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Show Page Six The Springville Herald November 11, 1976 Jeune Mere Club hears program . on wills, trusts The Jeune Mere Club met at the home of Margaret Blackett. Florence Nielsen, president, conducted a short business meeting. The club decided to make a baby quilt for the Festival of the Trees. A new member was voted upon. The Christmas Party was discussed. Chairman Zora Hales reported that the party would be held at the Wilkinson Center. A good program has been arranged and each member will invite guests. Naomi Carndall was in charge of the program. She introduced Don Strong, who discussed "Wills and Trusts." He stated that anyone who does not set his estate in order is only fooling himself, for if he doesnt make provisions, the state will and it is never the way a person wants it. He said the "first death" is usually taken care of, but the surviving spouse leaves it at that and does nothing more, which Causes the big problems and disappointments when they - realize too late what the law requires. '. He commented that it is usually cheaper in the long run, to get professional advice and that it is more simple than persons realize. There is nothing magical about wills and trusts, but there are certain rules to follow, and to do so saves untold problems and often much ex- pense. The safest advice when one wants to know what he should do, is to ask professional ' advice. The group responded with many wuestions. It was an informative in-formative and interesting evening. Guests were Mrs. Don Strong, Kay Smith and daughter Shauna from Bountiful and Ann Peay from Mapleton. Delicious refreshments were served to 18 persons. FLORIDA "The Sunshine State" became the 27th State, 1845. Where do circuses go in the winter? To Sarasota, Florida. Besides circuses in the winter, Florida has hogs that fish and cows that dunk. On Lake George, hogs swim out in the shallow water to catch their fish dinners. The bottom of the lake is covered with thick grass, so cows wade in the dunk their heads underwater to reach their I Whirlpool MAJOR APPLIANCES ZEE. t Anderson's Furniture 188 South Main Springville 489-4641 Did you ever want to every penny count? Ma SEW V3Lv GIFTS W5V V TWV 1 1 1 r T . You can learn how to do it. We're the Consumer Information Center of the government. And our free catalog lists over 200 booklets, brochures, and publications that tell you how to do a lot of different things. You'll find brochures about growing vegetables in tiny gardens About food and nutrition. Home repairs, health and recreation. Even about buying a used car. How to get the catalog that lists them all? V- us i w -?,. w ---'.-sir'i f" '! - " VB I -L . If ''' 'V fyi Mv WfA fih hi ' ' p Caryn Salisbury, John Teuscher Miss Caryn Salisbury to become Mrs. John Teuscher November 19 On Friday, November 19, Caryn Salisbury will become the bride of John Teuscher. The ceremony will be performed in the Provo LDS Temple. Caryn is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Salisbury of Springville. John's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Teuscher of Montpelier, Idaho. A reception will be held the same evening at the Springville First and 12th Ward. The couple will further be honored at an open house in Montpelier, on Saturday, November 20. Miss Salisbury is a graduate of Springville High School. She is currently attending Brigham Young University. Mr. Teuscher is a graduate of Bear Lake High School in Montpelier Idaho. He served a mission in the California Arcadia Mission and is now attending BYU. The bride-to-be has chosen Cindy Salisbury, her sister, as maid of honor. Other bridesmaids will be Vickie Salisbury, Kathy Teuscher, Mary Teuscher and LuAnn Bird. Bruce Teuscher and Rick Salisbury will perform the duties of best man. Ushers will be Jim Salisbury, Lynn Teuscher, Wayne Tuescher, and James Teuscher. Special guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Frank Salisbury and Mr. and Mrs. John H. Teuscher, grandparents of the couple. food. At Hialeah Park, near Miami, the pink flamingos eat only with their' heads upside down! Florida has about 30,000 lakes more than any other state. It also has the longest highway ever built over ocean waters. The Overseas Highway runs from Miami to Key West, spanning the islands called the Florida Keys, at the end of the peninsula of Florida. Florida tans are famous. Northern visitors acquire them at Florida's sandy beaches and