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Show Boulder News LeNora LeFevre Bishop Vard and Mary Jane Coombs are the proud parents of a baby girl born October 3rd at Cedar City. They have three sons who enjoy having a sister. Howard and Ida Church received word that Michael and Elaine Carter have a boy baby born October 3rd at Missoula, Mont. They also have three daughters. Gary and Val Jean Haws, Ivan Lyman and Mac LeFevre went to the Fish Lake Mountain to hunt elk October 4th. Deon and Fay Alvey of Escalante accompanied by LeNora LeFevre and La Rue Spencer where all but LaRue attended the work shop for the Garfield County News reports at the Town Hall hosted by Jerrie Fackrell and her husband Keith who was in charge of the mutton fry held at the Town Park on October 5th. The Boulder Relief Society held their opening social on October 3. A large crowd came to enjoy the event. It was hosted by president Judie Davis, her counselors and the teachers. Elvon Poulsou and family of Granger visited with family members Eva Dean Liston at Escalante and Heber and Neta Poulson at Boulder. Golda Haws accompanied her granddaughter Ray Dean Tucker to Midvale where she stayed at her daughter Beverly Ray Tuckers home for a visit. She returned with Madly n Haws who had been in Salt Lake City for a medical appointment. Pamela Jepsen enjoyed a visit with her father and grandmother of California Dan Coleman and son Shane went to the timbered mountains north of Roosevelt and returned with a truck load of log pine poles. Otto and Idona Haws, Neal and Fay Jepsen were in Richfield Speakers in sacrament meeting were Howard Church, Dee Hardy and Bishop Vard Coombs. A double trio was sang by Marlene Haws, Jeraldine Jones and Betty Alvey of Escalante and Ida Church, Florene Preston and Gladys LeFevre accompanied by Areola Gates on the piano. The elk hunt in Utah officially opened on October 4, but before that day hunters began to arrive. By the evening of the 3rd campers, trucks, and jeeps dotted the designated Forest lands with horns hoking, music on tapes blaring and motors roaring by. Horses stamped ner vously. Morning found thousands of hunters, both male and female, all dressed in bright orange, out at the crack of dawn pursuing the few scat tered herds of elk. Hardly ever a bull was with the cows and calves Game wardens were in every nook and cranny. Imagine how the bewildered elk felt as they fled from the orange creaiures only to run into ai. other group of them on every turn, both day and night. Then too imagine the amount of money spent for licenses, for equip nunt for nothing "Wow" To be continued in Deer Season Big Deal no ueer |