Show Board Orders 'Death Summons Retired S P Division Engineer Revision of Eccles of Otis Weeks division retired Lake Salt engineer Pacific railroad City Beer Law ofdiedthe Southern local hospital today at 72 2529 l 'V 'Officers Elected At Parish Dinner I" m Election of church officers for the coming year and presentation of annual reports highlighted the business 'session at the annual par ish dinner of the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd held Tues hall nism at tne day ReDOrtS Of theparish veiir'e aetivitloa included a review of repairs and renovations of church property and a financial statement emphasizing the sound financial condition of the church J W Stokes and E C Bader were reelected to the offices of senior warden and junior warden respectively Vestrymen elected were James Eckels and Carlton Jeffrey succeeding Al Behm and Hal Daniels whose terms expired Other members of the vestry are Albert C Spann N C Freeman S C Stewart and Alan Bader with Mrs J S Allen representing the Women's Council Elected as to the convocation of thedelegates Episcopal missionary district of Utah to be held in Salt Lake City April 4 5 and 8 were Mr and Mrs Albert C Spann Mrs James Eckels Mrs J S Allen and Mrs E C Bader The epiphany ring ceremony resulted in the ring being found Dy Spann who thereby becomes host to the 1949 parish dinner The thimble was found by Arthur Roth me aime oy Alan Bader An inspirational address was given by the Rev Joseph Hogben vicar of St Elizabeth's mission Whiterocks Utah j in a City Attorney George S Barker was instructed by city commissioners today to revise the retail beer license ordinance to require a $300 annus! fee for all types of dispensing The ordinance now in force im$900 fee for keg (draft) poses beer $300 for restaurants and other businesses where cooked food is tbm main item of aale $200 for bottled beer consumed off the premises and $300 for membership dub am following a long illness He entered the hospital on Christmas day Mr Weeks was born April 8 1875 in Wakefield Mass the son S P and Sarah Curtis Thayer of Weeks He resided with his narenf in various parts of the country as his father was chief engineer of the Burlington railroad He was graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1895 with a BS degree in civil engineering He went to work that year for the Boston & Maine railroad as a section laborer and when he left the company In 1897 he was a foreman He served as assistant roadmaster for the Maine Central at Bangor Me from 1897 to 1900 roadmaster for the Union Pacific at Junction City Kan: at Oakley Kan and Kansas City from 1899 to 1905 division engineer for the Union Pacific at Denver from 1909 to 1907 and was in Canada as track engineer for the Grand Trunk Pa cific from 1907 to 1908 at Portage la Prairie Manitoba On Knv 1 100B Km hwama n employe at the Utah Copper Co mine in mngnam canyon as level foreman and soon rose to general foreman of th mirfaee workings In 1911 he returned to railroading this time as general foreman for! the SP at Suisun Calif and later as assistant engineer- In 1012 ht want to Stockton Calif as division en- and on Sept l 913 befjnoar came division engineer in Ogden which he held until retiring in eight-thirt- y t The revisions were recommended by Mayor Harman W Peery at the first meeting of the new administration Monday Mayor Peery made his second attempt since taking office to gain commission approval of a proposal to request police officers who are eligible tor retirement to apply for pensions Commissioners Thomas East and Edward T Saunders again asked for further time to study it and the motion was tabled Offhand Opinio The city attorney said it was his "offhand opinion" that it is elective with eligible officers as to whether they shall ask for pensions or continue with the force until reaching a certain age "1 don't believe you can an officer to retire unless compel he has reached a certain age and has the required 20 years service" said AtThere are city torney Barker r:vil service regulations jnvormnff 1940 this matter" He served in France during In answer to questions the mayor said he believed there were "about World War 1 as first lieutenant half a dozen" officers who are with the 48th engineers from June qualified to retire He gave no 1918 to September 1919 when he maicauon oi nis reason tor want was nonoraDiy discharged On Feb 19 1907 he married ing them to retire The Citv attornev wae r also to prepare an opinion ing two other recommendations made by Peery last Monday One is whether city commissioners could cancel two contracts