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Show January 22, 1992 - The Springville Herald - Page Sewn r J"1 J- ; f w- 0 off If i V I .. b)lbirA& "' ? Hoi J f . c , ) v.n Pictured here are some of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd grade students at Grant Elementary making snowflakes using skills they learned from the "Math Their Way" program. Back row, left to right: Meliena France, Doug Belback, Jedd Olson, Nathan Jackson and Kelby Barnett. Front row: Natasha Roberts, Jeremiah Bronson, Nathan Bergman, Blaine Mason and Juanitta Steele. The teachers are Suzanne Thacker and Gwen Reed. ' rHl mp iff mf "I Care" winners for January 13-17th at Art City Elementary are: Brooke Measom, Craig Peterson, Bradley Allred, Corinne Versluys, Shalene Johnson, Ammon Smith, Bretton Lee, Calvin Smith, Kenna Hulce, Adrienne Schriever, Kyle Murray, Jacob Jones, Daniel Jensen and Shannon Child. Congratulations to these students who help make Art City a great place to be! Congratulations to the caught 'Ya winners for the last week at Sage Creek School. The first grade winner was Rachel Paxman, second grade winner was Holli Jensen, and for the third grade, Lisa Nelson. Aubrey Fullmer was the fourth grade winner, and from the fifth grade, Danny Gardner. CLASSIFIED 3 Home Nursing 3 HOME NURSING or care in your home. Excellent references. Call 754-5132 or 226-3005. FSI In 1900, the legal age for marriage in nearly half the states was 14 for males, 12 for females. HARVEY Heating & Air Conditioning Swamp Collars Alr Conditioners Furnaces FOH SERVICE CALL: DON 489-7088 FACTORY AUTHORIZED SMALL ENGINE REPAIR SERVICE FACTORY WARRANTY SERVICE AVAILABLE briggs & stratton Many Parts in stock for the do-it-yourself mschanic CARPENTER SEED CO. 1030 S. State St. Provo, Utah 373-3740 Buy, sell, trade Phone 489-5651 C a For Sale Miscellaneous C WHIRLPOOL TRASH compactor, works One, $35, call 489-6958. Lower bed frame and mattress priced to $75. tmL PRESCRtPTIONSFoun-tains, PRESCRtPTIONSFoun-tains, free delivery. SOS Drug, 214 South Main, 489-6041. tn TAKE soil away the Blue Lustre way from carpets and upholstery. Rent electric shampooer $3 Kolob Lumber. 1 POSTERS and signs painted for any occasion or business display. Call Art City Publishing, 489-5651 489-5651 and ask for Pat. tfh SURELOCK STORAGE STOR-AGE UNITS available, sizes 10x12 to 10x45, low rates. Call now, 798-2575. 798-2575. . tmL I J Business Opportunity WOLFF TANNING BEDS. New commercial-home commercial-home units from $199. Lamps, lotions, accessories, accesso-ries, monthly payments low as $18. Call today for free new color catalog 1-800-228-6292. J22 HEAVEN'S BEST carpet & upholstery cleaning expanding in Utah. We have 8 years of proven success.$9500 buys area, equipment, training & supplies. 1-80-359-2095. J22 or rent through for fast action c 3 Help Wanted 3 ADDRESS ENVE LOPES part time at home for pay. You must type or have good handwriting. Call 1-800-783-S997 Ext. 231. J 2 2 HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed. $35,000 potential. Details. Call 1-805-962-8000 Ext B-2236. B-2236. J22 POSTAL JOBS. $11.41-$14.90hr. $11.41-$14.90hr. For exam and application information call 219-769-6649 Ext. UT-117 7 a.m.-7 p.m., 7 days. J29L U.S. MAIL JOBS. $11.77 TO $14.9012.95. Fee, now hiring your area. No experience necessary. 1-900-6804454 Ext 0835. F5L WORK IN THE shadows shad-ows of Bryce Canyon. May-October 1992. Resort positions available. avail-able. Send resume, recent photo, Bryce Valley Inn, PO Box A, Tropic, UT 84776, 679-8811. 679-8811. J22 EXCELLENT PAY! Homeworkers needed. Over 400 companies need homeworkersdis-tributors homeworkersdis-tributors now. Get paid from home. Money-back guarantee. Call amazing recorded message 1-800-927-2986 Mailbox 204-2315 204-2315 Ext 210. F5 Whe,ij the Celsius scale was first devised, 10 degrees de-grees was the boiling point of water, 100 degrees was the freezing point of water. Brookside School is happy to announce their "Students of the Month." One student is selected each month from their home room. These students have demonstrated good citizenship and cooperation with others. The students of the month are: Jeff Banks, Elizabeth Zobell, Ryan Long, Geremy Gomey, Amberly Bown, Jenna Jorgensen, Ashley York, Arlene Wright, Brandon Bishop, Skyler Shimin, Tim Francis, Wendy Weiget, Lacey Rasmussen, Hailey Newman and Natalie Rasmussen. If you can't recycle, at least precycle Recycling programs are springing spr-inging up everywhere, awareness is at an all-time high, but that is not enough. The average American still generates several pounds of garbage gar-bage every day. Saving energy is synonymous with recycling. But before your turn your attention to recycling, remember the three R's: reduce, reuse and recycle. The first two Rs, reduce and reuse, can help you avoid trash at its source. This labor and energy saving process is called pre-cycling. pre-cycling. Another way to