OCR Text |
Show 141 Salt Volume 10c Seventy-si- x per copy 6 Pierpont Ave. Lake City, Utah MT. PLEASANT, UTAH 84647 84108 OCTOBER Number 18, 1968 Forty-tw- o mm mm mem Mwirwm Hunters urged to Iceep rules of sportsmanship Standing committees shuffled on city council since appointments Changes in the standing committees made necessaiy by the appointment of two new city councilmen, Louis Kay, and Harrv Hanson Jr., to fill the unexpired teims of Andrew J Pratt and Dr. Dean C. Rigby, kiled in a recent accident weie made at a recent city council meeting. Standing committees are now as follows: Public Safety, Recreation and CeleHanson-Jorgensebrations, City Parks, Jorgensen-Hansoardy Cemetery, Jorgensen-Finance, Claims and Licenses, Buildings and Public Grounds, K a y- - Jorgensen Streets, Sidewalks and Bridges, Waterwoik-'- , Seely-Ka- Board, Hanson; Board of Health, Louis Kay, Dr Gene E. Speuknnn, Harold P. Hansen. New presidency named at Manti Temple n; The Manti Temple Presidency was reorganized Sunday, October 13, by President Nathan E Tanner and President Joseph Fielding Smith. Ruel Christensen of Ephraim is thi t; Preal George of Hardy-SeelIrrigation and Manti is first counselor and Hardy-HansoFlood Control, Clifford Me Kinney of Spring Power and Light, Seely-KaCity is second counselor. President McKinney lecently retired after 19 years as administrator of the Sanpete LDS Hospital in Mt. Pleasant. He was also first counseloi to President A. J. Anderson of the North Sanpete Stake. Mrs. McKinney (Ruth) has Karl Mower, son of Mr. and served in the auxiliaries of the churcn and as counselor and Mrs Ted Mower of Fairview Snow College students have secretary of the North Sanpete was chosen as first runnel up filled 12 student body offices Stake for in tne Utah division of Scoutmany years. at general elections held in the ing District 12 in interviews campus center. on the Scout report to the naAlan Bullock, son of Mr. and tion program held at Provo Mrs. Robert F. Bullock, Midrecently. vale. was named president of Karl was chosen from a Leowith the sophomore cass, of Scouts to represent group nard Blackham, son of Mr. and the North Sanpete Stake at Mrs. Moyle J. Blackham, MorFuneral services were held the region meet held previously oni, being named vice presi- Friday afternoon in the Spring in Neplil. Winning out in the dent; Marlene Jensen, daughter City LDS Ward Chapel for he was chosen to of Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Jensen. Maybert R. Strate of Spring Nephi meet, thus area at the state represent Richfield, secretary. City. The prayer at the family Robert K. Cole, a son of Mrs home was given by Sherman meet in Provo. The boy chosen at the Provo meet to represent Olga B. Cole, Sandy, was chos- Strate. Gorden Sorensen of the Utah will be interviewed along en freshman class president. ward bishopric conducted the with other boys from District Serving with him will be Todd services. Prelude organ music 12 which Includes Utah, IdaW. Berry, son of Mr. and Mrs. was played by Karen Sorensen. will C. M. Berry, Porterville, Calif., The ward choir sang funeral ho, Arizona and Nevada, to winner The California. go and Kathy hymns, conducted by Elizabeth race president, chosen there will give a report Christensen, daughter of Mr. Anderson with Karen Sorensen on Scouting to the President of and Mrs. Stewart E. Christen- as accompanist. Prayers were the United States. sen, Salt Lake City, formerly given by Floyd Draper, Spring Nine boys were interviewed of Fountain Green, as secre- City, and Newton Donaldson of Moroni. Speakers were John at Provo by Scout executives tary. Associated Women Students Irons and Emil Jensen with re- and community leaders. named Peggy Lowry, daughter marks by Gorden Sorensen. Karl is an Eagle Scout and of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Low- Vocal selections included a du- has earned his Duty to God ry, Mt. Pleasant, vice presi- et by Leslie and Earl Clark, Award. He has earned many dent; Sophie Bruno, daughter with Elizabeth Anderson as ac- other Scout awards and is a of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bruno, companist, and a vocal solo by senior at North Sanpete High Murray, secretary; Vickie Rey- Floyd Donna School this year where he is Young, with nolds, a daughter of Mr. and Strate, accompanist. Burial was active in band and other stuMrs. P. William Reynolds, Mt. in the citv cemetery directed by dent activities. Pleasant, director, Ursenback Funeral Home of publicity and Susan Enckson, daughter Mt. Pleasant. The grave was Mrs. Melba Coates, who was of Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Erick- dedicated by Royal Allred. injured last week in a head-o- n son, Ephraim, activity mana- Pallbearers were grandsons, collision at Thistle, has been ger. Don, Byron, Dwane Lund, Paul transferred from Payson HosBrenda Cox, a daughter of and W ayne Donaldson and pital to