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Show All A Ak JIM TOILET TISSUE eia C0NTADINM fisB HUNT'S WTc011,AI0 BR TOMATO cams j MM GMDa 6 rag) HUNGRY JACK Hungry viiuAiifpi rANlAiVu MIX EXTRA LIGHT P. Co) BAG r OJ lip fSlllSi ' Jff .Jim.,, CADBURY'S HOCOLATE HI., MM HIM -41 USKii Hazel dfr'i Dinf dm n J NytMilk 7 KING SIZE jLhocolate i 2 BARS $00 October 16, 1975 The Springville Herald Page Five HY GRADE VOUKG, TEKDER MAM rpn z&r CT (0 : SUCED I nn $11 73) "A" GRADE flfk PO ) rO J g. lb, jl, WHOLE TiBONE STEAK lb. S2,49 PIC-O'-CHICK mr lb. 97c BONELESS SIRLOIN cm& lb. S2,69 LEAN GROUND BEEF Ky ib. 88c BONELESS RIB STEAK 'safe lb. S2.59P0RK LOIN CHOPS PC00IN lb. $1.79 PSLAB BEEF II AandR SLICED BACON LIVER BOLOGNA VALLEY BRAND FRANKS ag 79cTURKEY ROASTS SU. lb. 49c SLICED BACON W $1.49 TOM TURKEYS fb. 65c HAM HOCKS a, lb. 89c BEEF STEW Ssss' Ib. S1.59 R v '':?t--: 0 FOIL P AN FOR 0 A'tNlNK BMW 2h3a on " " " ' - HOT DOG and HAMBURGER cpdimGVILU OREM SCOPE MOUTHWASH 18-OZ. BOTTLE value SECRET ROLL-ON DEODORANT 1.5 OZ. "n,n GILLETTE TRAC II BLADES 5 BLADES $1.39 Value PRELL SHAMPOO 16-OZ. BOTTLE ?.2-79 $1139 Value WVk MISSBRECK HAIR SPRAY 1 1 -OZ. CAN $1.39 1 Value u OtSfOSAHI UlANE UOHT1R CRICKET DISPOSIBLE LIGHTERS $1.49 Value 3) c Frank Memory Roger Hutchings Ronald Jensen and students SAVERS instruct Middle School students on emergency treatment Students in the Sigma Pod of Springville Middle School have been studying Emergency First Aid under the direction of their teacher Mrs. Dorothy Kennedy. Resource people from the Springville-Mapleton Ambulance Am-bulance Service were called to instruct students in Emergency First Aid Treatment. Roger Hutchings of Mapleton, Frank ' Memory, John Bird and Ronald Jensen, all of Springville gave freely of their time instructing the students in poisons, bleeding, mouth to mouth breathing, pulmonary mouth to mouth resuscitation, shock, burns, and bandaging. The ambulance was brought to the school for the students to view. They were instructed on the use of the ambulance and its equipment by Ronald Jensen. rrra A series of terrace-like buildings on the side of a hill in Loudoun County, Virginia, will be the home of Xerox Corporation's International Center for Training Train-ing and Management Development when it opens in the summer of 1973. The multi-million dollar employee education facility, nestled deep within a 2,265-acre farmland site near the Potomac River, will accommodate accommo-date 1,000 students and have a full-time staff of 500. The school's purpose is to train and develop worldwide world-wide Xerox people for personal growth and better service to customers. Vincent G. Kling, Philadelphia architect (center), whose firm designed the center, discusses a model with Xerox executives Willard H. Duetting, school director (left), and William F. Souders, vice president f jjr marketing anjl planning, j if Hi P m I I |