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Show Annual DUP jubilee slated for May 8th at Centerville Chapel The Farmington-Centerville Davis County Daughters of Utah Pioneers will hold their annual DUP Jubilee May 8, at the Rolling Hills Chapel, 210 E. 1825 N., Centerville. Cen-terville. Dinner will begin at 7 p.m. All members are invited to come and enjoy the evening. A program is being planned around the theme, "Caring and Sharing Through DUP." Two special spe-cial musical numbers written by Ruth Gatrell, of the County Board, will be presented. New county board officers elected in March will be presented and Mary Johnson, president, will be installed for the new two year term, June 1987 to May 1989. The Daughters of Utah Pioneers are actively preserving a history of their pioneer ancestry by helping to cultivate a greater public awareness aware-ness and appreciation for their craftmanship, contribution, lifestyle lifes-tyle and the enduring legacy they left by collecting and displaying pioneer artifacts, marking historical historic-al landmarks and publishing their histories. The Daughters of Utah Pioneers are granddaughters and great-granddaughters great-granddaughters of those valiant men and women who migrated to Utah and colonized the West. Any woman is eligible to be a member of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers if they are age 18 years or over, and have at least one ancestor who came to Utah during the period ' July 22, 1947 to May 10, 1969. Those interested in joining should contact Mary Johnson, 45 1-2776 or Maude Mayfield, 451-5718. Outgoing county officers are: Barbara Jensen, president; Virginia Virgi-nia Semadeni, first vice president; Annarae Ploeger, second vice president; Arietta Williams, secretary-treasurer; Maude Mayfield, registrar; Arvilla Ford, historian; . Evelyn Asay, chaplain; Irene Kirk-land, Kirk-land, parliamentarian; Helen Hughes, lesson leader; Ruth Gatrell, Gat-rell, organist; Irene Olsen, custo- : dianofrelics and marker chairman; Norma Ballantyne, hostess chairman. |