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Show Volume Tooele, Utah, Friday, April 24, 1959 Sixty-Fou- r Number Forty Six r - r c ' f i N ' -- J N S take Conference This Sat. And Sun. Elder Richard L. Evans of the Council of the Twelve, and originator of the program, The Spoken Word, will represent the General Authorities ol the Church at all sessions of North Tooele stake conference, to be held in the stake tabernacle. Saturday and Sunday, April 25 and 2!i, according to announcement made by Stake President O.T. Barrus. President Bai rus extends a soccial invitation to the general public who have en- secretaries of ail high priests, seventies and elders quorums, bishops and bishops' counselors, ward clerks, stake committee for the Aaronic priesthood under 21, stake ward teaching committee and the stake committee fo Sr. members of the Aaronic priesthood. Floyd George Smart died Wed nesday, April 23 at 3:30 p m. in a Salt Lake hospital from undetermined but natural causes. He had recently un dergone surgery on his leg and had been returned to the hospital for treatment. A special meeting has been called for 3 p.m. in the chapel of the stake tabernacle to be attended by stake presidency, high stake council, clerk, stake Floyd Smart Richcl Elder sermoiiet!.S joyed and their patriarch, bishoprics, L. connecas in Evans ard given He was born in Tooele, Dec. 1, of the tion with the Tabernacle choir wives; also, all members 1914, a son of George and Marfor committees ward stake and broadcasts, originating from Temsenior members of the Aaronic garet Murray Smart. His father ple Square in Salt Lake City; to preceded him in death by two attend the general sessions of con- priesthood and th'hr wives ?nd all months. who are those of wives ference on Sunday, and see and elders and married. Attendance of other perHe was a graduate of Tooele hear Elder Evans in person. sons at this meeting which will be high school with the class of 1932 A priesthood leadership meeting addressed by El. Ur Richard L. and had been employed at Tooele will be held at b: 30 p m. Saturday Evans of the Courcil of the Twelve Ordnance Depot as a fireman for to be attended by the following; will be by special invitation. Danc- the past 14 years. stake presidency, stake clerk, ing and refreshments follow this Prior to that time, had had high council, quorum presidencies, meeting. worked at the Elton tunnel and General sessions of the stake had served two group leaders, quorum and group years in military conference will be held at 10 a.n service World War II. during 2 p.m. and 7:39 p.m.. Sunday. The He was a member of the LDS evening sesv a will be undei di- church, holding the office of an e rection of the stake MIA. The elder. He also belonged to the mem'oirship cf the staki is Eagles, and Disabled American these to asked attend Sunday ss Veterans. sions, and an invitation is ex ended to the general public to Mr. Smart was married to Marattend. garet Major on Dec. 16, 1945. Music for the 10 a.m. and 2 Surviving are his widow', his p m. sessions of conference will mother, and the following childbe furnished by a youth ren: Paul, age 12; Donna, 10; Alan choir sponsored by the MIA or- 7; Lee, 4; and Robert, 2, all of ganizations of tic wards, and di- Tooele. rected by I D. Bird. This group oi Also surviving are a brother, F. young people has been trained, and their singing will be a musi- Dale Smart; two sisters, Mrs. Barcal treat for those who attend bara Madsen, Tooele and Mrs. conference. The performance ol Melba Powell, Salt Lake City. Funeral services will be held this grouu and the full attendance h of its members to make a large Saturday at 12 noon in the ward church. Burial will showing will ha c a great bearing upon a possible invitation to per- be in Tooele cemetery. Friends may call at the Tate form later on a very special occasion. mortuary, Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. and A free lunch vn will be served Saturday, prior to funeral time. the bishopric and Reliet SoK. Dy Proctor George ciety of the Tooele Tenth wa J at noon, for those who cannot conveniently return to their horn's for dinner, those from out of town and others who ere invited to remain for lunch The progtam for the Sunday evening 7:30 p.m. session is t.unc elsewhere in this paper. n pn. f r i 1! -- " I C TOD ARMED FORCES DAY Aqua Belles Plan Show May 12. A son of George K. and Mary Ann Anderson, he was born in 1879 at Marysville, Marshall co., Kansas. He came to Utah with his family at the age of 16 years, and settled at Eureka. He worked as field representative