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Show I Page Two THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD December 28, ig6l OassiHFnedl Adls FOR SALE BELL, Boy boats, Johnson Mo-tors, Marine supplies, Pills-bur-feeds, garden supplies, mowers, tillers. Robertson's Marine and Garden Center. HU a25tfc BATHINET good condition, $5.00. HU d28c USED TV sets, 7 models to choose from. All makes from $49.95 to $99.95. Friel's. Ph. HU m3tfc DRIVE out and save at Niel- - son Feed and supply. For J quality feeds, hay, straw, flour, custom grinding, and j trucking. Ph. HU 1141 So. 4th East. o6tfc ' MOUNTAIN top soil Best in j the west. $2 per yard in 6 yd. loads. No rocks. E. H. Miller, HU sl4tfc 21", GE Black-dayligh- t, illum-inize- d picture tube, new, 1- -j year warranty, installed, j $39.95. Service calls $3.50. Bob's Radio & TV, Spanish FOR RENT house at 685 E 2nd No. Phone HU n30tfc UNFURNISHED 2-- b e d r o o m duplex. Gas range, garage full basement, 129 West 2nd So. HU n30tfc CLEAN modern all newly decorated apt. at 353 So. 2nd E. HU dl4tfc FURNISHED apt., basement, full bath. Utilities except lights. Laundry fa-cilities. Good location, no smokers. 309 No. 2nd East. HU dl4tfc FURN. apt., bath, hot water, garage. Phone HTJ-9-54- after 5 p.m. or HU-9-430- j4p furnished, steam heat, nicely furnished, gar-age, laundry room, dryer. Adults. Utilities furnished. $55 231 E. 3rd So. HU9-529- 0 D21tfc T7"T TDMTC3 XJIT'T O V. . : , L . ! CHEERS mmsim j May '62 Hit a High Note! I We hope the coming year is the bright-est one ever for you and yours! OPEN HEW YEARS AND SUNDAY WHSTSIDE MARKET IL, Ull., ,,,,, WILL sell, rent or trade Springville property for Mt. Pleasant property. stucco house, 1 acre, water, gas heat, fruit trees, 1287 So. Main. Want pasture in ' Mt. Pleasant. Luke Dunn, Phone 216, Mt. Pleasant, o26tfc brick home, gar-- j age. Carpet, drapes, full fin- - ished basement, includes rec reation room, extra bath room. 650 So. 1st E. HU9- - 4311 D21tfc PIANOS and Organs: Choose yours from Utah Valley's largest inventory. World fa-mous Wurlitzers, Kimballs from $495. Hart Bros. Music Col, Utah's largest piano, or-gan dealer. 706 South State, Orem. Across from Scera Theater. d28c CLEANING by the pound, 25c lb. Hats cleaned or blocked. Expert alterations. Quality Cleaners, 85 West 2nd South.! Phone HU n9tfc ONE new 5 foot left hand: bath tub,, $25.00. Inquire Carroll's Motel, 26 No. Main. n23tfc FIREPLACE wood, apple or cherry. Contact First Ward Elders, HU or HU-9-544- 4. n30tfc CLOSE IN 4 Rms., bath up-stai- 4 Rms. shower, fruit-roo- m down. 2 bedrooms up. 1 down. Rumpus rm. with Vinyl tile floor. Landscaped lot, fruit trees. Cement patio. Garage. $8,950.00. See Dick Conover, 74 East 200 N. n20tfc FREE use of our Carpet Sham-poo- er with purchase of Blue Lustre shampoo. Friel's, Inc. d28ca HU or FR j4 furnished apt. Utili-ties furnished. Non-smoker- s. 131 E. 3rd So. dl4tfc VHJEELCHAIRS, crutches for rent. Haymond Drug Co. Ph. HU J13tfc UNFURNISHED one bedroom apt. Ground floor, garage, storage. 36 East 5th South. Call HU a3tfc SPACIOUS apt. Stove, frig., garage. Near school, church and shopping. HU sl4tfc ONE modern apt, one mod. house. Good location, gas appliances. 110 No. Main or Phone HU o5tfc 3- -ROOM Apt. with bath, part-l- y furnished. HU 742 So. 2nd East. ol2tfc 4- -ROOM apt., partly furnished. Utilities furnished. Phone HU nl6tfc NEW apt. Storage, frig., stove. Reasonable. No smokers. HU ol2tfc PARTLY furnished apt. Access to utility room and storage. 