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Show July 19, 1989 - The Springville Herald - Page Three OCIAL EYENTS soth birthdby Jenny Jarman to trade vows with Idaho man Announcement is made by Dale and Melba Jar-man Jar-man of Springville of the engagement of their daughter, daugh-ter, Jenny, to Mr. Robert Bressler, son of Merlin and Darlene Bressler of Ashton, Idaho. The couple plans to be married on July 19, 1989 in the Idaho Falls Temple. A wedding breakfast will be held at the groom's home after the ceremony. A reception will honor the newlyweds on Thursday, July 20, 1989 at the home of the bride in Springville. The bride-to-be graduated from Springville High ' School and recently graduated from Ricks College in Rexburg, Idaho. She will attend Brigham Young University this fall. The prospective groom graduated from North Fremont High School in Ashton and served an LDS mission in Nagoya, Japan. He also graduated from Ricks and will attend BYU. Showers were held for the bride in Ashton and Springville. The newlyweds will make their home in Provo. fry, i X . i. Robert Bressler-Jenny Jarman Tonva Hone, Scott Stilson wedding Friday Announcement is made by Alan and Cletona Hone of Springville, of the engagement of their daughter, Tonya Marie, to Mr. Scott Gary Stilson, son of Gary and Delores Stilson of Springville. The couple plans to be married on Friday, July 21, 1989. A reception will be held in their honor that evening from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Second Ward Church, 350 North 400 East, Springville. All friends and relatives are invited to attend. The bride-to-be graduated from Springville High School and is working at Allen's in Springville. She will attend Steven's Henegar College of business this fall. The prospective groom graduated from Springville High School and is employed at Duckett's Furniture in Orem. Maid of honor will be Belinda Lancott with Deborah Debo-rah Stilson 'and Mylee Hone attending. Bestman will be Paul Evans. The newlyweds will make their home in Springville. I ' J, """. I I J 'rl h,$ V ... j rv a . . . ; 'j ' Kl i J - I ' Edmonds Continued from page 1 She later became the surgical supervisor super-visor at the Hanford Hospital. From 1943 to 1946 she trained nurses aids for the Iron County Hospital and taught Home Nursing and Mother and Baby Care for the Red Cross. The Red Cross presented her with a 25 year service pin for all her donated hours of service. Ella has always been busy in the LDS Church, especially the youth. For 37 years she loved every minute min-ute of camping out with the young MIA girls, and for 18 years as leader of the 11-year-old Scouts (Guide Patrol-Blazers). As a Scout Leader she decided she and her Scout troop needed to doa project that would really benefit bene-fit the community of Mapleton (1976). They decided they should make a city flag. They asked Maple-ton's Maple-ton's Wendell Johnson to design the flag and they got a bid from a flag company in New York for $250. The Scouts and Ella made hand-dipped hand-dipped chocolates. Ella would make the filling and dip them and the boys would package and sell them. They soon found they had more orders than they thought that they could handle, but they just worked a little longer and a little harder. When the candy-making project was completed they had made more than $400. The final cost of the flag was over $400. Over her years of Scouting, Ella has kept a scrap book of every one of "her boys." Most all of them have received their Eagle Scout Award, and many have served as missionaries. Ella was a diligent Scoulcr and worked hard and re- GoJ den Jubilee CANNING SWEET CORN $1.00 Doz. for over6doz. $1.25 Dozen 600 SOUTH MAIN SPANISH FORK orders 798-2119 Gardner Sweet Corn Utah's Finest ceived the Silver Beaver Scouting Award. Ella is famous in Mapleton for her hand-dipped chocolates. A hard worker, Ella has milked her very own Jersey cow (given to her as a birthday present) for 32 years, and just this June, she finally gave up milking. Many a Mapleton woman has tried to make chocolates like Ella and have asked her for her recipe. Ella's always willing to tell them how to make them, but it seems no one has the first ingredient, ingredi-ent, a "Jersey Cow". Folks about town remember when the, LDS Wards would have their annual summer campouts up Maple Canyon, and at 5 a.m. they would hear Ella start up her jeep and head for home to milk her cow. When most of the camp had not even . gotten out of their sleeping bags, here would come Ella, cow milked and a fresh batch of homemade cones. As Ella and Dr. Edmunds and their eight children moved to Mapleton, they immediately fell in love with the beautiful community and the people. Ella says the children chil-dren were accepted into the work force of picking cherries, raspberries raspber-ries and hoeing sugar beets. Ella feels this early training of learning how to work has been a most important im-portant part of her children's lives. Everyone loves visiting the Edmunds home, you feel as though you're part of their family, and they always have a lot of wonderful memories to share. One that is especially fun is the Petting