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Show Thursday, December 3, 1970 i Native Of Orem : f Dies In Calif. heights, and since all pieces can be moved, eyes rotate, whet'ls revolve, re-volve, clock faces change. Children Chil-dren combine enjoyment with practice in manual dexterity. of making cookies for Christmas. It adds a warm and hospitable aroma to the house and gives children an inner happiness that can never be bought or forgotten. into hollow forms to resemble birds, animals, flowers any shape that comes to' mind. The pinata is filled with candy and toys and suspended on a rope. Blindfolded children get three whacks each at trying to break the pinata with a stick to make the concealed treasures come tumbling out. For the Spanish descendants who came to the Southwest by way of Mexico, the Christmas season begins with the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on December De-cember 12th and continues through La Navidad, Christmas Day. Orem-Geneva Times long awaited Messiah came to the City of David as a mortal infant, to establish a new relationship between God and man. 4' The First Christmas As we commemorate the birth of a Child, we find new meaning in a glorious gift bestowed on mankind 2,000 years ago. v Pi: CCwCORD, ' Calif. Ornal tiiej Rielsen, 74, died Nov. .1 ia Concord. He was a native jf. Ottw asm former resident of frJnjvlttei-Mr.Mlelsen was born V-;:- Oct. 24. ItHi 111 Drum a nn Cookies Add Flavor To Happy Holidays C is for cookies The nicest Christmas trees ever are those trimmed with garlands of popcorn pop-corn and cranberries and home made cookies. It's an old-fashioned idea that few mothers take time for any more. Even if you prefer your tree laden with tinsel tin-sel and lights and expensive ornaments, orn-aments, don't overlook the joy "Luminarias and Pinatas Possibly the two best known ornaments from the Southwest that have spread in popularity to other parts of the country are luminaries and pinatas. Luminaries Lumin-aries are set on rooftops and lawns. Once they were bonfires, but in the interest of safety they are now made by plunging a large candle into a brown paper bag of sand. The pinata is a ' colorful and whimsical creation of crepe and tissue papers made . - The Christmas Child which was greeted by the shepherds and later worshipped by the Magi has forever changed the course of history. With his birth came a new age, a new religion and a new concept of the value of a human life. Never again will life be the same. The supreme gift represented, a miracle and was performed in a supernatural manner to reflect its eternal significance. The first Christmas Gift was a Redeemer who came to offer man a better life on earth and ntnrnj fa Kwi hn veil. The J of -Andrew and Martha Robblns PUZZLE UPS ... An enlarged version of "Puzzle l'ps" shows how this educational toy challenges chal-lenges and rewards children by testing their . learning ability. Since all pieces in each puzzle In the set are Inserted at different 'Kielsen. 1 He married LuellaReld in 1919 and she died in 1941. He later married Grace Roch. ; He worked for many years 5v ior me w.w.ciyde to. inSpring-tille. inSpring-tille. For the past 18 years Mr. Nielsen had lived in Concord. Con-cord. '." Survivors include his widow of il Rem Q Barbara Clark Rites Planned For Relative Of Local People Barbara Carroll Clark, 1150 Hillcrest Dr., SpriagviUe. died Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 2,m. 1150 Hillcrest Dr. u.c uui ,iy uubyiiaioi. Funeral services wfere a cerebral hemorrhage, Mrs. vw , rntnrS km Clark is formerly of Orem and h Concord, CaM. a relative of local people. She was born Jan. 20, 1906, in Orderville, Utah a daughter of George F. Carroll and Clarissa Amy Terry. She married J. Ray Clark Dec. 13, 1924 inOgden,' Utah. The marriage wtf solemnized June 2, 1952 in the -Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mrs. Clark had been a teacher in Primary, Sunday School and ; MIA. She had served as counselor ' and secretary in Relief Soceity, , She was an officer inDaughters of Utah Pioneers and a member r-of r-of Los Amigos Club. j She is survived by her husband j of Springville and two sons, C. T.qMqp Plorlr QnH Pair tl Plo!" y .u.t.u. vwua aim ivaj ... vaUAf ; both of Springville; fifteen grandchildren, grand-children, four sisters ana two brothers, Mrs. Arthur (Vivan) S umsion, Springville; Mrs. Clifton T. (Kezia) Pyn, Orem; Mrs. Ivan (Cora) Dimmick, Mid vale; Mrs. Lawrence (Viola) Mc- Millen, Bountiful; J. Kenneth Carroll, Vernal; and Paul W. Carroll, Orem. Funeral services will be held at the Springville Stake House, 650 E. 500 S., Saturday, Dec. 5, at 11 a.m. under the direction of Wheeler Mortuary. F:iends may caU Friday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Saturday prior to services. Interment will be in the Ever- green Cemetery, Springville.. THE MISTLETOE The Druids called mlstlettt the "all heal" and believed that