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Show 141 PIERPOIIIT AVE. SALT LAKE CITY 10, UTAH VOL. IX i I V I4 t f' S' 'r 'T t f it- l $ S' J " " $?, v .L, ?J ffi, s X i f j . S' ' ?'' & til ,'SS ' it 4 4 Ej- Ai r) tJ - cttp irp rf El cr3 l3 LAYTON, DAVIS COUN'IY, UTAH 'x'w :TY7 A V 4 y& 'v t) , y fA W- j t: s 4s. NO. 10, 197)7 1 m fv r'- NOVEMHKR f, .y , 0 IgR" v0 ; j m!jrjrtnwgK&'i ft rftfByi'rfftwyN (u rfrSii fri LAYTON ELEMENT RY SCHOOL Presidencj h from to lift rijiht; Mrs, Robert R. Vollmer, lice president; Mrs. Jame L. leathers, t; .Mr. Golden Adams, 2nd lice president; Mrs. Harlei S. Andersen, se'retari treasurer. P-T- A 3 nrc-iden- -- Ff3 J2 nif BOB We hear a lot of people complain about their taxes. Federal income taxes are too hicrh State income taxes are too high! Property taxes are too high! Personal property taxes are too high! And then there is the cruddy sales tax! ! is officially clocked in at Hill A EH with the arrival of the first guided missile for repair and maintenance. An SM-G- 2 Snark is shown above being unloaded from a 1 Globemas-te- r at Hill AFH. This missile was damaged while being test flown. The Snark is in production for assignment to Strategic Air Command units. THE MISSILE A EE C-2- M Hu Now this editorial is about the tax municipal governments get. You say that the local governments dont get enough. We agree, they dont. Put in respect to the money towns have to run things, people are just plain incorrigible. Take the case of a group of people who are trying to sponsor a swimming pool. They go about soliciting funds by donations with the city or town putting up half the money. Then when the swimming pool is completed they turn it over to the city to operate and maintain. In almost every case a city operates a muncipal pool at a loss and at the expense of all the people in the city. The benefits of such a pool are taken advantage of by not all the people in the city. nark Damaged During Flight Hill AFB has received its missile for repair guided first and supply support mission as- and signed the huge air base. a over This is a case of increasing our taxes (after forking The Snark was damaged during maintenance. its last flight. The left wing of 'donation). Whats happened to our spirit of free enterprise? The missile is the Snark, first the missile was knocked off and federal state and to govlook local, Why do we increasingly be received at Hill AFB there was some structural damage to missile ernments to solve our problems and give us the things we want? under the new missile maintenance to the fuselage. Why wouldnt it be better to form a swimming club, and after incorporating, sell shares to the people who want a swimming pool? Heres how we think it ought to work. We think so Who Killed Aunt Caroline? Mystery play be- cause we know it is being done in suburban areas all over the United States. Sell a share of your pool for $100 or $125 (dad has easily that much tied up in hunting and fishing equipment). After you have 250 families in on the ground floor you have $25,000 to build a pool. After the pool is in operation you charge life$10 a year for dues. This gives you $2,500 for wages for a guard, water, taxes, maintenance, etc. Now we think the beauty of this is you dont Davis High Kaysville the diunder Speech Department rection of Miss Eva Barrett will present a mystery play in three acts titled Who Killed Aunt Caroline? by Grant Richards. The date is Wednesday, November 20, with curtain time 7:30 p.m. sell tickets in the Davis High School auditorThe ium. for individual swimmers. The pool is exclusive to the people Included in the case of characwho bought shares and who pay dues. Also, a family can out- ters are Linda Stephenson, Mary grow its need for a swimming pool, and when it does the share Ann Adams, Brent Wood, Linda Rae Hilton, Doneta McConigle, is sold to the swimming club to be sold to another family. at Davis High ational out to classroom teachers for their students to use. Pictures, film strips, and tape recordings from Davis County Library collections are also in use. Among the many recent additions to the book collection are the following: Theories of Personality, by Calvin S. Hall and Gardner Lindzey. Handbook of Speech Pathology, by Lee Edward Travis A New World History of Art, by Sheldon Cheney. The Worlds Great Religions, by Life Magazine Day of Infamy, by Walter Lord. The Durable Fire, by Howard library books are checked Explore with Books, the theme for the national observance of Book is the inWeek November vitation extended by the Davis County Library to its many readers. 103,120 books are available at the headquarters library in Davis High School and the eight branch libraries throughouti the county. ' Book Week posters and groups of jackets from new books will be placed in each school in the county. Lists of new books added to the professional library, young moderns, younger readers, picture books and adult readers will be teacher and for provided for interested adults. 17-2- 3, 1 14,581 ovember 7 to 23 Hardy, Catherine Flint, Garth McCann, Jaunita Benton, and George Bollschweller. The students are presenting the drama as a benefit performance for the Davis Stake, Kaysville Fourth and Fifth Wards Building Fund. There will be a nominal charge. The benefit play is one of the community service projects at Davis High School. Lewellen The Story of Caves, by Doroth ! tional drag chute. The missile is described as an guided missile. It was designed as an intercontinentair-breathi- ng al vehicle with an ultimate range of 5,000 miles and an altitude of I" 00,000 feet. It is powered by turbo Below the Salt, by Thomas B. Costain High Challenge, by Dan Halacy and for younger readers Sun, Earth and Man, by George Bischof Copper Top, by Bob Hunt The Earth Satellite, by John Receipt of the first missile under this new mission is considered highly significant. But to what extent depends upon the outcome of the new weapons research program announced recently by President Eisenhower. Missiles probably will not be stored at Hill AFB. The mission includes storage of parts, including engines, and repair, overhaul and maintenance of missiles shipped here. The Snark is controlled by electronics during its entire flight. It lands on skids that can be retracted in flight and is decelerated by use of a conven- Marriage Licenses Swiggett Details of the flight, which damaged the missile, including when, where and the distance of the flight, were not made public for security reasons. The Snark is the missile that President Eisenhower announced recently had completed a 5,000- mile flight and then landed at a predesignated spot with remarkable accuracy. Ilill AFB recently was assigned a maintenance and supply support for three Air Force missiles the Snark, Bomarc and Bull Goose. Frances Frost, David Steed, Wilda 1 u Stephen Clarence Carroll, 19, tiful JoAnn Hatch. 19, Bountiful jet engines. Boun- 3S,0()O a 42-fo- ot The missile weighs pounds, is 74 feet long has wing span. Glenn B. Manning, 33, Kaysville Beth. Powe, 30, Layton Richard Edwin Abonen, 38, Wakefield, Michigan Ruth Helen Schultz, 30, Sterling, Illinois Sterling Comets, by Herbert Sim Gloomy Erasmus, by Jenne Hart Not A Little Monkey, by Charo-let- e John Wendell Roberts, 50, Tacoma, Zolotow Washington I Want to be a Bus Driver, by Sue Emily Ilalvorsen, 30, Setila-cooCarla Greene Washington m, FIRST I |