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Show Ben Lomond Beacon, Sept. 7, 197 1 2 nje j3SS3Xa It's a good idea keep doors locked mmsmssmsmsm The Ben Lomond Beacon is published each Thursday. Deadlines for each weeks issue is Monday at 5 p.m. We welcome ail articles from those who wish to contribute. Business office is 5388 So. 1900 W., Roy, Utah Phone 825-166- 6. Publisher J. Howard Stahie Mrs. Bonnie Stahle Advertising Manager Editor Sue Ellen Sims Carol Shaw LDS Correspondent YOU OUGHT TO LOCKED UP or at BE the front of the house while open it. An intercom or a peephole door least you are out back will noreven mally prevent this type of your home should be when you are in it! Many thefts occur from rooms in front of residences when the occupants are outside on the back patio or deck or are working in the yard. A thief seeing that the family is busy in the yard knocks on the front door and enters when no one answers and pilfers the home while the residents are busy outside. Locking crime against whoever is home. It is a good idea to determine who is knocking on the front door before you onf SALT CITY LAKE W. Spencer Kimball and three present and past general leaders of Church auxiliaries will be speakers at a special conference for all women of the Mormon Church on Saturday, Sept. 16, in the historic Salt Lake Tabernacle. This will be the first meeting of its kind for the young women, including girls 12 years of age and older. (The men and boys of the church have a similar gathering twice a year during general conferences.) The meeting will convene at 7 p m. and will be beamed audio live via closed-circufacilities to more than 1,400 gatherings of LDS women in the U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand. (Translations of President Kimball's message also will be it Have something to sell? Do it fast and easy in the want ads. 825-166- 6 $2 a week $6 a month HANSEN GLASS CO. SERVING ALL THE INTERMOUNTAIN AREA SLIDING GLASS DOORS ENTRANCE DOORS PLATE GLASS WINDOWS AUTO GLASS INSURANCE REPLACEMENT CUSTOM CUT MIRRORS DOOR CLOSERS REPAIRING STOREFRONTS SPECIALISTS 290-155- 5 OR 290-144- 1 LICENSED CONTRACTOR 563 W. 100 No., Bountiful and sent in the appropriate language to each congregation in the world which does not receive the live broadcast.) The meeting will be under the direction of the First Presidency, with Elder N. Eldon Tanner, first counselor, conducting. Speakers also will be Barbara B. Smith, general president of recorded the Relief Society, womens Elaine the organization; A. Cannon, general of the Young Women of the Church, and president Ruth H. Funk, immediate past general president of Young Women. Elder Ezra Taft Benson, president of the Quorum of LDS 12 Apostles, will offer the invocation, and Elder Marion G. Romney, to counselor second President Kimball, will pronounce the benediction. Music will be provided by a chorus of 700 young directed women, by LaVonne Van Orden, with Adams Decker Beverly accompanying them on the Tabernacle organ. New Zealand mission president announced Salt Lake City, Utah-Alb- ert V. Stirling, 62, has been named to preside over the New Zealand Wellington Mission of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. He succeeds the late Rudolph H. Luckauw, who died in July. Elder Stirling has been the director of the Mormon Churchs real estate division for the past 12 years, and has been area supervisor of the Churchs building program in England and Europe. He is a native of Salt Lake City and served as an LDS missionary in New Zealand as a young man, and has been the Priesthood on Missionary Committee. He will be accompanied to New Zealand by his wife, Gladys Thompson Stirling. They are the parents of three children. f system viewer should be utilized. At the very least look out a window to see who is on the porch before opening the door. Many criminals have used a pretext of being a repairmen, policeman, salesman or even a clergyman to gain access to a residence to commit a crtime. If you are not certain who it is at the front door, do not open the door and admit that person is you are home alone. Do not admit to anyone that you are home alone. If necessary, call a neighbor and have that neighbor come out on their porch and watch while you open your front door and speak to whoever it is on You, of your doorstep. course, should offer to do the same thing for your neigh- burglary. Keeping the doors locked while the family members are in the house, especially if one member