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Show Uu!vms1 Microfilming Ul Pisrpont Salt Lek At. City. Utah Z' M s-- U LueAL-J- V ( O --n V " - Or LLr r 'HIi; d 9 Ap 110 a Uil r IlME A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Read It In The Time Forty-Secon- Dayo tiLiWvOLl 'The Complete Home Newspaper Magna, Utah, Thursday, April 9, 1959 Year Number Forty Two "Copper Shopper Days Tuo Magna People DAV c::icc7G 0 Bo Installed Saturday Covefed Gef Awards FOR AREA STARTS APRIL IT'S SPRINGTIME SALE 9-10- Theres a touch of spring in the air and Mana merchants are taking advantage of it by featuring their Spring Copper Shopper Days of bargains on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, April THE GALA EVENT will have more than 2 5 stoies participating. Phono Gompany Plans Engineering Estimates For "f.'lctropoIiSan" Mountain States Telephone Features of the sale, sponsored by the Magna Chamber of Com- 'Company is now making premerce, include full new lines of liminary estimates on the promerchandise-clothes, furniture, posed metropolitan system for gardening supplies, household the Magna exchange, according appliances, fashions in fact, .to word received by John A. just about any kind of merchan- Rokich, executive secretary of the Community Council dise a customer wants. THERE WILL NOT BE any IT IS HOPED and planned left over merchandise in this that the metropolitan system A marble and hopscotch toursale, according to Myron Bosh, will be ready for use in the im- nament is planned for children general chairman. mediate future. of the Magna and Webster Eleof See the large selection mentary Schools, sponsored by springtime merchandise. All of However, phone customers the local VFW Post and Auxilofbe to must will it is new this season and remember, according offered at greatly reduced prices ficials, that the metropolitan sys- iary. tem will only serve Salt Lake A definite date has not as yet during the sale. TOO, each store will have and the Kearns exchanges. The been set, but will be shortly some kind of special contest and monthly rates, of necessity, will be increased. give prizes to the winners. VFW, Auxiliary Plan Hopscotch Local Tourney 00GD B0C10O rJlGgjm mercury continued its spree Sunday as it set three new marks for April. e IT SMASHED the high for April 4 by racking up a h 76. Previous record high for the date was 73 established in 1943. And it ran up the highest temperature recorded so far this Five local residents, ranging year. Apricot trees, Forsythia and also forced a dooi at Carls bushes, Emperor tulips and from 17 to 21 years of age, were Place on 21st South, getting ciga scores of daffodils brightened arrested Thursday by the Magna rettes, $5.00 in money and cases with sheriffs and the landscape view. charged deputy of beer. burglary of four establishments. The arrested men are out on ALL of PRACTICALLY the If any man seeks for greatfrom $500 to $1,500 ness, let him forget greatness loot, which had been cached bail, ranging and ask for truth, and he will away in residences of the young Horace Mann men, was recovered. The offifind both. Bowlers Take cers were tipped off to the Magna Delton when League Contest identity of the culprits The Magna Rexall Drug Bowla stolen radio to a gave they THIS IS ing team took the Delton Har neighbor. mony league competition title on to admitted The young men Wednesday. breaking into Don St Dave's TV The four ladies sponsored by JAY TEACHER Shop several months ago, as well the Magna Drug include Esther as the Texaco Service Station Laura on 7200 West, operated by Matz, Shirley Begent, Fairbourne Daniels, Norma two Coon. At these Theron while Dorothy Dea is sponsored places, radios, supplies and tires the Chuck Burt Service Staby were taken. tion. Last week they burglarized the Magna Lumber and HardProcrastination is the thief of ware Company, getting over time. Edward Young $300 in guns and ammunition, The record-breakin- g ChcriJJs Charge Five all-tim- f.lagna Residents On Burglary Rampage spring-feveris- National Library Week April 12-1- 8 Johnny Had Defter 1 A series of (Editors Note: articles will headline a teacher from this area each week, for a feature article suggested by the Webster School faculty. The one for this issue follows:) A native of Idaho, Miss Elaine Dalby eomes to Webster School with a varied background of ex- perience. She graduated from Ricks Jr. College in Idaho and later taught in that state. She has worked for Civil Ser-- v i n both i c e Commissions Hawaii and Utah and as a Ser vice Representative for the Mountain States Telephone Company in Salt Lake City. Her attendance at the Brigham Young University was disrupted to fill a mission for the LDS Church in California. Following her mission, Miss Dalby worked as a private govemness in California, prior to a return to Utah to attend the University o I Utah. She graduated from the Salt Lake college last year, and now teaches the fourth grade at Webster School. Newly elected officers of the DAV, Copper Chapter No. 11, will be installed this Saturday evening at the DAV Club, 8:00 p.m. The men were named -11 Learn To Read Mow! It no longer matters whether