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Show TOE AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN, Thursday, July 20, 1961 v Temple Ceremony Unites Couple 'it'' " r " ' i , '--'.. '" I. ' ' rf r c f f r J : Mr. and Mrs. S. Paul Murdock married July 14th A beautiful garden setting for a reception honoring the newly married Mr. and Mrs. Stephen . Paul Murdock, was held in the lovely garden of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Y. Fugal in Pleasant Grove July 14, 1961. The Fugals are .aunt and. uncle of the bride. Deanna and Paul were united in marriage earlier in the" day in the Mantl IDS Temple. The bridal party met guests standing in front of an arch and trellis attractively intertwined with pink rpses and twinkle lights. The radiant bride looked love ly in her beautiful white wedding wed-ding gown of chantilly lace over bridal satin. The skirt of the dress fell to the floor in tiers of the. lace and the bodice had a high cellared neckline with long lily point sleeves. Her finger tip veil of sheer illusion was caught up with a tiara that OREM CENTENNIAL FESTIVAL -FEATURE EVENT CARNIVAL ROMANCE - NORMA "JULIE" and ROBERT TAYLOR as mi mm m i H GULBRANDSEN "BILIIE as BIGELOW" 'tMOOM? PRODUCED BY UTAH VALLEY OPERA ASSN. IN COOPERATION WITH OREM BOOSTERS, INC. Thursday, Friday and Saturday July 20, 21 and 22. Curtain Time 8 p.m. Orem High School Auditorium Tickets available at ticket booth across from Orem City Hall. Wakefields Music store in Provo and at Albertson's stores. Phone AC 5-5250 for reservations. &ft- ADMISSIONS: SINC E ADULTS $liO; COUPLES $2.50; FAMILY $5.00 , , -All SEATS RESERVED ' Garden Club Ready for Steel Day Flower Show ill N . ' ' A ' 1 macje a perfect frame for her face. She carried a large wiute orchid accented with pink rose buds. Attending the bride as Maid of Honor was her sister, Miss Mary Beth Peay, bridesmaids were Gall Fugal, Karen Teuscher and Cheryl Murdoch, ah wore matching dresses in soft pink check and carried baskets of pink carnations and rosebuds Mother of the bride, Mrs. Ethan Peay chose a blue taffeta dress and the groom's mother, Mrs. Stephen Murdock,-wore blue organza. They wore match ing corsages of white carnations and Dink rosebuds. The fathers of the young couple looked real '; sharp in their tuxedos. Mr. and Mrs. Fugal greeted the guests and Mrs. Homer Royle was at the guest book. Peter Murdock, brother of the groom, stood as best man, while David Peay, Bill Warnick, Jay Hughs, Rick Webber, Larry Too- ley, Max Brotherson and Bruce Jones acted as ushers. In charge of the care of the sifts were: Mrs. Ruth Wood- worth. Mrs M&rv Jacobs. Mrs. In January of 1945 Mr. and Jacauellne Tremble. Mrs. Nadine Mrs. Arthur Nilsson and Mr. Miller. Mrs. Dale Mundy. Benlta arid mis. d. w. Jones in taiK- and Pat Mundy and Gail Stern. Ing about flowers decided it Myrla Williamson and Faun would be a line thing for the Whitney were in charge of thelpt'ople who liked flowers to get smorgasbord and refreshment together and form a club. lames, xney were au aecoraied attended the State Mid- in pins ana wmte ana Mrs. ,. rw.r.Hnn nt ni V i Whitney did the catering. The self-service punch bowl on the refreshment table was very ef fective Clubs in Salt Lake at that time and in talking to Mel Wallace of Ort'm, newly elected State -rh. hhw , . President,, asked how to go a- tier cake placed on a large mlr- bou' Wlns He said he ror, it was beautifully decorated! WUUiU '"wj with wedding bells"a replica of the temple and a miniature bride and groom. It was a most at tractive cake Parents of the groom are Mr and Mrs. Stephen R. Murdock, American Fork The bride's parents. Mr. and erican Fork and organize a club. In the second week of March he mt't with the group and they were officially made a club and Mrs. Arthur Nilsson was elected the 1st president of the club. They fully organized with all the vice presidents and other Mrs. Ethan Peay, live in Palmer, of leers including four directors Alaska. Mrs. Peay came to Utah about two months-ago to help get her daughter ready for her