1
50
21
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/594fce30b8a3833c6ba7b464252d5ad6.pdf
b10342cc2c18507266d2f4fd4d12b8dc
PDF Text
Text
2 ; 1
r. C.
part
ar
I apprec
your letter d critique of ovem r 21
on a Conetr\lctio
- esou.rc Use. pp rently t
critioism of
ay admini tr tion.
0
our state
constru.
In
in the Lo
s~
nth re
Gran
sa
appl1
on ..
due -
ent .
�th prlnc1pl that the co t
protect
major eaources
normal 008
o road co tructi.on. I bellev the ar constructive and 80\Ul(1
t
co
end.ation does DOt imply a diversion of fun • Prevalent
philosophy 1. one of eoODOmy i Bbi hway use tf fun.
contend that
,n.D·~ay
ra ar not a 8
public. Collectively. they are t
peopl
who deriv a living. or eaaur t fro
. ource affec
by highway. "the
n fits to Q carmot be considered at the expen of t other. TIler
adeqUa proc
e t 1nclu
the courts. to protect prl
1Dtereat.
blie
intere8ts-- tural reaour "'-00 DOt enjoy similar protection.
reasons, the recomm ndatton
that t e coa of rotecUng re ources
.. oW be conald red a normal co t of hlghway conatrucUo.n.
I quite agree that our probl
sunderstandi.
iV1OU81, t
we are all inter. d in
1 r ¥ highway Y tem, with full conalde tlo of
all i
at t lncludln tutur resource use. It re
my hope that our statement furthers that abn.
Yours inc , ly,
Daryl
Pre
co: Governor George •
yde
'W~1nlJ
1dent
�
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Title
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Correspondence from Daryl Chase to C. Taylor Burton, November 25, 1961
Description
An account of the resource
Correspondence from Daryl Chase to C. Taylor Burton, November 25, 1961. Response to the Road Constuction and Resource Use statement.
Creator
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Chase, Daryl
Contributor
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Burton, C. Taylor
Subject
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Traffic engineering
Roadside Improvement--Utah
Logan (Utah)
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Correspondence
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1960-1969
20th century
Language
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eng
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, 14.7.17 Box 8, College of Natural Resources, Dean's Files
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
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14717Bx8Fd20_Item 38.pdf
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cca9c275d48c760aa4271cfb70f54b8c
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•
•
LI ,.
......... uiLI'ur
,
•
�
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Title
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Correspondence from J. Whitney Floyd to C. Taylor Burton, June 30, 1961
Description
An account of the resource
Correspondence from Dean J. Whitney Floyd, College Forest, Range and Wildlife Management, to C. Taylor Burton of Utah Highway Department on June 30, 1961 about Logan Canyon Road.
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Floyd, J. Whitney
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Burton, C. Taylor
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Traffic engineering
Roadside Improvement--Utah
Logan Canyon (Utah)
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Correspondence
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1960-1969
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, 14.7.17 Box 8, College of Natural Resources, Dean's Files
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14717Bx8Fd20_Item 30.pdf
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PDF Text
Text
June 2l. 1961
Mr. C. Taylor Burton ,
Utah State Highway Department ,
State Capitol BuildIng ,
Salt lake City, Utah.
Dear Mr. Burton :
There 1 apparently soma confusion on the position of this College
with respect to the roadwork In Logan Canyon. In the inters t of clarlfyingour philosophy , I am quoting directly my letter Df March 28 to
Regional Forester Floyd Iverson , a copy of which was sent to you :
fl e appreciate the invitation extended by Mr . Kay to be represented
at the recent field review of the proposed highway construction project
in Logan Canyon . It i encouraging also that the several agencies involved
are being consulted dur1ng the planning tags.
"The College of Forest , Range and 11dllfe Managemerit has a keen
interest in h1ghway planning and constructi on . Recognizing the impact of
hlg,hwaV construction on land and resource use . we hav appointed a facul tv
committee to develop orne long range principles .and guidelines . This
committee 1a concerning ltselfwlth the b;road regional and stat -wide
i mplications of highway development with respect to urban and rural development, resource US8 , outdoor recreation , and other f actors . This committee
bas been at work for sometime and we hope to have a preliminary report soon .
"A second committee has been appointed specifically to prepare an
objective evaluation of the impact of the proposed road construction on
the fishery resource and
utilization of the logan River . This
will be a staff effort . This study will concern itself not only with the
immediate Impact of highway construction , but with the long range effect
upon the ri ver environment . One objective will be to obtain data on which
to baa sound recommendations for the purpose of m1tigating losses . W
e
plan to have a preliminary report from this committee in the very near
future .
"Returning again to the econd phase of the road construction work 1n
Logan Canyon, it is our hope that you will give every consideration to th
scenic and fishery resources of the Canyon . We recognize the englneering
problems involved and the fact that dequate protection will result 1n
higher co ts .
nwe . reject the .
e
.
lsts should foot th
11 f
losses. This is una
•
reu
The e
e R at
is
th . sportsmen and r.ecreationand the mitigation of
blle , as 1s the transportation
. .. . /cont .
�- 2 ..
Mr . C, Taylor Burton
Jun
23 , 1961
system . It 1s of t remendou social and conomlc value to utah t citizen .
Its protection shoul d b a nor a1 cost
d building . It Is cl arlv the
r esponsibi l ity of the road builder to protec t public r aourc S B8 1s done
f or p l vat ' resour ces .
0
'
, e urg your ag ncy , as t he one r apen ibl for det rmlning land u
on the Cache torest , to require v ry
eCButlon ncesaary to prot ct the
valuabl r ecreational. sc eniC , and fishery v lUes of Logan Canyon .
This tatamant was. d valoped by our College eomml t fa nd 1
ndore d
taff . It ha b en presented on s veral occasion . namel y to the
Chamber of Comm t ee and'the sea 10n attended by Comml loner Balch . It
at!ll rep r esents the thinking of the College or Fora t . Range and
anagement .
by th
ppreciate the opper unit! s to part icipate In the discus lone
concerning th road con t r uctlon work and w will b reprss nted at th
27 m sting .
Sine r I V yours ,
J . hi tn V Floyd . 0 an
College of Forest . Range
and WIldl 1f ' Management .
jwt
• •
• •
Jun
�
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Title
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Correspondence from J. Floyd Whitney to C. Burton Taylor, June 23, 1961
Description
An account of the resource
Correspondence from Dean J. Floyd Whitney of College of Forest, Range and Wildlife Managment, to C. Burton Taylor of Utah State Highway Department on June 23, 1961 about the roadwork in Logan Canyon.
Creator
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Floyd, J. Whitney
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Burton, C. Taylor
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Traffic engineering
Roadside Improvement--Utah
Logan Canyon (Utah)
Medium
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Correspondence
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1960-1969
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, 14.7.17 Box 8, College of Natural Resources, Dean's Files
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14717Bx8Fd20_Item 29.pdf
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June 21 , 1961 .
Dr. O. Preston Robertson, General
o Beret News ,
l3 Richards ~ tre8t ,
Salt Lake City , Utah.
anagar,
Dear Dr . Robertson:
e certainly want to thank the 'Oasaret ' ews' for the attention
that has been focused on the road bu1lding activities in logan Canyon
through Hack Miller's column .
Those of us here at the College recognize the need for road
improvement but we are alst) keenly aware of the value of our sceniC ,
recreational and fishery resources and the need to proteot these
resources now for the future . Obviously we must have adequate and
safe highways, but these must be designed to prevent damage to outdoor
resources . This , of course, costs additional money, requires public
SUp' }
ort, and close cooperation between the various agencies involved .
Considerable progress is evident .
W~ think the fD
eseret News ' has performed a public service by
rocusing public attention on this aspect
land use . W certainly
e
appreCiate your interest.
0'
Sln. erel y .
c
J . Whitney rloyd , Dean
College of Forest , Range and
Wildlife Management .
jwt
�
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Title
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Correspondence from J. Whitney Floyd to D. Robertson, June 21, 1961
Description
An account of the resource
Correspondence from Dean J. Whitney Floyd, College of Forest, Range and Wildlife Management, to General Manager D. Robertson, Deseret News, on June 21, 1961 about the road improvement.
Creator
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Floyd, J. Whitney
Contributor
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Robertson, D.
Subject
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Logan Canyon (Utah)
Traffic engineering
Roadside improvement--Utah--Logan Canyon
Medium
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Correspondence
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1960-1969
20th century
Language
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eng
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, 14.7.17 Box 8, College of Natural Resources, Dean's Files
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14717Bx8Fd20_Item 28.pdf
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Text
June 21 , 1961 .
Mr . A. C.
Salt Lak
14) South
Salt Lake
Beck , Executive Editor,
Tribune ,
Main.
City. utah.
Dear Mr . Beck:
We want to thank the ' Salt Lake Tribune' for the interest
shown in the Logan Canyon Road construction project through your
editor1al pages .
We recognize the need for road improvements In Logan Canyon
la' are also keenl V aware of the values
the fishery ,
recreational and scenic reS, urcas and the need for protect1ng these
Q
resources now ~ It 1s entirely possible to develop adequate · transportation systems without resource destruction but this requires public
understanding and support and . frequently , additional financing . It
also requires the close cooperation of the agencies involved . Strangely
enough this is a rather new idea 1n road building . There is far more
to b~ considered than the engineering features and designs . It is
necessary to consider these along with the value
the ~anyons and
rivers to the community . both from a .s ocial and economic standpoint . We
think progre~s is being made .
0'
and elsewhere .
0'
' Salt Lake Tribune' has performed a public service bV focusing
attention on thi landuse problem . We appreCiate your efforts .
Sincerely ,
J o Whitney Floyd , De~n
Col l ege of Forest ~ Range
and Wildlife Management.
jwt
�
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Correspondence from J. Whitney Floyd to A. C. Beck, June 21, 1961
Description
An account of the resource
Correspondence from Dean J. Whitney Floyd, College of Forest, Range and Wildlife Management, to Executive Editor A. C. Beck, Salt Lake Tribune, June 21, 1961 about the road improvements in Logan Canyon.
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Floyd, J. Whitney
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Beck, A. C.
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Traffic engineering
Roadside Improvement--Utah
Logan Canyon (Utah)
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Correspondence
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1960-1969
20th century
Language
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eng
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, 14.7.17 Box 8, College of Natural Resources, Dean's Files
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14717Bx8Fd20_Item 27.pdf
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5da66e7933ab19ca3d41bb7c99af4f8a
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Text
This letter also
s~nt
to:
Dr. O. Preston Robertson
General Manager
Deseret News
33 Richards Street , SLC
Nov mber 3, 1961
Mr. Ern t H. Linford
Editori 1 Writ r
Salt
k Tribune
l43South .Main
City, Ut h
Salt Lak
Dear Mr. Linford:
A you know, w have h d
Coll ge committe pr paring
a statment on road construction and re ource u , pro pted
in part by th difference of opin10n concerning th Log n
Canyon con truction work. Th t stat m nt i
now compl t ,
nd a copy is ttached.
I\.
\
\
W
nticip te publication with illustr tion. There
will be so
, nor editorial change , but in ess nc th
tat ment will r main the s
It i being ubmitt d in
this for
0 th t it will b
in your h nds as oon
possibl •
Copi
of this tat ment h v b en ant to the U. S.
Forest Servia , th St t
Highway Department, and the St t
Fish and Gam D parcm nt.
Sincerely your ,
J. Whitn y Floyd, Dean
JHB:ep
Att chment
Col leg of Fore t, R nq ,
and ildlif
n gement
'
�
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Correspondence from J. Whitney Floyd to Ernest Linford, November 3, 1961
Description
An account of the resource
Correspondence from J. Whitney Floyd, Dean College of Forest, Range, and Wildlife Management, to Ernest Linford, Salt Lake Tribune, on November 3, 1961.
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Floyd, J. Whitney
Contributor
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Linford, Ernest
Subject
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Roadside improvement--Utah--Logan Canyon
Highway 89
Medium
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Correspondence
Spatial Coverage
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1960-1969
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, 14.7.17 Box 8, College of Natural Resources, Dean's Files
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14717Bx8Fd20_Item 17.pdf
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PDF Text
Text
LAND USE MANAGEMENT
TRANSCRIPTION COVER SHEET
Interviewee:
Janet Quinney Lawson
Place of Interview: Ms. Lawson’s home; Salt Lake City, Utah
Date of Interview: April 28, 2008
Interviewer:
Recordist:
Brad Cole and Barbara Middleton
Brad Cole
Recording Equipment:
Marantz PMD660 Digital Recorder
Transcription Equipment used:
Transcribed by:
Transcript Proofed by:
Power Player Transcription Software: Executive
Communication Systems
Susan Gross
Brad Cole, February 2009; Randy Williams, 25 February 2009 and
14 July 2011; Becky Skeen, Fall 2012
Brief Description of Contents: Janet Quinney Lawson talks about her childhood memories at
her family’s summer home at Bear Lake and at family members’ homes in Cache Valley, Utah.
She talks a lot about skiing and sailing on/at the Wasatch Front, Utah and in Cache Valley and
Bear Lake.
Reference:
BC = Brad Cole (Interviewer; Associate Dean, USU Libraries)
BM = Barbara Middleton (Interviewer; Interpretive Specialist, Environment &
Society Dept., USU College of Natural Resources)
JL = Janet Quinney Lawson
NOTE: Interjections during pauses or transitions in dialogue such as “uh” and starts and stops
in conversations are not included in transcribed. All additions to transcript are noted with
brackets.
TAPE TRANSCRIPTION
[Tape 1 of 2: A]
BM:
[This is Barbara Middleton of the] Natural Resources at Utah State University. [I am]
here with Brad Cole. Cole [interviewer] is the Director of Special Collections at USU
Libraries. And we are here with Janet Quinney Lawson in her home in Salt Lake City, on
a beautiful spring day. This is Monday, April 28th [2008] and it’s about 2-2:15 in the
afternoon.
So Janet, if you would please say your full name and when and where you were born.
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�JL:
My full name is Janet Quinney Lawson. And I was born here in 1922 at the LDS
Hospital, as I recall.
BM:
In Salt Lake City?
JL:
Uh-huh. I guess I was born there.
BM:
Can I ask you, just to start off would you be willing to share the earliest memories of
your father?
JL:
Yeah, I was kind of scared of him! He was not a child’s best friend or “daddy.” He was
stern and he lived and he made you kind of tow the mark. As I grew older I began to
appreciate him. He was a superman. I used to run the rivers with him.
BC:
What was his name?
JL:
My father?
BC:
Yes.
JL:
S. J. Quinney. Seymour Joseph Quinney.
BM:
And running rivers – what kind of rivers are we talking about?
JL:
Oh! Colorado and Hell’s Canyon and all the rivers of the west. We used to run them in
row boats. It was great fun; I loved it. And we would do that and pull out wherever we
pulled out. I know I went down the river when I was – gosh, I guess six months or more
pregnant with Peter (my youngest son). But I didn’t tell Dad and I wore, you know a
blouse that hung out. And he didn’t even [know]. He wondered, I think he said, on
occasions. But boy when I told him driving out of Preston, poor father! It was a real
blow! Now he wanted to know if Fred knew, and I said, “Well of course.” “Did your
mother know?” and I said, “Yes.” “Did she approve?” I said, “Sure she did, she thought I
was alright to do that.” And I loved it! It was great fun and I didn’t have any problem.
We went down Hell’s Canyon and came out at Preston maybe?
BC:
Maybe Lewiston area?
JL:
Yeah! Way up there –
BC:
Right.
JL:
On the Oregon – yeah we pulled out there and then we drove home. We brought a car the
bank had repossessed up in Preston, I guess, or some place for Aunt Eve who was
Bammie Eccles’ sister and never had any children and so she adopted all of Bammie’s
children and all of her grandchildren. And we were very close and she used to stay at our
house. Her husband was an engineer on the railroad and so he was out of town a lot. And
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�she used to come up and stay with Bammie in Logan. Then she would come back here
and she would come up to the house. She lived out on the west side way out by Wasatch
High School and then she’d come in and up to the house and stay. And it was great fun,
she was a lovely person. She finally devoted a lot of her time to Bammie up in Logan –
she wasn’t really sick but anyway, she was getting old (in those days). They were half
sisters – same father, different mothers. So that’s what we did.
BM:
So speaking of mothers, what is your earliest memory of your mom?
JL:
My word! [Speaking to herself] Earliest memory [of] mom.
I don’t know! I guess running a pretty tight ship when I was little and not even in school
yet. But I had a friend – a life-long friend that lived across the street: Kay Henderson.
She was my dear friend. We used to go to school together. She’d go with us. She came
from a rather upbeat, youngest Dr. Dave’s family who was an eye, ear, nose and throat
[doctor] in Salt Lake. Kay and I – well we just plain grew up together. She didn’t have
quite as athletic of a background. She did fine, but she came from a family of kind of a
bunch of kids and they couldn’t spend the money for ski clothing and so on. We
remained friends all through our lives. She died three years ago in Cape Cod. It was a
good, long-standing relationship I must say.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
And it was fun to go over there because it was a big family. And I had only my brother
Dave who couldn’t be bothered much with me which was fine. But growing up in the
neighborhood but it was fun.
BM:
Was she someone that went with you when you traveled to Bear Lake or Logan?
JL:
Kay?
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
Oh yeah! She went to Bear Lake. Every year she would come up and go with us. They
were sort of, you know, more religious. Her mother didn’t like her to miss church, but she
did. My mother would talk her into it and say that she could go to church at Bear Lake. I
don’t remember if she ever did or not. Maybe we did a few times. I can’t remember
really. That wasn’t one of my great points in growing up.
BM:
Would you tell us a little bit about some of your early memories of Bear Lake and
traveling over there?
JL:
Oh. Wow. First thing that happened was that we had a seven passenger Buick. Now that’s
a pretty big car and it had little jumpseats. But we always had our dog, Tip, and I had the
cat, Tawny, and three kittens usually. And we would pile into the car and we’d chug
along and go up to Logan. And then we’d spend the night at Bammie’s house—Bammie
Eccles’ not Bammie Quinney’s—but Bammie Eccles’. Then we’d get up the next
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�morning and mother would drive us [o]n that old, broken down road that was a one-way
road really, you know. People just didn’t go up to Bear Lake that way except people in
Logan maybe, but we did! We’d go up there and haul in.
That time we stayed up in Idaho – my first recollection of staying at Bear Lake was in
Idaho. Mother rented the Gray house. Mr. Gray was the First Security Bank’s president in
Montpelier, Idaho. Yeah, that’s how it was. He was there and we rented this house
because by now they’d fallen upon hard times, then they went through a depression. The
bank went bust, or whatever. It was kind of tough. But anyway, we rented that house for
quite a few years. Then mother went out buzzing around one day and the next thing she
did was come home and say, “I bought a house.”
So down at Ideal Beach was a house that was owned by a Mr. Boyer who was a very
successful (I don’t know what he was!) man – businessman. That went kind of belly-up
and he had to sell the house. And here was this house that was completely furnished,
lock, stock and barrel–silver and china and bedding and more bedding. And then Dad
bought the lot, finally he talked Sister Boyer (maybe; Sister somebody) – and he sweettalked her. On part of that lot there was a lumber mill. And they’d cut the logs which was
fine except all the sawdust they pushed into the lake. Well that doesn’t deteriorate really.
So we had many years where every time we’d go down everybody would take a bucket of
some sort. And we’d haul out the logging –
BM:
Sawdust?
JL:
Yeah. Well finally we got rid of it, I guess. Of course that was many a year ago. Mother
came home and Dad nearly had a fit! But what she got that house for was—lock, stock
and barrel. I think it was something like $800. It was just ridiculous! And it was the
house we had. Dad, finally when Mother told him and he went to see what was going on,
he knew the piece of ground. I don’t know what he did. A lawyer did that as a “Thank
you very much people.” And so he was in good standing with the locals.
They just got out and they cut that house in three parts and they moved it! And it wasn’t
out that much. It was just amazing! I remember when they did it and I remember Mother
went up to Bear Lake. And that fireplace of course was stone from across the lake. It was
a big hole because they had to knock it down when they moved the house. So all Mother
could see was this hole and oh she went into great sobs of mourning that the house would
never be the same. Well of course it is the same and much better, and added on to, to
some degree. We added on—we changed the kitchen quite a bit and added another
bedroom and bath back there because Mother always had somebody to go to help. That
extended the kitchen on out further and behind the kitchen was another bedroom.
BM:
Um-hmm. Now Ideal Beach is – when I look at this map – Ideal Beach is south of the
Junction coming over to Garden City, but you were saying you were north to start off
with?
JL:
Oh no, no, no. Here we are. Let’s see. [Looking at a map]
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�BM:
Here’s Ideal.
JL:
Here’s Ideal. We’re down there to – what does that say?
BM:
That says Ideal Beach, Sweet Water Marina. So they’re just showing –
JL:
There, yeah well here’s –
BM:
That’s the Highway rest stop down there. So right around Rendezvous Beach State Park,
which is very historic.
JL:
Yeah. We moved it down about 2 miles that way and about one mile from Garden City.
BM:
My goodness! And you literally picked up the house and moved it?
JL:
Yeah, it was just crazy what they did!
BC:
About what year was that, do you remember?
JL:
Well I can think, but wait a minute. Let’s see – I think I was 16 maybe; 15 or 16. Yeah,
so how old would that make me? Since I’m 86.
BC:
So it would have been about 1937.
JL:
Yeah, something.
BC:
You said you spent a few years in Montpelier [Idaho]? Would that have been in the early
1930s? When you lived in Montpelier and rented Mr. Gray’s house?
JL:
No, that was in Fish Haven!
BC:
Fish Haven?
JL:
Down on the lake. That was their summer home!
BC:
Oh, okay. So he lived in Montpelier, but also had a house [on the lake] – okay.
JL:
Yeah they lived in Montpelier – Banker Gray – and had a beautiful home there. And
there was Grove and Fred. Fred was the oldest son, then they had Grove and then they
had a sister. What was her name? She was a cripple; she was born with faulty legs or
something, I don’t remember what. She was a lovely person but she was certainly
incapacitated. Times were hard. They opened up this fox farm in Fish Haven—Grove and
Fred. Fred first and then he went off and went into business and then Grove took it over.
And they raised these [foxes], they were a big thing in those days I guess.
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�BM:
And they were fox they were raising?
JL:
Yeah, they were foxes.
BM:
And what were they raising them for?
JL:
For the fur.
BM:
Okay. How interesting.
JL:
Yeah, they really would. Fur coats; not really coats so much, it would take too many
foxes. Oh, I remember. I never went down there though when they were slaughtering the
foxes. That was not my cup of tea. Nor go out – yeah I did. I went out with them when
they would go buy an old horse that was tired and slaughter it to feed the foxes. And of
course you had to be down there every day. They had to eat. It was fun, I liked it. It’s
nothing anybody else would like, but I did. Getting all bloody! Mother used to just shake
her head and say, “My goodness, what have I got here?” See I was a little, bitty kid. I
wasn’t very big at all. I mean structurally I was very small, but boy I was a terror I guess!
Poor thing.
BM:
Now did you go over there winter as well as summer?
JL:
Huh-uh. No, never did.
BM:
So mostly summer?
JL:
Yeah. What we usually did was plan to go up there on, well around the 4th of July and
then we’d close it up to some degree and get somebody to come in and drain the water;
which we still do. But things are changing up there; very definitely changing. And I can
envision–we’re not building anymore house. Rick was talking, I know, about building on
to the bedroom wing and putting in another few bedrooms and a bath. I think we kind of
decided that wasn’t a good plan. Anyway, I don’t think it’s happening, and it’s not my
problem. I’m not going to be here to run that.
BM:
So when you say, “things are changing up there,” what do you mean? What kinds of
things did you see change?
JL:
Oh! Oh the building is simply incredible that’s going on. And across the street and on up
Hodge’s Canyon it’s all subdivided and people are building houses up on the hillside.
And then they come down and go probably over to Ideal Beach, Bluewater Beach and go
on to swim or put their boats in or whatever they have.
BM:
Was that something that you did when you were a child, boating?
JL:
Yeah. Dad had the only sailboat on the lake I guess, for years. And then we also had an
outboard motor boat and then we got – well, let’s see. What have we got up there now?
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�Peter has a Hobie Cat up there. (Peter is my youngest son.) And he has this Hobie Cat
and he also has – yeah I think he’s got a motor boat too.
BM:
So sailing was something that you learned from your father?
JL:
What?
BM:
Sailing was something you learned from your father?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Did your mother also sail?
JL:
No, she didn’t. That wasn’t her cup of [tea]– she’d go out there sometimes with Dad.
They’d go out alone and just sail. Dad would sail very quietly, not too far out from the
shore. But, yeah she went out boating. She went out boating – I had a boat too. That was
a power boat. You know that lake isn’t constant. It varies – they pumped it out for
irrigation upstream. Well, they don’t want it anymore upstream. Anyway, last year they
pumped because the pumps would run out of – there was no water for them. And now
they’re going to let that go back. They’ve sold it to, I don’t remember the name of the
people they sold it to, but they are not interested in alfalfa which is what they used the
water for.
[Looking out the window] Oh, whoa. Looking out there at the sky, can you see?
BM:
Oh yeah; leaving a jet trail.
JL:
You see that? Yeah. Big old thing going across.
Dad had a lot of foresight. However people don’t know and we don’t tell them that we
have as much land as we have. But we’re well-protected on the north side and the south
side of our property. And it of course goes to the children and I guess they like it. I think
they’ll use it.
[Speaking to somebody else] Who’s that?
BM:
Sounds like somebody is talking on the phone.
JL:
Maybe.
And I don’t know, I just had some rare old times and fun times up there; very happy
memories. It [Bear Lake property] has this great, big screened-in porch that goes all
around half the house and the dining room table is outside. And there is a couch out there
and Grandfather Eccles’ rocking chair, old leather rocking chair. It just has lots of
memories. We have a book that we keep and people write in it.
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�BM:
Like the visitors that come?
JL:
Yeah, yeah. And it’s nice and it’s fun. And it’s fun to look back and it’s fun to look and
see when I decided I better go home is when I was going to have that baby. And I did.
BM:
[Laughing] Now which child was that then?
JL:
It was Peter.
BM:
Peter? Okay.
JL:
Yeah. See, he’s 10 years younger. He was really an after-thought. He wasn’t a
happenstance – he was planned on and conceived. And he went down Hell’s Canyon with
me unborn. I didn’t tell Mother about it. I told Dad about it on the way home. And he
said, “Does your mother know?” And I said, “Yeah.” He said, “I thought you were
looking a little dumpy.” Yeah, that was May and Peter was born in August. Yeah, I was
well along. I didn’t care, that was fun. I skied and I did everything!
BM:
Could you tell us a little bit about your skiing?
JL:
Well –
BM:
Where did you start?
JL:
There is Ecker Hill up Parley’s Canyon; Dave and Dad got involved in that through the
jumping. Dad got interested in judging and got interested in the Norwegian people and he
judged all the time up there, ski-jumping. And that is how Dave got going. I didn’t ever
go off Ecker Hill—I was too little. I went off Rasmussen’s Hill which was down the way.
But heavens! I didn’t even have bindings then. I think we took inner tubes and cut them
and put them around the toe and around the outside of the toe and around the back. Those
were our bindings. That was many a year ago!
BM:
That was inner tubing on wood?
JL:
Well the inner tubing I used for bindings –
BM:
Oh!
JL:
BM:
They were like the old wood skis with a toe strap. That was it. And then you got a hold of
that and then you got a hold of the inner tube and cut a piece about that thick and put it
over your toe and over the toe of your boot and back over your heel and off you went on
Rasmussen’s Jump. And it was a scaffold that was built and came down and landed on
the hill and ran out. Oh, it was fun!
How did you get up to the top?
JL:
Climbed.
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�BM:
On snowshoes or boots?
JL:
No, no. We just climbed on our feet on the little hill I jumped. But the boys, the big
jumpers – Al Bangerter and his tribe and us – they just put their skis over their shoulder
and walked up to the top.
BM:
Hmm.
JL:
Boy am I thirsty. Do you want some water or something?
BM:
Actually, I’m fine.
BC:
I’m fine right now.
JL:
Are you? Alright.
BM:
So those are the days before ski lifts and riding on top of the mountain.
JL:
Dad did the first lift in Alta – Collins lift – he did that. I mean when I say he did it – he
got 10 business friends of his to each put in x number of dollars (which I don’t know).
Ecker Hill was there, but it was pretty rough and I think they used it, but not for
tournaments and things. But he did. They built that and set it up. Now how does that
work? I was thinking that it was the biggest ski jump in North America. Whether it was
there or whether it was – I don’t know – in the Northwest. I don’t know. I would have to
research that and look it up. But there wasn’t an awful lot of ski jumping even.
But then I got my first pair of skis. I was little – I didn’t grow very much.
[Tape 1 of 2: B]
JL:
Celeste can get you something. These caregivers I have are just wonderful.
BM:
Oh, I bet. It’s nice to have people here.
JL:
Yeah. Well I didn’t have them here except during the day, but then I fell a year ago in
Moab and cracked it!
BM:
So now you have someone with you day and night.
JL:
I have somebody, yeah. I have two of them that are here day and night.
BM:
That’s great.
JL:
Yeah it is! I like it and they seem to like it, so.
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�BM:
JL:
So let’s go back to something you were saying. I am trying to picture the trip when you
were a young girl from, not just Salt Lake to Logan, but Logan over –
To Bear Lake?
BM:
-- to Bear Lake. I’m trying to picture that road.
JL:
Well at first it was even just a dirt road. Mother in the seven passenger car and the cat and
the dog and a couple of kittens and Dave and I was there and BM was there I guess (or
some household help). And we’d go to Logan and stay overnight at Bammie’s house –
Grandmother Eccles’ house – and go chuckety, chuckety, chuck the next day. And
sometimes your old car would heat up and you would have to sit there and wait for it to
cool down so you could go on [laughing]. But we always stopped at Rick Springs.
BM:
Oh, sure!
JL:
That was very different then than it is now. Because, I don’t know what they’ve done but
you can’t even hardly see it without getting out and walking! Well, I mean it wasn’t that
way in those days.
BM:
So you got there and you parked your car, and what did you do at Ricks Springs?
JL:
Oh, we’d have a drink or have a sandwich or have some water. It was just halfway and it
was good and it was fun and it was nice. And we always did that. Now I flew past – well
I haven’t been up through Logan Canyon because it’s been all under construction and a
mess. And then going in Roy into Ogden – that highway is just one big, bloody mess and
I haven’t gone there. I don’t when that’s ever going to get done. And I don’t know when
they’re going to quit monkeying with that road up the canyon.
BM:
Well they just did some bridge improvements, and that was quite –
JL:
Oh yeah.
BM:
-- quite a bit as far as stopping traffic one-way, and.
JL:
Yeah, because that one bridge goes over a great, big –
BM:
Oh, that’s the large one on the curve?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
And I don’t know. I haven’t been up Logan Canyon—I don’t remember if I even went up
last year because I just get on and zoom up here to Evanston and then-
BM:
So that’s your new route?
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�JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Over 80 to Evanston and then up?
JL:
BM:
Um-hmm.
Um-hmm. Now when you went through the earlier part when you went through Logan
Canyon, did you ever go to some of the places like Ephraim’s Grave (the big bear), or ?
JL:
Uh-huh. And they had, what an MIA Home or something?
BM:
What is that?
JL:
Up at the first dam or something?
BM:
Oh!
JL:
No, second dam I guess. And we used to cross the bridge and go up there and there was –
I don’t know and MIA. Maybe it wasn’t, maybe it was something else. I don’t know.
BM:
Hmm.
JL:
But anyway it was a camp and the kids used to go up there for, you know, camping out –
like Girl Scouts, only they were something else in those days.
BC:
So when you say, “MIA,” do you mean Mutual Improvement Association?
JL:
Yeah, yeah. Uh-huh. [Mostly likely talking about Camp Lomia, past 3rd Dam a few
miles.]
BM:
So was that possibly the Scout Camp at St. Anne’s?
BC:
Might be, I’m not sure.
JL:
What?
BM:
Was it St. Anne’s?
JL:
What ?
BM:
The camp you’re talking about?
JL:
I don’t know.
BM:
Hmm. It was on the right hand side as you go up the canyon?
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�JL:
You went over the dam there, which they used, and the water that came out of there they
dammed it up. So, I don’t know what it was called. And besides it’s all different now.
Utah State has that big forestry place up there too.
BM:
Um-hmm. Have you been there?
JL:
Yeah. That’s Mr. Dad’s. I said, “Now you quit that!” He said, “Wouldn’t you rather have
me interested in it than somebody else?” I said, “Yes I would.”
BM:
So this is the forestry camp?
JL:
BM:
Uh-huh.
That’s on the right-hand side as you go up.
JL:
Um-hmm.
BM:
And was the – let’s see was it 1938 was the first summer camp up there? 1936?
Somewhere in that time?
JL:
Um-hmm.
BM:
And so what is your dad have to do with that?
JL:
Well, he gave them the money to start the training camp up there.
BM:
Oh, okay.
JL:
And bring the animals and so on.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
So that’s what he did.
BM:
It is a very important place for a lot of the foresters to get their start.
JL:
Oh I think so.
BM:
Yeah.
JL:
A lot of foresters. Um-hmm.
BM:
Also fire. As far as training young men to help with forest fires.
JL:
Now, that I didn’t know. But that’s interesting. It’s a good place, should be.
BM:
Yeah.
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�JL:
I don’t know why I don’t. I think they have one cabin up there that they save for Dad and
Mother or for me or somebody to go up and stay overnight. I think I told somebody; who
would I have told –
BM:
Was it Thad maybe?
JL:
Uh-huh, probably Thad.
BM:
So you have gone up and camped up at the Forestry Camp?
JL:
Yeah!
BM:
Oh, alright. Because there is one building that is the older building.
JL:
Yeah!
BM:
With all the pictures in it and the stove –
JL:
Right, right.
BM:
Okay.
JL:
What’s that called?
BM:
Well that is the old Forestry Camp CCC building.
JL:
Oh yeah.
BM:
And it’s the oldest building –
JL:
There.
BM:
It’s one of the oldest buildings there. And then there’s a larger dorm, which sleeps about
30 people.
JL:
There?
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
Yeah, that’s right. I do remember that.
BM:
Do you also remember – you know, part of that camp burned.
JL:
Oh, it certainly did! I had forgotten that. It really burned.
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�BM:
The kitchen – the lodge.
JL:
Oh, that was – they had to rebuild it totally didn’t they?
BM:
We haven’t rebuilt it yet.
JL:
Oh, I thought we had.
BM:
No, not yet. We’re looking, we’re hoping. We’re hoping. But right now it’s an open area;
there’s a small trailer that was there that serviced some of the work, but nothing like the
beautiful lodge that you must remember.
JL:
Yeah, although it was –
BM:
The dining hall –
JL:
Yeah. It was kind of little, as I recall.
BM:
Was it?
JL:
Yeah, it wasn’t like – in comparison to maybe the Girl Scout camp down here or –
BM:
Camp Cloud Rim?
JL:
Rim.
BM:
Right, right.
JL:
Camp Cloud Rim.
BM:
Which was also a CCC building.
JL:
Well I guess those lakes [cabins?] were owned by people, you know. They weren’t just
sitting there. I’m trying to think who – John Wallace; the Wallace family had up there.
And the Brimhall family; and I don’t know. Of course they gave it over to the Girl Scouts
and now they use it and have added onto it even since I was there.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
For the dedication of the building or whatever.
BM:
And that was back in the late 1990s.
JL:
I guess, yeah.
BM:
Um-hmm.
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�JL:
I guess it was.
BM:
Yeah.
JL:
Did they name it for me or something?
BM:
They did! Your name is on that building. [The Janet Quinney Lawson camp?]
JL:
I just live in horror.
[Laughing]
JL:
I say, “I’m giving you the money and you’re to go ahead, but don’t be putting my name.”
There it was.
BM:
[Laughing] It’s on a building on campus too, up at Utah State.
JL:
Yes it was! What was it – oh that little Quonset hut. Yeah! That’s a great place.
BM:
That’s a great building though. [Ms. Lawson was recognized by USU in 2004 during the
dedication of a building named in her honor. The Janet Quinney Lawson building houses
USU's Utah Climate Center and Remote Sensing/Geographic Information Systems
Laboratory along with other services.]
JL:
Oh, it is! I’ve been there when little kids have been there. One of them really attached
himself to me; poor little things.
BM:
Was that the Adaptive Technology part where they’re in the basement there?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Is there a lot of children in that program?
JL:
Yeah that are learning to speak or walk, or – yeah, they’re physically limited.
BM:
Right.
JL:
But it’s a great thing that they can do what they’re doing in that Quonset hut.
BM:
Um-hmm. And they help a lot of children get around.
JL:
Oh, I know. I just know they do. And that cute thing out in front of the Edith Bowen – is
it the Edith Bowen and Emma Eccles Jones, are they here?
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�BM:
They are. Emma Eccles Jones Building is the education building and then Edith Bowen is
the lab school, which is right next door.
JL:
Yeah. Is it west or is it –?
BM:
Edith Bowen is east –
JL:
Yeah, it’s east –
BM:
And then there is a sculpture –
JL:
Yeah, that’s a Van Dam
BM:
Right, right. With the two children and then the –
JL:
Yeah, then, uh-huh. And then Aunt Em’s building.
BM:
Right.
JL:
Dad’s building is there too; Dad and Mother’s.
BM:
Well that would be the College of Natural Resources building.
JL:
That’s right.
BM:
Right, right. And that’s right behind, that’s right to the south –
JL:
South.
BM:
Of your Quonset hut, that you call it.
JL:
That’s right. Well, that’s what it is!
BM:
It is! And you know there are still folks that come on campus that say, “I remember when
that was a Quonset hut.” And it kind of still looks like a Quonset hut!
JL:
I think it does. Yeah, I do.
BM:
It has the remote sensing lab in it now; where they do a lot of the geographic maps.
JL:
Oh there?
BM:
Um-hmm. There are several entities in that building.
JL:
Besides the little kids?
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�BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
Oh. Well I just know that those little children – it’s wonderful when they can finally get
them out. They’re kind of timid about everything of course, because they’ve been so
protected; but, what a break for the parents and the children themselves to be able to get
out.
BM:
And it’s also a great training center for the students.
JL:
Terrific! Just marvelous!
BM:
There are a lot of classes that go through there.
JL:
Well there’s kind of a lot of Eccles/Quinney stuff up there somehow.
BM:
There sure is! Now speaking of USU and getting back to Bear Lake – if you’re down
near Ideal Beach, aren’t you also close to the USU –
JL:
Yes! That Dad built?
BM:
Oh!
JL:
I think Dad built that – gave them the money to build it. Yeah, it’s just down, maybe, oh,
maybe three-quarters of a mile on the road.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
But you can walk it. Of course now let’s hope that they’ll be good enough to – can’t I get
you anything? I feel so –
BM:
No, I’m fine.
JL:
I feel terrible. [Ms Lawson is concerned for her guest’s needs.]
BC:
Oh, we’re fine.
BM:
When you were there, you talked about sailing and you talked about swimming. Were
there also holidays, like Raspberry Days?
JL:
Oh yes! And I remember when the raspberries weren’t [growing] because they got
diseased! A few years ago actually, that was. Oh yes, indeed!
BM:
Hmm. So what did you do for Raspberry Days?
JL:
Bought them and ate them.
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�[Laughing]
BC:
Well did they have – when you were a little girl, did they have raspberries then? Or did
that came later?
JL:
No, I think that came later. I think that was started by the Hodges family and their boys.
And they planted those and then psh! I don’t know what happened. They got a disease
though, and it really – it was something they couldn’t spray and kill and have it alright. It
imbedded itself and would appear on the next year if you planted them. So, I don’t know.
And now – I don’t know what they’re doing now. They’re behind that – what’s that
called? That new place by the marina, only on the other side of the road?
BM:
Oh that large development?
JL:
Yeah. And then on up and up and up and up. Yeah. And that’s all being subdivided. And
honestly I think Bear Lake is seeing the best of times. It’s – I’m concerned. I think it’s
just going to develop and develop and more and more and more. And people are able to
get there and they’re building houses. I don’t know, Well, I’ve got enough space that I
don’t need to worry too much about it.
BM:
When you were over there before the development, do you remember cattle or sheep, or –
with those hills where the homes are going – what was that landscape like?
JL:
Yeah. They ran cattle up Hodges Canyon.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
They could run cattle up there. And they did and I don’t know whether they still can or
just don’t do it because nobody’s interested in doing that kind of thing. All those people
died; faded away. Although Rula is here and Dolly is here. And Dolly has died and Rula
– Dad bought the piece that goes in front of Rula’s house is on that side. And she – what
did they do? They finally got her to go over to Logan to live in a place, a house, a rest
home or something in the winter. Because they said they wouldn’t leave her up there in
the winter anymore, she couldn’t navigate. So I don’t know. I may see her, I hope so. I’ll
have to find out.
BM:
And who is Rula?
JL:
Well, she’s a neighbor on the east side. And they have a house. And Tom used to help
Dad all the time with the planting of the garden vegetables and so on, and mowing and
one thing or another. Well, he died and so it was Rula’s. And so she sold us this section
that was theirs, adjacent to our north boundary. It’s a south boundary and it’s a lot. And
there’s nothing there except, oh beautiful roses.
BM:
Hmm.
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�JL:
I don’t know, I think one day maybe one of the kids will build something there. I’ve got a
few of them hanging around that are entitled to do what they want to do.
BM:
Okay, so who’s the other person you were talking about? Dolly was another neighbor?
JL:
Yeah and she was on the other side of Joel.
BM:
Okay.
JL:
And they just loved him. Oh they just did. And they just used to open our house and clean
it and so on. Of course those days have gone. Dolly died a couple of years ago I guess. I
believe she was a year older than I am; maybe two. And Rula is a year younger. I think
she had about 12 – Grandma Hodges. And oh, did she like Joel! He could just wiggle her
out of anything.
[Laughing]
JL:
And then he would do a lot, you know, and they had legal problems. Dad would help
them out. And he was very kind. And they all knew it and all loved him for it and it was
beneficial to us. Because see we own – well, God I don’t know how many front feet. I
don’t tell them that because they don’t tax us. It’s undeveloped.
BC:
Yeah.
BM:
Sure.
JL:
But Dad’s never paid taxes. It’s called wetland. And actually it is. It goes down toward
the USU building. There are a couple of houses and then the building is there.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
And it goes down there.
BC:
When you’d go up there in the summer as a young child, did your dad stay up with you
for the whole summer or did he come back to Salt Lake?
JL:
Oh, he’d come back, you know.
BC:
Uh-huh.
JL:
I think he just felt that he had to get back home. And he’d – sometimes he would stay up
an extra day or two, but he didn’t stay up like Mother did. But Mother would pack us up
and go in. Of course we had Mr. Coddle then and the store and that was fine. But that’s
no longer. It’s all so changed.
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�BC:
And would you spend any time up in the mountains hiking, riding horses or anything like
that?
JL:
Huh-uh. No, nope. I just did it on the lake. And I rode horses on the lake.
BM:
Huh. Now who had the horses?
JL:
Oh, somebody local. Yeah. I’d say one of the Hodges I suppose. Yeah, even had my little
kids which weren’t so little anymore – although maybe he died. They tore – I’m so mad
at them, you know? Up there across the street from my place there was that old house and
then that little log cabin that was the original old house. And when they bought that land
they ripped it all down! And that was a terrible thing to have done! I mean that was kind
of a historical little old log cabin!
BM:
Did you know the people that lived there?
JL:
Yeah, I did. He was interested in nothing but the money. Ron Hansen was his name. But I
don’t know. Things will change, there’s no question about it. Gosh! I look up there to see
Dad and was sitting down on the porch that we added on outside, off the dining room –
the screened in porch. And it was right after he went up there after he had surgery.
BM:
Hmm. So it was a place he went to recuperate and rest?
JL:
Uh-huh. He loved it! He just loved it. And of course anything he did was for
improvement. Now if that lake will get back up, I will be ever so grateful. And it may.
Because the people who bought it from Scottish Power they can’t pump it anymore. They
used to pump it and pump it upstream (or downstream, whatever you want) on up into
Idaho, to give the farmers more, oh what do I want?
BC:
For irrigation water.
JL:
Yeah, for other chokecherry bushes.
BM:
Oh.
JL:
And they don’t do that anymore. They haven’t run the way -- . Yeah, they used to –
they’d sell the chokecherries all the time. In Garden City you’d go to the stand and buy
chokecherries.
BM:
Huh.
JL:
Take them home and put them in a pot and boil them up – ooh! Good!
BM:
And ate them as what? As a sauce, or [unclear]
JL:
No. Then you strain it and take it and thicken it as a chokecherry jelly or –
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�BM:
Sounds like one of your favorites!
JL:
Oh yeah! Gee it was good!
BM:
Huh. And so you put it on toast, or?
JL:
Yes! Anything you’d put jam on! It was just delicious. And those days are gone! They
just are. I looked out – going up toward Logan out of Garden City – here all this is
subdivided down to that place, that new –
BM:
That new development down there.
JL:
Yeah, whatever that is. And I may not live to see it, but then I may live to see some, but I
guess it’s just going like crazy.
BC:
It is.
JL:
Is it?
BC:
Yeah, I think it’s –
JL:
People are buying it and building and so on.
BM:
And it’s a beautiful place.
JL:
Oh! Of course it is. It’s just lovely. And down to the boat marina.
BM:
Do you remember the refuge? The wildlife refuge on the north end of the lake? Was that
there, or was that yet to be established? When you go past the boat marina and the state
park, and you continue north –
JL:
Yes.
BM:
Towards Montpelier, around the north end is now a National Wildlife Refuge.
JL:
It is?!
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
Well, I don’t know. I’ve driven around the lake and I know people that live there.
BM:
I’m trying to think of the year when that was established. Because I think you would have
been over there.
JL:
Oh, I no doubt would have!
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�BM:
It’s waterfowl and swans.
JL:
It’s beautiful! It’s more at the north end than the south end. Yeah. Yeah, I know where
you mean.
BM:
Because part of the refuge – I’m wondering if you ever swam at this beach on the north
end of the lake called – North Beach State Park? Is that it?
JL:
What is it called?
BM:
The very north end of the beach – by the pump houses.
JL:
Yeah, by the pump house.
BM:
That’s a very popular swimming place.
JL:
Well it is for the people that are up in Montpelier and Paris and St. Charles and so on, but
there are no – there are some hot springs over there too.
BM:
That’s right.
JL:
Yeah and they’ve been there forever because I was a little kid and Mother used to take us
to swim in it!
BM:
At the hot springs?
JL:
Yeah!
BM:
Oh, really?
JL:
So it’s really been there forever.
BC:
Oh.
BM:
That’s a very famous hot springs place. There was a hotel there.
JL:
Yeah. I don’t think – yes, I guess there, but that was really in the 1800s wasn’t it?
BM:
Yes, the late 1800s and 1900s.
JL:
Yeah, I know. But Mom used to take us up there. She didn’t like us to go swimming too
much because she didn’t think it was very clean.
BM:
Um-hmm.
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�JL:
Yeah, I don’t suppose it was. And anyway I don’t know whether there is still swimming
in there or not.
BM:
There are still hot springs back there in that area but the building is gone.
JL:
But the building is gone, so nobody really swims?
BM:
I think only locals who really know it’s there.
JL:
Oh.
BM:
But that is more off the north east corner of the lake.
JL:
That’s right.
BM:
Back towards the Bear River and the mountains then, close to Wyoming?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
My goodness. You really got around! Holy cow.
JL:
And the Nebeker Ranch, which was big and now the kids are running it again. I don’t
[know] whose it is? Is it Paul? See Dad was partners with all those gentleman. Paul and –
BM:
Um-hmm. Partners in the law firm, you’re saying?
JL:
Uh-huh.
BM:
Right.
JL:
They’re all gone, but their issue is there. And I don’t know who is over in their house. I
know that the gals and boys – or boy and gal – that run the wonderful little stand that do
those little donuts – ummm. [Licking her lips]
[Laughing]
BM:
Wait, what donuts are these?
JL:
Uh, they just fry them right there. They are just little things like that. And oh boy! Are
they good! I want to go out and get them. And then they also – they had some, they
showed it to me anyway, chokecherry. But that is gone – that day and era. And you
know, that’s kind of too bad.
BC:
Yeah, it is.
JL:
I feel sorry about that. I used to pick them.
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�[Tape 2 of 2: A]
BM:
Tape 2, side 2[1].
JL:
Yes.
BM:
Here with Janet Quinney Lawson and we’re continuing with our Bear Lake stories.
So he still sails up there? Peter?
JL:
Yes! And his kids; you know Peter’s kids are getting big! He married and he got these
two – after he was divorced from [?] and he remarried. And he has two little kids – three
and five. And that’s pretty little. They come up. They come up for a week or ten days and
they just love it and we love having them.
BM:
Oh, I bet!
JL:
And it’s the way it should be used.
BM:
Now are they swimmers as well as sailors?
JL:
Oh yes! Sure are. Is the Bear Lake monster for real?
BM:
Ah! You remember the Bear Lake monster?
JL:
Oh sure! [Laughing]
BM:
Tell us about that.
JL:
I don’t –
BM:
I actually have that in my notes as one of the myths or legends about –
JL:
Yeah, it is.
BM:
So what did you hear about it?
JL:
It’s exactly it – that it would come out and you better mind your p’s and q’s or it would
get you! And it was usually at dusk or after.
BM:
Uh-huh. What did it look like?
JL:
I don’t know! It sort of was large and it sort of had a long neck that would recoil in I
guess and just its head would be there; or it would be out standing up. What’s he got
here?
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�[Reading] Is the Bear Lake monster for real?
Did I give you one of these?
BM:
No, that’s fine, you can keep that.
JL:
Don’t you want one?
BM:
Nope, that’s fine. You can keep that.
JL:
I’ve got more.
BM:
That’s okay. On the monster, have you told your new grandchildren about this? Peter’s
children?
JL:
Yeah, Peter’s. Uh-huh, two little fellows.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
Um-hmm.
BM:
So they know about the Bear Lake monster?
JL:
Oh they do! And they’re sure they saw it. And as a matter of fact sometimes, you know,
the 4th of July or 24th some boats get together and make a Bear Lake monster out of it. Oh
yeah, it’s fun.
BM:
Well you know I also wondered if you fished there because there are fish in the lake.
