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Show Universal Mirrof3:nlng Hi Picrponl At. " SAt.T nrv ' For New or Advertizing Officers Installed Classifieds: Monday, 5:00 pjn. Taken only at office, none over phone except business firms and customers who maintain open accounts. 75c minimum. Advertising: Monday, 5:00 p.m. Correspondents: Monday noon. Society News: Monday, 5:00 p.m. Regular News: Monday, 5:00 pun. Photographs: Friday. 4:00 p.m. However, we would appreciate news and ads at earlier dates, as it greatly facilitates mechanical problems. Thank you. Phone BY Newly elected officers of Unity Temple, Pythian Sisters, were installed Tuesday evening at a meeting held in the Magna Lion House. Installing officers were Past' Chiefs Leatrus Turner, Oressa Pittman and Genevieve Greenwood. A social time was later enjoyed and refreshments served by Mrs. Alice Brady and Mrs. Leatrus Turner. The next meeting of the group on Friday, Feb. 8, will be featured by the official visitation of the Grand Chief, Mrs. Cecil Munn of Price, Utah. This gathering will also be held at the Lion House. DEADLINES jv-v-t- T TIMES REA Vol. 46, No. 32 7-56- Five Promoted To New Posts At Bacchus I quality imdark brown ported, numbers are $275; $300 for medium brown, and blonde wigs rur. as high as $350. They may be rented for $10 a week. Most of the wigs come from European villages where women traditionally wear long hair and from young girls entering convents. Prices paid for the hair have risen from $8 to $100 a pound, according to one importer who has been in business only a year. They sell to beauty salons and department stores and report their volume is running higher than a million a month. for high best-mad- e day, Jan. 7:30 p.m. Mr. Sherman Mr. Plunkett Three new department mana-gsr- s and two assistant department managers have been named at the Hercules Powder Companys Bac- chus Works. The appointments were announced by R. C. Tucker, Bacchus Works Manager. J. N. Sherman has been named Research and Development manager. He replaces J. H. Main who was promoted to assistant works manager last week. James E. Midgarden has been promoted to Polaris Department manager, replacing Dean D. Welder, who was also named an Mr. Klnger Mr. Roberson Mr. Midgarden Plant 81 manager, has been nam- worked on several rocket proed assistant plant manager at the grams at the Allegany Ballistics companys Kenvil Works, Kenvil, Laboratory, Cumberland, Mary- J. land. He came to Bacchus in I960. Mr. Sherman, Mr. Midgarden Mr. Plunkett is a graduate of and Mr. Plunkett were all serving the University .of Virginia. He has as assistant department managers worked at several Hercules locations since joining the company prior to their promotions. Moving up to assistant depart- in 1940. He has been at Bacchus ment manager positions were W. since 1960. H. Roberson, assistant manager, A graduate of the North Dakota Polaris Department, and Clark T. State University, Mr. Midgarden Kingery, assistant manager. Air joined Hercules in 1941. He workForce Plant 81. The assistant ed at several locations and spent manager of the Research and De-- . considerable time at the Allegany Ballistics Laboratory where he was Manager of Development on the Polaris program prior to coming to Bacchus. Mr. Roberson also had consider able Polaris experience at ABL prior to his arrival at Bacchus. He is a graduate of the University of Tennessee and joined Hercules in Mothers To March Wednesday 1948. ng world-renown- . joined Hercules graduating from Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. He worked at ABL, California, Louisiana, and Missouri before coming to Bacchus in 1958. He has held several supervisory jobs in Minuteman production at BacMr. Kingery in 1950 after chus. sporting-good- will be awarded to lucky people, and coffee, doughnuts and soft drinks will be served. A charge of $1 a person is being made. Everyone is welcome to attend. Cyprus Jaycees To Cooperate For Utah Week Members of the Cyprus Jaycees will cooperate in the week of Jan. Jaycee Week in Utah, ' it was announced Friday by Kelly Pearce, president. Gov. George D. Clyde has signed a proclamation which notes the time as Jaycee Week. Jaycee Week celebrates the founding of the Junior Chamber of Commerce in 1915 in St. Louis, r, Mo., the brainchild of Henry Jr., who called together members of a St. Louis dancing club to form the Young Mens Progressive Civic Assn. The name was later changed to Junior Citizens, starting the now popular abbreviation, J.C." (Jaycee). 