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Show P?j-- e Itah. U - THE HERALD, Provo. i ; ; n j Mocdcy. fi-iifc- ?r 6, n?6 13 Arraigned in Pmm t ; i i i , It F r :h&r ' iwftssS f S f " J- ' W fc.---" 1 tj Si , - ' ' , For the could second 'n.- - 1 home imo a Santa': workshop, making this kind of furniture for members of his family and friends. He has also turned out pieces for the Primary Children? Hospital, various other organizations and the Sub for Santa program. SOME LITTLE GHIL wiil be surprised this Christmas with a handmade picnic iabie like the one Preston Hooper of Mapleton, is working on or perhaps a little girl's cupboard in the here background. Each year Mr. Hooper turns his UK Hosting Maplefon Man Builds Happiness for Children - MAPLETON The Preston Hooper home in Mapleton resembles Santa's workshop for about a month before Christmas each year. Mr. Hooper has a hobby of making little girl's cupboards and picnic tables. One corner of their living room was filled with t!ie tables that have benches attached to the sides. Matching formica covers the benches and the table tops. Th h?l!way is lined with cupboards that would be the answer to any little homeirukers dream'. Ti.p Hoopers say it isn't just the little girls that take delight in this furniture, but little boys find eating on the picnic tables and putting dishes in the cupboards is just as much fun for them as for the girls. Mr. Hooper started h's hobby 18 years ago, when he made a set for his children. Every year since then he has Author of Best Seller had requests from family and friends for more sets. Mrs. Hooper said her husband has donated quite a few sets to goud causes. He gave two sets to the Primary Children's Hospital in Spit Lake City, when their own son was confined there for a while. He has also given a set to the Ut?h Valley Hospital, to several kindeigarten classes and has helped with Sub - (or - Santa programs. Of course his grandchildren all havt this furniture to enjoy also. Mr. Hooper commented that one of his picnic tables survived the Teton Dam flood. His brother, who lives in Hexburg, had a set for his children and Mb-.vinthe flood the table was faund, covered with mud and a little warped, but with some repair work was still g usable. Mrs. Monie McKim, Utah Tech Director of Career Center in Development charge of the event. The e used where needed throughout the - t . Ui have become lou saucv and arc reallv 10 Million More them-.- v. Tmi.i v people of American ten Honrs niu.ii m beginning tu I amy their super iiii s " or the Commonwealth of l!crto Pico "('(MHiskih t'ongressinrn" l vole cannot in Presidential Alter .1 Pie.sidnitial I iceptiuii. election.,. Martha Washiunton blamed gieasv The eligible electorate in November i 150.0U.WXS handprints on thr wal!papi-- on umn r.r.Tty 10 million vited "fiHhv deiniK'iats " As mw goi :non than the '. otirg rffe population at the time of the 1972 Presidential tit'ii, act outing to the Census t t- - Thinking Smaller !:.:( lust. I'tesitH'ntt.il clet Uoiis were are moving heki on dilft r ni i t Mrt and !inre iiom oni" '.U! ,4Wrfy fiom the country's largest t itn-the i Hut hi IMS Corgrrs, tJeritletl Jlie iimierenee find;.. Bid tc iu:.-uia.in the are heading back to small tows Most .Monii.iy in .Vivemixr foiSipi (tie first l',esidetitai fl liit- - siiiM is iroin iijv ia!Et"t i!'r!i..n d;y. and lb, I L when It has to two liinlior' jic..s with been ev. r smr. (Ihnsr over ,tnd wi poj'lilati'iMR of heim eo 5(W,0 Voting iiM'iiittes regKttr i" itiilliori. iu.n c . n ciik s pen ent of tin nation whei most AmiTH .ms pajnt ballots thf rest Hut it wit l.itp n thr Pn. Mnre secret paper ballots ImaHv rcplc-Once considered .1 ' fossil" like the the earlier custom of voter going to j moon with ,1 sutlaic little changed the polls ,ituj filing ou: Ins vol.. n over millions ol mis. Mars m.iw is Ill I' for ,1' ' I'.