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Show 4 1 ? fc MACNA TIMES, MACNA, UTAH Ancrftan Station Thuriday, Ihv; 0173 NOTICE TO CQtfilACTCrd Mem Lco!i After Renovation &,m&imji( K - r jT . V?; 'V r$2" Ir- v V" ; , V' " '"&. fr ')' f I - 1 ?r - ' , f I I x v t ' t v- J V'W s'V' 't $, Vi Ti"i v .V'V v . iriii v- - . 3 n-- l ' v. , Sealed proposals will be received by the Board of Education of the Granite School District at its office, 340 East 3545 South, up to 7:30 pm. Tuesday, September 22, 1964, for the furnishing of all labor, materials, transportation, and services for the construction of the Foothill Junior High School located at 4280 South Wasatch Blvd., Salt Lake City, Utah. Bids will be publicly opened and read in the auditorium of the Administration Office Building, 340 East 3545 South, Salt Lake City, Utah, at 7:35 pm. Tuesday, September 22, 1964. The right is reserved by the Board of Education to reject any and all proposals. A certified or cashier's check or bid bond of not less than five per cent of the amount of the bid, drawn payable to the order of the Board of Education of Granite School District, shall accompany the bid. This check or bid bond of the accepted bidder shall be forfeited in case he fails or refuses to enter into the contract or furnish the 100 performance bond, and 100 material and labor payment bond as required by the owner and the State of Utah. The work called for is sepa rated into four (4) contracts, namely: General Contract-Plumb- ing, Heating and VentilatElectrical Contract Contract ing and Special Equipment (Stage) Contract Detailed plans and specifications and proposal blanks will be on file in the office of Fetzer & Fetzer, 1345 South Main Street Salt Lake City, Utah, where they may be consulted or secured for the purpose of bidding. A deposit of $50.00 will be required to guarantee return of the plans for the General Con tract; $25.00 deposit on Plumbing, Heating and Ventilating Con tract; and $10.00 deposit on Special Equipment Contract documents. Said deposits will be refunded provided the plans and specifications are returned to the architects in good order within 10 days following receipt of pro- (5) ANYONE? John Coen, ownar and operator of tho Sorrico Station, is shown washing car windows of a customer's auto, parked in the entrancoway of tho beautiful now service station at 3495 South and 1400 West. Tho sorrico station WASHING, Four Way was recently completely remodeled and designed by tho American Oil Coy, due to the change in the highways leading to Bacchus. (Editors Note: This is another as a result of the Hercules Pow article in a eerie on Magna or der Co. Bacchus Plant road widHunter merchant. Featured this Service Staweek ia tha ening job. tion in Magna, operated by John Charles Doc" Sutton, father of Coen.) John Sutton of Magna, originally y The original builders of the started the Service in Four-Wa- y Service Station, 3495 1926. John operated the station S. 8400 West, were endowed with from about 1937 to 1941 and the as the late Jack Denton leased the proptremendous foresight station has been moved four times erty from Utah Oil Refining and to make room for alterations on operated it for almost 10 years. the highway at this busy corner John Coon leased the station intersection. ' in 1947, following his discharge John Coon, present lessee, has from the U.S. Air Corps., and just opened a new station, com- has operated it ever since with a plete with the newest and most fine crew of men, including Ernie modern facilities rebuilt again Gust, his d man, who has been with him 14 years. Enlarged Station The new station, pictured in the WANTED background of the picture above, A WESTERN showing John cleaning a car windshield, has three stalls, comAUTO DEALER plete lubrication facilities with lifts and other conveniences included in two stalls. The third CATALOG stall will be available for a meORDER CENTER chanical service that Four-Wa- y Service will offer for local motorfor ists, beginning about Oct 1 with MAGNA PROVO auto maintenance. ' Mr. Coon features a complete SALT LAKE CITY line of Atlas products and the faInvest In your future by mous Final Filter American Oil owning your own store. gasoline. The station is equipped America's largest automowith serten huge "daylight" neons tive supply retailer. Westthat took like a Christmas tree, ern Auto, is expanding its according to Mr. Coon. dealer organisation in this He is married, and he and his territory. Excellent locawife, Enid, have three children, tions available in Layne, Wade and Rachele. They area. You will merchandise reside in Magna. our famous nationally adJohn was a crew chief during vertised goods, tools and World War II on a Flying Forother profitable lines. Minitress 7 with four years servmum investment $15,000. ice in the Air Corps. He is Contact us for full informareticent to say, much about his tion on tho Western Auto exploits in the service, because Associate Plan: it sounds like bragging. Mr. Coon says the new Bacchus WESTERN AUTO is slated for completion on road SUPPLY CO. about Oct 15. He extends an inNew Store Development vitation to everyone to drop in and see the new facilities of the Dept. Box 1031. Ogden. Ut Four-Wa- y Four-Wa- right-han- B-1- Four-Wa-y 0--r Service. posal In the period from 1949 up through May 6, 1964, the