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Show APRIL 30, 1937 JMEgY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, UTAH The RISE of the DINOSAURS 0 gg By LEE STOKES, Geology mmsfc; ARTICLE V (fear ion ?k much - ? EXCLUSIVE PRICE, DEALERS i West Main UTAH Phone 111 "One Piece or a Carload" Jewkes, Sr., Club Monday Manti Temple present. with six members Mr. and Mrs. Asel Scovill anWinford Charles-tt- h nounce the marriage of their mine, have mov-iot- o daughter Leola, to Leonard n the Vaughn Cox home, of Rochester a't the Manti and Temple are Thursday. They fis. LaRue Charlesworth of Logan were speakers making their home at Rochester. Milton Huntington has purchclub meeting Monday the ased the Alfred Childs home. ht. Five girl clubs were repre-iteOne Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Moffitt boy and a few rents were present. The par-i- s are building a1 new home. are rot as interested in the Mrs. Celia Reid, who has been be. The very ill the S work as they should is slowwho work; win ly improving. past month, fs and girls ps to State fairs, Logan and A missionary party was held should be icago. More interest 'Tuesday afternoon after Relief ;en in club work. ss Areline Cox, daughter of Society. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tuttle of was and Mrs. Hal M. Cox, ;en to the Price hospital Mon-- C Salt Lake City, spent a few days as guests of his brothers, David for ear trouble. and Milton Tuttle. Sr. and Mrs. were Curtis Ray siness visitors in Price Tues-- r. Bruce Cox spent the week end at home. ilr. and Mrs. Thomas Guymon home from their mission at Industry ard labor organizaManti Temple. tions would both profit by a ilrs. Christy Humphrey enter- mutual rediscovery of some of ed the La'dies Improvement the ten commandments. fi.and Mrs. of Sweets Lar-se- 4-- H d. 4-- H i i Western Auto Co. Says It's A Fact! 03 DOES MOT OWN PANAMA CANAL ZONE I ybo'R NOT th wtu let yoo 'oNe op FAMiiy-fu- T Ljzlr vTr ifiM IT! If so, protect Studebaker, Pontiac or Buick owner? Our shop men your investment with SPECIALIZED service. are are factory-traine- d to work on these cars and they KNOW specialists. Drive here for your 'car's every need and it will be attended CORRECTLY. Genuine replacement parts. DODGE TON TRUCK Excellent tires, recently overhauled, new paint, a very good heavy duty truck1 at a cheap price l2 motor just w but STUDE COMMANDER SEDAN A high powered as new economical 8 cylinder engine upholstery as good like this delux interior as only a high priced car one can have PW 1 w ; good 1935 TOURING SEDAN-V- ery 1935 CC7C PLYMOUTH for tires, new rings just the thing summer vacation...- - Paint, good your Cg7g automobile has had CHRYSLER IMPERIAL This 7 good care. It has had but one previous JJf tees and C are good, Interior good. paint A bargain at 1931 8-- s25 """proof of SIR last week;sRTisement WALTER RALEIGH DID NOT VISIT Norm never got any nearer to the visit did He f.n mainland than Newfoundland. w. -erica. 1 "Popular Questions Answered Qo. Jr Walter Raleigh a wg v WESTERN AUTO CO. Studebaker - Buick - Pontiac Motor Cars Studebaker & G M. C. Trucks PKlCHi gEW CARS CARS Such a place, where they were was the area very numerous, which is now Emery County and in fact much of eastern Utah. If we were to imagine the conditions which prevailed during that time let us go back some 150,000,000 years and gaze upon a landscape which no longer ex- and which is recorded for us m the rocks and stones of the particular formation known as the Morrison which outcrops as a resistant ridge almost throughout the entire length of the county. This formation Is well exposed in great thickness on Cedar Mountain and in the ridge which runs just east of Castle Valley from that point to tihe south. It represents a great deposit of gravel, sand, limestone and shale which was deposited in a lowland bordered on the east by a great inland sea and on the west and north by great ranges of high mountains. Herein conditions with an semi-tropic- al abundance of water and fotod F-l- existed the great race of dinosaurs. In the swamps, lakes and pools they swam and waded; on the land they ranged by the thousands, some even inhabited the trees and a few took to the air where they become the greatest of all flying creatures. Scientists have discovered the remains of A over five hundred different kinds and these were as diversified as PATRONIZE THE FOLLOWING PRICE MERCHANTS the animals with which we are familiar at the present time. WHEN DOING YOUR SHOPPING. THEY ARE Some were as small as a common TAKE THIS DIRECTORY WITH YOU AND BE GUIDED BY IT. domestic chicken others weighed UP-TDATE, AND MERIT YOUR SUPPORT. forty tons. Some walked on two PROGRESSIVE, lcgs and some on four. Some swam, some waded and other divTHE PERFECT TRIBUTE COSTS NO MORE ed in the depths of the sea. Some climbed the trees and others flew FLYNN FUNERAL HOME in the air. There were dinosaurs PRICE, UTAH which ate flesh and others which 58 No. Carbon Ave. ate plants and some which had Phone 29 a diversivied diet of eggs and AMBULANCE 24 HOUR SERVICE insects. Large, small, swiftI slow, PRICE BUSINESS DIRECTORY OUT-OF-TOW- N O four-legg- ed and two-legge- d, finn- ed and winged, they swarmed by the millions and dominated the Cretaceous period from start to finish, and show the most wonderful line of evolution the world of nature has ever produced. It is indeed a thing to be wondered at that they became completely extinct and have left no decen-dant- s. When we look upon the decayed and scattered fragments of bone scattered over our hillsides we look upon all that re mains of a once proud and migh ty race, now gone the way of all living 'things and restorable to our view only as broken and imperfect skeletons and not as the creatures of flesh and blood they once were. The town is very much im- went an operation for hernia at in appearance since the the Price hospital. clean-u- p Several of the Primary week. met at the home of SuDt. Mr. Mabbetts, of Price, was a business caller here one day last Jennie Erickson last Friday for the purpose of making flowers week. Broth-erso- n for the Spring Festival. and Jones Lynn Parley Mr. and Mrs. Lee Childs and were in Colorado seeking reof Soring Canyon, visited familv week. last They employment in the Adolph Axelsen home last turned with no luck. Mr. and Mrs. Einar Erickson Mondav. Maurice Jensen of the Jensen-Allre- d and family spent last week end store was in Cleveland on as guests in the Ira Strong home business one day last week. in Huntington. o Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mortensen and family of Spring Canyon, SNOW COLLEGE STUDENTS GIVE PROGRAM IN EMERY have moved into the old Nelson COUNTY HIGH SCHOOLS place for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine uisen ana fnmilv. of Castle Gate, visited Wednesday, April 21, represenlast week here with his mother, tatives from Snow college presented programs at the North Mrs. Thursa Olsen. Miss Frankie Curtis has em- - Emery, Central and South Emery schools. The numbers were nlnvmpnt. in Price. . , . high . follows: ma as nas movea Speech, Therel Black, Erickson Ervin Bunnell solo, Pauline familv on to his fatm east of volcal trram string reading, Royal Anderson; Bert Oviatt, of Kenilworth, was trio. Pearl Willardson. Jane Mof- Anderson; here on business one day last fit and Catherine week. He plans to move (his fam- clarinet solo, Morgan Lund; talk, Diano solo. Jane F. J. Gurnev: ily down in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. George Richards Moffitt; vocal solo, Pearl ArnoldA. James visited President son; talk, Kenilworth, of and family several days here last week with Nuttall. Mrs. Richard's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Larsen GEORGE KILLIAN HAS and baby, of Helper, were guests PART IN B. Y. U. SPRING PLAY in the home of Bishop Alger last May 6 and 7 in Appearing week. The Primary operetta Blossom the SDrine rjlay. "If This Be Time," is nearing completion. It Treason", at Bngham Young unl versity, George Kllllan, oi will be presented on May 17. has been cast for the and Orangeville, Axelsen daughter, Adolph of Mrs. Mada Bsotherson, were Sat- role of Brainard, United States. Price. in visitors urday business There will be 48 in the cast Mr. and Mrs. Pete Rostrolli and visof this realistic drama by John of Storrs, son Gordon Dyer, ited Mrs. Rostrolli's mother, Mrs. Holmes and ReginaldDr. Lawrence, T. Earl beine directed by Olsen. Sunday. Mr. Stringham of Ferron, was Pardoe, of the speech department at B. Y. U. business last week. Mr. Killian is a graduate of Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Memory Castle Dale high