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Show Millard County Chronicle Thursday, July 13, 1961 Junior-Senior Girls' Softball Schedule SENIOR GIRLS A JULY 27 7:00 Sutherland vs. Delta 1st 8:00 Oak City vs. Delta 2nd 9:00 Deseret vs. Delta 3rd AUGUST 3 7:00 Oak City vs. Delta 1st 8:00 Sutherland vs. Deseret 9:00 Delta 2nd vs. Delta 3rd AUGUST 10 7:00 Deseret vs. Sutherland 8:00 Delta 2nd vs. Oak City 9:00 Delta 1st vs. Delta 3rd AUGUST 17 7:00 Sutherland vs. Delta 2nd 8:00 Delta 3rd vs. Oak City 9:00 Deseret vs. Delta 1st AUGUST 24 7:00 Deseret vs. Delta 2nd 8:00 Delta 1st vs. Delta 3rd 9:00 Sutherland vs. Oak City JUNIOR GIRLS (All games will start at 5:30 unless noted otherwise) JULY 19 Delta 1st at Delta 2nd Delta 3rd at Sutherland Hinckley at Oak City JULY 26 Delta 2nd at Delta 3rd Oak City at Delta 1st Hinckley at Sutherland AUGUST 8 Oak City at Delta 3rd Sutherland at Delta 2nd Delta 1st at Hinckley AUGUST 9 Sutherland at Oak City Delta 3rd at Delta 1st Hinckley at Delta 2nd AUGUST 16 Delta 2nd at Oak City Delta 1st at Sutherland Delta 3rd at Hinckley II j Neighbors 7.500 Read It In The CHRONICLE "They're so anxious to brag about having color TV they've painted their set blue." M & M Combine SR, 12 ft. POWER STEERING M & M Combine, Uni-Tractor, 10 ft 92 Massey-Ferguson Combine, 12 ft. LIKE NEW, POWER STEERING, WITH CAB John Deere 214 T Baler LIKE NEW Massey-Ferguson Forage Box with Bunk Feeder Ferguson Tarctor TO-30 Massey-Harris Tractor 44 2 Fox Choppers with Motor ALSO PTO KIai?sM mi PHONE 5125 2 STUDENTS: If Ycu Seek a Career Thai Lives and Breathes ... One Thai Is Humanly Hu-manly Warm . . . One wilh a Conscience Con-science for Community Service . . . Consider Commeiiity Joiiriialism. The Excitement of Today's NEWS The Challenge of Modern ADVERTISING ADVER-TISING The Responsibility of COMMUNITY SERVICE The Opportunity for BUSINESS OWNERSHIP Get all these by preparing yourself for a career in Community Journalism. When you return for school this fall ask your counselor to explain the many journalism classes available. America needs its most talented and best-trained young people to staff the the desks of its 10,000 home town newspapers. Jhli Mssa0 Prepared by fht UTAH STATE PRESS ASSN. Space h Contributed by ffce MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE LIVESTOCK QUOTES July II, 1960 By Win Walker Cattle saleable, 375. Lambs, 40. Hogs (last week) 100. Most of today's run were choice slaughter cattle, few reaching the prime class; 100 head feeders. The price was strong showing a big demand for feeder cattle. Hogs were" up, showing lc advance, ad-vance, top bringing $18.61. Top for today was a wild show calf, too wild to show but not; too wild to top the market. The steer was fed by John Lyman, an FFA boy, and- purchased by Joe Doctor-man Doctor-man Packing Co. for $23.05. Choice steers brought $21.50 to $22.50. Good and high choice, $20-.50 $20-.50 to $21.75, including some1 crossbreeds. cross-breeds. Holstein, $17. to $20.50. Feeders, $19.50 to $25.60. 27 head 500 lbs., brought $25.60. 20 head 600 lbs., $23. 100 head of choice heifers brought $22. to $22-.70. $22-.70. Low choice and high good, $21. to $22. Heiferettes, $15.90 to $18. Feeders, Feed-ers, $21. to $21.35. Holsteins, $17.40 to $18.60. Springers, Spring-ers, $184. to $238. Cows, standard, $15.30 to $16.40. Commercial, $14. to $15.30. Dairv kind, $13.80 to $14.90. Bulls, $17.50 to $18.20. Baby calves, $40. to $49. Lambs, $15. Mens Softball (SECOND HALF SCHEDULE) JULY 14 7:30 Delta 3rd vs. Oak City 8:30 Delta 2nd vs. Hinckley 9:30 Delta 1st vs. Sutherland JULY 20 7:30 Delta 2nd ,vs. Sutherland 8:30 Delta 3rd vs. Lynn-Leam. 9:30 Oak City vs. Hinckley JULY 21 7:30 Delta 1st vs. Delta 3rd 8:30 Lynn-Leam. vs. Sutherland 9:30 Oak City vs. Delta 2nd Pee Vee League- PEE WEE LEAGUE BASEBALL SCHEDULE SECOND HALF JULY 15. 6:00 P.M. Delta 3rd vs. 'Sutherland Delta 2nd vs. Oak City Deseret vs. Delta 1st JULY 22, 6:00 P.M. Delta 1st vs. Sutherland Deseret vs. 