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Show I 8 I BOX ELDER JOURNAL, Brigham City, Utah Thursday, August 18, 1977 Sarah Yates worsen I s editor Couple exchanges vows 3 tejjDjpemMgs food family women social to hold BPW Society Editor picnic here this evening SCRATCH PAD The Brigham City Business and Professional Womens club is holding a picnic for club members and guests this evening (Thursday) beginning at 6:30 p.m. at John Adams park. Invited to join with the local group is the Golden Spike club of Tremonton. It will be a pot luck event with program and report from delegates to the national convention in Louisville, Ken., including state officers. Members are invited to invite guests and bring prospective members to the picnic, said President Carolyn Taufer-ner- . MRS. ROBERT N. PACKER Couple trades promises in LDS temple wedding Miss Shelley Holmgren and Robert N. Packer exchanged wedding promises on Friday, August 12, in the Salt Lake LDS temple. reception honoring the newlyweds was hosted that evening at the Bear River LDS ward. The Lion House in Salt Lake City was the setting for a wedding breakfast. The bride, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lynne S. Holmgren, Bear River City, received an associate nursing degree from Brigham Young university. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon C. Packer, Brigham City, will continue his studies in economics at A BYU. Ladies golf activities 22: Monday, August Eagles Auxiliary play will be a blind bogey tournament sponsored by First Security Bank. Winners of last weeks play were Ruth Christofferson, with Eleanor OGrady and Betty Allen tied for second and third. Sponsor was Blocks in a poker tournament. Wednesday and Thursday, A Aug. Brigham City county club womens championship play will be held both at 8 a.m. days, with preceded by coffee and rolls at 7:30 a.m. Monday and Tuesday, Aug. Eagles Auxiliary club championship play, with winners based on low gross scores. There is a $3 entry fee. Call early for tee times. 24-2- surprise! Open house will honor couple on anniversary The family of David Heber and LaRita Williams Call will honor them at a surprise (up to now!) open house on Monday, Aug. 22, from 7 to 9 p m. on the occastion of their upcoming 50th anniversary. All friends and relatives are invited to attend and share in this happy occasion, which will be held in the Call garden, 380 North Second East. Just the good wishes of friends are requested, no gifts. The couple was married on Sept. 6, 1927, in Heber City after a courtship that began with a . . delivered to a sandwich young BYU coed working nights at the telephone office in Provo by a young employee of Walgreen drug. After lots of late night sandwich deliveries, the couple were married and lived for awhile in Provo before moving to his native Brigham . City. Their marriage was later solemnized in the LDS temple. LaRita Williams is a native of Provo, the daughter of Gad Hans and Edna Williams. He was born in Brigham City, the son of Judge J D. and Lula Bryan Call. Business partner Upon his return to Brigham City, he became a partner in the Idle Isle Cafe with his sister and brother-in-law- , Verabelle and Percy Knudsen Hes been promoting Brigham City ever since as a mem-be- i of the Commercial club, the Fire department, and Chamber of Commerce Taking time out to serve his country in World War II, he fought in the Battle of the Bulge in Belguim and returned to be an active member of the American Legion. Mrs. Call joined in with her support of the American Legion Auxiliary and has been active in the Relief Society. She is also an avid painter, using her talents for the enjoyment of her family. Five children Mr. and Mrs. Call raised five children, with one son dying in infancy. Always busy in the community, they raised their children to be active citizens. Their children and spouses include: Dr. Douglas and LaRita Evans of Provo, with Mrs. Evans teaching at BYU and being in private practice as a midwife working with a Senator Miles Y. and Suzanne Ferry, of Corinne, with Mrs. Ferry completing work as a home economist major and serving as a student advisor at USU, Attorney Richard and Judy Mantlo of Albuquerque, with Mrs. Mantlo working as librarian for the regional medical techenical library; Dr. Anthony and Ver-abCluff of Arlington, Va., with Mrs. Cluff as a busy mother of five and volunteer; son David and wife Donna, an attorney in San Bernardino, Calif. They have 19 grandchildren and four Again, friends and relatives are invited to attend the open house honoring the Calls. No written invitations have been issued. s tee-tim- 29-3- 0: Its great to be back