United States lost over $9 billion in gold, or roughly 37 per cent of its supply, so that now the nation could not redeem the dollars held by foreign nations. And like the radio ditty, Wonder where the yellow went," there is a great deal of wonderment on this matter of the vanishing gold. Yet perhaps the answer is quite simple. Under Foreign Aid Since 1946 through 1963, 123 foreign nations, including possessions of France, England and Holland, some 103 billion, 916 million dallors have been given away under the name of foreign aid. This 'money was given, in case it has been forgotten, to feed the starving, clothe the naked, and get a, little industry started so people cquld get pay checks. The Central African Republic, composed yf some 1,000,000 people, which is about as close a than Colorado, also bought up $700,000 of the American gold reserves out of some $2 million in U.S. foreign aid. h Saudi Arabia, which so far has received $46 million in U.S. aid, did even better. It took the entire $46 million, plus additional dollars it picked up along the way, to buy a $71.4 million chunk of the U.S. gold reserves. Oil-ric- be shown. But to sum up in the five years 1959 through 1963, nations which had received foreign aid dollars took almost $7 billion of these dollars and used them to whittle away the American gold reserve. Or, in other words, of the $9 billion in gold loss, $7 billion of this loss was made possible by giveaway dollars. l?M A Symbol 1$ On his recent visit in WashingD. C., Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie visited the Lincoln Memorial and placed a solid silver laurel wreath at the foot of the statue. He said that Lincoln is a symbol to all men who cherish freedom and equality as the most precious of Gods gifts." The wreath will remain permanently at one of the Lincoln shrines. ton, nd Greek Architecture Other Nations Profit Surinam, also known as Dutch Guiana, is an interesting case in point. Back in 1667 the Dutch were forced by the British to trade New York for Surinam, and today it is part of the Netherlands. Its 308,000 people mine 65 per cent of the aluminum ore used by the American aluminum industry. But handed some $4 million in foreign aid, it forthwith took $2.5 million to buy a chunk of the U.S. gold reserve. Lebanon, which is only about the size of Connecticut, with a population of less than 2,000,000, really tapped the .U.S. taxpayers in a solid manner, taking $88 million, or around $50 per person. four-fift- Lincoln 10, hs count as they could make in the bushes, was given a million dollars. But apparently very little of this wa used to buy hippopotami steaks for the starving, Wily Lebanese or whatever they eat, because And did the wily Lebawhat $700,000 of this donation bought nese do with this $8.8 million U.S. gold. : bonanza? They took $53.1 million Where Doth It Go? of it and exchanged it for a chunk Gabonj. another Bongo nation of the U.S. gold reserve. tied to France with an area less And so on and on examples can -- The first giant step toward modern architecture was taken 4,000 years ago by an ingenious Greek. He invented the two columns supporting a horizontal crosspiece. Later, a clever Egyptian discovered how to take the columns away and the arch was born. The Assyrians introduced arches and gave us the dome. But the Romans found that heavy domes caved in. Solution: g the buttress, a support. The fifth step was taken in 1883 when William Jenney introduced the steelskeleton (Jen-ney- s bird cage") in Chicago making possible the modem curpost-and-lint- 3-- super-stron- tain wall Walking Good Bargain In a sense, walking is the best bargain in transportation, for when you step outside the door and start moving your feet forward you are exercising your leg muscles, pepping up your circulation, gaining uncomplicated privacy and time for thought and sightseeing, and all this while you are getting to your jiiiititiiiitiiiiiiiiiiigiiiiiistimiissss WRECKED AUTOS WANTED 8 j i sWQ pay cash for wrecked sAIao sell parts far ell kinds Conversation should be without scurrility, witty affectation, free without indecency, learned without conceitedness, novel without falsehood. William Shakespeare ean. 1 3 - of, - Buck's Auto Wrecking 4850 South Dial BY 8488 7-67.- West i 21 aumiimiiiiiuiHmiimmnmiiHiuig Remote Control P. BRIAN (s) DOW Clerk-Treasur- Sold Rc::rvcs fhvi Anay I tils I7e Flayed 'Ur.th' St?. er Board of Education, Granite School District Dates of Publication: Magna Times: Thursday, Aug. 27, 1964; Thursday, Sept. 3, 1964, and Thursday, Sept. 10, 1964. Honost Citizons Noodod A professor at the New York State College of Agriculture in- terviewed some 5000 families in that state some time ago. Among other conclusions, as reported in the New York Times, was this one: Most people would like to see their communities produce citizens who are honest. But more than half of those interviewed would not consider it very serious for a daughter to cheat in an examination, or for a son to skip school to go to a movie and then tell the teacher he was ill" Humanity is never so beautiful as when praying for forgiveness, or else forgiving another. Richter I WITH "WIRELESS WIZARD" 1 REMOTE CONTROL TUriE AtlY OtlC OF TIIE8B MODELS FROM YOUR EASY CIIA1RI This is a glassful of snobbery I . 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