St. Marks Hospital in R. LaVaun Cox, Salt Lake City, Douglas Dean of Magna. Hon- Salt Lake City. and LaMar Cox, son of Mr. and orary pallbearers were David Mrs Vernon L. Cox, Payson, Strate, Fred Strate of Spring Mr .and Mrs. Wallace E. All-re- d were elected president of As- City and David Donaldson and and family, Kenneth, Jansociated Women Students and Jeffery Dean of Magna. Many et, Nancy and Marilyn, Orem, Associated Men Students, re- relatives and friends attended were overnight guests Friday of Mr .and Mrs. H. L. Norman. the services. spectively, last spring. n, H Kay-Hard- y; ; pre-iden- y; y: Fairview Scout Election held at rates high Snow with 12 in district event officers named -- Funeral held for Members of Company D, 1457th Engineer Battalion, Utah National Guard, lay trusses for a bridge over Pleasant Creek at 200 North and 400 West. Lower photo shows the bridges top being put into place as the Guard crew replaces the bridge washed out Services held for Mr. Tucker Funeral services were held in the Fairview Saturday, South Ward at 1:00 p.m. for George Que Tucker who died October 9, 1968 at his home in Fairview of natural causes. Services were under the direction of Bishop Henry Wheeler. The family prayer was offered by Lynn Nielsen, organ prelude and postlude music was by Virginia Mower; hymn, the combined Fairvier choir conducted by Ellis Madsen; invocation, Guy Tucker; tribute, Arthur Tucker; vocal trio, Ernest Terry, LaRue Hickman and Pat Hickman; speaker, Heber Mower; organ medley, Virginia Mower; speaker, Golden Carlston; remarks, Bishop Wheeler; benediction, Rodney Nelson. The grave was dedicated by Reed Lasson. Pallbearers were grandsons and included, Paul Mower, Karl Mower, Larry Hansen, Mike Allen, Richard Nielsen, Jim Woodward and Randy Allen. Burial wa3 in the Fairview City Cemetery under the direction of the Ursenbach Funeral Home. Moroni man on rifle team Views in a devastating flood 21 years ago. Mt. Pleasant City is furnishing the material. Another bridge at 900 East and 100 South (just west of the waterworks head house) has also been stated but will not be completed this year. Snow gridders HoteA... Mrs. William Jackson, PhoeUSU nix, Arizona, visited here four days last week with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Seely, after taking her grandson, who had spent five weeks in PhoeSnow College football team, nix, to his home in Lehi. from long road trips and weary Mr. and Mrs. Dean Seely and five consecutive losses, will reone visited day family, Roy, the Badger campus Frilast week with the Rex Seelys. turn toOctober 18, for a game day, State Univerthe with Utah Lasson Keith Mrs. Mr. and time is Kickoff freshmen. of Murray are happy to an- sity nounce the arrival of their first 2 p.m. The game will start the secchild, a baby boy, bom October 13 at the Holy Cross Hos- ond half of the season and Coach Bob Stoddard figures pital in Salt Lake City. Grandbrighter days lie ahead as parents arc Bishop and Mrs. that the Badgers head into the PleasMt. of Lasson E. Edgar ant, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry ICAC schedule. For a while last Saturday Bulloch. Cedar City. night it looked as though the Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Norman brighter days had already arwent to Salt Lake City Sunday rived. Snow was the guest of College to attend the sixtieth wedding Glendale Community ic looked as though the and of house and open anniversary James D. and Sally Washbrun. first win of the season was goMrs. Washburn and Mrs. Nor- ing on the boards. The Badgers went across the man are sisters. Gaucho goal line in the first quarter, but the play was called back by the officials. They lost another TD on a dropped pass in the end zone and another on a penalty. In the meantime, with the Mrs. Cecil Coombs of Fair-vie- score knotted at 0 midway is reported to be in fair through the period, the break condition this week from injur- came, but it favored Glendale. The Gauchos picked off a Lamies she received in a three-ca- r bert Nahulu pass near the cenMrs. last accident Tuesday. a broken ter stripe, moved into field Coombs suffered on shoulder, ribs and jaw in the goal range and then called g to Williams kick Ken the collision Her granddaughter, points. It was 0 and the Tammy Forbes ,who was riding were moving into Badgers was with her uninjured. Gaucho territory when the fiThe accident occurred on nal gun sounded. Highway 89 between Fairview In the matter of statistics, and Mount Pleasant. Snow had the best of it all the Mrs. Coombs is confined to way in first downs 16-- 5 and the Lrtah Valley Hospital in in total yards gained Provo. But the statistics also have to take into account the field goal that won the game for Glendale. Coach Bob Stoddard is sure of one thing. Little Tom Duvall, the 150 pounder who started for the first time and Two graduates of Wasatch gained 154 yards in 29 carries 198 