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Show Sun Chronicle 15, 1975 Thursday, May Weber County Hospital joins in observances 3 0SsEsf The inscription on the Elks Youth Awards read: American For I.eadership plication Outstanding of through apinitiative, organizational ability and by exerting influence on others to honor our American Heritage and Patriotism and Citizenship Appreciation as demonstrated by interest in and concern about our cherished of privileges citizenship under constituted government, participation in community activities, and by personal perserverance, resourcefulness integrity; and sense of honor has demonstrated our American youth will preserve our i) Randal Quarles. Roy High, savings Ixind, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Quarles, 5220 freedom. Recipients of these awards presented by the Hoy Elks during the past year include: Kelly ,J. Flint, Layton High, $125 savings bond, son of Mr. and Mrs. 1,. Jay Flint, 24 VV. Gentile, heritage of Jeanette tiering, S, 2425 Roy High, savings bond, daughter and Mrs LeKoy V JtiO'.l 5ii5o S Kov Goring, Douglas Bates, Clearfield High. $ DM) Savings bond, son of Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Rates, 851 N. 250 VV Sunset. Linda Brady, Clearfield High, $100 savings bond, Mr. , of Mr Earl Brady, Clinton. 2381 arid N. 770 Roy. , As part of National Hospital Week we would like to acquaint the readers with two volunteers at Weber County Hospital who contribute much to the smooth gaily routine of Weber County Gering High, $50 savings bond, daughter of Mr and Mrs KaCsuski Ray Sugimoio, 7144 VV. Mrs. 5ti;50 S., Rov The Roy Elks salute these outstanding American Youth. VV., Benefit scsie of U of U compus features crofts A benefit sale of American Indian arts and crafts valued id $250,000 will be held May 17 through June 1 at the Utah Museum of Natural History on the University of Utah campus. The collection includes jewelry, pottery, blankets, sand paintings, photographs and other objects made by American Indian craftsmen. It is being presented by Jackson Clark Jr. of the Jackson David Company, Durango, a Colorado, member of the United Indian Traders Association. Clark is a nationally recognized authority on Indian arts and crafts. to Donald Hague, museum director. The exhibit will show' works from and Navajo craftsmen; pueblo pottery from the Santo Domingo, Santa Clara, San Ildefonso and Hopi; and photographs of the early Navajo by Lisle Updike and William Pennington, represented Hopi, Zuni After a May 16 evening preview for invited guests, the sale will be open to the public from 9:30 a m. to 5:30 p.m. daily art silvers mithing in objects in the display will be available for purchase with proceeds to be applied to the Museums support and programs. The sale is sponsored by the Associates of the Utah Museum of Natural History. Demonstrations of silversmithing and weaving and lectures on the display will be given weekend afternoons. including weekends and Memorial Day, ED e challenge to a Bicentennial horse race has been issued by Gov. Calvin L. A 700-mil- Dee Smith honored Intermountain grocery Dee executive Smith, president of the Smith's Management Corporation which operates 120 food stores in Utah, Idaho, Nevada and California including w ill be honored one in Roy by Food Industries Circle for the City of Hope at a testimonial dinner May 15 in Angeles. The City of Hope in Los Angeles provides patient care in cancer, leukemia, heart blood, respiratory, diabetes s and other disorders ot heredity and metabolism. Proceeds from the May dinner will testimonial establish the Dee Smith Cancer Research Fellowship at the City of Hope. Mr. Smith is being honored for his dedication to the grocery 15 business and those humanitarian principles he has expoused throughout his which are career synonymous with those of the medical and reseaerch center," said Eugene Walsh, president of Food Industries Circle. kl.KMvK H.OK L Vnd flowers are furnished Ohve and Mark 2955 W ashington lMwme Hampton to California Gov. Edmund G. Brown. The Governor's challenge, made on behalf of the Weber County Sheriff's Mounted Posse proposes a race in June 1976 from Salt Lake City to Calif.., along Sacramento, the original Pony Express route. No reply has been received from the California ' governor. In his May 8 letter to Governor Brown, Rampton noted, I hope you will agree that the Pony Express ride will involve people in a rededication of an important epoch in the development of miles per hour and take 42 hours to cover the distance. Long distance racing is nothing new for the Weber horse group. In 1954 the group won a challenge by a sheriffs posse in Kansas City, Kan., which called for a 604 miie race from Salt City to Colorado Springs, Colo., over the Pony Express route. The Posse wdn that race by covering their leg of the route in 34 hours. The original Pony Express was simply a way to speed up the mail. A group of 80 riders, 16 to 18 years old, rode wld Mustangs along the route. Due's victims are children about 30 percent of the time; seme 3.570 youngsters tbroiiL'h aue 15 perish from ice;, eh ;, ear. It is estimated Last 25 percent of these tiagedie.