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Show ' "il Luc Cy Corp. i1 viHh Five Persons Make Application for City Treasurer Gfcy Council, Mayor Approve Special Improvement (District (Plans Hops to Begin Construction in Month, Set 24.25 Mill Tax levy The 1958 tax levy was set, the engineers who have completed the work on the special improvement districts and other important matters of business were handled at the regular city council meeting Monday night. All councilmen were present and Mayor G. Osmond Dunford presided. The 1958 Payson City Tax Levy will remain the same as it was in 1957 24 25 nulls. Ihe levy broken down will be contingent fund, 5 mills; streets, 5 mills; parks and public buildings, 2 mills; public safety, 4 mills; recreation, .5 mill; interest and bond sinking fund, 6.5 mills; library, 1 25 mills. Dean Furhiman and Blair Gardner, of McMulhn, who was P' even at the meeting, to get the legal work sta ted, and to acll for bids on the project soon as possible. Ralph Daniels, chairman cf the swimming pool committee, gave a report on the swimming pool operation to date and stated that the pool was operating effic ently and that the attendance was above a year ago. He invited members of the ci'y council and the mayor to make an inspection and enjoy a swim in the pool Friday night The council accepted the invitation and voted to extend the invitation to other city employees. Following a swim the com Dave Fuihiman, Hodgson and Associates, engi-- n er ng firm doing the engineer work on the spec.ul improvement districts, went over the plans for the districts set up for curb ant gatur and sidewalk projects. Plans and i ng.neering work are now completed and planning for the actual construction work can be done. T. e engineers suggested that the districts be set up into three areas for bidding U) the North and South Main projects, (2) the First South and East Utah Avenue proects and (3) the First North and Fourth West projects. Council voted to authorize City Attorney mittee will they cause quite a dust cloud. He was promised gravel would be spread on the area. Make Application Five persons made application for the office of City Treasurer, which was made vacant because of the resignation of Sarah Vance,. Applying for the position were Donna Ludlow, Georgcia B. Roach, Irene Hendrickson, Harold Ray Nelson, and Florence Mitchell. No one was appointed Monday the appointment was tabled for further study. Will Deed Roadway J. Clark Elmer and DeMar Elmer met with the council on the matter of opening a roadway on Ninth East and Second South. DeMar Elmer has built a home on Ninth East and his father, Lee Elmer, who owns the property has agreed to deed a 66 foot roadway to the South end of his property, which abuts Clark Elmers property. Mr. Elmer agreed to give a roadway at this point turning West and joining Third South Elmers agreement was referred to the g PARK WARD PLANS Street.andJ. Clark commission for approval. zoning Ned Houser, city dog tax collector, reported to the council he had this year licensed 358 dogs and destroyed 73. He reANNUAL FRESH quested the right to destroy dogs running loose under certain conditions. After a discussion, the matter was referred to city FISH FRY attorney McMullin to draw an ordinance giving the dog catcher right to destroy dogs under certain conditions. Park Ward will hold their Stanley Peterson, president of Payson Junior Chamber of annual 'Fresh Fish Fry on Commerce, asked if a water tap could be installed at the Wednesday, August 6, in the roadside park on the west side of the Peteetneet school Payson City Park. Fresh where they have placed some tables. The matter was grounds referred Salmon will be flown in from to the water department. A tap is in the process of being inthe Northwest especially for stalled today. the fry. George Stark asked that his garbage disposal fee at the Bishop Arch Williams, market he operates on the highway at Fourth South be reducchairman of the event, promed from the $3 per month he is assessed. The request was