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Show KHLLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delia. Utch. Thurs. De. 13. 103 5 11NG OURVvORLD THE f $ ft I ...and a sled... and a bicycle ...and please, Santa, - ca H"B5gs on ca . k;: v ,a f:i; ,?"vi:-?: - TS'O riff J Smart boy! Knows what he wants . . . knows what's good! There's nothing he could have asked for that could bring more pleasure than a trip on one of the fabulous Union Pacific Domeliners. it's srmr.. . if ecokqpku . . . Yes , folks of all ages love trains and little wonder, when they ride the smart, new Domeliners. Such comfort, luxury and relaxation! Such delicious food . . . such thrilling "top-of-the-world"' views from the large Dome windows. Manv other advantages. too, when you go Union Pacific- ft' family fares, to save you money .. . fpjyS 3253" ' choice of accommodations . . . room frf ' - II . . - I . 1 i : f to roam (especially appreciated wiich i you take the children along) . . . downtown arrival . . . and a generous . baggage allowance. Make this the best Christmas ever. Present the family with a Union Pacific travel certificategood certifi-categood for a trip anytime. For details, reservation, Of help with your travel plant, tee your nearest Union Pacific Railroad ticket agent. See your Union Pacific ticket agent, or give him a call he's at your service! He'll gladly help you with vour travel plans . . . arrange for a Hertz rental car if needed. Ak him about the family fares, too, and the convenience of having a Rail Travel Credit Card. ' J jl i " "- - - " i F I R S 1 j xc cS to ci! Santa Clauses - It's more fun playing Santa Clans when you give gifts that arc entrant:- .1 to please. For example: I I .7 . . I r l IN ITS, J!l!: 4 - . itrRrAiilllTtn I1 .. ' "1 i i ;-s-Jt m i i imr - y CHECKS with his or her L "!: J I jR-J-.P""i- name on each check, I f K Tr " " and alS numbered. mkhhbmjJ " the Sank for Everybody! (Jive a BOOK BANK. It looks like ' a book but is a bank. Holds both coins and currency. 1 in L in some Cive ANOTHER KINO OF E 0 OK a savings at count nasi bock. Start it with any amount vou choose. i Give a CM'CKINO ACCOUNT 4 . with whatever amount you i home as an initial deposit. Do some gift shopping at First Security t -hi-: w J- - -w-l t Once Over By Dick Morrison Mr. rnd Mrs. Ncis, Eogh- spent Sunday 'in Mayfield, Utah, for the family party that celebrated the 76th birthday of their father, H. C. Bogh. Twenty-seven members of the family wen? home for the occasion. ' Credit Where Due In reporting a list of gallon donors to the Red Cross Blood Bank here the other week, it seems l .made a couple of mistakes. The name of Glen Swalberg did not appear on my list, though Glen has given eight pints here for the Red Cross, and he has also given four pints while in the army. That make a total of twelve for Glen and it is a commendable record. I reported Wayne Sorensen as a donor of eignt pints. Wayne has e;iven eleven pints, here at Delta. This puts Wayne, also, among those who are now on t heir second ;allon. If I failed to report any others. t failed to give anyone full credit, shall be glad to correct the error I !.f they will tell me about it. The main point in this blood donning don-ning business is to do all we can to encourage people to cooperate with the Red Cross, and to show up when the Bloodmobile comes o town. This Is a decidedly humanitarian humani-tarian thing to do, from the strictly strict-ly Impersonal viewpoint; yet it is also something that can work out to the individual, personal benefit of any donor in unforeseeable situations sit-uations and at unpredictable times as I have good reason to know. Sj why not make a New Year's resolution resolu-tion now to help out in this essential essent-ial work next time you get the opportunity? By the way, it won't be long now until the coming of another new year, will it? It is hard to realize that that time has rolled around once more. Remember when? jGivuK 016 Croui 5 tl A !!$ , . -':.: tgi it 1 " v: - jits - - S - :, : i$ tra6U5oi)al at hohaaw tiW ffr -iap L .- . f ft. - . & ! i , j (jjjt-ftdftt, KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY f II v, OLD CROW -wquri Will-"" - Hut t A. X. J 1 . . -l .... ; THE oto CROW DISTI LLE RY' CO?. "i) IV.'oTn ATI ONAL DIST. PROD. CORP.,' FRANKFORT, KY. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF said she had many requests for impo-tant, then, the more necessary gills' trios - might be able to ar-'it becomes for the executive to get .. .We attended the annual banquet of the State Farm Bureau, not as members, but as parents of one of the entertainers, selected from the talent search to participate on the program. The trio, comprised of Mrs. Ruby Bishop, accompanist and arranger, Nedra Fullmer, Judy Bishop, Bis-hop, and our daughter, Carol Ann, enjoyed the opportunity to sing in that popular place where the banquet ban-quet was held, the Lafayette Ballroom Ball-room of the Hotel Utah. They wer" well received, being, as I understand under-stand it, the only members of the Junior group invited to take part. I, believe they were the only entertainers enter-tainers to appear from Millard County. ; The banquet was a most enjoyable enjoy-able affair for members and non-members non-members alike. Among other things I liked about it was the organ music furnished by Grace Evans McGuinness, on the Hammond. Mrs McGuinness was the only professional profess-ional entertainer on the program. She uses the professional name, Grace Evans, for radio and TV appearances. After the banquet, I got to talk ing to Mrs. McGuinness told her how much