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Show Leah Johnson elected as VFW Auxiliary treasurer Leah P. Johnson of Orem has been elected as Treasurer of the Department of Utah Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the US for her 18th consecutive con-secutive year at the annual convention conven-tion held in Ogden. Elected in June 1969 for the first time, she has been elected 15 of those years by ac-clumation. ac-clumation. Mrs. Johnson jointed Ute Auxiliary 2162 under her husband Grant's eligibility in March 1949. She was elected as auxiliary president in 1952-53, following this, she was elected elec-ted to the office of district president of district 6 and also of district H. As district president, she assisted with the re-organization of Orem VFW Post 8376 and with the approval of the Post organized the first Ladies Auxiliary to the post and was the first auxiliary president in 1956. In 1957, she became auxiliary treasurer, a position she still holds. In addition to the office of auxiliary treasurer, she has held the office of auxiliary secretary for several terms. She has held the office of department depart-ment secretary for two terms, one concurrent with the office of treasurer. She held all elective offices of-fices in the Department of Utah and was elected Department President in 1961-62. In 1971, she was elected to a two year term of National District Council Member 17. Holding this office of-fice 1971-73, she represented the Departments of Oregon, Nevada and Utah on the National Council of Administration Ad-ministration of the Ladies Auxiliary. Since 1971, she has served the Department Auxiliary for 16 years as the Department Membership and during 15 of those years the Department Depart-ment of Utah has attained 100 plus membership growth. She has held other program chairmanships including in-cluding Americanism and for many Area obituaries Frances Hansen Frances Ivella Rhodes Hansen, 87, of Orem, died July 3, 1987 at her home of causes incident to age. She was born May 1, 1900 in Ferron, Emery County, to John Joseph and Mary Ann Horsley Rhodes. She married mar-ried Robert Leslie Hansen on Dec. 17, 1919 in Ferron, Fer-ron, and their marriage was later solemnized in the Manti LDS Temple. He died July 21. 1976. She was a member of the LDS Church in the Orem 2nd Ward. She spent her childhood in Ferron and attended schools there. She worked work-ed with her husband to manage the Emery Regional Storehouse and Complex. Survivors include three sons and a daughter: Don J. Hansen, Orem; Reese A. Hansen, Salt Lake City; Ray E. Hansen, West Valley City; and Irene H. Brown, Provo; 31 grandchildren; 60 great grandchildren; and two sisters: Eva Boggs and Bethel Pehrson, both of Salt Lake City. Two sons: Leo and Robert, preceded her in death. Funeral services were held Monday in the Orem 2nd LDS Ward Chapel. Burial was in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. Lorna Masterson Lorna Elsie Hutchings Judd Masterson, 76, of American Fork, died July 3, 1987, of cancer. Survivors include her husband, Charles H. Masterson of American Fork and children including Mrs. Ezra Billings Bill-ings (Anna Lou) Patten of Orem. Funeral services were Tuesday, July Ju-ly 7, at Anderson and Sons Mortuary. Burial at American Fork City Cemetery. David D. Nuttall David Dean Nuttall, 46, of Salt Lake City, died Monday, June 29, 1987 at his home in Salt Lake. Survivors include his wife, two sons and one daughter, all of Salt Lake City, and four brothers including Richard L. Nuttall of Orem. Funeral services were Thursday at McKay Cottonwood Mortuary. Interment Inter-ment was at Mountain View Memorial Estates. Bern Mortuary SoivIaag & 373-1041 Clifford L. Carroll Funeral services were held Thursday at the Berg Mortuary of Springville. Interment Springville Evergreen Cemetery. Full military rites accorded accord-ed by VFW Dist. No. 4. Albert A. Smith Funeral services were held Thursday in the Edgemont 12th Ward Chapel, Provo. Interment East Lawn Memorial Hills, Provo. Rossel Brown Swensen Funeral services were held Monday in the Oak Hills 1st Ward Chapel, Provo. Pro-vo. Interment was in Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. years took Flag programs into the Orem Area Elementary Schools, teaching Flag Ettiquete and Flag History. Since joining the VFW Ladies Auxiliary, Mrs.Johnson has attended all but two State Conventions. Conven-tions. Missing the first one when she accompanied her husband to Texas and Oklahoma where his unit of the National Guard was called into service