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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah. Thurs., Sept. 20, 19b J . i Entering the University or this Utah week as freshmen were Jessie Lynn Cook, Wanda Billings, Hal KUlpack and Ralph Morrison, of Delta. Earth Black, sophomore, left Wednesday for the U. Derral Wright, SKAN, from Ala-meda naval base, is spending a 15-d-leave in Delta with his par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wright. Derral was recently at Moffatt fid. oh temporary duty while a store house was set up and while saw VVallie Kernel and Lawrence Stev-ens, Hinckley 'servicemen. SUTHERLAND... BY GLORIA WALKER Mr. and Mrs. Dean Justesen and small daughter of Terreton, Ida., visited Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Shields, and with Mrs. Ef-fi- e Justesen, their grand mother. Mrs. Leo Davis is visiting in Salt Lake this week with her daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Rus-sell McBride, and getting acquain-ted with her new granddaughter. Mr. and Mrs. Romulus Shields were in Salt Lake City this week. visiting and shopping. Miss Weaver Clark, of Holly -- wood, Cal., is here visiting her brothers, Rufus, John and Dick Clark and families. De Von Roper called his wife, Birdie Terry Roper from Lackland Monday and reported he is being transferred to an air base in Ore-gon soon. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Memmott have been on a trip to the South-ern Utah Parks with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Adams of Delta, this week. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Boothe have had their sons, Jim, Lee and Don Boothe and Roy and Vere Bendix-o- n here for the week to help with the threshing of their father's farm Mrs. Henrietta and Marie Bar-be- n and Mrs. Helen Hersleff were to the Jolly Stitchers club this week. They held a tri-bute and moment of silence in honor of Mrs. Katherine M. Pace. Mrs. Adrian Hansen reported on the Horace Mann book, "Joseph in Egypt." Mrs. Phyllis Wood was a guest. Mrs. Alice Jensen is in Cedar City visiting her daughter, Mrs. Marian Woolsey. Mr. and Mrs. Ivo Ogden spent Saturday and Sunday pine-n- hun ting in the mountains. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Bishop and family and Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell Walker and daughters went to Too ele Sunday in search of pine-nut- s. Mrs. Emoret S. Boshell, who is working in the Cedar City hospital, visited here last week with her family and cared for the younger children while her mother, Eleanor Skidmore, is in a Salt Lake hospit-al recovering from an operation. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Walker re- - ceived word that their son, 2nd Lt. John Walker has been transferred from San Antonio, Texas, to Fort Warren, Cheyenne, Wyo., for fur-ther training. Mr. and Mrs. Wilford LeChemi-nen- t and daughters of Los Angeles visited here this week with her mother and sister, Mrs. Jennie Thornton and Mae. LaRue Anderson of Oak City and Kae Henrie and Dorothy Brumley went to Provo last week in con-junction with the FHA organiza-tion. The Primary Class held a party J for their mothers Monday. Punch and cookies were served. There was a good attendance. Silver Wedding '!' Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Twilchhell V-- celebrated their silver wedding an-- , i; niversary on Saturday , Sept. 15. h ''J Their daughters, Mrs. LuDean Sea-rl- e and Ardyth Twitchell, were hos- - V tesses at a family party to mark 'in. the occasion. Dinner was served i.s1 to twenty-fiv- e, and Mr. and Mrs. :! Twitchell were presented with gifts $ " and best wishes. Present were the guests of honor and their children and Mr. and Mrs. John Steele Mr and Mrs. Roy Steele, Mr. and Mrs' Gordon Twitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Willden, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Webb and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Willden. Wallie Orton, old son en' Mr. and Mrs. Dee Orton, ,of Deltu, j is reported much better this weei.. t He has been in a Salt Lake hos- - I pital seriously ill with gas gan- - grene poisoning. He may be broi.