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Show Lindon Locals Eugene Stubbs of Lindon returned return-ed homo from a business trip to California recently, accompanied by Garn Medium of Orem. The men journeyed to Riverside to purchase pur-chase a new truck for an Orem feed company. Mrs. Vilate Bond is hero from G-unnison for an extended visit with her daughter, Mis. Leonard Abraham. Mrs. LaMar Hendrick-son Hendrick-son and Mrs. Dwight Petersen and two children of Gunnison brought Mrs. Bond hero to convalesce from a recent illness. Newly organized Lindon ward MIA has as its superintendent anil president, Mr. and Mrs. John Iv-erson. Iv-erson. The Iversons replaced the released officers,, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jensen. Activity counselors counsel-ors replacing Ellen Dawn Bezzant and Allen Houston are Donna and Walter Reiske. Bill and Carol Keetch are taking over Miriam Ash and H. V. Holdaway's jobs as manual counselors. Ten girls engaged the community commun-ity park building Friday evening and had a "gang" record, player piano, and dancing party. The girls who call themselves the "Dill-ingerettes" "Dill-ingerettes" are all freshmen at the Pleasant Grove High School. The girls who built a fire and roasted weiners in the park building included in-cluded Linda Kay Walker, Norene Bylund, Joye Nelson, Carol Harper, Har-per, Geraldine Hooley, Karen Remington, Rem-ington, June College, Linda Richardson, Rich-ardson, Sharolyn Noble, and Judy Jolly. Four sisters who had not been together for four years spent four days with each other last week at the home of Mrs. Horace Giltman, one of the four. The other sisters, Mrs. Edlean Abgglen of Vernal, Mrs. Jesse Law of Garden Grove, Calif., and Mrs. Lucretia Shelton of Salt Lake City, as well as Mrs. Gillman enjoyed their reunion with a cousin, Mrs. Theodocia Rich of Vernal. Three nieces, Mrs. Dezzie Genbich from Murray; Mildred War of Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Fei-natta Warner of Spanish Fork joined' the ladies at the Gillman home Friday evening for dinner and a session of chatting and reviving re-viving of old memories. News from two Navy men, in the form of a letter and more in the form of a visit reached the Truvere Hardman home last week. The Hardman' s son, Frank wrote a letter to his parents informing them that he was ort his way to Formosa on an oil earner. Frank joined the Navy two years ago. His parents saw him on a visit last June. Mrs .Hardman prepared a dinner Friday for her Navy brother, Edward Ed-ward Barkdull, whom she had not seen for four years. To the dinner she invited Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Thurston from Salt Lake City, and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Craven from Provo, making a total of ten persons, per-sons, including Mr. Hardman and the Hardman's three daughters Edward, who makes his home with his wife in Philadelphia, Pa., must report to Key West, Fla., by the 24th of this month. He has been having ten days to visit in and around Lindon. The Reed H. Walkers of Lindon and Merrill N. Wamicks of Manila Man-ila returned home last weekend from California where they vacationed vaca-tioned for a week and where Mr. Warnick, president of American Dairy Association, attended an ADA convention in Los Angeles. While Mr. Warnick attended to business there, the group of six, Mrs. Warnick and son Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. Walker and daughters daugh-ters Colleen and Suzanne, went swimming in l.e ocean and -visited the famous Knott's Berry Farm near Buena Park. All seven of the group made the trip to Disneyland and lunched in the commissary of the Walt Disney Studios, meeting Mr. Disney personally. The vacationers came home via San Francisco and called on Don and Venna Smith and their five children. The Smiths, former residents res-idents of Lindon, moved to the Coast City last year in order for Mr. Smith to attend Dental College Col-lege there. |