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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah, Thurs.. March 30,1953 FOR BETTER RESULTS ! Subscribe to the Chronicle ADVERTISE IN THE CHRONICLE I SOME IMPORTANT HINTS FOR . . . HOME SAFETY WEEK MARCH 26 APRIL 1 1 ' yr L n 151 1 IFOR HOME AND Crm J tMt , ,ff ni Iff" !! 'T" "'It Ill IMT Il Ml IP " - T' ilhdlH l' ' rtr"T AND LIGHT UP TOO!.... While yen are SPRING HOUSE CLEANING check these items CAREFULLY ... Basement and Hallway Lighting Frayed or Worn Appliance and Extension Cords Worn or Loose Electrical Outlets Appliances Which Give a Shock When Touched House Wiring Leaking Hot Water Taps See Your Local Electrical Contractor For Assistance Iteddy Kiloivatt YOUR ELECTRIC SERVANT Listen Sunday Telluride Pwer Company to the MGM . A g, Taxpaying Industry Theatre on the Excerpt from the St. Louis Trust Company Letter ... Air I "Soci lism and the nationalization o industry can come about only private industry is first sabotaged and crippled. The first step is to 4'00 m KSVC create public opinion hostile to business." BY - - TO offering added income and savings to Farmers and Poultrymen. Right now, $140,000 is being distributed to members. This is additional income on past egg sales. UTMP00LW AND FARMERS CO-O-Qenerol Off- Soh CI 1800 South Wwl T.mpl. Convenient Branches in Utah and Southern Idoho 1 MhMsnrMdfE)dDHEmir yom can't beat a mw!' . ...... ..'. "':f"'Sp Chieftain De Luxe Sedan (including white sidewall tires and bumper wing guards) All that's Good ( . and Desirable in a Fine Car! e"C";j"'--- -' S CW.ft.to 2.Door sJoe 19,3.00 I cW,m''ner 4"00r slon '. ' 1913 00 I It's no wonder people agree so easily with the idea that dollar for dollar, J Won . 1943.00 I ' I ' 1964 0a I you can't beat a Pontiac! Chieftain De iue 4 " Pontiac is the lowest-price- d Straight Eight in America. Pontiac is the I ah models ir" i lowest-price- d car offering the wonderful convenience of GM Hydra- - I OT'W'1 Matic Drive. Pontiac is famous the world over for its record on the road I fj' '' "' model I I of real economy and long life. And certainly not the least of Pontiac's I arrM'p""rd virtues is its outstanding beauty Pontiac is certainly the most beautiful I "'"'"'Lilai'. '" "'""v",, I : thing on wheels! Come in, see how much your new-ca- r dollars can buy! HUNSAKER MOTOR COMPANY ORLIN HUNSAKER h honeMOl wpimLiimii YOU . 0eA SHERl-0C- HOLMes t MELLOW TASTE YOU WAT IMPERIAL! hpy IDS church when to talk and v.hen to keep still. THAT WOMAN . . I am not angry, just terribly rode me in by the way Toots Ee column last week, Wingovers Hangovers, and QJ-Guide- , she says it is. So I write So I write Wingovers. Hangovers. So it's a music lover s guide. OK. If it is, it is. So What. Can I help it if It's over her head? Wingovers "ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO PRINT FROM THE DELTA AIRPORT" DICK MORRISON FLEDGLINGS . . . Lloyd Dean Burraston is a nick off the old prop. Now six months old he made his fledgling flight on March 18, with his old man at the controls. Cherie Hannifin took her first airplane ride in the sedan Sun-day, as guest of Mac Shields. Cherie said she enjoyed the flight very much, and when asked if the air was rough, she said that since she had never been up be-fore she didn't know, but anyway it was a lot of fun. bad: in th; cliassii,, they discover-ed the starter was upside down. Verdell was dead sure he had in-stalled it right side up, yet there it was the other way. After due discussion, they decided that the engine had been on the floor up-side down when Verdell bolted the starter on, so he had been right after all,' and when Ralph turned the engine over, it then was up-side right and the starter thus got turned upside down. Well they soon rectified that, and got the engine and installed and took off happy as larks. The knock? Oh, yes, the knock. They never heard it again. All they did was take everything and put it all back, and af-ter that there wasn't any knock. Where it went, nobody knows. No-thing was loose; nothing was worn There was a knock, and then there wasn't. Many a graduate mechan-ic would like to have that kind of BLUE SKIES . . . luck, but they never do. Since Miss Hannifin is a mem-ber of Delta's popular singing trio, the Harmonettes, along with Bon-nie Black and Lila Mae Sampson, it looks like Mac missed a bet by not taking the whole trio along. When you come to think of it, what could be nicer than sailing around up in the blue with the Harmonettes? Maybe Mac thinks it's nicer to fly with just one but my idea of things would be to take them all, and ask them to sing while flying; songs like Beyond the Blue Horizon, and Blue Skies, which they sing well, and I know whereof I speak be-cause I've heard them. In fact, any pilot should 'be glad to take the Harmonettes for a flight just for a song. Imagine being up there in the blue with