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Show HiclOliJU F5 ej'r oni, Ave. IXUlVw 1 11 Si4.t PAROWAN SHOWS Plans For Music Meet SLIGHT GAIN Reach Final Stages Bands will contest in the Plans for the annual Regto be Festival 10 Music ion gym and auditorium; march held here May 7, are rapid-l- y ing bands on the footbal field nearing completion accord and chorouses in the Third ing to L. N. Asay PHS music ' instructor who is general chairman for the event. Working with Mr. Asay are: Thales Brown, parade chairman; Principal Max S. Dailey, contest marching; programs, Mrs. Jean Evans; Lunches, Mrs. Karlene Pax-- J e man; Registration, Mrs. Mrs Orton; Publicity, Mar-gurit- - Marsden, Bands; Ralph Weber College, Bands and Orchestras; John Mario Nielsen, U of U., vocal work; National Guard officials, marching bands. ORLANDWARD NAMED PRAETOR BY FRATERNITY A story in the Sigma Chi magazine tells of the appoint ment of Orland W. Ward, for mer Parowanite, as Grand Praetor of the Fraternitys Rocky Mountain Province. He was appointed by Grand Consul Richard S. Doyle to succeed Judge Robert W. Reidy, New Mexico. IN RACESTO j ; Ward Chapel. Participants as listed to date will be, Parowan High School; band and girls chorus; Beaver, Jr. band; band and chorus; Fillmore, Jr. band and Sr. High band; Delta, Sr. band, Jr. band, Sr. High girls chorus, Mli-for- d, mixed chorus, Jr .High girls chorus and mixed chorus: Cedar City, Sr. band, two Jr. bands, concert chior, Sr. High girls chorus, Jr High girls chorus, Jr. and Sr. High orchestras; Hurricane; band and chorus; Kanab, concert band, and girls chorus; St George, Woodward Jr. Hihg 7th grade band,, band, acappella chorus, Jr. High; Dixie High, boys chorus girls chorus, and mixed chorus; East Ely, Nev. band; White Pine, Nev. band. Additional details and the time for the various events will be published next week as final details are completed The public is invited to all events according to Mr. Asay. u f 7 INCLUDE Parowan has made a gain of 105 people overt the past .en years according to unofficial census figures. The present population is 1,555 if the current figures are correct Cedar City gf course made the greatest gain with 1,271 new residents since 1950,. This gives Cedar a total of 7,483 people at the present. Kanarra also made a slight gain with 50 new residents bein tallied for a total of 313. All other areas of the county showed a loss. The tabulation is as fol- , special entertainment features have been added to the plans for the annual Memorial Day race meet here this year according to Jim Mortensen who is chairman of the event. Included besides the six races scheduled for the two day meet will be a cuting horse demonstration as well as calf roping. The cutting horse demonstration will be under the supervision of Dick Hammer of St. George who is also on the board of directors of the Utah Cutting Horse Association . Dick will also be the announcer lows: for the show. of a loss Paragonah, 319, members of the com Other & SumParowan 92; Valley Johnny and his lone note who are workin with mittee mit, 101, a loss of 49; Escahas almost nothing in comlante Valley including New Mr. Mortensen are Harold mon with these s Castle, Lund and Modena, Rogerson and Clint Thorn- and their music. It must be ton. The meet this year is . 549, a loss of Eyre (1 to r) Richard The total population for being sponsored by the Ex- Wayne Van Ausdal, Johnny Roger-s- o the county including Cedar change Club. nand Glade Holyoak seem City is 10,734. Already there are several to be doing it in most of horses from Parowan and their leisure time. ESSAY CONTEST surrounding towns that are These four boys plus Mah-lo- n in training for the meet Dailey (not pictured) WINNER LEAVES which will be the first of make up the Parowan Jr. the season here though other High dance band. The big FOR WASHINGTON meets ar escheduled for July question