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Show PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW, PLEASANT GROVE, UTAH THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1973 THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1973 for the Latest in . - - HAIR FASHIONS CALL FOR APPOINTMENT Classic Beauty Salon 60 East State Rd. Next to 7-- 1 1 - Phone 785-375- 2 Now Open Til 10 p.m. weekend CLIP and SAVE SPECIALS ffWvSxxxxNxxxxvvv CHOICE NAVEk this coupon worth GANGES 1 10 E 12 lb. C DANISH SWIRtS Macintosh Deli,.'SSSaS or Golden Delic ysjvxxxNXV APPLES THISCOUPON.WORTH CERTIFRKH 'I AV0CAD0ES lib. WALNUTS 1 7? m , good at idem market expiru 4- - --73 y 1 O $ I xxxxxxxxxxxxxsxx TUNA ON PURCHASE W FU 0F3-PAC- K 0 PRINGLES g FESTIVAL jO 500D AT IDEAL MARKET -- EXPIRES fj ICECREAM fcwxxxxxxNxxxxxxxxx AO onI thvxn BAKERY r 1 fl ONPURCHASEOF S 5 PKGS D0LlY WADSE PRODUCTS from f niiNFHBn 4 ZINGERS v UunruKU pood at iuwi market -- expires A BAKERS (fesxxxxxxxxxSxx IDEAL MARKET j; 43 South Main in Pleasant Groe GROVE THEATRE Shows Start at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. MATINEE EVERY SATURDAY AT 3:00 p.m. Now Playing - Runs to Next Tuesday V$sY It's fractured if ALI ( TtfKPOV trees and flying MQS1EV r4sO skis... it's a UlOltCI r3 ! 1 r9tlT SNOWBALL! PRODUCTIONS V j NS) presents r i i i ' i tooyrvri TECHNICOLOR k "j J3 tUaltjlssney World Upst-arting Wednesday, April 4 we will be closed for Remodeling until Further Notice S 'W ("& ) ( M I PERMA-COLO- R, INC Long Distance - 377-507- 6 - Call Collect Work Guaranteed - High Quality, Low Prices - Perma Glowing INCOME TAX TIME JAN C. CHRISTENSEN 240 South First East PI. Grove, -- Phone 785,2427 Inter-Ta- x Services, Inc. Salt lake City -- 801 266-351- 5 AirinnisSreiiiif ARMSTRONG Carlton Tire RADIALS by Armstrong F78 x 14 $ 36.41 F78 x 14 $ 22.74 G78xl4 36.92 G78xl4 24.00 H78xl4 41.10 H78xl4 25.40 H78xl5 42.28 F78 x 15 22.74 J78xl5 45.11 G78xl5 24.34 L78 x 15 55.15 H78xl5 25.60 Pius Tax 1.78 x 15 26.30 BIG 60 SERIES TIRES G60xl4 $ 33.96 F60xl5 32.68 H60xl4 35.00 G60xl5 33.96 160x 14 40.50 H60xl5 35.00 PU5T 160x 15 40.50 Carter's Service - ... 685 West State f yX' JX Pleasant Grove f ' 820 W. 4th North j$m&) I WSS OCDuQtaiCCDCS 2(3. 1 IOrem State X O V '!!m'"'" Sim and ILytm's Steve's meats mm mm 399 East State American Fork 399 East state American Fork Lynn Smith and Jim Sorensen Owners Steve Johnson Owner Mgr. DADifVunDC COOKING APPLES, lb 9' CHOPS, lb. ..V wMwnwr - uSL SHElLS' 12 ct--' 3 ' 89 sE!aPERIB5' lb 7Q LETTUCE, head for 19 RUMP ROAST, lb. P ST,5 oz. can 3 i M STEAK, lb $ 1 29 GELATIN DESSERT, 3 oz. 4? 29 PORK SAUSAGE lb. 69 BUTTER, 1 tissue wrap lb. 67 COUNTRY CLUB SLICED BOLOGNA 69 potato chips, 14 oz 49 JIM & LYNN'S MILD KING SIZE 32 OZ. HORN CHEESE lb... 39 PALfflOLIVE, Dish Liquid 59' Swallows Returned March 19 to Capistrano, Calif. The swallows returned to Capistrano March 19 follow-ing their 6,000 mile flight from Argentina. The swallow phen-onome- n has been noted since March 19, 1799 when a mission father wrote in his diary, "The swallows have returned." Only once have they been known to be late about 25 years ago when they encountered head-winds over Mexico. Merrill W. Beck Sustained Bishop In Bountaiful Stake Merrill W. Beck, son of Sadie Beck of Pleasant Grove was sustained last Sunday, March 25, as Bishop of the newly created 44th Ward in South Bountiful Stake. He has served for the past five years as a high councilman in the same stake. Merrill and his wife Marcia are the parents of two married sons, who have both served on missions and a daughter who is working in Washington, D.C. Merrill is the second son in the Beck family to serve as a Bishop, his older brother Reed served for thirteen years in a Salt Lake City ward. Funeral Rites Set Friday for Howard Frampton Funeral services have been set for Friday, March 30, for Howard N. Frampton, 69, who died on March 27, in the Am-erican Fork Hospital, following a long illness. The services will be held in the Olpin Family Mortuary, in Pleasant Grove at 11 a.m. and friends may call at the Mortu-ary 1 hour prior to services. Burial will be in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. Howard N. Frampton was born October 3, 1903 in Amer-ican Fork, a son of Otto L. and Caroline Jensen Frampton. He never married. He was a mem-ber of the LDS Church and worked for many years for the Pleasant Grove Lumber Co. Survivors include one sister, Mrs. Thomas (Ora) Powers, of Lehi. Funeral Services for Margaret A. Adams Held Last Thursday Funeral services were held last Thursday for Margaret Adamson Adams, who died Monday, at her home in Pleas-ant Grove. The services were under the direction of Thomas P. Hamann, counselor Seventh Ward Bishopric. Speakers were Eva Mae Green, Donna Ash Brock and President Henry N. Stoddard. Life sketch, Cameron W. Adams. Musical numbers were rend-ere- d as follows: Two vocal numbers by William E. Peter-sen. Irene Jenkins was the vocal selection by Terry F. Jenkins, Boyd Seely, Robert Hilton and William E. Petersen. Family prayer Patriarch Llyod L. Peterson; prelude and Postlude, Irene Jenkins. Open-ing prayer, Terry Jenkins. Benediction, Larry L. Adams; Dedication of the grace in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery by President T. Ardie Adams. Pallbearers, Steven Peterson, David Stoddard, Kenneth Stod-dard, Benny Adams, Perry Adams, Edward Adams, Paul Adams, Ken Thorne; Honoray Pallbearers, Larry Stoddard, David Thorne. flowers