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Show Utah Dairies Seek Princess The Utah County 1967 Dairy Princess contest and banquet will be held Thursday, May It at the Pleasant View Third Ward, 650 East Stadium Avenue, Provo, beginning be-ginning at 2 p.m., and finalized at a banquet at 8 p.m. Preliminary contests will be held Saturday, May 6 in the north and south part of the county. For girls from Provo south the contest will be held at the Genola Ward, Geaola, Utah, starting at 2 p.m. For girls from Provo north the contest will be held at the American Fork Tabernacle, American Fork, Utah starting at 1:30 p.m. Ten finalists will be selected from each area to compete in the overall over-all Utah County contest. These contests are sponsored by the Utah County Dairymen and Utah County Extension Services for all girls of Utah County. Eligible girls are any girl between be-tween the ages of 17 and 25 inclusive in-clusive and unmarried. Sha must be a high school graduate, resident resi-dent of Utah County and she must enjoy dairy foods. She must be willing to spend a reasonable amount of time representing the dairy industry and should have a reasonable knowledge of dairying. She must fill out an 2 ilication and appear at the contest. Mi "tT, k V !Kt mm SATIN GLOSS ENAMEL NEW acrylic LATEX SATIN GLOSS ENAMEL combines the durability of a rugged, non-yellowing semi-gloss enamel with the ease and convenience conveni-ence of soap-n-water clean-up. Ideal for kitchens, bathrooms, playrooms or trim-wherever trim-wherever a beautiful, emooth, semi-gloss fia isa is aesirea. 5sr a FERN COX DANCERS to be featured at theOrem 20th Ward Primary Benefit are, from left, Lou Ann Russon, Leslie Robinson, Kaye Lindquist and JoAnn Leavitt. The benefit will be staged April 29th at 7 p.m. in the Orem 20th Ward Cultural Hall, 860 S. 100 W. in Orem. Tickets will be family, $1.50; adults, 50 cents; students and children, 25 cents. There will be a bake sale and other goodies to delight the young and old. Prnrppric will ho ncori fnr PHmarv airlc onH matoHolc tt"v llw V 1767 So. State. Orem. Utah HOME LIVING STUDENTS at OHS gain first-hand knowledge of miniature minds and manners while directing a nursery school this week. Nursery School At Orem High Teaches Girls The annual HumanDevelopment Laboratory is being conducted this week in the Home Economics Department at OremHighSchool. Mrs. Joan Pitts and her senior Home Living students are directing direct-ing a nursery school for approximately approx-imately twenty-five pre-school children. The purpose of the laboratory is to gain better understanding and communication between the girls and their small pupils. It also introduces the children to many new and creative experiences. experi-ences. The girls have been able to observe many things about the behavior of pre-schoolers. They learn the needs of each individual individ-ual child and can see how he adapts and reacts to new situations. situa-tions. As in the past, this lab has been extremely successful. Two B.Y.U. students who have been training with Mrs. Pitts this quarter, Miss Martha Burton and Mrs. Nancy Henderson, have been very helpful in planning and conducting the nursery. TIMPANOGOS ARCHERY CLUB The Timpanogos Archery Club will hold their meet at the Orem City Park onSunday. Registration will be from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. Stunning new Old Crow Half Gallon ' m mum l0Lg)Wf Vj 1 WHISKEY trf 5 Special Features! Grip-Jug Handle. Perfect pouring balance, from the first pour to last. Compact Size. No taller than a fifth, but holds a full 64 ounces Built-in Pourer. Perfect pouring control smooth flow every time Same Great