- - take place w'hen . wiry fellows not over 18 years of age. Must be expert riders, willing to risk death daily; orphans preferred. Wages 25 dollars a week. Buffalo Bill Cody was one of the first to ride. The average ride was 45 miles, but Cody reportedly went 384 miles when the Indians burned several of the relay stations where riders got fresh horses. The last ride ended in October 1861, 18 months after it had begun. During its lifetime, 30, 000 pieces of mail later at $5 per ounce reduced to $1 a half ounce had traveled 65,000 miles. The ride in 1976 is an officially sponsored project of Utah American the 1 ' all Representative, and this means that she spends several hours on another day of the week in contacting the patients, chatting with them and ascertaining if they have any small problems which can be solved by the Pink Ladies or in some other way. She also follows-u- p on the patients who have been released from the hospital, contacting them by telephone to find out how they are progressing. As if this were not enough, be. Each child they might Betty also does other with the was given a Green Circle volunteer work cookie to symbolize what they Information and Referral had learned. Program for Davis County As the friendship day Senior Citizens. She does arrived, each child in the telephoning to help in inschool made a Green circle troducing this new program link with his name on and to the senior citizens. She is each link was joined together active in church work, and in the classroom. The entire one wonders what further studentbody then moved search might uncover in the outside to the playground and way of unselfish activity on each classroom chain was her part. a joined together to symbolize Betty has been and most the friendship of everyone. schoolteacher The Green Circle is green in recently worked as a medical color because it is always secretary at the hospital at growing. The huge chain is Hill Air Force Base. Doubnow hanging in the main hall tless this is one cause of her and her of the school for everyone to understanding see. rapport with sick people. Klome H Chaffin GTA Chief Clerk Soroptomist THURSDAY FRIDAY m.oon is "O gixut, to Max ere er a! C l,pcys Farmington a z Phi dips, I avion. ' 'ourse i t mington Lower, and Smith and Morehouse all have record snow packs with 26.9, 46.0, 41.8, and 17.7 inches of made water content respectively. These figures represent Mtes. 220, 146, 197, I. Sua.ii.il, poor t' a r- - and 227 percent average for each respective course. Our records go back to 1951. Previous high for Parley of May 1 Canyon Summit was 23.1 inches of water in 1952. Farmington Upper 45.0 inches in 1952, Farmington Lower 37.3 inches in 1952, and SATURDAY ! P U rwv Provo Wafer supply still reported as good TUESDAY Oliver Reed Henry Williams, Jr Provo Smith and recorded 16.5 Morehouse inches of water Kaquel COLOR Its all new s STARTING MAY 24th OPEN 1:00 P. M. DAILY Weber Basin Conservancy District has been releasing water from their mountain reservoirs for about a month to make space for spring runoff control. They have released all of the April runoff plus about 48,000 acre feet of stored water. Mother Nature with her temperatures, winds and storms will control the rate of runoff. High streams flow and flooding are expected. The telemetry readings from the snow pillow at Farmington upper snow course May 6 show another 1.7 inches of water not figured ,n above. The power of our people is the music in our song. It may be the age of automation, but its still people, much more than computers, that keep our railroad humming. Each day, we go to work in tune with the needs of people like you, the people of Utah. We see that the goods you need get delivered, on time and intact. And then we see that your copper, oil, steel and food products get delivered to people in other parts of the country. We re the Union Pacific, and if you've been looking at us as miles and miles of cold, impersonal railroad cars, we