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Show Moroni Feed Company Will Hold Annual Meeting Feb. 22 J. Howard Blackham, presi- turday, February 22nd. Busident of Moroni Feed Company, ness meetings will be held at announces the annual meeting of the Moroni turkey processing the association to be held Sa- - plant at 9:30 a.m. These meetings are for members only. A luncheon will be served to all members in attendance at the annual business meetings. The annual banquet of the company will be held at the Moroni LDSChapelat7:30p.m., your personal store February 22nd. Patrons and friends of the organization are at your door since 1868 invited to attend. Tickets will be on sale at Moroni Feed Company general office, Farmers KARL R. HUFFMAN Coop Service Station, L. Glen Anderson of Manti, and ONeil Spring City, Utah Larsen of Ephraim. Program for the banquet will be furnished The Footprints of Free by dom, a choral group from BYU directed by Steve Bardsley. Bringing this group in to furnish a program continues the high quality of programs which are brought in each year for the annual banquet. Moroni Feed Company is an Watkins agricultural association incorporated in 1938. It has grown in size and sales volume to be one of the leading integrated producers of turkey products in the world. Dressed turkeys and turkey parts from Moroni Feed Company are shipped to all major markets in the United States, to Europe, Hawaii and the Far East. Employment is furnished for more than 600 people of the area each year. 462-28- MANTI NATIONAL GUARD Obituaries Births Score 2 to Druzella Estep Hazel Mary Jacobson Cox, Manti, Utah, died Feb. 11, 1975 at the Provo LDS Hospital of Druzella Estep, 92, of Ephraim died Feb. 12, 1975 at the LDS Hospital in Mt. Pleasant of pneumonia. She was born Jan. 19, 1883 at Mannasa, Utah, (the Larsen ranch west of Ephraim) a daughter of Margaret and Lewis Larsen. natural causes. Born Sept. 20, 1896 in Salt Lake City to Jacob Baltzer children Jennifer and Mathew. and Lena Peterson Jacobson. Mr. and Mrs. l.lovd Kiar are Married William Jay Cox Jan. happy grandparents since re11, 1915, Farmington, Davis ceiving the news of the ar-vCounty. Later solemnized in of their newest grandson. the Manti LDS Temple. Active member of the LDS Church. Primary president and teacher, both ward and stake, work leader in Relief Society. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Harmon Taught Junior Sunday School announce the arrival of a new 35 years. Lifelong visiting baby son on February 7th. He teacher. 6 9 oz is and lbs. weighed 34 Survivors: husband Jay Cox; the third child for the Harmons. sons Elliott, Homer J., Max. The family reside in Mesa, AriCecil, all Manti; daughters Mrs. zona. Wallace (Beulah) Tuttle, MidGrandparents are Mr. and vale; Mrs. Bruce (Phyllis) Mrs. Frank Hardy, Ephraim. Moroni. 30 grandchilMrs. Hardy has recently spent Irons, 46 three weeks assisting in the dren, Sisters, Mrs. Paul (Thelma) Harmon home. Smith, Mrs. Meeks Manti; (Vilate) Holiday, Spanish Fork; Mrs. Stott (Geniel) Partridge, Cowley, Wjoming. Mrs. Estep was a hard workall her life. She was a saleslady for several years for Auerbachs in Salt Lake City. She was a piadical nurse in Ephraim for many years and helped deliver many babies and care for their mothers. Funeral services were second to Randy and Tami Olsen of Salt Lake City on Feb. 12 at the Cottonwood Hospital. She weighed 9 lbs. 1 oz. and will be named Stephanie. Max and Doris have 13 grand- Third Daughter .V'N- are INCLUDING Snow College Gold Key and Grand March 1st: Beef on the Hoof J 47 1 Gets Interest FEB Jewish girl, her family, and another family who have to go into hiding because of the Jewish persecution during World War II. The story takes place in Holland from 1942 to 1944. The Franks, the Van Daans and Jan Dussel find a place to hide in the crowded attic of an old factory. They stay there for two years until the Germans Dont Believe It That old wives tale that pork