I had enjoyed her playing. play-ing. I had noticed how competently she had put over her background music, and music to fill In the interludes when nothing else was going on. She remarked of the difficulties of playing the organ to the accompaniment of clattering dishes. I had noticed how she met that problem. Her job was simply to provide atmosphere music as needed, unobtrusively, yet effective 'y. A performer who does this often receives no notice at all from a 'arge part of her audience. Though ler music is somet hing which lends in air of charm to the surroundings, surround-ings, it is something of which many range appearnaces for them Of her own background, Mrs. Mc Guinness told us that she and two sisters had been on the Orpheum Circuit for eight years. They had done any number of acts including singing as a trio. Afterwards, our own girls asked me what the Orpheum Circuit was and that took some explaining. It also brought home to me that the Orpheum Circuit is something that is not as well known these days as it used to be, just another reminder re-minder that to some extent I am living in the past, in a world which the present younger generation is not familiar with. No doubt there are at least a few readers who will remember perfectly well how much they used to like Vaudeville shows of the Orpheum, and of that other great entertainment circuit, the Pantages. Both Orpheum and Pantages were nation-wide chains, or associations, of theatres, which offered "live" entertainment ranging all the way from clowning, juggling, acrobatics, juartets, tap-dancing, and such, to operatics, along with silent movies away from tedious detail and relax. It is necessary, first of all, for a man in such a position to take time off from work, to take his share of leisure; to take time simply to think. The idea that the President, or my other policy-making executive should play the part of the high-pressure high-pressure 'businessman of the movies, mov-ies, shouting orders constantly from his desk, answering a battery of at least six telephones simultaneously, simultane-ously, never taking more than fifteen fif-teen minutes off for lunch so he ' can't possibly miss anything, is grotesque. Such a man Is not a good executive. He is a very poor one. Important policy cannot be carefully weighed in such an atmosphere. atmo-sphere. Snap judgment and instantaneous instant-aneous decisions arrived at in the" "movie" atmosphere can't possibly be sound policy. Sound policy de mands calm, mature judgment, and that in turn demands leisure. The formulation of sound policy also requires that the executive be possessed of the ability to see beyond the crowding events of the moment, and observe the long- I recall perfectly well seeing Gert-irange, underlying trends. Along this ruae taerie, tne lamous swimmer iine, Frank S. Meyer, writing in of the English Channel in the mid- NATIONAL REVIEW, says: twenties, doing a live swimming act on the stage of the Salt Lake I "It is one of the difficulties of Pantages, which is now the Utah, j the pragmatically trained (and people are scarcely conscious. She. had some friendly words of waise for our Delta trio. She runs it is a booking agency in Salt Lake, and The bigger a job in a glass tank which was Installed just for that show. It was the advent of talking movies that spelled the effective end of such entertainment as Orp heum and Pantages used to offer; and if that hadn't spelled the end, TV would have done it. Anyway, it was pleasant to talk to Grace Evans McGuinness for a little while. She is a professional entertainer enter-tainer of long standing, and of high accomplishment. Timo To Think Every once in a while some critic tries to make an issue out of President Eisenhower's habit of taking time out to play golf, when he feels like it. Is this, they ask. the proper way for the President to handle the biggest, most important, im-portant, and most demanding job on earth? If you want my opinion, I think that Includes a very large percent age of those who form opinion and policy today) that they are constantly con-stantly searching for meaning in 'the facts' as they present themselves them-selves from moment to moment. The multitudinous facts which in any developing historical situation crowd upon the vision have themselves them-selves no meaning to yield up except ex-cept as they are seen in the context con-text of the underlying forces that produce them. Upon the surface of a tidal wave, transitory currents of air and water create patterns often totally irrelevant to the distant causes or the eventual consequen ces of the moving mass itself . So, to qualify as a competent xecutive, whether as President of the United States or of some less 'mportant position, a man should have the ability to avoid pointless ietail, which can be handled better "jy a half-dozen telephone-answering secretaries and stenographers. is, the more Continued on next page This year put something finer under the tree... i hvM UU W ' UJ UJ M K. f 1- - - - Vvt EcrT) rer5i frK WJ KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON 7-"".. in the magnificent holiday package and dazzling gift carton This hciiday season. giv and serve rich-tasting Sunny Brook Kentucky stea ght bourbon In Its rich-toaklnj new pacha; and t-"dsorr holiday gift carton I I : 1 I . ( SUNNY BROOK tt'TtClT JTlilf.t 2nntn IISltI ,. ! j toMo rt 4 LSI r I 4 Afx "i V rtMlCRY. ALSO AVAILABLE: Kentucky B nced Wh sky In tn. trac! t 0"! roi.d fcott' ERCCK C3.. IW'.tlZH CF NATIONAL USTIUCRS rP.CCUCTS CCRFCSATICM ICl'iSVIltf 53TH 85 HZZf. KWICKT ELNSD miUtl CC!IAI,$ 65 CRAM SlZtUi SFi.iTS. |