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Show ' 'v '"-fAr :i;-r r' v I ij cl p k & y i ..lit-- ; EIGHTH GRADE CLASS OF 1910 a proud day lor students, many of whom had been to Harrington School for the younger grades, on to Forbes School for the upper grades. ORIO spelled or penants and caps - the graduating class motto for "Our Road is Onward." Mrs. Verlaine Brewer Allen found this picture among the possessions of her late mother Mrs. Lucretta B. Strang. First row, left to right: Mattie Proctor, Rodney Spencer, Sadie Nelson, Hy-rum Hy-rum Blackhurst, Florence Dunkley. Elmo Vance, Lilly Lloyd, Carl Jackson, Carrie Spencer, Willie Shipley, Mary Blackhurst, Elbert Duncan. Second row: Nellie Baker, Frank Wagstaff, Bertha Okey, Ether Pulley, Willie Forbes, Luna Chipman, Mark Clark, Myrta Bonnett, Leon Miller, Pearl Preston, 1 L tmniilln Iir jJlMI Will.. n 4 tltlT ni Jv. ' . , M FIREMAN FRANK IS FAVORITE WITH KIDS-This popular television personality has a special way of greeting youngsters to make them feel special. He will greet each child having an entry in the Pet and Hobby Show at the City Ball Park on Friday evening at 5 p.m. Pets, hobbies, crafts, decorated play equipment will be welcome by City Recreation Committee sponsors. Children Urged In Pet, Hobby The annual Pet and Hobby Show, one of the traditional Steel Days events for children, will be held at the city ball park Friday, at 5 p.m. All children of the community com-munity to 12 years of age are Invited to enter a pet, hobby or decorated vehicle in the event. Greeting each participant will be perennial favorites Fireman Frank, te le vision personality and Smokey the Bear. Each child will be greeted by both celebrities celebrit-ies and given a treat by the City Recreation Committee, said Ora H. Chipman, Pet and Hobby Show chairman. Sponsoring the event will be the American Fork City Recreation Recrea-tion Committee, with all committee com-mittee members to assist Mrs. Chipman for the occasion. All children of the community, commun-ity, up to and including 12 years of age, are invited to enter the event, which will feature a Pet and Hobby Parade. Pet division will include rabbits, lambs or sheep, guinea pigs, dogs, cats, horses, birds, goldfish, turtles, ducks or other pets. Children are also invited to enter decorated bicycles, tricycles, tri-cycles, doll buggies or wagons and floats or entries previously used in neighborhood parades will also be welcome. Outstanding and unusual hobbies hob-bies featured will include those which show some thought orprs-paration. orprs-paration. Coin, mineral and rock if Jf fc, J" ALWAlo a cROWD PLEASERSmokey Bear wiU also be on hand at the Pet and Hobby Show to greet youngsters. Children up to 12 years of age are invited to participate in the Friday event. Big Pet and Hobby Parade will feature fea-ture participants, beginning at 5 p.m. to Participate Show Friday collections or stamp collections; woodworking, carving, metal work and other skills were exhibited ex-hibited in last years event, along with weaving, knitting and other handicraft items demonstrating hobbies. Some entries consisted of extensive ex-tensive doll collections some of which were artistically arranged on floats in previous years. Parents and the public are invited in-vited to attend, with the event scheduled for later in the day for the comfort and convenience of participants. Miss American Fork and her attendants will be on hand for this Steel Days event. Citizen Welcomes Letters to Editor The American Fork Citizen is glad to publish all Letters to the Editor, but there is one requirement re-quirement that must be met. The letters must have a signature signa-ture on for us to publish. The name need not be published with the letter and we are glad to withhold it on request, but the original document must be signed sign-ed with the writers name. If the person who sent the letter let-ter this week signed "An Irate Citizen" will come in and sign his letter to the editor we will be glad to publish it next week. I r (t ''! MO j M,P'C "f ' 1 . lue 1 . ' SI flew Arrivals Babies born this week in the American Fork Hospital were: July 5--Boy to Kent Lynn and Iris Nialson Jarrett of PL Grove, July 5 Boy to Glade G. and Janet Sutherland Durrant of Am. Fork. July 6--Girl to Jerry and Sheryl Smith Harris of Orem. July 6 Girl to Stanford R. and Joyce Thurgood Ekins of PI. Grove. July 7-Girl to Jerald H. and Judy Sannon Jacobs of Am. Fork. July 7 Girl to Lee A. and Judy West Brown of PL Grove. July 7 Girl to Stanley S. and Judy Nelson Sorenson of Green-river. Green-river. July 7 Boy to Clay H. and Marlene Hunt Cummings of Am. Fork. July 8--Boy to Jerry L. and Avonne Larson Brooks of Am. Fork. July 8-Girl to Gerald R. and Janette Harding Seals of Lehi. July 8--Boy to John C. and Valerie Winterburn Hyder of Am. Fork. July 9Girl to David and Laura Like Him Talayumptwa of Lehi. July 6 Girl to Leland W. and Rosemary CelcerSwansonof Am. Fork. July 10 Girl to Paul andAnita Smith Anderson of Am. Fork. July 10 --Boy to Robert A. and Donna Curtis Boren of Lehi. July 10 Girl to Stanley A. and Peggy Ostler Spray of Lehi. July 11 Boy to Ronald and Idyll Spalding Thayne of Lehi. July U Girl to Ray and Lynda McEwan Morgan of PI. Grove. July ll--Boy to Laurence and Jean Blackham Potts of Magna. Eastmond Family Holds Summer Party at Saratoga The family of Frank H., and Clarrisa Taylor Eastmond gathered gath-ered on Sunday afternoon at Saratoga Sar-atoga Resort for their annual Summer Party. Swimming ar.d rides on the midway were enjoyed by the group with dinner served in the late afternoon. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. F. Taylor Eastmond and sons, Rondo and Douglas, and Mrs. Regina Christensen of Orem; Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Eastmond and daughter Tina, Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson N. Eastmond ar.d son, Daniel; Joseph E. and Marilee J. Gordon and Mrs, Chorus Ash-ton, Ash-ton, all of Salt Lake City; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gordon and sons, Mike and Glen of Dugway; Mr. and Mrs. Glen H. Gordon and son Gary of American Fork; and Mr. and Mrs. R. McKinley Eastmond East-mond and children, Shelley, Dirk, Charis and Mr. and Mrs. Johnny John-ny Nielson and baby daughter all of Saratoga, Lehi. Ralph Barratt, Reba Perker, David Hunter, Katie Miller; Third row: Albert Rowley, Leslie Parker, Alice Parker, Blanche Kirkman, Wesley Chipman, Ora Jean Chipman, William D. Stewart, teacher; Cr;irine Needham, Leland Mitchell, Mabel Sommerville, WiUiam Laursen, Irene Armstrong, Delbert Chipman, Ruth Pulley, Fred Cheever, Prof. Joseph B. Forbes, Fern Thornton. Thorn-ton. Third row. Myrl Boley, Marion Green, Ann Preston, Randall Shipley, Ethel Davis, Osmon Justesen, teacher; Zane Adams, Miss Frances Ras-mussen, Ras-mussen, teacher, Lawrence Hutchings, Ada Madsen, Virgil Miller, Reno Wagstaff, May Lloyd, Earl Cunningham, Lillian Clayson, Frank Pulley, Mabel Brewer, Otto Mitchell. Martha A. Hayward, Am. Fork's Oldest Citizen, to Observe 95th Birthday Sunday Mrs. Martha Annice Hayward, oldest resident of AmericanFork will be honored at an open house on Sunday, July 19, in the Utah Power and Light Auditorium, Jrom 2 to 6 p.m. It will be in observance of Mrs. Hayward' s 95th Birthday. Mrs. Haywardwill welcome all those who desire to call. She has lived in two centuries. The space age marvels of this past week stand in marked contrast con-trast to the July 27, 1875 when she was born in Salt Lake City. She well recalls her early years there, "The unpaved streets a foot deep in dust in the summer and two feet deep in mud in the winter," as she tells in a written writ-ten account of her life by herself. her-self. She remembers the board walks on Main Street, street cars pulled with mules, coal oil or gas for lighting and the lamplighter lamp-lighter who came at dusk with his ladder to climb each pole in the business section to light each lamp. ZCMI, Walker Brothers and Auerbach's were only small concerns. Martha A. Hayward In 1901 she notes sht joined the Relief Society and has been a member since, serving for years as a visiting teacher. A lovely thread runs through her account of her married life, the implicit faith of husband and wife in each other. "A more noble man ever lived" is her tribute to him. In the spring of 1933 they moved to American Fork from Spanish Fork where Mr. Hayward had sought to make a better living liv-ing with his trade. Tliey began building a home when he was stricken with meningitis and died July 12. That same year Mrs. Hayward went to work as a matron ma-tron at the Utah S t a t e Training School, one of the fir.st matrons. She worked for ten years. Up to this time she was known as Annice but when the superintendent super-intendent noted her application, she was known from then on by her first name, Martha, and has been hince. Mrs. Hayward lives at 146 West Main Street, with a companion, com-panion, Doris Tanner. She receives re-ceives excellent care and enjoys the devotion of her children. She likes to cook some and keeps busy with needlework. She's lost count of the number of quilts and pillowslips she's made. To further the cost of family genealogical gen-ealogical research she crocheted crochet-ed a multicolored "granny" af-ghan af-ghan which netted some $200 among the family members. Unintentionally Un-intentionally Mrs, Hayward has summed up her homemaking ability, abil-ity, "I was never without a quick meal. I always had fruit in the ceilar and a can of salmon pushed push-ed to the back of the cupboard." Of her 13 children, 12 were reared to adulthood. A daughter died as a child. Two sons, Ray and Bryan, died ia tecent years. Her children are Mrs. Mary Dal-ton, Dal-ton, Mrs. Elwyn (Margaret) Wride and Mrs. David (Ida) Wagstaff, Wag-staff, American Fork; Mrs. Thayne (Louise) Bateman, Alpine; Al-pine; Mrs. Byron E. (Dorothy) Nelson, Prcvo; Wilson H. May- i i . A.' ward, Lehi; Sidney H. Hayward, Spanish Fork; Lloyd H. Hayward, Salt Lake City; Frank H- Hay- THERE IS ADEQUATE POWER FOR ALL CUSTOMERS CUS-TOMERS OF UTAH POWER THIS YEAR AND IN THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE. Publicity in national magazines and network