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Show THURSDAY, MARCH 14; H StEASANT 6R0VE REVIEW, HEASANT OROVE, UTAH THURSDAY, MARCH 14, ISS8 Peasant ten? ftrofeui Published every Thursday at 1 1 South Main, Pleasant Grove, Utah 84062 (Mailing address P.O. Box 278) and second class postage paid at the post office, Pleasant Grove, Utah 84062. Subscription Rate in advance: $3.00 yearly; 10c single copy. A. B. Gibson Editor-Publish- er Jack S. Pace Manager Karl Banks News Editor GROVE THEATRE Now Playing Through March 20 "To Sir, With Love" Winner of L.D.S. "Family Movie of the Year" Award MATINEE SATURDAY, 3 P.M. SPRING QUARTER REGISTRATION MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1968 Courses in the Following Areas Auto Body Marketing Auto Mechanics Secretarial Science Building Construction Welding General Education Call today for additional information! UTAH TECHNICAL COLEGE at PROVO 1 395 North 1 50 East Provo, Utah Ph. 373-789- 0 WEDDING INVITATIONS We offer a variety of styles, Prompt Service Let Us Give you a Price Shop at Home! PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW Don't forget , . . every litter bit hurts I : i , " i Whether you Farm 10 acres or 1000. . . you'll find it pays to fertilize! No matter what the size of your farming Fertilizers you are working in the right operation you'll find the best way to increase direction and that you are using the fertilizer profits is with proper fertilization. Modern that thousands of growers use each year to farming requires that normal soil fertility be achieve maximum yields and profit. So whether increased with a balanced fertilizer program for vour farming operation is large or small, top yields and profits. Using enough fertilizer vou'" find that tne easiest way to reach your this spring can be the difference in a profit harvest goals is to use enough fertilizer this or loss this fall. spring. Your USS Fertilizer dealer carries fertilizers, made by United You can be certain that when you use USS States Steel. (UsS) Fertilizers TWAOCMAHK Buy Bonds where you work. They do. '"... M4)airr-- : ; . - -- -- ' v r - , tr. i-- t fx I i , L v - ' n - -- k i y " " J i Why 3o our scrvicemea bey VS. Savings epportunitf. Freedom Shares pay 4.74 Bonds? Their reasons ire the same as yours when held to maturity of just four-and-a- - and mine: saving for the future, supporting half years (redeemable after one year), are freedom. And because they're fighting for available on a one-for-o- basis with Savings freedom, too, maybe servicemen see the need Bonds. Get the facts where you work or bank, more clearly than many of us. Buy Bonds. Join up. America needs your help. In more than one way. it makes you fed good. U. bavings Bonds, New Freedom shares knew Freedom Shares Nov, when you join the Payroll Savings Plan or the Bond-a-Mont- h Plan, you are eligible to purchase the new type U.S. Sav SrH ings Notes Freedom Shares as a bonus (iM Jfy Oonmrnt doet not po for Alt advtrtiiement. Tt U pretexted at a puMf A J6 rrie te coenraivm KiA tin Trtatury Dtparimtnt end Tht Advertising Council. Funeral Rites for Verda Radmall Set for Saturday Verda Sine Radmall, 73, 134 First Avenue, Salt Lake City, died Tuesday, March 12, at the LDS Hospital at 10 a.m. follow-ing a heart attack. She was born July 15, 1895 in Pleasant Grove, a daughter of Alma and Sine Larsen Radmall. A member of the LDS Church she had been active in temple work and genealogy research She had worked for Walgren Drug Co. and Montgomery Ward, before her retirement. Survivors include two broth-ers, Millen D. and Vilace L., both of Pleasant Grove. Funeral services will be Sat-urday, March 16 at 1 p.m. in the Olpin Mortuary Chapel. Friends may call Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Saturday, prior to the services. Burial will be in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. Arthur Bowles Dies at His Home in PI. Grove Arthur Bowles, 72, 370 East, 900 North, Pleasant Grove, died at his home Tuesday morning, from a heart attack. He was born April 22, 1896, at Afton, Wyoming, a son of Robert G. and Elizabeth Sharp Bowles. He married Cathryn Mechen, Aug. 22, 1922, Emmett Idaho, She die in February, 1940 He was a farmer in Idaho and moved to Pleasant Grove in July of 1965. Survivors include five broth-ers and five sisters: Mrs. Rus-sell (Ellen) Sullivan, Mrs. Floyd (Fern) Anderson, both of Boise, Idaho; Walter and Ez-ra, Nampa, Idaho; Mrs. Ida Cooper, Eugene, Oregon; Mrs. Mitchell (Maud) Peterson, Ny-ss- a, Oregon; George E., Cali-fornia and Mrs. Isabell McCoy, Pleasant Grove. Funeral services will be held Friday at 10 a.m. in the Olpin Mortuary Chapel. Friends may call one hour prior to services. Graveside services will be held Saturday at ll a.m. at New Plymouth, Idaho, Ceme-tery, with full military rites. Doctor in the Kitchen by Laurence M. Hursh, M.D. Consultant, National Dairy Council SCHOOL FEEDING PROGRAMS Lunch at school has become part of the American tradition part of our way of life. The bene-fits are enormous. The program helps to build strong bodies and alert minds in our children. It also helps teach good food habits to those who will be tomorrow's adult Americans. School lunch is the largest non-profit food service operation in the world. It is a prime example of how local, state, and Federal efforts can be coordinated. Three-fourth- s of our school-ag- e children are enrolled