| OCR Text |
Show Prominent Matron Honored on 75th Birthday Mrs. May Bentley, highly respected re-spected resident and church worker of Parowan, and the wife of city justice of the peace John W. Bentley, observed her 75th birthday on Sunday of this week, and to observe the event all of her children and her brothers and sisters from a widely scattered scat-tered area, came to spend at least part of the day with her. j Included in the visitors were1 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Norton and John Norton and son of Salt Lake City; Mr. and Mrs. Leon D;Uton and daughter of Circleville; Mrs. Clifton Harris and daughter, of Junction; Mr. and Mrs. Orlo Norton Nor-ton of McGill. Nev. all children and In-laws of Mrs. Bentley. Brothers and sisters were: Mr. and Mrs. A. Z. Smith, Santaquin; Mrs. Rebecca Norton, Panguitch; Mrs. Dean Norton, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Ethel Lay, Payson. Wednesday of this week the traveling assembly from the Parowan Par-owan High School was presented at the College of Southern Utah and the Junior High School in Cedar City. The program was presented to the college In the forenoon and the junior high in the afternoon. Following the final presentation the group visited the Cedar City Art exhibit. At 12 noon after the college program the cast In the assembly was entertained at a dinner in the college commons building, by graduates of the Parowan High School now enrolled at the C S U. The Parowan alumni members who were hosts to the local students were Marie Adams, chairman; Gale Stolk, LoRen Or-ton, Or-ton, Virginia Topham. Carol Ann Matheson, Mama Heap, San-ford San-ford Topham, Lyman Munford, Nelson Taylor and Tom Dobrus-ky. Dobrus-ky. Special guests from the college col-lege who met with the group al the dinner, were Dean Plummer, Kugene Holman, present student body president, and Royce Chamberlain, Cham-berlain, next year's student body I president of the co.'lege. |