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Show I HOLLAND HAS A NEW QUEEN 1l' ' ' " I : ; i . - If y-- Juliana, Holland's beloved royal princess, today reigns as Queen of The Netherlands Kingdom. On September 4, Wilhelmina stepped down from the throne in favor of her daughter. "Inauguration" ceremonies were held September 6. Wilhelmina, longest reigning mon-arch in Europe (the Dutch have just celebrated her 60th jubilee) an-nounced her decision to retire in a broadcast May 12. Then she said: "I must, in the interest of you all and of the Kingdom, entrust the sovereignty to Juliana, who, apart from her wise insight, also has the advantage of her age and her fresh young powers . . . God bless you and my beloved child!" Juliana, born April 30, 1909, was reared in the most democratic tra-ditions. She attended and graduated from Leiden University as an ordi-nary student and she has continued to mingle with her people as one of them. Her husband, Prince Bern-har-now bears the title of Prince o The Netherlands. The couple has four children. In keeping with the Dutch tradi-tion of democracy, Juliana was, not crowned, nor were the ceremonies which formally installed her as queen, called a coronation. Instead she was "inaugurated." No crown was placed on her head, but it lay as a symbol on a table by her side together with the orb and sceptre. She was "sworn in" much as the president o the United States, giv-ing her oath of loyalty to the preser-vation of the Constitution. Photos left to right show Queen Juliana as she is today and the young Princess Juliana with Wil-helmina, l - A Millard County Chronicle f J i Delta, Ut., Thurs., Sept. 30.1948 The Millard County Chronicle i Published Every Thursday at Delta, Utah .( j! By CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY ' ;l: Owned by Frank S. Beckwith and Frank Beckwith Frank Beckwith Editor jj Frank S. Beckwith, Business Manager Entered as second class matter at the Postoffice at v Delta, Utah, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879 i Party Enjoys Efcay isi Canyon Saturday David Varnes, Richard Van Horn and Frank Beckwith Sr., went, to Oak City, and there hunted up Don Harris to pilot them thr-ough the cave just withinthe boun-dary of the Forest Reserve about th'-e- miles .above town. They look flash light pictures of the small forms of stalachmites in the cave, and then went up to the pavilion and had lunch. After lunch they visited the an-cient Indian pictographs, figures painter in red on the quartzite. two of these iare most excellent, being a man with square head, square shoulders (much after the pattern of Basketmaker glyphs), and each standing cn a rain sign of four ele-ments, north, west south and east Near them the convent ional "horizon bands," notched, as is the usual manner of depicting them. An unknown glyph on the same rock. Others farther up the mountain. Then they went to the very in-teresting example of a rock over-thrus- t, tilting and upheaval. This is ia very beautiful study in geo-logy, and all of the party took pict ures o it. Th'ey were interested in the Oak City hills, "wrinkled with age-wor- n canyons." The c'olprs in the canyon are just starting and several shots in natural color were taken. oasis Mrs. La Veda Bishop L ' Mrs. A. P. Anderson and daueh ter, Verda, went to Salt last Lake r, Tuesday to attend the fun services of Mrs. Anderson's broth Andrew Hansen. The fi real was held Wednesday and th" Andersons returned home Fridav Miss Helen Skeem came hL ,last Friday to spent the weekmH with her parents, Mr. and Clifton Skeem. mi Siostrom was home the weekend. He is working f Salt Lake City for North kZ and likes the job very well Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stevens frnm Cucumonga, California were di ner guests of Mr. and Mrs rw Bishop last Thursday evening Aftm dinner they went to the Oasis W,Z church and taught some f0 L dances to a good crowd of peonlp who enjoyed the fun. Some of thl dances were a couple of square dances, the spinning waltz, Cottnn eyed Joe. The Rye waltz and a schottiscche. We dont' intend in ' let this program drop and plan, are being made by a committee I headed by Clark Bishop to cam on and learn more folk and old time dances. Mr- and Mrs. Glen Rawlms0n and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Erieksor, from Sutherland were in atten dance Thursday evening and are very much interested In this t of entertainment. Watch for fur ther announcements of future classes and come join with us Mrs. LaVeda Bishop left