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Show THE MIDVALE SENTINEL (Utah) Pag Three Friday; Noivmlrr 26, 1954 lAJedt was emcee for the program, while Mrs Westwood acted as show sec- Jordan retary. ji 1 Mrs. AGNES DANSIE, Reporter Phone Mid. 4203 The The family of Parley Spratling sponsored a fund raisin ing at project connection with their met home for Thanksgiving yesterday. Dinner was served to Mr meeting last Wednesday evening by Si Mrs Don Parr, Mr & Mrs Max, showing a moving picture, "I Was Snratlins? Mr & Mr William Twf ' a .Male War Bride", and by selling Salt Lake, and Mr & Mrs John Hen-son- , refreshments. The directors of the Herriman Iralso of Salt Lake. . Mr & Mrs Dean Bateman and rigation company held their meetfamily left Saturday morning for ing at the home of Thomas S. ButSan Gabriel, Calif., to spend the terfield Wednesday. Mrs Joe llarvath and daughter, Thanksgiving holidays with Mrs Bateman's family, the D. E. Greers. Reno. Nev, are visiting her parThe Mia Maids and Explorers of ents, Mr ic Mrs Arthur W. Crane. the Second ward attended a fire- Mrs Crane underwent an operation side chat Sunday night at the home Friday at a Salt Lake hospital. The literature lesson at the IDS of Janett Finlayson. Colored pictures of Swenden were shown by Relief Society was presented by Mrs Alice Bodell last Tuesday. Markus Holngren. Mrs Lancilot Bills, Riverton, visThe First ward Primary graduatited her daughter and family, Mr & ed four boys and two girls into the Mrs Douglas Butterfield last Wedpriesthood and MIA work last Sunday night. The graduates were: nesday. Mrs Emery Barrett, Mrs Hershel-EgberTommy Warner, Richard Egbert, and Mrs Mark Nichols, RivIvan Richardson, Seth Anderson, Mrs Spencer Miller visited erton, Coleen Wilcox, and Coleen Bishop Howard Barben of last Tuesday evening. the miscellaneous the Second ward was the main of Miss Jo Ann in honor shower speaker. at McKean's Caterthe Christensen Thirty-fou- r children of the hisLake ing in Salt Thursday evening tory class of the First, ward junior were Mrs Martha Christensen, Mrs Sunday School went on an excurMrs Fern Poor, Mrs sion of the Sons of Utah Pioneers Grace Walker, Mrs Dot Miller, and Museum in Sugarhouse last Friday. Mary Crane, Mrs Lucy Miller and daughter, MarThose accompanying the class were Ross Ashworth, Mrs Henry F. garet. Mrs Alice Bodell and Roberta Schmidt, and Mrs Paul D. Schmidt. and Evelyn Crane attended the A son was born to Mr & Mrs Kenmeeting of the Utah Womens Legisneth M. Williams, November 17. Mrs Argyle McDougal and chil- lative Council at the DUP building dren have been spending the last in Salt Lake last Thursday morning. Mrs Spencer Miller called on two weeks in New Mexico and Arizona. They left Nov. 14 with Mrs Orson Miller at a hospital in Salt Kathryn Johnson of Canada, and Lake last Wednesday. Officers and teachers of the LDS they expect to be home Sunday. Darlene Bytheway, Vivian Hal Primary attended the West Jordan verson, and Connie Coon were stake Trimary preparation meeting among the thousands of skiers that Friday afternoon at the Riverton took to slopes last Saturday. They Second ward. Stephaine Bodell, daughter of Mr spent .their time at Brighton. Out of town guests who attend- Si Mrs Kent Bodell, spent the weeked the wedding of Miss Barbara end with Mr Si Mrs Delbert in Salt Lake. Jean Cole to Leon D. Dance, at Ardell Miller attended the & Mrs Mr Mrs included Mooreland, Ida., Ross Bateman, Mr & Mrs Horace Rose society meeting at the Social Young, Mr & Mrs Roy Bateman; Center of the Lion House in Salt Mr & Mrs Edmund McDougal, Mr Lake. She also attended a party & Mrs Ronald Fowlks, Delorcs at the home of Mrs Mary Kalikakis Fowlks, Marian Holman, Mr & Mrs in Salt Lake Thursday. Mr St Mrs W. E. Crane attended Jess Johnston, Mrs Jane Maynard, & Mrs Jane E. Williams, and Mr the wedding of Mr & Mrs Dale N. Shelton in Provo last Friday eveMrs Wendell Holmes. ning. They were accompanied by Mr St Mrs David Armstrong, Census P-T- ROSEMARIE SCHMIDT, Reporter Phone Mid. 0080-R- 1 Mrs Emma Lee Drake left today for Chicago to attend the National Club Congress. She was chosen