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Show I Review-Thursda- y, October 7, 1982 -- Page 8 v ;' ; : ' : ( For All Your Ken Cardon Insurance 756-964- 3 v AutoHomeLife Business T Insurance 174 West Main Al""ica" Fo'k JisZilZXL ;i J Children's rocktn $500 with coupM - No Limit- - Woodcrest ! 355 So. Stale I Orem I Expires October IS.H glrJJasz Aerobics p renewable 4 Weeks -- $15.00 LC ues-- ' urs P,n1, hn lv old Jr. High School GO VVN approx. 400 N. and Center,!, For Z y more information call yCZL Marilyn Johnson l! ni) FREEJ PQ Expires Oct. l" 1982 , paBBBBIBBBIIBBBnHBHBBI1! B iiV Klondike Jack's Pizza Co. (EjB2v4J 519 E. State: Am. Fork ; WW 756-526- 6 -- I B Also: Kolladay, Midvale & West Valley Bi -""- -""I I iA;r nri mrn M:iaiu flomoc d fit uc.uwc.n- - muvicd mgiiuj All products from scratch whole milk & cheese ! j ALL YOU CAN DRINK!! B with this ad and any food purchase fl N.Y. style thick crust pizza J -- coming soon- - J EinBBnanBiBiraBiQiarappClC I rr I AD f The State Itait can make you i feel better. j Let me help you review your insur - ance coverages and needs Home. car. life and health There's no obit- - gation Call me for a Family Insur ;S ance Checkup today " t . J. RALPH BINNALL ; V- - ,. ; 120 N. 100 East ' , ' American Fork "1 A t N A STATE FARM fi ii Like a good neighbor, j pl StaIe Farm lS tnere' I STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES V V.. iNSUI)ANCfJ tiome Offices. Bloommgton. Illinois Ji yyjsJ DANCERC,SE I (Sponsored by Utah DancerciseAssnJ 'JSir' ri y Admission $1 oo mmp sV it I Exercise Daily 1 0 a.m. or 9 p.m. fInnLrLlfxfvVN Locations: Ji With This Ad AMERICAN FORK- -- & 1 Paying Sr Apollo Hall, 50 No. Churcyy Friend PR0V0 E- ifIy Provo Dance Center jstN? 373-9279or225-84- l5 includes $1.00 Seminar A f Grooming, Positive Sell tnew K Diet, Self Defense L z-- IWli ifi .: $10 Shrink-to-F- it Jeans i Button Fly I S1095 I tjjiww WW"'"I" mw:wffwr wii iiiiii ly WMlj f New principal welcomed' at Central Elem. Sfci Central School has really been busy since school started. Alot of great people have been added to our staff. They are Robert Emal, Prin-cipal; Mrs. Fryer, Sec.; Mrs. Lott, 1st grade; Mrs. Shire, 1st grade; Mr. Pipes, 4th grade; Mrs. Donna Bastian PTA Pres.; Mrs. Wendy Turly, Vice Pres.; and Mrs. Rosemary Pendley, Sec. A school government has been set up with the students. Voted in by their classmates were: Mayor, Clint Kelly; Sec. of State, Darren West; Treasurer, Janey Bone and Chad Mills; "VI Inspectors Monitor, CJV Snh, pTi'S Andrea uJH ?T S ?aig Molo;' Caghead r Rossow i,.'"' Harverson. .The, Antral V visited our Z orgerpride month Wedesday of "J month will be J P.nd? day whereX children will wea, iJ, tiger shirts. i Rosa B. Thorne to celebrate her eightieth birthday at home Saturday LDS Church as a teacher, secretary, president of the Relief Society, stake Relief Society Board Member, a member of Relief Society since her first marriage, stake Bee Hive Leader and a visiting teacher most of her married life. She has also been an ardent Genealogy and Research worker, having helped publish a Johnson Family History Book 1600 to 1970, and compiled a history of Relief Society of the first Lindon Second Ward in 1915 to 1969 when it was then Orem 34th Ward. She has made several large Books of Remembrance for all branches of her family and the Thorne Family. She is presently engaged in keeping a Living Genealogy of the John Kelly Baxter family and the charles G. Johnson family with assistance from other family members. Mrs. Thorne has spent thousands of hours doing research work and hired expert genealogists in Scot-land, England and Sweden and Ireland. Her hobbies are sewing, crocheting, quilting, paintin, writing and research. ROSA BAXTER THORNE Until accident and illness of both Elvin and Rosa, they were historians of the Pleasant Grove Utah Stake for the Artifacts and Historical Society of the church, visiting home teachers