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Show '.'A alc bauson Chronicle August 25, 1977Page 2 Labor Days art papim show scheduled Elmer Jones, director of Payson Senior Citizens, has been asked by the Payson City Council to sponsor a city wide show in the Tabernacle Center like the ones the Senior Citizens have done for the past eight years during the Homecoming (Hljnmtrk 35 West Utah Av( Pt i 'Hj-- ; ne Pdyson UUih-8-5- 45-922- celebration. weekly newspaper established in 1888, published every Thursday and entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office in Payson, Utah 84651 A 1 atghans, and any hand made pieces and art work. Ihe articles will be received Saturday, Sept. 3rd, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Have your name on all entries. They may be picked up Monday, September Sth at 6 p.m. All entries will be guarded at all times, day and night. Hundreds ot pictures of students attending the Junior High School during the years between 1949 and 196S will be on display and may be taken home tree. Come and take them irom the display boards. Ihe chairman for this exhibit are: Elmer Jones, general chairman; Ernest McClellan, La Var Davis and Stanley Wilson, photos; Geraldine Broadbent and Phylis Young, ceramics; Eleanor Loveless, oil paintings; Carl Benson, lapidary; Helen Adams, hand Gladys Wilson, Work. Displaying the hand work will be Matilda Bascom, Ruby Jones, Sherrie Jones, Lola Cooper, Geneva Pickering, Norma Alvey, and Virginia Richard M. Buys, Publisher Susan F. Buys, Kent Fuellenbach, Editor Jayne Brereton, Office Manager Co-Publish- er Production Staff Robin Fuellenbach, Assistant Editor Tanya Kae Manwill, Ad Layout Bill Murray, Graphics Steve Asay, Advertising Manager Billy Carlton, Maintenance mm dsi m nereis umm atS ASjf, 4 ,v PER list EDI1M CUM PtytM Chramb he articles to be exhibited are open to the public and you are encouraged to bring articles such as quilts, , Pat son Chronicle Editorial Litter, everybody's business Iri-Che- SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Payson and vicinity, $6.00 per year. Outside Payson area, $7.00 per year. All subscriptions are payable in advance. 15c per single copy. J Utahns are blessed with outstanding opportunities for outdoor recrea- tion: mountains, deserts, lakes and streams are found throughout the state. But do we appreciate these resources? Do w e take care of them? Judging from the litter and refuse we leave in the popular areas, we must not care any more for them than any city dump. Ginger. School and Home by Daryl J. McCarty - just for the But the Alliance isnt just aiming its insistent urging to "get moving at students. These educators are This is the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education and Recreation, and many of its members are high school coaches, physical education teachers, school nurses and dance teachers. also fixing their steely eyes on us adults whose idea of exercise is unfolding a recliner. to get Americans hiking health of it. Information from the Alliance says most Americans - particularly adults - have not accepted the responsibility for keeping their bodies tuned up as well as they keep their cars tuned up. One of their concerns is the high school football hero who flashes across the gridiron in a blaze of brilliance, graduates, and promptly ignores anything more strenuous than pulling that rubber band off the evening Of course, anyone who experiences sudden burst of desire for physical fitness should not jump into the old a paper. warm-up- . - Besides hiking, theyre talking about such sports as tennis, golf, swimming, bicycling, skiing and jogging. s and try to run off 30 pounds in one evening. Instead, these educators want students to adopt at least one life" time sport. If 'youre past 30; maybe-you- ll want your doctor to give you a checkup before you try to break any records. Try these lifetime sports with your kids - theyll love you for it. -- Theyre emphasizing physical edu- cation for youngsters, beginning with elementary schools. The stress, is on developing excellent movement skill for all children. These programs in some schools are designed for handicapped children as well as others. As the youngsters move up in school, they enter team sports, competition and an introduction to those lifetime sports. Missionary welcome A welcome home will be held Sunday, August 28, at 6 p.m. in the Spring Lake Ward for Elder Ronald J. Zee-maElder Zeeman has served for the past two years in the Amsterdam Neatherlands MisHe is the son sion. of Darrell and Helena Zeeman. Dont be afraid to turn someone If he calls you a in lor littering. link rejoice in the name. Better to be a fink than to let a slob continue defacing the mountains. gum and candy wrappers. Horne Center Write to your state and national legislators urging more stringent fitter laws. The punishment for littering should fit the crime. Offenders should have to clean a campground or several miles of highway. Lake were glittering with burned out aluminum food containers and cans half buried in the black ashes of an old campfire. Wedding gift list Practical gift, Of course, no one who reads this editorial is a litter bug. But what about your neighbor or the guy in the camp next to you? The self interest of every lover of the who wants clean trails, roads, water ways and campsites demands that he abandon qualms about being a busybody. Develop the habit of calmly but firmly lecturing strangers observed littering. "Pack it in, Pack it out reads the sign at the Henrys Fork trail head just outside the High Uintas Primitive area. On a recent hike up the trail it was evident that many back packers had adopted the motto, "Pack it in, Pitch it out". The trail was easily followed by picking up Ihe campsites near Dollar We live in a throw away society. Everything is conveniently packaged in plastic, cardboard or aluminum. With such convenience it is all too easy to become sloppy with our lit ter. When people were few in the early days of the west, the pioneers could drop or toss garbage and it did not matter much. The garbage left by pioneers, trappers and miners of 100 or 150 years ago has grown attractive with age. But the garbage from last summer or last week is just plain garbage. 