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Show Page Four - The Springville Herald - November 17, 1999 ' '(! JLiaJJ Rebecca Lyn Reed celebrated her first birthday on November 16, 1999. She is the daughter of Matt and Gail Reed of West Jordan. Her grandparents are Jim and Carol Reed of Springville, Spring-ville, Val Adams of Salt Lake City and Jack Adams of Oregon. Haden Allen Penrod, son of Marc and Heather Witney Penrod, turned one year old on October 18, 1999. He is the grandson of Willie and Ann Penrod and Doug and Mary-Lyne Mary-Lyne Witney. His great-grandmothers are Ramona Witney and Beth Davis. His sister, Rhea Audrey, helped him celebrate cele-brate the day. Crandall Museum to celebrate Bible Week Nov. 22-26 The Crandall Historical Printing Print-ing Museum will celebrate Bible Week Nov. 22 thru 26 with an open house all five days of the celebration including Thanksgiving Thanksgiv-ing evening. The museum located at 275 E. Center Street in Provo will be open without charge from 6-9 p.m. daily. Visitors will be able to examine exam-ine original and replicas of major Bibles including die Old Testament Testa-ment Hebrew Leningrad Kodex, Wycliffs English Bible, an original origi-nal page of the Gutenberg Bible plus a reproduction of the entire Gutenberg Bible. On display is an original 1509 Preachers (Pilgrim) Bible. Also included is an actual page of a 1607 King James Bible, a John Baskerville's Bible that was printed on an English Common Com-mon Press, the Cambridge Missionary Mis-sionary Bible and the new 1979 scriptures. Visitors will see a working monotype machine identical to the one that set the '79 Scriptures. During the week long celebration celebra-tion visitors will see and explore a re-creation of the world's oldest printing shop and witness type being cast and ink made plus a page of the Gutenberg Bible will be printed on a replica of Gutenberg's Guten-berg's old press. Period refreshments will be served and special lectures on all phases of the printing of the bible will be presented throughout the five day celebration. (ill Library Corner by Pat Bartlett Nostalgia time again. As I said last week, I love libraries! This week I want to mention our own Springville Library and some of the things that I remember remem-ber about it. As a young bride, my husband hus-band and I lived in a little two-room two-room basement apartment across the street from what is now Quality Qual-ity Cleaners. We lived there for one month until I found a black widow spider in our apartment and decided it was time to move on to safer digs. (I always give bugs a wide berth.) The best pan of living in that apartment was that it was just around the corner from the library. li-brary. I spent a lot of time in that old library and enjoyed browsing through the stacks in search of good books. The one thing that I remember is that the librarians seemed old. Of course I was only 18 years old, so a lot of people seemed old to me then. Some of them seemed a little grouchy, until I got to know them. Then they were so nice and helpful, and I enjoyed chatting with them. We have lots of people from out of town who use our library, as well as our own citizens, and it is heartwarming to hear them say how much they enjoy our library and the way they are treated when the come in. It is nice to be able to carry on the tradition of service. It is Children's Book Week this week, and aside from the great books you can check out at the library, the Friends of the Library Bookstore has specials on all their kids books. The hours open are varied, so call the library li-brary for store times. We are looking ahead to next week to remind our patrons that the library will be closed on Thursday and Friday, November 25 and 26, for the Thanksgiving Day holiday. We will open again on Sat., Nov. 27, with regular hours of 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Children invited to enter art exhibit The Springville Museum of Art will accept works of art from children ages 4 to 18 for the Christmas Lamb exhibit to be held in December in the Works on Paper Gallery. Artwork will be received Wed., Nov. 17, from 10 a.m. til 8:30 p.m. and Thur., Nov. 18-20 from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. There is no entry fee. This special Christmas show has become a tradition at the museum and is sponsored by David and Ingrid Nemelka of Mapleton. Sixty-five works will be chosen and each artist whose work is selected will receive a $10 cash award. This year special cash awards for high school participants will be $20 for each student juried into the exhibit. The theme is taken from the story "Christmas Lamb" which stresses the true meaning of Christmas as unselfish giving that Doctor to do graduate work Dr. Daniel J. Barton, son of Jess