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Show Halloween (Continued from page 1) noted making the rounds, and investigation has shown most of them to be from outside of Mid vale. Some "trick - or treat" groups last year were identified as coming from Salt Lake. Committees working on var ious phases of the parties have been announced as follows: Decorations and School Lions Club, Refreshments punch; Kiwanis Club, hot dogs and buns. American Le Picture shows gion, School. Ladies' Dance Community tickets - Club. Costume parades and judging Fire Ladies, Legion Auxiliary. l, Hostesses Lady Lions; lower grades, Daughters of Utah Pioneers; 4th grade through high school. Business and Professional Women, Ladies' Pre-schoo- Guild. Men from Gar Supervisors den Club, American Legion, Firemen, Catholic Men's Club, Police men. Mountview PTA Active As New School Begins night at the - Has Close Call ' . ft PR ARE and toe South. Bills The program prepared for the occasion follows: organ prelude, Audio-Visual Orilla Higgins; opening song, Arthur Mountview Elementary school choir; invocation, Grange; last Thursday was a splendid suc sacrament song, LaVoy E. Whit cess, and parents who attended more; piano duet, Earl H. Ottley, Seth H. Bills, formerly associat learned what the teachers plan to Robert S. Whitmore; speaker, ed with the Salt Lake County LiH. Voyce; vocal trio, Bis teach the student during the year. Ralph and Sister George B. Roden brary in Midvale, is presently ex hop The Mountview PTA held a cup and Janette; speaker, S. Peter, ecutive secretary of the Audio- cake sale for the children Oct. 18 Peterson; organ solo, Earl H. Ott Visual Center, Brigham Young and plan another in November. ley; remarks, Bishop Joseph W. University, and has been appoint Despain; response, missionary; ed supervisor of the audio-visuMidvale Stake Holds closing song, congregation; organ program of the s Col Festival 27 postlude, Onlla Higgins. Adult Education and Exten Takes Seth Back-to-Scho- Post at Rexburg Oct. lege The MIA of the Midvale Stake is sponsoring a quartet festival to be held Sunday, Oct. 27, at 8:30 pjn. in the Midvale Third and Fourth Ward chapel. University Shows Steady Growth; Reaches 20,000 sion Service at Rexburg, Ida. ; He will promote films and film rentals with elementary schools, high schools, and church groups; aid classes and teach audio-visuat the eollege, in high schools, mm m W "10 WIS EI-B- - BERN'S. ON" YOU BUY GROCERIES FOR THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE AND YOU ALWAYS KNOW WHAT YOU ARE BECAUSE THERE IS NOTHING ADDED ON AFTER YOU GET IN THE STORE. SOME STORES NOWADAYS GET YOU INSIDE WITH A LOW PRICE ON THE WINDOW; THEN ADD ON 10 AT THE CHECKOUT BUT NOT SOAT r THE PRICES ARE LOWj AND YOU THE AT BUYING THE PRICE - SEE IS DERNS' PRICE YOU PAY! PORK BYU-Rick- Quartet ;SENTINELa South Salt Lake County Daugh thrown open on a first come-firs- t Duane Gardner Active THE MIDVALE (Utah ters of Utah Pioneers will be Page Six ' served basis. On Committee at BYU , Friday, October 25, 1957 held Oct. 1 at an 28, Monday, p.m. feature The production Serving on the Homecoming at the DUP Memorial Building LaMar Osborne, 11580 South 700 Midvale, Sandy , Coeds hour and a half of fun and frolic committee at Brigham Young at 304 S. Main St., Salt Lake. Mrs West, CrescentJ; Sa.fjurday- - m. Honore and will be well worth the admis- University is Duane Gardner, son Orlando Erickson, president will " - of Mr & Mrs Lloyd Gardner, Mid- be in charge. A special program Salt Lake Countyjfiremen were ' Officers and men of the Re' x? Choking on a piece of banana sion. has been arranged. All officers m service frxmv, 1250 p.m until serve Officer Training Corps de. "Autumn Antics" is entirely an vale. that lodged in his throat, a Mid ana members of the various nine hours later, fighting the as Gardner has been named ' tachments at Utah State Univer production as it has business vale boy stopped breathing and of this year's camps of South Salt Lake Coun manager playing with matches sity Friday announced names of nearly strangled Monday evening. been written, produced, directed, Homecoming activities. A senior ty are urged to be in attendance.! were blamed for the fire. and casted by the inmates them student, Gardner is 23 coeds elected to the Corps of majoring in The boy was riding in the fam ' The loss was estimated at $580. Sponsors. selves. . economics. Baled and Straw 5:30 about his mother Hay ily car with All contributions v are to be Names of the university coeds Burned at Crescent p.m. and was eating a banana. His used of mater the for purchase to the Corps of Sponsors DUP elected Units Schedule In the him on over fall mother saw every square mile of land ials that will go into another all- A stubborn