OCR Text |
Show ' "V V is' S 1 ' v P ' , tM' f Vf .W'- f ,y - - ; &. V;-.- ' V: X ' v s 1HX V- V - v ' 'a - Glenn Yarbrough will appear the Valley Music Hail in North Salt Lake for two nights-Frida- y, November 8th and Sat9th at 8:30 November urday, v .,:.'V at V , , . th. x Jby Boyles Brothers Drilling Co. and Gibbons and Reed Construction Co. to drill Water Hollow Tunnel, part of the Bureau of Reclamation's Bonneville Unit, Central Utah Project, This ;is lowered onto the tracks leading to the tunnel inlet. earth-borin- g machine will cut through 4.1 miles of '80-to- n ! nctta: vT. J a 'uitc'i Byron Killian bred Columbia Sheep and he is very successful in that enter- Byron Killian of Salem is our Farmer of the Week. He has known farming all his life and at the present he is farming some dry ground as well as irrigated land. He also has pure prise. Be Held Tuesday The Payson Lions Club is very pleased to be a sponsor of another Glaucoma Clinic . which will be held in the new I Payson High School, 1050 South ; Main, Payson, Utah, Tuesday November 12, 1968. The actual testing will begin at 7:30 to - 9:00 p.m., however, a thirty .minute film pertaining to eye conservation will begin at 7:00 ' p.m. which will continue during : the evening. - 1 treats care. As he explains it, I just try to do good songs, I dont care whether their he rock to form the tunnel running from Strawberry Reservoir Bureau of Reclamation Photo to Water Hollow Creek. Glaucoma ClinicTo by Byron is the son of Alex and Irene Killian who were citizens of Salem; both are deceased. By was educated in the school? of Salem and is a graduate of the Spanish Fork High School He is married to the former Mina Christensen of Salem and they are the parents of two children: Mrs. Don (Sherrie Ann) Berge of Ogden and Kent Killian of Ogden. Kent is a practicing verterinary. Mr. Killian has served in the superintendency of the Salem Ward Sunday School. At the present time Mr. Killian is confined to the Utah Valley Hospital where he is suffer' ing from complications following a recent operation. We of the Spanish Fork Press wish this ambitious farmer-stockma speedy recovery. an it with pedigree is broadway, folk or rock and roll. But the melody must be so good that it becomes a vehicle for the words; it must be good enough to stay in the background. The words must have the most importance. For Glenn, a performance begins long before he steps onto a stage. Many hours of preparation go into each appearance, starting with the selection of material and progressing through countless hours of rehearsal. Glenn features The Fred Ramisez Trio. Fred joined Glenn in 1964 and has traveled with him ever since, occasionally deserting his piano for the vibraharp or bongos. Recently, his distinctive piano style convinced Warner Brothers records that Fred has a future as a single performer and he was asked to sign a recording contract with them. Also appearing with Glenn will be Decca reMaffitt and cording stars Davies. Their latest hit is Taste Like Strawberries. Tickets are now on sale at the Valley Music Hall Box Office in North Salt Lake and may be charged at all Sears, ZCMI, and Castleton stores. November 7, 1968 B. Davis By Shirlme R. Otteaen Here we are at the beginning of another new month. By the time you read this the election will be over and of course, everyone wont be happy about the outcome, but with all the problems and troubles in the world, I surely dont envy the position of our new president whoever he is. I feel in a reminiscing mood today. As I see the big mechanical toppers in the beet fields, I remember not too many years ago when this was all done by hand and it was important enough to let school out so the farmers could get some help. Now instead of a beet vacation, we have a deer hunt vacation. Many of your reading this will remember gritting your teeth or maybe even cussing little when you hooked yourself in the shin with the hook on the beet knife or gone into the house at the end of the day knowing for sure that your back would never straighten up. Or maybe you had a headache after getting klonked on the head with a beet that someone threw over on your side of the wagon when loading beets. I remember one year when the weather turned off cold and wet and the men that were helping us had to wrap their legs in gunny sacks and it required more than one team of horses to pull the wagons out of the fields. There used to be a beet dump in Palmyra, but now the farmers haul their beets to the old sugar factory' in Leland. Its too bad that our children will never know the thrill of waiting for the train to come down and pick up the loaded train cars. We used to put horseshoe nails on the rails to be flattened out and this a reporter and chumsusedtohide under the bridge while the train went roaring overhead. The mere thought of it now makes Dear Reader: By the time this issue is in your homes, Veterans Day, 1968 will not be far