seems to be 'which Linda Knight, daughter 4, and the Iron County Fair shall I play now, the sax, the clarinet, the accordion or of Stake President and Mrs in September. we have Richard sing shall left Wednesday for Salt Lake Mr. and Randall Mrs. it? City and Washington D.C, You see, Wayne, Glade Miss Knight, a daughter Wilcock of Ogden visited of Stake President' and Mrs. here with the Clair Stevens kki family and other relatives during th eweek. They were returning from a trip to the coast. vice-presiden- coached ts Arch Benson left last week for a ten day trip to Kansas City Mo. He accompanied Lynn Chase of Las Vegas Nevada who went to attend a horse show. ted ' :4 5 L,i :(& rxiYF- . ' $ 1 i held in Cedar City last week and Richard play saxowell. as Glade phones and clarinets. and John are accordionists, Mahlon Dailey, plays a too. John, alone plays the trumpet and solos with the drums; Richard is the vocal group on occasion. Mahlon soloist. was selected to perform on Kiwanis Talent program the in Southern Many people Utah enjoys the music of held in the CSU auditorium these versatile boys. MIA Friday, as well as Richard, dances in Parowan and Ce- Glade and Wayne. dar are often supplied with Mrs. Melba Ferguson of their music, as v ell as wed- the Salt Lake Tribune has ding receptions. The Kiwanl interviewed these boys this is, Lions and Rotarians of week and a feature article Cedar City have had them will appear in the Teen sectas special guests, and they ion of that paper n the near were asked to perform for future. the State PTA Convention CONNIE DUNTON Conference Sessions To TO RECEIVE Open Saturday Night How Can We Honor Our Parents by Deanna Evans; Talk 'T Am Thankful for My Parents and the Footsteps They Made for Me Kent Dalton; Vocal solo, 'That Wonderful Mother of Mine by L. N. Asay; Talk: Obligation of Parents to Children and dency; Talk, First-Secon- For Mrs. Cecil Adams RED Miss Connie Dunton, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs Frank Dunton of Paragonah has been named to represent the Parowan High School at the Utah Junior Red Cross Leadership Training Center at USU in Logan froih July 31 to August 6. She is a Junior at PIIS this year and an active work er in school and church af- Children to Parents Frank fairs. attendance. Day of the College os So. The Jr. Red Cross Leader g the Priesthood Utah Institute of Religeon; to session at 8: 00 p.m. will be Closing song, Let Us Oft ship Training Center is abilhelp develop Words leadership by the a special meeting for all Speak Kind a fathers and mothers in the congregation. The benedict- ity, sense of responsibility stake. This meeting will be ion will be pronounced by and an interest in service. After her training she in the Third Ward chapel. Eugene Boardman. will be expected to give the On Sunday there will be training to students at the two general sessions, the HOME ON LEAVE school. first of which will be at 10 Dick Stevens, son of Mr. a.m. and the second at 2 p.m. Both of these sessions will and Mrs. Clarence Stevens, be held in the Third Ward arrived home Sunday from chapel and will be general Iceland where he has been meetings which the public stationed for the past year. is invited to attend. The af- He will remain home a APRIL ternoon session is a special month with his wife and Wed. 13 Stake Temple Day. youth meeting and all young their children and also his Thurs. 14, Stakt Board Fapeople of the Stake ?w es- parents. He and his family culty meetings. will fly to California on June Fri. 15 Baseball, Cedar pecially urged to attend. City Music for the morning 6 where they will board a at Parowan. session- - will be by the Sing- plane for Japan. They will Sat. 16, Seminary Ball; Boy Scout-Be- e ing Mothers chorus under be stationed there for the Hive Dance. the direction of Mrs. Lyle next three years. Sun. 17 Easter Services; Evans. A Stake youth choStake Priesthood. rus will furnish the music Mon. 18 Adult Ed.; Second Marsha Stubbs, small for th eafternoon meeting. Ward MIA. of Mr. and Mrs. daughter This group is directed by D. Tues. 19 1 and 3 ward MIA A. Stones and will be ac- Bill Stubbs had to have sev- Wed. 20 Literary Club; Legeral stitches taken in her ion Aux.; Welfare meeting companied by Mrs. Deon head , after a fall at the school Williams. 