JL:
Yeah, but they’re trash fish usually, like the sucker. They’re no good eating, they’re
nasty. Yeah you can go and if you’re very patient and want to do it. The trout you just
can’t catch, but gradually I think it will restore itself.
BM:
Um-hmm.
BC:
What about your father? Did he fish at all?
JL:
Oh yes! He was a great fisherman. Not really so much there, but yeah. But he fished
there, sure. But it just didn’t yield anything but carp and sucker. They were so stupid you
could catch them in a net.
BM:
Wow. When you talk about Bear Lake – that’s a summer place and you’re a skier so
you’re coming down here to the Salt Lake City front – where was Beaver Mountain with
the development of that ski resort when you were a young child?
JL:
It wasn’t.
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�BM:
It wasn’t there.
JL:
No. That area was called Beaver Mountain. But I remember when it opened.
BM:
You do?
JL:
And I remember the people – I can’t tell you now, I just can’t – who opened it.
BM:
Were those the Seeholzers?
JL:
Yes, maybe.
BM:
Okay.
JL:
Maybe.
BM:
And so, how old were you when that [Beaver] opened?
JL:
I was probably 14 or 15 I think, because I raced up there.
BM:
Oh you did!
JL:
Yeah. And it wasn’t anything like it is now. I mean you have to go back up in, well that
wasn’t like that. It was, seems to me, you just go off the road and go on up.
BM:
Um-hmm. Did it have a tow lift?
JL:
Well, actually yeah it did, it had a tow. But it wasn’t developed really, [back] then it had
a single chair lift. I think it still does perhaps.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
I don’t know; I haven’t been up to it. I’m very naughty about that.
BM:
It’s gotten pretty spiffy.
JL:
I guess it really, really has and I guess it’s just wonderful skiing!
BM:
Um-hmm. And the Seeholzer family still has the operation.
JL:
The rights? They do? My word!
BM:
And it’s grown. So you raced there as a child?
JL:
Uh-huh.
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�BM:
Downhill ski racing.
JL:
Uh-huh. And giant slalom, we did that there too. And we did slalom; yeah, we did all of
them.
BM:
Were they also jumping up there?
JL:
Not really.
BM:
No?
JL:
No, the jumping was mostly down here, up at Ecker Hill. [Ecker Hill is in Wasatch
County] I’ve got some pictures that Peter [Lawson] has restored (and maybe some of
them are up at the University, I don’t know) of the jumping days with Alf and Sverre and
Corey [Engen]. Now they’re all gone. I think, to my knowledge though, Alf’s wife
Evelyn is still alive. I’m not sure, but I believe she is.
BM:
This is Evelyn Engen?
JL:
Uh-huh.
BM:
I’m not sure. I don’t know the name. I know the name Alf.
JL:
Uh-huh, he was the older brother of the three. There was Alf and then there’s Sverre and
Corey. And they all moved over here gradually. And then their parents moved over here.
[Mrs. Engen moved to Utah, but her husband was deceased.] And she was Alf’s wife
(she’s a pain in the butt! That’s not nice, but anyway she is.) She lives on an old farm. I
think it’s an old farm. Maybe it’s not, maybe it’s out on the – I don’t know. It’s out there
in one of those condominium developments.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
And I’ve seen her on occasions at some gatherings skiing, but I haven’t seen her since the
last ski archives up there.
BM:
At the university?
JL:
No. Up at the – what do they call it? That what I’m trying to think.
BC:
The University of Utah Ski Archives?
JL:
Yeah, that’s what it is. And that’s called something – I can’t think what it’s called. [The
Alf Engen Ski Museum in Park City.]
BM:
Is it Ski Meister? Or is that a magazine?
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�JL:
Maybe it is.
BM:
Hmm. But they celebrate each year, and that’s what you’ve been back to? Hmm.
JL:
I think Alf’s book or Corey’s book – was it Corey or Alf or Sverre? Maybe Sverre’s
book. Over there, can you see it?
BC:
Yeah. There’s one called First Tracks?
JL:
Yeah, that’s the endurance.
BC:
Yeah. Let’s see –
JL:
He’s gone.
BC:
The Wasatch Mountains –
JL:
They’ve all died but me. And as my Dad said, “You’re too ornery.”
[Laughing]
BM:
So you’ve skied with all of them?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
That was part of your –
JL:
bringing up.
BM:
Gee.
JL:
Oh yeah. I skied, as I say, when you put the inner tube around your boot and binding and
that was at Ecker Hill, that’s where we went. So of course it was open. Unless you skied,
and we did later on and I did too. You know, you would drive up Silver King Mine and
hike up and over and drop down into Brighton and stay at [?]; Mrs. Howardy would run
that. The only way you could get in was to ski in.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
God it was fun!
BM:
And the boys skied with the girls and you kept up with everybody? The boys kept up
with you?
JL:
Oh, sure! Some girls – oh, Jenny Gurnsey, we were not best friends. Dear Aunt Em. I
wonder who lives in that house now?
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�BM:
In Logan?
JL:
Aunt Em’s.
BM:
Um-hmm. The Eccles House in --
JL:
Not Bammie’s, but Aunt Em’s on the corner. Don’t know.
BM:
I don’t know.
JL:
She had an open house, somebody at Bammie’s house, and had it open and I couldn’t get
there for some reason and I wanted to. So I’ll have to call one day and see if I can go and
see her. I did a lot of growing up in that house.
BM:
In Logan?
JL:
You bet.
BC:
In the summers or all year round?
JL:
Mostly the summers. Well, we used to have winter there, Christmas.
BC:
Oh.
JL:
And Bammie would put one of the Christmas trees in the bay window on the second
floor.
BM:
I bet that was beautiful.
JL:
Oh, it was wonderful!
BM:
And so you went up from Salt Lake to Logan for Christmas?
JL:
Yeah, and stayed. Bammie had a whole house of people. Mother was there and of course
Aunt Marie was there but she lived in her own house I guess. I used to get so mad at her,
but it was George’s fault, he would just spoil her rotten, you know. All she did was feed
the kid, whichever one she had at the moment, and he would bring the baby to her.
Honestly! What a woman.
BM:
So these Christmases, this was an annual thing? You went up every Christmas?
JL:
Yeah, yeah. Until Bammie decided she wouldn’t stay there anymore. She went down to
California. And then we quit going up there and did Christmas at home. But Bammie
stayed there and then eventually of course we moved Bam down, moved her into the
Mayflower apartments [in Salt Lake City] where she died.
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�BM:
Can I ask you what Logan was like at that time?
JL:
Well, it had the streetcar, you know? It went clankety, clankety, clank. And it had
Bammie’s electric car. “Clear, here comes Mrs. Eccles, clear the way!” And Bammie – it
had enough juice in it to take her from her house to Aunt Marie’s. Now that was a pretty
good haul up. Back wasn’t bad, but up was –
BC:
Now is Aunt Marie [Marie Eccles Caine] the same – below the university they call the
Caine House?
JL:
The old – yeah, yup.
BM:
So right on the corner of 500 North –
JL:
And – what is that?
BM:
600?
JL:
It’s called “Something Way” or –
BC:
Yeah.
BM:
It goes right up past Old Main, they could probably see the Tower from their house.
JL:
Oh yeah, they lived directly down, actually.
BM:
So you went in an electric car from you aunt’s over there –
JL:
It was fun!
BM:
Oh my goodness, that’s interesting.
JL:
It was very sad and I didn’t know it, but Uncle Spence sold Bammie’s [car] (it was the
second one she had too, it was in perfect condition). He sold it to the scrap yard.
BM:
Sold the car?
JL:
Yes!
BM:
Why did he do that?
JL:
Huh?
BM:
Why did he do that?
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�JL:
Because the War was on and they needed it I guess. And Bammie wasn’t there to drive it.
I don’t think she was. Was she there? I don’t remember when she moved to Salt Lake.
BM:
So this would have been the 1940s then when he sold the car?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Hmm.
JL:
There’s a statue.
BM:
There you go, that’s the sculpture.
JL:
Then there’s that.
BM:
Oh!
JL:
That’s a miniature of the one that’s at Westminster.
BM:
Okay.
JL:
But it’s life-size; you can sit in a couch beside it. I was trying to think: who is that? I used
to go down to California and stay and visit Em and Noni.
BM:
Now who is Noni?
JL:
She’s the younger sister and she’s always lived in California, in Berkeley. Just over
almost to Piedmont.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
And Em – after Uncle Lee died – she moved down there and she lived with Noni until
Noni finally kicked her out. Here’s my mother. That’s Mother, and that’s Marriner and
that’s Ellen.
BM:
Ellen?
JL:
Bammie’s next-to-the-youngest.
BM:
Oh, okay.
JL:
And Merrill.
BM:
And you remember them very well?
JL:
Oh yeah! Sure, I stayed with them.
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�BM:
Did they ever come over here?
JL:
Oh yeah.
BM:
And to Bear Lake?
JL:
Um-hmm.
BM:
So you had company there quite often?
JL:
Um-hmm.
BC:
And that’s Marriner.
JL:
Yes.
BC:
Do you remember him at all when he was Secretary of the Treasury?
JL:
Sure. I was back in Washington with him. I used to stay with him because I was in
barracks and I didn’t want to be in the barracks very much. So Uncle Marriner would say,
“Well come on; you come stay here if you want to. And just check in and out so I kind of
know what and how.” So I stayed at the [?] [whispering]. It’s kind of posh! It was very
posh because the other ones were over in Arlington. The barracks were just over the
Potomac River.
BC:
So were you in the Navy, or?
JL:
Yeah. I was in the Navy and I loved it! And I loved being in the Navy. And the only
reason that I got out was because I married Fred and I got pregnant purposely. Because I
couldn’t get out, I just couldn’t do it. Then I got pregnant and then I could. No reason I
couldn’t have stayed in.
BM:
Hmm. When were you – what time period was this when you were back east?
JL:
In the Navy before? Who’s that? Who’s that?
BM:
Is that a bird?
JL:
No, well I guess. I’m looking just over the fence and I think probably it’s the gardeners.
They moved that house.
BC:
Oh did they?
JL:
Uh-huh.
BM:
Beautiful tree.
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�BC:
So did you join the Navy then?
JL:
Yeah.
BC:
And that was for World War II, or?
JL:
When I got to be 21 I joined the Navy. I couldn’t before that, because my dad wouldn’t
give his permission and I had to have my parents [permission]. So finally I got to be 21
and bang! I joined it.
BM:
So how did you tell them that you joined? Your parents?
JL:
Very terrified.
[Laughing]
BM:
Did you do it face-to-face or did you do it by phone?
JL:
No, I did it face-to-face.
BM:
Ooh.
JL:
Boy Dad! Mother I didn’t care about; but Dad was going to be a case. And he was! He
practically went to Marriner to tell him to get me out of this thing. And Marriner said, “I
can’t do that!” Because he was still Head of the Federal Reserve back in Washington.
BM:
Um-hmm.
JL:
So there I was off to [?] college and boot camp. And then when I got out of boot camp I
went to Washington D.C. with a Bureau of Ships and that was great because it was a very
closed, small, what they call a “Blue Seal” office. Nothing ever went out of that office.
Everything was burned, had to be. We camouflaged all the battle ships and they would
send [?] to them. And we would take them and put them on a paper and scale them down
to – and put them on a paper and then put ships out there to see how the ships . If they
looked like ships something, blah, blah, or whether we would camouflage them so they
didn’t look like the ones that they were. It was fun, I like it. As a matter of fact I liked the
Navy. I really did. I had a great time. My father and mother had conniptions. But I was
21! And I just did it. I must have been a terror for them to raise and I think probably I
was. Dave wasn’t here, my brother. He was in Australia. No, was he in Australia? Yeah, I
guess he was; in the Army.
BM:
So he couldn’t even be here to back you up?
JL:
No, no. After I got out of the Navy I met – through the S.O.S. or S.S.?
BC:
S.S. I think.
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�JL:
Yeah. And I got some kind of – not because of who I was but because of who I had been
in the skiing department and in the skiing mainly and so on, they wanted this run. And
now he or she is a wave and so on. We had fun. I had special [?] that brought me into the
studio and oh! Yeah, had a good time. I like it but I couldn’t stay in when I got pregnant.
Which I probably wouldn’t have gotten pregnant except that’s the only way and Fred had
been transferred to Ohio from D.C. and so the only way I could get there was to get
pregnant and get out of the Navy honorably. I did! Everything just went swell!
BM:
And you came back here?
JL:
No, I joined Fred in Dayton, Ohio where Rick was born. And that was something else
again. I thought Dad would have a fit! And I said, now never mind, I did this deliberately
and I’ll probably have another one deliberately. So anyway, I had the baby and stayed in
the Navy – or stayed in until Fred was released – and then we checked out and came here.
He’d never been here before. He’d never been west of the Mississippi I don’t think; poor
old guy.
BC:
How did you meet Fred?
JL:
In the Army-Navy picnic. Creek Park is where I met him. Although that was tough
because he was an officer and I wasn’t. And that made things a little tough sometimes.
But we managed, much to my father’s chagrin. I think he probably – what would he have
me – well I would have stayed in school I guess. I didn’t ever graduate from the
university. Because I was busy in the Navy and I did love it though. I really did. And it
was very good for me to do. And I was in a wonderful office in Washington, on
Constitution Avenue, in the Blue Seal Room. And that meant that upon opening and
closing that it was always locked. You couldn’t get in there unless you were admitted by
somebody who was your --. We were only about eight or 10 people in this particular
department. And we would camouflage the ships and put them on a board and look at
them out here and see if we had camouflaged out a stack; to change what kind of class it
was in. We burned everything, had to be burned. Nothing went out of that office.
BM:
Do you remember where you were when the War ended?
JL:
Sure. I was in Dayton, Ohio.
BM:
Had you had your baby then.
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Rick was already born?
JL:
Yeah, Rick got himself up and born. An OB/GYN, who apparently was a very
outstanding and very something else – OB/GYN doctor – Kirschbaum, I think that was
his name. And boy, he took such good care of me. He thought this was the biggest joke
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�on the Navy he’d ever heard. And so Dr. Kirschbaum, who was an outstanding,
apparently OB/GYN out of Chicago – he’s the one that delivered me.
BM:
Hmm.
JL:
Hardly got there in time. I didn’t have much trouble. Oh, I didn’t. Mother was very busy
trying on hats until Dad I thought was absolutely going to croak her.
BM:
She was trying on hats while you were –
JL:
In labor.
BM:
Oh!
JL:
Getting ready to go to the hospital. Because you know, where we lived Patterson Village
was a long way from – well, I guess it was at least a half an hour or 45 minutes away
from Wright Field where you had to go to have this baby. It was funny.
Did you see that? Emma Eccles Jones: Educator, Teacher, Friend. (6 March 1898—29
March 1991.) [From Utah State Magazine, Vol. 14 No. 2; Summer 2008]
BC:
They published this for the dedication the other day.
JL:
Yeah.
BC:
Yeah. Somebody told me about it, but I hadn’t seen one yet.
JL:
Well, that’s it. I won’t give it to you, but you can probably go and get one.
BC:
I will. We’ll put it in our [Special Collections]. I work in the library, so we’ll put it in our
[library at USU.]
JL:
Absolutely. I think Rick wrote a lot of it.
BM:
Well, we’re just about at the end of our tape. So is there anything else that you would like
to add?
JL:
No. What do you want to add?
BM:
Well.
JL:
Or ask? If I can fulfill –
BM:
Well you know one question that we were really interested in, that you talked a little bit
about in terms of so many changes going on at Bear Lake. And Bear Lake and Logan
Canyon – you mentioned the road and the bridges. Are there any other significant
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�changes or policies that you can think of that impacted the lake or the canyon while you
were going over there?
JL:
Well.
BM:
Or even events. Like the Depression, or civil rights, or anything like that?
JL:
I went – where was it? You know, it’s about that road that goes up, up, up and comes to
where you turn off to go – what is that road called? The part of it?
BM:
Is it the winding part of the road?
JL:
No. It’s the one that goes up from the river, over the bridge – they had to redo the bridge
like completely.
[Tape 2 of 2: B]
Yeah. Gee that was a fun one. You know when you go at the top there on that Denny’s
dugway and then turn to get out, you used to go out and around on that point. You can
probably still see the road. And mother was driving this 7 passenger Buick you know it’s
just a big hunk of machinery. That was the climb. And you know, you didn’t just sort of
flip up there like you do now. It was fun though.
Mother was quite adventuresome. I don’t know, I guess she went up to the store and tell
Joan she was there. You didn’t go over Evanston because from Evanston over was dirt
road. All through Woodruff, Randolph up the canyon, it was all dirt.
BM:
And you said you came then in most recent years, you came up through Evanston. Where
you going through Woodruff and Randolph at Deseret Ranch?
JL:
Yes.
BM:
Was that a place that you were in?
JL:
Yeah we didn’t go into it. No, we stayed on the road that went past the horse racing and
we went up there and then we just zoomed and kept going until we got to Big Junction.
From there you can go to Jackson Hole or Bear Lake.
BM:
Is that Sage Creek Junction?
JL:
Yeah, it’s Sage Creek Junction. And yeah, it’s longer but well I just haven’t driven in
Logan forever. I was asking somebody the other day how it was. Could I get through the
canyon or couldn’t I? Cause I was thinking about going up that way.
BC:
I think it’s pretty good right now. I don’t think there’s much going on now. So you better
do it this year because they might start all over again. [Meaning road construction.]
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�JL:
Yeah it I otta go. Why didn’t they leave it alone?!
BM:
Cause there’s lots of skiers and lots of folks going up and down. And they are in a hurry.
JL:
Well, do you think that they are to get up skiing to the meadows there, is it a lot faster
now with the road?
BM:
It is. It’s a lot faster. You know 10 years I’ve been here, but it is a lot faster from what
people tell me. It’s still a beautiful ride.
JL:
I know. It is. That’s the prettiest. The other one is just interesting kind of. Getting up,
over and dropping down.
BM:
But it gets wicked in the wintertime with the weather.
JL:
Well, yes it is. I guess it’s a hard road to maintain. They only open it up to the ski area. I
don’t think they open it up and over the top and down do they?
BM:
They do keep it open now.
JL:
Do they?!
BM:
So you remember a time when the road used to just be opened to the top?
JL:
Yeah.
BM:
Hmmm. And did they gate it?
JL:
No… they didn’t gate it. I don’t know. You just knew it wasn’t plowed. That’s how you
knew. You came to a grinding halt.
BM:
And the last place you could get to was what? Beaver Mountain?
JL:
Mm Hmmm. Yeah.
BM:
That’s a truck route now, Janet, with a lot of trucks that go through there pretty much
year round.
JL:
What? Bear Lake?
BM:
Yeah.
JL:
Oh. Over the new road?
BM:
Yeah.
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�JL:
Oh I’m sure. There was a great increase even before they did this new deal as it started
down. What was it called? Denny’s dugway. I wonder if it’s… is it significantly better?
BM:
They’ve taken some of the corners, they windy parts out.
BC:
Probably the big thing was they’ve built in a lot of passing lanes, so that you know, if you
had a recreational vehicle that was going slower, they wouldn’t back it up as much. So
now you can get around some of the slower vehicles. It probably saves you 15 minutes.
JL:
Honestly, who don’t go that way, go the way that’s not pretty just go to Montpelier
[Idaho]; that’s where people want to go I guess. Course Montpelier is a train …
BC:
Train town.
JL:
And there’s nothing in St. Charles. And there’s nothing in Paris really. And I don’t know
what they could build there. Or what they would have there.
BM:
I think mostly the change now is just homes that are going in. Summer homes and some
are winter ski homes. But mostly just homes because some the ranches that were there are
much smaller or gone. But more, more homes.
JL:
Between Montpelier and Lake Town?
BM:
Between Paris, St. Charles, and then down I don’t know what the next town would be,
but along that side. Little by little…
JL:
They are encroaching on my property and I don’t like it.
BM:
Well, Janet, thank you so much for chatting with us this afternoon.
JL:
Oh sure! I hope I’ve done something good. Well, if it isn’t right, or you need more
whatever, I will be aboard.
BM:
Alright. Well, thank you very much for having us today. We appreciate it.
JL:
I hoping I could get you something?
BM:
You know I might take a glass of water now. Thank you.
JL:
Um hum.
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�
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Hosted by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
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2013-01-17
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Title
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Janet Quinney Lawson interview, 28 April 2008, and transcription
Description
An account of the resource
Janet Quinney Lawson talks about her childhood memories at her family's summer home at Bear Lake. She also talks of her childhood memories at family members' homes in Cache Valley, Utah. She talks a lot about skiing and sailing on/at the Wasatch Front, Utah, and in Cache Valley, and Bear Lake.
Creator
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Lawson, Janet Quinney, 1922-2008
Contributor
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Cole, Bradford R.
Middleton, Barbara
Subject
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Lawson, Janet Quinney, 1922-2008--Interviews
Lawson, Janet Quinney, 1922-2008--Family
Quinney, S. Joe (Seymour Joseph), b. 1893
Bear Lake (Utah and Idaho)
Boats and boating--Bear Lake (Utah and Idaho)
Vacation homes--Bear Lake (Utah and Idaho)--Anecdotes
Skis and skiing--Utah
Roads--Utah--Logan Canyon
Ricks Spring (Logan Canyon, Utah)
Utah State University. Forestry Field Station Camp
Utah State University. Janet Quinney Lawson Building
Lawson, Janet Quinney, 1922-2008--Friends and associates--Anecdotes
Bear Lake Valley (Utah and Idaho)--Description and travel
Bear Lake Monster
Monsters--Bear Lake (Utah and Idaho)--Folklore
Skis and skiing--Utah--Logan Canyon--History
Beaver Mountain (Utah)
Logan (Utah)
United States. Navy--Women
Automobile driving--Utah--Logan Canyon
Medium
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Oral histories
Interviews
Spatial Coverage
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Bear Lake (Utah and Idaho)
Bear Lake County (Idaho)
Cache County (Utah)
Logan Canyon (Utah)
Garden City (Utah)
Rich County (Utah)
Parley's Canyon (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
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1930-1939
1940-1949
1950-1959
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Logan Canyon Land Use Management Oral History Collection, FOLK COLL 42 Box 4 Fd. 2
Is Referenced By
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Inventory for the Logan Canyon Land Use Management Oral History Collection can be found at: <a href="http://library.usu.edu/folklo/folkarchive/FolkColl42.php">http://library.usu.edu/folklo/folkarchive/FolkColl42.php</a>
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Fife Folklore Archives Curator, phone (435) 797-3493
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Logan Canyon Land Use Management Oral History Collection
Type
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Sound
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audio/mp3
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FolkColl42bx4fd2JanetQuinneyLawson
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28 April 2008
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2008-04-28
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Logan Canyon Reflections
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/14543bf93259e4823ef80bb976b0030c.mp3
3fdb21748d70982420ec86c054943f9d
http://highway89.org/files/original/2f15c9695e5c5e3b877f54072b0607e1.pdf
341343064e93ff303bacc9460407d016
PDF Text
Text
LOGAN CANYON ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
TRANSCRIPTION COVER SHEET
Interviewee:
William Daly Hurst
Place of Interview: Bill Hurst’s Room, Cottonwood Creek Retirement Center in SLC, Utah
Date of Interview: 11 February 2009
Interviewer: Barbara Middleton & Thad Box
Recordist:
Barbara Middleton
Recording Equipment:
Radio Shack, CTR-122
Transcription Equipment used:
Transcribed by:
Transcript Proofed by:
Power Player Transcription Software: Executive
Communication Systems
Chelsea Amdal
Randy Williams, 4/23/2009; Bill Hurst; Randy Williams, 7/12/11
Brief Description of Contents: Bill Hurst’s experiences on the Forest Service and in Logan
Canyon: Cache National Forest.
Reference:
BH = Bill Hurst
BM = Barbara Middleton (Interviewer; Interpretive Specialist, Environment &
Society Dept., USU College of Natural Resources)
TB = Thad Box (Interviewer; former Dean USU College of Natural Resources
and Emeritus Professor: Range Management)
NOTE: Interjections during pauses or transitions in dialogue such as “uh” and starts and stops
in conversations are not included in transcribed. All additions to transcript are noted with
brackets. Mr. Hurst reviewed the transcript and made a few changes; however, these changes are
not indicated, so the transcript and the tape may not match at all times. Mr. Hurst’s personal
papers are located in USU’s Special Collections MSS 362.
TAPE TRANSCRIPTION
[Tape 1 of 2: A]
BM:
This is Barbara Middleton and I am here interviewing Bill Hurst with Thad Box and we
are both here to talk on the second part of the interview with Bill Hurst. It is Wednesday
February 11th 2009; it is about 11 o’clock in the morning and we are here in Salt Lake
City, Utah. As you remember from the first tape we started off with Bill’s biographical
sketch and now we are going to start with Bill’s relationship with Logan Canyon and
where that started with the Cache National Forest. So Bill…
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�BH:
I first became acquainted with the Cache National Forest when I went to Logan to enter
Utah Agricultural College in 1934. Our professor, mainly Ray Becraft, took us on a
number of field trips into Logan Canyon to study plants and the effects of grazing on the
vegetation and talk to us about forestry in general. At that time there were only four
professors in the School of Forestry. One of them was T.G. Taylor who was head of the
School of Forestry. The School didn’t have a Dean at the time. Raymond Becraft taught
range and some range related plant identification classes although we did take botany in
the Botany Department from Bassett McGuire. The other professors there at the time
were Paul M. Dunn who later became Dean when the School of Forestry was founded. A
man named McGlochlin and J. Whitney Floyd, who later became Dean, made up the
primary faculty in 1934-35. Slim Hansen, a graduate student they brought back to help
teach this rather large class of foresters that started in 1934. The Forestry School at Utah
State experienced a large increase in students in the fall of 1934, as did many other
Forestry Schools around the Country. The Civilian Conservation Camps had a lot to do
with this I believe, since many of the Camps were located within the National Forests and
young men became acquainted with the forests and the Forest Service. At any rate, that
was the faculty in the 1934-35 Forestry School. So that was my first relationship with
Logan Canyon and the Old Juniper, the monarch of the forest.
[Omits information about moose encounter from tape.]
BH:
[Later in this paper I will tell you about my first encounter with a moose which took
place in Logan Canyon.]
TB:
You mentioned being up Logan Canyon quite a bit. Did they have a normal Summer
Camp or did they just take you up in classes? How did they get you up there to
understand the land?
BH:
[Utah State had no Summer Camp at the time. Their first Summer School was held in
August of 1936 in Logan Canyon. During my freshman year,] Dr. Becraft took us on a
number of one day field trips. One day we climbed to the top of Mount Logan stopping in
each vegetative zone where our teacher explained to us how elevation influences the
vegetation in each zone. We went on a number of field trips with him. He loved the field
trips and was a really excellent teacher. I attended the first forestry summer camp at Tony
Grove in Logan Canyon in the fall of 1936. The Camp lasted about six weeks as I
remember. It was held in the old CCC Camp. I think there were about 35-36 of us. Thad,
when you were Dean, I gave you my pictures of that camp so they must be at the
University some place.
TB:
Yes. I think they are there somewhere. We’ll dig them out.
BH:
At that time, Whit Floyd was in charge of the camp. He was a pretty seasoned guy in the
University and handled a lot of different camps. Art Smith was a member of the faculty
and helped with the Summer Camp, as did Dr. D.I. Rasmussen, head of the Wildlife
Department and E.L. Stoddart head of the Range Management Department.
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�BM:
Bill, can I ask you a question? You mentioned the camp was in the fall of 1936? And I’m
familiar with camp being in the summer. Could you explain a little bit of how that
worked into your school year?
BH:
The Fall Quarter would start sometime after the middle of September. Summer Camp
would start sometime in August. The year I attended Summer Camp we moved directly
from Camp into the class rooms at the University. As far as I know a similar schedule
prevailed throughout the history of the Camp.
BM:
Most of you were working summer jobs and then coming off of those summer jobs right
into forestry camp?
BH:
Yes. I quit herding sheep in mid August and went directly to Summer Camp
TB:
When you were talking about the faculty you mentioned Art Smith. I’ve had other
students tell me that Art broke colts while he was teaching up there, was that true?
BH:
I wouldn’t be surprised. His uncle, who lived in Idaho; had one of the most highly prized
stallions in the State of Idaho. Art lived with his uncle I understand, so I’m sure he was
riding his horses.
TB:
I had several students tell that while he was teaching range classes he’d be breaking the
colts at the same time.
BH:
Yes, that could be true. I’ve never seen the horses with Art, but he was at ease around
horses. I’ve never seen him riding any bucking broncos however.
BM:
So after these six weeks in Summer Camp, then pretty much this crew of camp students
would start classes in the fall.
BH:
Right. And as I said, 1936 was the beginning of that program. I enjoyed summer camp.
We had a man and his wife who did the cooking. Their name was Cooley. They did the
cooking for many years at the Summer Camp. And I mean they put on a feed at every
meal.
One of the indelible memories of the camp was a truck wreck we had on the Beaver
Creek road east of Summer Camp. The Forestry School had a stake bed a one and a half
ton truck. A four and a half foot rack was in place on the truck bed. There were no seats
on the truck beds however. When traveling, the occupants would stand up holding onto
the racks. One afternoon about half of the camp students and two Professors, Whitney
Floyd and Professor Barnes, loaded in the truck to drive out about 10 miles to a study
area. The two teachers were in the cab with the driver. All of the students were in the
truck bed holding on to the racks. As we paralleled Beaver Creek, a stream laden with
willows, a couple in a red sedan came toward us from the opposite direction and failed to
yield space on the narrow road. The right hand wheels of our truck went over the edge
and the truck fell topside down into Beaver Creek. Only the willows prevented this from
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�being a tragic accident. They cushioned the landing in the creek bed. However, there
were many cut faces and arms and some with body cuts. As soon as transportation was
available we were all taken to a Logan Budge Hospital [200 North and 300 East] and
examined. All but two of us, Virgil Peterson and Clyde Lowe, were returned to Tony
Grove Camp for the night. The other two remained in the Hospital for a night or two.
TB:
Did he destroy the truck?
BH:
I don’t remember; I don’t think it destroyed it because it landed in the willows also. But
the willows were thick enough that it was upside down propped up.
TB:
The reason I ask, when I started teaching Summer Camp in 1959, we had a 1936
Chevrolet truck, a green one, and two old army 6X6’s. That’s what we took the students
out in. I just wondered if that was the same truck or a replacement.
BH:
Well it could be. It could be the same truck. But that was our thrill for the day. In those
pictures that I gave you Thad, Virgil’s still had a bandage on his head.
TB:
Hum.
BM:
So in a group like that, were you mixing forestry, wildlife, range; was there a wide
assortment of students in that camp?
BH:
In that day, especially during the first two year of Collage, we didn’t consider ourselves
different. We were first and foremost students in the School of Forestry. . Most if not all
of us had taken classes together during the first two years of Collage. However, I think in
1936 they had Dr. Stoddart on board; he was head of the Range Department. And they
had Dr. Rasmussen on board and he was head of the Wildlife Department. And Paul
Dunn, I don’t think they called him a Dean yet, but he was head of the School of Forestry
Range and Wildlife, in effect the Dean. At Summer Camp, we were exposed to all of
these disciplines. The students were broken down into two or more units. Each unit
would then go to the field or class room and study one particular field. The crews would
then rotate until all had been exposed to the entire field of study.
BM:
What time did they get you up in the morning and when did the day end?
BH
As I remember, we would get up about 6:00 AM and be ready for field work or study by
8:00 AM. I think dinner was around 5:30 or 6:00PM. Lunch would be at noon. We
would take lunches to the field and this happened often.
BM:
And were there evening lectures then?
BH:
Yes, we had some evening programs but I don’t remember much about them. After a day
in the field hiking and climbing hills we were usually tired in the evening.
BM:
Is it Doc’s Hill?
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�BH:
Yes, yes Doc. I’m trying to think of his name.
TB/BM:
Daniel?
BH:
Oh Doc Daniel yes. He hadn’t arrived at Utah State in 1936.
BM:
So that was Benchmark Hill.
TB:
Yes, Benchmark Hill.
BH:
Yes.
TB:
Bill, do you have recollections of what the country was like in 1936 up Logan Canyon? As far as
you mentioned range conditions that Stoddart was teaching you, as compared to what it is now or
other times in your career?
BH:
Well, no I really don’t. I really don’t. However, during that same period of time I was
herding sheep on the Dixie National Forest. I herded sheep the summer before I went to
college and the first summer after I started college. I couldn’t get a job so I herded sheep
One day I killed a mutton and checked the stomach to see what it had been eating. I
found a leaf that looked like a holly leaf. I can’t think of the name of that plant now. It
was a heavy leaf with little prickly around the edges
BM:
Like an Oregon grape?
BH:
Yes. Well, something like an Oregon grape.
BM:
Utah Holly maybe.
BH:
Yes, it looked like an Oregon grape or holly. However, on the chart then being used by
range survey crews the plant had no palatability whatever. A few days after I had killed a
mutton and found an Oregon Grape leaf in its stomach, here comes the range survey crew
of guys I knew. They came in to have dinner with me. We got to talking about what’s
palatable and what isn’t. I think it was Oliver said “Well, they won’t eat this and they
won’t eat that,” and so forth. He pointed to the little holly plant and said “They won’t eat
that.” I said “I’ll bet you they will.” Then I showed him the leaf taken from the sheep’s
stomach. We had a good laugh over this and agreed the sheep made a mistake when it ate
the Oregon grape leaf. So we were thinking about what’s palatable and what isn’t in those
days. My sheep herding experience served me well after I got into the Forest Service.
BM:
How so?
BH:
Well, I learned what livestock could do if not properly taken care of and what the herder
had to do to protect both the sheep and the land they were using. I learned that it wasn’t
easy to get even utilization of the country. And I learned that herding sheep isn’t a lazy
man’s job. With only one herder with the sheep it’s a 24 hour a day responsibility.
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�I gathered plants when time permitted and identified and pressed them. I carried a plant
book with me most every day and had a plant press in my camp.
Through the sheep herding experience I gained a better appreciation of the problems of a
stockman. I think that helped me more than anything else. Their [stockman] life isn’t an
easy one.
Now to go back to Thad’s question of comparing what land looked like in 1935 to what it
is today. To attempt to answer this question I’m going back to my sheep herding days in
Southern Utah where I did make an eyeball sixty year comparison at the request of the
Supervisor of the Dixie National Forest, Hugh Thompson. To quote from my Memoirs
which were completed at the end of the year 2000 [A life Recalled: Memoirs of William
Daly Hurst by Williams Hurst.]
On July 17, (1995) VerMon Barney (my Brother in Law) and I trailered
horses to Castle Valley to spend two days riding with Supervisor Hugh
Thompson, Ranger Ron Wilson and Range Staff Officer Dale Harris on
the Houston Mountain where I herded sheep the summers of 1935 and
1936. Our ride took us to the old Jenson Sawmill on Houston Mountain, a
mill that operated in the very early part of the century and perhaps before.
After sixty years, I believe there is more grass in the dandelion cover and
more fir in the aspen stands. The country looks beautiful, as it did 60 years
ago. The ground cover is now probably better. A herd of sheep were
grazing in the area during our visit. We located my name on an aspen tree
dated 8/1/36.
On July 18, 1995 we were joined by Ranger Wilson and Range
Conservationist Randy Houston. Our day’s ride took us over Dry Valley
and onto Blue Springs Mountain. The complexion of Blue Springs
Mountain has changed because of logging roads. I feel certain however
there is more fir in the aspen stands. The young firs are less than 60 years
old so most of them have come in since I worked there. The country is still
beautiful and in good ecological condition. After my two day ride I felt
good about the management the area has received. I rode Diamond, my
former saddle horse, on both days of the ride.
My personal opinion of the area is this: When the area was first grazed
with domestic livestock, probably in the 1880s it was used by both sheep
and cattle and probably heavily grazed. This resulted in depletion of the
original grass stand which was replaced by dandelion. In 1936 dandelion
occupied almost 100 percent of the ground. Once over by sheep and the
ground was bare. Subsequent lighter use has permitted the grass to slowly
return. Very early fires, of which there is now little evidence, could have
removed the original forest and replaced it with aspen. That fir is now
replacing the aspen there is little doubt. Regardless of what happened in
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�the past, in my eyes, the area is healthy today and still supporting sheep
and wildlife plus a charming landscape.
In closing this subject on sheep herding days I would like to quote from my Memoirs a
paragraph about my faithful companions, the mule Jody and the dog Pal.
Jody could be either ridden or packed. I used him mainly to pack, since
Luke was much better to ride. Luke was a very good saddle horse. Jody
had the patience of Job. One day I had my camp on him and was in the
process of moving to a new location. For a reason I no longer remember, I
was interrupted in the moving process and had to leave Jody tied to a tree
for a couple of hours. On returning, Jody was in approximately the same
place under the tree but the pack was under his belly. In fact, the top of the
pack was resting on the ground. This didn’t seem to bother Jody at all. He
just patiently awaited my return. Many times over the years, I’ve wished
some of my mules and horses to, had a disposition more like Jody.
The dog Pal was also incredible. He continually amazed me. Besides
being wonderful company and providing me with a sense of security both
night and day, he would on command, go around a herd of sheep as far as
the eye could see. Best of all I felt confident that he had gotten them all.
TB:
At the danger of messing up Barbara’s tape, I’m going to ask you a question because now
most of our students come from cities, have none of this experience. Do you have any
ideas of what the modern day natural resources or Forestry College, how can they teach
these things to their students?
BH:
I don’t know. Very few in my day had the experience I had. But it’s an important
experience. I believe that the three years I spent with the Hatch Brother’s Ranch paid big
dividends in my career with the Forest Service.
TB:
You mentioned that most, or many of the students at your time, didn’t have that
background with livestock, did Summer Camp help fill them in? Or where did they learn?
I know a lot of them went on to be distinguished foresters, they must have learned
something somewhere.
BH:
The reason I feel that my experience with ranch and farm activities paid off is because of
the positions the Forest Service selected me to fill. From Assistant Ranger through
Regional Forester the jobs were heavily range and wildlife management orientated as was
my position in the Washington Office of the Forest Service. I’m sure most people in the
organization didn’t know of my earlier experiences but some did. And most important of
all, my earlier experiences made me feel more comfortable in the jobs I was selected to
fill. Many farm and ranch raised forestry students, such as Ed Cliff and Basil Crane, did
very well in the Forest Service as did others in land management agencies as well.
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�TB:
Well, unfortunately none of us can answer that. We’re still arguing that in education now
how to teach the practical things to our students.
BH:
Yes.
BM:
Well, and also the transference from what happens at field camp into the classroom for
that whole academic year. And when you think about that—what did you take from field
camp that you bridged into the classroom?
BH:
Well, we learned how to survey land for example. We learned what fish were eating by
catching a fish and examining stomach contents. We learned how to mark timber of
different species and how to determine forage utilization by cattle and sheep. We learned
how to use portable radios and how to fight forest fires among many other things
TB:
You mentioned you had on snowshoes when that moose chased you up a tree. Was that
an assignment or just you?
BH:
Oh no.
[Tape 1 of 2: B]
BM:
Bill Hurst [continuing from tape one side A].
BH:
Dr. George Kelker’s Wildlife Management class was on a one day field trip in Logan
Canyon during the winter. We were between Tony Grove Ranger Station and Tony
Grove Lake. The snow was deep and we were all wearing either skis or snowshoes; I was
wearing snowshoes. When we reached the area Dr Kelker had chosen for study we broke
up into smaller groups each assigned to a different area. My partner was Virgil Peterson.
He was wearing skis. In the vicinity of a lake (the name of which I don’t remember), we
crossed some huge tracks.
TB:
Pipeline Lake?
BH:
Perhaps, but I really don’t remember, But we crossed large tracks. Dr. Kelker said “That
looks like a moose to me.” Neither of us had ever seen a moose so we continued on our
way. Virgil and I walked into an opening in the aspen and there he stood. [Laughing]
That’s when we took the snowshoes and skis off and climbed a tree. In a minute or two
the moose left and we went on our way. We saw that moose again the same day on the
plowed out Logan Canyon highway near Tony Grove. A week or two earlier Art Smith,
Ben Haywood and J. Lowe Sevy, all Wildlife Management students from Utah State, had
seen, what we think was the same moose, swimming in Bear Lake, from east to west.
.
BM:
Well, now you mentioned boys in that moose story. Where were the girls?
BH:
There weren’t any girls.
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�BM:
No girls in Summer Camp?
BH:
No, there were no girls in forestry school at that time. The enrollment in the Forestry
School was large but I remember no girls.
TB:
The first women went to Summer Camp in the summer of 1970, but that’s another story.
BM:
Well, let’s look at some other relationships with Logan Canyon as far as school. You
were talking about some field trips and Summer Camp as far as the time period that you
stayed up there and you explored around. When you graduated from Utah State, did you
leave northern Utah for awhile?
BH:
Yes. I left Logan for the summer of 1937 and worked until October on the Grantsville
Division of the Wasatch National Forest near Grantsville, Utah. After my senior year,
1937-38 at Utah State I returned to this same job in May 1938 and remained connected
with the Wasatch National Forest until June 1941. In the summertime, I would be
working on the Grantsville Unit. During the winter I worked in various timber jobs on the
Kamas and Evanston Ranger Districts of the Wasatch National Forest. During the pre
World War II years the Forest Service operated on a very lean budget. A couple of times
I was placed on furlough during the winter months. One winter I worked a couple of
months at a sawmill before being put back to work with the Forest Service.
BM:
Where was this?
BH:
It was down there.
BM:
In the Ashley?
BH
No, it was in southern Utah where I was raised. My cousin was a Barber and had major
interest in a Ford Motor Company. He also had a small sawmill which wasn’t in
operation. Railroad ties were in demand so a group of us put the sawmill in operation and
sawed railroad ties. I went with the sawmill for a couple of months acquiring an up
graded automobile and a little cash.
BM:
Well, and different in that you also have those certain time of year where you’re always
going to be laid off.
BH:
No, this just applied to those who didn’t have a permanent appointment with the Forest
Service and at the time I didn’t
BM:
So how did you get to the Logan Ranger District?
BH:
I worked as an Assistant Ranger and District Ranger after I left school. In the latter job
we lived about four years in Manila, Utah. I then served in the Army for two years
spending one year in Japan at the end of WWII. After being released from the military
the Forest Service assigned me to the Cache National Forest in Logan, Utah as Staff
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�Officer to the Forest Supervisor. At that time the Forest Service was in the process of
purchasing Wellsville Mountain and adding it to the National Forest System. That’s the
big mountain out west of Logan.
BM:
And what was going on in Wellsville Mountain that they wanted to incorporate it into the
National Forest?
BH:
Wellsville Mountain is a big beautiful mountain that was outside the National Forest and
had been heavily used by livestock, particularly sheep. Accelerated erosion was common
in many of the drainages. In the mid 1930s I believe, Congress placed the entire mountain
within the National Forest System and authorized the Forest Service to purchase the land
from the private land owners.
The governor of Utah at the time, [Henry Hooper] Blood appointed a committee to look
into the cause of the floods. One of the people he appointed was George D. Clyde, Dean
of the School of Engineering at Utah State Agricultural College, who later became
Governor of Utah. Another was Reed Bailey, a Geologist and later became Director of
the Intermountain Forest and Range Experiment Station. Another was A.R. Croft, a soil
scientist I think, from Utah State Agricultural College. He joined the Forest Service and
stayed with them until retirement. I think there were two more on the Committee whose
names I’ve forgotten. These five men were all very talented people. They studied the mud
rock flood problem and wrote several bulletins on the subject. Convincing evidence led
the Committee to the conclusion that denuding the high elevations of a watershed and
exposing it to torrential rains was the root cause of the problem. Furthermore, overuse by
domestic livestock caused the loss of the protective vegetation. When these watersheds
were perched above high population centers they posed a real threat to the population and
property below.
During my stint on the Cache National Forest I carried this program forward under the
direction of the Forest Supervisor. A substantial part of my work in the Watershed field
was in land appraisal and land acquisition. During my three and one half years on the
Cache National Forest I also became well acquainted with Logan Canyon through
assignments I had there particularly in range and recreation management.
BM:
Can I ask before you move on to range, could you talk a little bit about what it was like
working on this acquisition and this Wellsville initiative?
BH:
Yes.
BM:
Well, you know what’s interesting to me is you are saying that, and you’ve used the word
several times, that the public demanded that the federal government come in and do
something.
BH:
They did. They pushed us hard on it. And it’s interesting to note that really the National
Forest (now I’m stepping back now in time oh 30 years or more), many of the National
Forests in the United States were created not for the timber but for the water they
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�produced. There was damage being done to streams and springs and it wasn’t so much
mud rock floods as it was the consequence of excessive animal concentration around and
in the water people depended on to sustain their lives.
TB:
I want to ask a little bit more about this Wellsville Mountain. It’s my understanding that,
and it may have been before your time, in the early days the local people actually raised
funds to buy land to give to the Forest Service and that the county commission was
actually behind the acquisition. Is that true?
BH:
It is true and not too far back either. I have seen petitions in the Cache National Forest
files wherein people petitioned the Forest Service to purchase watershed lands above
their communities to protect their water supplies. This was also done at an early date in
the history of the Forest Service for watershed land on the Manti National Forest in
Central Utah. At a later date petitions from people in Ogden, Utah and other communities
and from people around the Wellsville Mountain resulted in efforts that have placed
thousands of acres under federal control. The Weber County Watershed Protective
Association and the Wellsville Mountain Watershed Protective Association were both the
results of local people’s action to secure protection of their watersheds. A.G. Nord,
former Supervisor of the Cache National Forest was instrumental in achieving federal as
well as local support for watershed programs in the intermountain area.
To pursue Thad’s question of public involvement in the watershed land acquisition
program and the role the public played in this effort, I think it would be worthwhile for
Barbara or one of her staff to review the files of the two private organizations deeply
involved. One was the Wellsville Mountain Watershed Protective Association which
once was head-quartered in Brigham City, Utah and the other, the Weber County
Watershed Protective Association which had its offices in Ogden, Utah.
If pursued, I suggest starting in the Forest Supervisors Office of the combine CacheUinta-Wasatch National Forest in Provo, Utah. Perhaps they can tell you where the files
are located.
A discussion of land acquisition and watershed management on the Cache National
Forest as well as other locations wouldn’t be complete without recognizing the positive
role Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson played in this effort. The Secretary was a
Republican, a party opposed to the expansion of federal ownership. The Secretary on the
other hand supported public ownership on land that was serving a public need. Under his
leadership the political aspects of land acquisition were substantially diminished. He also
supported the Forest Service in many other ways all of which I thought furthered the
cause of conservation.
BM:
So with you working on the Wellsville issue and you’re, I’m assuming, meeting with the
public to understand what’s going on. What other kinds of issues are going on the Cache
Forest at the time?
BH:
We did meet often with the Watershed Associations mentioned above. We also kept in
close touch with other watershed activities In addition to the land exchange work on
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�Wellsville Mountain and in the Ogden River watershed, there was an active land
exchange effort underway with the Deseret Land and Livestock Company on the
southeast side of the Cache National Forest. Much of the land owned by this Company
was situated in a checker board fashion over a vast area. The intermingling land was in
large part National Forest land. Both parties agreed that it would be in the best interest of
all concerned if the scattered land could be consolidated. The land would fare better also.
Accomplishing the consolidation would take time both on the part of the rancher and the
Forest Service. I’m not sure that it has yet been completed.
The Deseret Land and Livestock Company was formally owned by the Mormon Church.
I believe it was during the period of which we speak. It is now in private ownership. The
Church also owned a Ranch in Skull Valley on the west side of the Stansbury Mountain.
While in Church ownership it once was used as a sanctuary for a Leprosy colony.
BM:
And the objective of getting rid of the checkerboard ownership was what?
BH:
Was to create conditions more favorable to management both from the standpoint of the
private land owner and the Forest Service. It is difficult to manage 640 acres of range
land when it is surrounded by land of another ownership. So there were benefits to be
gained by both parties that was getting out of Logan Canyon but that was the work I had
to do.
BM:
So you met with the Deseret folks at the time and you looked at different value and
trading parcels?
BH:
Most of my work on this case was independently done. Our District Ranger, Clark
Anderson, was active in identifying land that would be most beneficial to acquire as well
as land that could be disposed of with least impact on National Forest interests. My two
primary contacts were with the Ranch Manager, Dan Freed and their Attorney who had
his Office in Salt Lake City, Laurence McKay. I didn’t meet with them too often. I think
Thad knew Dan Freed. Thad, Dan and I were active members of the Society for Range
Management.
The Deseret Land and Livestock Company eventually went private. Except for
occasionally meeting with their attorney and Dan Freed, I didn’t spend a lot of time with
the Deseret Land and Livestock Company; although all of the acquisition cases would
clear my desk before going to the Forest Supervisor for approval.
TB:
Just when you were making exchanges like that, how much did current condition enter
into your thinking? And how much potential? How did you reconcile those two? Say one
block of land was, had been really abused and the other was in pretty good shape. And
they both had similar potential, how did you [evaluate it]?
BH:
I don’t think we took current condition into consideration. I didn’t in land I personally
appraised.
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�TB:
That was my impression.
BH:
Yes. The senses of values were quite interesting. A fellow well along in years, who lived
in one of those little communities on the west side of Wellsville Mountain, came to the
Supervisor’s office and told us he had a section (640 acres) of land on Wellsville
Mountain which he wanted the Forest Service to have. We told him we would like to
have it, that we would appraise the property and get back to him. I did the appraisal on
this property and it came out to about $10.00 per acre. This was in the late 1940s. After
my Supervisor’s approval I went back to the man’s home and gave him the results of our
appraisal. He insisted that $10.00 per acre was too much. We finally settled for $l.00 per
acre. He really wanted his land to become a part of the National Forests.
[Tape 2 of 2: A]
BM:
This is tape two with Bill Hurst and side one. Ok, we are continuing with tape two and
we are talking with William Hurst and we have Thad Box with us. And I posed the
question based upon the Wellsville acquisition in terms of the nature of public perception
and this idea that the public approaches the Forest Service to want to have their lands
either sold to or donated to the Forest Service. And I wonder if you could give us a little
more of a context for that in terms of the public views of the Forest Service and that
relationship.
BH:
There are several areas in the Intermountain Region that I’m acquainted with where land
was placed in public ownership [chimes] with the support of the local people; in fact in
some cases, it was the request of the local people. The Wellsville Mountain is a case in
point. However, long before that, back in the early history of the Forest Service, some of
the Cache National Forest was placed in public ownership at the request of local people.
