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Show ..t.. , .r: " n .Tmium , lwnTmfniHinrwWftjj Mtl(tM m PaSe Six THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD IJlS, Friends, church welcome the R. L Wilsons home Sunday temple at Laie, besides work-- 1 ing, on some 12 chapels and mission homes. Mrs. Wilson has busied her-self in church work, handling the office of president of the Relief Society there. The re-turned missionaries resided at Laie. They have two sons, Wil-bur and Gene and their fam-ilies still in Hawaii on a simi-lar work mission. Friends and relatives are in-vited to the welcome home for Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Wilson of the Twelfth Ward Sunday eve-ning at 5 p.m. The Wilsons re-turned recently from Hawaii, where they have spent nearly three years. Mr. Wilson was called to the Church Building Mission there. In reviewing some of the building projects that have been carried on in the Islands while there, Mr. Wilson point-ed out. that he has been work-ing on college dormitories, five temple guide homes, 17 fac-ulty homes, remodeling of the 14 rifle and M-6- 0 mart, two of the Army, fantry weapons. 't He entered the January and compijjt training at the fort. He attended 0rem School and was emm Si Witt Construction Co yed : vo, before entering thp"!. Gerald Bushman finishes course Army Private, Gerald L. Bushman, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore M. Bushman, Route 1, Springville, Utah, completed advanced infantry training at Fort Ord, Calif-Ma- y 24. During the course Bushman received instruction in rifle squad tactics and fired the M-- I f ) i - m ' I --WW' f r i v j? 7 i A. I rs I V WELCOMED HOME Mr. and 3Irs. K. L. Wilson, who will be given a welcome home in the Twelfth Ward Sunday evening beginning at 5 p.m. The Wilsons have spent nearly three years on an assignment for the Church in Hawaii. r " c gree in agricultural economics and is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho. His wife is the former Joan L. Henderson of 164 S. Third E., Rexburg, Ida-ho. Pilot, Verl K. Diamond pro-moted to first lieutenant. Verl K. Diamond gets promotion Verl K. Diamond of Spring-ville, Utah, has been promoted to first lieutenant in the Unit-ed States Air Force. Lieutenant Diamond, a pilot, is assigned to the 31st Air Transport Squadron at Dover AFB, Delaware. The Lieutenant, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Diamond of 184 W. Fourth N., Springville, is a graduate of Springville High School. He has a BS de- - mm m m m Gertrude Welch dies in Calif. Friends received word this week of the death of Gertrude Ann Welch, 43, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Welch, formerly of Springville. Miss Welch died in her sleep, June 6, at the home of her parents, 1072 Hacienda Drive, Walnut Creek, California. She attended schools in Springville and graduated from LaVerne College, e, Calif., and subsequently attended San Jose State Col-lege to increase her education in libraryship. She has lived in California for the past 15 years and has taken an active Dart in her Presbyterian Church and club activities. Surviving are her parents and a brother, David. Funeral services and burial were in Walnut Creek. Silk dyes readily but looses color easily; it must be handled carefully and deterior-ates rapidly in the sun. Try flavoring whipping cream with one teaspoon of honey instead of sugar, for a taste treat. Mr. and Mrs. Verl Uv and Patricia and Mrs Whiting spent the Past t-i- California visiting h. ter and brother-in-ia- 1 and Mrs. Cleve Turn' ClairmonJ. Mrs. BeulahV ing visited Mrs. Frank r ingham (Barbara HavnT ' at Downing and also Ct: I Mrs. Tom Haymond at bra. ABlt Railroad worker retires after serving 41 years When Mart Merritt heard or sang the song, 'I've been working on the railroad," it meant just that to him. But not any more; Mr. Merritt has , .tmii V r Mart Merritt, veteran rail-road worker for the D&RG Railroad, has retired after 41 years with the company. now retired from the railroad as of May 31, after spending 41 years "working on the rail-road." He has been employed for the Denver and Rio Grande Company for nearly half a century. Upon his retirement, he was given a party and pre-sented with a camera as a to-ken of appreciation for his 41 year's of service by the rail-road's Old Timer's Club. He began his railroad career on June 1, 1920, when he went to work for the Union Pacific in Las Vegas. He later switched to the Denver and Rio Grande and has been with them ever since. Active in the Old Timer's club, he has served as its pres-ident and is currently presi-dent of the Provo club. A World War I veteran,1 he be-longs and is senior er of the Timpanogos Barracks of Provo. "In recent years we have had more cases where juven-iles . . . have been using al-coholic beverages. This, of course, is direct law violation . . . It is time the crime of peddling illicit beverages to minors is made a more serious crime with heavy penalties. This peddling is just as dis-tasteful as the dope peddler. Both are law violators bent on the destruction of the health and morals of our youth." Angola, Ind., Steuben Republican Local Kiwanian to attend meet Clifford Crandall and his wife of the Kiwanis Club of Springville, will attend the 48th Annual Convention of Ki-wanis International in Atlantic City, New Jersey, June 30 to July 4. More than 16,000 Kiwanians and their families from the United States, Canada, Mexico, and the Bahamas are expected to gather in the City of the Boardwalk for the four and a half day event. Convention sessions will be held in Atlan-tic City's Convention Hall, the largest of its type in the world. Work to be accomplished at the convention will include the election of officers for 1963-6- 4; a president, president-- e 1 e c t, treasurer, and six trustees; recognition of the top clubs and Kiwanis districts, based on community service activ-ities; and the adoption of reso-lutions upon which the organ-ization's 19 6 3-- 6 4 community service program will be based. Merle H. Tucker, Gallup, New Mexico radio station owner and president of Kiwanis In-ternational, will preside. Billy Graham urges re-straint in sit-in- s. i j) I ' - i S I : i it i '' 1 ' , Meet DALE LAWLOR your new Fuller Brush Serviceman Let him help you help yourself to SPECIALS on: D.C.W., Body Lotion, Floor Wax and Polish Phone 373-267- 9 givi New power-packe- d formula with quick, long-lasf- c onc results. 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JMlllIlllllllj; m: Jh (OffTHO) IS?!' ; ARDENSPRA ' 5, r ROBERTSON'S Marine and Garden Center j law as ammended, becomes a dead letter, is up to us. A. I. Tippetts Chairman Springville Development Coun. Editor's note: All letters to the., editor., must., be., signed when submitted, whether the writer., chooses., to., have., his name appear in the paper or not. Views expressed are those of the writer and do not nec-essarily reflect that of this paper. Letters are always wel-comed so long as they are not of a slanderous nature. Its Up To Us The recent session of the legislature changed the law with respect to the use of al-cohol and tobacco by miners. The age limitation was changed- from 21 years to 19 years on the plea that 'public sentiment was not in line with the old limitation, and as a consequence the law was un-enforceable and had become a dead letter. It is a truism, of course, that any law to be enforce-able, must have a preponder-ance of public sentiment be-hind it. At a recent Youth Conference on alcohol and held in Salt Lake City, 340 teenage delegates asked that the new law be vigorous-ly enforced. We understand that a concerted effort is to be made in Springville to do just that, and whether or not the |