think of this process is environmental consumerism. By shopping for reduced packaging and creatively reusing what we already have, we could shrink the volume of trash going into our landfills by as much as 15 percent. To precycle is to make buying choices that support responsible products and packaging, packag-ing, make recycling easier and reduce the amount of garbage we throw away. Here are some pre- cycling ideas that you can do for your New Years Resolution: Reuse grocery bags or use reusable grocery mesh bags. Buy products with minimal amounts of packaging. Buy in bulk-avoid individually individu-ally wrapped items like cheese slices. Buy concentrates and refill-able refill-able containers. AD, C Personals 3 PLACE your classified ad in not 1, not 2, but 42 newspapers throughout Utah. One placement, one payment puts you into the "Utah Classified Advertising Network." Reach over 347,000 Utahns for only $99. Call the Springville Herald at 489-5651 for further information. J22 A WONDERFUL family experience. Australian, European, Scandinavian, Japanese high school exchange students arriving in August. Become a host familyAmerican fami-lyAmerican Intercultural Student Exchange. Call 1-800-SIBLING. J22 MONEY PROBLEMS? Bankruptcy makes your debts affordable. Chapter Chap-ter 7 is quick and economical. eco-nomical. Chapter 13 handles almost any problem. New techniques combine best of both. For free information call Bruce A. Embry, Attorney, Attor-ney, 1-756-3630. J22 SAVE MONEY - Lose weight! Feel terrific with the affordable and healthy Micro Diet! Call independent Micro Diet advisor, Sue, 800-755-9284. J22 OUR HOME has full-time full-time mom with lots of TLC We would love to adopt a baby. Call Cathie and Jack collect 802-235-2311 J22 The skin on your body least sensitive to pain is that on your heel. Produce 3 CRISP, JUICY, COLD storage apples at Sabin Orchards, Salem. Call 423-1156. tfnL ADOPTION: WELL-EDUCATED, WELL-EDUCATED, financially secure couple promises to provide loving home for your baby. Beautiful home on lake. Expenses paid. Call LauraAlan collect 203-491-9129. J29 PUBLIC NOTICE Probate and guardianship Notice Consult county clerk or the respective signers for further invormation FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF UTAH COUNTY STATE OF UTAH IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Kay Ross Overson, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS PROBATE NO. 9134O0461ES All persons having claims against the above estate are required to present them to the undersigned under-signed or to the Clerk of the Court on or before April 15, 1992, or said claims shall be forever barred. Catherine Overson Personal Representative 760 South 800 East Springville, Ut 84663 Published in the Springville Spr-ingville Herald January 15, 22 and 29, 1992. Real Estate For Sale 3 HME SHARE UNITS and campground memberships. mem-berships. Distress sales-cheap! sales-cheap! Worldwide selections. Call Vacation Network U.S. and Canada 1-800-736-8250 or 305-566-2203. Free rental information 305-563-5586. J22 Buy products that can be recycled. Buy products made of recycled recy-cled materials. Buy permanent replacements for disposable pens, razors and batteries. Buy fresh fruits and vegetables. vegeta-bles. If we all reduced the amount of packaging we bring home by half, we would reduce the trash going into landfills by 15 percent and our paper use by 24 percent. Question: When I go through the checkout line at the grocery store, I am asked if I prefer paper or plastic, which choice is the best environmentally? Answer: neither. Plastic is made of a non-renewable petroleum-based resource. And although al-though paper bags from wood are renewable, paper currently takes up 41 percent of our landfill space (according to the Environmental Environ-mental Protection Agency). I carry several woven cloth grocery bags in each car. That is the best answer. And for each bag I carry in, my grocer reduces (one of the 3 R's) my bill by 5 cents. If your store does not offer a bag refund, ask for it, or shop elsewhere. " Send questions or comments to: Stephen Poe, Utah State University, Uni-versity, Cooperative Extension, Logan Ut 84322-2300. E 3 Instruction E BECOME A paralegal. Join America's fastest growing profession. Work with attorneys. Lawyer instructed home study. The finest paralegal program available. Free catalogue. 