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Show ' May 2, iSr p Ten THE SPRINGVILLE jUTAH) HERALD j : SOCIETY OF THE WEEK j Coming. tfj, Classes of '26, '27 ", schedule reunion High school classes of 1927 and 1928, are ' plans for a reunion onT orial Day, May 30, at tt, Building. Class membe 4' partners are asked to m l' 4 p.m., and visit until 7 ' when dinner will be ' Chairmen are Howard cock, Harold Holley berta Hoover. David L. AUmen, prentice, USN, son of Mr Mrs. Wendell L Allm ' ' 363 South Second E g vlile, Utah, is serving aPt the attack carrier Usg 1 ger, currently operating the Seventh Fleet in the ern Pacific. 5 ' Homeported at Alan-- Calif., the Ranger is now" her fourth Western pa cruise. At home Mrs. Mary Friel is lescing at her home from a cent confinement the Utah Valley Hospital 1 Miss Geralee Swan to be wed to Robert J. Murdock in June Pretty Miss Geralee Swan of Whittier, California, will become the June bride of Robert J. Murdock, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Blaine Murdock of Springville, according to an engagement announcement made this week by her mo-ther, Mrs. Julia F. Swan of Orem. Her father was the late Charles B. Swan, Jr. The marriage date is set on June 25 in the Salt Lake Temple and a reception in the Orem Reception Center is planned for the same evening. A graduate of Brigham Young University, Miss Swan was associated with Kappa Debonaire Social Unit and she also attended Merrill Palmer Institute in Detroit, Michigan. She is presently teaching at Whittier. Mr. Murdock, who has completed an LDS mission in the East Central States, is a graduate of BYU, where he was president of the Civil Engineering Society. He is now em-ployed in Los Angeles. i " ;" 'I ., , M. F. Miner believes he has a good start in reaching the 100th birthday record set by his father. He noted his 90th anniversary April 23. 111! ' I ISlIk Ifi. 1 41111 li Mil pllli s t ii:IIPl;li MISS CARMA NIELSON whose engagement is being an-nounced this week to Leo W. Mecham of Spanish Fork. Carma Nielson, Leo W. Mecham to be wed June 21 in temple Carma Nielson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Nielson, has made known her engagement and forthcom-ing wedding plans to Leo W. Mecham, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mecham of Spanish Fork. June 21 is the date chosen for the ceremony which will take place in the Manti Temple. A wedding breakfast will be held at Ephraim to honor the couple and a garden reception is planned for the same evening at the home of the bride's parents. -- The attractive bride-ele- ct will graduate from Springville j High School in May. Mr. Mecham is a graduate of Spanish 1 Fork High School and is presently employed in that city. ! 20-3- 0 Anns work on projects Members of the 20-3- 0 Anns distributed tickets for the out-fit in the Sprucette window, given away May 1, . at their meeting at the home of Dixie Miller. Mrs. Carolyn Roper was a special guest. The girls are sponsoring the project to raise funds for Special Education at the Grant School. Last week, bean bags were made and given to Carol Stubbs, teacher at the Grant for use by her students. A Mothers Day party is al-so being planned for the club members and their husbands. Next meeting is announced for May 13, to be at the home of Jean Roylance. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Han-sen have returned from a de-lightful month's visit with rel-atives and friends in Californ-ia. They visited their .children and their families at Garden Grove, Orange, Santa Ana and LaPunte and enroute home stopped with relatives also in Las Vegas. Mrs. Lucille Siedler and Mrs. Ethel Hunn of.. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Con-ov- er the past few days. Mrs. Hunn returned to her home on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Con-ov- er have taken the visitors on sight-seein- g tours in Salt Lake City and other places in the state. M. F. Miner notes 90th birthday at family party M. F. Miner was honored on the occasion of his 90th birth-day with a family gathering Sunday at his home, 119 West 4th South. Approximately 50 members of his family were in attendance, a number com-ing from out of town. Mr. Miner was born April 23, 1873, in a log cabin which still stands on the old family homestead on South Main St. His parents were Moroni Min-er, who lived to celebrate his 100th birthday, and Nancy Elizabeth Chase Miner. There were 15 children and Mr. Min-er was the seventh son. At various periods in his lifetime, he has engaged in farming, cattle raising, meat and grocery business, construc-tion work, and as a peace of-ficer. He has always been ac-tive in church work, serving in many offices. He also filled a mission in California in 1948. For many years he was cap-tain of the Black Hawk com-mittee. He married Ella Dalton Feb. 6, 1895, and they had seven sons and daughters, two of whom are living: Mrs. Vanda Jensen and Mrs. Marian Wright of Pocatello, Idaho. There are also 11 grandchild-ren and 30 great grandchild-ren. In 1945, he and his wife celebrated their golden wed-ding anniversary. After her death in 1947, he married Ma-rie Teerlink and they have a daughter, Lucille, and a son, Moroni. Mr. and Mrs. Miner are ac-tive LDS Temple workers mak-ing a trip weekly to Manti to do temple work. In 1960, he reportedly did 126 endowments. A delightful program enter-tained family members during the birthday party, given by children and great grandchild-ren, including an original poem read by a great granddaugh-ter as a special tribute. Throughout the day and the week, Mr. Miner received many