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Show I 2 - TNE CITIZEN THURSDAY, MARCH S, 1S7S OBITUARIES 'Madwoman' Mont Timmins Funeral services were Utah State Theatre will present the English version of the famous modern French comedy, The Mad- Temple as an officiator. He was called with his wife to the North Carolina-Georgi- a Mission from 1971 to 1973. He and his wife have been officiators in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He is an alumnus of Utah State University. Surviving are his widow, two daughters, Mrs. Robert B. (Margaret) Bailey, Sun Valley, Calif.; Mrs. Paul M. held Wednesday noon at the North 21st chapel, corner of First Ave., and K Street in Salt Lake City for W. Mont Timmins, 80, 167 L Street, who died Sunday at his home of a heart attack. He was a former resident of Smith-Held. He was born April 26, 1894, in Butte, Mont., to William James and Helen Thornley Timmins. He married Mary Brighton June 17, 1920, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. In 1952, he retired from the U.S. Postal Service. He has been director of the Utah Easter Seal Society. He was a veteran of World War I. While living in Smithfield he served in the superintendency of the Sunday School, was president of the 17th Quorum of Seventy, Benson Stake. From 1926 to 1928, he served an LDS mission to Canada. In Salt Lake City he was bishop of the North 21st Ward. At the time of his death he was patriarch in Emigration Stake. He and his wife served a mission to Britain in 1962-6- 3 and later served in the Tendon I.DS woman of Chaillot, safety-consulta- problem of blending the . A $200,000 this comedy. sis- Closing services were conducted at the Smithfleld City Cemetery and included remarks by a sister, Nellie Skidmore and a brother, Joseph Timmins, dedicated was able to prove what caused the accident. At USU he deals with a different branch of safety. He is teaching some courses in Transportation Safety and Fire Protection and Prevention Engineering. Youngblood said there isnt too much between air- craft accidents, industrial was held in the Mountain Fuel Auditorium and was directed by Willis Hall and pocket-book- Harry Papageorge. Harris was elected as the Trustee for Area 1 including Cache and Rich Counties. discussion, this comic fantasy stirred up a hornets Wrecks Re-buil- ds Mr. Youngblood explained in accident investigation. In a helicopter accident at Promontory Point a small stick of wood enabled Youngblood to reconstruct the accident. nt rt -- mens Association, Inc. It black-marketee- rs Burial was in the Smith-fiel- d City Cemetery Wednesday afternoon. to investigation of and their fathers had their pictures taken together in a tiger replica. After a barbecue supper there were relay games with the girls shaving their dads and the fathers putting up their daughters hair. Baby pictures were displayed and identities guessed. There was also square dancing, waltzes, polkas, Virginia reels, etc. The girls teachers are Ellen Earley and Karen Jackson. Elaine Hyer, Arlene Hansen and Linda Chadwick, the Primary presidency, attended as did the priesthood advisor, D. Vaughn Hansen. air- Youngblood said, As a gain- ed from the accident of the aircraft with the faulty wings, recommendations were made to the National Transportation Safety Board to the safety record of this particular aircraft. showed investigators the attitude" of the helicopter when it crashed. Accident investigation is a matter of very subtle recognitition, Youngblood said. His aviation safety consulting experience is related He also added, It is unbelievable the amount of disinterest some people have with safety. JVlarlers Return From Vacation HUGH YOUNGBLOOD accidents and accidents in the home. In any accidents where there are factors such man, machine or environment involved there is a possible hazard, he said. And, he added, the same methodology for cause determination applies whether it is on an airplane, in an industrial plant or home -' Virgil and Alice Marler and Odis and Marie Talbot returned on Feb. 25 from a month-lon- g vacation which took them to Boulder, Colo., where they spent a day with the Talbots' son and daughter-in-law, Meldon and Shan-n- a Talbot, and their family; to Andover, Kan., for a day with their daughter, Sharon Lee, her husband, Dennis Richardson, and their children; to Kokomo, Ind., where the Marlers' son, Lyman, his wife, Audrey, and their family reside. situation. He said Human error was the one factor, that is the cause of a large number of accidents. He was taught in the U.S. Army and Air Force flying and safety officer and commander courses, which consisted of courses designed to furnish flying safety officers and commanders with technical knowledge, emphasizing accidents investigation and prevention. It is sometimes a metter of very subtle recognition on the part of the investigator," From this point they drove to Silver Springs, Fla., where they met two couples from St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada, Milton and Doris Scott and Charles and Lorna Wilde. Together, they spent Party ren and her father, Sid