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Show Around and About TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 196 Utah County, Utah Herald Column Makes Award to j UTAH COUNTY By MILDJIED B. HALL FR or. FR 3-85- 63 3-05- Provo's Lynn Jaeobsons and their three children chose a journey to Canada for their vacation. They visited in Swift Current, Saskatchewan with her sister, Mrs. Kenneth Nielson and husband who have recently returned from England and with her pars, ents, the Henry Folsoms at Alberta, also her two brothers, Calvin and Jack Folsoms and their families there. Hills-spring- Provo; Boy, Larry Chrisman, 11, has; won i a Brit ainnica Yearbook for sending hi riddles and jokes to the Herald's "Tell Me Why" column appearing today On the comic page. Larry is the ' son of Mr. and .i jvi s. Richard Chrisman,: 921 Larry 46 i dren, Graig. Genan and Grant Taylor of Hyde Park. All attended the farewell luau given the Majors California by friends. They also visited the Hobbs' son. Gordon and his fam ily at Norwalk. OREM A hung jury in Orem City Court resulted in no verdict in the case of Helen M. Cowley, 29, 445 N. 400 E., Orem, charged f f iKMiinciM:tniJy-&,.- Wolf a, 63, Box 886, Glendale, Calif., pleaded guilty to charges of following too close prior to an accident, and was fined $35 by Provo City Court. j going with them were grandchil- for Jules Jack j return to residence in Utah, at Pleasant Grove Young assistants . with driving under the influence of 820 W Provo. N. for . home intoxicating liquor. City Judge Darling Merrill Hermansen said no fursale. 180 North 1080 East, Provo. colA.: Leokum is author of the En route home to Denver, Colo., Also beautiful lot for sale, corner ther disposition has yet been on Friday morning were Mr. and of Cherry and Cedar. Call FR umn", a regular feature of the made of the case, pending moMrs. John Chrismer and their four tions Herald. counsel by FR involved. or legal (Adv.) children. They had stopped off in Provo to visit for two days with the Lynn Jacobsons as they were enroute to Denver after visiting on the west coast. chse-to-hoi A J Miss Marjie Bently was accompanied home to Provo by her family, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony I. Bentley, her sisters, Judy and Eleanor rnd brother, Ronnie, who drove down to Southern California to meet Margie after her summer .of employment as a stenographer in the Westwood area. The family vacationed there and along the way. Margie is slated for college this month. State Hospital Escapee Recaptured Land Transfer Discussed by City Commission City Court Lists Actions 11 3 DAILY HERALD Gale Anderson, 30, Salt Lake City, who escaped Aug. 27 from the Utah State Hospital by forcing an attendant. to unlock the door, has been apprehended and is back in custody, hospital offiThe Provo City Commission cials revealed today. He was captured after Salt Monday night discussed with Lake officers "staked out" his Almo Alger, 333 W. 500 N., a piece of property south of the Riverside Country Club and No decision was east of the Provo River. reached in Monday night. the Mr. Alger is interested The commission also briefly under an cre in size land y in an exchange for discussed the city's proposed The and other considerations. city which is set for y near the desires the a public hearing during next Monland area where the day night's commission meeting. is located. The E. Ashton has ordinance proposes , steps P. expressed in for the and the control of weeds within interest land, similar the the in some on private as well land limits has city reportedly as as desires the land. which area city city-own- ed right-of-wa- y. right-of-wa- weed-ordinan- ce right-of-wa- city-owne- d city-own-ed girl friend's home in Salt Lake City and nabbed bim there. He' offered no, resistance. Hospital authorities had classed him "potentially dangerous." Anderson, who was committed to the hospital after kidnapping two Salt Lake girls in an foray, threatened attendants with a coke bottle, ordered one of them to unlock the Ward Five door and let him out, and the attendant complied. Anderson then made his way down to the Provost School and threatened a teacher and her husband there working at night, demanding their car keys. They convinced him they had walked to the school, and he went to the nearby Beese-le- y Monument Works where he forced another couple from their all-nig- ht car, stole the vehicle, and doned it Canyon. Hospital authorities said attendants were undergoing an intensive training program designed to prevent recurrence of such an incident, Anderson has been returned to Ward Five. Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry b annoyed or feel tNo because of loose, wobbly false um longer teeth. FASTEETH. an Improved alkaont line (non-acipowder, sprinkled o they, your platea bold them firmer embarfeel more comfortable. Avoid rassment caused by loose platea. Get FASTEETH at any drug counter. Ul-a- d) (adv.) tour for me LAKE CITY, OGDEN AND PROVO Among visitors in Provo are Mr. and Mrs. Don Taylor and two children from San Jose, Calif. They are visiting with his father, B. D. Taylor and her sister, Mrs. Anthony 1. Bentley and the family. Mr. and Mrs. Tom (Alta) Thompson have returned to Sacramento, Calif. They were in Provo for the funeral of her father, William Frampton. Mrs. Charles R. Gossard opened her Orem home to a group of friends on Friday afternoon. After an luncheon a social afternoon was spent. all-he- Mr. and Mrs. Evan A. Griffiths and children, William, Jacqueline and Lis a, who had moved this summer from Orem expecting to make their home in St. George, have changed their plans and are now in their home in Orem again where they plan to remain. i Mrs. Golda P. Dozier of Provo, has .welcomed the arrival of her will be stationed for an undetermined length of time at the Dug-wa- y Mr. and Mrs. G. Lloyd Hobbs have been in LaHabra, Calif., where they helped to get their children, the J D (Joana) Major family on the road for their vJET out THE FAMILY CAR g hell-roarin- trek. officers a basis for planning, anyone wishing to make the trip is requested to notify a member of the chapter board, which includes, besides Professor Larson, Keith Melville, Eugene Campbell, Edith Y. Booth and Mrs. Claude Ashworth. J. C. Smith, cashier of the Milford State Bank and authority on the history of that region will accompany the tour to Frisco and Newhouse with a special lecture on their history. Frisco was the home of the Horn Silver Mine, one of the richest silver mines for the time it operated in the world. Newhouse was the basis of the fortune of Samuel Newhouse, early Utah financier who built the Newhouse Hotel and the Boston and Newhouse Buildings in Salt Lake City. To give j Traveling Abroad? VISIT THE NEW INTERNATIONAL DESK AT Deseret Travel Bureau it N. UNIV. AVE. FR some- day soon, take your fishing rods and plenty of film and get set to meet the Members of the Utah Valley Chapter, Utah State Historical Society, will make their annual his tory tour this weekend to the ghost mining sites of Frisco and once Newhouse boom towns of the Old West. Both are located in Beaver County a short distance west of today's Milford, and at one time Frisco was considered one of the toughest towns of the West. Largely overlooked in history (because g mining towns if they occurred in Utah tend to be played down in the state's history). Frisco at one time employed a sheriff who killed as many as six men on one Saturday night. Professor G. O. Larson, Utah Valley chapter president, said the official tour will start from the Park Motel in Milford at 10 a.m. Saturday. Many taking the trip plan to travel to Milford Friday night, said Professor Larson. The chanter president said members of the Sons of Utah Pioneers are invited to join the monster" - ioneer Country Recreation Land Sky--hi drive gives you and your family This 269-mil- e day or week-en- d a chance to explore some of northern Utah's most spectacular mountains. majestic forests, rugged gorges, colorful lakes and. to strike a fabulous lode of outdoor fun. (CLIP AND SAVE THIS TOUR) Proving Grounds. hell-roarin- tah's to son, SP5 Neal L. Meador, U. S. Army, who has been on duty for the past 13 months in Korea. He has been with the Army for the past six years and in Korea twice. History Buffs Plan Tour of Old Mining Towns on the way to find the missing usea w, picnic, fish and take pictures lp wonders of nature. You'll drive through impressive rock canyons and peaceful forests. You may glimpse waterfowl, deer and elk in their native habitats, gaze at lakes that shift color before your eyes, roam the trails of fur trappers, explore old ghost towns, discover one of the earth's oldest and oddest trees, and stop at state parks that feature water sports. Along the way, you can picnic or camp under lofty pines, firs and aspen, angle for trout in waters where world records have been set, look at one of the world's biggest Swiss cheese factories, and rub elbows with specters of the past that seem to need only a nudge to reawaken and thrill your family on one of Utah's most fascinating excursions. CITYStart at Om. SALT LAKE North Temple and Second West Streets (U.S. 89 brings you in from Provo), driving north on U.S. 91 ( Interstate 15). Your route takes you past oil refineries, hot springs, the amusement area of Lagoon, meadows, peach and cherry orchards, fruit and vegetable farms, and majestic views of the Wasatch Mountains and Great Salt Lake. In about 40 miles you will come to the city of ... 40m. OGDEN. This busy community with its beautiful parks, squares and Weber College campus, processes, packs arid ships agricul- tural productfrom the surrounding region. It is one of the nation's leading cattle and sheep marketing cen-- c ters. In Tabernacle Park, you can look at the GOODYEAR CABIN, built of Cottonwood logs in about 1844, It is thought to be Utah's oldest structure. During the last week in July, the Ogden Pioneer Days Celebration recaptures the mood of a bygone era in pageants, parades and j rodeos. If you'd like to inspect a fabulous collection of old guns including original models, drive south about four miles on U.S. 89 to the JOHN M. BROWNING ARMORY AND North takes you through MUSEUM (open week days). of Ogden, U.S. 91 more hot springs and country. Just south of Perry, fruit-vegetab- le a dirt road ambles westward to the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge, about 18 miles west. During the summer, this 65, preserve is the Mountain Rocky region's largest 000-ac- re wild fowl breeding area giving sanctuary to as many as 2,000,000 ducks and geese at times. Eleven miles north' on U.S. 91 is . . . 