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Show 7te PtuptitUnf PUotdftGfJte mftucG3 Published every Friday at Blanding, Utah I. W. Cox PUBLISHER I'Chan Moulton.w i i PHOTOGRAPHER do you expect Blanding CORRESPONDENTS Here s to be in 1965 and for what reasons ? what the INOUIRIUG PHOTOGRAPHER found out in Porter, East Blending Mildred Rascoe, NW Blanding Sue Graves, Downtown Section Hilda Perkins, S. W. Blanding D, Elans-Reception- -lst for Dr. Fallon. Opel Howell, Bluff Donna Brown, Mexican Hat ? Anna Brown,. El Paso Mzs. H. E. Blake, Montieello Su6.crpttonof; San Juan&funtyjf on. yar J, Mrs. to "I expect the population be around 4000. slew A steady increase in population due to resources being developed." . . population her interviews with people on the street v Anna GRAVESs SUE "l-fha- t ...S4. 00 San Juan County, six months .. 2.25 A. 50 Blafiohiro, in W.S.A. 1 ; yoar Elkwhtr9. ihlU.S.Ari 6 months 2.50 Marion-Cle- rk Farley Redd's. "The population increase by 1965 in Blanding is contingent upon many factors. The increased dril- Entered as second class matter at the Post Office In Blanding Utah, under the act of March 3, 1887 ling in this area in oil completion of Glen Canyon very definite increase in tourist trads. An increase of 1000 over Dam and the it is what now the maximum. mining for the would wester-- . towns All good formance every year, Vt-o- n at least nr- - ' is probably Also renewed interest in Uranium small operators the Increase again area population." bir rodeo per- are truly a western product; they originated in the west and have since become s;inh a national hit that, they are now among the biggest drawing cards 'that Madison Square can book. ?V. - When you arrive at the .Bland in: P.odeo this afternoon and morrow notice the freshly' leveled and sprinkled arena, notice the newly repaired pens and chutes, and the rodeo stock which -- has b$en .brought in frofr' distant -places and is being cared for for the show about tc get underway. Notice the concession stands and ponder the amount of hard work the ants. have already done and tHe amount of work ahead of them before the two day celebration ends Saturday- Night. Then after the show is over think of the big clean-u- p job. Thers will tfe Judges, announcers, ticket takers, men at the .chutes, men in the pens, men everywhere. In short, to put on a rodeo is a heck of a big job and & lot of hard work, Rodeos Francis ' D. Nielson-Cit- y Rcoordcr. "If they go to 40-ospacing in the Aneth field re if the Navajo Road is completed and if they bring, in a well to the west of us, I believe the popula- tion will be 5500 to 6000, - Blanding , owes Mrs. a debt of gratitude to the American Legion and the Elk Mountain Riders Club for. carrying of western Culture. .See you at. the areha. or. J. "I this important Fart am D. Sheridan-House-wl- fe. still optlmlstio to be in a slump now. It will at least double by 1965 in even though we seem population. The complex tion of roads will be a big factor and of course, new ( HOO(?0 PS) oil discoveries." ALWAYS LOOK YOUR BEST WITH. OKB QBOOSJQ Editor, Blanding Outlook r great Increase in the assessed valuation of San Juan County is due almost entirely to the oil and gas development in the southern part of this county. It 'is only fitting that some of this revenue be expended to The facilitate the operations muoh of these firms wealth to our oounty. who have brought so are roads end bridges, and the most urgent at this' tira is an emergency bridge over the San Juan River in the vicinity of ' Bluff for access to the developing Tohonodla area which is only a few miles south of Bluff, but for lack of aocess, the. Tohonodla business is lost to the county and - The' most needed improvements Open 6 btufi 0 lOeefi -- JhuM 9 oh & 5 pm. . State. ITie immediate construction of a bridge here oil and servicing ther inducement to their offices and shops in this county. the would be a furaomparys to locate N. Lis comb Pho. 3821 JjwMi 'Bmiti Skf 2 Blocks 'So. Grade School .. |