as the outstanding leader in the state to represent Utah along with about 16 boys and girls. They will be gone 10 days. The 85th birthdays of Mrs Marie Schmidt and her twin sister, Mrs Sophia Dittmer of Salt Lake, were celebrated Saturday night at a family dinner at the home of Mr & Mrs Joseph Schmidt. Following dinner colored slides were shown. Those present besides the honored guests were John J. F. Schmidt, Mr k Mrs Frank Schmidt, Mr & Mrs Paul Schmidt, Mr & Mrs Henry Schmidt, Mr & Mrs Charles Schmidt, and Mr & Mrs Robert Pix-toDraper. In early December Marv Jenson and Rex Layne will go by plane to Germany for Rex's next fight. On their return home Marv will stay lr. New York and await the arrival of Gene Fullmer. Mrs Jenson expects to leave for New York to meet her husband Dec. 15, and they plan to return home Dec. 22. Boyd Nielson and Ronald Drake were special guests at the Utah Poultry meeting and banquet held 4-- 4-- H 4-- n. last Thursday at the Fourth ward in Salt Lake. They demonstrated how to care for eggs properly. Bill Schorr, their leader, accompanied them. Mrs Anne T. Irving won a diamond in a recent newspaper con test, by guessing the silhouette of Marie Antoinette. A number of West Jordanites attended and entered their mink in the recent International Mink .Show held at the Salt Lake Fair Grounds. Dick Westwood was chairBrown man of the show and L. J-- . RECORDS If I Give my Heart to You Anyone Can Fall in Love Doris Day I Need You Now Heaven Was Never Like This Ed- die Fisher This Olt House Hey, There Rosemary Clooney High and the Mighty Moonlight and Roses Victor Young Papa Loves Mambo The Things I Didn't Dor-PeComo Smile If s Crazy-- Nat "King" Cole They Were Doin' the Mambo Mister Sandman Vaughn Monroe Ifs a Woman's World Cuckoo Bird in the Pickle Tre Four Aces Teach me Tonight Suddenly Jo Stafford Toy or Treasure Fortune in Dreams Kay Starr rry t, Ash-wort- Attending For-ma- n Mid-val- Agriculture Is Well Under Way The 1954 Census of Agriculture is about 50 per cent completed in the 29 counties covered by the field office at Salt Lake City, according to Field Supervisor Quayle Cannon Jr. Mr Cannon stated that he was well pleased with the cooperation the census enumerators are receiving from farmers in this area and has high hopes of completing the canvass by the scheduled closing date of Dec. 17. He pointed out that enumeration of farms is one of the larger costs of the census and that cooperation of farmers in com- pleting questionnaires promptly Mrs Annie C. Sorensen returned from Idaho after spending with Mr & Mrs Vester Rasmusscn and family in Idaho Falls and a week with Mr & Mrs Reed Crane and family at Montpelier. She also visited with friends and relatives at Ovid, Ida. Mr k Mrs Spencer Miller were guests at a Thanksgiving banquet of the Riverton Flower Club at the VFW hall honoring their husbands. Mr & Mrs Don Crane and children, Milburn, are visiting at the Arthur W. Crane home. Wallace Dansie, Salt Lake, and Wilford Crane, Riverton, visited Mr & Mrs Walter E. Crane Sunday af- IE to save starting time gasoline and died engines ez?20vfVj m Presently being held at state hatcheries, they will soon be plant-e- d as forage or food fish into several of the state's intermediate wa ters w here bass and pike have been stocked. Biologists point out that this species of sunf ish serves as a pan fish to the angler's hook and line as well as being an excellent food fish for larger game fish species. Native to the east coast states, they are not a prolific spawner as are many pan fishes. Maximum growth under good conditions is about eight inches. This first introduction into Utah waters of the sunfish is another move by the department in the direction of improving the fishing potential for the angler sportsmen. SUES Many Utah sportsmen now Jiave the opportunity to contribute a helping hand in the management of the state's big game and game bird populations, according to spokes men for the State Department of! Fish and Game. Totals of 29,000 doer and 10.000 pheasant kill questionnaire cards have been sent,to sportsmen whose names were picked at random from the files