62m. BRIGHAM CITY. This city is rich in history, as you can see in the antique collection in the Relic Room of the County Courthouse, and a major fruit shipping center. You may want to visit THE SCHOOL, a major Indian boarding school which can be toured on weekdays, and the BOX ELDER INTER-MOUNTA- TABERNACLE, IN noteworthy for its architectural forms and Reuter organ. If you'd like to take an adven- turous mountain-climbin- motor g trip for panoramas of Salt Lake and Bear River Valleys plus a chunk of drive via Idaho, make the Mantua to inspiration point near the summit of Mt. Baldy. From Brigham City, your route, d climbs U.S. Sardine Canyon through the Wasatch Mountains, then crosses the Southern end of Cache Valley, an 16-m- ile 89-9- 1, sharp-walle- ancient lake bed. Along the way, spur roads lead to trout streams, such as Blacksmith Fork Creek, "petrified" beaver dams, limestone quarries and a refuge for grouse. It is about 25 miles to . . . 87m. LOGAN. The twin gray towers of the Mormon Temple domhome of the inate this Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Sciences, while in Logan the background 9,713-fotree-shad- ed ot head. In Peak rears its forest-fringe- d the old days, this was fur trappers' country; now it's farm and fun land, the former being verified in part by the nearby Amalga Cheese Factory, one of the world's biggest Swiss cheese plants. Northeast of the city, follow U.S. 89, a bonanza road for recreation artd scenery. A highlight is lovely LOGAN CANYON decorated with appealing cottonwoods, box elders, aspens and maples especially colorful in autumn, and rugged rock walls shooting sharply skyward. Here, from spring to fall, you can d, hike up the trail to the Jardine Juniper, largest of its kind. In cool Logan River pools you can fish for trout and try to beat the world's record hooked in these waters, a German brown trout. Deer and elk roam the surrounding woods, and peaceful picnic and camp sites en tice you to linger. From the summit, just before leaving CACHE NATIONAL FOREST, you scan a terrific vista that includes big Bear Lake plus large parts of Idaho and Wyoming. ZdS Sft Mantua nnnnn n WCU6II b . ... ..! ... O :YPine View:F .. jar ...... p.. . . . .. ' t j. TLdT .F R" ' t5 Scale of Miles s p to is 3,400-year-ol- 25-pou- It is 40 miles to nd . . . This small lies the west on farming community, 127m. GARDEN CITY. shore of Bear Lake which is half in Utah and half in Idaho. One mile north is Bear Lake State Park, a good place 30-mile-l- seven-mile-wi- de for boating, swimming, fishing, camping or picnicking. A .boating marina is under construction. The lake, with sandy beaches ringing its deep waters, is a kaleidoscope of marine colors that shift in shade and hue as you move about. Somewhere in its waters a "sea monster" used to lurk; apparently the beast died of old age, for it hasn't been sighted in the last 95 years. From here, Route e, 3 swings down along the south then runs through farm and cattle sections for 41 miles to . . . 168m. WOODRUFF. This is a farming settlement and one of the coldest spots in the state. It is your SeeAmerica Best. . .ByCar lake-shor- jjr f Qalt CL v 7 Interstate Highwiy Numbers oLQ Pifir LcmC Oily U.S. Highway Numbers I fjo 12 State Highway Numbers Approximate Mileages 52m?' turning off point onto Route ing colors add to the fascination of the drive. 39 westward back into Cache National Forest. Here, again, is a scenic route that abounds in recreational rewards. Soon you are rolling along the -bordered streamj of Walton Canyon where beavers like to build miles dams. In another half-dozyou come to the MONTE CRISTO campgrounds, where sites beckon you to stay awhile, be- 229m. OGDEN. Route 39 cruises into the east side of the city where you can take a look at sights you may have missed on the first part of willow- en pine-canopi- the loop. Follow U.S. 91 south to Salt Lake Gty or, for a slightly dif- : ferent way, drive down U.S. 89 ed which runs closer to the mountains. j fore winding up through fir and aspen forests almost to the top of 269m. SALT LAKE ot wealth of splendid outdoor recrea- -i tion, felt the inspiration of nature and benefited by the heritage of the past. bu'll find you and your family will talk about the trip for weeks, and the youngsters, like you, will be raring to go again. nd Huntsville. Past Huntsville, visit Pine View Reservoir favored for its fishing, boating and water skiing, take a look at the big dark seam of phosphate at Black Point, then head into the MOUNT. OGDEN GAME PRESERVE in Ogden Canyon where the road and river mountain-rimme- d squeeze through narrow, fluted stone cliffs several thousand feet high. Jagged monoliths and chang CITY. Back home, you'll feel refreshed with the experience of having seen some of Utah's scenic grandeur, enjoyeid a Monte Cristo Peak. Farther along, a side road leads to the silver ghost town of La Plata. You may like to buy a loaf of tasty stone-groubread at the Monastery in 9,138-fo- ' i i This series of .tour suggestions is published on behalf of your local service H station dealer by the American Petro- -i leum Institute-- to remind you that you see America best by car. ; aban- far up American Fork , , |