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Show Page Four THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD !jJ&,iyy' BUSINESS DIRECTORY' ALTERATIONS Cuyler's, 447 N 2 W, Provo. FR Men's, Ladies clo-thing made to order. Tailored shirts. Remodeling: alterations ANIMAL John Kuhni Sons, buyers of dead and useless animals. Phone FR Provo. APPLIANCES , G.E. Authorized dealers, Hoov-er vacuums, Estate gas ranges & heaters. Friel's. HU Graves Heating & Appliance James N. (Shorty) Graves DAY & NIGHT EQUIPMENT SALES INSTALLATION AND REPAIR PRESCRIPTIONS compounded promptly and accurately, exactly as your Doctor orders. COSMETICS Coty, Lentheric, Revlon, Max Factor, Tussy and others. SODA FOUNTAIN Featuring Chases Ice Cream HAYMOND DRUG 238 So. Main HU FREE DELIVERY Prescriptions, fountain. Free delivery. S.O.S. Drugs, 214 So. Main, HU FEED STORES High quality poultry, hog & Dairy feeds. Poultry sanitation & equipment supplies. Smart's Feed and Produce. 340 South Main, Phone HU MOTEL ir The Sage, a MuTnJ tion. 1250 N. MiLHu 2y' Member Best Western Mot MOTOR REBU1LDNG Motor rebuiidlni'ir-'- ji mechanics from complex 'a of motor parts. The Love Phone HU C MORTUARY $ CLAUDIN $ Funeral Homes! Springville and Spanish Mi ', 1200 No. Main 519 No. M.i,-- Ambulance Service Fumaces, Ranges & Water Heaters HUnter 43S East 9th South Johnson APPLIANCE SERVICE 263 North Main, Spanish Fork PHONE 488-- R Parts and Labor Guaranteed AUTOMOBILE REPAIR Wheel aligning, body work, brake service, tune-up- s, engine rebuilding. Day and night wrecker service. Phone HU V 5641. After 5 p.m. HU G. Lowry Anderson, Inc. Miner's Auto Service, front wheel alignment, tune-u- p, brake ser. 480 S M, HU Engine Rebldg. & tuning. Elec. & Carburetor repairs. Phillips Garage. 96 N. Mn. HU Overhaul, welding, frontend align. Brakes & trans. Ruffs Gar., 38 W. Cen. HU AUTOMOBILES Ford authorized Sales and ser-vice. G. Lowry Anderson, Inc., 330 So. Main. HU Auto towing. Day HU Nite HU Wldg., Body & fender work, Spr. Garage. BANKING There is no substitute for money in the bank. Springville Banking Co.. 202 So. Main. .ruiauury reat riuur oc rccua, medical supplies, poultry sup-plies, garden equipment, Gar-den dust & insecticides. Spr. Feed 97 So. Main, HU FLOOR COVERINGS Rugs, carpet, linoleum & tile, expert installation. Friel's 213 South Main, HU FLOWERS Springville Floral HU 352 S. M. Flowers fresh daily. Mem. Nat. Floral Ass. TDS. GIFTS China, glass, silverware, small appliances, figurines, etc. Friel's. 213 S. Mn., HU GLASS SERVICE Allman Glass. Auto, plate win-dow, table tops, mirrors. 141 S. M. HU or HU GROCERIES Bird's Mkt., 4 S. 4 E., HU Meats, groc. veg. fruits. "Low Prices Every Day." Cragun's Market 687 N. Mn. HU Featuring fruits, vegetables, meats & groceries. FRESH VEGETABLES FRUITS MEATS Complete line of Groceries BROOKSIDE MARKET 759 E. 4th So. HU We honor all $ burial contracts Wheeler1 Mortuary r ' ,HU Springville's Complete Mortuary Blaine Wheeler 211 E. 2 S., Springville NEWSPAPER jjll I springvillT HERALD FIRST IN I Local News 111 Local Sports ' Local Advertising ' 161 So. Main-- HU PAIN1, PAPER 1, Reynolds Glass & Paint Cf!0 Paints, Wallpaper & Sundrie HU 346 So. Main. PHOTOGRAPHY f MODERN ART PHOTO Polish off back-to-scho- ol bills Cash to get set for school S25 to $2000 . . and all the plans and r S7f Xk ) purchases you have in ( svaPjXI J mind. Prompt, private VSj L loans on Signature only, "" car or furniture. SPRINGVILLE 13 East 2nd, South Owen O. Jenson, Manager Phone: HU Loans below $600 made by City Finance Co. (Utah) jlj Jir jLy r 'BE .CAREFUL; 1. KEiP ALL SHIELDS IN PLACE. 