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Show Wfyz liftwtgtj tie Retail VdT67 , ' THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD, THURSDAY, NOV. 19, 1959 Price 10c Number Forty-si- x Srringville Sfatie Sets iiarterly Conference; jjer Richards to Visit ; vo Prominent LDS church leaders will ( ;it SpnngviUe stake quarterly conference - dnday including Elder LeGrand : 'a member of the ! W j WTOwWjj, Elder LeGrand Richards of the Council of Twelve will address sessions of Spring- ville Stake conference Satur-day and Sunday. il of Twelve Apostles and ' f Casper H. Parker, a er of the general welfare parting Saturday meet-..'jn- d Sunday general ses-- '. at 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 .'anil be Leo A. Crandall, President. The Public is to attend. iiT Richards was for 14 Presiding Bishop of the rch, Prior t0 his new ap" "ment. He was prominent " Kal estate executive in city and in Califor- -' He has served four two as presi- - : jer Parker is a director of famed Church Welfare ,h of the nearly 300 stak- - regional divisions of the ;Church holds a conference .'tines yearly. Speakers re- - on the expanding missions Church here and abroad rive counsel concerning youth program, priesthood ims, Relief Society, and ;re programs at the var- - ; metings. Evening Meeting special program is planned ie evening meeting at 7 under direction of the music group comprising SUA Chorus, the Musettes, rlonal chorus and the re--- il missionary organization pringviUe Stake, directed iberta Hoover will present Story of the Messiah." .ling an appropriate at-:he- re for the musical pred-ion, will be three astoral painted by May Har--o- n of the Third ward, for-- : the background for the :iaed music groups, ioists for the evening will ;: Grant Clyde, Max n, Forrest Allred, Maurine - Kathryn Robertson, Carl an, Afton Banner, Lee :e, Barry Lauritzen, Carol i Vera Zobell and Melba ier. ' e accompanists are : Gloria .at, Mary Parker and :. Sargent. string ensemble will also ?any the chorus numbers '"ill comprise Rondo Jeff- - Elaine Rawle, Georgia :':r, Thora Johnson and Clark. : music groups have work-;ek- s to bring this out-i- g program to the pub-- ; the concluding session of stake conference. Government Momtes $3B57 for Mqwifti Springville-Spanis- h Fork Project Will Include Runway Expansion A Federal government allocation has been approved in the amount of $39,857 for the Spanish Fork-Springvil- le Airport it was an- - nounced this week. The money is for land acquisition, reloca-tion of power line, extension of Northeast Southwest Runway to 3500 feet; also the installa-tion of lights on the North-west Southeast runway. Application for the funds was made several months ago by the city and state. Harold Whiting, Springville council-man, has been in charge of Springville's participation. The allocation made by the federal government is only a portion of the amount which must be spent on the airport. Spanish Fork and Springville will be expected to furnish an amount toward the improve-ments. The federal action assures long-soug- ht improvements at the airport, which were studied some time ago by state and national aero-nautics representatives. Benefit Band Concert Set ToniteatSHS With an aim of reviving in- terest in band activit at the Springville high school, plans are going forward to purchase new band uniforms with sev- eral benefit programs and other functions outlined, ac-cording to announcement by George Puckett, instructor. The first such entertainment will be held this evening at 8 in the high school Audi-torium. Participating will be the 41 members of the senior high band and the 44 Junior high school "A" Band mem-bers. They will present a pro-gram of music ranging from classic to the most popular numbers. Students will sell tickets for the concert, contributions to which will go exclusively for the new uniforms, Mr. Puckett said. The band suits are about 12 years old; many are worn and shabby and it is believed more interest would be exhibited by the students and that Spring-ville would like to see the band in better looking outfits. Mr. Puckett said the cost of new uniforms is about $60 each and they hoped to secure ap-proximately 60 to care for the expected increase in band en-rollment. This brings the total cost at near $3600. It has been customary for the school dist-rict to assist with the uniform purchase but it will be up to the students and the town to procure the major portion. The patronage of the public would be apreciated on the first concert this evening, the director stated. f A . : 1 4.XW:::-- i Rehearsing for the Kolob Stake MIA Drama Festival next Monday and Tuesday evenings, are members of the Second ward cast of the one-a- ct play, "The Salad Wa-gon." Seated, Lynda Youd, Grace Alleman and Phil Williams on chair. Standing rear, Bishop R. K. Miner, Dally Thorn, Lynn Lowe, Jorgen Boyer and