67 So. Second East. HU n9tfc FURNISHED home, just north of Sage Motel ' $50 Call HU9-567- 7 Dec28 UNFURNISHED apt., with range, frig., utility room. Utilities furnished, ex-cept lights. 82 South 2nd East, HU nl6tfc BUSINESS office in Rivoli Theatre building formerly oc-cupied by Frazier Realty. Contact Huish-Gilho- ol Thea-tres, 140 So. 2nd East, Salt Lake City or Gene Braith-wait- e, Payson, Utah. o26tfc FOR RENT MODERN unfurnished home in Mapleton. Call Joe Carnesecca. HU ol2tfc WANTED TEACHER wants to buy inex-pensive used piano or organ for school use. Call Irene Moon HU9-686- 9 after 5 p.m. D21tfc LOST GIRLS eye glasses in case, lost between Jr. high school and 4th No. Call HU d28 MISCELLANEOUS RADIO, TV, record players, re-corders 5 qualified technic-ians to serve you. Over 26 years service in Utah County Ralph's Radio and TV, Provo FR j8tfc DR. LAFFERTY, Chiropractor open daily 9-- 6; Wed., Fri., 9-- 8; Sat. til 2 p.m. Closed Thurs. Arthritis, headaches, nervous disorders. Payson, 465-295- 1. ol9tfc GUARANTEED watch repairs. Standard watch cleaned, $4.50. Doug Brinkerhoff, 315 So. 3rd West. j5tfc ARE you paying more than you need to for your Auto Insurance? Call or see your State Farm Agent and com-pare prices. HU 103 So. Main. Mauray Payne. s21tfc WHEN you need insurance see LuDean Litster, C.L.U. or phone HU Be sure Insure Today. d4tfc TRIED it yet? Seal Gloss acry-li- c finish for vinyl and other floors. It's terrific. Friel's, Inc. d28ca for Delicious Baked Beans 300 size U iia U V '4MB &) ffc sr , Q "' "" " - V - .,.,- - - a - YE INTELLIGENT BUYER'S GUIDE TO FINEST LIQUORS a ... - ... I THIS GREAT BOTTLED IN BOND j IS NOW100 KENTUCKY. . . I and in a Brand New Package too! II v I ' F1 Every drop of Old Mr. Boston's new Bottled in Bond is 1 Sri 100 Kentucky Whiskey at full-bodie- d 100 proof! Inside I ' fall thathandsome new bottle thewonderful flavorof supe- - I iiiH rior Kentucky bourbon, painstakingly distilled, patiently Lzzz: aged, and Bottled in Bond right at the peak of perfection. p Treat yourself to the Kentucky bourbon with every fine I g quality of more expensive brands ... Old Mr. Boston n f 4) Bottled in Bond! : I K OLD FOR KENTUCKY CHARACTER 1 OLD Wlr. BOSTON sT0Ng I Bv m Dmm 100 PROOF :J i BOTTLED R0g1 ( S nil Nil KENTUCKYWHISKEY $. - KENTUCKY STRAIGHT l M 1 - 1 BOURBON WHISKEY S!SS-- ILf I H I ing 80 proof Kentucky ' p y-- - ' Available In Fifths and Pints. blended whiskey. NS st j 1 "INTELLIGENCE IN THE PURCHASE... fJjfefa I g MODERATION IN THE ENJOYMENT." JZEZ " ', KENTUCKY WHISKEY A BLEND, 72V455 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. MR. BOSTON DISTILLER INC.. BOSTON. MASS. I.G.A. from Red Ripe Tomatoes 46 oz. il TOMATO JUICE 3 for 7 ip5 .PEAfflES1 LEMONS lb. 12c LIMES 3for1Cc Frozen Foods Festival ORANGE JUICE is sr 4 for 83g ciiP Top FRUIT PIES !CARrTS. Blue Star Apple, Cherry, Peach, fAH J'f:k Boysenberry, Pumpkin $ ij fff I 1 MEAT PIES " urkey, Chicken, Beef. 5 for f- 1" vfl) LEMONADE ice milk it? in CalFame 1ft for QQrf Perfect Party Pepper-Uppe- r IU g EGGMOG eadow Go,d ?2C Holiday Meat Specials f Sour Cream i"pt7.G!ld 41c TableRite Fryers, whole lb. 29c j CheeS6 TableRite Fryers, cut up lb. 33c An Flavors-K- raft o for 59c TableRite Fryers, three legged . . . lb. 37c 5oz''ars Bar-SHam- s, . ib. 89c Oysters oLns0! .... 