- - ; l.il ;t (;- ,,; At iiit Career T( - b!u? their tps, etien In fact, m jtC.t one rot.oi'tiij, Orem Store An unknown li: t'iher. John Handolph. darkt" Wvhvi) thai secret ballets would turn the Putted wfo a "nation of scoundtcli." f. RAY KLAUCK Cancer Unit 0ffgriH Yule Cards -- shis Lhristmas Bp Spnfprl pi O 1V2 I !Z3 . : son. The continuation was granted on request of the Adult Probation and Parole Department. m y.j Where Christmas Magic Happens '2 Development Center lecture series. Yule Party A Set by nr-- fulfil Legionnaires SPANISH FORK -annual Christmas party for members of Spanish Folk Post 138 and auxiliary unit of the American Legion will be The held n e ;' 5ave 5zd un uur New uia ono.e dinner, a novelty-style- d and (.'resented exchange held be I the mm p special wit program gift are also Members reminded that on the same day, two stale cf the legion will visit Spanish Folk. Thev ii Ma 0y s, of service at (rtu dfpai licet tor Utah, and I van r - i: I A department adjutant Then- met will be available at VeUmiis Memorial Hall between the hours of J and 4 p m Thev will ofler help to ' i M - y- - - liy wterans or veterans' ,! the widow All au an He ;c-r- r ? ' t V rr: Oil s per-mh- StslUk s J to nici wuli r,t'niin$ , 1 V. Hi completing ttinu.il inn. me ijUeshf-n.ii- ' iVf die their 64,95 plav fee will r ' nair Decorian bean brown chocolate bag chair has durable cover with lacing on the sides. vinyl Furniture Reg. be charged for the banquet which will be served. Follewmg the Hall. ."loci. fk are urged 'o attend Each person is asked to bring an exchange gift with a two - dollar cost limit stipulated, A one dollar-pe- If .1 it'...'-- 7:30 p.m. a! e d n e s d a y in t h e Veterans Memorial Hall. :t0 East 400 North. Spanish Fork, All member- - of the post and auxiliary unit W .i If 1 ? j- zJtJJ , 'ZLZizz-f- syy, Personalize Your Gift Court Items Xhr. M"i" V , litem, arraigned Pin s hi in Prow. ( ! n i( v sour! on two i,, ijnts i' tiled o. a pr.'!i';ii!,,ir letjiifs'.-.If ,0 rig wlm I' H. t u;t :; ' i tor j! 2 p m Ikjii a? set a! $:i.0fl foiit. )( cash r Mr tf l'..m proivrty Rfg, $35 with tr-vb- t'y n r 4 ' priced $2 uiitin, 4tWv cc!o'. f ct nitjrf wi $31 On Rockers kit included mart drec3f hi Save "" choir cor.'-M- pprsonaluing kit. "" ' v V (' Reg. $120 wa'rt finished benVood rocker has tcne tsat end bock, Save $10 more by assembling i? yourself, fumilute. . Holiday Hours: Shop 10 cm. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday ' ' - liieio. Undar Constructicn 1! iimv hrtve constnii tinn Like a nudtcn rore, a crust that shift and crick and mountains that somcUmes Stolen From .fTii-.- sack She tvill also discuss outdoor living and camping technique:.: as expounded in her bock. The event is part of the hr, regaruca as " a planrt still "under Appliances Carson the art of cooking bacon and eggs in a paper . M.intnnd Mis. y y years, and 20 1, Again this year, the Gradiey Gilbert Crook, 433 S. Center, Santaquin, American Cancer Society was ordered to undergo a diagnostic evaluation under supervision of the Utah State Divi- is offering beautiful sion of Corrections, Mr. Crook will be returned to the Christmas cards for sale court at the end of that nenod for sentencing on a as a way in which donors may send greetings to burglary charge. family members and Leiand Rasmussen, 78 N. 800 E.. Provo, was friends while at the same granted a continuation of one week on sentencing on time contributing gifts to a charge of arranging to distribute drugs. the society for cancer research. Edward Elmer Ney, 52 W. 200 S., Springville, was sentenced to nine months in the Utah County Jail, Klauck, Ray then the jail sentence was suspended and he was Springville, currently two on of on a for placed probation years charge serving as vice president eluding an officer. The court ordered him to make of the Utah County restitution for damages and ordered him confined in chapter of the American jail for four weekends. Cancer Society, is acting The court