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Show 1 "V- h PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD SUNDAY:TUNE7 19? 1938 SECTION TWO PAGE FIVE ' (? A r I SPANISH COWAN STONE 4 mm mm ft. ftJTTST 1! LijjiI-4: I For .. " WANT ADS PHONE 49 5; ' Want ads will appear on the Classified Ad Page if they are in the office before 9 a. lm., after which they will appear in the column "Too Late for Classification." Classifica-tion." Want Ads will be accepted until 1 p. m. daily. On Saturday Sat-urday Want Ads coming in between 10 a, m. and 3 p.m. will be put in the "Too Late For Classification,!' Rates Firrt and second day, each Insertion 10 cents per line;, three days 25 cents per line; one week, 40 cents per line; two weeks, 70 cents per une; one month $1.20 pr Une . (Minimum charge 25 cents.) Count five words to line. Minimum accepted, 2 lines. Classified Ads Must Be Paid ' A 1 in Advance vLegral Rate 10 cents per line per, insertion, in-sertion, 8 pt. type. HAVE your next Permanent VVavte at Provos first permanent Wave Shoppe, experience guarantees guar-antees "satisfaction. Anderberg ' Beauty Shoppe, 143 S. 3 East. . Phone 689. jy3 INSTRUCTION LF YOU LIKE TO DRAW, sketch or paint write for Talent Test (no fee). Give age and'occupa- tion. Box 10. 319 J BOARD AND ROOM BOARD and room for two cool clean basement. 386 N. 6 E, jl9 i BOARD and room, Deer Creek ' men. 281 East 6th No. y j29 BOARD and room. Working men preferred. 218 N. Univ. Ave. jyll WORK WANTED WILL' care for elderly couple '6r woman. Inq. 1100 So. 5 XV. j21 MONEY TO LOAN LOANS A. C. Wickman (Wick) PERSONAL FINANCE CO; WILL LEND YOU $SC0 ON YOUR SIGNATURE $757 Monthly .Repays $100y Also Loans on Furniture, AutQi and Endorsed Notes, etc. ' Room No. 207, Knight Blk Bldg Second Floor - Phone 210 8 North University 'Avenue,. Over Schramm -Johnson's , , i - PERAtANENT WAVING " REMODEL voun home UJ1TII0UT MOflTGAGKlG Herb's How Check your home inside and out. Make a list of what you need. We will arrange to finance it even if. you have a mortgage. . For fygjcticulars See Tri-State: fir FOB REAL KX1AL ESTATE BARGAINS RENTALS J Bui nesa or Residence Insurance. Bonds or Notary Work SeeorPhone No; 4 HEAL REALTY COMPANY 165 Weit Center Street Ptovo'b New Shopping Centei See our windows for specials SPECIAL BARGAINS on New and Used 'Furniture 1 A large selection to choose from Trade in your old Lawn-mower Lawn-mower on a new one'. WE BUY, SELL, yOr EXCHANGE FURNITURE at 159 N. Univ. Ave. Phone 915-W THE GENERAL SHOP Sale of Property! Excellent Business Site CHAIN STORE OPPORTUNITY! BEAUTIFUL NEW ' 'Northeast Provo . Proposition. HOME - Excellent TEN ACRES Productive Crops Good Home-Opops Reap the Harvest here! POULTRY PROPOSITION 3000 Capacity Modern Home. Mosi Excellent Building Sites Specialty in Lots. INCOME PROPERTY Modern Home and Apartments. LAND Fruit Land Garden Land PIIONElOiW Willard L. Sowards AGENCY 39 W. 2nd N. St., Provo, Utah MISCELLANEOUS PAPERHANGING & paper clean- ing. Fred Nelson Ph. 1022-W j 24 FQR paperhanglng and cleanlng, .!. dv. noeox coving, painting. Pn. 0JbK4 Oliver M. Hansen. j24 LANDSCAPING ESTIMATES and given free. A. .Phone 029 J2. suggestions T. Harding. j21 WANTED Miellaneous MANfOplov Longs Paradise f Park. Tourist Court Provo. j20 EXPERIENCED window . trim-. trim-. mer, card writer,- and advertising advertis-ing man. Write Box 13. jl9 HELP WANTED MALE RELIABLE iAN WANTED to dall on farmers in Utah County. No experience or capital required. requir-ed. Steady work. Make up to $12 . a day. Write MR. W. D. CAMP-.BELL CAMP-.BELL rClearf eld, JJ-tvh,-.