wedding. Mr. Peay arrived from Alaska in American Fork . on Juiy iz, to be here for his daughters wedding. David Peay, the brides broth er, arrived from a LDS mission in the New England States, so the Peay family are staying with Mary Beth Peay, who is livine in the Peay home in American Fork. and this group served . for. the nt'xt two years. - Other presidents who have served in the organization are Mrs. C. P. Jensen, Mrs. Russell Thompson, Mrs. D. W. Jones, Mrs. Leslie Carson, and Mrs Glade Culmer who is the pres ent president. In the first year that the club was organized they held a Spring Flower Show and the." grade of the flowers brought to A Missionary Homecomine was thP show at that time were very held in the American Fork Sixth poor, but since then at both the wara lor aiaer uavia feay Sun- spring and fall shows the flow day evening. ers nave made a remarkable im Mr. ana Mrs. peay and David provement rrVv,r,."r rttmier' AiasKa This year the 14th annual Paul and Deanna are planning fteel af Sho U a honeymoon trip to Lake Louise tne A1Pme Stak Tabernacle 'I from 12 noon until 8 p.m. and v VMS U W Llll I. J LA K I 1 . n. ll la, through Las Vegas and back 10 American Fork where they win maxe tneir home. Lorin P. Jensen Mpves the quality of the show prom ises to be especially good. The Statt' President of Gar den clubs says he feels tnat through this .type of organiza tion in a town, people enaeav ... . . i . . j or to oeauuiy ineir iota ana 1st, white Club 2nd and gives blue red 3rd Art Exhibit Shows Pre-CiviLWar Theme To Oaden Forest Office grounds The Garden Lcnn v. Jensen will transfer to the Regional Forest Service Office at Ogden, Utah, effective July 23, 1961 C. S. Thornock, Forest Supervisor announced to' day. Mr. Jensen will be in the Division of Fiscal Control, as- filimpri crww4ffiallv tsv. tViA Circt- ?KwiMJ" The Fine Arts Museum, Uni Mr. Jensen has been a mem- versity of Utah, is planning a ber of the Business Management new exhibit to be featured July Section of the Uinta National 16 through August 13. Forest for he Dast four vears. Tne exnioit, enwuea Arusw 01 t.hA lpct. vpor nf mhiPVi v. has me wesiern rronwer, wui ivav hopn Arimln1at.rnt.1va Assistant. Ure OVer U pamungs. liic Prlnr t hi. ocdmnxinl tn fh. DEUmUieS Will UlClUde W8Wr Uinta National Forest he worked colors, oils, aquatints and hand for n short, time for t.h Tntpmol painted lithos. PovAniiA RerviPA in fvrton ntnh Such well-known frontier art- n is a veteran of the tt s' ists as Remington, Catlln, Blake Air Force. Part of his military U and Bierstadt will be feat-,aha feat-,aha n,.. in the chiiin. ured in the huge collection Of oci i iic vvoax auLiiu 111 wiil a imiw nine TclanHs fine art, Since living In Provo Mr. Jen- The exhibition aims to show sen completed requirements for me f the more teresting a B. S. Degree in Accounting and Tork Produced by arttsts who was graduated in August 1959 drew their inspiration from first from the Brlgham Young Uni' versity. FIOEST BUILDING LOTS r' IN ' " noRT ii of nil eoontY Beautiful View of Valley, Good Drainage, Sewer and City Water. .( REASONABLY PRICED TERMS. : LOOK TO YOUR FUTURE BUY NOW. SEE fl. FRilflK GAISFODD American Fork Telephone SK 6-3311" hand experience In the region west of the Mississippi during the nineteenth century. Major emphasis is on those artists who traveled or lived in this region before the Civil War. The exhibition ex-hibition is on tour through the nation for one year. xnougn many or tne paint ings are from private collections and on loan to the exhibition, several of the works will be for sale. Local Items Visitine in American Fork last Sundav at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rwse were Mr. and Mrs. Blair Reese and children Teresa now aged 1 years and Brooks, four months. Blair Is now wortrlncr with the Oullttrftn son water Co. He and his lam uy are living in Provo. place ribbons and the outstanding outstand-ing entries in the different sections sec-tions of the exhibit. The American Fork Garden Club has taken three State 1st place awards, one 2nd place