is hard to digest has been disproved many times by modern nutritional scientists. Pork, like all meat, is virtually completely digestible. Its protein is used for both tissue growth and maintenance. Pork makes many other contributions to good Its the most valuable natural source of thiamin and generously contributes other B vitamins and important minerals such as phosphorus and iron. nutrition. Ir u Qatar, b (?C& ::s !x MiiUj Mb " Ss :: :: :: :: by John F. McVmus Belmont, Massachusetts - Our federal government operates today under procedures that call to mind the decline and fall of Rome. Pressure groups and propaganda campaigns continually demand more action, and so a Congress passes more legislation. The sire and power of government continues to grow, and it will soon become total. Street mobs in Rome -many centuries ago; phony crises today the result is the same. And the outcome cannot help but be the same, unless the v hole show is exposed for the fraud it is. Some of the government's foolish moves arc eventually repealed when the heat dies down But for every ridiculous daylight saving scheme or seatbelt interlock system that gets scrapped, there arc numerous and far more dangerous creations that continue to strangle productive Americans. It is these to which we call your attention: the federal agencies such as OSHA, F.PA, and FFA. liach was born in a fraudulent crisis. If the phoniness of the pattern can be understood, the first step toward regaining lost freedom will be accomplished. d year-roun- d OSHA In 1968, Ralph Nader and others began a campaign to publicize the lack of safety in American industry. The White House proposed legislation, propaganda mills blared statistic-- , and Congress just had to do something about the alleged threat to the life and health of the workingman. What it did. came in the form of a new federal agency called OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration), a bureaucratic nightmare that has the power to control or destroy American business. When the hysteria subsided, a quick look at figures compiled by the authoritative National Safety Council showed that the accident rate in American industry had been cut in half in the previous thirty years, and was still dropping -without federal intervention. But the goal of OSHAs originators was not safety and health; the goal was control of business by government. s 12 s :: :: TTT mil? i i" ; H 11 QfcJIfc : 9' zfta 1'H ijpg ft SKBRISS 0 :: : (r MARKERS LOWEST PRICES, FINEST QUALITY LARGEST SELECTION IN UTAH ruptuic in an offshore oil well near Santa Barbara (Calif.) led to the fouling of some beaches and the deaths of some buds. Environmentalists and their allies in the media wailed that hundreds of thousands of birds had been killed in an ecological disaster. Out of this alleged crisis emerged the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency), with fantastic assumption of power over American business and industry. Four years later, the painstakingly accurate Congressional Quarterly reported that an estimated 600 birds had been killed. The condition of the beaches and the wild life was not the real concern. What the government wanted, and got. was more power. FEA Last year, we suffered thiough the energy crisis. Ah during the period when we waited in gasoline lines and turned our thermostats down, peliolcum dcalcis had full tanks and actually lacked storage space for incoming shipments. Out of the hullabaloo came the FEA (Federal Energy Administration) and government control over this absolutely vital commodity. That crisis was as phony as the others, but it worked beautifully to transfer additional vast poweis to Washington. The Latest Crisis Right now wc find outsclvcs in ihe nsdst of Energy Crisis No. 2 Dire predictions of every conceivable variety arc thrust upon us by the President, the media, and all sorts of experts. But whete is the evidence of any shortage? We are told that we must have either President Fords costly