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Show Millard County Chronicle Thursday, January 31, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED RATES: 2c per word, minimum ad 50c. Ads over 5 lines 15c a line thereafter. D splay ads, 75c column inch. Will not be responsible for errors on phone-in ads. Use of box no. 50c extra per insertion. FOR RESULTS. USE THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THE CHRONICLE EACH WEK. DEADLINE: (AGGREGATIONS) By Bob and Inez Ooinicermis M WHO'S GOT TROUBLES? Ever felt that you were in a certain cer-tain place in body but not in spirit? spir-it? Something went completely haywire at the Chronicle front office of-fice last week. After managing to squash a few rumors concerning the two recent meetings on the CAPS program, we ran into more, which completely threw us. So that's why we say we were here in body and not in spirit. Things got lost or placed in a purse for safekeeping. Things like notices from Jolly Stitchers about an "open house" program, which was presented last Friday at the Delta High School; letters from a very good friend, School Board member, Alta Ashby; and we don't know what else! (Truth of the matter is, we're afraid to inquire or look around!) Anyway, Mrs. Ashby's letter is included in this issue. And our heads are hanging low and we're in sackcloth and ashes. THE PARADOX OF CAPITALISM The Paradox of Capitalism by Richard S. Morrison is a discussion of certain of the inner contradictions contradic-tions of our system of free capitalism capital-ism and how they may be resolved. resolv-ed. The book, 52 pages, was published pub-lished at the Chronicle Publishing Co. We haven't read all of it. In fact, all we've read is the foreword. fore-word. But, this is just enough to whet our appetites. In Mr. Morrison's Mor-rison's column, "Once-Over", he gives his reasons for writing the book. In his own words his column col-umn this week contains quite a bit of "guff". We found this amusing am-using and rather out of character. We recommend "Once Over" for interesting reading every week, but this week is special. "The Paradox Par-adox of Capitalism" will be on sale at the Chronicle Feb. 1. FIRST WARD AREA NEWS BRIEFS LEONA Dogs lose lion, or lion loses dogs. Bob Oppenheimer (who works for the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service) and a group of men, including Bryce Bunker of Delta were hunting hunt-ing lions over near Scipio, a week ago Monday. They found a lion's trail and turned Bob's two valuable hunting dogs loose for the hunt. The lion had gone over the cliffs so the dogs did the same. They saw no more of lion or dogs. They hunted for a week. Last Sunday they found them five mile9 south of Scipio on the red ledges. They heard them bark and then spotted them. To get them back to safety they lowered a man down on ropes. The dogs were then brot up one at a time on the ropes to the top. They were hungry and cold as they had nothing to eat but snow for a week. Bob was happy and very lucky to find his dogs. I'll bet the dogs were glad to be found am. rescued. These dogs were valuea at $800. Other men to assist with the rescue from Delta were Bernard Bern-ard Owens and Jack Terry. Jack was the one who was lowered on the ropes. There were also two men from Kanosh. Albert Nickle is a patient at the Delta hospital. He had an appendectomy appen-dectomy last Thursday. Mrs. Rosebeth Kennington and daughters, Nadine and Paula from Tooele were here to visit with Albert Al-bert and other members of the Nickle family Sunday. Scott Nickle has received his call to labor in the Irish Mission. He wll enter the mission home March 11. He has been going to school at the BYU. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Sperry were Salt Lake visitors last Thursday and Friday. Sacrament meeting Sunday nite was given by the newly installed officers of the Relief Society and Young Ladies Mutual. Talks were given by Mrs. Bird of the Relief Society and Betty Jeffery, Sybil Jensen and Shirley Jeffery. The choir sang a special number. Don Knight and Keith Johnson were advanced ad-vanced to a priest in the Aaronic Priesthood. Students home from CSU at Cedar Ce-dar were Bruce and Jean Taylor. They went back after attending church at Sutherland Sunday nite where their cousin Elder Howard Clayton reported his mission. He recently returned from Alaska-Canada Mission. Mrs. Blanch Works, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith and Raelyn, Mr. and Mrs. Seth Jackson and Sheldon, Mrs. LaMont Works and Jessie and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hardy and family fa-mily were in Holden Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Stevens Ste-vens for a birthday dinner for Mrs. Delbert Crapo. Mr. and Mrs. Crapo's three boys were with them, Kent, Trent and Loy. Miss Linda Skidmore. a teacher at a school in Huntington spent the weekend with Mrs. Carrie Black. She also attended the wedding of Frances Kay Black and Douglas Mecham at Deseret. Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Newell Iverson are Lonnie and Phyllis Hansen and young son, Ray mond. They arrived Sunday night from Fort Angeles, Wash. They will be here until after Shirley Rae's wedding reception Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Goodwin from Ely, Nev.. visited Saturday with the Newell Iversons. Mr. Goodwin is Mrs. Iverson's brother. NEW CITY BUILDING AND POST OFFICE: Does the City of Delta need a new city building and post office? This and other questions regarding regard-ing the proposed building seems to be the big topic on the streets of Delta these days. We would like to see a new city building. This is partly due to the fact that the present building is obsolete and in poor repair. How do we know? We can see the outside walls from our back windows and take no delight, AT ALL, in the cracked walls and loosened brick! We can just see us having to move the press some week because the next door building build-ing has fallen into our backshop! Do we need a new post office? Can't say. We have no objection to new buildings, if they can be paid for. We have been assured by members of city council and Mayor May-or Church that the rental received from the U.S. Postal Dept. would pay for a new post office building. build-ing. Then we run smack up into something that we have always abhorred. Government competing with private enterprise, in this instance in-stance city government competing with a local taxpayer. So we don't know. We only know for sure that at this moment, it s raining outside out-side and the date set for the special spec-ial bond election is Tues., March 5. NEW LIGHTS: We are extremely pleased to learn that Delta City will soon be getting new lights in the residential resident-ial area. We think that the town will be greatly benefited with more street lighting. THOUGHT: Animals are such agreeable friends . . . they ask no questions! They pass no criticisms! (Compliments (Compli-ments of Western Newspaper Union). Un-ion). WORKS Mr. and Mrs. Lee Millwee (Patsy Thomas) called her father Charlie Thomas on his birthday Jan. 23rd to wish him a happy birthday. They have five boys who sang "Happy B.rthday" to Grandfather over the telephone. They live in Sacramento Calif. Tuesday night Jan. 23 the child ren of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Thorn-1 as came to have ice cream and cake with them and wish him hap- ' py birthday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tomas, Mr. and Mrs. Buss Thomas and Mr. and, Mrs. Dean Warnick. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas received ' word of the birth of a baby girl . born in the Holy Cross Hospital In Salt Lake to Dale and Linda Hatton Booth. This is the first great-grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas. Jerry Huff from CSU visited with Mr. and Mrs. Bud Huff and Marsha over the weekend. Visitors at the Brog Hopkins home for the weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ashton of Salt Lake and Dan Iverson from Dugway. Our sympathy goes out to the Leslie Webb family on the loss of their mother. We all remember the Boyd BMurray family that lived in our ward some years ago. They lived where Kennard Riding lives. Mrs. Murray was a daughter of the Webbs. Also our neice Wanda Kenney is married to their son Ronald Webb. Witnesses Slate Spring