OCR Text |
Show Uni Microfllmong Corp viiL(AYue 2, Utah Farmers Elected To Serve On ASC Committee VOLUME 71, No. 46 V 14-- 7, -- Carden Club Begins New Series of X Of interest to the farmers of Lyson and Santaquin areas will be the coming election of Community Committeemen, to administer the 1960 Agricultural Stablizatiun and ConPAYSON, UTAH THURSDAY, NOV. 12, 1959 servation Program. Ballots for this election will be mailed to all farmers in the area on November 20. The nominating committee of the Payson, Salem, and Spring Lake community composed of Oral G. Stewart, Gunderson, and Earl M. Decker have met and nominated candidates. Those nominated were: Owen A. Cowan, Noble DeHart, Verl S. Gardner, C. LeRoy Haskell, Clyde A. Holdaway, Merrill Koyle, George O. LeFevre, Carl J. Nelson, Dowell R. Schramm md Keith Simons. 'C'f The nominating committee of the Santaquin, Goshen, s ' and Genola community composed of Lloyd Taylor Pen-roKay Jolley, and Claude Rowley have met and nominated the following persons: Milton Barney, Jay Bingham, Milo Burraston, Douglas Nelson, Lee Okelberry, Don A. Penrod,' Darwin Robbins, Claude Rowley, Douglas B. Thomas and Donald White. Any person desiring to add ber 15. STOP BEAR RIVER If the names of the persons Payson Lions stopped Bear River High 14 to 7 in a state high school Class A football quarterfinal game played on the local fieetd last Friday. J. Karl Worthington, quarterback, is in the. act of making a long forward pass to teammate, Lynn Oborn, fullback, for a long gain. Lions Stop Bear Kiveir in Quarter - Final Game 14 7, Flay Highland Friday at Austin Staheli, Paysons great end, raced some 76 yards for a touchdown that decided the Class A championship quarter final game in favor of the Lions, over Bear River here Friday afternoon Stahelis shocking run came in the second quarter after both teams had scored in the first quarter. Lynn Obom, Payson halfback, and Staheli, the Lions fastest man, worked the reverse perfectly and key blocks opened the way for the dash down the sidelines. Mowing down the opposition were Meetings On Friday The Payson Garden Club will commence a new cycle of work Friday evening, Nov. 13, when the unit meets at the home of Mrs. Eugene Hillman, 152 South Fourth West Street. Everyone interested is invited to attend the meeting .which is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. The club announces that there are still a few spring bulbs to be sold. They are located at some of the stores in town and also the home of Mrs. Martha Chard and Mrs. Orval Porter. Popular new daffodils are Golden Harvest, Pink Fancy and White Beersheba, Parrot tulips in pink, blue and red; and Red Emporer tulips. All are for sale at reduced prices. Taylor School PTA Slates Meeting The Taylor School PTA meeting will be held Wednesday, Nov. 18 at 8 p.m. in the Taylor School auditorium. An interesting evening has been promised titled LearnDr. Steven ing by Travel. Ally, director of the BYU Educational Tours, will speak and show slides on the comparison between the European Education System and ours. All parents are urged to attend. Sophomore Class To Hold Confetti Ball The Sophomore class is mak- ing plans for the Sophomore The annual Confetti Ball. event is slated for Friday, Nov. 13, in the high school gym. Planning the event are faculty advisors: Dick Harmer, chairman, Lenet Read and Roe Groesbeck. Class officers planning the event are Lee Kapoloski, Alfred Ross, Carol Sue Wilson and Kay Watkins. Clark Clayson, Calvin Ewell, Gary Hoover and Max Staheli. d Paysons usually backs lost the ball to Bear River on three fumbles, but roared back after to score twice after the Bears got the first counter. Alan Nelson recovered the first Lion bobble on the Pay-so44 and Hugh Davis ran around his right end like a gazelle for 18 and 14 yards before Mike Ramsdell sneaked across for the score. Warren Christensen kicked the extra point. Payson came right back and scored, going 75 yards in nine plays with J. Karl Worthingtons pinpoint passes catching For the the Bears day, Worthington hit five of eight passes for 95 of Paysons 182 net yards. Last week he threw but two passes all day. First he hit Austin Staheli for 18 yards and then lofted a fling to Rickie Bryan to the one. Oborn bulled over for the TD and extra point. The next series Worthington struck through the air passes again on 15 and to Doug Huff. But Huff fumbled the final one on the Bears 9 and foiled a TD attempt. But it didnt matter, six plas later when Bear River punted Staheli went on his ramble. Doug Huff kicked the final extra point. Crucial fumbles robbed both teams of at least one more scoring chance apiece as