OCR Text |
Show THJC PAGE SIX ! ' : NEPUI. UTAH TIMES-NEW- -- 'ffi purse and purpose yours. want a at known, dependable quality Made and low price. genuinely guaranteed by Goodyear. GOOpYEAR, All Weathers if you want the best. Big, sturdy High Pressure Cords and Balloons. Made with Supertwist for easier riding and longer wearing. PATHFINDERS, i: and we've got if you LOCAL NOTES Mr. and Airs. It. Q. Dorius of Ross, California, announce the arrival of a fine girl at their home. How much do you want to pay? There's a Goodyear Tire for every Friday, June 25th, 1926 Miss Erma Lunt is making preparations for the opening of a mar-ce- ll shop In a part of the building which is being built by Vernon Stanley. Sunday afternoon after meeting the officers and members of the South Ward Missionary Committee motored behind Alt. Nebo, where they enjoyed a delicious lunch. Thirty members were In attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ka.powitz, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Karpowitz of Salt Lake City, and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Irons were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hobbs at their Canyon home last Sunday. REDUCED PRICES ON ALL SUMMER MILLINERY And for the man who is hard on HEAVY GOODYEAR tires DUTY CORDS. Built with extra plies of Supertwist, reinforced, rut-pro- of All-Weath- er ly side walls, extra heavy Tread a tough, bur- tire for severest going. 2fce BULLS Editor and Qeneral Maaaqer WILL ROGERS Goodyear Tubes to match them all. Mr. Come in and get our money saving price on your Goodyear Tire. McCUNE MILLINERY f FOR SALE AT THE THEATRE VT G race Motor Work and Success Water From Two States is supplied with wwter by an aqueduct i!3." initjs long, which I.oh Angeles carries water from mountain streams, particularly from the Owens river and Owens lake, which are wholly within The latter the st.-.tof California. of the drainage partnf the upper end area may be said to be in Nevada. V Co. UTAH NEPHI The great highroad of human welfare lies along the old highway of steadfast and they who are the nsst persistent, and who work in the truest spirit, will Invariably be the must successful; success treads on the heels of every right effort. Samuel Smiles. well-doin- Night Air Not Harmful Night nir, In spite of the theories of our grandparents. Is just as healthful as day air. It Is even more purifying, for it Is less laden with dust and humidity. Cold air, moreover, according to recent experiments, has been found to be even more health-livin- g than warm air. 1 neies always a rum time tAJ Honest WML merchants are in basiness to help you with your problems. Vou may reply, "They are in business to make money!" And, of course, they are. But the point is: They know that the best way to make money is to serve you honestly and efficiently. One of the most valuable services a merchant can render you is to tell you zvhen to buy. He knows the market. He is kept informed about raw materials and manufacturing problems. He gets all the advance tips on styles. He even knows pretty well what your particular circumstances are, and what your needs, will be. So, his advice as offered through his ads in this paper worth money to you. When he announces a special sale, or displays a new line of goods, it is well for you to investigate. There's always a right time to buy, and the ads in this paper will keep you posted. Read them and follow their advice! 1925. 0.LH. Plenty of Red Rasp- berries, Black Raspberries, and Dewberries. Phone your orders in early Monroe Whiting, Phone 26 6w Earl Whiting, Phone ISSj. "Stage Struck," the Allan Dawn for Paramount which production comes to the Venice next Tuesday A FAIR COLORIST and Wednesday, is a broad comedy Another" Bull" Durham idver--Zietifiement by Will Koaera. T,and (eld Follies and screen lending American humorn More coining, watcnior them, j II I Meeting the "Bull" Durham Smoker Face to Face I am just making, as the Politician Says,"A swing around the Circle," to see what was going on in "Real America." I had been in New York so long, I was getting a kind of a Subway ' Slant" on things. I was becoming as narrow as a Metropolitan NewspaperEditorialWriter. My eyesight was getting so poor I couldn't see beyond the Hudson River, and my mind wouldn't function farther away than Albany, N. Y. I knewthatNewYorkwas amusing the world," but I wanted to meet the fellow who was "feeding it." I am kinder oddly constituted. You can cut off my amusement, but if my food stops you are going