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Show CLASSIFIED RATES: 3c per word, ads, 75c column inch. Will not be insertion. FOR RESULTS, USE THE For Sale FOR SALE: Vaughn Allen home on lot 150 ft. by 200 ft., $9,500. or best offer. Contact Enid Hopkins, Delta or Vaughn Allen, 2457 Elm Ave., Suit Lake Citv, Utah. Ph. 484-4860. 210-tf FOR SALE: 19G2 Tempest 2-door hardiop. Excellent condition. Call 7!i2S evenings. 317tf NEW STOCKS Bedroom, Living Room Sets, Mattresses, Sofa Pillows, Pil-lows, Dinettes. P. Stevens Co., Furniture Fur-niture Dept. 324-47 SEE ADMIRAL COLOR TELEVISION tit low-low prices. We custom-order for vour personal likes. Or choose from our 19liG stock. Delta Auto Supply. Phone 4251. 82Ctt NOWlS THE TIME TO FERTILIZE vour lawn. Also, time to plant peas Quality Market Hardware Dept. SEE OUR NEW SPRING SHOES for Girls and Ladies ... at The PEL-MART. FOR SALE: Delta Canal water. Ph. 5120. 313-tf Svrrivv Station For lA'use MAJOR SUPPLIER Tires & Battery Consignment Professional Training Available RE YOUR OWN BOSS CALL TODAY 9771 or 4551 3l0tf SoFa BED SALE! $280.00 value-now value-now only $U!).00. Quality Market Furniture & Appliance Dept. CLOSE OUT SALE: Ladies' Dresses. $3.00 each. See our special sales table. D. Stevens Co., Ladies' Dept. NOW IS THE TIME TO FERTILIZE your lawn. Also, time to plant peas Quality Market Hardware Dept. LOSE WEIGHT safely with Dex-A- Tublets. Only )8e at Service Drug. 3il7-52 BLUE Lustre not only rids carpets of soil but leaves pile soft and lofty. lof-ty. Rent electric shampooer $1, at Quality Market. Furniture & Appliance Ap-pliance Dept. FOR SALE: 30 head bred 2 year old Hereford replacement heifers. Price $175.00 per head. Contact Wayne Gonder, Garrison, Utah. 4!7 ALONG WITH STEAKS, CHICKEN SHRIMP ON THE REGULAR MENU WE HAVE SPECIAL ON THURSDAY . . . Cltinesv FRIDAY . . . Mrxivan SATURDAY ... Pizza AT Handier VnU ONE RACK LADIES DRESSES m THE NEW EASTER LOOK AT THE DELMAR'l Little Girls' Ladies' and Teen Dresses Hand Bags, Gloves, Play Clothes Jeans, Summer Sandals and White Flats and Heels SEE OUR NEW . . , STAY-PRESS SHIRTS Tapered Shirt Tails - Short and Long Sleeve Also: NEVA PRESS SHIRTS FOR BOYS Tapered Long Tails STAY PRESS PARTS iee Our Spring Straw Hats minimum ad 50c. Ads over 5 lines 15c a line thereafter. D splay responsible for errors on phone-in ads. Use of box no. 50c extra per CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THE CHRONICLE EACH WEK. FOR SALE or RENT: 2-bedroom home, 142 North Cent or St., near new school and church. Also, nearly near-ly new electric stove. Call 33111, or see Kenneth Lake. 3 21 NOW IS THE TIME TO FERTILIZE your lawn. Also, lime to plant peas Quality Market Hardware Dept. FOR SALE: 4-inch centrifugal pump with 24-hp oircooled Wisconsin motor. mo-tor. Mounted on rubber-tired two-wheel two-wheel trailer. Call 2C51 or 890(1. 3;2i-4:7 ECHO I'HESS'D lioid Label work pants. Dressy looking. Never needs ironing. Ned's Cash Market. FOR SALE: Gyro Mower; like new. $375.00. Mary Johnson. Phone 7927. FOR SALE: Bricks. See George Bliss at Delta Apartments. Good price. 324-4j7 SAVE MONEY Buy Ladies' Berkshire Berk-shire Ultrason Hose. Sale now on at D. Stevens Co., Dry Goods Dept. KEEP carpet cleaning problems small use Blue Lustre wall to wall Rent electric shampooer $1. Quality Qual-ity Market Furniture & Appliance Dept. FOR SALE: 1951 GMC 34-ton pickup pick-up with camper. Ph. 4277. FOR SALE: 1953 Ford Tractor. In good condition. Eugene Bishop at Hinckley. 4,7 FOR SALE: 35-ft. house trailer. Excellent Ex-cellent condition. Call 7908. 4 7 BROADLEAF ALFALFA SEED for sale at the Northrup-King warehouse. ware-house. Frank Heise. 47 BUY FROM NEW STOCKS of Irrigation Ir-rigation Boots at D. Stevens Co. Shoe Dept. For Ileiat FOR RENT: Furnished opts. Utilities Utili-ties paid. $37.50 up. Some newly decorated. linens furnished or unfurnished. un-furnished. Daily, weekly or montn-ly montn-ly rates. Delta Apts., 235 West Main FOR RENT: 2-bedroom modern furnished home. Call 4-131 or see M. H. Workman. 331tf MODERN two-bedroom home for rent. Wall-to-Wall carpeting. Furnished. Furn-ished. Contact Kennard Riding oa-call oa-call 5321. 