from vacation in one way, and in the other it would still be nice to be on the road and worry free except about the battery, the heating radiator, and whether or not a camping spot could be found for the night. At least, we know were welcome at home. Abby and the new puppy Brandy were ecstatic over our return, leaping and licking and generally wagging their entire bodies over the happy arrival. Two cats were more staid in their response, royally allowing the family to carry them around and hug them and meowing more often than usual. Weve even been treated to a live mouse as a welcome-hom- e gift from one of the felines. The garden nodded from its vacation growth of weeds and presented us with tomatoes and peppers galore as a welcome-hom- e gift, and it seemed that the flowers in the flowerbeds had grown and bloomed more fully. flying objects. In the house Indoors, the potted plants looked a bit bleak since we care- hadnt asked our vacation taker to water them. The stack of newspapers and magazines and mail looked like more than a weeks accumulation, and the dust on tables and chairs made us wonder if a construction project had been carried on in our absence. Luckily, those items were hard to see for the stack of stuff carried in and deposited in the living room from the car. It didnt take long to hang the sleeping bags on the line, toss dirty clothes in a stack in front of the washer, tuck away backpacks and camping gear. . .but that washday is another thing, especially with a defunct dryer. Now it is all cleaned up. The weeds arent all pulled or the car all repaired, but things are back to normal. And the mountains and glaAlso grown ciers and lakes and historical Weeds werent all that had sites are all blended into the grown. The puppy seemed to memory of a nice vacation as have grown an inch a day in just summertime begins to wind the week we were gone, althou- away toward fall. gh its mixed St. Bernard and husky ancestry had already made the family aware that the pup would grow to a size to fit It was a full military wedding for Kathleen Edda Graham and Lt. William Edward Kozak, with the groom and his attendants in dress white uniforms and the bridal couple leaving the church through an archway of swords formed by six lieutenants of the US Coast Guard. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Graham of Mount Prospect, 111., and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Kozak of Brigham City. Wedding vows were traded by the couple on June 25 at 11 a.m. at St. Mark Lutheran church, Mount Prospect. For the double ring ceremony by candlelight, the bride chose a gown of white chiffon trimmed in lace and pearls. A deep band of lace bordered her floor length mantilla veil. She carried a bouquet of White rose, stepha-notibabys breath and yellow statice. Four-year-ol- d better. This youngest addition to the family had also provided her own welcome: turning the garage into a confetti factory with the stack of newspapers left on the garage floor for Boy Scout pickup. Shed added her own touches with a scattered bag of charcoal, some bones, and a collection of garbage scraps retrieved from the garbage cans. Abby took out her loneliness by eating up two plastic dog dishes, which she must have decided were Frisbees since they received the same tossing and catching and chewing action that she accords those Tremonton couple enjoys convention Mr. and Mrs. V.D. Bowcutt representing the Bowcutt Floral of Tremonton attended the 1977 Acapulco Fiesta Convention of Florist Transworld Delivery association at Acapulco Prin- cess Hotel in Mexico. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Ron Kalt of Salt Lake City. They also enjoyed side trips to Mexico City, visited Toxco (the silver capitol of the world) the toured Pyramids. They were gone for ten days and report a very enjoyable trip. Wedding party As matron of honor, Sheila Netter of Glenview, 111., wore a lime green jersey knit gown with chiffon poncho-styl- e cape. Bridesmaids Barbara Robin- son, Evanston, 111.; wore the same style gowns, but in lemon yellow. The attendants all carried, colonial bouquets of multicolored daisies, miniature carnations and mums, and babys breath, with a matching spring in their hair. Best man was Ron Berman, Palmyra, Pa. Groomsmen and ushers were Tony Mink, New London, Conn.; Mike Gentile, Houston, Tex.; Rich Muller, Juneau, Alaska; Pete Lenes, Seattle, Wash.; Dennis Mich. Buffet luncheon The newlyweds were toasted at a buffet luncheon for 85 at Old hold The Good Neighbor. free workshop begins with line material, flowers, hand pruners, and pretty containers shown by Fern Brown and Dee Dolan of the Spade and