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Show 'ni'.'?roal i'.i jpoa 11: hd. 141 Plerpcnt Ave Utah Salt, Lake City, Mr. PLF.ASAN 1, UFA! I 8 lt.47 students from over the world Kdu-eatio- Snow director, I)r. Floyd S. Holm, Keed C. Lasson, president; Jerry Wilkins, executive secretary, Sanpete Industrial Development of the group. Committee, as v Neiv organization named Tec at Snow College UNI Tec was the new name chosen to represent and identify the committee, the school and specifically the area of Technical-VocationEducation within the school and all the citizens residing within the area served by Snow College at a recent meeting of the Citizens Advisory Committee -- al North Sanpete elk hunters get '67 permits Edfor the Technical-Vocatio- n ucation. There is much concern lately regarding the high percentage of unemployment in this country. Yet, the Manpower Research Council says in its July 1966 report that 4 of the total number of joos are unfilled because of lack of Technical Vocational training. Here the percentages of unemployed and of unfilled jobs are about the same. It seems that the problem is bringing the two together. In other words, training (or possibly individuals to fill the vacancies in industry services and occupations. The fact is that the gap is widening instead of narrowing. of It is estimated that 62 the nations workers are needed in the Technical-Vocationfield of work, yet less than of those entering post-hig- h 15 school education intend to prepare themselves for this type of employment. Instead. of those who continue 80 their education beyond high school intend to go out in the of professions where only 23 the nations employed are need- Few North Sanpete elk hunters drew out on the forthcoming hunt as announced by the Utah Fish and Game Department. Edwin B. Anderson of Fountain Green, DeVerne M. Johnson, Gary C. Johnson and Gregory F. Johnson also of that city, and Bert M. Porter of this city all drew permits for bulls on the Nebo hunting unit. Not els much interest was shown here because a bull elk was permit on the Manti-LaSavailable to anyone who would ed. To correct this imbalance we pay the price of the permit. must drew try to discover what magChester, Floyd Carter, mi(80 a permit for either sex on the net is pulling 57 nus 23) of our prospective Nebo unit. trainees away from the area of employment where our society needs them most. W. A. This imbalance seems to have been brought about mainly by of the professions and the poor image of the vocations. Walter Arno Rosenlof, 62, The new sponsor for Mt. Vocational Roy, former resident of Education is Pleasant, was dead of natural UNI-Te- c in TechniUnited causes August 26, 1967, on ar- cal Education. It is estimated rival at an American Fork hos- that eight million new jobs will pital. open up in this country within He was born October 29, 1904 the next five yeans. Those who in Mt. Pleasant, a son of Wal- accept these jobs must be ter and Josephine Anderson Ro trained for them. With a united senlof. He married Pearl Jolley effort the schools of America of Moroni September 22, 1926, will find these people (mostly in Manti with the marriage la- youths) identify them, train ter being solemnized in the Salt them and aid them in finding the job. Lake Temple. are Numerous scholarships Mrs. Rosenlof died July 19, inprovided for college-boun- d 1966. toas inducements dividuals was He a former Payson po lice officer, a plastic worker at ward preparing themselves for Hill Air Force Base. He was a the professions. This is as it member of DAV, FOE Lodge should be. However, there is am even greater need for 2472. for the technical, scholarships sons are and vocational, clerical Surviving and services daughters, Walter A., Salt Lake bound students. This group rep WalMrs. Kent N., Roy; City; resents 63 of the total emter (Betty) Ewell, Lindon, Utah need and the studployment County; Mrs. Melvin (Jo Ann) ents often come from families Rowe, Ogden; 14 grandchildren, of the low income group. a half brother, Peter N. Nielson Scholarships and scholarship of Payson. funds for this purpose should Funeral services were held be contributed to Snow College Wednesday in Ogden with bur- UNI-Te-c Scholarship fund and ial in Payson Cemetery. a receipt will be issued under that name. Contributions for Mr. and Mrs. Pete Neilson any