They weren’t thinking about using it for timber or for recreation or grazing. They were
thinking about it from the standpoint of maintaining healthy watersheds. And I think that
the watershed issue was the driving force behind the creation of not a majority, but a
substantial part of the National Forest system.
Even though the public in general supported the movement, both early on and in later
years, to expand the National Forests or manage those in existence to enhance water
supplies, strong leadership was required. In the case of the Wellsville Mountain this
leadership came through the Wellsville Mountain Watershed Protective Association with
Robert Stewart of Brigham City at its helm supported by a capable Board of Directors
from Cache and Box Elder Counties. In Weber County the watershed movement was
directed by a citizens group under the name Weber County Watershed Protective
Association with Julian Heppler at its head. Both groups had authority to buy and sell
land within their area of responsibility and they often did with the Forest Service being
the purchaser when money was available. This arrangement made it possible to take
advantage of land sale opportunities which might otherwise be lost. During this period of
time, the 1940s, the annual appropriation to Cache, Weber and Box Elder Counties was,
as I remember, only $120,000. Despite this modest amount the Corporations seemed to
find ways through donation to keep an energetic land acquisition program going.
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�BM:
But the debt that those two corporations then [had] that you are talking about, the debt
incurred, could that have gone on until the forest had enough money.
BH:
Yes, it’s maybe still going on. Yes, they carried over, but it was the Associations that
made this possible. The transactions didn’t get into government funds at all. The
Corporations would buy the land and then donate or sell it to the Forest Service
BM:
But the primary concern of these watershed corporations was the protection of the cities
from the mud fl, it could be stated that way, or the primary objective of the corporations
was to get this land into government ownership, so they could manage it.
TB:
I think one of the reasons you asked “why did this happen?” There was in a number of
communities that had people there that [were] old enough to have seen what it was and
how it had been deteriorated and how it was stripped off. And it was really amazing how
denuded these lands were. You can look at some of the old pictures there and you can’t
find a sprig of grass or anything. And so there were a number of citizens in almost every
community along the mountains that became concerned. Bill said that the mountain had
come sliding down on them. But I don’t think it was totally the fear, it was that they
could just remember it, that the land had been better than that. And so they wanted
somebody to take care of it, and they knew that each little individual land owner couldn’t.
The Forest Service was a mechanism that could do it.
BH:
They wanted the Forest Service to manage the land. Now there was opposition to this
from certain factions of the public. For instance, some in the livestock industry didn’t like
the general idea of public ownership of range land. However, in some cases it was the
livestock people who joined with the movement to place critical watershed lands under
public jurisdiction
TB:
Another reason that there was, I think, considerable public support, was that most of the
land wasn’t fenced in individual plots, it was open.
BH:
Yes, it was open.
TB:
It was open. And so it was essentially a commons that anybody that had livestock could
turn them out on that area. So even if you were a land owner and had a 40 acre plot or
something up there, you had no way of really using it.
BH:
Right, no way protecting it. That’s a good point.
BM:
Thanks for the clarification.
BH:
Those two Watershed Protective Associations mentioned earlier, may yet be in existence.
They did a wonderful job when they were active. Their support went far beyond the
communities they served.
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�TB:
I’m glad you brought this up Barbara because this is a good model that we ought to be
looking at in public/private cooperation. Where the private citizens decide they want
something done, and then form a cooperation to contact a government agency and then
get it done.
BH:
Yes they did. In my opinion, it would have been difficult if not impossible for the
government to acquire the critical watershed land in the Weber River drainage and the
Wellsville Mountain without the two Watershed Associations. Their reach was wide and
it extended into some deep pockets
BM:
It was demonstrating effort too from the public. When you think of a huge federal entity
like the Forest Service and how it’s growing at that time. For local communities to feel
like they have some kind of public input, you know, this is way pre NEPA. So the kinds
of input that they could have, and working on that partnership, as a way to either move
land through into ownership or move money or especially, importantly, the protective
management of that landscape. I mean that must have been a tremendous feeling to have
that kind of connection with Washington.
TB:
What I would like Bill to comment: in those days before the Forest Service wasn’t just
something in Washington (we were fighting Washington) they knew Bill Hurst, who was
down on Main Street in Logan Utah. They knew that the Forest Service personnel stayed
in one place, a good amount of time, they got to know the people and the people know
them. They were part of the community. So the local people, when they started forming
these corporations, weren’t necessarily working with the big bureaucracy in Washington,
they were working with people that they knew.
BH:
Yes, the people in the two Watershed Associations were well acquainted with Forest
Service people and had a good understanding of the Forest Service’s mission. The
Associations were holding public meeting semi-annually in communities like Brigham
City, Ogden and Logan to keep people informed of their activities and to get feed-back
from the public. Of equal importance, the Associations wanted to know what the people
were thinking. These meetings were usually well attended too.
BM:
You know one of the things that I read in your memoir, and I wish you would expound
on it a little bit when you talk about this relationship with the public, you mentioned
actually going out and riding and spending days out on the forest on horseback, with
other staff, but also with the public, some of the land users. I think some of them were
sheep herders and there may have been cattle people too. But you talked about that
relationship, how important that was, and that was something that was, I think you said
established with the nature of the way activities needed to be done in your District Office.
Could you talk a little bit more about that and with the Forest Service in Cache [National
Forest]?
BH:
A long time before I started, the Forest Service had on the Forest level, Livestock and
Timber Associations whom they would meet with annually or semi-annually to discuss
problems or situations of mutual concern. Later, multiple use associations were created
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�on many National Forests. Their purpose, of course, was to facilitate the transfer of
information between the Agency and the public and visa-versa. Such organizations are
not uncommon today. I think they’re probably more active now than they were back in
the period we are talking about. The Multiple Use Sustained Yield Act of 1960 has
probably broadened the scope of discussion.
In that regard I’d like to refer to Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson. He was
writing a letter to members of a Cattle Association whose grazing permit had been
reduced. His reply was very interesting. He explained the mission of the Forest Service
and then he went on to say something like this “the National Forests are not timberman’s
lands, they are not the recreationalist lands, they are not the water user’s lands, they are
not the cattleman’s lands they are public lands belonging to all the people of the United
States and must be managed with this fact in mind. The Secretary had it right.
TB:
Bill, you were Washington staff along about that time. When the Secretary writes a letter
today he has dozens of speech writers, drafters and so on. That letter for instance, how
did the Forest Service input get into the Secretaries’ letter then? Did you write the letter?
BH:
No I worked on it.
TB:
I suspected that. [Laughing]
BH:
I worked on it but others did also. The statement on “who the land belonged to” came
from the Secretary. He didn’t pussy-foot around when stating his opinion. While I
worked on a number of letters which he signed the Secretary usually discussed them in
the formative stage with the Chief or Deputy Chief who was Ed Cliff. The Secretary was
very fond of both men. I did accompany Mr. Benson when he met with some livestock
interests in the field and took him on a five day fishing and sightseeing trip into the High
Uinta Primitive Area. In my opinion he was a great man and an excellent horseman. As a
fisherman he wasn’t so hot. So I put him on a lake where he couldn’t miss. In later years
my Grandson would say, “Grandpa taught the Prophet to fish.” In the Mormon Church
the Church President is our Prophet.
BM:
Well, a question I have for you is: do you remember a favorite place in Logan Canyon?
BH:
Logan Canyon is all special to me. It’s a beautiful canyon. The stream is just
unprecedented. I do remember a couple of incidents about Logan Canyon though, that
always impressed me. One of them had to do with the stream itself. The Bureau of Public
Roads wanted to upgrade a portion of the road through the canyon. That was, I think the
time you [Thad Box] were at Utah State and I was in the Ogden Office of the Forest
Service. The Bureau of Public Roads hadn’t at that time come around to recognize the
value of streams and what might damage them. They wanted to build a road where it was
the least expensive and the best alignment from the standpoint of automobile traffic. On
the other hand, the Forest Service and the University people, led by Dr. L. A. Stoddart
wanted the stream to have first priority. I should also mention Dr. D. I. Rasmussen. He
and the entire Forestry School faculty were deeply involved. They wanted the road to go
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�where it would have the least impact on the stream, but still make an acceptable road
through the canyon. This developed into a first class battle between the Bureau of Public
Roads being on one side and the Forestry School faculty and the Forest Service on the
other. Eventually the latter prevailed. The decision was a popular one with the public as
well.
TB:
The publication that came out of that “Road Construction and Resource Use” is the only
paper that I know of that every faculty member in the College of Natural Sources signed
up on. I mean in the whole history of it. And it started as you say, with L.A. Stoddard and
Jess Lowe went up the Canyon to go fishing one day and found a bulldozer parked in the
river where they were going to fish. And they came back down and got a hold of Dean
Turner and said “We got to do something about this.” And so they got the whole faculty
together and we had meetings, and I was just a young guy on the faculty there. But we
had a number of meetings and came out with that publication. And like you say, there
was a battle there. And it’s still going on.
BM:
What’s the time period you are talking about?
TB:
This is about 1960 as I recall that that publication came out.
BH:
It was somewhere between 1958 and 1962. But I’ll tell you, the Forest Service was sure
glad to win this one. It posted a sign that all road construction interests paid attention to.
[Tape 2 of 2: B]
BM:
We are on tape two, side two with Bill Hurst and Thad Box.
BH:
In reading this you must remember this road issue stretched over two or more years. It
didn’t happen while I was on the Cache National Forest. I was in the Regional Office at
the time as was Dr Rasmussen.
TB:
I think there’s a point here that it is important to get, whether we are talking about the
Wellsville or Logan Canyon, it’s important if there’s a problem that people see and agree
on. And the Forest Service and the University have no problem coming together to study
Logan Canyon and the river; if they say that there’s a common problem. And you don’t
worry about budgets, you don’t worry about personnel, you just go out and do the job.
BH:
Yes. That’s right.
BM:
And the perception of the public at that time too, of these two agents working together.
Can you tell a little bit about that?
TB:
Well, the perception of the public, I was just a young faculty member then and don’t
remember. But the public mostly wanted that road constructed.
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�BH:
Oh, yes. The public definitely wanted the new road. However, I don’t believe they
realized the impact it would have on Logan River if constructed to the original design.
TB:
I think if you’d put it to a vote, the Forest Service and the University would have lost
because people wanted to drive faster over to Bear Lake. It was something that was going
against public opinion at the time.
BH:
I agree; there is no question about it. And that’s the case on so many issues that come up
when public land is involved. There’s a certain group that’s really pushing and their voice
seems overwhelming until you expose the entire picture. Then, if your position is logical,
it changes and sometimes radically. I think most everyone now appreciates more than
ever the value of Logan River, values that would have been lost had the road been built
just to accommodate speedy automobiles.
Well, one other point of interest that took place in Logan Canyon more recently was the
Range Wars of the 1950s. The Forest Service reduced the amount of grazing by 20
percent on the Logan Canyon Cattle Allotment. At the same time there were reductions
being made on other National Forests in the Region. While many people applauded the
actions of the Forest Service many did not. The Forest Services actions were appealed in
a number of cases in both Utah and Idaho, some of them going to the Secretary of
Agriculture for a final decision.
The primary issue was the question of what land on the National Forests could be grazed
in a way that was compatible with other resources on or adjacent to the land being
grazed. The issue boiled down to a determination on each grazing unit (allotment) of the
land that could be grazed on a sustained program without damaging other important
values. The term “suitable” was selected to describe such land. Other regions in the
Forest Service were using the word “useable.” This word was unsatisfactory in our
opinion because most land can be used by livestock if other values are ignored. Our
definition of “suitable range land” was, “Land which can be grazed on a sustained basis
without damage to the area itself or to adjacent areas.” With this definition being applied
the issue of suitability became the crux of the grazing problem. It was decided this issue
was worthy of a research effort. We welcomed this as did Utah State University and
many in the livestock industry. Wayne Cook from the School of Natural Resources at
USU was especially supportive as was Weldon Shepherd of the Research Branch of the
Forest Service. Logan Canyon was chosen as the location for the research project. Ralph
Crowell, Supervisor of the Cache National Forest and Wayne Thorne, Director of
Research for USU would provide direction for the research. Wayne Cook from the
School of Natural Resources, USU and Weldon Shepherd, Director of Range Research
for the Intermountain Forest and Range Experiment Station would design the program
and give direction to its application. The Forest Supervisor, Ralph Crowell, appointed
Hallie Cox to represent him on his study committee. The Committee and the range
management scientists who helped them, put in about two years on the study of rangeland
suitability for livestock grazing. When the studies were completed the issue of suitability
seemed to evaporate. It is my opinion that people on both sides of the issue were
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�convinced that the cost of capturing the forage in an acceptable way from these difficult
to reach or sensitive areas was far greater than the benefits gained.
BM:
So did suitability then become more of a policy?
BH:
Yes, in Region 4 [Forest Service ‘regions’] they still use the term “suitability.” But in
Region 3 where I later worked, I could never get them to use the term.
TB:
You couldn’t?
BH:
No, I couldn’t. The Chief’s Office used the term “useable” rather than “suitable” and it
had become so ingrained in their thinking and in their instruction that it is difficult to
change. I believe the use of the term “useable” is one of range management’s major
problems. A cow goes where she has to go to get her belly full. She has no concern for
the damage she might cause in getting there.
TB:
Well, I learned something. I thought it [suitability] was in common use everywhere.
Because I came in right at the end of what Bill is talking about. I got my appointment
right at the end of that study. And all the classes I taught, I used suitability. And it’s in
their text book and I thought it was the widely used term now. I didn’t know Region three
still or Region four.
BH:
Well, I believe Region 3 still uses the term “useable” while Region 4 uses the term
“suitable” which in my opinion is by far the most descriptive of the message the user is
trying to convey. I think I understand Thad’s frustration also. He came into an area where
“suitable” was the acceptable term and one he was most apt to pick up.
TB:
So the basic argument was that suitability is a subjective thing. It depends on the three of
us here. We would each have a different opinion. Or usability, you could measure. But I
don’t buy that. As a policy of directive and I think suitability makes a lot more sense.
BH:
Yes, “suitability” is much more acceptable in my opinion.
BM:
Does suitability eventually have criteria?
BH:
Yes, it has criteria.
BM:
. . . that soil and water and re-growth and vegetation …
BH:
Yes. Suitable for grazing means the forage on the land can be harvested by livestock
under a level of management the livestock owner can afford, without unacceptable
damage to other resource values The ‘adjacent areas’ is critical in the definition because
that means the areas that are otherwise suitable for use can not be reached without
unacceptable damage to other areas of land.
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�TB:
To answer your question more specifically, the criteria and standards were developed by
individual agencies. So they would differ and I’m finding out that even within them, the
agency, and the society for Range Management has tried a time or two to try to get a
standard criteria across all the private and public lands, and they haven’t been able to do
it.
BM:
That’s interesting. Alright, we are going to end this tape today. It’s about 2:30 [PM] on
Wednesday, finishing the interview with Bill Hurst. To be continued.
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�
http://highway89.org/files/original/2d91a674268b6fda189b31097293174c.mp3
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PDF Text
Text
LOGAN CANYON ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
TRANSCRIPTION COVER SHEET
Interviewee:
William Daly Hurst
Place of Interview: Bill Hurst’s Room, Cottonwood Creek Retirement Center; SLC, Utah
Date of Interview: 16 April 2008
Interviewer: Barbara Middleton
Recordist:
Barbara Middleton
Recording Equipment:
Radio Shack Cassette Tape Recorder: CTR-122
Transcription Equipment used:
Transcribed by:
Transcript Proofed by:
Power Player Transcription Software: Executive
Communication Systems
Chelsea Amdal
Randy Williams (4/15/09), Barbara Middleton (4/24/09), Bill
Hurst, Randy Williams (7 July 2011)
Brief Description of Contents: Bill Hurst’s experiences growing up in Panguitch, Utah, where
his father was the forest ranger; his experience working for a sheep outfit, schooling at Utah
State Agricultural College, and work with the Forest Service, including in Logan Canyon.
Reference:
BH = Bill Hurst
BM = Barbara Middleton (Interviewer; Interpretive Specialist, Environment &
Society Dept., USU College of Natural Resources)
NOTE: Interjections during pauses or transitions in dialogue such as “uh” and starts and stops
in conversations are not included in transcribed. All additions to transcript are noted with
brackets. Mr. Hurst reviewed the transcript and made a few changes; however, these changes are
not indicated, so the transcript and the tape may not match at all times. Mr. Hurst’s personal
papers are located in USU’s Special Collections MSS 362.
TAPE TRANSCRIPTION
[Tape 1 of 2: A]
BM:
We are here on Wednesday, April 16th [2008]. My name is Barbara Middleton; I am one
of the interviewers for the Logan Canyon Land Use & Management Oral History Project
of Utah State [University]. And we [Thad Box and Barbara] are here visiting with Bill
Hurst at the Cottonwood Creek Retirement Center and we are in his room which is just
full of Forest Service memorabilia and artifacts and we are here to capture some of his
stories from the Logan Ranger District as well as some of the other areas. We’ve got
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�about thirty minutes on this first side and then we will stop and take a lunch break and
come back and continue. So you are going to be my timekeeper Bill. Ok?
BH:
Ok.
BM:
What I’m going to have you do is introduce yourself with your full name and your birth
month and year and tell us where you were born.
BH:
My name is William Daly Hurst. I was born in Parowan, Utah, Iron County on October
the 5th 1915. My father was a forest ranger on the Dixie National Forest at the time I was
born. And he was, a year or so later after my birth, he was moved to Panguitch Utah and
given a job on the Panguitch Lake Ranger District. He put his entire career on the Dixie
and what used to be the Powell National Forest. They are combined today.
BM:
The Powell National Forest and the Dixie?
BH:
And the Dixie, but mostly on the Dixie. He worked on the Powell before I was born. And
he never moved and he lived in his home in Panguitch. He built the home. And he and
mother lived there all of their life. And my dad worked for the Forest Service for about
38-39 years.
BM:
So you grew up as a child of a forest ranger?
BH:
Right. And another distinction that I like quite well is my grandfather was a Forest
Officer also. He had an interesting beginning. He joined the Forest Service in 1905 and
he was an engineer by training. Born and raised in Scotland. In 1905, Gifford Pinchot, the
first forester in the United States, and President Theodore Roosevelt were instrumental in
establishing the National Forest system. And of course they were looking for people that
could survey land and I think that was the primary reason grandfather was selected early
on—because he had his early training in engineering, so he could run boundary lines and
survey that and map it out.
[Stopped tape]
BM:
Ok, I just stopped the tape for a moment because we want to back up a little bit and we
are talking about, Bill’s talking about his grandfather who was born and raised in
Scotland. Would you give us his full name?
BH:
My grandfather’s name was William Radkin Hurst. And my father’s name was William
Miller Hurst. And my name is William Daly [Hurst]. And I have a son named William
Johansen [Hurst]. The Williams carried down and they’ve always given--the middle
name has always been the mother’s [maiden name] of the person being named.
BM:
So Johansen is your wife’s family name.
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�BH:
My wife was a Johansen, so our son is named William Johansen. [Chimes in the
background.]
BM:
Now your grandfather, you said, came from Scotland and as an engineer was valuable for
with what was needed in the Forest Service.
BH:
Right. When I say he was an engineer, he had some training in the use of engineering
equipment. And he wasn’t a graduate from a college of engineering if they in fact had
those in that day. This would be before 1905.
BM:
Right.
BH:
But he was skilled enough that he was a Beaver County Engineer. So he was selected;
and back in those days I understand that Gifford Pinchot played a role in the selection of
that first cadre that came in. So my grandfather was known quite widely as a ‘Pinchot
Man’. I think Pinchot actually made a contact with him in those early days of Forester
Service. My grandfather . . . we’re really talking about surveying boundaries of the
National Forest. You understand, Barbara, I am assuming some of this stuff because he
never told me. But I do know that he surveyed a lot of the boundaries of the National
Forest when they were first selected.
BM:
Was it mostly down in the southern Utah area then?
BH:
Well, it, most of it was in the Southern Utah area. And I think that was a skill that got
him involved in the Forest Service. He stayed, my grandfather, stayed with the forest
service until 1913, and during that period of time he was a supervisor of the Beaver
National Forest, which was headquartered in Beaver [Utah] and that’s where he lived.
Later the Fillmore National Forest headquartered in Fillmore, Utah, was added to the
Beaver National Forest. He became supervisor of the two forests. Then later on in 1913
they added those two forests to the Face Lake National Forest, which was headquartered
in Richfield, Utah.
BM:
Ok.
BH:
And they asked grandfather to be supervisor of that forest and move to Richfield. He told
them that with 12 children he couldn’t make it on a supervisor’s wage, which was very
small. And he said at Beaver “I have a little farm where I keep the boys busy. They raise
a lot of our food and get our wood that we used to heat the house and so forth.” So he
resigned from the Forest Service and he went back to his job as County Engineer for
Beaver County and that was in 1913.
BM:
Ok. So your dad grew up the child of a Forest Service family also?
BH:
Yeah he did. And my father William Miller Hurst he joined the Forest Service in 1910,
after he passed the rangers examination. He was stationed on the Dixie and Powell
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�National Forests. He worked about 38-39 years in the Forest Service and retired—in I
think he retired in 1948 or [19]49.
BM:
And he was mostly in Southern Utah. You said he was in the area of Parowan,
Panguitch?
BH:
He was District Ranger in Parowan, Utah when I was born. Then about 18 months later
he was transferred to Panguitch, Utah. And he lived his career out in Panguitch, Utah.
But while he was there he was ranger on three different Ranger Districts; they transferred
him around.
BM:
So your love for forest, the Forest Service, the outdoors, is in your genes.
BH:
It is. I think that’s right.
BM:
For many generations. Now with your, with that kind of experience, was there any other
choice, did you have any other fields of interest? Because I thought I read something
about a medical possibility somewhere along the way.
BH:
No.
BM:
No, ok.
BH:
No, that was never in my plans. However, my oldest son, in fact both my sons started out
in the school of natural resources up in Logan. Neither of them stayed though, in that
field. The elder son, I think spent 2 or 3 years at school forestry up in Logan. And the
younger son has spent 1 or 2 years in that field. And the oldest son went into biology, so
that he’d qualify for dental school or medical school. The other son worked for the Forest
Service a couple of years while he was going to school of Natural Resources, but he quit
that and thought there was a brighter future in Computer Science. So he went into
Computer Science and that’s where he makes his living.
BM:
Probably a good choice.
BH:
Yeah. He worked for Hewlett-Packard. And he lives here in Salt Lake City.
BM:
Ok, so you have mentioned two sons. One that’s a dentist in Bend, Oregon another that is
at Hewlett-Packard. Are there other children?
BH:
I have three other children. I have a daughter who is second child in my family of five.
And she lives east of here in a town near Heber, Utah, [called] Midway. She’s a graduate
of Weber State College [now Weber University] and she put in a career in Education.
Most of her career was in the public schools. She became an Assistant Superintendent of
the Utah County School District. And then she left that job and went and taught at BYU
for three or four years before she retired.
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�BM:
Ok. And she’s number two.
BH:
Yeah.
BM:
So number three?
BH:
I was going to tell you a little more about number two. She was…
BM:
What’s her name?
BH:
Her name’s Kathleen. She married a fellow named Hughes. She was very active in the
Mormon Church and she was selected by the president of the Church to be the 1st
counselor to the President of the Relief Society—that’s the woman’s organization. And
she served a five year stint as 1st counselor to the president of the Relief Society and that
really placed her on the General Board they call it, and is a top level administration. You
may know more about this than I do?
BM:
I don’t know that much about it so…
BH:
It was really quite a special calling for her. And then number four.
BM:
Oh wait, we missed number three. Who’s the third in line?
BH:
Oh yeah, number three. Number three is another daughter and her name is Linda. And
she married a man named Bryant Nelson. He was a Utah State graduate. And they live in
Hewitt, Texas near Waco. Both of them work in retail business. I’m not sure the name of
the people they work? Bryant works for a big store complex in Texas, it’s similar to
Walgreens (Walgreens would be here). His wife works in a business that supports that
group. I think her job is setting up displays in the store around the country.
BM:
She must be very creative. And then number Four?
BH:
Four is another daughter and she is another graduate of Utah State.
BM:
A lot of Aggies here. That’s great. [Bells chime]
BH:
Yeah, there’s four Aggies.
BM:
And her name?
BH:
Her name is Helen. She married a fellow named Tom McKay. She teaches school in
Edmond, Oklahoma. Her husband just retired from the Fish and Wildlife Service. He was
a biologist.
BM:
And so number five.
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�BH:
Number five is a son Carl.
BM:
BH:
That’s Carl? [pointing to a picture]
His name is Carl Johansen. And he’s in computer science.
BM:
That’s the computer person.
BH:
Yeah and he’s at Hewlett-Packard.
BM:
Well, from what I’ve read in your memoirs, these names are going to come back through
because I think it was your first, now where’s your first son? What was his name, the
dentist in Bend [Oregon]?
BH:
His name is William, William Johansen.
BM:
I think there’s a horse story somewhere along the way that we want to hear, about one of
his horses.
BH:
Yeah. He’s got all kinds of horses.
[Stop tape]
BM:
Alright, so we have the children, so how about your wife?
BH:
My wife was living in Grantsville, Utah. Her name was Emma Johansen. But everyone
called her Dolly. She went by that name her entire life. I met her when I was working on
the Wasatch National Forest out in Tooele County. I spent four, parts of four years, out
there and became acquainted with her and married her in 1941. She was with me 41 years
before she passed away of liver cancer, which took her fast.
BM:
So you mentioned the nickname Dolly. Do you know how she got that name?
BH:
I don’t really know how she got that name except that, you know family stories. She
came from a family of, first place her dad was an immigrant from Scotland [thinking,
correcting self] Sweden. From Sweden, he was a Swede. And he married, he wound up in
northern Utah and how he found her [Dolly’s mother] out in Grantsville I don’t know, but
he did and they were married oh about 1905 or] 6 I think. They had seven children and
my wife was the last one; she was the 7th. The story they say about her, about the name
Dolly, is that her mother was so glad to see this little girl come into the family that she
called her “My Dolly.”
BM:
Oh that’s sweet. So were all the other siblings’ brothers?
BH:
Oh there was one girl up near the front. One big sister that was about the 2nd one in the
family I think and then Dolly wound up being the 7th.
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�BM:
Five brothers to grow up with.
BH:
Yeah, five brothers.
BM:
Ok so what we have here is we have Swedish descendants and we also have Scottish
descendants. You said that your, just to finish up this side in the family, your grandfather
came over from Scotland. And do you know any geography in how he got to Utah? How
did he come in?
BH:
Yeah I do. He came with his parents, my grandfather Hurst, when he was about 18-19
years old. He came to Utah as a Mormon convert with his mother and dad and two
sisters. When they reached the United States the church [Church of Latter Day Saints] of
course, met them, I guess at New York, and they sent them to Utah. They sent them here
to Salt Lake City; there was a mother and father and the one son and two sisters.
BM:
How did they travel?
BH:
When they got to New York I think they traveled by train. Then when they got to Salt
Lake City the Church sent them to Beaver County. I say Beaver County because they sent
them to a little place that was just under settlement then, Greenville, I think they called it.
And my grandfather, he did quite a bit of education and he was picked up right away to
teach school. And that’s where he met my grandmother. She also came from parents who
immigrated as Mormon converts to the Church. And she in fact, she was one of his
students for awhile. They were just two years in age that separated them and they were
married and they had a family of 12 children.
BM:
So a family of 12. And he’s the one that eventually becomes then the engineer.
BH:
Well, he was the one that could do engineering work. Now I don’t know how much
training he had had in it but you know training in those days was a lot different than it is
today. And for doctors it is also. But he raised a family of 12 children which is a big
family.
BM:
It is.
BH:
My mother was raised in Panguitch, Utah. She came from a family of 12 children also.
Her name was Katie May Daly; that’s where I get my middle name. She was a school
teacher in southern Utah. She got her education in Cedar City, what is now the College of
Southern Utah [Southern Utah University], but in those days it was just a two year
institution. She met my dad who was a forest ranger in the Parowan/Panguitch area and
they were married in 1914. They raised three children which I’ve already described. My
mother came from a family of also 12 children.
BM:
Those are big families in those days.
BH:
So we had lots of relatives.
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�BM:
Oh, I’ll bet. We’ll we are almost finished with the end of the tape so let’s stop here and
then we will go on to the next section.
BH:
Ok.
[Tape 1 of 2: B]
BM:
Ok, we are continuing on tape one side two with Bill Hurst. It’s just after a lunch with
Fred and some of his other friends and we are going to continue on with Bill’s [story],
how he got to USU, the influence of USU in his early training, and also within those
college years some of the work that he did in the summertime, which was very important
for later on. So Bill, would you tell us a little bit about how you decided to go USU and
some of your influences there?
BH:
I think that I had in my head a long time before I went to college that I was going to Utah
State Agricultural College. The reason I say that is that I don’t remember ever thinking
about going to either BYU or the University of Utah. Why I didn’t think of that I don’t
know, but I didn’t. I always looked forward to going to Utah State. I think one of the
reasons I was attracted to Utah State was that quite a few of the young foresters who
would show up on the Dixie National, the Powel National Forest, the area’s where I
lived, had been graduates of Utah State. And I admired them and the work they were
doing. I think I mentioned earlier that I had engineering in mind and I did right up until
almost the last moment too. I even took engineering classes that I didn’t need to take,
because of the influence [chimes] of the Dean of the School of Engineering, George
Clyde. But nonetheless, I wound up in Forestry and majored in Range Management.
BM:
Now were there some influential people as far as either professors or other folks that
[influenced you]?
BH:
There wasn’t any particular person that got me interested in Utah State or forestry for that
matter. Although, looking back my dad and my granddad had an influence on me that I
can’t deny. Even though I didn’t look at it that way at the time, but they were both
foresters. And they loved the Forest Service and they just had to have an influence on the
choice I made. Although I had some very close relatives who had done very well in
engineering and they pointed me in that direction also. My dad’s younger brother,
Howard, he was an engineer out of the University of Utah, and did very well in life.
In the 1930s when I started to college, we were in a big depression in this country.
Thousands of men were out of work and jobs were very scarce, particularly in small
communities like Panguitch. So there weren’t many opportunities to find a job and so I
took a job with Hatch Brother Sheep Company in Panguitch, Utah. The first summer
which was 1934, which was the year I graduated out of high school, they used me mainly
in their fields and with their haying crops and irrigation and to herd their buck sheep.
Their buck sheep were kept away from the female sheep all year long until the fall time
when they were turned with the ewes for breeding season. Somebody had to look after
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�the bucks during the summer when they were grazing on local ranges. To make sure they
were in at night and not straying. So that was one part of my job, but hay and irrigation
comprised a big part of my work.
BM:
Now let me ask you a question on that because that sounds different than some things that
I am familiar with. But you are saying that as part of a sheep range grazing, they are out
during the day but then they are brought into an area at night?
BH:
Yeah, the bucks. That’s the buck sheep. The reason that’s important is that if they get out
they might wander off to where there’s a herd of sheep; then get into the ewes’ too early
and they have to be pretty exacting on when they do the breeding because that affects
when they shear and when the lambs are born and when they do the docking of the lambs
and everything else.
BM:
So it’s very timed?
BH:
Yeah it’s very timed. In fact it was almost the exact date every year when they turned the
bucks with the ewes’ and then the lambs would all come about the same time.
BM:
What time was that?
BH:
Well, the lambs would start to come in the last of February the first of March. It was what
they call ‘range lambing’ in those days. The lambs weren’t, I mean the ewes’ weren’t put
in sheds or barns to have their lambs. They were, they dropped the lambs right out in the
open range. They couldn’t have a lot of real severe weather that would freeze the little
lambs. So it was a pretty exact science as far as breeding was concerned. And that’s why
they had to keep control of the bucks. Nonetheless, I wound up looking after the bucks a
part of the year and helping with the hay crops and the irrigation of the alfalfa fields with
the Hatch brother’s sheep company.
The first summer after one year of college, I went back and they put me out on the range
with the herd of sheep. And I spent the month of June what they call lambing the sheep.
And that’s when the ewes’ were having their babies. By the first of July the lambing was
over and they went through a process of two or three days they’d take the lambs and all
the sheep to a corral. They would dock the lambs, which meant cut the tails off of all of
them. If they had ear mark, they do marked the lambs. They would castrate the males and
put a brand on all the ewes; put a fresh brand on all the ewes. And that took a couple
three days. And after that process was over the sheep would go to the summer range. The
summer range that I was on for two years was, most of it, was quite a distance from a
road. I’d have to take a pack horse along with my bed and groceries and I had a saddle
horse to ride. And of course I had a dog; it was a wonderful companion
BM:
And was that Pal?
BH:
That’s Pal. I can’t believe how much help he was. I was sleeping in a tent way out alone.
Well most of the time, I never worried a minute about him coming in the tent. Pal slept
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�right along the foot of my bed. And if anything happened he’d growl and wake me up.
And he did that quite frequently when a coyote came near the sheep.
BM:
BH:
So some of the hazards would be coyote, what else would be worried about?
Bear. We were worried about bear. However, I never had a bear get in my sheep. But I
did worry about it because that occasionally happened and usually a bear would inflict
big time damage on the lambs. They seemed to kill them just for the fun of killing them
you know.
BM:
Ok, not necessarily eating them
BH:
No they weren’t eating them. The coyotes would just have a little bit. But usually a
coyote would eat it, eat the lamb or drag it off some place.
I thought of a story. One night in the middle of the night my dog had waken me with a
deep growl and I picked up the lamp and put my clothes on and he kept walking outside a
little ways and then he would come back in the tent. The hair on his back was standing up
and he had this deep growl which I seldom heard him make. I thought for sure a bear was
out there in the sheep; although the sheep weren’t moving. You can tell when they move
because the bells will tinkle. The bells that were on the sheep—[the ones] that had bells
on them. And they weren’t tinkling which indicated that the sheep weren’t moving. But
old Pal continued to bark and walk ahead of me a little bit and then come back. And that
hair was still standing up on his neck which indicated something pretty bad.
BM:
Were you nervous?
BH:
I was quite nervous. I took my 30-30 rifle. And I walked down the trail. We were a long
ways from the road. I went down the trail and this dog would walk ahead of me a little
ways and then come back and then walk ahead, come back, all with that deep growl.
Finally, about a mile from camp, I heard a faint call say “Bill. Bill.” and then I knew
someone was trying to find me. But I knew it wasn’t a bear. [laughing] I was relieved in
that respect, but I was more concerned because what in the world would somebody be
looking for me at 2 o’clock in the morning? And I thought “my folks.” I thought
something’s happened to my dad or mother or my sister. And they’re trying to find me.
What in the world would they be out here in this time of night if it wasn’t something
serious. And so that made everything else like bears, coyotes, seem trifle.
So I kept walking down the trail and the voice came louder and louder and finally we
met. And it was a friend of mine from Utah State University that had a summer job with
the forest up at that country. He had been out marking timber. He left early in the
morning from Panguitch Lake and went out to mark timber. He broke down, his car
broke down on the way home and he knew that I was in the vicinity. His name was Bill
Thompson. Finally, I ran into him and he told me his story. Well we moseyed back up to
the tent and both of us crawled in the bed and went to sleep. And got up the next morning
and had breakfast after the sheep were settled. Then I took him, I had a mule and a horse
there and we saddled both [chimes] of those animals up and went back to the highway
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�where his car was. And it still wouldn’t run. So we waited until a car came through and
he got a ride to Panguitch Lake. And I went back to the sheep herd.
BM:
Now, I want to go back to a part of that story because you made a comment about the
sheep having bells. But only certain ones had bells. Who do you decide to put the bell
on?
BH:
Ya know, I don’t know. I never put bells on any sheep myself. They were already on the
sheep when I took over, so I can’t tell you that. But I do know that bells were very
important for two reasons. One is the dingling would tell you where the sheep were. And
then if, I think they had a bell on about a 1 in every 50 sheep. And there were 1200 sheep,
so you would have 24 bells. And in addition to that they kept so many black sheep in the
herd. And the black sheep were kept in the herd to facilitate counting them. It would be
difficult you know, for anyone to count 1200 sheep plus the lambs and there’d be more
than 1200 lambs because a ewe usually has two lambs. So there would be 1200 plus. But
these belled sheep and the black sheep are what are known as counters. So when the
herder brings the sheep in to bed them at night, he’ll count. He’ll count the blacks and
he’ll count the bells if he can do it. Sometimes you can’t count the bells because they
might be in lie down so you don’t hear a tinkle. But you have the bells that you count
sometimes. But you always count the blacks. If you have say 24 blacks in the herd and
you count 24 blacks you can be reasonably certain you got your herd. If you are missing
one, you better go look, hunt. You know you got a job the next day, trying to find the
other black.
BM:
So it’s kind of like sampling.
BH:
Yeah it is; it’s the same thing. And so that’s the reason they have blacks and bells. And of
course the bells tell you where the sheep are too. They are valuable in that respect.
BM:
Interesting. So these were, this was the Hatch Company was your summer job. Was this
each summer that you went home from college?
BH:
I’d go right to the sheep when I got home, maybe stayed home for overnight or
something like that. They were anxious for me to come because they were in the middle
of lambing and they needed the [help], you know if I was going to work for them all
summer they needed the help right now.
BM:
But you were put out with the herd and you were responsible once the lambing was done
and some of the other things that you talked about with castrating and some of the other
jobs. Then you were put out with the herd in a meadow?
BH:
Oh no, not the meadow. It was just mountains just like these mountains.
BM:
So tell us about the landscape you covered.
BH:
The what?
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�BM:
The landscape that you were in.
BH:
Well, it was a mountainous landscape, there was lots of aspen, lots of pine trees, quite a
lot of spruce and fir and there was some quite large and deep canyons. Mammoth Creek
went right through the area. It was well isolated. The Hatch brothers had three herds and
one herd was on the south of me, one herd was one the north of me. The herd on the north
of me was headquartered in what they called Castle Valley and that had a road running
through it. And the sheep foreman had a sheep wagon there and he’d bring his wife and
his little girls up to stay with him during the summer time. And he would move that
camp. It was a big valley, a big, great huge valley, that had plenty of area that were the
sheep could graze all summer long. So he’d be there and take care of the sheep. But he’d
be home every night. And once a week at least he’d ride over to the camp I was in, and
the camp that my partner was in, the same man both years, was in the other camp. And
he’d ride over to make sure we had salt; we had to salt the sheep at least every two days.
BM:
And why is that?
BH:
Well, they just needed salt. A lactating female will die if she doesn’t have salt.
BM:
So it was just a common nutrient that they need.
BH:
Yeah, well, that’s an ingredient of milk you know. And milk cow you have to have salt
before her all the time because, as I said, if they don’t have salt they die. So he had to
make sure we had salt every couple of days and he’d come over at least once a week and
sometimes more often and bring us salt. And he’d bring us groceries. And on each trip
that he’d make to our camp he’d say “what do you need now for the next week in the way
of groceries” and you’d always have an inventory ready for him.
BM:
So what kind of things did you order?
BH:
Well, they were quite limited. They didn’t include candy bars or anything like that. We
made sour dough bread. That was made out flour and baking soda and put a little sugar in
it. And this fermented flour and sugar thing and you know what sour dough is?
BM:
Yes, I love it.
BH:
Yeah I love it too. That was a basic thing and we always had bacon. And they tried to
keep us in eggs. And we had, we ate lots of beans and we ate lots of rice. Rice and
raisins was a favorite dish.
BM:
A hot dish?
BH:
Well, it could be either cold or hot. You’d cook the rice and put some raisins in it and
they’d swell up. You know. It made really a good dish, I still love it. Put a little salt in it
and usually it was cold. Then you’d put some canned milk on it and we’d always have
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�canned milk. Oh it was good food; I loved it. I still love it, cheaper food. And
occasionally we’d kill a mutton. They had a few, oh a mutton and they were males that
had been castrated and they’d let them live over a year so they were a year old or better.
When we would kill a mutton the camp herder would usually split it three ways: he’d
take part of it and give the other herder part of it and me part of it so we could eat it
before it spoiled.
BM:
Because I was going to say you would have to store that some way.
BH:
Well that was kind of a unique thing too; we used to put it in a seamless sack in the day
time and rolled it up in the bed. Then at night we’d hang it up. Have a rope on it that was
up over the limb of a tree if there was a tree around, and hang it up above the fly line and
flies don’t go way high. We’d drag it up and let it hang out all night. And the nights were
at that elevation, 8,000 to 9,000 feet, would be quite cool. Then bring it down in the day
time and put it in a seamless sack and wrap it up in the bed again. So it would go in the
bed quite cold and stay pretty cool all day. We had good mutton to eat. And I don’t know,
my mother used to send me up cookies once in a while when somebody was coming in
my direction.
BM:
What kind of cookies?
BH:
Oh she was great on the sugar cookies. And I don’t know if she ever made chocolate chip
or not. I don’t remember. But I’d like that. And dad would bring some apples once in a
while. We ate pretty good at the sheep camp.
One of the owners—it was three brothers that owned these sheep. And one of the owners
had a son named Delosh, and once in a while his dad would bring him up and let him stay
over four or five days with me. He was quite a lot younger than I, but he’d come up and
have a good time. Incidentally, he called me here not a week or two ago, but a month or
so ago. He was up here with his sister. And we thrashed over the old sheep herder days.
BM:
What fun to catch up like that!
BH:
Yeah, he lives in Canada. Well, that’s about the way the sheep herding went. I had that
job for two summers. In the 3rd summer I started working for the Forest Service.
[Tape 2 of 2: A]
BM:
This is tape two side one, April 16th [2008] and we are here with Bill Hurst continuing
our interview and we are talking about sheep herding as a summer job in college. Bill,
you mentioned two years with sheep herding and then in the summer of [19]36 is your
forestry camp?
BH:
I had herded sheep that summer [1936] and the summer camp, the first summer camp that
Utah State University forestry school held was in 1936, the fall of 1936. It was about a 6
to 8 weeks camp; I’ve forgotten the exact length. It started about the first of September.
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�BM:
So I had to leave the herd, sheep herding job, a little early that year to get up to Logan
and go to summer camp. Then, immediately after summer camp of course, school started.
So I entered my junior year of college.
Would you tell us a little bit about summer camp since some of us don’t have the
experience of that.
BH:
Well, it was really quite an enjoyable time as far as I was concerned. I think there were
35 to 40 young men there. They had a wonderful cook, a man and wife team and their
name was Cooley: Mr. and Mrs. Cooley. He was an excellent cook and so was she. And
she was a motherly type lady; she was appreciated by all the boys you know. They liked
to visit with her and tell her their troubles and their experiences as well. It was a very
helpful camp also because we were out in the field and we were doing things that we’d
probably have to do if we went to work for the Forest Service; like survey pieces of land
and put out forest fires. Radios were just being adopted that were two way, two-way
radios. We learned how to operate the two-way radio and we learned how to mark timber.
BM:
So was that timber cruising?
BH:
Well ‘cruising’ is where you estimate the volume of the timber. We did that also yeah.
Then we learned which trees out of the stand you would mark in different species of
timber. Where we had access to different species of timber, we’d actually go out and
select the tree that we thought should be cut and mark it somewhere. We didn’t do any
cutting or anything like that. We just learned which trees out of a stand should be cut,
depending on their new crown and how large they were and how thick they were, and cut
them so that you’d release the smaller trees and get the old trees out that weren’t putting
on any further fiber. So in many respects it started preparing us for the work that we
could expect to do in the years ahead, if we were in forestry. We also learned how to
estimate utilization on grasses and forbs and learn which of those plants cattle and sheep
would prefer. Just a general review of Forest Service activities, out on the range, in the
forest.
BM:
Can we go back to when you say estimate utilization of the range. Explain that to a nonrange person when you say that.
BH:
here are several ways they do that. One is, and the most accurate job anyway but one that
takes time, is to have a cage out at strategic locations, and they called these key areas.
That’s key areas where the livestock generally go to graze. Have cages out there that
prevent the livestock from eating that grass, [like exclosures to keep animals out of a
particular area]. These might be 3 feet in diameter, sometimes they have permanent
fenced areas that are about a rod square: 16½ feet square. A lot of those are put in
permanently so they are never utilized. But they use a lot of cages out that are just
annually put down. And then the animals will eat around them. The most accurate way is
to take a pair of scales out and clip the residue on the outside down to what you think is
proper level and weigh. Then clip the similar area inside the cage and weigh that. And
compare the two and you get a percentage utilization that way. If you do this enough you
can make fairly accurate estimates of utilization just by walking through the country.
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�When I was ranger I did very little clipping, I’d just go out and look at a piece of country
and could tell almost as well by estimating how much was gone. Because I knew that the
heavy stuff would be on the bottom and the lighter stuff would be on the top. And if they
take it down within two inches you know they haven’t gotten half of it yet. And so you
do a lot of estimating. But that’s the way they determine plant utilization. A lot of people
say “well that couldn’t be very accurate” but I disagree, it is quite accurate. Livestock
people and the forest ranger, whoever’s doing work for the Forest Service, they get pretty
good at estimating the percent of forage that’s gone from an area. Each vegetative type
usually has a maximum and a minimum standard. So if they get down to the minimum
standard you know they’re taking too much. And the maximum maybe they’re not taking
as much as they could. That’s the way she’s done.
BM:
Now this is the college of forestry at the time?
BH:
Yes.
BM:
And you were at forestry summer camp, so is there also an area [of study] that is helping
you look at watershed or wildlife or some of the other aspects that I think of today that
are part of the college. Where was that kind of thinking?
BH:
We took classes in that. The only difference, well by the time we got to the period we are
talking about we had a division, I mean a School of Wildlife Management and a School
of Range Management as well as a School of Forestry. Now they got a school of
Recreation and other things and Watershed Management and so forth. But when I started
school in 1934-35, we just had the School of Forestry. It was headed over by the head of
the School of Forestry by the name T.G. Taylor, doctor. We had Paul Dunn, he taught the
forestry classes. And Dr. [can’t remember his name] oh dear, anyway we had a fellow
that taught range management and he also taught dendrology, like the study of trees. And
he taught some classes in—[remembers name of professor] Raymond Becraft. He was the
other professor. Those three fellows pretty well handled the School of Forestry which
existed in those days. Sometimes they’d get graduate students to come in and help, like
teach some of the classes. You’d go to the botany building to learn about plants, identify
plants and all that stuff. And you’d go to soils building, where they specialized in soils to
learn about—to take your soils classes. So it was a pretty well rounded out program, even
before they divided the School of Forestry into these three divisions. When we got Dr.
Rasmussen for wildlife, he created a Wildlife School that was just one of the best in the
country. And Dr. Stoddard: Ely Stoddard, he set up the school of Range Management
which also was widely recognized as being an excellent school. That’s the one that I
chose to graduate in. Since then of course they’ve expanded that and they have this
School of Watershed Management now. And they have some others.
BM:
The wild lands, which range and forestry are incorporated into that, and wildlife is in that
also.
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�BH:
Yeah. That’s kind of like it used to be when I first joined, they were teaching them all and
they were all meshed in together.
BM:
Well when you talk about that several times in your book, you talk about the importance
of understanding the inner relationships.
BH:
Yeah, you have to do that.
BM:
Some of it was from a predator-prey standpoint. And some of the others were just the
watershed standpoint with grazing, grazing management and watershed systems.
BH:
The watershed condition is the key to good management. If you don’t have control over
your watershed you don’t have good management on the land. So they give a lot more
attention to watersheds now than they used to. Although watershed has been important,
you know that’s what you’re talking about when we talk about all these flash floods that
came off these mountains. That was just watershed management.
BM:
And that was a strong part of what was going on in the landscapes around you that you’re
seeing as a student.
BH:
Yeah. All those big floods, and I say all of them, not all of them by any means, were
taking place during that period of time. Some of them were taking place during that
period of time. And they were terrific floods and, of course, they don’t happen as often
anymore as they used to happen. And that’s really because they have better watersheds.
BM:
So some of the places that were infected were like Ephraim and where else?
BH:
Well, there were a lot of them up on the Wasatch Front, between Ogden—well let me
see. It was that country—it was north of Salt Lake City and between there and Weber
Canyon.
BM:
Layton area?
BH:
No, but maybe Bountiful and through there. There were a lot of those floods taking place
down around Manti and through that country where the Great Basin forestry range and
experiment station, through there.
BM:
And that would be Ephraim right at the bottom of that canyon. Now at that time also with
the camp experience, how many students are we talking about being enrolled? What was
the class size like at summer camp? [chimes]
BH:
Oh at summer camp? Well, I think I mentioned that earlier and I’ll probably contradict it
now. But, I don’t remember the number I gave you before but, I think it we had around
40 students up there the first year.
BM:
So you’re camping in the old CCC buildings that are there.
Logan
Canyon
Oral
History
Project:
William Daly Hurst (1)
Page
16
�BH:
Right.
BM:
And you are using quite a large area of Logan Canyon, of the upper Logan Canyon, are
you using primarily right around the camp?
BH:
Primarily right around the camp; although we took excursions out from the camp,
different places. The University owns a big section of land up there. A lot of it was taking
place that was right behind the old CCC camp where we were staying. We’d hike up and
over the top of that hill and do a lot of our training work up right within, well, inside of
the camp.
BM:
Is that now called the Ted Daniels Forest?
BH:
Yeah I think it is.
BM:
Alright.
BH:
Yeah that’s it.
BM:
Were you at the University when Ted was there?
BH:
No. He came after. I used to have fun with Ted. He was ours for many years you know.
He was a really permanent fixture at the University. He was recognized and honored
quite a few times. I’d kid him once in a while and say “Yeah I remember when you
came.”
BM:
When he was a young guy.
BH:
Yeah. So I remember when he came, and I can too. Yeah I was graduated before he
came.
BM:
And he made that one hill famous. What did he call it? Benchmark Hill?
BH:
Yeah, that’s Benchmark Hill. You’re right. Well, the hill’s named after him now isn’t it?
Ted Daniels Forest Hill. Yeah he’s quite a guy. He did a lot for the school of forestry too.
BM:
Bill, you’ve been talking about your USU experience and summer sheep herding and
your forestry camp experience. We are going to finish up for today, so would you
summarize for us the importance, the experience, some of the ways that USU prepared
you for your first job in entering into a profession in forestry and range?
BH:
I started to work for the Forest Service in the summer of 1937. That of course was before
I graduated. I worked until the latter part of September that year and then I returned to the
Utah State University to graduate in the spring of 1938. I went back into in June of 1938,
I went back into the same job that I’d left the previous fall.