reised in making the announto the garbage department which is under the streets cement that a good dinner ferred department. will be served as they have Submits Annual Audit done in the past. Adults will GlerwBojer, auditor, submitted the auditor, submitted the be charged $1.60 per plate and children through Junior audit of Payson City books for the year 1957, The audit High school age will pay 75 showed the books in order and the financial condition of the was in excellent condition, reported Mr. Boyer. cents. Of special note was the fact that as of December 31, the total indebtedness of Payson City was $93,000, $18,0001957, of th's amount will be paid this year. A police chiefs report was read by Mayor Dunford for the months of May and June. In the two months $482.20 was paid to the city treasuer. Member of Hospital Board On recommendation of Payson Hospital board, the council voted to make the city physician a member of city the board with a vote along with the other members. The mayor was authorized to provide Spanish Fork second place transportation for team will open the District Persons furnishing the program Friday night at the Black-Fiv- e Junior M Men softball hawk Encampment being held this week in Monroe, tournament on July 31 at 6 Traffic Commission p.m. against the Millard Stake Proceeding the city council meeting, a traffic commission The tourney will be meeting was held. Members of the commission entry include Mayor played at the Spanish Fork Dunford, Max Warner and Waldo Wilson, city councilmen-halIparkGordon Barnett, Lions club; James A. Daniels Jr Nebo Stake team will play of Commerce; and Alma Jones, Kiwams Clue ' All 'were the North Carbon Stake team ent except Mr. Jones u've light refreshments. Water Ballet Show Scheduled Daniels suggested that a water ballet show could be staged during Paysons annual eelebiat on at the swimming pool under the direction of the two life guards The council voted to have the water show put on Sunday a'ternoon during the celebration. Mr D ,nu Is was named chairman of the committee with the life guards, Stan Cloward , and Connie Cloward, members of the committee. He also requested that some gravel be spread on the area just north of the swimming pool. When cars drive into the area, s a-- plan-nin- VOLUME SEVENTY, No. 30 PAYSON, CONTEST TO CHOOSE PAYSON HARVEST DAYS QUEEN WILL BE HELD AUGUST 1 Queen contest to select the royalty for Paysons Harvest Days and Homecoming Celebration will be held on Friday, August 1, in the Nebo Stake Tabernacle at 8 p.m. Selected in the contest will be Payson Harvest Days Queen, Miss Payson, and two attendants to the Harvest Days Queen. Any girl who is 18 years of age or over, a resident of Pay-so- n or a graduate of Payson Senior High School is eligible to enter. Contestants must be single and must not have been a queen or attendant in the Payson celebration. If selected, the girls must not be married until after the celebration ends on Labor Day, September 1. Eligible g.rls of the area are invited to attend the contest. They may contact either Miss Clara Johnson cr Mildred Warner. Keith Jolley is chairman of the queens committee. Pictures of the contestants who enter by 10 oclock next Monday morning will be published in next weeks Chronicle. Endorse Candidates at Convention Clark Elmer Named Demo. Candidate UTAH, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1958 . Payson Army Reserve Unit Camp Completes 2-We- eks y During the past two weeks, members of Company A 383d Inf. Regt. from Payson have been engaged in Summer Training at Yakima Firing Center, Yakima, Washington, the unit departed from their home and proceeded to Yakima by t$oop train. They have engaged in weapons familiarization and firing, tactical and MOS training in I specific fields. As instructors in all prases of the 57mm Recoiless Rifle training. A highlight of the - first weeks activities was the Regimental Drill Team competition held on Saturday. ST Ten men from Co. A. Commanded by Specialist Fourth Class Frank Val Davis were judged as