away. To me Veterans Day is one of the most sacred of our National It is then that we Holidays. have an opportunity to pause in this hectic rush of time to pay our devotion to those men Mrs. Petty Cook, Registered Nurse, Joseph H. Greenhalgh and John Johnson at Payson City Hospital. Donations to T. V. Fund DONATIONS In leading the way with donation of a T.V. set for the patients at Payson City Hospital, the Board of Trustees have given splendid stimulus to many of our businessmen interested social clubs, and fine friends of the Hospital. Our their sincere and all thanks to the Board of the thoughtful donors. (By the way, our apologies for not including Mr. Ralph V. Daniels in last weeks Chronicle article as a member of the Board. Mr. Daniels was appointed by special City Council and Board action in September of this year.) Those who have donated TV sets or made other contribution to date include the following: (All donations in multiples of $110 will have a bronze donation plaque attached to a set.) Hospital Board of Tustees $110; Veterans of Spanish Fork District $110; Hospital Pink Ladies $110; Willard Nelson, Associates, (Hospital Architect) $110; Payson Lions Club $110; Wakara Riding Club $110; Food Marts $110; Am- - Roys me shudder. At the peak of the season, there would be a steady string of wagons going to the dump. Many a night, the lights were turned on with 6 or 8 wagons still waiting to unload. Sometimes they would have quite a wait so the farmers would visit and the bonds of friendship were strengthened. It would be quite a trick to control a team of horses when the engine came roaring down the tracks. Some it didnt bother, others it would. It was on such an occasion that Grandpa Roach had a load of beets at the dump and his team became frightened. He thought they were going to break and run so he jumped off the wagon and in doing so, broke his leg. That fall, Grandma Roach and the kids finished the beet harvest. Such were the days of yesteryear. Long days, hard work, the whole family working together and not enough money for all the erican Legion Auxiliary - Sp. Fork $5; Firemans Auxiliary - Sp. Fork $10; Utahna Riding Club - Salem $10; Jeune Mere Club - Springville $10; Cultus Club - Payson $55 Waldon Williams was a mem- ber of nearer $11,000.00 total The Hospitals share of the expense is about $7,000.00 . This is still lots of money to raise, but with the employee project and the grateful donations from our many friends in our total population area we surely can make the top. Act now, dead- line is near! to- so if you want to read something light or humorous, you must find it elsewhere. My attention was drawn recently to the cemetery marker of a friend of mine who died in battle just one month before his twenty fifth birthday. 1 copied the following message from the valuable marker that stands intheSpanishForkCem-eter- y in memory of him: Maj. Waldon Williams Artny Air Corps.. .May 10, 1918... April 7, 1943. Lost his life in the Pacific day, would have contributed his share to a better America had he been privileged to live. NOW HEAR THIS: The person who would do such a dastardly deed will never accomplish as much in this life if he lives to be 70, yea 70 times 70 as Waldon accomplished in his 25 years of living. I hope this Round the Town message gets brought to the attention of them who commit such acts of vandalism and will have an influence on them for Area... . Although his body is over better American Activities. I am not only pleading for the there, sweet memories linger here. safety of Waldons marker, but Set in the stone beside this all markers that have been demessage is a beautiful photofaced or broken just for The graph of Waldon. The picture Hell of It. My heart bleeds a is about six inches long and little when I see the broken about three inches wide. Ive narrow type stones that, as a always felt that having Waldons rule, mark the graves of our picture on the marker was in pioneers who sacrificed much to very good taste, as his family make our area livable. didnt have his body to bury, Our cemeteries are sacred whats wrong with having his places and to us who have loved picture in his stone? But it ones buried on our little plots seems next to impossible to of ground therein revere those keep that picture in good condiplots as holy ones, so please tion. Vandals have defaced it on do not tresspass. three occasions. Each time it The Williams family will soon is repaired a craftsman has to have the damage on Waldons remove the picture. It is sent stone repaired one more time. to San Francisco for technical Please respect their wishes by work, then the craftsman has to looking but not touching. recement it back into the stone. There is not much we can do This procedure took place only for our veterans. The sacrifices a few months ago, but today that most of them have made and Waldons picture is again marare making are soon forgotten. red, by BB or