- - j -9 FEMALJJ HELP SALESLADIES NEW kind of work for married women pays $14 to $23 weekly besides your own dresses and lingerie Free. No investment. Write giving age and dress size. FASHION FROCKS, Inc., . Dept., K-4403, Ciruninnati, Ohio. jl9 FOR SALE-CARS TfiPLYM. Deluxe Coach $365 00. Tei-ms. 142 No, 1 East. j24' 27 BUICK, good motor and tires. Cheap. 240' N. 5 East. j20 Lumber Co0 Phone 20 We ; have Apt-tllouses, vHoniei, - rsms Rjuich ' Dairies; Businesses, Busi-nesses, oil' station ' corner, tourist tour-ist camps, subdivisions, building build-ing lots at Vivian, park. Fire Ins. the best. Prows. Haws, Realty Co 5S.N. Univ. Ave,. Phone 456. FOR RENT FURNISHED 2 and 3 RM. mod. apts. basement- Cool. 851 North 2 East. J21 SINGLE lower apt. H. water, garage. gar-age. Adults. 270 No. 1st East. Ph. 1525Ji ' jyl9 CLEAN, strictly mod. apt. Close in. 66 EasV 3rd North. j20 2 'ROOM modern apartment. 243 East 6th North. - j23 SLEEPING rooms or apartment. 244 North 3rd West. 123 3 ROOMmodern apartment. 227 E. 3 No.' Phone 363J. J23 2 ROOM modern apartment. 319 East 1st. North. ' j22 SMALL 3 jrtni?i' cottage, partly mod. 6ld West 1 South. j22 COOL room, suitable for baching. 458 West 4th "South. j20 COOL, quiet room' and apts. 468 North 1st East; jl9 '. , m .-J.. ... : 2 RM. mod.' apt., will, take part work for rent 360 E. 6 N. jl9 3 RM. modern apartment. 232 E. 3rd North ' j22 MOD. apt. Pay by the week. Close in. Summer rates. 266 W. 3 S. jl9 3 RM. mod. apt., lights and water wa-ter furn. $15. 442 N. 5 E. j21 2 RM. mod. apt. Ground floor. 136 West 5th North. j20 1 LEFT, new mod. apt. electric . equipped. Jnq. 505 N. Univ. j21 3 RM. strictly vinod. apt., garage. 210 N. 3 W.. after 6 p. m. j21 LIGHT hskpv apt., ground floor. Ph. 272. 156 W. 3rd No. j20 MODERN APARTMENT. 681 N. 1 W. jl9 DOUBLE rooms, mod. and single rooms, 178 W. 4 N. jl9 3 RM. mod. apt, Elizabeth Apts. 107 East 1st Soutji. ' jyl 5 ROOM mod. home ana garage. Phone 1421J. jl9 OR PARTLY furn. 4 rm. mod.' apt. Reasonable: 293 East 7 North. j21 5 RM. modern- house. Ph. 568, 780 North Univ. Ave. j24 3 RM. modern apartment, 178 No. 2 East. ' J24 3 RM. mod. apt. Adults. 978 W. 1st Norths v FOR SALE , Miscellaneous EMPTY 10, gal. jelly barrels, 35c each. Provo Bakery. EARLY white cherries, 3c lb. Pick your .own. East of Cemetery Hi-way. j24 4 ACRES,, hay in field. Make of fer. Bill Cox West of Golf Course pn inth South. ' j!9 NEW inner.,.. spring mattress. Phone OlOJfV j20 , fr,, TWO 16 inch almost -new .tires with tubes'. , Just right for a . trailer. Bargain. Call 793. j20 $190 GAS range will sell for $40. Phone 460M. J22 NEW electric washer $39.85. New coal range $53.75. Gessford's, Inc. jyl6 DftlVE to S. W., Kitchen for Green Peas. Qrem'St. Highway. J21 5 BUILUiNG lots on- 7th North and 1st WestTAirimproyements paid,, only. $2750 cash. J. A, Owens, 69JL North Univ. Ave. j!9 COAL Rummer special $5.75. C. Chris tppherson. Ph. 791. . J25 SPECIAL large nut coal $6 ton. ' $3 .25. M $1.75. Delivered immediately. Right Weigh Co Phone 525. J22 FOR SALE OK TRADE Tedit. ,. on new Chevrolet. MaKe rne an offer Ph. 417. J20 LOST BLACK ' mare, 1200 lbs. White strip on' face; left hind 'foot white; brand Bar over 14. Reward. Re-ward. pM.-026-J-3. J. D.s Pyne. 4 ; J21 INCH rpfie blocks. Call Provo Herald . 4M, Reward. 3 LADIE'S ririg with ruby stone, bet. Lindon and ,Provd, Sun. Ret. Geo, 'Scoviile S. L. C. Ph. V.V.- Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult County Clerk or the Respective, Signers for Farther Farth-er Information. NOTICE OF SPECIAL STOCK HOLDERS MEETING OF . IN TERMOUNTATN FINANCE & THRIFT CO., A CORPORATION. Notice Is hereby iven that there will be a special meeting of the stockholders of the Inter-mountain Inter-mountain Finance & Thrift Co., a corporation held at the company's office, 32 West Center Street, Provo, Utah, on Monday, the 27th day of June, 1938, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. The object of such meeting is to vote upon the question of amending Article 5 of the Articles of Incorporation of said company so as to make the authorized capital stock of ' this corporation $50,000 divided into 50,000 shares of the par value of $1.00 each and to eliminate the preferred stock of said corporation. Also, to amend v any and all other of the articles of incorporation incorpora-tion so as" tor 'conform to the amendment proposed to Article 5 as aforesaid. Also, to provide for the carrying carry-ing into effect of said amendments amend-ments provided they shall be voted upon favorably. Dated at Provo, Utah, this 3rd day of June, A. D., 1938, by order of the Board of Directors. N. C. HICKS, Secretary. Pub. June 5. 12, 19, .1938. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR VOLUNTARY DISSOLUTION In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, County of Utah, State of Utah. In the Matter of the Dissolution of Greer Brothers Incorporated a Corporation. Notice is hereby given that Greer .Brothers Incorporated, a corporation organized and existing exist-ing under and by virtue of the laws of the State or Utah has filed herein its verified application applica-tion for a decree dissolving said corporation ; and That Friday the 29 day of July 1938 at 10 A. M. has been appointed as the time and the courtroom of the above court in and for the County of Utah as the place, at which the said application applica-tion is to be heard, and That on or before, the 29 day i of July 1938, any person may file herein his objections to such application ap-plication or to the granting thereof by the above-entitled court. In witness whereof I have hereunto here-unto set my hand and affixed the seal of the court aforesaid this nth day of June -RANT Clerk of the District Court For Utah County PubE June 12. 19, 26, July 3, 10. 1938. MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE X MOST ADMIT, LEUmC "W-UKT I'D MVSBL VAUAT DO I TO ALLEY . OOP BOOTS AND HER liF THAT BAMTOOX80 KHOWTKAT3 ( STAY WITH 1TJ " I X 1VC VLOOaSl VoCKioRS. CM AV.0M6 69AKiO J JWnKkT r MN TNE 1' -SPANISH FORK Ed Williams wishes to announce :the engage ment of hia daughter, Beth, J tb Reed Johnson, son "of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Johnson, also "of this city. The mjarriage is to tak6 place Tuesday, June 28, in the L. D. S. temple. Salt Lake City. Mrs. Icabinda Sorenson, her daughter, Miss Ruth Sorenson and grand-daughter. Miss Mar-jo Mar-jo rie Huff, returned home Sunday Sun-day after a- very delightful two weeks' trip to the Pacific coast. Mrs. N. P. Larsen is. spending a two weeks' vacation in California, Cali-fornia, in company with her son, Norman Larsen, and his wife of Spring Cayon. 'TJiey are visiting with their sons and brothers, Len, Dick and Grant Larsen, at Los Angeles and JTaft. Mrs. Elmo G. Luce of Cold Water, Michigan, is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J ex, and family. Mrs. Luce is the daughter-in-law of Governor Luce of Michigan. Lyman Halvorsen pf Glendale, California, with 14 Roy Scouts from the Pasadena troop, motored to Salt Lake to attend the Boy Scout camporee held last week I w4 T r -. t m l! . tu. vvilu seven, urn scuuuwic was the overnight guest of- his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Halvorsen. Hal-vorsen. Mr. and Mrs. Halvorsen entertained also during the week end, Mr. and Mrs. Reed Halvorsen Halvor-sen and children of Smithfield. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert R. Williams, Wil-liams, Mrs. Thomas Williams, Archie Williams and Mrs. Maggie Crump motored' to Salt Lake Sunday to attend funeral services serv-ices for Eph Howells, a Spanish-American Spanish-American war veteran, who. died at the Veterans' hospital, in Salt Lake. Mr. Howells while a native of Spanish Fork, enlisted from Park City. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine York have moved to Salt Lake City and friends may call after next week at their new home, 1833 Hubbard avenue. Mr. York has resigned his position with the Utah National Na-tional Guard and has accepted the position of factory representative represen-tative for the JohnJeere Plow company for Utah and Idaho, with headquarters in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Fuller "entertained "en-tertained as dinner guests last Thursday evening; Mrs. Effie S. Dart and Mrs. Uri Stewart Sr., the occasion being their wedding anniversary. "Miss Grace Stahman, daughter of Mrs. B. R. Stahman, left Thursday Thurs-day for Madison, Wis., where she will attend the summer session ses-sion of the University,, of Wisconsin. Wis-consin. She will visit in Madison with her brother, Mark, who is doing graduate work at the uni versity and with her brother, Fred, who is practicing medicine in Peoria, Illinois and with rela tives in Chicago. Mrs. David F. Hughes of this city, has received word that the degree of bachelor of laws was conferred on her grandson, Harold Har-old A. Banks, by Duquesne university, uni-versity, June 8, 1938. at Pittsburgh, Pitts-burgh, Pa. Mrs. L Mae Banks, daughter of Mrs. Hughes, went East to attend her son's graduation gradua-tion and also to accompany Mr. Banks and his wife, who will leave for a visit in the west the latter part of June. SUGGEST NOU MlkJGLE WITH OBOWQ AkJO LEAVE BLllL"PJO LIKE SIGHT- SEEJ& V1STTOQ-. TMfeKJ TAKE BAJS TO CAPE CM. LEO "PUEPLE; SLIPPER IS SUSPECTED SPV , eEVlOEZVOUft. BUDDIES WE ' wt'vJt GcmK rjEcvcm sonfe-?usvit sonfe-?usvit woovo sure mm W-CAMT O CHARACTERS 5 CONSTANCE DEREK BIANTHON a artlat yrhm 1tpoi7 rt. hilpegardb: thortald- XVrl( aUid. fcev. portrait. DR." ROGERS fee Met him wtt AUIevlt case. T :' :' . ' ' Ynttrtirt At 4kt CS4 mt mmmianumemt CuM -. ! rrU4 dmr yttten Dr. Rogera? mkr rHvMi call ker "Mr. Maa thm. BJia'wsaatca Caamte la a fcf kaaeymaoat ....... CrlACTER 3POTI' y Np pf course this is the artist art-ist . husband!" Mrs. Rogers t?ent on. Happily unconscious that at her first words all other sound and motion had stopped about her as abruptly as the action of a- motion mo-tion picture when the projection machine goes wrong, Mrs. Rogers bore cordially down upon Derek. Seeing Derek's stricken gray face, Constance felt suddenly sorry for him. "Of course I asked for you, my dear, when I went back to Bart-lett's Bart-lett's the other day," Mrs. Rogers was rushing blithely on. Constance, watching Derek's face and hoping the others had not seen it, began, "I think there's " But it was useless. Mrs. Rogers beard, only her own voice. "The joke about the whole thing, Mrs. Manthon" the merry twinkle in Mrs. Rogers' eyes as-turned as-turned that Constance would en-r Joy the joke as much as she did "was that one or two of the girls In the store had an idea that your young man had jilted you to come out here, and were wasting a lot