312-ltf FOR RENT: One-bedroom Apt. Furnished. Fur-nished. Call 385J1. 111311 FOR RENT or SALE: 3-bedroom modern home. Call 7985 or 5901. FOR RENT: 2-bedroom home. Call 3741. 3'31tf miscellaneous BILL'S RADIATOR SHOP: Complete radiator service, rodding, boil out, repairs. New radiator and heater cores. Used and new radiators. - 228tl WANTED HOME for German Police dog. Good with children. About 4 years old. Contact Floyd Tolbert, Abraham. 47 BROWNING COAL delivered or in yard north of overpass. Will delivei sand, gravel, sewer rock, top soil fill dirt, redimix. Call 83, Oak City, or 4531, Delta. (Brooklawn Creamery). Cream-ery). 916tl ADS FAT HOG SALE at Delta Livestock Auction, April 5, 19, May 3, 17, 31 or every other Tuesday. Sale begins at 11:00 a.m. EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING at moderate mod-erate prices. We pay postage one way. LEON'S STORE & SHOE REPAIR, RE-PAIR, Monroe, Utah. LOST: l'a year old male Siamese cat with dark face and short kinked kink-ed tail. Wandered from the Kill-pnck Kill-pnck Motor Iidge Wednesday p.m. Reward for finder at Killpack's Motor Lodge, Delta. 47 NEW STOCK DRAPE SAMPLES Custom made, reg. pleat or flow-flex. flow-flex. For free estimate call D. Stevens Ste-vens Co., Furniture Dept. 2811. 324-47 HINCKLEY Lions Club ANNOUNCE THE HINCKLEY SKATING RINK IS NOW OPEN Beginners- 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Advanced 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. Private skating parties can be arranged. Call Don Morris at 697J2 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 DR. T. R. LYMAN, Chiropractor is practicing in Fillmore at the Spinning Wheel Motel every Wednesday Wed-nesday from 2 till 8 P.M. 3;i0tf WANTED: Round dining table with ai without chairs. See Car Hoelzie oi call 7994. 47 ELECTROLUX Authorized Sales & Service. Lowell Edwards, Ph. 799J2. 42-tf Federal Land Bank Representative will be in Delta the 1st and 3rd Monday of every month at the Professional Pro-fessional Building. Appointments appreciated. Call 5971. 422-tf FURNITURE NEED REUPHOLSTERING? Have that living room set or favorite rocker re-upholstered and redesigned by Twitchell Upholstery. Upholst-ery. Twitchell's have served the Delta area for over 15 years. Their reputation for guaranteed service and quality workmanship is unsurpassed. . For free consultation in your home, drop a card today. Mr. Twitchell, with over 20 years of decorating experience will call with samples of all the latest furniture coverings and help you choose the color and fabric for your sofa or chair. Save one-half over New Furniture Furni-ture prices. TWITCHELL UPHOLSTERY 150 N. Main Cedar City NOTICE! The cost of processing pictures for publication has increased and we have adopted the following fol-lowing prices to take effect , Monday, March 14: 1 column halftone $3.00 2 column halftone $4.00 3 column halftone $5.00 In some instances prices charged charg-ed will depend on the length of the halftone, also. Millard County Chronicle 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 . . . - WE MOVED LAST FALL HAVE YOU BEEN OUT TO SEE US ? WE HA VE FOR'66 A NEW LINE OF . . . Tractors, Combines, Vindrowers and Forage Harvesters Millard County Chronicle DELTA THIRD WARD FLORA Jeanne Ashby was home from Dixie College during the quarter break. Jeanne is the daughter of M,r. and Mrs. Carl Ashby. Two other oth-er daughters, Susan anil Gerry are attending HYU. Susan is majoring in Home Ec. and Gerry is enrolled if the school of nursing. Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Richards and family were weekend guests at the Angus Meyers and the Ar- Down Yawnder Continued from front page) have stepped more completely had there been a strike. This I want to study further. I have heard there is a difference between a closed shop and a union shop. I want to know that difference, also. I want to know what a secondary picket line is. I want to know what a secondary sec-ondary boycott is. There is much along these same lines that I want to know. The afternoon pickets were pleasantly plea-santly surprised, or so they later told me, at the rather wide support sup-port the picket line had received from west Millard