at the Alpine Valley Care Center and very active in the Senior Citizens where they were members of the County Food Board and donated many hours of labor and also finance to the organization. Mrs. Thorne has been active in all organizations of the The 80th Birthday of Rosa B. Thorne will be celebrated by her child-ren, Lowell J. Baxter and wife Barbara of I Pleasant Grove and Acel and (Elizabeth) Baxter Nielson of Roy, - Utah on Saturday, - October 9th. Rosa was born at Pleasant Grove (now part of Orem, Utah) on Sept. 24th 1902, a daughter of Charles G. and Edith Ash Johnson. She attended ' school at Lindon Elementary and PI. Grove High School and had one year training at the Aird Hospital in Provo, Utah. She married John C. Baxter in the Salt Lake LDS I Temple on May 31th, 1922. The family lived at Lindon on a dairy farm until 1931 where they were active in the Lindon Ward and then moved to Junction, Piute Co. seat, where Rosa operated a small (Cafe and John was a salesman for the W.T. Rawleigh Co. for ten years, rosa was also a Relief Operator for the Bell Telephone Co., and because Junction was the first town in Utah to go on the dial system they installed a pay phone booth in the cafe and Rosa had charge of bill collec-tions and calls for surrounding towns of Piute County. In 1941 they moved back to Orem and the Children finished school at Pleasant Grove High School. They built a home where the Green Acres Nursery is located now, ' where they operated a small dairy and chicken farm, and Mr. Baxter was employed at Geneva Steel Co. for 25 years. After Mr. Baxter's death in May 1969, Rosa sold the home and bought a mobile home and lived at Mona-Le- a Mobile Manor where she was active in the Orem 36th Ward and then she renewed acquaintance with and married Elvin R. Thorne of Pleasant Grove. They reside at 306 South 100 EAst, Pleasant Grove . They were married in the Provo LDS Temple, Nov. 16, 1974. ' l ' - 'I iZ i :: I 5 It i i M " 11';" ' tf - i J FORD AND MAXINE WEST of Pleasant Grove serve as campground hosts each summer in American Fork Canyon. Ford and Maxine West serve as campground hosts in A.F. Canyon 'Something for nothing' is one of the criticisms of this country's welfare system. But the hun-dreds of groups and individuals working on the Uinta National Forest for little or no compensation, 'somet-hing for nothing' takes on a whole new per-spective. From Boy Scout Troops to college students, volunteers are filling the gap as depleting budgets and the loss of special employment programs cause losses in needed manpower. According to Jerry Smith, Human Resource Specialist on the Uinta National Forest, over 2,000 volunteers have donated time this summer. Time h donated varies from one day to . three months, j depending on the needs j of the volunteer. . Perhaps the most noticeable volunteers are campground hosts. Hosts, usually retired couples, live in a campground during the summer to aid cam-pground visitors. One couple, Ford and Maxine West, Pleasant Grove, have been the hosts at Little Mill Campground in American Fork Canyon for nine years. Aside from curbing vandalism and providing light campground maint-enance, Ford West also waters the turf at the Hanging Rock Picnic Site. These hosts inform visitors of camping opportunities, allowing Forest personnel to concentrate on other Forest projects. This spirit of volun-teeris-has been the alternate to budget cutbacks which have previously funded many conservation projects. Volunteers have saved the Pleasant Grove Ranger District an estimated $70,000 this year. The success of this program has generated two ideas that are proposed for next summer: (1) TheHeber Ranger District is planning an opportunity for local high school youth to work on the Forest all summer then provide a trip to another area such as Flaming Gorge as payment for their work at the end of the summer, and (2) The Pleasant Grove Ranger District is working with