Mo-nday night to attend a cancer con vention in Salt Lake City. National Advertising Representative NEWSPAPER AVERTIS'IrVG SERVICE, INC. (on affiliate of tfi 1 National Editorial Association) i j Serving America's Advertfjeriandtne Home Town Newspapers j', 188 W. Randolph Chicago I. ID. OFFICES Holbrook Bid, San Franciico, Cat. 5731 Grond Centrol Terminal Bldg., New York, N. Y. can't be measured i by the dollar sign alone j j When you buy a used car you don't merely buy an automobile you expect to buy depend- - , ' able transportation. That's what we sell used : cars that assure you of thousands of miles of transportation backed I; i- by the integrity of a 1 CURTIS MOTOR COMPAUY J; " M YOUR FORD DEALER r DELTA - - - - UTAH DR. K. A. DUT50N Optometrist Announces the opening o oSSice Saturday, Aug. 21 Crest Theatre Building Telephone 11 for your Appointment Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Opeiiig etofeeir S In Our rJeiv ' Building Incorporated We Have Several Sizes oS Offset I mi Taondleinni ; Disk Narrows y ' ': f ' TURNER and DRAPER . ; DELTA UTAH - - - - I AUCTIO-N- fitting Business Monday, Oct. 4 at 9:30 a. m. Carpenter Furniture Company (All New Furniture, Inventoried over $25,000) 137 So. 5th Street Grand Junction, Colo. Company unable to obtain a lease, and have ordered us to B sel1 entire stock of new, modern househohld frunishings and electric appliances piece by piece or in lots. Positively not o-ffered as a whole. Unusual opportunity for all buyers including home owners, hotels, rooming hou3es and dealers to buy now, I fine furniture at auction prices. CASH DEPOSIT REQUIRED DURING AUCTION FURNITURE INCLUDES: Overstuffed Living Room Suits, Beds of all kinds; bed room suits.; steel and box springs; Inner and cotton mattresses; baby beds; Dining rooms suits chrome breakfast sets; kitchen sets; kitchen (springs and wall cabinets; desks; book cases; cedar chests; tables and chairs; mirrors, rockers; unfinished wardrobes, vanities, corner cabinets and beds; Approx. $5,000 stock of floor coverings; Carpeting; rugs; Inlaid Lin-oleum; Linoleum rugs, etc. RANGES AND STOVES INCLUDE: Gas and coal comb, ranges; coal ranges; Oil and coal circu-altin- g heaters; gas hot water heaters; gas floor furnaces; Coleman gasoline hot plates; water heaters for livestock; stove pipe, etc. APPLIANCES AND MISCELLANEOUS INCLUDE Elec. washing machines; heaters, radios, irons, floor and table lamps; blankets; Presto Cookers; tents, tarpaulins; canvas by the yard; Luggage and Trunks; All Office Equipment; National Cash Register; adding machine; desks;typewriter, etc Auction Conducted by Gross Auction Co. .JjjSjgJjain Rons as CjtyMgj Tl? Z: GUARANTEED o: Bli . Ja; i Used iare rik re, .ue NOW AVAILABLE it J Ai :;j , mi , be t at ; HUNSAKER MOTOR CO. c' , DRIVE OUT AND SAVE c , SEE CLEM, LEWIS . ; lone 1901 u ! tt , i i; Vow InlfioU mgravtd in 22 Karat swii . jV2f "t gold ' S"'n' lcn9 pen is 'ac'Ofy-'osle- d and .j? jtiltjrfs " guaranteed Beautiful maroon plastic A t I K with simulated 90U cap, clip and band. VSLjf-- v Your Initials fngrW in C0W..GET YOUR PENS NOW! Tllnk of HI A fine - ASZfitfVfrT'SB choice of 2 or 3 initials engraved in genuine 22K gold for sfyZ&i n'y 50 "nh Whn vou Fol9e'' Coffee. Buy Jfcji5 Coffee today. Send for several pens now! Folger's s5f5SX$n, (SSij. Coffee is mountain grown! For economy, try using one-- VSJJ?V A W 1uart" l" P" cup- - pays always, to use FOLGERS. Y SJA JG'y j Mgor'i Coffee, Box 8331, Market Stcrtlon,loi7n"gerelVl, CalifJmFoI""! tsi'-L- ' I fleaIenJn'e personally engraved pens. enclose 50 cents ! j in coin, and one Folger's label lor unwinding band) for each pen ordered. I JVry j INITIALS (Please print) . J r2Ot Name j gyV'Sjs j Address I ybil Gy Z"Q State J 1 j "WHEN I SAY COFFK I MIAN fOtGfS'S" BsautiS&l. i FALL p PRESSES $7.98 and up WOOL SUITS $8.?'0 and up I MABEL'S ; ji I Chatter Box , ' ear Suzy, " Now that it has really frozen the veather is no longer a topic of ; onversation. Those that hit the jack pot are enquiring as to wheth-er there is a limit to the number of Cadillacs a dealer will sell, and are getting a nice assortment of travel folders in readiness for ex-tended trips. Those who didn't hit the jack pot are planning on doing so next year so that they can catch up with .the paTade. While all this wealth is being splashed about locally people in ' our sister town to the east, Oak City, are having a lough lime making both ends meet. A report comes from there that one guy is so hard up he had to steal the fruit bottles