OCR Text |
Show Briefs l ABOUT PEOPLE E YOU KNOW i j Gene Mayer, who drove his ! mother to California to spend 'he winter, ran into heavy snow and stormy weather Wednesday evening and was unable to 1 reach Milford in time for the j first session, of the new city council. So, with the streets covered with snow and the airport air-port runwaysadly in need of a snowplowing, the' councilmen handed him the task of overseeing oversee-ing operation and upkeep of the airport, and keeping the streets, alleys and sidewalks clean and in good repair. Ira Daniels, California's gift to the Milford Valley potato industry, in-dustry, breezed into town Wednesday Wed-nesday to pay .off his. Rose Bowl bets. - King Morris, the guy who collects the dough for the county coun-ty to pay its bills, was in Milford Mil-ford Tuesday helping Marj Schramm issue 1950 auto tags. Telluride's Paul Ashworth, Clif McShane, and Mr. Ash-worth's Ash-worth's son were recent business busi-ness visitors in Milford. Clif is getting to be a stranger after his promotion to assistant general gen-eral manager of the company, which made it necessary for him to move to Richfield. Sam and Irma Cline left Sunday Sun-day for Los Angeles, arriving in time to catch a television broadcast broad-cast of the Rose Bowl game. Friends who saw Marion Walker turn green as Kentucky missed the try for point after touchdown in their Bowl game Monday, didn't expect to see him up and around for several days. Marion is a former grid star who helped make an earlier Kentucky team famous. Mayor Kirk and Councilman Johnson lent official Milford representation to the throng that jammed Pasadena for the. Rose Bowl game. J. J. Sullivan, formerly of Milford, is doing all right for himself as mine superintendent of the Sunshine Gold Mine near Redding, Calif. Mr. James H. Wrenn, formerly skipper at the Horn Silver for Metal Producers, Produc-ers, mailed us the front cover of the Mining and Industrial News for December, and Mr. Sullivan's picture just about took up the whole front page. Jim says that much rehabilitation rehabili-tation and underground development devel-opment work was necessary to bring production up from "almost "al-most zero to more than 100 tons a day," and they are now kicking kick-ing production up to 150 tons daily, and gives Mr. Sullivan credit for particularly outstand--ing accomplishments. Another Beaver County man, I Morgan Evans, is employed at the Sunshine mine as a mechanic. mech-anic. j Jim Brannon received word I this week that his 17-year-old brother, Jack Brannon, of Bloomfield, Ind., has been , "signed up" by the Brooklyn Dodgers. Jim played a pretty good "hot corner" for the White Market team a couple of years ago, and the talent seems to run in the family. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hughes and Vernon left Christmas Eve for Southern California, returning return-ing last Saturday and "glad to be back." Marion said he preferred pre-ferred the cold weather to the Southern Cal fog, and swore they only saw the sun once while they were away. Wallace Hughes of Kemmerer, Wyo., joined his parents in California. A wonderful Christmas was enjoyed at the David Glenn home this year. All four sons, including the twins, Bruce and Donald, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Glenn of Salt Lake, and Robert, I were home for the. holidays. On Christmas Day the family was joined by Mrs. Glenn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George C. McDonald, Mc-Donald, and Mr. Glenn's mother, moth-er, Mrs. Susan Glenn. Last Friday Mr. and Mrs. Glenn returned re-turned to Salt Lake with their sons, and Bruce left for Fort Monmouth, N. J., and Donald for Scott Air Force Base, 111. |