pellet shots, to The least we can do is to honor the extent that another replace- - their burial places. dDCPCEfjDfJcii FRIDAY and SATURDAY, NOVEMBER hours. Hmmmmm! present day Sounds like the conditions, huh? Geneva Employees To Attend U.T.C. For 25 Weeks School bells rang recently at Utah Technical College for 31 Geneva Works employees enrolled in the plants Apprenticeship Program. The men began a session of related training at the Provo school, and will attend classes there one day each week until May. Training under journeymen at the plant the remainder of each week, the men are enrolled in the program for between three and four years to qualify in their respective crafts including blacksmith, electronic ek respectedSpanishFork n, land. You have probably been contacted by one of the Hospital employees or Pink Ladies asking Wouldnt you like to buy a ticket to help get T.V. sets for Hospital patients? and You can win a new color TV if youre lucky and you put your ticket in the box at the Hospital. Ambitious employe e shave sold over 1000 tickets, but this isnt near enough so please wont you buy a few. The employees have a contest and to date the leaders in sales include: Lizzie Utley 51 Brent Hales 54 Betty Cook 40 Nadine Brown 30 Mary Jane Reynolds 40. Some weeks ago we published that the total expense for all sets, installed, etc., would exceed $18,000. This amount included maintenace contract and other details which Hospital Administration has since programmed within our own maintenance staff, so may we inform you that a correct figure for 41 sets, the installation, antenna installed and system, special cables and speakers will cost a family. He was a brother of Bishop Arch Williams of Pay-soRaleigh Williams, Maggie Crump and Vera Shelton of Spanish Fork and other brothers who have made their communities better places because of their living in them, and he too who fought and many made the I am not in a good mood Evans memory? supreme sacrifice, that we might live in peace in a free TICKET SALES ON TV Wont you or your Club help? 8th and 9th DRINKS SATURDAY BALLOONS Plus $5.00 FOR - $10 00 - $20 the KIDS o GIFT CERTIFICATE on UPHOLSTERY AND $50-0- CERTIFICATE on 0 SNOMOBILE COME IN AND REGISTER repairman, electrician, millwright, motor inspector, pipefitter, welder and boilermaker. To successfully complete the program, the apprentices attend 200 hours of classroom studies at Utah Technical College in a curriculum covering such subjects as mathematics, blueprint reading, drafting, industrial economics and specific craft theory. Spanish Fork and Payson apprentices are: Bert H. Argyle, John McKenzie, William K. Johnson, Douglas Shum way. Bill Bellows, Blake Herbert, Robert E. Williams, Edward L. Hansen and Larry Stanton. The girl from ford Gounmj wants you. the biggest, Gome test-driu- e quietest Ford ever built. 0 great road ear forGG. Its built on a longer wheelbase than Chevy for true big-c- Business Opportunity ar ride. Its track is as wide as Cadillac for superb roadability. And its designed to be quieter than the Ford proved quieter than Youve got to drive it to believe it! Rolls-Royc- IT e. TISCHNER FORD Sales and Service Phone 754-328- 1 118 W Main, Santaquin T S THE GOING THING I Texaco Service Station For less Payson 8 Provo Good Volume History Some Investment Necessary. Paid Training and Business Counseling service Available. Phone 373-869- 4 Provo before 5:00 p.m. or 375-353- 7 after 5:00 p.m. 1 ment job is necessary. I was wondering if the individual or individuals who pulled that job read the message on that marker. If he had and if he bore any conscience at all, he would have thought again. Theres not a body buried here. This man disappeared in a flaming plane in the Pacific. He died that I, an American Citizen, might walk these streets a free man, that I might roam the fields with my gun in hand, but did he die that I should walk into a city cemetery and deface a monument to his of the hill has always intrigued Glenn Yarbrough. As a singer he has traveled this country from one end to the other and as a sailor he has investigated the waters of the Pacific. But Glenns horizons are not bounded by the confines of land or sea. He is limited only by the imagination of composers and the skill of musicians, for Glenn is on a constant exploration through the world of music. When Glenn chooses a song for himself it is only after careful thought. It must have a beautiful melody and a meaningful lyric, and once he has found it first The cutting head of the mechanical "mole" being used O us far side - Thursday, 84651 Between the Headlines p.m. The - "ROUND THE TOWMVB To Appear at VMH ' '.. X''vfcl -: ' '. v 'V - ;.3 v:? VtF Payson, Utah Glenn Yarbrough jV 7 THE PAYSON CHRONICLE V- - nul v HAPPENINGS HOSPITAL f See the complete line of AMF snowmobile accessories for more winter tun SKI -- DAD IDLER snowmobiles rmi.A 11 11 ir ai 11 i.a 11 itu 20 North 800 East, Payson, Utah |