Academy are among the in the Glendale game, is going students named to the summer to be In the backfield Fnday quarter honor roll at the Uni- aftemoon. Other Badgers who won a heap of plaudits for versity of Utah. They are Michael Benton their performances were Jim Saffle, a graduate student in Feick, a tackle, and Alan the College of Fine Arts, and Drury, a linebacker. Sherry J. W. Seagraves, a senMr. and Mrs. LeRoy Moos-ma- n ior in the College of Letters and Science. celebrated their wedding To be named to the honor anniversary October 9 in Provo roll list a student must main- They also visited at Payson tain an average of 3.5 or bet- Hospital with local accident ter in all academic subjects victims, Mr. and Mrs Reri where 4 0 is the equivalent ol Ruerch, Marilyn Ruesch and an "A. Mrs. Melba Coates. play freshmen Friday Accident victim reported fair w 0-- win-nir- Mate Second Class Newell E. Christensen, USCG, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Christensen, Moroni, and husband of the former Miss Ze'la R. Hansen of Fair-vieparticipated in the Third Annual Eastern Area Small Arms Competition held at the U.S. Coast Guard Training Center, Cape May, New Jersey. The rifle team and an individual member of pistol team from the Training Center won top honors. Their wins allow them to compete in the All Coast Guard Shoot-of- f. The Eastern Area Competition was composed of the 90 best marksmen east of the Rocky Mountains. Boatswains Mr and Mrs. H. L. Norman received word this week of the arrival of their eleventh greatgrandchild. a baby boy, born October 14 in Salt Lake City to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry B. MadFair-vieden, Mrs. Lucile Madsen, is also a great grandmother, and Mr. and Mrs. Blaine M. Madsen, Salt Lake City, are grandparents. 3-- 284-13- Maybert Strafe Historic engine joins museum exhibits The Schofield engine, iron workman of its day, will be permanently preserved in the Fairview Museum where posterity might learn of the story of its past, where it seived mankind in Spring City and many parts of Notch Sanpete Valley. It was bought as a unit to pump irrigation water on the Downard farm in Spring City, where it served until the area was flooded and the pumping well was filled with rock and debrie. It left the Downard farm and went into the hand-o- f the late William and his brother, Henery Schofield. It was purchased to run a hammer mill. Since it was mounted on a heavy truck it coon found its way into threshing the grain at harvest time, replacing the many horses of the early day horse power. four-wheele- d 7. Wasatch grads on honor roll Mrs. Anna Jensen, member of the Falnlew Museum board of trustees, works braking system on the historic Schofield engine, Iron workman of the parly days of Sanpete and uVuch uill bo preserved along with its interesting story. Its companion piece was the Case grain seperator, thresher, owned by the Danish Choir of Spring City, a group of early day citizens, who worked, sang and worshiped in early day tradition. Even though the thresher had been converted to engine power and a .straw blower had been installed the band cutter, the feeder and measurer of early day sepera-tor- s worked with the machine. The quantities of food for robust appetites cooked for the threshers by the family were never to be forgotten events. The engine was primed with a hand pump, given its first spark from a match head struck by a plunger, timed with the spin of the fly wheels by two other men. A magneto would furnish the electricity for the make a break spark unit. The massive engine is a Fairbanks-Mors- c with patents beginning in 1865 and has a rated energy of 25 horse power whien can bo matched today in two aluminum cylinders of a modern motorcycle weighing only a few pounds. Two very historic stoves are included ir the great interest and exhibits from the Henery and Rose Schofield home, making possible the preservation of a rich chapter of Sanpete's colorfu' history. Hunters of the wily buck will yellow and shirt, headgear converge over Utahs mountain jacket or sweater. ranges Friday for the annua1 Hunting for deer Is allowed deer hurt opening which will only during daylight hours by commence at the crack of persons 16 years of age or older. dawn Saturday, October 19. One new' regulation has been As hunters take to the hills, they are reminded to observe put into this years deer procthe laws of a true sportsman lamation and will be strictly as well as the laws of the state enforced. This law makes It the big hunting illegal to use a spotlight, headregulating event. light or other artificial light, Deer hunting laws remain to locate any game with fireabout the same each year, a arms in possession of the person using the light. fai t which should help deer Tills new rule was adopted out of trouble, hunters to keep but it never fails that a good to prevent the killing of game number of hunters