tax on imported oil, or rationing. But neither is needed. Must a man choose between pneumonia and tuberculosis? Why are we not allowed to choose health? Why don't the American people tell the would-bin their midst they have had enough legislation by phony crisis, and that they aie wise to the sinister game being played? e Copyright IV sss ssss ii(!f9mnM3Xb gibs us sss n i & lotali-tarian- by The John Birch Society Fronire s life I& III Ikdlweirr. EPA In 1969, a 73 ISitii IPGSttcg :: (2X2) ON iktnr-- ciiarati 9XH303 ;; TT K9il6:Utyu6 w 30 " (line fbnJIta Qtacns jsass; " uamnii' TO Isnt (ZoocU-- SfiatCuty mother and daughter. The play, directed by Martha Keeler, will begin at 8:00 p.m. and the admission for the play is $1.50 for everyone. The Gunnison Valley High School will present the play The Diary of Anne Frank on February 20th and 21st. The Diary of Anne Frank is a true story of a young DISCOUNTS Another Crisis That 'atclivme atd Douie I Shown at Gunnison High School BEESLEY MEMORIALS The Birch Log Popular Sizes Diary of Anne Frank to be This story dramatizes these people and the feelings they have for each other. It is a love story between Anne and Peter. It shows the hardships between Donation I Hazel J. Cox find them. This play portrays the experience of these eight people during the two years as recorded by Anne Frank in her diary. 2nd: Fat Lamb on the Hoof 3rd: 30 lb. Frozen Turkey $1 00 FILTERS MJE're of Manti. Date: Feb. 22, 1975 Time: 9:00 P.M. Place: Manti Armory Admission: $2 per couples Drawing for Prizes J ; Mm Mr. and Mrs. Rojer Sorensen the parents of a baby girl born February 17. She weighed 7 lbs. 7 oz. and will be welcomed home by two sisters and one brother. The Sorensens are now making their home in Nyssa, Oregon but are formerly of Manti. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Max Simonsen and Mr. and Mrs. Willis Sorensen, all FLOOR SHOW ,iV' - - CLEAN FURNACE I n. children. BACK DOOR ORCHESTRA 1 a baby great-grandchil- d, girl born Fri- B WITH I She ran boarding houses in Carbon County for many years. She was a constant source of comfort and inspiration to those that knew her. She has been living at Mayfield Manor for over two years. She is survivedby twin daughters, Mrs. Shirley Peterson and Carol Thomson; 10 grandchildren and 21 Her only son Robert Hyslop died in 1955. Funeral services were held in Ephraim South Ward Feb. 15, 1975. Burial was in the Ephraim City Cemetery. Jf I J er day in the Manti Center-Nort- h Ward Chapel in Manti. Burial was in the Manti City Cemetery. Max and Doris Hansen announce the arrival of their Featuring V She was the last member of a family of 11 full brothers and sisters and 13 half brothers and sisters. She married Ernest Hyslop Sept. 5, 1910. He died in 1919. She married William Estep in 1928. He died in 1955. IPs a Boy EPHRAIM ENTERPRISE 1975 Some people believe that stirring a drink with a knife will bring on stomach pains. al Great Grandchild MILITARY BALL MESSENGER Thursday, February 20, Hazel J. Cox 1 Mr. and Louis (Darlene) Kjar of Tuba City, Arizona are the parents of a new son born to them Feb. 16 in a Flagstaff hospital. He weighed 6 lbs. 14 oz. The couple have two other MANTI limiltal' ftiTu (5jRir litas 92 Years of Experience Helps Us Answer Your Questions 1 33! BEESLEY MONUMENT & VAULT CO. 725 South State Street, Provo Ph; 374-058- 5 WWYVWWflVVVWVWWWWVWVWYywWYy ALL NEW All Types Pest Control s s ss :: s ctjupiur. rwmmi 11 ifcsS&Mb ' i g it i M mt rmt n.mjk ikdlrarr. .tsi s VIIHKuttla warns ;; ii:nne Sstli oil qpmlfc tlftgr II (Bi lUEremniidl1 ns & i ,- r- 9nm00m w I O LOW COST mi ... 'SCOPE Free Estimates 24 oz. $1 07 375-732- 2 BLANKETS Size SCOPE 0 All $7.99 Super Residential and Commercial ri 1 $77 each Deposit Your Mystery Personality Entries at Our Store This Week d ba or Nell's Motor - :: : Johnson's Pest Control; Call Collect Ogam 0 Christensens 835:31 Larry Johnson, Owner 8 1 1 Operator wwwwvwwiwwwwwwwmwwm of Ephraim 155 E. 2nd So. |