winter resorts. Florida's jungles are famous, too. In the swampy Everglades deer and panthers roam, and alligators sun themselves. Where can you eat grapefruit and oranges right from the trees? In Florida, where for CHRISTMAS! FOR ALL THE FAMILY Pillows Quilts Jackets . Lingerie, Etc. Grannies' Fabrics 274 South Main Springville o o know how to manage your money to make , - Just send in the coupon. Sir" "SSBf I Send to: - U Ml Angle Walker, daughter of former residents Wes and Chris Walker who now live in Salt Lake City, will celebrate her first birthday on November 17. Her grandparents grand-parents are Mr. and Mrs. Russell F. Walker of Mapleton and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Weight, Jr. of Springville. vegetables and sugar cane are also raised. From Florida's forests comes our main supply of cypress lumber. And from her IFcee cattalldDg. mm mmi mm mm mm mm mm mm mm Mas mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm I'd like to know how to. Please send me your free catalog that lists over 2()0 government booklets, brochures, and publications. -Sl.it Consumer Information Center Pueblo, Colorado 8 KXW Yjew -Arrivals Nov. 4 Boy to Lonnie and Sandra Sharp Baum, 287 N. Main St., Springville. Nov. S Boy to Thomas and Karl a Beckham Whittle, 850 N. Main St., No. 30, Springville. Girl to Randall and Sarah Tanner Boyer, 945 E. 150 N., Springville. Oct 4 Boy to Lynn and Joey Hollingshead Harris, 740 E. 400 N., Mapleton. Oct. 31 Boy, Peter Ulysesses Worfgar, to Golden and Susan Gappmayer Banks, Springville. A girl, born Nov. 2 at Utah Valley Hospital to Glenn and Donna Lou Holmes. The baby has three brothers. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fay Johnson of Sacramento, Calif.; paternal grandmother is Mrs. Norma Holmes of Springville. Mrs. Johnson is visiting with the Holmes family and helping with the care of her new grandchild. 2 ominp Cventi Members of the Home Culture Club will meet Friday at 3 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Waldo Jackson. The We Readers will meet Thursday at 8 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Maurice Bird. Paula Jones will talk about the books and services of the Springville library. THE EDITOR'S HEADACHE Getting out this publication is no picnic. If we print jokes, people say we are silly. If we don't, they say we are too serious. If we stick close to the office all day, we ought to be around hunting material. If we get out and try to hustle, we ought go be on the job in the office. If we don't print contributions, we don't appreciate genius. And if we do print them, the paper is full of junk! If we edit the other fellow's stuff, we're too critical. If we don't, we're asleep. If we clip things from other magazines, we are too lazy to write them ourselves. . Now, like as not, some guy will say we copied this from some magazine. We did. Come, ye saints, look here and wonder, See the place where Jesus lay; He has borne our sins away; Joyful tiding, Yes, the Lord has risen today. Hallelujah! Hallelujah! On the' third morning He arose, Bright with victory o'er his foes. Sing we lauding, and applauding, Hallelujah! Tell me what you eat, and I .. will tell you what you are. pine trees comes much of our turpentine. There's cigar making at Tampa, and sponge fishing at nearby Tarpon Springs. What is the oldest town in the U.S.? St. Augustine, Florida, the first permanent white settlement set-tlement in the U.S., founded about 1565. The U.S. Air Force Missile Test Center is located at Florida's Cape Canaveral. From the cape's launching platforms, huge rockets thunder into space. Explorer I, America's first earth . satellite, was launched from Canaveral. So were our first astronauts. v ; 7iP Servient information Admmtftlralion Ontm is Af Janiel Averett and Susan Roach, chairmen of bazaar items; Helen Whitney, ' general chairman; Susan Johnson and Marilyn Mor-tensen, Mor-tensen, co-chairmen of the cook book project, pose beside a number of items to be offered for Lin 1 THE FAT-SOLUBLE VITAMINS Vitamin A, the first of the fat-soluble fat-soluble vitamins, is best known for its prevention of night blindness. But it's also important in maintaining main-taining your skin and mucous membranes. Without enough vitamin A, the moistness and pliability of your eyelids would dry up. Dry, rough, itching skin could also result. PROOF OF vitamin A's importance impor-tance was dramatically demonstrated demon-strated in Denmark during