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Show Or em-Geneva Times Thursday, January 5, 1907 Crossword Puzzle PUGGY ACROSS Kant Joke: sialic Dry linage Card name Ore deposit Fried cake Passageway Allv s. K. VI, 13 14 15 17. 18 20 Ma HEY PUSSY! VOH.VARE? TSOU SAID YOU'D PlNj (SUPPOSING I DOtfrY HY TU- Yfl TUFFY SAVS ( WE'LL SEE W EARS BBCK.TUFFY VItAKE IT BfiCK IM Jf I $&?) HE'S GONNA' A fiB0UT 1 llL 6,ve YOU FIVE M ? r4' 4' n P'WYOUR ) (writ) MINUTES TO TAKEAS ; 'IL C H 0 7 KJj3 IS 7 To 5i ii . Ever: poetic 21 i i CARPET REPAIR SPECIALIZING in serging (edging of rugs and carpeting) Hans Miller, 558 W. 600 N. Provo, 373-5201 N T.wn titnF AND REPAIR riAii'-' x vn" PHONE LeoJ.Prows,373-7406 Member ui.u., "1C PIANO RESTYLING AND RE FINISHING. 19 years inno Free estimate. expci - rr Harris Piann Shnn and Music Center,Orem, 225-4518. tf F03 BUSINESS MEN-EVERYTHING MEN-EVERYTHING you need in envelopes, en-velopes, letterheads and other printed office supplies can be arranged to your .order by the OREM-Geneva Times, 546 S. State. TF BUILDING MATERIALS-UTAH MATERIALS-UTAH Valley Builders Supply 485 N. State, Ph. 225-3300. One stop for all your remodeling remodel-ing needs, wide selection of wall and floor tile. Complete financing through Title I home improvement loans. . TF WORK WANTED-REMBRANDT WANTED-REMBRANDT could paint, could not paperhangbut Bill Wilson can do both. Phone Bill at 225-1816. D 15,22,29 J5 MISC. FOR S ALE-DON ALE-DON 'T merely brighten your carpets . ..Blue Lustre them., eliminate rapid resoiling. Rent electric shampooer $1. Nelson Paint and Glass Co., 538 S. State, Orem, 225-4141. MISC. FOR SALE-LOFTY SALE-LOFTY pile, free from soil is the carpet cleaned with Blue Lustre. Rent electric sham- . pooer $1. Utah Valley Builders Build-ers Supply and Pro Hardware, 485 N. State, 225-3300 FOR SALE-1961 SALE-1961 STUDEBAKER V-8 2-door wagon, exceptionally good, 656 W. 4 N., Orem, ph. 225-2396. J5,12,19 FOR SALE-HOME SALE-HOME Organ in this area. Take over small monthly payments. For more details write: Credit Manager, Box 6179, Sugar House Station, Salt Lake City, Utah. D29,J5,12B FOR SALE-SPEED SALE-SPEED QUEEN electric dryer Last years model, $118.95. Triple E Inc., 1698 S. State, Orem, 225-3429. BILL WILSON Painting and Paper-hanging Paper-hanging A ring from you a call from me A measurement taken An estimate given A color chosen A date is fixed No worry or fuss The work begun Will soon to end The bill comes next A pleasure to pay For a satisfied you Will find joy When friends say A job well dne Please tell me pray Who did this work So good so gay? I'hone 225-1816 PLEASE . . . Maybe if we use the polite approach you'll give us your business. We Buy -Sell - Trade, coins, stamps, supplies-hand-made jewelry jewel-ry antique bottles - micell-aneous micell-aneous items CASPER Stamp & Coin Shop 434 W. Center Provo Ph. 374-5076 ACE RENTS We Rent Almost Anything Baby Cribs Rolloway Beds Power Tools Sports Equipment 1745 So. St., Orem Phone 225-4616 1966 SINGER In beautiful walnut console. No attachments needed to zig zag, make buttonholes, overcast over-cast seams, blind hem, sew on buttons, decorative designs, embroidery, etc. Full ririce. $45 cash, or need resoonsible party to take over last eight payments ot $6.20 monthly. i year guarantee. For further information or free home trial. day or evening, call 322-1693 or 3b3-aa4, salt Lake City. LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders stockhold-ers of the Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Company will be held at the Orem City Hall, in Orem, Utah, on Saturday, January Jan-uary 7, 1967 at 2:00 o'clock p.m. Special business will be to hear the annual report of the officers, of-ficers, the election of three board members and to transact any other business that may properly come before the meeting. Leonard S. Walker, President Catherine S. Meldrum, Sec. Published in the Orem-Geneva Times Dec. 22, 29 and Jan 5. