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Show Thursday, July 4, 1963 MAGNA TIMES, MAGNA, UTAH MAGNA TIMES MAILS!!1 (DITORI Al Seminary Building Progressing Very Rapidly Published Since 1916 Edith N. Ridge. Editor Howard Ridge, Publisher lA!c6,,2N Issued each Thursday morning at 9124 W. 2700 South, Magna, Utah Entered as second class mail matter under the act of March 3rd, 1879. at Magna, Utah Adjudged one of the best weekly newspapers by the Utah State Press Association, given honorable mention by the National Editorial Association. Mail subscription rates Payable in advance, $2.50 year. The Times welcomes contributions from its readers upon any subject of public interest. All communications must be signed. No attention paid to anonymous contributions. But what they forgot, ig that the government only takes through taxes the money which business, industry, and individuals contribute and returns less, much less than was collected. , of Seattle, The basic difficulty, inherent in any socialized welfare service, is that once the system takes root, the administrative overhead becomes so extensive that the public nceessarily gets the short end of the stick. School and Cyprus High School. The building will face west on 8600 West and parking facilities will be on 8560 West. It is hoped to have the new Seminary ready for occupancy for 1963 fall sessions. The former seminary building was constructed in 1925, and the addition on it a chapel from the Bacchus Village, was added in 1955. UP Brick is being placed and SHES construction is rapidly moving forward on the ne. Oquirrh Slake Seminary Building, located just east of the Cyprus High School main building. It will consist of seven rooms which will cost $110,000, complete with furnishings and landscaping. The new edifice will serve the 9 th to 12th grade students of Brockbank Junior High two-wee- Rose-bur- i ' . b r UAHIlN MANUUS re- 297-570- IDE PORTABLES' ROOMMATE Series 19 tube (overall diag.) 172 sq. in. picture Daily Quarterly Amazing Low Price For 19 -- inch Pg3 Sportabout TV Yogis OUguDG ftj 6LAh BRG&ilfc ALSO FEATURETTE AND 2 CARTOONS Show starts at 6:15 Complete Show after 8:30 "WINE AND ROSES" starts at 6:15 and 9 p.m. Featurette and Cartoons 8:30 to 9 p.m. All out at 11 p-- 172 sq. in. picture yet it's quality designed for happy viewing. An 18,000-vo- lt chassis (design average) provides bright, sharp pictures t A3GUmfl6 Gft TO SERVE YOU WITH in normal signal areas. Power Grid Tuner brings a new level of performance to economy-price- d portable TV. Picture is locked in by stabilizer circuits which " and bounce." RCA Space Age Sealed . prevent , Circuitry provides extra dependability. Sensitive built-i- n antenna monopole adjusts for best signal. Come in for a demonstration of this RCA Victor best buy" Sportabout TVI Newly-develop- ed tear-out- PER ANNUM HERE Overall diagonal measurement Good news for bargain hunters! This beautiful RCA Victor Sportabout TV will scarcely make a dent In your budget, JACK JP ILllLR PICK OF v The dug ano iee nemicn Days of nine anD noses MANLIUS Free literature sent on quest, dial rJlGagnafaG Ktenrme jacn Production "BahauTlah establishes the equality of man and woman. This is peculiar to the teachings of BahaVllah, for all other religions have placed man above woman." Baha great-grandfath- er AT Lemmon A UARTtN soft-ba- ll PER ANNUM story! Hi ' m about the new arrival. -7 love fCHAKlES Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Anderson of Granger, former Hunter residents, announce the birth of a baby boy on June 16. Two sisters, Cindy and Terri, are happy Account Today This, in its own terrifying way, is a i Draper graduated this spring from the University of Utah, in Elementary Education, and will teach at the Western Open Your Savings OntfeDesfl 5-6- the Hunter Ward attended birthday festivities to honor Bishop Matt Pettersson recently at his spacious residence lawn. A large cake, four feet long, was made in a replica of the bishop, holding a book in his hand. Barbecued sandwiches were served and volleyball and games later played. ll CUT ME OUT AND HANG ME UPI JULY glass. Miss g, America. N., Kathryn Grayson was starred. They later enjoyed Marineland of the Pacific and saw the Wayfarers Chapel which is made of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Witbeck Paraphrasing a famous line of literature, The American people are the American people, and the State the State Department, and never the twain shallDepartment is meet ould aPPear t0 express the basis of a Vat staterecent ment by Congressman H. R. Gross of Iowa in which he urges all Americans to emulate the position taken by the city government of Columbus, Ohio. Rep. Gross states the U.S. State Department is bringing pressure on the big department stores, especially those in chains, to buy, stock, sell merchandise produced in Communist nations. He points out that this is most inconsistent with the official concern over unemployment in America, as goods under the slave labor of communism are not reflectedproduced in jobs for any American. He then points out how Mayor W. Ralston Westlake and the City Council of Columbus, Ohio, has handled the situation. The city government has passed an ordinance which provides that any wholesaler or retailer of Communist made goods in Columbus must-obta- in a license and pay a $100 per year fee and such license must be conspicuously posted so that customers are aware they are being asked to buy Communist FRI.-SAT.