cards and other mes-sages of congratulations from relatives and friends here and out of town. Among relatives, who came to Springville for the birthday celebration, were his daughter and son-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. D. G. (Marian) Wright and family of Pocatello, Idaho; Mrs. Emily Miner and Mrs. Emma Whitmore of Salt Lake City. Broods of geese appear in areas Broods of young geese are now becoming apparent on waterfowl management areas throughout the State. Waterfowl area supervisors reported the first brood from Farmington Bay on April 16. The presence of Canada goose broods signifies the peak of nesting activity among oth-er species of waterfowl on the State marshlands. I 1 When a f j dies, llu I I? deaths oca,,; -- the father, I ' " - : the husUd M- and the in. R come. ti(, I ' i insurance I help you V- continued, Uf i j income. LnDean Lilster, C.l.C, HUnter BENEFICIAL UK Virgil H SmithrW Slili, THE FINEST IN PRACTICAL DRAFTEKG TRAINING ALL PHASES OF DRAFTING AND BLUEPRINT READING Enroll now for a career with unlimited job opportunities Training does not interfer with present job. Study at home or school and progress at individ-ual's own ability. Free lifetime placement service. Write or call for FREE information. Train with industrial specialists! NAME Street City Phone Technical Engineering Institute 237 East Broadway, Salt Late City Telephone 1 FOR SALE or TRADE Will trade good brick homeS ( with full basement for a ( home on one level. Close In: ) 132 South 3rd East. S Call HU - Batteries! RAM TO WET A C2ch jI A STAMP ) r .. '. ; ) - y J JlliisiiSiiSllll& y ' "''am,n X . I,'1,'st" t3UKMSKt!9y . Tablets At Sage we I - ? ' - strive to have it pleasant, - 100 Count cheerful and snnny at all !f times. We most cordially . X 39C I invite you to shop with us. f , y ; X c I Frozen Pies pn-- 3 for 89c I H Peanut Butter1 3 ib. jar 98c JSdOd Sil(BSk j I Corn whole or cream style ... 8 for 1.00 Dog Food 2.69 lb. dSc f pit "!,,SS Dry Milk -.- 4,,.... 1.09 "IJjp Miracle Whip : 48 z- - 79c XS? o for i no Sirloin Steak Jssfca lb. tt jj Tomato (Beach Cliff) 7 ( Ky. cabbage Chuck Steak ' . . '. IbJc Wk Ground Beef . . 2 lbs. ft CfelPOTATOES m Chee Sday!. k 4?t v::fe--'-i 10 lbs. 29c I ; J 1 &. rty RADISHES OR Clearwater Bonita Flakes 6 for I blL " ? GREEN ONIONS tj, B W Q kim Postum-g- . or coffee flavor. 8 oz I 0 DUn. IUC Pork and Beans. Van Camp's 4 for I 10th SOUTH 4th EAST TELEPHONE HU 9-46- 11 I I PLENTY OF FREE PARKING J Prices effective May 2. 3. 4 CTFROM PAX"P 3 Year Crabgrass Control Plus Fully Balanced Fertilizer " ONLY PAX HAS THESE ADVANTAGES: J. PAX controls crabgrass for 3 or more years. 2. PAX controls chickweed, poa annua, euphorbia, other weeds. 8. PAX controls lawn insects. 4. PAX fertilizes. 5. PAX can be applied same day you reseedyour lawn. KILL ugly HOW! pjfi Crabgrass . f PAXs Robertson Marine & Garden Center 97 South Main Springville a a a a a a ""ffcaiAJf1, .",,,,,,,, ,,!,,! ImlloPyW "EJ,:2"J'V, HU k xW:o pnngviiie, Utah :::;::: III - il :::::::::: :::::::::: Dear friends, The least suggestion of ::xi show or display in any funeral ::::X: service is in poor taste. IX-- : ;Xx:; It has always been our thought that the funeral direc- - l xx) tor should be as inconspicuous I X:X as possible. The many details x:y involved should be looked after ::;:: quietly, respectfully... the family should be relieved of :jx all possible responsibility. IxS X; That is our duty, our f:::::x:x service. Jxj:jxjx Respectfully, ISx-X:- : 111 Young drivers in 1962 had the worst record of any age group in the United States. Men and women under the age of 25 represent only about 15 per cent of the nation's li-censed drivers, yet they were involved In nearly 29 per cent of all fatal accidents and in more than 27 per cent of all non-fat- al accidents. Studies by the Travelers In-surance Companies show driv-er error and lack of judgment were responsible for 32,300 deaths and more than 2,900,000 injuries on U. S. highways in 1962. Coming (Events . . . Safety Council car wash The Safety Council of the high school is sponsoring a car wash Saturday from 10 a.m., until 3 p.m., at the City Park, to raise funds for their Safety Program activities The pat-ronage of the public is urged by these students. Alpha Beta Club The Alpha Beta club will hold their spring luncheon Fri-day, May 3, at 12 noon, at Riverside Country Club. Mrs. H. T. Reynolds, Mrs. Myron Childs and Mrs. William Wit-ney are hostesses. Mrs. Oliver Dalton will give the program. Brookside School j Spring Festival The Brookside School PTA is sponsoring a Spring Festi- - val at the Brookside School to- - day at 5:45 p.m., for all par- - j ents and friends. A delightful J program is being worked around the theme, "Under the J Big Top." Lunch and refresh- - ments will be sold after the j festival by the PTA as a fund raising project. Mrs. Reed Hunter,' president, is in charge. Make sure the activities you plan for your spring clean-u- p or weekend outings are with- - in your physical capacity the Utah Heart Association cau- - tions. Motorists in 1962 raced ' down the nations highways to a new and traggic auto death record which for the first time exceeded 40,000 fa-talities. The previous high was set in 1941 when 39,969 per-sons lost their lives on the highways. : I i ' Mark Jay Averett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bud Averett, who was a year old April 21. Photos by Vernon at Modern Art Phqto .A Jana Lee Erickson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Erickson, of Spanish, Fork, formerly of Springville. who was a year old April 29. |