ser-vice during the Korean Conflict and i QM when she was in Peru, Indiana UfeTS her Air Force son Larry was getting married. She has also attended atten-ded many National Conventions and Conferences. It would be impossible to log her milage as she has toured the State of Utah with other Department Depar-tment Presidents to assist and promote the VFW and the Ladies Auxiliary. Her interests are varied, she is an avid bowler and organized and served as the first president of the Orem Women's Bowling Association. She has held many offices in the leagues and has bowled in State and National Tournaments where she has attended League, City Association and State Titles. In addition to her Auxiliary and Bowling activities, she has held positions in the LDS Church, in the Business and Professional Women's Club, local and state clubs. A member mem-ber of Orem Boosters, she held the offices of-fices of Secretary and Treasurer of this group. A grandmother of 11, she enjoys participating in family activities with them, she is excited with their skills and talents. A proud mother of six, four sons and two daughters, she boasts that she is the only Orem Auxiliary Member who can boast three generations of members of the Auxiliary. Both her daughters are members as well as her 16-year-old granddaughter, Mindy Andrus, of Lava Hot Springs, Idaho. Myrtle Farnworth Myrtle Randall Farnworth, 85, of Orem, died Wednesday, July 1, 1987 at her home. She was born July 16, 1902 in Taylorsville to Thomas and Ida Bringhurst Ran dall. She married Ivan A Farnworth on December 30, 1919 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. She spent her early years in Idaho and moved to Orem in 1929 where she has since resided. She has served as state president of the World War I Veterans Auxiliary and was past president of the VFW Auxiliary for four years. She has been very active with Orem Senior Citizens. She was a member of the harmonica har-monica band and she and her husband were tour guides for many years. At the age of 60, she started bowling and held a 225 pin series. Her special interests included in-cluded cooking and crocheting. She had received first place ribbons at the Utah State Fair for two of her articles. She was a member of the LDS Church and had held many positions, including in-cluding Relief Society counselor. Survivors include her husband of Orem; one son and two daughters: Ivan R. Farnworth, Mrs. Guy (Dortha) Cor-dner, Cor-dner, both of Orem; Mrs. Arthur ( Alene) Kosanke, Spokane, Wash.; 24 grandchildren; grand-children; 39 great-grandchildren; 4 great-great-grandchildren; four brothers: Morley Randall, Blackfoot, Idaho; Norman Nor-man Randall, Pocatello, Idaho; Welcome Randall, Monterey, Calif.; Max Randall, North Dakota. She was preceded in death by two daughters: Beulah Pyne and Joyce Harding. Funeral services were held Monday in the Orem 16th Ward LDS Chapel. Burial was in Orem City Cemetery. Mona Scboelkopf Mona F. Iverson Schoelkopf, 81, of Orem, died Monday June 29, 1987, at her home in Orem of casuses incident to age. She was born Nov. 12, 1905 in Maeser to Christopher Christo-pher W. and Margaret Howard Miller Iverson. She married Henry Floyd Anderson, April 12, 1923. She married Cecil F. Schoelkopf, August, 1963. He died April 4, 1986. She was a member of the LDS Church and lived many years in California and moved to Orem seven years ago. Survivors include a son and two daughters: Theo F. Anderson, Duchesne; Renee Anderson, Orem; Vaudie Woodall, Claremont, Calif.; Bob Schoelkopf, Lafayette, Calif.; 14 grandchildren; grand-children; 46 great-grandchildren; three great-great-grandchildren. 1 Services were Thursday at the Wing Mortuary in Lehi. Burial was in the San-taquin San-taquin City Cemetery. Blaine Hatfield Jr. Blaine Arthur Hatfield Jr., 18, of Springville, died Sunday, June 26, 1987 at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center of injuries received in an automobile accident. He is survived by his father of Springville; his mother of Spanish Fork; six brothers and three sisters including Ronald Hatfield of Orem. Services were Thursday with burial in Springville Evergreen Cemetery. I I h 7 Hearty smile covers pre-panorama tension as Alan Osmond, Os-mond, producer, relaxes as speaker for ProvoOrem Chamber of Commerce membership luncheon two days before the Freedom Festival climaxes celebration with Bob Hope appearance. RAINBOW TROUT IS A NICE CHOICE FOR A FESTIVE BARBECUE Summer is a great time to entertain guests. With a menu that takes advantage of the barbecue grill and