Logan
Canyon
Oral
History
Project:
William Daly Hurst (1)
Page
17
�BM:
And what job was that?
BH:
That was called administrative guard on the Grantsville division of the Wasatch National
Forest. It’s out west of Salt Lake City towards Wendover. I was on Stansbury Mountain,
which was an isolated mountain standing out in the desert, but it runs from lake level
which is about 4200 feet to 10,000 some odd feet in the air above timberline. It’s a
magnificent long mountain; it has all of the life zones clear from, oh south desert, desert
shrub to tundra, above timberline. So it was a wonderful place to work. There was no
timber to cut on the forest, there was timber, but they didn’t cut any of it except few poles
and things like that. But it was a big range management job and the country was alive
with deer. So I gained a lot of experience in range management and wildlife management
while I was on that district.
After I returned in 1938 they assigned the Vernal Division of the Uinta National Forest to
me and it later became a Ranger District. A few years after I left, they consolidated this
Vernal Division and this Grantsville Division, which I’d been on. They consolidated
those together and made a ranger district out at Tooele, Utah. Since that time, it’s been a
part of the Wasatch National Forest. Now I understand they’re going to put all three of
those forests together.
BM:
Right. The Cache, Wasatch, Uinta.
BH:
Yeah. So I enjoyed another three years on those units. I should say however that there
were periods when I would be laid off. During the next three years there were periods
that they’d just run out of money to pay someone. And when that did happen they would
put me over on the main part of the Wasatch National Forest out east of Salt Lake up
around Kamas and Evanston and Granddaddy Lakes and [I would] work mainly in
timber. Selling lots of timber crops in those days: that’s mining crops.
Then there were huge insect control job projects going on. I worked on those and became
superintendant of a 200 men crew up in insect control one year. In fact, I had that job
when I got my permanent employment with the Forest Service.
BM:
What kind of insect control were you doing?
BH:
It was the mountain pine beetle. It was in lodgepole pine well, mainly lodgepole pine.
There were tremendous attacks and killed a lot of lodgepole pines. But they’re still going
on you know? Colorado’s complaining all the time now about insects taking all their
trees. I’ve about reached a conclusion that that isn’t too bad. We can’t use it; the forest
has to turn over and that’s the way that nature has for turning them over.
BM:
Uh huh.
BH:
The only trouble, and the thing that bothers lots of people, is they’re burning up a
valuable resource that you can make gasoline out of now. And then big fires get into
Logan
Canyon
Oral
History
Project:
William Daly Hurst (1)
Page
18
�them, into this dead timber, and sweeps out of the dead timber and into live timber, you
notice those downsides to it, too. But on the other hand, the forest is turning over. We just
never have been able to use all that timber, no matter how much or how badly we’d like
to see it utilized. You got to have a place to use it. And then, I’m jumping ahead quite a
few years now, but when I was supervisor of the Ashley National Forest we sold the
largest crop timber sale that was ever made in the United States. We were so proud of
that. We thought, boy this is really going to make an inroad into all this old rich
lodgepole pine. You know those trees that don’t grow too big in diameter but they grow
up straight and you can cut a lot of crops out of them. Well, we just got that timber sold at
a good price—not only the largest sell but it brought the biggest amount of money. They
got to bidding for us and they went way high, the timber operators did. Within ten months
they had invented what they call the screw bolt process, I mean a plate screw process.
Where they take a big old square piece of heavy iron and they’d run a couple of holes
through that then they’d put that up in the top of the mining shaft and screw bolts through
these holes and up into the crevices of the coal. Then [they] take huge wenches, they had
down there, and tighten them up and put that plate right up solid against the coal mine,
the top of the coal mine. That protects it as well as those mining props were doing and a
lot cheaper. The bottom fell out of the [timber] crop sales. People who had bid these big
high prices, we had to make some adjustments and do it fast. And cancel a sale under,
you know you’re not supposed to do that really, but we were forced to do it. Like when I
say we were forced, what could a poor guy do? He can’t sell his crops.
BM:
It lost it’s economic value.
BH:
Yeah, well, yeah it lost it’s economic value. Well, that only compounded the problem that
we had and have an overabundance of this over mature stuff. So what are you going to do
with it?
[End of first interview]
Logan
Canyon
Oral
History
Project:
William Daly Hurst (1)
Page
19
�
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/LoganCanyon/id/33">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/LoganCanyon/id/33</a>
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Hosted by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
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Transcription equipment: Power Player Transcription Software: Executive Communication Systems
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2012-10-17
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Title
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William Daly Hurst interviews, 16 April 2008 & 11 February 2009, and transcriptions
Description
An account of the resource
In Bill Hurst's first interview, he discusses his experiences with the Forest Service: (father and grandfather both worked for the U.S. Forest Service in Utah), including Hurst's service in the Logan Ranger District and the Cache National Forest in Logan Canyon. Then in the second interview he shares his experiences growing up in Panguitch, Utah, where his father was the forest ranger his experience working for a sheep outfit, schooling at Utah State Agricultural College, and work with the Forest Service, including in Logan Canyon.
Creator
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Hurst, William Daly, 1915-
Contributor
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Middleton, Barbara
Box, Thadis W.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Hurst, William Daly, 1915---Interviews
Hurst, William Daly, 1915---Family
Hurst, William Daly, 1915---Career in Forestry
Logan Ranger District (Utah)
United States. Forest Service--Officials and employees
United States. Forest Service
Hurst, William Radkin
Hurst, William Miller
Forest rangers--Utah--Biography
Mormon converts--Utah--Biography
Utah State University--Alumni and alumnae--Interviews
Sheepherding--Utah
Utah State University. Forestry Field Station Camp--Anecdotes
Forests and forestry--Fieldwork--Utah--Logan Canyon
Forests and forestry--Study and teaching--Utah--Logan
Utah State Agricultural College. School of Forestry
Watershed management--Study and teaching--Utah--Logan
Range management--Utah
Forest reserves--Utah
Cache National Forest (Utah and Idaho)
Becraft, Raymond J.
Benchmark Hill (Logan Canyon, Utah)
Grazing--Utah
Watershed restoration--Utah--Citizen particiapation
Deseret Land and Livestock Company (Utah)
Public lands--Utah
Wellsville Mountain Watershed Protective Association
Forests and forestry--Multiple use--Utah--Citizen participation
Benson, Ezra Taft
Roads--Utah--Logan Canyon--Design and construction
Roads--Utah--Logan Canyon--Public opinion
Grazing--Cache National Forest (Utah and Idaho)
Grazing--Research--Utah--Logan Canyon
Utah State University. School of Natural Resources--Research
Forest ecology--Utah--Logan Canyon
Range management--Utah--Logan Canyon
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Oral histories
Interviews
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Logan Canyon (Utah)
Cache County (Utah)
Iron County (Utah)
Beaver County (Utah)
Dixie National Forest (Utah)
Panguitch (Utah)
Utah
United States
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
2000-2009
21st century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Logan Canyon Land Use Management Oral History Collection, FOLK COLL 42 Box 3 Fd. 4 & 5
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
Inventory for the Logan Canyon Land Use Management Oral History Collection can be found at: <a href="http://library.usu.edu/folklo/folkarchive/FolkColl42.php">http://library.usu.edu/folklo/folkarchive/FolkColl42.php</a>
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Fife Folklore Archives Curator, phone (435) 797-3493
Is Part Of
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Logan Canyon Land Use Management Oral History Collection
Type
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Sound
Format
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audio/mp3
Identifier
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FolkColl42bx3fd5WilliamDalyHurst
Date Created
Date of creation of the resource.
6 April 2008
11 February 2009
Date Modified
Date on which the resource was changed.
2008-04-06
2009-02-11
Is Version Of
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Logan Canyon Reflections
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/b3d77f928b392c419f19e10c8cf60e28.pdf
a141affb023f955461494ecabc4f4f5b
PDF Text
Text
TESTIMONY OF REP. JAMES V. HANSEN
BEFORE THE TRANSPORTATION SUBCOMITTEE
OF THE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE
APRIL 26, 1990
Mr. Chairman, in addition to my oral presentation
before the committee, I appreciate the opportunity I have to
submit this written statement for the committee record.
On behalf of the constituents of the First District
of Utah I am asking along with leaders from the state of Utah
for $85,000,000 for the completion of upgrading
u.s.
89
to a
limited access expressway design.
The reasons that we have come before the committee
to seek funding for
u.s.
89, between Burke Lane in
Farmington, Utah, and Harrison Boulevard in Weber County,
utah, are that the highway is excessively dangerous, the
volume of traffic is too large for the size of the highway,
and the local and state governments simply can/t afford to
pay for the upgrade of
u.s.
89.
U.S. 89 is located along the Wasatch Front in the
north-central part of Utah.
It functions as a transportation
link between Salt Lake city, Ogden, Hill Air Force Base, and
the surrounding area.
traffic.
I~
is a
It serves both local and commuter
designa~ed
route connecting Interstates 84
and 15 and is one of the only two north/south routes through
Weber and north Davis Counties.
As a young boy growing up in the area, I remember
riding my bicycle up this road.
The area was little more
�than fruit orchards and rural farm land.
since that time,
the area surrounding the road has developed into one of
Utah's fastest growinq population centers.
Traffic has
increased along the corridor approximately 135 percent since
This traffic increase has resulted from both an
1970.
increase in commuter traffic on
u.s.
89 and increased local
traffic traveling on and across the corridor.
OVer twenty years ago, the emerging safety and
conqestion problems of u.s.
89 were recognized, and the state
of utah petitioned for federal money to develop the road
an interstate.
that
into
The application was not approved because, at
time, the population and the traffic volumes on the road
did not meet Federal Highway Administration standards.
Since the recognition of the problem in the 1960 / s,
the population and traffic volumes have increased to make
u.s.
89 one of the most dangerous roads in the state.
Before
being elected to Congress, I served as an independent
insurance agent in the area, and
u.s.
paid the most out to those injured on
89 was always where I
u.s.
89.
I can/t begin
to enumerate on the number of deaths and serious accidents I
bad to attend to alonq this twelve mile stretch of road.
As
I speak to my constituents at home and in conversing with my
neighbors, I don't know of anyone who has not had a personal
friend or ' relative injured or killed because of U.S. 89.
To outline the situation,
u.s.
89 divides the
communities of Farmington, Fruit Heights, Kaysville, and
Layton.
The portions of these cities surrounding the highway
�are completely residential.
Over 125 streets and private
drives have access to the highway.
Presently, we have cars
turning left on and off of the road, and, with no controlled
access, you can ima9ine the safety implications.
While the
number of accidents are not abnormal for this type of road,
the heavy congestion and cross traffic have caused the number
of fatalities to be more than four times the normal rate.
To add to the problem, the highway is a major
connection route for trucks and automobile traffic between
Interstate 84 and Interstate 15.
There exists an alternate
route to using Interstate 84, but the severe 6% grades that
exist on I-80 through Parley's Canyon make using 1-84 the
logical route.
problem.
Heavy truck use has been a major safety
Requiring a truck going 55 mph to stop for a car
turninq left onto the highway is an obvious threat to
safety.
At the expense of over $100,000, a study was
conducted to find a solution to the problem.
The wasatch
Front Regional Council and the Utah Department of
Transportation initiated the
u.s.
89 Corridor study in
response to the operational and safety issues of the
Corridor.
The study included a comprehensive analysis of the
existing and future travel demands along
u.s.
89 and
concluded that the best solution is a limited access
expressway design.
Throughout the course of the study, local and state
opinion has been sought.
I am happy to say that at every
�level we have received support for the limited access
All local leaders responsible for cities
expressway design.
along the corridor have signed a petition of support.
In
addition, Governor Norman Bangerter, Senator Orrin Hatch, and
Senator 3ake Garn have expressed their strong support for the
highway_
According to other additional studies that have
been conducted, the cost for the federal government to solve
the problem by establishing an interstate would cost upwards
of
$l~O,OOO,ooo.
The estimated cost for the limited access
expressway design is $85,000,000.
Presently, the state of
Utah simply lacks the ability to fund the highway.
The Utah
State Department of Transportation estimates that given its
present level of funding, it would take well over 15 years to
finish the projeet.
The safety and congestion problems
continue to mount, and, if we do not move quickly, we will be
faced with further loss of life.
Mr. Chairman, in conclusion I would like to
reiterate my support for the effort of the state of Utah to
obtain $85 million to upgrade U.S. 89 in utah.
The safety
and congestion problems have become enormous and with a
growing population the situation will only get worse.
you again for permitting this testimony.
Thank
�
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1704">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1704</a>
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
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Title
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Testimony of Representative James V. Hansen before the transportation subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, April 26, 1990
Description
An account of the resource
Testimony of Representative James V. Hansen before the transportation subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, April 26, 1990, requesting funding for US 89 to alleviate the traffic congestion in more rural areas along the highway.
Creator
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Hansen, James V.
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States Highway 89
Roads Improvement--Utah
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1990-04-26
Spatial Coverage
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1990-1999
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Papers of Congressman James V. Hansen, 1970-2003, COLL MSS 351 Series I Box 85
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv82138">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv82138</a>
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
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Text
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application/pdf
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MSS351SerIBx85_Item_4.pdf
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/a3440fd76ae443b84495ffd7e8ea6a02.pdf
6ed807dc8dd185f886f381bad84c6c68
PDF Text
Text
I -
7
/
TESTIMONY OF CONGRESSMAN JAMES V. HANSEN
BEFORE THE TRANSPORTATION SUBCOMMITTEE
OF
THE
HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE
May 6, 1993
Chairman Carr
l
distinguished members of the Subcommittee,
I appreciate the opportunity I have to appear
Subcommittee.
b~fore
the
On behalf of the constituents of the First
District of Utah I am asking along with leaders from the state
of Utah for $73,600,000 for the continuation of completion of
upgrading U.S.
89 and $3,600,000 for the completion of a new
interchange on Interstate 15 (1-15).
The U.s. Highway B9 route extends approximately 12
mil~s
between the cities of Farmington and ogden.
Not only
does it provide the principal lihk between major Interstates
and these cities, but it is the main lina of transportation
between many smaller communities und their markets and
suppliers.
AdditionallYI
it is a principal connection between
a major Air FOrce installation, Hill Air Force Base, and the
rest of the country.
Last year Congress appropriated $2,400,000 to
continue conducting initial studies and engineering.
Th~
$2,400,000 is an initial portion of a larger, multi-year
appropriation initially requested by myself,
former Senator
�Jake Garn and Senator Orrin Hatch.
This project has been authorized through the Highway
Reauthorization Bill but for far less than is neQded to
complete the project.
The reasons that I have come before the
Committee to seek continued funding for U.S. 89, ·are that the
concerns with the highway continue to mUltiply as the highway
is excessively dangerous, the volume of traffic is too large
fer the size of the highway, and the local and state
governments simply cannot afford to pay for the upgrade of U.S.
89.
I am also asking that the committee appropriate
$3/000/000 for the completion of a new interchange on 1-15 at
Forest st. in Brigham City, utah.
Spending for the project has
been authorized at a level of $3,600,000 in the Highway
Reauthorization Bill.
Th~
proposed site of the interchange is located west
of Brigham City, Utah.
This is the present location of Morton
International and the future location of a visitor center for
the United states Department of the Interiorfs Bear River Bird
Refuge.
Morton International is a
automotive safety products.
larg~
manufacturer of
At present, there is no direct
off-ramp providing access from 1-15 to the Morton International
�facility-
Being the largest manufacturer of automotive air
bags, Morton
Brigham
ci~y
Internatic~al
is pro j ecting dra matic growth at the
site over the next four years.
Travelers tc the Morton Internat i onal facility must
presently access the p l ant by exiting 1-15 approximatel y 3
miles south of the plant or approximately J mi les to the north
of t h e
p~ant
and
n ecess~~ a tas
he avy
to travel by way of busy streets to
International facility.
~~ ~ c k s
re~ch
e~= ou t2
to
t~ e
p:ant
t h e Morton
Reduction of congest i on and increased
safety are utmost in t h e planning of the
ne ~v
i n terchange.
Additionally, the United States Department of
Interior Bear River Bird Refuge is planning to locate it's
visitor center at the site of the interchange.
The visitor
center is expected to draw in excess of 50 0 ,000 visitors per
year, or 170,000 vehicles.
Due to safety and logistic
concerns, construction of a new intersect i on is vital to the
viability of the visitol center.
Again,
I would like to reiterate my support for the
effort of the State of Utah to obtain $73 / 000,000 to complete
upgrade of U.S. Highway 89 and $3,600,000 to construct a new
interchange on 1-15.
As growth continues in these areas the
safety and logistic concerns will only continue to mount.
�
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1703">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1703</a>
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Title
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Testimony of Congressman James V. Hansen before the transportation subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, May 6, 1993
Description
An account of the resource
Testimony of Congressman James V. Hansen before the transportation subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee stating the reasons for funding to improve the interchange of I-15/US 89, with special mention of the Morton International Facility.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hansen, James V.
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States Highway 89
Roads Improvement--Utah
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
5/6/93
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1990-1999
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Papers of Congressman James V. Hansen, 1970-2003, COLL MSS 351 Series I Box 85
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Opening Session _ Third Annual I!emborship lieeting
The 89'ers International Hlghvmy Association, Inc.
A1'ton, Wyoming ; October 7, 1957
The opening business sossion was called to order by Vice Pr esident
Bentley ;.litchell who ~e"d a letter from P"esidcnt Hay V. Stewart, in
wh ich the P"esident stated that he had been unavo i dable detained and was
therefore officially desienating Vice P"cs i dent ;.iitchell to act i n his
place. Vice President i.Iit chell announced that he had talked with P"ea ident stewart by telephone and that t ho P"csident cxpected t o arrive in
Afton :/Ionday evening .
The invocation \'ras offered by Puul Stevig , Vvyoming Director of
the Associati on.
The Honora.ble Doyle L .. Child, 14ayor of Afton, v/elcomed the oonvention t o Star Valley and en~ouraged the Association to be aggress i ve and
c o~pc titive in the carrying out of its purposes.
Lorenzo S. \1alker, President of the Afton Chamber of Commeroe,
we lcomed the delegatss to Af'~on and commented upon the fine spirit of
c ooperation which exists between the Chamber and the looal 89'era group.
Vice President i,I1tchall raad a wira from the Honorabl e Ernest 11.
McFarland., Governor of Arizona, in which the Governor expressed regreta
that he had been unable to attend the Convention and extended his best
wishes for a successful meeting. Sim..1.1ar messages were read from the
Honorable George D. Clyde , Governor of Utah, tho Honorable J. Hugo
Axonson , Governor of I'.1ontana, the Honorable lJi lward L. Simpson, Governor
of Wyoming, the Honorable 81' Alvaro Obregon, Governor of the State of
Sonora, Mexico, D. James Cannon, Direotor of the Utah Touri st and Publioity Councll, Marilyn Sergeant, Research and Promotion Ass istant of the
Arizona Development Board, and Demetrio P. K:lriakis, Charter Member and
ardent 89'er supportsI' from l~ogales, Sonora, Mexioo.
0
A letter was also read from C. B. Brewster , P"esident of the Chamber
of Commerce at Banff, Alberta, Canada, in which !Jr. Brewster had designat ed Mrs. Dorothy Boyce, an executive of the Banff Chamber, to represent
the organization in his absenoe.
A letter was also read from 81'. GWllel'mo Freeman, Director of the
89 ' ero Hie1may Association for the Republic of I.lexico. Sr. Freeman has
be en undergoing medical treatment at the Uayo Clinio in Rochester and
expressed apologies and re gre ts that his doctors wou ld not permit him
to make the ·~rip.
Vice P"esident LI1tchell suggested that inasmuch as the Jrlnutes of
the last annual meeting of the ol'ganizatlon uel'e rather lonethy and had
been oovered in detailB in bulletins d istributed to the mecbership that
he "/ould entertain a motion t hat a reading of said minutes be suspended
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and that t hey stand approved as \lritten . The motion was made by
Direotor Charles illartin, seconded by Vi ce President Ernest Sar an and
carried .
'fhe follon i ng committees ner e then appointed by Vice President
:J1tchell ;
~'OIllNATING
\
CO)==;
Ernest Saran , Chairman , ;"1. G. Bas s ,
Nord II1lkes .
Vice President iJitohell announcod that t he d ir ectorships to be
aI'e as folloy/s: From Wyoming, one director to s orve a threeyear 'term; from Arlzona, .t wo diroctors to serve a throe-yeur term. eaa.b.;
fro," Ut3h , one d ir octor to fill the unexpired one - year term of Burnett
Hendryx, who hM left tl'6 89 ' er area and tu:cen r esidenc e in CalHornia.
~t. fil1ed
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AUDITING GOl,1LiU'TEE:
RESOLUTIONS
Frank Sorgatz, Ch:.!lr man; lkirk PUgmire,
Allen Cameron
CO~UJIT'=:
Charles Martin , Chairman ; Mrs. Dorothy
Boyce, Jerry Breen, Ralph Cameron, Ceoil
Smith, Fred Hutohins.
It Was announced that the standing advertising and promotional
committee which had be en appointed t o administer the current advertising
and promotional program of tho Association would report their activities
at the Tuesday session. This committee consists of Bentley :litchell ,
Chairman, Frank Sorga t z, Burnett Hendry", and lkirtin Cantwell.
Vice President, Ernest Saran, of Calgary, Alberta was asked to
introduce the various delegates from Canada.
The v8.l"ious committee ohair.men were requested to call meetings
of the i r r espeotive committees at onoe so that reports coul d be submitted to the membership at the ma in business sessions on Tuesday .
Ther e being no f ur ther business , tho meeting \mB recessed at
10;45 A.;,!. to r econvene on Tuesday lIlo" ning at 11: 00 A.M.
Rcspeotfully submitted ,
Martin H. Cantwell
Exeouti ve Seoretary
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QFF1C1AL
iJI N UTES
Recessed Session - Third Annual UB!l1berahip I,looting
The 69 'ers International HiGhway Association, Inc.
Af ton, Wyoming; Ootober B. 1957
rrhe reoessed session was ca.lled to order by President Ray V
Stewar t at 11:00 A.M.
0
Minutes of the opening session Y/Gre xead, and it was Lloved by
Director Llartin thnt they be approved us wl'itteno Tho mot i on \'18.8
seoonded by Director Saran. l!otion carried.
Executive Seoretary Cantlloll (love a verbal. reoap of the membership
r eport for the fiscal year from Ootober I, 1956 to October I , 1957. "The
grand total of notive and honoxal'Y members on record as of October 1 ,
1957 >!as reported t o be 621. Coopared to the 448 aotive member" in good
standing on reoord as of Ootober I , 1956, the report ref l ected a membershi p Gain of 173 for t,he fiscal year. A oopy of the membership report
is attached heroto and made a part of those official minutes.
The report of the Auditing Committee ,vas read by CorJIDittee Chairman Frank W. Sorgatz. The Committee reported that the re oords, fUes,
vouchers and books of the Corporation TT6!lsurer W. Go Bass had been
audited and examined, and found to be in good order. The Committee
further reported that the reoords of the Executive Seoretary Mar tin H.
Cant\lell aocounting for Corporation funds cleared through the Sal': Lake
City office were found to agree I"JHh the books and reoords of the Corporation Treasurer. A certified oopy of this report Is attaohed hereto and
made a part of these minutes.
The report of the Resolution Coomittee was read by Charlie B.
Martin, Jr., Chairman.. A total of ten resolutions were reco!!ll:l.ended .
eaoh boill(l voted upon i ndividually follOldng its reading, All ten resolutions we1'e passed by the unani!l1ous vote of tho membership with several
minor amendments beiD3 made. Copies of each of the resolutions as amended and adopted ~e a ttached hereto and made a part of these minutes.
At 12:30 P . l!. the morning session Vias recessed by President Ray V.
Ste\Jart to rec onvene at 2:00 P.!'!.
***********
The afternoon session was called to order by President Ray V.
Stewart at 2:00 P.!.!., the first order of unfinished business being the
r ~port of the Nominating Committee.
Director Ernest R, Saran, Chairman of the NOminating Committee,
stated that his coumittee had a reoommendation pertaining to the term
of office of certain directorships rJhich i t nished to reooll!llend for the
consideration of the delegates. Under the present setup, Director Saran
explained, both directorships in Arizona I"Jould oxpire next year and the
same rlOuld be true of the two directorships in Utah. Whe r eas it is the
intent !lad purpose of the oorporation by-la'"S ,'merever possible to mainJ
tain hold-over directors and stagger the elections of new di rectors to
the best advantage, it Vias the reoommendation of the Nomlnating Committee
that in the case of Arizona one director be eleoted to serve the 3-year
�t~l'r nd t he other &. ;,.' GotOl' be elected for 0. l-year term. and that in the
.
cnoa e r the Stato of Utah ono director bo eloctod to serve a J-yoar ter~.
'Jhai",:,an Saran further announoed thu t tho GxistiIlll vacancy in the director,1hip t ram Utah "as duo to tho resic;nation of f ormer Direotor Burnett
liendl';rx who ha d moved to Cali1'o:;,ni a. Cha irman Saran further rep orted tha t
-the ros i snation of Director Franlc U. Sorgatz \'Iould require the ele ction
of a rep lacemont dir e ctor f e r the State of Idaho to serve the r emal,ni ng
one year of the unexpired ysar. 1. vv
Direat o ~ship oandida tes sel ected by the
t hen announced a s follo\ls:
}'OR ARIZCNA:
Charles Hagerman of
FOR UTAH:
~l oI1l inatiIlll
Committee were
\1 . G. Bass of ', iickcnburg to sorvo a J-yoar torm;
~
~eB cott
to serve a I-year term.
Homer Bandloy of Riehfield to servo a J-year t erm.
FOR WYOUING:
Pau:i. J . Stavig of Mton to serva a )-year term.
FOR IDAHO: ruark rugmir e of Paris to serve the l-year unexpired
term va ca t e d by the resIGnation of Fr ank \'1. Sorgatz.
Cha irman Saran f u.~the r reported that it was the recommendation of
the Noninat i ng Conunitteo t ha t the aC~G1on of the Board of Direotors in
tho e l e ction of Sr. Guillermo Freeman to serve a vacated 3-year term as
Direct or fr om t he Repull1ic of Mexi co be approved and su.stained by the
membership.
Dir e ctor Erne st R. Saran , Chairoan of the Nominating Committee,
then made t he following motion:
"It is moved that all of the foregoing recommendations as made
by the Nouinating Committee pertaining to the term of offioe
t o be s erved by each of the Directors to be elected be approved
and adopted, and it is further moved tha t the recommendation of
t he Nominating Committee pertaining to the Dil'eotor f rom the
Republio of M
exico be approved and adopted , and it is furthe r
moved that the nomina tions be closed and that the Seoretary be
instruoted to cast a unanlmou.s ballot in favol' of the recommende d nomineos and that they be elected by aoclamation."
The motion vms s e conded by Direotor IJartin and carriod by the unanimous
vote of a ll delegates present.
Vice Pr esiden't BentleJ[ t!itchcll, Chairman of t he Promotion Committee ,
roported that t o date s ome ~ 7CO O.00 in advertisine support had been secUl' ad for t he guido t ype br oohure to be published und dis tributed early
in 1958. Chairman Hitcho ll stated t ha.t \mile the exact publication date
could not be a nnounc ed at tho noment , i t was the aim of this colillllittoe
to have the broch ur e off t he pr ess in time to oatch certain major travel
and spo"t s hows. Chairman llitchell further rsported that the mnking of
the 89'er movi e had be en t emporarily postponed in order to permit concentration on tho completi on of tho brochure and to make additional fu.nds
availutle for the printine of additional copies of tho broohu.re in exoess
of ',he f, ua r anteed minimum of 50 , 000 ciroulation ,
Exeoutive Seoretary Ijart in Cantwell ",ho has been aSSigned to conduct
t he solicita tion of financial support f or t he promotional proGram reported
that he has be en out on tho hiGhway constantly since early in April and
that a t leas'. prelillinary presenta tion of the proGram has been lIl!lde in
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all t,9'e1'9 oO:-.J!.lll.ultJos frc;:_ J>io6~llcs, Sonora J U:xico to Edm.onton, Alberta,
Cnna'in. Cantllcll'Ol,orted that tho reoeption in nll al'Gas had been very
i'J.vora'Jlc und tha~~ ,,;','htlc 30J.icitat;ion :!.n several of tho sections had been
pl'rlctlcally 00,;:'.)1: ted there is still connidel'ubl0 orswization vlOrk 1'emin1n~ to bo do:)}, 1'-'3.rticulal'ly in Utah, Arlzona, and :icxico.
Vice P1'es .' Jen~ti El'nost R. Saran Gave a bl'iaf l'G)Ort of t,.16 l'ocGpt1on
and support Ci { .. n tho prOcrO,J1 in the Province of Albcr~lia. Vice Prosident
Saran stated ..... nt ho ha.d ncco!.lpanicd 3ecretary Gunt\Joll on "i;hc Ill.'l.jor
portion of t: . to~ thro~l ~lbart~ and that an excollent iapression of
the orsaniz'" / _~on a:1d ito ala .:L11<l objcc"blvos ll.:ld been Civcn. Ho om.phasized
the imP0l'tu_';o of "the fuct thut the ol'gOllization has o.chiGvod tho :rocoGnition and upport of t~c Alberta Provinc i al Gove rnment i n addition to
tho munic:h ~.l 6ove:!.'nmp.n~1J3 ane. Cil3rJbo~ of Cor.:m.crce in all of lUberta' s
tlBjor ci -4j j .5. Fe sto.tcd tha.t to date 34 individual nembershi ps had beon
SCOUl'fd ;'.: Albor'~a, and predicted that this ficure would rea ch well over
100 bele:..' tho llOJCG convention.
V" ': ;' Frcside.lt Sal'an then proposed that this Association s'ponsor
an' or ...(\i.Z8 a Gccd-\'Jill tOUl' of its members into the Provinco of Alber ta
t .. -., - "laco curly in June of 1958 just prior to thc start of the heavy
·iioUl'-i /' 803.00n.
Vics Prosidont Sal'an sUGGested tha t tho calva oade s tart
y,~.t:U J ~'3:·:eL10:1y at thf1 ootder t·) be par·ti cipated in by the Gover nor of
l.~:.nt ...}
iJ.:Jd thE; Pl'd::i..:.:c of the .-~rovince of Alborta, to be fo l lowed by a
91-i; ' ,.i1l{l tom: up ,\l.bert~ Route 2 through the cities of Cal Gary, Red
DI~;;" I <.lnd Ed-lonton, tilon C'lst -tic .Jasper National Parle and around the
fC\1 f "
~Ubor'~a scenic loop to Lake Louise, Banff J and baok to Cal gary .
Hr fo ~~tcd that the GfJVG1'Il!!!.On-t; of the Province as \lel1 as muni oi pal govern1'"
3 Hould ue happy to gr-eet uncl ent~rtain the v isiting 89 t er s and ex"," -1od ~ cordia.l invitation on their behalf to the entire organization.
Vice President S8.ran then l.'e.m,'1~ked that thousands of Albo r tans 1'lere
eagerly l ooking forw,,~d to tho ti;;lo when they could dri 7e throue;h YellowstonE Park on the i ::- nay tc tiouthcrn uinter i'osorts and move6. that the
incoJl1ng Board of .liroctors be instructed to follow throUGh and continuo
t.le efforts pertain:i.lt3 to thin j.ssoclc.tton's pro j ect of scouring yeo.rD.l'ound north-south t:C.lvcl tm.'oueh Yellm.'stone Po.rk. Tho .!:lotion VI8.S seoonded by II. G. Bass, and c'tnied by 'Gho une.niaous vote of all deleGates.
President StC\"la2't then introdut'}'3d Guest spoaker t Don \'[at kins of
HoL'ltionn Dlrl'lc't;or for the Yello\/stono Park Co. and the
Er. \latldns cuve a short ·talk on tho value of inte r cO.".j1U!.ity public rclll,~lons \'Ihich ',:ns follm'lod by a queat10ns and ansuer
~' 1'l!..r] in '4";hich mny 0:: tho dolcGJ.tos present participated.
FO~3.i:,eJ.lo, Public
E:w:l.lf:;on .sto~os..
r"Gsidcnt St,,·;,~~t then introduced Ly J.e So.rvis. ;.j,uJD.Ger of the Utah
A'..1.t::>aouile Association and ~-\..:. . \ Oi'f'ioG at Salt 1akG City, Utah. rt:. Sarvis
.
o:-:r,lDl!lod tho uethods omployed and various oources from \'lhich t he AAA
sccUJ.'es road in:orlntion Gl von to potent i al travoler s and use(\ in supplyina 't'CU~inc;1. Ha G.!:1phasizGd 1:;110 faot that oach local COLiI:l.unit y OQ uld
do itself a valuablo favor if arrangements could be made ,mer eby tho AAA
orfico and other l'outi"'G aGencies could bo supplied w1th up- t o-date
current I nfor!~tion as to the condition of various construoti on ar eas
alollG the hiCh';,13.Y. The talk ''''" folloned by a round-t"ble <iiscUDsion of
the various problens pertaininG to Qccuxate inforlJ.atlon and proper routing"
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Rctirinc PrcGidenJ~ Ray V. StO\'lart then thanked tho off i cer s and
",olUberc for the loyal'vy Ilnd coopcrution thoy had extonded during hi s
three terms in office.
Thel'o to1ug 210 .:'u:cther bUBincss, the I1hird i\.nnual 1,lombe~8h i p
:.roeting of the 59'ers D'l'G0~nationa.l Fi GhvJ:l.Y Association, Inco 'VIas adjourned SINE DIE at 4:20 P.l.!.
0'
subrai t;'tcd ,
I,:artl.n H. CantVlsll
Executive Secretar:,
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;'iIrJlE.\S there 5.8 still con~ldcrablo construction neC6.:l:;:a-L'Y Oll
t.ll3.t ror·Gion of Hir;A\'J..Y U~ S .. 89 knmJU as the: Grand Ganyon of ~";~le
.=n.::.lce RivCl~'1 in ordCl' to oriL3 ttiG road up to standa.l'cl bot een )\..1.pine
'3_ud Juckr,on .. ,'[yamin!), und
r
3HERE.;;\S cart?in ~1'~~~. Power I n teI'ests arc i ntent upon building
a !I.i:;h pouer daHl o.CI'CSS
nn.rroYis of t his Canyon, and
1V1IERE.:\3 the construction of such a da!llt if pC~.Qli tted, would des t roy
one of' tha nost sD0ctaculur seanie tow'1st attrac t ions in 'the Sta.te of
\;yo,~ing !illd on tl1G ent i re r 'Jute U. s .. 89 J a nd
rlHEREAS t he Jackson Hole 69 ' er6 Cl ub, the Jackson Hola Hotary Club,
the Jac1;::son Ho l e ChillTlbe:!.' of Commer ce, fl...'lU the Jtar Valley G9 t crs Club,.
ond the Dear Lake Basin S9 ' ers 0l ub: repr0sontinG in the aWGgate SO!ii.e
five hundred property miners in the Stat e of ',[yominS nnd Id~ho arc unElnimously OPl) Oscd to tl-te dcstl'uctioll of t his beautiful Canyon,
NO,'I TlIEIlliFOR<: BE IT RESOLVED that illl poss ib;Lc u n ited, effor·1t be
made to encouraae anG. expedi to the ful l vOfllpl ot i on of this :")nnke III ver
Canyon sector of U. !:5. C9, and that the 89 f e:rs Int ernational Higil\'I8.Y
Associatton, Inc. in convention assGrqbl.ed thi s 8th day of Oct obor, 1957
at :~fton, WYOlili ng do pretost constru,ctioIl of an unwan ted and unneces$al,'Y
Federa:J.. PmlsI' Dam in tho narr~:r"/s of the Snake n i vor, und
BE 1'1' ElIRT1= RDSOLVJlD that ~his protest be mado lmo;m to, and, a
COl'Y of this Rb:SOLUTICll be filed '\Jiti~ the Eoderal ])\.ll' cau of Hecl aplation,
an:... t.he respoctive Govornors, Senators) nnd ConGressmen of tho states
of J.1ontiQ.ll€l.)
~.'yoL:ing $
Id£lho t Utah J ilnd Arizona.
Tho fo~e.eoing RE30LUTIUr lIO. 1 \"'.15 appro',ed dlld. adoptod by the
&9 t e1' s ·l~~ ....r\E\'TIClic'\.L iIIGlL,:;lX :H3dv CL .'il I<...1';-) nJ~. by the *uno.niuous vote
of dclcGa.toE- on the floor of the Aosociution' s Third Intornc..·;;ional
Conven'i;ioll, meetinG at .titan s i'!yominG Octobor 8, 1957.
ATTBST"
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Delcao.tes officially re.pro;;;entin[; Foreign Governments no·t voting
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eratlo ·!;::a"la~. r~:·C ..l u . S . 89) ~a:j "JD J r.:·~0r:. ",.(LLch 1 ·\; OGj;"·vcs i'rorl the !;":cuth.
c .tl'al'.i.ce of Yolle'.ws'toee "G') :io,"1,00 \,i~~y ; t!J.rc·,JiDG :lddltionnl blli:d.cn an
1l1 roady avel'O' oVl·~ed U. S . 1.9J. ~.nc.. ~;l TU.cll'"f.?YC _ :.md.
VlIllREAS ·~.hc Jaclrson IIo13 a9 t u:"o:; LJ.ub , the. JQO!:,20n Hole Rotnxy Clu~:
the Jackson LTolc Chamber of.' CC';:i::.1C~C0 ! ;illl} t:'l0 ;YiAr,J:' Va~ley V9' ors Club 2
and th.e Bear I,2.k€ "las in 89 ' ;,rs Club ropI'c.:;ontinG in the 'lccreG].tc GO.l:lO
f i ve h.un:lred l)Z'OlVJi.'ty O·.m3I'3 l=: tIw ~tr"~0 of . IyoHing .:illd. Idaho arc un::mir·1C'l."lzl:r ol"JpoJod t o tho 'J0~.::t.:~i..1ct;7.on G:,: t hin llilnBCCGSary ro:l.u,
~m';I' :1.7~:·S:':::'G?'::'~ 3£
IT rL.:'3 ... 1\· .•m i,;ha:t the 09 ' m:s
I!J.te~n<ltioIlEll ll:l.OW.l:r
.\8.Goc:~Q·\;im.\ , Inc . in conv:).!r~i ~·~1 nssc:...tblod ti).is 8th uay of
at .\r·to!!. , ~"[yojlnG do un3.~i.r ")u·-:ll~T i'~(jtt;l:J t any conl:Jtruc'lilon
;i cr. of :["utU!'(; C(/.w°l,iI'lJ.cti:H1 o;~ ··. {d.:.:> ).'01.";0., (lnu
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.~ • • • . ~
..,., '""f)
..1..1; o~\
...... -
..J·.r~t.::J.ll
01 T-:cc :·.'·z..l'"ioti , c:r. ·:.;hJ.·:; co1,i;.1s oE this =.'csolution bo placed be..-l
fo::.:c;hc GOVCj:l..Ol'Z J .3er.;:1:~O:t'D , 11U<i ~~0.i.l('2'CSS.li1en 0::' ·iJl:;.c stntof3 of j".Jon~Gnnn. t
',Vyorr.l.l:.fj, :Waho, Utah, and i~.i:?;onc\.
The f01' 6coi.ne RESOI::J'"Z'ICi. He . 2 i"i..J.3 n.pl-ro·v3d and adoptjcd by the
:39 ' 81'G nITl!..""'RNATIC:~AL HIGH.J'. r ~B3CCI.,\·i7IGH, n'l"c . b Jr the*unanimoUJ3 vote
:
of (lsleGn t~s on the floor
Q.t.
~llC
ADsocl ..1tioll' s 'i'hir-:.1 Internat i onal
COllvol1.tlon t fllOI3·tino: at Aft,:u J Wyo.c1.'.np Oc tober 8 ) 1957 •
.\: D!'.1ego.te·s ofrlol'-llly
l' 3p:-C'CSc,;:1~Gi,i~g FO'I'elgn GOVeJ..'UIilenta n~votlng
�(
(
RESOLUTIO N
the 89 ' s"s
JE:i;fl:i:'natio!2::t .. E::. ~"'13.;r i .. f:,. (cl:l"l,jion for ·;.;hc Hel/ublic of jlfe xico
h1.s been iI!.Cnp;i,J':·Lat~)d du. -Co SO]~iOUD oj.Jero.tionn and is s till
m:d.e:T 'G}:."." "G!llont. 'l'i,; t ."l C .:'I::'.ro I3::"O'~h0!'S Clinic i....1'1 Roches ter,
..............:,j.• ):;
\'1l7O"G!,?',~'
..,..~
~.l;~
,·'·l •• _ . " . _. . . .T',.·'c-: . . n )
_~ ",..,··,.......,
...
_J.o.U._
1
\1
)):""'cto ...
~
. __ ......
fO~
_
.~
"I,
.
ti:"ll.!"!..csotD.., n.:i."!'u
Vrri..I'.RE/l.S,
" ;en the Executi va SeCl' etary
1
~ c6 reto at beinG unable to
a~lit~end. the "i;ui:rd Int;0rl1at~.onal convontion nOYI in assem.bly at
Afton, liyoming ll!ld ho.s fmthel: c1.:ts12dod h i s best \'Jishes for a
~l·. l~:;"cGm:-~n
hD.s
\'.'1'i t
e.nd other Board memucrfJ h:..s sincere
successful conventiono
~JQW THEREFORE BE IT RmOLVTD , this convention e>"-pl'ess to
Sr . Freeman its sincore regrets for his illnesD and oXG
ond best
nishes for his s1?oedy !'€-covory , a nd
BE n' FilllTllliR RUl O
LVED , '.ha'. a ooPY of t his resol ution be
fOl'Ho.rded to Sr. Fr eeman a~G Rochcsi'01' .
Th .. fOl' ago ing RESOLUTION NG . 3 was approved and a dop '~ed by
tho 89 ' era INTKlNATION,\L HIGllilAY ASSOCIATICN, nw. by the llll~
allimolls vote of de l ci3a·~m.l on the floor of the .A ssociati on ' s Third
I'1te rnati onaJ. Conven·tion, lilCfi!t~~1t-nh P.i'ton, Wyoming October S r 195 7 .
AT'['I;ST:
'\\\I~'I(J ~kJ<ecutive
~
•
Secret al'Y
�(
(
\'.'HERKI\S, Rny V. S'C31'l.3.l't J co-foundel" and Char'Gol' PJ~esident
of the S9 ' ers Intel'national Highway Association, Inc . 1 has cont~ibuted freely of his timo , cucrGY , and pers onal resources in
the interest of this orB~nization during tho three years in
v/hi ch he has served us its preSident, and
\':JlfLREAS,
tedious journc,
nation highv/ay
her husband i~
Ura. Stevlart has a.cco.t:1pnniad him on numerous
s up and dovm tho lol1G·oh and breadth of the throe
system and has othel'iJ:!.se encotu'a gcd and uss i si;ed
his d uties,
NOr! TlillREFO!lE BE I T !lESOr,VIm , tha t the 89 ' ers International
Highvlay Association, Inc. in convontion assembled this 8th day of
October ,. 1957 at Afton, rlyoming ex-Gond an everlastinc vote of
confidence and sincere appreciat ion of the sincero effox'i;s and
inspiring acconplishmcnts achie ved by President Ray and ~,{!:'so
Stewart.
'rhe foreGoing RESOLUTION 1;0. 4 was ajlproved and adopted by
·<he 59 ' ers IN'l'&lNll.TICNAL HIGHWAY ASSOCIATION, INC. by the unanimous vote of del eGatos on the f loor of the A.ssoclation t s 'l'h ird
Inter'national 0onvention, meeting at ~O!lli1lG October 6, 1957.
ATTEST:
~
t.,.
ExecuUve Secretary
�r
(
rIHErdJ:P3, ~ . O. Iio::::0\'l of Fl::gntaff, .j11':~.zona YlaS one of the
i'01mdcrs and Ch:E,""or Vj,c.; - i~I'm:;idcnt of the 89 ' e:rs rn'Gol'uattonal
Higl\,ay :~':·30ciati()r;., IilC. J and
\'l'.lIErillAS J his unt i.ru.cly death on July 27- h i s an i:r:i'oparable
t
loss to his .family, :.!.is business associate3 ::md his oommunity,
Non TfTRRBFJRE BE rv RESOLV1D, th9.t the third annua l convention of this orG-.lnization 'u llioh he hulpcd t,C o!'canize, pay honor
'"0 his meI10ry this 8th day of Oetober, 1957.
The i'ol'egoing P..ESO:L.UTICN NO. 5 ''JUS approved a.nd adopted b y
the $9 ' ors m 't',,;RNATIGNAL HIGJI,IAY ASSOCIATION, INC. by t he unan1nous vote of dGlegates on 'che floor O.r the Associat ion's Third
I!lte1'na~liional Convent i ()n~ meeti ng n't; Afton, ilyoL'ling October 8, 195 7 9
Alrr.rEST;~~
Executive SecI'etary
"\
�(
RES 0 L UTI 0
~
N O.
6
',l!J.:!!REAS, '\jc,o movinG of t he th i rd :.lnnuaJ. Internatiotml 0onvention of tho 69 'crs In tm:na.tlonal HiGh'.iUY .\..ssociatlon, In:}. from.
the City of Jacl::oon , \{yo.:...:.i nG, to Af '~on in ::>tar Valloy hus placed u
heavy load of xcsponsibil1ty upon our :"lyo.i.:linC Dir ector', Pau.l Stevic,
and ot'I.X hosts J the oi'f i cors and mcmbora of the Star Valley B9 t erB
Club, and
VIilL'RB!\s , the members and supportal's 01' tids oreanization in
the entire Star Valley have \lorkcd untlr in<;l y to mnke this conve n-
tion a success,
NOW THEREFOru: BE IT Illi30LVLD, that the sincer e appreciation
of this convention oe extonded to Paul St evi s, the officers and
members of the Star Valloy 89 ' 01'5 Club, the mayor of Afton, the
PrGsfdent and Llo!Jbor s of the Afton Chamber of Commerce , the management and ataff of the V~lloon Hotel, and to t he entire citizenry
of S tnr Vr lley Ur!rl surroundl.J:lg terri tory for the excellent oooperat ion and assistollce, unci
BE IT FL'RTIlEIl RESOLv::.D, that a spccial vote of thunke be
extonded to i.he editors Md publ1shel's of the Star VE.lley Indopendent fer the excell e nt publici t.y coverage G1 van this convention and
oooperation far boyond the cull of duty in tho handlinG of our
printine xequi ramcnts.
Tho foroGoinG RSSOLUTIC,N riO . 6 was approved and adopted by
tho 89'ers IN'Y£IlNA.TIGllAL llIGH,iAY ASS()CIA.l'IGL, n.c. by the unanimous
vote of deloso.tes on thc floor of the ,\ssociation's Third I nternational Convention, meeting at Afton, rryoLling October 8, 1957 .
ATTEST:
~ecutive
Secretary
�(
WI-r:!.:rm~\S) ona o~" ;;Lo ~L
':oj")o _·u;:s of To.'l':) C9",,:,~ s I1ltc.:.'n.3.tional BiG:,' oy lSSolC "'1.. Lh) L:o. in t: fl'O .:.'Jto en': w.ncolU''-lge
rocip:roClll lnte t'llC.tiuHr 1 l.ou..:.:~GJl b .... t\'iouu CilU' f:::icrilly nations
t:> the nOl'ti!l en:". r.0U'!:.1., C.l J the United 8t6.t0~, and
~lIIERS·\':-,
it; 19
t:. s. 89, ...10x100 15,
o~-
rUX)OStJ 'lr~d dc;:::;i~c
'3.._~
.Ulio:r:tn ..~out:; :; n:J one continuous boulo -
';0 pl'csent hi:;hilujS
p~lr}:.J 1'[ t~e:"' than thrr'u scp'lr::ltc rO'ltao, ~GherGby
~lir,t.inattn1 ~_ntor.l.!'.ltioj~')J b01Jld"ri "[, '''\f. ::l dctorl'cn1. 'GO tcurist
t ravol bat J' ·n ~;>C&O tll.l'c(:: llT.;lon!:, and
v.1.rd of nati;.uaJ.
','118nE~\"'S, this 00.11 t 'J.zt be a.ccoLll,:lished a.t Olll' Canadia n
borda"!' b;r )rescntin,], ;.~(n""nna's Gl"10icl' National Par k and .\'lber t o. 's
~·l3.terton L:.!:.'s I:atlun~l rarl~ as Oll~ bOJ.u'tli'ul recrea ti onal arGa
rathor' ~h<.l_l ,\'10 c!i~t5..!lr, t .'ll'lrn 10c.lted 1:J tHO separate na tions,
NO':1
Ti.u:::r.E}'f$J~
B3 1'/ 'z:.SOL·1J:..D, 'iihu":; in
1.~l
publlc!ty releases
and i'LltJ.lI'3 )1 ';"nted pr0l~otic..nn:' HJ.ttC"C' l'C"<le,'!sed by this orcr,a.niza tion
·:;.J.cre;ln rJ:::'~ 'once is llU.idc to e5:;hoI' on( O~ bot!1 of those national
1'1:.s t::tQ t V· (, teru l'\'h~ tel ton-C-:'.acicr J.ll :'C111.l tioD.al Peace Park"
b,)
e.i::'l~loye.j"
l:L. 7 rJaB np~roved and adopted by
.ASSOC IA'.2IL:, lllC. by the unanimous
1,r otc of dalC{;ates on the floor of t~e ;wJ:Jociationts Third Inte r ll~tlonal 0onvontion. ,~1eti..ilC r.:~~-uGn, .;:,·oming October 8 J 195 7.
'rilO
t;~c
.:..-'or~tioinc Rl~SOL;j'IGr
8 9 t 61' S n;T;-:IUifA'.e.ILN,U.
Hlc!I.:~\Y
A·iT~:r:. V~~cut1ve
Secretaxy
\
�(
RES 0 L UTI 0 N N O.
