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Show THE PAGE FOUR FROM THE FOREST TO YOU HOW BIG TREES ARE MOVED CLASSIFIED The ADS Ike Times-New- s Every Thursday at NepH Juab County, Utah Gibson, Editor and Mauager Published A. E. TANNER Thursday, August 1st, 1929. NEPHI, UTAH TIMES-NEW- S, B. 1 NEPHI ICE DEALER, Entered in the Post Office at Nephi. A complete line of Hostess Cakes Utah, as second class mail matter, every Sunday. Let us put one aside under the Act of Congress of March for you. (Jib's Drive lan. Phone 3, 1879. 120-- J. C. L. Gibson, Prop. LINE OP fl'ilN'S extracts, ypices ana l ouei vwncies See Jacob Uibuon or Phone 324W. COMPLETE 4" w NOT WHY BUY RAWLEIUH'S Pyrethro Fly Spray and kiU all Full line Rawlelgh the insects? Call O. W. Thornton, 47 Products. N. 6th E., Nephi. Phone J46 W. SEVERAL GOOD BUILDING LOTS For Sale. See A. V. Pypw, (Old Bank Building). FOR SALE Harvester 9( .'1;', v'--f - f HOLT in New COMBINED 1928 S. D. Broadhead. r f"".., " FOR SALE ONE CHILD'S RIDING Pony, 3 good milch cows, 4 heiturs, 1 wagon, rack and box and harnesses. Inquire Mrs. Geo. C. Malloy. BARGAINS IN IRRIGATED Dry Farms. A. V. Pyper. Bank Building). I. AND (Old RELIABLE MAN WANTED TO RUN McNess Business In Juab County. $8 to 12 dally profits. No capital or experience required. Wonderful opportunity. Write today.111. McNESS It CO., Dept. T, Freeport, Tht tree u on it way front a forett to a city man't Uwn. Tkal gtgantie ball of earth in the foreground contain it$ root. The re U inclined to an angle which will permit of it being lifted by special apparatu ued by tree expert. Thi particular tree i 75 year old.l more than two feet in diameter, ha a limb spread of 45 feet and It land 65 feet high. The ball of rth in which th root art rm. bedded weight 20 ton. Note the size of the men in comparison with it. In order to transplant this tree successfully the earth in the new location must be specially treated, and the tree will be "medical given Attention at interval for a period of two the espert w?;o year ly moved it. Scientific tree moving was develope-by the research partment of the Davey Tree Expert Company ai XUnt, Ohi. m i Bw in "Talki-To obtain "talking" moving pictures of a polar bear at the zoo in Oakland, Calif., photographers placed their machines close to the animal's cage and then opened the door so they could film close-up- s of the inmate, snys Popular Mechanics Magazine. The bear seemed to enjoy its brief experience as 89 "actor," jumping In and out of its pool and giving a few roars and grunts which were recorded for the talkies. No Chinese Alphabet The Chinese language has no alphabet, for it is not a letter but a syllable language. Each written character Is the equivalent, not of a sound, but of a word of one syllable, for no Chinese word has more. Dr. Harrison will be at the Nephi Drug Store Monday and Tuesday, August 5th and 6th. Now is the right time to have that school boy or girl's eyes cared for. It SHETLAND PONY, FOR SALE Black yearling mare. Write G. A. Taylor, 161 No. 9 W., Provo, Utah. UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER FOR Sale. In good condition, S30.00. X. L. Bakery, Nephi. ELECTRIC GOOD FOR SALE Washer, also table beets, and green peas. Perry Hall. GENERAL HOUSEWORK WANTED An 18 year old girl wants to do general housework, and a girl 15 wants to tend children and do light Phone 312. housework APRICOTS FOR SALE JOSEPH R. Price. 2t--p CARD OF THANKS Mr. and Mrs. Mont Tiawell and T. Other Camel, Ditto An exhibition eiinie doesn't mean a P TldwRll of American Fork wish eo thank their friends la Nephi for thing, and is of no importance what- the assistance given tnem ai in soever ur.Uv.s the home team wins It. burial of Lois Tidwell, little daughToledo ninrle. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Mont Tldwell. Announcing The Organization of the First National Co. NEPHI, UTAH Located in the First National Bank Bldg. Handling INSURANCE, BONDS STOCKS and FINANCING Agents for Heber J Grant & Company, General Insurance Agents, of Salt Lake City, who are well and favorably known to the people of this vicinity. Also the American Surety Company. Both of these companies are reliable and responsible and unexcelled in service. This Company Is Owned By The Stock Holders Of The First National Bank i Public Tasks Done By of People. crp U L INSECTICIDE One-Fift- h Eighty per cent of the men and women in any given American community merely live in it. Be it a great center of population with its teem ing millions, a thriving city or a mere wide place in the road, this rule, sad to Bay, applies. It has never dawned upon fovr- fifths of the people that tbey are a definite part of the community, that llielr town belongs to lliuui, thai they are obligated by the tenets of good citizenship to contribute their part toward the development and ex pansion of that place which they call their home. In every city or town, regardless of size, a glance about will convince