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Show r ! FOUNTAIN GREEN fpocial Correspondence ' Mrs. Delia Collard was hostess . to the members of the Klever , Kraft club at her home Thursday . evening the occasirf being her -irthday anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. John Jenson of I'alt Lake City visited Sunday w.th relatives in Fountain Green. r Mr. and Mrs. Grant Erickson of Salt Lake City visited Sunday a. the home of Mr. and Mrs. icrt n Jenson. Mrs. idena Crowther entertained entertain-ed her club members and four Si c-cial guests at a dainlly ap-:o ap-:o nted luncheon at her home Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jenson of -loroni spent Sunday in Fountain Jrecn visiting relatives. Mrs. A. A. Anderson entertained entertain-ed the following ladies at a birth-cay birth-cay luncheon at her home Wednesday Wed-nesday afternoon. Mrs. Anna Cook, Mrs. Martha Elder, Mrs. Ciena Johnson and Mrs. Zina Jacobsen. j Mrs. Lillie Robertson entertained entertain-ed at a birthday party at her home Monday afternoon honor-J honor-J ing her grandson, Frank on his 8th birthday anniversary. Mr. Lester Mikkelson of Salt Lake City visited Friday at the home of Mrs. Jennie Anderson. Devere Johnson and Delbert Morgan have left for Gunnison where they have emplyment with ! the Gunnison Sugar factory. Miss Betty Allred visited during dur-ing the week end with her parents, par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Mathias Allred Mrs. Annie Jackson is visiting in Ely, Nevada the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Florence Holman. Mis. Mary A. Holman of Mt. Pleasant spent a few days here during the week visiting her mother, Mrs. Eliza Coombs. Mr. and Mrs. James Mayer of Gunnison visted Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Trena Mayer who is very ill. Miss Ella Samuels has returned home from Los Angeles, California Cal-ifornia where she has had em- j ployment for some time. j In a recent paper called "The Mid-Devon and Newton Times" ; from England in the front head-' lines, Mrs. Lillian Gibson Snow of Fountain Green reads of the ; corageous feats of her nephew, ' Eric James Littlewood - Gibson, ' bon of Mr. and Mrs. F. G. D. Gib- I son. It reads Of the many epic feats of bravery and determination, determina-tion, the foundation of British ' naval tradition Eric James .Little-' wood Gibson, 20 years old sick 1 bertlji attendant. of 3.1 Golvers Hill j King,steignton has during the present war, partaken of a lions share. In the course of his thrill packed adventures he has frequently frequ-ently brushed sleeves with death, escaping often as though by miracle. mir-acle. He has come to grips with the enemy on Norwegian soil, was in the Altmark incident saw the torpedoing of the , "courageous" "courag-eous" and at'.ended wounded soldiers under a vicious hail of Lombs shrapnel and machine gun bullets in the miraculous evacuation evacua-tion of Dunkirk. He is now improving im-proving in a hospital after being badly injured when H. M. S. Ivanho was lost. When the "Courageous" was torpedoed Gibson was out in the boats for many hours rescuing survivors. In the second battle of Narvik he was one of the 24 men who volunteered to rescue the crew of the Hardy. Many other feats of bravery too numerous to mention were cited in this paper but at the ending it said, "Mr. and Mrs. Gibson were called to his bedside and while there their son said, "No German will ever kill me." Mrs. Snow has her parents, brothers and sisters right, in the midst of the war and along with her letters receives her home pape. |