8
\lIillREJ~ I t ho 89 ' 6 1'S Intcrna~~ional High\'IaY Association, Ino 0
vIas created fol' the purpose of inviting and enoouY'aging safe and
aOllvenient travel on H i ah~ray 59 in ito er.tire'i'y. and
WHERE.r1.S, the 700 members of this Maoeiation are deeply concerned regarding t he s t andards a nd conditions of said hiehway in
re~ards to safe and en joyable tourist travel, and
W
HlID.K\S, the Dar r ow, windine section of HighrJay 89 kn01.'Jfl as
"\'/hits Spar" in the State of Al.'izona between the c itics of Prescott
and rli ckenburg 1s consider ed hazardous to the extant t hat many
Arizona visitors unused to mounta.inous terxain are Immm to use
alternate routes J thereby m.i ssi nc one of t.he lilOS·t spectacular scenic
drives in the entire State of Arizona,
NOri THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVIID t hat t he 89 ' er n International
Highway Assochtion , Ino . in oonvention assombled this 8t h day of
Ootober , 1957 a t Af ton , .iyoming do una n1m.ously petition t h e High\lay
Departme':'lt of the State of .lU'izona and the Federal Bureau of Publi c
Roads to a l ~ot a nd appropr i a t e the necessary funds required t o provide safe and adequate travel passaee tl!ld eliminate daneerous curves
\'{herevcl' possible and eeneraly improve this oect i on of Highway 89
above described , and
BE IT FlJ1lTllER RESOLVED '"ha.t this petition bo made known to
and a oopy of this resolutio n be filed with the Arizona Stat e H1ghvlay
Department, the Governor and Congrossional deleGation of the State
of )11:1zon8 and the Federal Bureau of Publio Hoads.
The f orseo i ng RESLLurICN Nt. . 8 'was approv ed and ad opted by
the B9 ' ers INTl!HNATIl.NAL HIGH.IAY AGSC 0IATICN, INC. by the unan1m.ous
vote of de l ocnte s on the f loor o f t he Associutiont s Third International Convention , eeti
at: ton , \iyoI!ling October 8, 1957.
A'£TEST :~~Dl~~~~~~~~::~~Ex.outive
Seoretary
�(
\lHl!!,HEAS, tl..c 39 ' 01'8 In-;';crr.atlonnl I-li.;h".'/Uy ~\.Ssociation, :n~. in
convention assembled at the cit~~ of Kanab s Utah on Octobor 12, 1956
adop';:'oc!' a resolution protesting tho tl~aditional vlintcr clo~':!lci of that
portion of U. So S9 wi th!.n the bounG.a1.'ic.s of Ye:.J.mY:; t.Ln'J P _t:~:. . :\" he'-,l'1.i
unr/arran ted in lirht Of l:11u.m f"lcts anI L~'G~:2G '~I.[~t ·~,~:.l .,.O::3~ _~ , ., '-l. JI'tr
be i:lade to brin£:', cbcut
tJ.0 yotir-armU1d
mc.ir..o- ::n:::"n:~L
use of t h i s 1n'tcxnatio!".L.i north-sou1:.h lliClur.:..,V
~('r
GY~lt;''':;Hl.L ..
G,Oll.;;:"Q
Ll'T"'~:.(;
am
rJI-IEHEAS, this A s sooiaticr~ In G021V i nCE'd thu\. tLc yoal·-c.xr_'~JI;.d lil.!.rtenunc e of t his hiGh\'Jay t.h:r ouc)::. Yo l lmm t one [-'urIc . 3 an e vcntt4.:..i..i ty, the
realization and comFlc tion of ,-,,"ich the 700 wGmbcrs 01' this AssociatIon
are !:lost allxious to sec eff0ctcd at t he earliost po"slbl e ti.fo1C3 in lceepi.n~
with safe vlinter travel, ani
W1l:E.llF.AS. the int~:est and cooperatio- ,lis pla:rod duriO{l th" past
twe17e mo.aths on the part of the U.. S .. Dell:'D: ;.:uent of the Interior, the
Nnt.:_r)no. l Park So:"vicr) ar.d ce:tal n nenfJ'JI' 5 of' ConGressional delegations
i :r.. n'3E:.rby st:ttes ha~7e b::::sn -:loth crutityin..; a:J.d above our 9Y.:pe c to..tioUB,
NO"a TlfJJ:.HEFCRE J~I' 17:.1 R:!:SCLY£m ·i:;!J.a·~ tUJ 39'0::00 Interna tional IIigh-.,'("8.'Y
Ili'3soc:.ation. Inc. i1.1 ~cn~.:ention D.ns0mbled this 8th daj." of O c tob~1", 1957
at :~ton, Hyo.mlr-'t, duly adG]oVlledgc-j ,lith [;ra:~it'J.d'3 "~~e interest displayed
nn:, (;,ffol't e~ct.enc.0d by f~b,e "bove LIm..tioned incH.viduals and Fedel'o..l
Dll1'f'Ut:.S
t
and
BE IT FWrrITER R£'.S("LVLD that a vote of tlw.n~:s be extended to LaDUel
A. (Lon) Gar l' lsori, Sl!.porint~ndent of Yollow-:;'i:ionc P:u'k, and his s"',uff for
efforts 1'lhich have, and v!ill be 1l1ndc I an::1 tlnt \'10 _pledGe to Duper in-',8ndel1'~
Garricon OUI lnc1ividua1 PnC. colleot:_ve coopc::atioll c.nd activo [,t:ppor-l; in
the do lution of IToblews and the ~.''J.Gili tati0:.l of plo.nE: rcquil'6d 1:'0 j:'.f.lEtGn
tho year around cpening to internntio!1Ul t,,:u.1'ls~1.i 1:i:. .'avel of one of l'Jorth
America ' s most magnif i cent Nat i cnal P~.r\.'ks t:':_"Jreb:,,- 'Jll.,lina.!iinG ~C.G last
exis t ine road -block on North 1lm.er:'ci'.'.., 5:"00 "nile .i..i1.:r0C-Lution DoulevCll'd
of National Pa~k5J and
B:C r: Fu~~rl~-_l~n HES(.l.V.CD th-s t tho int'Jnt of tb.·: -; action b~ made }~Ov.!l
to ...... a (JOpy c-:: this l':3so~_lltio[. be filed. ,,",:1 '';,1 '3:1)) Hintenj ::mt Gnrlson ,l
11(1.
the ;:,;:--,tioll:tJ. Parl:- .3orv:~.cot the Departnant of' t"~le ~:lt0 I'ior, and the ,lCSp(\(}tl ~i e Cov"JI'no~~ and CC1...c1"1fJsic-no.l dc).cGJ.t.:.3 or ~:;~le States of .[ont'lna,
i.1yorrL,g, Ifls.ho. l-tall auG. Ar:.zC1I'..a.
IJ'he i'cre30~r..g RESvl,lY':IGK NQ 9 ~'ns approved. aila n10pted by tho
09 Cf9 lliTEF.lCATICHA1.. HIGF.,'AY AS..)(i,!L'.1'IC1:, n:;. by L;ilc unanimous vouo
of' celccutez 0;.: the 11001' or thE. ASDociatior~ 7 S T'rurd. Intc:r:onn t.ion:,l
Con"rcntion t meei;ing a t \.fti,.ll,~~~lilibObGr 6) 1957.
A~'rEST' __
~ili±~;
;j'::tQ!iuttvo SecrotrH"
�r
E. 1l.
CO!!
u
~'
I Q II
11 O.
1 0
i'iIlERU.8, due tc i'.'i.ntGr cli.mat:lc (;C11ditions C;.O.Li.\IUon to mes t
p ortions of the S'(jute ai' ~lyolUinG : highways nhcn surfaced vlith \'Jell
packed Ot1.0;;, are Gone:rally found to be suitabl e for safe travel at
a)'-:>eds in ,l:\.col; ine with C;Jn:'1"·.on. son36 and the obser vance of fundamenii:11 safety :t'a ctors, and
\ilThll:lAS, official "sports i ssued by tho \,!yoming State Highway
:'Je:1a.rtmcmt :Lor tilo infoI'.n:ltion oi' routi nG agenoies and the trave ling
pu1}l ic aro minlcad i !1(; nn:l inadeCluato due to the omission of a "s now
r'Yld " clas sification the't'cby creatIng the impression tha. t t he a b ove
~lo;Jcribod Sl1O\'J pacl:ed r O,ld condH;ion is either extremely hazardous
(;1' entirely 1.w.pa:01 sa'hle, :.ina
',(JT;.::rm:'.S J tto Jackson Hole 69 ' ex Club J the Jaokson Hol e Ro tary
Glllb, ·~he Juckson Hole Cix:lb·:l' 01' COLlrlerce , and the Star Valle y
89 t 81'f'. Clu.b 1'Cpl'<.:ucn:tiD.£; in the aggregate 3006 500 property O\'mGl'S
:.i.1 tllo State of \!youlng a!'G c'Jnvinced t t.at the omiss ion of a "s noVi
ro~:dn c.i.o~:;;iflcat:'.ol1 in the offici al repor'Lis issued by the Wyoming
r:i~:hvIay Do.:'nrtmeht :results in the' intimida:l:.ion of potential w
·inter
vif;j:cors s thereby advcl'sely affecting the economy of ~Jyom.ing 01 ties
"!nd commt;J.1i ties,.
1m\,: ?BEREFOnE TIE
1'1: P3SULVI:.1) thnt the 89'G:rs International
i!.S90clntivn,. Inc .. in ccnvent i on assemblod this 8th day of
o J-'&;ober J 1957 at ,\ftoll, dyoruing d o unanimously support the petition
3ubmi tted by its Uyomine delogation requesting the \Iyoming I-IlghVlay
!Jel.'artmcnt to include a "3nmJ Rond \I clEl.ssification in all official
·ro~d oondition reports raleased. by t his departmen~ during the "linter
of' 1957 Ilnd that ~.;.b.:l:J ola[loillo.:l~v10:'1 boco.mc standard for all times,
1-a.',~h\"D.y
an.d
m: :cr
F1JHTffL"R RESGLVED that thi s petition b e filed with the
\i:rmuiDG, Hii])li/ay Departm:3nt, and ~lihat; a copy of this res olution be
fm:":J:l~;'ikd to the Gavel.'normd Conr;rcssionul dcl oBil"~es of the Stnt e
of rlyar:D.n~ I nl ,d to ChruJliKU' of Conune:- oe Haad CO~Jlm.i t tees in va.r iOllS
l,iy"';miJ1.,'; C::·;.':. CG 0
'l""e fOl'cgoing RllSOLunCN 1-;0. 10 "US appr oved and adopted by
the 89' ers n~'ITllliAirIC1~Al HIGI;.iAY :~'JSOCL\TIGH. nm. by the unanimous
vote of deJeGates on the fi0cr of the Association's Third InterIlD.Gi on:t1 Conve ntion, lle?"jIlg at l.:fton, ':'yoming Ootober 8, 1957.
ATTEST:
Exeoutive Seoretary
�89' e r s
I h T i d . A ~ I 0 ~ A L H I G H J A V ASS L. I h C .
• ~¥* ••••• *¥~. ** •• ¥.*** ~* ••••••• *••• * •• *.* •• *.*. ( .** •••••••••••• **
"Re:.! :
M. H. Cantwell
TO :
1 , 1957
Officers and Direotors and Members
SUBJECT:
Oct o ber
tor fiscal yea r Oct . I , 1956 - Oot. I, 1957
Membershi p Repor t
Ac'rIVE Lj;SWlERS
1957
ST\TE
n.
OLO;) 3TAl\VII.G AS OF OCT . I,
(compared to)
195 6
LOSS - GATh
CANA:JA
36
2
J4
],ICNTANA
53
60
-7
:',YO:,UKG
81
33
48
IDAHO
44
58
-11,.
U'fAH
93
.124
- 31
121
164
- 43
7
7
7;4if
=rJ
ARIZONA
MEXICO
l\OTL :
1957
m
In addition to the above li s t e d ACTIVE ImL!BERS the Association
has a permanent HCI'CRARY Membel'ship consis ting of 0hambers of
COillmer ce , Civic OrganIzations, s tate, Provincial , and J;,iunicipal
Bodies, l\ewspapers , e tc. which totals 186 H(,l\ORARY l!E;,lBERS .
GRUiD TOTAL (Active a nd Honora r y) -
LOCAL CLUB j4';;.Lll!:RSHIP IN GeOD
1957
CLUB
,/1
3TAl~DING
(compared to)
621
,\.3 OF OCT .
1956
LOSS -GAlli
16
25
-9
GLilN 0A1YON tl2
29
50
-21
'!3
SEVIER VAL.LEY ,r
23
29
-6
24
35
-11
BEAR LIKE 1}5
44
58
-IL,
G
TAH VALLl:.Y ,/9
45
32
13
PRESCOTT 1~10
24
( N ew ~
24
38
(New\
38
Bm:CE CANYON
;IIClGiJo.BURG
.14
JACKSON ifll
.~~
•• *•• ~*¥~ •• * • •••• *.******
1, 1957
•
�89' e r s I N TE o N AT ION A L H I G H • l Y AS S ' N.
I N C.
* *~********** * ****** ****** ***** *********************** ********************** * * * ***
FRO :
M
M. H. Cantwel l
TO:
Officers and Directors
SUBJECT:
...
- -- -
Ootober 1 , 1957
Re-Cap of INCOME and EXPENDITURE3 cleared thru the Salt Lake
City Offioe for the fiscal year Ootober 1, 1956 - September
30, 1957 •
- - - - -- - - - - --- - - - - -- --
r N C O 14 E -
14 E 14 B E R S H
MEl"
-.!!.
TOTAL
REVENUE
REMITTANCE
$645.00
105 .00
405. 00
705 . 00
375. 00
540 . 00
570. 00
210.00
390.00
510 . 00
300 . 00
300 . 00
$645.00
105 . 00
405 . 00
705.00
375. 00
540.00
570.00
210.00
390 .00
510.00
300.00
300 . 00
***********
MONTH
RENEW
Mar.
Apr .
May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.
23
1
'4
28
7
2
20
9
9
7
14
15
16
6
23
19
16
34
16
5
17
27
6
:2
43
7
27
47
25
36
36
14
26
34
20
20
TOTAL
139
194
337
Oot.
Nov.
Deo .
Jan .
Feb.
r P FEE S
*******************
*******
$5,055.00 , $5,055.00
(Receipt from Corporat1on Treasurer on file for each
monthly Remittance ) .
OFF ICE
MONTH
2-!-E R H E A DAN D S UP P LI E S
PHONE
POSTAGE
Oct.
$10.46
Nov.
12.45
Dec.
3 .70
Jan.
9 .74
Feb.
27.26
Mar.
30.41
Apr.
7.74
May
25 . 50
June
4.07
July
14 . 65
Aug .
31.32
Sept .
12,25
TOTAL $169 . 45
$ 8.83
PR~~ ING
$11.20
90 . 68
14.97
6.40
34.50
7.50
11.00
19 .24
. 97 .19
24 . 60
135.01
63 .5 6
12.25
20 . 00
38.60
46.08
$221.37
56.24
20 . 35
.-- .
$520 .63
MISC.
TOTAL
$16.92 $ 47 . 41
61.36
179.46
27.48
39.58
12.53
153.96
65.03
124. 39
36.05
214. 47
39.26
149. 80
5.00
30. 50
7.52
23. 84
23 . 80
116.89
12.00
102. 27
' 2 . 92
61.25
$311 ,87$1.243.5:<
.-u
~()A
C(..' ..
;1 S
,f
,;;.,
'1,1 i'?
..l.JjCl- I \
-I. ,,'
'i
i b
(J _
(Itemized statement of eaoh 1nd1v1dus.1 expenditure sub7 .' ,.. '
mitted to Coroorat1on Treasmel' for audi t prior t o Petty
Ca sh Refund) ..
I
, ..... ~t
S'
~
{ ,
&
"
v , 'J
L
C' !
�r
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTs
No planned sightseeing tour this pom.
CONFERENCE OF CLUB OFFICIALS
MA IN BUSINESS SESSION
9 a.m. tomorrow morning
10 a.mo tomorrow
'IIill inolude features as follows:
DON W
ATKINS
7
Publio Relations Direotor Yellowstone Park Co. and Hamilton
Stores will speak and conduct discussion on D1JI1'IClltxxxxxx
" INTER" COMMUNITY PUBLIC RELATIONS"
LYLE SARVIS_ Manager Utah AAA will speak 4IJ( and acoduot disoussion on
" Methods used by AAA in seouring ourrent ..K¢x information
on road conditions, and how oommunities oan cooperate to
their own ad vantage"
BANQ,UET TlIlln 8 p.mo tomorrow (ieature
speaker~
also ToD Sherard, Deputy Engineer Wyo
Sec W Highway Commission
yo
.. >ow.. ". == ,
DO
....
-_._--
;.-------
Lon Garrison, Supt
ellowstone Parko
HWY. ep
�Opening M
eeting
M . Oct 7
on
**************
INVOCATION
AGENDA
Paul Stevi g , wyoming Director
WELCOME ADDRESS -
"
"
Mayor of Afton and 89'er member
Doyle L. Child
Lorenzo S. Walker
-
Fres o Afton C of C.
has given
exoellent moral and financial support
to local 89' ers.
**************
CORRESPONDENCE and ANNOUNCEMENTS
MINUTES OF 2nd . ANNDAL CONVENTION, Kanab, Utah
APPOINTMENT OF COMMITTIES
1)/"~-c( ?-/'.t L/v
NOMINATING - Ernest Saran(Ch~
Bill Bass
ARIZ:ONA ( 2 )
UTAH
AUDITING - Frank Sorgatz (ch)
RESOLUTIONS -
(someone from W
yoming)
WYOMING (1)
Directorships to be filled-
Oct. 12, 1956
(1)
Mark Pugmire
Chas . Ma»tin (ch)
Ralph Cameron
J years
J years
1 year - unexpired term Burnett
Handryx
Allen Cameron
Mrs. Dorothy Bo 06 , Jerry Breen , .
('~c.i_\ S '"
I
i"'"
Paul Stevig(or ~~§D from W
e
yoming
Fred Houohens(of Jackson. Fred will not be here today
but has two resolutions on which he wants to talk
fc
tomorrow, so wo uld be good to have him on the committee.
ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
Standing Committee - M
itchell, Chairman , Sorgatz, Hendryx, Cantwell
********
ANNOUNCE:
Committee Chairmen will call meeting follOwing adjournment.
Delegates with s uggestion., etc. should appear before Resodutlons
Committee eta .
�
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Title
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89'ers executive secretary memos, 1957-1958
Description
An account of the resource
89'ers executive secretary memos, 1957-1958 on the recap of income and expenditures of 1957 fiscal year, report on the Jackson [Hole] situation, notice of annual meeting in 1957 and 1958, August news bulletin, January 1957 board of directors meeting, progress report on promotional program, miscellaneous report, and the March 1957 progress report.
Creator
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Cantwell, Martin H.
Contributor
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Mitchell, Bentley
Subject
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United States Highway 89
Tourism
Accounts
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
Medium
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Administrative records
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Publisher
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89'ers International Highway Association, Inc.
Date
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1956-12-21
1957-03-09
1957-08-20
1957-10-01
1957-10-04
1958-09-10
Spatial Coverage
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 2 Folder 8
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
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Text
Format
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image/jpeg
Identifier
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MSS322Bx2Fd8
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/28d5c6fcca62fa31b7bd9933795718b1.pdf
74dc32bdda407de4eda6d712100c41f0
PDF Text
Text
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER
Application is hereby made to the 59'era INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY ASSOCIATION, Inc . for
8 CHARTER granting the establishment and operation of a LOCAL 89'ers CLUB as defined
and described herein . Charter to be issued when and if all provisions of the "CHARTER
REQUIREMENTS" outlined be low have been met.
TERRI'roRY
All towns and communi ties on and adjacent to the INTERNATIONAL
89
HIGHWAY
SYSTEM BETWEEN and INCLUDING the following points:
SOUTH
NORTH
(Specify town, county line, or definite address on Highway)
~~:------------------------------------------------------NAME
The name of the proposed Local Club will be: (choose one)
§9.'er CLUB OF
(Use name of your
The
town
8q'ers cum
or some phrase describing the area)
SEND NECESSARY
MA~R~
ro: ________~~--~~-----
(PRINT full name and complete mail address)
Detatch "APPLICATION" and mail to Executive Secretary at 140 West Second South St.,
Salt Lake City 1, Utah. Retain "CHARTER REQUIREMENTS" f or your file.
......
CHARTER REQUIREMENTS
(1)
Any individual or group may apply for a charter on the above specified f orm and
may select the Club name and define the territory to be included.
(2)
Upon receipt of application the Executive Secretary will furnish a list of present
members in the prescribed territory, and supply necessary membership material.
(3) - A MINIMUM of 25 PAID-UP MEMBERS within the area defined is required before the
charter 'Will be issued. Present members to be included in making up the required
25·
(4)
Application for membership must be on the Association's prescribed form properly
filled in, and accompanied by REMITTANCE IN FULL for one year's dues in advance.
(5) - Dues in the INTERNATIONAL ASSVCIATION are $15.00 f o r ONE FULL YEAR. Remit the full
amount. When and if the Charter is issued, your LOCAL CLUB will receive a REFUND
of $5.00 on each NEW member secured and a like a.mount on the ANNUAL RENEWAL of
ALL members affiliated therewith.
(6) - When chartered, each Local Club will elect local officers and function as a selfgoverned unit under the provisions of a set of BY-LAWS to be prescribed by the
parent INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION. These by-laws will permit great latitude and
freedom of action at l ocal level. 'll1ey will neither "police" nor restrict l ocal
activity not in conflict with the established regulations and policies of the parent
Corporation. They will, however be designed to standardize procedure and foratall
duplication of effort or conflict between local club activities and the over-all
projects of the International Association.
�N?
Con necting MEXICO Rt. U with CANADA Rt. 2
II
2821
~
Club
Prop.
Mgr.
Check Whic:h
Business
City
County
State
Other Organizations, POlIltions held, etc. (OPTIONAL)
MAKE ALL CHECKS PAYABLE TO THE ASSOCIATION
Address All Co mmunicatio ns To
89'ers INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY ASSOCIATION , Inc.
140 Wesl Second Sou th St.
~
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The unders igned hereby applies fo, membership and tenders FIFTEEN
DOLL ARS payment in fu ll or dues for one year. (PLEASE PRINT)
Mall Ad dress
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APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP
Full Name
2821
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INSTRU(' TIONS FOR USE
"
PRINT or TYPE- Double c hec k Initlalll and correct spelling of nMle.
FILL ALL SPACES ON BOTH FORMS- Use carbon or PRINT or TYPE duplicat e.
IN ALL CASES- Original Application and Receipt Stub (e ntire brown form) mUlIl
remain Intact and be lIe nt to AseoclatJon Ofrtce with remittance for duclI attached.
INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIPS- (l.... rom AI"1!8. in which no AppllcaUon for LoeRI Club
C harter hu been made.)
R etain ONLY the DUPLICATE RECEIPT STUB as a memo record or your remitance. Mall r cmRlnlng portions of form to Association with re mittance attached.
Membership card, when Issued. will be your receipt for dues.
LOCAL CLUB CHARTER APPLIED FOR- Membersh ip Committeeman will sign.
detach, and give DUPLICATE Receipt Stub t o AppJlcant. Retain DUPLICATE
Application blan k ror Club Records. : a!l ONGINAL Applicatio n Blank and
M
Recei pt stub to Association Office with remittance atta chcd IN FULL ($13.00l.
ASIIoclation Treasurer will rerund Local Club one-third thereot when and If Charter
is Issued.
,
�N?
Connecting MEXICO Rt. 13 wit h CANADA Rt . 2
2821
2821
N?
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APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP
The undersigned hereby applies tor membership and tenders FIFTEEN
DOLLA RS payment in fu ll of dues for one year. (PLEASE PRINT)
Prop.
Mv·
Mall Address
Cheek Which
Bus iness
Full Name
City
Cou nty
State
MAKE ALL CHECKS PAYABLE TO THE ASSOCIATION
Address All Communications To
89'ers INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY ASSOCIATION , Inc.
Salt Lake City 1, Ut:ah
~ --------------------------------------------------------- --
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Other Orpniutlonl , Positions held, etc. (OPTIONAL)
140 West Second South St.
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�BS;n LSY :.l n C:1ZLL , v 1~ E :::!3 R~3 . 0:.:9 ' :':HS
loU I CHZL L ~W :'!i: L . 130 1 InJ~ . 8 9
LO;;A7II . u r An
�CIlARTZR APFLICATION FOR A LOOAL CLUB on UNIT
OF
The 89 ' ers International. Highway Associat1on , InD •
• •••••• *** ••• *............................*••••••• *•••••••••••••••••••••••
All applicationS tor the charterins ot a loosl 89 ' ero Club shall be
subject to t he tollowins Regulations.
Ally individual, or group cay arlilY to the International Organization
tor a Oharter to opera te a local 89 era Club by t illins in the torm
below and eubmittins seme , pr operly signed to the Exeoutive Seoretary .
hen a ppli oat i on for a Looe.l Club is made , the propos od Olub shall
be requi.ed to seoure a minimum quot a of 2; paid up mombars , organize and
eleot offioers on or before 60 days fram the dat e ot the Charter ApplIoation
in order to earn and reoeive the refund of . ; . 00 per membership as provided
for in the Local Olub By- Laws . unless the above haS been aocomplished
withi n the prosoribed 60 day period, the Charter Application shall expire ,
and al l rights snd olaim to any and a ll ac cumulated refunds Bhall be
torfeited . Another Oharter Application may be tiled at a future date and
any suoh forfeited members hips shall be considered as "old members" ,
counting towards the required 2; membership quota , but no retunds shall
be peyable to the Olub on these momberships until renewal dues are
oollected , as provided for, and in the cnnner speoif ied in the Loca1 Olub
By- Laws •
•••••••••••••••• ** • •••••••• ** •••••••*.....................................
Havins read the. abovo Regulat iOns , and the Local Cl ub By- Laws furnished
with this Application , ( I ) (.... ) agree to e1l ot the terms and conditions
oontained therein , and hereby make application f or the Charterins or a
Looal unit ot The 89 ' ors International Highway Association , Inc , To wit :
NAlIE :
_______....:: ERS ~LUB of the 89 ' ers International. lii gh.IaY
8:.29~·~~_C =
Aosociation , Ino .
TERRITORY: (North and South Limits)
Town , Junotion , or other Address NORTll ON US 89__________T" -_
: ;O
Town , Junotion , or other Address SOUTH ON US 89_____________
Including the f ollowing Cities , Town , end Communiti es :
,
D :
ATE
C~ttee.
Si gnatures and Addreo of indi vidual or ·Organi zntion
App~lcation for Charter;
makIng this
•
•
\
�1
BY -L AWS
Ot All Local Olubs and units Chartered by
THE 89 ' ERS INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY ASSOCIATION , INC.
ARTICLE 1 - NAWK
The name ot this Local Unit shall be "The,_____________
89 ' ERS CLUB ot the 89'ers International Highway Assooiation, Inc.
ARTICLE ·ll - l(EI{B]'llSHp'
Membership in this CLUB shall oonsist ot those persona over 21 years
or age , partnerships or oorporations within ths predetermined geographioal
area desoribed t he the Charter App11cat1on who have t1rst been aooepted
1nto members h1p ot the Internat10nal Assoo1ation.
Memborships shall
oonsist ot two olasa1tications being "ACTIVE" and "ASSOCIATE" , and ahall
not be transterable .
ARTICLE 111 - ANNUAL DUES
Annual dues tor eaoh "ACTIVE" member shall be $15.00 , payable in
advanoe , and annual dues tor "ASSOCIATE UEIoIBERS" shall be any
ot $15.00 to be determined by eaoh such member .
SUll!
in exoesa
No SPCEIAL ASSE96MEN'l'S
shall be made upon the momber. ot this olub .
ARTI CLE 1 V - TlIlU4 O MEMBERSHIP
F
The term ot membership shall be for one callender year, renewal dues
being due and payable upon the l a st day ot the m
onth in wh10h the original
membership Tms entered in t he books ot t he Internat10nal Assoo1at 1on .
Any momber in detault ot payment ot dues for a period ot more than 60
days shall be fort hwith suspended , without hear1ng , trOll! all privileges ot
member sh1p .
�2
ARTI CLE V - OVFI CERS apd DI EOTORS
SECTION 1 .
The Offioer s
an~
Di reot or s of this Cl ub shall be eleot ed at tho
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING.
The Officers shall consist of a
ane or more Vioe Presidents , Seoret ar y and Treasurer .
oft ices may be held by tho oace person.
Pre 8 i~ent ,
TWo or mors
orf1cers shall servo f or a t orm
ot one year unless sooner resigned or r emoyed .
SRCTI O]! 2.
The CLUB may, at ita dosoretion also elect a Boord of Direotors to
serve in staggered terma.
SECTION 3.
The Offioers and Direotors sO eleoted ahall constitute an Exeout1ve
COJDIIl1ttee to OOMuot the aff airs at the Looal Olub.
A majority of the
Exeoutive Committee m
embere , at the time in offioe shall oonstitute a
quorum for the transaot ion of any and ell business .
SECTION 4.
The Cffioers and Directors at this Looal Club ahall s.e rvs without
compensation , but may be reimbursed their aotual expenses i nourred in t ho
performance of
~utie8
on the behalf ot the Looal Olub.
ARTICLE Vl. - XEETINGS
SECTION 1.
The ANNUAL MEETING O the membership at this Local Club shall be
F
hel~
during t he period bot_en AlI6ust 1, and September 15 at each year tor t he
purpose ot eleoting Otfioers, ODd the transaotion at other business which
may be properly presented.
Notice in writing shall be given a ll members
in good standing not leas than ten
UERl'ING .
~ay8
prior to the
~ate
at eaoh
ANlI1JAL
�SECTION 2.
3
SPECIAL Jo!l!lF.'l'moa or t he .....bereh i p shell be held at such pl aco , dar ,
and tirDB a s prescril(],d by the Exeoutive Committee , with t hroe daY"
notioe be1ng 81 ven to all l!18!1lbers in good otandill8 .
ARTICLE Vll - QUORUM and VOTING
SEOTION 1 .
Those members present at
anr
duly noticed ANlUAL or SPECIAL neeting
shall const! tute a quorum ror the transaction or
a~
and all bU8inoS8 .
SIOTION 2 .
Eaoh JII8IIIber prosent in person at
anr
AllNUAL or SP OIAL JIIlullbership
lIleeting or this LoGal Club shall be entitled to one (1) vote ror his
individual lI18J11bership , OR for tho oorporation or partncrship he in
person represents .
Each corporation or partnership shall have only one
vote tor eaah lI18Jllbership oarried .
ARTICL!: Vlll - lNDEBTED
S LIMIT
The highest amount of INDlll3Tl!DNESS or liabil1tr to whiah this Looel
Club mar a t
n~
tl.Jne subjeot itself shall not bo mors than twice the
amount ot mombership -refunds oolleoted during the prior rear:
PROVIDED
ALWAYS that t his LoGal Club has no right to , and JDar not inourr an)'
indebtedness or liabilitr tor or on behalf of the 89 ' ers International
B1ghvmr Assooiation, a oorporation.
• TIOL!: _ - FUND RAI S mo
lX
SECTION 1 .
The Looal Olub shall have the right to raise funds tor its aotivities
by an)' method not in oonfliot with the polioies or the International
Assooiation, BUT shall not inorease the dues , nor levy assesamsnts upon
its mambers .
�SECTION 2 .
4
ALL tunds reoeived by t he Loolll Club trom any s ouroe shall be
oxpended under direction ot the Exeout1ve Committee tor t he 901e purpose
ot attraot1ng and lolding tourist trade within t he geographioal area 01'
t he Local Club .
ARTICLE X - INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION
Eaoh
Looa l Club shall be required to have representllt
n present
eaoh Annual Internat10nal Convent10n ot t he persnt Asso.,illt10n.
t
Said
repreoentllt10n may oonsist ot one or more or the Ottioers , O other
R
seleot od delegation.
ARTICLE
n -
CASH REFUND ON !L!!M!lE!lSHl;P DUES COLLECTED
SECTION 1 .
By
virtue ot ita Charter , any Looal Club may eleot' to a ot as an
ll8ent tor t he International Assooiation in the matter ot soIling memberships , and the oolleotion ot renewal dues within ita territory.
SECTI ON 2 .
Loeal Clubs _ aoting as agents , shall reoeive a caah retund ot • .5 . 00
tor s lloh and every new membersh1p sold _ a nd "enewa]. msmberah i p dues
oolleoted PROVIDED ALWAYS that the renevml mnmberahip tee is oolleotod
end
•
remitted to t he Aseooiations salt Lake C1ty ortiee w1thin t hirty (30)
days from the date said renewal mamberahip tee is due and payable .
It
is understood thet the Looal Club torteits all olaim to this retund on
mamborsh1pa whioh booome more than t hirty days delinquent , and whioh may
t hen be oolleoted by an agent 01' the International AS800iation.
SECTION 3 .
The Exacutive Seoretary or other agent
ot tho International
Associat1on may Goll01te and sell new memberships within the area 01' any
Local. Club, a nd th.. Looa l Club shall r .. oei ve no ossh retund on suoh new
memberships until a nd unless the 1.0041 Cl ub oolloots the seoond year
ronewal dues .
�•
5
ART ICLE n l - STATUS 01 LOCAL CLUBS
Loca l Clubs shall be oonsidored in GOOD STAnDING aD long as a llIin1lnum
of 25 p aid up mEllIlbers is maintained , and allot the terms and oonditions
or
these by- laws are compl1ed with .
Tha Charter at any Cl ub may be
revoked for just cause by a ot ion of the Board of Diroctors of the
International Assooiation .
ARTICLE
nll - GENERAL
POLI CY
SECTION 1 .
Tho full nn.me of the Locel Club &hall be used in ALL advertising
done by eeid Club .
For Example:
nThe Blank 89 ' ers Club of the 89 'ors
International Highway Association, Ino . n
SECTION 2.
Looa l matters and problems shall be referred to a nd disoussed wi th
t he Stato Director, who after investiga.tion will reco......nd aotion to the
Intornational Assooia tion .
BEeTIOl. 3.
lIo Club ahall issue an
ofUoial sta t ement in the natle
or
the 89' era
to the press on any matter i nvolvi ng other oOJllllunities 01' US 89 in which
a differenoe 01' op inion is involvod .
Offioia l sta t
onts on such
oontraversialmatters must be released by the lo cal Dire otor of the
Internat ional Assooiat ion .
SECTION 4.
The Looal Club shall at a ll times COOPERATE with other Looal Uni t s ,
and wit h the Internat ional Associa tion in the furtheranoe and pr omotion
of t he objeoti vea of t h is International Organization.
�6
SECTI O 5.
N
Intormation requested by the EXeoutlvQ Secretary, or any Officer or
Direotor of t he Interno.t1onal M sooiation s hall be furnished prOOlptly ,
and Looal Clubs aro required to advise tho Salt Lake Oftice regarding
their projects and aotivities at trequent intervals in order that the
International Directors cay be
o tacl1liar 1ii1 th the acti vi tiBs of
Looal Clubs , and also in order that these notivities cay be given proper
publioity in the Assooiation' s Bulletins .
ARTICLE XlV - CONFLICTING PROVISIONS
SECTIO
1.
Any
provisions ot these By- laws which may be in oonflict with the
Artioles ot Inoorporation OR the By- Laws ot tho International Associat ion
shall become null nnd void .
SECTION 2 •
•\ny
provisions oontained in the printed Charter issuod to Local units
whioh cay confliot with the provisiono of thase By- laws shnll beoom
e
nU}l and void .
�
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3254
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1596">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1596</a>
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
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2013
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Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Applications for 89'ers charter and membership
Description
An account of the resource
Applications for charter, charter requirements, and membership, by-laws of all local clubs and units chartered by 89'ers International Highway Association.
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States Highway 89
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 1 Folder 16
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
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image/jpeg
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
MSS322Bx1Fd16
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/4df3d57bab760b705d2120e4e9fe9af6.pdf
f0d27e8e6f58aec624396002552448c7
PDF Text
Text
Nov. 13-'57
Cardson , Alta.
MEMO
TO: Bentley Mitchell
FROM:M .H.Cantwell
RE: Dues Remittance Advise
COPY: Charlie M
artin
******************* ************** ******************* *** **********************
This tile contains the two reports which I will file with the Corp. Treasurer
ea ch month.
•
One 1s the "Remittance Advise" showing: List of memberships collected ,
refunds paid to Clubs;recap of new, renewal, and total memberships for the
month .
The bmtton, right side tabulations shows: gross coll ecti ons ; gross professional
tee(50%) deduoted ; and net remi t tance due the Corporation . The top center
shows the Check N
umber a t tached .
The bot t on , lett, shows: The gross professicnal fee deducted; the amount of
refunds paid to olubs out ot this gross fee; and the net tee remain1 ng which
is payable to me . Out of this net tee , I will of course have to pay commission
to sub- agents i s cases where this is required .
*************** ***************
The other report is a statement of monthly items due me from the Corporati on .
unless there happens to be authorized travel expenses , this will be a two-part
report : The statement of refund due petty cash with itemized receipts a ttached,
and a re-cap statement showing all items, and total due .
�r
(
!l ,,; ME,: R S HIP
:1<';<***
,**.<
llE1!ITTAliGE
FROU: ll.H .Cantwell
TO:
CID:CK
aEREIHTH M
Ccrp~Treasuror
"
"
IUE
BE R
!llTES
Edd i e s Lounge, M pe lie r
ont
15.00
Ear l 's Cate , M
ontpelier
1 5 . 00
L.S . I·,edel,M pelier
ont
15. 0 0
Chie f M l,M pelier
ote
ont
1 5 . 00
'Hes s Conoco, M pelier
ont
15. 00
Bar ret t F lo~al, M t pe lier
on
15.00
Lowe Dr ug Co., Paris
15.00
Ge:btsch M ket, Par ia
ar
15. 00
Shepherd Bros ., Paris
15. 00
Al linger Co., M t pelier
on
15.00
I. G. A. Foods , M pelier
ont
15 00
Real Es t a t e Exoha ng e , M
ontpelie r 1 5 : 00
Boise - Paye tte , M t pelier
on
15.00
M
ontpel ier Laundry, M
ont.
15 Ou
•
Doyl e Ant hony , M
ontpel ier
15 . 00
Bud ' s Bar , 'ont pe lie r
15.00
J erry' s Chevr on , M t pelier
on
1 5 . 00 ,
GriJne s Barber Shop , M pelier
ont
15. 00
Bur g oyne Phc y ., M pelier
ont
15. 0
M
oder n Drug Co., M pe l1er
ont
15. 00
F ?? 2 ss, xMmsIp6tt •• ,kkkRXAw Sf sa
l¥;'t· •• 'ik·Mpq?bie·· .. t t .,' ri. w*11 22
Roya l Bakery , M pel ier
ont
1 5 . 00
R1ch Th eatre, M pelier
ont
15.00
Jewell M el, M
ot
ontpelier
15.00
Ar t Sorenson " 66", M t pelie r
on
Three Sist ers M
otel, M pelier
ont
*Lowe Dr ug , M t pe lier
on
t
•
•
"
LlEIA'ER
DUES
1 5 . 00'1' ·
15 . 00
1 5 . 00 '
1 5 . 00 ]
JACKSON ( 4 )
REFUND! 21) . 00
.
*' ******************* ••• ** **..f***********
'
•
•
.
.
Sta r Valley' irewelr¥,A1'ton
1 5 . 00
• R.J.Crook s tore, Smoot
1 5. 00
.
•
Bruoes S tandard Serv. · Afton 15 .. aO
STAR VALLEY ( 3) RE~'D 6 15 . 00
<vu
•
•
•
I
I
•
**.***.*************.*~********.
Ar t S t adl er. W
ickenburg
1 5 . 00
.!
_':: ::!=",=G
il:::IC KEN BUR ~(~l::).:....:
. RE::'~FUND=...."':...:,,5,::::00=-_,"",
: !I . '
•
*
Dr. Philip Fulstow, Kanab
TreasUl'e Trail M
otel, Kana'b
*
GLEN CANYON ( 2 ) REFUND $ 10 . 00
~
•
1 5 . 00
1 5 . 00
* *~*************************~***.*****
•
•
:Suns ot M
otel, G: ' Fai ls
Sullivan M
ero., D~Uyer
dim Bridger Ct., Gardiner
"es t ern M
otel, Br owning
Ar i z ona Suppl y Co., F1a
Elliotts Phoh., M
anti - ,g .
• Old Smoky B- Q., W
illiams
. Ch oteau Club (Don Ander son)
15.00
15. 00
15. 00
1 5 .00
1 5 . 00
1 5 . 00
1 5 . 00
1 5 . 00
,,1.5 . 00
Chote~u Texaco, Chotea u
*_*_*-*_
-I!.
10-31
daokson M
arket, da ckso..
" Hawkins AC ot. Servo "
.; daokson l11nter Spor t s "
*,
Drs. I!.• C.and G.F. Naegell"
*
-
ADVISE
~
*
-*
****
'
15.001 •
15.00 '
15. 00 •
Bear Lake - 26 Memberships nEFUND • • • $ 1 30 . 00
r;o ,
101
DUE S
*-
t . . - . * " __ ,,,
A i sIr lou tIc n
GROSS Protessional Fees. o.
,, 337.5 0
'lube....
.~ 180. 00
Fees.. • •
$ 157.50_
REF1J}jT)S
.~
*
GROSS
foa',d
0
r ofessloLa
lI.l~..
"'35:)1
lE'cluct on c
• 8)
_nL~l
fi'eGs does NV·... show
com:n1ss1ons p ld
DE
UG~'ED
" ller-te ...
"'X ....f Fee
0
•• 6.12..00
50% )
337.50
~
K
,
(
Paymcnt of refund to Glen Canyon
he l d pending status of Club
--
337.50
�..
~ '
MEKBE
**•
FROU: M.H.Cantwell
~
REMITTANCE
TO : Cor poTreasurer
'* '"
* * * * * '" '" * '" *
SHIP DUE "
'" * * * '" * * * * .
ADVISE
NO • :i:i!- "T.i -:I<
*' '" * * '" *
~
DUES
MEMBER
*
*
o CLUB
Fl agst aff Cheshire M
otor s
Vcrkamps , O and Canyon
r
Shasta M
otel, Gr e t Fa113
Fr ed Harvey , O
rand Clnyon
The Gift House , Logan
Loyt s Toxa co . Tumaoa cori . Ariz
t G ene , Came ro~ Ar iz
r
Dovmtown ·o t e l . Tuos on
Bl a ir M
otors . ~i v i ~B ton
· Turnbull M
otors . Edmont on
:I':
.f'
:I<
* * * * :): * * * '" * '"
»:
* * '"
*----;r
MEMBER
DUllE
BEAR LA
M a rk Pugmir e
Bear Lake lotor
*M
otor Hotel
:;, *Kunz Temco
..
15 . 00 ~
15 . 00 "
15 . 0
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
l5 . v O
15.00
15 . 00
15 . 00
*
*
~
*
*
*
4 M
ember shi ps
15. 00
15 . 00
15. 00
1.5. 00
efund Pai d
" ¥
ZO . OO
•••••••• * ••••
SEVIER
VA~LEY
CLUB
*
Rai nbow Ca fe
15 . 00
iChfield M
otel
15 . 00
*•••• *~ ••• *
* C. R. Car d , Texas Gas Co
15 . 00
STAR VAJ~ CLUB
* Fi r s t St a t e Band , Saline
15. 00
(~ B6taaeZES%ijZe50.e0Z ·Sevi er V lley 0i l Co .
a
16 . 00
* Forty- Five ptel
15 . 00 *
*M and N ~ruok Lines
15 . 00 *
5 M
ember shi ps Ref und Pai d
Z5. 00
* Salt River Oil Co.
15 . 00 *
••••• *.**** ••
* Reue l Call
15 . 00 *
",i r t hl1n For d Sal es
15 . 00 *
BRYCE C rroli CLUB
Fr eda Ca fe
15 . 00 *
15 . 00
Bruoe F . Parker
Corral ~t e l
15. 00 *
15 . 00
dwe .
Del and Teds
15 . 00 * A. L. Elmer H
/
Call Bui ld i ng Head quar ters
15 . 00 *
Marv i n Sess i ons Che vr on fi t a .
15 . 00 :0;Z M
embershi p • •••••• Refund due $10. 00
....
I ' emberships--- etund Paid .• $ 50 . 00:
II)
"
••••••••••• *
~"'"'-"'-"=="'-"' L:.><
O LE
C"' UB
5:
~
1 JOember - Ref und
*••••• ******
''/IC mURC CLUB
U
Valley l.atio nel Ilunk
15 . 00
1 Member s h ~p •• Refund Pai d •• o.Oo
5. 00
... *."' •••• *••• . ••
"
15 . 00 *
Fent on Rexall
l.!*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_'!'_*_*_*_*_*_*_ :J:-*_ *~)~ _*_ *-*->!,-*-*..;fr:: .. :0:' . *_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_;j, .. *_.
* Nll\'/
H i s t rib uti 0 n
GROSS Professional Feaso oonGo$
_ 8-
RENEWAL
-Z,-
GROSS AlnOWlt Collected ..
Zt;7';')rJ'
Paid t o Clubs o•• ••• o$ ~
(or he l d)
*~ Professional F888 • ••
$ ~~?eREFUNDS
DEDUCTE~
0
TOIj' :.
0
0
00
( FTotoFee - 50% )0.
",
495 . ()
247 .'50
0 ••••
* ( NetPrcf essional
)"eGs does NOT shoy,
deduc1iion 0: ooJlll1lisfJiona J?aid to
sub- agents)
RE:
MA
J
ll.1£§.
Dryoe Ca nyon and Gl en Canyon Ref unds
hel d pend i ng s t a tus of clubs
�•
•
DeooQbor 31 , 1957
FRO!.! : IA. H. Ca ntwoll
TO : Cha rli o B. Unrtin
SUN 'CT : I t ems due M. ll . Cantwoll fo r month of Decelllber , 1957
PROFES3 10NAL FEE ( De oembor) . . ..... .... ........ ..
REFUND
• 1 0 0 . 00
ETTY CJ\3H ...... .. .............. ..... .. .. ........ .. .. .... .. .... .. 59 . 8 3
.. 159. 83
CREDIT ( Pr ofess i onal foo advanoed ) • •••••
B. L
~CE
DUE ........... ..
1 00 . 00
�FR ~ :
M H. Cantwoll
.
TO : Chnrli e B.
December 31, 1957
~nrt1n
SUBJECT : St tement of refund due petty cash tor Qonth ot De cember , 1957.
PHOHE ( Long ;) l s t anc e ) •••••• •• • • •• • .
•
••••••• $ 41. 15
PO . . ...... . . . ...... . ......................
JT\G
PHINT n~G
4. 00
( St at amo nts} .......................
llg90
MI3C . StJPPLI.ES ... •••.••.••.••••••••••. • •.• ••••
2. 78
TOTAL F....FUND D ••••.. • .•• $
m
59. 83
�"!
~
. ..
M'j.
;:; 13
•
>
Rf;"LTA
*
IJ.iI Cu",' ell
~
K
nl'l.l
dE
--------
, B
1 52
~.
'
o CLUB
15.00
1 5 . 00
15.00
15 .
1 5 . 00
1 5 . 00
15 . 00
15. 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
15. 00
'C
1
•
~
_.
"
REFUND DUE • ••
SHIPS
INVOLVED
~
•
•
'
"
Firat! a U . Dank! BrOl ml ng
Rainb",.-,
to1 , L vines t on
BerB Garage , It . SUlphur Spr .
First Nn t1 . Dank , "
1 5 . 00
15 . 00
15, 00
15 . 00
*
*
•
•
*
*
55 . 00
*
•
.... ....... *** ••
J OKSO
,
L PER
It
Dotao ayet t o Lw;bor Co
Lowe Drug , Paria
Dea r LakeDai ry Cooop
Sh epherd Dr os . , Par i s
I z a tt Servioe
St ar line Sorvice
Cottle a ash s tore
Lakota Resort
Fi sh Haven Rosort
nea r Lake ot or
Hansen Chevrolet
m
,
T
S
flO. 5/31/58
--- -----
.----.....,~~-
IN CLUB
11
J:i
•
*
*
HOLE CLUB
ROBoro Poi nt Rosort
1 5 . 00 •
*
•
DUE . .... . . O 5 .00'
,
, MBERSHIP
1
IillFUND
4< • .i: _ _
"
j
s
t
r 1 but 1
~
n
J.'ro£ess:ional Fees ..
Ju
e~
•
.... \,.f'3
,
.lenal
t'(ll rl
':Ill ~\
t,...
.••.
ec~
,
.......
'1.• '
•
~lC;"
..
l'
~
_
RE Ii,/;\L 1 6
knoun
Colle p e
h
r Fee
0 . 00
dOAB NOrr
1f),l~
CROSS
_*_
--
DEDUCTED
••
•
t _*_'1<-*_*_* .. ,,'_*_.
• NEW
1 20 . 00
GRC
•
•
*
•
•
Il
l.!
I.
*. _
)T.Co__ _
16
.• 240.00
~
<0'
, "
-.:.-.
• 120. 00
120. 00
�/l~
!!'ROM:
May )1, 195!!
I4. H. Cantwell
TO : Char lie B. L
!artin . Jr .
SUBJECT :
St a t ement ot Retund due Petty Cash for L , 1958
lay
POSTAGE ••••••••••••••••• • •
!.IISC .
• •••• •• •• • ••• • • •• •••
TOTAL
Sal es recei pts or itamtzed
statement for eaoh item
a~;1f~d he at •
;:~~~ve
7 . 00
Seoretary
$
7. 50
�FROM : U. H. Cunt well
l.!ay 31 , 1958
TO : Cho.r lle B. lJurtln , Jr .
SUBJECT : Statecent of items d ue M.ll . Cant well - May , 1 958
Y- ' 58 ) • ••••••
$ 100. 00
Retund to Petty Cush ••••••••••• • ••
7 . 50
Professional Fo e (
TOTAL DUE
107 . 50
�-'7~
l.IEMBERSHIP DUES
* * *REMITTANCE *ADVISE * * •
***• * * *
FROU: M. H.Cantwell
CHECK
TO :
":It
Corp ~ Treasurer
* * * * * ,. * * '" *
:to
NO.
HEREWITH NO. lilA\ --
* * * * ~ * *" ""
M EMBER
DUES
>I<
*** **
r
:t:
:;.
