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Show t';;. t-..i- MIltARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta. Utah. Thurs. Oct. 25, 1053. Mr, and Mrs. Schuyler Gardner, of Redondo Beach, Cal., are announcing an-nouncing the birth of a 'baby girl, weight 7 lbs. and 4 oz., Oct. 20. Her name is to be Jeanne vlcirie. and she has an older brother and sister, Don and Kathy. Grandparents Grandpar-ents at Delta are Mr. and Mrs. Clair Gardner. Ts M. I. Walters and young Mrs. Elma Mnc'c and "i'"! "in, over Mr son Bill, left Delta Wednesday for a trip to California of several weeks, to visit friends and relatives in Los Angeles and San Francisco. uiii Provo, visited in Delta the weekend with her parents, and Mrs. David Terry. GI VING OUR Vv ORLD THF - FIRST SECURITY. the a n k for Everybody! CHECK THESE ADVANTAGES YOU'LL ENJOY with a flrtt Security checking account Any amount peni an account. You save time by mailing checks to pay bills. Your money Is safe from theft or loss. ; You have better control of your money. You have legal proof of payment. 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This is the new car that goes 'em all one better ulth fuel injection . . . with bold new ideas in design . . . in styling ... in automatic dridng.ICs u, smooth and sassy! Chevrolet is the place where new ideas grow. And what a crop of them this year! . . . Fuel injection . . . a brand-new Turboglide automatic auto-matic transmission (optional at extra cost) with Triple-Turbine take-off. A full range of five potent engines, with horsepower options ranging clear up to 243. A functional func-tional new "face" in which bumper and grille are styled as a single unit Dozens upon dozens of ether brilliant touches including smaller 14-inch wheels. It's an idea year at Chevrolet -and you'll want to sample them all I U CHEVROLET A ,1. II , "270-h.p. argin etfO evoit- cfc't at extra eojt. Alto With up lo 283 hp. Corft end patngr ear notft't. Only jranchised Chevrolet dealers li 4 (iijpia this famous trademark SUNSET CHEVROLET COMPANY 'FXTA. UTAH PHONE 311 Once Over By Dick Morrisora "My Little Sister' If you don't mind, good reader, we'll, turn our attention away from politics for a moment right at this the height of one of the most lethargic- turned- lively political campaigns in anybody's memory. There has come to hand an essay by one not so old girl about another, an-other, only a little younger, which expresses a sentiment mat couia kindle a flame in the hearts of members of any family in which there is that wonderful pair, '"bU sister", and "little sister". No need to say who wrote it. Some few readers mav guess, anyway. Nor who is the subject. Some friends may guess that, too. The beauty of it is that it says the things that any "big sister" might write, or at least think, about "little sister". So here it is: "My little sister is indescribable. At least I can't figure her out. She is one of those rare combinations of a devoted tomboy and a delicate feminine little girl. She has equally all the attributes of a loving mother and a battleship. She can look like a tramp from the wilds of Pahvant Valley, in her big sister's sis-ter's worn tennis shoes, her brother's bro-ther's faded blue denims and her own torn red and blue plaid shirt, or like an angel when she is dressed dress-ed In a yellow nylon dress, her h.iir falling softly in light brown curls end sitting in a choir seat i at church 'beaming down upon you with her turned up-nose ana hny dimpled smile. "She will tease and torment her bnther endlessly yet if you need money for an important ball game, she is the first to offer her allowance, allow-ance, dear a it is, as a sacrifice to the cause. "Ch Hnpsn't studv mucn, QUI her report card is always straight A. "Slip rate'v misses a church meet in" rnd s'ie wouldn't miss play n? a ball E?me if her life de- : rended on it any k'nd of a ban game bPskptbM'. DaseDau, ern footbal1- - f""d se's pwd at them She cn blt a b-U farther, nwke mnrp baskets, and catch more for ward p'ses than any boy I've known She is at the height of her glorv vhei she is swinging from a hapese Mr or racing the neighbor neigh-bor vov B'ound his corral. "TMs fariy Mtt'e girl has her se to. I can talk to her se 'o;:s'" nbout relisrion or life and she wi'l listen intently and then r o e of'ei than not practice what I tell her. It scares me sometimes when I see the influence I have on her I wonder if I am the one who has made her wnai sue I like to flatter myself and think I played a part. Our birthdays are three years, 363 days apart, yet she will listen to me whereas what hpr mother or other sister tells her Uides in one ear and out the other. "She is priceless, one nuu which word of comfort to use and u,hAn She has an inborn sense which te'ls her to say, "Gee, thafs 1 good, Sis", or "Couldn't you qo u inst a little better?" ine s aiwayt there when I need her most her all-wance for a show, her ciomes w ar the same size shoes), or her- oed little hand to give me a pat on the back when I've failed rmpthine I really tried for. "She is happiest when she is watering her garden in which she grew tomatoes, one at a time, and !two cucumbers, this year. tne i forever taking in some stray dog ' or cat and giving it a square meal i and a lot of love before it contin nes on its way. I "I often think when I see her walkine down the street, her ieei turned slightly outwards, her hair v,i,.