'Delta 2nd Oak City vs. 'Delta 3rd JULY 29. 6:00 P.M. Sutherland vs. 'Delta 2nd Delta 3rd vs. 'Delta 1st Oak City vs. 'Deseret AUGUST 5. 6:00 P.M. Sutherland vs. 'Deseret Delta 1st vs. 'Oak City Delta 2nd vs. 'Delta 3rd AUGUST 12, 6:00 P. M. Oak City vs. 'Sutherland Delta 3rd vs. 'Deseret Delta 2nd vs. 'Delta 1st CLASSIFIED RATES: 2c per word, minimum ad 50c. Ads over 5 lines 15c a line thereafter. Display ads. 75c column inch. Will not be responsible for errors on phone-in ads. Use of box no. 50c extra pe r insertion. FOR RESULTS. USE THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THE CHRONICLE EACH WEEK. For Sale catteries for Cars, Trucks and Tractors. Full Laher line including Mustang, Exeter, Nonstop. Priced from $10.75. Guaranteed 2, 3 and i years. All adjustments made by us. DELTA AUTO SUPPLY, Delta, tt WAR SURPLUS: FREE 1 lb. Lock Washers (retail value $2.00) with every 5 lbs. bolts. New 10" High Top Leather Boots, reg. 14.95 now only 7.95. Van's Motor. 622-76 FOR SALE: Two large hay-hogging boxes in good condition, made of 34-inch flooring lumber, with metal met-al hoods. One stationary unloading motor. Between 10 and 12 tons of baled first crop hay. See at Lee Talbot's residence in Abraham, Ut. FOR SALE: 1 16-ft. all steel truck bed; 2 300-gal. slip tanks; 2 200-gal. 200-gal. slip tanks; 1 gas meter; 1 reel with 100 ft. hose; 1 power take off pump. L. II. (Speed) Riding, ph. 4551. FOR SALE: repossessed spinet piano pi-ano this area Assume balance of small monthly payments. For more information, write, Piano Dept. Box 148 Sugar House Station, Salt Lake City, Utah. FOR SALE: Siamese Kittens, Bern- adene Schena, ph. 796J3. 7-13tf BATTERIES All sizes on hand-Group hand-Group 1, exchange, from $9.95. Guaranteed 12 to 48 months. KELLY KEL-LY SERVICE, Phone 3791, Delta, Utah. 323tf HORSEMEN We have (complete line of Shoes, Bridles, Cinches, Bits, Spurs, Leather Goods. D. Stevens Co., PRO Hardware. 68-824 idvertlsfntf worbfor you I FOR SALE: There are available a few old school desks (the old style) for sale at $1. each Also a few old type bench (three1 seats in one) at $2.. The hardwood in each is worth more than the dollar, and as they are they would make good play furniture for the kids or better still outside seats for the patio. See Mr. Bennett or Mr. Lovell at the High School. TIME TO SUMMERIZE your car- Keep it in top shape for the summer sum-mer season with the following: ALEMITE CD-2; MAGIC STP; SHA-LER SHA-LER RISLONE; BARDAHL; CASITE TUNE-UP; WYNN'S Friction Proofing. Proof-ing. DELTA AUTO SUPPLY. 427tf FOR SALE: 1 folding camp cot; 1 girl's bike; 1 boy's bike; 1 hand plow; 1 Boy Scout tent, 65 sq. ft. of floor space for 2 boys. Mrs. Songer. 713 FOR SALE: Weaner pigs. See Rex Jensen at Sugarville. FOR SALE OR RENT: 2-bedroom modern home. Call 457J2. 18-713 Use our efficient Carpet Shampoo- er FREE with purchase of Blue Lustre shampoo. Workman's Home Furnishings. GATES TIRE SALE continues; all commercial tires beginning with 600x16. Buy 1 pair or more to qualify qual-ify for xk savings. (Unconditional road hazard guarantee on all tires) LOVELL & ROPER SERVICE. tf FOR SALE: Pie Cherries, 10c lb. you pick; picked, 12c lb. McMullin's Orchard, Genola. Ph. 7543320 7-20 FOR SALE:! M & M Combine, with blower and wagon. See Dick! Clark FOR SALE: 1951 Chrysler Newport Coupe. Clean car. Needs some mechanical me-chanical work. As is $100. Call Ken-nard Ken-nard Riding 5321. Miscellaneous JEAN HOPKINS will be at "The Fashionette" July 18th. Call 5731 for an appointment with Jean for the latest advancement in beauty service. 