20-2- 6, Gies-senbie- Group Rapidly Expands The Organization has reached such proportions that today there are more than 4,500 chapters in the United States Jaycees with a membership in excess of a quarter of a million. The Jaycee movement has also reached to 90 . nations and territories with membership in excess of 400,000 members. A Distinguished Service Award banquet honoring this communfwM V. itys outstanding young man ih community service and leadership during 1962 will be held by the Cyprus Jaycees Tuesday, Jan. 29 at the Lions Club, beginning at 7:00 p.m. The public is invited and tickets will be $1.75 a person. They are available at the Magna First Security Bank through Brent Huish or by contacting Daryl McCarty. The young man chosen will not be announced until the banquet time. Moroni L. Jensen, principal of Cyprus high school, will be the speaker of the evening and talk NEWEST WATER CONTROL Arthur Marsh, chairman of the on The Role of Jaycees in the Board of Trustees, Magna Water and Sewer Improvement DisCommunity. Musical numbers trict, is shown pointing to the latest recording and control dewill be given by the Cyprus High vice, installed and now in operation at the local utility office. School Concert Choir. Final installation of the Auto-co- the pumps run and complete John E. Gardner will serve as a completely automatic sys- data for a more efficient opera- judge to select Magnas outstandtem control for culinary water, tion of the locally owned water ing young man, assisted by Dee was completed Thursday at the system. The installation cost Peel and George F. Cromar. offices of the Magna Water and $7,200.00. Sewer Improvement District. The reservoirs at 3500 The Autocon controls water le- and 8020 West are held at aSouth vels in the reservoirs for a con- from 34 feet to a maximum level capa stant supply by automatically city of 40 feet. The reservoir at turning on pumps as they are 4100 South and 8400 West, the needed, or as the case may be, most recent addition to the return them off to maintain a cor- serve is a utility rect supply of water for Magnas and iscapacity, held at a level above 16 needs. Magna Water Installs New Controls store in San last years drive total which was $2,880. hats at $4.50 and the same hats with bullet holes at $5. Area Is Divided A lot of TV programs seem as The various elementary schools if they were made up entirely of mark dividing lines and each is commercials. Now Los' Angeles presided over by an area superKTTV has gone all the way by visor. Ladies in charge include putting on Cavalcade of Spots, Mrs. Ross Anthon, Webster and show that was in Magna Elementary; Mrs. Shirley a fact nothing but commercials. Wagner, Whittier, Monroe, GranIn Los Angeles there has been ger and Hillsdale; Mrs. Don Poul-soe lot. Most established a over the six Kearns elemenof the houses originally were built tary schools and Mrs. Shelby on land that subsequently was Cook, Sr., Plymouth, Taylorsville purchased for highways, schools, and Meadowbrook schools. factory sites, etc. The state or They are assisted by various other property purchaser sells captains and assistants. company, them to a Division of Funds e which moves them to the ' Mrs. Bello emphasizes that sale. lot, for immediate of all funds will go to the Foundation and the balNational Anna MY ance will remain in the state. Mae Nielson, gives this explana will be used to help The tion why she reads detective babies money defects and also born with stories: When you come to the used to aid those crippled by arend of a crime novel, at least thritis. something in this huge, chaotic Give for the life of a child! world has been settled. Medical authorities say: Is it that every child can be possible asked my my daughters world free from credo the other evening. Id say born into this or defects? mental physical Thats its live life to the fullest. Is it possible there can be a do dont of us most something for arthritis, until weve been on the brink of cure or a preventive which has plagued death. I feel as if Im living by an affliction all ages since the dawn a most fortunate Kismet. I be- people of came grateful to God for the of mankind? which These two questions privilege of being alive to enjoy it. If you look at a bird, a tree, concern every family everywhere are the prime challenges of re the miracle of birth, how can you God? search supported by YOUR supof the existence deny local March of Dimes Everywhere you turn you see this port to the drive next Wednesday research everlasting life. look which already has produced two Every year in winter, I out at the bare trees and then polio vaccines and two Nobel in spring I see them all bloom prizes. feet. The answers will not be found into a beautiful sight. the To The Autocon turns off check darn some two time. The for has unit and speed controls life? Youre help Everlasting quest, the National Foundation-Marc- h two recording graphs that record valves, turns on or off booster tootin there is! of Dimes finances a na- over a full period, the pumping systems, and in short, reof WHISENHUNT amount of water being delivered places the water control in a com tionwide, REV. W. H. (Continued on Back Page) the First Baptist Community search program and helps sup to Magna, the amount of time that Church in Magna has a fine reputation for excellent sermons, which are not only inspiring but unusually short. He once related, how as a starting minister, he learned the importance of being most accomplished dancer in beauty of When the temperature drops