Confab Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kozina, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Wheeler, Mr. Milton will be among the hundreds in attendance at the spring semiannual semi-annual circuit convention of Jehovah's Jeho-vah's Witnesses to be held in the Utah State Fairgrounds Coliseum, Salt Lake City, Feb. 8 to 10. Donald Kozina, presiding minister of the Delta congregation, remarked, remark-ed, "Jehovah's Witnesses always look forward to these Bible gatherings. gather-ings. With the world in such a chaotic mess and people fearing an atonre annihilation, it's vigorat-ing vigorat-ing and vigorating to meet with people who put all their faith and trust in God. Too many people today to-day have such a distorted view of faith and so put their trust in material ma-terial things and the wisdom of frail mankind." Further Mr. Kozina said, "The convention theme will be 'Right Kind of Ministers' and the program will include a variety of talks on1 vital Bible subjects and actual de- monstrations that will help U9 to advance our individual Christian Bible educational service. Since Jehovah's Je-hovah's Witnesses devote much time to house-to-house visitations, these points will help us in our daily ministerial activities and will stimulate us to stay awake and remain active ministers in these critical last days." Sunday afternoon Mr. Kozina will g've a 30-minute talk on the subject "How Strong Is Your Faith?" The featured speaker fvr this circuit convention will be John P. Sutherland of Brooklyn, New York, district supervisor. He will deliver the climax Bible discourse on Sunday Sun-day afternoon at 3 p.m. on the topic "Who Will Win the Struggle For World Supremacy?" (SOME POPULATIONS AT RISE) Health Is a state of complete physical, mental and social well- being and not merely the absense of disease or infirmity. Health is an indivisible unit which is one and the same time mental, physl cal and social. The general public knows what is meant by the physical phy-sical aspects of health; some know of the mental aspect of health, but the area of health that needs the most exposition is the social area. In the social area study groups of people or populations are studied rather than the individual. The job of public health mental health is preventive. Prevention covers many areas: (1) rehabilita tion; (2) limitation of disability; I (3) early case finding, early diagnosis, diag-nosis, early treatment; (4) specific protection; (5) promotion of mental men-tal health. The broadest form of prevention is mental health promotion. In this promotion, trained personnel try to give families information and un ; derstanding that they can give to , their children, so that children will be spared some of the problems i that beset us at present. If the promotion succeeds or a community communi-ty is made more aware of mental health, many people with mental problems will not be forced down the spectrum of prevention to the area of rehabilitation. Re habilita-tion habilita-tion is more expensive in time and money expended that prevention. There are many groups of people whom the public health mental health could help, but more pilot studies are necessitated because of the few trained personnel in the field of mental health. It is known from experience and ongoing research re-search that there are definite populations pop-ulations at special risk in the field of mental health. First area is juvenile delinquency. Sheldon and Eleanor Gluecks at Harvard, a husband and wife research re-search team have been working on the problems of juvenile delinquency delin-quency for about thirty years. During Dur-ing this time they have compiled a list of predictive criteria, criteria by whch to . predict children are most likely to become adjucated as juvenile delinquents. During their studies they have found that the first best single criterion is not a broken home, this is second, but an adjudication of one or both of the parents as either juvenile, delinquents delin-quents when they were young or as adult cnm nals when they were older. Dr. A. D. Swartz, Chief, Mental Men-tal Health Service of the California State Department of Public Health, suggests