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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah, Thurs., July 27,1350 Attend ISerciaicsa At Bryce Canyon Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Twitchell, and six children and their families, will attend the Mangum family reunion at Bryce canyon on July 28, 29 and 30. The children include Mr. and Mrs. Roy Twitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Willden, Mrs. Mild-red Willden, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Watts, from Delta and Mr. and Mrs Cloyd Talbot, Oak City, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Webb, Deseret. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Wilcock, from Salt Lake City , spent Saturday night in Delta with their mother, Mrs. Mildred Willden, and went on to Cedar City for July 24.. They will join the family later at the reunion, after a trip to Bryce can-yon. Bteret LUCILLE SAMPSON Miss Genevieve Eliason is spend ing a few days at Spanish Fork. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Warner spent Saturday at Provo and Salt Lake City attending a family reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Cropper and son, Vincent spent four days at Paradise Lake. Mrs. Victor Roberts and daugh-ter are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Jensen. Mrs. Roberts is from Salt Lake. Ray Moody from Salt Lake was a weekend visitor at the home of his mother, Mrs. Effie Moody. Mr. and Mrs. Boone Colegrove and family are visiting in Deseret, from Salt Lake City, and are stay-ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Croft and Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Moody. Vernal Johnson from Tooele, spent the weekend with his moth- - Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Davis r.rd family from Provo spent the week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Orson Cahoon. Miss Shirley Davis just returned from a months vacation at Long Beach, Cal. She stayed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reed Bun-ker and family. Mr and Mrs. LaVerl Dewsnup are the proud parents o a baby boy born at the Fillmore hospital on July 24. Mr and Mrs. O. L. Hill man and Mr and Mrs. Hyrum Anderson of Lyman, Idaho, were weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Western. Miss Faye from Provo also spent the weekend at the Western home. Mr and Mrs. F. M. Western and family and Mr. and Mrs. James Sampson, spent Saturday at Fill-more attending the McCullough reunion. The Daughters of Utah Poineers furnished the program in Sacra-ment meeting Sunday and it was very good and enjoyed very much. CI, 1YJ.I3. A1CIUU Kent Dewsnup and Wayne West ern went to Salt Lake with the Delta band for the 24th celebra-tion. Mr. and Mrs Millden Scow and son, Darrell, spent the weekend in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mace and fam-ily from Fillmore spent the 24th with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dewsnup. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Coleman of Van Nuys, Cal., spent Monday and Tuesday in Deseret. They had been on a trip to Idaho and stopped here to get their daughter, Patty, who has been visiting her the past month. Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Eliason are visiting in Salt Lake City with Mr. and Mrs. Parnell Hinckley. Miss Elaine Cahoon from Tooele spent a week with her sister, Mrs. Ralph Conk and family. For lKonickcoiBii,rt Among the many in pane .. for their Homecoming over Sat day and Sunday were Mr m Ray Owens, and Mrs. Owen", k 8 ther, N. A. Hoart, visiti from Fort Lauderdale, Fla made the trip on Friday and I.5' followed Saturday by the CX family, including Mrs. Flora ra"S bell, from Salt Lake City, Mr Mrs. La Var Owens, Mr. and Millard Owens, Mr. and Mrs R nard Owens, Mr. and Mrs r Owens and families, on Saturn Family reunions were held Z' rng the homecoming, and the Z' ty attended the Owens family t union, and Mrs. Owens and hi brother attended the Hoart famiv reunion, with three other sister, The trip home was made bv Z of Bryce Canyon. a Mr. Hoart returned to Delta fm a short stay, and will meet frienrt in Kanab and return to his horn c in Florida. ' LYNKDYL BY MARY IOHNSON Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Sheriff and family of Sandy, Utah were weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Sheriff. Eleven boy scouts with Harry Mc Cardel and Ray Wilkins as scouters attended the scout meet at Navajo Lake for three days last week. Mrs. Lucille Johnson, Jo Ann and George spent last week in Salt Lake City. Bp. and Mrs. Clead Nielson were also city visitors. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mills spent several days in Provo visiting Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clark. Mrs. Cornel Vest and Norman drove to Provo for a two day stay. Mr. and Mrs. Garth Whatcott of Salt Lake City and Mrs. Clea Dut-so- n and son of Provo spent the holiday weekend with their par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Whatcott. Mrs. Whatcott is improving at this time. Mrs. Ruth Lovell of Pleasant Grove and Collier Lovell of Oak City visited at the home of Reed Nielson Saturday. Mrs. Donna Hay cock, spent several days in Ogden with her husband Leslie. He is em ployed there. She returned Satur- - day to the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Cherrington and family and Mrs. Jean Ashby of Springville were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nielson Sunday. Ray Nielson went to Salt Lake Thursday and drove home a new Mercury. The family spent Monday in Provo. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pendray and boys drove "up from Cedar City and spent the day Saturday with Mrs. Anna Mc Mann. Mrs. Pendray has completed her work at summer school. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Abbeglen drove down from Frovo baturaay. Herbert after three weeks in the LDS hospital is happy to be home again. Mrs. Abbeglen returned to Provo Monday where she will continue her studies at the Y. Mrs. Lois McCardell received word of the death of her grand-mother Ogden who lived in Mon-tana. Miss Margaret Smith was home from Salt Lake City over the week end. Her sister, Mrs. Aleen Easter-broo- k is in the hospital with a new baby girl. Miss Brenda Huntsman of Enter-prise spent the past week here with her aunt, Mrs. Billy Nielson, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Nielson drove to Enterprise to take her home and visit Billy's parents. Dr. and Mrs. Norman and fam-ily and Mr. Jeff Finlinson were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. .and Mrs. Earl Greathouse. Miss Molly Mills is in Salt Lake City with her sister, Mrs. Russell Dutson. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Johnson and two sons of Kanab and Frank John son of Hurricane visited over night at the Lile Johnson home. The Lynnndyl ballteam played away in Mona. Elder Orlo Nielson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jay Nielson of Leaming-ton reported his missionary exper-iences in church Sunday evening. He returned from northwestern sta-tes two weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Nielson drove to Provo last week for fruit. Mrs. Betty Rosenbaum has had a cousin here visiting her from Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Nielson spent the day Thursday in Nephi. Mrs. Lile Johnson visited in Suth erland with her mother, Mrs. Het-ti- e Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs. Wil-liam Johnson of Los Angeles who are here on vacation for a few days. J JOSEPH B. KYLE of Gary, Ind., elects Grand Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elk of the USA at 86th Grand Lodge convention in Miami, Fla., Radiant Heat Like Sunlight In Principle If you think heat rises, you're wrong. Hot air does, but heat alone doesn't rise any more than it falls. That distinction is an important one for many home-owner- s, ac-cording to Doremus L. Mills, a heating research engineer. He says it explains why a radiant-heatin- g panel in the ceiling of a room can be just as efficient as il it were in the floor. Writing in American Builder magazine, Mills compares a ceiling panel to the sun. He says the ceil-ing panel warms occupants of the room in the same way heat is "received in a downward direc-tion from the sun that is millions of miles away from the earth." Radiant heating is one of the newest home heating systems. Heat is spread through a house by circulating hot water through coils of pipe embedded in floors, walls or ceilings of the rooms. The heating coils are completely concealed. Mills, who is a past president of the New York Chapter of the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers, points out that a radiant-heatin- g system is not intended to heat the air. In-stead, it heats the persons and other objects in the room. High air temperature is not necessary, he says in American Builder. "II one stands in tne sun on a winter day he may feel warm but if a cloud should intercept the sun's rays he would soon feel cold although the air temperature had not changed a fraction of a de-gree," Mills explains. "Likewise a room occupant, even in air tem-perature of 72 degrees F., may be uncomfortably cool if sitting near large cold areas. "It is because of this fact that a radiant-heatin- g system does not depend on room air temperature at any fixed value to produce com-fort conditions. It does attempt to control the temperatures of the inside enclosing surfaces of occu-pied rooms and to maintain them at a temperature that will give the room occupants a sensation of comfort without feeling too warm or too cool. This is something that no other type of heating system can do effectively." He says the limitations of ra-diant heating are that it cannot produce "humidification, dehumi-dlflcatio- n or ventilation." FOR BETTER RESULTS ADVERTISE IN THE CHRONICLE GWSS YOU A POUTAVlz 1 n J L T,lc mz's 3 ISSS. -- I pifeGf itll k? 4 YEARS OLD lla3 ""V 86 PROOF 111 STRAIGHT BOUHB OHWHISKY-OLD HICKORY DISTILLING CORPORATION, PHILA, PA. 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There is one bit of advice your Uncle Sam wants you graduates to remember, and that is "the only money you'll ever have is the money you are saving right now. Saving part of each pay-chec-k is the ONLY way to save." And one of the best ways to do it is to buy V. S. Sav-ings Bonds through your company's Payroll Savings Plan. Those bonds are backed by the full resources of the Government and will return you $4 for every $3 ten years later. U S Tt.'ikjity Dffiimmeiu Maxy Peterson, from Salt Lake was a Delta visitor over the week end, with her sister, Mrs. Wanda Beckwith. SUMMONS IN THE JUSTICES COURT OF THE DELTA PRECINCT IN AND FOR MILLARD COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH Before Francis B. Chesley, Justice of the Peace LEO DAY, doing business under the name and style of LEO DAY'S STORE, Plaintiff vs EDDIE J. ARNOLD, Defendant THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon ELDON A. ELIASON, Plaintiff's Attorney, whose address is Delta, Utah an answer to the Complaint within 20 days after service of this sum-mons upon you. If you fail so to do, judgment by default will be taken against you for relief de-manded in the said Complaint which has been filed with the Justices Court of the Delta Precinct and a copy is hereunto annexed and served upon you. This is an action Quasi In Rem. to establish the plaintiff's owner-ship in money or property hereto-fore attached by the plaintiff and held by the Union Pacific Rail-road, garnishee, as money owed to the plaintiff on an open account. Dated this 28 day of June, 1950. Eldon 'A. Eliason, Attorney for Plaintiff Delta, Utah First publication, July 6, 1950. Final publication, August 3, 1950. SUMMONS . IN THE JUSTICES COURT OF THE DELTA. PRECINCT IN AND FOR MILLARD COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH Before Francis B. Chesley, Justice of the Peace ROY NIELSON, doing business un-der the name and style of RED AND WHITE STORE, LYNNDYL, Plaintiff vs ALVIN SMITH, Defendant THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon ELDON A. ELIASON, Plaintiff's Attorney, whose address is Delta, Utah, an answer to the complaint within 20 days after service of this sum-mons upon you. If you fail so to do, judgment by default will be taken against you for relief de-manded in the said complaint which has been filed with the Justices Court of the Delta Pre-cinct and a copy of which is here-unto annexed and served upon you. This is an action Quasi In Rem. to establish the plantiffs owner-ship in money or property hereto-fore attached by the plaintiff and held by the Union Pacific Rail-road, garnishee, as money owned to the plaintiff on an open ac-count. Dated this 20 day of June, 1950. Eldon A. Eliason, Plaintiff's Attorney, Delta, Utah. First publication, July 6, 1950. Final publication, August 3, 1950. |