and one 3rd place. In .1954 they took a 1st place national award which was the first ver to be? presented to a garden club in the state of Utah and it is the last one that has been awarded award-ed since. It was presented at Fillmore, Utah, through Thea Kendall, state president at that time. The Garden Club has been active from the.' moment they were organized. They are responsible res-ponsible for the beautiful rose garden at the community hospital. hos-pital. At the1 time it was donated don-ated to the community the members of the club nlanted the garden and cart'd for it for five years. Money from the membership was usd to purchase a table for the hospital for serving the patients; $25 donated to the Daughters of Utah Pioners toward to-ward their Relic Hall and $25 was given to "the Hutchings Memorial Museum in Lehi. $37 worth of shrubs was given to the hospital this past year to be planted in the- parking area. And the club are contributors to the Blue Star Marker at Bridal Bri-dal Veil Falls in Provo Canyon. The club for such a small or ganization has done the com-mnuity com-mnuity of American Fork a very fine service. Don't fail to visit the Flower Show this year. Stir a pinch of theyme hamburger before serving. Into A pinch of rosemary gives fish a subtle flavor. I i HfSjRi' (Milk is by far tht most often V lJl! utdiam,wtrglng5ttait 'rsfKrtCtjfk' I Pr week. Mtat averages 27 'Wm CmRi-i - Butter ttid chem combined i 1 ACCORDING TO RESEARChIyAMAMA rTTSt I HOME ECONOMISTS, THE AVERAGE 1 a tSa 1 REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER 1$ USEO I 7JER TPJlv 17.368 TIMfSSAYEAR. TOTAL OPENINGS I 1L rlg.feOX PER WEEK AVERAGE 334; fEE &AV. 4f "e l9 9 M. By ARTHUR GODFREY - Honorary Education Chairman of the American Cancer Society's 1961 Crusade The Way to Fight Cancer RoBERT Frost once wrote about two roads that diverged in a woods and he ". . . took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference." I thought about these lines the other day when a touch of snrinsr in the air made me feel how eood it was NT! to be alive. Whan that Tin in which turned nnt tn h cancer developed two years ago, Ihad a -choice of two roads. One was to live with mv A pain a little longer to "wait and see"; the , other was go to a doctor. i na consider tne "wait ana see ' road, but nnt fnr lnno 'T fnnlr th nfhi "And that has made all the difference." I took the road "less traveled bv" and it is "less traveled by" because a srreat many neoDle I do not know Cancer's Seven Danger Signals and do not have an annual health checkup. Now the road I am talking about is the road that if followed takes you to vour best nrotpe- tion against death from cancer. And if some 45,000,000 Americans now alive that's the number who will develop cancer if things go on as they are do not take the road "less traveled by," their chances of dying will be greater. So take the road to better health and life. It is your responsibility; responsi-bility; the family's responsibility. The danger signals of cancer and the annual health checkup should be as much a part of your health program as eating and sleeping. They will not only lead you to better health but to a great deal more happiness. They will eliminate a lot of worry and it could stop a lot of heartbreak and financial stress. Know the danger signals; have that yearly health hecknp. f Let's make the "less traveled by" road the "most traveled by'" Arthur Godfrey Printiri 0 0 0 . PAYS FOR ITSELF When you think of Printing . . . think what it saves NOT what it costs! HINTED STATEMENTS with matching window envelopes save billing time get better returns. r RINTED STATIONERY; insures a hanay gupply of letterheads and envelopes no time lost looking for the proper paper and an envelope. RINTED BUSINESS HELPS such as "daily cash sheets," 'paid-out slips" help keep records straight shorten bookkeeping time. ' P RINTED ENVELOPES pay for themseiv m time saved writing return addresses. - Printing looks more businesslike! is more businesslike! for samples, quotations call SK 6-3311 American $ork Citizen . |