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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah. Thurs. Oct. 20, 1955. Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Callister and children, Judy, Robert and Janet, made a weekend trip to Yellowstone Yellow-stone national park. Mr. and Mrs. J. Avery Bishop of Delta, and Mr. and Mrs. George Stewart, of Hinckley, spent part of the week in St. George, where they visited the LDS temple. Are Active On CSiJ Camus Mrs. Gain Brown and her four daughters, from Salt Lake City, was a Delta visitor during the ! week with her parents, Mr. and 1 Mrs. J. Avery Bishop. Joyce Stanworth, Delta, daughter daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Stan-worth Stan-worth of Delta, was nominated secretary of the freshman class at College of Southern Utah, Cedar City, voting. Joyce is entering the field of education at CSU this year. Clarence Prestwich, sophomore at CSU, was voted student council representation. He is majoring in industrial education, and is a son of Mrs. Abbie Prestwich, Delta. Donald Floyd was nominated as Associated Men's Student representative. repre-sentative. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Floyd, Delta. Suggest Cereal Instead Of Good Old Mush it. U. I Meets 40 YEAfiS AGO .... Ann E. Melville Bishop Camp, D. U. P., will meet Friday, Oct. 21, at 2:30 p. m., at the home of Mrs. Verna Gardner. Mrs. lone Hollings-head Hollings-head and Mrs. Lucile Kimber will be co-hostesses with Mrs. Gardner. FROM THE FILES . . . mm . 2 1 Now that cool weather is just around the corner, serve a home-cooked home-cooked cereal piping-hot to your school children on school mornings, 1 suggests Miss Pearl Cox, county home demonstration agent. Cooked cereals stick to their ribs longer. If your family has not learned to be good cereal eaters, try some different combinations and varia-, tions. Many different cereals are available today. It is easy to have a different one every day of the week. Miss Cox lists these tips for making cooked cereals taste different: I Try cooking a coarsely flaked cereal such as rolled oats with a finely ground one like cream of wheat. I Add two tablespoons of molasses' or honey to the cooking water for each cup of cereal you prepare. Use milk in place of half of the water when you cook cereal. This ' adds more food flavor as well as food value. I Use brown sugar and a little' melted butter on top of the cereal occasionally. Add a few chopped dates, figs, or raisins or some candied fruit mix to the cereal about ten minutes min-utes before youe serve it. Stir them in carefully with a fork. Stir in a level tablespoon of wheat germ for each family member mem-ber ten or fifteen minutes before the cereal comes off the stove. This makes a good flavor and adds a lot of extra B vitamins as well. Use a bit of bright colored jam or jelly instead or sugar. Honey, molasses and syrup also make good toppings. Sprinkle some crisp prepared cereal over the cooked variety after it has been placed in individual indivi-dual bowls. Serve some bright red berries around light colored cereals, and bananas around the whole wheat varieties, for interesting variation. Let the small children have individual in-dividual pitchers from which to pour their milk or cream onto their cereal. Call it cereal Instead of mush. It is surprising how much better it tastes. Fine cereals like Farina or granular gran-ular wheat cereals often go lumpy. You can prevent this by mixing them with enough cold water to make a soft mixture. Add this mixture to the boiling water and stir constantly while pouring, then set over boiling water in your double boiler. l f.. - , v o u v '' :Ayu"- a ill4 rf t " ' f !fWi V : V j : 11 ty J Now... you can buy one! All-new V,; Li wX LJ Ls LJ k Revolutionary new Push-Button Driving , . . first in the low-price three! 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Formers Supply Company 2S9 West Main DELTA, UTAH roa Means Many New Settlers The Delta Co. has 100 teams on the North Tract plowing and seeding seed-ing 3000 acres of land for parties who have recently filed on their lands. About half of these people are now on their land and most of the others will take up their residence here in the spring. They also have Jones Bros, clear-and clear-and plowing 1000 acres preparatory to crops next spring. This is being done with their caterpillar engine which was recently brought from California. The settlers on this land will mean quite an addition to the Sugarville country by next spring. Sutherland Searchlights Our school has been running four weeks now with an average attendance of sixty pupils. Mr. Jas. 1 Barney is Principal and Miss Helen Bunker, the teacher in the lower grades. The school hids fair to have a very good standing this year. I Mrs. Delia Lisonbee Is moving to Hinckley to place her children in school there. j Most of the threshing Is done in this vicinity. The crops show all kinds of tests. Burt Johnson's fall wheat showed a test of 44 . 