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Show mm - Willis Embry haa returned home after spending a week at Lamar. Missouri where he vlslled with his father and brothers and sister. Occasion for the visit was the 73nd birthday of his father, L. P. Embry. MTs Edna Fitzgerald entertained at the Sew Inf Circle meeting Thursday night. Nine members were present and spent the evenHelen Beziant, ing quilting: Donna Ottosen. Lucille Fitzgerald Lorrelne Bagncll, LaVaughn Carrel, Anna Mae Blazzard, Florence Rockhlll, Jo Blazzard. Next meeting will be Thursday, March 29, at the home of Lucille Fitzgerald. F$ve members of the Cerel Gfnee family were honored at a birthday dinner party Saturday night at their home. Mrs Clines prepared a lovely turkey dinner with all the trimmings for 27 guests. Celebrating their birthdays this month is Mrs May Gines and her children Helen Jones, Howard Gines, Douglas Gines, and a granddaughter Marla Lou Gines. Out of town guests for the occasion were Marjorie and Rukm Xawis and daughters Verna and Gay of Heber. Mr and Mrs Gordon Taylor and son Jay spent the weekend visiting Capitol Reef Monument, National Arches Monument' and spent a night at Green River. A number of people from here attended funeral services Friday for Bene Bailey's mother, Mm Yenea Glasler at Nephl. In attendance the Bailey family, Gordon and Verlle Taylor, Hue and Carol Jewkea, Ivan and Mary Tumbow, Bishop Rex and Margaret Walker, Theron and Norma Atkinson, Roseoe and Wenle Andrus, Melba Thomas, Mrs Jean Urs entertained at the Merry Mm Club held Wednesday night at her home. Thirteen members were In attendance to enjoy the social gathering. Next meeting will be at the home of LeOra Knight, March 21 Ward and Jo Blazzard and Bill Weaver spent a week at San Francisco for a timber convention. They also enjoyed sight seeing tours In the area and visited with a number of friends there- Little Kathy Van TasseU, daughter of Mr and Mm Merlin Van Tnaaen Is home again after Vending several days in Heber hospital with croup. Vera Dngdale and Thyra Lieser went to las Vegas, Her over the weekend to visit Vert's husband who Is working there. Mr and Mrs L W. Fltsgerald PURE " JOY Thats how mothers describe their Long Distance visits with their children. Pure . Joy. If youd like a sample, pick up your phone and go visit-In- g soon. Mountain States Dan Sommers Funeral Held Help Yourself To A SLICE AT LIFE By Katherine S. Ilart reason all of us believed that the Cookie Ladys whole purpose In life wu to sell us cookies; therefore, it wu our duty to buy them. (All undoubtedly the influence of too much medieval scholasticism, no doubt) Daniel W Ilford Sommers, 77, died Saturday morning March 6 A New Personality In an Ogden hospital. College students probably have since Captain Ahab.) She Bold But one day a crisis occurred. He was born October 24, 1887 more of their own little Institu- two kinds of cookies: cocoanut Some In Coalville to Daniel and Mary bumptious, overly curious tions than the whole world vanilla wafers and Southern student decided to follow The Johnson Sommers, Married Leona curds the cocoanut being, Cookie Wilson October 17, 1006 Coalville. problems. Lady. He stealthily pursued Every day cramming I am sure, cooked shoe laces: and and was shocked to find out hu Mr Sommers had been foreman st the Ideal Cement Company: member of the North Morgan Ward; former deputy sheriff: past president of the Morgan County Wildlife Association; council commander Woodmen of the World. Survivors, widow; on son, Kenneth; four daughters, Mrs. Vance (Leona) Helner, Mm Mack (Betty) Peterson, all of Morgan; MTs Jay (Olenna) London, Los Alamos, N. M.; MTs Dale (Marguerite) Vernon, of Sandy; 16 grandchildren: 14 great grandchildren; brother, John; sisters, Mrs. Francis Nielsen, Mrs. Annie Kygar, all Morgan; Mrs George (Ada) Lee, Coalville. Funeral services were held at the Morgan IDS Stake center March 0. Pallbearers were grandsons of Mr Sommers. Honorary pallbearers were fellow employees of Ideal Cement Co. Burial was in the North Morgan Cemetery and the grave was dedicated by Morgan Stake President, Raymond P. Larsen. Former Marion Man Is Honored MARION Walter & Horton wu honored st an open house at the home of his son, Seymour T. Horton, 137 East 27th South, la Salt Lake City on March 14. The occasion was his eighty-sixt- h birthday. Mr. Horton Is a former Marlon resident His family when together make quite a He has five children, 17 groiqz grandchildren and 43 great grandchildren. Ur. and Mrs. dark P. Brintoa and family of Peoa attended the event this weekend to visit their daughter Linda Jenaen and Mr an MTs Dean Hansen and family of Salt Lake vent Sunday with