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Show The Pyramid Page Might January Snow responds to Tale of tubs 15. li)Kl communitys needs career Tin tub subs as playpen By Demon! Ilowell Occasionally as we lie in our porcelain tub filled with hot water we might think about the stories of low tough sanitation was our ancestors. Dont you Hooey! believe it. They too had tubs to help them with cleaning problems. Maybe they did have to carry water from a ditch instead of turning on a tap. Maybe they did have to heat their water on the kitchen stove. Maybe they did have to take their baths in the back yard or the middle of the kitchen floor. It might even be true that the whole family often did take baths in the same water. There may even be some truth in the assertion that these baths didnt happen very often. But can we accept at face value the suggestion of Blaine and Brenton :'or Yorgason (popular present century. still washing clothes, in Typically these first metal tubs, using water systems consisted only of heated by coal burning a cold water tap in the. kitchen ranges. Tubs served not only for yard or in the kitchen. Well into the 1930s baths and clothes, but more Sanpeters than not were sometimes used for would still have been mak ing soap or scalding a taking baths, and many Pig. In some cases they were even used for play pens for children. Hannah Bohne of Fairview relates one such experience that happened over eighty years ago. David EPHRAIM- Her mother was peeling of Campbell, Principal in the at peaches the Richfield Seminary, their home in yard a sawmill will Friday forum animals were loose in the yard, the mother put the child in a tub to play. To entertain the child her mother had given her a peeled peach. A large sow attracted by the peach grabbed the child by the wrist and dragged her from the tub. The child was rescued, but Mrs. Bohne, now 89 years of age, says she still bears the scars made by the pig's teeth. Yes, things were difficult for those who Bv Dr. J. Marvin Higbee EPHRAIM- - The Mc- Donald ' to Report Board regarding of the Regents comthe community college further recommended that the technical college be allowed to grant Associate of Arts Degrees and Associate of Science Degrees as done by the present Junior Colleges of Snow, Dixie, and College of Eastern Utah. prehensive The report suggests that the restoration of would have pioneered our valleys, these degreesof attracting and tubs played an im- the effect speaker at camp. Because she portant role in coping many students to the on needed both Forum hands to do with some of their many technical colleges and that these students would January 16. The title of her work, and because problems. his talk will be "The Strait and Narrow - A be the Friday likely make a choice much earlier than otherwise. He suggests also that undecided students could be better served by comprehensive community colleges if Associate of Arts and Associate of Science degrees were available. Since Snow College already has the right to grant such degrees, the report suggests that it, along with Dixie and C.E.U., be encouraged and directed to become increasingly aware of and responsive to the needs of their areas with particular reference to training and lor jobs. mad dash or a Long Walk? He attended Dixie College from 1965 to 1966 and in 1969. He then attended BYU from 1969 to 1971 to complete his BA such local degree. Between to BYU Mormon stories as The he returned he received his where and Bishop's Horse Race the Salt Creek Massacre) Masters in Education. authors of that sometimes women went a year or more between hair washings, or that the bushey beards of men served as a hotel for living crawling things? How could such a thing be when they had tubs? For most of Sanpetes first hundred years the galvanized steel tub was the primary contributor to clean clothes and clean bodies. While Manti had installed a simple and inadequate water system as early as 1892, most Sanpete communities did not have a piped water system until well into the 1974-7- His church service in the past includes Elder's Quorum Pres, and a member of the Bishopric. He is presently a member the of High Council. Mr. Campbell was born in Roche, Nev. and is presently residing in Richfield. He is married to the former Bonnie Eksund and they are the parents of 2 sons and 4 daughters. The Indians Peru of ancient a great civilization including, cities, roads, bridges and complex government, without the wheel, the arch or writing. had This picture of the Albert Christensen family mine in Huntington Canyon, developed from a negative made in about 1915, is really several pictures in one, and tells several stories. Albert Christensen kneeling with the mastiff camp guard is one picture. The two miners who are clowning as a pair of young lovers (Orsen Tucker as the girl and Earnest Orton as the boy) is another. Still another picture is the small boy, Tom Christensen, with the can on his head. These with other familv members, miners and guests, all tell a story of how people made their own happiness and fun in isolated mining settings. Of significance to this story, however, is the picture of the number 3 tub hanging on the cabin wall, which tells much about what the mother, Agnes Christensen, can do about clean clothes and clean bodies until the family moves back to town when the snow flies in the fall. (Negative provided by Golden Sanderson) The more affluent had the comfort of shaped tubs. Here Mrs. Norma Allred of Fairview, who works part time at the Fairview Museum, poses with feet in a tub that her mother bathed her in as a baby more than 61) years ago. Your choice of 2 interest-earnin- g checking plans. Advantage NOW The most versatile and commonly used tub during Sanpetes first hundred years was the plain, round galvanized metal tub. For small children like Rachel Anderson (daughter of Gary and Jannette of Ephraim) who poses with her winter coat and deer horn back scratcher, the number 2 tub made an adequate bath. For adults or the whole family the number 3 was used. Lost book returned by postal efforts MT. PLEASANT- Customers complain about the service, and comics make jokes about but the postolfice goes on about its daily business moving the mail lor the millions of American who use the service. it . Sometimes mail is misplaced and mistakes Occur lut one Fairview Woman found out this week that the postal service can also be ef- licient and helpful. 1 ;lty Ramsey mailed .'.115 copies of a book she ircenlly published and . somehow along the way to a customer in South CDakota a. package con- laming two books broke open and one of the books fell out. Postmaster Fairview Ted Mower sent a tracer on the book bul received no response. The books were mailed November and when it liad not turned up by January H) a claim for EATING CURB smokers - CAN. HELP SMOKING-Alkalin- e foods may help smoke less. Research has shown that the more acid the bodys prepared. On the day it chemical balance, the was to be submitted a call faster nicotine is flushed came from the LDS from the system. So, if Church membership you must smoke, the to Mrs. effects of the weed will department Ramsey's home. The last longer if you eat a caller said the Church diet high in alkaline and had received a copy of the low in acid foods. The best Ixmk and would like to know to whom it should be vegetables; the worst, sent, meats and alcohol. In the front of the book, a family history and There are about 800 genealogy, Mrs. Ramsey distinct languages spoken had mentioned her in the western part of in the Africa. membership Church and apparently from this the postoffice Jupiter revolves around ' decided to uttempt to the sun approximately locate her in that way. once every 12 years. some Through special effort a book valued not The islands of Japan only, for monetary, are the projecting reasons; but because i: summits of a chain of was a limited edition, was mountains which were returned to its rightfu originally a part of the owner, Asian continent. Score one for tht postolfice! 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