of sympathy on you." . Well, it's out now, Constance thought. That's all it needed. Into the silence that followed, Derek began in a thin, stifled voice, "Of course it's easy to see how this story started. There was in fact, we " Out of sheer pity Constance broke in, her voice clear, cool, and just enough amused, "It's too bad to spoil such a pretty romance, Mrs, Rogers; but Mr. Manthon and I are not married. It is true that we did announce our engagement engage-ment there was even something about it in some of the papers, I believe; but we found oh, some time ago that the whole thing was well, rather a mistake." She smiled a little pityingly at the gratitude she read in Derek's hunted eyes. Mark Rogers had strolled to a window, and was standing now, -- OREM BRIEFS Windsor Ward LOIS DRAGE, REPORTER Phone 055 -R-l Mr. and Mra Frank Candland of Los Angeles were guests here Monday of Mrs. C. T. Drage. Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Erickson and small daughters of San Maria, Calif., are here for an ex ALU BtGWT. LEW - I'M READY. JiAY.... AM 1 TO WEAR THAT &AU&LE ch.in OO AV4K VsiVTH fTJtX9tW$e. UO rOCH o looking out, bis hands in his pockets, pock-ets, whistling inaudibly. Derek began' again, ''Constance, I think I ought to we don't want any misunderstanding about this, of course. I " - "Really, arent we making a mountain out of a mole hill?" Hilda Thorvald asked lazily with one of her faint, inscrutable smiles. "After all, this isn't anyone's any-one's affair but yours and Connie's, Con-nie's, Is it, Derek?" She smiled companionably at Constance, - strolled over to the piano, sat down, and began to play with complete absorption. pONSTANCE stood for a mo-ment mo-ment exactly where she had stood since Mrs. Rogers, had begun be-gun her epoch-making narrative; then she turned and swiftly left the room. As she went, she heard Mrs. Rogers insisting in a voice of amused bewilderment, "And they actually told me at the store that she had bougnt the last things for her trousseau only the day before she went away, Mr. Manthon." When Constance went up to George Thorv aid's room a few minutes later. Dr. Rogers was there. "What's this about your going away, Connie?" George demanded. "Good Lord, Doc! I thought you were one of these strong silent men who know how to handle women. . . . You brought her here because you thought I needed her, didn't you? All right, tell her I still need her, and put a stop to this nonsense." "You spoiled brat," Mark Rogers Rog-ers said shortly, "you don't need her any more than I do"; and realizing too late how unwary he had been, turned an unprofessional unprofes-sional crimson when the boy went on, his black eyes snapping delightedly de-lightedly in their deep hollows: "All right, then. For God's sake, tell her how much you need her. Maybe that will hold her if nothing noth-ing else will. . . . Oh, very well" it was only too evident that George Thorvald was enjoying himself immensely "if you, as my physician, don't know how to see to it that I get the kind of care and nursing my feeble state requires, I'll have to see what can be done about it for myself. . . . Interrupt me if I'm wrong, but this seems to be the only way out of it: "Connie, darling, will you marry mar-ry me and make me laugh for the rest of my life?" "No, George, dear," answered Constance. "I will not." "And why not?" George affected hurt surprise. tended visit. They are house guests of Mrs .Libbie Erickson. M. B. Walker returned to his home here Saturday after a two months' visit in England and parts of eastern United States. He reports