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Show Regional welfare banquet set Friday II mm The Springville Regional Welfare Banquet will be held Friday at 7 p.m. in the Springville North Stake Center. Tickets for the fund-raising event may be obtained from ward bishops. Funds will be used toward the purchase of equipment to be used on the regional welfare farm. President Glendon Johnson of Kolob Stake will be conducting with President Calvin Packard, Springville North Stake, giving the welcome. A menu of pit barbecue beef, baked potato with sour cream, baked beans, creamed peas and carrots, cole slaw, hard rolls, and pie alamode will be served. A special slide-film presentation prepared by Rell G. Francis entitled "Feed my Sheep" will be the highlight of the program. The presentation includes in-cludes a history of the regional welfare farm since its inception, with sound and narration, along with pictures charting the silkworm industry, horse-drawn thresher era, the beet fields, sugar factory, onions, swine, and various other welfare projects in the area. Other program numbers will include musical talent from each of the four stakes in the region. President Grant S. Thorn, Springville Stake, will be the concluding speaker. February 22, 1979 Section Two . h I Women gymnastics meet slated here Saturday Klder Jon T. (roncman, son of Shirl and Marilyn G r o n e in a n of Springville, will be the speaker in sacrament meeting Sunday, February 25, in the Springville Fourth Ward, 400 North and 400 Kast, at 12:30 p.m. He enters the Mission Training (enter on March 8 prior to departure to the Texas San Antonio (Spanish speaking) Mission. An open house will be held following at 258 N. 100 K. Nearly 50 of the best women gymnasts from the entire state of Utah will converge on Springville this Saturday as Springville High School hosts the USGF Class II state women's gymnastics finals. Entrants En-trants will range in age from 9-17 and come from gymnastics clubs thoughout Utah. The hosting club for this annual event is the Provo School of Gymnastics directed by Brad Cat-termole. Cat-termole. Cattermole, who also serves as the meet director for this event said, "The United States Gymnastics Federation (USGF) sponsors three levels of nationally-recognized nationally-recognized women's gymnastics competition. Class II is the intermediate in-termediate level of gymnastics. Many of the performers who Springville residents can see Saturday will become some of Utah's finest women gymnasts in Class I and Elite competition in the future. Local gymnastics coaches ; Gaye Lindsay of Springville High School, Randy Brown of Art City Creative & Gymnastics, and Jay Smith of Park Ro-She stated that Springville gymnasts have not yet reached a level of competence to perform in a Class II competition. However, they are hopeful for the near future. Cattermole also pointed that these girls represent the top 60 or 70 gymnastis in the State of Utah, which has approximately 10,000 aspiring women gymnasts. The all-day event begins at 10 a.m. with compulsory exercises exer-cises and 2 p.m. with optional. The public is invited to attend and admission is free. Kolob Stake Welfare Farm, shown with men and boys at work in the fields about l!H(i, grew more than crops. Work on the farm also made men of boys. LeRoy Tingey, left, was farm manager. Ron Graves, kneeling in center beside Mr. Tingey. is now serving as a bishop in Mapleton. President Ernest A. Strong, under whose supervision the welfare farm was begun, is on right. A history of the welfare program in the Springville-Mapleton region will be given Friday night at a special fund-raising banquet. Farm Bureau dinner Flea-market garage-sale postponed meetings scheduled Susan ( randall is the Senior of the Week at Springville High. She is the daughter of Lynn and Marilyn (randall. She is presently serving ser-ving as studentbody treasurer, a u d secretary and treasurer for the Ski Club. Susan enjoys sewing. skiing, snow mobiling, and all sports. Alter graduating this Spring she intends to further her education by attending at-tending beauty school. Two local Farm Bureau dinner meetings have been scheduled for the coming week. First, local Farm Bureau members will have a dinner meeting at Bart's Catering, Saturday, Satur-day, February 24, at 7 p.m. Those wishing reservations may telephone local president Paul Prior at 489-7309. There is a charge for dinner. All Farm Bureau members are invited to attend the Farm Bureau's Winter Convention Thursday, March 1, at the Orem Senior Citizen Center, 85 N. 400 E., Orem, at 7 p.m. Local members may contact Mr. Prior for tickets. Ellis Armstrong former Director of Utah Highways High-ways and Bureau of Reclamation engineer, will be the keynote speaker. His subject is "Energy." He has a number of projects and awards to his credit, including the J. R. Talmage certificate from BYU. Girl Scouts to get new emblem A new emblem for the 67-year-old, 3 million-member million-member Girl Scout movement in the U. S. A. will be introduced March 11 by Utah Girl Scout Council. Its first appearance ap-pearance locally will be in churches throughout Utah, White Pine County, Nevada and Fredonia, Arizona on Girl Scout Sunday as part of the church bulletin. The emblem is a dramatic redesign of the trefoil, a three-leaf clover shape used in various adaptations by Girl Scouts and Girl Guides Postponement of the giant flea market-garage sale for the American Family Monument was announced Saturday by Mrs. Byron (Edna) Done, chairman of the garage sale committee. The sale will be held on April 7, when more suitable weather is anticipated, Mrs. Done Explained. Originally scheduled for the last week in February, the sale will now be held in the National Guard Armory 222 W. 500 North, Mrs. Done said. In the meantime a plea for individual donations for the monument, to be created by Dr. Avard Fairbanks, is going ahead in the county said Dr. Virginia F. Cutler, monument committee chairman. In Provo at the present time BYU students are soliciting contributions under the direction of Diane Murphy, who heads the "good cause" fund-raising fund-raising committee, Dr. Cutler said. Others working on funds raising include Gordon Bullock of the Chamber of Commerce and ex-Mayor Verl Dixon of Provo. "Any of these individuals would be happy to talk with anyone about donations to the monument," Dr. Cutler said. "We hope this garage sale will bring in thousands of dollars," she added hopefully. I'M? 9 litf::' ' ' omH Km i;::in.ji.i.A:ihmmmmmmmmmiwMmMiun t ,itwi aH"" ImwwhhhwJ Springville Middle School Chorus, under the direction of Mr. Evans, will present a concert tonight at 6 o'clock. The public is invited and there is no charge. Mrs. Dalton, representing the Continental Bakery in Salt Lake visited the two second grade classes at Brookside School on Tuesday. She taught them about bread making process in connection with the "World of Work" unit on the bakery. The children were given a complimentary miniature loaf of Won-derbread Won-derbread and a Hostess Twinkle. 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