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Show ISA arf show sef (or next week ,he. Intermountain Society of Artists will hold its Annual Central Utah' ISA Arts and Crafts Show in the city park of Nephi, Utah, on July 13 through 17, Tuesday through Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Artists from all parts of Utah and neighboring states will participate in the art show. (ISA is non-profit organization. Its purpose is to promote Utah art and Utah artists. It provides shows for the artists to display their Work so people may see the art, and become better acquanted with the artists. It brings the art to the people in the cities and towns throughout the state. It also adds a pleasant attraction to the celebration held in the I Adventist s give blood at meeting The old-time camp meeting held recently in Hobble Creek Canyon was (he unique site for a Recent Utah Valley Hospital Blood Bank blood draw. ji Members of the Seventh-Day Advenstist Church donated 48 units of blood to the blood bank as a park of their 1982 Nevada-Utah Conference Camp Meeting, June 21-26. 21-26. $ Pastor Milton M. Hinkle of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Provo, noted that the blood draw was conducted con-ducted for the benefit of lhe community as well as jjhurch members and that it may become an annual jevent. We can live without our friends but not without ,our neighbors. Thomas t uller ;: When your neighbor's ihouse is afire your own 'property is at stake. I Horace I Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Leviticus XIX 18 220 South Main ' 'i 3 d l org 4y I 2oy WKrf 49y area-this time the Ute Stampede. Since the artists use all types of mediums: oils, acrylics, watercolors, Dastels, and inks, there is a wide variety of styles. Local artists and craft artists are invited to exhibit with the ISA. They may call Ina Linton in Salt Lake City at 467-2107. This year an interesting activity will be added to the show. Carl Purcell, Snow College art professor, will give a workshop and lecture on sketching, to the ISA artists on Thursday, July 15, at 1 p.m. If local artists ar-tists are interested in attending this activity, they may call Kaye Greenhalgh in Salt Lake City at 966-1504 or Sandra Johnson in Mt. Pleasant at 462-2318. About 750 SDA Church members attended the week-long educational and spiritual camp on the ranch of Drs. Paul J. and Charles M. Smith in Hobble Creek Canyon. Utah Valley Hospital Administrator, Grant C. Burgon, applauded the members for their willingness to give blood. "We use about 400 pints each month for surgery and emergency center cases," said Mr. Burgon, "and summer is an especially difficult time to keep enough fresh blood on hand. We heartily commend and thank the Seventh-Day Adventist Church members for this valuable contribution." A plague houses. o' both your Shakespeare There is nothing new except what is forgotten. Mile. Rose Bertin Spick and span new. Cervantes There is no under the sun. new thing Pulsar: Quartz Why pay more or settle for less? Pulsar Quartz. Always a beat beyond. In technology. In !7 kWBSm O 4. Thomas K. Davis (Tommy), 16, son of Keith and Marva Davis, received his Eagle Scout Badge in a special Eagle Court of Honor in the Springville North 21st Ward on Sunday, July 4. It was presented by Jack Measom, second counselor in the bishopric and former assistant scoutmaster. Most . of his requirements were earned while in troop no. 64 of the Springville North Fourth Ward under then-Scoutmaster then-Scoutmaster Karl Measom. Tommy has held most leadership positions in his Deacon's and Teachers' Quorums, lis Kagle service project was cleaning the skylights and attic of the Springville Art Museum building. Tommy is active in sports and plays in the Springville High School marching band. Golf play scheduled today Men's Day at Hobble Creek will be today at 5 p.m. President Doug Baxter urges all members to come join the fun. Refreshments and prizes will be available. The champ of the month play for July will be Saturday, July 10, according to Mog Warren, who urges all members to sign up early for times to play. Manti pageant begins ivjo-vjeeh tun tonight The sixteenth annual Mormon Miracle Pageant opens tonight on the south slope of the Manti LDS Temple Hill in Manti, Utah. Beginning around 9:30 p.m., the Pageant will be held July 8, 9 and 10, and 13 through 17. There is no charge and patrons are advised that the evenings are cool and they may need wraps. For 50 weeks of the year Manti is a quiet little country town where farmers tend their lands and livestock, and merchants and businessmen supply the needs of the community. Sheep and cattle graze in nearby pastures, and grain, hay and turkeys are major farm crops. . But for two weeks in mid-July, each year for the past 15 years, Fiir opens dramatic competition Children, teenagers and adults have the opportunity op-portunity to share their dramatic talents with each other at the Annual Drama Competition of the Utah County Fair. Within the three divisions there are performance classifications for children: humorous and dramatic reading; and four classifications for teenagers and adults: humorous and dramatic reading, mime and scenes. There is a five-minute five-minute time limit. Auditions will be held August 7. Participants should submit their name, adress, phone, age and classification to: Mrs. Myrth Burr, 1185 Columbia Lane, Provo, Utah, 84601, (373-5319), or Utah County Fair, 176 E. Center, Provo, Ut 84601. Deadline for registration is August 5. There is a fee to enter. value. 