re-ports an enjoyable experience. Mrs. M. E. Long and Nathan Long of Salt Lake visited here with friends and relatives over the week end. Miss Dona-Hafen is home again after a three weeks visit at Cop-perton. Cop-perton. By JEWELED BtiOOCH MOST IM-PDCTAXJT IM-PDCTAXJT TTEM Of ATT1CE . SAME IS QJKJAJIkUBLV DEVISED CAKXXD CAMECA "TtS HOPE OU CATCH FACE OF MJMBEQ CHE SPYJ . , t . SHU1 tOOKTT TMSCT'STEADA . . . COM D0WH TO OUR CAVE -A ISPJ, WATER'S SHOOTiM'WAy - MktVc" vooovor AM .ii TU' TlTt ! TOO S V.OT I TOO . .. . . ' !V", ' i m Bs ,7 A r. m m mm mam m m . NEA Srvk, lac. Because, dear George, I love another," . Constance said demurely. de-murely. - "Hm! George frowned. "That does complicate the matter. Not" his eyes lighted with wicked cun-ning-"not that fair-haired boy in the studio, I hope." Too late Constance saw whither this game was tending. 1 "No," she said' shortly. "I should hope not." "I hoped not. . . . Wen, now, let's see" George's eye ruminated rumi-nated innocently upon the ceiling "it eoindnf be " "If you're through playing 20 questions," Mark Rogers snapped, "here's Miss ' Wilcox with your lunch. IH come back when you've eaten it." ONSTANCE followed Mark Rogers out of the room. "Well," she said with a mocking mock-ing little smile, "it had 1o be a major operation, after aU. didnt it?" "I'm sorry," Mark Rdgers said. "But when Mother gets under way she well, you saw for yourself." "Of course," Constance told him. at didn't matter at all, really except to Derek." "Oh him! The half-baked Narcissus!" Nar-cissus!" Mark Rogers almost barked. "You mustn't blame Derek too much," Constance said swiftly. "It wasn't his fault if I boilt him up into something he never was, and probably never could be." i She was, she realized desperately, desper-ately, saying all the wrong things. It wasn't Derek she wanted to talk about. It wasn't Derek at all any more. .... He said abruptly, "You're being very fair. It's an unusual, and a a very, lovely trait.' "It's easy to be fair when when things don't hurt any more," Constance said, and added on a quick breath, "Do you know, that's almost the first nice thing you ever said to me?" "Do you know," he said, with a short laugh, "that you're not a particularly, easy person to say things to nice or otherwise?" Although he did not move or look at her, it seemed to her that he came nearer as he went on, his eyes on his doubled fist, "I've often wondered if it made any difference to you what I said." Hilda was r i g h t, Constance thought. He is shy. Suddenly he looked up, and his eyes were deep in hers. He began again, "I've even wondered sometimes " Behind Be-hind him the door opened abruptly. ab-ruptly. (To Be Concluded: S OFF TO CONVENTION SPRINGVILLE Planning to attend the national ' Kiwanis convention con-vention in California the coming week, are the following local club members and their wives: " President Presi-dent and Mrs. F. C. Packard, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Clyde and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Christensen. By auto road, it is 3265 miles to San Francisco from New York over the air route, it is only 2568 miles. THOMPSONand COLL BC1LLIAJOT " IS REAi-LVA LEk. WHEMNOU PRESS THE SAFETV CLASP YOU SWAP THE PICTURE. THAT'S REALLY CLEVEB! By HAMLIN By MARTIN A30VA T V ,1 VMQWV 0&ONI& UA OV-CdttWCVAltttt,!' TWeXVi rAOCH AX.WtKDr- 6t .t? -Vtt' SOS "'IAK& ' 598 South University- Avenue "HELPFUL SERVICE' -:--;:- -A AUTOMAT! REEL with line, below , WJU oodw 'Reward. Ret. provo tt v. : iff Highland 3977-W. J131 eraia. V i r r Y-. S , ' . ..." . . : |