being third place in i" ri5o7htr Ktrtd imnSrS Slaved I made by the ?lm,ord w!S b? ThuXday next I31" slr"1 P?rking f Utah Juan Stake vs. Carbon Stake Avenue be W? be at 22-'the entire Regiment in the sho,d at 8.30 and Juab Stake vs. deerees Pa?ne at this FirstJes i angle execution of manuel of arms, give three feet ad- Commander and Administrative Spanish Fork first place team ditional space on each side of the street and the are Pictured Company would eliminate and facing, flanking the parking of only four car on each side. Personnel of the company. From left to right: Sfc. George S. at 9:45 p.m. conThe tournament will The council voted to 22 degree parking on Wet Utah Spencer First Seargent; Sgt Shirl D. Hanks Supply Searg-en- tinue Friday and Saturlay, avenue for a time to see try 1st Lt. Clarence R. Taylor Company Commander; Pfc. if it would be practicle to start it on 1 and 2. Boat Club Will Hold August Main Street. Garn Q. LeBaron Company Clerk. M Men Tournament (2) That The Senior M Men softball Commission in correspondence be continued with State Road Picnic in Park tournament will be held on and First Northattempting to get traffic lights on Main Street and Utah Avenue and First West. Council For Meeting Tuesday Thursday, Friday and Satur- concurred in the recommendation. day, August 7, 8 and 9. (3) Investigations should be made to install The Payson Boat Club will yie signs on streets and intersections where traffic is hold an important meeting, and to determine the cost of the needed in Kenneth Bills is heavy next Tuesday evening, July 29, signs. (4) That property owners having shrubs and trees over- at 8 p.m. at the Payson Park New York with intersectins and blocking the view of v! picnic area. The meeting has fequired t0 trim the obstructions back to give a an important bearing on the view Air Patrol Drill Team future development of the Council also approved last two items. boat harbor. Kenneth Bills, son of Mr. All members and their wives and Mrs. J. Reid Bills, Salt are invited. A watermelon Lake City, formerly of Payson, bust will be enjoyed following Selective Offices Releases List and grandson of Mrs. Kathryn All members the meeting, York is in New Betts, Payson, inand interested persons are City with the Olympus Civil Of Men vited and are urged to attend. Leaving U. S. Services Air Patrol drill team. The Olympus team of Salt! Selective Service offices at Tedd E. Gottfredsen, Lake City won the Western Spanish Fork announce the my; 150 Nebo Stake Springville, Navv; Fred District meet at Denver, Colo, following movement of service Jones, Sonngville, on and are now competing men: Jay Littlefield, SpringGirls Spend national basis in drills and Enlisted: James Gerald Forst ville, Navy; made maneuvers. The top was SpringviHe, Army; Garth Me-b- y Phillip Wade Marsh, Soring-villplane. Before coming home, eks Whitney, Members of the Payson Army Reserve Unit get instruction Week in Canyon Springville Navy; Bernard Wayne on the 57 recoilless rifle at Yakima Firing Center at Yakima, the Utahns will visit Washing- Army; Dixon Black, Payson! Montague, Navy; Robert MarD.C. other and ton places summer camp. About 150 girls from Nebo Washington, when the unit was at its Navy; Harold Wayne Black, ion Sk.nner, Springville, Payson, Navy; Gary Dennis Golden Norman Twin- -, Navy; Stake spent last week at Left to right are, front, Glen Bowers, Blaine Willes, Val Davis; Carson, Spanish Fork, Navy; Park in Hobblecreek can- back, Leon Gay and Dennis Dixon. Gordon S. Reid, Spanish Fork, Jenkins, Navy; Oliver Earl yon near Springville. In the Spanish Fork, Marine Navy; Donald Thomas Jensen, Corps; Donald E. Van Nosdal group were girls from the Spanish Fork, Marine Corps; Payson, Marine Corps; Beehive, Mia Maids and JuniWool Growers Receive Shorn Wool Incentive Pay DougClair L. Perry, Payson, at- - Lynn John Pickering, Payson, las Grant or Gleaner classes. Jh Marine Corps; Robert Willard Air Force; Max tended the Rocky Mountain Under the direction of stake Of $15.50 for Ellsworth, Payl Every SI00 Paid for