OCR Text |
Show The Payson Chronicle, Payson, Utah BYU THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1960 Lions Club Boy Scout commissioner in this area Appointment of Rulon Dean Skinner, formerly District Scout executive at Roosevelt, as the new District Scout ex- ecutive in Utah County filling the vacancy created by the re- -' signation of Woodrow Dennett, was announced today by Scout execu- - Floyd Liveridge, Obituaries J. Richard Wilson. J. Richard Wilson, 70, lifelong resident of Payson died Wednesday morning at Pay-so- n City Hospital of a heart ailment, after an extended rancC well - known television commercial personality on the United States Steel Hour, ready for valley Steelmark visit. 1600 register at He was born Dec. 6, 1889, in Payson, a son of John Rich ard and Sarah Matilda FairHe married banks Wilson. Jennie May Mitchell Oct. 1 1913, at Provo. The marriage was solemnized Aug. 26, 1925, in the Salt Lake LDS temple. Mr. Wilson was employed at the Payson flour mill for 47 years, retiring several years ago. An active member of the LDS church at the time of his death he held the office of High Priest and was finance clerk for the ward welfare committee. He had also served as a ward teacher and secretary to the Elders Quor- annual Payson Rulon D. Skinner new Scout executive cive of the tah National Parks Council. In his new service area. Mr. Skinner will serve the districts of Lehi, Alpine, Timpanogos, Palmyra, Nebo, and Santaquin-Tinti- c. For the past 6 years, Mr. Skinner has served the Utah National Parks Council as District Scout Executive for the Uintah Basin. During that period there was a 587c growth in boy membership, 44 new units organized, 5007c increase in scout camping, and 1007c increase in scout rank advancement. While Mr. Skinner served the Uintah Basin, the annual rate of leadership training certificates issued jumped from 20 to 550. Three of the five boys from the State of Utah to attend the Boy Scout 1959 Jamboree were from the Uintah Basin, and nearly 100 of the 450 boys the Council sent to the Colorado Springs National Jamberee were from the Uintah Basin. Mr. Skimier graduated from the Brigham Young University in August 1954 with a major in accounting. A member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, he filled a mission in 1950 to 1953 in the Uruguayan Mission, spending time in both Uruguay and Paraguay. During his LDS mission, he was selected by the Boy Scouts of Uruguay as their representative to the interamerican Scout Conference in Cuba in um. Surviving are his widow of Payson; four sons and three daughters, Ralph, LaMar and Shirley Wilson of Payson; Darrell Wilson, Springville; Mrs. Ray (Edith) Carter, Spanish Fork; Mrs. Glen (Ilene) Spencer Payson; Mrs. Harold (Irene) Thomas, Leland; also a foster son, John Kinnear, Salt Lake City; 25 grandchildren, 5 and four two brothers and two sisters, Wilford Wilson, Gravit, Arkansas; June Wilson, Idaho; Mrs. Mamie Curtis, Payson, Mrs. Jennie Paul, Ogden. Funeral services will be announced by Rigby Mortuary, Payson. Lee H. Coker Lee Harrison Coker, 72, of Payson, died Monday in Cortez, Colo., of a heart attack. He was enroute to Durango, Colo., to visit his daughter at the time of his death. He was born March 8, 1888 in Arkansas. He moved to Texas as a child and lived most of his life in Turkey, Tex. He spent the last 20 years in New Mexico and Utah. He moved to Payson in 1943. Mr. Coker has followed the profession of farming most of his life. He was a member of the Payson Community Presbyterian Church. He married Grace Agnes Degan in Texas in 1910. She died in 1953. Surviving are a daughter and two sons, Mrs .Homer (Dorothy) Dobbins, Durango, Colo.; R. E. Coker, San Manuel, Ariz.; and Earl L. Coker, Spring-villseven grandchildren; two brothers and three sisters, U. F. Coker, and Garland Coker, both of Turkey, Tex; Mrs. Addie Russell of Amarillo, Tex.; Mrs. Laura Fillingam, Briscoe, Tex., and Mrs. Lillian Fort Maileyboro, Tex. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 1 p.m. in the Payson Community Church under direction of Rev. Coyne L. Gifford. Friends may call at the Rigby Mortuary Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Thursday prior to services. Burial will be in the Provo City Cemetery. m HAVE THE During his stay at Roosevelt, for 5 years, Mr. Skinner served in the Roosevelt LDS Stake Sunday School Superintendencjy. His work was twice reviewed in the INSTRUCTOR, monthly mag azine of the Sunday School Association. He is a native of Safford, Arizona, his wife, Ruth, is a native of Bridgeland, Utah, and the Skinners have two a boy, Kumen 3; children and a girl, Diane, 1. As he continues to serve the Utah National Parks Council of the Boy Scouts of America, he will make his home in Provo, concluded Mr. Galaxie Poetry Week In observance of National Poetry Week, the Payson Chronicle' will publish a limited number of original poems in the Oct. 13th edition. Poems should be in the hands of the publisher at least one week before Oct. 13th. F0LL0WIHG I960 CARS Crus-o-Mat- trans. R ic Galaxie Crus-o-Mat- 4-d- & H. Falrlane 500 4-d- V-- r. 0D-heate- 8 Falcon Station Wagon, 2 8 R & H, V-- 8 trans. Other accessories. ic tFalcon V-- Other accessories. brown and white, r. r white brown & white 4-d- r., Sedan, Light Green 4-- dr Galaxie Demonstrators, 4-d- R & H r, Loaded - Real Values -- GOSHEN MOTOR COMPANY GOSHEN, UTAH Phone CR ", -- Z touchdown. Dean Fisher made the extra point. Lions stop Cyprus Guards Calvin Ewell and Friday 19-- 6 OR MARION DAVIS rd farewell program 7 Richard Money, recently returned LDS missionary, will show photographic slides and discuss his experiences in Paraguay and Uraguay at Payson First Ward MIA on Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend. The event is under direction of the Special Interest Class, with Mrs. Vera Cloward as class leader, and Mrs. Mildred Partridge in charge of arrangements. Richard Frank Wilson,' son of Frank E and Lois Powell Wilson of Springville will be honored at a farewell testimonial Sunday, Sept. 18, 7 LDS p.m., in the Fourth-Tent- h ward chapel, 353 East Center, in Springville. Elder Wilson will represent the Springville Fourth Ward, Springville stake, in the West Central States Mission. He will enter the mission home in Salt Lake City Sept. 25 and leave for his field of labor his wife, Helen, will sing a Oct. 3. vocal duet. Lynn Powell, teacher at The missionary is a grandPayson Junior High School, son of Mrs. Dora Powell Stewwill be one of the speakers, art, Spanish Fork, formerly and Jack Powell, principal of of Payson. Payson Parkview School, and n, , j We went right to Pork Country to bring you finest meat for this... Prettiest pork you ever did seel Glistening pink meat, edged with clear white fat that says to the experienced shopper "Here is truly pork." Our buyers went right to the areas Pork Chops loin to pick out the very finest of the tender young porkers and were offering your fovorite cuts now at money saving prices. (A great time to stock your freezer.) Spore Ribs Country Style Lean, Meaty Ideal Barbecued Whole. Half or Butt Piece rJ, JJp 11 ID. lb. 106 Days Till Christmas like the big day is years away, doesnt it? But a word of advice. Right now is the time to decide about the Christmas cards youll send this year. Will they be ordinary? Or will they be photo greeting cards! Whats out of the ordinary about photo greetings? Just this. Photo greetings are as personal as your signature. Cards only you can send. Because you design them yourself! You just pick out a favorite browse through our selection of Kodak photo greeting designs. You pick the design you like. We combine it with prints made from your negative. Result: a special Christmas greeting that you designed. Your friends and relatives will enjoy receiving your Christmas photo greeting. And fer peeople you see infrequently the arrival of your card will be like a friendly holiday visit. Youll be surprised at how easy and inexpensive it is to send photo greetings. But it does take an early start So come on it first chance you get and look over our photo greeting designs. Pick the traditional, modem, or religious theme that best expresses your holiday sentiments Well handle the rest GEARS PHOTO SHOP Payson, Utah Encyclopedia For Young People" Get Volume II Today So That You Will Soon Have Big Dollar Values ! 2 ib$. 49 Busy Baker Soda Bisquick ho'J'bX Facial Tissue Velvet 285 ." 