that if schools are to help prevent children from becoming de- j unquents more work should be done with those children whose parents are known to have had trouble w.th the law. Such a procedure pro-cedure would prevent spreading the efforts of the too few professional profes-sional personnel too thinly. A recent study on suicide, done n Los Angeles, shows that of the series of successful suicides 75 had either attempted suicide previously pre-viously or had threatened suicide, or both. More studies on the prevention pre-vention of successful suicides are needed. A third population risk is related to suicide but is also in the area of sociology and city planning. Studies have been made in various cities showing that the suicide, alcoholism and mental illness rates are higher in the center of a city. The rate decreases in the suburbs,. A rash statement? Not as rash as it sounds and worth thinking a-bout a-bout in preventing mental disorders. disord-ers. In the hubbub of city living a person can be isolated, yet surrounded sur-rounded with many people. Suicide, alcoholism and mental illness are all symbols, symbols of social deterioration, de-terioration, the result of social isolation. iso-lation. In the early 1940's came the knowledge that German measles in the first trimester of pregnancy could cause congenital malformations, malforma-tions, that congenital malformations malforma-tions are not necessarily the result of hereditary factors, but may in fact be due to intra-uterine prenatal prena-tal factors. It was reasoned that if German measles could cross the placental barrier and do harm to the child, so then might maternal BLM Schedules Refresher Course O .-"Q.n Vtllki S J fessonal personnel of the U. S.I tsureau oi Land Management in Utah, Wyoming and Idaho, will attend at-tend a special one-week refresher course on the Utah State University campus in Logan between January 28 and February 1. The course has been arranged jointly by the Utah State University Univer-sity Extension Services and the BL-M BL-M Utah State Office, according to R. D. Nielson, BLM State Director for Utah. The intensive week-long course will include such topics as range ecology, soils of Utah, watershed and soil relations, forestry, range techniques, range nutrition, big game-livestock relations, rodent and rabbit problems, range improvements, im-provements, range economics, and research plann'ng. Such a course Is intended to assist BLM professional employees in becoming acquainted with latest research and techniques to make them better able to administer ad-minister the national land reserve in the western states, Mr. Nielson noted. Attending from the Fillmore District Dist-rict Office will be: Nyles L. Humphrey. Humph-rey. David S. Orr, and Lloyd K. Schlappi. anoxia, physical damage to the mother and hormonal imbalance of the mother. Recent studies indicate that the amount of difficulty that a child will have or cause after he is born is correlated with the a-mount a-mount of difficulty that the mother had in her pregnancy before he was born. What this really means is that babies bom to mothers who have an inordinately large amount of intermittent spotting, threatened threaten-ed abortion and premature delivery are more likely to have mental deficiency, de-ficiency, brain-damage type of epilepsy and brain-damage type of behavior disorder. Children who are physically and emotionally deprived of mothering make up another type of population popula-tion at risk in good mental health. The unwed mother with guilt feelings feel-ings and an unresolved hatred of the child's father is in a group which can be expected to have problems that will interfere with their mothering their young. Work with the unwed mother, both to help her give up the child in some instances and to keep the child where she is able, might bring rich rewards in preventing some psychosomatic psy-chosomatic illnesses, some schizophrenia schizo-phrenia and some behavior disorders. dis-orders. THIRD WAHD AREA NEWS BEA WILLDEN News just doesn't seem to come my way. Maybe I should stay closer clos-er to the phone. Was all upset by the untimely accident that happened In Mes-quite, Mes-quite, Nev. And our sympathy goes to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrpnro Rnnlrpr and those who are bereaved by it. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bunker went to Mesauite to bf with tho fnmilv. Mr. and Mrs. Red rick FarkrAll nf Springville also came to Delta and wem on to Mesquite. They returned return-ed to Delta Tuesday morning. Miss Bonnie Willden was home over the weekend. Mrs. Vauahn Allen visited in Salt Lake over Sunday. Mrs. Al Willden. Mrs. Zola Lam- bright and Mrs. Richard Hare went to Salt Lake Monday to take Bonnie Bon-nie back to school. Stonnert in O- rem and pxked up Deon Searle, who is also attending Excelsis Beauty School. Zola and I stopped in Salt Lake long enough to look up a friend who we hadn't seen in some 30-odd years. She lived in Delta as a young gal. Mrs. Hilda (Davenport) Cornell. And we are looking forward for-ward to a longer visit in the near future. After all, there's a lot of catching up to do. We also stopped in and saw the Harvey Keele family. Also brought Millie home with us. Had a very enjoyable day. Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Talbot and chree children are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Leland Sanderson and family. fa-mily. Sugnrville VENICE DAVIS Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Losee and family and Mr. and Mrs. Alden Shurtz made a trip to Salt Lake for a visit with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Memmott. Their father had sureerv in one of thp Salt Lake hospitals last week. Doris Abbott had a short visit with her son Vance, of Spanish Fork during the week. Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Oliver and Larry made a trip to Salt Lake for a visit With their son Carl nnd family. They have a new home and are geuing settlea in it. Joy Barben and family from Yucalpa, Calif., with her parents came up for the funeral of her husband, hus-band, Charlie Barben and stayed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davis. Sunday night the program was given by the bishopric. Talks were given by Elizabeth Hinckley, Barbara Bar-bara Losee, Rom Shields and Roy Losee and remarks by Bishop Shurtz. A good crowd was in attendance. at-tendance. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Lundgreen and daughter Shiela and son Rex visited Sunday with their children Mr. and Mrs. Donald Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Davis made a trip to Salt Lake with a load of iron Thursday and the children returned home with them. Mr. and Mrs. Harlon Stone and family had their recommends read in church Sunday evening. We are happy to welcome these good people peo-ple to our ward. COMMUNITY CHURCH NEWS A group of students from Wasatch Wa-satch Academy will be in Delta next Sunday to conduct services at the Community Church at 11:00 o'clock. All are welcome to come and worship with us. Sunday School classes are conducted con-ducted every Sunday morning at 10:00 o'clock. USAIR FORCE THE AEROSPACE TEAM Se your local Air Forea Recruiter For Sale FOR SALE: Spinet Piano this area. Take over small monthly payments. pay-ments. For more details write, Credit Manager, Box 148, Sugar House Station, Salt Lake City, Ut. 131-214 ICE SKATES Boys' and Girls' at Quality Market Hardware Dept. FOR SALE: 60-ton of good threshed thresh-ed chaff. Contact Morris Hopkins or phone 885J2. 2U Lt. Carl L. Oliver Now at Ft. Douglas First Lieutenant Carl L. Oliver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse L. Oliver, of Delta, reported to his new assignment as-signment this week as Air Force Officer Training School procurement procure-ment officer in Air Force Recruiting Recruit-ing Detachment 608, headquartered at Fort Douglas. Lieutenant Oliver is a graduate of Delta High School and later graduated from Brigham Young University where he majored in music education. During his school years he served two years on an LDS Church mission in the northern north-ern states from 1953 to 1955. Lieutenant Oliver entered active duty in the Air Force In October 1958 from the Reserve Officers Training Corps, Brigham Young University. He was transferred to Fort Douglas from an assignment at Malstrom