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Show ' Page Six THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD . . JV the alternating ions, while the of the sid(,, buses a' tan. arc Puir is stopped and flashing red lights are in op-eration, traffic is to stop-b- oth coming toward the bus and the rear," said the Super-visor. The two new buses purchas-ed this spring will carry 66 students each. The latest equip-ment for the best protection of the students has been in-stalled in them and interiors are beautifully decorated in heavy bown naughahyde uphol-stering with rubber foam cush-- School busses ready to rc!l Thirty-tw- o big, yellow buses, all completely renovated and ready to haul thousands of Nebo District's children to and from school are ready for the new season according to Super-visor Merlon Bryson of the District Staff. The fleet of thirty-tw- o bus-es, including two new ones, are tuned up, filled with antti-freez- e, gas and oil and will be in the hands of the bus drivers this week. "There is always work to be done keeping the buses rolling as well as helping to keep other district automo-tive equipment in shape to perform well," said Mr. Bry-son. All motors have been over-hauled, brakes adjusted, inter-iors' and exteriors washed, cleaned and painted where needed. Nebo School District bus personnel are especially cho-sen for their ability to handle their buses effectively and well, Mr. Bryson reported. "The biggest job we have in school bus transportation today is to convince the average mo-torist that, when a school bus Mrs fcmma K turned to her home lin-early a month's ' visit sister and brother-i- n , '': ' and Mrs. Arch Comv, Platte, Nebr.Sh, Mr. and Mrs. H return trip after the J sited their sons Ked : and families in Salt,T' They made the trip i' r t i i ! I ! i A Allan Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wright, whose flrs't birthday was celebrated Wednesday, August 22. Jay Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Turner, who had his first birthday Wednes-day, August 22. Moisten I lews By Mrs. Norrit T. Binti Phon. HUnt.r Mr. and Mrs. Russell Grange and their family are moving this week to their lovely new home in ESst Provo, where he will be close to his work at KOVO. The project for the Mapleton Jaycees this month was lay-ing the hardwood floors in the new home being built by the Mapleton ward. Several changes have taken place among the officers of the Jayces recently. Paul Dib-ble has resigned as vice presi-dent and George Leifson has been selected to take his place. A new director will be chosen later. Louis Diamond, a Mapleton Jaycee, and his family have moved into their new home in the Grant Nielson subdivision. They have been making their home in Spanish Fork. Several Mapleton City offi-cials and their wives attended the steak supper at the Alpine Country Club last Friday evening, sponsored by the County Commissioners. Among them were Mayor Douglas Bills, councilmen Norman Gra-ves, Ray Whiting, Dr. Paul Edmunds and Merrill Halver-so- n, City Recorder Norris T. Binks and policeman, Fay Jen-se- n. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Jones and their children are selling their home in Mapleton and are moving to Salt Lake City where he will be employed in the office of Nor-Be- st Turkey Association. Dr. and Mrs. Paul K. Ed-munds accompanied their daughter Mary Ellen to Salt Lake City Sunday and attend-ed the testimonial meeting in the Mission home Sunday even-ing. Mary Ellen left early Monday morning by plane for Seattle where she will spend a day at the World Fair be-fore flying to Tokyo, then on to Hong Kong, which is head-quarters for her LDS Mission to the Far East. Memorial Park in Mapleton was the scene of a pleasant picnic supper Saturday evening when several relatives were honored for birthdays which all occured during the early part of August. Honored guests were Welby and Burton Warren, Zina Dibble, young Mary Jane Hutchings and Max- - ine Dyett. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dibble also celebrated their wedding anniversary on the birthdays of their Uncles Wel-by and Burton Warren. Mrs. Georgia Plumlee was the honored guest at a family dinner Sunday, the occasion be-ing her birthday. The dinner was servd at the home of her daughter and son-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Ermel Jensen. Guests included a son Joe Plumlee, his wife and family from Salt Lake City, all of her grand-children and their families; her sisters and their husbands, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Houghton of Provo, Mrs. Eva Thurman and Mrs. Tressa Burgi of Provo. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Men-denhall and family are spend-ing a few days at Fish Lake. collect white elephants and various articles to be auctioned during the evening. No Primary will be held in the Mapleton Wards until Sept. 4. Mrs. Elmo Court, Mrs. Na-omi Parkins and Mrs. Hugh Hjorth supervised the "Trail Roundup" recently at the Map-leton Church, for the Trail-builde- r group of their primary Mrs'. Veon Morgan and three daughters, Karen, Diane, anc Janet, of Portland, Oregon an spending ten days visiting wit! her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S Lavell Bird and with Mrs. Ma rie Morgan. Some folks seem to believe that vegetables put through juicer are more nutritious thai the fresh vegetables themsel ves. Experts assure us such i: not the case. Juicing can't ad any nutrients, but there is s loss of some nutrients ii juicing, and cellulose, valu able for digestion, is discarded Dr. and Mrs. Victor Pagen and family from the Univer-sity of Wisconsin were house guests during the past week of Dr. and Mrs. Glenn Seal and family. Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Thomp-son and family have returned to their home following a year's stay at Fort Lewis, j Washington. Mrs. Joy Hibbert and family who have been living at the Seal apartments, are moving to Orem this week. Mr. and Mrs. Blain Williams and boys moved to Lander, Wyoming this week to make their home. Their son Terry will remain here with rela-tives and attend college this fall. Dr. Carroll Draper of the Utah State University will be on hand to cook his B. B. Q. Turkey on Friday, Aug. 24 at the Memorial Park in Map-leton for the Mapleton Second Ward Primary which is spon-soring a building fund carni-val. A drive will be made in the Ward prior to this date to IflewS lfoteS . . . Mrs. riilllip Brown (Mary Ivory) and little son Mark, have returned to their home in Salt Lake after spending the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ivory, while her husband was with 144th Evacuation Hospital Unit of the National Guard stationed at Fort Leonardwood,, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hansen and three small children Trudy, Carrie and Rebecca have re-turned to their home in Phoe-nix, Ariz., after a visit in Springville with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hansen and Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Russell. They returned home by way of San Francisco and Los An-geles, visiting relatives and friends enroute. Major and Mrs. Keith Men-denha- ll and two children, Pam-ela and Keith Jr., and Mrs. .Merlynne McCaul and three children, Jeanne, Michael and Julie Ann of Sacramento, Cal-ifornia, have been visiting their mother and grandmother, Mrs. Lula Mendenhall. Major and Mrs. Mendenhall and family left to visit a few days with her folks in Cowlev. Wvo and will then go to Washington D. C, where Major Mendenhall has a new assignment with the Air Force at the Pentagon. They expect to be there four years. Mrs. McCaul and chil-dren returned to their home in Sacramento. Visiting In Springville the past week were the following sons and daughters of Mrs. Mary H. Weight, who came to Utah to attend the funeral services of Mrs. Weight's grandson, Martin Prestwich, Friday: Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Weight of Rivera, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Saunders of Los Angeles; also Mr. and Mrs. Paul Weight came from Tooele. The funeral was held ( in Orem. L I "Shorlly after my return tr0m :, mission in 1 959, enrolled for - ltl j t ;7v 4 and management study a, I f I Henager. Meantim,,. held do J : time ob. After 3ft , "of' f CPA with an excellent occ'l? V; ::;;::;;s '"" For a man who wants '? ftl i - 'ma hurry, and still oy J' h : i rnnin9 ,ctrl at s," hl , i answer I, f for me." 