*
:;<
>I<
*******
:;<
*-;;
D
..;IA:;....:E
:....:M:....:Be-;:E_R;:
C
~
NO
CWB
*
I NVO
LVED
*
~ tllIlI "Il"Il~
*
15. 00
15.00
15 . 00
15.00
15.00
~ Crosby Caf e, Kanab
15.00
15 .00
...-- J.C. Pennay Co., Flagstaft
~ John F. \'liggins , Uvingoton
15.00
___ Yankee Jim, Gardi."lS"
15.00
~ S Bar S , U vingston
15.00
15.00
Bun.1ing IInrket, Kanab
Anorican Lnumry ani Unon, Prcocott 15 .00
W tward lIotel, Fr edonia
..
15.00
Conaco M
otel, Kanab
15. 00
1 5.00
Pugh otor. , Kanab
Brooks~ Servic. , Fr edonl.a
15.00
.. The llordcr Stor. , Fl esstaff
*Hotel Eldorndo, l.!lJ zatlan
.. Playa Uazatlan, l.Illza t.1an
La Siesta. l'otel, Uazatlan
Hotal. Fraemm, llc.zatlan
Total •••••16 msnbershipe
~~:HHHI-~
STAR Vt\I.LWf
I
cwe
L IWIIlERSHIP
,
Rofund DUe •••• 5. 00
*
*
•
*
*
*
*
•
*
*
•
*
Bentl ey : The s ix marked in red
*
*
mailed the ir checks . This out of
,
*
*
*
*
*
*
197 st atement s sent out t wo weeks a;
*
*
*
*
*
*
•
Star Vallqr 5\"/1 •• Cheeoe
*
*
;*i *_*_*_*_*_*_*_=< _*_*_*_~_~_:t .. *_*_* _*_*_>;: * ..,*""*_ *_*~ * *_.*_*_>1_*_* ..*_*_*_*_*_*_*
:of;*_*
a
i
GROSS Profess ional Fe ••••••
~FUNnJ
_
Petid to Clubs
*~} ofessional Fees.
•
* NEI1
• t r ib ut i 0 n
.
ts
RENEWAL
__
J\Jn01mt
12~.~_
GROSS
~
_ 5.• 00_
DEDUCTED ( Prof .Fee
.......
NET REl!JTTP~
~...
.. ... $ , ..,..,
I::.n
-"'
-
R
F
M
TOTAL _ _
17
Colle~t e d,
,.t\
NctF-"cfoS3i ,L.al asp does NC".' sa;\'t
deUl.lct ion 0 ('c., [: ... ons
.id
II
3
00 • • • •
50% l .
$ 255.00
t
127.50
HerewHh •••••• $ lZ1.5O
I
R
K
s
�FRCII.
~rU
1IJ1 . Ca~,.all
30, 1958
11). Charli. B. lIart1n, Jr
SUBJ~. Stat ....nt of it""'" due 1I. II .Cantwell ~ April, 1958
REFUND TO PETTI CASH ••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••.• ••
63 .32
PROPESSIO
NAL FEE ( April, 1958) •••••••••••••••••••••••• 100. 00
11)TAl DUE
• 163. 32
�I'I«J.I. lI J10Cantwell
A
pril 30, 1958
TO. Charlie B. l!artin, Jr.
SUBJ];l;T.
or
St at cm<nt of refund due pett y cash f or month
~IONE
April, 1958
(long dietnnce) •••••••••• • •.••••••• ••• 36. 09
PCBTGE.. ... ................... ............. .... 9.00
A
PRINTING statements on:1 envelopes .. . .. . .. .. .....
1.5. 25
suppl1ee, etc.............................
2 . 98
YISC.
TOTA REFUllD DUE
L
Saleo Rec eipts or i temized
otat omont or each item
a t ""hed
etc
ExecuU vc $ecrotar,y
• l,3 . 32
�J.!EtlBEBSHIP LU,L.
*
$
*
* ~ * ~. * -~
11EIITTTAHCE ADVISE
fro: Corp" Trees urtEll"
NO . 1/:31
:---
._---_._--'EMB;,;R
DUES
NO CLUB
' The Blue Bi rd, Logan
*Diok ' s Cat e . Logan
' M quis Hotel, Lethbridge
ar
' Yor k Hotel, Cal gary
Rivi era M el , Tuc s on
ot
Came r on otel , Pangui tch
Hwy 89 Lodg e , ~.~.t
Pang .
S . Ut ah Cle aner s, Pa nguitch
El Pa ti o Caf o , Fl aBs i af f
..
$ 15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
Lezy B M el
ot
$ 15
Ri chf i el d Coca Cola
BEAR LAKE CLUB
15
15
'.
$ 15
15
Ja ok son Lumbe r Co
as senburg Construction
*
•
•
*
*
*
*
*
3(9Ut.S)
em
~--------- 1 M ber ship
Refund Paid ••• $ 5 .• 00
•
* L _________ _
*'
"
cOD'JJliaf;ion~
1 Memb er shi p
Refund Palld •••• .• , 5 . 00
*
*
•
ember s hips
~------------- 2 M
*
*
Re fund pa i d •••• $ 10
•
* L ____________ _
.,
*
*
_Wi oSo
\ Netlrcf(3s3 Lonal ·i'ees does .I.YOrr show
b
The BRYCE CANYO CLUB a t
N
Panguitch has di s ba nded
and vii11 r e oe ive no furthe r
refunds unle ss r e -organi z ed .
*
•
*
*
*
*~ET FTofess1cnel Fee s ••.•• • ~ ~~~
()
~
DUES
--_
.
*
•
c < ..
P,nu I"GO Id
Clubs" .. .. ,~ .::!...Q....QD
(ieductioTJ. :of
NOTE :
r i b u t i r. n
GROSS Profe s s ional Fee s •• , ••• ~
REF1lNIl.~
MEMBER
*
J ACKSO HOLE CLUB
N
t
~
*
SEVIER V
ALLEY CLUB
Hi s
·
•
•
ST R VALLL'Y CLUB
Busco Products
Fr ank II . Sorga t z
* *
')aid tr
l!.E\V
'
G
ROSS
2 mombe r shi ps
Ref und pai d ••• $ 10
.q_
RENEWAL ./
TOTAL
(1).--
A!noun. Collected ••••• $'l:"V51~
DEOUCTED ( P"of .Fee - 50% ) •• '* ' 1_~ ,5.0
m;:~ REMI'l'TANCE
R
!'i.
iii
He r ewith ...... $ It4..-S"
ARK
s
�FROM : rA . H. Cant we ll
January 31-' 58
TO : Charlie B. l!ar tlh
.3 UBJ .CT : Items due LI. R. Cantwe11 for J:lOnt h of J anuary. 1956
I'liOl!'E3.3Ivl AL l!'EE ( J anuary-' 58 ) .... ....
100 . 00
REFUlID TO PETTY C J3H •• • ••• •••• • • • • • ••• • •
~
55 . 83
155 . 83
( C
REDIT ) Professiona l E
'ee Ad "anood ••••
100. 00
Balanc e due January • • ••••• •• •• •••• •••• •
55 . 83
De c . 5t n t ru~ent • •
59 . 83
Unpaid balance due from
TOTAL DtJE •••• •• • • •• • •• • • ••••• • • • •• • •• • • •
.
115 . 66
�,
FROLl :
TO :
Ll . H. Cunt ,,,,ll
J anuary 31 , 1958
Char lie B. M
artin
•
SUBJ£CT : St at ement of refund due Petty Cash f or m h of January, 1958
ont
••• *••• ••••• ••• ••••
~
~
~
PHO
NE ( Long Di s t ance ) •• •• • •• • • . •••• .•
....................... . ................... ..
J UPI'LIES ..........................
PO:JT.\O.,;
MI.':l C.
TOT\L REFUND DUE •• • ••
Sal es r ecoi pts or it emized
s t ot oo ent of ouch item
a~her eto .
ChOd
. _
~
J
H. Cant wG ll . Ex"''' , S e ery .
$ 28 . 74
9. 50
17 . 59
• 55 . 83
�MEMBERS HIP
* * * * ****~ *
FROU:
TO:
r.~
*
::+.
*
HEMIT~'AN CE
M " H"Can~we ll
CHECK
HEREWITH
C ~r p o Tr o as ur e r
'+ '"
* * ""
;;<
~
>I<
':.
**~-*
;,;, * *
M EMBER
!lUES
STAR VALIEE LUB
l.oI,er Va.U.y Power and
~ --
•
·
*
•
•
•
"
*
• ** *
ADVISE
NO.
!!
N~O!.._ __
* * ,~ *
DU ES
***
1<
* * * '" . * * * * * * * ~.
M E M B E R
*
*
*
Li~t
*
*
*
*
*
*
Refund •••••••• ~ 5 .00
•
•
•
*
~
"
•
*
*
*
*
*
,;:
•
,I
::'
*
•
•
.,
*
*
ft i
GROS~
B
t r i tU G
Pr ofess ional
j
G
Profes s ional F'e es . .... . tJ
tL c..Tsssi r .1
de! c lon f c
~. 1
1 S
~.
7 . 50
DEuUCTED ( Prof.ree -
5 .~
}J],,'T
2. 50
docs . .W'" snow
hi. .. (
'11 . . 1o~!.i'e€,B
REHEWAL
NEil
TOTAL
GROSS
F ee"".o., . ~
Paid to' J lu bso . .. . . ~.
~!F!'.
*
n
PEill:TTAllCE
---T
,.
l
;O~
Here'}ii th
~
�FRClIl » . H .Cantwell.
lIarch 29, 1958
TO. C
har;1 e B. ltartln. J'lJ .
SUBJIlCT. s t atement
or r efund
due petty Cash oonth or IIarch, U 58
PHONE and TELEGRAPH ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 13 .54
�".,
PRell! 1I. Il. CAI!l\1ELL
Ma rch 29, 1958
TO. Charlie B. l'a rt.1n, Jr .
SUBJro T.
It.... duo II. H. C8IltwoJ.l, month of Uo.rch, 1958
REFUND PETTr CASH •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 13 . 54
PROFESSIONAL FEE ( March-'58) ................ 100. 00
TOTAL DUE
.j
�TO : Charl1e B. ]lar tin . l
FRO!.l :
~: art1 n
SUBJECT:
I
""ber 30 . 1957
H. Cantwell
S t a tement of items duo !.I . B. Cantwell nonth e f tlOVE
ffiLFESS I ONAL FEE ( l,ovembor) • .• • • ••.••• •• $ 1 00 . 00
ItD'UNl) TO rETTY CASH (
J
ov) . • • • • • • • • • • • • •
TO~~ ...............
62 . 97
162 . 97
!.It .
1957
�I,ove!J1ber 30 , 1957
TO: Charlie 'a»ttn, Jr .
FROlJ: LI. H.Cantwell
SUBJECT : Refund due petty oaah , month of
1J0VFLlBI Jl ,
1957.
POST. G • •• • • ••••••• • •• • • •• •• •• •• • •• • • •
E
$ 1 . 15
Telephono (Long D'stance) ........... . .
( includes credit card oalls made
baok in Sept . ana cct)
)0 . 77
M
isoellaneous and supplies ............
13 . 05
Printing ,
~
~av1ng
etc .
9. 00
(Photos for oublloity of Canndian
Cavalcade )
TOT
• ••••••• •
62 . 97
Sales reooipts and iteJ!1ized
statement of eaah 1001vldual
it2ili~hcan:::::~'Ex~U'~
L-______________________________________
~
'
j
�r
:M3;''iBERSUIP
*
.O!.h MoHoCnntwell
*
*
:~ * * • *
IlEill:TTAJ,CE
DU.£.::.
* * **
ADVISE
*
CIlECK
HEllli~IITH ~iO.
'fa: Corp . . Treasu:rer
Mt;M BE R
DUES
NO CLUB
Crossroa id M
oto1 , Cal ga ry
Har r y Lunoh, Ca1gary
Que ens Hotel , Ft. Maole od
Roya l !Iote1 Reat . , Cal gary
S1m Tan 1
otel , Tucson
Ga te~ my Hot e l, Gardiner
otol , Livingston
Del a r M
Par kway etol, Li vlngs ton
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
1 5. 00
15 . 00
••••• *.** •••• *•••
STAR VALLEY CLUD
Dad 's Bar , Thayne
Peter Pa n Sundries , Thayno
A &. N M
arket , . f ton
S t a r Valley Drug, .\ ft on
By ' s S ino1a lr St a tion , , tton
St ephona Oowboy Club , \ f t on
Doyle F . Ch l1d , Ins . l fton
"Kay Robins on Conooo S er... ft .
*Dlxon's Servioe ,
tton
*Dintriet Auto Supply, tfto n 1XI
*Borg &. Hemmert, f t on
Cel.lhar ts S toro , ·\ fton
,
*
·
*
•
11)
l4 EM B E R
D"
•
*
•
*
•
•
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
•
*
15 . 00
15 . 00
1 5 . 00
15 . 00 ~
15 . 00 •
15 . 00 *
15 . 00 *
15 . 00 •
15. 00 ..
15 . 00 *
15.00
15. 00
*
*
J
12 memberships - IlEFUND• • •• 60 . 00
*
•
•
•
*
*
*
*
ft i
IlENE'liAL 16
a t r 1 but io n
'
l>
GROS
~~~S Profess~onal Fee s ~o~ ~~~~
m::FUNIlS
*~
Paid to Clubs
0 ......
1 50 . 00
60 .
$ __00
_
90 . 00
Professional Fees •••••• ~.$ __ ____
• \ NetProf esslona1 Fees does NOT show
deduction of commissions pald to
sub-agents)
GROSS
Amount Collected ...
TOTAL ~
00 • •
$ )OO. O!!,
DEDUCTED ( Prof .Fee - 50% ) ••• $ 150. 00
NEf IlEMITTAl'CE
Herewith •••••• $ 150 . 00
�•
FRO: :
!.1 . H . ~ " nt
lell
Yabr uary 2 6 , 1 95 8
TO : Char li e B. Mart1n , J r
SUBJj!;CT : IteJIIS d u e !. H. C3Iltvlcll month o f February , 1958
Profesoional Fee ( Feb . - 58) ••• ••••••• • ••• • 100 . 00
Ro tund to Patty Cash . . .. ... ....... .. . . .. .
1 0.95
CREDI T (Prof es s i onal Fee ,\dvancod) .....
110 . 9 5
100 . 00
B L .l(OE DUE FOR FEBRU.UlY ..... . .... . ... .
10 . 9 5
UNI',. lD B,u...BCE DUE FROM J, J,UARY ........
55 . 8 )
UIlP lID B ', L.U,CE DUE FRO DECE:.lBER .......
!.i
59 . 8)
TOTAL DUE ........ .
,
.
$ 126 . 61
�FhOM: M H. Cqntwell
.
Febru ry 28 , 1958
TO : Chtll'lie B. Martin Jr .
SUBJZCT,
Sta t~ent
of ref und duo petty
*~.*.*.~
o a8~
•• •••• * •••••• *
~
roST LGE •••••••••••••• • • •••••••••• ••
M
ISe . SUTPLIE3 •.•••••••••••• 10 . .. •• •
TOTAL REFUND DUE
Sales reoeipt o r itomized
stut oment ot eaoh item
J»r~~ (U
IkIrtin H. Oa twell
Exeoutive 3e cre~ n ry
, conth ot Fe bruary, 1958
f
2 . 50
8. 45
• 10 . 95
�r
liEilBLRSHIP DU_~d
* * * * * * * ~~ * * -~
REl.!ITTJUICE AD VISE
*
*
NO.
TO: Corp ",Treas!.lrer
MEMBER
DUES
-
a bandoned a nd wi ll r ooei ve no fur t her
r efunds unl ess xe- organi z ed .
The Gr een Frog , Prescot t
*
Sk yline lotol, Presoott
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
• M
oore ' s La.undry , Pr es oot t
S i err a Court
~
Pr es cott Ci e ar 0 tore
Harry M r shall, Pr escott
a
A
hno r a t el .
"
Al len ' s Mar ke t
II
ROhe r - Bloom Dr ugs
Auto Re st Mot ol
Pa ule y & Rogors
paxch a Lodge
"
"
"
"
Re fund •• 0 60. 00
W
ICKE BURG CLUB- 1 2 membe r shi ps
•
•
Pete ' s M
arke t Bas ke t
Ranoho de l oa Cab!llloro8
Br i s t tbl M l
ote
Cres tview lote l
,
ot'e l Ranoho Grande
W
este r ner Court
Circl e S La jllldr y
Vallo Vi s t a M t e l
o
Bar 7 Ranch o
San t a Fe Ca fe
Pe t cr sens M s .tear
en
,Ya rd Clea n e rs
"';:;*-*-*-*-'t" .)j-"'- ~- _-1" . *'
~
-:;t- .....
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
*
*
*
•
•
*
MEMIlER
S
Ni e l d 011 Co.
Cs ,,¥on Camp
....
15
15
Refund ••• • • $1 0 . 00
2 membor shi ps
*
*
*
*
*
*
'~QCKS ON
*
*
W rm S p r i n gs Ranch
o
George Huts i th
enoy
't he Ro undup
*
•
•
*
HOLE CLUB
M e ' s Mens
oor
4 membe rsh i p s
15
15
15
15
.~ ea r
RefWld ••• 20. 00
*
*
"
•
*
*
•
*
*
*
*
•
•
*'
*
*
J_ s i, r i b u t i , n
0
DUE2
VALLEY CLUB
"'-:t-,~~.>',_*_*_ *_* j: ''''_*_~_*_* ... *_or: .• *_
GROSS .Pl"OfG36ionel FeE"sQ
!ffi,'/
*_ *_*_*_'!'_*_* _*_*_*_*_* .
-.S....
• $ 1./5 0 !!!;
~$ ~.:J..::' O O
-_
.l.uos ~. • ~ • "t"
NE,~.£.
*
•
NO CLUB
NOTE : Th e Pr esoott Club h a A bee n
*
'!'
1.- l.B
Frof65sional ]'ee8 • • • • • >;,
_ '1.£.:. 0 0
-1.2. s.!. (> 0
d.3LfYofessionp,l 11ees dOf!f. is'O',(, S.:lOV"
iC(tl10i i;; 1 ..
-l;J .. l ) l '
11 t
3 ,J
.ut3)
DEDUCng: \ h'of ,]'ee
50% )"
R'MAll~3
i
...)
�J:.ULi'rAHCE
l'ltOJ.1: U.Ho Cantwell
TO: W
oCoBa.ss
(~ indicates new members)
ffiESCOTT CLUB
#
SEVIER VALLEY
Statement of Membership dues collected and refunds
due loca..l Clubs - I!onth of Februm-y , 1957
1!ElJBmSHIPS CO=TED _ 1
REFUND DUE - $ 5. 00
WE!lIlERSHIPS CO== - 1
10
Prescott Cigar Store
2 -~
ADVISJ:,.,
RElUND OOE - $ 5.00
i 15
U3
Southern Utah Coca Cola Bottling Co .
$15
U2
GLEN CANYON
Shady Rest llotel ~15 Robinson Rot e1 $15
Jacob Lake Inn
15
STAR V LLEY # 9
A
J.tl1!1kllSIUPS COLLEI:TEIl - 1
5 15
Robert. llarket, Afton Wyo .
BEAR LlJ<E BASIN /I 5
l!E.lil:o.?gjIPS COJ.LlX:TIW - :;
HOlE
;7ICKl'liBUIlG
#
1:El!B;:!lSlIPS CO=T£o - 1
REFUND DUE .. " 5.00
& :;'5
4
Valley National Bank
REFUND DUE - $ 5.00
15
15
# 11
Richmond /foOte1_Hote1
R;;FUND DUE - $ 10. 00
UJ;L.'B:lRSHIPS COLL&:TEIl -1
e.
Grimnet lA.unber D.Ild Hch'f'e o
Vil'olJay li.ote1
~ /\SON
REI1JND DUE - $ 5. 00
~
15
~~ IHHI-*iHHH:"***:HH~-i~";'**'I:*A·::-lH:**::"'.HHHH:-~-~"".H:{'...:}~-r.--:~i-'".rlH:-:P.:-:H<*i.,****
...
LIVI NGSTON II 7
*
llE1!B~gjIPS
CULLU:TED - 4
REFUND DUE - $ 20. 00
( hold pending charter)
* Paul's Store, ·,:Usall, Uonto $15 *Livineston Drug, Livineston $ 15
Rainbow liJtel, Li:vin;ston II
15 * Trail-Rite-Inn, Livinsaton
15
I.IISCELANEOUS AREAS _ NO CLUBS
Ve~lion
Cliffs Lodge, Cameron
Oracle llotel, Tucson
Sun Tan l.btor Ct o , Tucson
* Hotel La Sies ta, llautJ.an
* Hotel r~reeman, lJazaUan
M1J.Ul£:!lSHIPS COLLECTED 11
.~15
15
15
15
15
Cavern Cafe, I·logales, Sonora (
II
"II
II
(
Amer. Travel Service Nogales (
It
11
"
n
(
.:osaicos Uexicanos , Nogales (
11
II
11
(
TOTAL lIilJll!illSHIP FEES ( Collected in February 1957) .. 25
NE\'I -7
RErID'IALS -lB
Reed.for
Deposit ............ .. ........... .... Treas "
1956
1957
1956
1957
1956
1957
dues).$
due.)
dues)
dues)
dues )
dues)
15
15
15
15
15
15
RhVENUE •••• $ 375.00
REI!ITTANCE TO CORPORATION TREASUF.ER
Inclosod herewith
.-
~
375.00
.. , ......,
..
. ".,.'".~."
�L 0 CAL C L U B REF U N D
t
* * * * * * * * *. * • * *
REM
ITTANCE ADVISE
CHECK N •. _ _ __
O
FROM : Martin Ho Cantwell
TO: _ _ _ _._ _
DATE _ __
AUT .$
.___ .Treasurer .' ___________ 89 'ers CLUB .
The a ttached check i s in payment of
REFUNDS
earned by your Glub for
the coll e c tion of dues from t he following members i n your area :
BENTLEY :
This is a sample of the Remittance Advise which will
be sent to the
Lo~ al
Clubs .
In this space it will oontain a list of the members
on whioh refund isb being paid .
Your oopy of the monthly remittanoe advise to Charlie
shows the refunds being paid the var ious ~lubs , so
unless you specially want i t , I will not make an extra
copy of this form to olutter up your files .
I will ofeourse retain a copy for my files .
TOTAL
REMARKS :
_ _ MEMBERSHIPS COLLECTED
* * * *
@
11
5 000
EACH. REFUND DUE $ _ _
�
Text
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2161
Image Width
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3426
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1560">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1560</a>
Purchasing Information
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To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
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2013
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Dublin Core
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Title
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89'ers Membership dues remittance advise
Description
An account of the resource
A sample of the Remittance Advise which will be sent to the Local Clubs. It will contain a list of the members on which refund is being paid.
Creator
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Cantwell, Martin H.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Accounts
United States Highway 89
Medium
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Administrative records
Date
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1957-11-13
1957-11-30
1957-12-31
1958-01-31
1958-02-28
1958-03-29
1958-04-30
1958-05-31
Spatial Coverage
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
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1950-1959
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL 322 Box 1 Folder 22
Is Referenced By
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View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
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Text
Format
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image/jpeg
Identifier
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MSS322Bx1Fd22
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/952de6fe541590519267ec45674c7b47.pdf
0568c929806eb838a74d1bffc06f6923
PDF Text
Text
v
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��Wherever you go, travel the safe, secure way ...
with American Express Travelers Cheques,
protecting your travel cash. If your Travelers Cheques
are lost or stolen, you will get a prompt refund.
So for a carefree vacation-buy American
Express Travelers Cheques.
• l00 % Safe
• Spendable Everywhere
• Convenient as Cash
• Good until used
R efund if lost or Stolen
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Char/les . .. onlya penny a dollar
�HERE'S HOW THEY WORK:
You lign here
when you buy them
You sign here
when you spend th em.
THE
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
Logan, Utah
IN OUR 61th YEAI:
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No. 2071
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WE CHARm:: YOUR ACCOUNT AND RETURN UNPAID THE FOLLo\ NG ITEMS RECEIVED FRO!'>f YOU
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�YOU MUST
KNOW
ABOUT
NEW TAX
REGULATIONS
ON
SAVINGS
--J
�U nder recent congressiona l acts, a ll
ba n ks, .savi ngs and loan a ssocia tions
a nd o th e r pa yers of int eres t a nd / or
di vid e nd s of S IO.OO o r m ore i n the
aggrega te to a nyo ne pe rso n d uring
eac h c al e nd a r yea r are req uired to
re po n these pay ment s to the Interna l
Reve nue Service.
W e furth e r are req uired to use an
" ide ntifying numbe r" whe n ma king
these repo rts. Thi s n umber is your
Social Sec urit y number. As a necessa ry result, you (our savings customer)
are required to provid e us with your
id entifyin g numbe r, which is your
Soc ial Sec urit y number if yo u ha ve
one.
The officers and employees of this
ba n k offe r thei r assistance to you.
And so you m ay understa nd exactl y
what is no w re quired a nd ho w you
a rc to provide the needed in fo rm a tion,
this folder outl ines pertin ent points of
th e new la w.
Q
A
of an adult and a mmor, the adult's number
M ust I provide an ide ntiryi ng number
eve n tho ugh I d o not fil e a tax re turn?
must he f umished. r ou must undnfine Ihe name
of the person whose number is reported.
res
Q
Q If
I a m not covcred by Socia l Sec urit y
and , the re rore, d o not h ave or need a
Socia l Securit y number, must I nevert he·
less get an identi rying number to comply
with the new law?
A r es
Q
A
Q
I a m a wido w and am recei ving Social
Sec uri t y be nefi ts. Mu st I ge t a Social
Sec uri ty nu m ber?
Ifyou (lrt 62 or over lind received these ben, ·
jits bifort J anuary I, 1963, and havt no I11l1n·
ber rif )'01" own, you 11!O)' use the btnifit
numbt r.
M y husband a nd I have a j oint savings
accou nt. Musl we rurnish the ba nk both
or our Socia l Secu rity nu mbers?
A No. all all joint aaowlls, on{)' 011' lIumber
lIu d be uu d. III your lOse, the lIumber oj the
husband must be fumish ed. all j oillt aaotmts
H ow does th is regulat io n affect g ua rdia ns, c ust odia ns, com mitt ees, c redi t
u nions, etc.?
A Compliance is required. We ask )·ou to consult
our N ew Accounts department or an officer of
th e hankJo r counst! in )"our specific case.
Q
Docs this law al so a ffect t rusts, estates,
pe nsion trusts, corporations, pa r merships, e tc.?
A r es. Again Wi retommend ) 'OU conSilii OUT N ew
A aounts departmm t or an o
fficer of th e bank.
Q I do nOt have a Social Sec urity number
a nd must sec ure a n ide nti rying number
to comply with the law. How do I go
about this?
A Our N ew Accoullts departmenl has all necessary
for ms and will assist yo u ill jillillg th em 011.1 .
�Q
I am 14 years of age and have a savings
account in my own name. Must I get a n
identifying number?
A Yes. Arry individual with an account in his
name only - including minors - is required to
have an identifying number.
Q When must I fu rnish my ide ntifying
number?
A We are requiTed by the la w to T
eport interest
payments aggregating 110 O mOTe mo.de to our
T
savings accounts customers this year. Therefore,
we recommend that you make this information
available immediately to aooid lateT problems.
Q
How do I furnish my identifying number
to you?
A FOTm s aTe available at the Savings depart-
Thank you for understan d ing the
requirements of these rece nt laws
which req uire us-a nd yo u - to provid e the information needed fo r this
new interest reporting procedure. If
yo u ha ve any ques tions no t covered
by thi s informat iona l fo lder, pl ease
ask fo r the help you need at our New
Acco u nts depanment . Or fro m any
o ffi cer .
Ou r Bank is pleased to join
with all olher Banks in Utah
in providing you with needed
information on this Tax Law.
ment und the N ew Accounts deportmenl. /f)'ou
have any qurslion as 10 properly Jilling out Ihe
form, empfo)·tls at eilher of these departments
will be happy 10 assisl you.
Q \Vhen a re banks required to report inter-
est or dividend payments aggregating
SID or more?
A B eginning with the 1963 caiendaT)'ear.
Prepared by
MEMBER BANKS OF THE
UTAH BANKERS ASSOCIATION
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Image Height
905
Image Width
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2459
Local URL
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1508">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1508</a>
Purchasing Information
Describe or link to information about purchasing copies of this item.
To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
Date Digital
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2013
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979880558
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highway 89 International Promotional Fund checks and charges and pamphlets
Description
An account of the resource
Highway 89 International Promotional Fund checks and charges from September 1957 to February 1959, and Pamphlets advertising for American Express travelers cheques, automobile loans, and facts on new regulations on savings.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Legal documents
Nonprofit organizations
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Pamphlets
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1957
1958
1959
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 1 Folder 18
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
image/jpeg
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
MSS322Bx1Fd18
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/793b662c0d84ac0bf43afb1e6845a7fd.pdf
f5dad99b1b154ec4000c51037ab74298
PDF Text
Text
(
April 19 . 1967
FROK: .H.Cant wall
TO·: BanUey Mi tahen. Chairman
Treasurer Pr omotion Fund
Statement of authori.ed expense acoount to be advanoed snd oharged
against total oommissions earned
MI LES KOTEL
DATl<
April 3
4.00
3.00
3.00
6
Salt Lake, Logan, Montpelier and around
Bear !ale Basin area
6.
MILEAGE FOR WEEK
210
3 . 00
April 7
3 . 00
8
3.00
3.00
9
10
Bear Lake Ba.in-Afton- Star Vaney
3.00
Afton to Jackson Bnd return
6.00
11
6 . 00
18
MILEAGE FOR WEEK
13
240
April 14
15
16
17
3 . 00
3.00
Afton -Alpine
3.00
end return
Afton-Thayne and return
3 . 00
Afton to Pari. to Poa.tello
Pocatello to Salt Lake City
Wi
18
5.00
MILEAGE FOR WEEK
19
461
911
17
911
day. @ • 6.00 p.r • ••••••• • •• 102.00
miles C 7¢ per .••••••• •• •• •
)(01;81a •• • ••••••••••••••• • ••••••
63.77
55 . 00
\
• 55.00
�FROJ& : 1I. II . Cantwell
Ootober 31 , :1.957
TO : Charl! e B. 1lartin , Jr .
SUBJECT :
Sta telIlent of I toJ!l.S Due M. R. Cant loll M
onth of O
otober , 1957
* •• *.*.
*.......
.,.** ••••
***••••
PROFESSIONAL !'EE ( Ootober) ... . ..... . ..... . .. 100 . 00
REFUND to PETTY CASH ••••• • •••••••••• • ••••••
CONVENTION TRAVEL EXP. (
L
D~ance)
• • • • •••••
101. 60
60. 00
�ooto
TO: Charlie B. Martin. f r .
FR O~I ;
U. Il . ClllltVlBll
SUBoTECT ;
Retund due Petty Cash t or ",ont h at October . NO : Some
TE
at t hi s erpense was incurred i n SeptBJ:lbor a t t er t he Sopt .
sta tem nt "US sent to Bl l 1 BasS early i n ardor t hat he
e
could closo his books tor the y, ar .
POSTAGE •••• •••• •• • ••••• • •.• • • •••••• • • • •
TELEFHONE (
$ 13. 25
Di st anoe )........... . ..
33 . ) 8
MISC. and SUPPLIES including Clip
Servioe , Duplicator paper s etc . ••••••••
54 . 97
Lang
TOTAL
_
.
,
Sal es Recei pts and Itemized
Statement at each individual
it
er&t ~ _
Can wo ~ . Execut1ve Secretary
~
, L._ _
31, 1957
_ _ _ __
$ 101 . 60
�TO : Charlie B. :'artin
FROM M.B.Oantllell
:
SUBJECT:
,
"ober 31, 1957
•
Statement of uthorized Travel
Third Annual Comvontion .
llowanoe in oonneotion with
!lILEAQE - Cal.gary to Afton and return
1616 miles Q 5¢
•••••••••••
DAILY EXPENSE -
24 days 0 $10 per
t
••••.••••••
TOTAL
240 . 00
$ )20 . 80
CREDIT ( 10/9 Ck. flo . 376). . .. ........
BI\L . DUE
80 . 80
260 . 80
e
60 . 00
�STATE M ENT
STRR VRllEY InDEPEnDEnT
P UBLISHED I N WYOMING'S D A I RY CENTER
A ,.T O N ,
WYOMING
11ay 1, 1957
I
89 1 ers International Higlnlay Assn.
Pro~otion Connittee
c/o Bentley l·utchell
Logan, Utah
L
April 25
I
1200 NeHs Bulletins
Cuts
Postage
80 00
( 16 70'
2 89
9959
�FR<JI. 1!,JI.Cant well
TO.
February 14, 1959
CharUe B. l!ertin, Jr. - Bentl ey Mitchell
SUBJECT,
a ccOWlts receivable and obligations .
Status of Broohure COnmittee re i
As of this date , our printing bill is paid in full , and Remittance Advise /I 2/12/59
in t he amount of $ 175.00 t urned over to t he Promotion Fum tadso' will permit ue to
make f i nal payment to our artist, Richard IJ . Bailey and a small item f or photos I
purchased • • • leaving a balanc e of less tjlan • 30.00 in tm Prozoot ion Fund. af ter
all bills incurred i n the public ation of the brochure have been paid i n full.
UN
COILEC'IElI ACCOUNTS RECE I VABIE sre as f ollows:
F.1am1ngos Motel, Wazatlan • • • • • • • • • 0
Aiken I oS Lodge , Kanab
• • • • •
• • • •
Rancho G
rande M
otel, W
ickenburg
Rio lo!otel, Tucson
• • •
Bryce Canyon C
afe, Panguitch • •
Saddle and Sirloin, Tucson • • •
lOSS -
•••
• • •
• • •
• • •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Cal.gary Stampede Board • • • • • • •
•
•
•
•
e 30. m
20. 00
25 . 00
30. 00
30. 00
30. 00
0
( This outfit claimed a 50 ~ loss of value
because brochure was not out in time to carry
1958 Stampede dat es, and onlY paid half of
$
t he • 300. 00 contracted for )
315.00
NOTE : I n view of the fact
that
we have been billing, and XVi'h
writing l etters to all of these
small acc ounts far t he past
five months with no results,
I doubt i f we 1',111 ever get any
of this money. I will contime
to bID them, but we ca.n.oot
count on being paid. There is,
of course a chance t hat some
of it may come in, but from the
practical st andpoint we must at
this time consi der them l ost .
�I
FROM: M.H.Cantwell
TO: Bentley Mit~hell
September 8,1957
COMMISSION RE-CAP - To be attaohed to Report # 9 - 8 •
• *.*.**** •••• *****
Telegraph Money Order September 6 - Prinoipal amount
Servioe Cost
• D5.00
6.70
TOTAL to be oredited against oommission. ••••••••••
• 341.70
The tollowing re-oap i. oompiled to determSne the ooamission balanoe due
aa ot Report # 9-8 due to the tact that the above oredit ot • 341.70
is an odd tigure whioh does not balanoe with any given Colleotion Report
**.*.************* •• *********
REPORT
I
8- 31
Advanoe Commission allowed on:Alberta Travel Bureaul
Citr at Calgary 1 Red Deer C.ot CI sponsorship grants
at, 300.00 eaoh. Total. 900.00
COMKlSSION • • •••••••••• $ 300.00
Other Commissions due this report
REPORT
•••••.. .••...••••••••••••
~o.oo
$ 3 0.00
I 9-8
Commissions due this report •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
TOTAL COMMISSIONS(both reports)
93.33
• 1+23.33
CREDIT Telegraph M
oney Ordsr
BALANCE OF COMMISSION DUB ON REPORT # 9-8 •••••••••••••••••
.*.*******.************.*
Re-oap ot Membership Fee. due Association:
aeport ., 8-31
Report
# 9-8
2 member.hipa •••••• 30.00
J memberships, ••
o.
45.00
•
75.00
31+1.70
81.63
�THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
rtD IR ... L
R[ S lRVE
.H.. I'. 0'
SYS TEM
fEDEII", L
Dt~ OSIf
INS UR AM CE
e O Il~OIl"' Tl OM
L OGAN, UTAH
To the Printer ,
The f ollowing are instructions for impr inting checks for customer s of this
De s ign a m printing must conform to A. B. A. specifications .
bank .
Title of account :
H I GHWA Y 89 IN T EAN A T t ON ~ L FUND
130 1 EAST H I GHW AY 89
LOGAN .
UTAH
Bank name to appear on checks:
'mE = T NA TIONAL BANK
of Logan
LOGAN , UTAH
Transit- Routing number:
97-22
1243
MICR encoding :
Cust omer A
ccount Number
,
A u xilia r y O N US Fiel d* ~
T rans it Num be r F ie ld
ON US F ie ld
0022
"' ) M gnetic Ink check serial number printed. in the Auxiliary ON US Field must
a
1ncl ude high order zeroes . The starting number should be suppli ed by the
customer.
Your cooper ati on will be greatly appreciated.
Very truly yours ,
AUthorlZ srgnature
�THE fIRST NATIONAL BANK
MUII[R
FEDERAL
R[ ' [~V[
S YSTEM
'EOER,o. L
0'
DlP O,' T
I IIB U R"" C [
C OR "O ~"'TION
L OGAN, UTAH
Dear First National Bank Customer:
For greater speed and accuracy in handling your account we are
converting to a new elec tronic bookkeeping system. To meet the r equirements of t his system , all checks must have an account number
and other identifying numbers printed on them in magneti c ink . Through
the use of these numbers your hank will be able to provide you with
the most modern and efficient banking service available .
IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO HUNT MORE COMPANY CHECKS in the near
future please see that these checks are imprinted in magneti c ink
with your account number and other identifying numbers as they appear
on the attached printer' s instruction sheet. Either take the sheet
to your printer or r eturn it to us with your reorder i f you have been
obtaining your checks through us.
IF YOUR PRESENT SUPPLY OF CCMPANY CHECKS IS ADEQUATE please
retain the enclosed instruction
sheet until such time as you r eorder
c hecks.
We will be happy to wor k with you or your printer in making
whatever minor modificati ons in check format may be necessary to
ac commodate the new code numbers .
May we suggest that you make a t en-minute inspection of our
check catalog. We have many types and styles of rusiness checks
available in y our choice of six colors . We are sure their uae could
result in considerable saving of time and money in your operation.
This is another step in this bank ' s continuing effort to serve
you better.
We appreciate ver,y much your cooper ation.
�Feb 6, 1958
Dear Bentley:
This rrornings mail brought the other $ 150 . 00 from Pr escott Chamber of COIllllerce,
so at long last we a re able to payoff Paragon Press in full.
The balance due is
$ 119.12 •
I would like to take this check over to Paragon persorolly
80
that I can have them
give me a receipt in full on the entire deal, so please mail it to me .
This will leave us liith only a small balance du:e lJick Bailey which we should be abl e to
clean up this month .
Did not get out of to.m this past week as I had planned. Have been having nothing
but trouble with the electrical system on the Buick, and am afraid to hit the road
until it is cleared up . Have had new volt regulator and battery installed, but there
is a short or something that has not yet been located.
Best r egards ,
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Image Height
5003
Image Width
Image Width in pixels
3153
Local URL
The URL of the local directory containing all assets of the website
<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1325">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1325</a>
Purchasing Information
Describe or link to information about purchasing copies of this item.
To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
Digital Publisher
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
Date Digital
Record the date the item was digitized.
2013
Conversion Specs
Scanned by Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library using Epson Expression 10000 scanner.
Scanning resolution
Resolution in DPI
400
Colorspace
RGB or Grayscale, for example
RGB
Checksum
3152502625
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Miscellaneous financial material for 89'ers International Highway Association, Inc.
Description
An account of the resource
Miscellaneous financial material for 89'ers International Highway Association, Inc.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Cantwell, Martin H.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Accounts
United States Highway 89
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Correspondence
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1957
1958
1959
1967
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Afton (Wyoming)
Lincoln County (Wyoming)
Jackson (Wyoming)
Teton County (Wyoming)
Pocatello (Idaho)
Bannock County (Idaho)
Idaho
Wyoming
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
1960-1969
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 1 Folder 26
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
image/jpeg
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
MSS322Bx1Fd26
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/d4bb725390b99cec67e7ce6eec4fad73.pdf
f3d18e5e6ad02fef0d245b3462ec892c
PDF Text
Text
CoPT
II1toh
I
Srwart
Your letter
2/l!!
re IIOVIE
Director Sorgatz 1[M unable to make it dawn to Salt J..ake tor t he Promot.1on COI!II:I1.ttee
mo.ting hold Frl.dq, but Bontlo,y ...... h .... , and we _
)'Our corrreopondonc. with
Trock". Here i. our thinking on the various pointe in question.
0"""
CHOICE OF FIlM 1- '!M. and all oth.r toohnical matt er ••hould b. loft to Tocker with
trnwlodge ••Min& aa a double sheck.
)'OUl'
TIllE OF FIIKIIIG - Thi. aloo ahpuld b ....""kad out. by you and rocker , and will probably
depe.ntl JILlch on arrangements moat convenient for him. U h. can clear t he "torrid ZODe "
aarl;r and be North ot PrMoott by aarl:r July i t will make hie trip more .njoyable. '!M.
of course would make it necessary t o 1!'ork from. South to North which.might not tie in
with tho plan ot mald.JIA tho fila n- North to South.
If possible, it would be log1cal t or him to FOUCM' me in the various arey bSfWlBe thie
"ould make it pooa1ble to gin hill an outJ.in. ot support aecurad in aach arei7I could
pDbabI;r l1na up k.,. people tor hill to contact lIbon h. arriyad. W _
.
not, however
plan on this, unleee it juat happens to work out dnc. I 1dl.l have to work ent1rel¥
ind.pendent ot all other operatione end could not poasibly grauant.e to be in any given
area at ant partlwul..ar tae . Treckar will alao have to work on hie own s chedule if he
gete the job done in tour week II ••• in t act neither ot us "til have 4Dir tim. to 10 •••
AND TI TLE - '!M. 10 a point which depends to a great _ent on one quootion •••
cwmercial can _ tho t1lm be end got distribution. B:r that I meeD ho ... tar can ...
f!P in Pl'ClllOt1ng our A
ssociation and its members. For a:xa.mplel
mJg[E
_
],.. lie plan to feat.ure tho MW lIIOIIIb....ahip pleoque in the Ihmborohip Bootor, the Brochure,
and all of our future _tional publicity mald.JIA a direct appeal t or patrol>&&" ot
JIIOIl!bore to tho total exclusion of all other.. Could.... car,.,. th1a th_ into tho III01r1<o_~
by uaing tho placque in tho titlea? Or by mention in the eound .
2 _ The Aasociation has gone on record to the eftect tb& all three highWllJ' emb~
JruST be giTen equal bll Hng in all of our promotion.W would there.f'ore haTe be use
e
th_ together aa th.y appaar qJl the stetion...,. in tho s moral ti.:l.... Thi. do .. not
mean -however that ahote or t he 1nd1Y1d.uol markers could not be pickad up along tho
line. However, the International th _ _ t be maintelnad throughout.
3- ,. to title, .... will ceo. up shortly with a
h1ghl;r dramatio end deacriptiYO
Pu"aae to uae as the title l.1De on the cover of the brochure. l' this same }iLrue
turns ont to b. suitable alec tor tho mavie title, it would be an ideal .ituatiCII.
The brochure, moT1e , roster . etc. sbould. a.a tar all possible all be considered u
int.rlocking unite ot on pr<JDDt1onal th_ , and tiad tog.ther as clo.ol:r as 10
practical.
Aneth .. thought on the title 1
Could a " Name the lIoY1e" cont .. t be promotad ?
It thi8 were doM , the first prize would, ot course have to be somet hing worth while
s uch BIJ an all e.xpm.ae weeks Tacation in one of 0lU' various recreati onal areas Etc .
SUch a conteet, U
han:Ued, would r esult in consid able publicity. There is,
howsvor , one
dr_leo Such a project would require a considerable
�Henir;p?==
3N57 -
PAtil 2
\
~onal budget ( wh1ch we do not have available) aM alo o far IlO1'O tilllo and .ffort
tban aI\YODO will haft to .pare an a 01d. 1a.u.. M to
1'ra this point em I
lIIU&t .hoke off fJYC7 _dblell bit of time ob1:la1n& routine work and tunot10n about
_:If,
m
aa a aal..mon and t1ald r"",eeentati". , conc..trat1n&
r1&ht k1nd of """ m....b<l,..h1p. I plan, of cour.., to .taT
to h&n«l. nec ..15Ol7 ropol'te to BUl
keep the books
will attaapt to maintain neceas&l7 correepondence aa best
Baa.,
on oelling aM -urins the
pIlt a f.". de,yo each JDOnth
and recorda up to dat., and
I can.
On thio .ubjoctn of th .... aM tW., Bentlq and I both ago. that ~t would not he
practical to feature !ll\Y particular "",tal. It, howewr _pl. lik. rod H.......y and
IellCllretone Park Co. c _ thru big in a financial wq, ... would probably b. obligated t o
gin their fac1liti .. sa. plaT. But f or a • 30.00 li.ting • • • Ill.
lI.AP,
ART. ETC.
l'h1s can b. a Tf1I:7 a:penaiva it_. am. wherever possible we IIIIl8t t17 to make one piece ot
art do double duty for both the ,.,n. and brochure . II. have arranged with our Art Pirm to
mak. up a c_eheno1Ye 11 proopectivo" but """" of tho f1n1ahed art will be done "" any
... tion ofnt the brochure lUltil we have t1n1ahed solic1ting the area lCO _ aM ha..
raieod ALL the ..,nq necul5Ol7 t o financ. that particular opraad. Th. big ...p of tho
_ira three-nation eyota w111 probably ba the laat piec. of art to ba dODO, ao ... ha"
no wa::r nf k:now1ng h"" far oaat aM wet nft US 89 we will have to go to t1nd tho
.tc.
"""'1'.
AlII I correct in aolllllling that· the ti/ilee , mapa,
will come laat after ell nf the
footage haa baen ahot, edited, .tc., and the t1n1ahed production 1. being out together1
It this 18 correct, wa can sit tight WltU ,.. 8.8 how th1.n,ga ara working out.
IIl!mll!&SllrP LIST l'OR TRPl:1CER
I will. aeM him a dupl.1cated list
within the next f"" de,yo , and alec
tho prea • • lIh1le out in the field ,
and kay people who can holp him in
of a:y mailing"
n 7 2 2 PI r 77
at1ck"B
a cow nf the Jlembarah1p Roeter when i t 10 oft
I will alec keep him advioed ca new membera,
Yeri",," ar.....
3
CANADIAN )IQOTAGE I Ernie Saran penciled a briar not. on the ballot he returned
aa::r1ng that -he had been to lrdmonton and had & talk with Dan C_ball, Deputy _
. ter
RaHil Moore. and also Hon. 1Ir. Patr1ck, lI1n1ater ot Econam.c Affaire . He gave no hint
.. t o the reeulte of theee canteren_, and did not indicate in any wa::r i t the n.a
was good or bad. He meraly aaid that he " ould write me in detail in a few de,yo , and
I have been watching 8Very mall """oct1ng to hoar f rom him.
In vi . . of this , I feal it will be bast to get the 1"" dOllD on the current nft1. 1ol att1tudr
in Edmonton bator. corr..ponding with th_ about their portion nf the film. Ern1.. letter
should arri..- &I\l'day, and I will rolq 1t. contento to you at ODW. liar. on th1. subject
as soon as I bear traa Saran.
~I
Beutly mentioned that someone connected with the touriet proIIW>t1on eot-<lp
!i&ifllromi8ed to .upply .01lI0 lIaxi.an footage . I underetood him to aay that he had written
to 1'OU about it.
REPalT
Bentlq 10 preparing the "Progr .... Report • on the _ t i o n to date wh1ch
we hope to duplic ate and mall to all Directors th1a next ....ek. It will deal .nt1roly
with what _ have done on the brochure, i,.,Uate pl.anII , financial statanant» eto.
lie will ha.... to depend on you to _ t the dope an what 10 heppening re the movie,
and for this purpose , I am. .,ending 8OIIl8 master. tor the duplicator. Please type up
whatever meeeage you have tor the Directors on the ma.et ... a, and shoot th. back to..me.
�UNION
PACIFIC
DATE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Bentley:
Am making up a s ales and. collection report which
I will mail tonight.
It is not quit. readr. and I wanted you lID t o got
this mElnO on the movie as soon as possible, 80 will
take this to the P. O. now in time to catcb the
P .... plane(I bope) and will mail the report later
todq.
Am mailing the copies to the others alonl\ with yours
and will talk to Ray D!! tonight .
0
lIartin
�FROIl:
ll~H . Cantwell
TO: Bentley Witchell
COPY: Stewart, Hendryx, Sorgatz
IIa,y 7, 1956
SUBJECT : Cos t data etc . on making the 89 ' ir llovie
Haven Tracker has adviaed Burnett that i f w. still plan on having the movie made this
SWJJn8r he rlll be abl e t o leave Chi c880 on June 22, and wi.ll have 28 da,y8 available to
take the f ootage, returnins to Chic ago on about July 20 .
It we decide to prooeed, finances will be required as follows:
BEFORE JUNE 22
JULY 22 -AUG.l
For film •••••••••••••••• S 600.00
Advance on expenaes o • • • • 400. 00
• ••• •• •• ••• • • • •• • • •••• • •••• 1000. 00
Final settlement on expens es (minimum) •••• • •••••••••••••••••
800 . 00
(It is 111¥ underst anding that this would be eatisfaetory)
AFTER FIUIlNG
After Treckar has finished With his end of the job, shooting,
cutting, editing, etc . the following inveatment will be required
to produce finished prints readr tor showing.
Lab. fee for
making
master "ana"ar printll • •••••••••••••••••••lOOO.OO
Finished prints for projsction (at $ 100 each) with a
probable minimum of at least six required to permit. &n.1
sort of effective distribution •••••••• • • •••• • ••••••••• • ••• • •
600. 00
TOTAL (known) COST •••• , J , 400.00
The $ 34Q:).OO is referred. to as t.he "known cost"
due to the tact that. all of the items lil!lted. are III1n1.mum estimate. with no eu.hieD provideJt
to take care of unexpected incidentw . Also , to ucr knowledge we have never tulJ.y l ooked
into upenae which may be involved. in securing distribution . (Th!!! may have been done but
if so I do not recall the details )
Mr .. Tracker wishes to b. advised at. the earliest. possible date whether or not. we plan to
proceed with the til.ming in June . 80 that he can arrange hie SUJI:IIl8r plana accordingly.