AFB, Great Falls, Mont., as deputy director of personnel, per-sonnel, 341st Strategic Missile Wing. While stationed at Malstrom, Lieutenant Oliver served as branch president of the LDS Church for the base. He and his wife, former Kristen Mathews of Provo, and their two children, Alice, 4 and Karen, 2, are living in Salt Lake. Calling 4-11'crs Here is an opportunity to serve the West Millard Hospital program. All 4-H'er's are being asked by the 4-H Council to collect S&H and Gold Strike Trading Stamps from parents and friends and turn them in to the council member in your community or the Delta office of the County Extension Service. These stamps Wjll be used in purchasing pur-chasing kitchen utensils and other small items for the new hospital. This will also give 4-H'ers a Community Com-munity Service project for their record re-cord books. 4-H Council members are Venice Lovell, Oak City; Louise Lovell, Lynndyl-Leamington; Louise Allen, Cameron Adams and Lionel Taylor, Delta; Delma Jean Galli, Hinckley; Bertha Owens, Sutherland; Rae Jensen, Deseret-Oasis. Start collecting now. LIVESTOCK QUOTES By Win Wolker Jan. 29.1963 . Cattle salable, 500. Hogs salable, 200. 100 head of fat steers and heifers heif-ers led today's market. 25 of the run was commerc.al cows with a good supply of standard cows. The market was off cent on most of the slaughter cattle. Bulls showed a decline of 1 cent. Feeders were strong with a light run. Top for today was a 950 lb. heif er fed by Dr. M. A. Lyman and purchased pur-chased by Joe Doctorman for $26.-10. $26.-10. Choice steers brot from $25.50 to $25.90. Good $24. to $25.25. Commercial Com-mercial $22.50 to $24. Holsteins $19.-10 $19.-10 to $23.10. Feeders $23.10 to $27.-75. $27.-75. 50 head, 650 lb. brot $25.20. Choice heifers $25.10 to $26.20. Good $23.50 to $25. Crossbreeds averaged $24. Feeders $21.85 to $25.60. Holsteins, fat $19.40 to $21.-20. $21.-20. Cows, standard $15.85 to $17.80. Commercial $14. to $15.80. Dairy kind $13.90 to $15. Canners $11.25 to $13. Springers by head $208.; pairs, $170. Bulls, $15.50 to $17.80. Most of calves sold by head. Veal, $25. Hogs, top, $16.20. Fine Arts Club The Delta Fine Arts Club was entertained by hostesses Alta Ash-by Ash-by and Cleo Eliason on Monday, evening, January 28. Dinner was served at Hatch's City Cafe to twenty members and guests. After dinner the group met at the home of Alta Ashby where the program was given by Mrs. Adrian Ad-rian Hansen. She told of her experiences ex-periences in Mexico last summer. Those present were Harriet Eliason, Elia-son, Mary Wright, Orvetta Nickle, Lorna Bunker, Deona Black, Lenore Gardner, Evelyn Roblson, Betty Turner, Norma Pearson, Estelle Gardner, Louise Lyman, Barbara Ashby, Cleo Eliason, Alta Ashby, and LaRue Nickle, members; Frances Fran-ces Whicker, Louise Lisonbee, Beverly Bev-erly El ason, Delores Ogden and Adrian Hansen, guests. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Booth of Salt Lake City announce the Dirth oi a daughter, born Jan. 25 at the Holy Cross Hospital, we ghing 6 lbs. 13 oz. Proud grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Zen Boothe of Delta and Mr.! and Mrs. Donald Hatton of Kanosh. Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Cal Boothe. i PLYWOOD SPECIALS i-in. 4x7 Mahogany Pre-finished Panels at only $2.99 V4-in. 4x8 only $4.99. Grant Church & Son, Delta. INEXPENSIVE Engine Heerte'S Keep your car, truck, tractor engine eng-ine warm thru the night. Costs' less than 4c a night. Delta Auto Supply. Sup-ply. 1213tf she Morris Supply IN HINCKLEY FOR Stokcrmatic Sales Service AND RCA Television and Appliances ADMIRAL TELEVISION and Stereo. Fine quality, long life. We have over 150 UHF sets in Millard County. Coun-ty. A limited number of good used TVs available. Delta Auto Supply. 