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Show BEAVER CITY. UTAH, FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1946 I'wmtmimmiiimtniMii.im.... .. fcimw,iwiiiiiiiwi!iuiNliii; Mrs.' Vera Calvert anl Mr. and Caliente, are vis iting at the home of her mother, Mrs. Emma Williams. Mrs. Julia Griffiths has return ed from Salt Lake, after visiting her daughter, Mrs. Grant Murdock and is much improved in health. Margaret Blackner took mem bers of her Gosnel Message class and others, 21 in all to Pondarosa Park last Wednesday. Mrs. Roy Lee of Sraurr Press ESTABLISHED NOVEMBER 25, 1904 membfp. UTAH STATE oiths- - Pittfi ASSOCIATION MERLE B. MERKLEY AIRD G. MERKLEY Associate Editor Editor and Publisher PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES Year, $2.50; 6 Mo. $1.50; (PAYABLE IN ADVANCE) o 3 By Mary Juno Calvert Mrs. Mo. $1. A First Class Publication entered in the Post Office at Beaver, Utah, as second class mail matter, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Advertising rates quoted on request. Telephone 24. GREENVILLE '.I' lliiKlitoi&iiUiilil Belle Reese has been ill this week. J. H. Greenwood has been in Salt Lake City this week on o Norma Erickson of Delta left for her home Thursday after assisting relatives. other at the with the bookkeeping Howard Theissen returned to for a week. Brooklawn Creamery Ely, Nev., after spending a week with his aunt, Mrs. James Lucy Rae Green of Cedar City, has been visiting this week with Donna Lou Hlackett came from her aunt, Mrs. Kenneth Smith and Springville to visit her grandpar- family. ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Morris. Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Murdock Carl Goodwin of the Milford and ehidren of Ely, Nev., spent the week-en- d with his mother, Mrs. bishopric, came over Sunday to Olive Murdock and Mrs. Lettie bring a car load of MIA workers to attend the Stake Union meeting. Sott. Mis. Jane Blackner Is improvMr. and Mrs. Levi Howd left ing, after taking seriously ill Friof last week for Salt Lake Friday day. will spend several Mrs. Bill McQueen and two sons City, where they weeks relatives. visiting Bill and Dick returned from Salt Lake, after visiting both ; g HORSE SHOW & HOME COnlluG Wil-lam- s. Speakers at sacrament meeting were Roy Yardley, Kent Morgan and Walter Kerksiek. Mrs. Olive Murdock just returned from a two week visit with her daughter, Mrs. Cliff Spendlove of Kanosh. Alena Lue Eackrell left for her home in Caliente, after spending two weeks with relatives here. Mary Jane Calvert left Monday for Ruth, Nev., where she will join her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Faekrell, then motor to Berkeley, Calif., to visit her two sisters, Garnetta and Naomi, and X Wcdee Til LEGAL NOTICES j.. tf! "MAKE IT A Probate MILLION!" For HF1 & Guardianship Notices Farther Information Consult the County Clerk or the Respective Signers. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF EARN WHILE YOU LEARN A SKILL OH TRADE BEAVER COUNTY, UTAH. NOTICE TO CREDITORS the Matter of the Estate of ELIZABETH PEARCE REES, Deceased. Creditors will present their claims with vouchers attached to the undersigned administrator at the offices of his attorneys, Cline, Wilson & Cline, at Milford, Beaver County, Utah, on or before the 29th day of August, 1946. In Splendid education and training in mora than 200 skills and trades are offered by the new Regular Army. Good pay and opportunities Over lor advancement. of a million have enlisted already. MAKE IT A MILLION! Get all the facts at your nearest U. S. Army Camp or Post or U. S. Army " Recruiting Station. three-quarte- CEDAR CITY, UTAH' 95 NORTH MAIN rs Administrator the Estate of Elizabeth Pearce Rees, Deceased. (June 28 to July 19, 1946) V. M. BURNS, of 150 Race Horses More Than $3300 in Purses Two Big $600 Handicap Races elephone Calls eaver cor iillteljl ig Ecifi HDay H iiHiiiiiiiuiiKiiU!iiiii;iiiiiiuiiHiiaimimtiiiuimimKniait!iinnni!iiii iiiiuuBiiuiii mmsammsi Telephone switchboards in Beaver are busier today than ever before. More telephones are in use and people arc usinjf them more. Local calls handled per day show an increase of 33 over comparable periods a year ago and long distance calls are up 20. In Heaver, as in many other telephone offices :n Utah, more equipment will be installed just as fast as we can get it. For reasons beyond our control many of the vital materials we need are still not available in quantity. Meanwhile, we'll do our best to handle the unprecedented volume of calls. Busiest hours are between 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. We don't want you to reand 11 a.m., and strict your use of the service but if some calls can be made conveniently during less busy hours it will help us 1 St m lift-- gUmS ' irfvf'ft! , ' t V JZfWW'ii'i'filZ "But here's a 1946 plus got an engine" . . . OIL-PLATE- give you better service. CONOCO Thanks for remembering. f D Please see above Two cars alike-fr- om paint to price. . . . Except that the keen buyer got himself a real plus he got an engine. Its sleek inner finish the engine's very soulis under guard of This special way of fightinz wear fights carbon and sludge for fair! And the way for you to adopt this type of protection is to get a fill of Conoco N"1 motor oil patented. oil-plate- d oil-platin- UJ VJ OIL-PLAT- & Telegraph ES YOUR ENGINE The Mountain States Telephone MOTOR OIL You'll get Conoco N" oil's added ingredient, acting magnet-like- , make inner surfaces attract and hold oil-platin- g to OIL-tlatin- g. It seems part of the metal-sta- nds of lots of the its big share of rub-thw- arts Go wean It's THE correct start for a new car. Or if yours is a there's lots of veteran, new hope for it, in changing to Conoco N" Your Mileage Merchant's ... oil-tod- ay-at Conoco station. Continental Oil Company o |