Wool in 1957 Labor at Bishop, Payson, Air Force; son, Navy. School ) leaders, Grace Fielding, Iona L. Brent Bowen, Spanish Fork, Wool growers will receive The payment to compensate University of Colorado last Stark, Lucile Haskell and VirAir Force; ginia Clinger. The girls learned shorn wool inientive payments for the wool on unshorn lambs week. More than 80 labor leaders Jesse Raymond Scott, Span to make purses, flowers and of $15.50 for every hundred will be 33 cents per hundredWest Ward to Host dollars they receive from the weight of live animals sold from throughout the Rocky hsh Fork, Air Force; Ellery novelty wells. the An impromptu program was sale of shorn wool during Th;s payment is designed to Mountain region attended Hyrum Seamons, Goshen, Air Force; Karl Gene Wiscombe, given Wednesday evening and 1957 marketing year, Claude discourage unosual shearing school. Weekly MIA Dance on Thursday families of the Hunting, Chairman Utah Coun- of lambs before maiketing. Springville, Coast Guard; officers joined ty Agricultural Stabilization Volunteers for induction: According to the chairman girls and ward The W st LOS ward will the group in camp fire sing- and Conservation Committee, the Utah ASC County Office ments, the lambs must have Hilton Davenport Hall, Army; sponsor t' e MIA dance, never have been shorn. Kent Eugene Nielson, Army; to be hed week'y . ing and joined the audience has annuonced. This 15.5 per- are now making payments. Because wool growers reiv 26 when a skit was presented by cent rate of payment repre- Applications for these payNelson Beardall, Gene at the West Howard ward sale ceived hall for the There prices ' higher sents the difference between ments had to be filed with the each ward. Earl Danielson, Richard Jay will be a floor show wool during the past and dancA group of girls from three the national average price wool county office by April 30, 1958. of their Hone, Douglas VeRay Jensen. ing to the music of The rate wool incentive the Dukes season, to shorn Palmyra Stake wards were growers got for their wool The payments apply to bring the average Thomas Murel Ivory, Army, all orchestra from BYTT. There also at the park and joined in during the year ended March wool and lambs marketed be- required Springville. will be no charge for admisincentive to the various activities with the 31, 1958 and the incentive lev- tween April 1, 1957 and March price isup from service: the Alsion, but a small charge for 15.5 Separated level percent. only el of 62 cents per pound. 31, 1958. To be eligible for pay- Nebo Stake girls. though the rate is lower than Mark Victor Bills, Springville, refreshments. Leaders of tro prog-aunder the program for the past Army; Kent LaMont Blackley, an2 years, the method for calcu- - Springville, Army; Amie Wei nounce that the htfo ',av'ces allating the rate is the same. In ght Brown, Springville, Army; ready he'd in the series h'vp 1955, the first year the program Paul Wondess Kallaway, San-w- been highv s crossfi in operation, the shorn taquin, Army; Blaine Ferron weeks danc-ai hed at Postmaster General ed to the sender if it bears To give the American peowool incentive payment rate Hales, Springville, Army; Gary Spring lake and he an- a return address. Otherwise E. Summerfield Arthur familiarize to more time ple was 44.9 percent; the second H. Hansen, Spanish Fork, Ar one was at Payson First.Fifth it will be destroyed or sent to themselves with the new post- nounced today. of the program, 1936, the my; Sherald Wendell James, ward hall. year the Dead Letter Office. After October 31 a age rates effective August 1, wool payment was 40 percent. Spanish Fork, Army; Melvin the Post Office Department charge will be made for all From August 1 through OcThe w'ool incentive program A. Johnson, Spanish Fork, Ar-i- s will suspend between August pieces of mail lacking suffi- tober 31 only the postage due authorized under the Na- - my; Elden Clark Morris, E'jampe is mare forcible 1 Wool Act to run through son, Army; Floyd Nelson, San than precept. People look