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Show m DESERET VJEWS AND TELEGRAM, Wednwdoy, Jun T m wmmmm ' 17, ,1964 Osteopathic Auxiliary Plans Annual Convention Activities .z Ana Marie Balderas , MelyinHas tings Wed The home of Mr. and Mrs. George Hastings, 295 E. 7800 South, Midvale, yas the setting Wednesday morning for a wedMr. ding breakfast that honored their son and daughter-in-laand Mrs. G. Melvin Hastings. The bridal couple repeated nuptial vows earlier in a Salt Lake Temple ceremony. Elder Boyd K. Packer, Assistant to Attending the bride will be the Council of the Twelve offi- Miss Balderas, Miss ciated. Karen Hale, Miss Carolyn HastThe bride, former Miss Ana ings, Mss Maxine Hastings, Marie- Balderas, is a daughter Miss Nancy Johnson and Miss of Mr. and Mrs. Eduardo Bal- Susan Magleby. Best Man deras, 1021 Elm Ave. They will -will be best Webster re-L, fete thr bridal couple ( Gaiy The auxiliary to the American Osteopathic Association Utah,Idaho, Montana andyomlngjalLmed-4a-Salt-Ike- j City Fridayaiid'Safiirday, in conjunction with the mens The event will be held at the World Motor Hotel. Mrs. Otterbein Dressier, Southfield, McL, president . national auxiliary, and her Dr. Dressier, will be guest " speakers. Mrs. Dressier will address the auxiliary at a luncheon Saturday noon. Mrs. Robert B. Vance is president of the local group. Mrs. C E. Conklin is chairman Try 'Dip - man. in group. J? ?iih' TTH-- m fAUCEI WITH A FUTURE ( Saves Work JTimo...Walor of the Mre.Otterbeifi Dressier . 'n Chip' V' CU,'tS S of die auxiliary activities. Friday noon, the ladies will attend a smorgasbord luncheon. That evening they will join with their husbands for a dinner-danc- e at Maxfields Lodge. Saturday morning, a tour is planned, followed by a luncheon and fashion show at thettoteL The final event of the conclave will be a dinner Saturday evening at the Teogra. Fereday Plumbing, Heating & Appliance 113 E. 1180 So. Phonoi 463371 Steven Paul Hastings, tomato sauce. Coat the cutlets cepfion Wednesday evening in Remove Discoloration with finely Hastings, Michael crushed onion-garli- c the Lucero Ward, 232 W. 8th Gene Remove discoloration from Hooper, Daniel Balderas, snack chips. Season with salt South. Robert Balderas and Samuel wooden rolling pins and bread and pepper. Brown in fat Balderas will usher. boards by rubbing jnthJuOLa .A dd- - additional-toma- to sauce, fbeen attending- 4emCTrff(rTHfisuig"with cover and cook dear slowly For the nuptial festivities the the University of Utah. Her hus- Water. 'done. About 25 minutes. h bride will wear a band is attending the U. He has gown of delustered satin and completed as LDS Central States AMERICA'S ' . -alencon lace. A matching head-- mission. ALa Entertaining -prenuptial piece" releases her 'veil. ' She Will Hastings, BriMJsS rr-r- r y bus-ban- Marta at t W m1 V w w-- ' OPEN EVERY NIGHT - The-bride-- until - Til 9.30 floor-lengt- 1 CLE AnAKCE t j Mrs. G, Melvin Hastings is the former Miss Ana Miss Lorna Faye Wells is the bride of Carl James - Rice. : paries have been Mss Johnson, cany begonias surrounded by Hale, Miss Maxine Hastwhite roses and lilies of the ing, Mrs. George Hastings and Miss Carolyn Hastings. valley. .... r 1 Marie Balderas ON-YOUTH III- Lorna Faye -- Wells Z Of Carl J. Rice D i Is-B- ride Wells became the bride of Carl James Rice in a ceremony performed Wednesday in the Holladay Stake House. ' Following, the newlyweds were honored at a wedding lunch' eon by Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Clayton. ' The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Weils, 4935 Holladay Blvd, Mr. Rice is a son of Mrs. Robert t). Clayton, 2455 E. 3225 South, and WilUam P. Rice, Seattle, Wash. Miss Lorna t Faye o u BY ELAINE CANNON By Becoming in a a Better Is bored the Term Everybody is Phono it 486-666- A Pace setter i - make-u- p. " , Or aH of a sudden, startled by a lone sofa in i you "are Mack-as-nig- a room, which in every Otter way, Is as pastel as a pastoral palming. We like the element of surprise, but hot to this extent It has to be a Mack sofa type of room in the first place, and tied in with another black item to be a success. If you 'decide to give your treatment rooms the light-touc-h few the summer, dont spoil the . effect witt one heavy-hande- d Meat . . f 2184 East 33rd So. HU These pictures will help you relive