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Show B6 The Emery County Review, Tuesday, October 14, 2008 TRIBUTE Mary C. Earl HUNTINGTON—On October 9, 2008, our cherished mother, Mary C. Earl, surrounded by family, left this earth to join her true love, George, and her beloved son, Randy. Mary was born December 27, 1921, to Paul and Mary Cavallo in Huntington, UT. As a life long resident of Emery County, Mary graduated from North Emery High School, and attended nursing school Pete Bottino “Pa” HELPER-Pete Bottino, born March 20, 1914 in Helper, Utah to John and Katherine Bottino passed away peacefully surrounded for two years. Mary and George were married July 12, 1941, in California and worked together at Douglas Aircraft Factory. They returned to Huntington to open Earl’s in 1946 and other business enterprises throughout their lives. Mary and George were well known for helping anyone in need. Mary was involved in her community, served as President of the Chamber of Commerce, and was involved in many projects over the years. Mary enjoyed gardening, fishing, painting, ceramics, traveling worldwide, working her business, and the time that she shared with her children and grandchildren. Mary will be dearly missed by her family, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. She leaves behind her daughter, Sandra (Bennett Ray) Gunderson, and her son Kim (Sharon) Earl, both residing in Huntington; grandchildren: Shawn (Tasha) Van Seters, Jason Gunderson, Kimberlee (Edward) Rasbold, Timothy Earl, Jeff (Randi) Earl, Randy (April) Earl, Ilene (Eric) Grant, Robert (Kathy) Baker, John Michael Baker, and Amanda (Maurice) Cannon; great-grandchildren: Zack, Shantelle, Ashlin, Taran, Draydon, Corben, Tralynn, Melbourne, Traralgon, Adrie, Keaton, Jackson, Tory, Robert, Courtney, John Michael, Kylynn, Sadie, Maurice, and Aleah; and by many other loving and caring relatives and friends. Mary was preceded in death by her husband, son, Randy, parents, and three brothers, Paul, Frank, and Jack. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, October 14, 2008, at 11:00 a.m., at Fausett Mortuary in Castle Dale. There will be a viewing Tuesday at 10:00 a.m. prior to the services at the mortuary. She will be laid to rest at Huntington City Cemetery. Services are in the care of Fausett Mortuary. by his family on October 11, 2008 in Salt Lake City. Pete served in the Navy from 1936 to 1939. He married Wilma Seppi on September 9, 1940. During WWII, Pete and Wilma worked in the Pearl Harbor Naval Yard. In 1945, they returned to Helper where they raised their four children. Pete spent most of his life in Helper where he was known as Helper’s handyman. He was the chief electrician for Helper City and retired from Utah Power and Light. Pete helped install and maintain Helper’s first TV system. Pete was truly devoted to his community and was a lifelong member of St. Anthony’s Catholic Church. Pete was a true adventurer who loved fishing and hunting. He earned his pilot’s license at age 72 and even built his own helicop- ter. He loved speeding in cars, snowmobiles and his chaparral. Pete was well known for his musical talents. He could often be found playing his harmonica at any gathering, always brining joy to all. Pete is survived by his wife Wilma of 68 years, his sister Lorraine and Sam Falsone, brother-in-law Hiram and Helen Seppi, children Pat Noel, Jack and Mary Bottino, Becky Bottino and Ken Condray, Toni and Stan Payne, his grandchildren Brian and Carolynn Bottino, Penny Noel, Jeanie and Gabe Jacquez, Gina and Graeme Cox, Amy and Chris Wilcox, Julie and Brian Prutch, and Andrea Hickey, and great-grandchildren Alexis and Felicia Jacquez, Franklin Wilcox and Rufus Cox. A vigil with rosary will be held at Mitchell’s Funeral Home, Price, Utah, Wednesday, October 15, 7:00 pm. Funeral Mass Thursday, October 16, 10:00 am St. Anthony’s Catholic Church, Helper. Burial at Mt. View Cemetery, Helper. The family would like to thank Garden Terrace and Alta Ridge care centers and Millcreek Hospice for their extraordinary care. Crossword From Page 3B. Donations can be made in his name to St. Anthony’s Catholic Church. HOROSCOPE Continued from Page B3. ADOPT A PET VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your body will talk back to you this week. Take preventative action, such as using a headpiece on your phone to keep you from kinking your neck. Go easy at the gym. Stay within a gentle physical regime. It’s not the time to force your body into new and potentially awkward positions. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The process of getting along is different for everyone you know and it changes through time. What created harmony yesterday could create dissonance today. Surrender to the process of relationship building knowing that it cannot be perfected, only enjoyed. You will never stop learning to love well. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Thoughtfully schedule ahead. If you don’t have enough activities on the books, you will be tempted to obsess over details that are ultimately meaningless. Too many activities will cause you to lose focus entirely. You don’t want life to blur by you! Get balanced. Let your highest self be your social secretary. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You don’t know what’s going on next door, though you have an inkling. The neighbor’s business holds a peculiar fascination. You’ll find yourself preoccupied with such for most of the week -- that is until your own pressing business takes priority. Soon tales from the house over yonder will be a dim dalliance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). What is it about those people who get to live their fantasies that intrigues you so? Your thinking patterns are ingrained to the point that it’s almost impossible to see the world any other way than the method you’ve been seeing it for years. A Scorpio may change all of that, to the same degree that you are open to change. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 18). In the past, you’ve held the opinion that having a back-up plan is for people who don’t believe enough in the first plan. However, the times have changed. Right now, contriving another route might give you the security you need in order to really go for what you want. Write it down -- that’s what makes it real. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Oh, the personalities you’ll be navigating this week. If only people could be as spiritually attuned as you. But that would require them to mind their own business, find their own inner strength and not lean so heavily on others, namely you. Lucky for them, you’re extraordinarily generous with your wisdom this week. (Holiday Mathis is the author of “Rock Your Stars.” Copyright 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.) ‘The Hemingses of Monticello’ is a Challenging Work Continued from Page B3. the subjects in their time and space.” And on this issue, the subjects were not silent -- if we expand the circle of subjects to include Hemings’ siblings and chil- Gordon’s Nursery & Floral Fresh Flowers, Plants And Gifts 686 N 400 E Huntington 687-2264 Mon-Fri 9-6 •Saturdays 10-3 Excel Dental Care “Excellence In Dentistry” Boyd’s Family Pharmacy Family & Cosmetic Dentistry Implant Surgical Center For All Your Pharmaceutical Needs about family, that we can take the first step toward getting at the reality of black and white lives under slavery.” That reality, as GordonReed reconstructs it through letters, contemporary accounts and oral traditions, could be punishing to all parties. While damning slavery, she is remarkably compassionate toward Jefferson, who she characterizes as a visionary political philosopher whose humane views collided with the ugly nature of an evil system. One sad example: On his death in 1826, the former president freed three of Sally Hemings’ five surviving children. The other two left Monticello without being formally manumitted because they were lightskinned enough to pass for white. Papers showing that they were black could have embarrassed and even endangered them. “The Hemingses of Monticello” may stir old passions by taking everything that is documented about this family’s tangled, tragic history -- and then pushing the tale further. Gordon-Reed’s interpretation is provocative and persuasive. Not least, it’s also a profound meditation on the fluid and conditional nature of something many Americans have regarded as fixed: our individual racial heritage. Were the children of Jefferson and Hemings white or black? Both? Neither? In antebellum Virginia, the answers to those questions meant freedom or bondage. In our country, will there ever come a day when those answers mean nothing? (Copyright 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.) Worley-Jensen Monument Price • 45 W 100 N • 637-4400 Where Beautiful Smiles Are Created •No Charge Consultants •Latest Cosmetic Techniques •Metal-Free Ceramic Crowns •Implants 381-2447 Shawn K. Leonard, DMD, PC 15 E. 600 N. (Upstairs) Castle Dale, UT 84513 Community Nursing Services Home Health & Hospice 381-5464 •Free In-Home Evaluation 25 West Main Castle Dale, Utah Care Covered By Medicare Local Man Prevails In Scuffle With Hoodlums BEXAR COUNTY- Tom W., after using Thera-Gesic on a sore left shoulder, encountered two hoods breaking into a car in a parking lot. He whacked one of them upside the head and ran them off. When asked why he took the risk, he painlessly replied: “None of your dang business!” Resource Options For Non-Medicare (435) 613-8887 (435) 381-2044 ® Go painlessly with Thera-Gesic® THG-08916 This 4 month old male, Australian Shepherd mix is looking for a place to call home. He can be yours for $62.50, which includes spay and rabies vaccination. An AVID Chip is also available at the time of the adoption for $12. This pet and many others are available at the Emery County Animal Shelter in Castle Dale, 490 West, SR-29. Call 381-2539 for more information. dren, many of whom were literate and wrote about her relationship with Jefferson. Rejecting slaves’ writings and oral accounts as well as accepting their oppressors’ testimony or silence is a “racket,” Gordon-Reed maintains. Sally Hemings’ mother, Elizabeth Hemings, was a slave who claimed that the father of her children was John Wayles, a slave owner whose acknowledged white children included Jefferson’s wife. Virginia law obscured or denied his mixed-race family, but surely the historian has no obligation to deny Hemings and protect Wayles. “This simply reenacts the world of master and slave in the pages of history,” Gordon-Reed argues. “It is only through piercing the veil of Southern society’s laws, including its fictions “Serving Emery County Since 1998” “Providing Competent, Respectful Care in Your Home” 60 East 100 North • Price, Utah Phone (435) 637-0665 Toll Free 877-637-0665 Buckle Up! |