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Show at Millard County Chronicle Thursday, September 10, 1964 A OA 72 oman $ ace - v Utah Symphony Orchestra Will Open Community Concert Ass'n Season J M By INEZ RIDING Last week I wrote a letter, a heated one. I left it-lying on the kitchen cabinet for a day and a half. I re-read it. It said what I wanted it to say. I mailed the letter let-ter with a copy of the August 27. h Millard County Chronicle, outling part of my Down Yawnder with either red or blue pencil, to Mr. Calvin Hampton. My letter to htm questioned his promise to build Utah schools, .1 he's elected governor. Among other things, I said that I too made promises pro-mises and I promised that voters all over the state of Utah would learn of what I term an inconsistency inconsis-tency be .ween a candidate's promise pro-mise and an action. This wou'd be accompl shed by writing a letter to the editor of every . Utah weekly newspaper. I pointed out that Utah weekly editors are primarily Republicans Repub-licans and ever so many are active in local and state politics. I excluded ex-cluded BiU Wilson of the M Hard County Progress because I didn't want to p'ace Bill in an embarrassing embarrass-ing position. Bill is part of the east Millard Cit'zens group that Mr. Hampton is representing. I couldn'; ask him to publish a letter criticisi-ing criticisi-ing the committee's at orney without with-out being "hurt" if he refused!!! I had decided after I mailed the letter that even for me this was pretty "dirty". (Bob prefers "Slightly "Slight-ly Underhanded".) I hadn't taken the time to inform Mr. Rampton of this before I rece'.ved an answer from him. I answered his letter. These may or may not be published, publish-ed, I haven't decided. Nauseating, isn't it? I agree wholehear.edly. I almost lost my sense of fairness, I think. I'm tired of a lot of things but most of all I'm t'red of being a woman trying to fill a man's shoes by being an editor of a weekly newspaper. My darned emotions keep getting in the way! Some days I'd like to take my emotions, roll them into a ball, place them under my heel and crush them for good. But. not every day do I feel that wwutc Mvtja ... J ucul I auio that I'm a woman with some intelligence in-telligence who is interes'ed in the community she lives in. By sheer wili power, I'll lift myself my-self out of this morass of guilt and probably before I get through this column I'd be saying something that will make someone wish that I had quit while the tears were still flowing! Like for instance I've been busy checking out some rumors. Following Follow-ing the September meet'ng of the Millard Coun.y Commission on re-districting re-districting Tuesday, Delta was filled fill-ed with rumors supposedly coming from Fillmore. Walter Ekins, can-d can-d date for re-election was supposed to be a victim of cm east Millard wri -e-in campaign. Rumor also had it that either Walter Ekins or Cutler Cut-ler Henrie, both seeking the two-year two-year commiss'on seat would be asked to withdraw in support of the other and a writein campaign begun for the four-year seat now held by Commissioner Christensen set in motion, using the cand date who withdrew from the two-year race. According to a reliable source, there has been some talk of the eastsMillard writein campaign but no organized movement, as yet. 0 ilintituD cir j .f-TN AMERICAN DAIRY ASSOCIATION OF UTAH nZT Sponsored by Utah's Dairy Fanners W 3tsiH iV 'Alii: 7j CUM HaUMCJ&l Our telephone has been right busy w th queries of the legality of vhe suggestion of the west Millard Mil-lard campaign. According to a Delta Del-ta attorney, it is legal. That's all I know except that as far as 1 know vhe re is no organized movement move-ment on' this side of the county, either. We've also had one inquiry about the religion that Mr. Mitch Melich and Mr. Rampton embraces. As far as I can ascertain, Mr. Melich is Baptist and Mr. Rampton is LDS. False is yet anolher rumor that Delta High School :s NOT an accredited ac-credited school. Delta High School is an accredited school. This comes from school board members and Supt. Barney alike. At the last not if cation to Prin. Benne 1 concerning question of whether DHS was an accredited school or not, on'.y one was in violation. vio-lation. At that time (letter Baled Jan. 13, 1964) three teachers were carrying some assignments ou'side the areas of major and minor pre-parat'ons. pre-parat'ons. And speaking of the local high school we're happy to announce that with this issue, Delta High School has its special place in the Chronicle. I like to take a sneak preview at the news and reports before they are published. It is truly tru-ly amazing to see the number of corrections made by Mrs. Clayton grow smaller as the school year progresses. All readers who like the school news should let Mrs. Clayton Clay-ton know. She puts in a lot of time on this, along with' Bob and Joe at the backshop of the Chronicle. Welcome Wel-come back, Mrs. Clay: on and another an-other class of writers. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Jones of Delta and Mrs. Louisa Lovell of Oak City attended funeral services Wednes day for a half-sister, Mis. Orson (Ella) Callister in Blackfoot, Idaho. Community Church JEANNE SPARSE Our annual Congregational Meet ing was held this past Sunday, followed fol-lowed by a very successful pot-luck dinner in the church dining room. Dr. Roth was our guest speaker and moderator of the business meeting. He represents the Presbytery and resides in Salt Lake. Among our guests Sunday were Mrs. Clara Malone, Callie Morrison's Morri-son's sister who is visiting from Huntington Beach, Calif, and the Carl Stevens famiiy. The Stevens moved to Delta last week from Minnesota and we were all delighted delight-ed to welcome them. Carl works for the FAA at the airport here. Margaret will be a valuable addition addi-tion to our Sunday School staff. The Stevens have three children, Debbie, Carl, and Diane. June Timmons is spending the week in California with her sister and family. Rev. Fred Hauman, Jr. will be our permanent Pastor this fall and winter and we will be holding services ser-vices every Sunday at 11:00 a.m. until further notice. Sunday School meets at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday with a nursery class and kindergarten being added this coni ng Sunday. A reminder that crafts class is Tuesday Tues-day afternoon righl after school at the church. Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Evans of San Jose, Calif, have been visiting for a few days this week with turn mv 'iSB air ONLY with your purchase of 2 extra quarts of MILK Ouaranfd Unbreakable Highly stain resistant Unharmed by boiling or freezing Dishwasher safe Decorator-styled in beautiful neutral burnt gold Ittisi Mimvfm jn MISS HELEN MARIE STONEKING Reveals Troth . - Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Stoneking of Abraham are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage mar-riage of their daughter, Miss Helen Marie Stoneking to Mr. Charles Arthur Thayer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Theobald. Delta. Wedding plans will be announced later. Patsy Ekker To Marry Wedding vows will be spoken as Darrell C. Holden claims Patsy Ekker Ek-ker as his bride Saturday, Sept. 12 in the Payson LDS Fourth Ward. Miss Ekker is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ekker of Eureka. Mr. Holden is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford H. Holden of Payson. A reception will honor the newly-weds newly-weds later that same evening between be-tween the hours of 8:00 and 9:30 p.m. in the Fourth Ward Church, with a program and dance follow ing. The young couple extend an invitation in-vitation to their many friends in Delta to attend. Jeanne and Jack Sparke. Mrs. Evans Ev-ans is Jeanne's aunt. The teenage youth group met last week and elected the following follow-ing officers: John Elwell, Jr., Pres.; Vice Pres., Scott Meacham; Sec-Diane Sec-Diane Waterman; Trea., John Ab bott. The youth group meets Wed nesday evenings at the church. Fast! Compact! Portable! Efficient! QUALITY nnly 1 $169.50 i Ark. ALL NEW HOLIDAY ON ICE Open September 18th Through September 27th STATE FAIR SALT LAKE CITY Hinckley. Dean and Carma Evans and two little daughters of Dillon, Montana v sited from Wednesday to Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Wright and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wright. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Western and family and Mr. and Mrs. Alma Western Wes-tern went to Provo Friday night. They visited the Rulon Westerns and attended the openhouse given in honor of Sharon's brother, Howard How-ard Buckley and his new bride. Deseret Stake Relief Society Slates Concert Music lovers of the area will be interested in learning of the com ing concert of the Deseret Stake Relief Society scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 17 at the stake center. Numbers which will be presented in concert form, are those selected by the General Board of the Relief Society to be sung at the coming General Conference. All local ladies who are singing in the concert Sept. 17 will blend their voices with other Relief Society members from thru-out the state at the conference. confer-ence. Deseret Stake ladies have been studying under Mrs. Florence Jep-persen Jep-persen Maddsen. There will be no charge at the concert and the public pub-lic is cordially invited to attend. & mister! M W MILLION 1 COMES 1 TO UTAH I Nv SEPT. 24 V n Will wash, rinse and spin dry a 6 pound load in just 8 minutes. Spin dry one load while another washes. No plumbing necessary ...can be used in kitchen, bath or utility room. Completely portable -moves from sink to storage area on easy rolling casters. Washes a full 6 pounds of clothes and uses only 10 gallons of water. Has suds saver, too. SEE A DEMONSTRATION NOW MARKET iMvu i Mr. and Mrs. Marlow Morris and three children are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harold Morris and Ronald, Mx. and Mrs. Don Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Warnick Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Morris. They are stationed sta-tioned at Key West, Fla. with the Navy. Sunday they all had a dinner up the canyon. Ronald and Rose Shumway