to have an argument on your hands. I, as Editor and Proprietor of the Bull's Eye, wanted to meet not only the readers,butthejwr.fof THIS Wonderful Product of OURS. (The American "Tobacco Company and me. ) Well, I wish you could see the type of Men they were, Big fine healthy upstanding I They were not the little Ancmics that has to tap his Cigarette on the box before he can smoke it. They were our Producers of our Necessities of Life. When I saw the type of smoking "Bull" Durham, it almost made me cry, that I wasn' t a smoker Ie-M- He-M- cn myself. P.S. There will be another piece here a few weeks from now. Look for it. with Gloria Swanson as waitress in a small factory town on the Ohio River. She is smitten with Lawrence Gray, a pancake artist In the lunch room, who is fond of actresses. To make a more favorable impression on the young fellow, Gloria is school taking a correspondence course in stage acting and is given a chance to show what she can do when one of the famous floating theatres which ply their way over the broad waters of the Ohio arrives in town. The scenes that follow, in which Gloria clowns all over the sets 1" all sorts of get-up- s, are said to be far up and beyond anything fans saw in "Manhandled," "The Humming Bird," "Zaza" or, for that matter, any of the star's previous pictures. vwfm "J . em y Ol-co- 1 Long Ago," which will be shown on U.1 li IM incossossti til I ifth Avenue, New York City :2dL This young woman ascends u giddj ladder every day to put finishing touches to the "Rainbow City'" -- the Cor-teInternationa Exposition, opening in Philadelphia June 1 and continuing until December 1, to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of American IndeDenri- ence. She Is one of an army of young block. arums wno are maxmg me sesqul t Due to a faulty start upon the olorful success. part of the horseless carriage. It is necessary to begin the race again. The Judges are still trying to decide the winner, inasmuch as the horseAID TO BEAUTY less carriage blew up Just as it was crossing the finish line. Sesqui-Omemil- J The fall of a champion was recorded on celluloid during the making of "Sporting Life," the Universal Jewel Maurice Tourneur production which will play at the Venice Theatre next Thursday. The champ was none other than Ted "Kid" Lewis, former world's welterweight champion, and now holder of that title in England, and he was kayoed by Bert Lytell. Although Lewis was never knocked out in the real ring, he was quite willing to consent to It when paid to do so as an actor. W4 ' :m Aft ..rT. , J i cine-matical- ly IBI I Guaranteed by M. , Romance, adventure and Intrigue feature "Looking for Trouble," the I'nlversal-Blu- e Streak Western that Ik now showing at the Venice Theatre. Jack Hoxle is the star of this thriling picture and Is again pleasing his vast army of admirers. Universal has given Hoxle a great supporting cast. Among the players are Marcellne Day, James Gorden Russell, Wiliam Dyer, Ppggy Montgomery, Edmund Cobb, Bud Osbornn, Bert DeMarc and Harry Russell. "Looking for Trouble" wag directed by Robert North Bradbury. Durham smm wood-consumi- - WW liAJ 1 JLi An automobile race which for thrills rivals that of the annual Indianapolis Classic, furnishes a real "smash" climax in more than one sense of the word for the Sidney tt Paramoont production, "Not So Saturday at the Venice Theatre. On a street lined with more than five hundred people an exact replica of Fifth Avenue, New York, In the late '50's the race is run between the first horseless carriage ever built and a man on foot. Mounted high on the rattling, contraption, Betty z Bronson, featured with Ricardo in the leading roles of the picture, and Dan Crimmins, who plays her inventive father, race Laurance Wheat, in an antiquated track outfit, the remarkable distance of one city "vi A. it r t. V " k i r - v .a . .. Under this young woman's Kkilirul bands the front of the Administration Inl Building of the ternational Kipoflilon Assoi iation qilckly takes on a delightful aspect. She directs gardeners where to place the small trees and shrubs about the great stucco binding. She Is doing ber share to make the big of the 150th anniversary of the of the Declaration of Independent a S'leces Scul-Centennia- To Cut MarthmalloWl prevent nmrtOiniHlImvs from sticking to your scissors when ruttlnf them In small pieces, dip the scissors In lcewstT snd use them without drying. The work may be done very the mamhmsllows do not rapidly, tick to the aclssori. To cnl'-!rarin- g.n-ln- g |