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Show 1l fax 1,0' stake confer enge f yf SUM DAY SV1HS 'X. Reporter- - Tess Toblson IN NUMBER 1 ltESi nuMotX' KANOM Published every Friday at Fillmore, Utah 84631 A THE OUR TOWN r WRESTLING a uAi. i diliBeckstrand steadfastly, gently, tenaciously, persevered through the years toward building their won Dental Clinic, Ideally located and equipped with all of the modern appliances for the practice of dentistry, their dream is now being fulfilled. Although we were unable to attend the grand opening of their building on Monday Dec. 27, 1971, we were honored to have Zola give us a personally conducted tour and explain the type of work to be performed In each room, as well as the uses of the different pieces of equipment. The east door of the building opens Into a very Inviting reception room, paneled with beige wood paneling and using a monocra matte color scheme for the carpeting and furnishings. A glowing fireplace In one corner Is flanked by baskets of artistically arranged fresh flowers. Immediately we were concerned for fear the heat from the fireplace would Injure the flowers, however as we examined the fireplace, we discovered the glow was heatless, since heat would Interfere with the electric heating sustem controlled bv a thermostat In each room. The large mirror covering the north wall gives the Illusion of spaciousness. We next visited the sterilization room where all Instruments used by the doctors and, technicians are washed and sterlUed. Three of the rooms house machines, two of these machines are of the type used In minor dental surge! y; one Is Installed In an opening between two of the rooms and can be used In either room, making four rooms In which may be tacn. In one machine room Is a of the peaoranic type which can lake pictures of the whole mouth, showing Just how the roots of the teeth fit Into the upper and lower jaw bones, and Is one of the few machines of this type In Utah. Residents of this area are Indeed fortunate to have skilled operators who are willing to spend large sums of money cm the most modern equipment available, In order to serve patients from a sparsely populated section of the state. All of the laboratory supplies are kept In the lower cabinets which can be opened by pressure from the knee, making 11 possible to keep the hands once they are preapred for duty. In one room Is an Auveloper which develops the p'etures In about four minutes from the time they are surveys recently fo the Council of Twelve. 'Church of Jotut Chntl of latter-da- y So inti ELDER HENRY D. TAYLOR, com- pleted by Cloyd Day and Kirk Heaton of the Soil Conservation Service and Larry Gass of the Forest Service show the following: At Pine Creek there was 48 Inches of snow with 9.3 inches From November I of water. to the present there has been 12.4 Inches of perclpltatlon. In previous years, Pine Creek was not read until February 1 so we have no past average tocompare with. The total perclpltatlon from November 1 to the present Js 8.8 Inches. (Continued on page 2) Report Goings Gr Comings If you 'take a t;ip or have gut its for the holidays, dmp a n te in the rruil or call it in. an Assistant to the Council of Twelve of The Church of Jesus T.i's includes children home Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, fr. m various schools. TOURNAMENT 3rd Hurricane 52 points Be It know to 4th North Sevier 50 points MILLARD V;t Wrestlers placing In the meet were: Kendall Quarnberg 3rd John Whitaker 112 Hal Edwards Is 2nd 119 Gary Teeples 1st 126 Thayne Christen n 3rd 132 Kay Monroe 3rd 138 Greg Kesler 2nd 143 Gary Christensen 'nd iw all parties hereunto Interested: eda Carroll delivered i If I os male child at 12:15 a.m. January 1972, the first child born at Fillmore LDS Hospital since the urn of the New Year, Rob Robertson, M.D. s) 1, 153 Loy Dobson 1st 167 Ed Stevens 1st 185 Calvin Bennett 1st Uni. t i fl Les Nellson 2nd MILLARD WON over Cedar Monday by a score of 32 to 15, - winners were: 88 Kendall Quarnberg pin 105 John Whitaker forfeit Hal Edwards forfeit Cary Teeples dec. 145 Gary Christensen dec. 167 Ed Slevens dec. 183 Calvin Bennett dec. Uni, Les Nellson draw 112 119 hr fk . fr i THE LARGEST SECTION OF FOUND NEAR SCIPIO WAS AN aircraft, of which this ts the 0 Piloted by Identified as that of an air section. Lucas, It was the only craft. It was a single engine portion of the plane readily irgs Eugene ; vf, t JR. VARSITY -- -- i :. . were