let by outgoing commissioners the last week in December They cover construcAssociation for Edution of a fire station at Hinckley cation Will hold itsChildhood meet-in- e monthly and a erection of airport control in Moench hnilriino nnHi tower addition to the administra- torium the Weber college 2450 Jeftion building ferson Saturday Jan 10 at two Saunders Explains pm The program will include a film Saunders holdover commissioner said the money for these contracts "Your Children's Eyes" Dr Glen totaling in excess of $80000 was F Harding will discuss "Eyesight provided for in the 1947 budget of Young Children" Edgar Id "These contracts will not affect the Hayes will make a report on "Bet1M budget at all" Saunders said ter Lighting in the Schools" a "Besides there is a surplus of 0 project being carried on by the which the outgoing board Parent-Teachassociation Mrs turned over to us which is prob- Lavon chairman of the Barclay more than we've ever had committee on ably will kindergartens before" The other matter is whether! the tell of progress made h toward the of kincity can rescind an action of the establishment recent commission through which dergarten The public is invited $700000 in public improvement bonds were sold Peery and East contend this action was "hasty" on the part of the old board and that WHAT MAKES the money is not now needed and YOUR NOS1 would only lie idle in banks RUNT Saunders contends the bond sale Cnnmnstinn in nnxnl was properly conducted that the proposed fire station and sewer CKMtrii reduce nasal em and anwoams You Improvements are vital and that r ftima! insiantlv the majority of people are In favor Rmnnmiral of the improvements since authorized sale on the bonds atthey BSoV Nov the 4 election 1 n sssssssasssssssWIBSSP JBSSf Otir Weeks Vaillle iniDenveft Edith Wolcott i i w et'Ks was m memuer rar tmr oi me Church of the Good Episcopal ! -- D aUmv mori rari T ±ermr Merrill post No 9 Western Society of Engineers: Sociejty of American Military Engineers $nd Engineering Institute of Canada Rhdnhorfl1 A Surviving are his widow two Frederick V Weeks Parkersberg W Vs Philip V Weeks! Ogden: Mrs Walker Smith Arlington Va and Mrs Monie DeHaaii Ogden a sister Mrs J P Sedgwick Salem Ore and three grandchildren Funeral services will be conducted Friday at tivo pm in the Robert M Mamh Si inm Church of the Good Shepherd by Ogden was convir-tr- i n nit v nrumt the Rev J Burton kaltor of a charge of n today driving by the mortuary 529 Twenty-fift- h ociiiciitcu iu pay a line OI 3DU or serve 25 days in jail Charged also with drunken driving in connection with the incident Marsh had pleaded guilty He was sentenced to pay a fine of $200 or serve 100 days in jail Marsh on Dec 5 drove his car into the readallegedly end of a machine parked near Twenty-secon- d A seven - member nominating and Jefferson and continued on to near Twenty-thir- d committee to select candidates for withoutandstopping where he was election to the board of directors overtaken byKiescl police An attempt of counsel to stipuFeb 16 was chosen oday by cham- n ber of commerce directors The late circumstances of the C Foley Committee beaded by Harmon B cnarge tailed when Joseph city attorney said he would Barton will choose 14 candidate deputy witn 8 defense contention ?sfroe that Marsh was unaware of the acwfenee names will b4 listed on bal at Twenty-secon- d and Jeflots The ballots will be mailed to cident ferson members Feb 2 The defend a — vwnvviiuu lie: iidU J Rex Baehman Irhnmhor inc taken a drink of liquor became ident said additional nominees can sick and was not aware of the ac be chosen by members at large cident according to hia attorney oy presenting petitions signed by at least 15 members Results of the election will place raven new members on the board Composed of 21 members seven ar retired each year Other members oi the nominating committee are J Clyde Bueh-le- r J H Andrews Jaurence Farr William H Loos David O h If anybody has two $2 green- and John H Pennington uicus coyerea with signatures The chamber's annua! memberwnjt-- are valued as Keepsakes by ship meeting will b held Feb 23 Mrs Jov Peterson Pnlin n0t Hotel Ben Lomond In the afterDee T Burke will appreciate noon of that day directors Will tive the information meet to elect a president two The officer said the bills along a treasu rer and manuhki vaiuaoies were in a ager purse that was stolen from a cloakroom at the Church of the uood Shepherd Christmas eve One of the bills is a "short sooner nearing the signature of CosteIt is one of $2 bills used as Hawaiian curThe other bears the