amount will be graciously and son of Riverton visited accepted. over the weekend with Mr. and The UNI-Te- c Advisory ComMrs. Glen Thompson. mittee includes Reed C. Lasson, al Rosenlof paid respects Technical-- New manager of the First Security Bank branch in Mt. Pleasant, president; Jerry Wilkins, executive secretary, Sanpete Industrial Development Committee, vice president. Mrs. Nellie Ray Toone, Snow College, secretary; Lee R. Thompson, Snow College business manager, treasurer; Harry Mosher, owner of Ephraim and Manti trailer manufacturing plants; Vernon L. Kunz, cashier of Manti City Bank; Ralph Blaekham, manager Moroni Feed Co.; Larry Stahle, publisher of Ephraim and Manti papers; Dr. Kenneth Braith waite, Gunnison dentist; Snow College Director, Dr. Floyd S. Holm and Prof. Mer-r- it Bradley, Snow College. Wasatch Academy began the August 28, with an enrollment of 190 students, the largest they have had in years. The enrollment is about 15 more than last year, and is due to more rooms being made available in the reconstruction of Sage Dornntoiy which was severely damaged by fire last spring. At present junior class boys are living in the undergraduate dormitory and senior class boys are living in the infirmary until the dorm rooms are available. Students from many countries are enrolled at Wasatch this year. Students are registered from Turkey, Germany, Thailand, Peru, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Gambia, West Africa. There are several students from Hawaii as there have been in past years. Mt. Pleasant and Utah students are enrolled, as well as from states all across the United States. The first football game of the season will be played here next Friday, September 8, with Park City being the opponent, and not Greenriver as previously scheduled. fair winner Labor Day camp-ou- f planned by society ut Saturday there will be a tour along the famous Skyline Drive to study the watershed. The climax of the Saturday activities will be a Sheepherders chuckwagon supper. Following this a slide show will be presented by a ranger naturalist who will review some of the natural features of the area. Utah Nature Study Society is a organization with its roots reaching back into the great efforts of Dorothea D. Mulaik assisted by her husband, Dr. Mulaik who is a professor of Botany at the University of Utah. An organization dedicated to the great cause of conservation, the study of nature and its effect on society and the preservation of the beauty of the landscape. The Labor Day camp-ou- t will extend from Friday afternoon through Monday over the weekend. The meal and activities non-prof- it local-oriente- on. Drowning victim Services held grandson of Monday for Sanpete couple Jane Mr. ami Mrs. Morris Bunnell of Spring City left immediately for llovo early Saturday upon learning of the accidental death of their small grandson. The little boy. g apparently out for an walk, fell into an irrigation ditch near his home and drowned Saturday, August 26. E. earlv-mornin- Trooper Ned Deuel, Utah Highway Patrol, identified the boy as John Winterton, son of Doyle and Donna Bunnell Winterton, 4321 North 100 East. Provo. The little boys body was found lodged in a headgate in wide canal about the five-foa mile from his home Saturday just after 9 a.m. Trooper Deuel said the body was found by Clair J. Pierce, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pierce. The youth was among a growing number of searchers called out when the child was discovered missing from his home. The trooper said Charles Headman, a Provo City employee working in the area adh reministered suscitation until a physician and ambulance arrived. Trooper Deuel said a plank bridges the canal behind the boys home and it is thought he may have been trying to walk across the canal when he fell. The boy was born September 2, 1965, at Provo. He is survived by his parents, a sister, Vickie, brother, Mark B., grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Bunnell, Spring City, and Mrs. Maud Winter-to- n Giles, Charleston. Funeral services were held on Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the Edge-moFirst LDS Ward Chapel. Burial was in East Lawn Mem orial Cemetery. Coates Funeral services were held on Monday afternoon in Mt. PleasLDS ward ant chapel for Mrs Jane Elizabeth Shelley Coates, 85, who died