off the graves in the Oak City cemetery so his wife could put up fruit he snitched from his neighbors. There are those that hope the fruit bottles have ghosts in them so that the man will be haunted especially hard this win-ter. And if they don't have ghosts in them they hope the fruit spoils. Conditions must be tough when it drives one to steal from a ceme-tery. I finally found out why George Cahoon wanted to become one of our legislators. It is a long story and dates back to the days when banks were shakier than a Demo-cratic officeholders in these times. George was out in Vernal working for the Peppard Seed company and had placed his savings in the local banks there' Each morning he would go into town and take the pulse of the bank to see if it would live that day, and then retire to his home to await the next day. One day somebody out of breath told him that the bank didn't open that morning. George barged into town with blood in his eyes to see the whys and wherefores of the closed bank, and was moaning the loss of his savings. He shook the bank door firmly, but it was of rather sturdy stdff and he failed to open it. He went about town loudly proclaiming his loses to any and all who would list en. Finally he went to the post of-fice to buy a stamp so he could mail a letter to Charlie Peppard ask ing him for enough to buy a cup of coffee and a ticket home, but he found the post office closed, too. Things really did look tough for George at this point, especial-ly when a post office closes. As they never care how far a post of-fice goes in the red, they keep them open. Closer inspection of the window showed that it was closed for La-bor Day. George heaved a sigh of relief and reasoned that the bank would probably open the following ) morning. It did and George was the first in line to get his savings and put them in a nice clean sock. He says he wanted the get in the legislature to pass a law that banks couldn't close without giv-ing the patrons a long warning ahead of time to that no sleep would be lost when they closed for holidays. And in case they were going to the wall for keeps, it would give the early birds a chance to pull out a worm before the vaults snapped shut on it. George must have been a wor-rier in those days, because this year at a crucial time in the fall, he left his seed out in the field standing nice and straight and went to Logan for the wedding of his son. He was away the Sunday night the first warning came and didn't cut his seed, with the result that he has a bumper crop now and can, if he wants to, buy him-self a bank and open and close it when he pleases. George could also have passed a law that fathers shouldn't play with their son's playthings, espec-ially if they want to keep out of trouble. If he had done that I am sure that he would have found staunch backing in Dudley Crafts, local attorney and experimenter. It seems that David, Dudley's son, had sent away for a tropicol ham-mock and was enjoying himself no end this past summer sleeping outside in it. It hapened that Da-vid was away that night, and Mel-b- a had gone to Garden Club, so Dudley decided that he would look into this plaything of David's and see if it was safe for fathers as well as sons. He thought the roes looked a little slack so he tight-ened them up so they were nice and straight. The hammock had a level appearance and so Dudley climbed in to see how it was. He zippered shut the opening and was as snug as a bug in a rug in this closed in hammock, complete wij:h roof, mosquito and bug proof, and he was as happy as a shoat in a granary. He wanted to try it for size so he turned over, I mean he started to turn over, when the hammock completed the job, leaving Dudley reclining on the roof of the thing while he stared up as best he could in the dark, at what should have been where he was esconced. Now Dudley is a calm man and takes things rather methodically. He reasoned that all he had to do to get out was unzipper the side and slide out. He was foiled on this as he couldn't find the zipper. After hunting for 'it for an hour and a half he gave up and put more thought .on how to get out. He figured he could cut his way out with his pocket knife. That did not work, either, as he was wedged in the hammock in such a manner that he couldn't reach his knife. Now Dudley really did do some thinking. He thought if could only get hold of the catalog he got the hammock from he could send for a machete and then hack his way out when it arrived. He knew, of course, that he couldn't write