7 1. STOP MACHINE TO ADJUST AND GIL r 3. when mechanism becomes clogged, . DISCONNECT POWER 8fORE CLEANING. A KEEP HANDS. FEET AND CLOTHING AWAY F FROM PARTS. W 'Y 5. KEEP OFF IMPLEMENT UNLESS SEAT OR V PLATFORM IS PROVIDED, KEEP OTHERS , rr j?:J I Jti member National x L Jtf Safety Council J REMEMSER TO STOP THE POWER before you touch or tinker. W E 3 T i I D t MARKET 241 South 1st West Hours: 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Sundays and Holidays: 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Hunter 9-5- 4 1 1 PAUL BEALS, MANAGER JEWELRY Duke Jewelry. Watches, Dia-monds, slvrware., gifts. Watch repairs. 254 S. Mn. HU LOANS Conventional & FHA long term Real Estate Loans see Milt Harrison at Springville Insurance & Realty Co. 154 So. Main HU LUMBER Coal Lumber Castle Gate Dustproof Coal Bennett's Paint Builder's .Supplies KNOWN FOR DEPENDABILITY Kolob Lumber HU 33 West 2nd South Utah Service VZP WEDDING p ypj PORTRAITS U Everything Photographic Photos by Vernon 130 South Main HU f PLUMBING, HEATING f BUCKLEY- - JOHNSON g Plumbing & Heating PLUMBING & HEATING W Complete installation & re-- j pair service on all types of plumbing and heating. Gasir" appl. 343 S. 2 E. HU K RADIATOR SERVICE Miner's Radiator Service, r-ebldg., repairing, cleaning, new" cores. 132 W 2 S HU REAL ESTATE J Wm. Parry Home Realty. Homes, Farms, Rentals. 52 W. 2nd S., Phone HU S RECORDS J RCA Victor, Columbia, DeccVj Capital and others. Friel's. 213; South Main. HU REST HOME J CLARK'S REST HAVEN September I announces opening of a convalescent home for men and women MRS. JUNE CLARK SPRING CITY, UTAH Phone Mr. Pleasant 23R5 BEAUTY STUDIO Boyer Beauty Studio, 29 W. 1 So., HU Mary Boyer, Mgr. Professional Work. CABINET BUILDING Fine Cabinet building, formica tops, plastic tile. Call A. E. Dallin, HU ' CAFES Chicken, shrimp and steak din-ners. Chicken Roost, 1 mile No. Main, HU Fish & Chips, Thick Tasty Malts. LeMar's, 1700 So. Main, Phone HU CARPETING Specials in CARPETS & DRAPERIES Call us for Free Estimates Art City Upholstering 220 So. Main HU CLEANING, PRESSING THE FINEST CLEANING THAT MONEY CAN BUY! HU HUMPHREY Cleaners 60 West 3rd South Madsen Cleaning Co. Fur stor-age, cleaning, glazing, restly-in- g, remodeling. FR CONCRETE Thorn Rock Products FOR YOUR BUILDING NEEDS Ready-Mi- x Concrete Sand Gravel Road Gravel Fill Dirt Roofing Chips Dial Provo FRanklin 3RUGS PERSCRIPTIONS FOUNTaTn I Dorothy Gray Cosmetics Vetinary Products REXALL CITY DRUG Free Delivery IMS. Main HUnter i OS DLTD ...when you have this "selling star" on your team! .... If your goal is MORE SALES, you'll pile up a bigger score when you put newspaper advertising in your selling line-u- p. Your ad here will "carry the ball" into "pay-of- f territory" every time you call the signal. Never takes a "time out" . . . never needs a substitute. It covers the field like a blanket . . . has a perfect sense of "timing" . . . delivers your message when and where most people look for buying information . . . does its selling where most shopping starts: in the pages of this news-paper. Why not "go into a huddle" with our representative. Call Hun-ter naifflpiiii ' i i 11 i Available in Utah JfoJU i I SAMOVAR VODKA L! tonight! 'JJJ - Made from grain. 80 Proof. Schenley Dist. Co., N.Y.C. Expert roofing, all types. Hall, Phone HUnter or write R. F. P., SpringvU USED CARS . Always the Best-- G. Lf Anderson, Inc. Third SoutB and Main, HU j VARIETY STORE ,' B&GStore, 242 S. Mn. HU Complete W variety store merchandise j WHEEL BALANCING! Modern Tune-i- n baWj Wheels remain on car. Service, 5 S. MainHUjJ 4th South and Main HU Industrial Supplies ve Oil FREE DELIVERY Prompt Courteous Service The Grand Lumber Co. 381 South 4th East WE LOAN MONEY HUnter Springville FROM OUR diiPf FILES iy rv"v CVVvv vwvvv; v: v- v. v. v . 