residents. Several Sev-eral local residents had stopped and talked with them and had more or less said "stick with it." One of the afternoon pickets, Mr. Thornton, and I discussed the repeal re-peal of 14B when he came to the Chronicle late that afternoon. He explained that unions feel that the repeal of 14B would NOT deprive a man of his right to work. When I disagreed, he pointed out that a man exercises his rights to work when he makes his decision to work on a job which has a labor contract. At the point of decision is when a person exercises his "right-to-work." You know that kinda makes sense to me. Unions don't grab men off the street or off the farms and insist they join before they can work on ANY job. I think I've been biased In this before. be-fore. In fact, I know I have. In any case, I'm through worrying worry-ing about the repeal of 14B. The way it works is rather a farce, it seems to me. Mr. Thornton and I discussed the idea of "killing the goose that lays the golden egg." I asked him if unions weren't afraid of making too many demands on businesses and through the demands causing many businesses to fold. This, he assured me, unions did discuss. We talked about the labor union walkout walk-out in Sweden just before the turn of the century and the reaction of business when it, -in turn, walked out. Labor unions have, never been as strong in that country since, even though Sweden has a socialistic social-istic government. Mr. Thornton told me that one of the biggest concerns of unions is the rapid growth of the labor force in America. The labor force is increasing at a much faster rate than union membership and he thinks this should be a cause of concern. Congressman King had told me earlier that the union mem bership was not keeping pace with the growing labor force. All in all it vrs prP'nhle dis cussion for me. I found Mr. Tin ton and his companion, Mr. Harold Lassen just ordinary people who think unions are important to our way of life. Incidentally, I had talked with a friend, highly respected in this area, on two seperate days of the picketing. Just prior to the settlement settle-ment this friend said "I'm pro-union. When I was a younger man 1 worked in a mine. Everytime something some-thing went wrong at the mine the owners got their mules out first because they cost him $75.00 to $100.00 each." My friend continued that he thought that unions were now in need of regulations much as business needed regulation earlier ear-lier in this century. Interesting comment, I thought. GIRLS' STATE The legion Auxiliary's Girls' State Candidates Tea was a very nice affair last Thursday evening. The endidates, all fourteen, presented pre-sented a varied and interesting program. iner Thursday, March 31, 1966 AREA HEWS BRIEFS WOOD jaan Dekkers. Whitie and Elaine wore happy to have them over for breakfast and dinner, and were especially es-pecially glad that Angus was well enough that he and Freda could come with them. The guests stayed the night with the Meyers. Doris Dekker, who has been attending at-tending the I.DS Business College, was home for the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arjaan Dekker, Robert and Margaret. Fred Gavin has been a patient at the Veteran's Hospital in Salt Lake. He has been in serious condition. con-dition. We hope he is better now. Kent Callister, son of Mr. and Mrs. Latbal Callister, who is a returned re-turned missionary from the Alaskan-Canadian mission, was honored at Sacrament Meeting Sunday evening. ev-ening. He gave a fine report of his missionary experiences. His father gave a few remarks and members of his family rendered a musical number. It's nice to have Kent back with us. Thee will be a .Temple excursion for the young people of the ward on Saturday, April 2, 1966. Elwin and Grayce Pace spent the weekend in Las Vegas. Earl Willden was in Delta for the weekend on business. It's nice to have you come back once in a while and visit with us. Don and Ada Rosner, and Jerry spent a few days in Delta visiting with relatives and friends. Jerry reports that they have bought a new home in Texas, and she thinks she will like it better than the a-partment, a-partment, 22 stories high, where