Whiskey. Famous. Smooth. Mellow Old Crow KMTUCKY SIMIGHT BOURBON WHI5KCV 86 MOOF DISmUBMIIIIOTIHOBtMMOUS 010 WOW DISTttlEBT CO .FRNKF0RT.KT LINCOLN BEACON by Cris Headman Tuesday was the most important import-ant day to the final candidates because it was the elections. The campaigning was finally over for another year at least and the candidates were allnervous.Six-th allnervous.Six-th period was an assembly in which the winning candidates were announced. But before they were, Mrs. Dalton's Journalism class gave a short skit about elections in the past through the time tunnel. tun-nel. The main characters were: Rex Greenwood, Chris Tew, Craig Doxey, Kathrine Jenkins, and Mike Robinson. The assembly was very good and fit just per fectly into the elections. The win ners will be announced next week along with their pictures. There was also a victory dance after school in which the whole school was invited. Thursday, the sixth grades will perform their assembly to the sixth and seventh grades only. They have been working hard on it for weeks trying to get it in top shape. I'm sure it'll be an outstanding out-standing assembly and the students stu-dents will enjoy it stated Mr. Briggs. Friday will be the eighth grade party at Saratoga. They will go after school at 3:45 on buses, and will come home about 6:00. .at Saratoga they will go on rides, swim if desired and play games. 'I really think it sounds like fun and I'm sure that all of the eighth grade students will have fun," stated Jim MarshaU, eighth grade president. LET'S PLAN A PARTY AT . . . RIVERSIDE Roller Skating Rink Skating Every Night Except Sun. - Tues. 7:30 - 10 p.m. Tuesday Nights MIA Parties by Reservation Matinee Sat. 2-4 p.m. Thurs. Special 40c Plus Skate Rental MONDAY NIGHTS All the family .... $2.00 (Includes Skates) For Special Partv Rates nd Hours Call 373-9187 551 W. 12th N. Provo Pvt. John Todd Completes Course FT. LEONARD WOOD, MO.-Army MO.-Army Private John E. Todd, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard E. Todd, 957 S. 500 E, Orem, completed an engineer assistant course April 17 at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. During the eight-week course, he was trained to operate and maintain air compressors, engines, en-gines, crane shovels and tractors, Pvt. Marvin Henke Assigned To Unit In Vietnam TAN SON NHUT, VIETNAM-Army VIETNAM-Army Private Marvin C. Henke, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil W. Henke, 575 E. 13800 S. Drap er, Utah, was assigned to the 12th Data Processing Unit in Vietnam, April 3. Pvt. Henke, a clerk typist in the unit near Tan Son Nhut, entered the Army inOctober 1966 and was last stationed at Ft. Huachuca, Ariz. He is a 1960 graduate of Jor dan High School in Sandy, Utah, and attended Brigham Young Uni versity in Provo. His wife, Jennifer, Jen-nifer, lives at 1689 S. Lake-w.jod Lake-w.jod Drive, Orem. Woman, 87 Dies In Rest Home LAKE SHORE Rites were conducted Tuesday in LakeShore for Margaret Beck Baadssaard. 87, who died Friday, April 21, lybY, at an Orem rest home of complications incident to aee. Bishop Dean Taylor officiated. bhe was born July 28. 1879 in Spanish Fork, a daughter of Alfred Al-fred R. and Margaret Thomas Beck. She was educated in the Spanish Fork schools and in 1898 married Marinus Baadsgaard in Spanish Fork. He died in 1931. She had lived in Lake Shore aU her life, until moving to Spanish Fork five years ago. She was active in the LDS Church and had served as a Lake Shore Ward Relief Society visiting teacher for over 50 years. She served as president of the Primary and was bunaay School teacher. She was also a member of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Survivors include