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Show August' 29, 1990 - The Springville Herald - Page Five OCIAL EVENTS Old-new photos remind twins f : ' ' V;. , 4 Open house Friday for newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Haderiie Mr. and Mrs. Norman D. Young of Escon-dido, Escon-dido, California are pleased to announce the marriage of their daughter, Kathryn, to Mr. Kirk LaMont Haderiie, son of Paul F. and LaRou Haderiie. The couple were married on August 18, 1990 in the Los Angeles LDS Temple. An open house will be held in their honor on Friday, August 31, 1990 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the home of the bride's grandparents, William and Hazel Clyde, 2000 Canyon Road, Springville. All friends and relatives are invited in-vited to attend. ", ' . 4 f x- , Edna Young Woodrow Weight Edna Young, Woodrow Weight to trade vows The Young, Weight, and Jenkins children announce the marriage of their parents, Edna Young and Woodrow (Woody) Weight. The couple will be married on Friday, August 31, 1990 in a church ceremony at the Canyon Ward Church with Bishop J. Niel Strong of the Sixth Ward performing the ceremony. Following the wedding, the couple will be honored at an open house from 7 to 9 p.m. at the church, 1975 East Canyon Road, to which friends and relatives are cordially invited. They request no gifts. Both the prospective bride and groom are long-time residents of Springville and are active in church and community affairs. Children of Edna Young and the late Gene Young include: Patty Jackson, Lisa Rudd and Kim Young. Children of Woody Weight include: in-clude: Larry, Lynn, Shirl. Susan W. Bartholomew, Bartholo-mew, Randy and Danny Weight. Children of the late Norma Jenkins and Woody Weight include: Marsha Harward, Stanley Jenkins, Jane Fox, K'Ann Carlson and Elliott Jenkins. The newlyweds will make their home in Springville. Utah Valley Symphony slates 33rd season -0 ;.A:: 1 f Vi. --'':.. Ryan Mitchell Gillies, son of Mitchell and Lori Gillies of Spanish Fork, turned one year old on August 25, 1990. His grandparents are Bonner and Diane Gillies of Springville and Ron and Ruby Butler of Santaquin. Great-grandparents are Elmo and Jeneva Gillies and Wayne and Elma Evans, all of Springville, and Noal and Ulala Butler of Pay-son. Pay-son. He has one brother, Tyson. Sea creatures living at depths below 3,000 feet have been found to be blind or to possess their own phosphorescent phosphores-cent lighting system. The Utah Valley Symphony has scheduled five concerts for its 33rd season, with a new conductor at the podium. Dr. Clyn Barrus, an accomplished violist who is also director of orchestras at Brigham Young University, will lead the symphony sym-phony in concerts Oct. 10, Dec. 5 and 6, January 23 and 24, March 13, and April 17. Symphony patrons should note a new starting time for concerts: 7:30 p.m. instead of 8 p.m. All concerts will be in the Provo Tabernacle, 100 S. University Un-iversity Ave. The Utah Valley Symphony will open the 1990-91 season Oct. 10 with the Sibelius Concerto Con-certo for Violin and Orchestra, with Donna Fairbanks as soloist. solo-ist. Also on the program is music by Wagner, Ralph Vaugh Williams, and Rimsky-Korsakov. Rimsky-Korsakov. The traditional Christmas concert and community carol sing Dec. 5 and 6 will feature BYU's Brassworks Ensemble as well as "Peter and the Wolf," narrated by Walter Rudolph of KBYU-FM. The annual Young Artists Concert with outstanding outstand-ing soloists from Utah Valley will likewise have two performances, perfor-mances, on Jan. 23 and 24. An all-Tchaikovsky program, pro-gram, including "Pathetique" and the 1812 Overture with real cannons by Karl and Diane Furr, program will be performed March 13. Cellist Roger Drinkall will also be featured in "Variations on a Rococo Theme." April 17's pops concert will be a panorama pan-orama of American music, from Bernstein to bluegrass. Special guest artist will be BYU's Jazz Quartet. Season tickets are now on sale and may be ordered by sending a check to the symphony, sym-phony, care of business manager man-ager Bev Dunford, 461 E. 2875 N., Provo, UT 84604, or by f honing her at 377-6995. cost or the five concerts is $30 for a family, $20 for individual reserved, $10 for single (unreserved), (un-reserved), and $8 for students and senior citizens. Shortly before the final closing of his photo studio on South Main Street early this year, Rell Francis received one more customer, Leota Beardall Cox. She was hoping to find a glass plate negative of herself and her twin sister Leola Beardall Bear-dall Hamann made in 1920 by the early visionary photographer, photogra-pher, George Ed Anderson (1860-1928) at his Springville studio on South Main Street where Allen's Supersave Market Mar-ket now stands. Francis was in the middle of boxing up his collection of some 10,000 turn-of-the-cen-tury Anderson negatives to turn over to the BYU Photo Archives. With a scare of threatening bad health and the possibility of an earthquake (like San Francisco's recent shake) turning the adobe house-studio and fragile glass negatives into a pile of rubble, Francis decided it was time to end his business and put the historical collection in a safer place, available to the public for many years to come. The