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Show Page 6 (Continued from page 3) room with a lollipop for each child. As the child brings in his membership, he wil take his lollipop from the tree. A large tree with a large lollipop for each room will be placed on the desk in front of the school. As the rooms empty their trees of lollipops, the teachers of each room will take the lollipop for her room and replace it with a colored disc indicating her room has 100 per cent, and in what order these rooms achieved the 100 per cent membership. A arge poster with of the school on fire at one end and the fire hose at the other will also be employed to show students how rapidly 100 per cent membershtip can put out the fire and save the school. Other PTA news items this week find a Room Mothers Tea scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Friday at West room. Kearns in the Multi-PurpoTeachers and room mothers will be given a chance to meet and discuss plans for the coming events of the year, reports Mrs. Wayne Madsen, room representative for the se PTA. October 27 will be the first fund raising event scheduled by West Kearns Elementary. A movie will be shown beginning at 3:15 p.m. Tickets will be sold to fill the large room and then will be open to any and al who wish to attend. Admission will be 20 cents per person. South Kearns will hold an executive meeting Oct. 20 at 3:15 p.m. at the school for all PTA officers and committee chairmen. room mothers A tea is also being planned for next week at South Kearns Elementary. Fund raising committees announce another movie will be shown Oct 27. More details later. Under joint sponsorship of the Oquirrh Hills PTAs and the Kearns Town Council is a civil defense course now in progress each Wednesday evening at the school. Capt Spradling, assistant director for the Civil Defense for the State of Utah, spoke last night at the 7:30 p.m. meeting on Radiation and Fallout Wednesday, Oct. 18, Commissioner Buck Brady discussed Rescue; and on Oct. 25, Marilyn Weinger will lectureon first aid. The public is all-purpo- se get-acquaint- ed Thursday, October 19, 1961 THE VALLEY VIEW NEWS c invited to attend the classes for the next five weeks. The AM Session of the Oquirrh Hills reports their fund raising project this year will be the collecting of deer hides from hunters. Anyone having a hide may call one of the following persons and it will AMherst up: Virginia Johnson, Ruby Standing, CY Ruth Matthews, CY or LaVem Brasher, CY Mrs. Alice Gillette, hospitality chairman for David Gourley PM Session, announced that her committee is making arrangements for a Room Mothers Tea to be held at the school next Tuesday afternoon. Since many o fthe teachers will be in class, the event is to be a light informal to become acquainted and to give the opportunity for teachers and the mothers to discuss coming events. PTA president, Mrs. Della Hurlin, announced that a fund-raisin- g project in the form of a rag drive will be conducted in the near future and persons in the area are asked to watch for further details. A series of studies in Sex Education is currently underway at the David Gourley School under the sponsorship of the David Gourley AM PTA, according to Parent and Family Life Education Chairman, Mrs. Inez Robinson. Dr. Heber Hall will give a course in the correct answers to sex education problems. Dr. Hall is an instructor at the Stewart Training School at the University of Utah. The course that he will present is patterned after the course he teaches the children at Stewart School. On the final evening, Dr. Hall will present a film on Human Reproduction. Registration, free to the public, will be Oct. 17 at 6 p.m. at the David Gourley multi-purporoom. In connection with this series of lectures, Mrs. Linda Leper, School health nurse, will present a film and lecture on Maturation to the 6th grade girls and their mothers on Oct. 17 at 9 a.m. The film is a Walt Disney film on growing up. A Room Mothers Tea will be held Oct. 17 at 12.30 p.m. in the Lunch Room, according to Mrs. Katy T trio will render two pieces. Trio members are: Mrs. LuDean Farle, Mrs. Darlene Crowther and Mrs. Doris Christenson. -- CY six-wee- - 3525 So. Redwood Road 51 We Buy, Sell be picked get-togeth- 6-95- AMherst 6-95- 51 and Trade Guns to tody for the Hunting Season PRACTICE 30-0- 6 AMM0.98' Box ITALIAN $1.15 Box 7-- 35 er ID00 and USED M TO CHOOSE FROM IF M SCOP :V ks Only WE HAVE THE MOST COMPLETE LINE OF GUNS IN THE AREA . . . SAVE ON CITY PRICES ' Browning - Colt - Weatherby Winchester - Remington - Ithica and Savage Guns Bausch & Lomb - Lyman - Weaver Leopold and Bushnell Scopes se -- Mc-Quiv- y. i Available ELY 270 30-0- Hunting Ammo. $049 opum wmm (rasa Only v 34 Regular $3.75 $069 Box Only COMPLETE LINE OF U SI LAY-A-WA- Y h H.P. Ammo. 30-3- 0 ,$349 Box Drink Milk at bedtime and relax. Milk is the nightcap beverage with protein. You always need protein. Thats why you never outgrow your need for Milk. Drink 3 glasses every day. Ammo. 6 Regular $4.75 Regular $4.75 Only in 5 li V FOR CHRISTMAS AMERICAN DAIRY ASSN. OF UTAH msBMgggjHe & Box I |