7113-27 LET US PROCESS your beef, lamb, pork, and show you how you can save $1. to $2. on the complete processing of your pork. Every pork cured by us is smoked with hickory; hick-ory; hams are pre-cooked, the lard rendered and put in 2-lb. pkgs. to fit your deep-freeze. Our packing plant is the only slaughter house in West Millard that is State Inspected In-spected to insure you that the very best job is done. We invite you to come and watch your animals processed. pro-cessed. TALBOT PACKING CO, ph. 2441. SHOP AT HOME SHOP THE ADVERTISERS WITH GOVERNMENT SURPLUS SALES NOW anyone can buy DIRECT from U.S. Government SURPLUS DEPOTS, by mail for yourself or for resale. Cameras, binoculars, binocu-lars, cars, jeeps, trucks, boats hardware, office machines and equipment, tents, tools and tens-of-thouBands of other items at a fraction of their original cost. Many items brand new. For list of hundreds of U.S. Government Surplus Depots, located in every State and overseas with pamphlet pamph-let "How Government Can Ship Direct To You," plus procedures, HOW TO BUY and how to get FREE SURPLUS, mail $2.00 to SURPLUS SALES INFORMATION SERVICES, P. O. Box No. 1818, Washington 5, D.C. SHOP AT HOME SHOP THE ADVERTISERS WITH 7;13tf PAINTING DONE REASONABLY. Phone Dwight Moody, 381J1. WE WILL AUCTION Fat and Feeder Feed-er Hogs every other Tuesday at 12 o'clock; July 18, Aug. 3, and 17. Bring them in early as our regu lar cattle sale will follow the hog auction. Delta Livestock Auction Phone 2361. 518-tf Lost mid Found LOST: Large appliance cart between be-tween Delta and Hinckley Saturday noon. If found contact Eugene Morris Mor-ris of Morris Supply In Hinckley. FOUND: Suitcase filled with clothing. cloth-ing. Picked up near highway south of Eureka. Owner may claim by identification and payment of this ad. See Ray Skinner, Delta. 7jl3 GATES TIRE SALE continues; all commercial tires beginning with 600x16. Buy 1 parr or more to qualify qual-ify for M savings. (Unconditional road hazard guarantee on all tires) LOVELL & ROPER SERVICE. tf FOR SALE: 1 35 hp electric start motor; 14 ft. fiberglass boat and trailer, like new; can finance. Call 2481 or 2381, $900.00. FISHING AND CAMPING SUPPLIES Complete stock of Sleeping Bags from $9:95. D. Stevens Co., PRO Hardware. 6,8-824 FOR SAL'': 1 chest of drawers; 1 youth bed; 1 couch and chair set; 1 baby jumper chair; 1 rocking horse; 1 parakeet cage and stand. See Craig Tanner in Hinckley or call 6934. LOOK IN YOUR ATTIC OR THE BASEMENT YOU MIGHT HAVE SOMETHING THAT IS WORTHLESS WORTH-LESS TO YOU. BUT SOMEONE ELSE WOULD LIKE TO HAVE. A 50c CLASSIFIED MAY KILL 2 BIRDS WITH ONE STONE .... Wanted AVAILABLE for baby sitting. See or call Lexiane Merrell, phone 4152. 71361 SALESMAN WANTED WANTED ..AT ..ONCE Rawleigh Dealer in Millard County. Write Rawleigh's Dept. UTG-180-3, Denver, Den-ver, Colo. 7 j 13-27 For Kent FOR RENT: 2-bedroom Apt. Call Keith Dalton, 2581. 54tf FOR RENT: one and two bedroom homes. Both modern and newly re-decorated. Call Mrs. Fenton Gardner at 5791. 7'13-27 FOR RENT: One 2-bedroom house, furnished, $40. Single apt., furnished, furnish-ed, with water, $25. Call 3851. 615tf APT. FOR RENT: at 183 North 3rd West, Delta. Furnished or unfurnished. unfurn-ished. Heat, hot water, automatic washer furnished. See Rex Harris, ph. 3871. . 6;i5tf FOR RENT: I bedroom modern home, furnished, Delta. M. H. Workman, Work-man, ph. 4431. 615U Child's Arm Turns Hard, Stony; Medical Treatment Slows Process Christine Versluis, who is nine and lives on the shores of Lake Ontario at Hilton, N.Y., is unable to straighten her right arm because of rheumatic disease. Her arm and parts of both shoulders are becoming becom-ing increasingly calcified, which means change of the muscle tissue into a hard stony substance. This somber-faced child is the tragic victim of dermato-myositis, dermato-myositis, one of the forms of rheumatic disease. Another form is rheumatoid arthritis. The majority of people don't know that children suffer from arthritis; they believe mistakenly mistak-enly that arthritis aftiicts only the aging someone's grandfather grand-father or grandmother, surely not the very young. But there is urgent reason today why grownups and parents par-ents especially should be intelligently intel-ligently informed about arthritis arthri-tis among children. Dr. William