of license buyers as listed at department offices. It is from this annual deer kill card census that vital information is gathered, important to better management of the state's big game resources. This Information, along with that gathered during range counts and studies, checking sta tion figures and other sources, forms the basis for the recommendations upon which the Utah Board of Big Game Control sets the annual seasons for big game. The same important information is derived from the pheasant kill cards and is helpful in scheduling the annual fall hunts for this prime game bird. Sportsmen receiving either type of kill census card are urged to fill them out accurately and return them immediately to department offices. The cards are ed and require no postage. self-addre- ss Gale Vernon, Sandy Nile Shields, South Jordan Max Mumford, Sandy Kay Hamilton, Riverton Dr J. S. Alley, Midvale LeGrand Poor, Herriman H. L. Malstrom, West Jordan Gladys Margetts, West Jordan William II. Gardner, West Jordan Union Jr. High School, Midvale Parley Spartling, West Jordan Vale Tagashira, Long Beach, Cal. importance of fish and wildlife resources became more generally known. This illustrated lecture is shown daily throughout the school year in a program designed to reach all schools over the state. Civic clubs may arrange for evening showings by contacting the Education Devis-ion- , Utah Department of Fish and Game, 1506 West North' Temple, Salt Lake City. rod-eare- Phone your news items to 178. Will BLOCK and WRAP HOME PEPMANENTS d $3.50 Bring Your Kit major project at the state's Kamas Fish Hatchery was completed last week when tho contractor put finishing touches on new trout fry ponds there. New Subscribers- This will increase by four times Ray Nelson, West Jordan the available space for handling Union Pacific Railroad, Salt Lake the small fish in the early weeks of Howard C. Nelson, Midvale their growth. The Kamas plant anB. R. Anderson, Sandy nually handles about seven million Mike Cerrone, Lark eggs and raises four million of the trout fry produced at the 12 state J. Leak, Riverton hatcheries. Many are later transferred to the other hatcheries for rearing to the fingerling and legal stage before planting. A second phase of this Important capital improvement project is now under way with the construction of a new refrigerated feed house at the Kamas plant. A ' i" Back to School Permanent! Roll $$tQQ KATE COOK MAUD BARNEY Operators NDY Beauty Shop M W. Main - Post Office Btdg. Phone Mid. 100 Fall Plantings Now Ready - SHADE TREES FLOWERING SHRUBS EVERGREENS sunf ish Fifty thousand were recently acquired for intro duction into Utah waters, according to spokesmen for tho Department of Fish and Game. They came as a gift from tho Hot Springs, N.M., red-eare- d Students in Utah are again being shown a Department of Fish and Game film during the current school year. Upwards of 85,000 will enjoy this Important illustrated lecture concerning conservation of For successful growth, NOW is the time to plant We will help you plan your plantings and landscape your home the way you want it. You the state's resources. The film being shown this year depicts the state's small animals in H U1T R I L I T E their natural habitat. It was taken I VI I ft OtSTlNCUISNf 0 MOOtCT mono food wrtmm by department personnel during the recent warm weather months. for Informal! toll writ.. A new film for this program is taken and edited each year. MADGE S. THORPE The school program is part of the work falling under the departSandy, Ut. ment's education division. It was 229 N 500 East ' initiated several years ago and has PHONE: MID. 450-in as demand the steadily grown are invited to visit our nursery and inspect the many varieties in stock. ( Price List on Request s Sunset Nurseru R. W. ATKINSON SONS & 8200 South 700 East Ph.: Mid. 589-- W Sandy, R.D. 2, Box 57S Discover the thrill of l6-da- will be a vital factor in keeping down the final cost of the under- ternoon. Mrs Spencer Miller motored to taking. the week end. She was Quick completion of the census Nephi for will not only help in keeping costs the guest of Mr & Mrs