suggest you look again. And look deeper. Youll see a vital form of transportation, with vital people at work for you delivering all types of goods for all types of needs. People Power. It's the We caon big Youth Most Valuable Student. We are very proud of these volunteers, as we are of all the ladies and young ladies who give their time and loving care to the hospital. &es Cashier , the Elks National Foundation Salt Lake City Bill Burns Daylight PiCL Clerk of Citizenship Award and the Erma Jean Oten Timekeeper Ogden Gering graduating class at Roy High School this year, has been a Candy Striper at the hospital for three years. The smiling faces and cheerful voices of the Candy Stripers as they do various tasks around the hospital are very welcome to the patients. Jeannette has managed to give many hours to the hospital while participating in numerous other activities. She is a member of Jobs Daughters, Girl Scouts, was a delegate from Utah to Science Fair International, was a State Science Sterling a Young Scholar, Americans team member, a representative to Model United Nations, secretary to the National Honor Society. She belongs to Interact, the American Field Service, Key Club, Les Desmoiselles de Ballet, Ogden Symphony Debs, and is enrolled in Freshman Year of College on the High School Campus program. She won the the Surplus property bidding Tmm - Kids 50 cents ment. She is also Patient Contact Jeannette valedictorian animals loved and respected young children are alone or him because of what he had w .thou1 proper supervision. done for them. But, the Chirkendoose told a!! the animals he did not want to be liked for what he had done for them but only for being himself. When children are taught human relations in this way it is easier to understand children Rev Bicentennial should be friends with No funds were everyone, no matter what Con, color, nationality or creed requ in 1968. L Adults $1.25 then barnyard, advertisement in a San Francisco paper said. Wanted: Young, skinny, -- Tuesday is Ladies Night Betty Boone One SUNDAY-M0N0A- 5637 S. 1900 W., Roy 4 Phone the above statement, Betty Boone, (Mrs. Eugene Boone), from Sunset, is a past president of the Volunteer Auxiliary at the hospital, and in the last six years she has given almost 1500 hours of service to the hospital and the patients. On Tuesdays she assists the patients in wheel chairs to and from the Physical Therapy Depart- Ike WEDNESDAY Theatne 16 average approximately Utah team Roy 773-090- about 40 horses to cover the distance with each horse going between 1 and 3 miles before being ferried ahead to another segment of the race. The riders plan to communication.. The proposal calls for a to begin in Sacramento and race toward Salt Lake City. A California team w ill begin in Salt Lake and go toward California. The route would begin in Salt Lake and go through Tooele County toward the Nevada border. In Nevada the riders would roughly parallel U.S. 50 through the towns of Ely, Austin and Carson City before crossing the California border over Dormers Pass and dropping down into Sacramento. In 1860, the Pony Express route stretched 1.900 miles from St. Joseph, Mo., to Sacramento and took 10 days to ride. The Weber County group expects to take just over 40 hours to do the Salt Lake to Sacramento portion. "Of course well be going much faster than the original Pony Express riders went," Dr, William Shurtleff, an Ogden dentist and project spokesman, said. We'll use The students of North Park school have been participating in the National PTA Green Circle program during the past school year. On May 2 a special Friendship day was held at the school culminating all the children had learned. According to chairman, Fran Brown, during the year each classroom was told the story of the "Chirkendoose. This particular animal was the combination of a chicken, a duck, a goose and a turkey. All the animals in the bar-- r vard wanted nothing to do wish him because he was so dd and different hence, they cast him out. Then one day he saved all their lives by warning them of a fox in the Jementary according All Hospital in Roy and who are a testimonial to the truth of Green Circle held of North Pork Mary .Jane Sugunoto, Rev , daughter VV Ann Taggart, Clearfield High, $75 savings bond, daughter of Mr. and Mis. Blain Taggart. 1120 E 1050 S Clearfield Bruce C Edwards, Lectori High, $50 savings Ixind. 'on of Ml and Mis. James Ed .cards, D.i Vickie Lane, ( 'learfield $125 of If you want to get something done, send a busy poison to do it. $75 reason why the Union Pacific railroad people |