489-4221 J thousands of visitors have poured into and out of Sanpete Valley to see the pageant. According to Pageant Officials, 1982 may be the biggest year of all, if telephone calls and letters are any indication. in-dication. And more than 100,000 viewers come each year to see the pageant. From a sampling taken in 1981, it was determined that more than half of the audience were seeing the pageant for the first time. But many people return year after year, bringing family and friends, for the colorful scenes and message of hope and triumph. A cast of nearly 400 annually spend their evenings in rehearsal for six weeks prior to the performance, and hundreds hun-dreds more are involved mminin"i m mm nun !l t-;. Klder David L. Jacobson recently returned from the Canada, lialafax LDS Mission. His welcome home will be held July II, at 10:20 a.m. in the Springville 10th Ward, 355 East Center. Elder Jacobson is the son of Waldo and Marian Jacobson of Springville. Hansen promoted Julia E. Hansen, daughter of John B. and Dolores K.-.Foster of Hammondsport, N.Y., has been promoted in the l-ffl1. . -fi-- ;v ' & - ..y v' ' flit iMW4sWi-' .- :". 'c"" ' ' ' '-W I J ffyW9WK ...-,..-. .. -.-.fi- , : w j ' ' '" ''yw yi i B 'sf , ' ; ' iMjowwwiiiM mmmmm "0 If s. f j ' Yfas , v ill . t "v LzJ j J A ' j ... Tj I . i'lyn)wy - . ,,. ilTMH JHWWjiW Tlirnfrrrnr m n ' " r "Hi .a. If you have reasons to move but don't want a large monthly an affordable alternative to buying another house! Beat the high cost of a better home with a planned Home Improvement Loan. Now, you can get into a better house without leaving home! Add a room, finish the basement, put in that patio you've been wanting. Expand, remodel or renovate. Make any worthwhile home improvement and finance it with a Home Improvement Loan from First Security. First Security Bank in production and in maintaining physical facilities, in traffic control, and in providing for the comfort of those who come to the pageant. Those same farmers and business men and women who peacefully tend their farms and businesses for ten a nd one ha If months of the year are joined by teachers, students, and sometimes entire families. Most of each year's cast live nearby, but some return annually from Salt Lake City, Richfield, other parts of Utah and from other states. Even France and England have been represented in the cast. This year, as with each year, there will be many newcomers to the cast and staff, and many are returning to add another year of faithful service which they give to help to tell the "Mormon Story" Wilkinson arrives in Turkey Staff Sgt. David W. Wilkinson, son of Wayne G. and Virginia V. Wilkinson of 668 South 400 East, Springville, Utah, has arrived for duty in Incirlik, Turkey. Wilkinson, a security specialist, was previously assigned at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas. He is a 1974 graduate of Springville High School. U.S. Air Force to the rank of first lieutenant. Foster is an administration ad-ministration officer at Cannon Air Force Base, N.M., with the 522nd Tactical Fighter Squadron. Her husband, Ricky, is the son of Delynn and Ireta Hansen of 718 Brookside Drive, Springville, Utah. The lieutenant's grandparents, John and Mary Kinsman, resides at 36 Cameron St., Bath, N.Y. 6Wre turning the house weVe got' into the home we've always wanted. Fir5B: of Utah, N.A. First Security July 8, Evan B. Graves, son of Ronald and Shirley Graves of Mapleton, has been called to serve in the Philadelphia, Penn. LDS Mission. His farewell will be held on Sunday, July II in the Mapleton Stake center at 9 a.m. He will enter the Mission Training Center on July 22. The crop always seems better in our neighbor's field, and our neighbor's cow gives more milk. One pound of uncooked meat will make about two cups of ground meat. Our forefathers didn't know of shoe polish as we do. Goose grease cleaned and polished their boots. K5f ; - I Tt St . .. m n r 1533 North Main Security BanEis Bank of Idaho, N.A. First 1982 - The Springville Nourse to speak at UVll child safety week KSL newsman Dick Nourse will be the guest speaker at a Child Safety Seminar Wednesday, July 14, as part of Utah Valley Hospital's Child Safety Week, July 12 through 16. Joining Nourse at the 1 p.m. session in the Clark Auditorium will be Provo Police Chief Swen Nielsen, Emergency Center physician Robert N. Gray, M.D., and head of Pediatrics, Douglas W. Hacking, M.D. The group will speak on a variety of subjects concerning child safety and will answer questions from the audience. Child Safety Week was spawned from concerns expressed by hospital physicians over the number of accidents occuring yearly that involve children, many of which the physicians feel could have been prevented. Exhibits and demonstrations demon-strations will also be available in the auditorium from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Utah Valley Hospital Mental Health and Social Services Department will feature a LIGHTING FIXTURES Jtuntillan Sledric Supply "WtioteMl ft IMH" Blair R. Hamilton - Phono 798-8435 SPANISH FORK, payment First Security The money lending experts. Our loan experts will examine your project plans and design a financing plan that best suits you. Our rates are competitive and our experience saves you time. So come in. Tell us how much you need and what for. First Security Home Improvement Improve-ment Loan is the easy, affordable way to start living in the home you've always wanted in the house you've already got! Security Bank of Rock Springs Herald - Page Thirteen" booth on child abuse. Other exhibits will include in-clude seat belt safety and child restraints by the Utah County Medical Auxiliary, first-aid by the UVH Emergency Center, CPR by the Provo City paramedics, and poison control by the University of Utah Medical Center. Photo exhibits will be set up in the hospital main lobby July 12 through 16. Door prizes will be awarded and refreshment will be served following the question and answer session. All events are open to the public and admission is free. For additional information, in-formation, contact the Public Relations Office at 373-7850, ext. 2107. In the field of world policy I would dedicate this nation to the policy of the good neighbor. F. D. Roosevelt The cold neutrality of an impartial judge. Burke Neutrality, as a lasting principle, is an evidence of weakness. price 12 Installation available UTAH 84660 offers Members FDIC LENDER First Security State Bank |