with a little advance planning, having company can be relaxing and fun. - Rainbow trout is a nice choice for a festive barbecue. It has the advantage of being quick and easy to prepare. This recipe for Rainbow Trout with Toasted Hazelnut Butter is simple yet elegant. While you blend the hazelnuts and butter, the trout takes a dip in a fresh lemon juice and sesame oil marinade. Then off to the grill; the rainbow trout cooks in just minutes. While the trout is still sizzling, it's topped with a generous dollop of hazelnut butter. Toasting the nuts is worth the extra effort. It brings out the distinctive taste of the hazelnuts and complements the rich, smoky flavor of grilled rainbow trout. RAINBOW TROUT WITH TOASTED HAZELNUT BUTTER 4 rainbow trout fillets (4 ounces each) V cup plus V teaspoon fresh lemon juice, divided 1 tablespoon plus V teaspoon Oriental sesame oil, divided Marinate trout in V4 cup lemon juice and 1 tablespoon oil. Cover and refrigerate about Vi hour. Meanwhile, combine remaining teaspoon lemon juice, remaining V teaspoon oil, butter, nuts, and sugar. Season with salt to taste; set aside. Over hot coals, place trout flesh-side down on oiled grill and cook about 2 minutes. Use 2 spatulas to gently turn trout; cook about 2 minutes longer, skin-side down, until done. Serve immediately with butter. Makes 2 to 4 servings. 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'' ': 1 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened 1 tablespoon toasted, peeled and ground hazelnuts 1 tablespoon toasted, peeled and chopped hazelnuts Vi teaspoon sugar COST A VV 2 WEEK SPECIAL Brand new fully guaranteed! Many mar Malum, reel We stock 324 West Center Provo 374-0725 s Orem-Geneva Times- Alan Osmond By Jeanne Thayne Alan Osmond, world renowned Eroducer and entertainer, is a likable dd back kind of guy who will spend years on a single goal, and run outside and scream when it's accomplished. That's what he did when Bob Hope finally said "yes" he'd come to Provo for the Freedom Festival. It took three years, several trips, and a whole lot of phone calls to get that Hiiswer. "And the funny thing is I don't have any idea what Hope is going to do," Alan told the Chamber of Commerce Com-merce last Thursday at their membership luncheon. By now, of course, the Freedom Festival is over, and all of Osmond's work has been judged by the thousands and thousands who packed pack-ed the B YU Stadium for the Freedom Festival Panorama. Osmond said he was approached by the Freedom officials several years ago to help them get the Festival "out of the red." It's been a challenge. He says, but for the first time he hopes to make a "few shingles" this year. Getting sponsors has helped. "We started sponsors two years ago. Now. we have sponsors fighting to help. It's a zoo but it's working," he says. The entertainer also related how Turtle's House learned a lot of patience with them. They had to redo one whole framed section when dad found out they used nails that were too small. Mandi, 8, the youngest, put in all her spare time also. "I picked up all the piles of trash," she says and remembers the fun of having a weiner roast and cooking 'smores one night when they burned the stuff she'd collected. She learned a lot about setting goals and accomplishing accom-plishing tasks. A goal was set to complete each step of the building process, says Mary. "It was a thrill as each step was completed," She claims to have learned more than anybody. "I have a hard time seeing the end product and become easily frustrated when I don't have the foggiest idea what I'm doing. It was really scary working up on the roof but I had to have faith; now I have to have faith that the grass we planted will grow." Bret has no doubt. "I never had faith this house would go up and look at it," says Bret. For Eric the whole process was "really satisfying." To see his family work together to accomplish something important was good, and to see his drawings come to reality was also "very fulfilling," but he says the greatest joy was in seeing the kind of charity such a project fosters. Orem Community Hospital's Emergency Center is open 24-hours a day with a physician always on duty. Nearly all injury or illness can be treated at the center. New Emergency Center at Hospital After treating over 12,000 people with injuries or illnesses in 1986, the staff of Orem Community Hospital's Emergency Center was glad when their new emergency center was recently completed and opened. "The old Emergency Center was adequate in 1981 when the hospital was