for Sugar Company during which time he lived in Idaho and Montana. With his family, he came to Tooele in 1930, and engaged in mining until his retirement. A member of the LDS church, Mr. Proctor had been active in church work throughout his entire lifetime. He served as a counselor in the Wallpa ward bishopric, and on the Sunday school board of the Bannock stake;, and had served as a ward teacher for many years. He held the office of a high priest. Mr. Proctor was married to Annie Ludlow, on Feb. 13, 1901, in the Salt Lake temple. They were the parents of six children, three of whom survive: Mrs. Walter (Ethel) Formo, Max Proctor, and Mrs. Dan (Inez) Whitehousc, all of Tooele; and a foster daughter, Clco Ruth Cook, Utah-Idah- o To be Heard Sunday Evening Sunday evening session of North Tooele stake quarterly conference will be under the direction of the stake YWMIA and will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the stake tabernacle Winners of the ward speech festival will present their prize-wi- n ning speeches. Special musical numbers have been planned and some Silver Gleaner awards will be given. The stake membership is invited to attend. -- USU Alumni Plan Banquet d claim prizes. HOSPITAL All alumni and their partners are invited to attend the Aggie al umni banquet, which is to be held this Friday, April 24, at 7:30 p.m. Medical in the Kirk hotel. Kathryn Hurley, Delle Coach John Ralston, will be the Surgery guest speaker. Coach Ralston is Gwen Nichols, Tooele Martha Ann Welch, Tooele the new Aggie football coach. Marlin L. Robinson, Tooele The price is $2.00 per plate. Reservations can be made by Mansur Shibley, Tooele calling Lois Bailey of Tooele, or Leah Calhoon, Tod Park Marshall Grode, Tooele Lawrence Matthews of Grants villc. Jeffry Lynn Norton, Tooele Mcnan, Idaho. These reservations should be Accident Also surviving are three sisters made immediately so as to know Estella Mascarenas, Oakland, Mrs. Mary Davies and Mrs. Jes- how many to prepare for. California. sie Pardini, Salt Lake City; and Mrs. Marie Olsen, Riverton; 20 grandchildren, and 14 great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. in the First-Sixt- h ward chapel. Burial will be in the Tooele city cemetery. Friends may call at the Tate Show Boat, a musical speciac-ticket- s Tooele Fourth Eleventh ward mortuary, Thursday evening from be purchased for church. Tickets are 25 cents for may 7 to 9 p.m. and Friday prior to $1.50. All proceeds will go to the children up to 12 years of age, funeral time. stake and ward Sunday schools, 50 cents for all others. Family ular produced by the Utah Paver and Light Company will be preTo sented here, Friday, April 24, unTo der the sponsorship of the Tooele 1st stake and ward Sunday schools. -- Show Boal Will Be Here In Tooele, Friday April 24 -- Allan Swan Speak at Ward Allan Swan, foirrer resident of Tooele, will he (he guest speaker at the First ward sscament meet-irSunday, April 2f ai 7:30 p.m. The Tooele priesthood cnorus will furnish musical numbers. I Appearing in the production as a featured soloist will be Mrs. Dons Nisonger Alsop The musical is highly acclaimed and everyone is invited to attend. Curtain time is S p.m. at the will show the State basketball film and give a commentary. It was Kansas State that was ranked No. 1 in the nation last season, losing only to BYU and NCAA champs California. Coach BYU-Kansa- Stan Watts s afPurpose of the fair is to raise money to aid the explorers in going down the Colorado river, this spring. The trip, which has been taken by various groups in years past, will not be made after this year, due to the Glen Canyon dam, which will put much of the area under water, when completed. Tickets are still obtainable from any post 131 explorers and from Dwayne Wright and Claude Atkin, according to post president, Danny Gillespie; and the public is urged to join in the evening. their spring water show, winter-lonPrice of the dinner and film is stunt, ana composition practice, and a preparation for $1 per person. the performance tours that the Aqua Belles take each summer. p g A fantasy of fairy tales will come to life, by way of Carrolls famous Alice, and her Looking Glass. The characters of the Looking Glass become alive to help Alice prove to Old King Cole that the mirror is really magic. Tooele Stake Sets Priesthood Meeting Col. Supensky fund-raisin- g On Saturday, April 25, the Tooele Aqua Belles will present Adventures Through the Lookii Glass, The show is a wind-uof the Coach Stan Watts and activities in the area are busy Forces Day celebrations to