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Show Millard countV chronicle Delta, Utah, Thurs., June 26,1952 Siliitrtniiis TaMy Tab Mrs. Vada Shields entertained the Tally Tab club at her home Thursday evening. Lunch was ser-ved to members Vera Giles, Velda Perkins, Venise Taylor, Grace Fow-le- s and La Preal Justesen, and El-v- a Stone and Flossie Hepworlh, as guests. Pinochle was played dur-ing the evening, and high score awards went to Mrs. Stone, Mrs. Perkins and Mrs. Fowles, while Mrs. Giles received low. Aro Honored At lleccptioii Mr. and Mrs. Aldus D. Chappell, who were married in the Manti temple June 9, were honored at a wedding reception and dance in the new Deseret stake house Sat-urday evening, June 21. The bride is the former Miss Rayda Bishop, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray S. Bishop o Delta, and Mr. Chappell is a son of Mr. and Mrs. LaVon Chappell, of Ferron. The new Mrs. Chappell was love-ly in a wedding gown of the white slipper satin, fashioned with a fit-ted bodice and full skirt, with a yoke and overskirt of Chantilly lace. The finger-ti- p veil of bride's illusion was secured to a tiara of tiny seed pearls and orange blos-soms. She carried a bouquet of pink carnations nestled in white satin. Her attendants were Miss Lois Gardner and Miss Dorothy Bishop, of Delta. Standing as best man was Wayne Wilson, of Hinckley, a former missionary companion of Mr. Chappell. Serving as receptionists were Mrs. Vera Hilton, Mrs. Fannie Hil-ton, Mrs. Fontella Bishop and Mrs. Betty Johnson. In charge of gifts were Misses LaRae Chesley, Doro-thy Black, and Gevene Adams. Mrs. Grant Bishop was in charge of serving, assisted by young fri-ends and relatives of the bride. Verdell Bishop acted as master of ceremonies of the program. Tak ing part were Miss Carmen Rose and Mrs. Jack Fowles, in a duet. Mrs. Lorna Bunker, a marimba so-lo, LaVon Chappell, vocal solo, Mrs. Georgia Adams Huff, a read-ing, Dick Chappell, piano solo, Fer-re- ll Chappell and Lloyd Chappell, a duet and Mrs. lone Christen-sen a vocal solo. Many 'friends and relatives from out of town attended the recep-tion, coming from Salt Lake City, Spanish Fork Ferron Beaver Hol- - den and Wayne county.xne young couple received many congratula-tions and lovely gifts for their home. The newlyweds are making a home at 774 North 2nd East Log-an where they will, continue their studies at the USAC this fall. The bride was graduated from BAC and has attended the BYU and USAC where she is majoring in home economics. Mr. Chappell has completed an LDS mission in the northwestern states and is working toward his degree in history and education at USAC. He is a member of Delta Phi fraternity. Hinckley 3aids Jiigagemcnt Told Bishop and Mrs. Walter L. Ekins announce the engagement of their daughter, Marlene, to Mr. Dale Bliss, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oren Bliss of Hinckley. An announce-ment party was given by Mrs. Ekins for the betrothed couple on Saturday evening, June 21. Friends and relatives of the two called during the evening to congratulate them. . The Salt Lake temple will be the setting for the midAugust rites which will unite the couple. Both Mr. Bliss and Miss Ekins have attended college at the BYU during the past school year. They plan ito make their home in Hinck-ley. Mr. and Mrs. PlOss Esplin and children, from St. George, were week end visitors with their par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Moody. They left Sunday for Bryce, where Mr. Esplin will be employed this summe;. Deseret MRS. ARPRILLA SCOW Mr. and Mrs. Walter Leben, Bet-ty May and Fay Ann Leben, and Miss Lars Schmidt from Amherst, Colorado, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Crafts. Bishop and Mrs. O. L. Dulson and son, Gill, were California vis-itors this past week. Daughters of Utah Pioneers of Millard County held their conven-tion at Deseret Friday afternoon A large crowd was in attendance from East and West Millard. A fine program and refreshments were enjoyed. Mrs. Carrie Jensen from Calif-ornia is visiting at Deseret with relatives and friends. Mr. M. B. Bage from Afton, Tex-as, is visiting at Deseret with his daughter, Mrs. Frank Winfield and family. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smylie and daughter, Annabell from West Los Angeles visited during the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Oral Black Mr. and Mrs. Earl Christensen, Carolyn and Phil are spending a few days in Salt Lake City. Richard and Angie Sorensen of Salt Lake City are staying the summer at the home of their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Palmer. Mr. and Mrs. Al Norton from Washington, D. C, visited during the past week with Mrs. Norton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John I. Bak-er. Mrs. Thurza Webb left Saturday for Modena, Utah to spend the next 10 days with her daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Taylor and family. A family dinner was held Sun-day afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Sampson. A lovely dinner was served to the following: Mrs. Nell Watson, of Delta, Mrs. Alta Jameson and son and daughter from Salt Lake City, Mrs. Stella Forand . and Roma Stump, from Oakland, California, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Barney and son, Sutherland, Mr. and Mrs. Garth Talbot and daughters, from Delta. Mrs. Genevieve Larson returned to her home Sunday at Spanish Fork after having spent a week visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Eliason. Mr. Parnell Hinckley from Salt Lake City visited Sunday and Mon day at Deseret with his daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Lin-coln Eliason. Mr. and Mrs. King Hinckley and children from California spent the week end visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Eliason. Mrs. Rae Jensen and children returned home after having spent several days in Salt Lake visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Roberts. Miss Gale Roberts return-ed to visit here with her sister and family. Ray Moody from Salt Lake City, visited with his mother, Mrs. Effie Moody, and sister, Norma over the week end . Mr. and Mrs. Marlow Cropper and daughter attended the rodeo at Murray, Friday and Saturday nights. Marlow came home with two lovely trophies he won while there one in calf hoping and one in rein-ing class. Chatter Boxj Dear Suzy, While the cat is away the mouse will play is an-ol- d adge, but it took a different twist this past week with our fellow townsman, Owen Holt. It seems that his wite left town and was off visiting so Owen decided that day that he would go home from work, clean up, and then do a little catting about the town while he had the chance. He came home from work but didn't clean up, nor did he cat around. For during the day vast hordes of bees had taken over the Holt homestead and when he opened the front door a loud buz-zing confronted him, and it was not a buzz in his head. He hastily closed the door and hurried down to Doc Judd to see what' Doc had to prescribe. Doc had plenty to prescribe and was liberal in his dishing out advice and his elixir, of which Owen had great need, because here he had a night on his hands and nothing to do nor anyplace to go. Fortifying himself and getting the little brain cells into high gear with Doc's panacea, Owen toyed with the thought of doing away with the bees and having the house to himself. How he long ed for his wife, who would know the answers and who would take action right oflf. A dim light start-ed to gleam in his mental process and finally burst into full bloom like an arc light, and he figured that maybe a bee man would know what to do. Derral Wright was summoned to see if he had the answer and he had an answer alright, but it entailed fumigating the household with cyanide, and as Owen had not taken any preventive against that gas he was forced to sleep the night on a lonely bed hastily made up of three railrad ties and a burlap bag. Next day found the house full of dead bees and they had all lost their buzz. So had Owen lost his buzz and so he went back to work bemoaning his fate that such lit-tle things as bees could rob him of a night to howl while his wife was away. Fern and Frant Foote, North Tract farming team, got their sig-nals crossed up last week when raking hay, with Frank receiving the worst of it. It seems that when it comes to raking hay up they have a system, Fern drives the tractor and Frank rides the rake. When Frank wants Fern to turn a certain way he hollers "gee' and for the other direction "haw." Came a turn and one or the other of them mixed up the gee and haw business with the rake going one way and Frank another. Frank was rolled over a few times but not injured any place that showed, and Fern was rather upset to think that she had treat-ed Frank that way, when he had always' treated her OK. Frank fig-ures that if he had had any burrs Fern would have rolled him right up in the windrow and let him go for seed, but as he was minus the burrs she stopped and let him get up. They took it