OCR Text |
Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE : Delta, Utah, Thurs., Nov. 27, 1952 FOR SALE: 25 head of Oache Val-ley heifers, ages from 6 months to 3 years old. I will sell any amount. Phone 1693, or see Duane Stanworth, Delta, 11-2- 0 FOR BETTER RESULTS ADVERTISE IN THE CHRONICLE ' SPEED BIDING How io sian engines fnet . that you have plenty of Cievron starting Fluid and chevron in extremely Cold Weather ' Ban-Ic- e Fluid all season. Weem- - phasize service because it is the Shown above is a foundation of our 5. primer pump designed to inject local business I Chevron Starting Fluid into gas- - ; "" """" oline or diesel engines. ' .VSr"5 It works this way: as the oper- - nr.irr?- - PMMBftH ator steps on the starter, he ; ffK-- works the pump with his hand. SV Highlyvolatile Chevron Starting X - Fluid goes into the engine and f S''( jr starts it up. Has started engines ' furtnnlf I!TN5 FLl) at 50 below zero I . j " IfHUn To prevent ice formation in your Vj. jjSiKamm fuel lines and tanks, we also rec- - ' tict I ommend Chevron Ban-Ic- e Fluid sa-b;- in cold weather. ' K:"K:S iSSsfLj If SP1 H ft 1 ifT vlL f S-- : We'll be glad to fill your order 3&VUi old A for the primer pump for your equipment and, of course, see A Standard Oil Company f California Product Distributed by L. H. (SPEED) RIDING PHONE 551 DELTA, UTAH i enhance the gt 4 1 Bourbon Taste of J "Lefs not kid ourselves about high costs and heavy taxes. There IS a limit. Pass that limit and an industry can't operate. If that happens to Utah's mining industry, we'll all suf-fer. We'll lose the benefits that come from pay-rolls, supply purchases, and tax payments. Re-member, these are benefits that not only help us miners, but everyone in every section of our state." J V IIB1HMPIIIH pp .'PHH' .'. m 'I '!' Mil.. H'M!.aJUWtf'lt.W! MH OUITYANT ADS A LITTLE INVESTMENT In a CLASSIFIED AD WILL PAY BIG DIVIDENDS 5 line or less ........ 50c or 3 times for . $1.00 FOR SALE: Dairy Equipment: two stainless steel magnetic type De Laval milkers, complete with pump and motor; 12 ten gallon milk cans; four, can milk cooler, 1 two compartment washing vat. Alma Christensen, Delta 11-2- 0 Pleasant dreams with an ELECTRIC BLAUKET Set the dial and sink into cozy warm blanket gives you the warmth of sheets. You'll slumber relaxed all two or three ordinary blankets, night long under an electric blanket. FORGET ABOUT icy cold sheets, Automatic controls keep the heat heavy piles of blankets, and tense, exactly as you set it, no matter how aching muscles. Get your Electric cold the room gets. One electric Blanket today! JUST RIGHT FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT! Available at all appliance, furniture and dry goods stores ""39SI TELLURIDE POWER COMPANY f) You can't beat these You can comb the county without fj International pickup truck exclusive! i finding a better "top hand" than an ' I Silver Diamond valv.-In-ha- d cngln built In tht International Truck with pickup body. ' world' larfl"' fruek nfl'n Pant-- t . . The "roomlait, moit comforlabl cab on tht rood One reason is the 45 years of truck -t- he ,3 ;' manufacturing experience behind it. And SuPer-jteerin- .yt.m-m- or potitwo wntrot S true tO its Century Of farm family trad i- - ' easier handling. 37 hmlng anglo. Jf tions, International pickups deliver Vc " ne0rnodeJi ?'2?0 to,8'f0 115, 127, ' 134-l- ""l Bame outstanding performance and . bases. ' during economy. The traditional truck toughneu that hat kopt International first In heavy-dut- y truck sale to S1 Invest SO minutes m finding out r - 20 straight years. Do it next time you're in town. a Larges, exclu,,v, fruek Ic erflanMrtoB. , u IfT T '&tjk ? I Buy on ProofT" ' ; Before you buy any truck, j . ' 'X ''vSJ I let us give you a list of per- - (YV A : 7?N- - V;1 1 I sons in this area who have ilsLill: recently bought new Inter- - I International Pickups ava able in nine models with nationals like the one you eh, 8, and bodies, 4,200 to 8,000 lbs. gvw. are considering. Check with any or all of them. Find out how Internationals cut haul-ing costs on jobs like yours. . . For complete information about any International Truck, $09 ejSHnejMBBJIBS9MHSSSSHBSSSSHSBaBBBBMBSae1 ASHBY'S, INC, ...phone 161 DELTA, UTAH I mmmvummx, Mr.a rid Mrs. Paul Blackburn of Freeport, Texas, write this week that they had read in the Chron-icle of our recent snowstorm, while they, in shorts, were on a sunny jetty trying to oaten fish. They say come on down