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Show BASIN BRIEFS Mrs. Ella Roberts is proud to announce- the birth of her fifth grandchild, a 9-pound son, born Dec. 11, to Mr. and Mrs. Lorell E. Roberts, of Milwaukee, Wis. Joyce Jordan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray S. Jordan, returned last weekend from Wasatch Academy Acad-emy to spend the Christmas holidays with her parents. She was a dinner guest Monday evening eve-ning at the home of Joanne Walton. Wal-ton. Other guests present included in-cluded Glenda Rudy and Yvonne Fretwell. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Malin and Doug spent the weekend in Salt Lake City. D U P The next meeting of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers will be held Friday, Jan. 2, at 3 p. m. at the home of Lcla Labrum. This will be the annual Christmas Christ-mas party and gifts will be exchanged. ex-changed. All members and el- igible members are urged to be present. Zclla McGce left Sunday for Denver to spend the winter with her daughter. Boyd Mullins is home to spend the Christmas holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Les Mullins. Mul-lins. Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Goody, of Springville, arc here spending the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Workman. Farewell Party A missionary farewell party honoring Junior Fausett and Gam Lloyd will be held Friday evening, Jan. 2, in the Ioka Ward hall. Refreshments will be sold and the proceeds turned over to the boys who will leave Jan. 5 to serve in the North Central Cen-tral and South Central mission fields, respectively. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hall returned re-turned Monday evening from Long Beach, where they went to attend funeral services for their grandson, Julius Ralph Pike, 25, who died Dec. 13 in Sautclle Veterans Administration hospital hospit-al as a result of injuries incurred while serving in the South Pa-icific Pa-icific during the war. Mr. Pike enlisted in the Army in April, 1943. He spent two j years in the South Pacific attached at-tached to the American Division, which was first to land in New Caledonia and among the first to reach Japan. He spent some time in Yokohama. He received the Purple Heart when Injured by a Jap hand grenade which hit him while he was lying beside a stone wall firing into the aperture of a Jap pillbox a few feet away. Burial was in the Veterans Administration cemetery at Long Beach. Seen in town this week for the first time in some months were Marilyn Lambert, Lowell Hall, Donna Rae Labrum, Howard Ho-ward Allred, ' Byron Gilbert, Betty Jo Sprousc, Bonnie Hanson, Han-son, Burr Eldredge and BoB Penfield all college students who are home to spend the Christmas holidays. Mr. and Mrs. William Edwards, who are attending U.S.A. C. at Logan, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Nelson and children, of Bingham Canyon, came Tuesday to visit during the holidays with their parents, 'Mr. and Mrs. Homer P. Edwards. Frank Mohlman, of Boise, is visiting at the homes of J. W. Mohlman and Glen Mohlman. Dorothy Dillman -is home from the U.S.A.C. to spend the holidays holi-days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Dillman. Also visiting visit-ing with the'Dillmans is their little grandson, Ray Lunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lunt, of Pocatello. i. The Progressive Parly will hold its inaugural banquet Monday, Mon-day, Jan. 5, at 6:30 p. m. at the Roosevelt Coffee Shop dining room. The public is invited. Reservations may be made with Fred Gagon, phone 167-J. All reservations must be in by 5 p. m. Jan. 2. Mrs. Marian S. Shields, our j Arcadia correspondent, was hospitalized hos-pitalized for a few days last week as a result of a fall in which she suffered a broken knee cap. Keith Walker and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walker and baby daughter are spending the Christmas Christ-mas holidays with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Walker and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Todd. The Walker boys are students at the U.S.A.C, Logan. Ladies' Fish And Game The Ladies' Fish and Game will hold a post-Christmas party at 8 p.m., Dec. 29, at the Parley Rawlings' residence. |