1213tf GATES TIRES New and Recapped Close Out Sale LOVELL & ROPER Phone 2301 SALES & SERVICE FOR SALE: Portable Oster Pipe Machine, with quick opening dies, Vi" to 2". David Jacobs. Phone 3851. l3tf WINTERIZE your car motor with Wynns Casite Bardahl STP Rislone CD2. We stock them all. Delta J-uto Supply 419-tf FOR SALE: Three bedroom home with two baths. Contact Heber Curtis Cur-tis at 5400 Evergreen, Las Vegas, Nevada. ll29tf PLYWOOD SPECIALS Vvm. 4x7 Mahogany Pre-finished Panels at only $2.99 -in. 4x8 only $4.99. Grant Church & Son, Delta. CLOSE OUT SALE on Winter Merchandise Mer-chandise at HALF Price. Men's and Boys' Winter Coats; 1 lot Men's j Suits; 1 lot Men's Pants; Men's Sweaters; Boys Sweaters. D. Stevens Ste-vens Co. LINOLEUM: Sandran needs no scrubbing. January Clearance. $1.29 per sq. yard. Workman's Home Furnishings. PLYWOOD SPECIALS 4-in. 4x7 Mahogany Pre-finished Panels at only $2.99 Vi-in. 4x8 only $4.99. Grant Church & Son, Delta. $1 per day rental for Electric Carpet Car-pet Shampooer with purchase of Blue Lustre. At Workman's Home Furnishings. JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE on Bedroom Suites and Mattresses at Workman's Home Furnishings CLOSE OUT SALE ON WINTER Merchandise. See sale tags on our rummage table. D. Stevens Co. FOR SALE: 3-bedroom home, 34 basement, central heating system, double garage, patio, beautiful lot, good location. See Ken Clements or call 2861. ll29tf WEBCO Aluminum Siding, special prce $65.00 per square, applied. We will not be undersold by outside applicators. Valley Builders, Delta. 712tf FOR SALE: 1953 Plymouth; good condition; good rubber, $125.00. Inquire In-quire at Morris Merc, H.nckley or write Mr. Stewart, Box 262 Hinckley. Hinck-ley. lllOtf JANUARY 31 TO FEBRUARY 4 BOYS' GIRLS' SHIRTS I DRESSES ONE GROUP $1.44 each MEN'S i WMtPiuSMrk I REG. $6.98 $4.99 REG. $5.98 rr CLOSE OUT ON Winter Merchandise Merchan-dise at HALF Price. Ladies' Coats; Girls' Coats; Children's Coats; Pre-Teen Pre-Teen Sweaters; Ladies' Sweaters. D. Stevens Co. FOUND: A watch. Owner may reclaim re-claim by identifying watch and paying for this ad. Call 373J1. WILL TAKE A LIMITED number of piano students. Call Mrs. Joe Moody, 317J1. 131-27 UNPAINTED FURNITURE: 4-drow- er, 5-drawer chests; 3-drawer nite stand. Finished Maple Chests in 4-drawer and 9-drawer. Workman's Home Furnishings. BATTERIES All sizes on hand Group 1, exchange, from $9.95. Guaranteed 12 to 48 months. KELLY KEL-LY SERVICE, Phone 3791, Delta, Utah. 323tf PRATT & LAMBERT Ready-Mixed Paint. Close out, assorted colors, $3.98 gallon; $1.49 quart. Workman's Work-man's Home Furnishings. WHY hunt any further. Shop at Quality Market Hardware. For Rent FOR REUT: Furnished Apt. Phone 3662, 295 South, 4th West. 27 LOVELY LARGE 2-bedroom home with basement; automatic heating and air conditioning; garage; disposal. dis-posal. Available Jan. 27. Can be seen by appointment. David Jacobs, Jac-obs, Call 3851. 391 W 2nd South, or 217 South 4th West. Also, cozy 1-bedroom furnished apt. l3tf FOR RENT: Furn'shed modern 2- bedroom home; also, furnished 1-bedroom 1-bedroom home. Phone 4431 or 3261 or see M. H. Workman. lllltf FOR RENT: Modern 2-bedroom home; wall to wall carpet; garage; gar-age; partly furnished. $35 a month. See Kennard Riding or Call 5321. l17tf Miscellaneous CLEARANCE on all Appl'ances. Prices cut to fit your needs. Workman's Work-man's Home Furnishings. AVAILABLE for income tax work. See or call Ladd Black, 332J1. l24tf LOST: 3 Hereford cows branded 7K or VH left hip. Lost in vicinity of South Tract area. Elwin Pace, Call 2291. l31tf LOST: 1 Jeep truck wheel and tire, 7:50x16 (between the river and Delta). Finder contact Frank Bishop or leave at West Millard Co-op. 1220-tf WE CARRY a complete line of transistor rad o batteries, also Channelmaster transistor radios. Channelmaster gives excellent performance per-formance in our area. Delta Auto Supply. l10tf GET READY for wnter Radiate, recored, new core, complete service. ser-vice. Get it done now before winter sets in. Bill's Radiator Shop. 927tf BROWNING COAL delivered or in yard north of overpass. W 11 deliver sand, gravel, sewer rock, top soil fill dirt, redimix. Call 83, Oak City, or 4531, Delta. (Brooklawn Creamery). Cream-ery). 96tf WE WILL AUCTION FoTand Feed- er Hogs every other Tuesday at 11 o'clock. Feb. 12 and 26; March 12. Bring them in early as our regular regu-lar cattle sale will follow the hog auction. Delta Livestock Auction-Phone Auction-Phone 2361. 518-tf ONE GROUP Vz Discount LADIES' 1 1 I r mm tm m AHrvLtli REG. 59c 1 2 pair $1.00 |