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Show 12, J Page Two THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD i ; --si . . . . " ILibrary question V Cultural Arts invite daughters to party The cultural Arts Club held a Mothers and Daughters social at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Lynn with Mrs. Ross Ellis and Mrs. Max Thorn Luncheon was served Sharon Ellis, Vickie Gibbs, Claudia Harris, Merrilee Holly, Karina and Cheryl Lynn, Jan Neilson, Nancy and Barbara Neilson, Joan Parker, Larsene Thorn, Brenda Whiting, Gayle Whiting and Patricia Ann Whiting. after which a program was given by some of the daugh ters. Mrs. Leonard Harris gave a tribute to the daughters and Joan Parker to the mothers. Patricia Lynn gave a read- - ing and Patricia Whiting and Christine Child gave a Chinese dance. Diane Clyde gave a reading Mrs. Jay Nielson gave a tribute to three members who "just have sons". Then Patricia Whiting sang a Mother's day song accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Verl Whiting. Guests of club members in-cluded: Patricia Cherrington, Christine Child, Susan Christ-ense- n, Diane Clyde, Nanalene Cook, Christine Crandall, aired at club Lee R. Taylor gave a tt. ' prehensive talk on the f& bility of Springville the state Library syste the meeting of the Home c ture club Friday, at the v of Mrs. Emily Anderson. Mr. Taylor made an ;,. sive study of reasons f0r ,: against the proposed syst and was well prepared his explanations. Special guests were it. Taylor, Mrs. E. T. Crand-an- Mrs. G. B. Orton. " Next meeting was anno-ce- for May 20, to be at r. home of Mrs. John Judd Bride-elec- t given party complimented at a kitchen shower recently given by her Orton of sister, Mrs. Norma Richland, Wash., and Mrs. Ra-na- e Gamer of Provo. The party was' given at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orval Lunceford and the seventeen- guests en-ioy-the evening with games, visiting and refreshments. Many useful gifts were pre-sented the guest of honor. Alpha Beta Club sets luncheon Mrs. Kenneth Condie was hostess to members of the Alpha Beta club at the lovely new home of her daughter, Mrs. Wilford Manwaring re-cently. In the absence of the president and Mrs. Earl Condie, secretary, presided. After .group singing, reading of the club' collect by Mrs. Myron Childs and the pledge, Mrs. B. F. Krause read the financial report. It was voted to contribute $10 to the Art and to hold fu-ture meeings a half hour ear-lier at 3:30 p.m. Five new members were also added to the club enrollment. The program featured a talk by Mrs. Alonzo Morley, psy-chiatric social worker at the Child Guidance Clinic, who ex-plained the methods employed at the center in treating the emotionally ill. She was intro-duced by Mrs. Erwin Sheffield. Mrs. Harmon Hatch invited the club group to her home on Saturday, May 14, for a 1 o'clock luncheon. She will be assisted by Mrs. Boyd Wilson and Mrs. Wm. Witney. The hostess, assisted by her daughter served delicious re-freshments at the close of the meeting. fa j 4 f - - - . ,w - W A. ' " ' "1 . ... w. .... , . . , i L,,-- 1 A-'- ' j Alberta Hoover, presented honorary Gleaner award. Betty Packard who received Golden Gleaner award. Grant S. Thorn, presented honorary M Man award. Special MIA awards presented ymhers Golden Gleaner award, while an honorary Master M Man and honorary Gleaner went as a surprise feature to Grant S. Thorn and Alberta Hoover. In making the latter presen-tations, Ben.j Fietkau and Uvonne Bigler, representatives on the stake M. Men and Gleaner council said, the Three members of Spring-ville stake who have devoted much time and effort to MIA activity, were presented spec-ial awards at the Sunday even-ing program which marked the close of Springville stake quarterly conference. The award winners were Mrs. Calvin (Betty) Packard, who received the coveted awards were in recognition ot, "devoted service to youth and the public." Mrs. Hoover is stake MIA music director and Mr. Thorn, former bishop of the Fifth ward, is a High Councilman in charge of MIA work. The Golden Gleaner award is earned through participation in church activity by individ-uals from 11 to 30 years of age, while the honorary awards are confered on individuals not younger than 45 years. Any class may nominate an ' individual for the honorary award but it is the council which make the final selec-tion by vote, it is pointed out. Mrs. Audrie Ford, stake YWMIA president, was ir charge of the meeting whicl also featured talks by twc prominent students from th