she has lived in Chicago. Sounds to me like she is still a "country girl." Mcrylon Erckson has bought Ada Rosner's home. We want to welcome wel-come this family into our area. Roger Bliss has bought Vaughn Allen's home, so we will soon be having these fine people with us. Ronnie Bailey, son of Shirlee Bailey, spent the weekend with his family in Delta. Ronnie is attending attend-ing Snow College. The Young Married's Square Dance was held Saturday night. Glen Rawlinson did the calling. Enough people attended to make 2' a squares, so some rested while others danced. Refreshments were served after everyone was all tuckered tuck-ered out. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Moody have a new granddaughter, born to Jack and Andrea Nielson of Leamington. Her name is Heather, and this now makes four grandchildren for the Moody's. Mary took care of the other children while Andrea was in the hospital. .. .Pamela Booth won 4th place with her entry in the Science Symposium Sympos-ium at the U. of U., held March 17. This was quite an honor and should have been part of last week's news. Pamela is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken (Myrna) Booth and the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Or-vil Or-vil Turner. Roger Davis won the trophy for the most valuable player at the Sr. M-Men Tournament held at Gunnison. Gun-nison. There were 64 teams who entered en-tered in the competition. Gaylen, Tlow is the Time to be IninhittG Ijout Commercial Printing: little Debra, and his parents, Mr: and Mrs. Tarn Davis are proud of him, and so are wo. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dalton, members mem-bers of our ward who have been taking the class, "Project Temple," will go to the Manti Temple this week. Congratulations. Leland Sanderson is still a patient pa-tient at the IDS Hospital in Salt Lake, but is reported to be feeling better. Bernice will be staying in Salt Lake where she can visit him as often as possible. Mrs. Cloy Alldredge is returning to Missouri after having visited in Delta with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Law, and Cloy's parents, par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Alldredge Her mother drove her to Salt Lake Monday to meet the plane. Clarence Gowers is recovering from an operation in the I.DS Hospital. 32 J0 4J3 THURSDAY, MARCH 31 THROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL 9 j Baker Pharmacy j I DELTA THE FOLLOWING VARIETIES OF SEED GRAIN ARE AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BARLEY Gem, Velvon, Trebi, Bonneviile -WHEAT- Komar -OATS- Swedish Selected, Overland Park MORRISON & COMPANY ONE MILE NORTH OF DELTA PHONE 5691 (yflittCj PiintiiHj Tleeis LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES POST CARDS IMPRINTED WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS (Large stock to choose from best quality) MOST ALL TYPES BUSINESS FORMS HANDBILLS-DODGERS FAREWELL TESTIMONIALS TICKETS-PERSONAL CARDS PRESCRIPTION BLANKS RECEIPT BOOKS STATEMENTS LODE LOCATION BOOKS BOUND (20 originals, 20 duplicates, 2 carbons) PLACER CLAIMS LEGAL PAPERS Prices Taken from Nationally Used FRANKLIN PRINTING CATALOG. ' PUBLISHERS OF THE MILLARD CGUHTY CHRONICLE i Mr. and Mrs. Jan Wright, Patricia Pat-ricia and Marge drove to St. Louis, Mo., where they visited with their son and brother, Larry and family. ' Larry is finishing his first year of residency at the Barnes Hospital there. He will leave on the 25ih of June for the National Institute of , Health, a Navv research hospital, at Bethesda, Md., where he will train for two more years. They also, al-so, visited the City of Nauvoo, and Mark Twain's home at Hannibal, Mo. On their way home they visit-i visit-i ed in Denver with Mary's brother, I Carl Smith and his family, j Paul Moody, student at BYU, vis-j vis-j ited for the weekend with his par- c-nts, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Moody, j Well, what do you know, not a j single item about the Wood fam-I fam-I ily this week. I'm afraid they are I getting a little "camera shy" when they talk to me. I may have to I stail asking the neighbors. 1c I ran Lemhi Your Case Machinery Dealer |