OCR Text |
Show Orem-Geneva Times Wednesday, August 3, 1994 Page 5 V JONATHAN K. BAYLESS Jonathan K. Bayless called to Italy Mission Elder Jonathan K Bayless, son of Jon and Lindsey Bayless of Lindon, has been called to serve in the Italy, Padova Mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Elder Bayless will Bpeak in sacrament meeting on August 7, at 9:00 a.m. at the Lindon Stake Center, 650 West 100 South. An open house will be held at the Bayless home after the meeting. All friends and family are invited. Elder Bayless is a 1993 graduate of Mountain View high School and Mountain View Seminary. Semi-nary. Benjamin Lawyer completes basic training Navy Seaman Recruit Benjamin Ben-jamin J. Lawyer, son of Micheal B. and Donna V. Lawyer, of Orem, recently completed basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, HI. During the cycle, recruits are taught general military subjects designed to prepare them for further fur-ther academic and on-the-job training in one of the Navy's 85 occupational fields. Studies include seamanship, close-order drill, naval history and first aid. Although the Navy is getting smaller, the state-of-the-art ships, aircraft and high tech systems sys-tems in today's fleet require bright, talented young men and women to operate them. The Navy has over 55,000 job openings open-ings this year, most of which include in-clude guaranteed training. SAVING FOR RETIREMENT: You can't afford to wait Social Security and your company retirement plan will probably provide only about half the income you'll need during retirement The rest must come from personal savings. At Edward D. Jones & Co., we can show you a variety of investment strategies that will help make your retirement dreams a reality. If you can't wait to retire, don't wait to start saving. Call or stop by today. STEVEN H.TOLLEY INVESTMENT REPRESENTATIVE 898 South State 27 Orem, Utah : (801)226-5125 S Edward D. Jones & Co. Present this coupon at Veteran's Memorial Pool & WaterslkJe Park, 500 North 450 West, Provo and receive a (1.00 discount off the purchase price of ONE ALL-DAY Waterslide Pass (Reg. $5.50). All waterside passes induce pod admission. Valid up to 4 people. Must have coupon. Expire 8-13-94 NOTE Children ages 7 and under must ride the waterslides with a person age 15 or older. Also, children ages 7 and under must be accompanied in the pool by a parent or responsible person 18 years of age or older. PROVO pV"N County Planning Com. recommend moratorium in agricultural zone The Utah County Planning Commission has voted to recommend recom-mend to the Utah County Commission Com-mission the adoption of a temporary tem-porary regulation prohibiting subdivisions in the A-l Agricultural Agricul-tural Zone for a six-month period and initiation of a study to develop a new master plan. The Planning Commission heard concerns about well and high ground water table levels, the accumulation of weeds on the unused parts of five-acre subdivisions, sub-divisions, and interference with the agricultural industry, which is intended to be protected by the A-l zone. Specifically, the Planning Commission cited nine critical concerns that led to their recommendation recom-mendation for a moratorium and new master plan: 1. Ground water protection. 2. Availability of culinary water. 3. Protection of watershed and water recharge areas. 4. Dealing with surface and subsurface drainage. 5. Soils capabilities. 6. Impacts on wildlife. 7. Flood plain hazards. 8. Costs of urbanization in rural areas which have no service Toiley to host seminar for busines owners and community leaders Steven H. Toiley, the Orem representative for the financial-services financial-services firm Edward D. Jones & Co., will host a seminar titled "Current Issues in Downtown Revitalization" Wednesday, August 10. This will be a chance for anyone who is involved in or who wants to be involved in economic renewal to get the latest information informa-tion on community economic redevelopment," Toiley said. The program, broadcast live via satellite from Jones' St. Louis, Mo., headquarters, will feature two experts from the National Main Street Center, a division of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and a clearinghouse for information concerning downtown preservation and revitalization. Kennedy Smith, director of the National Main Street Center, and Grace Broughton, program assistant with the center, will lead a discussion discus-sion of current trends and recent developments in downtown revitalization, including legislation, legisla-tion, grant programs and new state-level developments. Be- Jim and Shirley Brailsford to celebrate golden anniversary Jim and Shirley W. Brailsford will celebrate their golden wedding wed-ding anniversary at an open house hosted by their children, Saturday, August 6, from 7-9 p.m. at the Sharon 3rd Ward IDS Church, 445 South 700 East, Orem. They were married in the Salt Lake IDS Temple during World War H. Jim served in the 10th Mountain Ski Division in Italy. He worked for Geneva Steel for 39 years. Shirley worked for Mountain wa want th scoop on what's happening in Orem. Call in news tips. Orem-Geneva Times 225-1340 POOLHOUnS: l!ondsy - Thursisp 1.-C0-8.-CD p.m. Fridays & Saturdays 1 3-6:8 p.m OCT infrastructure. 