30 Years Ago Springville High School tea-chers for 1928-2- 9 are as fol-lows: E. E. Knudsen, principal; Hugh Baxter, Harold Alleman, E. L. Faux, Wayne Johnson, C. B. Leadingham, Cornell Mendenhall, Glen Sumsion, La-cel- le Sumsion, J. F. Wing-ate- Arnold Roylance, A. E. Jacob-se- n, Mae Finley, Mercy Lun-ber- g, Bessie Finley, Mae Hunt-ington, Floss Harmer, Winne-fre- d Parry, Clara Clyde, Portia Davis . . . Principals of the four grade schools are: Jessie Alleman, Lola B. White,' Han-nah Rowland and Mary Roy-lance . . . Miss May Finley and Miss Bess Finley have return-ed from a month's vacation in the Northwest . . . Mrs. Lula Mendenhall is at the Aird hos-pital recovering from an ap- - little friends were entertained at a party Saturday afternoon by Mrs. Naomi Beardall for her little daughter Bonnie's birth-day. 15 Years Ago A tax collector will be at the city hall to help anyone with income tax blanks. Those who must file are married people who have an income of $3500 or more and single people with an income of $2700 in 1943. . . . Mrs. Margaret Faye Hansen, 27, died in a Salt Lake Hos-pital of a long illness . . . How-ard Maycock and Don Watts have been named bishopric counselors in the First Ward succeeding Frank Sanford who has moved to Nephi, and Vic-tor Frandsen who has been made a High Councilman . . . Police are investigating a burg-lary of the Utah Service sta-tion when 31 cents was stolen and a quantity of gas stamps . . . J. D. Ford and William Weight have returned from the southern part of the state where they distributed about 800 pheasants ... A highlight of summer socials was a party given in the First Ward hall honoring the retiring members of the bishopric, Franks San-ford, Wilford Manwaring, Vic-tor Frandsen and Clerk John Whiting ... Miss Lois Rigtrup daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Rigtrup and Lt. Lloyd B. Thur-be- r of Gooding, Ida., were mar-ried Tuesday in the Salt Lake Temple. pendicitis operation. 25 Years Ago Complimentary to Miss Row-en- a Hutchings, a bride of this week, a kitchen shower was given Monday by her sisters, Mrs. Preal York and Jessie Hutchings . . . Robbers entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Johnson via the back door and stole $3 from Mrs. John-son's purse, reports Marshall Wallace Bird . . . An attempt to burglarize the City , Drug was frustrated when Marshall Mell Cherrington came upon a man climbing a ladder at a rear window . . . Plans are under-way for the Springville Com-munity Fair with H. G. Thorpe as chairman; V. C. Mendenhall, n; Belle Childs, secretary and Claude Salisbury, treasurer; chairmen were Mary Childs, fancy work; Florence Boyer, pastry; Zina Condie, music; Frank Sanford, fruits; Virgil Bird, crops; Lee Sum-sion, horses; Paul Thorn, ath-letic carnival; Richard Childs, sheep; Carl Alleman, swine; A. B. Riding, horse-sho- e pitch-ing and Elda Nielson, flowers. . . . Grade teachers for next year are Hannah Rowland, Prudence Wride, Rea Straw, Luell Straw, Lola B. White, Hilda Clegg, Lillian Russell, Helen Palfreyman B e r t h a Bearnson and Hazel Williams. 20 Years Ago Ray Alleman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alleman has re- - cently been appointed assistant professor of physics at St. Johns College, Annapolis, Md. ... Clifford Crandall was sus-tained a member of the Second ward bishopric succeeding Far-re- ll Hatch Sunday evening . . . Kenneth Hales, 36, is recover-ing from a gunshot wound he suffered in an accident while loading a gun in the canyon east of here . . . Harvesting of a large crop of peaches will get underway in this area this week . . . Verona Condie is con-valescing from an operation for appendicitis which she under-went at Afton, Wyo. . . . Hon-oring Miss Louise Patrick who is leaving for a mission to Cal-ifornia, a farewell testimonial-socia- l