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Show . MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah, Thurs., Feb. 2, 1905 I Idaho Miss To Wed Win, fordoer Illiltif:" "vt Illlilf '':- ! ; .Jllll-;;,- ' - O v liliiif 't WtSS 1 :,. Mmml ?".': :':,.. :::: f mlmHimWI mmmmmm m'lml- iEmm? : P,mm XM-s- ' pMimgWii'i llllllllll km&mmLMm wm'pm mm"M I - ' - . ' WM '&m ;i t m mmm mmm, MISS ENID LOUISE LAURITZEN Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Lauritzen, of Victor, Idaho, announce the engage ment of their daughter Enid Louise to Mr. William H. Gardner, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Eugene Gard-ner, of Delta. Their wedding is planned for early summer. At present they are attending business college in Salt Lake City. Mr Gardner and his fiancee were recent visitors in Delta at the Gardner home. Make Trip To Manti Temple Delta Third ward sponsored a trip to the Manti temple Satur-day for 51 younger ward mem-bers who were baptized for five hundred names. ExcEiange Vows 3 eh i! clay Rites Miss Barbara Jeanne Wright, daughter" of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer H. Wright, of Delta and Don A. Morgan, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Morgan, of Riverton, Utah, were married Sunday afternoon, Jan. 29 in the Ladies' Literary club in Salt Lake City. The double-rin- g ceremony was performed by Rulon Hinckley, bish-op of Seventeenth ward, before members of the families and close friends. A reception followed from half after three until six o'clock. Prior to the ceremony, Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Wright honored the couple at a wedding breakfast at Beau Brummel For' her wedding the bride wore a ballerina length dress of mauve organdy, styled with a molded waistline and bouffant skirt over taffeta. White pique formed her cap, and she carried a bouquet of white roses encircling a white orchid. Miss Helen Cobum was maid of honor, and wore a ballerina gown of pink organdy with a corsage of white roses. Morris Page per-formed duties of best man . The mother of the bride wore an afternoon dress of cinnamon crepe with brown accessories. Mrs. Morgan, mother Of the bridegroom, was gowned in turquose crepe. Both wore corsages of white gard-enias. Following the reception the young couple left for Pullman, Wash., where they will make their home. For her honeymoon trip, Mrs. Mor-gan wore a suit of beige wool with brown accessories. The bride is a senior student at USAC in Logan, and is affiliated with Theta- Upsilon sorority. Mr. Morgan is a graduate of Univer-sity of Utah, and is now working for a master's degree in psycholo-gy at Washington state college. He is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Both will be graduated from college in August. 5!ay lleviewecl At JLyHe Iore Osab Mrs. Harriet Eliason was hostess .o the Lyric Lore Club at their neeiing Thursday night .Dinner va1, server", wilh places marked or Lucille Ilortin, Reva Skidmore, Sloonor Skidmore, Ray da Raw'in-'().- !, Mary Dassott, Carol Schlappi. conn Mnurine Jeffery, ''Tacrine Ardersori, Pearl Snow. The! ma BlarV, Alice Gardner and .''Iarjcrie Otrdner, club members, ind Dorothy Lott, Cleo Eliason, Mary Wright, Scbrina Ekins, Bar-5ar- r. S iendlove a;id Louise Adams, ;uesl z. Aflcr dinner a program was giv- -' in, v.'tn Mrs. Adams reviewed the "iinedy, "Tliree Is A Family". ffl Couple Weds In i, Salt L.ake Temple k.! Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jacobson of Oak City announce the marriage of their daughter, Arvilla, to Mr. "5 Forrest D. Buchanan of Salt Lake City, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Buchanan of Garland, Utah. The Si impressive ceremony took place on K Thursday morning, January 26 in the Salt Lake temple with Presi-dent Robert D. Young officiating. Relatives and close friends wit-fr- s nessed the marriage. Immediately following the cere-- k mony Mr. and Mrs. J. Elmer An-;- l; derson of 1990 So. Main, Salt Lake li City, uncle and aunt of the bride, i; entertained at a wedding breaks- '; fast in honor of the bride and t groom. Music for the guests was It provided by Mr. Harper Stone an, vocalist, aecomnanipd hv Wilhel- - v mina Stoneman Freeman. The bride is an accomplished pianist, a former student of BAC ' in Cedar City, and filled an LDS mission in the Texas- - Louisiana field. The groom served in the U. S. Army in World War II, filled ;ft a mission to the New England '! States, and is a member of the t Orpheus Singers of Salt Lake City, After honeymooning in southern h Utah, the couple will make their f home in Salt Lake City. Cosaplc sivess Floral Awsarcl Il :y Morgan, v.c'l-knov- n former now of Kexburg, Idaho, intl Ms wife smiled at readers in Dw-e- t News Sun-day, nominated as "good neigh-bors'". They received a bouquet of flowers from the Utah State Floral Assn.