further ordered the public defender to as chairman locally of determine the value of legal services received by the Christmas card Mr. Ney and to present a bill to be paid to the Utah project. County Public Defender Association. This vesr's csrds rry Albert Wilkins Davis, 612 N. 400 E Orem, was reproductions of a sentenced to a year in the Utah County Jail, then was beautiful water color by placed on probation for two years. He is to serve 90 Valoy Euton of Midway, days in the Utah County Jail on a work - release entitled "Long prcgram and make restitution of $202. Mr. Davis was Shadows." The painting sentenced on a Class A misdemeanor of exercising depicts a winter scene in unauthorized control over a vehicle which previously Utah. had been stolen. Boxes of cards have Lester Flickinger, no definite address, was been placed in most of granted a continuation of one week after being the banks through the returned to the court on a bench warrant issued when county. Persons he left the Halfway House in Salt Lake City. Mr. requesting further inforFlickmger's attorney asked that some other mation may contact Mr. Klauck or the Cancer program be found for his client, who is on three office in Provo. a for third Society years probation degree fclcny. thousands of people in the Intermountain area have been aided by their spirit of giving," Mr. Christensen said appearance on the Johnny Carson show, where she showed Mr. The Founding Fathers would be the vote, citified Americans joked over astonished to learn that 150,041,000 enfranchising "bipeds of the forest" Americans were eligible to vote in and slurred the new "coonskin the Presidential election this Congressmen" at the Capitol. November. By the Civil War, universal male At the Nation"s beginning that wasn't suffrage was the law, except for the idea at all giving the vote to slaves. Even the boys in blue could every man. Let alone to women, vote, unlike at least one group of blacks, and citizens only 18 years old. Yankees during the Revolution who The way they saw it when George were told they couldn't vole because Washington was President, a man had they "had no will of their own." Their to "have a ske in society'' to have a muskets persuaded the election judges say in choosing the new nation's otherwise. leaders He had to own property or Despite the Emancipation prove he paid taxes, the National Proclamation, blacks were not enfranchised until the 15th Amendment Geographic Society said And he had to be "free, white, and was ratified in 1870 Then five years 21". Nobody gave a second thought later Tennessee enacted the first Jim about letting women vote. The brand Crow law separating blacks and whites new Constitution said nothing atout in public places, and in 1890 poll taxes voting rights, only that it was up to the and literacy tests were enacted to disfranchise thousands of blacks The stales to decide. Ideal Electors 24th Amendment finally banned the Now, five amendments to the poll tax in l'J64 in the Women got the vote in lRi9 Constitution later, election day in the United States finally measures up to Wyoming Territory. Elsewhere the the way Alexander Hamilton and suffragettes, as they were soon calling James Madison theorized things should themselves, began their long battle for be. writing in the Federalist Papers in enfranchisement. the early 18'JOs. They faci-- such arguments as. "If "Who are the electors of the lederal women were allowed to vote, they representatives''" thev asked "Not would crowd all men out of office and the rich, more than the poot; not the men would be obliged to slay home and learned, more ,han the ignorant, not take care of the children " In 110 a the haughty heirs ol distinguished suffragette was "one who has ceased names, more than the humble sons of to be a lady and has not yet become a obscure and unpropitious fortune. The gentleman " electors are In he the In 1920 women won the vote with the body