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Probate No. 14,745 ESTATE OF THORIT C. HEB-ERTSON, HEB-ERTSON, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the office of Attorney Harvard Har-vard R. Hinton, 46 West Main, Lehi, Utah, on or before March 22, 1967. Claims must be presented pre-sented in accordance with tho provisions pro-visions of 75-9-5, Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as required therein. Ella M. iebertson, Executrix Published in the Orem-Geneva Times Dec, 22,29, 1966 and Jan. 5,12, 1967. Doing One Thing Well: Dry Cleaning A Modern Plant in Pleasant Surroundings Operated by Experienc ed Personnel. ALLEN DRIVE-IN CLEANERS 55 So. State Orem Ph. 225-0501 A RADIATOM CZPAIUD Auto Qlmm Instollei gpMlalteed Wwfc AHLANDERS 480' So. Univ. Ave., Provo WORLD'S LARGEST MOST TRUSTED MOVERS DAILEY MOVING and STORAGE Representing ALLIED VAN LINES lflCfO South State, Orem Ph. 225-4543 Latin Be Dawn goddess Robert E. Roofing rock Look at Leaner Nails Monkey Japanese coin 23. 'J6 27. 30 32 33, 34 35 36 . Tellurium: 48. Pure and simple 49. German "I" 50. Experienced 51. Comfort 52. Bashful 53. Duct chem. Map book 3 39 . Clever 41 45 47 Ocean Split Appease Answer Punle PR0V0 Radio & Television Co. HOME OR SHOP REPAIRS Radios Televisions Stereos Recorders Record Players Tubes tested free ... Batteries Bat-teries and needles installed while you wait. Antennas repairBd-installed Our ney address . . . ' 1254 N. State Riverside Plaza Provo Phone 373-4713 Formerly Ralph's Radio Ralph W. Wiscombe, Mgr. Educational Counselors !$12.000 a year. Guarantee eommisson. By contract (Not pro-rate). Enroll students stu-dents by appointment only. No experience necesary . Technical Institure of Am . 242 No.Univ. 373-7200 to j- 213.3 U H?liU3 3 'y yrrViNv pi rv 3 19 3nQXv"3Q3 j Do you know a better way to move 100 used cars and trucks than by cutting prices? -Here's Just A Sample-No. Sample-No. 2645A 1965 Monza - White - 2 Door 4- 1 AQf A A Speed - Loaded I 4 7 J.UU No. 2699A 1965 Ford Fairlane 4 - Door 4- m zap a a Speed. 695,00 No. 2718A 1963 Dodge Dart 2 Door, Radio AA (Don't miss this one) OVj.UU No. 2646A IOC Aft 1961 Ford Fairlane As Is I 7 J.UU No. 2720A 1960 Corvair Monza 2 . Door AA. 4-Speed. Radio , 295.00 G. W. Warranty on every car lOO'i Financing with approved credit P E. ASHT0N CO. 175 No. 100 W. PROVO Sales and Service OPEN ft am to 8 pm Specializing in Repair of Automatic Transmissions Now you can take advantage of our topflight experience ex-perience in repair of all types of transmissions. Plus Our Usual Automotive Service O Motor Tune-Up O Electrical Work O . Motor Overhaul Orem 600 North State - Orem DOWN 1. Swing music 23. Recede phrase 24. Over: poet. 2. Land 25. Breaks measure 27. Weapons 3. Empty 28. Golf mound 4. Come in 29. Sea eagle 5. Flashed 31. Poem 6. Main 32. Showy arteries 34, Fasten to 7. Depart 37. Article 8. Baba 38. Shullle 9. Evergreen 39. Pinnacle shrub 40. Appeal 10. At rest 41. In 11. Animal 42. Chinese 16. Sings in weight a round 43. Eskimo 17. Public house notice 44. Whale 19. Printer's 46. Service measure charge 22. Wing 49. Lives Golden Spike Centennial Plans Now Underway It was a wind-swept sagebrush flat, shielded in a low valley by drab, brown hills in the north of Utah hardly the ideal place for an event which was to mark a whole new age in American his tory. Yet, it was in such a place, a day's wagon ride west of Cor-inne, Cor-inne, Utah, where the rails of the Central Pacific and Union Pacific were joined in 1869, hastening the end of the vast western frontier. The 100th anniversary of the driving of the last spike of the Pacific Railroad at Promontory will be celebrated by UtahnsMv.y 10, 1969, in the midst of pageantry pagean-try rivaling only that which sur rounded the actual completion of the railroad. The Golden Spike Centennial Commission, created by the Utah Legislature in 1965 to plan the 100th anniversary of the east- west tie, has formulated a tenta tive celebration program calling Front End Alignment Align-ment with our visual! ner Auto Ph. 225-3174 THE FIZZLE 1 WiD A. DREAM LOST)! NIGHT TM AT I 'WAS N APPOKJTED SECRETARyj for a nation-wide observance. In its year and a half of operation, opera-tion, the commission has planned a comprehensive centennial program pro-gram for 1969, incluling an exhibition ex-hibition marking a century of transportation progress. The commission's final plans will evolve from its appropriation appropria-tion from the 1967 legislature, which meets in January. The centenaial group is requesting $565,950 to implement its plans. The Utah Travel Council will work cooperatively with the commission commis-sion to provide publicity and advertising. ad-vertising. Highlight of the celebration will be a re-enactmei:t 100 years later of the ceremony which took place at 12:47 p.m., Mv.y 10, 1869, when the first Wows in the driving of the final spike were telegraphed from remote Promontory to the waiting