E. Barton and the late Jean c. Barton, has received an appointment ap-pointment to the University of Louisville Continuing Education Program to do graduate work in endodontics. Dan graduated from Springville Spring-ville High School with a scholarship scholar-ship to Utah Valley State College. Col-lege. He graduated from UVSC with an Associate Degree. He then earned a Bachelor's Degree from the University of Utah. He was accepted to the University Uni-versity of Louisville Medical School where he received a degree de-gree in dental medicine. Dr. Barton will complete his residency residen-cy at the University of Louisville Medical Center in July. In Au- brings joy to the giver. The story is about the change that occurs in a young boy's life after he visits an art museum and views a special spe-cial Christmas painting. Art work submitted should be original, individually conceived and created by the student. No works will be considered for the show if they contain glitter, glued on beans, macaroni or other material that tends to fall off when handled. The exhibit will run from Dec. 1 through Dec. 31. An open house will be held at 4 for presenting pre-senting the certificates and awards. Music will be provided by the Utah Valley Bell Ringers. The 12th annual Religious and Spiritual Art in Utah Show will also be on display during Nov. and Dec. on the first floor of the museum. pL:,f fJM ' - part JS - , -3 Dr. Daniel J. Barton gust he will begin two years of Happy 16th Birthday Melissa!! You are as beautiful on the inside as you m are on the outside! m mm w& un vr is;? or Mor&! X Ryan and Chalan i jj? f ft T! Dan, Jill & Kathryn J J aTrf Jk'S S ji:itc -v :ji f jt I I - l - Xtl . V-' :"YY inwiiiiiiiiriiiifirT '-Tt " - - 1 ..... Edward H. and Vesta F. Boyer celebrated their 66th wedding anniversary Monday, November 15, 1999. On Sunday, several of their families came in for a Tatertot dinner. The family consists of 12 children (11 living), 52 grandchildren, 82 great-grandchildren and the mates of those married. They have one family serving an LDS mission in Lebanon and one is visiting in New Zealand. Seven of their families live in Springville, 18 families live in Utah outside of Springville and 24 live in other states of the USA. An intellectual is a man who takes more words than necessary to tell more than he knows. Dwight D. Eisenhower graduate work. Dan is married to Shannon Priel of Louisville, KY. They have two sons, Ryan and Isaac. Dr. Barton and his family reside in Louisville. The witch hazel plant is so called, it's believed, because its forked twigs once though to have magic power in pointing out hidden springs of water. When there are good habits in a country, the business of the state dwindles. G.W. Russell FREE Votive Candle with $ 1 0 Purchase 25 off All Fall and Thanksgiving Decorations 10 off All Christmas and Alpine Trees 00) ranjoGES? Town & Country Gifts 2 36 South Main Street, Springville Jj Open Mon. -Sat 10 a.m. -6 p.m. m No strings attached. Anytime something knocks out the lights, we're ready. We're here to give you fast, responsive, dependable help. Our Customer Service Center is open 24 hours a day to answer your calls. Our crews work around the clock, too. And we have teams from all over our service area prepared to offer extra help wherever there's a major outage. Lights out? WeVe on it. Now here's what you can do if the lights go out: Be ready! : Keep in your house: a flashlight, battery-operated battery-operated radio, battery-operated clock, bottled water, manuaican opener and extra batteries. If someone in your home is on life support, be sure to have a backup system and an action plan in case of an outage. Before you call us, check your breakers - or fuse box to make sure you don't have a tripped breaker or blown fuse. Look for lights at ! your neighbors'. After you've checked, give us a rail at 1-877-548-3768 to report the outage. Have your account numl!er handy to help us work more quickly. Turn off major appliances and other electrical equipment to prevent over loading circuits once the power's hack. Keep warm and safe. Wear a hat and extra layers of clothing. Make sure propane or kerosene heaters have proper ventilation and never burn charcoal inside your house. Cover your freezer with a blanket ' and keep the door clostd. Food should stay frozen and safe for about two days. Turn your porch light and one inside light on. That way you and our crews will know when power is back on. When your power returns, if your lights are i i i 1 1 aim or very uripni.can , Lagairu There may still be a problem. If there's an outage, we don't kid around. We'll get the power back as fast as we can. To report an outage, call 1-877-548-3768 (l-877-LITESOUT). UTAH POWER A PacifiCorp Company Making it happen. POOR COI |