so far that brief and to the point. movement. The fluidity of the constant different a skiers are even the unhappy, told He said that a colleague area Hunter winter and of breed a gliding as opposed to stepping and the Magna was delivering he him that out turns ice high speeds attainable on skates makes-thiskaters, enthusiasts, sports sermon to his first congregation. possible. in force. r He became so carried away by A covey of skaters on a pond, their On local frozen ponds with bonfires the sound of his own words that faces flushed from the extreme cold of of all skaters the restless gliding figures, peorimming how realize didnt he their surroundings, mirror a very relaxed a small ages and all degrees of skill flock to ple were becoming until attitude. Once they become fairly profiballet dancers or totter on unsteady and had been squirming who boy, in most cient, skaters say that they can withdraw The ankles. Magna place popular front caught pew, fidgeting in the into a little world of their owh, a world of is at 21st South and 5900 West. Due to the his attention. The new minister rhythmic motion and glowing well being. lack of water, a former popular site, saw him tug at his mothers sleeve is not available. Speed skating is a demanding facet of could Lake, Haynes and then, ih a voice that the of one is like sport. Skaters hurtle at tremendous walking, the church, plain Skating, be heard throughout in Olympic and other competitions. exercise sure forms recreational of speeds the simplest he said, Mommy, are you But for the majority of blade buffs, to is almost to one available that and to anyone. get the is only way this is a means for pleasant recreation is to do All lace have skating up your you heaven? and exercise. Besides, its too cold to do skates and go. anything else, is how one young person Skating is one of the most graceful of STOP BREAKING your heart! all sports. A good figurt skater rivals the put it. on Back Page) A beginning at N. . WHAT NEXT? These are some choice speciNext Wednesday evening, Jan. port the Salk Institute for Biomens of news, together with the 30, from the hours of 6:30 to 8:30 logical Studies in San Diego, I cut headlines, several hundred marching Calif., where sciout of daily newspapers in the p.m., mothers will call at homes for entists will read and work past month. Perhaps you study the annual March of Dimes drive, to solve the most funda- them, too. states Mrs. Dale Bello, district together new West Texas State Colleges over the area of ( Continued on Back Page) football stadium will have out- superintendent, Magna, "Hunter, Granger, Kearns, in can the so lets plug spectators Taylorsville and Meadowbrook. their electric blankets. These mothers hope to increase s Diego, Calif., offers 26, A wide variety of prizes velopment Department has not yet been named. Mr. Sherman, who has also been assistant works manager last week. serving as Minuteman Project M. W. Plunkett has been pro- Manager, received his education I HEARD a woman in a Magna moted to Air Force Plant 81 at the University of Minnesota. store say Thursday: I dont mind Manager. W. J. Rue, former He joined Hercules in 1952 and scrimping in order to spend, but I hate to scrimp just to save. world-shatteri- After plunging to a minus 18 degrees during the past week, lowest reading locally since 1955, the mercury started climbing back to "normal' only after this area shivered through an Arctic-lik- e week that threatened fruit trees, froze water lines and caused general ll well-style- lipstick. Prices The monthly Community Gam Night, sponsored by Union the Magna Mine-Miat the hall. 2650 S. 8950 West, will be held Satur- Mine-Mi- ll Group Plans Game SX.C5. FASHION has decreed that wigs will be more popular with milady in 1963. In the Chicago area, stylists claim 1,000 wigs are being sold monthly, with annual spending on them reaching one million dollars. d They claim before long, a wig will be as common as Night January 26 Mercury Goes Up After -- 18 In Biting Winter Freeze Magna Out JLowt I P Member Utah Stale Press Association Magna, Utah, Thursday, January 24, 1963 Member National Editorial Association Western-typ- e - half-ho- ur n, used-hous- house-movi- ng used-hous- one-ha- lf SISTER-IN-LA- n, discomfort. Magna Water and Sewer Company workers answered more 45 calls to thaw out frozen residential water lines. Mr. Arthur Marsh, chairman of the Magna Water Board, suggests that in event of another siege of extremely cold weather, it would be advisable for business firms and homeowners to let a pencil-thi- n droppage of water run continuously. It is more feasible and cheaper to have a little water run than have the cost of repairs to lines and homes. Magna Elementary Damage When Magna Elementary faculty members and custodians reported Monday morning for school, they discovered that the entrance hallway and six rooms were flooded with water, caused when pipes broke in a room sink, Evidently, the water had run all day Sunday and Sunday evening. Rooms housing the fourth, fifth