World War II. Because of extreme shortages short-ages of this vitamin over a long period of time, Danish children developed an eye disease called xerophthalmia. They had been getting only skim milk. Many lost their eyesight. When whole milk was restored to the diets of Danish children, the disease was brought under con Pre Thanksgiving Holiday Special on our O'Keefe & Merrit and Amana Radar Ranges Free yourself from the long hours of cooking this year with a microwave from Davis Interiors If ir.i Vc5Ju AND WHILE THEY LAST 19" Zenith chromacolor portable T.V. only a few left at the ridiculous price of only $399 Come and Shop At "FURNITURE Doctor in the Kitchen" by Laurence M. Hursh, M.D. Consultant, National Dairy Council trol. The factor needed was the vitamin A in milk fat and butter. And what does vitamin D do for us? ALL OF our bone structures must have a proper balance of calcium and phosphorus if they are to grow and maintain themselves. them-selves. Vitamin D assists in getting get-ting calcium and phosphorus from the intestinal tract into the blood ant then it again sees to it that calcium and phosphorus are deposited in bone where they are needed. If this process fails, for lack of vitamin D, bones do not calcify. In the young, such disease is known as rickets. In older persons, per-sons, osteoporosis, a bone-softening process, results from lack of vitamin D and of foods such as milk, rich in calcium and phosphorus. phos-phorus. THINGS ARE mm TO BUILD YOUR WOkLD AROUND" 72 North Main Street, Spanish Fork sale in the 18th Ward "Weihnachts Fest" or German Christmas on Friday night. The public is invited to the bazaar, dime-a-dip supper and bake sale. Because milk is our major ' source of calcium, nutritionists long ago recommended that milk be fortified with vitamin D. Today, To-day, most milk is. Read the label. It's true that sunshine striking our skin triggers the production of vitamin D in our bodies but with variations in weather, especially in winter, this source is not evenly reliable. A WORD of warning: Vitamin D can be toxic. So don't go dosing yourself with vitamin D pill supplements. sup-plements. Infants and adults need 400 I.U.'s (International Units) of vitamin D daily. That's the a-mount a-mount in a quart of vitamin D milk. - ' And what of vitamins E and K ? Vitamin E unites with oxygen to help prevent blood cell ruptures caused by oxidizing agents such as the peroxides in unsaturated fatty acids. The daily need for viamin E may be related to how much polyunsaturated fats you consume. con-sume. Vitamin K is essential for normal nor-mal blood coagulation, and recent research has shed light on how it assists in blood clotting. We get vitamin K in our food and it is also synthesized by the bacteria in our intestinal tract. HAPPENING AT mm Other Holiday Special on our 18 cu. ft. Gibson Freezer FU18M2 while they last at unbelievable price 'Weihnachts fest' planned by 18th Ward Friday A "Weihnachts Fest" or German Christmas will be held by the 18th Ward on November 12 at 6 p.m. in the 13th-18th LDS Ward church. The event will feature a bazaar, dime-a-dip supper with both American and German foods, baked goods for sale, specialty German desserts, a cookie tree, white elephant sale, games and movies for the kids, a picture taking booth, and a recipe book sale, .t The recipe book, which was compiled under the direction of Marilyn Mortensen and Susan Johnson, features a variety of tried and true recipes from local cooks. Families are invited to come out and spend the evening and enjoy Christmas shopping and a good meal. Helen Whitney is general chairman of the festival with Susan Roach and Janiel Averett in charge of bazaar items. Brigetta Wing is chairman of a special German dessert booth. Auxiliary holds installation rites Val Matthews was installed as president of Mapleton Firemen Auxiliary at an installation dinner held in Spanish Fork November 4. Other new officers installed include Carrie Morgan, secretary; Sylvia Palmer, historian. Outgoing officers are Peggy Leslie, Elaine Mason and Pat Livingston. Hostesses for the evening were Doris Bulow, Grace Nielsen and Carrie Morgan. Poetry workshop slated Thursday The Utah Valley Chapter of the Utah State Poetry Society will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the home of Mirla Greenwood Thayne, 414 N. 600 E., Provo. Ora Pate Stewart will conduct a workshop on how to organize poems. Anyone interested in writing poetry is invited. |