, the amendment should be DEFEATED. Let the 1969 Legislature smarten up and lease out a motel (with low winter rates) to provide lodging and for aahUeattan. 1181 E. 5730 South. DEFEAT Proposition Vice president is Stacey Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shel- 2 COMPENSATION OF LEGISLATORS". It is not the don Johnson, 5764 So. 1145 East. Serving as secretary will be Suzanne Vinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hal D. Vinson, 1269 Hyland Lake Dr. These officers will carry out their duties for the first half year. Elections will be enheld again at mid-yeabling more students to assume leadership positions. The president works directly with the principal and coordinator on the program for the year. Mrs. Florence Brown is the student adviser and solution to achieving the al- truistic goals to good legislation. There may be justification for increasing the $25 per diem.. .alconsiderations though pay should not be the incentive to seeking public office. There is no quarrel with the present provision for mileage allowances. My quarrel is with the third 'EXprovision granting PENSES OF $15 PER DIEM salary to ar, (DAY) WHILE ACTUALLY IN SESSION". This means every legislator would be given $15 Vital Statistics meals for out of town legislators. (Lodging the legislators neither in one motel would also provide opportuni ties for necessary consulta tion after hours). Keep the Legislature honest and make the bill. them Would more pay attract a better type candidate? NOJ The Legislature is well represented by many profes-as sions and avocations such medical doctors, educators, lawyers, farmers, union men, housewives. businessmen, People who seek public office do so because of ego and dedication two essential requirements. Those motivated (LETTERS, Pg. 9B, Col. 6) McMILLAN - (From Pg. 4B, Col. 7) Teachers will be introduced during the preliminary proParents will then be gram. invited to visit their children's classes, where they will hear a discussion of the and acyear's programs by the tea- tivities presented cher. Mrs. Thamer (Carol) Hite, is in chairman, charge of arrangements. Refreshments will be served. program BURIED. Mark Patrick son of Allen, Ralph K. and Ruby Geis Allen, J232 E. 3545 South, on Saturday, following services at St. Anns Catholic church. He drowned on Thursday in a creek near his home. Born May 20, 1967, at Salt Lake. Survivors, parents, brothers, sisters, Guy, serving in Navy at Long Beach, Calif., Ernest, serving in Army at Ft. Knox, Ky., Davis, Brian, Barry, John, Annette, Lori, all of Salt Lake, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Allen, Austin, Minn., Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Geis, Salt Lake. BURIED. Lydia Bell Chapman Dowdie, 80, 5761 So. 490 West, Murray, yesterday (Wednesday) in Murray City following services (STATISTICS, Pg. 9B, Col. 2) Cemetery X? FACE . . . Used by thousands of students down through the years, this cafeteria at Hillcrest junior high has been re- - Lunch Week -- - Hillcrest Cafeteria MURRAY. Hillcrest junior high's cafeteria, one of the oldest in Murray School District, has been given a new look this year. New tables with individual seats attached, along with new paint, new floor covering and plastic serving trays do much to create a pleasant atmosphere where students attending Hillcrest junior high enjoy their noon meal. Approximately 410 students are served each day at Hillcrest. They receive a noon y TV COTTONWOOD MAll 1 I it jA'-.- v W modeled, with individual attached seats vided on new tables. We are joining with schools throughout the nation in observing National School Lunch week, Oct. said Mrs. Mary Ann Jensen, Murray district school lunch supervisor, Our theme for 1968 is "School Lunch Aids Good Health. The approximately 4,000 children who participate in the school lunch program in Murray are being taught good eating habits which, in addition to providing good nutritious food for help in learning now, will assist them in selecting well-balancnutritious meals throughout their adult life," she concluded. 