rather easy for a few days until they caught onto their signals again, and now they are raking away right happily, until they get mixed up again. Floyd Tolbert has recently be-come a member of the Society of Ditch Jumpers Who Didn't Make It. He was out irrigating the other night when it was trying to freeze and to warm himself up thought he would jump a ditch a few times to get warm. He jumped ful-ly equipped with hat and shovel but when he landed in the water he lost his grip on the shovel and somehow or other lost his hat. Now he is going about with out n Vi o t rrr inrr a rooonflir m turned college boy (if anyone can look that bad), and is waiting for the water to go down in the ditch to retrieve his shovel. The Rainmakers are doing us dirt thes days. Here we pay them good money (or as good as money is these days) to make rain and they double cross us. Tuesday when the little blossoms of alfalfa were looking like a million dol-lars they brought about a rain that made all rains lately look Jike work of children. Not only did they toss a bunch of rain at us, but along with it came hail as big a grapefruit (pink), or at least they seemed, that big, and around Sutherland it had the ap-pearance of a Christmas card, complete with snow, icy roads and a blizzard. They must have hollered "gee" when they meant "haw". Tools. JULY 4th SUGGESTION ) CHILDREN'S SANDALS $2.49 and 3.98 SIZE4jo SEE8 10 3 "ladies- - flat sandalT $2.98 - $3.98 and 4.98 Ladies' White Pumps and Ties l2 PRICE Boy's Fancy Rayon Sports Shirts ONLY $1.69 SIZE 6 to 16 . Ladies' Sun Suit Halters - ti--v COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC WASHER FOR THE PRICE OF A CONVENTIONAL WASHER Regular Economat $229.95 Less Your Old Washer NOW $189,3; 10 DOWN - 24 months to Pay Demonstration m, wn'i 'i ' " " ""' .4 ( with anZi NEW AUTOMATIC FEATURED Spindrier 1 rwaJ AUTOMATIC a ; ' k SPIN-RINS- E () Now EASY Spindrier do. th. r rn ' hardest part of washday automatically with amazing f "'i a-ti- zrzz mim Automatic ' wo '"b work at ona to do " I gi g a week's wash in one hour. i II H I Handy Swing Faucets save 'J) jH " soap and hot water. All new J built-i- Water Filter. New high- - i V" speed Drain Pump. U Washer Is j Your Old i 1 .,:,,'.Mfc L 1 Dovm payment AS LOW AS $149.95 V WORKMAN'S Home Furnishings 'o iime jju..'WJilfl l nil.'tWM .m MOVIE GUIDE and NOTICE Because of circumstances outside our cot trol the picture, "Bells on the Toes" will not k played at the CREST THEATRE until July 23, 1 and 31. However we have a brand new picture It fill in the date of July 1 - 2 - 3 in "Frances Gos To West Point". This picture will open in Dell: the same time as it opens in Salt Lake City, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY - JUNE 27 & 28 "Rose of Cimarron" In Color and Also "Reunion In Reno" SUNDAY and MONDAY - JUNE 29 and 30 "TEXAS CARNIVAL" Color with Red Skelton and Esther Willi TUES. - WED. - THURS. - JULY "Frances Goes To West Point" . WITH DONALD O'CONNOR A Grand Family Picture Ciest Uieahe CIRCUS IS COMING TO TOWN TUESDAY, JULY 10TH John A. Strong's One Ring Circus DOGS CLOWNS JUGGLER Wm. Dedrick's Famous Circus Ponies where I sit ... &u Joe Marsh from Neighbor Pojtf Remember one time when I told that's his business. But about the old loose-ston- e wall that really serving ny usu separated Easy Roberts' property he may sooner or W from Handy Peterson's? just like Handy j;. That was when they decided they thati!e'd VioM-f-c " really didn't need the wall between T - T.re disaPP""3' them in the first placeso they L, simply .stopped repairing it. llke, son's thseJ to a UV, Now I hear where a fellow, who beer now and then. the old Johnson place, wants can3 are learning that " to buy all those stones. It seems he et in the way of the pen figuree a stone wall is just what's gide a3 well as the persots needed on his property. . "j flii From where I sit, if that fellow sf& ' wants to build himself a stone wall, C "!" Copyright, 1952, tfwirf FOR SALE: 3 Chester White wean-e- r pigs. Call Larry Wright, phone 1942.. WANTEDr Old gentle horse that will work on a rake and one that kids can ride. See Aroet Taylor. FOR SALE: 80 acres of ground. 40 broke, and 40 in the brush, near Abraham. 7 acres of certified Ranger alfalf. Also a Guernsey cow, just fresh. See Lee Talbot. Abraham. 