Karren; Evette Merritt and her father, Harold Merritt , and Suzanne Boman and her father, Alva Boman. Chadwick and her father. Grant Chadwick; Priscilla Hogue and Cleve Hyer; Lor-i- e Jessop and her father, Willard Jessop; Penny Kar a week at Ft. Lauderdale and visited Disney World. The Marlers and Talbots then visited New Orleans for a day and spent two days in Baton Rouge, La., with Mary Alice and Lyle Gyreau, who are converts to the LDS Church, and friends of the Marlers. At Alexandria, La., they visited Mr. and Mrs. Horn, also converts and friends of the Marlers. One day was spent at Vicksburg, Miss., which is of historical significance to the Civil War. In New Mexico they visited the Carlsbad Caverns, then drove to Phoenix, Ariz., where they spent two nights with Virgil's sister, Violet, and her husband, Jeff Calhoun, before returning to Lewiston. BIRTHS BUTTARS, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin, Trenton, a boy. GREENLEE, Dale and Kaylene, 594 N. Maple, Smithfield, Feb. 23, a boy. HUBER. Leon and Ann, 410 E. 2 S., Hyde Park, Feb. 27, a girl. KENT, Phillip and Vickie, 70 East 2nd So., Smithfield, Feb. 26, a boy. yt SIGHTS LIKE THIS will be wished for in the coming months when the blistering sun will glare down on A baby girl was born February 18 to Kim and Stephen Pitcher of 43 North Second East, Hyde Park. She by LaRee Bodily Lewiston Bishop Sid Karren and his wife, Renee, just recently vacacompleted a two-wetion during which they visited eight LDS Temples. They traveled north through Idaho to Portland, Ore., and then ek south through California, calling on friends and relatives in several places. They made stops also at Las Vegas and St. George, and went to the Grand Canyon. Harris and Norma Mickel-so- n of Grace, Idaho, visited on Sunday with their son and Norris and daughter-in-laNadene Mickelson, and their family. Chad McKnight and his wife, Jana, of Nampa, Idaho, visited Sunday and Monday with Chads grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Oral Layne, Sunday, the group enjoyed y, dinner in Idaho, in honor of the birthday of the Laynes daughter, Venn a, Mrs. LaMar Oliverson. Mrs. Anthony Hall visited Wednesday and Thursday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Richards, of Sandy. Small sons, Garrick and Robert, accompanied their mother who attended a wedding shower for her new Wh-ne- Linda, the bride of Tom Richards. Norris and Nadene Mickelson were hosts Friday evening at a neighborhood dinner party at their home. sister-in-la- Guests included Lorin and Melba Scott, John and Debbie Bartholomew, Bryan and Sharon Taggart, Paul and Louise Carr, Dean and Juanita Fundenberger and Marty and Debbie Abrams. Hie Lewiston First Ward will hold a reunion Friday, March 7, at 7 p.m. Tickets will be sold for the affair. A Boy Scout banquet was held in the Lewiston First Ward Thursday evening with Norris Mickelson, Sherman Taylor, Blaine Allen, Elaine Hyer, Ellen Andersen and Louise Carr in charge of the arrangements. There was a program of skits by the scouts and a reading by Norene Mickelson. Following the confirmation of Kent Weeks in the Lewiston Fourth Ward, his parents gave a dinner for their immediate family and Idaho, and Elaine and Lorin Pitcher of Logan. Greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Edith Peterson, Smith-fieland Arvilla Fraser, Grace, Idaho. She will be named Jennifer Lyn and her daddy Stephen is a glasser at Gordon Glass. 6 pounds 15 ounces 20 inches long. d, weighed and was She has a sister, Stephanie, 16 months. Grandparents are Pauline and Wayne Egbert, Grace, be $$ Citizen Cacfje it Published ettiy Thursday Smithfield. Utah Second .IKMI Ai: l dais postage paid at 84335 WIsilN - I III Kilt yen outside Cache must for 75 Nitrates, Urea, Phosphates and Potash in blends of your choice. Available in Bulk, Bag, Trailer or Custom Spread at competitive prices. Our special is Sulfur Superphosphate 19 APA plus 10 Sulfur. Custom spread now for legumes feeding to fix nitrogen and save the cost of buying Nitrogen. MINERAL FERTILIZER CO. Midvale, Utah 28 years of fertilizer service Smithfield, Utah 84335 Subscription Rales: 85 per year SS per FERTILIZER! A Valley muttering mortals sighing because it's too hot. Citizen Photo Karrens Return From Visiting Eight Temples New Arrival The girls and their dates were Angela Jones and her uncle, Kenny Weeks; Lisa Baird and her father, James Baird; Stephanie Stevens and her father, Farrell Stevens; Dixie Williams and her father, Marvin Williams; Nancy Stephensen and her father, Blaine Stephenson, and Janette Stephensen and her brother, Michael Stephensen; Sherri accidents involving craft. result of the knowledge Held In Leiviston Ward Saturday, March 1, in the Lewiston First Ward, a Daughter-Daddy party was a delightful occasion for the Primary girls and their fathers. "King of The Beasts being their theme, the girls more than 30 A small spot of paint from the tail section of the aircraft Daddy-Daught- er Wil- liam R. Harris, and S. W. Webb from the Richmond Lions Club attended an organization meeting in Logan on Monday, Feb. 24, for the