OCR Text |
Show Thursday, March 5, 1953 THE SUN ADVOCATE Page Three 40 Your Credit Rating Credit Bureau of Price Renders Valuable Service to Commerce of Southeast Utah An Institution in Price which at various times has saved merchants a great deal of money and of which too many people are not familiar is the Credit Bureau which is currently operated by William J. Welsh, Jr. The Credit Bureau serves as a clearing house for information relative to the good and not so good points about an individuals credit and contained within its more than 20,000 file cards is in all probability information about you and you. The bureau services the southeastern Utah area. If you should go down to purchase some item that would require credit and the merchant was not personally acquainted with you or did not know just what kind of a credit risk you are he will call upon the Credit Bureau of Price to provide him with the information he requires. If you are new in town and the Bureau does not have a file on you then the credit bureau in the town from which you came or one in a nearby town is consulted and be four-coun- ty X merchants and references which are given by the prospective purchaser on his application form, a form which is usually required by all stores before credit is extend- Quick action if you see us first No Fuss No Trouble No Bother - ed. Each Credit Bureau member pays a nominal monthy fee which entitles him to receipt of the bulletin and to the use of the facilities of the bureau, an arrangement which has proven to be a money saver in several instances Appraisal and Insurance required on your auto. Loans made only on 1940 and later models . . . New Car Purchases Financed on 6 Plan. PRIVATE LOAN CREDIT COMPANY ROOMS the serious Illness or his mother. She was still In a critical condition the last time his family heard from him and he will stay until there is a change. Mr. and Mrs, J. C. Stevenson, Clive and Lynn motored to Manti Sunday to celebrate his birthday with his mother, Mrs. Ethel Steve-ensoand his brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Keith G. Stevenson, Dennis and Rishard. The neighbors on Edgehill Drive helped Mrs. Inez Hyatt celebrate her birthday last week. Tom McCourt returned home last week after spending several days in Fontana, Calafornia, for a physical check-up- . Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Walker were business visitors in the state capitol last week from Thursday n, have lived in Sunnydale and Sunnyside for the past nine years. He is still employed by the Kaiser Steel Corporation but they have bought a home in Dragerton. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hunter, Keith and Pauline moved from Sunny-sid- e to Sunnydale last week end. They have been residents of the upper camp for a long time. Mrs. Mike Kandaris, left, and William J. Welsh, Jr., have credit ratings of many Price residents at their finger tips in some '20,000 reference cards contained in their files. They are shown checking some references in response to an inquiry received from one of their subscribers. AUTOMOBILE 5. (Crouded out last week) Mr. and Mrs. John Maxey received word last week end that their daughter, Ola, was to be married Saturday, February 28, in the Church of Christ in Kansas City, Kansas, She has lived in Kansas City for the past two years where she finished high school and has been working since. The couple will make their home there. A group of men motored to Salt Lake City last Friday to see the basketball game between the BYU and the University of Utah. The men who went were Bill and Denny Lindsey, Tony Elegante, Jackson Moffitt, Tom Mahon, Rell Andersy, Curley Fausett, Si Ross, Don Ross and Cal eJwkes. Ted Newell was called to Walla Walla, Washington, last week by Mr. and Mrs. Ken Allred and Jimmy from Hiawatha came over Friday and stayed until Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Allred, and sister Marilyn, They took their daughter, Kathy, home with them. She had been visiting her grandparents and aunt for the past ten days. F. L. Graham was a Salt Lake business visitor last week. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nelson and son, Clark, moved to Dragerton last Sunday February 22. They US FINANCE YOUR NEW OR USED - until Sunday evening. Daughter of Sunnyside Couple to be Wed fore long the information is available to the merchant who can then make up his own mind as to Whether or not you will be a good credit risk. This interchange of information between credit bureaus is 'possible because ell are affiliated with the Associated Credit Bureaus of America with headquarters in St, Louis, Missouri. Each credit bureau pays for information received from another on a coupon basis and these coupons are cleared through the national headquarters for final payment to the payees listed on the coupons. Here in Price the Credit Bureau also publishes a mimeographed 'bulletin which goes out to the membership once each week. In this bulletin is contained much valuable information about legal tranactions, purchases and such which are recorded with the office of the Carbon county recorder, actions filed in the city and district courts and other miscellaneous information. Much information about credit 'ratings is also obtained by the bureau from LET 4-- at Their Finger Tips SELVAGNI BUILDING PRICE. UTAH to Price merchants. The Credit Bureau of Price was started in 1937 by Val Hicks and was taken over in 1941 by William P. White and in 1947 the management of the 'bureau was taken over by Mr. Welsh. Currently the bureau processes about 400 credit investigations per month and much of this work is done by Mrs. Mike Kandaris, clerk. ; aW mine Hill and Hill f KENTUCKY JwUU . Chicagos Electricity To generate the electricity used by the city of Chicago requires 20,000 tons of coal daily. You've named a winner when you say "Make BOURBON WHISKEY ftom FULLY THIS WHISKEY IS STRAIGHT 4 YEARS OLD 86 PROOF . THE HILL & AGED HILL CO., LOUISVILLE, KY. Vforitfs newest Television freat the BUISK CIRCUS HOUR every fourth Tuesday that makes a man Its morea lotthanof pride horsepower beneath the hood of the car he owns. For the real point in reaching record horsepowers and compression ratios goes beyond miles per hour. It steps up per fortnance and economy in normal driving. Thats what Buick engineers did when they upped the power and compression of each 1953 Buick Special, Super and Roadm aster to the highest figures in r Buicks history. In the Super and Roadmaster, they put a new kind of V8 Engine first passenger-ca- r V8 with 8.5 to 1 compression, and a long list of other major engineering advances. - fifty-yea- 9 P For the Special, they redesigned the VL Kitchen Croft Flourbutter er or robine and oeanut and add alter- milk and ggolk M th the flour. do balla Cttf d cooky indentation W famed Fireball 8 Engine 3 gave it horsepower and compression. And to these spirited engines they coupled the new Twin Turbine Dynaflow Drive that adds flash-fasquiet getaway to utter smoothness. Just to give you an example of what all this means: The 1953 Buick Special with Dynaflow can beat the mighty 1952 Roadmaster on getaway can reach 30 mph ( when the law allows) with a combined speed and jerk-fresmoothness no other car can equal. Of course, theres far more to these new Buicks for 1953 some seven dozen new features alone. But why not come in and see for yourself that these are the greatest Buicks and the greatest values in fifty great years. -- t, e j on ter). place and make in a c00ky. Bake (375F) ov;,f8ugarover F-26- shorter flame travel, faster firing, higher tea. Remove lightly-tool- . 'Standard on Roadmaster, optional at ixtra cost on other Stria. WHEN j j SAFEWAY STORE BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM- REDD MOTOR COMPANY 129 WEST MAIN PRICE, UTAH |