BYU. ... Be strong and of good courage; be not afraid, neith-er be thou dismayed; for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest. (Joshua 1, 9.) Through the long centur-ies, men have held these won-drous words close to theii hearts and have overcome the grief and tribulations thai must come to us all. Today, as forever, "God never fails." iri j SPECIAL ; MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY ! Large Walnut Topped Raisin-Appl- e Coffee Cakes 1 , 35c SPRINGVILLE, BAKERY "Consistently Lower Prices" ?l,. ".. (Cflaissiiffnedl ,Ad3 FOR SALE 1958 FORD Fairlane V-- 8. Po-wer brakes and steering, ra-dio. Call HU ml2tfc FERTILIZERS, Insecticides, seeds, garden tools, feeds, Boats tc Motors. Springville TTWI ITTT mVUttf FOR RENT WHEELCHAIRS, crutches for rent. Haymond Drug Co. Ph. HU J13tfc FURNISHED apts. by week or month. 'Call Carroll's Motel, HU s24tfn ' RAWLEIGH Products A. Laron Larsen, 367 E. 2nd No. HU nl2tfc USED TV sets, 7 models to choose from. All makes from $49.95 to $99.95. Friel's. Ph. HU m3tfc BUILDING lot. Unexcelled view of entire valley. 110 x 150 ft. Make offer. HU ml7tfc HAY. Frank Carnesecca, Ph. HU al4tfc HOMES, Farms, lots. Cash or trade, terms, if desired. In-quire Harvey Robbins, 35 Kolob Circle. Ph. HU Payne Realty. a28tfc UNFURNISHED m apt. Utility room. 333 E. 2nd No. Inquire at 54 No: 1st E. HU o29tfc apt. Ground floor. 670 E. 1st No. Bill B. Averett. Phone HU jl4tfc UNFURN. Apt., ground floor, large, light, 36 E. 5th So. Ph. HU fl8tfc 3 --BEDROOM unf. home. $50. . HU Bert Cherrington. f4tfc 1 Modern house, part-ly furnished; also Modern Apt. partly , furnished. Call i '!5lsN V-- V rrrromn Trrinn: METAL bed and springs, dou-ble bed size. Good condition. HU a28tfc HOME 5 room, brick, carpet-ed, full basement, garage. Lot, 71x212, So. front, fruit trees, garden, shrubs. IV2 blocks from center of Spring-ville. Will finance. Ph. HU-9-555- 0. ml2 SHETLAND pony. Black, 2V2 year old gelding. Call HU-9-636- 9. a28tfc HOTPOINT Automatic Wash-e- r, $50. Phone HU m26p' BY OWNER, nice home, basement apt. Ideal location. Priced to sell. See to appreciate. Bill Kapp. 390 E. 1st So. Phone HU m5tfc HAMMOND Spinet Organ, double manual, one octave base, 50 discount. Phone HU 110 North Main. m31tfc apt. Partly furnished. 96 East Center. Phone HU-9-50- or call at 80 East 2nd South for information. m31tfc PARTLY Furn. apt Couple only. Inquire 742 So. 2nd E. Phone HU m3tfc 2- -BEDROOM Home, gas heat, 213 So. 4th East. HU after 4 p.m. a7tfc 3 ROOM furnished apt. 353 So. 1st East. HU a7tfc BUILDING in business dist-ric- t. 25 West 2nd So. Call HU a28tfc 3- -ROOM unfurnished apt. Util-itie- s furnished. Call . a28tfc DUPLEX apt. unfurnished. 2- SUCCESS ACTCD Th pkp miict hp HU m5tfc SPINET piano in this area, as-sume bal. of contract. For more details write: Credit Dept. Box 148 S. H. Station, S.L.C., Utah. ml9 1950 CHEVROLET Sedan $50.00; 1946 Chevrolet School , Bus (new motor) $350.00; 1949 GMC School Bus $200.00. Board of Education, Nebo School District. Phone Spanish Fork 798, Payson 310. j9 ELIMINATE traffic paths in carpet. Spot clean with Blue Lustre. It's terrific. Friel's Inc. ml2ca MOHOGANY drop leaf dining table. Will seat 12-1- 4. HU-9-459- 5. ml2tfc West. HU a28tfc 4y2 ACRES farm land. Cash or share. 140 East 8th So. HU a28tfc UNFURNISHED, clean, com-fortabl- e, duplex. 289 No. 1st 7West. m5tfc UNFURNISHED, 3 - bedroom home. Modern, good location, priced right. Zoned for busi-ness. HU m5tfc furnished apt. Mod-er- Call HU any-time. m5tfc UNFURNISHED, clean, apartment. Carpeted, draped. Utility room, gar-age, gas stove., Utilities fur-nished. $50. 250 E. 2nd No HU ml2tfc r .....- -J One PAX Application Kills Crab Grass Seeds for Years 90--1 00 fjJ'J "Z Effective I. Solves Crab Gross Noblem A tingle application evtry few ytart gives permanent crab gran control. Alio gives positive control of meue-eo- r ehiekweed. SUCCESS reasons why! R fP-- R T E D Did you ever stop to think how frequently you judge a store by the amount of adver-- ILL fi lFR tising 'it uses? Actually, this is a good yardstick. The firm that advertises con- - THEMATIflM sistently has built volume through adver-- lull lllllUll tising and offers better bargains and " greater values simply because increased P linnr THAT SMALL furnished home. $40. Call HU R. L. Wil-son or HU ml2tfc UNFURN. apt. Adults only. Extra nice. Lester Da-vis. HU ml2tfc MISCELLANEOUS vVHEN you need Insurance see LuDean Litster or phone HU-9-647- 0. Be Sure Insure Today. d4tfc i PAINTING; paper hanging, zolltoning. Free estimates. Call HU Mart B. Bringhurst J30tfc j WILL tend children during the day at my home, 929 E. 40 j North. j2c . REG. PERCHERON stallion : standing at Peg Taylor's. Ph. SU Route 1, Box 107, Pleasant Grove. i2 TOMATO, sweet potatoe and pepper plants, Oscar Boyer, 211 North Main. m26 USED doors and windows. Ph. HU Don Watts. 