be held Depot, on May 15, 1959. Tooele OrdGrounds, Tooele National Guard, and C. Battery, 921 Field Artillery, Tooele, are sponsoring this year's affair, which promises to be bigger and better than last year. Many popular activities held last year will be repeated this year. Tank rides are planned for the youngsters. Carnival - type rides sponsored by the Tooele Ordnance Depot Civilian Welfare Council will again be set up in the administrative area. Underprivi leged children will be sponsored by the committee, and will be brought to the installation thru cooperation of the civilian transportation agencies. Many static displays will be presented by other agencies, among them a display by the Tooele Squadron Civil Air Patrol showing their capabilities for search and rescue, commumca tions and community service. Twenty-minutguided tours will be presented throughout the day. As a kick-of- f for this years program, Lt. Col. Albert J. Hyde, project officer for this area's Armed Forces Day celebration, visited the mayors of Provo, Pleasant Grove, Orem, Lehi, American Fork, Stockton, Tooele and Grants-ville- , to issue them a personal invitation to visit Tooele Ordnance Depot dring this celebration. e Tickets will be available at the door, this evening (Thursday) for the big spaghetti dinner and sports evening, sponsored by Explorer Scout post 131, to which the public is invited. The event will be staged at the First-Sixtward chapel, with the spaghetti dinner being served anytime between 6:30 and 8:30 pm At 8:30 p.m., featured guest, BYU Eiglh Ward Organizes May 2 Bazaar The Tooele Eighth ward Relief Society is sponsoring a bazaar and food sale, Saturday, May 2, and cordially invites the public to attend. The event will be held in the North Tooele stake recreation hall, at 196 North Pinehurst ave. Supper, being served at 6:30 p.m., will feature barbecued hamburgers, hot dogs, baked beans, salad, pie, cake, ice cream, and punch. Heres the opportunity to treat the entire family to good food, reasonably priced! articles Many lovely hand-mad- e will be offered for sale, and it will be an ideal time to select Mothers Day gifts. Good home-bakefood may also be purchased. For every fifty cents spent at the bazaar and food sale, a ticket will be given for a prize drawing. The drawing for prizes will be held at 8 p.m. Those holding winning tickets must be present to Tooele and the Ordnance Depot. The train will run again this year as part of the festivities. tween Stan Watts Here For Banquet Third-Sevent- Speech Winners SPECIAL1- -A feature of the Tooele Ordnance Depot open house, the past two years, has been this special train, providing free transportation be- - 300-voi- George K. Proctor, 312 South Main street, died Tuesday, April 21 at 6:35 p.m. at the Tooele Valley hospital, after an illness of a few weeks duration. He would have celebrated his 80th birthday, t) :! The military installations with preparations for Armed this year at Tooele Ordnance nance Depot, Dugway Proving -- Funeral For G K Proctor Friday 2 P.M. U Armed Forces Day Fele lo Draw 5000 Funeral For Floyd Smart Sat. 12 Noon en-t.i- j ' Harris School To Sponsor Jr rl Exhibit Alf Engen To Hunt Noted ski instructor Alf Engen and state landscape architect Francis C. Oswald will travel to Middle Canyon, Monday, April 27, to determine if the area is suitable for a ski resort. Engen and Oswald will look over the proposed ski areas in company with officials of the County Chamber of Commerce and Tooele ski club. This action is being taken in connection with recent action by state and local officials toward making Middle Canyon a state park in the near future. The connecting link of the Butterfield road between Tooele and Salt Lake counties through Middle Canyon seems certain to be completed after meetings, last week, between Salt Lake and Tooele officials. A road has already been com- pleted as far as Butterfield Alice brings forth an array of The Sterling R. Harris school Pass on the Toot le s:de by NatBlack PTA will exhibit including an art fairy sponsor ional Guardsmen, upon request Bo Little Sambo, Ugly and tea on Sunday, April 26 from Peep, Tooele stake priesthood leader- Duckling, and The Three Little 3 to 6 p.m. in the school's library. of the Tooele county commisIt looki d for a time ship meeting will be held in the Pigs. Mrs. N. Howard Jensen is in sioners. like the project might bog down Tooele Fourth - Eleventh ward, of the affair. Assisting her Some of the team numbers in- charge Kennecott Copper Corp., this coming Sunday at 2 p.m., to are Mrs. Leatha Peterson and as Snow