OCR Text |
Show n Millard County Chronicle , s J Delta, Ut.. Thurs., Jan. 22.1948 jf vtglvv paralysis JANUARY 15-3- 0 1 OJUjlS - - -- S - - - - ..-.t-,- ii t Classified Ads FOR RENT Steam heated apart-ment, private entrance. Adults. Ho-tel JWinardhJ79-l- . 122 FOR SALE: house in Hin-ckley with 1 acre of ground and 5 shares of water. See M. J. Davis at Peterson Motor Co. 3x 25 CUSTOM GRINDING, Tuesdays and Fridays. Morrison, Elevator. 122 - 25 FOR SALE: Building lots. Inquire of Elmer Fullmer. 25 9 Theodore Q. Jensen jhj POST NO. 117 :'i Helta American 1 ' I Legion lli;il!lil!Dll;!!!ll!!ll!lll!l!lllll!l!ll!!llllll!l!ll!l:ll!ll!ll!ill!!lll!ll 9' WILL MEET EVERY 1st K & 3rd SUNDAY AT MER- - CER HALL FOR BUSINESS i MEETINGS, AT 4 P, M. SOCIAL MEETINGS 2nd 1- - & 4th SUNDAYS. HALL IS v OPEN AT 2 P. M. EVERY . SUNDAY IIIHEIlliiilEM a, Visiting Buddies Welcome II t 1 I 1' FARMS FOR SALE: Bert Hales, at Deseret. 1-- FOR SALE: 12 ton pick-u-p Dodge truck. New engine, new paint. See H. A. Beckstead. 115-2- 2 pd. FOR SALE: hay baler, and a hay loader. See Bert or Lester j Johnson, Sutherland, ph. 155--3 I 115-2- 9 pd. I LOST: Yearling holstein bull, with horns, branded with a reverse C on right hip. Ralph Crafts, Hin-ckley 131 I WILL SHIP HOGS Thursday January 22 and February 5. Dewey Sanford. NOTICE: The Delta Livestock Auction will hold sales every Friday in the future. Delta Livestock Auction. ATTENTION STOCK RAISERS: For immediate disposal for dead or useless animals call 13Y. We pay cash. 125 "Stum Me tywA ftteiuifusfwi And 9'U 1ell Ifoo. Wind Ifau. 'loom Jlike." said an authority on newspapers. He went on to say that the hometown newspaper reflected the type of town it was published in. If the paper were inferior the town would be quiet, business poor and I it would not attract new citizens. He also said that if the paper were lively, full of interest and had a large subscription list, then the town would reflect that spirit and would be a good business town, attract new citizens, and be progressive. IN THE RECENT USPA BETTER NEWSPAPER CONTEST the Mil- - . lard County Chronicle was placed m division A for papers of circulation over 1000 a week. Classing it with far larger towns such as St. George, Cedar City, Richfield, Price and Brigham City, and the Millard.. County Chronicle received the following: GENERAL EXCELLENCE Honorable Mention BEST PRINTED NEWSPAPER ....... Honorable Mention BEST USE OF LOCAL PICTURES ...... Second Place GENERAL NEWS COVERAGE Honorable Mention GENERAL ADVERTISING LAYOUT ...... Honorable Mention WE ARE PROUD OF THIS RECORD and happy that our paper was not only in division "A" but that it also received the above acknowledgements. THE CREDIT FOR THIS ACHIEVEMENT does not go alone to the Millard County Chronicle, but the largest share of the credit goes to Delta and the surrounding com-munities, who have supported the newspaper loyally, aiding it with liberal quantities of news, subscribed in numbers far beyond the normal town and com-munity of its size, advertised generously and done everything possible to. make the paper a success and .a pleasure to operate here. WE WHO LIVE IN WEST MILLARD KNOW that our community is lively, progressive, up-to-dat- e, and the best in the world to live. We place also know that the Chronicle is a reflection of our community and its many fine qualities. THE OWNERS ARE HOLDING IN TRUST the Millard County . Chronicle for the benefit of all the West side of the Sffi 13 ?0tr?e ners who have built UP the ' ?fUn7 Chronide, it is you, and without you we have our fine communities, our progres- sive spin nor would the local paper be able to "com-- Pete with papers and communities far bigger than ours. Utanlzs FOR SALE: All kinds of typewriter covers, ribbons, cleaners, brushes, rubber pads, carbon paper, and ad-ding machine ribbons. Chronicle of- - fice. FOR SALE: 100 tons of first class chaff. Contact Millard Owens, tel. 26M. 128 FOR SALE: home, Hinck-ley, recently remodeled, moderniz-ed, insulated; oil heater, automatic hot water heater, floor coverings; Large lot, granary, garage, chick-en coop; New lawn, cement side-walks, fire place outside. (Cleo D. Bishop, owner Hyde Park, Utah). Also contact Don A. Bishop, Hinck- - ley, Utah. 115 tf. FOR SALE: spring fryers. Cloy Broderick, phone 7-- 4x 115-2- 5 FOR SALE: frame house, 2 blocks east and 1 block north of Wasatch service station. Inquire of Morris Hopkins, Delta. 115-2- 2 pd. FOR RENT! Seam heated apart-ment. Banque Hotel tf. FORSALE: or rent, home in Delta. See Dell Ross, phone 13Y. 25 i i WINTER CHORES ' c ARE EASIER with ;l jJjQ r , UNIVERSAL t h i1 ;qJI 0 s r ilfillsi.FgsZ. I ' i kgg i You can do your winter chores much faster if there's a "JeeP" on the job especially when snow is deep or mud is soft and sticky. The Universal "Jeep" goes through churned-u- p farm-- ; yards, over impassable winter, roads, even across rough open country. With new all metal top and the heater going, you can work the "Jeep" right through the coldest weather-usi- ng it for such widely differ-ent jobs as spreading manure, hauling produce or , fetching supplies. The "Jeep" also furnishes power for operating many kinds of belt-drive- n equipment, r including hammer mills, buzz saws, feed grinders and numerous others that you use the year 'round, p, Let us show you what the "Jeep" can do. Ft E L T A MOTOR COMPAIIY ,! jci ' en - - - . UTAH the for - Cattle & Sheep Pellets ALFALFA SEED Common & Grimm Certiiied Varieties Ladak Orestan Grimm Hanger Pioneer Baled Hay - OATS -- MOODY BROTHERS -- he IJJUliiVIM Oi-AlLi-L DELTA BIG S CHAIRS - SOFT DRIIIXS I' HAMBURGER- S-y pecinl Snterest iroeips of Slake old Party The Stake Special Interest party being held Wednesday night, n. 21 in the DHS gym, with C ncing, old and new, and refresh-nt- s. A small charge of 25 cents being levied on each person to ke care of expenses. The party ens at 8:00 p. m. and everyone Deseret Stake is invited. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Pace re-- - ned home Thursday from a trip California, where they visited Long Beach and Colton, Santa lita and Las Vegas. Reuben Davis, from Fillmore, is a Delta visitor Wednesday. B. A. C. Brings Piano Recital To Second Ward An excellent program of piano and organ music was presented Sunday evening in the Delta Sec-ond ward, by students of Frank Van Cott at the B. A. C. music department. Mr. Van Cott present-ed four students of outstanding ability, Melva Bringhurst, Ruth Slack, Nina Henrie Robinson, and Marian Decker. The program consisted of piano solos, a number for two pianos, or-gan solos, and the concluding number, for piano and organ. Mr. Van Cott played the organ num-bers, with the young ladies at the piano. Mrs. Robinson played three numbers on the program, from Rachmaninoff, Debussy and Chop-in. At the close of the program, a group from the audience remain-ed, and prevailed upon Mr. Van Cott to play organ music for an-other half hour. The group drove up from Cedar City Sunday, and back again that evening, although their travelling time waS much slowed up by the snow and icy roads. Gives Lesson At El. II. V. Meet Mrs. Verna Gardner and Mrs. Olive Barney were hostesses to the Ann E. Melville Bishop camp of the D. U. P. at their meeting on Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Barney. Present were Romania Porter, captain; Adeline Jeffery, Waiora Wallace, Iione Dalley, Ol-ive Barney, Ruth Searle, ' Trina Gronning, Verna Gardner, Zephyr Steele, Iva Mitchell, Fontella Sam-pson, Savalla Sanford, and Mary Bassett. The lesson waes given by Mrs. Fontella Bishop, on pioneer water systems in Utah, discussing par-ticularly the culinary and irriga-tion water of early pioneers at Deseret, on information furnished by Alice Hutchison Western, of Deseret. Many interesting facts were told of how the early settlers in Deser-et obtained their water, such as first from holes in the river bank, where water would filter in, the first surface wells, with such hard water the housewives preferred the canal water. Joseph Black dug the first well, which proved too strong of mineral. Then the Allred brothers dug a well of such good water that people came for miles to get some. And there was also the lithia well, of Mrs. Minetta Gibbs, from which water was ship-ped to Salt Lake City, where it was sold for 5c a glass. Paul Backer, from Fillmore, is spending two weeks in Delta, as-sisting his brother, Cecil Baker, at the Baker Pharmacy. Enlistments Accepted For Duty In U. S. Authority has been granted by the Department of the Army for former Service Men to enlist for numerous Army installations thru-o- ut the U. S. with a guaranteed minimum of three years service with the unit of their choice. Terms of enlistments must be for not less than three years, have had service outside the continental limits of the U. S. since 2 Septem-ber 1945, and not eligible to enlist in grade higher than grade of Ser-geant. Some of the installations are as follows; Ft. Lewis, Washington; Camp Hood, Texas; Ft. Bragg, North Carolina; Ft. Worden, Wash-ington; Ft. Knox, Kentucky; Ft. Ord, Caliofrnia; Ft. Jackson, South Carolina and Ft. Dix New Jersey. All applicants enlisting for units located at these installations will be sent directly from the enist-me-to unit of choice. For further information on these assignments and als other local assignments contact your local U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Re-cruiting Office in the City Hall, Tooele. XOItTII TRACT . Mrs. J. B. Walker I Miss Wixom, county nurse, visit-ed the Sutherland School Tues-day, and found all students in good health. Another visitor to the school on Thursday of the past week was Mrs. Day, county hot lunch supervisor, to visit the hot lunch room and project. Friday night the Sugarville Re-lief Society will have a house-warmin-to celebrate the com-pletion of the remodelling of their new quarters. There will be a chick-en dinner for all Relief Society members and partners. The dinner will be followed by a dance, to which the public is invited. Bishop Rom Shields has return-ed home well recovered, from a stay in the hopital in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. John Hersleff went to Salt Lake City last week, to meet their daughter, Mrs. Catherine Schaeffer, arriving from San Fran-cisco. She returned with them to Delta for a visit. Mrs. Cal Boothe had her mother visiting with her last week. Mr. and Mrs. Arch Poulson vis-ited Salt Lake City during the past week. The Lamberts had a cousin, from Nebraska, stop with them for a visit of two days, on his way to Cedar City. Little Anna Shields, who was seriously ill Saturday with nose bleed, is now fully recovered. |