August 24, 1967, in a local nursing home of natural causes. She was born January 25, 1882 in American Fork, a daughter of Samuel Levi and Marian Burnside Shelley. She mariied John Alma Coates on August 24, 1904, in Manti. The marriage was solemnized in the Manti LDS Temple July 18, 1905. Mr. Coates died in 1939. Mrs. Coates served as president of the Mountainville ward Relief Society for two years and was a visiting teacher for many years. Surviving are two sons, Marvin L. Coates, Mt. Pleasant; Vearl R. Coates, Fairview; 10 First-Fourt- two-year-o- A stunt program has been planned according to Talula Nelson, captain of the Mt. Pleasant Music PUP ininp will be furnished by the North Sanpete high school band and Mayor Calvin Jcppson will be The dedicatory the speaker pi av er will be given by Rex Hnfen. Following the program a tour of the relic ball well be held and refreshments wU be served. The marker is built of white niarbelized brick and cement ami is topped by the old bell taken from the Hamilton school when it was torn down. h state. Ronald Jackson home on visit nt from Vietnam Pfc. Ronald E. Jackson was visiting friends in this area this week after returning the preh vious Saturday from a tour of duty with the 1st Air Cavalry Division in iVet-na- Funeral held for nine-mont- elderly woman Impressive funeral services Ason of Mr. and Mrs. Lorn were held last Thursday, AugJackson, who are now living ust 24, in the Fairview North at Scofield, he walked in on his Ward Chapel for Mrs. Della parents the previous Saturday Hurst Brady, 71, of Fairview. as a surprise. who died of natural causes in Due to a knee injury he had the Sanpete Valley LDS Hosbeen under treatment in a hos- pital at Mt. Pleasant on Augpital in Japan for the past ust 21, 1967. month. He reports to Fort Ord. California, in about two weeks and will spend the remainder of his time (ntil May, 1968) in the States. ities, parks and flood control b. encouraging the facilities; deelopment of effective industrial development groups, plan ning commissions and other community organizations; c. improving the systems of communication and transportation so that its residents will be more easily able to interact with the outside areas, thereby encouraging and speeding up development. 5. Increase the quality and expand the opportunities of the human resources in the district by, a. improving the education available to everyone, including adults (as in l draining programs); b. increasing the ease of access of all residents to employment and other opportunities by reducing ethic and other discrimination. Services were under direction North Ward bishopric with Bishop Lawrence Larsen conducting. The family prayer was offered by Myron Tucker; prelude and postlude music was by Louise Spencer; hymn, combined Fairview choir directed by N. Stanley Brady; invocation, llilden Tucker; speaker, Hugh Hurst; vocal solo. Floyd Young accompanied by Evelyn Terry; Berthed Howell; respeaker. marks, Bishop Lawrence Larsen; hymn. Fairview choir; benediction, Lyndon Graham. The dedication of the grave as pronounced by Steven Eric ksen. Melvin Winkler, Vernon Winkler, Albert Winkler, Rodney Coates, Roger Christensen and Steven Schurc served as pallbearers. Interment was in Kan view City Cemetery directed by of the Funeral Two plaques arc placed on the marker; one honors the bell and the other honors the signing of the final peace treaty tiding the Black Hawk War, September 7, 1872 Former resident services held Funeral services were held Wednesday morning in Holla day Fourteenth LDS Ward Chapel for Reed Quintin Clark, former Mt. Pleasant resident, who died in a Salt Lake City hospital of natural causes August 1967. 27, He was born in Mt. Pleasant February 21, 1908, a son of Ferdinand and Hannah Chris tensen Clark. He married Muriel Syndergaard February 15 1935, in the Salt Lake Temple He was a school teacher teaching at Oakwood, Millereek William Penn and Howard R Driggs Elementary Schools in Salt Lake City. Surviving are his widow and the following sons and daughters, Dennis R., Barry W., Mrs. Sheryl Olson and Mrs. Robyn Padgen, all of Salt Lake City; four grandchildren, a brother, Arthur Clark, Salt Lake City, and sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Bag-leKoosharem; Mrs. Christy Robinson, Spanish Fork; Mrs. Zina Madsen, Springville; Mrs. Ruth