Hope garden club which will sponsor a free class for the public on Monday evening. Newcomers set annual couples steak supper Newcomers club members and their spouses will gather for their annual couples steak fry on Saturday, Aug. 27, of the home of Arlene and John Edwards, 8 East First North, beginning with a social hour at 7 p.m. Couples are asked to bring their own steaks, silverware and plates, plus a dish to share such as salad, relishes or vegetables. Members will be called during the week to determine which of the three they will bring. Newcomers to the area who are not yet members of the club are also invited to come to the steak fry, with a donation of one dollar per couple set to cover the costs of beverages, rolls and butter, etc. Reservations may be made or information garnered by s or Loretta calling either Arlene Edwards at . at IEZ . SHOE CENTER Would Like to Invite you to the Biggest Shoe Sale Ever in Brigham City! We must sell over 2000 pairs of shoes within the next three weeks to make space for our new I Si Former and New students register Tues., Wed., Aug. 23 and 24 from p.m. to 5 p.m. and Wednesday Aug. 31 from p.m. to 5 p.m. at War Memorial Building Brigham City. 1 1 FOR BEGINNERS (Tap are 5 and up INTERMEDIATE, ADVANCED, AND PROFESSIONAL STUDENTS IN CLASSIC BALLET. TOE (Poin-teCHARACTER (Natl. Folk) AND JAZZ TAP. CLASSES AVAILABLE -- Ballet age 7and up) ). I VVJ I kQ for Mr. and Mrs. David Heber Call will be observed at an open house on Monday, 7 to 9 children and spouses . . . p.rr ., a surprise planned by their up until this publication. GOLDEN WEDDING DATE The delightful Osmond Family are among the many students who have trained at our school. The director's Internationall's Trained (Price School of Dana The "Hallmark" of Dance Instruction z. The New Owners of the The "HALLMARK" of Dance Instruction Director and Instructor: Colleen Price Moore 1977-7- 8 Kar-pu- 723-698- 5 734-938- Price School of Dance Announces Registration 1 1 ym blue-ribbo- FLOWER ARRANGING Mc- Red Cross. Spade and Hope garden club will offer a free artistic flower arranging workshop for area residents on Monday, August 22, beginning at 7 p.m. at Gillespie Hall, 150 East Third South. Mrs. Dee Dolan, a noted n winner in flower shows and also an accredited flower show judge, will teach the basics of flower arranging in a combined demonstration and workshop session. The public is invited to attend. The course is intended to assist those who are interested in entering arrangements in the upcoming Box Elder County Fair, in the annual Peach Days flower show, or just for their own enjoyment at home. . Those attending are asked to bring their own containers, preferably a low rectangular or round bowl and also one suitable for a dinner table arrangement such as an oval or boatshaped bowl. They should also bring a pin flower holder, floral clay, and some small hand pruners. All flowers and plant materials will be furnished by club members, and there will be no cost to persons attending. Saturday, Aug. 20, members of Daughters of Utah Pioneers from Box Elder county will gather at the Community Center in Brigham City for their annual convention scheduled for 10 a.m. until noon. This event will include both the north and south county camps, which represent eight camps in the north and eleven camps in the south end of the county. It will be presided over by representatives of the Central Company from Salt Lake City, with a display of books for sale to be brought from that area. Thurza Kingston, president of the South Box Elder DUP y and Dolly Iverson, president of the North Box Elder DUP, will be in charge of the day's activities which will include election of new county officers. Buffet luncheon will be served at noon to conclude the event. All members are invited to attend. Lean, North Chicago, 111.; and Jim Robinson, Ann Arbor, Orchard County club, before leaving for a four-da- y holiday in Vancouver, B.C. They now reside in Hunting-ton- , Beach, Calif., near Long Beach where the groom is stationed. Lt. Kozak earned a bachelors degree at the US Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn, in 1970 and a degree in civil engineering in 1974 from the University of Illinois, Urbana, where he met the bride. A graduate of Prospect High school, the bride earned a bachelors degree in 1972 and a masters degree in 1974 at Illinois. She has been employed as a counselor at Centralia (Wash.) College, and he has been stationed in Seattle. county convention slated here Saturday Coralville, Iowa; and Wendy Bachchuber, Garden club .will DUP 1 1 Mil NOT EVERY SIZE IN ALL STYLES SC nM 80 S. Main CECJ7EQ Brigham City, Utah f. t |