1 the highest we have heard of on the flat. He sold this week at 98c per bu. loose F.O.B. Delta. Other crops show tests as low as 25. A number of cars of grain are being shipped out of this district. Bert Ottley, Wm. Walker and Frank Heise are selling this week. Reconstructing Big Dam Concrete Core, Rock Face and Spillway Make Sevier Bridge Dam Secure Against Both Time and Tide. (Above is the headline on a long article in the paper of 40 years ago, telling of the work going on at Sevier Bridge Dam.) It says there is a large force of men and teams being used, some eighty odd men, working two shifts. Thousands of tons of clay are being hauled from the hill sides and dumped in front of the concrete con-crete core to build up in front of It, and hundreds of tons of rock are being hauled from these hillsides at the edge of the dam and used to riprap the face of the dam so that the action of the water will not cut away the earth When completed the structure will be ninety feet In height Above the dam is an ideal reservoir site which, when filled, will hold 250, 000 acre feet of water. Delta News The shipping of the sugar beet crop to the Payson factory began Wednesday when a car was loaded from Steele on the branch, and another was being loaded from Wilson and one from Delta. Next Monday they will begin to move from Lucerne and Sugarville. Wheat has started to move quite freely again this week and there will probably be ten cars go out this week. Altogether there will be in the neighborhood of two hundred cars of wheat shipped ship-ped from this station this season. In the Burbank items in the Millard County Progress last week is the statement that a severe earthquake shock was felt there on October 2nd. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ed Whicker, Whic-ker, on the sixth, a boy. Dad Whicker is prancing around with another feather in his hat and says there are others besides the Irish that you can't keep down. Reserve Act Enlarged For Young Men Kathryn Pace, from Salt Lake City, was home for the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Pace. Her gTeat-aunt, Mrs. Anna Cox, came with her Friday, and stayed overnight, going on Saturday to her home in St. George. Mrs. Clarissa Keast. from Long Beach, Cal., Is visiting in Delta with her daughter, Mrs. Lucile Kimber, and family. "I was coming along fine with my vacation plans when I discovered discov-ered I was pregnant again" remark re-mark from a soap opera heard by chance one morning over the kitchen radio. Don't let that bother you. lady. It's a condition that is sure to bring about its own cure sooner or later. R. S. Morrison ill Ralph Morrison GSon DELTA. UTAH Young men eligible for Army duty under provisions of the Reserve Re-serve Forces Act of 1955, may now secure full information concerning con-cerning this Act at any of the U. S. Army Recruiting Stations in the Sixth Army Area, it was announced announ-ced today by Colonel William M. Cohoon, Commanding the Sixth Army Recruiting District, Presidio of San Francisco. "There are many youths who have or are reaching the age for induction who are interested in learning more about the new Reserve Re-serve Act, but have not known where to secure this information. The Army Recruiting Service is now prepared to provide the answers an-swers to their questions," Colonel Cohoon said. There are three program available avail-able for fulfilling the military obligation obli-gation called for in the Reserve Forces Act of 1955, signed by the President on August 9. The first, for persons who have not been ordered to report for induction, is a six year enlistment in the Army Reserve. During the term of this enlistment, the enlistee enlis-tee must perform two years on active duty in the Army; serve satisfactorily in the Ready Reserve through attendance at 48 weekly drill meetings and a 17-day summer sum-mer encampment for each of three years, and finally serve one year in the Standby Reserve, which requires re-quires no active training. The second is an eight year enlistment en-listment for youths between 17 and 18 ,. This enlistment offers a deferment from the draft. Under this plan the enlistee will be required re-quired to serve six months on ac tive duty and 7 Ms years in a Ready Reserve Unit. High School students choosing this plan will be deferred from active duty until they grad- For ESMA Leaders On Saturday, October 8, the FHA officers, along with our advisor, Miss Schmutz, went to Beaver to a Regional Meet Convention of FHA. We met with officers of other schools, and got alot of new ideas. We really had alot of fun attending atten-ding this meet and really plan to have new ideas for our meetings this year. by Inez Nielson, reporter. uate, or as long as they show progress pro-gress toward that goal, or until reaching the age of 20 years. The third program is for men with prior military service who have been released after August 9, 1955, and before July 1. 1957. This program offers an opportunity for these men to fulfill their Ready Reserve obligation by enlisting and serving satisfactorily in a Ready Reserve Unit for one year. After one year these men will be transferred trans-ferred to the Standby Reserve, subject to call to active duty only by an Act of Congress. Prior servicemen ser-vicemen who do not participate in a Ready Reserve Unit will still be listed as belonging to the Ready Reserve until they are credited with a total of 8 years active duty and reserve service. Selective Service can induct eligible eli-gible men who do not avail themselves them-selves of the enlistment programs of the Army Reserve. Those entering enter-ing the Army through the draft will have the same obligations as those who enlist under "Program 1". However, the six year enlistment enlist-ment under the Reserve Act may result in spending the two year period of active duty at a time more advantageous to the individual individ-ual than the period designated by Selective Service. For further information contact your local recruiter Army SFC Jack G. Regh,f at Post Office bldg., Provo, Utah, or on his visits to Delta and west Millard during the second week of each month. 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