OCR Text |
Show THE SAN JUAN RECORD, Thursday, November 3, 1977 - Page mum rjioinnns R SYLVIA EVANS Specials i BLACK for November 3,4,5 Fryers Saltines Keebler $1.09 2 65$ Vegetable Juice western FamuyTo? Mackerel Eatwell Jack oz. 49$ 15 Whole lb. 44$ Cut Up lb. 48$ Instant Milk Pork T-Bo- $1.99 ne Western Family Beans N Rice A Roni Glass Plus Towels Chicken or Beef 8 2 rr row purchases 389$ Semi Sweet Morsel 12 $1.79 oz. $1.49 Cocktail 12 oz. 95$ Cherrios 15 oz. 87$ Cold Medecine nywi $1.89 Cream Rinse $1.19 Cheese r 57$ Swiss Miss Pak Chocolate or Butterscotch 69$ i 4 Swanson Chicken nirmoro Ull II Iclo Regular or Crispy Barbecue Red IRONSTONE DINNERWARE ovenproof open stock 8Y UNIVERSAL 79$ T DELIGHTFULLY NEW Lemonade Cakes Russet 10 Yellow Onions Italian Bread h Western Family 6oz Sara Lee Choc, or German Chocolate Potatoes BAKERYGOODS Bow-Tie- $1.23 Kraft 12 Gal. Flavored Singles Sliced American, Pimento, Montery Jack, Bacon 6 oz. rUQQingS 'SlUrnSL" Fiex Orange Juice 12 7$1 oz. QQ, 67$ lb. bag. $1.39 25 lb. Bag 49$ 12$ s 849$ Hot Dog Rolls v. w V 49$ Wranglers wlth "A 55$ 32 oz. Chocolate Chips Cereal Sr. 39$ oz. Western Family Jumbo Peanuts Coles. Her father was a coal miner. She started school at the age of 5 and the children were expected to be through with 289$ 12 size Sausage Top Round .$1.39 by Florence Galbraith Sylvia Evans Black died at the San Juan Nursing Home m Blanding on October 25, 1977, at the age of 93. She was born September 4, 1884, in Pontypridd, South Wales, to Thomas Evans, Sr., and Jane Ann $8.49 50 Qt. Western Family 5 Baking Squash y. Sylvia Evans Black school at 15. She went two years in Mertha Bidvale and one year in Jamestown while she lived in Wales. She often told the story of how she and her brother Tom sat on the front step and wouldn't go to school. At that time an LDS elder was at their home and her mother asked the elder to go around the corner and as a policeman came up the street for him to walk in front of the policeman, as she thought this might get the children to school and it did. Mrs. Black had a sense of humor and looked on the bright side of life. In 1892 the Evans family came by ship to the U.S., and then came to Utah. At this time she was 8 years old. They came by train to Salt Lake, and she attended school nearly a year there. She attended the dedication of the Salt Lake Temple with a Sunday School class and here she met President Wilford Woodruff. She became a member of the LDS Church November 7, 1892. Soon after this the family moved to Fruitland, New Mexico. She went into the 5th grade in New Mexico and this is the last schooling she had. In 1902 she married John Martin Black in Fruitland and the marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake Temple. They were the parents of 11 children, five of whom preceded her in death. Her husband owned and operated a flour mill most of the time after they were married. They lived most of the time in different parts of New Mexico and for a while in Old Mexico. They lived for a short while in Blanding and for 5 years inMonticello. Their last Chocolate Chip Reg. Size Doz . home was in Kirtland, New Mexico, where they lived until her husbands death in 1967. Then Mrs. Black lived with 65$ her children until her health r r . MONTIcmO - .Wy.vvv.-vr- ,, - ,c.f e.&i.c'.f.'rtf.'UO failed and she entered the San Juan Nursing Home in 1971. She loved her grandchildren M i ' -- - and she always had a jar of (Please turn to Page ft': j -v; - 't r ff 4 aw ovv!' Vt cM 1 , 11) |