and they will help us land a big one. To clinch matters they enclosed a pic ture of their banana crop which is ripening in the yard. Two stalks, which had ripened earlier, had been given around town as rare prizes. Mr. iand Mrs. M. H. Workman have a new grandchild in the ar-rival of a son to Willard and Beth Workman Atkin, Nov. 21 at Tooele. Wingovers All the news that's fit to print from the Delta Airport by Dick Morrison Fuel Low Delta's excellent landing field proved a life ' saver for 'another AF plane last week. Major W. H. Holt, flying an 1 from Great Falls to Las Vegas set down here Friday with only four gallons of gas in his tank. At the rate his ship was burning it, this would have turned his engine only a few thousand more revolutions. Major Holt spent Friday .night and part of Saturday tuning up his engine with the help of Leo Burraston, slract idea, provided art impres-sion is conveyed that an intelli-gent person can grasp. I can't believe it intellectually or artist-ically 'honest to portray the world in Daliesque manner. The other day in Salt Lake I bought a new record, sound un-heard, just because the advertising blurb caught my fancy. The City of Glass, by Bob Graettinger. A fascinating contribution to con-temporary American music, it was supposed to be. I couldn't wait to get home to play it. And then what a let-do- I got. Of all the cacophonous jangles! ' The com-position was claimed to suggest a city whose structures were stapes of musical sound, transparent and in constant motion, so that one then tok off for Hill Field. By coincidence, I happened to be in the INSAC house Sunday evening talking to Don Bothwell, when Holt was heard reporting to Salt Lake radio at 1726, estimating his time over Delta at 1759, in flight to Las Vegas two days delayed. Searle Dept. (Cont.) If the Searle brothers step up their flying activities much more, it may be necessary for this col-umn to run a special Searle depart ment. Last week Archie reportedly bought the club Champ, unless I've lost count, makes the third airplane in the family, and Tex took some dual instruction in night landings in his Cessna. Hot Shots could be seen through the outlines of others, a city of moving glass-like edifices. I guess I expected a modern bit of musical description like the Moudau, or an intricate structure of thematic material like Franck's Symphony. But it wasn't what I got. Mostly I found it unintelligible. At times, it was almost las "har-monious" as Stravinsky's Infernal Dance of the Firebird; other pass-ages suggested Shostakovitch at his worst. (And right here I feel impelled to add that I don't like Shostakovitch). I think his Ameri-can build-u- p stemmed from the efforts of Russophiles to exalt all things Russian. I know of no more disgraceful episode in the history of music than his apologizing to Stalin for not composing music more in keeping with proletarian revolution, and I think the poor sap is more to be pitied than scored. Of the City of Glass, the ad ;puff said its fresh new sound al-most defies teohnical explanation. . broken rhythmic lines vib-rant imagination .... unhibited spirit. Somehow those words look different now that I've heard the music. To any record collector who may be tempted to buy the City of Glass, all I want to say is, don't pay over your money until you hear it. After having been grounded the week before on account of snow, sleet, mud and poor visibility, the Odd Fellows annual turkey shoot finally got off the ground last Saturday and Sunday. The weat-her was clear, wind was cold from NNW, and visibility was unlimited except that it was pretty hard to see some of the turkey's heads. No trouble was reported except the icing-u- p of some of the patrons. Under the able stewardship of Ray Steele, who doubles as Noble Grand when not climbing Pack-ard's Peak to fix the beacon, Les Welton, Owen Holt, Speed Riding, Herman Munster, Dick Hunsaker, and others too numerous to men-tion, the affair went off very well. The Chronicle's business man-ager, Frank S. Beckwith, did him-self proud as a. marksman, but un-fortunately, the Editor, Athena Cook, proved she couldn't hit the wall of barn shooting from the inside. However, her better half, Bill, turned out to be a marksman par excellence. It was my misfor-tune to be in a target shoot group which inrlnded "Rill Cook and La Var Owens. I didn't get the tur-key, naturally. A ladies target shoot was or-ganized, and it is said one of the gals actually hit the