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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah. Thurs. April 19, 195S. Major William F. Hedrick and wife, the former Sharon Rollins, were visitors in Delta last week with Mrs. Rollins grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L, D. Pace, and a family party was held Saturday night at the Pace home. Major ard Mrs. Hedrick are on their way to Germany, and went on to visit at Baltimore, Md., with their parents, par-ents, Lt. Col. and Mrs. J. C. Rollins, before their departure. no n n o KILLS 7EM More growers than ever before are treating their fields with powerful dieldrin for alfalfa weevil control. con-trol. Dieldrin gets the weevils before they lay their eggs which hatch into destructive larvae. Dieldrin can be applied as a spray or as a dust. Only small amounts are needed for effective control. con-trol. Dieldrin is available under well-known brand names from your insecticide dealer. HERE'S A PLUS I Dieldrin is also tops for control con-trol of onion tlirips, grasshoppers, grasshop-pers, onion maggots and other insects. SHELL CHEMICAL CORPORATION AGRICULTURAL CHEMICAL SALES DIVISION 103 Eush Street, San Francisco 6, California WE HAVE THE SPRAY YOU CAN BUY IT IN BULK OR WE CAN APPLY IT FOR YOU. SEE US FOR YOUR SPRAYING NEEDS Champs of every weight class ! Mew '58 Chevrolet Task-Force Trucks ! r Model 3104 pickup. Forward Control chassis. Model 3442. Model 3803 with refrigerator body. Model 3805 paneL IJEV7 LIGIITWSICHT CIXAITCPS I 6000 Scries truck with van body. 50C0 Series L.C.F. 6000 Series school bus chassis. NEW MIDDLLWCIGHT CIIAIVIPS r f w i: 10G00 Scries truck ;i taadem. 9000 Series L.C.F. 10000 Series truck ish mixer. rew !nes mooel u trtitor. kev; iiEikvirwEiGirr champs i r f This is Hist part of the new Task-Force fleet! Come on in HHr end se vyky anything less is an old-fashioned truck I Six Chattering Cheis i ll Club We met at the home of Linda Nelson's on Monday, April 16, for our 4th 4-H club meeting. We discussed future plans and projects in our 4-H club. We were served cupcakes and adjourned at 4:30 p. m. We were minus three members at the meeting. by Paige Bassett, sec'y. jf -.- .. , SUNSET CHEVROLET COMPANY Blondie PAG WOOD, I WENT CHECKUP TODAM AND fa (g) 196, Ring Abraham Mrs. Afton Fullmer Mr. and Mrs. Garn Thompson 'Dorothy Talbot) of Garfield have a new baby girl, Cyndy Lee, born in St. Marks hospital April 10. Mrs. Velma Tolbat, Dorothy's mother, is in Garfield helping to care for the family. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Blanch, formerly for-merly of Abraham, have an 8 lb. 2 oz. baby girl, born in Los Angeles April 10. Kary and Eleanor Murray drove to Los Angeles to see their first grandchild. Joan and Karen Murray are with their Aunt, Cle-one Cle-one Talbot, while their parents are away. Tiny Dobra Fullmer is fine after hnr bout with pneumonia. Jay and Lurna Fullmer drove to Cortez, Colorado Saturday and back Sunday, Sun-day, visiting with Ladd and Richard Rich-ard Fullmer and the Dave Poul-sens. Poul-sens. Tiny Debra and Genlel stayed stay-ed with their grandmother, Mrs. Afton Fullmer while the rest of the family was gone. Emily and Alva Young are back home after taking their cattle to their ranhc in Tooele county, and Mrs. Halley Y. Jensen is back here to the Young home after a visit with Nayon and Eugene Young and family in Delta, while Emily and Alva were gone. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Taylor went with Gus and Eva Taylor on a long trip thru seven states. Down thru California visiting Jerry and Marilyn Blanch and Foliett Taylor They also seen some of the Humphries Hum-phries boys and their families.) Then thru Oregon and Washington then back thru the north country. t ""; v, ca ....... - : m my cfr f V By Chic Young FO A CANCER ') I'M JUST FINE I WONDERFUL, BLOND! E ! AND I GAVE OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY. EVERYONE CAN 1 HELP CONQUER CANCER WITH A CHECKUP AND Yi A CHECK ! j Fctturw Syndicate, Inc., WoriJ righti resenrel Herb said he saw a lot of country which made him like Abraham all the better. Chief Petty officer of the Navy, Wesley Goodyear and family of California spent Wednesday and Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Benny Schena. They were on their way to Denver (Becky's home town) on vacation, will "be back in May. The Benny Schenas and Gladys and Sherman Tolbert enjoyed a theatreparty Monday night. Gladys and Sherman Tolbert spetn Sunday with Gladys mother, Mrs. Sarah Taylor in Provo. Gus and Eva Taylor, Mrs. Julia Bliss, Evan and Boyd Probst and Branch President Clifferd Petersen were the speakers in Sacrament meeting Sunday night Henery Hoff and Bob Blanch were home for the weekend from the BYU. A party foor the retiring Branch presidency will be held Friday night, April 20, in the church. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bliss and friends, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Orton, from Payson, Utah, Bob and Seb-rina Seb-rina Robison, Oasis, and Reva and Clark Bliss had a nice trip to Topaz Mt. Sunday sounds like spring is here. The "Mineralogical Society of Utah paid their annual visit to the House Mt. trilobite field Sunday, Sun-day, April 15. Mrs. Betty Jones and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Lockerbie preferred pre-ferred the warmth and shelter of the Southern Hotel to the good company and the cold of the outdoor out-door camp. USB 4000 Series stake 1 - i ft J 40 YEARS AGO FROM THE FILES ... . Delta AUTO FOR SALE: My Reo 5th touring car, 1912 Model,' good shape, good tires, price $300. W. L. Lackyard. The Delta Canal Co.'s B. canal on the North Tract is reported to be drawing 253 second feet of water now and will soon be filled to over 300 second feet. The Sevier Bridge dam reservoir is now filled to the 61-foot contour line and the water which has been allowed to run to waste for some time back will soon be held to bring it up to the 70-foot line. Government weather reports from mountain watersheds of the Sevier say that there is from five to six feet of snow in the mountains yet and that there will be plenty of water to fill it. Born To Mr. and Mrs. George Sampson, of the South Tract, Sunday Sun-day night a boy. Lightning struck the Delta Co.'s private phone line near Woodrow during Tuesday's storm and shat tered a number of poles and "burn ed out several phones on the line. The damage Is being repaired today to-day and the line recently been extended ex-tended to near Sugarvllle. Sutherland A new baby girl arrived at the home of Ed Bunker last week. All are rejoicing over the arrival. Ed has as many kind as anyone now. Great Wheeled Educational Inst. Well, the Demonstration Train has come and gone and brot a lusty squall of weather with it. Or at least the squall was sticking around in this community waiting for the proper opportunity to turn loose, and found it on this occas ion, and In doing so did itseii proud- on both days to the extent that it practically ruined the occasion. occas-ion. (Sounds as if Delta weather outdid itself 40 years ago, with wind and dust, no doubt, and any thing else it could stir up, for the article goes on to say that "people throughout this coming empire were compelled to remain home because of the Inclement weather". The train consisted of ten exhibit cars. A banquet was served at night to the visitors by the farm bureau of Millard County, and Gov. Spry was one of the speakers.) South Tract The company of South Tract farmers who purchased a Martin Ditcher and Grader last week are more than satisfied with its-work. It will clean banks and bottom of any ditch, be It flat bottom or V- shape to a depth of four feet. It will build a new ditch, flat bottom or V-shaped, three feet deep, with four horses. Cost $42.50 f. o. b. Denver. School closes on the South Tract Friday of this week. This is just one month too soon and the children chil-dren lose seriously by it. The neighbors are hauling hogs in its issue of Feb. 25, Business Week TilE FASTEST Gufi whH ml 11 AMERICA IS AHC y r- if- Hi I i it i i I Prove Right to S. S. Reiiofits We who handle claims for social security benefits sometimes find cases where real hardship results because people who believe they are entitled to old-age and survivors surviv-ors insurance benefits are not able to prove their entitlement. In one case, it may be a widow having a great deal of trouble getting a marriage record or otherwise proving prov-ing she was, married to her deceased de-ceased husband. In another case, it might be a claim for child's Insurance benefits and no birth certificate or similar record can be found for the child. These are unusual un-usual situations but they do happen. hap-pen. If you were to write the social security law and regulations, I believe you would require that certain conditions of entitlement be met before benefits would be paid. Many employed or self-employed people pay into the social security insurance fund and regulations regu-lations must be observed to protect the fund from those who would not rightfully be entitled to the benefits. If it is a widow claiming benefits, bene-fits, it must be established that she Is actually the widow. A marriage mar-riage certificate is the logical proof to be expected. A birth certificate of a child will show his age