As explained to me by Burnett the situation is like thia • • • if' we decide to go ahead,
Jbo . Tracker will proceed 8S per the above. It, however, we decide to hold of! paneling
a more secure financial. statue , llr. Tracker wti.l auffer no inconvenience as he hal another
ti..lJaing project lined. up which can be substituted during the 28 d&1S he will have available.
In this cormection, Burnett assurea me that no embarrassment will result in the event we
decide t o postpone our fi lming.
In t&irneae to Mr. Tracker, w. must theretore
arrive at an iImlediate decidoD, ani adviae
him accordingly.
The entire s ituation, ot coure e, revolve. around the problem ot finances, and it i.
somewhat unfortunate that the decision mu.t be made at this particular moment . Our program
got ott to & late start, and progress has been slow since it haa been necesa arr to
conduct all solicitation up to thi s point in " oft seaeon" areas and little, it arrr,
improvement can be expected until about mid-June • From that point on, progress should
be rapid.
The quastion is ••• would it be wiee to take on this' 3400.00 obligation at this stage
and gamble on the funds being aYa1lable by paY-9tr time. CIt , would it be better to
p~
l
eate and give the egga a chance t o hatch betore we count OU. chickens.
�B~lex
Mitchell - Stewart. HendEfx. Sorgatz • • • • May 7 2 1957,. " , PAGE 2
As the individual responsible for raising the DJ)ney to finance this program, I peD80nally
opposed. to the assuming of obligatiol1.8 which must be met on certain dates and payable
with ANTICIPATED revenue. In support of this attitide, I advance the followings
811.
TIrl.s is a two-year program in which we propose to raise a sizeable promotional
fund with the brochure as our only fund- raising medium. In presenting the project
to our membership in the Uay bulletin we mentioned the movie along ldth several
other items as being major activities in the proposed 10 point promotional program
but didnnot promise that it would be made at any certain time o It was made very clear
that the entire program must be financed thru advertising support in the brochure,
and that the total success of the program would be in direct ratio to the financial
support given.
Two items only have been dated and promised,. and must therefore have priority.
Dist ribution of the first Membership Roster has been promised for sometime in June,
and advertisers in the Brochure have been guaranteea that a m1n1U1lm of 50, 000
copies would be distributec1 between October 1 , 1957 and December 31, 1958,
These two items are being emphasized in the solicitation as "for sure" with the
understa.nd1ng that the other points in the program will follow it, and .!:h!n, fund.
are available o
It is my understamlng that the Promotion CoIllllittee has more or 1,"5 agreed on a
up&)' as you go " policy for the complete protection of the AS8ociation and all concerned.
Contracts made with the printer and art agency provide for payment in II advance
installments in amounts sufficient to cover the cost of scheduled productionll
This means that no production involving expenae lIil.l be authorized. until we are
able to iasue a check covering the cost of that particular operation. This will
~ ep us out of debt •• , and out of trouble .
***
The making of the JIDvie i8 one or the most important projects in our proposed
program, and I am. sure we will be able to go ahead with it at a future date during
our two year program, but I question the advisability ot assuming the obligation
in our present insecure financial status.
***
I am going t o talk t o Ray tonight , and wU1 ask him to let you have his opinion on this
at once. You can probably call Frank, and then get in touch with Burnett so that he can
pass the decision along to I(r . Trecker.
1
�ARIZON ... OffiCE,
1021 E. Comelbock Rd.
Phoe"i~, A.izono
Diol CR -4 . 77D8
ADMINIST.ATION OffiCE
1-40 WEST SECONO SOUTH ST
SALT LAKE CIty 1, UtAH
OIM H 9 . 9322
Au II!!Ilb.
OffiCE Of
RAY V. STEWART, p,..idenl
530 W. lIiII Williom.
•
Williom., Ari%ono
March 29, 1957
OffiCERS ,
.... Y V STEWAU
, ••• id ..1
W ..lo.n •• t.!ot.1
Willi. m., A,I.on.
S. O. t.40lROW
Yi,,_'.u;d ••1
t.4orrow t.4010 ..
f I09 .,.fI. A.ilo..
IENTLEY t.4ITCHElL
Vic,·', •• idul
t.4itch.1I t.4ot.1
L09". Utoh
W G . .... S5
Su,.tory_T....u•• ,
L. Siuto t.!otOi
Wi<~."r.~." A,bono
OIUCTOItS ,
~~:;lL:,~~~o~:~t:'°Ni"
N09· 1 Sono.o . M•• ico
••.
IURHEfT .... HENonx
Como.o" Mol.1 ud To~tI
'.n9u;tc~, Utoh
FR ... NK W 50RG"'rz
FI.. tS.cu,i t,lu~ofldo~o
MontlMli.',l d.ho
O... LLAS A. CLIN6ER
~r~~:o~~~!~~::q·
• ICH ... lO C . FUGUS
F"9U. t.!ot.1
6, .. , h ll •• Mont...
Dear Bentley ,
I have today r ec eived f r om Burnett a c ontract to Haven Trec ker
for making t he movie ~ As Chairman of t he Promoti on Committee I believe you
should also c heck t h e c ontract over carefully . I !'liU enclose t he entire
file as i t was s ent t o me . I f y ou approve send t he \·/bo le Ylor ks bac k to me
a nd I ·.rill sign it end bet Bill Bas s to aut o:;r a.pl1 i t also ane. get i t into
..
the wor ks . T~e i s short , but I felt it best you OK it first .
As i ,e fr om the poi nt s mentiolled by .vurnett in h is 1 t ter to
Tr ecker I wondered a b out item 4 which calls f or all of hi" expenees , said
e:>..-pen ses to be n ot l es s than ,4 0 . 00 per uay . I s ee n o limit as to time he
may s penf.l on t he road . In oth er worU.s u.S t he con tr~t r eadG he c ould spend
0 months at ;;40 . vO per day l·r more am.. 'lIe would rea l Js b e i n t .le soup . I
shoul d t hi nk t llere shoul be a tine limit spr...cifi ed duri n.:. which t ime he
must c omple l.e t he f ilm . Bur-nett pro;'ably would have a much be l-t ar i ciea t han
I as to wha.t such limit should be . U un . . .el'ste.nd.i r.g we.s t hat i t should. be
y
c omrleted i n thirty days, ~ut t .ler~ c ert..inl y is nothing in t he contract
t 0 " - ' t h ow 1 ong th .... f ~
"lmiDe; ~s t 0 t ake . Item
"
h
~
sJ.ll.-c if" es t h a t t . e e dO t ed
~
~
film i s to be ir. th e ba1](is of t he Association 60 days after filming: , but
the filming could take 6 mont hs e.:;J
a~ t He COl.trc.ct i s c oncerneu. •
far
Burnett I would s~g est you write Bentley a t onc e gi vins h im
your opini on on t his sending a. copy t o me .
EXECUTI\lE SECRETAn,
t.4 ... kTlN H. C ... NTWEU
1010 W S.co .. d SOYI~
Soli Lol. City. UI.h
One more thing we must k8 sure of 10 t he a vailability of t rie
mor.ey to c ....rry out t .~e S!ontrE.(;t 1f entere. i : to . B:; tlIile llnrtin i .:;; on t ile
r oad il l ittle '~hi1c ....e shoW..:.. have an irJclilJg a.;;. to t he suc~ess of our
fUIld raisin... .
Bass i nformeu me c ou ple days liJo t hat the 9.) assoc . 8T1U the
70 assac . both had been w-orY.ing ickenburt, for a ll t hey are worth and be
\londers if anyone will have &.ll; money ltdft foY' u s by tiI::e Y! .... get tbere .
l!. idently oath AS30 • ax ~ raisi .• i::, mOlle for s. brochure .
v
Hope t he b rachm 'e i s out of t he woods n ow nne. Martin c a n get
th e b~l r olling a t once .
Si nc erely ,
cc Burnett Hendryx
M
artin Cantwell
SCENIC ROUTE OF THE AMERI CAS
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Text
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Image Height
3375
Image Width
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2667
Local URL
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1304">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/1304</a>
Purchasing Information
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To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
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2013
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300
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RGB
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2442046068
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
89'ers promotional movie
Description
An account of the resource
Documents pertaining to the promotional movie for the 89'ers International Highway Association, Inc.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Cantwell, Martin H.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Stewart, Ray V.
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States Highway 89
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
Medium
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Administrative records
Publisher
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89'ers International Highway Association, Inc.
Date
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1956-05-07
1957-03-01
1957-03-29
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 2 Folder 5
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
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Text
Format
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image/jpeg
Identifier
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MSS322Bx2Fd5
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/1b70ddff81ab91c7aea2bf724b354031.pdf
553c03efc1697d8d4159a5477f535f82
PDF Text
Text
AO MIHI S TIA T ION O FFI C E
1-40 WEST SfCON O SOUTH ST .
SALT LA IC E CITY 1, UTAH
OIAl El9.9lU
.... IZON ... OHlef,
102 1 E.
Co",.lba(~
Id.
'hoe";., A.;.ong
Oiol CR 4· 770 B
O fl fCl O f
Mr . Ray V. s tewa r t
President 69r. Intorna tional
OlfICU$:
l "Y V. STEWAU
""Id,.'o hlol"
W .. 'o.n.
W
illi,,,,,, ",1
.0.'
$. 0 won ow
Yln·"...l d ...,
""""0,," Mot.....
Fl o'l.'off, A.IIC.".
I ENTl EY I<oCITCHELL
Vlc. · ' r•• id eM
l<o4 ilch. II !ooIot.1
L"" ", U I.~
W. 6 .•..,SS
S
.c,.,.".T
t ••• w
...
to 51,.10 101010'
Wi~h "but. ,
"',hoft.
DIUClOU,
5UlllUt.4 0 S£OAHO
De a r RaJ"
I hope t hat ~our r eturn trip W a s p1ea nunt e s ourB
B.
wa • • W had a good time wi t h you i n M za tlan nd wish
e
a
t hAt WI e oul d hav e atayed longer. lie di d atlly ono c.ay i n
Pheonix Where we vi.ited wi th 80m of our friend. we hAd
e
not a e en tor aevera l years .
W hope that t he rain we ran in to in Arizona hae exe
ten ded into y our area. They told ua at Pheonix that t h o
Whole ot northern Arizona W S having a good r a 1n . W had
a
o
to turn W
est fraa Pheonix and go clea r into Ca l i1'ol'nia
bofore turn1nf, llorth in order to get a r r ound t h e s t orm .
I have opened the account her e in thv Fir s t Na tional
I U.NEn ,. . HfNOlYX
C.,".'o"hlOKl udTo~ ..
, .. t" i IC~ 1 Ut,h
Sank in the name of Highway 69 ra Int t l Promoti ona1
erna ions.
Fund . I de p oe! ted
~ho
tour h und r ed dollar a heck whl Gh you
chock tor the a dvertising
1n t he Brochure wh ioh ve agreed t hnt we would e a oh purohale
in advance in order to have auttlo1ent funds to get the
program on the va.,. .
:i';:'t~:C~i':';.·"~~~cI.ha8ent me togethel~ wi L my pe r lona l
h
r.4 .. " I~ti .... h:l,""
~I~~t;':.:,jl~~~~:'u
A lp l .., W~", I ",
IICHA.O C . FUCiUS
Fe. q u. 10401.1
5 ... tF. U' , Mo",...
AI you lmow t h e r e will be conSi derable expense invclved in ge.tlng eve rything ready for l·lI1ot in to go on t he
IXICUTIVI nClElAlT: road . I am planning t o go to Salt Lake one day th10 week
MAITlNH . C ANfWILL to go over t he final
plana tor his work . At t ha t tlr.:e wo
~!t'1~ks:~i~~fU::
mUlt})e pre pa red t o pay tor getting out the r ece1pts and
other materia l whioh he will need . By the time I pay him
the stipulated . um ot one h undr ed dollar. per week tor t he
month ot February we will be broke unl. . . a ll of the Director . send in their advertiaing money as agroed upon a t
the meeting i n Afton .
W
ill you plea se send in y our monoy by re t urn
to help t h e Oauae along .
SCENIC ROUTE OF THE AMERICAS
~1l
�Cdntwoll -
,
~ltc hell
COllvsntion
A j)8.cty phone 1 as ... roa Fl..lj:s WI .uli..! IWke. fIIO it thd!'.., wtI.. 1.1 .. os,db11!. t. ot havlug
..,ill Coxon , .t..:t8cut1ve ...-ecrotarl \.· r t .. oj rl ...Uf' otor liot.el ·'l8;jc·ui...t.i OD ti.rl->ear on
t.hld rot; r u at. J~Ck80 ,1 .·ole to tul, i'Uout p: Y 3nt1l~ b~ pU;S8;J of com..ounities on
our l'o.ant 4. .WELlB . Dtlntlu,i' .. 111 r eruner (,,0)'011 f1 " ... 1..0 ..i.3. Ilt1 , to fIo"'- V
tuLL
to tbd ..~x1can }.;ucple dO·f. t·lO u
~ox()n .2.3
to
It
by
11 f
6.t
OUT l.1t1dti,
111 F~bT'\l:J.ry ,
lu,ock. uCJ I. I.d dr"", out f1« ht 11. t.u# . . ~ta c C ,lri:a n6.
& Vat.:. of.' V...c j'eople ill t III l:OIOl ...Ulll tic:.
cOI.f..;e n j .
i .l) Certain thu.t Ulllu3h do~thL;g of t.>3
rt i~ ......·..e that \lIver1 (;v u.lt
ill be
ya;j!8 GVaULW~ ali! I-8T'ilQrs will Ud .... .,.-:.IJ.V , but. t.lla)' nOl,t, b'l ill ~r i~o.. a with",ut
ig .• t .
,raJelitl
~"'6inG' A
prI\JYtSnt ouch b. p&.::3sirlt:; wi t;".o.. t
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_b ut h' vin him or.
t.tl 1- r",~ram. Tbe party who c 1m! ·. . 111 !JOY t.c.&t h1s dxpo),~eO .;.re fail ;0 no '- at
will acrua to t"o . J oc atiof: . I ,10 not. .iUjOIf 'A'h~ther it ls t o:Llh·l .: Io (' b
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t ..• id( our toomllef'1lh11 w111 b " i.l ru t • i . ,JUl,l1 •
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think it:. vel" and iAarUn 1t you &1'\:;.
give =e your bonest opiJ.lon end ·l.OI.lt.
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I coulJ have your '3.Dswer by t ht::u it ;;oul· l be fine .
Best regards to all the f/J.:lIil~' .
lill 8]:·
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t~
�AD MIN IS TRAT I O N Of FIC E
\ <1 0 W EST SECOND SOUTH ST.
SAlT LA KE CITY I , UTAH
DIAL EL9 ., J U
ARIZONA Off iCE ,
10 2 1 E. Co",.l bo<. R .
d
' h... ni.o; , A,i.o no
Dial CR <1 · 7701
AuiflllUI.
O ff iC E O f
.... y Y. STEWA R' , , ... dd.nl
5JO W. alii Willlo",.
•
RAY v. STEWART
" •• Id.",
Enc lo s ed i s a cop,y of a letter t o t~tin in reply to hi s of the 11th
.iith a report on the prol~re :; t o date of the rrocotio:cl r-ro.;ram .
W."., n., 101 01.1
Willi.",., A, I.o".
1010,,0" 101 0 ' 0"
FI.",.ff, "" ;.0...
IHHlEY IoI ITCHiLL
W • •" ..ld. nt
I<
loI il <h. 1I 10101. '
LOQlu, U'.h
W. G . .... SS
s..<r ••• 'y.T' ........
L. SI..,. 1oI0h '
Wld..nbv, • • A rI. o~
July 20, 1957
Dear Dentley ,
O'FICE IS,
S. O. 1oI0UOW
vlu ·".,ld.,,'
Willia M. , A.bollO
I 8lll very m
uch concerneJ about tne .. ay il:. is going 8.", i t seems t o me i t
is or ,;,;.gr; i ng much t o slo •.l y . I ful.ly r etl.lize i t is a. tre:....euJ.ous job , and
I am c onvinc e ... that 110 or,e C;.d). bet tna .J ob ,lor,e i., t. time aUctL.eu
vtithout mort:! nel p . I al..;o _'u1ly re:.J~, ~ the FrubleGl of &ett~r;~
uit .ble
larson to help, but I can see no alt ernntive t o .oiLe;: i t c..n.i lioir,s it as
,uil..kly as possi·:lle . The s1.l.l!1:t.er i s half "one 1,0" with onJ...v six weeks of
it left and scarec ely hl,~ of our luota raised to date and cons i dercl>ly
l ess than that ac t u.:Uly collucteJ .
DI_IC T
Od ,
IiUIlLUIotO SEDA NO I :feel very c ertain t hat if we go to the ::oIlventi on and have to report less
1'101.1 F,.! 101.' .... <I. HI..
Ho,.I." ....or. , ", • • i.-than half of t he _~uo:a r aise.l t ha.t it iill very seriou'l:; effect our'fforts .
,ith just 10 weeks lei t u;.l:.i l th~ :onventiOli it L ;ojng to be whale of a
f:"';~ii:h~Ul,:~ ...tI TOW
'big job t o eet an:-:thin.,; like half of t he :.J.uot:~ collect e 1. I n f a c t I ha been
~lANK w. SOI/iATl hopil..c i I:. would be j os sible t o repor t t o t :'e Convention t hat t he Brochure
F].. , s.c., .., ""k of Id.1oo uld
.
loIon'p. n" ,ld."
W
O
go t o pr ess ~n c tobcr or 10velllber at lc:..test .
IURNErr A . HENDRYX
°
DALLAS A. CLI NGER
"rin~ S.ddl. lodu
A pl u ,
W,o",;n,
RICHARD C . FUGUS
h t' u. 10101.1
6,ul F. U. , 101 0,,1...
The Br ochure of c our se t o do the greatest Good for ne t year should be r da,iy
fo r '.li stribut ioll not l a t er t han Dec ember as that i s rohen people start
planui ng fo r next sumr.:ers va<': iit ioI, . No efIort should. b~ s}areU to get. : . t
r ead,i by tilen , but I <i..Q ufraic! t he ~ro::;J":':cts /,l:ru .;etti n;;: dimr.;er ever:" day .
fllfCUTIV I ffCUTAI'I' ,
a c onferenc e wi th Mi:.r tin an<l see what l,;an be ·,'Iork,"d out . tii th a l l due
1'9SpeCtS to Aiartin I fee l SW'9 he CtaUoot ,~o t he jo. . . titriout n'i! l p . He has
ana i s tioing a g ood job but i t is simply toabig: 8. .. 00 for an: one J,;ersoll .
Our s ucc.ess or f a ilure as an Associ a t ion rests s'luarely upon our t.e.];ree of
.:.uccesa i n t his Promot ion 60 someho the Job llIust be !lolle .
MARTIH H. cAHT
w"J'l a v e
~,'t'~~s.-g;h~~:~
I will be 1 00Ling for a repor t from ;:ou on m;' return from Color ado una certainly hore you c an ork ont satta ;oluti oll .
alJ. tho
fOll1il¥ .
,1r.cert;ly ,
II
SCENIC ROUTE OF THE AMERI CAS
�AIR CONDITIONED
37 UNITS
•
•
PHO NE 2064
crnitchell crnotel
President 1IloI ",...t ~lIJf1Wdy 89
Westerner lo'fotel
Logan, Utah
Williams , Arizona .
Dear RBY ,
Sit down before you get to the bottom ot t he page
and .ee who this letter is from , otherwise you may pas.
out and injure yourself .
I ~ve been foroed to spend much of my dayl ight time
out at town during the past few weeks , and by tho time I
reached home long atter da7k each n1ght I have been just
too bushed to wri t e any letters .
I w111 start by g1v1ng you my imprecsions of the
Trecker contraot . 1 . I teel that t here Ihould be a detinite time limit plaoed upon the filming of this project. 2 . I feel that M . Treokers minimum expense of tourty
r
dollars a day is a littl e out of line , unless of oourae he
i . expect ing to take his whole f am11y on a nioe vaoat10n at
our expense . J . I do not see why M . Treoker ahould be given
r
full and tinal aWlhori ty aa to what soene9 should be filmed,
and as t o what is finall y ed1ted into our film .4. I cannot
see why we shoul d suppl y Mr . Trecker w
1th aPPl'ox1matoly
eight thousand feet of f11m from which he will make a t1nal
f i lm ot less than three thousand feet for us and t hen m
ake
his own uso of the other five thou8& teet of film from
nd
Whioh .evernl area !'1lms oould very m,ll be made at our expense . In short I feel that t hi s oontract i 8 all in favor of
Mr . Treoker , and does not give U8 suffi cient proteotion .
Ilow for the ent1re promotion pr oject . Martin has t he ahow
on the road . He 1. up in Jaokson now, and fl>om his letters
and the money he has sent in I believe that we are at l a st
cn the way with 1t . Last week he sen t 1n $245 . 00 in oash
from a few he oontaoted on the way up throU{;h Montpelier
and Afton . He seems to be very enthusiastio about the Whol e
thing, but wanted this time up here to feel the program out
where the clubB were str ong, in or der to develope hie presentation botore he star ts out in earnest . A l in all I teel
l
that we are go1ng t o be suocessful with the whole thing . It
may take more time than we antioipated, but I am oonfident
that if we work hard a t it we will make it a suooe.s .
�AIR CONDITIONED
COMFORT AND REFINEMENT
·
37 UNITS
•
STEAM HEAT
•
PHO NE 2064
crnitchell crnotel
I h:lvl\%~·~L~\jf,;v"tlJll he .h~~n'i~);'.i' out all ot
the kink. 1n his presontation of thi. pr oJeot by the
end of this week and t hen hend immediat el y for perts
South 1n order to take advantaEe ot the leaBon down in
southern Ar1zona. and then t o work North with the season .
Thi. he pX'o:u1eoB to do .
I expeot him to roturn here toni ght oX' tOlllorrow, at
Which t i me I will go over everything with him and glve
him all the help t he t I can before he leaves tor your
ter ritory .
I am going to write to Burnett within the next tew
days When I can see my way clear to plan a trip into
oout hern Ut h . He euggested that when I got down that
way por haps the three of us could get together acd talk
t hings over . I think he has a good id ea 00 I >1111 let
both of you know w
hen I can get dollIl tho t way . I lIlust
v1sit all of the Be.t ,/est ern ~!otels in the State belfors
t he tourist rush 8tarts so perhaps we could get together
at that t1ll1o .
J UBt as aoon as Martin geta baok here I will writa a
full r eport ot the aotivities of the Committee up to dat e
so t hat everyone """7 know that we have not died ot .tagnation
up hers in this neck of t he >loodl .
When are wo going to take another t r ip down South for
another try at tho big f1sh?
Sincer ely yours ,
�Cllut:.fell -
l0i'i
Drochure - Aiiuc.
ureko.; lIIWlD.tia hal!! a rrivo J. . Sa. a. 1.t tl3 r fr oll2 )"rOIJa..n with his l='icturlO cn.l corre-ct
U~ II!J!)~ .....iJj8'" I.e n.d l eft for Yo",ico :;1t:' t.e !t:\Y .uter .. & l .. ft flh-J hc..J. J UDt
retUt"Io8Il br, ri!)y~ ~o . I -"ill 6-LC,,:1 913 his l e tter 1.0,J picture, but rla~t:lo r eturn
t.:l l ",'tttlr 1.0 ~ SCo 1 :IL.,y 6.0: wvr it •
t.1tle.
.lao, b,_l1""Vd it. or bet .I. l"tJce1vdtl ~i 11 ... It ... 1a ch'Jtk i,.. Ul',l <11 tnt All f or hi.1S
Jlio..:.lli>err!ihir" e..Fl ..... hI1 off ar to half' 'Wb,lI. t blii ... ould. lie 1$ v _,cy 1 I.er .lStad i~1 the 1~
point jr..:,rli!!ri lnU ll,.UC-it·.. tillil w:si. ef..6 f8'Jl'lc at Tucson ..,eul .. 1.1.# l",t.el'e"t.o. •
':'10':6 tho.) tI'eaaury 1u 1. ~mch 6 1·.. flbn I 11.l1.1. Il(m,t t!:<i> CD :(.;1;. ,ur·!t L.) t.o Oq!t/J
t.~ ;,~..Vll t1Jn",
) th~r' is lltt,l" t.aced~- i.ty o.f it ,,'.1: ~ c!o r to S.. lt. L:J..a 11.11 I. b·,d(
~ in . ..t ce I WQllt ha.V3 t.ime t.o 'uS.-t:l-l' it. r Ot' n i ji,W <..i..~ 3 ! .. ill Nr,\.L,.-s ~ 1 t ~":H)
uet ;-:- tUl'n it itrull'hl•• i.91y r1e.-,,$;t;l o
!"t to rficeni ;:.1 :J:..r .;t;tQTJ
1 ~v rih.ivu ., ... J "" . It 1.8 4 "lory
'.. ~, ·1 ruper t ana 1 hOl" ';Jill J;;.r SOIliU 01' thQ J11'd...;.lo r ~ Lose ..n"" Let t uoa Ol, tho
bolL 1. aQa1 t I el so lil1I ""t. f:;'\llt , but will try to C01"':'tH.:t t ll<l.t v~;'ty 3001_• • 1 m.>te
tilat. tll~ re~-ort. ,:.Od8 n~"t sh()", ULV· tcllitiv.·..J. fuo.;13 r" ",1II .l:lti3~. 1 ".10fh:;lJ bim ;.1l.j
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bot hd t' .. 11"uII< .. .:.it tnl.u .. n .GO 4'01 "lur it' nil ~-.ru!" lieut it. . 1£ ,)0'--- h· Vu •• t I&ot it bofc:t"'(;
lJC, 1,1. 113 li.l •..;. .. . I' 1 l~cQ:1.:i.J. h.ir.1; of it ~~J"., 1 -;on•.;. t..i.w U.C: ~ .0._.11: fi.·l,.i.l!I ~;Ul. Welt":: .
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u ... bd, an I'ri,.t it. , but i-'t"iut. t;'J(,! v~ry j,.1ml.<m, \,:Ii ",,un g$t 0: 0;" . '1'-;;)1'e is
ite
1....k.... J.y to b<l Q .... han.:. J.ll _ur-.;cW1"8 , uut 801 t~ tlJ 1JC;I 1 CbD.. ot tell you at:y IlI.re
toll .. !, t.n •..!" ~t i;.!li3 time . A so }llJll:.e k .. e; it. cl)lf11~t1.;.l . 1 h,t.va on!.:. mldnti ..n:e:i
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it i,-, }l".H,I'l'" t o Dil.V t: 00 stiJ.tl.(.;.uery 3houl .: such, ell', 1 t.~,J...", 11J-ce.
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tho neceuary
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ill
81)01
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00 l'\;'.:Jl ••
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th"
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ll h
t')T
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...BJuciat.ion . j . cel.t it :tir .. ct tor. llilil) 41. t( ~ V~ time 1 :;Ii tse".li~ it
.1r .... ct ~ yvu foS I b.ow ~a n!:.:e.l it. ill t.l .... u 1.~ • . !.t,i t,.,.<.t (;.h'.lck "".:3 a
ver-:' •• lev 1&V.8l' ", __ 'Hi~; ::l13 t'ltj"'j iL roll "J:f ~o,.'iL.le '.' •. HI) :it. .:i t.eo.!
h~ ilJ 11 '-'1") .11....... [; L.p.~,J.
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out. 0 thl! r.;Lo. .. . ole go iL
~ rvd e v*"ry :/..1)" It sb,Q'i3 ., t_J~ tlh r ~o
+ 1cs
up to un to !,Sst. it out . 1£ t.:,f;J U.l;ih"'l ~.r t,;f ",·r t.le OL...<.J1Ul' c..n bu
J Tuduce ... t.,on Car,t le11 £AD
,et. 0 (no rcol.-J ~,J it .i:~;"u.l. p
lta , l j . v
u r ."ant t.lut euO'J€r. tuuJ
true
tll~:t·.1
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(I,i,toJ
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U:JC, t he ..;",...u h6 00 toll rO.3tar 16 A~,ril let rtic;;n 1.:: L.l','38(, than
we t~1.1~ 80 fiat overy 3i.~1~ mambor ..H ) il,t!..· th6 tuU that you cnu oeforot
Wnw . 1'ter 'rri.!. lot a. 1 1:tXJr'.. ai. ~ 1,Ll;,..L
~ivU ~il.
1 .rt'-V~ 'ne 1Di...ut.;,e
c,r t. o'j . .Itu, ~.tin.; .nieh ,)''>1
ow;, If6 ~ e club:.. ":II .. ~ loOt. 'e.t tneir fivQ
Q ll~:r r tun. tofte .... ohj1'1. ... 13tliJ th&t. f 'hi V\.L(:~:J
ill t ieD ~o tv vro\tlote
t. lid
1,,·£ t..JO lJ p' i t l1."l~l' $ .
..
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�IInrch
, 1. ...7
Cantwell - Mitchell
I was very ,~! to .~t tn.
t..
!!-....re lIIovlug ~8.l.n .
u6n~r~ rr~,rels
Rer
~t
of
rch 1 th
n1
10a.rl1
that
I ClUmut e:t t'Q8d enOl.i.fiD t;le im).'Crt6.Lce of .cett1l.Ol!, ti."" Ll'lIc.hu.'e off t...'le "row:;:...
OD. 6elf c.ust.a11.1I1g \)8.bia IJ ~uic::lll as v-:-s~ 1ble ~'" it 18 c cstir.g a Coo.ea1 ot &oJ.o1' . vary GtQ' 'Qeo t pa3 as until it COJ. ba mt.. 1~ 801£ SU.3taL L :g .
1'.I.l'
I ro ,UOl;Stea. BUlB.3 to tranBfal' un::>t:lor 4w . uv to tne iTo.otiar. .i.k:tpt ""'hieh
he L ,for ;;19 . . h& 'la .. dO.:..6 . J.t I lmV 8 toe llltaT t_Ol 1 l'eadur/ 1.1
baa. wtJy
1.ho~il (f.J hQ intUnIl:) ~I',J Jl'J ul'). hab
, 0.>0 b:J.. Ilca iJ Ln·"! bn.nl!.
'I.
hu O.1"tHS l o~ .
ill re.i\wi.J W v X'l.QUS l.:ll.ili
of
il h
S .. . .JO i." !IUd llt.Tl . Marti;.. 1.£ )"IJU r bolj l ~i:>
Lbo ... ttl\' 1I~.:,bt:!1"Jh_.t8 ~ t.ter :;",rd t.nwa w hiJII ta t. Uu'
Ttlt.,IGl' t .c..o hula t .• em
..,u,,_ .i. we IJ..lbt r tht.! m nth . :; yo·J. C Ln r~a .. i l 580 ttle!"';) is n ,' a,- IHy if , ••
t.t'ba. :11- to
lil a bills .U<J t"Q l", t of 1, 8 m 11th BO IOU 3~8 bo' iar'rt.ant it
'UlY ",b
id
to i.,.-t
~Ow.:.:: rotduWOl dn J.,t-o
ill at. Of... I3 .
t.:l9 Oll,y '#1:1 WIl \,:oulj get t..J brcn.....uT'.l .•ut or. t.le r ... l:i:1. a to .r aih t.lle
to ut it s1..lil'l;,ad 80 I t.vo~, t.l~ fJu..i.l ll, t.ht! •• vruJ rod j ! o . tlOl! i t
is Ull to ;t .... ~ ",,1101\-;.;
1 1 .... lUll will do lvt)r,t l .. r.. j':o3d~1 to .. dt 1 et: l'teIe ,rOG ur full--r u re of h .tlI.~-,cl!tl C:"'JI:11t1~,. of t....... trl3a;;lU/ you w111
..nder05t~d too 'IIh! t .•e ur~ ent n·...:o "it of otU1lt; f.bol an"w Oli t .• c r~1\ 1.
1
if.j-.t:.W
tr~~9ury
..
To hel.;. matte1'3 ..1oJ '6 on. of ~yr l"'kl!i I ~b 'lck:e bOlJ.ced JII.;.rJ:.: 1 ~r:o'"
! ido t
fut.
' lllti.ts our tr(T. bl t· " , 0' t
Lan :n:l.~,.l beli v t.:. t L of hl
ld
bOIl ,.,.;8. !Jill \III1l!;! . 0 .l.1
to 0 • 1 ba.. l • lith ... ..1, tho
t:i h· , i
t
p<l1' •
FoJ.· tJ
ta r 88 no uterllativi't ). ~ f f. t Iforl. I i1t ~ a for a hils to et
.. lltt.l .;or kiJ'i C pit .1 , trion h
& uih and c ... tch i;J.
I, and Phoi.n l~ 1fnile
their se m ill till on . Th.s S8a.&CIi 8 t..1-..rt~(J tc sL _.... ~1I r.
U
~ II ill CO!08
1.0 a haJ. t IJ ml U e r n:y . Of COUTS,. t.le IJOCUC)t' you C!W 8
)1II'nt. rt't
b ettA.r , bnt 11 ill be imrollsiDl. u;llJ1 S lie tun
··,,:t'£, a"
1 01 lc. t. ,1""1' 011 rf1 th .
1 ~OO . )l, X-1us t ~le
t ruv.ling ."':' n3e l'l will in the eni be +3 u~,t'A fros the COl ..... a. lcl:. eu-ne:1 fr'Ac
tho ala of th~ l.lrochure p'ovi ,ed Lt cou:rae t' l It t ,e <.om.... lssioJ.s eat"l-.a,l aro in
.7'--C.i,s O! t.."l8 L .;..1 .
plU3 tr v.!U·
e;:J: r.:J8 • 13 t 'lis c()rr~ct? Al8a i f the
:.lbert.oj so• • ru ent cow8:s thru vr1t..~ ;a.T.o\h l'
1... .
t"ia yea 43 it
ln st Y$&r
'Would 1/,:, t that go to lOU as c O«S1S810n or or,ly 1/» of t e EL:101..L_t tb'J)' oj'el,d
to i.r.:1 l .l;! brccbure? Let . ~ bear yo...r 1ntelTret.,t1oH ot t:.;,ls a.sr.ec +.
It· unJ.erstanJ.iiog of the contrMo t you encl o' e! 18 tha.t the
<;1r.C'lT'sly ,
�AlllONA O ff ICE ,
l Oll E. Ca",. lboelt
AO M I N ISTIAtlON OffIC E
140 WUT SECONO SOU n .
TH
SAlT L CITY I . U A
AICE
TH
Id.
Pllo." I_, A,i zona
D L El'. ' ll 2
IA
Olo l CI " · 7708
O ff iCE O f
.AY
V.
STEWA",
p, ..;d.nl
.53 0 W . 8ill Walla",.
OfFIcns,
lAY Y. STEWAlT
" •• ld ... 1
ole l
Wool.,U. ...
W ....., A.;, au
IUI
5.0 ... OIlOW
Y ·, •• tJ d. o1
lu
•
Bentl ey iJitchell , Chairman Promo tion Comilli t t ee
IIi tchell M
otel
Logan Ut ah
Dear BentJ.:,y ,
looIor.o.. "'010...
F-I.~.I.II.
A',......
IEH1lET M Ll.
ITCHE
Vlc• •P•••ld""•
... lIeh.II M••1
o
Loqu. U
l.h
W. G. 'ASS
S ••• ".T,...w, ...
.u
L. SI.,•• Mole l
Wlco.nbu,q, A,loon.
April 24, 1957
Wl lIi a",., A';Eano
analys i s
form a nd
l imit on
we c vuld
Your l e t t er rec eieved today and I fully agree wi th your
of t he Trecker contract . ITe c ertainly c annot a c c e pt it in i ts present
I bel ieve some fur t her negotia t ing ne ens t o be done . li th no time
the f ort y dol lars a day expense s (even i f we a ccepte d t h a t fi&ure)
fin d t hat film cos ting us twenty thousand doll ar s or more .
11henever y ou decide you can g et t o Pangui tch I ·,{ill do my b_ s t
t o meet y ou t her o and pe rha~s the thre~ of us c an go ov_r the whol e s ituati on
DUCtOU,
1
and c ome to a c.i. ecisi on as to just wha t i s a f air and e4ui t ab l a of f e r t o nul~e
IiUILlUMO SEDANON .,_ . T '
"
H ft"! M.,eo. d. I....
oiol
rec.:rer en d carry on f r om th era . I c e rt ain l..Y c oula. no t ag r ee t 0 t h a ter .;s
"
oqol.. ona••. Muleoas t hey are .
N
'U~NETT A. HEND~ YX
Co....ro~ M ud Tow..
olol
'.n qyll~h , Utoh
By a l l means Mart in s hould get i nt o southern Ari ~ ona as s oor.
~~AHIC w. SO~GAT2
.
the s ea son 7:111 t aper off f as t d own t here pr etty s oon no·,., . I
f; .. tSac.rll,"'ft'ofrdo~ i 05Sl.bl e as
t.4 .... tp.tillt.ld.....
promL ed h im I would go s outh with him if he t hough t it ne ce ssary and perhaps
DALLAS A. CLI N . I could be of as sistance t o him in g e t ti .,· ' ' ' ' - 1 3
GU
"rl "~ S.dd!o lod,
'' s tarted in Tuscon ana. tincal.>s
A pI.. , W,O/Olln
,
s inc e h e i s pr acticall y Ul o-:m doVll, t h er_ . I s ort of f l: el t hat Bill V:alt z
~ ICH A.D c. HlGUS w111 step i n and he l p i f I show up wi th ~brtin and ask him to h el p , but knowing
Fe"w. M
ol.1
1i, .. IF.tt., M ... W l t z 1 t i s anyb ody!) gues s I/ha t a ttitude h e wi l l take i f rJL.rtin appr oac hes
onl
a
him alone . Tne 3ame g oe s fo:' Ky riak.i~ alJd we \'Iont g e t to fir st bar,e ir, r.:e xico
IX
lCUTlYf SfCUTA~Y rrithout b i s hel r .
MAlTlN H . C
AHTWU.l.
1 w . Sacond South
.0
s.1t l.h Ci,.,. Ut. h
I am g l a d Ua.rt ins t r i p north wa s s uccessf ul e ven t h ough it i s
the deade st o5sib l e t ime of y e er up the r e . I t makes i t l ook very e ncourag i ng .
Martins wire Sunday sai d t r i p ne t ta":' 1 000 • ..;0 . Tha t s ur~ makes a good Gt o.r t .
I BU. JIOse ~ t in "Ri ll be don hel" _ very shortly b ut ha vent heard any thing sinc e
his wi r e l as t ~unday .
I atten :l.e d a motel m ee ti l ~ a t Veg as ;.iond~ a nd
s aid t ney had a wa nd r ful t r i p to ~ey.1co City and
g one M other .J week s a f t e r lea ving Ua'_a.t lan .
units . I ' l l go b ac k for that oig fish any
to see y ou in
Par~uitch
s aw Da hill' Rob inson
or. a r ound the other
He is v ary bu sy and
time you s s.y .
soon ,
s~n~q,
SCENIC ROUTE OF THE AMERICAS
�AIIIONA OffiCE,
1021 E. Camelbock Rd.
'hoen,", A"zono
Diol CI "'. 7708
AOMINIS'~Ar I ON
OFFICE
1.( 0 WEST SKONO SOUTH ST.
S... LT L... KE CI TY 1. UT ... H
DI ... l H 9·9322
OffiCE 01
15
RAY V. STEWA Ii:T, " •• ide nt
53 0 W . Bill Willioml
•
WIlliam" Arizon ..
'lay 9 , 1 957
OfFICEU,
. ... y V. STEWART
" ••ideol
W ..... no'M .. I.1
Bentley Witchell , Chairman Promotion Committee
M
itchell lIotel
Logan Utah
Willl.m" Ari.ono
S. O. MORROW
Dear Bentley ,
............. Molon
~I09".U , A,I.on.
I had been waiting t o hear from you in r eply to ~ l ast letter ,
IENTLEY .... ITCHElL
Yiu·P •• ,ld •• '
but llar tin informs me the plans are chc.ngt:d an d y ou no longer e il..'""P8ct to
Mllckell MOIII
l091n, Ullk
h ol d a mee t ing in Panguitch .
W . G ..... SS
So ...,",..,·T... ,.,.,
~ince my las t l etter I h ave g iven the movie c onside~ab le thought
l. 51. 11. Mol.1
Wlc~ .. b"'9, A.i . on,
and I mus t say I am i n agr eement TIith M
artin t hat i t should b e po stponed
until a l ater dat e , probably next y ear . My reasons f or t h i s are p artly as
DIRECTORS,
follows :
6UILlUMO SEDANO
Th
. ..
A.
Hol.1 fto! M do NI..
.,co.
1
e .aSSOClatl.On J..S proh i bi t eu by the ilY LAVIS from c ontactinb any
N0911.., 0"0" , MI.ktiebts in excess of ~2500 . 00
~~!~~!!" ~~!'IE~~~T~~"
2 Until iTe hav e a balance i n the bank to c over the production of
~'"9uit~h,U'.h
t he movie I fee l i t woul d b e unuise to make a contract for i t s pr o,..uction
:e:I~:C:iIVs~'~~~~d~ien asi de f r om the fact above s tated . The s ale of t he brochure c ertainly i s
MOnipoolilf.ld.ho
not f ar enough a l oIlti to b e certain of it s SUC\..6SS anu while I fee l a nd hope
DA.Lt.AS .... CllNGE~ it will be i t ~ tar.e lOllt;er than we expec ted end we could easil,,>, fina.
"r'"~ 5.ddl. Lod91
Aplno. w,omin9
ourselves very much e m
oarr a..; cied financially •
5 Th ere are certa i n parts of Tre<..ker::; c outra.ct which c ould not be
• ICH .... DC. FERGOS
FO'9U' Malol
6, .. 1FoU,. Monlo.1 accepted as t~ ey are .
I b e li ~ ve f urther i nvestiga tion i n to tn~ coot of pr oduc ~ s uch
EXECUTIVE SfCm .... n. film shoul..l be made . It s eems t here are a l ot of ~A
-tra c ost s n07 coming
........ TlN H C"'NtwEI4lUt that we . .I.i d not know about before and we truST kno·r. what the compl e ted
.
1 W S.cond Sou"'.
40
.
$4olll. k.ClI... Ullh f l.1m ./l.ll cost bef ore we en t er into a con t ract wi tb anyoI.e to ~ ro.....u.ce it .
Viu·',uid.nt
I plan t o meet L
-tattin in :Phoenix l'lionl.l.8\Y Wlcl go to Tuc son and
Nogales wi t n h im. Hope we can Get the pr omoti on i n to h i ; h gear dorm there
no.. as their 510'.7 season i s approachin~ very f ast . 1.1so I find t he 93 As s oc .
has just c anvasse.l a ll of southern Ari .ona n icki.n& everyone for fifty bucl; e
for t heir b r o c hu~ e . ~~ ~ake our p~tch a ~it tle h arder .
Let m k'lol'I your uecis ion .
e
Sincerely ,
q(~
cc Burnett Hendryx
M in Cantwe ll
art
SCENIC ROU TE OF THE AMERICAS
�Ser. ",
Cantwoll -
IJ57
~tchell
C(\nvention
Juet r ocaiv6,j 0 letter fr o BUTueH t.odny ~;i·.ril", hi... n.
wl .. ra~:; which will be
pet"IUUlent !:Ii"l;O ho ha,i pt.:rcha.~e .. :. a homo . Tbe l..-i .r·esi!. p-o.v will bu 11& Dar.cro,.;·ft p.oad
burL~.:.:.JlB , ...... UfO;.·I'il.o . ,lease C01'{'t:rC't ,Yvur ~li. ~ L ..dt End 31;1
t .... t hI:! r ("f~ ... \~ '3
t.ha buUetl'JB et-..c .
I have not hal.!' 1 from either or je'u for Jome t_ae, "L-"l:t .i
3U,.
~ th ... i 1.......,3 fot· the
&:1'0 go1..tt. '!OL\lo fl.": eXp8(.te..l • .oil'..) Iln:: r';,':ie~·"1,.... ti .. 3 C..·S;il,· i. flo "at?
It.. itt just 4. "saku off now an... tUG j~f!VI '1me p.c.3JO.' tbat L03rt .L1:' ·cr.;" btl! !o:-i; .
~oll\l'"~rltiOl,
I ho V h~..l no Tej'll1 Hl aa yet froID !o.fiy I.H. Ule ctiH!l' lot.tQT'n
G
0 ~ 110 he'\1" [Tilt; t118t! tiOUJ .
r
sent out to ... ilv' ,
hct1.l}M.n et.1.. u1 thsl", b'lt he;
11l t~JO h'(Ji:lOtitlfl I iL:k.i1ii tlJ
tsxp. (.'
~
to b . kbl·,..
~.",
... e l . to t "ke
~ .
I gua.ls tbat 13 811 for 00':4, ljut ont~
tU te· b(·t~" have L~\Jrnctt:l l'l.Iucit al 1·133~ .
}fa eSiecL.11. as. t: tlll<t be b., k It .1 . .ft.·!1n';h a;) to t 3 ,rc;...~·f,; .• of t •. \::1 t·~;Jo.·1or"
QI;d t.;)t': o..;j •• odatic,n as 110 s.:..id bi~ be'H't i .... 1 ~ d ~_~ \l"l o.lh he i , ver i .t. "!31te I
lo 1. ..C" 1r. h·::'1 t:l1llJ~' turl1 O'l t.
3iJ.c erely ,
�1.r . 1 , 1
Ct'nt 1011
'i tt:he:l1
II lott-<lt' tod1'l.:,'"' ["-lm !'-'rd ~
.,ilI: ret" ~ l·ng . Ii... B ,1
oJ ~octi.1J
fl .. .ad .. l1:3t l';"h.. e1v~~ ab. ... _ ... ~1 .... 1 h
b.:Cl:"; tl'ftv~ll1 ~ 1.. 7' ""ie:
r I;"ta r ;,:,~ h ..... ~
I
1
!"~co1vs,1
1.;,0 .e
an, t.l.!.q; fr
... tt
!WV bot hlJ r_.
fl'l'!D ... 9: t. rJ foY'
tl . r h.
t 1
t
t
n lit',
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t·
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try1.t:
3
.. .!lI
",i"
is 111 lG h
I~e~
It.
,)., cr t...c • a t. 6 woe:ii. . Ye3ter~ h6
So! t. .... ..-,1 nat', t,:d Col tet' "M ~Jl.t<.lc.G11t(J ," lJ c..~l;(..... !, ' j
kit. 1'l1ftJ.Gg .
f:;x-ptJeta
tr:.- "cD l:,d. 11.1' U I
... ! e: 10.•. ~
"~.
b
v 1.'.\
~
C
• t
.....
''':ollV".Ji,ti 10 , 'v ;tfAi;.~~ ... II'" ',- d I k e V'J-..·:/ l:IUdl t
.. l>
Ul<.i .... 1 1 if '" Lt
0,11_
L
ClJ\ ,
t'~J'U 1.'1
~L:J ;rGaoht :;J
Jq'c ., L ._. t Ci
r13
fi'Ohll .A-rt:.hur
Hi! ''''.
b-~
It.(.;heatt:.r , '1m. •
1: t.
t'o,,:: !l.1 t.o
.:'1_ A1.......
o "'on.1
.il
••
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• t
I
'n&.9 WI,
c:.U
I h
bC+
J:i
t
v ~ II
t'
1
t;,.. ~.o.;, :...n t~o.~I.
him ... .U.~
b.. 1It t~
.-111 f.ut
fl
'ut'
~
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i
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t
yd, ki::; n,
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t
t
In
�RAY V. STK!lART
September ~ 1957
Dea
•••••••••• ** •••• *
Ernie forwarded your letter of the 7th( addressed to Bentley and myself)
up here to Edmonton.
By now , you have no doubt reoel ved mine of the
8th br1.Dg1.Dg th1.Dgs upto-date as of that writing . At the moment there is very little else to
add except that things have sone off to a fairly good start here in
Edlllonton oonilider1.Dg that this is a large oity way up at the jumping ott
plaoe into practioally no where , and the end of paved roads in the Provieno8
Tourist tre4.
re to date has been so inoidental that even the motel
operators do not have "~aA understanding or appreoiation of the potential
and seam somewhat amaze'" to learB what similar oities in the States have
been able to aocomplish. The whole area is louzy RICH with oil money ,
whioh makes tourism l ook unimportant , at least at the moment . In faot the
Alberta Government just last week paid a "profit ehsr1.Dg" dividend to
every adult oitizen in the Provinoe ••• • 20 . 00 eaoh for a grand total
of 11 million. This was the oitizen' s split of profits aocumulated by
the Provinoial Government from Govt . Oil leases .
-
Have been work1.Dg with my su agent , Ed . ZllZZO: Leger who will oarry on
atter I leave . Only about halt a dozea memberships pioked up to date , but
like any large City it is a slow prooess . The population is 248 , 000
spread out over 42 . 6 square miles .
Have three pioture sponsorships at • 300 eaoh in the works v/hioh should
oome to a d'finite deoision by TUesday (the 17th) and then I will take
off leav1.Dg Leger to follow up on membership and listings .
AS 0 the Convention" .ws ••• wl have nothing new sinoe my last letter .
Last Sunday even1.Dg I wired \'lalt nng at Jaokson to advise me via letter
as to general progress and list of roservations . The reply may be av Galgar
by now awaiting my return , as I had planned to be there myself today.
I am going to oall Ernie tonight , and a ilvise him that I w111 be a couple of
days late and IP' there is a l etter from Jaokson will have him Dx read
it to me over the phone . I t I ge t any intormation from tonight ' s oall
will inclose i t with this before mail1.Dg . It not , will ad v ise you as
soon as it does arrive .
The way it looks now, I may not get to Jaokson until about the 30tll.
as it is too far to oome baok up here , and I mus t therefore get Alberta
tied up , piotures and all before I leave . I t the Jaokson folks have gone
ahead and done anything as per plans , a week will be ample time to get
the whole oonvention pllllgram polished off in good ahape ••• 1t they have
laid down on the .1 o~hen it will be another story Whioh I hate to even
think about .
Somehow , I will mannege to get a bulletin into the mail over this n en
week-cnd , whioh v,Ul be just two weeks before the oonvention . Am writ1.lls
key people in the Livingston to Logan area today urging tham to Drganiae
per&onal solioitation for convention registrations to all olub ~bdrs
etc .