three sons and one daughter. Mrs. Alton (Ruth) Richardson, Benjamin; L. Foster Baadsgaard, St George; Alfred E. Baadseaard. Lake :Shore; EsbernBaadsgaard,Span- lsn tork; and a grandson she raised, Foster Johnson; 27 grand children, 45 great-grandchildren. one brother and two sisters, Joseph E. Beck, Tooele; Mrs. Clyde (Elsie) Mitchell, Provo; and Mrs. Hannah AHen,SaltLake City. Interment was in the Spanish Fork City Cemetery. r r fax vr , St 7 : PVT. STEVE TUCKER, son of Mrs. Thaola Tucker of Orem, stands beside a Jeep in the Vietnam war theater. Steve has been in the war zone about six months with an engineering company. Tucker, former Orem athlete, participated in baseball base-ball and was a member of the Orem High football team in 1965. He also placed in the A AU boxing bouts. Pvt; Douglas Hall Completes Course FT. (JORDAN. GA. - Private Douglas T. Hall, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Hall, Z7S N. 800 East, Orem, completed a radio teletype operation course at the Army Southeastern Signal School, Ft. Gordon, Ga., April 21. He received instruction in the operation of radio transmitting and receiving sets by voice and Morse code. Pvt. M. Martinez Completes Training FT. BENJAMIN HARRISON, IND.- Army Private Manuel C. Martinex, 19, sonofMr.andMrs. Manuel Martinex, 1070 N. 12 W. Orem, completed an eight-week pay specialist course at the Army Finance School, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind., April 24. He was trained in the payment-of payment-of civilian and military personnel handling of travel allowances, and accounting. Instruction was also given in business law and pay regulations. Funeral Rites Held For Woman, 87 Funeral services were conducted conduc-ted Saturday for Mary Elizabeth Stewart Beckstrand, 87, who died Wednesday, April 19, 1967, in Orem. She was born June 13, 1897 at Meadow, Utah, a daughter of James Murdock and Mary Janette Duncan Stewart. On Aug. 23, 1899 she married Heber Beckstrand in the Manti LDS Temple and he died on June 13, 1955. She had attended the Brigham Young Academy. Active in the LDS Church, she had served as president presi-dent and officer of many auxiliary organizations. She and her husband hus-band served a three-year mission in the Manti Temple. For several years prior to her death she lived in Orem and American Fork but had lived most of her life in Meadow. Survivors include sons and daughters, Mrs. Cecil (Thelma) Fisher, Meadow; Mrs. Francis (Viola) Roylance, Altamont; Mrs. A. E. (Mary) Russell, St John; Melvin Beckstrand, American Fork; Mrs. Raymond (Ava)Stew-art, (Ava)Stew-art, Orem; Monte Beckstrand, ElPaso, Texas; Dawn Beckstrand San Francisco, Calif.; 15 grandchildren; grand-children; 27 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. Interment was in the Meadow Cemetery. ed. All students were given voting vot-ing registration forms, and were asked to fill them out and hand them in before school, after school, or during lunch. If they did not register, they were not allowed to vote in the final elections. elec-tions. On April 20 campaigning began. Persons running for office of-fice were allowed 5 posters. On Tuesday, April 25, the elections assembly was held. In this assembly, as-sembly, the candidates from both' parties gave speeches on their qualifications. Voting also started start-ed on Tuesday, and continued until Thursday at noon. Winners were announced at the elections dance and will be printed next week. The student Council wishes to congratulate congrat-ulate the winners, and wishes them luck in the coming year. NEW BABY ARRIVES Mr. and Mrs. Terrv Tucker are the proud parents of a babv girl, born last week. Mrs. Tucker is the former Pat Thorne, daughter of Mr. an! Mrs. Kobert Thorne. Mr. Tucker is the son of Thaola Tucker all of Orem. WomenPast21 WITH BLADDER IRRITATION Suffer Many Troubles. After 21, common Kidney or Bladder Irritations affect twice as many women as men and may make you tense and nervous from too frequent, burning or itching urination both day and night. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and suffer from Headaches, Backache and feel old, tired; depressed. In such irritation, irri-tation, CYSTEX usually brings fast, relaxing comfort by curbing irritating germs in strong, acid urine and by analgesic anal-gesic pain relief. Get CYSTEX at druggists. drug-gists. See how fast it can help you. OJH NEWS by Celia Harris For the past two weeks, elections elec-tions have been held at OJH. Thursday April 13, primary elections elec-tions were held. All the next week, student registration was conduct- Orem-Geneva Times Thursday', April 27, 967 Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1. Compression 9. Clubs 13. Rebelled 14. Encourage 15. Hail! 16. Korean river 17. Char 18. Sisters 20. Chops 22. Sun god 23. Yawl 25. Scotch river 26. Meyal 27. Readjust 29. Mr. Crosby 30. Forgive 33. Infuriate 35. Again 36. Cowboy show 38. Suffix: Associate 39. Strike 40. Distributed 7 T" T 7 1 " 9 " " 71 . iff ii. 71 X&" 50. Dull 44. Musical note 52. Flee: slang 45. Pattern 53. Rare gas Answer to Puzzle 47. 5280 feet 54. Mangle 48. Reverberate 56. Travel 57. Perfumes fl3 Mvnnaiv-aTolJOiHi?;3i i 1 wms a own 1 w 3no ondvxn? xT 103 fljo aa3 N;V 9ivto n 3ai.W3h 3 y DOWN 1. Trick 2. Entertainment Entertain-ment 3. Happening 4. Therefore 5. Wily 6. State 7. Tell 8. Learned 9. Fish 10. Lincoln 11. Ripping 1Z. Queer 19. Propeller 21. State: abbr. 24. Female bird 26. Juana 28. Sit astride 29. Sweeper 30. Attire 31. Tempter 32. Shelter 34. Male nickname nick-name 37. Musical dramas 39. Toward 41. Flower 42. Exult 43. Greek divisions 45. Friar 46. Resins 49. Weeder 51. Insect 55. Registered nurse: abbr. "Sh-h-h-h- I'm listening to mood music!" mill y iiim, This young fellow appreciates the finer things in life. That's why when he bought that new sports car he hurriedly called us for complete protection. Why don't you? Bowen-Warnick Insurance Inc. 500 South, State OREM "Your Security Is Our Business" REMINDER We'd like to remind you how much fun it is to have clean carpeting. It's easy and economical too. We let you use one of our Taylor machines which is designed for women to take the hard work out of carpet cleaning. Taylor cleans without water, carpets can be used instantly. , TAYLOR CARPET 1497 So. S'ate Orem Phone 225-2489 contains 13 PLANT FOOD ELEMENTS FOR GREENER GROWTH V'V r WATCH IT GROW WITH MORGRO 1 SEE YOUR NEAREST MORGRO DEALER We furnish roller or spreader FREE of charge with purchases. Rohbock Sons' Floral 1042 So. State Orem,. Ph. 225-3100 ( EVERY-B0BY WINS SUBSCRIPTIONCONTEST STARTS APRIL 22 1967 ENDS JUNE 10 1967 at 12 noon Cosh For Everyone - 7 PRIZES You receive cash in addition to prizes! l8t Sting Ray Bicycle 5th Prize 10 Transistor Radio 2nd Prize Walkie-Talkie 3-Mile 6th Prize 8 Transistor Radio 3rd Prize 12 Transistor Radio 7th pg 6 Transistor Radio 4th Prize Offical Boy Scout Pup Tent BOYS & GIRLS ENTER NOW EARN MONEY -WIN PRIZES Rules and Regulations Available At Orem-Geneva Times office Subscription Rates 1 Year 3.50 2 Years 6.50 S Years - 9.50 Out of Slate 5.00 Foreign 6.00 Monthly (In 'Orem) 30c ENTRY BLANK Name Address Phone Age READ ABOUT OREM RESIDENTS IN THE TIMES Schools Churches Clubs Sports Societv Pictures of friends All Orem News Legals Editorals Comics firocerv Ads As Low As ALL FOR OREM GENEVA Orem's Home Owned Newspaper IP Per Month TIMES |