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Show Millard County Progress, Friday, May 22, Fillmore, Utah 84631, 1981 Page 4 WILDLIFE GRADUATION MHS ness" School bells will chime for the last time as the bv Stephanie Dcarden. valedictorian. A musical number. graduating class of 81 Brother", leave MHS to meet new "Hes My will be done by Russon challenges and opporand Scott. tunities. Penni Johnson A tribute to the Class will be Graduation held Wednesday. May 27, of 1981 will be given by Robins folat 8:00 p.m. in the boys Stephanie lowed tribute to a by gym. The theme will be "Im parents and teachers by Tina Ford. .lust Moving Clouds Toof Ill Announcement day. ..Tomorrow will be Mountains". by Try scholarships Invocation will be by Keith Gillins followed by of Bob Sant. Introduction to recommendation theme will be by Mark graduates by Principal .lav Richman. IntroducPeterson. The will chorus perform tion of graduates will be Moun"Climb by Mark Peterson. Every tain" by Rogers and A talk. Hammerstein. Conferring of diplomas will be by Dr. KenKnowledge, Seeking High Honor Students will be done by Connie neth Topham and Harold Senior Class of 1981 followed by Beckstrand. !' f Tf? ITT Tomkinson,a Better Way of Taps and reveille will "Seeking Life" by DeAnn Robins be by Mike Henrie and and "Seeking Maria Tomkinson. Happi NEWS- - rr repor way patrols Officer to eleven. Children under six years of age must include their fish in the creel of any licensed fisherman. After the opening weekend the limit goes to eight fish. Creel show surveys that nearly half of the fish caught each year are taken on the opening weekend of the season. By the catch limiting on the opener, hopefully fishing success will be better later in the year. Because of problems with the owner of the land adjacent to the proposed kids pond, this idea has been shelved. Sorrv. the Will Question: streams be stocked for the opening day of fishing? Answer: All fishable streams in Millard County will be stocked with rainbow trout for the Saturday. May 30 opening day. Waters to receive rainbows are Maple Grove. Oak, Pioneer. Corn. Chalk, and Meadow Creeks. Over 4.000 fish will be stocked in waters in Millard Countv in the next week. On opening day the limit will be six fish for each licensed angler and three for youngsters six ten-inc- h SENIOR TRIP "Fun and Excitement The seniors and their adwere the results visors went to Lagoon, ing a most successful to the show, and to the Senior Trip held on Tues- Universitv Mall. day Mav 12th. 1981. follow- Honor Students Senior Class of 1981 NEW FHA OFFICERS HONOR ROLL Congratulations to these deserving students as they have paid and ceived the rewarding suits! The following students have been chosen by Principal Jay Richman as Honor and Honor from the grad- of 1981 at class uating School. Millard High h A done! well job Elections were held for tarian-Pa- m Rodeback; Larsen; the new FHA officers on Historian-Dia- ne Chairman-Ki- rn Wednesday May 13th. Recreation Public Brunson: The FHA held their inMastallation ceremony and Rclations-Alle- ne 2 thews: Encounter the new officers for Christensen. are as follows: Prcsidcnt-Jo- sen: Vice Warner; President-La- ne Secretarv-Kee-s- ha - We congratulate these girls and wish them good luck. We know youll do a fine job! be will be an school awards There "Awards Assembly" held given to deserving May 2 1st at dents at this time. 7:30 pm in the Millard High School Auditorium. Everyone is invited to Various departmental and attend. will Christen- dy Ewers: Treasurer Trudv Bond: Parliamen- AWARDS ASSEMBLY Chair-man-Ani- 1981-198- Stephen duction, Gray discovered the principle or the actual flow of electricity of con- in 1729. Milliard FFA Wins Soils as SUSC Members of the Millard Eagle FFA Soil Judging team took top honors in the recent soil judging competition at SUSC. Winning team members were Kevin Cummings, Bob Sant, and Andrade Christensen. Kevin was the high scoring individual in the entire contest with Bob placing second in individual scoring, and each received a trophy for their accomplishment. The Millard Chapter received an attractive trophy for the first place rating. Other chapters placing in the contest included Enterprise, second, and Beaver, third. The Millard Eagle FFA Chapter has consistently scored well in the soils contest at SUSC, winning first place four of the past five years. In the livestock compe-tiiioat SUSC. to members from the Millard Chapter placed fifth in the overall competition with high team members Terry Monroe, Dale Robinson, and Eric Packer. rrrTramfTfrTTiT DHnBS3iHa3 00033502511 n TTT ZQ23GBDU2EID MILLARD EAGLE FFA PARTICIPATES IN STATE JUDGING Five judging teams from the Millard Eagle Chapter of the Future Farmers of America entered