Am ino+osing copy of a letter to
lyn Sergeant 'J! t he Arizona Development
Board . I bellave that I sent you aopy q! ~ ~evious l etter to her . Anyway
s he
t. to attand the aonTention and wr ~te ask.1.Dg if s he would be • ~..... ~\
... la~ ••'.:.a~ go. her l etter ihast night ,
d Y/ired her an invi tation ~:r <
oe.l
". hi " 1 Attar_ If' vou hannau to be in .Phoenix • .JIll,ltht be a g ood ""
..
�RAY V. STEWART
Sapt . l l- P.S .
Sunday Morning • •• • P.S :
** • •*** ••• *** ••
Just talked to Ernie to see it he had a letter tor me trom i alter King
at Jaokson. No such luok .
o
It has been a tull week sinoe I wired him as tollows:
-
_
~
,
___
•
0
____
o w •••
0
0
~._
-
,
AllUIAIL LIST OJ!' CONVENTIO RESERVATIONS Il!' ANY AND ADVISE
N
REGARDING INVITATI N ACCEPTANCE AND GENl!:RAL
liGRESS ::>TATUS
UARE HEPBURN WTEL 5809 IlACLEOD TRAIL CALG'IRY NEEDED J!'OR
SEPTEIIBER BULLETIN
Look~ like a tull week is time to get an a ir mail letter trom Jaokson
to Calgary. So ••• here I sit right on the spot a thousand miles trom
Jaokson with the oonvention opening three weeks trom today , a bulletin
to get out , and no intormation.
J!'rankly, knowing alt iJ)Cl ng , this situation soares hell out ot me, and
while it burns me up to have to put the ASsooiation to expense whioh
should be unneosssary, I do not see how ~ can possibly wait any ~onger
tor some word about the Convention p~ess , 80 I have plaoed a oall
tor Mr . King. There was no ..
answer , so I will keep on oalling
until I get hold ot him.
I want to get this letter to the P. O. sometime late toda¥, and it I get
hold ot King betore it has to be mailed , will inolude the Conve~ion
intormation . It I "do not hear trom him betore this has to be mailed , "
will get another letter out to you at onoe atter I have talked to him.
Ernie mentioned that I have mail trom you at Calgary which he will
torward today , and should reaoh me M
onday or Tuesday I'o!!ot knowing the
contents ot thiS mail , I oannot oomment on i t at thia wrltlng ~ ~
•••••• *
Sunday P
10:00 P .M. now , and I
w.o..J
r~~
just called W
alt again , but got no
answer . Earlier this afternoon Mrs . King told the operator
t hat W
alt was out hunting , and had a oooktail party date
this evening , but was expeoted home by nine- thirty.
Guess the old boy must hat;e had one too many and Mama
joined him, so will now wait till morning .
W
ill advise you soon as I hear trom him.
�Se~t . 1 • lv~'1
COllventlon
1'h1s l utter
t.bo
UQ
d(.luOt w111
l O1\:j: rur. it r,ll1
COM
De for
t.1Q
&.i ~OQBth1t1ti.
or
D
hoCli to you both 1 fNuume , but in
best no d.oabt •
.to navQ JU3t m
old Qur moWl ana \Jhero we ;till I!iO (,)1' "h"t ./0 ~i1l cio 1 bavent. t...e
Bl1tihtll3t iCllJU Juot 80 l or-s aa
gat a lOL;fI \Y tJ alJiQ' f rom touriota . 1 .loot t.hiok
lover trant to S~ anotOur c'ne tho CUlYbo I ' U ehmlg6 my aL.d aVbt.tually it lover
,,;ct ro3too. up.
A:J thlribs l<..~ ~ it 1') sOGIewhat tol.4bttul if 1 w111 ... 0 a.1:l1d t.o &61:. 1:.0 t.hl :O~.vcn
tion Ol.. tu.e at> thd noVl O;:.JnOL~9 tL.tli.t1 OliOi' c.\.:to.~o\' 1st ~to.'i o. w.l 't.ho I .erA leu.
1 ....i.l._ ..10 :tV ~ ,..,t t~ .et 1;.091"'6 anti as ~o-..... <.1. looldble, but if. 15 akuot (;ort.J.n
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o.
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.
provi~·
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\.;D
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Title
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Various correspondence from members of 89'ers, 1957
Description
An account of the resource
Various correspondence from members of 89'ers International Highway Association, Inc. including Ray Stewart, Bentley Mitchell, and Martin Cantwell.
Creator
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Stewart, Ray V.
Contributor
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Mitchell, Bentley
Subject
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United States Highway 89
Tourism
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
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Correspondence
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89'ers International Highway Association, Inc.
Date
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1957
Spatial Coverage
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
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1950-1959
20th century
Language
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eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 2 Folder 7
Is Referenced By
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View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
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Text
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image/jpeg
Identifier
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MSS322Bx2Fd7
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/4fef853680137b9ffb57fa3ee425ba04.pdf
3ca3491ca0ff59a918ee6c743bc8f3b8
PDF Text
Text
COLLECTION
REPORT - RElUTTAllOE
FROM: M.B.Oantwell
ADVISE
OOl1!.lISSION STA TEIlENT
NUMBER
6 - 10
10: Bentley M1tchell. Promotion Committee
A
N v . ARIZ
"
"
"
S. ARIZ
"
"
"
ThWlderbird Inn(Will1ams )
Coffee PO~
"
Vaughns Indian Store II
Verkamp ts
(G. Canyon)
~o .oo
50. 00
30 . 00
30.00
30.00
30 . 00
Has 56 Units
30 . 00
30. 00
Bowman Hote1(Nogales)
30. 00
Nogales Chamber of Commerce
35 . 00
30. 00
35 .00
El Camino Motel (Tucson)
Riviera Motel
II
30 . 00
30 . 00
30. 00
30 . 00
•
Arrowhead Motel, Nogales Ariz .
Rio Motel, Tucson
Saddle & Sirloin, Tucson
$30.00
BEMI TTANCE
.D1lE
INTERlIA TI ONAL
30.00
30.00
WilUams-Grand Canyon C of C
Jerome Historical Society
TOTAL •.••• •• $ 690 . 00
REVENUE ~ 265 . 00 OOl.llUS SI ON
$
BALANOE DUE FROM LAST ro:I'ORl'
TOTAL COOMISSIONS DllE
REMARKS,
$ 165.66
88 . 33
~ 77. 33
- -- ---Wail to:
140 West Second South
Salt Lake City. Utah
)
�COLLECTION
~'ROld:
=
REPORT - RElllITTAIfCE
M.R.Oantwel l
lQ:
]~ntley
ADVISE .. COMMIS ION SUTE1IENT
NUM1ll'lR
9/23
M
itohe ll. Promotion Committee
SOOTION
Edmonton
South Bend M
otel
El Paso Motel
n
30.00
30.00
15.00
15.00
Sub-agent Leger
45.00
4j.00
n
$60 a 50% ••••• $30.00
Edmonton
Pan American Motels
60.00
15.00
75.00
REM! TTANOE
Edmonton C. ot C•• o
••••••
at
these orders are
S;)r~~C
-
DUE
veritle'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_______
REVENUE $ 120.00 OOMl4I SSI ON
REQUES TED
i5 0~OO
:B.ALAlICE DUE l"ROU LAST REl'ORT
TOTAL COMMISSIONS DUE
~e C , t. o
'2.1 \ , ('3
tJ v "'-
331/3%•• $20
3 memberships •••• $ 45.00
and oheoks are being mailed.
PAYMENT OF COMM
ISSION
60.0~
300.00
City at Edmonton ••••• • ••• 300.00
Both
$
REM A
- - - --RK - S
:L8;37
It request granted tor payment
Edmonton City and Edmonton C. at
I
A
$ 21;63
t
?l.b)
:
oommission on
• total oommission will be ••• $ 271.63
,;? . . P .J!....e?~t- .::rv
;:itYe' ~7'
,
V'\
/'
-
,, ~
:G IS:
(
. ,,~lf'.j
�•
C01LEOTION
REPORT - REillTTAiJOE
FROM: M.R. Oantwell
ro: Bentley
ADVISE
Mitche~l.
A
Wyo.
COMl.!IS3ION STbTEr.lE:NT
Hm.!BllF
9 - 8
Promotion Oomm
ittee
DUES
Star Valley 89'ers ".L'"UI IOO.OO
TOTAL
100.00
R E !.I A R A S
(Mi tahell has Check)
$100
REMITUNCli
DlJE
@
33 1/3% •• '33.33
I NTERNATIONAL
3 member.hips tee •••••• $ 45.00
Ii
REVENUE
$
220.0
Ol.!lJTSstON
BALAN<lli .DUE FRO!;, LAST
TOTAt CO!!MISSrONS DIIE
---,
S T A
REP OR~
$$t
,
,
ib.-..3
$ 81.63
---
see attached commission statement
)
�-.
COLLECTION
FR(J,f: U,R.Cantwell
.-
3EOTION
.
REl'ORT - REldITTAllOE
'
A:DVISE . OONLIIS ION STJ.TE!.IEIIT
TOTAL
A C
REl.!
SUB- AGENT
*::t.* *¥;;c****** *** * "'* ** *:
•
*********
Bow River Motel
30 . 00
1~ . 00
~5 . 00
ArlIlS tr ong M el
ot
30 . 00
15 . 00
~5 . 00
TOTAL
N1lKl!ER
&/31
10: Bentley Mitohell. Fromotion Committee
NEW BUSINESS SECURED ~Ir*~~;;t~
Calgary
~
60 . 00
Grad
Gra:!
$60 @ 50% •• .. . $30 . 00
REMITTANOE
DIlE
INTERNA nOl/AL
Alberta Gbvt o Travel Bureau
City of Cal gary
Red Deer ,Alberta C of C
The above grants havi ng been
officially approved , payment
thereof is being cleared thru
routine aocount ing perceedure o
REVENUE $ 60 . 00 COIJlJISSIOI1
ll.ALANOE DUE PROJ4 LAST
TOTAL C~IS5IOIl8 DUE
REM~
---
- --
REEOR~
$ 30 . 00
~
$
R KS '
See attaohed l e tter in reference to
"Futur e Payment Contracts"
)
�COLLECTION
P.EPORl' - .RE!.tlTTAN E
FRO!.! : M.B .Can twe11
-
~:
cma.u:s
ADVlJE
I ON
TOTA L
8- 27
SUB - AGENT
**************** ******
************
iII rtJ!
) 0. 00
)0 . 00
30. 00
90 . 00
Amyl orne Motel
"
,
NUMBER
RE
NEW BUSINESS SECURED Bf~~~i~;;!:
"
.-
'J'J'!.lENT
Bentley M
itohell, Promotion Commi t t ee
AOC O U
"
S~
Arlo t s Restaurant
Barney ' s Fi ne FOod
Eamon ' s Tourist Centre
Star Motel
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
15. 00
15 . 00
*
45 . 00
45.00
45 . 00
Grad
45 . 00
Grad
Grll,d
Gr ad
Grad
210 . 00
TOTAL
$210.00 @ 50% •• • $1 05 . 0
NEN BUSINESS - NO
C l &~ ary
30 . 00
Graddell Mote l
15. 00
$ 30
45 . 00
REl.!I TTANOE
DUE
@ 33 1/3%.. .
10. 0
INTERNA nON.lL
6 membership fees • •• • • • • $ 90 . 00
S IO N
S
RE VEliUE . 240 . 00 00lJUISSI O
N
~
BALANOE DUE FRO!. LAST llEPORT
TOTAl. OOlaUSSIONS DUE
REMARKS:
,~
115. 00
t
---- - --
Air- Mail Ca r e :
j
Hepburn Mo t or Court
5809 MaCLeod Trail
Calgary , Alta , Canada
)
�COLLEOTION
REPORl - REI.UTTANOE
FROY: H.B.Oantwell
ADVISE
COlaIIS ION STbTEMENT
8- 17
TO: Bentley M1tohell, Promotion Committee
=
TOTAL
AD •
Mont .
Mont .
Mont .
NUI.!B1l1
Tr a il Rit e In
Martins , Ino .
Chadwick & Son
1 5. 00
HEHAR
60 . 00
)0 . 00
45 . 00
•
REILI Ti'J.BCJ:
Livingston Chamber of Commerce
Picture Sponsorship
$ )00. 00
1 membership
DUE
INTERlIA TIONAL
$ 15 . 00
NSTATE
11..
REVENUE
0,0
10/0, 0
I,,)'
$ /,-,> .t-!'Com!l SSlON
lIALANOE DUE FROl.I LAST REPORT
TOTAL Com!I S5l DNS DUE
R EMARKS :
~
i 'It') ~
$ NO N~
$
-------
Mail care Hepburn Motel
5809 MacLeod Trail
Calgary
I
�-.
COLLllOTIOl!
FROM:
REPORT - RElUTTANOE
H.H.OBnt~ell
ADVISE _. CO!.lJ.[IS lOll S'l)ATE.llEIiT
10: Bentley Mitohell, Promot i on Oommittee
I1UJ(BER
8 - 1
A
»
Gardine r Chamber of
Callison Drus JG
ardiner
»
Town M
otel- Cafe
"
Parks ' Fly Shop
M o
ant
300 .
..
15 . 00
..
It
Ri ver s i de Cabins "
"
Wilson Motel
It
e. 1i f f D1V 0/ /.,,,oS
Lndu
COLLECTIONS RE ~~ETVED
Mountain View Motel , Gardin. r
e
~30
REMITTANCE DUE !NTE~TIONAL
TovID_Motel- Cafe membership fee
15 . 00
S I 0 11
REVENUE
. bm~OMIUSSION
BALAIICE DUE FROU LA ST REPORT
TOTAL OOllMISSIOliS DUE
REll A RKS:
-------
Mail Care Gene ral Delivery
Jacks on , \oVyoming
~ ~CO <7e>_
.~
none
$'N:O
r
�.
~
COI,LllOTION REPORT - REIDTTA!!OE
FROII : LI.H.Centwell
-
ro: Bentley
.ADVISE
!.Ii tehell,
COl<1L1S3IOJ! STbTEMENT
lllJUBER
7- 25
Promo,lon Comm1 ttee
A
- K Motel
.
Wyo .
Snow iClng Courts
..
Ed. Hodson Old Wyo •
The Roundup
Silver Spur Cate
Paul Hanson Co .
.
..
l!
.
Western Steak HOllse
..
..
..
Jackson Hol e C of C
Star Valley 89'ers
Rich County Commission
N. Ariz
N. Ariz
(two checks , $30 each)
60
300
200 •
50 .
15
(Bel
due- $lOO )
Camp Townseild
Br anding Iron Din.
COLLECTIONS MADE ON PR'~V 'rm ~
Wyo .
Corral Motel
30 .
(Report 5-6 FUture)
llElJITT.ANCE
COLONIAL MOTEL- funds remi
DOE
IN~TIONAL
(This r eport) 3 memberships
but due from Report 6- 29
45.00
15 . 00
~j?> , ?5
<"\'10,'-'V
REVEIlUE $ q~b ~OOl.!/.lI SSION
BALANOE DUE .FROII LAST
TOTAL COMMISSIONS DOE
.REPORT
~ '3 ; '~ .
•
'3.;'
'1
$ .. 13. 00
REMARKS
--------
)
�Complete and KEEP ORIGINAL
RETURN COPY WITH CHECK
�COLLECTION F.,EPOR:' - REIIJTTAIlCE
FROM: M.H.Cantwe l l
=
SEOTI011
Wyp.
ADVISE - O=aSSION STA TEUENT
NUMBER
6-29
£0; Bentley Mitohel l . Fromotion Commi ttee
A CCOUHT
ADV.
Sterling Service
TOTAL
DUES
R E M AR K S
30 .00
J100
Wyo
Twitchell Service
Wyo
La Kota Res or t
Wyo
Wyo
Wyo
Clark Oil Co
Lazy B Motel
ThreeK Sisters Moteli
Wyo
loG.A.Food Center
Wyo
Wyo
Bear Leke Dairy Coo-op
Lower Valley Power & Li8
30.00
30.00
;30 . 00
30 .00 (membership Chief Motel)
30.00
30 .00
30.00
30 • 00
;30 .00
;30.00
25.00
100.00
30.00
30.00
25.00
100.00
(apply picture)
(apply picture)
:rMnous
COLLECTIONS MADE ON
C NTRA2~
********************** ******* •• ****
Wyo.
Wyo
Wyo
\'Iyo
N.ARR
Wy
~
Vi:;
Valleon Hotel
Star Valley Jewelry
Swis s Motel
45.00
,
)0.00
30.00
30.00
Vir Day Motel
300.00
Williams-G.C. C of C
30.00
Anvil Motel, Jackson
G o ID 77 I'a, ) !1o-bor Cau t sa ~ f-
45.00
30.00
30.00
30.0.0
300.00
,
15.0
1.60.
45.00
Report NO. 5-6 (future)
"
"
"
,
Report NO. 6-10
Report No 5-6 (future )
11.53
'.,30 DO
3f' 1? "' , IADD REMI T'MHCE $
REMITTANCE DIlE INTERNA TIONAL-
Gus Rioh Lake Shore Resort
30.0
- --
C O M MISS I O N S T A'rEME lI'T
REVENIlE
$ '330 .£J6 0M!.II SSI O
N
FROM LAST REl'OR:r
TOTAL OOM!.!ISSI O DUE
llS
REMA R KS ,
BALANCE DUE
-....,.
--
101411 Check:
~ ~ 7~,
,
b '1
\i> 1-; 0 77 <.Q.,
$ -:l,7 b, h I?
-
CARE GENERAL DELIVERY
lACKS ON HOLE, WYOMING
/
�COLLECTION
.
FROM : M.B.Cantwell
=
~TIO.!l
~...
_ .
TO:
B~ntley
Jacob Lake Inn
_ ..
_
N . Ariz .
N. Ariz .
N. Ariz
ADVISE
COJ8.[IS roN
S~TEllENT
N1Jl.!llER
6-19
1Ii tchell, Promotion Oommi ttee
A 0
N. Ariz
..
-
REPORT - REI,[!TTA:'!CE
.
--
-
120 . 00
*.
Cameron Trading Pos t
Gray Mt . Trading Posy
66 M
otel , Flagstaff
30
Dues on the se
accounts
were paid
by separate
COIll:CTIONS MADE ON PRE!VIIJUS
che~k
for remi t tance
S . Utah
Peach, ' s Trails End
30 . 00
30 .
REMITTANCE
DUE
dihrect to Assn.
Treasurer
I NTERNA TI ONAL
REVENUE ~ 390 .000OWllSSI O
N
lIALANCE DUE
~'ROllI LAST REPORT
TOTAL COMMISSIONS DUE
~
~
$
130 .00
nom
130.00
REMARKS
-------
)
�NUJlBER
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
FROW : 1I. H. CantweU
SECTION
~
CO
NTRACTS ACCEPTED FOR FUTURE PAYKENT
TO : Bentley lIitchell , Chairman Promotion Committee
A CCO U NT
ADV .
DUES
TOTAL
"
,
"
,
"
So . U
tah
"
"
"
,
"
Vir-Day 110 tel
Star Valley Jewelry
Corral Motel
Vall eon Hotel
AnVil M
otel
Swiss llotel
( Her ewith)
Trail s End Restaurant
Art Gl"eene C iff Dweller s
l
Murray Harri son ConoeD Serv .
Dicks utoco Ser vic e
Bryce Canyon Cafe
Colonial Motel
30. 00
30 .00
30. 00
45 .00
30.00
30.00
30. 00
60. 00
30. 00
30 .00
30. 00
30. 00
15. 00
30. 00
30.00
30 .00
45. 00
45 . 00
30. 00
30 .00
60. 00
30 .00
30 .00
30 .00
30 .00
$ 405 . 00 $ 15. 00 $ 420 .00
Future
PROI!ISED PAYUENT DATE
(Previous Contracts)
Wyoming
,
" 5- 6
July 8
July 10
June 1
June 10
July 1
I!ay
15
July 1
June 1
June 1
June 1
July 1
July 1
�COLL!I:TION
REPORT - REIilTTANC, _
l
-"rn E =
COILIIlSSION
!i!! !,u .H
STATEUENT
5 - 6
FR(Jl: M R. Cantwell
.
SECTION
Wyoming
"
"
"
,
•
,
,
,
,
,
"
"
!
"
"
So. Utah
,
,
"
"
Montana
So . Ariz .
N. Utah
Canada
TO: Bentley Mitchell, Chairman Promotion Committee
ACCOUNT
Paris LiOO IS Club
Bear Lake Count ,. Comnission
Gertsch llarket
Chief lIotel
Star Valley Hunt Camp
Fr eel ' 8 Super lIarket
Mark' s Chevron Service
Th e Flame 1.1:0 t el
Canyon Camp
Valleon
Hote~otel
Fred' s Cafe
Lonnette Wotel
Del and Ted ' s Central Texaco
Jensen' s A G Market
Bur goyne Cate
Jewell and New Park Motels
Cameron ilotel ani Tours
Parry' s Lodge
Raiobow Caf e
Hi-Way 89 Lodge
llountair Motel
Aiken ' s Lodge
Martin' s Inc.
La Siesta llotel
II1tchell IIote1
Hepburn Votor Court , Ltd .
DUES
ADV .
250 . 00
150. 00
)0. 00
)0 . 00
)0. 00
)0. 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
30. 00
V
REIIARKS
250. 00
150 . 00
)0 . 00
30.00
30. 00
30 . 00
50.00
)0 . 00
)0. 00
)0.00
)0. 00
)5 , 00
10. 00
)0. 00
)0 . 00
37. 00
30. 00
TOTAL
15 . 00
15 . 00
15 . 00
)0. 00 _ Dues paid by separate check
)0 . 00 not deposited in PromotioanFund
)0. 00
)0. 00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
30 . 00
)0. 00
45 . 00
)0 . 00
50 . 00
)8 units- $ 8 . 00 bal.due
30 . 00
)0.00
)0 . 00
)0 . 00
)5 . 00
Bal .due on publication $ 20. 00
10. 00
45 . 00
45 . 00
52 . 00
Dues not deposited. in PrOmotiOl
)0.00
Fund
(\8
1132. 00
COMIIISSION
S~ATEIIENT
Total Adverti.ing R.venue ••••••• $ 11)2. 00
Commi ••ion • • ••• $ )77 . ))
PAYABLE TO: II . H. Cant".l1
60. 00
1192.00
REllITTAtGE
CS
Pr.vious
~
uar
.
- 1057. 00
INTIRNATIONAL
'-" . ~
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Image Height
4353
Image Width
Image Width in pixels
3403
Local URL
The URL of the local directory containing all assets of the website
<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/840">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/840</a>
Purchasing Information
Describe or link to information about purchasing copies of this item.
To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
Digital Publisher
List the name of the entity that digitized and published this item online.
Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
Date Digital
Record the date the item was digitized.
2013
Conversion Specs
Scanned by Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library using Epson Expression 10000 scanner.
Scanning resolution
Resolution in DPI
400
Colorspace
RGB or Grayscale, for example
RGB
Checksum
3211616710
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Collection Report, Remittance Advise, Commission Statement
Description
An account of the resource
A collection report, remittance advise, commission statement documenting the membership funds and other payments.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Cantwell, Martin H.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Accounts
United States Highway 89
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL 322 Box 1 Folder 21
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
image/jpeg
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
MSS322Bx1Fd21
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/0e3779ac2fffa29a2305955fd0d6cf9c.pdf
cacfc2bf44510752c2a418d4e0b9257b
PDF Text
Text
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BAI.AXCE
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-
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a
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(f3..
;1"/ ;;
IMI •.
HII:O"T
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149
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>
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1
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A~IOUNT
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BALA!\C.:
150
fueL
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-<
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,
,
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I M IOUN T
T OTAL
T illS CHECK
fA!)
I '""
/ '7.
+-3- j:.
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.
.§Zd<-- ';Z
(-0,..,
151
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>
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TOTAL
A NOUNT THIS c m ;CK
HALt\l\Ct;
�IL\I. .
---' V
~'"
lJI«tT
b
152
OIW!-: 1
t"OI(1)
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TOTAL
ANOUNT TillS e ll EeK
IJAL\ XCt:
k
~
" '-f'j .
153
/1/Oll IHo:J(OF-- I!)~ "1---1
r
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"
--------~"'--~~---{~
. ·OM
..
_____________ •
~ 1
,
o
TOTAL
,\~ IOUNT
Ti ll S CHE CK
BAi.AS"CE
___________________________
TOTAl.
ANOUNT TillS c m ;GK
1
•
~ 1
BALASCE
,
o
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Image Height
2735
Image Width
Image Width in pixels
1404
Local URL
The URL of the local directory containing all assets of the website
<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/815">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/815</a>
Purchasing Information
Describe or link to information about purchasing copies of this item.
To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
Digital Publisher
List the name of the entity that digitized and published this item online.
Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
Date Digital
Record the date the item was digitized.
2013
Conversion Specs
Scanned by Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library using Epson Expression 10000 scanner.
Scanning resolution
Resolution in DPI
300
Colorspace
RGB or Grayscale, for example
RGB
Checksum
2308497229
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highway 89 International Promotional Account book
Description
An account of the resource
Highway 89 International Promotional Account book from March 1957 to February 1959.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Accounts
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Administrative records
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1957
1958
1959
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 1 Folder 17
Is Referenced By
A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource.
View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
image/jpeg
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
MSS322Bx1Fd17
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/fb7aee0f995a02b83f72c8cf4c06db71.pdf
805ee78f3831c96cbd6e49ec7666515b
PDF Text
Text
,
��... tIZONA. OffICE ,
1021 f.. COIII.I1:oo(k td .
AOMINISTRATION
OffiCE
.40 WEST SECOND SOUTH Sf
'''_"i.," · 7708
Dial Cit
SALT LAKE CIT Y 1, UTAH
DIAL El9. 9J22
A. i ~o .. o
89eu
OffiCE O f
omellS,
.... V
.... Iy STEW.""
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Willi ...... A,It" ..
S. O . MOIlOW
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"'or,o.. 104010"
f l.",.If, ArllOIII
.UHUT Io4ITCHUL
v i... , ...
Mllchl n Mol'!
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SUfl'"'Y'T, "" ~,,,
h SI• •,. 1040111
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OIIiCTOU,
GUllLUt.tQ SEDANO
HoI,1
104 •• ( ... d. 1'.11
••
1'.10,.1•• , O"orl , I<oI .. I<..
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IU.HETT A. HENOIYX
C.....,,,,, M" N ' ud Tow ..
'U'IUIICh, U,.h
flANIC W. SO _lOAn
' 1.. , Sou '; ly a... ~ of 101,110
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DALLAS .... CLINGER
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IICHAID C. FERGUS
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&, .. , F.U•. 1-4".h,,"
IXiCUTlVI 5(CU'AU':
",,,UIH H. CA NTWEu..
140 W Secoad South
s..It llh CI.... U,.h
SCENIC ROUTE OF THE AMERICAS
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Text
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1331
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/796">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/796</a>
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2013
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89'ers International Highway Association, Inc. blank letterhead and envelopes
Description
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89'ers International Highway Association, Inc. blank letterhead and envelopes.
Subject
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Tourism
United States Highway 89
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
Medium
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Administrative records
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1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
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Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
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1950-1959
20th century
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eng
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 2 Folder 3
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View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
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Text
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MSS322Bx2Fd3
Highway 89;
-
http://highway89.org/files/original/7f722067f331119079d7a241dddfa40b.pdf
9e88871198f82030d7aef85df8a151af
PDF Text
Text
8~ ' .r.
Ill TERIiA TIOHAL BIGBJlAY AS SOC lATIOll
Minut ee of Eeard of Dir e ctor " u.& ti ng he l d a t the Hotel Newhous e , Sa l t Lake
Utah on O
ctober 24. 1955 .
C it~ .
IICf<N mG SESSI ON
The me e ting was call ed to order at 101 30 a, m. by Prnldent Stewart. Pre ..nt
'Were Ray V. Stewart , Pretidsnt; Bentley lI1tchlil l, Vloe-Prea1dent ; -W . G. Baas ,
Secretary- Treasurer; Directcr. Burnett Hendryx , Frank W Sorgatl and Rlcte.rd
.
C. :r.r~.; IIt.rtin H. Cant_II , Executiv e Secr etary and Berni. W
illiams , Guest.
A
bsent, Directors Dalla. Clinger , excu68d; Guiller mo Sedano I Vice Presid ent
S. O. M row , excused .
or
Seoretary Baa. read the minute. of t he m
ornin g se s.ion , first me eting of t he
A• • oa1at ion held at Flagstetf , Arizona an September 23, 1955 . Approved ••
r.ad .
Mr. Cantwell read t he minute. of t he Aft ernoon s el.1OQ held on Se ptem
ber 24 .
1 95 5 wich were approwd with one oorrection - - the n Ul. of County mentioned
in Paragraph 2 therein wal cbaliged trom "Mlrlp08a" to Maricopa.
The minutes ot tba E~ning Sen10n wer e also read by lItr- . Cantwe ll. Mr . Cantwel l
pointe d out that t he two resoluti CXlS to have b ee n dra'1lIl up by 1Ir . Gecr p Ban
bad not been ree.ind . Mr. Catrtwel l .... . in.truoted to oontaot 1Ir. Ball 1.mr!ltdlately r.gardin& t he re.olution. . There bei I1f; n o other correcti a14 , the minut ..
•• r e ap prov ed a. read .
Th8 minute s of the Board of Dir ectors U,.ting held Sunday morning , Sep t s mber
25 , 195 5 at Flagatart , Arizona were read by Secretary Ba.a . Hr. Cantwell sta t ed
tt..t he felt t he paragraph reterring to b.1a appointment a. Executive Se cretary
wa ll not enti re l y correct.
Mr . Cant we ll r equa sted t tat an a mendll8nt be added
the reto and read t he proposed a mendment to the Board of Dir e otors . 1Ir . Mitohel l
motio ned that t he a mendment b e tna.de a par t of t he minute. , seconded by Mr . H
endryx .
Motion oarried. The amendment i8 a ppend.d hereto and be come . .. part of the mlnutu .
President Stewart stated tha t he }ad one a ddi t1 on which /S houl d be ade to the
l ast pI!lT lI.Ua ph of the minutes, 1 •• •• the ~rt whioh reads " Ray Stewart. wall in_
Itr ucted to draw up By-Laws for 89 ' er&" . M
otlon was made by Vr . ¥1tchell that
this i tem b. ohanged to read "The President was a uthorized by t he! Board t o proo.,,,d through the Aaa oo iat ion Attcrney to draw up By-Lnws &nd a Charter unde r
whioh to organize load 89 ' er Clubs". Seconded by Mr . I:en dryx. lfotion carr ie d .
The minutes "rill ap proved wit h oorre cti eIl8 as shown .
Trea surer "
Repor t l
AmOtmt of mOlle y c olleoted to date for Jle dHtrsh ip . 451 msmbera, is $6, 765. 00 pl us
$38.00 on partia l pa id memberships equals II. total of $6 , 803 . 00 . Disbursements I
Johnny Perkinl , $3 , )22 . 50; n soe1 lAmous Expense , $1 , 064.27; Johnny Perkins ,
$300. 00.
wa.
Balanc. on hand $2.116. 23.
It
IDllde a -.tter or reoor d that President Stewart and Exeoutive Seoretary
Cantwel l had _ de 11 joint &udit of the membership roster em Ootooflr 2]rd . The
_udit d1ac1011edi 451 paid - up members an reocrd : 9 partially paid _up me mber s tota l _
ing $38 .00: an undetermined number of honorary IM mbers said to ex ist, t he Dame s of
whioh Ilre not on reoordJ 4 n&lMS on reoord a. having receiTe d me mbersh i p plaques ,
but no reoord of dues payment. Two of t he fo ur n on-pa id DlerOOers wer e in Ar izona
�and wwre turned OWl' to Allociation Ofticer' trom tmt State to inTe.tigate.
TN
ott.r two wer e the Calitcrn1a Court. and Hotel Frtn.oe., both ot Guadalajara . x1oo •
.... Cantw.ll
1l1.tructed to place the.e two name. on tM mtmber.hip reeter without further inn.tic.tioD. and carry them
paid_up aocount. with the notation tbat
there b neither endenoe or reoord. that the $30.00 due ..... reoei...ed by the .1.. 0oiation tre •• urer .
-.a.
a.
h.ymM1t of 8ilh I
To ....rtin H. Cantwell, petty oa.h acoount - $64. 64 . Vr. Sorv-ta motioned that the
bIll be paid. Seoond. by Mr. Hendryx. JIotion oarried.
to Ray
V. Stewart, lan& dietame telephcxw caUl parta1nin, to ann.. l .etin, -
$32 . 00, and $3.00 tor .ta"P"
bill be paid.
A total ot $35.00.
111". Bondr1" ..ot1o%lOd that tho
10 erdered.
Mr. Sorgata .eoonded the moticm. and it .... 1
To Jarfa Printing Company , llellberahip a pplication tor .. and enTelope. - $61. 50.
Mr. Il1tot.ll 'ZOtioDid ttat the bill paid. Seoonded by Mr. ""£Ill . Kotion oarrled .
'1'0 Hot.l liewhoule tor uee of room tor Direotor.' lIt.tin, - $10.00 plul rOOln .erTioe.
lIot1cm tlat th1. bill be paid by 1Ir. II1tcholl. Secoad by ..... Bolldr)'X. Wotion
oarried.
1Ir . Bilndryx motioned that the A.. ocation rehtlurN Direotnr. for attend1nc Direotor.
lDMting. a. tollawl. ..18, Roo.. aDd actual mileace trt.'ftU.d by the neoe .. ary
automobile. at the rate of 51 per aile or tb. COlt ot publio tranlportation ••
requir.d . Mr. Sorpta •• oealed the motion cd it wa. 80 ordered.
1Ir. II1toheU motioned tl'at wher.Tar t_lible Direotor 8 oooperate witb other
direotcra in tJ. area to trawl JllQre than one d1reotar in the car to ake the
expense a. eoonomical al po.lible. Second.d by 1Ir . rerr;ua. M
otion carried .
Mr . II1tohdl .otlon.d that . . iuue the oURODlry Corporate cheoking aooount
authoriaation, oopy ot whioh is hereto attaohed to the minute.. Seoonded by Mr.
'ergu.. )(otion carried.
Mr. Mitohell lIloti med tlat tbl tr....ur.r b. aut h orized to reimbur •• Mr. Martin
11. Cant-nll 1'01' tlw petty ca.h fund AI •• t up in the oontraot betnen the 8 9'er.
tntenu.tional Highway A•• ociat ion and MLrtin H. Cant_ll , and aha to pay the
.tipulat.d tee at $100. 00 per JIODtb a. l q al the oOl1tract remain. in toroe,
plua the $1.00 per _bel' tor an _mber. al pro ... lded tor in the oontract. 8eo_
OI1d.d by Vr . Sergata . )(otion carried •
• eting reoe .. ed tfr
lunoh at 12135 p . m.
.et~
re.uMd at 1.45 p.m.
AFTERNOOi SESSIOM
The oorre.pondenoe .al read by the Xxeouti...e Seoretary and aoted upon a. required.
ElECOTI'IE SECRilTARY'S REP <R T.
1) SURETY 8QfD Ir. Cantwell intcrmed the Beard that he .... unable to .eoure
a bond tor hIiUelt beoauN an ellPl~-em.ployer relation.hip cUd. not exist betqeD himlelt and the ••• oc1.tion. Be ltat.d tu:rthtr that .ino. he is neither
an ottioer nor an employe. he hal been ad ... iaed tlat th.re i. DO _ani of •• _
ouring the bond UDder the olr oumatanc••• A:rtar oOlldderable dbou .. im lIr.
Hendryx s otiomd t1:at the B9'er. re.oind tlw requut for a bond :ror the Exftauti"
Seoretary . SeooDded by JIr. Bal.. Motion carr» d.
_ 2 _
�lk
2) E~AL RECOCIlITIOI fCll ROUT! S 2 aDd
J. re.ol ution to the etreot that the
Ca.naara.n-"xIoan route .rpie .hCNld be
oluded with the U. s. 8' R1gbway .hield
on .tatione17 and other literature 'ft. pre.enwd. lIr. Hendryx motlo:oed that
ae.olution :tl, .. oopy of whioh will be attached to the minute. , be .dopted .
SeooJ'lied by Mr. Mitohell. Motion oarried.
3) ACC EP1'AIiCE CF APPLICATHIiS FOR IlEllBERW I P . ".olutton #2 . 111'. IIitoholl mOTed
that Artlole 2, seoBon I or tb8 By-I .... be amended by the ..dditlm ot the tollow_
tn, pron,lonl "The Beard at Direotor. ay , ..t tbt1r diloretion, authorhe tl:.
Preaidmt to delip.ate an indiT1dual or oollD1ttee who ahall b. empowered to
"ppro,.. or rej.at new appliDatlOl1a tar lleDiberahip". Seaonded by R'.
)(otion
carried. President St;elwart d.a1c;nated that 1Ir . Cantwell be .uthori&ed to a p prOTe
the member.hip ..pp lioation. aa t h-,y are reoei,..d at his attioe.
Ba...
4) IIA IL DIG PEIIIII T.
Mr . Sorpt& lI.otiomd that the ... oot.tioa plroh.... tlw tV'.t permit.
aeoODd.d the aoti.oa and it wa • • 0 ordered.
lIr.
rer~
5) ADDRSS80GRAPH EQU I PII8II f. 110..4 by 111'. II1toholl ••• oond.4 by Kr-. Hendryx that
Mr. CantWlill b. authorIsea to proc ••d with haTiDg addrenograph p late. _d. tor
the 'ftriOl.lll -il1J:&& lilt. and hire thelD. run until .uah a ti_ •• he oould pur aha ••
a ,.oond hand addr•• aograph maOhlDe at a aoat not to .xceed $25.00 to tl:. A.aooi.tion. Mati. OIl oarried.
6) STAl'IQlERY. Mr. liandryx .Oftd. that Mr. CantweU- •• uwat1on regardin«
atatlon.ry and other Moeaaary printing and auppl1ea b. authorised. Seoonded
by 1Ir. '.rgu.. lAotl on oarr led.
7) DIRECTORY OF TRAVEL ACJIIJICIES. It .... _0T0d by 111' . _ryz am •• oondod by
Mr. F.rp. tl"&t Jtr. Cantwell btl authorised to purohaa. an up-to-date 11.t at
tra,.l ateno1•• to ao.t $10. 00.
Mot ion aarried.
REPOR'I' C'N PUBLICITY COYMlHEE held onr fio a Septa.ber 24, 1955 meeting at
Fla gataff . a r.ad by lII. B. Cantwell, Cha.1ran. (Copy attaohed and _d• • part
hereor) . The report . . a aoo.pwd aa read and all reoo_Dded itema we re tabled
pending oompletion ot orr.nhat1on at Stat. and looal 1.,.1 , exc. pt the attar
ot _kin, reoordln,a ot 'fr••• ur. TraU" aJ'li "BeyClld the Borti.r" .
In tka aa .. at tha reaordiJl& or the otticial song , Mr. Ber n i. W
ill1ama waa
oalled upon to 4iaau •• the ~loua pha ... i nTOlTed.
Mr . W
illi. . . . u,gpated that ..... tually two recorda be _4e , an. in Englhh on
both .1d•• and 1h. other in Spln1ah on both aidea, with the En, l1ah ,",ralon being
reaorded tirat. Sa atated that , "su.lo tod~ 11 a toregon. conolu.ion __ there
i. no .pecula tion".
'I'M Initial co.t tor 3,000 reaorda would rtm. around. $100.00, with the reoord.
aoating 0I11y $ .22 e.ah . Tha •• in turn w00.1d be ao l d to Juke Bax operator a tor
$ .15 per r e acrd and wcu 1d be the fir.t _rket approaohed tor the ole ot the
reaord., W
illiau atated . To further . h OW' tkat there wwld be no apeoulation
involnd lfr . W
1l1bJU point.d out tor .xampl. , that it no reoord ..... r. aold to
Juke Box operatora, the r.card. · Gould be ••nt to the diao jock ey. in radio
tiona all onr the oountry. E'ftrytialO t he r.cord 1& played on • • tation , BKI,
whiah ooatrola the radio publlo p.rtormano. pay. 4i royalty. It it gae. onr
the Iillt\al network, re gardl. . . at where it • .rr.anate. trom , it wou ld b. 1100 x
4; that 11 pald by BKI, ao that e'Yell it no r.aorda ... re aold, public pertor-.nc.
ro,yaItl.a would exo.. d the ooat ot the reoord, depending upon how man, time. it
. .a play.d.
.ta-
- 3-
�Mr. 1filli..rna .aid that " I Get If¥ l ick. on 6£" increa.ed traffio about 67'" on
H1g_y
&&.
It .... J.!r . W
1111.._ ' proposal t1».t the publio perta- c anoe royalties and .n proceed s
derhed. t rom the .ale of the records is to &0 to t h e ••• oolat1m. ... . " illl..me
a.k. ter no olDpe:n• .,ti on but ,ta.+.ed that Mr. Ba .. felt he . h ould lw.Te .OIM royalty
b.ole on bb aon, .
Mr. W
1111a. ,aid "that ~ woul d l et t he talent ..nd ,et it em the r ecord at the
expense or the a .. celation .
at d:1atribut ion of the record would be. Mr.
W
illiama re plied that M walld distribute them at no oo.t. & omtinued that
in thb oountry you lIlUIt haw a liceue trom Petrillo b.tore .. recor ding oan
be ade. To tet ....y trOll. thll t Ni reoord will be reoordad in .xioo, duty w111
b. pa.id on the maater and it _ 111 be brou&ht over to t ld.. country tor pr . . . in, .
He ,.,ld he would haw to ter • ., oomp-ny wh lo h he wl11 call "The lAtinaar Raoord
Ii'r. Mitchell ..k e d . a t t he oo.t
Company" •
The oo.t on lI8k in& the oomplete Stanish
reoord would be thl . ame a. t or aaktn,;
tha c omp let. Enc l1ah reoord, but attar the original 3 , 000 reoorda, the coat would
be .bout 18; per reoord .
Mr. Ball • • lat d if the .a,oolat1011 had 3 , 000 recorda _de in Fngl1.h , how lon,
would. i t be betcre the y oould be aold and the or 1t;: 1nal inTO. tl!llD.t and prof ita
r e turned to the uaooiatlon. Mr. 11'1111&_ replied" About ttl-ee WNk.".
Pre.iden:t Stewart • •• d for opiniona on t h is and it .... the general
that ... ~ e ..nted by 1Ir • • Ul1&_, there cOJ.1d b. nothing to lo.e •
CDDCeDBU.
..... "'iUau .aid tt.t he dt1n . t want Illy of the CIIOney in .d'ftlnoe to be r;in the
'ftClture im:Ded_ a tely , bt jut ..mted the ' CI. ' trom the Board of Direotcr. to , 0
i
a head . 1Ir. Hertdr)"X inquired a. t o how lClllg it would Uk e to ,et t ho wb ob t hin,
r e.dy and the reoord. up for ••1e to 1Ihich 1Ir . W
Ulams replied "about 30 day''' ,
• Hendryx . aid that it t he a •• ooiatton i . loin, to undertalot t h la w nture , it
moul d enter into. oontract wit h Mr . W
11l1&_ oo",eriD, .n t he d1ftaren t ph••••
d the operation and adftDce lIlanoy . , bt needs it . 1Ir. 1fiUiama .tated t ... t the
a .. coiati em. "didn. t need a contraot", a ll t h.t f t . needed ..... an •• ,ilQl_nt froa
Mr. W
lll1au that a ll profit. 10 to the 89 ' er . .
Mr . J!1t ohel1 .aid the '11001.. _
tion needed a performance coutraot to oo••r the Board of Direotor • •
Pnddent Stewart telt t .. t a. motion .... s in order to handle thl. eme ..y or
amther . M
otion • • made by )Ir. "ertua ttw.t t.he Pr•• ident and the Seoretary
be .ut h arhed to exeoute a ocm.traot between the ••• 00iAtion and Bernie W
illia ..
prOTid ing for the re.ord1:a.c; ot "Trea.ure tr.n" and "Beyond the Border " on the
fol lowing ba.i., The origina l 3,000 reoord. to be made , di.tributed and aold
by Mr . Willla~ .t a total oo.t not to exo.. d $100. 00. All prooeed. reeultin g
trom the .ala and public partorDmloe royal tie. to ba cc_ the property of the
... oclation. CI'l all r eco rd. produced in e:xoe .. ot the tirst 3,000, the ... ooia_
tion to pay Bernie W
lll1au 2S~ ot t h e net prct"it derl.,..d t rom. the .al e SAd
public perforlllUloe royal tie., i t any . Se conded. by Mr. Sorptz . Wotion carried .
1Ir . Cantwell reque.ted aut horisation to .. oure new 1I.8II'ber.hip pla quca •• tlw
present supply will be exhau.ted. in t ho near f u1ur e , and produoed a do.ipt be
had worked up f or .pprO'ftl of the Board. President Stewar t authoriJed the
Exeouti~ Seoretary to ba~ the ~1nl.he d .rtwork made up an the de.ien tor the
-
.-
�mellibersbi p pl aque. the design having been appro'Qd by t he Beard.
Mr. Ba .. mond ttat it be ptlrmanent policy of the uaooiation that Chamber of
COIlUllerce Oftices neei... honorary mtmber.hip • • ach yeu. Second.d by Mr. Kitche ll .
M
otion oarr.!ed.
Mr. Cantwell n.1 autlxlrh,e d by t he 130ard to give honorary member .h l pa to ,",rioue
madlu of pubUcity • • lw .a... tit.
Or&Aniaat icm of penranent Exe out ive Committee in each State ..... di80UII Bed . It
was de oided t hat the Direot or of each State GhOllld a p point the Chair man of the
sub_o ommittees , J. •• IhDber.hi p . Le~. la t i 'ft , H1&:hway . Advertil i ng, Pol icy and
Grio'V8noe . The.e .ub-committee ohai r:mn in turn would a ppoint two member. each
to hel p them oarry out the dutie. of their re' peotlve oolMlitte... Mr. Mitohell
moved the a ss ooia.t1 on a.dopt thll a. p r op o.ed on the State let up. Seoonded by
Mr. Sor gat.. llotion oarried.
Looa l 89 ' e r s Cluos
the Board ot Di re otor . d18 oUl'ed the or ganiu,tion ot local club . a. fo llows I
1)
Local 8? ' or. club . ahall be go'Wrned by the X.ticnal By La..I .
2}
They wi ll b. permitted to carry
aD.
furd ra.iling a ctivitie • •
3) Appli cation will be mde to t ru. E~outiT8 Secretary and the necenary luppl ies
nil be Bc t to the par ty r eq.l. s ting tat fcr-.t1on of t he club .
4) There muat be a total of 25 fully paid up member . for eaoh club b etore a
Charter _ 111 be i uusd , inol ud,lns: b oth old and nfi_ mamber • •
5 ) Tbt perscn or per.ons mak ing appli cati on tor a Charter must del1g:nate on
the a.pp l ioation the d.finite geographic al boundar!.s to be covered by their par_
tiou lar club .
6) Each loca l club mu.t ~T8 a dul y a l e ct.d Preald.nt , 1 or more Vice Prsaldenta ,
Secr etary and 'rre•• \rer , and Directorl (Optional to the looal olub) .
1 ) The local 01 ubi will b. g overned by t he 8 &n'8 oorp crate limitat ions
Nati ona l As.ooi.tion .
8a
8) Eaoh l ooa l olub wi l l be require d t o u,se the nama "The 8 9'ers Cl ub ot
fi ll ing in the na_ or thdr City or COtmty .
9)
Col l ection and turn ing in of Membership d ues.
the
•• • ••
Aa .ach member.bip fee 1,
col l eoted it abo uld be forwarded along with t h e member " app lica tion to the
Seoretary who , at hi, d1eoretion , will a ffix the applicant's na me
t o t bt member.hlp roster a nd _ 111 t h en forward both the due. and t h e a pplication
to t he Corpor a tion Seoretary_Treasurer. When t he required 25 msmbersbl ps are
r eoe iTed and a Clarter ie issued , the treasurer w111 dra.. a obeck in the am ount
of $5. 00 tor eacb new me~r.hip and return it t o the loo al cl ub a s their oo~
mi,.ion .
EX8 CU t i ....
Discuesion wa. hel d re,arding Ways and mnn. ot securing new members with Mr .
Hen dryx 8 u~g.stin g t hat awry medler get e. mmberl t hat tni, shoul d be • proj e ct
carried on twice a year . Further that . ach Direotor s hal l deem it his ,.e,Sponai_
b1l1ty t o bring the 89 ' e ra Association be tore the public eye .
- 5-
�•
the prope r a ppro aoh to mmnbership ettort in Canada and Mexico waa aho d1aoUII • • d .
tt.t the
orde red at 8100 p. m.
Mr . Sorptl mand
._tin,
b. adjourned , •• eoDied by Mr. Ba •• and ao
litl ena W Dover
.
Re oordint Seoretary
.... dt _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _
A p~O'
Date. _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ __
••• ••• ••••
- 6 -
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Image Height
3271
Image Width
Image Width in pixels
2523
Local URL
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<a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/787">http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/highway89/id/787</a>
Purchasing Information
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To order photocopies, scans, or prints of this item for fair use purposes, please see Utah State University's Reproduction Order Form at: <a href="https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php">https://library.usu.edu/specol/using/copies.php</a>
Digital Publisher
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Digitized by: Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library
Date Digital
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2013
Conversion Specs
Scanned by Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library using Epson Expression 10000 scanner.
Scanning resolution
Resolution in DPI
300
Colorspace
RGB or Grayscale, for example
Grayscale
Checksum
4172086233
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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89'ers board of directors meeting minutes, October 24, 1955
Description
An account of the resource
89'ers board of directors meeting minutes, October 24, 1955
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Dover, Helena W.
Contributor
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Stewart, Ray V.
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States Highway 89
Accounts
Alberta Route 2
Mexico Route 15
Medium
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Administrative records
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
10/24/55
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Salt Lake City (Utah)
Salt Lake County (Utah)
Utah
United States
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950-1959
20th century
Language
A language of the resource
eng
Source
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Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, Edgar Bentley Mitchell Papers, 1950-1959, COLL MSS 322 Box 1 Folder 3
Is Referenced By
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View the inventory for this collection at: <a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356">http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv06356</a>
Rights
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Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Special Collections and Archives, phone (435) 797-2663.
Is Part Of
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Highway 89 Digital Collections
Type
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Text
Format
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image/jpeg
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
MSS322Bx1Fd3
Highway 89;