- - . ght home at the end of this wee., Mrs. Ross R. Anderson, of Salt if his recovery continues good. Lake City, is visiting in Delta with her niece, Mrs. Lafe Morley. Will Be Wed In Temple Rites Mr. and Mrs. Reed Lovell of Oak City announce the engage-- 1 ment of their daughter, Merlene, to Donald F. Schmutz, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilford A. Schmutz, of St. George, Utah. The Bride-ele- is a graduate of Delta high schhool. She attended the Brigham Young university and was affiliated with Gamma Phi Omicron and Alia Mitra social unit. A graduate of the Utah State Ag-ricultural college, she was a mem-ber of the home economics club and Lamba Delta Sigma. She has taught kindergarten in Logan and St. George. Mr. Schmutz is a graduate of Dixie College and Brigham Young university where he was a member of Delta Pi. He was in the Span-ish American mission two and one half years. He served in the army and in the islands of the Pacific during World War II. The wedding is being planned for September 29 in the St. George Temple. Scott Chesley returned to h... home in Delta Saturday after stay in the LDS hospital for en.- - ij ergency surgery and treatment.h. '' is doing fine and drove his ca. j, home, much better off than whe.. he went to the hospital by am- - bulance. Mrs. Chesley returne with him. II. II. S. News' LYLA RAE TALBOT F. H. A. DOINGS The FHA officers for this year are Irene Lewis, president, with her officers: Shirley Davis, vice president; Helen Black, Sec; Lula Marie Hilton, reporter, and Corma Wright as the song leader. This year has really started out with a bang. The officers are al-ready out to make a little for the club by selling Christmas cards. Irene and Shirley went to Provo to a FHA convention. They stayed at the BYU Upper Campus Dorm. The first program was a friend-ship assembly and the girls from the different chapters were intro-duced. Saturday meetings were held to learn what girls in the different chapters were doing for a special year's theme. Saturday night a square dance and song festival was held. The girls re-turned home Sunday. PEP CLUB INITIATIONS Initiations for the pep club have been held this week. There are seventeen girls being initiated in-to the club. They have been in-structed to wear different clothes for three days of initiation. Mon-day they wore clothes that clashed with their hair done up in twenty-f-ive pig tails with a different color ribbon on each pig tail. Tues-day they wore night-gown- s and house slippers and their hair done up in pin curls. Wednesday they wore gunnie -- sack dresses with one nylon sock and a high heel shoe on one toot and a flat heel shoes and a bobby sock on the other one. Marjorie Ireland, Jerry Larsen and Shirley Davis were Ln charge of the inia-tiatio- An assembly will be held Wednesday under the direction of Kathryn Ekins and Lyla Rae Tal-bot. An initiation party will be held at the high school Wednesday night. The officers for the Pep Club this year are all Seniors. Mae Jean Petersen is president with Erma Roundy as vice president, Irene Lewis as sec, and Jerry Lar-sen as reporter. FRESHIE DAY Last Wednesday marked a day that will always be remembered at the Hinckley high school. 26 freshies were initated into the high school. The freshies were dressed in all kinds and colors of garb. This year the tables sort of tur-ned. In stead of the sophomores being the victors it turned out just the other way around. The fresh-ies really plastered the sophomores with paint and makes up. That night a stocking and levi dance was held to the music of Bud's band. Everyone agrees it was one of the finest dances of the year. Mr. and Mrs. Clement Portei, from Washington, D. C, visiteu last week at Abraham with Mrs. Porter's sister, Mrs. Hallie Y. Jen-sen and Mr. .and Mrs. Alva Young. Mr. Porter called at the Chronick office Saturday and said he hao been an employee of the paper in 1916 and 1917, before Mr. Beck- - with bought the paper. He left from Abraham in 1917 to serve in World War I. Mrs. Porter will be remembered as the former Flor-ence Black, yongest child of Jose-ph S. Black, first bishop of Deseret. The couple have lived in Wash-ington for many years now, where Mr. Porter is employed by the gov-ernment. Pvt. Gene Mitchell telephoned Tuesday night from his camp in Georgia, and talked twenty min-utes with his mother, Mrs. Melvin Mitchell, at Delta. He is in the sig-nal corps., and says he expects to be home on furlough in about ten days. r if " I iMl There's less time than think I ) you to get your barns, V f granaries and sheds in ship-shap- e condition for winter. i i Staft today by seeinS us for plans, ideas and J jZy if materials. Convenient