800-362-7070 Dept. LA72902J22 In 1900, the legal age for marriage in nearly half the states was 14 for males, 12 for females. NOTICE OF REGULAR ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS MEETING The regular annual meeting of the stockholders stockhold-ers of the Strawberry Water Users Association will be held in the Payson City Council Chambers, 439 West Utah Avenue, Payson, Utah, on Saturday, Satur-day, January 25, 1992, at 1:30 p.m. The purposes ot the meeting are: To elect f ur directors to succeed ihe following whose terms expire upon the election of their successors: District 1 , Claude Rowley; District 5, Reed Rindlisbacher; District 9, J. Ross Nielsen; District 13, J. Merrill Hallam. To levy an assessment to meet the expenses of the association for the ensuing year. To her reports of the operations and conditions of your association and to transact any other business that may properly come before said meeting. Gary A. Aitken, Secretary There will be no SWUA grazing permits during the 1992 grazing season. The Strawberry Valley lands are under a rehabilitation program administered by the U.S. Forest Service. Published in the Springville Spr-ingville Herald January 22, 1992. At the January dinner meeting of the Palmyra Chapter of the Sons of the Utah Pioneers, Elden and Lucille Andrus of Spanish Fork gave a report on their mission to England. They told how they worked on the Census records. Pictured left to right are Tonny Devenish and Lucille and Elden Andrus. n n i ' Brookside School "I Care" students are: McCall Parker, Melinda Binks, Ashley York, Boedee Hopes, Michelle Branham, Ashley Peay, Amberlee Booke, Billy Gholdston, Elizabeth Barrows, Kyle Bodily, Jessica Hunting, Ryan Jacobsen, Jake Canto, Christopher Snow, Zack Chestnut, Traci Heaps, Bethany Poulson, Irene Wright, Aja Graves, Chris Childester, Isaiah Banks and Shaelyn Mathena. FfH ; ;J v The students in Mrs. Hylton's class at Brookside School enjoyed a Quilt Party. Parents and students had fun with a display of various kinds of quilts. The students made their own paper patchwork squares and put them together to make a class quilt. A queen visited in a quilted robe to deliver quilt cookies. They played various math games using the theme of quilts including graphing the quilt cookies. OBITUARIES Anny Elisabeth Nowak, No-wak, 81, of Frankfurt, Germany died January 10, 1992 in Germany of natural natu-ral causes. She was born January 1, 1911, to Albert Phillip and Luise Mathilde Schick van Hayn. She married Johan Fritzen, June 7, 1934 in Frankfurt, Germany. He died March 7, 1947 in a Russian prison pris-on camp. She married Paul Nowak, May 3, 1952 in Bad Godesberg, West Germany. He died November No-vember 1, 1974. She lived and was educated in Germany. Her family and those who knew her will remember her for her zest for life, love of family, and love for adventure and travel. She particularly enjoyed being with her grandchildren. grandchil-dren. Her interests included includ-ed world events, politics, sports and the cultural arts. Having endured the tragedies of two wars, the death of two husbands and two sons, she never lost her belief in a loving and caring personal God, or her love of life. She count Alberta Alberta Johnson Banks, 76, died Sunday, Jan. 12, 1992 of lung cancer at the home of her daughter. She was born March 22, 1915 in Gillmore, ID to Martha Howell and Julian Harold Johnson. She married Joseph Peter Banks on Aug. 21, 1937. They were the parents of 10 children. Alberta was a graduate of Brigham Young University Univer-sity with a bachelor's degree in social work. She was a nurse, teacher, foster parent and humanitarian. humani-tarian. She was a member of the LDS Church where she served in many capacities i it"? J i tajknr Anny Elizabeth Nowak ed her blessings daily and shared her strength and comfort with those less fortunate than she. She was the strength and the example for her family and believed in God's promise: "No matter mat-ter how bad things seem, No matter how cold the winter, No matter how big the storm, Spring will come and the rose will bloom again. Look up, for God will send His rainbow." rain-bow." She is survived by three daughters and one son: Gerlinda Boyack, Boston, MA; Heimy Taylor, Tay-lor, Columbus, OH; Bodo Fritzen, Bloomington, IL; Ingrid Nemelka, Maple-ton; Maple-ton; 21 grandchildren; 8 great-grandchildren; one . brother, Albert von Hayn, Bad Homberg, Germany. She was preceded in death by two sons, Achim and Detlef Fritzen. Funeral services were Mon.,Jan. 20, 1992 in the Mapleton First Ward. Burial was in the Evergreen Ever-green Cemetery. Paid obituary Banks including four missions. She was preceded in death by her husband, a son Joseph, and daughter Linda. Survived by daughters: daugh-ters: Mrs. Carl (Penny) Loback, Kearns; Mrs. Gene (Grace) Nielsen, Mapleton; Mrs. Nicholas (Beverly) Beardall, Orem; Mrs. Paul (Rosella) Arr-ington, Arr-ington, Provo; P.R. )Pau-line) )Pau-line) Banks, Salt Lake City; sons: Leonard Banks, Bismark, ND; Steven Banks, Provo; Golden Kimberly Banks, Mapleton; 30 grandchildren, grandchil-dren, 9 great-grandchildren. Funeral was Thursday. Interment in the Springville Spring-ville Evergreen Cemetery. 1 Jtt Anny Elisabeth Nowak The sun is 330,330 times larger than the earth. Springville Floral and Gift for all your sympathy needs Friends List Available vVe want you to have ju&t the right gift to express your sentiments Springville Floral 207 E. 400 S. ,489-5647 Afttr Honrs I Svmfey 798-8411 1 |