Farm they and their children started 25 years ago. More than 500 children, coming on different days in the spring, would get to ride in a cart pulled by one of their St. Bernard dogs. The children could try to milk the cow, chase the ducks, pet the lambs, take a tractor ride and even have an egg hunt. The Edmunds are the proud par-cntsof8children,23 par-cntsof8children,23 grandchildren and 1 great-grandchild. All eight of their children have graduated from college. Seven from BYU and one from Ricks College f Nursing. They are: Dr. Paul K. Edmunds Jr., Mary Ella Edmunds, Charlotte Edmunds Dowdle, Susan Edmunds Johnson, Dr. Franklin M. Edmunds, John M. Edmunds, Ann Edmunds Johnson, and Richard Rich-ard M. Edmunds. They have received re-ceived degrees in the following fields: Tonya Hone-Scott Stilson Items needed The Springville Art Museum is in need of a room air conditioner and are asking if anyone would like to donate one for use there. They can also use large or tall green plants that have grown too big for a home. If there are citizens who would have any of these items for donation, dona-tion, museum personnel would be glad to pick them up. Call Lila at 489-9434. Calligraphic show opens The annual show by the Utah Calligraphic Society will open at the Springville Museum of Art on Saturday, July 22. The exhibit by this group will be shown in the museum's second floor "Works on Paper" Gallery. An artists' reception will be given on Sunday, July 23 from 2-5 p.m. The public is invited. Crib corner Boy, to Ramie Glazier and Reggie Reg-gie Nelson June 26, 1989 at the Mountain View Hospital. Grandparents Grand-parents are David and Carol Glazier, Gla-zier, of Springville, and Vickie Nelson and Dean Nelson of Provo and Springville. Master in Accounting, Law degree, Optometry degree, PhD in Education, Educa-tion, Youth Leadership degree, Travel studies degree, and two with Nursing degrees. Six of the Edmund children have served missions for the LDS Church. Not only are the Edmunds happy they moved to Mapleton 32 years ago, but so are the neighbors and friends of Paul and Ella and their children. The family of Vernon Castlcton will celebrate his 80th Birthday at a weekend canyon campout July 21-24th. 21-24th. Vernon was born July 21, 1909 in Eureka, Utah toGeorgeand Elizabeth Eliza-beth Nicholson Castleton. At age 12, he began working in his father's assay office and at age 17, took over running it for the next ten years due to his father's failing health. During Dur-ing this time, he graduated from Tintic High School and his interest . in photography as a hobby began. He met and married Norma Peterson Pe-terson on June 19, 1935 in the Salt Lake Temple. When his father died, the assay office closed and Vernon opened and ran an appliance store in Eureka until he moved to Springville in 1939. He worked for Crandall's Store, helped in construction construc-tion of Geneva Steel and sold life insurance. In July of 1949, he opened his own photography studio in Springville and made this his profession. pro-fession. A fire destroyed the studio in 1973. He then onpned his busi- Looking Back ncss on a smaller scale in his home and has just recently retired. He is still actively doing copy work. Vernon and Norma celebrated their 50th Wedding Anniversary in July, 1985. She died in August of that year. He married Eudora Hansen on January 8, 1986 in the Provo Temple. I He is active in the LDS Church, holding many positions in the ward and stake. He was a charter member mem-ber of the Springville Lions Club, serving as its second president. He belongs to the Nebo Camera Club and organized the Skyline Camera Club. Photography has been a hobby and a profession for Vernon. He also enjoys gardening and working with wood. He has done his own remodeling of his home interior and studio, built his own hobby shop and made many beautiful pieces of furniture. Vernon's proudest achievement is being a husband, father, stepfather, stepfa-ther, grandfather and great-grand- f - . ' 5 k ' f. y -s ; t: K ',: ' , i : , . T. J T" I Any Jones will do by Lot's Wife One of the many-and there are SO many-endearing things about me is my strong desire to keep up with the Joneses. All the Joneses. Hundreds of Joneses. Any Joneses at all. There are so many of them! The ones I hate the most are the perfectly organized Joneses. These Joneses ARE the dread word: disciplined. dis-ciplined. About the only thing they do wrong is sometimes, at a five a.m. Fun Run, she'll giggle and say shyly, "I didn't get my bacon pan washed this morning before we came." Or, "I just barely had time to make biscuits this morning." This to her is the height of wild abandon. aban-don. This kind of housewife thinks she's casual because she only bakes once a week. These people usually weigh' about 120. 