21 Stake Thurs. Primary The MIA session which is grounds the first of the week meetings. the final meeting of the conFri 22 Parowan High Anference will be at 8 p.m. in nual Day activities. Mr. and Mrs. James Mer the Third Ward chapel. cer left Thurs. morning for Sat. 23 Stake MIA Record The theme for this session Logan where they wall visit Rally. will be Honor Thy Father the Stewart Adams. Sun. 24 Parowan Stake Preand Thy Mother, 'A special! paration meeting. Mon. 25 City Council meetprogram has been arranged Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coofor this meeting as follows: ing; 2nd ward MIA; Adult Maxine Joseph) of Los per education. Opening song, Love at! Home by the congregation ' Angeles are visiting here Tues. 26, 1st & 3rd Wards Invocation by a member of and in Panguitch with their MIA. the Enoch Ward MIA Theme families until Sunday. Wed. 27 Stake Temple Day. Mr. and Mrs. Ken Joseph Thurs. 28 Stake MIA Leader by Gail Ann Humpherys; presentation of a Golden of Montebello, Calif, came ship meeting. Gleaner Award to Linda up with them for a visit Fri. 29 P. H. S. Girls Day Jones. The presentation will with Kens parents, Ivlr. and Dance. be made by Mrs. Lyle Hlateri Mrs. Arthur Joseph. Sat. 30 Parowan Stake man of the YWMIA Presi Quarterly Conference. Foil-win- Funeral services for Mrs. Cecil Tebbs Adlams, 56 were held Wednesday afternoon in the Parowan Thrd Ward Chapel. She died at her o fJane Bentley, Maralyn Pendleton and Janet Miller, neices. Interment was in the Paro wan City cemetery, where the grave was dedicated by a brother, Dan Tebbs. MRS. ADAMS was born at Panguitch, April 7, 1904, to Burns and Ruth Asay Tebbs. She married Claude W. Adams, Parowan, Sept. 5, 1928 in the Salt Lake After the primaries are here early Sunday morning of a heart ailment. Prayer at the home was offered by John Pendleton. At the church Ray h Tebbs, a brother of offered the Invocation and Veloy Butterfield, a brothtr in law pronounced City L.D.S. Temple. the benediction. She received her educatServices were conducted ion at Brigham Young Univ. by Bishop George F. Row-le- and at the Uuiversity of Utah. She taugh school in PanSpeakers were Mrs. Edna S. Hatch, Bishop Rudolph guitch, Milford and Paropered with 10 units for the Church, Panguitch and Rich wan and has been active in last year valued at $126,600. ard Halterman, a son in law. L. D. S. Church organizatState wide residential con Musical numbtrs includ-- a ions, particularly the Relief struction fell. Nearly 1,500 vocil solo In The Garden Society where she has servne whomes were started dur of Tomorrow by Verl Tay- ed as Stake President. She ing the quarter, but this was lor accompanied by Mary has also served as Primary still 3 per cent below last Lyman at the piano; a vocal president. In addition to duet years first quarter total. Beyond the Sunset church offices she is a past Verda to Tebbs andNucille president of the PTA both Univer by the According of Bureau Dodds, con release, Panguitch. They at Parowan and Panguitch, sitys struction of new non resident were accompanied by Iltta a past president of the Paroial buildings in the County Reed also of Panguitch. The wan Literary Club and a dropped 94.7 per cent to closing song was a vocal solo member of the Parowan Gar Oh Dry Those Tears by den Club. $8,500 likewise, non residen SHE IS SURVIVED by tial building construction L. N. Asay. He was accomin the state as a whole fell panied by Mary Lyman on her husband, two sons, and the piano and Barbara