- - Such an award is made weekly by the Magazine for some act of neighborliness in "Bouquets for the Living" dept. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan were selected for their hobby of sharing the beautiful flowers in their garden by providing bouquets for church meetings, public gather-ings, funerals, weddings and par-ties. Fine Arts Club Hears Program Mrs. Margaret Jensen and Mrs. La Rue Nickle were to the Fine' Arts Club at the Jen-sen home on Monday evening. Dinner was served at eight, and members present were Arvetta Nickle, Lenore Gardner, Harriet Eliason, Barbara Ashby, Louie H. Black, Shirley Christensen, Carol Schlappi, 'Mary Moody, Leona Prestwich, Cleo Eliason, Lou Es-tel- le Gardner, Clare Stephensen and Deonna Black. The program was given by Mary Moody and Cleo Eliason and was a discussion of 20th century art, with empha-sis on Utah artists and their work. 31any Enjoy Talk is IVethcK-Jand-s Over 1,000 persons, including school boys and girls and the pub-lic in general enjoyed the illustrat-ed lectures given in Millard Coun-ty Jan. 30, by Josephine Daines, Utah International Farm Youth Exchange student who spent last summer on farms in the Nether-lands. She talked to assemblies at three high schools in the county on that day. Miss Daines lecture tour was by the USAC and she was at each assembly by Rodney Rickenbach, Millard Coun-ty Agent. f for wear L washability ':: fit and features tl y wrp em srp p IS 8SST! tT .1 'i ?Tri?? trial . "J K Jj in your I 111 C C EL, 4 V ! I A st tarn " imm 1 1 w 1 1 1 V You'll meet a real 1' "Champ", men, when I you wear TEST OVER- - 1 ALLS. Made of tough t denim that can really take it... San- - forized for lasting fit , . . sizes graduated for I true comfort for men of 1 every build . . . seven handy pockets, every I one with a special Test plus-we- or extra con- - I venience feature. For a better "buy. .. better BUYTESTI 1 TEST OVERALLS S2.79 I Max. shrinkage 1 The DELMART -- HOME FREEZER J We want to introduce you to the un--I usual Maytag Home Freezer be-- F cause, frankly, we believe that once you've tried it you won't want to be J without it. Delivery and pick-u- p are free, and you will be under no obligation what-ever to buy. We just want you to find out first hand how it saves you money time effort. So come in and get the details about it right away Qualify Market " j' rr ! lJLJ v ' - if t it": , " V ,? ! Kv ' ' . Si - 'v v - i 1 I .fitjwiiiiwr'- - uw"11'- -" " '" T.T ty , Brilliantly designed and distinctively styled in gleaming white, gold, chromium and e, this streamlined Frigidaire DeLuxe refrigerator is representative of an extensive new 1950 line of 20 models in three types. Featured are such innovations as adjustable and sliding aluminum shelves, twin extra deep porcelain Hydrators which can be stacked to j make space for big items, a new full-widt- h plastic chill drawer for bev-- j crages, and a new plastic basket drawer for eggs. The new h ! door and e and gold interior trim make it particularly oleasing. iiitiihi ran d BALLERINA BEAUTY with lots of emphasis on the offside strap. Black as night. Styled to be worn with ease. Priced with a thot to please. Only $3.98 a pair Also comes in straps, ties and sandals. ( D C LTfl'S N rVDEPRRTrriEnT STORE ) " '"' y 'y Our Complete Stock oi Blankets 25 DISCOUNT -- BUY AND SAV- E-Prepare now Sor Sew 8 Save I Week. We have fust added new material to our Piece Goods Dept. Orvll Jeffery of Quality Market, told today of broad new 1950 lines of Frigidaire household refrigerat-ors, ranges and other products, which he inspected recently during a special preview meeting in Delta conducted by the Frigidaire Dist-rict there. Jeffery said that he plans und-erway for an extensive public show ing of the new refriderators and ranges. New 1950 products will be on display within the next two or three weeks, the actual time to be announced later. The new refrigerator line affords three distinct types of refrigerat-ion, four separate series and 10 sizes. Food storage capacities range from four to 17 cubic feet. Jeffery pointed out that the line includes two-do- Imperial refrigerators with separate "locker-top- " freezing compartments; DeLux mo dels with full-wid- freezers and full-leng- doors, and Master and Standard refrigerators. "All models" he said, "reflect distinctive new Raymond Loewy styling. Gold and chromium out-- . side trim adds to the appearance of top refrigerators of the line while interiors are made more at-tractive by colorful new iceblue and gold." Among the many new features are "target" door latches, adjustable and sliding aluminum shelves, full-wid- pastic chill dra-wers and a new twin Hydrator ar-rangement. Jeffery said that a radically