net-work TV news programs warns of possible power shortages this summer. These reports refer only to some parts of the Eastern Seaboard and several mid-western mid-western states. BARRING AN UNFORESEEN MAJOR DISASTER, DISAS-TER, THERE WILL BE AMPLE POWER TO MEET ALL ANTICIPATED REQUIREMENTS IN THE TERRITORY SERVED BY UTAH POWER & LIGHT COMPANY. In addition to our own generating capacity, UP&L has interconnections with the Northwest North-west and Pacific Southwest power pools 0 BUT WE HAVE AMPLE GENERATING CAPACITY TO CARRY OUR LOAD THERE IS NO SHORTAGE OF GENERATING CAPACITY. YOU CAN BUY THAT ELECTRIC DRYER, OR FREEZER-REFRIGERATOR, OR AIR CONDITIONER, OR INSTALL ELECTRIC HEAT FOR NEXT WINTER IN CONFIDENCE THAT THERE WILL BE PLENTY OF POWER TO OPERATE THEM AT REASONABLE COST. Tho Folks at Utah Power & Light Co. Your Electric Concern Phil Jensens Return From Mexico Convention Mr. and Mrs. Phil D. Jensen have just returned from Mexico City, where they attended the Beneficial Life Insurance Company Com-pany Annual Sales Convention, for which they had qualified earlier this year. Highlighting the week-long session was a speech by Joseph Fielding Smith, President of the LDS Church, who is Chairman of the Board of Directors for Beneficial Bene-ficial Life. The annual Sales Convention is held in order to introduce new industry and Company developments de-velopments to the agency leaders and coasultants. Speaking for the Company, President Conway A. Ashton of Salt Lake City, said that the Company has the highest confidence in the current national economy and its future. He pointed point-ed out in this regard that the Company has announced expansion expan-sion plans which will involve nearly every state in the union. In addition, Mr. Ashton introduced intro-duced a complete new line of Disability Dis-ability Insurance to the Convention. Conven-tion. In order to qualify for the meetings, meet-ings, it was necessary for the Conventionaires to successfully meet a high standard of production pro-duction and service for the preceding pre-ceding 12 months. ward, Bountiful; Fred H. Hayward, Hay-ward, Oak Harbor, Wash. There are 44 grandchildren, 91 great grandchildren and 38 great, great grandchildren. A E3 us mm cm & iff ? ti I?;; y:fi?;ay THE AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1970 Armory Parking Lot Blacktopped In Joint AF City-Guard Project The parking lot adjoining the National Guard Armory and the American City 3all Park has been leveled and blacktopped. The project was a joint effort of the- Utah National Guard and American Fork City, with the guard units supplying equipment and manpower to level and grade the site. Blacktopping was applied ap-plied by city crews. The ' new lot has been paint- Bruce K. Bean Remains in Serious Condition The condition of Bruce K. Bean, 17, son of Mrs. Joan B. Bean, remains unchanged. Bruce was critically injured in a motorcycle-auto accident June 12, suffering suf-fering severe head and other injuries in-juries in the crash. He has been hospitalized in the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, where he is still unconscious. uncon-scious. Although Bruce has not regained consciousness, he is not paralyzed and tests and treatment treat-ment are being administered by his physicians. A passenger on the cycle at the time of the accident, Meri Lu Preston, is reportedly recovering re-covering from serious injuries sustained in the accident. which further augment our resources. UP&L has an additional 330,000 kw of capacity under construction now on schedule sched-ule for operation next year, and a 430,000 kw generating unit scheduled for 1974. Larger, more efficient generating units like these are made possible by greater sales volume that helps us resist the upward thrust of inflation on our costs and rates to the benefit of all customers. So our sales promotion and advertising will continue con-tinue to promote new and increased use of electricity. So long as people and machines are not infallible, and so long as summer storms bring lightning and high winds, we may have a few power interruptions from time to time. striped for parking and will be available for those attending the evening show performance at the ball park Saturday, July 18. Councilman WiUiam M. Pierce approved payment of $641 from street department funds for the project. Pink Ladies Attend InstiSda Members of the Pink Ladies organization at the Am. Fork Hospital are invited to attend the Institute for Hospital Auxil-aries Auxil-aries July 20 and 21 at the Ramada Inn in Salt Lake City. Reservations may be made by contacting Pink Lady officers by tomorrow, Friday, July 17. Topics taken up at the two day meet will include "Communicating "Com-municating to People," "Team Work and Morale of Volunteer Workers," "Objectives and Programs Pro-grams Responsive to Projected Needs in the 70's", and "Importance "Im-portance of Periodic Evaluation." Evalu-ation." Verda Peterson is president of the local organization with Norine Fox, vice president; Betty Robinson, secretary; Rowene Vibbert, treasurer; and Alice Clements, immediate past president. |