Seven White the of much of the land on clude owners and Melchizedek which Mrs. Olga DeMichelc. presidencies the other side, attempted to Cinderella, and The and committees and Aaronic Dwarfs, of prominent Utah and who Seven danced Sisters, away Pictures prevent completion of the road priesthood leaders are asked to local artists will be in the exhibit, to Lark o n the Salt Lake their shoes. attend. including LeConte Stewart, Prof. county side. The departments scheduled are The older girls of the club have Jack Vigas of the University of In their meetings, officials of helped the young girls in compos- Utah, and his students, Jessie as follows: the two counties found legal Doris Hamilton, Mary War-ocMelchizedek departments, per- ing their routines, as well as their cause to go ahead with their Rosa Belie Gwyn, Juanita sonal welfare, church service, fact own numbers. plans to complete the road and finding and reporting, Melchize-deMothers of the girls have taken Thomas, Ethel Patrick, Martha Kennecott Copper Corp., when B. Dobson. contacted, sounded more favorpriesthood quorum instructors. the chairmanship for costumes in Fackrell, and Beverly Local artists who will exhibit able to the for branch, wards, the show. Department project than ever pictures are LeRoy Skidmore, the before. stake, Aaronic priesthood leaders, Some of the starring characters Tooele high school art instructor; department for senior Aaronic, -include: Alice, Sharron Fox; King Clarke Imlay, Jr. high school art and stake ward, branch, priestMrs. Ann Humpty-DumptMrs. Jones, instructor; Cole, Pratt; hood leaders. MARRIAGE LICENSES Michelle Johnson; fidd- Robert W. Couchcr, Mrs. Myrtle Welfare meeting will be held at lers, Virginia Brown, Kay Riding, Ailsop, Mrs. Lorraine Shields, and Dale Rydalch Eiricson, 21; and 3:30 p.m. 'Lois Roma Mikesell, 19. Gay Gillette, and Kathy Williams. Mrs. Josie Shields. For Sunday 2 P.M. tales, k Leigh Lake view To Dedicate New I Butterfield Ski Sites 99 ?? ' fi Chapel Sun. t & Tv v - s If Joseph Reed Joseph Heed Dies After Long Illness Joseph Reed, 43, passed away, April 21, at his home, following a heart attack which had confined him to his bed for the past six months. He was born in Grantsville, Utah, August 5, 1915, to Grant E. Reed, Sr. and Carrie Bagan Reed. He attended school there and graduated in 1933. He married Emma Louise Anderson at Tooele, Feb. 1, 1940. He worked most of his life at the Bauer mines, holding numerous offices in the USW of A, local union No. 4331. He served in the National Guard for three years. He was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, and a member of the Tooele First ward. Surviving are his widow and five daughters: Delone, 18; 15; Judy, 13; Larene, 10; Barbara, 6, of Tooele; his parents, four brothers and three sisters: Thomas, James, Grant Jr., and Lee; Miss Betty Reed, Mrs. Blaine (June) Sutton, all of Grantsville; Major Catherine Reed in Army Nurses Corps, and an uncle, Fred Bagan, of Salt Lake City. Funeral services will be held on Saturday, April 25, at 2 p.m. in the Tooele First-Sixtward chapel. Burial will be in the Tooele city cemetery. Friends may call at the Tate mortuary, Friday evening, from 7 to 9 p.m. and Saturday prior to funeral time. Jo-len- Elder Richard L. Evans, member of the Council of Twelve Apostles of the LDS church will dedicate the Lakeview ward chapel on Sunday, April 26 at 6 p.m. The ward choir will provide the music, and an invitation is extended to everyone to attend. A special invitation is given former members of the ward. h AAUW Rummage Sale April 24 - 25 Erda Ward Honor Old Bishopric Its smart to be thrifty. Come and see the sensational bargains at the rummage sale, sponsored by the American Association of A party for the outgoing ward University Women. It will be held bishopric of the Erda ward willjat the Pioneer Hall on East Vine be held on Friday, April 24, 7:30 street, on April 24, and April 25, ifiom 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. You p.m., in the ward church. Everyone is invited to attend, really cant afford to miss it. TEE FOR TWO New and old Tooele golf pros. Alex Stevenson and Tony Macaluso point out some of the features of the opening of the Tooele golf course planned for this Satur t time will be 10 day and Sunday. Kick-of- f a m , Saturday, when Mayor James Sevan g challenges long shot John' Clark to a contest on the first tee. NEW DRAFT BOARD HOURS The Tooele county draft board office now located in the basement of the city hall will be open between the hours of 8 a.m. and 1 p.m., Mondays thru Fridays. |