even the stranger that all tasks of a public nature are performed by a mere one-fift- h of the people, a faith ful few who, exhibiting a fine spirit of sacrifice and willingness, make a sincere effort to carry the burden while the others, with arms akimbo set, look, on, rarely to praise, fre quently to criticize. Those vexing problems which are ever to the fore in every community could easily be solved if the though: would less army of the four-fiftjoin that loyal, courageous little one-fiftband of the Here, indeed, is a problem for the educators and the thinkers of the land. How are we to train our children in order that they may grasp a consciousness of the fact that obli gations go hand in hand with the privileges of citizenship and resi dency in any community? How are we to instruct them so that they will gladly put their shoulders to the wheel and push with all their might and main when they become men and women and citizens of New York or Main Street T The solution of these problems will automatically solve a hundred others The answer is just as perplexing. the key which will open the door to that era of community progress which Is the dream heaven of every forward looking an and woman. BUT MEANWHILE, WHILE WE CAST ABOUT FOR THE ANSWER TO SOCIETY'S GREAT PROBLEM LET US APPRECIATE AND GIVE FULL CREDIT NOT CRITICISM TO THOSE EARNEST MEN AND WOMEN WHO ROLL UP THEIR WHEN A COMMUNITY SLEEVES TASK IS TO BE DONE AND DO IT. FOR, TRULY THEY ARE THE THE REAL SALT OF THE EARTH rPATRIOTS OF THESE PIPING TIMES OF PEACE Tarentum, (Pa.) News. n KILLS FLIES MOSQUITOES MOTHS BED BUGS ROACHES ANTS and MANY OTHER HOUSEHOLD INSECTS AND THEIR EGGS FLIT SPRAY WILL NOT STAIN hs h. 50c 75c Hand Sprays $1.25 J! ft and $1.00 50c Nephi Drug Company Geo. D. Haymond, Owner WE ARE HERE TO SERVE WheatCzar of Dim Past Reborn in Book Local News Miss Veda Deming, of Ogden, Utah, is enjoying a ten days vacation in Nephi, the guest of Miss Eva Winn. Miss Deming and Miss Winn taught school in the same district in Salt Lake County last winter. i' fe' -- U-:CI Miss Blanche Burton came down from Salt Lake City Saturday eve ning, returning to the above city Sunday afternoon with Judge and Mrs. Thos. H. Burton. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Powell an nounce the engagement of their daughter Ida to Mr. Spencer J. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joel Brown of Provo, Utah. The marriage will take place the latter part of August in the Salt Lake Temple. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Williams of Provo spent the week end with their neice, Mrs. G. O. Golden, on their return from a two month trip in the East where they visited in New other eastern York, Chicago and cities. Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Broadhead returned to Salt Lake after having anjoyed a vacation in Nephi at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Golden. Mr. Broadhead had been employed by the Keeley Ice Cream Co. for a number of years and is making quite a success in that business. Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Jorgensen have been in Nephi visiting for the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Bailey. They have just returned from Seattle, Washington by way ol San Francisco and Southern Cali fornia. Mr. Jorgensen has been em ployed as a florist and decorator in Seattle for the past year. They intend to make their home in Salt Lake City, where Mr. Jorgensen will be in the floral business. "He Build. Wisely Who BuUd. WelT TO BUILD WELL nephTplasier HAS NO EQUAL The Largest and Purest Natural Deposit of Gypsum In the World WEPHI PLASTER and MFG. COMPANY "Life Is a song sung by an idiot, dancing down the wind." Thus wrote Euripides, ages ago. And thus quoted Old Hutch, Napoleon ol Wheat in the stormy eighties, after his biggest deal. The gripping life story of Old Butch (B. P. Hutchinson) Is told, for the first time, by Edward Jerome Dies in "The best Plunger," a new Covicl-Frled- e seller. It Is a thrilling tale of the old wheat pit, and vivid scenes live again as the great master of speculation dreams of world power. The book, says the New York Times, "Is written with such dash, such dan. with so keen a savor of the drama enacted. with such unfeigned Joy In the speed at which the eplo unfolds, that the reader Is left more breathless than by any cinema, and would not exchange the volume for any half dossen of tat trovert novels." While the story chiefly concerns picturesque Old Hutch, himself a character for an American Euripides, the whole troupe of blstorlo plungers-Arm- our, crazy Harper, Letter, Uncle Danl Drew, Flsk and Keene go marching down the chapters la cruel and brilliant pageant. It la a Powerful book of tremendaiu Mailt. say leading critics. Mr. Farmer Don't Take A Chance INSURE YOUR GRAIN AGAINST HAIL AND FIRE WITH OUR OFFICE QUICK ADJUSTMENTS -- A.V. PYPER Phone 100 Old Bank Bldg. INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS |