OCR Text |
Show January 29, 1970 Tel mohteII PHHPl ME AM Hi CUT H CORN 4 303 CANS ry X 5fW 5 (D) 5 G I II cans U :ECTIVE THROUGH FEBRUARY 3rd WHOLE n) LEGGED m.(ny rO) FRYERS lb. 0)jH 1 Qff WILSON'S CHICKEN FRIED STEAKS lb. nn an LBS. FULLY COOKED lb. U.S.D.A. CHOICE i : i riiltF I ; Wc JddF Ml for Jtz I s rToTTTon Willi fcj I i I '.Ml 111 VVJ TTT VI THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD Page Seven DEL MONTE CUT GREEN BEANS DEL MONTE MIXED VEGETABLES 303 CANS s SSI CANS '5. DEL MONTE TOMATO CATSUP 14-OZ. BOTTLES FOR (D) CEDAR FARMS SLICED BACON THICK SLICED BAR S FRANKS CUT-UP lb. 35 PKG. V- Vs! vy' BREASTED FRYERS lb BEEF SAUSAGE ALLEN'S COUNTRY STYLE 2 $ CHUCK STEAKS id. 59)' LEGS and THIGHS lb. SS)C BREASTS . . lb. Oyc iv ''-it. i"'- 7-BONE ROAST U.S.D.A. CHOICE ROUND BONE ROASTS BONELESS POT ROAST BONELESS BEEF ROAST lb. 88c lb. 88c lb. 88c 13-oz. Cc I VALUE ( 0 ) rO AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY 43" JOHNSON'S FIRST AID o8c M I N I - K I T VALUE BRECK'S SHAMPOO 15-oz. Bottle ViTm $fl09 59c H Y T O N E 98c Value 3Q0 rr FILLER PAPER count 6!)C HYTONE 98c Value TYPING PAPER count 69c RISE SHAVE CREAM $1.19 VALUE 79c ARRID EXTRA DRY DEODORANT 6-oz. Can Provo Springville American Fork Orem ' 1 V P a i ' I f ' J V i . 1 . . - i ft -:--I ' 3 rival. J I 1 ' 1 V 1 Si -.1 r " -1 ft, I 1 1 t i ' 4 J.-c i- . if , i "ft. .v..t.ii Je- ' i . .-' -'J Dr. Ken Creer, newly-named Art City Days chairman, gave the Kotarians a preview of this year's celebration at their meeting Wednesday night. He was introduced by President Jack Windley. The celebration will be held June 11. 12, and 13, it was announced. Alcoholics Anonymous program highly successful world-wide January 25 through January 31 ha. been declared Iby Governor Gover-nor Rampton ai Utah Alcoholism Alcohol-ism Information Week. This coincides-. ,with a massive educational edu-cational campaign rationally against alcoholism which rates numb?r one among the nation's major health problems. ' Alcoholics Anonymous Program Pro-gram is highly successful world-wide. "Twelve Suggested Steps" is the heart of the personal per-sonal recovery program through which thousands of problem drinkers have achieved sobriety in Alcoholics Anonymous. Anony-mous. These steps, which sum up the experience of early A. A. members, were first written down in late 1938, three years after the movement got under way. Today the steps are regarded regard-ed as the cornerstone of the A.A. program by the more than 400,000 members in some 11,000 groups in 90 countries throughout the world. The steps are essentially a formula for changing a person's per-son's way of thinking and living. liv-ing. New members of A.A. may accept them without question, or they may have serious reservations res-ervations that must be resolved re-solved before the recovery program pro-gram mnkec sense. A number of the steps refer to God, for instance. After years of hard drinking, the newcomer may be somewhat cynical about any such reference. refer-ence. It is only when the new member appreciates that A.A. is not a religious program that he c.n begin to understand the broad, purely personal concept con-cept of God, "as we understood Him," that runs through all of the Twelve Steps. Most people will admit that there is some power greater than themselves. For the active alcoholic this power is, in most cases, the bottle. A.A. suggests that he substitute another power, pow-er, whatever he may choose to call it, and switch his dependence depend-ence from alcohol to his newly-found newly-found concept. These are the Twelve Steps of A.A.: 1. We admitted we were powerless over alcohol that cur lives had become unmanageable. unman-ageable. 2. Made f decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understand under-stand Him. 4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. 5. Admitted to God, to ourselves our-selves and to another ' human being the exact nature of our wrongs. 6. Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects de-fects of character. 7. Humbly asked Him to remove re-move our shortcomings. 8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all. 9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others. 10. Continued to take personal person-al inventory and when we were wrong, promptly admitted it. 11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying pray-ing only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out. 12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to practice these principles in all our affairs. Most A.A. members are quick to point out that all the principles prin-ciples expressed in the Twelve Steps can be found in the teachings tea-chings of various spiritual leaders lead-ers in the past. These Steps, plus the ability of one alcoholic alcohol-ic to identify with another, make the A.A. program effective. SLINKY Ruby red cotton fashions a stylish jump-suit with the look of the 30's. By Parkland of Dallas, it's accessorized acces-sorized with a long, trailing paisley scarf. 1 l ODD STATE! f f) I A AMAZING! lh RADIO PERFORMER IS ACTUALLY HEARD BV HOME LISTENERS BEFORE HE 19 HEARD BV HIS OWN STUDIO AUDIENCE I SPEAKING OF SOUND SECUR.ITISS LETS TALK ABOUT U.S. SAVINGS BONPS: THEY REPRESENT VOi? FAITH IN YOUR COUNTR.YS FUTURE, SO... YOU CAN BE A GOOD PATRIOT AND A PRUDENT SAVER. AT THE SAME TIME.' California extends farther north than the southernmost part of canada... and farther south than the northernmost point of mexico.' , MEXICO Or CUUKSH . . . 70U KNOW THAT THERE IS NO CHARGE FOR BUYING OR REDEEMING U. $. SAVINGS BONDS! EANDH BONDS ARE REGISTERED IN THE OWNER'S NAME AND ARE REPLACEABLE IF THEY ARE LOST, STOLEN OR DESTROYED! i |