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Show Weather Hie Springville Junior High School weather station reports that fair and warmer weather should continue con-tinue until Friday evening with temperatures in the mid 60'$. Hi ere will be generally stormy conditions with a chance of precipitation from Saturday through Sunday evening. Gearing and fair weather is forecast for Monday through Wednesday. Volume Eighty-one Sprinkling restricted Effects of the drought hit home this week when Jack Windley, Water Department superintendent, announced an-nounced that restrictions on outside watering and sprinkling will become effective immediately. All residences east of 1000 East including in-cluding the Hall subdivision, will be restricted to watering on Tuesdays from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. on Wednesday. Everyone living east of the city limits on Canyon Road and in Hobble Creek Canyon homes, will be restricted to watering and sprinkling on Wed .. Blair Sargent Art museum names Two Springville residents have been elected to the Board of Trustees of the Springville Museum of Art. Blair Sargent, a former member of the Springville City Council, former member of the Kiwanis Club, and currently a member of the Museum Board, was re-elected to another term by the Art Association membership. Robert L. Marshall, noted water-colorist, water-colorist, and chairman of the Brigham Young University Art Department, was elected to his first term on the Board. Jessie Dalton and Paul Thorn are retiring from the Board. Mr. Marshall's works have been shown at the Springville Museum and in major watercolor exhibitions across the country. He recently returned from a half year of teaching and painting in Spain. Mapleton hikes solid waste Mapleton City councilmen met April 19 for their bi-monthly meeting and discussed installation of a new well pump at the city building, a $3 per month increase for solid waste removal, future fire protection, the Main Street road project and bids for a city tennis court. Councilman Don Korth reported that the discharge line to the new well pump at the city building has been installed and it is expected that the pump itself will be in place by April 29. The old pump was reported to be outdated and didn't have the capacity of the replacement. Korth said the new pump will have about one and one half times the capacity of the old pump, but that its full capacity won't be realized until the lines to the well can be replaced with larger ones. The addition of larger lines is expected to be completed along with the Center Street Reconstruction Project which is scheduled for 1978. Mapleton residents will be paying an additional $3 per month for solid waste removal. Councilman Johnnie Bleggi suggested the increase and stated that at the end of six months the council would review the fees again in order to make any further adjustments. The fee increase was unanimously passed. In other council matters, Mayor Norman Graves reported that the county council of governments is conducting a survey of the municipalities in the county in order to provide recommendations for future fire protection. Councilman Morris Warren was suggested by the Mayor to be Mapleton's representative in the survey. Mayor Graves also reported that Commissioner Kenneth Pinegar requested a meeting with the city council to discuss the purchase of rights-of-way for the Main Street Road Project. nesdays from 8 a.m. to Thursdays at 8 a.m. More restrictions will follow in about a week for the remainder of the city, Mr. Windley said. Bartholomew Springs, which serves the East Springville area, is practically dry, Mr. Windley explained, and there is no way to pump water from the city wells into the springs. Hie city's water supply from Bartholomew Bar-tholomew springs usually is low at this time of the year, he said, but generally picks up later. However, the un- Robert Marshall two new trustees Museum Director L. Ross Johnson said the museum's art collection is actually owned by some 300 members of the Springville Art Association, and that they in turn are represented by the Board of Trustees which formulates policy for the museum. Other current Board members are: Karl W. Allred, Stanley Burningham, Hal Clyde, Kenneth Creer, Bert L. Fullmer, George Puckett, Clarence Jensen (treasurer), and Janet Packard (secretary). Study until twenty-five, investigation until forty, profession until sixty, at which age I would have him retired on a double allowance. In youth the days are short and the years are long ; in old age the yars are short and the days long. f It , i miijni nTri mill iiimi rnrirr-ril Work is progressing on the new well pump being installed at the Mapleton City Building. It is expected that the pump itself will be in place by April 29. The new pump will have about one and a half times the capacity of the old pump, according ac-cording to city councilman Don Korth. 1 SPRINGVILLE, UTAH 8466:i seasonable warm weather coupled with the low water level, makes it doubtful that the water supply will pick up. The new water tank and system currently being installed will help relieve the situation after August, Mr. Windley added. Ditches in the city have been cleaned and Strawberry water is expected to be turned into them this Monday, Mr. Windley explained. Plat A irrigation will then be available, supplemented by the Strawberry water, he said. Amblyopia clinics to be held here A free Amblyopia clinic will be held for pre-school children in Springville and Mapleton on Thursday, May 5. This screening is to detect eye problems in 3Ms to 5 year old children before they enter school. The Springville clinic will be held May 5 from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Grant School multi-purpose room. The Mapleton clinic will be held May 5 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the auditorium of the Mapleton school. 