Reynolds, Provo. In his early years Mr. Clark was a violinist of note performing at many local functions. y, ot are under the chairmanship of Mrs. Shirley Mendenhall, her sister, Mrs. Mary Lyle Peterson assisted by Golden G. Sanderson. Enthusiastic response is expected to an invitation to visit the Fairview Museum during their visit to this section of the Lebanese commander to attack Israel. iml,i r 'I lui 'a live 10c per copy mouth-to-mout- director named by Central Utah Resource Development group Rudolph S. Pace. Richfield, also conducts research and plan- officially designated by EDA has been named as the new dir- ning directed toward improving on the recommendation of the ector of the Central Utah Re- social and economic opportunity State of Utah. The goals of the Economic source Development Association by mobilizing personal resourcaccording to an announcement es and combating community Development District program One imoprtant are to 1. decrease unemployby J. H. Springer, president of deterioration. function of the director will be ment within each district, parthe board. During the past year, Mr. to coordinate the programs of ticularly in those areas where Pace has served as the assist- the Office of Economic Oppor- it has been highest in relation ant director and project director tunity and the Economic De- to the labor force; 2. increase with the Central Utah Resource velopment Administration under family incomes within each dis trict, particularly among those Development Association. In his one organization and staff. The region consisting of Juab families with incomes of less capacity as project director of tourism he was recently ap- Millard, Sanpete, Sevier, Wayne than $3,000 per year; 3. estabpointed regional vice president and Piute Counties is being con- lish more stable and diversified of Utahns Inc. for Panorama-land- . sidered by the Economic Devel- district economics by, a. enlargas an ing the export-oriente- d sectors This area includes Wayne, opment Administration Economic Conn District. Sevier and Piute Development by attracting new firms and inSanpete, An Economic Development Dis stitutions, and expanding and ties. Among the purposes of the trict is a group of adjacent improving existing ones; b. im organization are to establish, counties or areas which is the proving the efficiency and efd sec operate or delegate community proper size to permit effective fectiveness of action programs to prevent and economic planning and (level tors. 4. alleviate poverty and its causes opment; contain at least two Improve each districts through an educational program redevelopment areas (Juab and basic environments by, a. creatand understanding the needs of Sanpete), ineludes an Economic ing adequate water facilities, the people. The organization Development Center, has been housing, sewerage systems, util rn.7 The m.u ker that has been erected by the Mt. Pleasant and Hambleton Daughters of Utah Pioneer Camps mi the property of the Mt Pleasant Pioneer Historical Association on State Street will be dedicated on Thursday, September 7 Time has been set for 4 p m it is planned to have the ami John M interton Pioneer Assoiiation Rein- Hall . . droll ns in ditch open to the public Horn 2 pm 1967. Lillie Wise is Mr. and Mrs. Morris Seely and family of California are spending two weeks here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ruel Mrs. Lillie Wise, Mt. PleasH. Seely. ant, won a sweepstakes award in the home arts division at the Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Larsen Utah State Fair. and sons, Bruce and Wayne, Mrs. Wise won the award on vacationed last week in San a hairpin lace afghan. Francisco, the Redwoods and She also won second, third along the Oregon Coast to and fourth places on rugs she had entered. Portland. People from over the state are expected to converg in the mountain area of Fairview canLayon to enjoy the three-da- y held annualbor Day Camp-oly by the Utah Nature Study Society. This is an all family event for the children and the young people. For those arriving on Friday, there will be a campfire program of stories, singing and good fellowship. 