and sixth grades were flooded with about two inches of water. Students normally reporting to these rooms were taken to the room until the water was cleared away. Water vacuums were borrowed from Brockbank, Cyprus and Webster schools and it took about two hours before the water was out of the rooms which are of concrete floors with asphalt tile. Principal Debs estimates that only slight damage was caused by the water break. multi-purpo- ay multi-million-dol- Too Cold? Nof For Skating! rl LORRIN DEE TRACY Mission ...To California A farewell testimonial to honor Elder Lorrin Dee Tracy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Seth E. Tracy, prior to his departure for the California LDS Church mission, will be held in the Lake Ridge Ward, 3140 South 7700 West on Sunday, Jan. 27th, beginning at 6:30 p.m.. He will leave for the mission Will Head Granite Education Board r- - ".I W se Fruit Tree Damage Most owners of fruit trees said it was too early to determine how much damage to their trees was suffered. The deep freeze, coming after a period of milder weather, apparently has frozen some cherry and peach tree buds. Officials believe that the subfreezing temperatures, combined with drouth conditions, have added to the threat of winter kill to trees and shrubs. After experiencing numbing low readings of nine and seven degrees over the weekend, local Dr. Jay O. Brinton, Magna physiciwas elected president of the Granite Board of Education Tuesday evening. He an-surgeon, will serve the next two years. In a historic session, the board also officially seated Mrs. Howard B. Summerhays, first woman ever to serve on the board. Keith C. Mrs. Summerhays, Brown, also a new member, and Forace Green, reelected member, all took oaths of office. O. Thayne Acord was reapfor a pointed term. residents Wednesday enjoyed a Retiring board members are balmy 20 degrees and with it came a small snowfall with about Zelph Y. Erekson and M. Elmer an inch of powdery snow contain- Christensen. Mr. Christensen had ing .03 inch moisture, falling been a board member for 12 (Continued on Back Page) leisurely throughout the day. clerk-treasur- two-ye- er ar Bishop Federal Chief Speaker At Catholic Banquet Jan. 27 Most Reverend Joseph Lsnnox Federal, D. D., Bishop of Salt Lake City, will be the featured speaker at a Building Fund Kick Off Banquet of Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Magna on Sunday, Jan. 27th, beginning at 7:00 p.m. in the Parish Hall, announces Father Lawrence M. Spellen. L. Tracy Reservations for the banquet to which the public is invited should be made by today (Thursday.) Delicious food will be served by the Pronto caters and each ticket will admit the person not only to the dinner, but also a chance for some beautiful door prizes and an hour of top musical entertainment. This fete will officially kickoff the school fund drive and bum the mortgage. The program will include rer, marks from the Arthur Delmez, president of the Magna Chamber of Commerce; welcome from Reverend Spellen; speakers, Rt. Rev. William Vaughan and Rev. Charles E. Freegard, former Magna priests; guest speaker, Bishop Federal. In addition, a musical program of a Broadway musical will be presented by Mrs. Ethel Hogan Heinz and Mrs. Virginia Barker Clark. Hostesses will be four members of the C. C. D., Mrs. Garfield Lewis, Mrs. Joseph W. Ribotto, Miss Albina Alberico and Mrs. Tony Mirafcella. Girls of the C. Y. O. will serve and the Girls Club will be in charge of decorations. toast-maste- home Feb. 4th. Elder Tracy has been attending the University of Utah for the past two years. At Cyprus High School he was vice president of the Magna LDS Seminary, and has a brother, Elder LeGrande N. Tracy on a mission to the Northwestern States. Their father was a former first counselor in the Garfield Ward. The following program will be given: Prelude, Wilma Sowby; open ing hymn, congregation; invoca sacrament tion, Larry Tracy; hymn, congregation; sacrament service, Aaronlc Priesthood; vocal solo, Normand Gibbons; talk, d Vaughn Harris; talk, Bishop S. Wilding; cornet solo, Brent Johnston; talk, President Maurice A. Tuttle; vocal solo, It's a Girl! Mary Sowby; remarks, Bishop Mr. and Mrs. Guery Fratto anJoseph Davies, Jr.; response, missionary; closing hymn, congrega- nounce the birth of a sweet little tion; benediction, 'Seth E. Tracy, daughter on Dec. 18. She weighed in at 6 pounds, 4 ounces and has postlude, Wilma Sowby. been named Natalie Lyn. A sister, Marie Ann, is Mr. and Mrs. W. Deloy Hard- happy about the new playmate. man of 7841 West 2820 South anMrs. Fratto will be remembered nounce the birth of a baby daugh as the former Angela Mirabella. ter on Saturday, Jan. 19th. Mr. Proud grandparents are Mr. and and Mrs. Hardman also have three Mrs. Emil Mirabella of Mlagna other daughters, Jolene, Valerie, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fratto Laura Lee and a son, Kevin, of Bountiful. Wil-for- s than 0. Brinton Dr. Jay Farewell To Honor 20-fo- ot out-whi- 56 two-year-o- ld |