world. Other activities suggested for the centennial observation include the staging of parades, rodeos, queen contests, national winter sports and other athletic contests, con-tests, special rail excursions, national and international conventions, con-ventions, art exhibitions and other cultural events. Gerreld L. Pulsipher, acting director of the commission until a permanent director is selected next spring, said most northern Utah communities will share in the centennial observations. According to Pulsipher, the Golden Spike Centennial will in elude historical exhibits and a collection of century-old railroad equipment, commemorating 100 years of progress in transporta- tion. Promontory and the site of the completion of the historical railroad was declared a national historical site in 1965 by President Presi-dent Johnson, and as such, as found itself a permanent place on the tourist map, as well as in the history books. The National Park Service, which administrates federal historical his-torical monuments and sites, is expected to provide a visitors' center at Promontory, railroad tracks and replicas of the Central Cen-tral Pacific Jupiter and U.P. 119, the steam engines which participated in the historic meeting. meet-ing. The original tracks were removed in 1942 to provide scrap iron for the war effort. In 20 years today's children will be grown up. UNICEF works and invests now to make them strong, healthy, and well-educated to do a good job when it is. their turn to manage the world's affairs. UNICEF has provided assistance assist-ance to special mass campaigns against five diseases wliich are a serious menace to millions of children: leprosy, miliaria, trachoma, trac-homa, yaws and tuberculosis. Se, selenium, shown here in crystallized crystal-lized form, appears to play a vital role in maintaining the integrity of voluntary volun-tary muscle. In minute amounts, it has proved curative in certain animal dystrophies. Yet its toxicity is so great that it cannot be administered to human patients until its properties and metabolism have been thoroughly investigated. You can support such fundamental research re-search by your contribution to MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY ASSOCIATIONS OF AMERICA, INC. 1790 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019 FAMILY THAT'S FUNNV....X HAD A DREAM LAST NIGHT 'THAT I WAS MADE SECRETARY OF THE; TREASURy ! 2nd Lt. Don B. Jensen 2nd Lt. Jensen Is Awarded Silver Wings Second Lieutenant Don B. Jensen, Jen-sen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don A. Jensen of 1289 Apple Ave., Provo, Pro-vo, Utah, has been awarded U.S. Air Force silver pilot wings upon graduation at LaughlinAFB,Tex. Lieutenant Jensen is being assigned as-signed to a unit of the Pacific Air Forces which provides air power to maintain the U.S. defense de-fense posture in the Pacific and conducts air operations inSouth-east inSouth-east Asia. The lieutenant, a 1961 graduate of Provo High School, received his B.S. degree in 1965 from Brigham Young University. He was commissioned there through the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps program. His wife, Saundra, is the daughter daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Groneman of Orem. Steven L. Gull Now In Vietnam Army Private First Class Steven Stev-en L. Gull, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn H. GuU, 1225 N. Main, Orem, arrived in Long Binh, Vietnam, November 29 with his unit, the 446th Transportation Company. The unit was previously located lo-cated at Ft. George G. Meade, ,ML Pvt. Gull, a truck driver in the company, entered the Army in March 1966. ' Gull is a 1965 graduate of Orem High School and his wife, Marilyn, Mari-lyn, lives atl55S.CampusDrive. v IT JANUARY SALE PRICES SLASHED TO MOVE 'EM FAST! ALL MAKES & MODES LARGE SEE OR CAM DICK PAYNE VAUGHN DRURY EARL GITRR SAM KOPI MAC BOYER United Sales & Service 470 Wes 100 HOW STRANGE'. BECAUSE f AND I DON'T REMEMKR I HAD A DREAM LAST I APPOINTING EITHER OF tSj N1GHT.TOO ft fe, YOU FELLOWS THE GIRLS Iff m o rcn ckva. ii r -VV I 1 a r 3 V 'II, a "And if YOU would like to take the calories out of everything and give them to those less fortunate than I, please feel free to do so. Amen." STRICTLY BUSINESS bY mcf.. r 'If the government thinks we have a balance-of-pavments problem they should meet my wife." SELECTION OF USED CARS North PROVO By H.T. ELMO By Franklin Foljpr 'lit s 1 J 373-3031 3 1 C |