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Show thy Ceumidl Derails fee CeIebo,aGiini Plans were discussed for the annual Harvest Days and Homecoming Celebration to be held at regular city September council meeting Monday even4-- 7 ing. Volumn 77 Number 30 PAYSON, UTAH Aug. 4 is only District, Teachers agree on Contract Wednes. Day, Agents Named agents were Registration released this week by Mark Boyack, county clerk. There is only one registration day, Tuesday, August 4, prior to the primary. The primary election will be held Tuesday, Negotiations were completed General institute will be held for renewal of teacher contracts in the Spanish Fork High by Nebo School District and School on August 26, beginning the opening of school. Nebo Teachers Association. Russell Superintendent Stansfield said yesterday that contracts and placements were mailed Wednesday afernoon. School will be opened as scheduled next month. 11. Registration agents are Pay-so- n First District, Annie Second, Mrs Norman Broadhead; Third, Lucille Taylor; Fourth, Echo Durrant; Fifth, Barbara Leatham; Sixth (West Mountain) Gladys J. Larson; Spring Lake, Cecil S. Feery. Santaquin, Dist. 1, Olive Greenhalgh; Dist. 2, Blanche Howard; Genola, Evelyn N. Larson; Goshen, Vilda Kay; Elberta, Marguerite Waterbury. Egg-ertso- n; GO TO HOLLAND ON WORK MISSION Darrell Zeeman and his family will leave early in August to fill a work mission for the LDS Church. Pictured, left to right, are Helena Zeeman,, Raymond, Jeffery, front, Lynette, Ronald, back, and Darrell Zeeman. Darrell Zeeman will Fulfill Work Mission in Holland Family Night to be Sponsored - at Swimming revived this week at the Pay-soMunicipal swimming hole. Ma and Pa and all the kids can come swimmin on Thursday evenings from 5 'till 8 p.m. for only a dollar. All members of the pool staff would like to thank the students and, parents for their patience during the reorganization this week. All lessosn are taught on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday each week with the exception of the 1:00 oclock beginners class this class is held on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday." There are still many nights available for groups who wish to rent the pool. Anyone wanting the pool for the evening for more may phone information. n 5 M Men, Gleaners Plan PG Party Program in Park Ward Sun . Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Camp Sego Lily, presented the program in the Sunday evening Sacrament services in the Park Ward last week. Captain Bessie Naylor introduced the numbers on the program. Salute to the American and Utah State flags was led by Scout Laird Leatham. A musical duet was sung by Meeting on Streams Stocked for Good Holiday Fishing With the 24th of July and another three day week-en- d approaching, many waters in south Utah County will have been stocked with catchable size rainbow trout. Among these are Payson Reservoir, Maple and Red lakes; Payson, Thistle A meeting of citizens of District No. 5 of the Nebo School District was held last Wednesday evening. The meeting was held in the Santaquin City Hall to discuss the proposed redistricting of Nebo School District and to draw up a proposal, which they felt would be fair to all schools in the district. A proposal, they called the Al Proposal, which was so named for identification purposes, was drawn up. The study was not only voting wise, but area and compatibility as well. It was sent to Sterling Jones, county commissioner and committee chairman, LaVem Green and Lynn Crook. Mr. Crook, who was appointed to represent the school board from District No. 5, was in charge of the meeting. The group asked that before any proposal for redistricting is adopted that they be notified and be invited to meet with the County Commissioners. and Nebo creeks. Most water was drawn out Martha Tanner and her dau- of Box Reservoir about two Sunday Service for ghter, Barbara, accompanied weeks ago and it will receive 4--H by another duaghter, Marilyn. no more fish this Clubs Sunday year. Soldier A short history and incidents fish and creeks Starvation of pioneer families was given The annual Sunday quotas were reached about by Dorothy Christensen. Jane three weeks ago but there morning Service will be held and Mary Williams played a should still be a few fish in next Sunday morning, July 26, piano and organ duet. South these streams. Jerry Dahlberg at 7:00 a.m. at the Bandstand in Utah County vice captain, that Diamond Fork and the Payson Memorial Park. Jennie Elmer, spoke briefly reports members and their All Hobble Creek will be well followed by remarks from are parents especially invited stocked by the 24th of July. to be there and anyone else Bishop Merlynn Tanner. The A major portion of Utahs who is interested. G. Osmond closing song was sung by three granddaughters of Hazel upland game bird season for Dunford will be the speaker. 1964 will be set by the fish and Stewart and the benediction and game commission July 29, was given by Stena Daniels. Stake M Men Gleaners will participate in a party with Pleasant Grove next Wednesday. The party with the P. G. M Men and Gleaners will be in place of the regular Tuesday night class. It will be held at the Timpanogos Stake house party. and will be an Mismatching clothing will be the wear of the evening. ' The Payson group will meet at the Seminary at 6:15, transportation will be furnished under direction of the stake leaders, Mr. and Mrs. Monte Depsw. A charge of 25 cents will be made. Nebo Camp Gives Santaquin Holds Redistricting Spring Lake Ward will honor ed a call to serve on a work the Darrell Zeeman Family in mission for the LDS Church. Sacrament Service Sunday He will be a building supervisor for church building in evening. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Zeeman Holland. and four children will leave The program honoring the August 7 for the- Netherlands Zeemans will be held in the Pool where Mr. Zeeman has accept- - Spring Lake Ward Church beginning at 7 p.m. Family night swimming, at DUP old fashion prices, has been 465-906- 1964 It was approved that all events of the previous years wculd continue. Horse Races vi be held Saturday and Labor Day, parades will be Saurday at noon and Labor Day at 10 a.m. The Flower Show, Art Show, Home Art Show and clubs will also be again on the agenda this year. Mayor Eugene Hillman was requested to organize the committees for these events. Committees named included Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Pete Wilscn, parade chairman; invitations, Margaret Taylor and Sally Bale; advertising and specialty events, Max R. Warner; concessions, Lyndon Crook; and decorations, Cyril 11 Registration August THURSDAY, JULY 23, 4-- H 4-- H during the summer quarterly meeting of this policy making body. Expected to be set are the hunts for mouring doves, chuk-arHungarian partridge and grouse. The grouse species include sage, blue and ruffed. Field surveys are currently underway to evaluate annually production and status of populations in these species. The data from these surveys will be submitted to the commission for study prior to setting the hunting dates. Season for quail, pheasants and wild turkey will not be set until August 26, when field data concerning these birds has been collected for consideration by the commission in Dean G Wilson named setting the hunts. Nitrogen plant superintendent s, odd-ba- ll Know Your Law There is a Federal Statute, Title 18, U.S. Code Section 836, which became effective July 1, 1954, pertaining to the transportation of Fireworks into a , state prohibiting their sale and use. It states: otherwise when Whoever, in the course of continous interstate transportation though any state, transports Fireworks into any state or delivers them for transportation into any state, or attempts so to do, knowing that such fireworks are to be delivered, possessed, stored, transshipped, distributed, sold, or otherwise dealt with in a manner or for a use prohibited by the laws of such state specifically prohibiting or regulating the use of Fire works, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than one year, or both." Violations of this law come within the investigative jurisdiction of the FBI. . People, returning from vacation, transporting fireworks or firecrackers back into the state of Utah are in violation of the above stated Federal law. Superintendent Stansfield said in his letter to the teachers mailed with their contracts and placements, Nebos Board of Education is particularly proud of the program adopted during the spring of 1963 when salary negotiaotions were completed for a period of two years. There were those educators who stated that Nebo District would not be able to find the money to finance the ambitious salary schedule proposed. You will be happy to know that we are still in the black and intend to stay there. And yet, you will see tremendous changes in your buildings for the most part when you return to school this fall. Supplies will be more than adequate, some new furniture been added to most schools, and painting, lighting fixtures, draperies, acoustic tile (both floor and ceiling), etc., have been provided in an effort to better our educational 4-- Goshen to Hold Two-Da- y 24th July Celebration urday. Lynn Powell Assigned to Payson Jr. High N.bo School Board released information at their meeting Monday night on assignments of the two new principals of the district. Lynn A. Powell was assigned as principal of the Payson Junior High School and Clyde J. Lundell was named as head of the Spanish Fork Junior High The celebration will be sponsored by the Goshen Recreation committee and the Goshen Valley Riding Club. James Tab Fowler is chairman of to the Jaycees and to Dr. J. R. Hogan, chairman of the property committee, for further study. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gonzales requested that the city pay for serum necessary because their two-yeold child had been biten by a dog. The dog was disposed of before certain tests could be made, they said, and their doctor recommended that the child be given the shots. The matter ar was referred to the insurance company for a claim. Cyril Reynolds, city electrician, said it was time to order additional Christmas street decorations if new ones were to be purchased this year. On his recommendation, the council voted to buy 9 plastic lanterns at $27.50 each. Tour of Reservoirs Selby Dixon, chairman of the irrigation department, rep orted on a tour of the reservoirs in Payson Canyon with Mr. Lee Forest Service engineer, Harold Laird, ranger, and Paul O. Hurst, wfttermaster. Recommendations made following the inspection tour were that Red Lake should be enlarged, trees cut out of the dam at Winward Reservoir and that the pipe be replaced in the dam at the big reservoir at some date in the near future. The pipe shows signs of rusting out it has been in the dam for 63 years, Mr. Dixon said. the recreation committee. Activities planned for the celebration will include childrens and adult races, sports and games with prizes for all. These events will begin at 10 a.m. At 2 p.m., there will be ball games in the ball park. The riding club will sponsor School. an amateur rodeo both Friday and Saturday night. The rodeos will be both amateur and Junior rodeos. Neil Thomas is chairman of the rodoes. Youngsters desiring to ride may sign up before noon on Friday with Owen Horton. The rodeo producer is Nelson and Allred from Cleveland. According to Dick Steele, the stock and riders for the rodeo are better than amateur and includes some brahma bulls. The ball games will be a married and single womens soft ball game, Little League game between Kirks team from Clover and Goshen Little League team. Mothers of the ball players' will have the concession stand during the day time and the Goshen Valley Riding Club will sell food at the rodeo G. Osmond Dunford . . . moves both evenings. gromds to Colorado next week. pro- grams Your Board of Education has expressed faith in Nebos teachers time and time again, in that they have always settled their problems amicably Thus, by sending these contracts out now, and your signing and returning them, the Boards faith and trust in you has again been confirmed. Knowing that I, also commend you for your faithfulness and your sense of honor. During the past year, various agencies have produced massive compilations of facts, statistics, and opinions and assembled them in impressive arrays of arguments; gut, in the end, they have produced only a few humhble truths. Payson Studonts to Take Part in Hill Cumorah Pageant Sharon Curtis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reid Curtis, and Sara Ann Stewart, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Max Stewart, left last Thursday, July 16, for Illinois, where they will participate in production of the Hill Cumorah Pageant. Both are BYU students and are making the trip by chartered bus with a group of other young people. They will spend four days at the Worlds Fair in New York. The Hill Cumorah Pageant, now 27 years old, is presented by more than 400 Mormon men and women on 25 stages on the slope of Hill Cumorah and draws an attendance of more than 100,000 spectators from all parts of the nation. G. Osmond Dunford accepts Denver Seminary Position Osmond Dunford, princiof the LDS Seminary in pal Payson, has been transferred to Denver. Mr. Dunford will be coordinator of early morning Seminary classes in the Denver district and will teach at the institute at the University of Denver. The Dunford family came to Payson June 5, 1945, when he was named principal of the for many years he was a member of the stake Sunday School board, teacher of the stake M Men and Gleaner Girls class, and was a teacher in the other organizations. At the present time, Mr. Dunford is a member of the Nebo Stake High Coun- G. cil. Mr. Dunford was elected mayor of Payson in November .... Report will be about 60 additional markers. The city purchases the marker and the pole and the local club will install the signs. The booths were referred Reynolds. A delegation for the Junior Goshen will hold a 24th Chamber of Commerce waited celebration on Friday July and Sat- Seminary here to suceed John F. Olsen. During the18 years Mr. Dunford served as principal he estimated that over 1800 students graduated from the local Seminary an average of 100 a year. The Seminary enrollment so increased under Mr. Dunfords direction that during the past year, there were three full time instructors and one part time. Teaching including the Terence Davis ' principal were Lars Bishop and Frank Herbert on the full Davis time basis and Wayne Haws, principal of the Junior High School Seminary, on the part to time basis. Two key management app- new steel process development Active in the church, he Mission ointments have been made at by using to greater advantage served as bishop of the Payson United States Steels Geneva Second Ward from 1946 to 1951, Elder Terence Davis, son of Works, it was announced to- the engineering design and of the production experience Mr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Davis, day by George A. Jedenoff, two Utah steel industry veter-answill give his welcome home general Santaquin Horse Wins superintendent at Genaddress in the Fifth Ward Sun- eva. Dr. Wilson was bom in Pay-so- n Reserve day evening, July 26, in the Champion Gordon former Bywater, and received a M. S. degree regular Sacrament meetihg superintendent of the Geneva in chemistry, mathematics and in Arabian Show n SL services. has been physics from Plant, Nitrogen Brigham Young Meeting begins at 7 p.m. named general supervisor-desig- n A stallion ,Yac-arHis Ph. D. was Universiy. Elder Davis has just comand Dean G. earned in fuel engineering, Robbins Darwin owned from by technology pleted a mission for the LDS Wilson, formerly the general the University of Utah. He has of Santaquin, won Reserve church in the French Mission. supervisor-coa- l processing and been with U. S. Steel since champion honors at the i chemistry at the Raw Materials 1957 when he joined the metHorse Show held at Music wakes the soul, and Research Laboratory, has been allurgical chemistry and in- Salt Lake County Fairgrounds lifts it high, and wings it with appointed to Mr Bywaters old spection division as a senior in Murray recently. sublme desires, and fits it to position. Both changes are metallurgist. Two years later horse was k The bespeak the Deity. effective today. he was promoted to chief shown with some 300 purebred Joseph Addison Mr. Jedenoff said the moves chemist and in I960 he was Arabian horses and The will strengthen Genevas posi- transferred to the Raw Mater- from throughout the western Procrastination says, next advantage we will take tion in the fast growning coal ials ' Laboratory. Dr. Wilson United States and Canada. chemicals field throughout the and his wife, Jacqueline, have The Robbins family has thoroughly. stabel of about eight horses. Shakespeare Intermountain area as well as five children: Terence on the council they requested the race programs again this year. The council gave the concession to the Jaycees. The group, which included Lane Balzly, president, Melvin Baker, past president, and Ronald Scott .also discussed the street marking project, and building booths in the boys dressing rooms at the municipal swimming pool. The Jaycees were authorized to go ahead and complete the street marking project which Dean Wilson named Supt. Geneva Nitrogen Plant Sunday o, two-year-o- ld gray-blac- half-Ara- LaNesta Chorus Names Officers Lovely flowers, soft lights from hurricane lamps and music beautiful Hawaiian made an impressive setting for the LaNesta Chorus summer party held last Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Jerry (Donna) Stewart. Members of the popular Pay-so- n ladies chorus met for a social evening combined with the business of electing new officers for the coming years activities. Guests dressed in native Muu Muus were seated on the ground at small low tables to enjoy the luau prepared for them by hostesses Mrs. Val Hogan, Mrs. Betty Winegar and Mrs. Erma Measom, outgoing officers. New officers who will serve for tha coming year are: Mrs. Betty Winegar, pres.; Mrs. Pauline Nelson, vice pres; and' Mrs. Doris Gasser, sec. Other officers will be selected later on. The annual Summer party for firemen and their wives was held Saturday at the Payson City Park. Twenty couples enjoyed a steak supper. Arrangements were in charge of Mrs. Dick Harmer and Mrs. Dee Dell Brown. taking office in January He served a four year term as mayor 1958 to 1961 He served as president of the Payson Kiwanis Club in 1955. Mrs. Dunford has also been active in the church and the of the Second ward Relief of the Second ward Relief Society, president of the Cultus Club and served as teacher in the auxiliary organizations. Mr. and Mrs. Dunford and their two youngest children will leave for Denver the later part of next week to make their home. The Dunfords are the parents of eight children, three of them were bom in Payson Barbara and Ann are moving to Denver. Ned will remain in Utah to attend the BYU this fall. The other five children are married. Bishop Named Principal Lars Bishop has been named the new principal of the Payson High School Seminary succeeding Mr. Dunford. Teaching with him will be Clinton Dan-zi- e and Hal Ferguson, and Mr. Haws will teach on the part time basis as he has done the past two years. 1957, 1958. ..... returns Ernest Olson from Indian Mission Ernest Olson to Speak in 2nd Ward Sunday Elder Ernest Olson, son of Garth Olson of Payson has recently returned from serving the LDS church in the Southwest Indian MissMr. and Mrs. ion. He will give his welcome home address Sunday evening, July 26, in the Second Ward church. Meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. Events of the "Week . FRIDAY, JULY 24 Goshen Celebration Genloa Ward Homecoming Payson American Legion Meeting SUNDAY, JULY 26 Welcome home Elder Terance Davis, Fifth Ward 7 p.m. Welcome home Elder Ernest Olson, Second Ward 7:30 p.m. Farewell Darrell Zeeman family, Spring Lake Ward 7 p.m. Nebo Stake Sunday School Preparation Meeting ' WEDNESDAY, JULY 29 Nebo Stake M Men and Gleaner Party, Pleasant |