Jane two daughters, Tebbs Dug-wa43 per cent from the previous year to a total of $9 Bayles played prelude and David, Parowan: Mrs. million. Bayles on the orgon. Miss Richard J. (Claudia) Halterpostlude music. man, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Pall bearers were two Wallace (Jean) Lee, Pann Mr. and Mrs. Ward made a trip to Salt sons, Tebbs and David Ad- guitch; five grandchildren; Lake last weekend to take ams, to sons in law, Wallace her mother; two brothers, and Richard Halterman Dan and Ray all of Pan'heir daughter and family, Mrs. Janet Jones who had arj two nephews, Richard guitch; sisters, Mrs Addie visaed with'' them here last Tebbs, Panguitch and Vee Miller and Mrs. Ruth ButterBiPterfield, Salt Lake City,1 field, Salt Lake City. week. Flowers were in charge over, two parties will be organized and a campaign will be launched to elect students of the parties choise Other school offices to be filled at the elections are editors of the school paper and yearbook. -- . Pan-guito- Building In County Up three-mont- 12 ; ional Capitol. Her mother will join her in Salt Lake City and acOpening session of the Stake quarterly Parowan her to company Washington conference to 'be held here we are told. Saturday and Sunday will d be at 6:30 p.m. in the Ward chapel according to President Howard D. Knight. This session will be a Priesthood session and invitations have been mailed to all those who are to be in y. Building construction in Iron County was nearly 85 per cent above the same period a year ago as the first quarter of 1960 closed, accord ing to figures released by the Bureau of Economic and Business Research of the University of Utah. Totall construction recorded in the h County during the excluding period public works and utilities construction was valued at $639,000. Iron Countys per formance can be compared with the entire state during the first quarter when $28.9 million worth of construct ion was started, a 20 per cent drop from a year ago. Residental construction in Iron County jumped both in the number of new dwelling units ruthorized and their valuation. The 21 new units this year had a val uation of $265,000, as com v N CROSS TRAINING at Bozeman Green, Georgia Rowley, Nor" ma Alger and Charles Murie. Students who would be secretary are Donna Batt, Connie Dunton, Kathy Nielsen and Pamela Mitchell. ' i - J teen-ager- PHS STUDENTS fvr Si. Some Funeral Services Held and City IT-li-e SPECIAL FEATURES Howard D. Knight, recently won a statewide essay conSLATE PRIMARY test sponsored by the Governors Committee on EmployELECTIONS ment of the Physically Handi capped. Miss Knights essay Students of the Parowan won Orland is associate prof, honorable mention in of physical education and High School will hold pri- the National contest. intermural director at the mary elections Friday to seShe was awarded a years University of Wyoming, and lect nominees to run for stuhas been Chapter Advisor dent body offices at a gener- scholarship to a Utah college, of Gamma Xi Chapter at al electon to be held next a $50.00 Savings Bond and an expense paid to the Nat- Wyoming since 1947 when Friday. he joined the Univ. faculty. Candidates to be voted on He is also president of the for student body president Laramie, Wyo. Alumni Assn, are Nelson Merkley, Kennof Sigma Chi. eth Bayles, Larry Rowley and Douglas Rogerson. He holds a Masters degree for the Univ. of SouthSeeking the ern Calif & formerly taught position are Adell Montana and Parowan Utah schools. He was an all star basketball player at Montana State during his college years. He served three and a half years with the U. S. Navy during WWII. r' NUMBER EIGHT MEMORIAL DAY POPULATION D. Cox PAROWAN TIMES, PAROWAN UTAH, APRIL 28, 1960 VOLUME FORTY FOUR Jean Hendrickson. Judges for the events that begin at 8 a.m. are: Dr. Clair Johnson, Weber- College, Lu X-- y; Mort-enso- L-- e Town Calendar j |