Lynn Olpin honor of down but will aid in prompt pub- and attended a party in birthlication of the results, Mr Cannon her sister, Mrs J. H. Vickers, said. He urged local farmers who day at the Mt. Nebo Hotel. A son was born to Mr & Mrs had not already done so to comButterfield last week. Eldon plete the census questionnaire and Mrs Parry Bowen and Mrs Mark have It ready when the enumeraand children of Roose Oberhansh SI N, Main. Midvale Ph. Mid. 813 tor calls. velt, spent several days last week as guests of Mr St Mrs Sherwood if j ' Butterfield, the occasion being in f honor of Clinton's birthday. Robert Shinscl, Nephi. visited with Mr & Mrs T. Ralph Butterfield Hotand family. Marilyn Butterfield spent two on days last week with Mr St Mrs Del bcrt Wengrcn and family in Union Mr St Mrs Don Swascy and chil dren were guests at dinner at the home of Mr St Mrs Alton Larson at Lc hi Sunday. Mr St Mrs Annon Green and fam ily of Midvale visited at the Louis ! Christensen home Sunday after noon. CHEVRON Mr St Mrs Warren Butterfield en ill... .V tcrtained at dinner in honor of Mr St Mrs Daro Marshal of Midvale To make sure your enginrs will Sunday. tart on tl first fw turn In the coliVi weather, five them a shot of Chevron Starting Fluid as you step on the starter. It has sta rtM diomla in 10 ere s onds at 30 below sera A&k us about equipment that you can install on engines to make the use of Chevron Starting Fluid easier. fuel lines, Avoid starting delays from (15 11 Fluid in your too, by putting a little Chevron Ban-IcOil fuel h preventa freezing of any moisture that may tanks or line. get Into storage Let cs fell you about Chevron Starting Fluid and Fluid today. Chevron Han-Ic- e NOWi YEARS r hatchery of the UJ5. Fish and Wildlife Service. - ( 8 !. low-ro- lontr, '.' ' " j tswer, Rornier . . more Powerful than ever V"jf " "' J '"' new styling totally the Ford Your first look tells you Ford is longer, lower . . . the body totally new. But, what you can't appreciate at a glance is Ford's totally new cumis . . . totally new power . . . that make driving any '55 Ford excitingly new. THUNDERBIRD niplred by The fabulous ThundcrUrd styling Is riflittml in oO the new Fords for 55. From the wide, d grille and vbored headlamps to the tear fender, Ford Is tike smartest, most distinctive nw car you can buy. smartly-contoure- As you slip beliind tho wheel you discover the thrill of Ford's totally new windshield . . . new d sofa-soseats . . . fabrics fresh and new. And then you discover perhaps the greatest thrill of all! Ford's totally new Trigger-Torqu- e power is the kind of smooth, responsive power that only the world's greatest builder of could bring you. Your Ford Dealer invites you to Test Drive the '55 Ford today. This Is do ordinary car. You move out swiftly and quietly with all the power youll ever need for tale passing and And you can enjoy cajy this new TrigRW-Tonju- e performance FROM In the new new ft 3 MIGHTY engines 1C2 h p. 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AH have Ford's e new performance and new Ride, And you may choose Fordomatic, Overdrive or ConvenUoiuL New MAINLINE Trigger-Torqu- AnKle-Foise- d i V?CTn7) IMT.T "11 e PLUS ALL THESE OTHER BRAND-NE- "WORTH MORE" FEATURES W ferdeoatk Drht has in automatic ktft.gw for quicker Starts and better passing ability Nra Tarbe-Actio-a Spark Pines resist fouling, maintain i( t SC and up to Ntw Tubeltis Tires offer extra New 19 larger Brakes mean smoother longer brake lining lift, optrttnf srTiasncy up to 3 times as long. He Dual Cikaett Syittai on V I n rtt in iB fairlans and Station Wagon mode's reduces exhaust back pressurl puncturi md blowout protection, longer tin Ml Rew for tpeed-Trtue- Mrs r rtsponsi poww. Hew Tarqee-TaRorea- 1 Itar tiles g! vt you just tt right Cver-s- drive ratio for brilliant Trier Torque performance. OLD Tor cr.3.1 mi fefonsaiioa cbouf Slanisri Oil Company to3 four Iocl rnnferd man of Ccl.fornia I preiscts, GAYLE BRUNYER So. STATE PHONE !ry ' j STtJUMT IOUM0M MOO eVCSCS Tho lino car of its Hold trimcrT ' HENRY S. DAY- PHONE Mid. 301 GREAT TV, FORD - C. l::dyale, THEATRE, KTVT. PM. THURSDAY s UTAH |