'Con-men' hit area Springville Police Chief Leland Bowers has issued a warning to local residents that there are people in the area attempting to defraud people with faulty roof repairs. One elderly woman , here already wrote a check for alleged roof repair, but quick action by relatives, bank officials and the police saved her from being defrauded of funds in her bank account. Chief Bowers said that the con-men generally approach widows and older residents with an offer to repair leaky roofs with a "Magic Sealer" containing only crank case oil with a silver pigment added. Usually the alleged contractors agree to do the job for a nominal amount, then talk the elderly person into paying much more for the completed com-pleted work. Chief Bowers explained that the entire operation is "semi-legal" and does not come within the realm of fraud, but is "clearly an attempt to get as close as possible to it." Any citizens suspecting .such a confidence game in the city are urged to report to the police. Citizens are also urged to do business with reputable businesses located in the area to avoid being victimized. removal fees torn APRIL 28. 1977 What could be a greater attraction on a sunny spring day than a host of dandelions growing by the roadside at least to little girls on their way to school looking for flowers for their teachers. Sue Ellen Matteson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred 'Swede' Matteson, and Lisa Anne 9 A total of 44 Springville residents and five Mapleton residents graduated from Brigham Young University in exercises held last Thursday and Friday, according to a release received from the school. They were among 2,361 students who received diplomas at the 102nd Commencement. These graduates, in addition to the 1,032 who received degrees in December, brought the total for the school year to 3,393. Area students and North Stake slates weekend conference President F. Calvin Packard of the Springville Utah North Stake announces an-nounces that Stake Quarterly Conference Con-ference will be held this coming Saturday and Sunday, April 30 and May 1. The Saturday evening session will be held at 7 p.m. in the 13th-18th Ward Chapel. The theme will be "Family Organization and Records." All adult members of the stake are invited to attend this meeting. There will be no Sunday Morning Leadership Meeting. The Sunday morning Conference General Session will be held in the 13th-18th Ward Mapleton fire chief urges cooperation Mapleton fire chief Roy Evans and his assistant chiefs Mac Mathews and Winn Everett are making a plea to Mapleton citizens for their cooperation in doing spring burning. Because of the extreme dryness and the conservation of water, they are requesting that persons doing burning obtain fire burning permits by telephoning one of them or Neil Steiner. Burning hours are from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Citizens are also requested to telephone one of them for help if the fire gets out of control. Utah State Presn p, 0. Box 1337 .Salt Lake City, itr rrr Price 20c re " ' 1 ;Wt Wr , degrees earned are: Dr. George Calvin Puckett; associate degrees, Kathryn A. Sumsion, Jane Jenkins, Tawna Clyde, Robert Wayne Goodell, Kristina Ren-cher; Ren-cher; master's degrees, John Weston Thacker, Gregory Dalian Clark, Kim B. Henrie; Danny Kay Lovingier. Bachelor degrees were earned by Steven W. Anderson, Jay Marcel Boyer, RaNae Christensen, Richard L. Conder, Patricia Wynn Ensign, Mary Louise Gammell, Carl Howard Haymond, David John Jensen, Cheryl A. Ransom Ran-som Miner, Richard Reed Nielsen, Thane R. Sid-doway, Sid-doway, Michael N. Stansfield, Vicki J. Smith Voros. Others are Craig B. Argyle, Donna Rae Carpenter, Alison Eve Craig, Richard Walter Fowler, Julie Ruth Johnson, Craig Keith Miner, Douglas Lynn Peterson, Joanne Jenkins Rice, Thomas Hugh Smith, James Edwin Sumsion, Brent J. Thorn, Chapel at 10 a.m. Everyone is urged to attend this session. President Packard states that President Eldon Cooley of the Utah-Salt Lake Mission will be in attendance at the conference. Land owners seek planning commission A meeting has been called for Monday, May 2, at 8:30 p.m. in the Community Service Center (Chamber of Commerce building) 175 S. Main St reel , by the West Springville property owners to formulate plans to establish a district planning commission. The group will select three commissioners, com-missioners, outline their boundaries, name the district, and sign the petition to make it legal to submit to the county commissioners. The group is desirous of electing commissioners who will represent large, medium and small acreage land owners. Public meeting set Springville Police Department announces an-nounces a public meeting to be held 2 May, 1977, at 7 p.m., at the police station. The purpose of the meeting will be to form a Motorcycle Association. Assn. Utah O Number Seventeen i hi M and Karen Marie Cook, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Cook, just couldn't resist picking a bouquet for teacher at just about one minute to nine on Monday morning. Dandelions Dan-delions and kids ... a sure sign of spring ! Keith Louis White, Kerry Don Bird, Robert A. Cheatham. Mark Alan Davis, Rodger LeRoy Ful wider, Catherine Ann Guttery, Robdrt John Naylor, Richard Carlos Rife, Linda Ann Snow, Rodney K. Torgersen. Mapleton students earning degrees are Carol Clement (BAC), Sherrie Clement (BAC), Camille Fullmer (BAC), Catherine E. Taylor (AC), Beverly Ann Walker (BAC). Herald hires new summer editor Roger William Taylor, University of Utah journalism major, has been named summer editor of the Springville Herald. He will assume editorial duties next week. Herald editor Oneita Sumsion will be taking the summer off. Mr. Taylor graduated from University of Utah with a Bachelor of Science Degree in sociology in 1976, and earned another Bachelor of Science Degree in March of 1977 with a journalism jour-nalism major. He was a staff writer for the Daily Utah Chronicle and worked as a staff writer -photographer with Model Neighborhood Neigh-borhood News in Salt Lake City. He is 27 years old, married, and enjoys skiing, tennis and golf. Persons with news to report should contact Mr. Taylor at the Springville Herald office on weekdays. News deadline is still Tuesdays at noon. 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