1 bake once a year, eat it all,andweigh &Sreallyalot. Then there's the money Joneses. Not the expensive kind, the economical eco-nomical kind. These Joneses feed their entire family of eight a four-course four-course meal every night with all four food groups and dessert for about 88 cents. Their kids always look darling and they never go any place but Fritzi's and the DI. The very worst thing is that they always tell you about it! They go over ever)' grocery tab and balance everything to the penny. I'm grateful if my checkbook and I seem to be anywhere in the same ballpark occasionally. I usually give it three months. The bank has never, ever made a mistake in my account, it's always my fault. These people are always finding bank mistakes . and they hang in there till the bank fixes it. They're confident because they're righteous and good. I'm always terrified because I'm undisciplined undis-ciplined and a spendthrift. I'd be perfectly happy this way-a little broke maybe-if I didn't compare myself to them and feel guilty. But I do. Then there's the Yard Joneses. These people are related to the Clean House Joneses. You probably proba-bly have some of them in your own neighborhood, lurking. These people's big cry is consistency. If you'd just get up every day and do 15-20 minutes in the yard or get right in and do your bathrooms first thing GAG you'd never have these huge jobs. The ones I'm constantly faced with. Usually, when I try to keep up with these Joneses, about the third or fourth day, I just don't want to get up anymore. It doesn't seem worth it. Stuff comes up: a chance to sleep in and lie around in bed for awhile and read a good book. Or talk to an old friend on the phone. Or listen to the birds. Or just sit there and think over my life. I can always tell myself I'm writing writ-ing a column in my head. Except that I compare myself to the Clean WANT BETTER HEALTH?! Overweight ....Slender Worn out ."fnergefic Sfreiied Colm Froil Health conscious Americans oro taking a serious look at the health benefits of herbs, we supply... High quality natural health products The ducatlon to uio thorn wltoly SIGH UP FOt OUR FREE CLASSES! HERBS HEhLH 125-2085 352 No. Slate Orem n,M House's or the Yard's and I feel inadequate. But 15 minutes in the yard, 15 in the bathroom, 15 with 1 the vacuum, 15 with the dishes times three meals...you could useupyour whole life 15 minutes at a time. Every time I really relax though and say to myself, "Rise above this, midget mind. Go out there and BE YOURSELF," it's always a mistake. mis-take. A Cleaner Jones will come in and ask to use your bathroom and phone, neither of which are immediately imme-diately visible even to you and you're supposed to at least know where they started out. Or a Saver Jones will take his entire family to Hawaii, economy, and you don't even have enough money for gas to drive up Hobble Vernon Castleton father. His children are: JoAnn Diamond and Lynn Castlcton, both Springville; Lloyd, Laguna Hills, California; Darlene Kindred, Fillmore; Loree Westcott, Kuna, Idaho; Elaine McBroom, Calaba-sas, Calaba-sas, California; Larry, Salt Lake; Julie Hempel, Sandy; David (deceased); (de-ceased); stepchildren, Jackie Iker, Springville; Barbara Fairholm, Orem; and Robert Hansen, Louisville, Louis-ville, Kentucky. He has 33 grandchildren grand-children and 25 great-grandchildren. Creek. Or a Yard Jones will win a city clean up prize, which really wouldn't bother me since I don't consider myself in the running for those. It's a strain. I want to be myself, messy, prodigal, overweight. But those are really not the world's most admired qualities and it's hard to resist, at least occasionally, trying to be admirable. Sometimes I set behind my house on a lawn chair and watch the sun go down. I think, "Somewhere, somebody has paid $10,000 to sit in a chair pretty much like this and watch a sunset just like this," and I think of all the mone I've saved by being able to do that. But I do it behind the house so no one will see me just sitting there instead of weeding. I A f. i 'r : I- r -Nsr"' . -v , V ' I V James and Lula Anderson 50th wedding anniversary The family of James and Lula Anderson request the pleasure of your company at a reception in honor of their 50th Wedding Anniversary on Friday, July 28, 1989 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Springville Stake Center. James and Lula met at Brigham Young University during the summer sum-mer session of 1936. He and his twin brother, Gerald, were studentbody presidents at the time. In the fall, they taught school together in Wellington Elementary near Price, Utah. They were married on August 9, 1939 in the Salt Lake Temple by David O. McKay. During their married life they have lived in Utah and California. They are the parents of four sons and fourteen grandchildren. Provo's Sidewalk Sale lasts two days. The new University Avenue could last forever. While the Utah Department of Transportation Transporta-tion rebuilds University Avenue in downtown Provo, Provo's Association of Involved Merchants is opening up the sidewalks for a big sale. Provo's Sidewalk Sale runs July 28 and 29. There will be Back-to-School sales, en tertainment, food and plenty of free parking. To get around the construction, follow the detour to Freedom Boulevard. Then use the cross streets for access to your favorite busi nesses. Provo's Sidewalk Sale Friday, July 28 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, July 29 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. TO |