rency "From Daddy Merry Ogden fire department made phrase two runs Tuesday afternoon and Xmas 1945" The detective said it is possible street early today to Twenty-fift- h where flames caused minor dam-ac- e the bills have been used by the u"t'"i io pay lor purchases First run was made to 165 Twenty-fifth Flames splattered over the walls When a mixture of kerosene and naint thinner sinillprl nntn n gas range Flames scorched newly applied paint and caused smoke damage Firemen said painters were cleaning their brushes in the First meeting of 1948 will be solution when the accident hap- held by Corp Fred J Grant post pened The call canke in at five-fift- y No 1481 Veterans of Foreign °- - 81 eint o'clock to- p m J Second rfin was made at m iaDor temple hall 263 a m today tq 115 Twenty-fift- h Twentv-fift- h Commander A I Brw where an air conditioner motor became overheated arid burned es all to be present for the first rm initiation of this year located over the entrance door A Pbllffet lllnchonn " firemen said flames caused little aciveui Current membership damage drive inrougnout the state will be dis- uussea 111 meet tonight at U Auxiliaryto Session 4n me IK v A w nan v ui FOET will meet for Auxiliary a business session tonight at eight o'clock in the lodge hall All members are requested to! be present' sons and two daughters Driver Receives Stiff Penalties i hit-ru- Education Group Chamber Reports Meets Saturday Nominating Unit $31-00- er nine-mont- PENETRD "BssBBassal I SRING "EM hit-ru- — — — THE OGDEN (UTAH) STANDARD-EXAMINE- R 7 Wednesday Evening Jan 7 1948 Darcey Nye 50 Called by Death "College Notes Birthday Student Leader Speaks which they may! build their edu cation DY DbtOQ said alumni "never forget Weber because it la a aafeMt with a toul" mni "we need this spiritual foundation mora bow than ever before" Dr Dixon and other faeulty ing of the college and told of the imiuence of Weber graduates members were praised by Barton loyalty 'There are Weber grads in every for"Ittheir ' is con t rtt iimi Im I state of the union as doctors den- offers of jobs at better pay tists government executives busi- m oroer bigger to remain with ness men lawyers and educators collega 1 We have teachers in Yale Cornell and Harvard The Hhrnrlnn nt lumbia university is a graduate of Weber college" She said it is up to the present generation to carry on this in- fluence President Speaks Speaking on the moral and growth of the school Dr Dixon described the purpose of the' iHMituuon in tne words of its first Louis F Moench "I will principal seek to lay a true foundation in the hearts of the students upon Birthday oi Weber college was observed today during the first assembly of the fall quarter by some 1600 students faculty and alumni in Moench auditorium A well rounded program presented talks by Mrs Lydia Tanner home economics instructor emeritus President H A Dixon and Student BodyPresldent Laurence Burton Speaking along the theme of school spirit and what a four-yee- r institution would mean to future students of Ogden and vicinity Burton delivered one of the most stirring addresses heard from the auditorium platform Declaring few people are financially capable of sending their sons and daughters elsewhere for college education Burton assailed the state legislature for failure to provide Ogden with a four-yecollege "A few greedy politicians from a few greedy areas defeated the four-yeplan as presented during the last legislative session without giving one substantial reason In fact good not one of the arguments advanced against the school WOUld Stand two minntos In junior high school practice debate" he asserted Alleged Reasons Burton recalled alleged reasons why some legislators voted against passage of tho bill "A senator voted against it because we hud enough school spirit to get a few hundred students together to visit the legislature to fight for it Another senator said there was no reason why Ogden students could ivi imc wie back and forth betweenoamoerger here and the University of Utah He said he had even checked into schedules and found that a student could catch a six am train out of Ogden that would enable him to make an o clock class There would beeight another train back that would get the student in Ogden at seven-thirt- y pm the senator said" Burton declared "Allowing time for eating traveling to and from the station this would leave the student seven hours for sleeping and studying" Burton said " Burton declared school spirit is excellent "Ogden is coming to realize it has a college and a college with spirit MrsTannrr spoke on the