is homealone, will reduce the possibility of an intruder entering the residence and committing a Women President 77-- bor. , Many times one expects to become the victim of crime if they go downtown or go shopping or go on a trip. But all too many times people become victims of crimes when they least expect it, when they open their own front door. Lock on to a good idea keep your front door locked. Assistance asked Campaign advertising cannot be erected except in commercial or industrial areas and owmers must first be granted a permit before any sign may legally be erected. Under the Highway Beautification Act no outdoor advertising signs can be placed along Interstate or Primary Highway systems or within the state highway right of way without permit. No political signs of any kind can be allowed or permitted within the state right of way. This includes telephone poles, fences, trees or existing official signs located in the right of way. Time wasted by UDOT personnel to remove those signs during election years has been considerable in the past and the Department is requesting the cooperation of all political candidates in Utah in adhering to both the intent and letter of the law. The Utah Department of Transportation is calling on all political candidates this year to comply with both the Utah Highway Beautification Act of 1967 and the National Highway Beautification Act of 1965. Under those statutes it is illegal to place signs in the right of way on Interstate or any state highway. Any signs illegally placed on the rights of way of state roads will be immediately picked up and discarded by the said Boyd Hansen, UDOT Highway Department, Beautification and Encroachment Coordinator. "Signs 1 f rrs.Tur A ' '1m i ... UwkMte'ZAife- i AAasGooud li. toon t 9 IRA KXTENTION: ILL- - ks 1 By We Do More With PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT. 13, 1978 Great tor Hamburgers GROUND WITH BEEF TenderS Juicy FOR OR MORE IZ .! . 34-lb- . At. Si. ok I 30-lb- . SO lb. Aul. HootU Supr Bvrgr Who) CutFryr 10 IBS FREE 1 H lbvftee IS lb ft b Pure fork Sewege SUBSCAN BE MAOE. u lb. Sliced rTOC n. M Bologna Pork Spare Ribs nw Hb Center Fork Steak S lb, lomb Chop ri rjO Rib Steaks French Style ASSORTED MEAT 200-L34-lb- ALL ORDERS ARE Tender Club & f do:.,. ...ib.UV Steaks ne I u. Zj Lean. Tender 3 ib: Beef Short Ribs Pot Roast - WRAPPED FOR FREEZING 90 DAYS Zj Spare Ribs .i 11. innioue Util Tiie ph'pns.il to extend the time limit for consideration d Right-- . Amendment is an of the I a attempt to r a with tund.nnental constitutional procedure. tainpi None ot us need to he reminded ot the enormous amount ot emotion generated by the 1 RA issue. But we must take great care not to allow those emotions toohsciue the l.u teaching etfeetsol the extension proposal, because the methods by which we consider changes in the Constitution are ultimately of far greater significance than the spLtiiiv changes themselves. Central to the amendatory process is the requirement that the people teach an overwhelming consensus on proposed amendments to the Constitution. Article V requires that two thuds ot both Houses ol Congress propose the s ol the state legislatures amendment, and that or convenii.Mis must ratify it. No distinction is diawn between proicdme and substance both are interrelated steps in a single ettort to dcmonstiaic the necessity of the proposed ch. in. e. When the (2nd Congress submitted the LRA to the states, it d J so m the lonn of a resolution which laoi.ciOon upon the consent of of the states ' w uiiin sOcn seats. " The setting ot a reasonable time Imi't m which t dcinonstiate the consensus required tor raid1, ..m n can baldly be considered a minor procedural detail, as ao.o. aics H extension have argued. The choice of seven yeais was not an aibitrary one. but has been the length o time .luiiiul reasonable lor consideration of c'ety proposed am. ndtiunt since lM? I si. umoi; a ivoc tics novc piopose that we retroactively change the u !e- - I hey maintain that such a change can be atlcckd In sin pis maonty vole lather than the ni.qotuy is qi.es d by ihe Constitution m the proposing of ymetislmc ir J. icgui ding the fact that the tunc limit is an evcnn.il component ol the amendatory poke's lie s tow n.n g assertion is the insistence that those states which have appioveJ the amendment under the terms ortgi-naii- v propos, , by Congress must be content to have the life it their approvals artificially pieserved. while only those staRs which have