S. Clark, director of medical care of The National Foundation, Founda-tion, whose expanded program embraces arthritis, birth defects de-fects and continued work in polio, said this week: "Rheumatoid arthritis is a type that can make children very ill indeed. They may become be-come severely crippled. Their joints may 'freeze.' Happily, we can now demonstrate today that with proper treatment and care, most of the crippling caused by juvenile rheumatoid arthritis can be prevented." But the cardinal point. Dr. Clark emphasizes, is that thousands thou-sands of children have rheumatoid rheu-matoid arthritis without knowing know-ing what the disease they su!Ter from really is. Their parents may dismiss the aching in neck, knees, wrists or elbows (or. more rarely, in all these joints simultaneously) as "growing pains"; or for a vari- V 4- t f s Nine-year-old Christine Verslui must hold her right arm in this awkward upright position because it it turning into hard, stony substance. But there' hope for her in research sponsored by The National Foundation. ety of other reasons, the right diagnosis is not made. "We now estimate that in the United States, more than 50,000 adults who suffer from rheumatoid arthritis had their actual onset of the disease in childhood," Dr. Clark added. "Had they received modern treatment at that time, most of the crippling in maturity could have been prevented. That's one reason why The National Foundation's program in arthritis ar-thritis and patient aid for the young is so significant." Child victims of rheumatoid arthritis are estimated to total 30,000 in this country alone, with 16,000 a year ill enough to need medical care. About 5,000 or 6.000 of these may require re-quire treatment as intensive as the rehabilitation needed for those stricken by paralytic polio. There are at least 11 millions in the nation today who suffer from some form of rheumatic disease, including arthritis. RheumatDid arthritis victims total about 1.500,000. The disease dis-ease is the nation's No. 1 crip-pler. crip-pler. To return to Christine, the little girl with the arm and shoulders turning into a stony element, she is receiving treatment treat-ment at the March of Dimes-supported Dimes-supported Arthritis Study Center Cen-ter at the University of Rochester Roch-ester School of Medicine one of four National Foundation arthritis centers around the country. Her doctors hope they are slowing the advance of calcification but the outlook at this time is not certain. Uncertainty, then, is the disquieting dis-quieting prospect facing this little girl. Her mother, Mrs. Eugene Versluis, hopes that if enough people support National Nation-al Foundation research, perhaps per-haps in time Christine's right arm will fall back where it belongs and the stoniness will disappear; and that eventually the appalling figure of 30.000 children with crippling rheu- I maioia arinruis tfatu jear ! decline. DEAR SOMEBODY I have forgotten for-gotten who I loaned my large cast iron grill to; would like to have it returned, please. Dick Hunsaker. Complete Miscellaneous stock of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Sockets, plugs, switches, fuses, recepticals, transformers, extension cords, etc. DELTA AUTO SUPPLY. Southern Utah Detective Service! 303 WEST MAIN DELTA, UTAH TELEPHONE 2601 ' PROFESSIONAL INVESTIGATORS PRIVATE CIVIL CRIMINAL DIVORCE CASES SHOPPING SERVICE COLLECTION SERVICE Carl A. Winfield CHIEF " Graduate Professional Investigators' School Los Angeles, California n SEE THE NEW . . . 616 NEW HOLLAND FORAGER BEFORE YOU BUY. NOW ON HAND HEW HOLLAND BALERS MASSEY-FERGUSON TRACTORS M & M TRACTORS mm Snap-A-Pcirf Forms 1 J KJ U W ii Y Registers and Register Forms y 3 3 2 -a V- n, 4 V tfVS V mr 3 u ; 1 i V, -Ml T& ijflf - - JZ- : m. 1 Continuous Forms iST-. tMM ' ! V )t!Ll - V ) ?if3 Salesbooks Manifold Books in. THE IVi a SHE 4 Guest Checks ft tj ,n ri lit f' lai m u I1U ly . T ' Tags kT COUNTY CHRONICLE DELTA, UTAH |