those sirens singing just for you! The more I think of it, the more ' the idea appeals to me, and if Mac or somebody doesn't take them up. and they want to go, NEW T . . . . Inasmuch as Jess Done uprooted the old wind T and hauled it out to be set up on his farm, a new one had to be installed at the air-port. The new wind T is every-thing a T should De - -- sensitive to the wind, bright orange color to show up well, and all that sort of thing. PACKAGES . . . If you ask me, that word pack-age is about the most misused and abused word in the anguage these days. Every way you turn, somebody is offering you a pack-age of something. No longer is it necessary for anyone to plan; to figure out details of any project. All you do is decide on an obqect-iv- e and someone will sell you a "package" that contains each sep- - I'll see that they get to, orata itom nr Hptftil npPPSSflrV for some nice clear Sunday afternoon. UPSIDE DOWN JENSON . . . Ralph Jensen and Verdell Jen-so- n are a couple of Sugarville who hope to grow up to be mechanics. They spend a good many periods in the high school shop ; they claim that they "take" auto mech-anics, but it might be more to say that they are only ex posed to the course several hours a week, and whether it will take may be determined later. Well, whether they take mach-anic- s, or are immune to it ,they decided to overwhelm Ralph's '36 Ford , which developed a loud knock. Nobody could identify it for them, but neither could any-body deny that the engine had a knock, and a loud one. So Ralph and Verdell jerked the engine and tore it apart. They scattered parts all over the shop, but try as they would, they couldn't find anything that was bad enough to cause a knock. In fact, all the parts looked per-fect, so after due consideration they decided to put them back together again. Maybe, they de-cided there hadn't .been any knock after all. The job of putting the starter back on fell to Verdell, and when j the boys started to set the engine its fulfillment. An auto company advertises a power package, consisting of a new engine and automatic trans-mission. An air line offers pack-age tours - - you pay them so much money, and every detail of your tour is planned, directed, and carried out for you on schedule. You need only know where you want to tour to, and maybe not even that, as they could supply a destination for those who didn't know where to go. A labor union is asking an auto maker for a welfare "package" of 31 cents an hour. In the pack-age are to be such things as old age pensions, hospitalization, paid vacations, and many other things. The Hoover plan has been cal-led a government reorganization package. Congress is considering making a single "package" appro-priation each year, in the interest of economy. It would say to the President, if effect, "There, you can spend fifty billion dolars this year and not one red cent more." The American Legion objected to the Hoover reorganization pack-age, or at least to something in that package, and then sent out a package of criticism, according to their ideas. One of the biggest "packages" in private business is a new pack-age power plant offered by West-inghou- Electric. If you are a municipality or a utility, and want a power plant, you don't need to know all the details. You just pay Westinghouse half a million dollars, and furnish a place to put it ,and they will deliver ths package and set it up. It includes generators, buss bars, power unit, and a brick building to house the works. You even get a fence to go around the premises. Perhaps the day will come when you can buy a "package" home, complete with wife and family, with everything all arranged to be just what the average modern could want. It should in-clude all this, and heaven too, for a small down payment and a long term mortgage. AUTHORITARIANISM .... Our old friend, Wallace Reid, was a Delta visitor Sunday. Wally was a percussionist in one of the Delta orchestras in the old days. He now lives in Los Angeles. At the recent meeting at the L. A. city hall, attended by Gov. Lee, Gov. Warren, and other dignitaries Wally was master of ceremonies, and he said it was the first time in his life when he could tell two governors and the head of the AiifiOiea Counts Off Saturday i Beginning April 1st, you can ex pect the census taker to knock at your door at most any time prepared to answer questions' ah' out you and your family. jt your heritage as an American and your duty as a citizen to heln your government provide the accu, ate statistics necessary to plan the economical future of this great nation. The census taker is a sworn United Sates government employ ee and carries identification to prove it. Personal information you give will be held in the strictest ol confidence. Subject to the condit. ions provided by law, even the FBI cannot have access to the personal information given and that