OCR Text |
Show PenroneJ OJfpl ) Itcnicf Ifvy j BORN:-To Mr. and Mrs. Lor- ; in Taylor Sunday Aug. 22nd a I baby boy. : Postmaster Faust returned i the first of the week from his ; fishing trip. ' Mrs. Walter Moffit visited ! friends in Lynndyl last Saturday : and Sunday. j M. L. Kenyon is in Salt Lake ! taking in the sights of the city ! for a few days this week. Mrs. J. W. Bell, of Spanish Fork, is here for a ten days' ; visit with her sister, Mrs. Geo. ; Boyack. ' H. A. Knight, of the Delta Merc. Co. spent the last of last ) week in Salt Lake City, attend- ; ing to business matters. Mrs. Harry Aller left Thurs- ; day of last week for Baker City, ; Oregon, where she will visit her parents for awhile. I Mr. Melvin Lee, who has been ; here looking over the country, i left Wednesday morning for his j home in Wayne Co. j Mrs. Wm. Bunker and Delia Lisonbee left this morning for : the Southern part of Utah, j where they will make an ex- j tended visit. ; T. C. Gronning and family, returned to Delta Wednesday after having spent the last two months in Baker City Ore. visiting visi-ting relatives. Mrs. Winebrenner, left for Salt Lake last Sunday night where She will enter a hospital and possibly undergo aft operation opera-tion for an absess in her side. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Ingersol drove down in their car the last of last week from American Fork. They visited Mrs. Inger-sol's Inger-sol's parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Bishop. Ted Moore has installed a large engine and feed grinder and is dcing commercial feed grinding. His ad in the Chroicle gives you the particulars. J. P. Fidel who lives on the South Tract came in Wednesday and took the train for La Fayette, Fay-ette, Colo., where he was called by a telegram that his mother was very sick. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wood of Great Bend, Kans., while on a visit to California, stopped off here yesterday for a visit with their nephews, Wood Bros., and to look over the country. The Bee Hive girls of the Des-eret Des-eret Stake will spend tomorrow at the Grove, taking their lunch with them and staying all day. They will take swimming lessons in the after noon from Miss Athena Beckwith. F. Hancock, who is located near Sugarville, shipped in a car of household goods and lumber the first of the week and will build a house and barn on his place and take up his residence on it. He was accompanied by a carpenter who will erect the building. We are told that a flowing well has been struck on the farm of Landlord Tompkinson, of Fillmore at a depth of two hundred hun-dred feet and that it has a strong force, sending the water up two feet from the top of the ground. Robt. Whicker has gone back into the well drilling business and was the successful bidder for sinking the five school wells recently called for by the Millard Mil-lard County School Board. J. W. Edwards came in the first of the week from Gunnison Gunni-son with five land buyers from Sanpete and Sevier counties. coun-ties. We understand that they each purchased land in tracts from forty to eighty acres on the North Tract. Entertainment at the picture show tonight will be "The Frontier Fron-tier Mother" a two-reel drama. "Professor Smith," comedy, and "The Little House in the Valley," Val-ley," a two-reel Mexican frontier fron-tier play. The "Trey of Hearts" which will be the next serial to be shown at the Princess will commence about the last of September. Sep-tember. R. J. Law has the largest ad in the Chronicle this week which has appeared in the paper since we have had charge of it. The space occupied and the prices quoted indicate that Mr. Law intends to give his patrons some big bargains and make prices which will induce many settlers to visit Delta and his store the first week in September. With the Chronicle reaching over 700 readers he can find no better means of reaching the trade. |