it bad miraculous powsxs to cure diseases and counteract counter-act poisons. The Druids found kissing under the mhtletee great sport, but believed H was not proper unless the sprig had been cut with golden knife. Custom also denanctal that one of the berries on the mistletoe be removed each time one kissed beneath It (Mortuary 1 Services f Halw BARTIE PIERCE - Funeral services ser-vices were held Wednesday auae Berg Mortuary. Interment was in the Provo City Cemetery. MARY LOVELLA McCOARD WEISER, Idaho -Graveside services ser-vices were held in the Provo City Cemetery Monday at 2 p.m. LaMAR D. BUNNELL - Funeral services were held Tuesday, 11 a.m. at the Edgemont 1st Ward ; Chapel, 4000 North 650 East, v Russell (Ann) Judkinsjrumans-Provo. Judkinsjrumans-Provo. Interment was In the burg, N.Y.; three grandchildren; Provo City Cemetery. , his mother ofOrem; two brothers OWEN BEARDALL - Funeral -nell, Provo, Milton W. Bunnell services were held Tuesday at 1 and Mrs. Reed (Faye) Gillespie, 1:00 p.m. in the Kolob Stake orera. Center, 650 E. 500 S., Spring- j Burial was in the Provo City ville, with Bishop RalphS nelson jCetsetery. of the Springville Uth Ward of- . ficiating. Interment was in the springvme PMnCt,MUry;$Largon Baby CHARLES KENNETH MOH TndflV TAGUE - Funeral servloes were a"3 uua; held Wednesday at 11 aa. ln OREM - Jeffry Lynn Larson, the Berg Drawing Room Chapel three weeks, son of Lynn and of Provo, with Bishop Mark Old- ) Linda Lane Kiesel Larson, died royd of Provo 8U Ward officl- Tuesday morning at his home in ating. Interment was in the ; orem. He was born Nov. 5, Provo City Cemetery, where Ml i70, in Provo. His parents are military rites were accorded by members of the LDS Church. the Dean Mendenhall Pest No. . 13 American Legion. ALICE CONRAD BERTIN CHER-RINGTON CHER-RINGTON - Funeral services' were held Wednesday at 12 noon ' in the Edgemont 1st Ward Chapel with Bishop Charles T. Warner ,; officiating. Interment in th Provo City Cemetery. ROBERT G. JOHNSON - Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. in the BergDrawingRoom Chapel of Provo with Bishop John H. Adams of the Provo 18th Ward officiating Friend, may call at the mortuary Thursday Thurs-day from 6-8 and Friday prior to services. Interment Reber City Cemetery. Concord; nine children, Mrs. Ted ua; Kouwell, Leslie, Ida.; Mrs. Una Strange and Bill Nielsen, Niel-sen, Spanish Fork; Reid 0. Niel--sen, Bountiful; TedNielsen,Pro-vo; TedNielsen,Pro-vo; Mrs. Richard (Roberta) , Victor, Concord; Ronnie Nielsen, i Fremont, Calif.; Mrs. J. Lynn (Colleen) Hill, Long Beach, Calif.; Mrs. Charles (Cheryl) Freeman, Livermore, Calif.; 36 ..grandchildren; 24 great-grand- r, ' J , ' . u and 1 Nielsen- hilriron- twn hrnthorc Dnun held MR. BUNNELL LaMar Bunnell Dies Of Cancer Funeral services were held Tuesday in Edgemont for LaMar D. Bunnell, 52, 3911 N. 3rdE., Provo who died Friday evening At the Utah Valley Hospital of ancer. He was born Dec 15, '1917, in Vineyard, a son of Ross K. and Pearl Williams Bunnell. He married Lorna Stubbs on June 18, 1937. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mr. Bunnell went to elementary school in Orem at the Spencer School and while a boy with his family to Bingham Canyon. Then ttey moved to Orem and he was fraduated from Lincoln High chool there. - He was a trucker for Utah . Poultry, and from 1959 to 1963 managed his own trucking business. bus-iness. For the past seven years 'Mr. Bunnell had ,been an insurance in-surance agent for Utah Farm Bureau and County Mutual Life . Insurance Co. ' After their marriage he and his wife lived in Orem, moving to Edgemont in 1948. Active in ; the Edgemont LDS First Ward, ' Mr. Bunnell served as secretary . of the senior Aaronic Presthood committee, in the presidency of the Elders Quorum, assistant Sunday School superintendent and -Sunday School superintendent, i He was also assistant Cub Master Pack No. 38, treasurer :tt the Utah County Life Underwriters Under-writers and on the Underwriters ; Board of Trustees. His hobbies were hunting, fishing and home 'gardening. He was also a member of the Orem Chamber of Com-? Com-? merce. Survivors include his widow; two sons and two daughters. Dr. GaryL. Bunnell, Pacifica, Calif.; Bret J. Bunnell and Mrs. Richard (Pem) Beesley, Provo; Mrs. and one sister, Harold R. Bun- Survivors include his parents and one sister, Lisa, Orem; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Larson, Burley, Ida.; Mrs. Alton Kiesel, Manti; great-grandparents, great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Niels P. Nielsen, Gunnison. Funeral services will be held today at 11 a.m. in the Sund-berg-Olpin Mortuary in Orem where friends may call prior to services. Epiphany ; During the holiday season, we ' hear reference to the Epiphany many times. However, many do not know when it occurs and how it fits into the Christmas calendar. calen-dar. 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