fire smoldered included Linda Lee Jacobsen, seat Deputy Kresh Juretich, Midas live inhabitants of Next the many Monday inmate production, a new prison Meeting through 500 bales of hay and 400 insect world as there are men on Sandy, and Sharon Swenson, vale was passing the car and saw The monthly .meeting of the bales of straw at the residence of the earth over two billion. chapel. something was wrong. He stopped, saw the boy was turning blue from lack of oxygen, pulled him from the car and gave artificial respiration. Police and ambulance crews were ealled and got the boy to breathing, then took him to St. Ktfth L. Whitmore Mark's Hospital. Mis The West Central States The boy was David Oliver, son sion of the LDS Church is the destination soon of Elder Keith of Mr & Mrs Alvin J. Oliver, 85 L. Whitmore, who will be honor Heather St. By next morning he S ed at a farewell testimonial Sun- was breathing normally and the day, Oct., 27, at 7 p.m. at the chest congestion had cleared, Granite Ward, 3100 East 9800 Banana Lodges In Throaty Boy Missionary . MCWMM) l5c STEAKS and to other groups on a credit Total enrollment of the Uni and basis. versity of Utah last year soared His wife and their five chil past 20,000 for the first time in dren will join Mr Bills in Rex its history. burg soon. Passage of the milestone was He was graduated in 1946 from reported in the report of the re- Utah State University and ob transmitted to tained his master's degree in ed gistrar for 1956-57- , Dr. A. Ray Olpin, University of ucational administration at BYU Utah president, by J. A. Norton, in 1949 and took a year of grad educauate work in audio-visuregistrar. total The 1956-5including tion at Indian University in 1955-pupils and extension 56. He taught school in Lava Hot registration, as well as the reg reached Springs High School, Ida., 1946-ular college students 20,727, at least 10 higher than 48; was teaching principal in Box r audio-visua- l enroll Elder County, 1949-5any previous ment in the University's history, director, Salt Lake County the report showed. Library, Midvale, 1951. The total, Mr Norton said, cov ered 18,789 students at the col where only two de lege level cades ago enrollment at the same non-cred- v. &WC- e one-yea- level was 7,023. 4 Regular daytime enrollment on the college level last year was 9,113, the report showed. A study of enrollment trends in Utah, made last year by the University's Bureau of Economic and Business Research, reported that by 1970 the regular daytime registration at the University possibly will reach 18.000. enrollment lnclud The 1956-5ed students from every county of the state and from every state n the nation. Mr Nortton told President Olpin: . . . 84.2 of the daytime stu dents in 1956-5were Utah residents. Other states and VS. Pos sessions provided 14.3 of the student body, and foreign coun 37 fortries provided 1.5 eign countries were 7 ? r 1 L uu l( H WU LU 3C - 3fc.2gai, lb. 1; talent-studde- PERMANENT FRYER'S On Prison Stage Next Week End The evenings of Oct 31 and Nov. 1 and 2 will be big nights out at the On these successive evenings the inmates of the Utah State Prison will present their first spectac ular, "Autumn Antics.' The stage show will be presented on the stage of the prison auditorium at 8 p.m. and admission will be by dona tion only. The auditorium seats 442 people nd the doors will be . SWIFT'S "Autumn Antics" THE MILDER BOURBON ILi CHICKEN - VEGETABLE - TOMATO CREAM OF CHICKEN 7 THE SMOOTHER BOURBON CELERY' SO UP POTATOES ffll-FSEEZ- E 31ib.H SIRLOIN ygai. 3fc fflEESE TETON d STEAKS B 50-- TREAT 7 L- - ess THE LIGHTER BOURBON "7J"? ,, ? i IF YOU CAN FIND A BETTER BOURBON... BUY IT! REGULAR ... 79c mm ieat Stability of the growth at the University of Utah was shown. Mr Norton said, by the fact that in each of the past five years the senior class has been almost as large as tho freshman class. The enrollment last year included 2.351 frehmcn and 1.940 seniors. The remarkable postwar growth of the University perhaps is best described by the gradua tion statistics. The report noted: "Of 40 847 degrees and diplomas conferred by the University since 1876. 20.241 (virtually ) have been conferred since Jan uary, 1946. . in I trust you sup- the primary election will give me the same Nov. 5. tM tootM wmmt,."4 fn. ptf Candidate for l1 TALL CAN GAiEAOE BANANAS 1 H LARGE JUICY c ib. NE STEAKS (Grapefruit PRICES SUDJECT TO STOCKS ON HAND Sincerely RxiMf STEAKS L support in the general election on HENRY 111) 1 Tuesday. A SALMON PortiS ausage wish to thank all those who ported me " 3(P)C can THANECS bourbon I ROUND LEAN FRESH one-half- I I I ALASKA BECKSTEAD at Mayor of Midvate 31 N. MAIN gyp - n B 5fc QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED b I ' (F(d MT3YALI |