in the more than 70,000 schools serving nutritious, d lunches each school day. A total of 18 million young-sters participate in the program. Poor Nutrition A Danger But bigness is not the sole measure of accomplishment to be applied to school lunch. The interest in school lunch in the United States dates back more than a hundred years. Early in this century concerned physicians and public health workers, as well as educators, had realized that poor nutrition in children was a danger to their health. Many local efforts were made to meet the challenge. Milk at morning recess was one of the first. Later, milk distribution just before the opening of school was undertaken in many areas. This was done because it was noted that many children came to school without breakfast. The reasons varied. Sometimes, it was just the plain shiftlessness of parents. Some Lunches Inadequate As distances lengthened be-tween home and school, and more parents worked all day, the need for more than just milk at school became apparent. Many of the lunches that children brought to school were nutritionally inade-quate. Educators also believed lunch at school could have educa-tional impact. Thus, in 1946 the National School Lunch Act was enacted by Congress. And nowa-days, educators coordinate the experience students have in eat-ing nutritious meals with nutri-tion education in the classroom. Both the U.S. Department of Agriculture and state depart-ments of education are involved. Federal funds reimburse the local communities for part of the cost of the food, most of which is pur-chased locally. Some foods are purchased by USDA; some sur-plus foods also are distributed from this source.' Nonprofit Schools Eligible Both public and private (non-profit) schools are eligible pro-vided they operate the lunch pro-gram on a nonprofit basis. Estab-lished standards provide that the lunch must meet the lunchtime nutritional needs of the children. The four food groups, including milk, are emphasized. The meals must be served with-out cost, or at reduced cost, to children who are unable to pay the full price of the lunch. No discrimination or segregation within the school against any child is permitted because of his inability to pay, or because of race, color, or national origin. Almost a billion dollars' worth of lunches are served in schools each year under this program. But there are still almost 10 mil-lion children attending schools without any food service at all, and millions of children who do not participate in schools where lunch is served. More nutrition education is needed to counter this fact. Parents can help, too. Schools in needy areas can get Federal assistance if there is a lack of food service equipment. Injured Man Now Recovering After Recent Accident Alexander L. Nytch, 7655 Stef-fense- n Drive, Salt Lake City, who was severely injured Mar. 6 in an accident at the J. Arza Adams Turkey Farm, Manila, is improving at the Salt Lake City Cottonwood Hospital. Mr. Adams said that he had received word Monday morn-ing that although Mr. Nytch's condition was still serious, he was making remarkable recov-ery. Barring complications, he should be out of danger in a few days, it was reported. The accident happened while Mr. Nytch was repairing a pump at the Adams farm. A mechanical part of a large crane slammed into his back. He arrived at Cottonwood Hospital by ambulance an hour after the accident, where a team of surgeons were waiting. Examination revealed that Mr. Nytch had: a hole in the upper right chamber of his heart, per-mitting blood to flow into the sac that surrounded the heart muscle. A punctured left lung that was leaking air into the chest cavity. A ruptured pulmonary artery. This is the vital blood vessel that carries blood from the heart to the lungs for oxygen-ation. No detectable blood pressure and blood, pooling in the heart sac, impeding heartbeat. To complicate matters, Mr. Nytch was found to have AB Negative type blood, a type so rare that only one out of seven persons have that type. Luckily, the hospital had three pints of matching blood, which was enough until more could be secured. Surgeons evacuated the trap-ped air and emplanted a tube in Mr. Nytch's chest. The lung expanded quickly to normal. They then stitched up the hole in the heart and the tear in the artery. A normal heart-beat returned and blood press-ure became normal. Mr. Nytch was talking about going home Monday morning. Hospital attendans were opti-mistic that this could happen soon. SrWMGBO MARATHON NIA? Z iPlGEON RACING STARTED rJj JJX'U'i DURING THE ORIGINAL OLVMPIC R W yrV''rS GAMES (776 B.G-93- 4 AO.). THE --Tfv' .tyr-2-&:r LONGEST FLIGHT WAS THAT OF THE fcl' V Puke of Wellington's pigeon fESV.. svy.y HSS WHICH, IN 1645, FLEW FROM OFF THE US -V COAST OF WEST AFRICA TO ONE r?Vq52' MILE FROM LONDON. THE DISTANCE - COVERED WAS ESTIMATED TO BE 1 - XJ AVOlPTSMPTATIOft... ABOUT 7,000 AAlLEii TEMPTED 'TO BUY BONDS THBS RE investment if t'lfwlRE IN'YOUR lv THE FUTURE rJSfS FASTEST HUMAN "friB HIGHEST AVERAGE SPEED J ?Jj EVER ACHIEVED BY MAN WAS mZ . i 4 THE IOO YARDS RUN BV BOB 1 X HAYES (NOW A PRO FOOT BALL , , JJJ- - ' I rii4f PL AVER) IN THE LAST STAGE OF "lXXe-- A RELAV RACE. HE COVERED 'r? .'A i'-SWXv- '' THE DISTANCE IN 7.8 SECONDS! HLPP YOUR. COUNTRY LATELY?' ' n Jf-- THE ANSWER S A BOOMING "YES" IF YOU'VE INVESTED At THE AJBW FREEDOM SHAReS AND U.S. SAVINGS BONDS ! |