proposed new Utah Dairy- s rather have richer than richer lives, for themselves or anyone else. Setting off many a heated the grave. particular dent resulted in a products liability suit in which an settlement was reached. This accident that Youngblood said through wreckage damage analysis and accident reconhe struction methodology, LaMar Spackman, In the play, the "Madwoman" is a great poetic writer's reaction to the corruption of Paris between 1939 and 1943. Yet the play speaks not only of France, but of the whole western world and those malevolent products of our era, the profiteers and who would d. acci- Attends Meeting fantasty that characterise (Ann) Hendricks, Mrs. Cyrus (Nellie) Skidmore, both of Richmond; Robert of Bear Lake, and Joseph, Smith-Hel- ht weeks. Richmond Trio ef- shuttling nimbly between the two moods of reality and ters and toothers, Mrs. Lorin . performance forts of 38 actors, but also of keeping their performances Salt Lake Holfert, City; 27 grandchildren; sev- dent investigator or accident reconstruction expert, one is now available. Hugh Youngblood is the man to whom all these g titles apply. He is a new resident of Smithfield and an instructor at Utah State University. He is married and has one son. His wife is Julie and his son, John, is five. Mr. Youngblood was an instructor at the Institute of Aerospace Safety and Management at the University of Southern California in Aircraft Accident Investigation Techniques and Aeronautical 'Engineering, before com-- t ing to., Cache. Yalley.. One aircraft accident Youngblood investigated resulted in the proof, in his opinion, that the wing failure caused the aircraft to crash, in other words, because the wings didn't work during the flight, the plane crashed. Broadway run. Tickets are available at the University Center Ticket Office, City Drug in downtown Logan, and at the Lyric Theatre box office on the afternoons and evening of ht Should any Cache Valley resident ever require the services of an aviation or an expert witness in aeronautical engineering or an aircraft acci- continued throughout the 8 Thirty-eigroles are involved in this worldly fable as it has been called, and W. Vosco Call, director of the show, not only has the y; Smithfield Resident 6-- 13-1- (Verna) Smith, Murray; n; Mar. nest of controversy during its Paris run and provoked a storm of arguments that 5 and in the Lyric Theatre in downtown Logan. Curtain time is 8:00 p.m. sons, James S. Timmins, Murray; Dr. David B. Timmins, Rabat, Morocco; Dr. William M. Timmins, Holla-daan adopted son, Alfred en mm Theatre To Present the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Weeks, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Weks, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Braegger, Mrs. LaRae Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Weeks and their families, and Lathan McNeil. erts, and her Mr. and Mrs. David Roberts, all of Fairview, were guests for the occasion. Holly has been baptized and confirmed a member of the LDS Church. and Ricky Chadwick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Chadwick, was confirmed Sunday in the Lewiston First Ward fast meeting by his father. Ricky's grandmother, Mrs. Marie Clark of Logan, was a dinner guest of the family following church. Mrs. Chesley Johnson of Fountain Green, Utah, spent the weekend in Lewiston with Gary and Sue Ann Johnson and their family. They are the parents of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Johnson and came to be present for the baptism and confirmation of their grandson, Brad Johnson.Holly Mickelson was feted at a birthday dinner party last week on her eighth birthday. Her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Rob Heidi Chadwick was taken out to dinner in Logan by her parents to celebrate her birthday Friday. They then called on her Mrs. Marie grandmother, Clark. Heidi is the daughter of Grant and Linda Chadwick. Carol Cornish entertained the Lewiston Jaynes at her: ' home Wednesday evening. Seven Sky View High School students from Lewiston took part in the success John Dahle was confirmed a member of the LDS Church in services in the Lewiston Fourth Ward. He is the son of Rod and Danna Dahle. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Irons of Moroni, Utah, and Mr. .,. Four-year-o- ld ful presentations of Pajama Game." They were Craig Buttars, Boyd Bodily, Ruth Rawlings, Cindy Gilbert, Mary Ellen Spackman, Linda Pitcher and Carla Van Dyke. In the Lewiston Second Ward fast meeting Sunday, two babies were blessed and there was one confirmation, ark Weeks blessed his daughter and gave her the name Myma. Little Brande-lyn- e Johnson was blessed and named by her father, Frank Johnson. Angela Baker was confirmed by her father, DeLoy Baker. Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Bodily spent Saturday night in North Salt Lake with their daughter, Meridee, and her family, the Stuart Hatch family. Sunday they attended church in a BYU branch for the blessing and naming of new little Angela Jeanne Alder, the daughter of the Bodilys nephew, Mark Alder, and his wife, Ruth Anne. |