precious images of six-month-old identical twins photographed pho-tographed in a fancy wicker baby buggy, was quickly located under the name of their father, Alvin Beardall, a Springville butcher. Photographer Photo-grapher Anderson, who was soon to give up his failing business to work at the Springville Spring-ville Cannery and pursue his dream to publish his LDS Church history photographs, had made two glass negatives of the babies. He had, by long habit, carefully etched the patron's pat-ron's name on the edge of the negatives to preserve their usefulness use-fulness to a searching descendant. descen-dant. As such, Leota, carried with her the original black and white print to compare it with one of the 5x7 negatives. It was a thrill for her and Mr. Francis to press the well-preserved, positive portrait against its glass negative counterpart to reintroduce these remarkable remark-able images after a separation of nearly 70 changing years. Francis, also a practicing photographer, desired to make an up-date picture of Leota looking at the glass plates. These he will add to a growing collection of before-and-after pictures tilled "G.E. Anderson Revisited" that reveal striking changes in Anderson's people and places more than a half-century half-century later. The modern, update photo of the sisters shows how separate sep-arate lifestyles alter appearances appearan-ces and personalities. For both Leota and Leola, it now seems strange that their mother, Sarah Scott Beardall, had to tie separate red and blue ribbons in their hair to identify the identical twins. As seen in the recent print made by Francis, the mother's practice may have initiated the twins opposite, personal choices for different colors, fashions and lifestyles. Also they recall that they were somewhat alike when they married in their late teens. Heber Cox, who married Leota over 50 years ago, remembers a frequent question put to him: "How can you tell which twin is your wife?" he was often teased. "It's easy," he candidly replied, "She's the one that comes home with me!" Rell, also a twin to his brother Rulon, and having older twin sisters, Marian and Maurinc, can empathize with Leota and Leola's differences, and understands how twins can ' " w . I ' J few 4:j ''V Leota and Leola Beardall as photographed by G.E. Anderson in 1920 - - - I i, timr ftf XL - j - t A f 4 , j Leota Cox and Leola Hamann, twins, still living in Springville, as photographed by Rell G. Francis in 1990 be unfairly put into competition competi-tion against each other by teasing teas-ing playmates and relatives. Even though it has been several months since Francis negotiated a combination gift-sale gift-sale contract with the BYU to turn his photo collections and equipment to the Lee Library and make them more available to the public, he still gets daily calls and letters from genealogy geneal-ogy patrons and historians searching for photos and information. in-formation. "For me the old pictures have introduced several sev-eral book ideas that I want to get finished in my retirement," he said. "I can understand why others are so fascinated with these remarkable images of the past." UVCC hosts hilarious Farley Family play Utah Valley Community College will host "The Farley Family Reunion" play beginning beginn-ing Sept. 7, in the college's amphitheater. James Arrington, of Orem, has agreed to present the hilarious hit play "The Farley Family Reunion." The play has been called a "laugh-a-minute marriage." The play hasn't really been seen in Utah Valley in two years. "That's not really fair," says the show's producer and director of the center for lifelong life-long learning, Lenora Plothow. "Here is an important theatre artist that lives in Orem and people shouldn't have to travel to Salt Lake to see his wonderfully, wonder-fully, zany humor." The play will open Friday, Sept. 7, in UVCC's outdoor amphitheater. Other shows are scheduled for Sept. 8, 10, 14, 15 and 17. All performances begin at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $6 and are available avai-lable through the division of continuing education located in room 111 of the Administration Administra-tion Building or by calling 222-8000 ext. 450. Tickets will also be available for $7 at the door. Benjamin Franklin was one of the first people to manufacture manufac-ture playing cards in America. The largest snake found in the old world is the python. It measures as much as 30 feet. 'j 1 or . am Bock to School Special Perms $24" long hair slightly more Men's end women's hcircuts 500 Ends Sept 15th 140 East 300 South 489-6241 Kandice Gillies, daughter of Mark B. and Karl C. Gillies of Springville, will celebrate her first birthday on August 30, 1990. Her grandparents are Bonner E. and Diane Gillies and Phil J. and Connie Curtis, all of Springville. Great-grandparents Great-grandparents are Elmo and Geneva Gillies, Wayne and Elma Evans and Jack and Klea Curtis, all of Springville. Her great-great-grandmother is Charlotte Johnson of Springville. Jr. Drill Team a Hours Per Week $16.M a Month Jazz - Tap - Ballet 1 Hour Per Week $14." a Month Tumbling 1 Hour Per Week $10, ,M a Month 3 ( i"f is t PAM BINGHAM Dance Instructor CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 4 Ask about family discounts 489-5196 t t |