target, but the report was not verified. I don't think Marianne Knox hit it, in any oase. Marianne told me she had never shot a gun before. Glen Christensen bagged a tur-key, but then Glen was once the best shot in the Nephi National Guard unit, and also he claims to have been the best shot in Korea while he was there. So the turkey (he shot at didn't have any more chance than a Chinese Red. I had hoped to see what Fred Clayton could do in a trap shot, butt they took so long to get Fred's unit organozed that I practically froze to death and left too soon to enjoy Fred's ballistic antics. Don and Dorothy Bothwell were ob-served at the scene, but if they copped a turkey they sure kept quiet about it. Some may object that the annual turkey shoot is rather hard on the turkeys, hut for me, I can't see any difference in killing them that way than some other. All turkeys wind up on a platter, and that certain preliminary is essent-ial. After all, the question of whe-ther Thanksgiving day is a time of joy or something else would seem to depend on whether one sees it from the viewpoint of a 'human, a turkeys, or, for that matter, a cranberry. Chaoticism If I may coin a word, and no one seems to be raising any ob-jection, I think chaoticism would be a good name for the thing a lot of our modern creative artists represent. Call them the devotees of chaoticism, or the high priests of the cult of chaoticism. If they were to try deliberately to bring chaos out of order, they could hardly do differently than they do. Of course it may be that I'm just not ready for their stuff yet. Maybe it's over my head. Still I can't forget that it was not so long ago that the prize winning picture at an exhibit of modern paintings turned out to have been hung up-side down, and the judges didn't know it until after they awarded the prize. I never did see that picture, and while it may have been ultra terrific, I can't help thinking it must not have conveyed any idea very clearly, even an abstract one if they couldn't tell top from bottom. The kind of pictures I like are the ones that are of something, of a landscape, for instance, in which the sky plainly belongs on top, or even of an ab- - Mr. and Mrs. Owen George had their family Thanksgiving dinner an Sunday afternoon before the departure of their son, Blaine, who has entered the service. Blaine has been graduated from the U. of U. and ROTC, and goes into the U. S. Air Force as second lieutenant. He left Sunday for San Francisco where he will visit his aunt, Mrs. Ella Gardner, and then go to Ham-ilton AFB. After two weeks there he goes to Ellington AFB, at Hou-ston, Texas, until further assign-ment. Members of the family here Sunday were Mr.a nd Mrs. Bud George and two children from and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bown from Salt Lake City. Delbert Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Mitchell of Delta, has returned home from the Fillmore 'hospital where he was treated for several days. 40 Years ago From the Files . . . Leamington The District School Sporting Club went on its first hunting trip Friday afternoon after school. Game wasn't plentiful as was ex peeled, but the boys brought in 22 pairs of rabbit ears and one ' coyote pelt. The prizes for the best shooting were awarded to Carl Cheel, first; Jay Nelson, sec-ond; and Wallace Nielson, third. Scipio A few of our young people went to Holden last' night to attend the wedding dance of Carl Nixon iand wife. Oak City Oak City has been suffering from an epidemic of measles the last few weeks. Dr. Broaddus was called from Hinckley iand with optical work, measles and other sickness, seemed to spend a very busy two or three days. Deseret The stork stopped at Deseret Sunday morning to leave a beaut-iful black-haire- d baby girl at the 'home of Bishop and Mrs. Bamron. All are doing splendidly. Delta There will be a big dance at the Amusement Hall on Thanks-giving night. Come out as it will be a good opportunity to shake down your big Thanksgiving din-ner. Prof. Maunoh has just thrashed out 2240 bushesl of grain from his farm east of the reservoir, which he thinks is pretty good for second year. Wm. Bassett and family have moved down from American Fork and will occupy N. S. Bishop's farm. Hinckley The first Relief Society Confer-ence of Deseret Stake was held at Hinckley last Sunday. There was a large attendance from all wards in the stake except Oak City, where an epidemic of meas-les kept everyone at home. |