the game wore on. The Bears mounted a stiff third quarter attack and moved 70 yards to the Payson one before Calvin Ewell found the ball rolling loose and., stifled the threat. Payson was forced to punt out of danger, but when the Bears went to the air after losing 14 yards Oborn plucked a pass and rambled to the Bear River 31. The next play he struck for 16 yards, only to fumble. Nelson, Hugh Davis, Lyle Evans recovered Payson fumbles for the Bears and Warren Christensen plucked off a late Payson pass by Obom to keep the Lions' worried. Garry Hoover and Obom intercepted for Payson and Ewell pounced on the Bears fumble in the exchanges. Payson ended the game with 182 net yards from scrimmage against Bear Rivers 164. The losers had 12 first downs to Paysons eight. Fridays A) Westminister sure-hande- n Slated Game Payson will play Highland High School of Salt Lake City Friday in one of the two Class A semi-fingames. They will al meet at Westminister Colleges Dane Hansen Stadium, 1840 South 13th East, at 2 p.m. Payson has been unbeaten and or tied this season either or league games. in Highland lost a to Davis Highland is the only Class A team in the semifinals from last year. They lost to Ogden and have repeated this year as Region three champions. Other teams in the Class A are Bountiful and Murray who will play Friday afternoon on the Murray field. pre-seas- pre-seas- 7-- 6. Semi-fina- ls 25 Girls Receive El-de- ! -- 4. . d, 14-- Sharon Openshaw Gets All-St- ar Five Payson football players of 25 girls were honored at Nebo Stake Quar- were named on the Region A group Jacksons to Return November 25 From Samoan Mission Five Daily Herald team.Four players from Orem, one from Provo and one from Carbon made up the balance of the honor team. ar Jaycees Will Give Outstanding Fanner Award The Payson Jaycees are sponsoring an Outstanding Young Farmer award, to be given to a young farmer from this area. The local winner will go to Salt Lake in Feb. to compete for state honors. The state winner will compete in the national contest. Applications should be submitted to Stanley Peterson, Floyd Schramm, or Max Llewellyn by Dec. 10. The award will be presented to the winner at the annual distinguished Awards banquet in January. To be eligible a farmer must be between 21 and 35 and earn at least two thirds of his income from his farm. Mr. and Mrs. Peery Jackson are expected to arrive in San Francisco, Calif., on Nov. 25, when their ship docks after a cruise from the Samoan Islands. They are to leave Samoa Nov. 14. Family memLDS Typing Award bers plan to meet them in In a recent assembly held at San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson have LDS Business College, Miss a labor mission for fulfilled Sharon Openshaw, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernell Open- the LDS church in the Tongan shaw of Santaquin, received Islands, where he completed an award for typing with per- construction of, three chapels fect accurasy 66 words a min- and the housing unit for the teachers. His latest assigntest. ute on a was in construction of Miss Openshaw is a gradu- ment quarters for teachers living School. of ate Payson High at Pago Pago, where Mrs. Jackson served as Relief Society president. Earlier in Named to the mythical team were M?x Staheli, half-ck; Lynn Oborn, fullback: Austin Staheli, end; Mike Draper, center; and Gary Hoover, guard. J. Karl Worthington, quarterback, and Clark Clayson, tackle, were named on the second team. Four other members of the champion Payson eleven were given honorable ment on, they were Doug Huff, end; Calvin Ewell and Lynn Lerwill, tackles, and Rickie Bryan, halfback. b Wednesday Night would-b- e writ- ers are invited to enroll in a class in creative writing sch- eduled for ten weeks at Taylor School in Payson. Mrs. Myrla Thayne of Provo will be the instructor. Mrs Thayne is becoming well known for her abilities as a writer, and she has also published several original songs. Her programs of a religious nature are becoming more and more popular and are being presented frequently in churches of the Provo area. The first class will be held Wednesday evening Nov. 11, 7 p.m., at the Taylor School. Fee for the course will be $3, according to Mrs. Ruth Rothe, acting chairman on arrange- Payson women are divided COMPLETE SPILLWAY Lynn Crook, Santaquin Canyon Watershed committee chairman, and Ralph Felker, area xmservationist for the Soil Conservation Service, discuss the nerits of the recently completed primary spillway in the flood :ontrol unit debris basin of the Santaquin Canyon Project. (Continued on Page Eight) A public forum meeting sponsored by the Mayor and Pay-so- n City Council will be held next Thursday, November 19, in the American Legion Hall at 8 p.m. Purpose of the meeting is to discuss what must be done and what should be done in regards to the construction of a sewage disposal plant for Payson. voters turned thumbs down on bonding to construct Recently the proposed plant and extension lines to the east part of Payson. Payson now is the only larger community in Utah County without a proper sewer disposal plant. Plans must be made as how to proceed. Mayor G. Osmond Dunford, city councilmen, Max Warner, Sherman Loveless, Keith Jolley. Glenn Cowan and Waldo Wilson, project engineers, Dean Fuhirman and and fiscal agent Lauren W. Gibbs, will form theHarry Hogson panel to discuss the situation. They will be prepared to answer any questions citizens will have. 8,100 Co-o- . . . Elizabeth Manwill Notes Birthday Sunday Combined By County Health Board ty nt Ralph Waldo Emerson John Daisy To E At Missionary Farswe!! Scottsdale, Ariz.; Mrs. Dell B. (Edith) White, Spanish Fork; Mrs. Frank H. (Mildred) Booth, Nephi; Mrs,. LeMont (Florence) Robertson, Spring-villMrs. Allen C. (Elizabeth) Taylor, Victorville, Calif. She has 29 grandchildren and 33 She also has a sister, Mrs. William (Minerva) Thompson, Modesto, - Calif. Child Guidance, Mental Health Clinics City-Coun- There is a time in every mans education when he arrives at the conviction that d, e; 1931. lns ed p. Cald-erwoo- At a meeting of the Board Health of Utah County held Sewer Problem Aired October 20, affiliation of the Utah County Child Guidance By Co. Sanitarian and Mental Health Clinic was discussed and approved by At Club Meet the Board of Health. This action was likewise approved by Glen Sagers, Utah County the Board of Directors of the was chief sanitarian, speaker Utah County Child Guidance at the Payson Lions Club and Mental Health Clinic on meeting Monday evening at October 22. the Turf Cafe. Mr. Sagers was Under this the introduced by Don J. McCoy, Child Guidanceagreement, Mental and inter-clureb chairman of the Health Clinic will become the lations committee. Mental Health Clinic of the LaDawn Rasmussen sang a Health Departsclo accompanied by Nadine ment of Utah County and will Westover. function as a division of the The meeting was under di- basis as the Sanitation Departrection of Sherman Loveless, ment and will be subject to president. Special guests at the Board of Health of Utah the meeting were Marshall County. It has been recommended by Fisher, new city councilman, and four members of the Edge-mo- the State Board of Health that Club of Provo. health departments establish Mr. Sagers told of different types of sewer disposal plants used throughout the county but only two types are accepted by the state pollution board They are the filter type and the activated slug plant. Pay-so- n plant has been designed for the activated slug. He also showed and discussed test taken of the water discharged from the present sewer disposal plant. The bacteria count in the water in the tests run as high as 23,090,-00- wages. John Robert Daley Goes to Great Lakes Mission Former Payson City Treasurer, she was employed for many years as a saleslady at Farmers Mercantile Mrs. Manwill is the mother of nine sons and daughters, eight of whom are living. They are: James Vearl and Glade B. Manwill, Salt Lake City; Mrs. J. W. (Elon) Green River; Mrs. Stanley I. (Irene) Cahoon, of envy is ignorance. into four teams, whose names are here listed, captain named f:rst. Sponsors names head each team: Wilson Style Shoppe, Mrs. Neldon Andrews, Mrs. Leslie Wilson, Mrs. Ray Angue, Mrs. Rex Mendenhall, Mrs. Ray Dix Discuss Payson Sewer Problem ll Payson Begins Writers and 2, Active in church and civic affairs in Payson, Mrs. Man-wihas served as president of the Young Womans Mutual Improvement Association, counselor in the Relief Society, counselor in the Primary, teacher in the Sunday School and a member of the Nebo Slake She is Genealogical Board. a past captain of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Writers Class In Utahns are in Utahs petroleum industry, and they will earn ever $35,000,000 annually in Cil-leg- A group of Payson and Spanish Fork women organized a bowling league this week, when the initial meeting was held Monday at Dukes Lanes in Spanish Fork. To be known as the Ten officers include Mrs. Pins, Riv Dixon, Pavson, as president; Mrs. Harvey Huff, Spanish Fork, vice president; Mrs. Dale Reynolds, Payson, secretary; and Mrs. Ronald Hawkins. sergeant at arms. Forum Meeting Set November 19 To ll Oct. Over their mission they were in Bowling League Want To Know? Mrs. Elizabeth Manwill of this city will