Mr and Mrs DeMar Wilde. Dean Is a former service buddy of Bucks Kathy and dark Jones of Ogden and Eddie and Kathy Sores. n of Logan opent the weekend wlthjthelr parents, Mr and Mm Lynn Sorenson. The Boyd Lake and Lany Colton families were in Balt Sunday night to attend the teetlmonala of David and Gary Colton. They stayed overnight to see them off at the airport early Monday enroute to British South Mission. Mr and Mrs Robert Hoyt have returned home after spending 10 days visiting in California and Nevada. Bonnie Lambert la Improved after being ill last week, It was thought at first to be a heart attack. Others on the sick list this week la Mra Clyde Van Tassell, who Ja spending the winter In St George; Barney Thomas who Buffered a stroke Sunday; Karen Simpson, tfoepItUlzeff In Heber hoapitaL Helen and Pete Bmaat are making plana for a trip to San FYandaoo, CaUL, to visit relatives They will leave Thursday. mo-lues- theyre en muse Into hot stuffy tele- the molasses being processed asphone booths or small Volks wa. phalt gena supposedly to establish all They werent fresh, either kinds of records, when an theyre about moist Zwieback and really testing la the durability u crunchy u sand paper. But do of their deodorant you know something? We bought Or elu they picket, parade, them anyway, by the dormitory and crosscountry peace march room full Why, we'd sell our food which can be good things except ration tickets, even a last pack that they usually dont know of cigarettes in order to buy these whether they're protesting the odious, unedible chunks of paste. nuclear bomb, Viet Nam, the Boer Because and I think this wu War, or fried chicken on Sundays, u u her that, u soon u she campus, had left the a miraculous transforms, tlon occurred. The Cookie Lady stopped limping. The Cookie Lady suddenly seemed to grow about n foot, from a miniscule four foot six to a more conventional five foot two. The Cookie Lady even skipped. She willed, pa inlezily. Then she waited .at a corner and out of nowhere a Big Black Cadillac appeared and a liveried Summit 3 County Bn chauffeur opened the door for her. (In truth, I always felt that COALVILLE, UTAH the chauffeur bit might have been a alight exaggeration.) And off went the Cookie Lady. To apTHURSDAY, MARCH IS, 1S6S pear the next Friday. After that, we all started thinking and figured out that If The Cookie Lady sold a bag a week to every student (and I never knew one student who didn't make the weekly transaction), she'd be making about 81,000 a week, for there were upwards of 2,000 students there. Train Rides As for as grandiose conclusions Riding School and morals to the story go, X 35 Shetland Ponies really dont know what to say. I Hone Training suppose it an means that "Afoot Chuck Wagon Breakfasts-and his money make a rich Cookie jUdyT or Look Before You Rafter-- H t, Limy." On second and SUMMARELL HARVEY Don't count your cookPark City Box 683 ies before they're batched." PLAN AHEAD for Fun This Spring Stable third-though- Nefarlone Tactic And speaking or institutions, several yean ago, when I waa a freshman at a small college, there waa one Institution there which waa unlike any other. The Institution waa a "she," and "lhe" wa The Cookie Lady. A little old lady with various humps and deformities, she looked like a shriveled up potato with vaccination marks. Every Friday afternoon she made the rounds of all the college dorms, carrying her Little Red Riding Hood basket of homemade cookies that she sold for 60 cents a bag. (Unlike a baker's dozen of 13, a CboMe Lady dozen meant 11 cookies; nobody minded, for Cookie Lady said she couldnt count past 11 although she teemed to be quite a wizard at making change for a $5.00 bill) 'OooUsa cookies, anybody?" aha would plaintively query. Nice fresh cookies?" that, along with the echo of her alow, limping shuffle down the hallway. (Despite the absence of a wooden leg, she had the greatest limp .08 1 has always wanted i in a $3000 automobile. V Telephone NOTICE DOG OWSEBS n COILTOU The final data for Dog License st the old rata for the year 1965 has passed .(refer to previous Bee Issue) Effective March 15 the New Rate is: $540 for Each Male $7.00 for Each Female M&tCOW Contact or make checks payable to the Coalville City Treasnrer on or before March 25L 1965. 9 Any deg found on the streets after March 25, 1965 without n Dog License will be shot and removed to the dump pile for burial Remember March 25 is the Deadline! What makes us so sure? Mercurys sales for one thing. Theyre up, up and up, all over the West. Which isnt surprising really. Who wants to spend $3000 on anything less? By Order of THE CITY OFFICIALS. CRANDALL-WALKE- MOTOR INC. R Coalville, Utah |