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Show 4-- . County officials were sworn into office Jan. 4, by County Clerk Kristine t Frischknecht. Officials will each hold office for four years. Pictured are (left to right): Earl Clark, Reed Hatch, Eddie Cox, Bruce Blackham, Ilent Roth, Steve Kjar, Claude Pickett, Ned Jensen, and Kristine Frischknecht Not pictured is Ross Blackham who was sworn in later. .. MT. PLEASANT, UTAH Volume 107 FG teacher honored at retirement program be honored that evening at a dinner by the Fountain Green Faculty and Staff at the JC Restaurant in Nephi. Mariana was bom in Fountain Green to Osmond and Idena Crowther. After High School, she graduated form LDS Business o 'f A, Mariana Schulze GREE- N- A FOUNTAIN on Thursheld be will program in the 2 at Jan. 14, p.m., day. : Fountain Green Elementary School, to honor Mariana Schulze who is retiring after many years of teaching in the area. Students, parents, teachers, family, anu friends are all enI couraged to attend. She will also College and Brigham Young University. She started teaching in San Diego, CA, in the public schools and at a 6th grade science camp in the Hills East of San Diego. She also spent two years tn Japan teaching dependent children for the Air Force. When her husband finished his service in the Navy they returned to Fountain Green where she raised her two children, Scott and Brian, and taught school in all the grades ranging from kindergarten to eighdi grade special education. She has taught at Moroni Elementary, the Middle School, and Fountain Green Elementary. She loves people, especially children, and hopes to continue on a small scale. It is with great emotions and much gratitude to the people of the communities that have allowed her to share their children with her, that she closes this part of her life and moves onto different interests. First Security Bank donates to Snow College With $19.9 billion in assets. First Security Corporation is the by Holly Lynn Simonsen EPHRAI- M- First Security recently announced it is giving $2,000 in scholarships to Snow College this year through the First Security Foundation, according to Lynn Bradford, area president for Central Utah Com--muni- ty Banking. This year. First Security Foundation will contribute more ' than $150,000 in scholarships and grants to 26 colleges and universities, and increase of 15 percent from 1997. t We at First Security strongly believe that education plays a vital role in strengthening the fabric of the communities we ; serve, said Spencer F. Eccles, chairman and chief executive officer of First Security Corporation. "Over the past 46 years. First Security Foundation has been supporting this belief with contri- -' butions in excess of $1.6 million to colleges and universities in Utah, Idaho, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, and Wyoming." t second largest independent bank holding company headquartered in the West. in Since its incorporation 1928, it has believed that success is not only measured by performance and profitability, but also in the way it interacts with communities it serves. To that end. First Security donamakes financial and tions to various educational and nonprofit causes and encourages the active involvement of its employees in the community at in-ki- large. Snow College Director of Advancement, Dean ODriseoll, comments that "over the years First Security, has been very generous in its donations. The arc like annual scholarships Christmas prese .s, and the students who receive them are grateful for the investment in their future." Price 500 ;"xL oriented, and is adding a feature that will highlight recipes of the community. "If people have recipes that are special, that were handed down, we will run a special in the restaurant. I like to get the community involved in my restaurants," People with Hathaway says. recipes should contact the Sanpete County Heritage Council at 462-250- 2. Sil Hathaway is always in the kitchen. He started out there when he was 12 years old, washing dishes in Don's Cafe in Pay-son. He washed dishes, cooked and cleaned in many kitchens during his lucrative career in the restaurant business that included owning 17 restaurants in Utah CountyHathaway plans to spend the remainder of his career where he began, in the kitchen, cooking for his customers, at The Horseshoe Mountain Restaurant in Mt. Pleasant, 850 South Highway 89. "Ive always been chef in the kitchen, Ive cooked in all my restaurants. If youve got a problem, it stops at my door. I am the kind of guy who loves to serve people, it is what I have done all my life," he says. Hathaway says he was still in his teens when he realized the restaurant business was to be his calling. One day while washing dishes in Don's Cafe, he was left in charge for an hour while the owner was away. We got really busy. I was. time. aftout 13 years old at and jt was tie worst Jay 0f my life. I realized if I could handle that. I could handle anything." he " This is where Ive been says. ever since. Hathaway's wife, Wanda, has been part of that vision for many years. The two met while she was working as a waitress m a in Provo seafood restaurant where he was a cook. The owner eventually leased the restaurant to Hathaway. "Almost immediately afterward, a truck hit the sign outside the restaurant, so I put up a new one, and changed the name to Sils Seafood Grotto." It was to be the first in a string of restaurants in Provo run by Hathaway, including Maglebys and Sil's Ivy Tower. Hathaway grew tired of the Provo, and decided to move to comfort of Santhe small-tow- n ever-expandi- pete County. He and Wanda are building a home in Mt. Pleasant. Hathaway immediately established himself in the kitchen. "I want people to know that if thev come to the restaurant, they should come to the back and say hi to Sil. Sil is always in the kitchen." v.v Farm agency announces disaster aide MANT- 1- United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has recently enacted the Disaster Assistance Program, $400 million dollars has been set aside for disaster aid, as an incentive payment to encourage fanners to buy more crop insurance for 1999 crops. Number Two New policy Sil Hathaway makes new home at local restaurant Mikk-else- 'X, . 84647 - January 13, 1999 adopted for car registration MANT- I- Sanpete County recently adopted a new policy for motor vehicle registration and renewal. According to a press release from Steven Kjar, Sanpete County Assessor, it is no longer necessary to make two stops and two checks to renew registration or transfer a title. To get complete information on new vehicle registration and renewal laws contact the Sanpete County Assessor's office. 160 North Main, Manti. Residents may simply bring in form received in the the mail and proof of safety to the Treasurers inspection Office at the south end of the The d fee only applies Another includes change vehicles with model vears less than five years old need a safety inspection only once every two vears Vehicles m this category that have vears must have safety inspections in even-number- vears. even-number- Vehicles that have model years must have safety inspections in years. Vehicles with model years five years and older must pass safety inspections each year. pre-prmt- courthouse. Better yet mail m the required Health Department to hold cancer clinic forms and check m the envelope provided It will be processed and returned in the mail at no extra charge. MT. PLEASAN- T- The Health Department will be holding a breast cancer and pap test screening clinic Monda. Jan. 25. They will be able to help women know at what risk level they are in. Call 9 for an appointment. The press release also introfee that new will replace property tax on cars and light trucks. Because the fee is no longer a property tax it is not deductible on federal or state income tax. duces the age-base- to cars and light weight trucks and will not apply to recreational vehicles, motorcycles or heavy trucks. age-bas- 462-244- f- - v f, v F J Farmers whose losses exceed 35 percent in 1998 or who suffered losses in three or more years, from 1994 through 1998 are eligible to apply. This includes both insured and non-insur- ed crops. o ' If you think you would qualify for these benefits farmers are encouraged to contact the Farm Service Agency at 50 South for Main, Manti, Utah. Sign-u-p disaster aid will begin February Kevin Allen, North Sanpete High School agricultural teacher, recently visited Kane Valley Elk Ranch, Ephraim, with 14 advanced agricultural students. t s |