Lane Robison dec. Mike Beckstrand dec. Daniel Davies pin re- tractable landing gears. ! matches won by: Mooney with low wings and PLANE SPLATERS IN SCIPIO FIELD "kYtf. -' s wlr feHriftfc I'M C, px ' JUSTIFIABLY PROUD OF THE ts VWa Baby 1972 First Carroll. She and her husband Ralph are the parents of this fine son. BORN ON JANUARY 3, THE Young man wtu recleve many . gifts from Fillmore merchants. THOSE WHO PARTICIPATED In the contest were Warner M Stevens AG. Duanes AG, Baker Drug, Shadys Cafe, Mi- llard Implement Company, Me Brtda Lumber, Kimballs 4 Co., Beulahs Style Shop, Kelly's Department Store, Central Utah Insurance A gency, St rout Realty, Steveus, Inc., Mark Paxton, Texaco Distributor, Photo Village, Pioneer Market, Cafe Bene and Truck Stop Cafe, Evan A. Beckstrand, D.D.f., Peterson Floral and The PROGRESS. Vr v Jt LIGHT SNOW SOON BEGAN TC lone landing gear Is nesr the cover the crash site near Sclplo, center. Vehicles In the tore-wi- th this largest section all tha remains of the motor. One ground are perked near the Im- pact area. cold and short frost storms SHERIFFS POSSE road it miserable for the re members complet the grim task of recovering the remains of covfy learn. The White Mll the pilot and his daughter. Bitter krd Posse ambulance ts aimos MILLARD ay SCS NEWS ytg Aiiuion! 98 105 ay In this same butldingare six apartments being finished for prospective tenants, three are upstairs,intwo on the main floor basement. The walls and one around the tubs and showers In the bathrooms are all tiled In pastel colored ceramic tile to match Ihe other bathroom fixtures. All of the furnishings are of the very best quality with plenly of closet and storage space In each department. These apartments are a boon to Fillmore and would be a credit to a much larger city, thanks to such progressive owners. I Elder Taylor was a prominent Provo, Utah, businessman before beign called to his fulltime Church position In 1958. He also Is a former California mission president. He serves as a managing director of the Churchs vast welfare program and helps supervise the West and Scandinavian European missions. The Conference session will be held Sunday at 10 A.M. In the Stake Center, 21 Scuth and 3rd West. Stake President Llyod P. George, Kanosh, says visitors are welcome. 1st MILLARD 107 points 2nd South Sevier 102 points ' St m effort to make i Fillmore. Team results were: "T . their dreams come true. Because Dr. Evans and Zola Snow points. j . All of us dream of a time In the future when something we desire very much will become a reality. Some people go on dreaming all of their lives but they never put forth Ue 13 Jan. 7. By STELLA DAY s EAGLES MILLARD HAS A LEAGUE bye this weekend but the Eagles will travel to Gunnison to play a practice game on Saturday, OUR TOWN the necessary V day night at St. George, 63 to 51. High scorers for Millard were Shan Carling, hitting 18 potej, and David Stephenson Friday, January 7, 1972 hMlng FILLMORE MILLARD i weredefeated by the Dixie Flyers In a league tilt last Thurs- CM' The Millard County Progress - i PRACTICE BAShET-ha- ll game on Thursd.iv, Dec. 23, South Sevier downel the Millard Cagles, 60 to 54. High scores for Millard were David Hare with 14 points, Shan Carling with 13 points, David Step- -t enson with 10 points, and Rick Bennett with 9 points. cprnmh 'V- will speak at the Millard Stake Conference Saturday and Sunday, January 8th and 9th in A Salt Lake City airplane, In route from Douglas, Arizona to Salt Lake City, crashed one mile north and one mile east early Sunday evening and was found the next morning by rancher Jay Memmott, Sclplo. The pilot Eugen LeRoy Lucas, 45, and his passenger Debbie Lucas, age 14, apparently died Instantly when the plane plunged Into the ground. Mrs. Claude Quarnberg stated that she heard the plane Sunday night and thought she heard It crash. She reported It Monday when she learned of an aircraft By that time, the missing. plane had been found by Mr. Memmott. The plane was scattered over a large area and It was difficult to determine one part from anNeither of the wings other. were found even partially Intact. Doth the pilot and his daughter were found some distance apart In the wreckage. The plane had left Douglas, Arizona, Sunday afternoon, January 2 and apparently got caught In the sudden snow storm that hit the entire area. The clock In the plane was stopped at 8.28 and this Is about the time Mrs. Quarnberg stated she heard the