goes for any and all taxation groups , too. Your city, county .state and fed. eral governments need and use every answer you give. These an-swers will be used on a statistical basis but, will effect every man, woman and child in this country The three major schedules taken up in the decennial census will be population, housing, and apic-ulture, V. Max Moffitt, Census Supervisor, says. Every manufac-turer, distributer, business man and economist in this country will use the 1950 census information lor ten long years. This is a complete survey and there is no substitute for a quality census. SUMMONS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE DISTRICT IN FIFTH JUDICIAL AND FOR THE COUNTY OF MILL-ARD, STATE OF UTAH CECIL K. ROSS and MARCELLA S. ROSS, husband and wife, Plaintiffs, -- vs- DELTA LAND AND WATER COM PANY a corporation; Wi.&.l min LAND AND DEVELOPMENT COM-PANY a corporation; ROY W. SIM-MONS State Bank Commissioner of ha ctato nf Utah, as receiver ot the Columbia Trust Company, an insolvent and defunct banking cor poration, of the State of Utah; DULUTH LAND COMPANY, a cor-poration; FRANCES INVESTMENT COMPANY, a corporation; BObluiN LAND COMPANY, a corporation; GEORGE A. SNOW, and MRS. GEO RGE A. SNOW, his wife, whose true and correct name is otherwise unknown; NORVAL J. WELLS and HARRIET G. WELLS, his wife; MILLARD COUNTY DRAINAGE DISTRICT NUMBER FOUR, a body corporate and politic; A. W. MAC ARTHUR and MRS. A. W. MAC ARTHUR, his wife, whose true and correct name is otherwise tin -- known; ROY W. SIMMONS, State Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah, as receiver of the Deseret Savings Bank, an insolvent and de-funct banking corporation of the f TTtoVi- INVESTORS FIN- - ANCE COMPANY, a corporation; JOHN A. SLY and MRS. JOHN A. SLY, his wife, whose true and cor-rect name is otherwise unknown; R N. DAY and LILA B. DAY, his wife; FEDERAL LAND BANK OF BERKELEY, a corporation; MAUD W FAUST, a widow; JAMES L. WHITE and MRS. JAMES L. WHITE, his wife, whose true and correct name is otherwise un-known. The Heirs, Creditors, Devis ees, Legatees, and personal repre-sentatives of the personal defend-ants above named who might be deceased, and the Stockholders, Creditors, Assigns and Successors in interest of any of the above named corporate defendants that might have ceased to exist and all other persons unknown claim-ing any right, title, estate therein or interest in the real property in the Complaint adverse to Plaintiffs' ownership, or any cloud upon Plaintiffs' title thereto. Defendants. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANTS: You are . hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this Summons upon you, if served within the County in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above en-titled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to Can I? The trouble with Toots is, she don't have no appreciation of the finer things. What's wrong with music? What's wrong with Wingovers? What's wrong with Hang - - oh skip it. Here I'm Ir-ving to lift the cultural level of the paper, and all I get is a razzing from Tootsy I'll bet her idea of highbrow music is the Mule Train. Bach, Beethoven? Bet she never heard of them. Here's ten dollars that says she wouldn't know the Air For The G String if she heard it. Toots, is such a dumb cluck I bet she thinks discretion is some kind of a salve. the demand of the Complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. This action is brought to quiet title on the following lands in Mil-lard County, Utah: The W of the NW, and the SEV4 of the MWS, of Sec. 33, Twp. 17 S. of Range 6 W., Salt Lake Base and Meridian. The NWJ4 of the NE'A of Sec. 32, Twp. 17 S. of Range 6 W., Salt Lake Base and Meridian. The NWKof the SE& of Sec. 29, Twp. 17 S. of Range 6 W., Salt Lake Base and Meridian. The NEK of the SW'4 of Sec. 20, Twp. 17 S. of Range 6 W Salt Lake Base and Meridian. The SE'i of the SWVL of Sec. 20, Twp. 17. S. of Range 6 W., Salt Lake Base and Meridian. The SE'4 of the NE'4 of Sec 19, Twp. 17 S. of Range 6 W., Salt Lake Base and Meridian. Dudley Crafts Attorney for Plaintiffs P. 0. ADDRESS: DELTA, UTAH. First publication, March 23, 1950. Final publication, April 20, 1950. Mr. and Mrs. Owen George drove to Sacramento, Cal., last week, where they are visiting their son! Vernon George, and family. Harlow Mortensen, from the BYU and friend, Miss La Rae Gardner, spent the weekend in Beaver and Delta, visiting members of Ha-rlow's family. The boys in today's Who's Who are John Avery Bishop of Delta, and Ed. Bishop, of Salt Lake City! sons of M. M. and Janett Bra-nson Bishop, very early settlers. Ed is now a contractor and builder. John Avery still lives on the same corner in Delta where he built one of the first homes in Delta. He Is a veteran choir leader, and chor-- i ister in Delta Second ward, and member of the Desert Sentinels. |