the state FFA contests at Logan May 7. Ten contests are held annually on the campus of the Utah State University with teams from each of the 52 chapters in the state participating. The contests in which the were Millard Chapter involved along with the team members and rating are listed. By Max Martin surre- duce traffic accidents during the coming spring and summer holiday weekends. The program, called Combined Accident Reduction Effort "CARE, is an extension of a national CARE program successfully adopted for use in other states. Basically, the CARE program involves an extensive patrolling effort with creation of heightened public awareness of the dangers of holiday driving." explained Robert Reid. Colonel. Utah Highway Patrol. Beginning with the Memorial holiday, the maximum force of the Utah Highway Patrol will be on duty throughout the long Memorial Day. Fourth of July, and Labor Day weekends. This concentrated enforcement effort will also continue across state lines as surrounding state agencies incorporate this same CARE program. Colonel Reid said that since so much holiday travel is interstate, especially heavy patrols will be concentrated on the interstate highways. "We want the motorist to know were out there, and well be especially enforcing the 55 mile per hour speed limit, improper lane usage, and following too closely." Special emphasis will be placed on the problem drinking driver, w'ith additional personnel assigned to the Alcohol Safety Action Pro- ject teams. When a driver crosses a state line, he can be sure the next state is pa- trolled just as stringently. We want to remind motorists that the combined effort is exactly that- -a combined interstate intensive patrolling effort. "Remember the practice of turning on your lights for holiday driving?" said Colonel Robert Reid. We want the public to do that again. Light up for Operation CARE. Your vehicle will be more visible to other drivers-a- nd your headlights will help remind other drivers that this is a time to be especially careful on the highways." Besides heavy patrolling of interstate highways. patrolmen will concentrate on some high fatality corridors in the state. These are "accident prone highways, especially dangerous for travelers on holidays. Be especially careful on this Memorial Day weekend and help the Utah Patrol Highway reduce the needless fatality rate. Class of 71 reunion Time for a ten year reunion!! Save us some time and send us your address along with some ideas of what you would like to do. Reunion date is July 3 and 4. Plan your vacation and let us hear from you. Mike and Gwen Evans Box 334 Fillmore, Utah 84631 WASTE NOT, WANT Quite unlike our modern methods of travel, manufacture and daily rituals of livelihood, the pioneers of Fillmore were challenged continually with the need of drawing on their own skills and ingenuity for survival. Most were well aware that a mandatory law of survival was in effect for every adventurer of the wild west, embraced by the necessity of self effort if one could expect to achieve the meager comforts of a home, clothing and needful staples of life. Pioneer women made their own soap and menfolk would go to the canyon and burn hardwood heaps into ashes which were sacked up, brought home, placed in leaches and with lye thus made soap. It was mixed with animal fat, after which a cooking and drying process followed and soap of a high quality emerged. Nearly every family was familiar with the meat packing industry. not as we know it today with its entanglement of regulations, but their own version which required the utmost skill and care in handling. In addition to meat from the animal, the were important commodities and included leather for various needs. ..very important also was the tallow used in the making of candles which families learned to make for themselves if they expected to have a glimmer of light in their homes when darkness settled KANOS tcam-Excell- I kind of a loan at t r 290 EZlZZi: It IH) i i i i The Sally Kanosh D.U.P. Building in Kanosh will be open for visitors on Memorial Day from 2 to 4 in the afternoon. There will be tour guides there and the public is invited to attend. Olaf and Blanche George enjoyed their trip to Elk Grove, California recently, where they went to visit their son Sterling, his wife Margot Lynn and family. They went especially to see their new baby girl. They now have six children, four girls and two boys. Sterling is serving as a High Councilman in one of the Sacramento stakes and Margot Lynn is a counselor in the Stake Young Women's organization. Willard and Dathel Whitaker and their grandson. Doug, spent three days of last week at the Blue Diamond Ranch at least $1.00 to 30 Mowers i 'pcuicied. I I I t r i RADIO SHACK S NEW POWER PRODUCTS I i of