found- - -- mr-itual Bf AUTIFUL ar I Darcey I Nye Darcey L Nye 50 of 207 Seventh died at six forty-fiv- e a m today in a local hospital following a two months illness Mr Nye was born April 1 1897 in Huntsville a son of Stephen and Alice Simmons Nyc When a boy the family moved to Ogden and h had resided here most of his life At time of death he was connected with the Boyle Furniture Co as salesman He was a member of the LD S church Mound Fort ward and the seventy's quorum He had been a member of the Ogden tabernacle Choir over 26 years He was past president of the Weber County wild Late federation and at time of death was a director He was also a member of the Knights of Pythias past president of the Associated Glee clubs of AmericaUtah district and president of Ogden Male Singers He was a veteran of World war I and a member of the American Legion Baker-Merri- ll post No 9 On Aug 28 1918 he married Helen Scale in the LDS Salt Lake temple Surviving are his widow Ogden two sons and one daughter Stephen J Nye D Darcey Nye and Mrs Herman Green Jr Ogrien: two grandchildren three brother mid two sisters: Victor J Nye Clyde V Nye Ore L Nye and Mrs Arthur Ramsden Ogden Mrs Curtis Knight Redwood City Calif Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at one p m at the Factory to You FREE BUILT-RIT221-- I lt t standing operntio I Efficiont Enduring Venetian Blinds ar 4 nder" take f ESTIMATES CO E Kiesel METAL MINING INDUSTRY OF UTAH Dial lii MmKvana ur l in i tiranl Band! mm m Utah born and reared — trained in the New York Citv Washinrlnn r t and San Francises tudioe oi aiuhi k HI K K A V led taaaa Let this popular artlU-instrteach you the latest American ani liStta American dancea In one of the aMMt beautiful and specially desism-dance studios in America Oar instruction is thorough Interest tn aw stodenta ts genntne Thpse fac-to- n are never offered at "karfata prices" When your course ts complete With us you KNOW HOW TO DANCE Monday thru Friday 12 noon to 16 pm Saturday 19 a tn to c pm ui Mi Grant-Evan- s ! Studio of Dance Suite 401-40- 2 BEN LOMOND HOTEL Phone 3408 Washington mortuary by vuunsciur vernai tracer of Mound Fort ward RuHnt urin k in ugden city cemetery Police Seeking Keepsake Bills Taken at Church Min-noc- vice-preside- nts Firemen Make Two Minor Runs fPtfiy? V - FWWill Hold Session Tonight V" I We "Drox" Men's Shirts one-thr- ee -- tll I V LAUNDRY— DRY CLEANING 2310 Grant Ava Phone 4421 M oixilTy 50-fo- ot V2 x 8'toot Building 75°° FBEE DELIVERS oi Then Bnildtog to Your Acreaso Within the Radius of Ogden On his plea of guilty to a charge of reckless driving which had been changed from one of hit-ru- n anving xwaxie New 25 of 277 Barrett Bonnevillp Pnrlr tenced in citv court fnHv a line Of SOU Or sprvn 9?S itov 4J1 New was involved in an accident near aecona and Washington Dec to JUeRoy Olsen Weber Bccoraing county deputy sheriff o" 'i Dates Meet Lodge Mount Above buildings have electrical wiring plenty of windows 1x2 sheeting under on sides mineral-surface- d and under roofing on top are lined with sheet rock and have 1x4 Buildings fir flooring tar-pap-er 90-J- b TO Bp All of These Buildings Are in Excellent Condition etc TO SEE THESE BUILDINGS Drive Out Tomlinson Road to Gate TIME K ETC HUM West 4th South St 2jl Utah General Depot Ogden Utah Mondays Thru Saturdays 9:30 A M to 4:30 P M BUILDERS SUPPLY Salt Lake City Utah NOW- - make 9 fate to OIL-PtA- No 848 L Ogden A to B of R T lodge will w pu Pm in the For storage or Long - Distance Moving Dial Og-- d on Operator and ask for Enterprise 1050 There Is no charge to yu for the call If yon have a storage problem REDMAN Van & ! TS memoers urged to A I: attend for mm TV — 595W Building - Penalty Fixed on Reckless Count WANT A BUILDING ON YOUR LOT? 20 x ) BEST WAY TO BABY that great new f48 or to keep "Old Faithful" going while you wait is to make a date to Oil-Plat- with Conoco e N! N' Motor Oil (patented) contains a special ingredient that astern an extra film of lubricant so closely to metal surfaces that cylinder walls and all working are parts This means extra protection from win Oil-Plate- d! Storage Co Copyriaot 1948 Continental Oil Company ter's hard starts because extra actually resists gravall drain down even overity! Won't And that's night! tvhy also whether still or running hot you're standing g from jon't e combustion acids j from "dry" friction sfrom sludge and iarbon due to wear! Oil-Platin- "dry-frictio- n" g extra-protect- ek metal-eatin- Get extra starting power get extra pickup make get extra (mileage e date to ycnir engine today! Oil-Plat- r WBSwL a J |