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Show Page Two - The Springville Herald - March here entertainment there, Looking for help tracing your family line? One of these genealogists will be available to help you on Sunday, March 4 from 1 :30 to 7 p.m. at the Genealogical Workshop in the Harold B., Lee Library, BYU Campus. They are from left, Margrette Madsen, Roberta Drissler, Colleen Anderson, Katie Mason, Doris Booth, and Pearl Augustus. Others not pictured are Jeff and Dorcie Blake, ( aptola Murdock, Robert Lundgren, Dave and Carol Nuttall, Maurine Colvin, Joyce Muhlestein, Catherine Enslow, Michael and Jackie Gelotte and Blanche Larson. Four generation help available Need help verifying the information on your family group sheets? A well qualified staff of volunteers will be available from 1:30 to 7 p.m. at the Genealogical Workshop to be held Sunday, March 4 at the Western dance set District 5 Riding Club Western Dance; Sponsored Spon-sored by Saddle Dusters Riding Club will be held at 8 p.m., March 10, at the Spanish Fork Memorial Building. Open to everyone 18 years old or older. Music will be by the "Country Pickers" There will be a drawing for prizes. Tickets will be sold at the door or by any member of the Saddle Dusters. Grobben's Pizza pan 25 North Main 489-9484 Monday Night Special Vi gallon of soda pop FREE with purchase of 14" Pizza vMNfi w M PRINGVILll HMIB Harold B. Lee Library on the BYU Campus. Mini classes covering family group records, Book of Remebrance, notekeeping, gazetteers and maps, home records, biographies, vital records, Temple Records Index Bureau, Computer File Index, family group records and pedigree charts, Early LDS Records, and Temple Records will be offered. Talents for all times scheduled Talents for all Times, an evenings entertainment en-tertainment scheduled for Friday, March 2, at7 p.m. by the Springville Tenth Ward, 355 East Center Street, just might be the remedy you need to combat "cabin fever" or the "winter blahs". Eye appealing crafts and hobbies are sure to provide you with enthusiasm en-thusiasm and motivation to start you on your own TWIN DRIVE-IN IS! I. Ilik, Km. 174 0111 SHOWS ELECTRIC 7:00 HEATERS hebcM hwo-lHHir vacation in tonn! All JT UST fs VAWW co-nitTHEDEEP il HI hit r 5 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INTKMOKS" Di m: m;vk MtlSTINCItlllTI'll CO. UST MCTUH LAST YEAI t ANNIE HAll ft W F' mni m mmm ft war m lUBiLI Kl Carriers for the PRINBVIIL Thursday mornings. Apply in person at The 161 South Main 1, 1979 Pre-school photos set Brookside School PTA will again sponsor preschool pictures. These pictures will be available to all preschool children in Springville and Mapleton. Pictures will be taken Friday March 2 from 9:30 a.m. - 12 noon, and 1 - 6 p.m. Adams Studio will be taking the pictures. A packet will be $3.25 and will include 1 - 5 by 7, 1-3 by 5, 2 large wallets, 4 mini wallets. We will be taking appointments ap-pointments February 26 at the Brookside School 489-4241. For any more information in-formation contact Glenna Prior 489-7309. particular projects, while a fast moving "talent show", including a road show presentation, singing, disco dancing, jazz band, monologues, original poetry and even a Pied Piper clown who will lead your young children into a storybook world, are all "prescribed" to bring a sparkle to your eye and spring to your step. Interested? We hope so. Please come and join with us for a special evening. Everyone invited. in-vited. Of the 2.3 million ex-military ex-military personnel who will receive $5.3 billion in Veterans Adminstration service connected disability payments this year, some 500,000 are Vietnam Era veterans. More than one half of ihe men and women who have worn America's uniform in wartime are still alive. Some 38.9 million have participated since the earliest days of our nation with nearly 26.5 million war veterans still living. Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow ye diet. William Gilmore Beymer HERO. ce a week delivery, Power linemen ! fner by Utah Tech Electrical power linemen-both those now working in industry and students who wish to enter the field-will be trained by Utah Technical College at Provo-Orem under a new program recently approved ap-proved by the Utah Tech Instituional Council. President Wilson W. Sorensen made the announcement an-nouncement following the council approval, and said the project will be under the direct charge of Carl Crawford, instructor in the UTC Technology Division. Mark Prothero, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Prothero, was named Scout of the Month for January from the Springville Stake. A member of the 10th Ward Blazer Scout Patrol, Mark is working toward his Star. He likes scouting and all sports, especially basketball and baseball. I Metric rulers given to area students by Central Bank & Trust Metric Rulers were distrubuted to 18,000 Provo and Nebo School District students this week in an effort to assist students in learning the metric system of measurement. The Central Bank and Trust Company of Utah County sponsored the ruler distribution in cooperation with district and school officials. HliHBNHHHlil! Division of Wildlife Resources Regional supervisor Rodney John, left, Dennis Shirley, information specialist, right, and Kevin Cherry, center, on front row, are just three of the 55 DWR officers representing six counties at a Central Region business meeting and training session Tuesday. The meeting was held in Springville Community Service Center to schedule goals and objectives of the DWR for the next few months. DWR is remodeling the former Federal Fish Hatchery buildings on North Main Street here which hopefully will be ready for occupancy by July, Mr. Shirley said. Channel Is now on the Cable as Channel 13 Springville Cable TV 595 So. Main Springville, Utah, 489-6372 Mr. Crawford said the program is the answer to a request from half a dozen muncipalities in Utah and south Salt Lake Counties who either have municipal