he want to or would like to or may learn when the spirit moves him. Johnny now has no choice. He had better learn to read and read well or we may wind up in a world where no English is written any more. Reading is the key to all knowledge and knowledge is power and power means survival. Napoleon knew that, and he once said, Show me a family of readers, and Ill show you the people who move the world. We Americans dont want to move the world. But we dont want anyone else to, either. So Johnny had better learn to read. Because you can bet Ivan is spending a lot of time on hit book. GRANITE FACES FUNDS NEED Thursday evening VFW SLATES bership. TV- - INSTALLATION Elected officers of the local VFW and Auxiliary organizations will be installed Saturday eiening at the Lion Community House to include: VETERANS POST Charles post commandParis, er; Bill Louderback, senior vice commander; Ken Vance, junior vice commander; Frank Falvo, quartermaster; Don 10-m- ill chaplain; Thomas, Dick Franzen, judge advocate; Lain Bytendorp, post adjutant; Morris Romano, officer of the dav. VETERANS' AUXILIARY MaeDene Cooley, president; Empey, senior vice president; Hazel Hansen, junior vice president; Shirley Romano, secretary; Cherie Vance, treasurer; Vairanica Bezzant, chaplain. New members include Mary Biown, Teresa Bytendorp, Mar-vi- a Corbndge, LaWana Franzen, Beulah Greenwood, Bernice Johnson, Lyla McCarty, Ilene McLain, Roxie Morse and Helen La-Ver- Papamkolas. Guests for the Veterans installation will be State Department Commander Raymond Lester; State Senior Vice Commander Don Pearce; State Quartermaster Wayne Newbold, and National Service Officer Lyle Klotz. State Department Commander Lester will be the installing officer. The Auxiliary officers will be installed by past department piesident Elsa Decker. OQUIRRII STAKE NEWS Samuel Arnold Beckstead Two Magna residents were named Honorary Golden Gleaners Friday .at a banquet of the Oquirrh Stake Gleaners and M Men Friday evening in the Magna LDS Wardhouse. Covers were laid for one hundred and fifty guests, according to Miss Illene Hulse, general chairman. THE TWO PEOPLE so honored are Samuel Arnold Beck-steaof the Magna First Ward and Grace Jensen Christensen of the Lake Ridge Ward. Mr. Beckstead was born March 8, 1910 at South Jordan, Utah, and married Elizabeth Bernice Benson September 27, 1933. HE HAS LONG been a prominent member of the LDS Church, having served as First Counselor in Sunday School fulfilled a supenntendency; three-yea- r Stake Mission; served as First Counselor in the Magna Ward Bishopric for five and one-hayears, was a member of the High Council as advisor to the MIA over six years and at present time is bishop of the Magna First Ward. d lf ' Anderson, assistant clerk; Alan Thomas, superintendent of the YMMIA; Raymond Herzog, Sunday School superintendent; Helen McCarty, Primary president. i k A mittee for the contest Milton oJhnson, Lion Tamer. officers Mens Ramc inccs For 0 BROCKBANK TO OFFICERS WEDNESDAY PUBLIC URGED TO ATTEND WEBSTER MEET NIGIIT SAT. Grac Jensen Christensen MRS. bom May CHRISTENSEN was 22, 1910 at Mt. Pleas ant, Utah, and married Allen Christensen September 1, 1928. Her service in the LDS Church has also been very noteworthy. She has served as Primary presiART VII1IIERS dent, teacher and counselor in several has been a Gleaiv GIVEN III COPPER er leader,wards, dance director, drama director, counselor in Ward MIA also Stake MIA counselor. SHOPPER EVENT and She has been approximately 22 years in MIA activities and now Michael Jeffs was awarded is Stake YWMIA president. first prize of $10 for his original drawing of a symbol to be used for The Copper Shopper Days, sponsored by the Magna Chamber of Commerce. OTHER CYPRUS High School winners were Tom Dyches Jr., second place, $5.00, and third place money of $2.50 went to Susan Whitaker. At Brockbank, first place winner was Jerry James, who was given a $10 check and second place went to Bill Eden and a $5.00 check. John W. Papanikolas was chairman of the Chamber com HEADING THE CHAPTER is Orlando Barber, commander. Others are Orvis Haskell, senior vice commander; Bryce Graham, junior vice commander; Ubaldo Martinez, secretary - treasurer; Eugene Kone, chaplain. include Executive Keith Yeates, Don Coon, Kenneth C. Taylor and Thomas Borland. Delegates to the State convention at Provo April 30 and May are Orlando Barber, Bryce Graham, Orvis Haskell, Ubaldo Martinez, Keith Yeates, Eugene Kone, Thomas Borland, Ray Peterson, Don Coon and Ray COPPER CLUB A DANCE FESTIVAL will be held at the Pleasant Green Ward on Saturday, April 11 and the Pleasant Green 1st Ward will present a preview of dances that will be at the June LDS conference in the U stadium. Magna 2nd Ward as hosts. Everyone is invited. mem- site purchases from this source over the next two years. funds available Combining from past bond elections, state emergency funds and the continuing program, the district ex- James. THE AUXILIARY delegates pects to raise $10,145,000. It still will be short of existing needs. are Dellene Alvis, Clara BarAPPROVAL OF THE special ber, Lucille Brusatto and Anne tax levy may mean a Herrington. Alternates