Brenda Anderson. The play was written by Mrs. Jessie J. Daltoa, stake drama director. Kolob Stake MIA Schedules Six-Pl- ay Drama Festival Kolob Stake MIA Drama Festival will be held Monday and Tuesday evenings, November 23 and 24 at 7:15 p.m., according to announce- - ment this week by Mrs. Jessie1 J. Dalton, stake drama direc-tor. Six one-a- ct plays will be presented with Mapleton Sec-ond, the Twelfth ward and Mapleton ward at the Maple-to- n amusement hall Monday night. The other three wards Second, First and Eleventh will present their performances Tuesday evening, in the Sec-ond ward recreation hall. The plays are being shown on a competitive basis and are all high class comedies promis-ing to be entertaining. Therr is no admission charge and the public is invited. Judges for the events will be: Mrs. Fern Tanner, Mrs. Barta Swenson and Miss Ellen Viklund all of Spanish Fork. There will be no regular MIA meetings in the partici-pating wards on these nights officers state. The Sixth ward will hold regular mutual. The plays, cast members and directors are listed as follows: Mapleton ward, directed by Mrs. Rhea Williams, will pre-sent, "The Perfect Hideout," with Russell Miner, Gordon Beardall, Ellis Murphy, Terry Williams, Sharon Ellis, Mary Sue Taylor, Charlotte Ed-munds, De Anne Nielson, Mari-lyn Barker and Nila Norwood taking part. Mapleton Second ward, will present, "Curtain Time," direc-ted by Kathleen Bennett assis-ted by Marilyn Tuttle and will include cast members, Jean-ett- e Ogilvie, Leon Fullmer, Ermann Stone, Ray Bennett, Bonnie DeGraw. The Twelfth ward play, "Boy Friend for Dinner," directed by Mrs. Janet C. Bird and Jean Brown has cast members, Lu-ell- a Wilson, Mary Brown, Richard Millet, Donald Watts, Maeser Young, Gary Boyack Stephen Killpack and Garth Bird. The Second ward will pre-sent, "The Salad Wagon," written and directed by Mrs. Dalton who is being assisted in the directing by Grace Alle-man. The cast includes: Bishop Richard K. Miner, Dally Thorn, Jorgen Boyer, Brenda Ander-son, Lynn Lowe, Lynda Youd, Phil Williams, Grace Alleman. "The Happy Journey, has ben chosen by the First ward and will be directed by Pat Bramall. The cast members are: Charlotte Martin, Elvin Ostler, Linda Bjarnson, Leland Chapman, Viva Bird and Joan Felix. The Eleventh ward has cho-sen, "Mother's Anniversary." directed by Margaret Smith and Claire Duncan. The cast is made up of Evelyn Robbins, Grant Richins, Kirk Peery. Darlene Castleton, Janice Bear-dall and Pat Booke. Mail Collection Boxes Add to Postal Service To facilitate the collection of mail and to give added ser-vice to patrons, Postmaster Bliss Packard this week an-nounced a new schedule. Postoffice clerks will go out to the collection boxes, located at various sections of town, at 6 p.m., every week day evening and 3:50 p.m., on Sun-day. The mail collected will be dispatched at 9:05 p.m., that same night from Springville of-fice, and in 90 percent of cities and towns in Utah, will be delivered the next morning by 8 a.m., the postmaster re-ported. The collection boxes are lo-cated as follows and mail will be picked up in the order list-ed: Corner of Fourth North and Main; Second North and Second East; Fourth East and Center; Fourth South, Fourth East; Brookside Market; 4th East 8th South; Seventh So. and Main; in front of the high school; on Bank Corner and at the Postoffice corner. Postmaster Packard advises the general public to take ad-vantage of the time of collec-tion and the speed in which the mail will leave the city for out-of-to- delivery. The service has been approv-ed by the regional director, who has commended the post-offic- e on the service. Farewell Sunday lift Ward for Ross I Steffens Ross L. Steffens has accept-ed a call to serve an LDS mis-sion in the Northern States, and will be honored at a fare-well in the Eleventh ward, Sunday evening beginning at 5 p.m., in the1 Junior high I A , i . Ross L. Steffens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Steffens, who has been called to Northern States Mission. Farewell is Sunday night in Eleventh ward. school Auditorium. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Steffens. The congregation will sing the opening number at the farewell program followed by prayer by Frank Loftin. There will be the Sacrament song and service. Music for the evening will be by a Girls' quartet composed of Janet Gale, Laraine Boyer, Pat Kapp and Nedra Litster. Mrs. Ernest Boyer will give a vocal solo and prelude and postlude music will be by Mrs. Oscar Nelson. Grant S. Thorn and James H. Lawrence will speak. There will be remarks by Bishop Er-nest M. Boyer, by parents of the missionary and by the mis-sionary. John Hardy will offer the benediction. Ross, who is a former stu-dent of the BYU, will enter the Mission Home in Salt Lake November 30 and leave early in December for the mission headquarters. Diabetes Tests