OCR Text |
Show 3nt i IfreBB 7- - rn ijjj '. THE o Larry Ferguson to Marry Susan Gray in Oct. Rites ;rv w'mfmd .iimI VhIj r.iy i .h l llti- Id uiiihmiim and fiMtlHimuiig iiLitriage nl Iht'ir daughtif Stiviu I mIh h i iin-ii- l.airy lTgusiHi. mh iif 'jleti 'Hk' couple and JaiR-- l will n.t'itt vovks ni ik tuber ID. w ill le IdiiHiicd al a reci-tio1 (hat veiling al the lil Kcci(in ( enter with receiving from H until Id p.m. All friends and relatives are invited to attend. Susan is a graduate of Lehi High School and four year Seminary. She wa$ a mcniljcr of the I lia, The I'ionettes. the National Honor Society. She is presently a student in the nursing program at Utah Trade lech. I.arry graduated from Lehi High School where he was active in the wrestling and voca- h-- tioual si FREE PRESS THURSDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1975 where he is studying Carpentry. They Mill make their home in Lehi. He also top piogiaius. It is considered a serious ofgraduated from four year fense for a member of the LDS He an served seminary. in Scotland and is a inenilier of the National Guard. He is attendum Trade Tech mission British House of Parliament to lock a door anywhere in the House. n a Rose Barnes Takes Honors At State Fair Again displaying her alulny as a green ihumber. Rose Barnes walked away with many prize winning ribbons at the Utah State Fair. She won a blue ribbon for her Begonia; second mariplace for small variegated golds and nasturtiums and a third for a flower and vegetable arrangement. In the second show she captured three first places for begonias, nasturtium arrangement and small marigolds. A second place for small zinnias and another second for flower arrangements. - One nice thing about growing older is that you and your children eventually wind up on the same side of the generation gap. . -- , la u S x. -- rf , l-- The kindest word in all the world is the unkind word, i Mm JIM FOWLER, CAMILLE HANSEN . . . will marry Oct. 9 Camille Hansen, Jim Fowler To Exchange S.L Temple Vows autumn wedding in the Lake Temple will unite Camille Hansen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell P. Han- ary and American Fork High School, Camille attended Dixie College. Active in church she is sen of American Fork and James L (Jim) Fowler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don C. Fowler of Lehi. The couple will be honored at a family dinner at Andy's Smorgasbord following their marriage. There will be no reception. After graduating from Semin School. She is presently employed by Dr. Claude Thomas. Jim is a graduate of Lehi High School where he was a member of the varsity basketball and golf teams and won football honors. He attended Snow College and was a member of the football team there. He An Salt currently teaching Sunday is presently employed by Roberts and Anderson Construction Company. The bride was guest of honor at a shower held by Mary Pulley and Mrs. Ruth Hansen. Office workers and friends of Miss Hansen were hostesses at a kitchen shower and Donna Barnes, Jane Trane, Candy Fowler and Janice Roberts also feted her at a shower held at the Barnes Home. Following their honeymoon the couple will be at home at 589 East Main Street in American Fork. LARRY FERGUSON. SUSAN EILEEN GRAY ... to marry I II.,. CINDY DEVEY, PFC. SCOTT MARLIN Every time lemomi growers raise their prices. ... set date Cindy Devey, Scott Marlin to Recite Vows in Oct. 10 Rites Mr. and Mrs. Ranald Devey of American Fork are pleased to announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter Cindy to PFC. Scott C. Marlin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Marlin also of American Fork. The couple will be married on Friday, October 10th at 5 p.m. in the American Fork 3rd and 10th Ward cultural hall. The bride and groom will be honored at a reception the same evening from 8 to 10 p.m. and will also be held in the cultural hall. Friends and relatives are invited to attend. Miss Devey is a 1974 graduate of American Fork High School and LDS Seminary. She was a member of the National Honor Society and also the colorguard. She graduated from the Bryman School in Salt Lake City as a Medical Assistant presently employed and the kid raeeto! the cold drink steed get more for his lemoeade. is in Lehi. Marlin is also a 1974 of American Fork High School. He has been stationed the past year in Berlin, Germany as a Military Policeman. He has attended several special schools throughout Germany and also has been honored as "Soldier of the Month." After a brief honeymoon the newly wedded couple will be making their home in Berlin, PFC graduate