will forget and livestock illegally at night to tag their game or unload and was copied from laws used their rifle before they put it in in other states successfully. a vi nicle. Failure to tag deer and carI. rying a loaded gun are but two ot the more commonly violated deer hunt rules the Division of Fish and Game say hunters should observe more carefully this deer season. One deer of either sex may be taken on the regular huntRay I. Johansen, who with ing license except on three his wife owns and operates Ray Box Elder, and VaLenes Floral and Gift buck only areas: Raft River, West Pine Volley, Shop in Mt. Pleasant, Is recovand Terry Ox Valley. ering in a Provo hospital from There is a general eleven day injuries he received In a one-eroll-ovseason except on five units Saturday afterwliii h will close after five days noon at Thistle in Spanish of hunting. These five day Fork Canyon. hunts are for the Heaston, Mr. Johansen was alone at Stansbury, Tintic, Vernon and the time of the accident, and Bcaver-M-nerunits. was driving a new panel deAll deer must be tagged at livery truck. He was souththe place of kill and before be- bound, en route home, when ing transplanted and the prop- the vehicle enreened across the er notches removed to Indicate road hitting the mountain, then the month and day of kill turned back across the road along with the sex of the ani- taking out the guardrail and mal taken. It Is unlawful for turning over on Its side. Some claimed locker plants to accept deer witnesses the car unless they are properly tag- had rolled over at least two times, while others claimed it ged. It is unlawful to carry on or had rolled over one time. He was taken to the Provo in any vehicle, any firearm which has live ammunition in hospital where it was found he had suffered five fractured the firing chamber. Every person while hunting ribs, deep cuts on the head shall wear consplcious red or and back and a bruised leg. Johansen Ray injured in truck rollover ar er North Sanpete chooses popular musical show, 'Guys and Dolls' Double-breaste- d suits and flowered ties seem to be coming back into fashion. Probably the trend will get a big boost when North Sanpete High Dolls In the school auditorium in The story takes place in the rather wicked city of New Yoik around the early forties, when the described costumes were in vogue. The show is full of gamblers who seem to enjoy singing and dancing as much as rolling the dice. Characters such as Big Jule, Benny Southstreet and Rusty Charlie are found ducking the police, playing matchmaker, singing hilarious songs about their trade, and, last but not least, repenting in the 49th Street Mission. This is no ordinary mission, however, because it is operated by the very dignified General Matilda B. Cartwright and decorated by a very beautiful young lady missionary named Sarah Brown. The romance that develops throughout the show gives rise to some beautiful songs such as More I Cannot Wish You, Ive Never My Time of Day, Been in Love Before, and Ill Know When My Love Comes Along. For comedy songs one young lady laments the fact that she has been engaged for fourteen years and singing about theproblem in "Adelaide's Lament. Nicely, Nicely Johnson" (big time gambler) sings like a choir boy In the mission about a dream he has had. It seems he was on the boat to heaven and the other passengers told him to "Sit Down, Youre Rockin the Boat." Three betters sing about their choices in the first race in an interesting trio called Fugue for Tin Homs. The show will be directed by Loa Cheney and Jay S. Christenson, Scenery construction and painting will be by Lawrence Kelson and Max Blain Bertha Bulow Is in charge of costumes and Shirlene Dovey will organize the dancing. Tickets will be handled at the high school by Joyce Lowry. North Sanpetes best talent will occupy the stage backed up by an orchestra of fine local string musicians and Instrumental students at the high school. Lead roles will be announced with the completion of tryouts and production dates will be announced as soon as possible. Donate hides to Scout troops The North Sanpete Stake Scout Committee is asking deer hunters in this area to donate their deer hides to the Scouting program in their wards. Any hunter willing to do this is asked to contact his ward bishopric, and they will make arrangements to call for the hide. The hides will be sold and the finances used toward the Scout budget of the individual wards. Red Cross Drive chairman listed Mrs. Catherine Christensen has been named chairman of the Red Cross drive for Spring City. She will be assisted in the current house to house canvass by Mr .and Mrs. Edwin Simons, Mrs. Ruth McKinney, Mrs. Winona Allred, Mrs. Ireta Sti ate, Mrs. Geneva Madsen, Mrs. Cecil Watson, Mrs. Jessie Schofield, Mrs. Mildred Peterson, Mrs. Crystal Aiken, Mrs. Geneva Sorensen and Mrs, Athene Osborne. Welfare agency Is first to make budget cuts. |