crash. Officials Investigating the crash stated the Lucas plane apparently made a turn and was headed back south when It struck the It has appeared in famous. dozens of TV pictures and has played an Important role In the Search and Rescue otwt!ons In Millard County. giund at an approximate erf the According to the flight plan filed by Mr. Lucas and at his last radio check from Bryce dence showed that the plane Canyon he was flying must have been going at about route 257 which should have 180 mllles an hour when It taken him across the mountains hit. Wreckage scattered everyJust south of Beaver, thence to where made It a grim reminder M Ilford, Delta and Salt Lake of the force that Is exerted CUy. Douglas , Arizona, where when a plane under almost full the flight originated Is In the power hits. extreme southern end of AriJack-so- n Merlin Sheriff Deputy zona, located on the border of was first on the scene after Mexico and New Mexico. Mr. Memmott reported. Members of the Millard Jeep Posse under command of Kenneth Hare NO PAPER? assisted In re moving the bodies, CALL THE PROGRESS, AND IF YOUR ADDRESS picking up paper and guarding CHANGED-Dthe aircraft until officials from IT NOW! Denver arrived Tuesday, January 4. The County Attorney also assisted the Sheriffs Department NEW DEADLINES In the Investigation. Here from was Mr. Denver THE PROGRESS Is having Denver was Mr. L. E. Martin, to meet new earlier deadlines Air Safety Investigator, National In order to print the papers Transportation Safety Board. as they have been. The Lucas aircraft was one We hope that the advertisers of three aircraft that crashed and subscribers will like the over the j0ng j;ew years week Idea of having the paper out The second plane was found earlier Thursday. Tnls will Monday and a third missing mean that Fillmore subscribers somewhere In southern Nevada will get their PROGRESS at or Utah has not been found. the same time as the rest of The bodies were taken to their Flowell morning mall. Olpln Mortuary and serlves will will get their papers on Thurstown of be held In their home day as they did some years ago Woods Cross, Utah, later this and out of town subscribers week. may pick- up their papers at 90 degree angle. Size Impact crater and other nr evi- V-- O Ue MRS. CLAUDE (HtLDA ) was certain sbe Quarnberg heard the p$ne crash Sunday evening, but after talking with her husband and son, she decided to not report It until she learned the next morning on the news that the craft was She said when' It missing. passed over Sclplo, tt was very low and a storm was raising. NEW DEADLINES JAY MEMMOTT, UPON OUT checking his cattle Just east of Sclplo Monday morning noticed some strange additions to his field, looking as scrap metal. He soon found It was the missing Lucas aircraft and called the Millard Sheriff's Depart- ment. all staff photos NtW DEADLINES rnuGRESS office until about 3:30 p.m. or our mall time. Tuesday noon deadline, and almost all of them meet It. OF To meet these new deadlines this we are most appreciative. w will have to ask that news Side Street stores have a be In early,. .as soon as It hap Monds-noon deadline or If a pens ' ,TY' noon Mil following week. This Includes We our Subappreciate even the "Important news that scribers, correspondents and even the "Important notices that advertisers efforts. We hope Just have to go this week. to make the PROGRESS the W e know they are Important, best newspaper In Millard th'-but If are Important, please have them tn by TUESDAY AT County! - NOON! SIDE STREETS MADGE. A. WARNER, daugh-t- er erf A'lma and the late Lottie Anderson, Is best known for her energy and Interest In civic Madge was one of two sisters In a family of boys. She graduated from Millard High School, and later met and married Joe Warner, son of Maurel and the and church affairs. As colate Eva Warner. owner of Review Apparel, sewTo Madge and Joe a son and ing factory, she has given employment and encouragement to two daughters ware bom. Ro si, many women and girls of East married to Linda Robinson from Millard County. She ts kept Sprtngvllle, Is living In Fillmore where he works with his busy there, but still finds time to car for her home and Sun- father at Warner Motors.Connle attending B.Y.U., Is studying day School music department, clothing and textiles. Joyce will of the Fillmore Second Ward, When the Anderson family graduate from Millard High moved from Delta to Fillmore, (Continued on page 2) V V |