OCR Text |
Show ' 'lit N THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD Page Five lllinil!tlliIUIIMIIllllttlllllllUlltlllllllIIIMI lltllllMIHIIIIIIIIllHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllimillllllillllllllllMIMIIItlHll il1lllltlMlllllMIIIIIMinillMIII!IIHIIIIIIIll11l1IIIIIIMIIHIUIIIIIIIIU11llll(llllllltllt!lli SOCIETY OF THE WEEK. rillllllllllllltlllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllUIIIIUtllllllltllllllllllllllllNlltllllllllllMllllllllMlllllllltlllllltllllMllUUIIlll ntiiiillllllllllHIIIMIIIIlllllllllllllltllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillllllllllltllllllMltllllllllllMlli; Mapleton families at reunion The Phillip Hurst family held a reunion at Kellys Grove Saturday with local family members serving breakfast to the group. All enjoyed a pic-nic lunch at noon. Meetings were held in the forenoon and the afternoon and Lyman Crook of Santaquin was named president of the family organ-ization. Watermelon was ser-ved in the late afternoon. At-tending from Mapleton were Mr. and Mrs. L. LaVell Bird, Mr. and Mrs. Walden Hurst and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hurst. V , "..1 S' - 1 and Mrs. Howard A. Thulin of El Cerrito, Calif., for jim an open house will be given Saturday evening. 5lets wn house set for visitors here husband and their little daugh- ter Tana Ellen. Mr. Thulin, a retired chief of police of ElCen-ito- , has en-joyed some fishing trips and he and his wife have visited a number of scenic areas in the state. They are leaving early next week to visit another daughter, Mrs. Donal Turner and family at Lewiston, Mont. and Mrs. Stanley Stubbs Open House Sat-- vilj holding v Aug- 5' at tneir home, ,'So. Main, from 8 until ,B for her parents, Mr. 'jirs. Howard A. Thulin of .'.rito, Calif- Mr. and Mrs. E, i.'P& Rawle Jr., will be -- ,e Thuliiis have been visit-- i a Springville the past two 'is with their daughter and 'L)rW.i'..l'1"H'..'.'. 'i"1nn f I' I ! ' ' : ' ',. Miss Linda Loftin whose engagement to James G. Frost Ls announced this week, the wedding to be an event of August 16. Miss Linda Loftin sets wedding with James G. Frost August 16 Lovely Linda Loftin, daughter of Mrs. Gail K. Loftin of Springville, has set the date of her wedding to James G. Frost, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Frost, also of this city, on August 16. The ceremony will take place at the home of an aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Bird, 131 West First South, and will be followed by a garden reception at the Bird home. Both young people are graduates of Springville High School and LDS Seminary. The bride-to-b- e is employed as a secretary at Thorn's Construction Company and the future groom is with Her-cules Powder Company in Salt Lake City. Newton McDowell and fam-ily of Mesa, Arizona, spent the past week in Springville guests of Mr. McDowell's mother-in-la- Mrs. Adah Jesse and other relatives. 1 Miss Joan Gill whose engagement to William Terry (Bill) Gale is announced this week, the marriage to take place Sept. 1, in the Salt Lake Temple. Miss Joan Gill sets wedding date with William Terry Gale Charming Miss Joan Gill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gill of Springville, will recite wedding vows with William Terry (Bill) Gale, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Gale also of this city, in early autumn. The date for the ceremony is planned for September 1 in the Salt Lake Temple and will be followed by a recep-tion the same evening in the Springville Stake House. A graduate of the LDS Seminary and Springville High School, she was active in Steno and Pep Club affairs and is presently secretary of the Springville Stake M Men and Gleaners organization. Mr. Gale has served an LDS mission in the North Central States and is presently employed in Morgan. After their marriage the new bride will continue in secretarial work at Brigham Young University while her husband continues his studies at the same school. The popularity which Mrs. Ella Reynolds has attained as a speaker and program enter-tainer, took her again to Pay-so- n Sunday evening, where at the request of Grant Gardner, bishop of the First ward and assistant school superintendent, she gave the evening's pro-gram. Her talk centered on a patriotic theme in which she paid tribute to President Ken-nedy and patriotism expressed in his recent talk. Dinner marks 82nd birthday Mrs. Abbie Ashcraft was guest of honor at a dinner Thursday of last week marking her 82nd birthday. The dinner was given by her daughter and son-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Er-nest Whiting, with whom she makes her home at 59 East 5th South. A pretty birthday cake hold-ing 82 candles centered the dining table around which places were arranged for fam-ily members. Eighteen called to extend birthday greetings including Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ashcraft, Mr. and Mrs. Orean