3 cans 1.C3 Bar--S Bacon, Ib. 59c TUNA Lmk Sausage Ib 49c white star-L-ight Meat 9 ft i Chunk Style- -l2 size cans Cfl"5 Theater owner wins suit, triple damages Pioneer Drive-i- n Theatre Inc., of Provo, owned and managed by Marv Cox of Spring-ville- , has been awarded a $90,000 triple damages verdict against 11 movie-- making firms, movie-distributi-firms and movie theater chains in a suit charging viola-- tion of the Sherman Anti-tru- st Act by restraining trade. The decision is subject to ap-peal if the defendants wish to take that action. The verdict was filed in the federal court of U.S. District Court Judge A. Sherman Chris-tenso- n in Salt Lake City follow-ing a three-wee- k civic suit brought by the Pioneer Drive-I- n Theater. The suit charged the defendants with conspiring to restrain trade and commerce in interstate distribution of mo-tion pictures. Named as defendants in the complaint were Paramount Film Distributing Corp.; Metro-Gold-wy- n Mayer Pictures Inc.; Twen-tieth Century Fox Film Co.; Fox Intermountain Theaters; Buena Vista Film Distributing Co.; Universal Film Exchanges Inc.; United Paramount Thea-ters Inc.; Intermountain Thea-ters Inc., and NT&T Amuse-ment Corp., all Delaware firms, and Warner Bros. Pictures and Columbia Pictures Corp., both New York firms. Services held Saturday for Wayne Beesley (Continued from Page One.) LDS church, secretary of the Springville Ninth Ward Sun-day School and a ward teacher. Surviving are his wife and one son Mikel, both of Spring-ville; his parents of Springville one sister and one brother, Mrs. Eugene (Mary) Curtis of Cheyenne, Wyo., and C. Tay-lor Beesley of Mapleton. "We'd have a better if there was more wiid our forests and lessinth0 cities." I it t x ' in immtii nfrtwniiViwrA.-v.,.....- ,.. f. .rfrfffVk.,J..r f LOWER AWAY The nuclear reactor at the University of Utah is lowered aboard truck for the move to the new Merrill Engineering Building. Railroad man gets new job with union Mart Merritt of this city has been elected chairman of the railroad Firemen and Oilers Lo-cal 651, AFL, Salt Lake City, for a period of two years. The election took place Thursday evening, at the Labor Temple in Salt Lake. Mr. Merritt has served as a board member of the System Council 12 years as well as hold-ing other positions. The battle of the highways, as speeding motor vehicles clash, is about as deadly as wars. Despite all books and ad-vertisements there is no easy way to anything worth having or knowing. It is good, no doubt, to love mankind but it is better to help those around you who need assistance. work is being done in coopera-tion with the assessors of the two counties. Those who don't get plates by mail either by choice, because of their location or because they have moved from their taxing district or have another car will have to stand in line. Income forms showing up in mail boxes Those demanding and dreaded-s-tate income tax forms will start showing up in mail boxes in the next few days. Three hundred thousand of them are going into the mails this week courtesy of the State Tax Commission. At the same time the state mailed out 165,000 forms by which license plates can be paid for and ordered by mail in Salt Lake County. Another 45,-0- went to Utah County. The Billy Dukenspiker says that a lot of people who talk straight from the shoulder should talk from a little high-er up. Dr. and Mrs. Jay Harmer and two children of Denver, Colo., returned to their home Wednesday after spending the Christmas holidays in Spring-ville with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Friel and with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Harmer at Payson. Imagination: The idea that price and wage- - controls can be established by voluntary co-operation. It is more blessed to give than to receive but occosionally it is comforting to be on the receiving line. Engineers get nuclear train-ing for Savannah. |