out an order even if he had the blank ias he had left his fountain pen in the house, and so that was out. His various means and methods of getting out were au Hops and he knew he would have to wait for Melba to come home and zip him out of his predicament. He hoped that Garden Club wasn't too long that night and that Melba would get home early. Melba ar-rived rather late and couldn't find Dudley any place in the house. She went outside and heard some mut-tering and finally found him, as we all' knew she would. She said, "Dudley don't you think you'll catch cold out here with no blank-ets? And, anyway what will David say if he knows you used his ham-mock?" Dudley's reply should have been couched in language fitting and proper for an attorney, but I am s'orry to relate it was not what could be put in print, or even used in a court room. He pleaded his case with Melba to please un-zipper the confounded thing and let him out so he could go to bed in a decent bed, and not in this topsy-turv- y arrangement he was in. Melba unzippered the side and Dudley's exit was rather undigni-fied but very satisfactory to him. Since that time he has let David's playthings alone, and he has suf-fered no ill by doing so. I have heard of couples when they were courting in a hammock come to an abrupt end, but this is the first time I ever heard of an attorney for getting into a predica-ment he couldn't talk himself out of. Toots. The harvest of the gardens and fruit is thought nearly over with. The arrival of a light frost Sunday and Monday nights stopped the growth. TV,e farmers are needing rain very badly for their fall grain planting. Miss Verna Mae Shipley's 4H girls surprised her for her birthday Monday evening. A good time was had and refreshments were served. Oak City ... MAE H. SHIPLEY Sunday evening the MIA had charge of the program. The theme "Keeping the Sabbat-- , Day Holy" was well carried out by members of the different classes. Also a book review of the "Improvement Era," by members; a piano solo by Viola Talbot; and a trio by Colleen Anderson and company. President of the MIA, Melvin An-derson, took charge of the program. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Lyman and baby from California, visited in Oak "City with friends and rela-tives last week. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Jacobson returned with them for a visit in California. Following people have left for schools, Robert Nielson to the AC at Logan; Elwood Lovell and Gene Harris and Mr. and Mrs. Junius Anderson, to the BYU in Provo. Ralph Lovell left Salt Lake City Thursday for the Canadian mission field. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Anderson went to Salt Lake last week. They visit-ed son, Francis, who left Thursday for the California miss-ion field. They also attended the state fair. Salt Lake visitors this week were John L. Nielson, Mr. and Mrs. AJden Nielson, Mr. and Mrs. James Ander-son, Niel Lovell and Bryce The wedding dance for Mr. and Mrs. Carl Whatcott Saturday eve-ning, was lovely. A large crowd of friends and relatives, together with the many presents given showed the love and esteem for this young couple. They left Sunday for Provo where Mr. Whatcott will attend scViOol this winter. Don't forget the wedding dance for Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Anderton, (Miss Kathleen Lovell) Saturday evening, October 2. All friends and relatives are invited. Mrs: Parley Elder's children were called home Sunday, Sept. 19, as she was very ill. She is improving now. Her daughter, Emily, remain-ed with her the past week. Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Nielson and son have spent the past month in Oak City. Byron returned to his home in Salt Lake w)-,er-e he will teach at the U of U this winter. Mrs. Nielson and son will remain in Oak City for awhile with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nielson. Mrs. Bruce Lovell is spending a few days in Oak City. NOTICE OF T OF NEXT REGULAR MEETING OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. Notice is hereby given that the next regular meeting of the Mill-ard County Board of Education will be held in the school district office at Fillmore on the second Wednesday of October or October 13th. This is & nt of the regular meeting for one week. Persons wishing to meet with the Board are therefore requested to do so on the above indicated day. Millard County Board of Educa-tion. By Helen Rogers, clerk. Sept. 22, 29 and Oct.o5s7EEEt Published Sept. 22, 29 and Oct. 6. |