7-- Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Taylor, who moved to Oakley, Utah, two weeks ago, have returned to Delta to stay. Mr. Taylor's health was affected there so the family re-turned home. Mr. and Mrs. Joe McGuire and little daughter arrived in Delta Sunday for a visit with her par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Morrill. Joe had received his release from the air force at Denver June 21 after four years in service. The couple will go to Tooele later to make a home. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Starley drove to Cedar City Tuesday, taking home their daughter,. Mrs. Ruth Cahoon, and three children, who had been visiting with them for Pvt. Joe Moody, and wife, Glen-n- a a week. Moody, are spending a furlough In Delta with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Ward Moody,. They have been in Baltimore, Md., and will go on to San Francisco, where Pvt. Moody reports for duty June 30. M. Ward Moody returned to Del-ta Friday from Detroit, where he had attended a seed growers' con-vention. For the past two weeks Pvt. and Mrs. Cleone S. Talbot have been visiting with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Talbot, of Hinckley, and Mr. and Mrs. Mor-gan W. Hurst, of Payson. Cleone has just completed his basic train-ing at Camp Roberts, Cal. Mrs. Talbot will accompany him to Ft. Hood, where' he will receive fur-ther training. Miss Elizabeth Moody, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Ward Moody, returned home Friday after spend-ing two years in the L D S Spanish mission. Most of her service had been in Texas, and for the past six months she had been at Cor-pus Chfisti.. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Peterson and children, from Roosevelt, are Delta visitors at the Ward Moody home. Mrs. Peterson and children is remaining for a longer visit, and Mr. Peterson left Wednesday to return to their home in Roose-velt. The 4-- Thimble Club held their regular meeting at the home of their leader, Dorothy Steele. After a business meeting light refresh-ments were served. All club mem-bers were present and included Brenda Lee Pace, Andrea Moody, Barbara Nutsch, La Raine Curtis, Barbara Steele and Patsy Manser. LaRaine Curtis, reporter Mr. and Mrs. Heber Wilkins have received word of the arrival of their third grandchild with the birth of a son to their daughter, Mrs. Eugene F. Simmons, in ' San Francisco on June 18. Mr. Simmons who has been serving in Korea for the past eight months, is now on his way home, and will arrive in two weeks, f Oasis Mrs La Veda Bishop Mrs. Leona Pratt and daugh-ters, Joyce and Joan left Tuesday to return to their home at r, Cal., after a visit of ten days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Amos Maxfield. Robert and Stephen Robinson, of Delta, have been visiting their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Robinson since Sunday. Mrs. Lucille Farr, of Phoenix, Arizona, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Val Styler. On her way here she stopped at Bea-ver, and her sister, Ila Messenger, brought her on to Oasis. Mrs. Mes-sing-and her children visited for a week here. On Friday another danchtpr Tllen Anderson of F!nh. raim, visited at the Styler home. The Black family reunion in Fillmore Sunday was attended by Mr. and Mrs. J. Val Styler, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Styler, Mr. and Mrs. Arlyn Styler, Mrs. Lucille Farr Mrs. Nella Carter, Mrs. Ila Mes-singe- r, Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Gillen, Mr. and Mrs. Deon Gillen and Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Gillen. Brent, Karen and Lynn, children of Mr. and Mrs. Aryln Styler, of Bountiful, are visiting their grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Val Sty-ler, while their parents are mak-ing a trip to Denver. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roundy spent Sunday in Provo. Mrs. Clark Bishop spent the week end in Logan with her sis-ter, Mrs. Allen Peterson and fam-ily, and also attended the wedding ceremony of her niece, Aldeen Skid more, and Seymour Nielson, in the Logan temple Friday. The Bake Sale First set for June 28 has been postponed until a later date as many of the ladies will attend the garden club con-vention in Richfield Saturday. Mrs: Ruth Kump, of Axtell, Utah spent the week end in Delta with her sister, Mrs. Verna Gardner. She made the trip with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ball, o Gunnison. The Kitchen Kids Club met at the home of Ethelyn Sorensen this week, and prepared fruit sal-ads. Officers are Barbara Bishop, president, Colleen Barben, vice president, Ethelyn Sorensen, sec, Diane Hannifin, reporter. Next meeting will be at Diane Hannifins home, Tuesday, at 2:30 p. m. k |