13-1- Receives Facelifting I eononwooo u. & NEW meal consisting of portions of meat, vegetables, bread, butter and a half pint of milk as prescribed by the federal in the type A government school lunch pattern. The same program is carried on in each of the 11 schools in the Murray district. Manager of the Hillcrest kitchen and lunch room is Mrs. Bud (Anna) Hillis. Other workers are Hazel Bel-Io- n, Margaret Poulson, Marie Bench, Margie Wright and Julia Markham. ed Continuous Education Progress Is Topic For Parkside PTA Vf back-to-scho- ed ' i?!Vie ps fir Baby t; 7iyiapgr aStCW s pro- VS at the iiOSGrTldlfS t ,t .. ."Ion '"Firtl rMkl Mlhirtl ....' WwmW K .; -r,m, i (Sf? XxJ I .i: ., Lr'A Kf M cV-A- L- .', ,J ft V T( M ol program being held at 7:30 tonight (Thursday) at Parkside elementary. Following a short business meeting where the school's volunteer aid program will be parents will be discussed, given an opportunity to visit teachers and learn of their class outlines for the year. In meeting with the parents the teachers will be explaining in more detail about the continuous education program. They will discuss the system and also the grading system to be used. Parents will also learn how the teachers plan to identify the needs of the children and how they will treat the need or implement it. ' 1st ' ""20th teC frtly DRIVE IN SHOWING!!! 1st l.llr . CV7l 22il?r MICHEiell OIAHANN lla muo. OTTO PREMINCfcR T0DAY1 Whether you're buying or selling, renting or trading, MURRAY. Progress of the job hunting or looking for continuous education program Green Sheet want ads help, will be discussed by teachers can help. Try 'em! jKERRm'rHL TIME AT lJn GtLX " STARTS LrS. p(esenjKCt DEB0RAHDMI I I fl I ' S yp Mfe-- s POPULAR PRICES! non-gradi- ng Century-Fo- x -- piu$ Xftlai JTiaW yOUON PICTURE SHOULD BE KEPT OUTOFTHE REACH OFCHUDREM ' 1 HllAIOU$ JNErOWO MRROU IliuRHYSUNDnifVA THIS "NI STARTS " "I IWA" 1 W i.jjoi oriN7e .SS i sift ' 'rfprrrRTh? . 1LL3JJU krr I. w m . mrner t M a ! i t n ill v ...didn't even know she was married" Well, she's marriod all right. You could havo read about it a year ap) on jvirc six. Her wedding announcement wan printed in the same newxier tluit recorded her KircnU' wixidin, her birth, her graduation, and now the beginning of another generation. When each of these event took place they were duly noted and set down in permanent print in the continuing record of your community. From birth and death announcement. to chronicling the mighty cvenU of war and jieace, newspapers have been printing the facts in America since times. And if you Mieve that "printing the facts" is easy, you should sit in an editor's chair, sometime. If it's in print it shun there. It can be checked It forms a permanent record. and in the air, loose talk whose It's not chatter edge is sharper than the sword, whose tongue all the worms of N'ile, whose breath rides on the posting winds . . . ," as Shakespeare put it. You may take this service lightly. You should live, then, in a community without a newspaper. You would probably find that, without the modifying force of printed news, the winds of slander and controversy would be blowing pretty hard. double-checke- "... out-veno- Master Charge I MEDIUM OClOIIM't.'tU I I1 !TyJ Hi No Poym.nl 'Til B.C. If 36Mo'.toPay (I "?"" n I) lp"nIIHltVeVtn"!"''!JLv II m-h- . """"1 mufr Waiity ctntroi shopping I ( Bank Terms I NEWSPAPERS...THE INDEPENDENT f&v Walker Bankcard d. m e cMfBwwt Trnvtton;ii Sot'd 00 tube to bum Cut m u,off,',t Bi Cof lot D fT)aP)C V pHLCO cutom color tv w.HiJ.000IUf VV i V 9 0) - &gnai Sf)mhi gnal cewftg Degauiung Sr(em 267 Muff Kn p.ctut e 5 men ovaitfOM mounted iwatief ' ! Si Wlih Trade ctu'U 1 I , IpmilCO 1 II I Fl JI 1 I I I Store Hours GrtZ) 10 A.M. 7 P.M. Mon.Fri. 10 til 9 |