were cared for and arranged by the Seventh Ward Relief Society. Horned Owl Eats 2,750 Mice per Year, Helps People In a good mouse year, 90 percent of the great horned owl's diet is mice. This to a daily kill of about 7.6 mice or 2,750 per year. With a mate, the yearly kill would jump to 5,500 and with two young to 11,000. Card of Thanks The family of Margaret A. Adams wish to express their appreciation for the kindness shown in the recent loss of their dear mother. The Family of Mrs. Ben F. Adams National Safety Council Driving Week in April Salt Lake City, April 7 thru 14 will mark the kickoff for the National Safety Council's second annual National Defen-sive Driving Week. This week will be designed to remind the American driver that traffic safety begins at home. "A safer America de-mands that every driver learn Defensive Driving," says How-ard Pyle, president of the Na-tional Safety Council and Fred Montmorency, president of the Utah Safety Council. "The American driver," Pyle and Montmorency noted, "driv-es the safest cars and travels on the best, safety-designe- d roads in the world. But many lack skill in using them safely. 85 per cent of all accidents are still attributable to driver er-ror, and these errors account for over 56,000 deaths annually plus two million disabling in-juries and billions of dollars in property damage." "Most driving errors can be traced to the lack of training," the Safety Council spokesmen added, "and the majority of the 116 million drivers on our roads today have not learned accident avoidance skills." The goal of the 1973 nation-wide Defensive Driving cam-paign is to bring driver train-ing to enough drivers fast enough to curb the rising death and injury toll. The National Safety Council would like to train three million drivers each year until the end of the decade of the 1970's. Thus far, more than four million American dri-vers have taken the eight-hou- r Defensive Driving Course. The course is being taught all over the nation under the sponsor-ship of state and local Safety Councils, industry, the armed services, churches and service groups. Volunteer instructors, whose training is also approved by the National Safety Council, present the course in four two-ho-sessions. DDC utilizes films and visual aids. In these sessions, licensed adult drivers learn how to try to make ev-ery automobile trip safely de-- spite the poor driving habits and mistakes of other drivers and in spite of adverse driving conditions. A recent indepth research project showed that licensed motorists who completed the National Safety Council's ur Defensive Driving Course had fewer traffic accidents and violations than other drivers. These are the basic results of an extensive study conducted by the Council's Research De-partment involving more than 8,000 Defensive Driving Course graduates from 88 cooperating agencies in 26 states. The major finding reported in the study was that self-report-accidents among DDC graduates were reduced by nearly one-thir- d in the year following completion of the course, while moving violations were cut by one-fourt- h. Other results showed drivers who completed DDC to have reduc-ed some types of collisions by 40 percent or more and to have increased markedly their use of safety belts. Caballeros 4-- H Riding Club Reorganized for 73 The Caballeros" 4-- Riding Club reorganized for 1973 re-cently. The meeting was held at the home of Janeen Reinolf-so- n leader, and the following officers elected: Susan Ackerman, president; Joye Hall, vice president; Eliz-abeth Adams, secretary; Mon-ica Liston, reporter and Patri-cia Schow, will be junior lead-er. Other members include San-dra and Greg Johnson, Susanne Smith, Leslie Blackham, Scott and Karne Barney, Nathon and Sam Adams. The calendar for the new year will include programs on different breeds of horses and a leather project. April 5 Deadline For Queen Contest Entries for 1973 Entries for the 1973 Straw-berry Day Queen Contest must be in by April 5, according to Nancy Southam. Also April 5 will be the deadline for any girl not hav-ing a sponsor to enter the contest. Any girl who does not have a sponsor call Nancy Sou-tham, Phone 785-301- 1. Former Resident Called to Mission From St. George Jewel Nelson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Nel-son, former residents of Pleas-ant Grove, has been called on an LDS Mission, according to word received from the Nel son s recently, bhe will enter the mission home on April 21. Jewel is the fourth mission-ary in the Nelson family, and will go to Germany. Peruvian Indians believe that a man who is struck by light-ning and survives will be re-stored to full health by a sip of .vicuna blood, National Geo-graphic says. Bighorn Sheep Bighorn sheep can lie in the snow for hours and stay warm. Their winter coats of matted hair (not wool) do not let enough body heat escape to melt a single snowflake. Giraffe Unique The giraffe has no vocal cords, has fewer vertebrae in his neck than a mouse, is fast-er than a horse, can go longer without water than a camel, and can see backwards without turning his head. NOTICE TO BIDDERS Bids will be received by the City of Pleasant Grove on a white 1969 Ford police car. Bids may be turned in to the police office in the rear of the city hall, and anyone interested in examining the car can see it at the police station. Bids will be examined by the city council at a future date, and they reserve the right to accept or reject any or all bids. i Michael Francom, |