715 So. 2nd East. ml2tfc OR RENT brick home, 259 No. 2nd E. In-quire Mark Law, 494 E. 4th So. Phone HU ml2tfc WANTED COUNTER Girl over 18 at Art City Bowling and Rec-reatio- Apply in person No phone calls. See Lil. ml9 WORK WANTED GUARANTEED Watch and clock repairs, my home Doug Brinkerhoff, 315 South 3rd West. Phone HU o29tfc LOST BOYS Brown leather jacket Size 8. HU ml2 FOUND LADIES small coin purse Owner can claim same bj identifying it at 145 Wesl 2nd South. ml2c FOR LEASE ' PASTURE for 3 or 4 horses Alton Snow. HU ml2 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI Open 7:00 Adults 75c Show 7:45 NOW PLAYING FIRST RUN ' BARRY SULLIVAN ROBERT BLAKE AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE Co-H- it Spy Rings Clash with Firing Squad Fury! "THE HOUSE OF INTRIGUE" starring Curt Jurgens Dawn Addarm technicolor 111 2. Fertilizes Your lawn Supplies ont normal feeding of nitrOf tn plant feed. 3. Control Soil Pf$ Kill mot lawn damoglna ' Ph. I APPLY PAX NOW j BlfOHI CIA gims sum TO oow Free Application of any fer-tilizer products of 40 lbs or more at the regular price during the month of May. BEDDING PLANTS .of all kinds! TOMATO, VEGETABLE, FLOWERS, ETC. We still have a nice selection of ROSE BUSHES! SMART'S FEED AND GARDEN CENTER Be a SMART Gardener r ... zzz3 I I II I I I " & " KjiiLyd.liy cell iuj. v. ing advantages. These savings are' passed ttf F F K I V along to the customer-Eye- n sma11 compan' II II LLllL I ies can attain, through consistent new PaPer advertisin&' increased sales, and eventually reach the point where they have Sreat impact on the community. New ' A R E Y 0 U R PaPerS aggressive merchants wort hand in hand. The merchant who use: DCCTTflTAI newspaper space regularly shows I "LOI .IUIlL faith in the community and, although CD I IMP MEDIUM motive is partly based on self-intere- st, 1" OL LLI lU IVIlUIUIVI contributes to the high quality newspap ' ' product available to readers. for advertising assistance. ... ' NATIONAL concern offers op-portunity. Married man above 30 preferred. Must have late model car. Knowledge of r tractors and machinery help-- t ful. Sales experience not : necessary. We train if hired. Drawing account. For per-sonal interview write quali- - fications, address and phone ! number to A. E. Smith, P.O. Sportsmen plan annual outing Plans for the annual Sports-men- s outing to be held in the near future, were outlined at a business meeting and steak dinner for officers of the Springville-Mapleto- n Wildlife Assn., Tuesday night. Wives also attended as guests. President James Damico was in charge of the business dis-cussed with other officers, Charles Porter, Blake Averett, G., M. Black, Hasting Smith, Bernell Jensen and Sam Kin-se- r. The perfectly natural is the perfectly spiritual. Mary Ba-ker Eddy. Portrait of Progress Yes, Paula paints today but there were yesterdays when five-year-o- ld Paula Suter United Cerebral Palsey As-sociations' Poster Girl, could-n't stand alone', because of crippling cerebral palsey. ; Helped by therapy, she now - attends public school. i Mrs. Robert W. Taylor, the former Charmian Long, daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Long has arrived in Newfoundland, where she met her husband and plans to make her home for the next thirty months. She made the trip by plane, leaving here Friday morning and arriving in the nort;hland 29 hours later. Her husband is stationed with the Air Force at Newfoundland. Mrs. Oscar Boyer is spend-ing a few days at Idaho Falls, Ida., with her daughter and son-in-la- Ted and Marjorie Davis and making the acquain-tance of a new grandson. Mrs. Nell Condie, accompan-ied by Arthur Condie and Mrs. Frank Price of Orem returned this week from a weeks visit to California. The Condies vi-sited with DeVere and Ruth Condie Erb and family includ-ing a new baby boy at Dow-ney. The Erbs now have two boys and a girl. They also toured many places of interest including points at which Ar- - thur had been while serving an ' LDS mission a number of years ' ago. They also helped the Erbs celebrate three of the family birthdays during the week. Mrs. Price, the former Mattie . Pierce of .Springville, visited . her sister, Mrs. Otto Mehr, Lo s Angeles, whose husband ; passed away recently. |