and daughter Georgia spent Wednesday and Thursday in Hinckley fixing up their home and visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Western. Mr. and' Mrs. Neil Swensen and boys of Salt Lake spent the Labor Day weekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Randall Swensen and with Mr. and Mrs. Proser Ashby of Delta. Lee and Lois Wilson of Dugway spent the long weekend at their home in Hinckley. Melvln and Carmen Hepworth of Cedar City and Roma Zeller of Tooele Too-ele were at the home of Mrs. Fern Hepworth for the weekend, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hardy and family of Pleasant Grove visited with Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hardy and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Steele. Art Reeve's sis'.er from California has been vis'.ting in Hinckley and renewing old acquaintances this past week. Blaine and Harriet Spendlove and girls Mary and Elaine of Kaysville spent the Labor Dav weekend at Reva Taylor's and visiting friends and relatives. The new Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ekins were honored at an openhouse in the Relief Society room the evening of their marriage which took place in the Manti Temple. Many friends and relatives came to wish them well. They received manv lovely and useful gifts. Those attending from out of town were Mr. and Mrs. Garold Browning and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Browning of St. Marie, Idaho; Mr.' and Mrs. Tom Reeve, Allene and Janiel of Fillmore; Mamie and Allene Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Reeve and Eldean and Duane E-kins E-kins of Cedar City. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Ekins will be moving to Logan to continue their studies. Mr. and Mrs. Evan Western, Ei-lien, Ei-lien, Edward, Dorothy and Janet of Dugway visited Mr. and Mrs. Alma Western and Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Western Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Randall went to view, Idaho to a Bronson family reunion Sunday and Monday. Mr. Larry Hafen of St. George visited at the home of Elford Reeve. Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Western and children Stephen and Karen visited at the Alma Western home Sunday and Monday. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Swensen went to Baker, Nev. Sunday afternoon and Monday. Jane Ekins and small son were in a car accident last Wednesday. She was on her way to Flowell tc visit her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mace. The car went off the road and rolled over. They were bruised and shaken up but not seriously hurt. LaWanna and Wesley Peterson blessed their new little son Sunday He was given the name of James Quincy Peterson bv his father. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ekins and Eldon have gone to St. Maries, Id aho to be at the reception for Leo How to liven cp potato salad Juet mil it with Krtft Sadmek Sprtadl Speck! perky retithea is a creamy, aasty ifr earing. Octet ea hatd Wttuce, too. AM it coeate fa a handy atw wide-mouth jarl KRAFT Sandwich Spread The famed Utah Symphony Orchestra Or-chestra will open the 1964-65 season sea-son of the South-Central Utah Community Concert Assn. at a concert con-cert Sunday, Nov. 1 at 4:00 p.m. in the Richfield High School auditorium, auditor-ium, according to Dr. Joseph Hal-gren, Hal-gren, president, Richfield. Appearance of the orchestra, now in its 25th year. Is the first of at least three concerts planned by the association during the season. Dates and artists for the remainder of the season will be announced following completion of the membership mem-bership drive which gets underway Sept. 14 and runs thru Sept. 19. Dr. Halgren said that inasmuch as Nov. 1 is Fast Sunday for LDS members, there will be no interference inter-ference with church meetings. Mem bers in the north Sevier area will be able to attend stake conference and the concert as stake officials .consented to move the afternoon session up a half hour. It was emphasized that there will be no individual concert tickets available for the concert other than regular memberships for the entire season which will be available only during the membership week drive. Season tickets are $7.00 for adults and $3.50 for children. Last year's season ticket holders will be given first chance to join the organization this year, then the remainder of the tickets will be available to new members. A total of 750 tickets will be available, Dr. A REMINDER to homemakers to stock up on plenty of Utah Ekins and his new bride. Vilate Dennison is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Dennison. Denni-son. She will be going back to Weber We-ber State College later this month. DeVon and Ranae Dennison visited vis-ited the Dennisons for two days. They went Monday to take a trip thru the canyons. They live in Oregon. Ore-gon. Mr. and Mrs. Dennison's daughter, dau-ghter, Mrs. Theo Ellis and children now is living in Oak City. All the Dennisons went to Oak City to attend at-tend sacrament meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hecker have visited Arlene's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Heber Bishop. They are from ElCahoon, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rob-ert Carling (Louise) and four children child-ren have also visited the Bishops. Louise was thrown off a horse while here and received a broken rib and one crushed one. They will be living in Haley, Idaho where Bob will teach school. Dorothy and Dick Knot of Layton stopped to visit the Bishops Sunday Sun-day and Monday on their way home from the canyons. Janith Bis-shop Bis-shop is teaching school in Pleasant Grove. She teaches fourth grade. She lives in Provo. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Morris took a trip to Sun Valley, Idaho for three days. The trip was sponsored by Salt Lake Hardware for their winning win-ning dealers. A bridal shower for Patsy Ekker was held at the Parry Taylor home Sunday aftfernoon. Among the out of town guests were Patsy's mother Mrs. Richard Ekker, s'sters Josephine Joseph-ine Tolley of Springville and Betty Thomas of Eureka. Many lovely gifts were received. Also attending were Nora Cropper, Louise Cropper Max"ne Bishop, Inga Black, Beatrice Beat-rice and Bernadine Schena, Billie Berry, Carol Ann Pratt, Virginia Done, Rawlene Hales, Reva Taylor. Betty Thomas and Jeanne Taylor were hostesses. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ekker, the Bernell Thomas's, Parry Taylor's Alen Valley's and Patsy Ekker and Darrell Holden spent Labor Day at Lehman Caves. Clara Stewart spent ten days on vacation with her son Duane and wife of Provo. They visited Jackson Hole, the Teton's and Yellowstone National Park. They also went to the Idaho Falls Temple. She spent two days with her son Lyle and wife in Pleasant Grove. Saturday she had her niece Mira and husband hus-band Gam Brown of Salt Lake, her niece Zella Street of Provo, her niece Verda and husband George Bolschweiler of Salt Lake, her sisters sis-ters Annie Peterson of Provo and Lemira Bishop of Delta visit her. Her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Stewart of Pletsant Grove also al-so spent Sunday with her. f ,8ft) """" - Halgren stated. The 85-member orchestra, which has been under the baton of Maurice Mau-rice Abravancl since 1947, director and conductor, will play a varied concert. Since 1958, when its first recordings were introduced and released, re-leased, the group has received excellent ex-cellent and favorable reviews a-cross a-cross the nation. Recently, the orchestra was listed list-ed among the nation's top 15 symphony sym-phony organ'zations and three recent re-cent recordings were listed among the top records of the year by The New York Herald-Tribune. Following the kick-off dinner for officers and membership workers Sept. 14 representatives of the association as-sociation will contact potential members in Sevier, Wayne, Piute, Garfield, Millard, Beaver and Sanpete San-pete Counties. Directors, who will handle ticket sales, Include C. Howard Watkin, Mrs. Russell Roper and Karl Stahe-li, Stahe-li, Richfield; Mrs. Rulon Rasmuss-sen Rasmuss-sen and Mrs. Orson Olsen, Monroe; Mrs. William Hill, Salina; Gilbert Fjeldsted, Gunnison; Dr. Richard Poulson, Loa; Fred Warner, Fillmore; Fill-more; and Mrs. Ruth Coates.'King-ston. Coates.'King-ston. Serving as officers in addition to Dr. Halgren are Mrs. June Ross, Richfield and" Dr. Harold Crandall, Salina, vice presidents; Dr. Gordon Beckstrand and John Vernieu, Richfield, Rich-field, secretary and treasurer, respectively. milk for the weekend comes from Joan Durran, attendant to U-tah's U-tah's Da ry Princess. Utahns Urged to Drink More Milk People in the Delta area this month are reminded to get more milk for the weekend and also to enjoy more good eating and vibrant vi-brant health with Utah dairy products. pro-ducts. The reminder comes from Utah dairy royalty, who are participating in the tenth annual Utah Dairy Foods Festival Tour sponsored by the American Dairy Association of Utah. Stars of the tour are lovely Margaret Winn, Smithfield, Cache County, Utah's 1964 Dairy Princess, and her attendants, Gloria Van Dyke, Bountiful, Davis County, and Joan Durrant, Morgan. The tour began in Duchesne Coun ty on Tuesday, Sept. 8, and will conclude in Cache County on Wednesday, Wed-nesday, Sept. 16. "We are drawing attention to the high quality and outstanding flavor fla-vor of Utah's dairy foods," said Kenneth T. Allred, Salt Lake City, chairman of the committee in charge of the tour. "Utah milk and dairy foods have consistently received re-ceived highest national honors, and we will be stressing the enjoyment and nutritional benefits coming from their use." The Dairy Princesses and their entourage are also emphasizing the importance of having an extra supply sup-ply of milk on hand for the weekend. week-end. "Surveys show that two of every three families in Utah run out of milk on the weekends," Mr. Allred said. ADA of Utah officials, in addition addi-tion to Mr. Allred, participating in the tour will be Wallace A. Parrish, Logan, associate tour chairman, and John Van Drimmelen, manager of the American Dairy Association of Utah. SHOPPERS WISE ECONOMIZE THEY SHOP WITH THOSE WHO ADVERTISE f 7 9 rbtotpul |