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    • yearbook1917i063: Athletics

    • yearbook1917i063: Athletics

    • Beaver Murdock Academy--Beaver (Beaver County, Utah); School yearbooks

    • Athletics. No greater satisfaction can come to the student at graduation than to feel, when receiving his diploma, that he has served honestly and well the institution that now honors him. And these feelings are permanent. They will be found...
    • 1903, Mar 8

    • 1903, Mar 8
    •  

    • Sun. Mar. 8, 1903: Ther. Cool., Colder., Wea. S. wind, clouds. We herded east of camp. The feed is good and the sheep are beginning to gain. 34) Monday 9: Ther. Cold N. wind., Wea. Clouds Pleasant most of day. Myron found what appears to be an...
    • Page 134

    • Page 134
    •  

    • to qualify. Carried. Recorder was instructed to notify each gentlemen of their appointment and request them to qualify as soon a s possible. The Mayor then announced the standing committees of the Council as follows: (The first named of each being...
    • Page 339

    • Page 339
    •  

    • regarding animals in t h e City limits, a n d t h a t a permit be obtained a n d a fee charged for cows a n d horses, b u t hogs be excluded. Gustave 0 . Larson, Chairman of t h e Red Cross s t a t e s t h a t t h e Red Cross takes care of Veterans...
    • Page 393

    • Page 393
    •  

    • Sept. 2 , 1965.. .Jack Hart, Manager of the Golf Course, met with the Council. He is enthusiastic about the possibilities of the Golf Course, and predicts the best golf course in the State. Green fees set at $1.25 for 9 holes. After some...
    • Page 395

    • Page 395
    •  

    • Sept. 2 , 1965.. .Jack Hart. Manager of the Golf Course, met with the Council. He i s enthusiastic about the possibilities of the Golf Course, and predicts the best golf course in the State. Green fees set at $1.25 for 9 holes. After some...
    • Page 412

    • Page 412
    •  

    • Whetten and Councilmen Hunter and Jones will take the Oath of Office at high noon on January 5 . Ramon and Dr. J. S. Prestwich met to discuss the Glen Canyon Power situation. Dr. Prestwich is concerned that the City will lose rights to the Glen...
    • Page 476

    • Page 476
    •  

    • in increasing the capacity of our Iron Works. W began to e feel proud of our achievements; b u t , low and behold, the bursting of a rain cloud in the mountains brought a flood down the Creek, and in a few hours the labors of months of incessant...
    • Page 246

    • Page 246
    •  

    • Although the early settlers of Utah had placed more emphasis on celebrating the 24th rather than the 4th of July, Independence Day had gained in significance. July 4, 1861, brought with it an enthusiastic celebration throughout the Utah Temtory, in...
    • Page 395

    • Page 395
    •  

    • probably drove the cows aiong with them. Heaton commented that "the eight miles seerned like 800 on that old rough wagon going up that canyon." Sarah and her children were constantly on the lookout for Indians in view of what had happened to the...
    • Page 414

    • Page 414
    •  

    • this far off land of Mexico and separated from so many of our family that we so dearly love, which are separated f?om [us] by such a long distance. But, this life is short at the longest and the generation to which 1 belong wiii soon al1 be passed...
    • Page 454

    • Page 454
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    • out at Lund, Utah, by Harry Hunter, Mother's brother-in-law. He took us to his home. It was a happy reunion for Grandmother Lunt and her daughter, Rose. We stayed there about a week. Mother's folks and fnends h e d up an apartment on First West,...
    • Page 105

    • Page 105
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    • wrote the following about the accident: "I was husy helping as father went to lift the water out of the kettle, I was right in the road and Pucell hollered to father and said to he careful as the boy was right there. Father lifted up the bucket...
    • Page 131

    • Page 131
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    • lose their lives, than not. They decided to get out while they could. They loaded a little of the already sawed lumber onto the outfits and started back. They stopped for the night in a grove of pines near the Upper Mammoth. By morning, the snow...
    • Page 159

    • Page 159
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    • tion at hand, they turned their efforts to the possibility of underground water. In 1915 the! hired a professio~mlwell driller from California by the name of Hal-ry Paine. He sct up a big steam rig and dug an 800 foot hole near the hotel location,...
    • Page 243

    • Page 243
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    • level. Now, Brother Jones, of course, didn't have those qualities alone, but I think you will agree with me, among those who did, he was outstanding. Men of vision are in a sense the eyes of a community. They see ahead and sometimes when others of...

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