'S::'f ;;s M M'W:':'f' Marlow B. Yon p s:.i-:- Bountiful, Utoh ly , i Get Ahead Foster ' " . ' Learn Skills at Night Night school gives you secod , --m'Smi " i 1 P'P' 'he skill, you hov, X-- S ( personnel for good poyinn kj? position, than we ca fill Fr, 7" J rnent service. L-,- n...i Enro, Now Fa MARLOW B. YOST registration Aug. r Monday and Thursday evenl, ?' Spec.ol courses: Speed- - $choo casses begn writing, Gregg shorthand, . Accounting Management . FJ Nancy Taylor finishing. Taxation Secretarial Science IBM card punch. five leadership e pgr PowereodT ! IBM Automation. f . j CLIP AND MAIL TODAY I flk'dM Send me free, without obligation, bulletin on evening courses. 4 t f U w , j :::z:::zizzziizz:: J CHy M!L I Slate Pfcon. " IT IS YOUR DUTY AS A CITIZEN TO VOTE In Order to Vote YOU MUST BE REGISTERED Your Next Registration Date is August 23 Public Service Announcement by Utah State AFL-CI-Happiness it II no easy mat- - ter; it's very hard to find it ' j w''n our p " 1 selves and 1 impossible to ,. j find it (Ij f V 1 elsewhere! For Details Call LuDean Ulster. C.L.U. HUnter BENEFICIAL UFE VirgitH SmlduPre.'SJ,UkcCStl,U,ll i ' I by ", ft ! 'm i I if ' f - 1 . :Z rf4 i t nrii UL ' l b&T 1 1 lls;? f k Y'tSYT , m" 10 DISCOUNT on $ M wood preservative f ; Chevron Wood Preservative gives extra long life to I i fence posts, hop poles, sills. ..any wood in contact with ;? r " 1 the ground. If you apply it by soaking, here's an easy i f i way that cuts a lot of lifting. Sink a barrel in the ground j and just slide heavy posts in. I ; Don't forget -- you can save 10 on Chevron Wood Preservative delivered before August 31. sss j Order now and save. ExjgL f For any Standard Oil product, cof CffJJffffJIf) I 1 1 UTAH SERVICE. INC. T 1 4 i 4th South & Main, Springville, Utah K?j I '1 HU or HU J "fVu. i lyi-- WVy '?:!.::'!!' rtv' SfWibitafc : special Peanut Butter 3 lb. jsr : RADIO Strawberry, Raspberry, Y to be given away rrCbCIYCi Apricot, Boysenberry, 40 oz " , come in and get your ClCkerS feZ f ' I 1 FREE TICKETS 0,jves sdby 4 fcr u 1 school supplies BIsquick ft Paper, Pencils, Note Books, Tt58oBpr Cake Mix 3fcrfi: FREE PENCILS Sat, "kid, with parents ftffeg . ). 67C, 2 Ii I? I Clip Top Carrots . lb. 5c Tuna Fish IV 3 for I parrapf tae Juice ' tot,0! 6 f 11 feT Fruit Cocktail 4 for 8!; a JJSJ Toma, JuIce lb. 5c rl:i ' s Grapefruit 3Soh3avr's 5 for IIs Bananas gen fastwLr!!lb. 1 2c -- , Local Tomatoes 2 lbs. 15c " 3 Rump Roast . 79c PP?" r ROUND STEAK .... lb. 85c , , GROUND BEEF. . . . 2 lbs. 89c r:&y LINK SAUSAGE .... lb. 49c J-- y 1 10th South 4th East Telephone HUnter m Plenty of FREE- - PARKING 2 Prices effective Thurs., Fn., Sat., August 23, 24, 25, 962 , . Rrf1 l'tke WaterJ Either way bottle or can Olympia Beer always tastes refreshingly the same. One priceless ingredient is I the reason: "Its the Water" OLYMPIA BREWING CO., Olympia. Wash. 0lj BIG AUGUST BACK-TO-SCHOO- L j I SPECIAL AT ALLEN CLEANERS! h cw 1 uj " H II M H w v JtJJ ; j ' - S A 1 1 1 0 t I Krl i 1 I u ;M lHr VIId miMm WITH DISCOUNT OF $5.00 OR MORE 1 YOU PAY ONLY I $108 54e Suits, Dresses, Coats Sweaters, Skirts, Pants House Coats and Shirts SAME-DA- Y SERVICE IN BY 10:00 OUT BY 4:00 RLLEft CLEANERS 373 South Main Springville, Utah Springville man gets diploma Don Roger Anderson, son of Mrs. Ellen Anderson of this city, was among 420 University of Utah students who received their graduation diploma in commencement exercises a t the University Saturday even-ing. Mrs Anderson and her daughter and son-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Art Child and son Tony were among those who attended from Springville. They were in company with Mrs. Emily Miner, Salt Lake, a for-mer resident of this city and also Mrs. Anderson's brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Glen-do- n Whitmore of Salt Lake City. ' . Don majored in merchandis-ing and has accepted a posi-tion with a leading business concern in Seattle, Wash., leav-ing this week to take over his new work. |