laded to ratdy remain eligible to consider tie aiik i.slmci.t during the extension. The jstonishmg un-l.'k's ol cviiikhng consideration only to states willing to vote "yes" is a p.irtkulaily ironic proposal, coming as it those who represent themselves to be such strong thus i i I ii.ual rights rs o;tc siipj W hut emerges Irom an examination of the extension proposal is tl e last that a contemporaneous consensus as to the di so I'siiuy and necessity of the ERA simply diexn't exist Like ( mdcicll.is sisters, forcing their feel into her delicate glass xbppcr. the proponents of this unprecedented proposal would force the amendment into our fundamental iaw. regardless of the structural damage that would result. To sustain such damage for the sake of expediency would indeed be tragic. (Guest oliiinnixt Omn G. Hatch, a Ctali Republican, is a member of the Senate Judu i.oy Committee, and serves on the Subcommittee on the Conxiituti n He is originally from Pennsylvania, and attended law school at the University of Pittsburgh. Heritage f ourulatton presents his siews in order r.,- -i puMie debate on a critical policy issue.) lb. con-duion- $ ri y g 39 . s two-third- s 1 3 r.? FreshBread I'" OUR FAMOUS 'sliced f! counter. We always hove o live butcher to give you MORE personalized service. We freezer wrop your order ot no extra charge. We have everyday low prices. We hove MORE high quality meot lor LESS money. (." 4K PHONE '.Bi'oncnnti 393-054- 5 IB 4 mimm JS.MHrVJ t t - v) UVU, 09 o-- ) Lb WE RESERVE The RIGHT tOUMlT ANTHEM BASED ON SUPPLY a?niY(mffl:n7ij:(!mrT:i. ; 00 u Reg. 1.39 DACOfJg WITH COUPON OPEN 9 7 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS 13 k V'L WE DO MORE WITH LESSSSI W.th LESS money! WE DO MORE than your grocery store s meat 7; ib.yO Reguar Pork SAME AS CASH ON ORDERS OVER $100.00 WE WELCOME FOOD STAMPS him (i three-quarter- Center Cut - ( ISEI) TAMPERING three-quarter- BEEF HEARTS SUPER BURGER tdJ M Lb. Sen. I) t slaved Salt Lake Cit- yThe Salt Lake Missionary Home, where missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints assigned to parts of the world are trained, will be closed next month. The First English-speakin- g Presidency said those be trained missionary in Provo, of the Church missionaries will at the churchs training facility starting October 26. The Provo facility will undergo a name change the Language Training Misdsion to the Missionary Training Center. The Salt Lake Missionary Home of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints will be dosed in October and the training of missionaries g English-speakinto assigned parts of the world will be given at the Churchs missionary training facility in Provo, Utah, effective October 26. The Provo complex will undergo a name change from the Language Training Mission to the Missionary In adTraining Center. dition, the Churchs First Presidency announces that y the training and orientation period for English-speaking will be extended from five days to four missionaries weeks. The purpose of the longer training period is to provide more extensive orientation and preparation for the two-yemissionary experience. The Salt Lake facility, which has lieen handling from 200 to 250 missionaries a week, is not large enough to accommodate them for the extended time and training, Church officials said. Missionaries required to learn languages other than English already undergo an eight-weeorientation and language training period at the Provo facility. President Max L. Pinegar, president of ar k the Language Training Mission, with Paul E. Felt and Gary L. Bunder as his counselors, will continue to preside over the training J. Martell Bird, facility. president of the Salt Lake Missionary Home, and his counselors, Clifton 1. Johnsopn and Spencer H. Osborne, will be honorably released at the time of the transition. Bible study planned by for women The Explorers Bible Study Thursday, Sept. 14 will begin classes weekly scheduled on that day from 11 a.m. at First 9:30 Presbyterian Church, 880 with 28th St. The study is open to wumen of all Faiths without charge. The curriculum is planned by Mrs. T.M. Constance of Salt Lake City, a graduate of Nyack College in New York. Emphasis will be placed on what the Bible says and means. Luke Acts is the subject of this years course, part of a five year course that encumpasses all books of the Bible. Nursery care is provided and there is a coordinated program for year olds. For further information contact Pat Dicamore at 2-- 5 |