1, Marker dedication set Saturday, September 7 school year Monday, NI-Te- 1.M1U R Honors pioneers Wasatch draws e I was the new name chosen to represent and identify the Snow College Comn mittee and area of Technieal-Voeatio- n at a recent meeting. Left to right are si I'l J -- .. ;7 hm Jane E. Shelly Coates . . . lived 85 years grandchildren; 11 great grandand the following children M. John brothers, Shelley, William L. Idaho; Nampa, Shelley, David A. Sheley and Jess Shelley, all of Mt. Peasant. Edgar E. Lasson, bishop of the First ward, conducted the services. Prayer at the mortuary was by John Shelley; prelude and postlude music, Gwen Shelley; invocation, Ivan Shelley; speakers, R. L. Row'e and Leslie Shelley; tribute, LaRue Burnside; song by choir; vocal duet, Brian and Hal Shelley, accompanied by Gwen Shelley; benediction. Dale Shelley. Pallbearers were Leland Coates, Bryce Coates, Dennis Coates, Rodney Coates, Harry Burnside, Steve Shurz. Burial was in Mt. Pleasant City cemetery directed by the Jacobs Mortuary. Elmer Shelley dedicated the grave. Camp Hambleton Daughters of Utah Pioneers will hold their first meeting of the season on Wednesday, September 6 at 7:30 p.m. at the civic center in the library basement. Mrs. Ruth Jones, captain will be in charge. Salt is used in candy mak ing because the salt brings out the sweetness of the sugar. County officers commended on police effort A letter dated 23 August from ttie office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Salt Rake City and written to County Commissioner Clifford Black-hacommends the high quality of Sanpete County officers. The letter, written by Earl M. Dalness, special agent in Chicago, reads as follows: On August 3, 1967, investireflectgation at Ephraim, ed that a deserter from the military service was in the Ephraim area and was apparently hiding out in that area. He was subsequently observed by officers and chased up Ephraim Canyon where he was stopped and taken into custody. At the time of his apprehension, the desterter had exhibited a show of force with a loaded weapon. His final arrest was participated in by Sheriff Grant Larson, Manti, Trooper Bert Willden of the Utah Highway Patrol, and City Marshal Don Reid of Ephraim. The cooperation and alertness of all officers in causing this subjects apprehension without serious incident is certainly to be commended. Such cooperation and alert police action reflects the high quality of all our police officers. Priesthood party Saturday night A North Sanpete Stake Priesthood Party will be held Saturday night at 7:30 at the stake house in Mt. Pleasant. Invited to attend are all Priesthood members and wives, all Aaronic Priesthood Adult members and wives and widows of Melchizedek Priesthood bearers. The party is sponsored by the high priest quorum. ek Wales man selected on Utah National Guard Rifle Team Staff Sargeant Rex Christen- Wales, is a member of Utahs National Guard Rifle Team which is competing at Camp Perry, Port Clinton, Ohio, in the nations stiffest small arms competition in the 1967 National Rifle Matches. SSgt. Christensen, a member of the Mt. Pleasant unit of the National Guard, is a son of the late DeLiel Christensen. Wales, and Mrs. Ada C. Oldroyd, Nephi. The Guardsmen will compete as a team against over 40 other Guard teams as well as numer sen, ous military, police and civilian The individual aggregations. members also will fire in competition with some 2,500 other individual marksmen registered in the matches, each x'ying for highly coveted trophies, medals, plaques and the traditional National Rifle Association silverware. In addition, many will be striving for the elusive legs which are required to earn the in the highest classification shooting world, that of tinguished Rifleman." Home Mr and Mrs. louis Kay took their grandchildren. Man and J. C. Melxan to Salt Lake City on Wednesday to put them on a plane to return to their home in Portland. Oregon. The McLean children, son and daughter of the former garct Kay had spent a week with their grandparents Comprising the Utah National Guard Kille Team this year are (kneeling) left to right, SSgt. Darn in lope, Sandy: MO Gail Oldham, Sandy; SSgl Ellis Hunt, St. George; Sgt. Major Carl Corbin and Spa Tommy Black, both of Salt Like City, and (stand ing) CWO Wallace I)e ey, Murray; 1st Sgt. David Brough, Logan; Capt. Richard J.inline. Col. Morgan lligha, 2nd l.t. Lirry Fillmore, all of Salt Lake City: SSgt. Ilex Christensen, Males; Spa Michael Black and Sw Maurice Nielson, both Salt Lake City. |