Germany. tl tl WW, ; , JOHN CHRISTOFFERSON, SHAUNA JEAN THOMPSON John Christofferson to Wed Shauna Jean Thompson Oct. 8 Shauna Jean Thompson and John D. Christofferson will be married in the Salt Lake Temple on October 8 with Hartman Rector, Jr., of the First Council of Seventy performing the ceremony. Shauna Jean is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David B. Thompson of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Christofferson are the parents of the prospective groom. The bride-to-bgraduated from Skyline High School in 1973 and attended BYU. She has been employed at Valley Bank and Trust and is currently employed at Utah Bank and Turst in Salt Lake City. She enjoys sports and sings with a group of young adults in a double quartet. John graduated from Lehi High School and fulfilled an LDS mission to Oregon. He has attended BYU where he is majoring in Interior Design. He is active in sports and enjoys Falconry. e The newlyweds will be honored at a reception at the Highland View Ward, 19S0 South 2700 .1 East, Salt Lake City, following their marriage, Wednesday, October 8. Receiving will be from 8 until 10 p.m. The bride has asked Connie Campbell to be Maid of Honor and bridesmaids will be Jerri Hatch and Isabel Anderson. David Christofferson will be Best Man for his brother and Ray Carter will be an usher. In charge of serving will be Mont Christofferson, Keith Thompson, Mike Thompson, Gary Oviatt and David Burdett. Mr. and Mrs. Robin Taft, and Mr. and Mrs. David B. Thompson will receive guests at the door and Mrs. Scot I Dorton and Mrs. LuDean Davis will be in charge of the gifts. Linda Cotton and Annabel Reed will be in charge of the guest book. The couple will live in Salt Lake City following their honeymoon. They will later move lo Provo to finish school at BYU. By driving more slowly you can help preserve two of our valuable resources and you. - gasoline If he didn't pass his increased costs along to his customers, he would soon find himself spending more money than he was making, and he would go out of business. That's pretty much how it is with natural gas distribution companies these days; companies like Mountain Fuel. You see, much of the natural gas Mountain Fuel sells, we buy from independent gas producers and large pipeline companies. This is one of the ways we can insure an adequate natural gas supply to meet the growing demands of our customers. It's a good system. And for years everyone has benefited from it. No longer a buyer's market. Hut in the last 21 mouths the natural uas market has turned upside down, with national demand finally outstripping readily available supply. As a result prices have begun to i limb. Canadian natural gas for example-ju- st one of our sources of supply has increased in pni e from $.33 per thousand cubic feet in November of 1973 to an already determined $l.(i(l by this year. That's a percentage increase of IIH.Vr in two years, at a cost increase to Mountain Fuel of many million dollars. It's obvious that Mountain Fuel can't afford to absorb this and other cost increases by ourselves. Not if we are to continue to serve you. So we have to pass the increases along, as they occur, to our customers. We're sorry to have to do it, but the alternative would mean having to close our doors. Aren't there other alternatives? We could refuse to pay the increases imposed upon us by our suppliers, but if we did we'd have lo give up the supply. In today's natural gas hungry energy market, another gas utility would certainly pick up that supply as soon as we let it go, and we wouldn't get it back at any price. VVe could do that, of course, but since '.i of all the gas you use to heat your home and cook your meals comes from outside suppliers, it would mean you'd have to use 33' less gas, or we would have to discontinue service to important industrial customers. Those aren't very ex iling alternatives either. Our own drilling programs help keep gas costs down. Fortunately for all of us, some of the increased cost of natural gas we have to buy can be offset by the very reasonable cost of the gas we produce ourselves. That's one reason we're constantly working to develop gas fields of our own. Hut our own exploration and drilling programs are not sullicient to supply the needs of all our customers. And so we continue to buy the gas we need from those who can supply it, pay the market price, and pass price increases along to consumers. We're not wild about having to do that, but if we didn't, we wouldn't have an adequate supply of natural gas. And that's something nobody would be wild about. ' MOUNTAIN FUEL |