was held in the Fourth Ward Thursday evening . . . Double funeral services will be held here Friday afternoon for Mary Louise Inshaw Holley Wheeler, 82, and her brother, George Inshaw, both of whom died here Tuesday about four hours apart . . . Twenty-fiv- e giwuuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiijiiuiLiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii n miiim iiinirpiiiiiiiiiijiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiii niiiiiiiiiilin i niiiiiiimiin limiiniim MEMBER: UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION I NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION I fjATIOHAL AWAS3 YlllZZl I WEEKLY NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES, Inc. I '9 Cp3 57 Published Weekly By 1 HtJioal Cdlbvilal UtoekJtot 4i tf 1 J tutu I Sirt L-- it lubushincj Kompany wm 3wu i , i I At Springville, Utah si Entered as second class matter at the post office in Springville, Utah, under the act g of March 3, 1879. Springville is a city of 7,000 population. It is particularly noted for its famous Art Exhibit and road-buildin- g contractors. Springville has a greater concentration of these contractors than any other city in the United States. Its chief g industry consists of a steel plant, cast iron plant, creosote plant, canning factory, powder plant, extensive farming and fruit growing, stock raising and lamb feeding. g 1 Subscription In Advance, Per Year $4.50; Per Copy 10c I Springville Herald Staff: EE HARRISON CONOVER Publisher CARLOS RIFE Printer 1 MANILA BROWN " Editor WESLEY ROBEY Pressman ORVAL SINGLETON Pressman WOODROW WEIGHT Manager KENT cRANDALL Pressman 1 MARVIN COX Advertising WILNA ALLRED Circulation DEAN BIRD Printer RICHARD HARDY Stereotypist B 1 EAUumiiiirvuHiHimniui riirinilll inn limn ii IIIIIIU lllinillllUllllinimilllllllDllllimilllUIIMmillllElllllllllllllHlllllllllllinilHMIlllllUlllllllllllim Circus Announces Dates for Fair Performance A highlight of entertainment in the state the first week in September is the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, scheduled for seven big shows on Thursday, Sept. 4 and continuing through Saturday, Sept. 6, at the Utah State Fair Grounds, Salt Lake City. Matinees will be held on Thursday, Friday and Satur-day. To enhance the international quality of the show the presi-dent, John Ringling North, has spent months on a talent quest in European capitals, key cit-ies and touring circus stands and engaged the largest num-ber of star acts in circus nov-elties assebled in 18 years, it is reported. Four new super spectacles, the most dazzling in a decade, will be as follows: "1001 Nights,' an Arabaian night's dream; "Up We Go,' a new and stunmng ballet; "Bless My Britches," a glorified western, and "Yankee Doodle Do," a rousing kaleidoscapic grand finale by the ensemble of the circus personnel in fabulous array. We have grown immensely-bu-t we must go on growing economically and industrially. What Is It? It pays most of the taxes. It provides most of the jobs. It has always done most to raise wages. It has given us all our fac-tories and shops. It has built our ships and railways. It developes inventors and business builders. It originated the principles of efficiency. It has done most to lower costs and prices. It created the whole struct-ure of business. It alone can raise our stand-a'rd of living. It is the hope of the human race. Yet Karl Marx said it must be destroyed. What is it' ? It is Private Enterprise. Please do not ask for credit. We don't have enough money either. Anonymous. God gives us relatives; thank God we can choose our friends. Addison Mizner The eyes of black bear cjy don't open until about forty days old.- Even their vision appears to v r for several weeks. |