new idea has been injected into d electric range design. There are two, compact h "Thrifty-30- " models equipped with what Frigidaire describes as "the largest ovens installed on household ran-ges." The new "giant" oven, ex-tending completely across the ran-ge, will hold up to six pies or 10 loaves of bread. Other new products- - Introduced at the district meeting included 11.7 and 18 cubic foot food freez-ers, an improved electric dehumid-ifie- r, window room air conditionsr, glass door commercial refrigerators farm milk coolers, water coolers and large-capaci-open- typ- e ice cream cabinets. ADVERTISEMENT i ; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Gronning, ir from Milford, made a short visit 5j in Delta during the week with t their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Gronning and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bunker. j. Chatter Box Dear Suzy, Delta has always looked long-ingly at the county court house and wishing it was located here instead of in Fillmore where it is. And come an opportunity to get the thing over here Delta is afraid to take the chance. It came about last week when the Millard and Delta ibasketball teams met and Millard came over loaded with enthusiasm to do some wagering to back up their . team. They offered to bet the unty court house against the live-- i stock show barn and seven shares of Abraham water. Delta was a little skittish as a result of the re-- - cent cleanup campaign here and didn't want to bet anything but money, so didn't take the offer from the Fillmore delegation. Now in the future when anyone asks why the court house is in Fillmore instead of Delta the ans-wer will be that sometimes a clean up campaign can be carried too far and the people around here have lost interest in betting (poss-ibly). Maybe the Delta bunch was afraid they would win the new county jail too, and didn't want to have any part of a jail In Delta. It would be just a white elephant for us now that we have taken up the straight and narrow path. The men of Sutherland are mighty wrought up about the Re-lief Society out there and think that they showed discrimination lately. It all came about when the Relief Society had a social and got to playing "Truth or Consequ-ences'". When it came the turn of Mrs. Norman Erickson, pres., she was asked, "Did Herman Mun-st- er ever tell the truth?'" and she answered "No". That was wrong 11, as they can't be disturbed un-til them. Now if the buyers will do the same with their litters that Nick is doing the hospital association has set their sights too low. They can build a million dollar building and when they have it built and the hampsters keep coming they can use them for research work. Now all the hospital association will have to furnish toward the hospital is a metal plaque to be put over the entrance of the hos-pital saying, "This Is The House That Hampsters Built." We get all the breaks. Toots. because Herman was once asked if he would like a glass of beer, and he said "yes" which was the truth. Anyway Mrs. Erickson lost her consequence and it was "to kiss the best looking and most hand-some man in Sutherland." Mrs. Erickson picked Les Porter and did kiss Les Porter, which was the cause for the ruckus among the men. Bennie Robison, Marve Moo-dy, and others who felt they were better looking than Les have had something to say about this has-ty choosing of Les. Meanwhile Les has taken on new life, vigor and vitality now that he has been chosen as the best looking man in Sutherland. Mrs. Porter says these are differ-ent times about the house now with Les always appropriating the mirror for his primping and taking pleasure in his own looks. Gene Walker, of cow fame about Sutherland, has lost his cow that he was milking to sell the milk to Fen-ell- It just up and died when it learned that was Gene was milking her to death for but 5c a quart. Gene is now buying milk steady at Fejrell's and paying 20c a quart and Ferrell is buying milk at his own store, and not liking the high price at all. Those attending the reception of Teddy and Jonel Nielson in Oak City the other night are still wondering if it was Ted or Verl Jacobsen that got married. It seems that Verl was more in the limelight than Ted and was rib-bed a little more. Verl said that the younger gener ation had given up post office and were now playing pony express. He said the game is the same, but there is a little more horsing around. Nick Pace, half-pi- businessman about town, has launched into a new business which will assure us that a hospital will be built, as he is going to donate his earnings to the hospital fund, and you can soon see that the earnings will be enormous. Nick's uncle and aunt, Bill and Wanda Pace, gave him a pair of hampsters as a Christmas