FDIC. I This month RADIO SHACK Flyer is worth i your Tillers i- Power Sprinkler -.i c ninS - I in Ne- welcomed as the newest member of the Kanosh ward. His baptism took place on Tuesday, May 12. Reveau Newby was released as a Sunday School teacher and Nora Price as secretary of the Relief Society. Ray Jensen was sustained as a teacher in Sunday School and Winifred Williams as the new Relief Society secretary. Guest speaker was high councilman Robert Nielson. Baptismal services were held in the Kanosh Ward Chapel Sunday evening, May 17, for Jay LaMonte Behunin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Behunin. Montys grandparents, Evan and Ethel Ashby from Murray, were here for this special occasion. They were also in attendance at church services in the ward Sunday. We welcome Josie Miller back in our midst again. She will be occupying her home here until fall, when she returns to California. She was accompanied to Kanosh by her son Doug, who will soon be returning back home. Lloyd and Helen Rogers attended the funeral services in Murray on Friday, May 15, for their granddaughter, Kathy Parker, who was 30 years old. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Rogers. Pat and Larry Anderson of Monroe accompanied them to the funeral services. hi-f- I N. Main Fillmore who mother-in-la- by Dathel Whitaker Kasoline-powere- while modernization. This means you can pay ahead and save interest. Or pay the whole loan off early without penalty. The loan is ready when your plans are. bJSlJCIIIS UL My was very familiar with the Waste conservative, not, want not" society in which she grew up, remarked in a jocular tone, "When father butchered a hog, it seems nothing ever went to waste; we used everything but the squeal! vada with Glen, Lilly Whitaker and family., While there, they helped them get their They garden planted. Land Judging-Super- ior woke up to two or three in the rating, placed third inches of snow on Saturstate-KeCummings, day morning. The rain Bob Sant, Andrade Chris& preceding the snow was tensen welcomed by Glen for his ent Dairy Products many acres of crops, rating, placed because he was able to The first powrer boat was fourth in the state-J- ay turn off some of his Wilcox, Jay Beckstrand, built in 1865 when Jean Etienne Lenoir sailed sprinkling system for a Joseph Jay Day boat while. on a Livestock Judging on the River Seine in Paris. Sacrament services were team-Go- od rating-Tcr- ry conducted by Cleve ChrisMonroe, Ben Hunter, Ben tensen. Damon Travis Keslcr. son of team-Good Horse Judging and Calvin, was Faye Rhodes rating-J- ay Darrin Rhodes, David Lund, Joe Brinkerhoff, Evelyn Rhodes, alternate People who have power Cattle team-Go- od boats today, and are poweDairy rating-Ste- ve Flint, rfully attracted to pretty i Sam muaic, can now net Todd Quarnbcrg, speakers made for marine Probert Elephants can spend up to I Each affiliate bank of First Security Corporation is a member over the valley. Industrious women could often be found working far into the late hours of night dipping and boxing candles so a good supply would be on hand for future use. Wool was a very scarce and was often item gleaned from a brush where grazing sheep or sheep driven through the area had left little locks on the rough branches. The meager supply after being gathered was carded into rolls by hand and spun into yarn by use of the spinning wheel. After yarn was produced and placed into skeins, it was colored by native dye made from herbs and brush of the surrounding hills. It was then woven by hand looms into cloth and made into suits. There was nothing shoddy about that cloth, for it wore like iron, and when those suits could not be obtained, they traded the Indians out of buckskin and made it into suits. A young man thought himself quite well fitted out for the ballroom if he sported a nice buckskin shirt fringed up and dow n the sleeves and a pair of chieftain breeches with heavy fringe up and down the seams of the legs. KAPERS ?ClCt4 Get tiiie best Territorial Stalehousr Stale Historical Monument Park Superintendent vin JLL solution to home imthe Its simple needs. Pay only for the time provement use the money to remodel, add a you room, kitchen, patio, or insulate to save energy or make any other worth U' , in a spe- cial program to help Brent Olson Wildlife Conservation of the rounding states OTA SCOPE Once again, Utah Highway patrolmen will team with members of the high- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS By MUSEUM Operation Care OFF any Purchase and all small gas engines for , spring repair and tune up. Tl, , ir Performance Center CASH FOR WE NEED I I "T 18 hours a day eating. i i I i 743 6626 All old mowers, tillers small engines and that run or used to run... or just funk. mi |