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Show SUN CHRONICLE. Jan. 20, 1 979, Page 1 2 Unique bookstore -- ntra by Cliff Bachison i. just kept knocking out walls and taking over additional space, said Mrs. Barbara G. William, another of the stores owners. The first day we moved in a lady came in and wished us luck and really felt we would need it. She announced that she had just gone broke in Mrs. the same location, Swapp said. We are the only business to last longer than two years in this location. Apparently not everyone was pessimistic of the stores chances for success. When I went to get a small business loan at the bank, Mrs. Craig said, The loan officer told me that he would give me enough to get started this year and enough to build a building the following year. of CHAD GONZALES . . . We Nestled in the corner of a shopping center at 1934 W. 5700 S. is a unique business called The Exchange. The Exchange is the largest used book exchange in the state, according to one V BRYAN PETERSEN first place . . . . . . third place . . . fourth place Pack 375 announces top pinewood winners declared. According to Pat Petersen, den mother, Chad Gonzales, Winners in the Pinewood Derby race held recently by Cub Pack 375 have been 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Toby Gonzales, won first place. Claiming second place was Roy youth earns top scout award , Eagle Scout Aliens must file All aliens, with few exceptions, who are in the United States on January 1 of each year, must report their address before the end of the month. i 394-577- 6 BOYLES south as Roosevelt, Utah, and as far north as Idaho. We even had a bus tour stop here one day, Mrs. Craig wooden v . ' v. 1 V ' I ' f ' j . : i : ' s : Y c . ; t - - i . Jan. 22 is the sixth niversary of the 1973 l t Wn, fliripOOl Quality common issues for 15 cents a necessary service to alot of people. Well never get rich but we meet a lot of nice people Mrs. Swapp said. . i - tv: s ' fir I K ill II ' j an- Supreme Court decision that made abortion legal in the U.S. for any woman who has a physicological need for an abortion. The abortion may be performed at any time the during nine month gestation period. Local peoplel' graduate Four local residents were among the 1,153 graduates who received diplomas Dec. 20 at Brigham Young University in Provo. John Stanley Hoffman of Roy and Barbara Adams and Charles Leroy Smith of BARBARA Appliances Lauara Craig and Barbara Swapp, the three owners of "The Exchange," a unique Books can be bought as cheaply as 1 0 cents. GWILLIAM, bookstore in Roy. received represent 39 states and 17 other countries. Fifty per cent are men and fifty per cent are women. Among them, there were 34 doctoral degree At the Roy Library degrees. Disney movies will be shown today at 2 p.m. at the Southwest Branch Library in Roy. The following Disney favorites will be shown: Brer Rabbit And the Tar Baby, Island Of Mystery, The Mad Tea Party, and Peter Pan Meets Captain Hook. Children of all ages are invited to the movies. Degree recipients have been invited to attend the 104th Commencement exercises next April since there were no formal services in December. Button stories Round As a Button will be the theme of activities for preschoolers Tuesday January 23, at 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. at the Southwest Branch Library. The following stories will be told: Mrs. Mooley, Balloon, recipients, masters 95 degrees, 904 bachelors degrees and 120 associate GITBO ILCAQOUG 3 Cycles YOUR EXCLUSIVE LEASING CO. ALL MAKES & MODELS SEE US Water Temperature Whirlpool Selector 3 Wash-Rins- e Combination - WERE THE PROFESSIONALS 1979 Chev 1979 MUSTANG PS, rear window Cheyenne wiper washer, Short bed, 4x4, air cond., tilt wheel, two tone, dual tanks, sliding rear window, Ralley wheels. much more. 5300 Choice of Color Almond, Gold, White $200 Easy Terms They sell the business. providing U.S. Bachelors degrees. Norman Gene Jones of Roy received a Doctorate degree. The December graduates MODEL service that is unique. Some people ask for special books that are out of print, said Mrs. William. We have 7,000 and more books that come into our store every month. We can usually find any paperback that someone would want. Mrs. Another reason, Craig offered, is that we are one of the few businesses where the customer furnishes the bulk of the stock. The exchange also has gotten into the comic book jfcvl &: ; 1J i also Exchange or a nickle with a trade-in- . We didnt think much of the comics at first, Mrs. Swapp said. One day a kid came in and said, Hey lady, I just sold a comic I bought here for a dime for ten Bucks! I couldnt believe it. Since then we have gained some expertise in the field and when rare comics come in we bag them in plastic and save them for sale to collectors at a higher price. is oepn The Exchange from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and the store does buy some books. We pay 35 per cent of the cover price for science fiction books and 8 cents per comic book if they have a cover, Mrs. Swapp said. The best thing about our business, at least to us, is Mrs. Craig commented, that we feel that we are ! . W-;- The features a book search tT Av ' H i i 'v -- - we have been so successful, commented Mrs. Swapp. Number one is the high price of new books. A lot of avid readers just cannot afford to read the way they want to at new book prices. Some people read as many as 30 books a week! , t - Clearfield Prices cut on special factory-direc- t shipment of has The Exchange steady customers as far titles. 