46g3722 The Alliance states that a young child who moves better actually learns t Everytime you go camping or picnicking take along large plastic garbage bags, and bring them home full. It is no longer enough to meticulously carry out all your own garbage. When you visit your favorite campsite clean up the whole area when you leave even if it means taking trash some slob left behind. a 49 Save With OD -- First Security Home Equity Loan can provide from $2,500 to $25,000. A We must do all we can to rid the waters, forests and deserts of Utah ot the bane of litter. The natural wonders are the only ones we and our children will ever have. Youth Conservation i oa "Sun-Powe- r" D DD 0 ID Corps employs Q D Youve been putting money into your home. Now you can take some out with a First Security Home Equity Loan. Borrow on its increased value to add a room, modernize, plan a trip, send the kids to college. Any worthwhile purpose. The payments? Simple. Take up to 20 years to repay with no prepayment penalties, should you wish to pay back sooner. You can obtain from $2,500 to $25,000 depending on your equity. No need to disturb your present mortgage. And rates are competitive. Get the details on money from your home at your nearest First Security D cm 0 DD DC a CD D DC cm 0 O Bank. 0 S3 For your energy conservation needs reinsulation or storm windows we offer the best gradute at the right First Security Bank of Utah, N A First Security State Bank, Salt Lake City. Utah Firs! Security Slate Bank of Kaysville First Security Bank ot Murray, N A First Security Bank ot Rock Springs, Wyo First Security Bank ot Idaho, N A First Security Bank ot Orem, N A First Security Bank ot Bountitul, N A First Security Bank ot Logan, N A First Security State Bank of Helper I DQ (QUM WXANt LENOIR cm price. oa a goa on Members F D.l C. Payson youth C B0 D DC a a Contact Curt Arrington at dp 465-246- 6 ; ; j ? k Modern recreationists, trying to recapture a portion of frontier n i 1 Backpackers like to think of themselves as more ecologically minded than motor recreationalists but the ranks of the back packer are not off limits to the litter bugs. neVs : he reasons for littering (there are no excuses) range from mere negligence to slovenly disregard. But we dont have to live that way. You can help. Stop the disgraceful trend. In the Forest Service campground at Payson Lake the problem is not as severe, however the fire pits are filled with cans, broken bottles, eggshells and aluminum foil (none ot which will burn). set ; It it takes that long for trash to decompose and we keep adding to at the garbage in the the present rate we soon wont have to travel to the mountains to see whats there. We will be able to get the same view at the nearest sanitary land till. 1 ! M Studies have shown that steel (tin) cans ordinarily do not breakdown into soil in less than 20 to 40 years. Plastic may not decompose entirely for 200 years, aluminum for 500 years and glass may take up to 1,000, 000 years. drove up Payson Canvon recently and was appalled by the garbage lining the road. The beautiful view ot maple and scrub oak was marred by blossoming kleenex flowers and beer cans mushrooming on the shoulder of the road. Beer Can Elat (aptly named) is covered with the remnants of countless beer In places the garbage is busts. almost knee deep. better. An organization of muscular, deepbreathing educators is doing its best spirit, cannot afford to drop, toss or leave their garbage in the hills. two young people from the Payson area, Ingrid Jensen and Brenda Bowers, participated in an eight week program entitled the Youth Conservation Corps (YCC). The program sponsored by the Uinta National Forest recently concluded its work program tor the year. the YCC is a program similar to the more familiar Civilian Conservation Corps of CCC. The purpose of the program is to provide jobs for youth in the forests of our nation and to educate them to the interaction of man and the environment. to reach these goals Ingrid and Brenda helped in completing various projects' in area forests. Some of the projects which they worked on were A erosion control in Packard Canyon, ience building in the Payson Lakes n area, and repairing fences between Hobble Creek and Diamond Fork range allotments. The redesigning and constructing of new facilities at the Palmyra Campground was a project to be viewed and enjoyed by the public. Ingrid and Brenda are two of many youths chosen at random from applications which were submitted early last spring. YCC will be continuing next year in Utah Valley with plans tor expansion already underway. Any youth interested in working in the program next year who is between the ages of 15 and 18 should aPl !y through their local school counselors early next spring. |