5 pock Zee Tissue 3N Ba,h oom GROUND BEEF 3 lb. for 98c PRESTONE Gal. 1.69 Buy Piece (Sliced Salad Dressing Tuna Fish Pillsbury's Cake Mix Assorted 1.00 4 4 roll pack 29 ( Vi 55 oa BREAD Mrs. Wright's Slenderway (Reg. 28c) lb. loaf 19 Salads Taste 9.39 II IDe lb. 39 49) qt. 49 for 89 3 pkgs. 1.00 Better-- 5c Off Reg. Price No. Highway-Ri- pe Segments 3 for 1.00 Apple Pies SX Tomato Soup iSo.orn.d 9 1.00 Peas ?w. 95 303 5 Ellis Chili It By The 70Fj AQ This Week's Best Buys! Nu Made - Makes All a Complete Set Crackers 49) Center II Slices ID. Bologna Cudahy Puritan 5 IT IDe Cudahy Puritan Tender Smoked Shank Piece Halibut By Gean 9 lb. Hams Pieces to Bake (Center Slices lb. "The Golden Book , Illustrated 59 Lean, Center Cuts i 3 Lb. Average Phone SK " First Ward meeting 6-- PHONE 265 V Utah County. pre-seas- snapshot of your family or take a new one for the occasion and bring the negaWell let you tive to us. SOLD BY SEPT. 29 Blue, Power Steering 4-d- r. Steel Hour per. Hicks scheduled Steelmark Days Ronald G. Hyde, member of the Brigham Young University faculty, was speaker at the Payson Lions Club meeting Monday night at the Turf Cafe. Carl J. Nelson, accompanied by Roene DiFiore, sang two solos.. Sherman Loveless, chairman of the membership committee who had the program for the evening in charge introduced Mr. Nelson. Don J. McCoy introduced the guest speaker. Gene Vest was the other member of the committee arranging for the program.-SpencAmos, president of the club, had the meeting in charge. Special guests at the meeting were W, Harold Hawker new principal at the Payson High School, and Elmer Daniels, visiting here from ' California Mr. Hyde reviewed a short history of the United States and reminded members of their responsibility as citizens and encouraged them to exercise their right to vote. Richard Holdaway, tackles Phil Reynolds and Norman Flower, Art Shows Payson Highs Lions scored Francom and end Mike Jewett The annual Harvest Days looked in the line for the a 19-- 8 victory over Cyprus Lions. good Flower and Art Show proved to be as successful as any that here Friday night in a has been held in the past. tilt Coach Jim Durrants charges Over sixteen hundred people registered as guests to view scored two touchdowns in the CHRONICLE WANT AOS BRING RESULTS the lovely flower displays and second quarter to break a 6 dead-loc- k and win the grid paintings by local artists. The Flower Show Chairman battle. and committee wish to express Payson scored first on a long LIVE ORGAN MUSIC their thanks to all who enter- drive in the first quarter with ed flowers. They extend a Paul Thomas going into the out. on the special thank you to the fol- end zone from one-yar- d lowing merchants for the gen- Cyprus, taking advantage of erous prizes that were do- a penalty against Pay-soLOWREY ORGAN ON KONI tied the score by rambling nated: First Security Bank, Wilson Feed, I. G. A. Food-line- r, to pay dirt on a long drive. 1480 ON YOUR RADIO DIAL Daniels The The Lions scored again when Drug, Chronicle, Christensens, Wil- Jim Mortensen swept around l,io,3 Sunday Phone Requests to sons Style Shoppe, City Drug, end for 20 yards and Jim Kropf Spanish Fork 1174 or Springville HU Mel Hanks Supply, D. T. R,, raced 30 yards up the middle Salem Merc., Burdick Lum- for a touch down. HERGER ORGAN CENTER ber, Utah Poultry, Elmers Tackle Stan Haskell recov39 NORTH 2 WEST, PROVO Confectionery, Chase Lumber, ered a Cyprus fumble in the Payson Furniture, Schwartz end zone for the other Payson Lews Lumber, Appliance, Roes Bakery, Hill Top Floral and Page Furniture. The best glad arrangement Was erroneously reported in V- the Chronicle last week. The prize went to Verdene Page. Sounds that MUST BE Veteran U. S. former George for Utah Valley appearances in "Mi. Stainless Steel" Gloria Wright will give boost to "Salute to Men of Steel" observance on September 29, 30 and October 1. 1953. e; be feted at to value citizenship Rulon D. Skinner named new district Richard Money will show slides at Richard Wilson to speaker urges 303 5 cans 89 Safeway Farm Fresh Produce! cTl New Crop Famous Southern Sweets Good Boiled, Large, Flavorful Baked, Candied, or Roasted Celery Grapes - 2 lbs. U.S. No. Crisp, Stringless Stalks Seedless L each 1 15 lb. mm Price1 Effective Thursday, Friday and Saturday h |