Ashcraft, Mr. and Mrs. Neno Antonino and children, Vickie, Gay, Paul, Cindy and Brent, James and LaRue Beardall and Janalee and Pauline Whiting. On Saturday, a number of family members gathered at Saratoga to further celebrate the birthday. A son Ruel Ash-craft and wife and family came from Keams and with Mrs Ashcraft, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whiting, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ashcraft and Mrs. Elaine A. Anderson of Benjamin enjoyed a dinner and visiting. A descendent of original pioneers of this area, Mrs. Ashcraft has made her home in Springville for a number of years. Her grandfather, Wm. Shim Wardsworth came to Utah with the original pion-eers of 1847. He was with Brigham Young and helped him in the wagon when he looked over the Utah valley and declared "this is the place." The grandfather took prominent part in the settle-ment of Springville. He operat-ed a saw mill in the canyons east of here and helped to make roads from the canyons into the community. An area in Hobble Creek canyon, that of Wardsworth, was named after the grandfather. Mrs. Ashcraft has four sons and a daughter; 17 grandchil-dren and 12 great grandchil-dren. Mrs. Adah Jessee is spend-ing the month of August with her brother, Theo A. Phillips Annette Giles is convalesc- and family at Roosevelt. ing at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Giles, from a recent major operation which she underwent at Brigham City. Annette is employed at Thiokol. Family reunion A number of Springville peo-ple were in Charleston at the Park Friday for the reunion of the descendants of the late John and Frances Petersen. Vi-siting, games and picnic lunch-es were enjoyed by approxi-mately 94 relatives from Salt Lake, Springville, Provo, Pay-so- n, Heber and other cities. George Peterson was named president of the family organ-ization; Mrs. Harold Harraer, Payson, reunion chairman; Mrs. Vince Clayton, Salt Lake, It was the first reunion of the family in a number of years. A list of honor students for the spring quarter at the USU, Logan, just released this week includes the names of Max Arlin Bartholomew, Ernest Jan Eberhard, Karen Holdaway, and Karen Roylance. ng j . rT V L " n " 7 A Happy h family Means ' a Photograph lj Castlefon s not come in :on for a family st; roup portrait? ' the youngster has :r missing, so much 'e better. This is "e way you'll want '' remember him ;E ' years to come. JMS :t us show you how "xh the art and the ".ence of - '"'Otography have "Wed in recent ' n m. We'd like to ' y you samples ; our work. jus vIodehn Art Photo ist rvni ft X 'it" & i5 It r V J GENE FULLMER BUILDS Total Electric GOLD MEDALLION HOME Let the world's middleweight boxing champion tell you why he is joining the hundreds of Gold Medallion Home owners in this area: "Ours is a young family, so we wanted to build a home that would be te for a long time. That's why we are building a Total Electric Home near our mink farm in West Jordan. "My brother Don completed a Total Electric Home re-cently and he really likes it. "What impresses me most is the electric heating. There's no noise and it's extra clean which will make it easy on my wife Delores. Each room will have its own thermostat control. There are no drafts. I'm really sold on electric heating!" Gene Fullmer West Jordan, Utah For more information on a Gold xX SN Medallion Home, write or call Sales and P'iO h& :Jfi8L. Marketing Dept., Utah Power & Light xttt ( i.lt Co., Box 899, Salt Lake City 10, Utah. JMi UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. TOTAL ELECTRIC HOME i j ii j: 1 in Yatches 9.95 up arm Clocks, Westclox . . 2.98 NS LEATHER OR METAL WATCH BANDS t Men's and Ladies' Leather Wallets U UP YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOO- L OUTFIT j With some costume jewelry Wh Main Phone HU i SEMI-ANNUA- L (C Sean amice All Summer Merchandise drastically (B ceD an cc clO MATERNITY WARDROBE 32 North 100 East Provo FRanklin i This is a wonderful I opportunity for ladies I that would like to IE have the things extra It money can buy . . . If Also a self satisfying business I of their own. I am looking for ladies with get up and go, to sell Edith Rehnborg Cosmetics, made by the Vitamin Co. also to sell Nutrilite Vitamins. Write: Mrs. Beulah Green 3527 South 12th East I Salt Lake City, Utah 1 John Bird, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arvil Bird and Jeff Mi-ner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Miner have gone to Palmyra, N.Y. to see the church pag-eant. John recently returned from an LDS mission in Eng-land. Mr. and Mrs. Wiliord Man-warin- g, daughter Carol Ann and sons Tom and John are home from an enjoyable va-cation trip to Yellowstone Park. They were especially in-terested in the earthquake area and visited the lake and faults created by the eruption. They stopped also at Jackson. Crtlr Corner Boy, to Pete and Audrey Hermansen Carter of