Sponsored by Springville Club Commemorating National Diabetes Week, the Springville Junior Chamber of Commerce has taken as a public health project the distribution of a simple, inexpensive, authorized test, which will determine whether or not the persons taking it should be further ex-amined for symptoms of this dread disease, now eighth on the list of killers in our com-munities. If you wish to take the test send to school by Tuesday, No-vember 24, ten cents, and the number of members in your family. The ten cents covers the cost for the entire family. You will then be sent an en-velope containing test material. Enclosed in the envelope, you will find a small strip of yel-low paper-tap- e one for each member of the family to be tested. Dip the tape in a collected urine speciman. Remove and wait one minute. Yellow color indicates that the urine is sug-ar- free. If the tape changes from the yellow color to a shade of green or blue, within one minute, the test is positive for glucose sugar, and the pa-tient should be seen by his doc-tor for a confirmatory test. This project is sponsored as a strictly non-prof- it public health service, in the interest of better health. Those who do not have chil-dren in school, tests may be obtained at SOS, Haymond or City Drug. Assisting with the program are members of the JC Wives. Show for Projects The Springville High School Senior Class will sponsor the movie "Seven Brides for Sev-en Brothers," Friday November 20, at 7:15 in the high school auditorium. According to Carl Nielson, class president, the show will help raise funds for Senior class projects to be car-ried out through the school year. The public and all stu-dents are invited to attend. Funeral Services Held Mon. for Russell C. Childs Funeral services were con-ducted Monday in the Twelfth ward, for Russell C. Childs, 55, who died Friday morning, at the family residence, South Main St., of a heart condition. Bishop DelMoine Christensen was in charge of the services. Burial was in the Evergreen cemetery, directed by Wheeler Mortuary. He was born in Springville, June 3, 1904, a son of Moses and Beulah Sandmyers Childs, and attended schools in this city. He married Clara Cornaby of Spanish Fork November 23, 1927, in the Salt Lake Temple and has made his home in Springville all his life. He was employed 15 years with the Pipe Plant and more recently at the Utah Poultry Cooperative plant. He also en-gaged in dairy farming. He was an elder in the LDS church and had served as a ward teacher and as an Ex-plorer Scout leader in the MIA. He was a member of the Lions club. Surviving besides his wife, are seven sons and daughters: Russell Ardeen Childs of Las Vegas, Nev.; Floyd Childs of Murray; Mrs. Howell (Carolee) Newman of Glendora, Calif.; Fred, Dale and DeVere Childs and Mrs. LaMar (Delores) Crandall all of Springville; also 11 grandchildren and a brother and sisters, Alden Childs of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Mary Giles of Lake Wood, Calif.; Mrs. Verl Mayme (Thelma), of Gypsum, Colo., and Mrs. Mor-ris Taylor (Ada), of Spring-ville. Maplefon Council Determined to Enforce the Laws It was decided at the Maple-to- n City Council meeting Mon-day night that certain city or-dinances would be more strict-ly enforced. Among them was the dog ordinance which reads in part: It shall be unlawful for the owner of any dog to permit said dog to run at large in the city between the hours of 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. of any day. It is imperitive that all dog owners pay their dog tax. This will be strictly enforced and put into effect immediately, city officers report. It was the unanimous decis-ion of the council to consult engineers from Water Works Equipment Company concern-ing their culinary water prob-lems and have them meet with the council. It is mandatory that all elec-tricians and plumbers obtain a license from the cit yto oper-ate in the city. The buyers' str-ike will occur, according to ob-servers, when the people run out of money. Paper Deadline Set Ahead Due to the Thanksgiving holiday next Thursday, the Springville Herald will be delivered on Wednesday. Therefor all advertising and news items must be into the office by Monday night to make next week's issue. Brookside Market Enlarges Store; Celebration Set Brookside Market is holding its grand opening for the new-ly expanded and remodeled store this weekend at 759 East 4th South. Don Watts, Mana-ger, invites the public to drop in and see the new facilities added for the convenience of the shopping public. The business is also celebrat-ing its 13th anniversary, hav-ing begun in 1946. Floor space at the market has been increased two-thir-over the original building, which is equipped with the very latest in self serve Frozen Food and Dairy Prducts cases. The Dairy Case is built in with in type doors and cir-culating cold air to keep the produce