moun-taineering enthusiasts on a plan which will provide volunteers the skill to teach safety and mountain ethics, and patrol high-impa- ct trails, such as the Mt. Timpanogos trail. Whether group or in-dividual service projects, the Uinta National Forest is depending on volunteers to help fulfill management objectives and provide Forest visitors the best possible experience. For more information regarding volunteer opportunities and programs, contact the Uinta National Forest, Supervisor's office, at 377-578- Merrill J. Kooyman Dies (Barbara) Zeitz, Bk River, Ore.; Mrs. (Beverly) Rosejl(l Long Beach, Calif. ' Graveside servfe were held Tuesday t the American Forkft Cemetery. PLEASANT GROVE-Merril- l John Kooyman, 71, of Pleasant Grove died Saturday, Oct. 2, 1982 at his home. He was born Sept. 19, 1911 in Bennett to Art J. and Emily Colton Kooyman. He was married and was divorced. Survivors include six sisters, Mrs. Jesse (Bernice) Millett, Provo; Mrs. Helen Laycock, American Fork; Mrs. Lyla Ander-son, Pleasant Grove; Ms. Aaron (Eunice) Ingram, American Fork; Mrs. Edwin MY PRAYER I pray that risin' from the dead, I may in repentance stand: No crown perhaps, upon my head, But needle or pen in my hand. I've never learned to sing or play, So let no harp be mine. Since childhood on, until this day Sewing, housework and research been my line Therefore, accustomed to the end, Of a Jill of all sorts and plying stitches, I'll be content if asked to mend, The little ANGELS Breeches. PI. Grove Fire Dept. receives 'thank you' donation Pleasant Grove's volunteer fire depart-ment received a monetary thank you this week from some residents of California. Fire Chief Ray Newman received a letter of thank you this week from Mr. and Mrs. John B. Simons of Redding, California along with a check for $100 made out to the Pleasant Grove fire department. The couple expressed appreciation to the fire department for dousing a fire which began in their motor home at a rest stop on 5 west of Pleasant Grove. It was an electrical fire which resulted in $800 damages. They said they were on vacation at the time and were so grateful to the department for quick response and kindness to them. The money will be used to help finance equipment for the department. Pleasant Grove Junior High releases Oct. calendar The calendar for the month of October for the Pleasant Grove Junior High School was released today by Principal Steven Baugh. Oct. 7-- 8 U.E.A. convention - no school. Oct. 12 Ninth grade Shakespear-ean Festival. Oct. 15 Ninth grade assembly. Oct. 22 Half day, 8 a.m. til noon. No lunch. Oct. 25 Deer Hunt. No School. Oct. 29 End of term. Nov. 4 Harvest Festival 1 p.m. - 2:45 p.m. Nov. 5 Parent Visiting Day. The light of knowledge dispels the shadows of doubt and brightens the world. G.W. Douglas ;. Stamp collecting month underway noted, "Students who engage in this hobby have a good time acquiring new or used stamps, and the hobby stimulates their intel-lectual growth. Any adult who introduces a youngster to the hobby of stamp collecting is giving that child a leisure avocation for a lifetime." October has been designated as National Stamp Collecting Month by the U.S. Postal Service, Post-master Donald F. Keele announced today. Centering around the theme, "Discover Stamp Collecting - The Hobby of a Lifetime," the month-lon- g obser-- ; vance is being sponsor-- i ed in cooperation with the Council of Philatelic Organizations (COPO). The Council's member-ship includes national, regional and local organizations involved in various aspects of stamp collecting. Throughout October, post offices and local COPO organizations across the country will sponsor various activit-ies calling attention to stamp collecting, the world's most popular hobby. "Millions of Amer-icans recognize that stamp collecting can increase one's know-ledge of geography, biography, history and science," Postmaster Keele said. "For example," he |