an time, people could call directly from New. York to San Francisco. Today, Long Dis- " ' tance is a lot faster, more convenient, and much less expensive than - Today the soft touch Is being emphasized in the cosmetic world, and to keep up with the times, how could this be applied Jo decorating a room? A soft touch or a light touch hi a room might be one with soft blue mist walls, curtains In white with soft blue pattern, the ' same fabric used for the bedspread, and with this, either a loft blue or dove-whit-e rug. I Or the light touch might mean fhe way you handle your lamp Shades and accessories. Some Otherwise soft touch rooms look with 'wear a heavy-hande- d red or Mack lamp shades that seem as outlandish there as real blonds with too much eye NURSERY-" the first transcontinental telephone line was completed at Wendover, Utah. For the first y. By DOROTHY DRAPER ANDSCAPE important day in our nations history Exactly 50 years ago on June 17, 1914 Bridal attendants will be Miss Mary Lou Wells, maid of honor; Miss Karen Rice, Miss Sally Clayton and Miss SueZann Wad-leMiss Ann Wells will be junior bridesmaid, and Lisa Larson, flower girL Beet Man Best man will be the bridegrooms fatter, Mr. Rice. Wesley Waters,' S. Neal Rasband, Marvin Morris and Frank Wells will usher. The bride has attended Brigham Young University. -- Mr. Rice was graduated .magna cum laude from the University of Utah this month. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa PhL He completed an LDS mission to southern Germany. The newlyweds will mate their home In Pasadena, Calif., in the fall, where Mr. Rice win continue his studies toward a doctorate at the California Institute of Technology. . Entertaining at prenuptial par-lte- s have been Mrs. Harold Bailey, Mrs. Russefl Jackson, Mrs. Desmond O. Larson, Mrs. Jack C. Elder, Mrs. James J. Rice, Mrs. Robert Craig, Mrs. Jack Olson, Mrs. Arlin Ross, Miss Suzanne Warden and Mrs. Edgar Barron. ; ' Rooms The 'Light Touch' $1.98 flat ITCHELL'Sll 1 Partlot Isnt! phanotis. . ($549 Value! STANDARD VARIETIES Alto, CATIIUNO ...Wo Mako Extra Do lit lout Sandwich.,, Saladt and Cooklot tor Small After all "" Give Your FLAT PETUNIAS 2425 Highland Drive For the occasion the bride has selected a gown of delustered crystalline. She will carry talisman roses and ste--! Dorothy Draper Says oll OF HOME COOKING -By V DOUBLE Cook-Enr- Cooking Class Reception Set Wednesday evening the bridal pair will greet guests at a reception in the Cottonwood Mall Auditorium. AND Inloymowt THE ST. LAURENT SCHOOL Pace setter CHAIN F. HYBRID A Doing -- Add to Your Family' SALE LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHlN it used to be as youll see when you read the cap-tio- ns under thephotographs.' v V n 4 Telephone men used Model T Fords to drive out to the Job each morning. At night; d, they returned to large covered .wagons in whlch Jhey sIept. When.the line was operators needed an hour to get a call from New York to San Francisco. Today, jour calls go through in 2 or 3 seconds. fin--she- The man In the middle, getting ready to make the first transcontinental call, is Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone. In Mr. Bells day there were only 8,500,000 phones in America. Now there are more than 84,000,000, and 28 new telephones are Installed each minute of the working day. It t 4 This picture was taken Just after the man on the pole had spliced the transcontinental line. This fed New York and San Francisco together for the first time -by telephone. Coast to coast calls In ' those days cost $20.00 for three minutes. Now you cap call for Just $1.00. -- Heres how telephone poles weretaken ,,,Jnto the Nevada desert when the line; was built Today, although .Exceptionallywell cutand. tailored shorts aiid surfer sets . . . cotton sateen tops in colorful floral and geometric prints... the cotton poplin pants in7" coordinated solids. Misses sizes. A o j and j wires are still used for Long Distance, I most of your calls travel through the air I on a radio beam called Microwave. Each of these beams can carry 600 conversa- in j? tions at the same time. I being poles v MOSSES COTTON PLAY SETS HEBE'S WHY t MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHONE YOU SAVE At () ROBERT HAU W. mR for to, t, only! r ar chorgail W hov. n credit lou.il You tor botovto w. tort! 2930 Sor State' St. v |