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Show Big Bailey Bros. Benefit Circus to be Staged Here Monday Afternoon, Evening Kivvanis C!ub Sponsors Entertainment To Raise Funds for Grove Fireplace The elephants are coming to town This will be the theme song of every boy and girl, and adults, for that matter, next Monday, when the Bailey Brothers Circus comes to Springville, under the sopnsorship of the Kiwanis club. There will be a matinee at 3:30 p.m. and a night performance at 8 p.m. at the Spring Acres race track. Funds from the entertainment will be used by the civic club to build a fireplace at Kelly's Grove and the patronage of townspeople, old and young is asked in this undertaking. Known as "That Grand Old Show" the circus will present 46 acts and 26 displays together with fireworks and other attractions. Tickets may be secured at the City Drug store, at Haymond Drug store or the World Drug at Spanish Span-ish Fork or at the gate. Gentry's performing elephants will be a highlight of the circus entertainment and Shirley Stevens, renouned aerialist will do some breath-taking stunts during the afternoon and evening. In addition to the 46 acts, Eddie TTnripini and his clowns will brinsr many a laugh from the audience. Dorothy's college Chimpanzees will do their bit to add to the big entertainment feature and other acts too numerous to mention are listed on the circus program. The circus committee is composed com-posed of the club boards of directors, direc-tors, Glenn Tipton, Bill Gogarty, Clarence Jensen, Jay Bingham, Maurice Bird, Glenn Coffman, Leot-nard Leot-nard James, Jackson Howard, Fin-ley Fin-ley Roylance, George Bird, Erwin Sheffield; also H. M. Weight and Paul Lloyd. Directing plans for the fireplace at Kelly's for which circus money will be spent are: Glen W. Sum-sion, Sum-sion, Jay Bingham, Blaine Clyde, H. M. Weight Dean Prothero, Robert Ro-bert ' Winston and ' Arlon Van Orden. , '7 ' ; i . m ' -i ' '' . ''' V f .... i : i - Kk ' i r -. . v. ' ' ' l i - I f - 1 I ' : ' : .' "'1 Is . , u y -, ;. ! H a Springville Man Promoted to Div. Supt. at Geneva . i j E. V. Boorman, 149 South 2nd West, Spring- i ville, has been named division superintendent Coke and by-products, at Geneva Works, Columbia- j Geneva Steel Division, United States Steel Corpor- j ation, it was announced" this week by L. F. Black, f general superintendent. j Born in Buffalo, New York, March 13, 1893, ( Mr. Boorman received his elementary education in Buffalo and graduated from Fulton high school at Fulton, New York. Later, he studied chemistry and physics through the International Correspondence Correspond-ence School. , Mr. Boorman came to Utah in 1919 with the Utah Saldaro Company as a general foreman in their pot ash refining operations. From 1922 to 1924 he operated his own grocery business in Salt Lake City. In April, 1924, he joined Columbia Steel Corporation Cor-poration as a turn foreman in the coke plant of the new Ironton Works, as it was just beginning production. He worked at the Ironton Works until 1943 when in October of that year he transferred to the Geneva plant as general foreman of the coke plant. Before coming to Utah he ' worked for three years. 1916 to 1919, with the Semmet Solvay Company Com-pany in Syracuse, New York. One of his two sons, E. V. Boorman, Jr., is an attorney in the law department of Utah Operations, j Columbia-Geneva Steel Division. The other son, Richard, is general manager of plant accounting for Kaiser Steel Corporation at Fontana, California. E. V. Boorman |