at and October 31, 1958, the cient postage. This charge, will be collected from the renew charge for handling plus the postage due, can be cipient, or the sender if the 1948, ending March 31, 1959. taquin, Army; Harold Lee me six days a week to see mail lacking sufficient postage refused by the recipient, in recipient refuses to accept the The 1958 program will be sub- Ockerman, Payson, Army; Glen what I mean on the seventh. Richard Cecil enacted by the Congress (P.L. which case the mail is returnr mail. stantially the same as for 1957. Alvin Weight, Springville, Ar- - j" ? t; For Commisisoner Utah County Democrats Saturday elected as their nominees for county commissioner term, J. Clark Elmer, Payson, and Marcellus Neilson, Spanish Fork, and for county sheriff, Deputy Sheriff Ralph Peters, Orem, and Deputy Sheriff Rosioe Kay, Provo. Eliminated from the primary Democratic race for these posts were county commission candidates Francis S. Lundell, Benjamin, and Roy Lymani, canSpring Lake, and sheriffOrem. didate Sterling Harling, Mr. Elmer, building contractor and fruit farmer, was counfrom 1949 to ty commissioner former Nielson, Mr. 1952, and and Fork of Spanish mayor auditor was county Mapleton, 1943. for eight years prior to Santa-qui- n Roscoe Kay, former a was of police, chief two-ye- ar Fishing Party Set For Exceptional Children, Adults The Second Annual Fishing Children Party for Exceptional held Satbe will Adults and Te at 1:0urday July 26th be held m will Party Fishing South Fork of Provo Canyon, road from two miles up the This party is Vivian Park. Counthe by being sponsored committee for tv Recreation and Exceptional children Child Exceptional the and ules PTAs of Utah County. This is one of the special events of the recreation pro occasion ingram and on this cludes the handicapped person and their families. aidThis fishing activity is and Game, Fish ed by the State Wildlife The Utah County Sher-riff- s County Utah The Assn, merlocal and Possee, chants. All handicapped persons be or twenties are they tots, teens, to come invited welcome and afteran enjoyable and spend lunch own noon. Bring your cream Ice and fishing pole. and drinks will be furnished, - deputy sheriff for the past 14 years and is past president of Utah County Peace Officers Association. Deputy Peters, former Orem chief of police, has been a deputy for the past six years. Candidates Endorsed The convention endorsedDe-mocrati- c candidates filel for office. These Democratic candidates are: Commissioner for Provo Mayor G. Marion Hinckley and Hilton A. Robertson, Provo. County Surveyor, incumbent, LaVern D. (Vem) Green, Provo, (unopposed). County attorney, incumbent Arnold C. Roylance, Springville. County treasurer, Grant L. Atwood, Pleasant Grove. County auditor, Robert Q. Strong, Provo. County assessor, J. Earl Smith, Lehi, and Guy H. Ivins, American Fork. County Recorder, incumbent, Thelma Vest Smurthwaite, Payson. County clerk, Mark F. Boyack, Spanish Fork. Utah State Senate, District County four-yea- r, One, Wallace R. Wymaiu, Edge-mon- t, and District Two, Harvard R. Hinton, Lehi, and George C. Scott, American Fork. Allen L. Hodgson, Payson, was indorsed for the House of Representatives from district six. District six is comprised of Payson, Santaquin, Spring Lake, Genola, Goshen, Elberta, Dividend, Benjamin, Salem, Lake Shore, Palmyra, Leland and Spanish Fork, west of Second East Street. Sr ? Service Joining, W.l-lia- I m Navy-Merli- I e, two-wee- ks Bal-so- m Sro-taqui- n, r'",nf-,nir- (AFL-CIO- :atu,-1?v- j I Ned Kapple Finishes Far East Tour Ned S. Kapple, aviation first class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Kapple, Payson, and husband of the former Miss Hazel W. Yetman of Bryant Cove, Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, arrived the aircraft carrier USS Hornet after six months in the Far East. During the overseas tour the Hornet took part in training operations as a unit of the U.S. Seventh Fleet. 62-ce- nt m P. O. to Wave Handling Charge to Oct. as 85-37- Pay-tion- al Lt |