of the and a comment: lUth Amendment peoph- of the I nitcd Suites " ' tin.' only people with t Hu! ti.iii-The greatest thr.g that came out of World War U wis the Voting rigltU. Ilii- pi iij.ri ii nt'fir- Tnij the war LiXp;.pt :s, were Mi to 7i pea ent ol the emancipation of women, tor which na ttdult ma;e aumdmi; to man fought " like the Federalist refolds, Somi-The 2:ttd Amendment enfranchised (iarette of Aim.ipol;.,, fell h t e w, iiuens ol the District of Columbia in cause Jut uiariT", '"f'.i, and. 10 years later, the "The truth is. " s.ud the pupcr on Amendment lowered the voting age to p, ..pi,. ,,! Tuesday appearance will be for any Utah Tech student or staff member interested, 10 than - was scheduled for Dec. 30. A continuation of one week was granted in the sentencing of Robert Roy DeHart Jr., Orem, Ate economics instructor. The Inter-mountai- n area. "BYU students have donated in the annual Christmas drive for more number of and chain appliances it did fulfill the saws were taken from expectations needed by Bill's Appliance, 538 S. the Red Cross which was State St in Orm. during seeking 600 pints of whole a recent early morning blood. breakin. Store representatives Airmet, who worked jointly with Angel Flight reported that someone member Becky had gamed entrance by Cayheart, a junior in breaking through elementary education northwest service door. a from Fairborn, Ohio, atsaid They tributed the fewer determination of exactly donations this year to two how much was taken will things: the donations be known only after a full came during the week inventory. Officers from the Orem the lollowing Thanksgiving holiday, Police Department are and some students didn't investigating the understand that they burglary. home University "the that the Utah County Chapter in conjunction with the Arnold Air Squadron and Angel Flight. Last year 673 pints were donated. Wayne Airniet, a junior in psychology from Albuquerque and special projects officer for the ROTC unit, said that even though the unit did not reach its goal of 1,000, McKim The author will show the tape from her Different Kind of Vote Aug It. 1W0. "!!w on hook, techniques which tell how-tcamp and live outdoors co m f ort in and simplicity, has had a "'-national ; and brought fame 10 tn former Hrigham Young tfllUI uiltg rcyriaing roiners 5aw gr-a- Dian Thomas, author of best - seller book called "Roughing it Easy," will spent at 10 n m Tuesday in the faculty lounge at Utah Technical College at Provo. according to a Red Cross, said blood will be County Figures compiled from the Monday through Thursday donations show that a total ol 647 pints of blood was contributed to the Red Cross through i - 24 Dallis Christensen, director of the Utah Cross. ""Vt within their swine flu shot. -- - donate hours after receiving consecutive year, women at Brigham Young University men two - to one in the annual Christmas blood drive sponsored jointly by the Air Force ROTC detachment and the Red students J..I r jr . In other court action, James L. Hiatt, 641 S. 1700 E., Spanish Fork, pleaded guilty to a Class A misdemeanor of writing a check en insufficient funds. Judgment was set for Dec. 23, pending a report by the Adult Probation and Parole Department. Tommy Birriel, 630 N. 850 W Provo, pleaded ianoceni to theft, and trial was scheduled Dec. 20, He was remanded to the custody of the sheriff, pending trial. Myrna Hansen Newell and Steven Jon Crumb, both of 165 S. 300 W., American Fork, pleaded guilty to a charge of attempt to produce marijuana. Sentencing Coed Blood Doners Beat Males 2 f 1 "TJSf J Mt .Named in the complaint aie liutig Trail arid Quy Dinh Tran. both of 637 S. 600 E Salt Lake City ; and Cuong Mahn Iran, 1.54 S. 700 E., Sail Lake City. Friday in the' Fourth District Court to charges of aggravated assault filed against them in connection with an altercation iast wek. Trial has been scheduled Jan. 20, 1977. 4. J mi nesrs ' . ; 8 a i |