100,000 the store has remained in the same location they have taken over the adjoining four car. . . . JGGP 326 Wash. Blvd., Ogden Phone: These and Although sportiest; and Ben German had the most original further r:iGP2 SUFfU 50,000 Chad Simpson, 9, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Simpson, took third place. Ralph Anderson, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stain, nabbed fourth that there are some definite reasons why We feel Abortion law in sixth year information contact us: PJEEP9 From the first 5,000 books, The Exchange has grown to some where between Shawn Oram won a prize for the ugliest; Riki Reese placed with his car for being the MARK SHAW IKEPCOI books. other categories, ' JOIN OUR MAILING LIST' For It was an idea that I had for a long time, said Mrs. I went around to Craig. garage sales and bought an inventory of about 5,000 vehicles were built by the boys and some 16 cars were entered by the cubs. In four ward of the LDS Church. Oram is the Darrell Scoutmaster. Mark has been the Patrol Leader and Senior Patrol Leader. He enjoys bike riding and skateboarding. He is the oldest of 6 children. Mark Shaw, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Shaw, 2107 W. 4750 S. has achieved the Eagle Scout. Mark, 14, is a 9th grader at Roy Junior High and a member of Scout Troop 375 sponsored by the Roy 18th 1975. Bryan Petersen, 9, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Petersen. place. the owners, Barbara Swapp. It also is one of the few places in Utah where a person can buy any used book in the store for a dime and a paperback in trade. The bookstore was started by Laura Craig in August RALPH ANDERSON CHAD SIMPSON second place said. stores. Assistant Editor pmsjrfaim Free Delivery ONLY 17 Per Month 36 month open end lease plus sales based on 3,000 miles per year, commercial lease. tax, 1 I vlw This Is A 10,000 Truck (Loaded with Options) Per Month OYL 2750 Wash. Blvd. 48 month Open End Leaie plus talei tax. baled on 13.000 miles per year Commercial Lease. METRO LEASING, INC. 3260 WALL AVE. OGDEN, UTAH - 394-887-9 Three Sides And the Round One, and Watty Piper's Trucks. Preschoolers will make a shape collage and experiment with a variety of shapes. Books recently received at the Southwest Branch Library in Roy include the following titles: THE PIERCING by John Coyne. Because of a Father Stephen Kinsella is afraid hes year-oland does lose his university position. He goes to parish where he meets Betty Sue Wadkins whom is touched by a supernatural force. 29 d love affair, losing faith an isolated he believes THE ANIMALS COME FIRST by Mary Bowring. The wife of a British country veterinarian tells the warm, touching and funny story of a life shared with some of the most memorable animals youll ever meet. CUTTING EDGE by Penelope Gilliatt. Sons ol a benevolent but restless professor become as inseparable as twins, surviving growing up and eventual separation, but can their devotion for each other survive when they fall in love with the same woman? THE COURAGE TO BE IMPERFECT: THE LIFE AND WORK OF RUDOLF DREIKURS by Janet Terner and W.L. Pew. Trace the career of Rudolf Dreikurs psychiatrist, humanist, and educator. POTTED ORCHARDS: GROWING FRUIT IN SMALL SPACES by Alan F. Simmons. Growing fruit trees and bushes in pots can be an absorbing and rewarding form of gardening. The plants are most highly decorative as well as yielding luxury fruit. HEIR TO KURAGIN by Constance Heaven. Forced into marriage to a man she doesnt love, Anna Stepanova Crispin is used as a pawn in a family dispute and journeys to her husbands ancestral home in the Russian Caucasus. TRAINING YOUR COLT TO RIDE AND DRIVE by Marilyn Carlson Childs. A complete guide to training colts of all breeds to ride and drive for pleasure or show, written for the amateur horseman. A WOMAN CLOTHED IN SUN by Jeanne Williams. Wrenched from the gentle pleasures of her sheltered world in the bayous of East Texas, a young woman flees to the wilderness of the great Southwest in a blazing tale of high adventure and headlong passion. ALL ABOUT SURF FISHING by Jack Fallon. How to fish in the high surf, from piers, bridges, all the ocean edges and jetties, on flats, and along saltwater creeks. THE HIGH FRONTIER: HUMAN COLONIES IN SPACE by Gerald K. ONeill. By the 1990s ten thousand people of various nationalities may be living and working in space. This book tells who will work in space, how they will get there, and provides specific details on the possibilities for family life and earthlike living conditions. |