and products temperature-c-ontrolled. The frozen food case is a double isle shop-aroun- d type and is the first such equipment of this partic-ular kind in the state. Modern lighting, new shopping space with added shelves and dis-play space gives the store a "super-marke- t" convenience. Mr. Watts employes all local help and aims to render the best in service, maintain low prices and keep customers sat-isfied. The meat market at Brook-side Market is managed by Charlie Lewis, and occupies an important section of the shop- - ping area. The exterior of the building has been completely remodeled with a tile front added and storage space at the rear of the store. A spacious parking area adds much to the conven-ience of the customer. ;:.ar Resident i in Provo aeral services were held esday in Provo, for Mrs. Snelson Elliot, 76, a for- -' resident of Springville and 1 of Mrs. LaPriel Friel and " rl Johnson of this city, fed Saturday following a nths illness. "e was born in Springville, wghter of Thomas and stte Roundy Snelson and here until her marriage 2ert P, Elliot in 1904. ::f husband and two daugh-- 1 survive as do 19 grand-Je- n and 11 great grand-:re- n. four brothers and sisters. It is impossible to imitate Voltaire without being Volt-aire. Frederick The Great. Gfif Cfffc Mew &rf The possibility and the bene-fits from opening up a new road west of the Drive Cor-ral on the East Bench, were discussed at the City Council meeting Monday even-ing Present for the discussion Neilson, coun-ty were Marcellus commissioner and John Mo-ney county road supervisor, who explained county partici- - pation on new road building. A motion was also passed by the council unanimously ap-proving inclusion of the work of surfacing Fourth North from 9th East to 1050 East, in the 1960 road building pro-gram. The councilmen announced that the holiday lights would be hung and turned on for the holiday opening November 27, as requested by W. L. Snel-son of the Merchants Commit-tee of the Chamber of Com-merce. A delegation from the Jay-cee- s including Keith Watters and Max Averett, received ap-proval from the council of a contribution of $100 by the city for a Christmas treat for the children at the holiday open-ing. All members of the council, the attorney, the recorder and the mayor were in attendance, in addition to two new city councilmen, R. L. Wilson and Frank Memory, who gained some experience on the pro-cedure at a council meeting. p ri (-- -1 Woodward, Ka re" J" all, Photographer; , er; Boyer, notogrJapher;CGPryant Clyde, f thP ' ? material for this year's edition t r.Art'ste are staff members above: V ,l to right, Mary Ann Schreiver, ''Wk .Thence Barney, photographer, "uncan, art editor; standing, Mike Accredition Group Inspects School A committee from the North-west Accrediting Assn. made a survey of the Springville high school last week, to determine if the standards meet require-ments of secondary schools. The school building, records, library, graduation require-ments, teacher load, profes-sional training, administration, school activity are all taken under consideration in making the rating and will be reported to the Northwest Assn. before the school is rated. The group noted with satis-faction the renovations made at the high school and expres-sed satisfaction with the cur-riculum. Springville has had a fully accredited school since 1946. On the visiting committee were LeRue Winget, state di-rector of secondary education; Afton Foregren, assistant di-rector and Dean Christensen of the BYU. Paul Walker, high school principal, is also a member of the committee. 18 Difference: The Soviets make their people work good of Communism; an try to make capital-w- k for the good of the Infant Services He!d Here Mon. Graveside services and burial was in the Evergreen cemetery Monday for the infant son of Larry James and Donna" Lee Keel Harrington, who died Sat-urday in Artesia, Calif. Surviving are the parents; grandparents, Mrs. Erma Har-rington, Provo; Mr. and Mrs. Don Keel, Calif., and Mrs. Lyda Smith, Provo. Civic Meeting Reminders This Week Kiwanls Club The Kiwanis Club will observe Farm-Cit- y Week at their meeting Thursday evening and each business man member of the club has been asked to bring a farmer as his guest. Each teacher in the club has been asked to bring a er business man. The program will feature a talk by Dr. John Valentine of the USU faculty on a farm topic. Lorin Phillips will be toast-mast- er for the dinner-meetin- g at 7 p.m., at the Westside School. Jaycees The Murray Junior Chamber will present the program at the Springville JC meet this evening at 8 p.m., at Melody Inn, on Parliamentary procedure and Orientation. Neil T. Child is in charge of program arrangements with President Lamar Smith to conduct preliminaries. Smartness, rather than sin-cerity, is what ruins many people. To copy faults is want of sense. Charles Churchill. |