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Show r I JulyJJL THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD Page Nine Specifications for Road and Bridge Construction," publish-ed by the State Road Comis-sio- n of Utah, Edition of 1960, are part of this contract. All reference to the State Road Commission shall be con-strued to mean the Board of Education of the Nebo School District. All work shall be completed in 30 calendar days. No bidder may withdraw his bid for a period of thirty (30) days after the date set for the opening of bids. The Board of Education re-serves the right to reject any or all proposals and the right to delete any item of the ac-cepted proposal. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE NEBO SCHOOL DISTRICT. C. J. WENDEL, Clerk-Treasure- r, Nebo School District Board of Education. Published in the Springville Herald July 18, 25, 1963. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Office of the Superinten-dent of Schools Nebo School District Spanish Fork, Utah July 16, 1963. Sealed proposals will be re-ceived at this office until 4 p.m. o'clock on July 30, 1963, for the construction of tennis courts at Springville Senior High School in Springville, Utah, and Spanish Fork Sen-ior High School, Spanish Fork, Utah. Bids will be opened on this date by the Board of Educa-tion of the Nebo School Dist-rict at 8:30 p.m. at the Springville Art Gallery. The main items of work are: A. Springville High School Project: 936 square yards of re-inforced concrete slab 5" thick, 95 tons of Plant Mix Bituminous Surface 2" thick, 6 each install net posts, 500 lineal feet of reinforced concrete retaining wall, 150 lineal feet of reinforced con-crete track curb, 54 each install fence posts. B. Spanish Fork Senior High School Project: 1,872 square yards of re-inforced concrete slab 5" thick, 190 tons of Plant Mix Bituminous Surface 2" thick, 12 each install net posts, 896 lineal feet of reinforced con-crete retaining wall, 93 each install fence posts, 618 cu-bic yards of Crushed Each proposal shall be ac-companied by a certified check or bid bond in an amount equal to five per cent (5) of the proposal. Bonds: Performance bond in an amount not less than fifty per cent (50) of the con-tract price will be required. Payment bond in the amount of not less than fifty per cent (50) of the contract price will be required. A combined bond in the amount of 100 of the bid price will be ac-ceptable. Plans and specifications may be had at this office. Those applicable portions of the book entitled "Standard Increase seen in bond sales Sterling E. Price of Spring-ville, Savings Bonds Chair-man for Utah County has been informed by State Chairman Frederick P. Champ that June sales of U. S. Savings Bonds in Utah reached $1,876,951, bringing the total to $10,871,386 up 11.2 per cent over 1962 and represent-ing 54 per cent of the year's goal. Utah County's sales for June were $57,344, making the half-ye- ar total $491,692, or 49.2 per cent of the county's 1963 goal, according to Chairman Price. "When you expect a check, anything else that comes in the mail is junk. Fred W. Grown, Edwater (N. J.) Ber-gen Citizen. " . .., - ) Li & V r A L: ALL-STAR- S OF THE HOBBLE CREEK LEAGUE who will play the winner of Mill Creek vs. Tooele SI m their at Grantsville July front row: opening game of that tournament are as follows, Carl Haymond, Terry Bredesen, Nancy Reed (bat girl and who has played with the teams for the fun of the game, and who is an excellent player, but cannot play in the WBBA circuit), Allan Johnson, Ed Cuch; second row: Danny Dewsnip, Dennis Goble, Russell Kinross, 3Iarlin Ro-bertson, Kelly Clements; back: Dan Barton, assistant coach; Eric Orton, Rodney Roylance, Kenneth Hulce, Larry Lovvrey, Blair Packard and J. D. Dalton, coach. Players and their parents are looking forward to the games at Grantsville. Swan hunting - collected total of 313 . estimated taken, with' an , were knocked down but l 82 ""retrieved by the 1,000 " who received swan tnnHne permits in Utah last W" according to a joint !'tment today by the Utah rfment 0f Fish and Game . U S- Department of interior-a report covering the 1' I962 huntinS season flas noted that more than of the total birds were immature year- - tpor birds of the year. j me table qualities of swans, by flavor and de- - iil ,. indicated 0f tenderness were Za generally by the hunt- - - J" good or delicious, with as i;i 12 per cent listing the " 15 as tough, the report said. Gneral concensus of hunters ntmion showed that the birds iT' U not nearly 80 easy t0 s King to bag as had been an- - ticipated. SSi