financing, too, if you wish it. t BUILD-REPAIR-EIGLIOD- GL 1 fiMj ROLL ROOFING "V ' - 1 90 lb- - m'neral surfaced felt MM I EEr- - P1 1 roofing. Heavily saturated MjI l i JzL with asphalt for extra weath- - Wt! J Approved granary, Model --Png and longer life. M 2106. Detailed plans avail- - Per Roll 34.!IU i able for many other types V and styles Nij r3; WALLBOARDS mm SviV ; Use these low-co- st wallboards ' '"Sl n1 or 'inin9 form structures or E"fy if $ building partitions. Ideal for 'rvl-- - i'!;ltH ;j milking sheds. Keeps out 2 . drafts, insulates. ,, Lu.. Livestock barn. Provides As low as 790 JLJt" '' J ample feed storage facilities. --- S" I f - jtS. We now have an excellent stock of I y''mmwL Dimension lumber in all sizes for I im JISi any eons,ru,in need. Heavy duty open livestock STi tx fS (? feeder. See us for plans. V if UJ 4r!'V V ZJ U i L.n rW. i . FARM FAMILIES CROWN SPARK THE WINNERS 1 2 Spark, oil heaters win again! The annual farm families ' survey conducted by the Pacific Northwest Farm Quad and f covering Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Utah, once again shows that Spark heaters enjoy greater preference than all other makes j combined. Spark also triumphed in 1949 and 1950. , SEE FOR YOURSELF WHY SPARK IS FIRST! j 4J Let your Spark oil heater dealer fx ' tJM. show you the way to solid com- - S 'L fort this winter. Check the ' XS3jj&' j advantages Spark can give you in IS your home when cold weather JS Kthtrn;akTreSparkagainst I Tr5ATv,iAtl?pAP" Mrit . 4m f A 'P suncj ttWa farm ''Z I fan;Jie, "tend to buy . p.rticular o f ! w SIS of hMter' W'U lJ Spark,; ; other make, combined. 46. Ia I j &isas 1950 31V4 chose Spark; othet makes 1 1 combined, 48V4. So the preference I Spark, already heavy, is increasing. ' ' If m m m ., . ELECTRICALLY ) ( AND ENJOY THE ENJOY HEALTHIER LIVING WITH A PLENTIFUL SUPPLY OF HOT WATER When it comes to the very best in hot water service, there's nothing quite like an ELECTRIC Water Heater. It's quiet, depend-able and as safe as an electric light. Visit your appliance dealer, furniture store or plumber. He will recommend the proper size for your family. TELLURIDE POWER COMPANY A g. Tax-Payin- g Industry - -- - S I? IE s n i L WE HAVE A FEW NEW CARS WE WILL SELL AT PRICES EFFECTIVE BEFORE THE LAST CAR PRICE RAISE uesin mim co. FILLMORE. UTAH - , J YOUR CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH DEALER j BY - - Establishing reputation for top quality. This means a constant market at premium prices; added income ' r and savings for ' members. UWI POULTRY , AND FARMERS CO-O- P (Jenrral OjfflceK 1800 South Wtit Tcmptt - - - - Salt Lah City Convemenr Branches in ' Utah and Southern Idaho William M. Stapley, and his wife the former Joyce Marie Kelley, and their daughter, Jackie Ann, spent the week end in Hinckley visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Stapley. Mr. Stapley was recently released from his second term in the service. He was at Camp Rob-erts, Cal., serving as a master ser-geant. Their home is now again in Salt Lake City. With them for the trip were Mrs. Stapley's sis-ters, Miss Pauline Kelley and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Konzulus, from Salt Lake City. Evan D. Nielson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Nielson, of Leam-ington, enlisted Wednesday in the U. S. Air Force. He is the third Millard county man to enlist in the "Scenic Southern Utah Flight" according to Sgt. Howard Stinson,, Richfield recruiter. The flight will be entirely composed of men from southern Utah, who enlist now and return to their homes until Sept. 28, when they will be sworn into the Air Force. Men who have al-ready had physical examinations may enlist in this group b yspecial permission of the Air Force. Evan will be among the guests of honor at the big Amer-ican Legion-Ai- r Force sponsored farewell party in Richfield on Sept. 28. Mr. and Mrs. Kendall Twitchell were in Salt Lake City Sunday to visit their old son, Brent Lynn, at the general hospital, where he is being treated for polio. Each parent got to see the little boy for fifteen minutes. They were told that the child had the old type of infantile paralysis, and will be at the hospital ftom two to six months. He is responding well to treatment, and is using muscles they hadn't expected him to use so soon. Miss Wilma Tolbert, of Los An-geles, spent the week end in Delta visiting her mother, Mrs. Frances Tolbert. |