power plants or their own power distribution systems. They include Provo, Springville, Salem, Payson, Lehi and Murray, plus the Strawberry Water Users Association. These agencies, said Mr. Crawford, have been sending their linemen to Mesa College in Grand Junction, Colo., where such a training program exists--but have requested Utah Tech to provide one which will be a considerable savings in travel and subistence expenditures to the organizations involved. Accordingly, the College's Institutional Council, an advisory group of business and industry experts chair-maned chair-maned by Grant Burgon, Supervisor of the Utah Valley Hospital, approved ap-proved the program for Utah Tech. LaVar Rockwood, dean of administrative services ser-vices at the college, said a five-acre plot on the northwest portion of the Orem Campus will be set aside for the new training facilities. These will include construction of power poles, , lines, transformers, underground un-derground lines, meter equipment and anything else necessary to train a lineman. It will be an outside facility, with no enclosed building contemplated. con-templated. Mr. Crawford, a lineman and meterman All Provo, Springville, Mapleton, Salem and Spanish Fork elemen-taries, elemen-taries, Junior and senior high schools were contacted con-tacted between February 20 and 22. Teachers were encouraged en-couraged to use the rulers in conjunction with lessons on the metric system, which the United States will be totally converting to in the near future. $470,000 State Farm State Farm Mutual, largest auto insurer in Utah, will return 3.1 percent of its Utah customers' premium to them as dividends beginning April 15, according ac-cording to Regional Vice Let us help your tax return in the privacy of your own home. AUDIT PROTECTION INTER TAX Thanks to sponsors The Springville Community Basketball League committee members and all league players wish to thank six of the fine merchants here in Springville for their contribution in sponsoring teams. Without their help the basketball season would not have been the big success it was. This help was especially needed' because this was the first time the league had ever been organized here in Springville. Without their help the league may have never gotten off the ground. THANKS to these fine merchants, Mor-tensen's Mor-tensen's Plumbing, Miner's Auto, Steffens Realty, Pioneer Drive Inn, Jon's Tip Top Shoes and Grobben's Pizza Pan. tor Utah Power and Light until he joined the Utah Tech faculty two years ago, said it is hoped the facility will be completed by May in time to be used in a summer school course. It will be incorporated as part of Utah Tech's regular daytime curriculm, he said, thus training students who wish to become linemen, as well as employees of the cities incolved. Mr. Crawford said Utah Power and Light has its own in-service training program for linemen, but has indicated cooperation where possible with Utah Tech in getting the program started. -Jl 6TS Ck """"V Central Bank & Trust Company, represented by F. Calvin Packard, chairman and president, and Alice Graham, employee; present metric rulers to Superintendent J. Wayne Nelson and Dr. George Puckett, Springville High School principal. Some 18,000 rulers were distributed by the bank to Provo and Nebo districts. refunded to customers President Robert D. Bischoff. The company insures 176,000 vehicles in the state. , The total amount of the dividend in Utah is expected ex-pected to be about $470,000. you prepare Call 798-3189 afternoon & evenings Kiwanis Cub last week heard guest speaker Myrlfc Bu Farm Bureau. She spoke on "Water, the L. e Blood of Money, right, assisted by showing s. ides . erry .JJHE Tonight s meeting will feature William Pratt as tne guei v Knight as toastmaster. All club members are encouraged to attend. Ernesto Olascoga and his wife Judith were guests at the Springville Rotary Club meeting Wednesday night Feb. 14. Also pictured is the club president Craig Taylor. ErniKToisNjie recipient of a Rotary Foundation Award, which allows him a year of graduate study at B.Y.U. in Organization Behavior. Ernesto Er-nesto told about how NC Received the Award from Rotary Foundation and about Mexico. Ernesto and Judith are from Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Charlie Lowery. :. im, l BYU this week The department of theater and cinematic arts at Brigham Young University has designated March 8 as "Fred Adams Day" in honor of the visit of the Utah Shakespearean Festival founder. Adams, currently the artistic director of the Cedar City-based festival, will be the featured speaker at an assembly on Thursday, March 8. The discussion, scheduled for 10 a.m. in the Harris Fine Arts Center Nelke Experimental Theater, is open to the public. No personal consideration con-sideration should stand in the way of performing a public duty. Ulysses S.Grant hoy One WITH THIS COUPON we'll give you a medium-sized Pizza Hut pizza free when you buy any large-sized pizza at the regular price. Or a small pizza free with the purchase of any medium-sized pizza at the regular price. Choose famous regular or pile on the toppings with new SuperStyle. The free pizza will be the same type and have the same number of toppings as the pizza purchased. One coupon per customer per visit. Not gooa wun oiner coupons, uooa at an participating pizza Valid through March U, 1979 I I I L Springville - 330 North Heber City - 750 Main - Cash value 1 ?0 cnnl ItolPfl It is thy duty oftentimes to do what thou wouldst not; thy duty, too, to leave undone that thou wouldst do. Sprfimg IMseTtaw - Get TMNext Smaller Irce Main - 489-5660 654-3637 PAYSON'S BEAUTIFUL HUISH THEATRE OPEN 7 START 7:15 ONE WEEK - FEB. 28 MAR. 6 STARRING TUE. LADIES NITE cimp OPEN 6:30 '" SHOW 7:00 ' t ATRt s tl k ai r way to begn a love affar ? JEFF AIAJMI rmrrr in. urn .Xi S hJ ODY KILLKDtlCDo tc Ni mill- kiliMjumn Vwiuhm i AM IN) HHirtr-liN . Ni'il litM,.. EYES OHAUKAMAKS Hut restaurants Including: inS JllfgD) r m a AUMLD I |