-SU- Miss Illene Draper and Miss Deana Berndgen have returned from a vacation at Malibu Beach, C3lif., attended the stage version of Camelot at the Philharmonic Auditorium in Los Angeles. Miss attended a Pectal family reunion HUNTER NEIGHBORLY NEWS NOTES Saturday at the Murray Park to Inhonor a Hunter Ward girls who envitations were mailed to two hunFrom Trip Entertains Visitors Return joyed a week at Camp Bridal, dred descendants. A program was Recent visitors at the home of near Alta resort, Utah, included Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lowder presented. The Palisade Park in Sterling, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Giovengo in- Terri Ann Timmerman, Judy and children, Joan, Steve, Brenda cluded an aunt, Mrs. Lovisa Work- Hancock, Nancy Smart, Karen and Margo, returned home Fri- Utah, was originally started by and is now k man and her daughters, Rose and Rydalch, Janice Edler, Debby day from a vacation a Marian of Las Vegas, Nev., who Davis and Patty Pettersson. They trip. They vacationed at the Leh- being improved as a state park. also spent a few days at the home returned Saturday. man Caves and attended Sunday All Den Mothers of Pack 566 of Mrs. Vernona Dutton, a sister services at Ely, Nev., saw the copMr. and Mrs. Vivian Bertoch, to Mrs. Giovengo. mine at Ruth, Nev., and went will enjoy a summers vacation per eccompanied by a daughter, Mrs. in Virginia City, next from meetings until fall, although Other guests were a niece and Adena Rydalch, motored to Idaho sightseeing to Lake Tahoe and then to several trips are being planned her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- Falls, Idaho, to attend the wed- Fort Bragg where they enjoyed for the pack during the summerert Demares t and children, Eric, ding of a granddaughter, Joanne the ocean, on to the Redwoods time, states Mrs. Dean Larson, Bobby, Ellen, Tera, Craig and Bertoch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and a most enjoyable fishing trip wife of the pack leader. Kim of Tacoma, Wash. On Sat- Vivian Bertoch Jr. in Oregon. Miss Bertoch was married in urday, a nephew and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Davis of the Idaho Falls Temple to Ted The Hunter residents also visited the Oregon Caves and Crater Ore., and children, Angela Reis of Los Angeles June 21. and Teresa, arrived for a vacation, Lake and en route home, were Mrs. Marianne Farnsworth was guests of cousins, Mr. and Mrs. They will return July 5. Mrs. Lois Anderson and daugh- taken to a Salt , Lake hospital Vernon Widmer, for a day in ter, Patricia Ogden of Richfield, Thursday for an emergency oper- Nyssa, Ore., and stopped at Twin have also been guests at the Gio- ation. She will be there for about Falls, Idaho, as guests of Mrs., a week. Jack Kunder and daughter, Janet. vengo home. . . . Ordinance Passed On Communist Goods Congressman Gross is urging that more communities follow the example of Columbus, Ohio. It seems an effective and legal way for the American people to fight communism despite the State Department Or, at least, up until this time, no federal troops have been ordered into Columbus to protect a Polish ham. MIA members of Seventy-fiv- e Social Security was established in 1937 on the theory that it would provide benefits superior to those available under private plans. See what has happened: . . . consider the case-- , of a worker today who at 21 begins paying his Social Security taxes. By the time he is 65, he will have between contributed, his own and his employers payments, over $18,000. If that same money were banked at 44 per cent compounded quarterly, he would accumulate about $50,000 at retirement age. This money continued at 4 '4 per cent would in an income of about $2,125 yearly. On the other hand bring SS provides only $1,524. Had this money been saved and placed in individual accounts, there would be quite an estate, but in the case of Social Security, benefits terminate upon death. merchandise. In addition, such a place of business must prominently display signs with letters not less than five inches high telling that Communist made goods are being sold, and any advertising must also state this fact. Violation can mean a $500 fine, six months in jail, or both. So, once again the heartland of America takes the lead in proclaiming an American principle, and also a much deeper wisdom of how to combat communism than the bureaucrats. Because Russia, China, and all Communist nations have never been able to socialize the farmer and get production of food, the big domestic problem of the Communists is to get enough food. Without food, their systems would collapse. They can, and are, buying foods from nations considered American allies. But these allies want money for food they sell Communists. But with Communist nations selling their goods to America for dollars, they then have the money with which to buy food to keep their armies well fed, and thus are in a position at the proper time to attempt to make good Nikitas boast to bury Enjoyable Vacation Hills Elementary School in Kearns. Miss Berndgen is a teachMrs. Laura Nixon, president of er of at the Murray High the Hunter Relief Society, an- School.English nounces that a demonstration on new fabrics and how to care for them will be given by Mrs. Ines Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Ames anDoxey, North Jordan Stake work nounce the birth of a baby girl director counselor, in the Hunter on June 16, their first child. Mrs. Ward on Thursday, July 11, be- Floretta Ames of Hunter is the ginning at 10 a.m. paternal grandmother. Many people believe that the federal government in its handling of social and welfare funds is the proper answer to many of our social problems. er Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nielson have returned from a weeks vacation to Colorado Springs, Colo. While there, Mr. Nielson attended a business meeting. They were accompanied by their daughter, Nancy, and were guests at the Garden of the Gods Club. Canyon Party Planned The Hunter Ward Young Mar-ried- s are planning a canyon party July 8. Beverly and Ray Brown are in charge of arrangements and will be happy to give further particulars to any interested persons. . . . Fallacy of Government Management Pointing to this problem, the Washington, says: Hunter Notes of Interest ONLY . COMPUTE BANKING SERVICES Saturday Matinee Roundup OUT 2:30 p.m. STARTS 12 NOON for Matinee. Featurette Double Special Payday. Hey, Gang! Also Featurette and Colored Cartoons. Money For Everyone See You at the Party! Fun For All ALL CHILDREN 25c FOR THE MATINEE Starts Friday, "SAVAGE SAM." ien, "THE NUTTY PROFESSOR." SXT WEEK INDEPENDENT - LOCALLY OWNED Bank of Commerce 9145 WEST 2700 SOUTH jgj THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TELEVISION IPGpGin)niDGG "FuDininflcuDe i 5 |