9. Protection of public health and safety. R.N. Kaye Lynn VVootton receives Thomas Award At the annual convention of the Utah Association of Home Health Agencies (UAHHA), former Orem resident Kaye Lynn Wootton, R.N., received the prestigious pres-tigious Maxine Thomas Award. The award is given once every two years to a home care professional profes-sional who has had a major influence in-fluence on home care in Utah over a long period of time. Wootton has been involved in home care for ten years. She has served as president presi-dent of UAHHA as well as on the board and on a number of committees. commit-tees. Wootton is the owner of In-Home In-Home Health Care, a local home health agency with offices in Orem, Salt Lake, and Ogden. s cause the program will be broadcast broad-cast live, the audience will have an opportunity to ask the panelists questions on the air. This live broadcast coincides with a national competition for revitalization grants being administered ad-ministered by the National Main Street Center and sponsored by Edward D. Jones & Co. "Jones first got involved with the National Main Street Center about a year ago, and it's something some-thing we're very excited about," Toiley said. "The contribution this group makes to communities across America is tremendous, and we're happy to be able to help bring some of that here to Orem." Edward D. Jones & Co. traces its roots to 1871. Today, with more than 3,000 offices in 49 states and the District of Columbia, it is the largest financial -services firm in the nation in terms of retail offices and is one of only a handful of firms to serve more than a million investors. inves-tors. For more information on this live satellite broadcast, contact Toiley at (801) 226-5125. The office is located at.898 South State St Ste 27. Bell for 32 years. They are active in the IDS Church, have held many leadership leader-ship positions, and served in the New Mexico Albuquerque Mission. Mis-sion. They are the parents of four children: Linda Tobber, Orem; Russell Brailsford, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Bruce Brailsford, Kenosha, Wisconsin; and Janet Cardon, Ogden. They have 15 grandchildren. All friends are invited to attend at-tend the open house. We Own and Offer" NEBO SCHOOL DISTRICT GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS Coupon: Maturity: Price: Yield to Maturity: Call Feature: Interest Paid: Rating 2L .;AL Effective 072394. Market risk is a maturity. Subject to availability. E!i Edward D. Jones & Co.' Members of the Orem-based group that installed the new monument stand by the finished product. (Left to right) Dale Houghton, Jay Finch, Stan Houghton, Jr., Emma Houghton, and Curtis Call. Gunnison Massacre . . tant fields. A final burst of sunflowers appeared in a patch near the road just before the landscape began to change. Soon the farms had disappeared disap-peared and the terrain became more desolate, giving way to sagebrush and rabbit brush. The slate-blue mountains in the distance dis-tance looked as though they had been cut in clean lines from paper and set against the western horizon. The early morning sun filtered through clouds that were neither low nor high in the light aqua sky. We turned off the main road onto the dirt one that led to the monument site. In places, the area grew even more bleak and desolate, with alkaline or salt soils obliterating even the hardy desert plants. Arriving at the spot, we noticed what remained of the marker erected in 1927 only part of a rock set in a concrete base. Local history buffDeon Gil-Jen, Gil-Jen, who had come to observe the installation, said he had attended the ceremonies there when the 1927 marker went in. "It was only a couple of years later when the bronze plaque was torn off," Gillen said. They (the vandals) must have only gotten a couple of dollars at the most for the bronze." Gillen's wife, LaVean, was also well-acquainted with the area, and pointed out Sawtooth Mountain in the distance, which, she said, "grows an inch a year". She gave general directions on how to get to the Great Stone Face, another local sight Nancy Shearin, an archaeologist ar-chaeologist for the Bureau of Land Management, attended and supervised the monument installation. instal-lation. Other locals involved included in-cluded Charlotte Morrison, the director of the Great Basin Museum in Delta, and Ed Lamb, a member of the museum's board of directors. The locals were gracious to the Orem-based group and did not view the monument installation installa-tion as the work of interlopers. LaVean Gillen said, "It takes new blood to come into a valley sometimes some-times to stir it up kind of like Geritol." Lamb termed the concept con-cept for the monument "an exceptional excep-tional idea." What was done Emma Houghton dug the first 5.75 OS1514 97.11 6.0 6l504100 615 & 1215 AAA STEVEII II. TLLEY INVESTMENT REPRESENTATIVE see Souot sat 27 Oram, Uih (SOI) 224121 consideration on investments sold prior to contined shovelful of soil on the soot chosen for the memorial, very close to the remnant of the 1927 marker, which will remain in place because of its historical value. The compacted ground necessitated the use of pick axes and metal poles to break through the first inches of soil, then moister sand below made the digging dig-ging easier. Even the weather seemed to cooperate, with the clouds screening screen-ing away some of the sun, and a slight breeze helping to stave off the increasing morning desert heat. Morrison marveled, "Any other day this week, we'd have been cooked by now. This is amazing." amaz-ing." When the hole was completed and the base was set, a crane lowered the rail into place. THAT ARE SURE A RON f ad. BETTY i rnitTTfiwi i Gtato . Reg. $24.00 WW) Coupon Only K l (Most Cars) With Coupon Only th Coupon Only Your Ona Stop Utah County Family Owned Tire Store UClVGGr. UL70 651 Nortn State Street, Orem from front page TT li l ll ii 0UgrK naa cnosen tne ran ior the marker partly for its durability and partly because the Gunnison group had been doing survey work to determine possible pos-sible railroad sites. Wheelbarrow after wheelbarrow wheelbar-row load of mixed concrete was dumped into the hole, and after about three hours' work, the monument was in place, facing an easterly direction to catch the rays of the morning sun. Stan Houghton's daughters-in-law, Merilee and SheRon, kept watch over kin and cousins during the procedure, and Merilee commented com-mented on how "perfect" the monument looked, blending in with the desert terrain. All physical physi-cal remnants of the project were removed before the group departed. TO PLEASE n i LLOYD Y . SCOTT i i 4 Cyl -6 Cyl - j 6 Cyl - !p f I 8 Cyl - G4" ! j (M0St Cars) vWCouponO I 31 ic: Most Cars 1 1 Pickups, 4x4s and curves Reg. $43.S5 SM Mat Exin WW! Coupon Only Our Tires are American Made. Hmira: 225 - 6343 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Muffler shop II II 8 a.m.-7 p.m. vveeasays 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday! |