-irr in ihp wind, ana ner frwklert little face full of the joy of living, that only down the celes tial streets of heaven sJiouia waist the tomboy angels like my little sister". I I From A Grateful Government The picture of the Marines raising rais-ing the American flag on Mt. Sura-bachi, Sura-bachi, on Iwo Jima, taken with the idea that it would be a routine news photo, became famous as a result of its nobility of expression and harmony of composition. It was copied In the design of the Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery. A current magazine. Facts Forum i Hew from the Kraft Kitchen! &teez dJtiz rip j AiiaftA into hot feeds SPOON IT HEAT IT for chttit sauce SPREAD IT for snacks A Ftrtzi Proctts CJ!H Spnrf sequel to the historic event thus hamorir-lized. Under a cit reproducing repro-ducing the original pl'.oto are printed print-ed these words: "Ira Hayes, a Pima Indian, was one of the six marines who raised iH(- i-ierici F!it; on Iwo Jiiiia. On January 21, 1955, Kayos froze i body was found on the Sacaton reservation, in Arizona. He had wandered from his home, seeking to find a place for himself in the white man's woiid".- As if he had not already earned himself a place in it! The i'em occurs in an exhaustive ?.nd informative article dealing with the controversy regarding recent re-cent legislation on Indian affairs and the serious problems faced by this large American minority group and by our government in finding a just solution. Lee Campaign Committee I am indebted to a news item in the Deseret News of October 20 for the following list of people who are taking prominent part in the "Lee For Governor" drive. These are newsworthy, interesting names. The list is not a complete one, of course, but as far as it goes, it provides food for political thought. As residents of Salt Lake City, the Deseret News listed Lloyd E. Cooney, chairman of the Citizens For Lee Committee, Mr. Cooney being former Young Republican state chairman and state GO? publicity director; Starley D. Bush; National Committeeman; Dean P. v. s : Vid.1 Fox Clawson; Charles Char-les H. Barndt; Mrs. Cleo Tedesco; Mary Patterson; Mrs. Charles S. merrill; Mrs. Priscilla Hansen; Mrs Ruth Throckmorton; Dan Valentine and Mrs. Elaine Valentine. Among down-state residents, the News listed: Charles A. Eteen and Mitchell Melich, both of Moab; ip'-ih Nay'or. Provo; Mark Paxton, "i'lmjie, and George E. Stewart. i.Jjchesne. Clea-ing The Desk ' ' ' V; -ri l-,i"b )0-1: " a desk can wi..-. miners too ini- U t!vow away, yet forever iLt;p.ii huried under even more important new things that keep w.in alan.c;. My two baskets for 'ncoming ard outgoing mail have i;i- niiico b?on useless for what w,. .. ere intended for, good now -!y 'r purposes of temporarily n-y'l-n documents of all kinds, s'"! them perhaps for months, intil some need arises which impels im-pels me to go through them, find, maybe, something I happen to want, and throw the rest away. This is a good day for a clean-up. A great many of the items in this stack of papers were saved because be-cause they touched off a train of thought on something or other which I thought at the time worthy of comment here. Maybe they still are worthy of it, though old items do become dated as new ones come along. Just taking them as they come, let's say our little say, briefly, and then dispose of them in yonder wastebasket, for good and all. How nice a clean desk will look! News Item: "nn to Slash Arms Purchases From U. S.", is the headline. head-line. It is throe weeks old. But Thomas Cuthbert; Jennings J. Phil- when I first read it. the thnuphr lips, Jr.; 0. J. Wilkinson, former struck me, "How nice if the Ameri-Republican Ameri-Republican State Chairman; Geo- can people could slash their ex- rge i. Hansen, former Republican Continued on next page ' it 1 ( I ' r I 5 z:r- J Cut heating costs! Get all the heat you pay for! Standard Furnace Oil is made clean to burn clean and it contains Thermisol that "conditions" your furnace fur-nace while it heats . . . keeps it like new! Standard Stove Oil lights fast, heats fast, is the ideal fuel for circulating heaters. Both are 100 distilled dis-tilled to burn without waste you get ALL the heat you pay for! For real economy heat, call us today for neighborhood neigh-borhood Housewarmer service. ser-vice. One call does it all! call your Housewarmer L. H (SPEED) RIDIN DELTA. UTAH PHONE 551 "1 1 i WJi! i, i :4 Wil.lllliaiW3 f - - f III -rttt-a .! f ' ; 1 "EXTUCKY STRlit"1 i "OURBONWHlSHtH. ft ' L " 1 i Tastes so rich swallows so smooth I u iui m h:li i k:u cc v?an r, civ:s::s of rational distillers, Louisville, k. CXNTUCKY STRAIGHT ECUSSQfl JTritSKEY-K tKZ? |