well planned advertising t,; works for intelligent users, re-dl- ss of the state of bus- - iness. The ma" who uits com" plaining about his wife's cook-ia- r proves that she's learned - jjttfj or he has. Watching sun eclipse may result in blindness, say Medical Assn. CHILDREN, don't realize that less than one second's expos-ure to the direct rays of the sun can, under some circum-stances, cause permanent blindness. There isn't even necessarily any immediate sen-sation of pain before the dam-age is done. The only safe method of watching an eclipse is by "pro-tection method." That is, the viewer looks at an image of the eclipse, rather than at the eclipse itself. The image is projected onto a white sur-face, and the observer, WITH HIS BACK TO THE SUN, watches the image. Most of us have set fire to a piece of paper by focusing the rays of the sun through a magnifying glass. It is this same burning power that damages the retina of. the eye in eclipse blindness. The sun's rays are brought to focus on the interior of the eye by the optical system within the eye. In fact, the safest way to view the eclipse is on tele-vision or through photos in magazines and newspapers. Unless you obtain professional advice from an expert an ophthalmologist, astronomer or optical scientist don't look at the eclipse. The notion that massive federal intervention is the on-ly solution to the problems confronting American educa-tion has been called "bunk" by Ladd Plumley, President of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. He pins the same label on ideas that Russia is turning out super-scientis- ts "while our own schoolmasters fumble along with inadequate schools and inept students (and) that ev-erything will be worse tomor-:row.- " There will be an eclipse of the sun visible all over Utah and the United States on Sat-urday, July 20. But DON'T LOOK AT THE ECLIPSE unless you have first obtained expert guidance on how to do it without injur-ing your eyes. This warning comes from the Utah State Medical Asso-ciation to safeguard against the cases of serious eye dam-age and even blindness re-sulting from each recurring eclipse of the sun. Watching an eclipse is not worth taking a chance on injuring your eyes. If you are going to watch, be sure you do it with out taking the risk of injuring your precious eyesight. Dark sun glasses are no pro-tection. There is NO FILTERS generally available that make safe viewing of an eclipse pos-sible. This includes the sooted glass that many people once believed safe. Even heavy welder's glasses do not pro-tect. Telescopes and binoculars rined on an eclipse aree par-ticularly dangerous. They magnify and intensify the burn. DON'T PHOTOGRAPH THE ECLIPSE unless you are an experienced professional. Looking into the viewfinder of a camera pointed at the sun is highly dangerous. Even special filters don't help, unless they are chosen with great care. Most people, ESPECIALLY SIDEWALK SALE SPECIALS Set of 6 Sheffield Steak Knives $1.95 3-pi-ece Sheffield Carving Set $1.95 Famous Brand Costume Jewelry regular 2.00 to 3.00 Special 88c This is not old close-o- ut stock we have ' just received it this week! 220 South Main Springville, Utah 'PwESTERN AUTO 8- DEALERS i; WANTED FOR PLEASANT GROVE ,ui PROVO SPRINGVILLE 1 Invest in your future by owning ,our own store. America's largest nlomotive supply retailer, West-- Auto, is expanding its dealer otganiiation in this territory. locations available in area. You will merchandise if famous nationally advertised sporting goods, tools and other E profitable lines. Minimum investm-ent $15,000. Contact us for full iolormation on the Western Auto SS i Associate Plan: WESTERN AUTO SUPPLY e k COMPANY New Store Development Box 1031 Ogden, Utah s. LiQj-dlf-el j Sch' ! ROUND STEAK T-B0- NE Iffl Wik if s. ID. 07V ID. 70lg?;Si MEAT PIES .n sfl 7 s . TiS-Leaoe-d MVf- - TUNA, I.G.A 4 for 89c I I I , If NO ) rJ ? - j APPLESAUCE, I.G.A. 8 for 1.00 'V " u - FRYtltt 1L J (C V&&i&rJj;f& & IFMOMADF MIRACLE WHIP Salad Dressing qt. 49c &2 ) h J v . pach 10c niblets corn 6 for 1.00 rnlLfij Ky - - i tomato juice, i.g.a 5 for 1.00 t Chuck Wagon COFFEE, Sunny Man I lb. 53c ifRAMS., lb. 89c GROUND BEEF lb. 39c broccou, spinach gex-ritJS- PEAS & CARROTS CHEESE, TableRite, 8 oz. asst 3 for 1.00 ICE CREAM - 69c BANANAS - 2 lbs. 25' IZTm SHEE;: -- X I DETERGENT, I.G.A., 22 oz 45c - SUGAR, U8I ....... 1 0 lbs. 1 .39 PEACHES Nx ry CHARCOAL 10 lb. bag 49c 2 lbs. 25c ;;f --V , - jJO ;UKE MIXES. Cinch . . . 5 for 1.00 pEpRS ; V, A(S(K !7 WATERMELON 3forioc .4 V 51 ! biscuits ib. ite'M MwBut fl lil ) si '"ARGARIUE r--Sdr X. ) 3 EIG ST0RES y |