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Show merits including a birthday cake were served. Funeral services for Mrs. Mar-gianna Mar-gianna Nelson Remaitis, 54, of Salt Lake City will be conducted conduct-ed tomorrow, Saturday at 2 p.m. in Masonic Temple, 650 E. So. Temple by Lynds Chap. 1. Mrs. Remaitis passed away Wednesday Wednes-day at 4 p.m. in a Salt Lake hospital hos-pital of a heart ailment. She was a sister to H. V. Nelson and A. L. Nelson, both of Bingham. Burial will be in Salt Lake Memorial Mem-orial Mausoleum. made their home at the Copper hotel in Bingham. Mrs. Irvin Stillman delightfully delight-fully entertained the Linger Longer club at her home Tuesday Tues-day evening. Mrs. Hosmer Peterson Pe-terson was an invited guest. The occasion also was a birthday party par-ty for Mrs. Frank Prescott and she received many lovely gifts. Prizes at bridge were awarded to Mrs. John Nilsson, Mrs. Ross M. Cushing and Mrs. Gordon Buckle. Mrs. Nilsson also won the bingo prize. Tasty refresh- tiny miss was given some $650 worth of oxygen to save her eyesight. eye-sight. A local doctor reported her the tiniest baby delivered hereabouts. here-abouts. The family formerly A theater party was given Saturday, Sat-urday, March 21, for Suzanne Greene in celebration of her seventh sev-enth birthday anniversary by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Greene. A delicious luncheon was served after which the group attended the show. Easter baskets filled with candy and humming lariats were favors. Besides Suzanne Su-zanne those present were Randy Fae Chestnut, Jimmie Granquist, Ruth Claire Kidd, Nancy Bado-vinatz, Bado-vinatz, Kathy Weichman, Hanky Menna, Jerry Nepolis, Suzie Longfellow, Linda Merriken, Pauline Slotte, Suzie Hoglund, Johnny Dee Balich and Nancy Jo Williamson. Suzanne received many lovely gifts. Tiny Lorraine Garcia, ten-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adolpho Garcia of 227 W. No. Temple, Salt Lake City, has come a long way. At birth he weighed one pound and seven ounces and now she tips the scales at 16 pounds. The youngster young-ster was placed in. an incubator at the hospital at birth where she was kept until last August when she was able to be taken home. While in the hosDital the ft REMEMBER" IY THJ OLD TIMERS i . r Front C. W. McFrederlck, Cres-lun, Cres-lun, Ohio: I remember seeing thousands thou-sands of wild pigeons In the spring of the year flying from one feeding ground to another so near the ground you could throw a stone up into their midst. From Grace Schmidt, Cambridge, Cam-bridge, Nebraska: I remember the good, old butchering tune when beef liver sold for one cent per pound, pork livers were thrown away, and a 10 lb. turkey sold for $1.00. Arbuckle coffee was 10 cents a pound with a stick of candy thrown in. From Mrs. OUdya Markle, Underbill, Un-derbill, Vermont; 1 remember at the so called La River place, my grandmother bad a barrel of soft soap making in the rear of the wood house. A cat Jumped on the cover of the barrel. It tipped and dumped the cat into the barrel. What a time grandmother had with that pcor cat. Although grandmother grand-mother washed the cat and did all , she could, every bit of hair came off the animal. But the cat lived out the rest of its nine lives in pite of the iye bath. From Mrs. Uallle Colson, Canby, Ky.: I wneniber when we didn't hove a stovs and sat by the open fire in the winter, burning our shins and freezing our backs. We cooked over the tire and the best biscuits I ever ate were cooked In a skillet with legs. Coals from the fire were pulled under the skillet and on the Iron top. Think I'D try my hand next summer when I can make a fire In the yard and see if my biscuits will taste like my grandmothers'. From C. E. Peck, Ottawa, Kansas: Kan-sas: I remember seeing Lieutenant Governor P. P. Elder of Franklin ntv Kansas living at Ohio City. Kansas, plowing with a team oi horses and a yoke of oxen at--...ed to a walking gang plow. Also the grasshopper year In the early 1870' s. |