are Fay tax increase for school building Yeates and Bessie Cobbley. construction. Approval of this issue will permit the board to levy such portion of the new 1959-6rate as it is needed to suppleNominees for the Magna Lions ment money from the bond elecClub annual election have been tion, state emergency aid pro- NAME gram and other revenues. named to include: Acute needs are pointed out Thomas Hubbard, president; Dee Peel, first vice president; in projected enrollment expected J. O. Bnnton and Philip Debs, over the next four years. This New officers will be elected second vice president; Wayne year the district enrollment is Wednesday evening, April I5th Nicolo and Glynn Petersen, third 31,669 and next year, 1959-6vice president; E. F. Blanchard there will be 3,631 more pupils at the Brockbank School PTA meeting which begins at 7:30 and A. L. Vaughn, secretary; E. or 35,165. THE BOARD must provide p.m. M. Lambert and Howard WadsThe program in its entirety is: housing for these added students worth, treasurer. Advancing of colors by the Nominees for the board of di- and has only four means of acColor Guard. rectors include: Byron L. Huish, complishing this end: Opening prayer. Clair Rosenberg, Ray Thompson, 1 Bond election. Veil A. Haws and Malcolm F. 2 State aid from the emer- - Special numbers from the music department. ency fund. Election of officers. 3 Revenue from the district Explanation of the Guidance tax levy not to exceed 10 per Counsel program at Brockbank cent of the basic program. by Principal Clark Frei, Wallace 4 A voted special tax levy. Bawden, Glendon Casto and HartSuperintendent Elmer J. Elaine Geigle. vigsen explained how the two All school patrons are urged are possible under to attend. elections legal requirements. Assessed valuation of the district has risen more than the estimate made for the last bond election. Therefore, the board should call for a bond election bonding for the amount allowed Who is the Most Preferred through the increase in assessed Date at Brockbank junior high valuation which will fully qualischool? fy the district for state aid. All patrons of the Webster School are urged to attend the This question will be answerfinal meeting of the PTA Thursed Friday evening at a Girls Preference dance that starts at day, April 9th, beginning at 7:30 7:00 p.m. and ends at 9:30 p.m. FEATURE BUSINESS will be oclock. PLANS GAME election of officers, an art exFor this dance the girls elect hibit from each class and musia boy out of each grade as their cal numbers from the 5th and most preferred date. The final6th grades. ists are: Spring garden needs, includ-- . 9th grade A man of integrity will never Gary Borg, Paul ing shrubbery, will be featured Wilkin, Richard Nielson, at the Utah Copper Club game listen to any plea against conSaturday evening, April science. Henry Home Paul Donaldsen, night 8th grade 11th. Ted Higley. Festivities will begin at 8.00 Every man is valued in this 7th grade Layne Naylor, p. m. Members and partners are world as he shows by his coninvited. duct he wishes to be valued. Allan Taylor. Brockbank Girls Will Choose Preferred Date THE PLEASANT GREEN 2nd Ward, under the direction of Bishop Jimmie Hales and Stake President, William B. Martin, has named new officers to include: Leo Rupp, clerk; Jack ON SATURDAY. April 18th the Oquirrh Stake dance is slated at the stake house with the With Granite District growing by leaps and bounds in school population, it needs funds to finance schools to house these thousands of children. SO, SCHOOL administrators are asking the people to approve a $3.5 million bond issue April 28 and also a special tax levy. If the tax election is approved, some $2,870,000 can be raised for building construction and by the Fine Son Mr. and Mrs. Max Buckner announce the birth of a son on March 31st in a Salt Lake hospital. He weighed in at 7 pounds, 1 4 ounces and has two brothers and two sisters. Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Silcox and Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Buckner are grandparents. SEMINARY ROYALTY IS NAMED AT APRIL DANCE Featuring an unusual theme April Showers, Oquirrh Stake seminary held their annual spring dance Friday evening at the stakehouse. Allen Culley was chairman of the festive fete; Ken Tuttle, decoration chairman; Marilyn Culchairman and ley, floor-shoJ a n i e 1 Moesser, advertising chairman. Evan Jones was the faculty advisor, of A QUEEN A N D two atten- dants were selected from Church History, New Testament and Old Testament, to include: Joy Anderson, queen; Sharon Justesen and Jeanette Kilpack, attendants. Music was furnished by the Rhythm Five. Afg Vg?3 GUPGSUDm TO: i Get rid of all rubbish now? Check all possible fire hazards? Rake lawns and clean hedges? Paint fences and outbuildings? Wash windows? Clean your yard? Fix up chimneys and vents? Remove excess trash and get it ready For Magna's Annual Spring Cleanup April 20th to April 25th? The Magna Chamber of Commerce arid the Magna Community Council hope so, because it will give YOU, YOUR HOME and YOUR COMMUNITY, Added Pride Watch For Truck Hauling Dates on Winter DebriSi No Tree Limbs, Please! |