and prove that he is a child of the person on whose social security record a claim for benefits is being filed. Since the law requires anyone any-one claiming retirement benefits to have reached age 65, some evidence evi-dence is needed to show that the person is actually that old. While the social security office does have a responsibility of protecting pro-tecting the old-age and survivors insurance system against unjustified unjust-ified claims, the purpose is not to try to keep those rightfully entitled entitl-ed from getting their benefits. Our advice to the families of those working persons whose tax contributions con-tributions go towards making up the social security trust fund is this: Obtain proofs that may be needed before they are needed. Find out if your marriage is actually actual-ly on record and see if the births of your children are recorded. Get some evidence of your age. Be armed with this information when the time comes to file a claim for benefit payments under the old-age old-age and survivors insurance program. pro-gram. A representative of the social again today. I don't know where they all come from, but whenever a shipper calls for hogs they haul in a few. HinckleY The Stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wright, April 13th leaving a fine baby girl. There is considerable excitement over the mining prospect out in the west mountains. Among those interested are A. Stout, W. F. Pratt, and C. C. Draper. r- llssiwKtttc j IT3-3" ' ! ' ' ' ' J I D.U.P.Campto Meet Friday Helen Mar McCullough Camp, D. U. P., will meet Friday at 2:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Ava Star-ley, Star-ley, with Mrs. J. E. Stains and Mrs. Lula Pearson as co-hostesses with Mrs. Starley. Mrs. Emily Bunker will give the lesson at the meeting and Mrs. Reva Bliss will give the history. security adminstration will be at the County Office Building In Delta on April 25th at 1:00 p. m. Anyone desiring to contact him may do so at that time. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION PUBLIC SALE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, " March 7, 1956 Under provisions of section 2455, R. S., as amended by section 14 of the act of June 28, 1934 (48 Stat. 1274; 43 U. S. C. 1171), and pursuant pur-suant to the application of Ralph M. Monroe of Scipio, Utah Serial No. Utah 015665, there will be offered to the highest bidder, but at not less than S3.00 per acre, lit a public sale to be held at 10 o'clock a. m., on the 3rd day of May 1956 next, at this office the following tracts of land: W'NW Sec. 26, T. 17 S., R. 3 W., SLM, Utah, containing 80 acres. This parcel f land as indicated, will be offered for sale as a unit. No bid will be received for less than all of an offered parcel of land. Bids may be made by the principal prin-cipal or his agent, either personally at the sale or by mail. Bids sent by mail will be considered consi-dered only if received at this office prior to the hour fixed for the sale. Bids must be in sealed envelopes accompanied by certified checks or post-office money orders made payable to the Treasurer of the United States for the amounts of the 'bids. The envelopes must he marked in the lower left-hand corner "Public sale bid, Serial No. U 015665, Sale, May 3, 1956." The highest bidder will be required re-quired to pay immediately the amount thereof. Any adverse claimants of th above-described land should flit their claims, or objections, on or before the time designated for sale. The Bureau of Land Management Manage-ment has not searched the files of Millard County to ascertain evidence evid-ence of any adverse claims. Any contiguous owner claiming a preference right must assert such right and substantiate the claim by submitting the evidence required requir-ed by 43 CFR 250.11 within 30 days from the above sale date. Douglas E. Henrlques Acting Manager First Publication March 22, 1956 Final Publication April 19, 1956. Magazine reports ' For the past year the makers of Ancient Age, confident that they were bottling the finest bourbon bour-bon produced in this country, made this challenge chal-lenge to the American public: "IF YOU CAN FIND A BETTER BOURBON. BOUR-BON. ..BUY IT!" The people accepted this challenge and rewarded Ancient Age with a phenomenal phe-nomenal sales increase, a percentage greater by far than any other liquor in any category. To you who made this record possible we say "thanks" and promise the same superior bourbon in every bottle of Ancient Age you may buy this year. Kentucky Straight BOURBON Whiskey- . 6 Years Old . 86 Proof. Ancient Age Distilling CorankforuKentucky. BOURBON isie m AGE! Jctcnt DELTA, UTAH PHONE 311 4 |