celebrate her 80th birthday Sunday, Nov. 15, when an openhouse will be given by members of her family. Friends and relatives are invited to call between 2 and 5 p.m. No special invitations are being mailed and it is required that no gifts be brought. Mrs. Manwill was born in Payson on Nov. 12, 1879, a daughter of William D. and Eliza Boulton Keele. She was married to John Vernon Man-wiMarch 27, 1899, in the Salt Lake LDS temple. He died ments. The program is under direction of Payson High School through Nebo School District. Hawaii, where he labored on e. construction of the LDS Local Women Orgarlz? Do You Petitions for the Santaquin, Elberta, and Genola community must be delivered to Lloyd Taylor Penrod, Chairman of the Nominating Committee, at Elberta, not later than November 15. Goshen, Elizabeth Manwill Will Note 80th Birthday At Openhouse Sunday Five Payson Lions Named On Region Football Team Awards In October Five Class A all-st- o ing to serve and eligible under the regulations, they will be included on the slate of names. 7 Silver Gleaner . names to this list may do so by presenting a signed petition by ten farmers who operate land in these communities. Petitions for the Payson, Salem, and Spring Lake community must be delivered to Oral G. Stewart at Payson, Utah, not later than Novem-spetitioned are found will- - n s 40-ya- rd terly Conference when they were presented with Silver Gleaner awards and pins and recognized as having the requirements under the program. This group is the last to receive the honor, since the program is being discontinued. Another to take its place will Add A be known as the Pearl achievement program. Mrs. Gladys Smith, stake leader, presented the following girls with the award: Judith Ann Done, Elaine Rodgers, Virginia Drollinger, Evelyn Hiatt, Carole Hiatt, Lou Ann Harmer, Florence Hendrickson, Susanne Ivory Frisby, Ann Clingeer, Kathleen Hill, Sarah Ruth Tanner, Carolyn Rogers, Linda Montague, JanLinda Strong, et Mowers, Verna Schramm, Patsy Ann Hansen, Verla Shell, Mary Ellen Seat, Karen Garner, Carol Susan SpencAnn Sullivan Velma er, Mabeth Nielsen, Lou Sizemore, Ilene Butler. Will-B- e and maintain a basic program in mental health. The Board of Directors of the Child Guidance Clinic, the Payson members of which are Mrs. Allen L. Hodgson and Mrs. Reed Page, will function in the future as an advisory board. The staff of the clinic, with Dr. Marlow R. Harston, Supervisor, will serve not only children but adults. The merger of the clinic, in the opinion of the Board of Health and the Board of Directors of the clinic, will be a step forward in the mental health program and wjll create and take advantage of existing institutions by means of which the needs of the people will be better served. An acquaintance that begins with a compliment is sure to develop into a real friendship. Im-ho- John Richard Daley will Tory Christensen; opening congregation; opening prayer, Joseph Daley; SacraI Stand All ment song. Am- zed; speaker, Warwick C. Lamnreaux; vocal duet, Madre Johnson and Mary Abbott, It Was For Me, accomMargaret Daley; panied by tribute. Margaret Daley, grandduet, mother; instrumental Maurice and Melba Jones; speaker, S. Roland Lindsay; vocal trio, Karen Ostler, Ann Mirell and Bernice Green; rebarks, Bishop Archie Williams; The program Sunday eve- remarks, parents and missionning will begin at 5:30 p.m. ary; closing song, God Be The program honoring Elder With You; benediction, by Daley includes prelude music, James Daley. be honored at a missionary farewell Sunday evening in the Sacrament Services ot the Park Ward prior to his leaving to fill a mission for the LDS church in the Great Lakes Mission. Elder Daley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Daley, will enter the mission home in Salt Lake City on November 16. He is a graduate of the Payson Sen- ior High School and the Pay-so- n LDS Seminary. song, Is Speaker At Jaycea MasTr Shorift Utah County Sheriff Ralph Chappie was the guest speaker at the Ncv. 10 meeting of the Payson Jaycees at Dons Cafe. Sheriff Chaple gave an interesting talk on the problems of law enforcement in the county. He named bad checks as the biggest single problem, with burglary second, He also complimented the Jaycees on their street marker project. Dick j BENEFIT FUND Payson Jayshees will give away Saturday to the lucky winner the lovely hand made pink quilt shown by Jane Elmer, left, and Mrs. Melvin Dallin, right, president. The quilt is on display in Page Furniture. of Mrs. Max Llewellyn and Mrs. Jack Walker are the project. Funds made from the project will be given to the Payson Hospital Building Fund. FOR HOSPITAL |