built," said Larry Layne, Center manager, "but over the years as we started treating 1,000 people a month, with as high as 1,300 a month during the summer, we needed a larger facility." The new Emergency Center, open 24 hours a day, is located on the south side of the hospital and is double dou-ble the size of the previous area, allowing treatment of up to nine pa tients at one time. It has trauma, cast, suture, ear-nose-throat, endoscopy, GYN, and general examination rooms, each with specialized equip ment. A larger and more comfortable waiting area was added and a more accessible ambulance entrance was constructed. A physician, specially trained in emergency medicine, is always on duty.. "Most any type of injury or il lness can be treated at the new center," said Layne. "In part because of the recent addition of special -Wednesday July 8, 1987 .Page 4 Tells Chamber President Reagan asked The Osmonds to entertain at his inaugural. Alan went all out using Utah people to build sets and banners, arranged for the Tabernacle Choir, etc, and after it was all arranged, they were "uninvited." "unin-vited." Osmond went right to the top and called Nancy, "in 10 minutes she called back and said it was all worked work-ed out." At the production there was a severe cold spell and wind storm, but ' 'as soon as we started the wind stopped," stop-ped," recalls Osmond. Getting ready for the Freedom Festival is probably Osmond's greatest great-est challenge. "It's a sell job all the way," he says. "But now that Bob Hope has come to Provo it will pave the way for others." Alan had Mr. T last year along with Crystal Gale and many other entertainers. "These people peo-ple want to come back," he said, "and that's what's important." Osmond admitted he's had offers from other cities who'd like to lure him from Utah Valley. He told the Chamber, "This is my home." He said he just returned with the "Osmond "Os-mond Boys" (his six sons) from a performance per-formance in Japan and there is a -possibility they will be going to Russia, but, he said, "When we get home I want my boys to have a nor-. nor-. mal life with their friends and that is what we can have here." Continued from Front Page Mary's sister, a slightly built teacher from Wyoming, came down and single handedly laid up the rock front of the home; Eric's dad spent hundreds of hours on the house and custom built the kitchen cabinets, and a neighbor helped pour the concrete. con-crete. But the majority of the carpentry carpen-try was handled by Mom and the kids. "It was a hassle, but it was worth wor-th it," says Eric. Eric traded for electrical, plumbing, plum-bing, heating, foundation and tile work. For the shake shingles the family scavenged the good shingles from a neighbor's unfortunate house fire a couple of winters ago. "We hand pulled each staple from those shakes, stacked and bundled them until we would need them." According Accor-ding to the family that was the toughest and most boring job of all. For Christmas the family was given a professionally laid rock fireplace. The family had scouted out and hauled the rock from their cabin site near Woodland. By February of this year the house was ready for occupancy. Now, the lawn is planted, some trees and flowers started, and the pain of the past year is replaced with pride. The Tuttles don't mind telling anyone who asks "this is the house that WE built" . . . at about half the cost. medical care units to the hospital. However, the big advantage is that the new center is more convenient and accessible to the patient. We can now see and treat our patients more quickly. Also, they never have to worry about whether we're open, because we never close." The Center also offers a low-cost plan for minor injuries or illnesses. For a minor cut or scrape, or a nagg ing cough or sore throat, patients can often use the "30-30 plan." The plan guarantees that the patient will be seen by a physician, treated, and on his way in 30 minutes or less, all for $30. A nurse will determine if the pa tient can be seen under the plan, and payment must be made at the time of treatment. As a public service, to assist the Orem residents to be prepared for emergencies, a 64-page emergency handbook is being offered free to the public. It addresses topics such as first aid, and home and weather emergencies. One copy per family may be obtained from the Orem Community Com-munity Hospital Emergency Center. For additional information call 2244080 Ext. 126. , This article provided as a community com-munity service by Orem Community Hospital |