Spring-ville, July 27, at the hospital in Mt. Pleasant. The new baby is a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Carter, Springville and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hermansen of Ephraim. Boy, to Richard and Cherriet Fullmer Barker, Friday, July 28, at the Utah Valley Hospi-tal. !; Mrs. Zelma Beardall is en-joying a visit from her son and daughter-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Beardall and three chil-dren of Phoenix, Ariz., who are visiting here and with re-latives and friends in Provo. Farewells given the Dale Hardys Dale and Isabel Hardy who with their young son Robyn left Saturday to make a home in Seattle, Wash., were guests of honor at a dinner party held at Sage Inn Saturday evening. The party was hosted by a group of neighborhood friends, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Martindale, Mr. and Mrs. Orin Nielson and Mr. and Mrs. Har-old Jordan. Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Hardy, Robyn and Mrs. Hardy's mo-ther, Mrs. Gilda Leslie were dinner guests at the home of a sister and brother-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cooksey at Orem. On Tuesday afternoon, Mrs. Thelma Diamond and Mrs. Florence Beardall were hos-tesses at a party to which a large group of 6th ward Re-lief Society members were in-vited. The guest of honor was presented with a beautiful go-ing away gift. Tuesday even-ing was spent visiting with a group of old friends who gath-ered at the home of Mrs. Helen Watts. Attending the party were: Audrey Miner, Konda Lee, Janice Higbee, Catherine Johnson, Mamie Hjorth, Glen-d- a Jackman and Lucile Brown. Mrs. Delia Clark and her daughter, Mrs. Janice Higbee of Winnemucca entertained at a barbecue supper Wednesday evening honoring the Hardy's. Thursday morning Mrs. Ted Martindale and Mrs. Margaret Blackett were hostesses at a lovely brunch. Joining the hos-tesses and Isabel were Lor-raine Davies, Evelyn Jordan and June Nielson. The morning was spent visiting and a lovely gift was presented to the guest of honor. Mrs. Frank Sanford has re-turned home from a visit in EJko, Nevada, with her grand-daughter and husband, John and Cora Jean Hubbard Bieg-le- r. She was on hand to wel-come a new great grandson, born to the Bieglers July 10, at Elko. While Mrs. Sanford was at Elko, another grand-son, Michael Hubbard and his wife came from Seattle, Wash., near where he is stationed with the Air Force, for a few days visit. Mrs. Sanford ac-companied them to Springville and they stayed here a short time before returning to the base. Friends enjoy canyon party Another in a series of sum-mer parties for members of the S.T. club was held Monday in the form of an 11 o'clock brunch at the canyon home of Mrs. H. M. Weight. Mrs. Ed Johnson, Mrs. Arthur Finley, Mrs. Leon Harrison and Mrs Weight were hostesses. The day was spent visiting and with games with prizes awarded to Mrs. Gwen Baxter and Mrs. Emily Anderson, a special guest. Gertrude Sumsion, Floss Phillips, Gwen Tippetts, Emma Clark, Vi Child, Manila Brown were others attending. Students take eastern tour Several Springville Seminary graduates desireous of increas-ing their knowledge of LDS historical places joined a Sem-inary tour to Palniyra to view the sacred pageant. They ex-pected to visit places of church interest enroute and to also take sight-seein- g trips in Washington, D.C., New York, Philadelphia and other places. Going by way of Texas, Lou-isiana and Florida were: Vickie Hatch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dee Hatch; Carol Green-halg-daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Greennalgh; Saun-dr- a Jackman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. L. Jackman; Arnold Loveridge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Loveridge; Caroldean Mason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Mason and Bonnie Damico, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Damico. On another bus taking a route through Kentucky and visiting other places of interest were: Susan Friel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Friel and Diane Boyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Boyer. Mrs. George Anderson is en-joying a visit from her grand-daughter, Miriam Loewenstein of Terre Haute, Ind. A daugh-ter of Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Loe-wenstein (Hazel Anderson). Miriam has been attending summer school in Denver, Colo. Three couple went from Springville to Grand Junction, Colo., the past week to at-tend the national convention of the D. and R. G. Veterans or-ganization. Those who attend-ed were past president and Mrs. Mart Merritt, Mr. and Mrs. Axel Danielson and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brailsford. Mr. Menitt is a member of the board of directors. Nellie Dibble Knowlton of Salt Lake City is visiting this week in Springville, the guest of Mrs. Cleo Heavener and Mrs. Lucille Blanchard. |