present. These hampsters are about the size of mice, only they have a bob tail instead of the type that the farmer's wife cut off. And prolific is a mild word for them. They start having young at the age of 45 days, and will have a litter every 14 days thereafter. The lit-ters, or whatever you call them, average around 12, which are born bald and hungry. The first litter has arrived at present but the mother hides them so well in their nest that they haven't been able to count them, but know there is quite a bunch. Nick is going to sell them for $1.00 each and donate the money to the hospital fund. The first three lit-ters have been bargained for so you can see there is quite a bit toward the hospital already. This CrBt litter will be on display Feb, - Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whicker made a trip to Salt Lake City this week, jj. and visited their daughter, Mrs. ,c Walter Manis, and family. Sunday School Leaders Feted La Mont Works, retiring super-intendent of the Delta First ward Sunday school, was host at a par-ty Saturday night, honoring those who worked with him during his 2M years in office. Fifty-thre- e guests were present and entertain-ed in Mr. Works woodwork shop at cards and games. The Sunday school was recently reorganized, and Mr. Works and his counselors, Albert Nickle and Jay Bunker, and secretary, Emma Jean Pratt, were released. New Sunday school heads are Eldon Sorenson, superintendent, John R. Dewsnup, Gordon Nielson, coun-selors, and Mary Lou Rawlinson, secretary. Colored slides were shown Sat-ura- y night, some by Merlin Work-man of South Africa, where he served in the mission field, and others by Paul Adams, of Delta happening. A hot supper was ser-ved by Mrs. Works at the close of the evening. 1 '; G. B. Huff and Wm. Bishop, of D. Stevens and company; left Mon--j, day for San Francisco, where they .' are attending furniture market jf week. .it Mr. and Mrs. Dick Clark return-ed early in the week from a trip to Salt Lake City. Ralph Morrison and son Willis, rrtade a business trip to Salt aLke City this week. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ashby and daughters, Jerry and Susan, spent the past week in Phoenix, Ariz., Forms for state income tax re- visiting Mr. and Mrs. Orran Ashby. turns are available at the County Offices in Delta. Slaower Honors Missionaries A stocking and handkerchief shower was given Saturday night by M Men and Gleaner Girls of Hinckley ward at the home of Eve lyn Bliss, in honor of three depart-ing missionaries, Melvin Hepworth Blaine Wilson and Glenda Cropper. Games were played and refresh-ments served to the thirty guests present. Many useful gifts weer received by the guests of honor. Mr. and Mrs. Layton Bishop made a business trip into Salt Lake City during the week. Mrs. Fannie Terry, of Hinckley, left Tuesday for Los Angeles. She will spend the winter months visit-ing her daughters, Mrs. Hawker and Mrs. Wright and son, George Q. Terry. Mrs. John Peterson and son, Car-lyl- e drove to Salt Lake City Sat-urday and Mrs. Peterson visited over the weekend there, returning Monday. Georgia Adams and Genevieve Eliason, teaching at Spanish Fork spent the weekend at home with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alec Adams in Delta and Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Eliason, in Deseret. ESasket Social At Sugarville For All Friday Sugarville MIA invites everyone to join them at a Basket Dance held in the ward hall in Sugarville on Friday night, Feb. 3. There will be fun for all and each lady is asked to bring a basket lunch for supper for herself and partner. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Olsen and son from American Fork, were Delta visitors over the weekend with Mrs Olsen's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Spor. Mr. and Mrs. M. Ward Moody re-turned to Delta Thursday of last week, after a trip in the east. Mr. Moody attended a seed convention in Chicago, and he and Mrs. Moo-dy went on to Arkon, Ohio, where they visited their son, Elder Joe Moody, there in the mission field. Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Hopkins and family, who have been ranching at Gandy, moved back to Delta this week to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ashby, and infant daughter, Bobbie, arrived at the airport in Salt Lake City Mon-day afternoon, flying there from San Francisco,. They were met by Mrs., Ashby's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Church, who drove up ac-companied by Juvene and Gary Church, and Miss Nola Heyborne, from the BYU. They returned to Delta Monday night. Bob recently received his release from serving with the navy. Mrs. Reid went to Salt Lake City Saturday, to visit Mr. Reid, who is there in a hospital for medical care. |