school, and the were Castle of Gate, ard family is majoring in speech at B. Y. U. Vioro finndav. mv and Mrs. Melvin Stacker after (having served as a misin States Mission have moved on to the Stacker sionary L. Central D. S. Church. the for town. of farm northwest Oviatt Is in Em 44. h. FUrtha The first presidential election ery with her mother, Mrs. Sena' was held in 1788. ill. is who Burderson, Mrs. Grace Erickson visited her A noiseless paper has been inmother in Castle Dale last weeK. for use in sound studios. vented Viv of Wells Mrs. Ira Mr. where crackles and rustles are m Via VP moved to Wellington. Wilburn Rugg recently under prohibited. proved you a 1934 - Elmo Department (PROOF NEXT WEEK) Are these creatures because of tact that certain formations the in the area are famous for the peat number of bores they and for the numerous other interesting remains of the dinosaurs. Cattle and men sheep and others who frequent the hills nave many times noticed the gigantic bones which lie in profusion over protions of the range and have no doubt wondered at the manner of the beasts which found burial place in the desolation of the hills. Perhaps we should first inauire how the dinosaurs came to be preserved, or in other words "petrified". It is commonly supposed that petrafaction involves a miraculous transformation of uving matter into rock or stone like the turning of Lots wife in to a pillar of salt or something similar. However it is a natural process governed by physical and chemical laws which are pretty well understood in most cases. To be petrified an object must possess hard parts and be immediately buried in some moist situation where the circulating waters of the earth have a chance to pass into the minute pores and cavities of the object and there deposit the calcium and silica they may carry in solution. This slow replacement of matter by the mineral constituents of the earth involves an. immense period of time and sometimes the re placement will never be complete. After going through the process of petrafaction an object must be buried for a long period of time and then be again uncovered by erosion if it is to be found by mankind. Thus we see that the chances of an animal being petrified and ultimately recovered by the geologist are very small and perhaps for every creature thus preserved to us thousands or perhaps millions have left no remains. Therefore the very profusion of the bones of the dinosaurs in some localities indicates and argues for their immense numbers in ancient times. Student of B. T. U. pany 959 in the lead in the educational work. FERRON CCC This week also witnessed the arrival of Calvin Sudweeks, who is to take the place of Joe Smith on the technical staff as company Com959 with Joined Company mechanic. Mr. Smith is pany 529 and the people of to be transferred to expected another hi Carbon counties and Emery week or two. a within camp the celebration of the completion o of the San Rafael Bridge. Thirty American first The newspaper eight enrollees left camp at about was the Public Occurrence, pub10:00 a. m., arriving at the point 1690. at lished In Boston, Mass., 12:00 of the celebration at about noon. All were treated to a swell in two The Pullman program and barbecue. Many years has carriedCompany 32 more than points of interest were seen on million passengers witfhout loss the trip, both going and return- of life to a passenger or employee. ing from the celebration. Officials from the Governor's Alfalfa is native of western Asia, office and from Emery and Car- where it has been cultivated for bon counties as well as repre- at 2500 years. least sentatives from the Fort Douglas District CCC Headquarters were among the prominent men who EMERY COUNTY ABSTRACT CO. took part in the program. Superintendent Frank R. Wor- CASTLE DALE, UTAH then, Foreman J. T. Young, and Dr. Francis F. Viglione were preLICENSED ABSTRACTER sent from Company 959, Camp OF TITLES l, Ferron, Utah. of Besure the title to the land cCc You can never you purchase. Company 959 welcomes its new know the true condition withDan Educational Adviser, camp out investigating. E. Sweet, who arrived here April 23. Mr. Sweet will take charge of Our Abstracts Tell It All the educational activities of the O. SORENSON, Jr., Mgr. camp. It is with sincere hopes that we will be able to put Com- - CARBON FLORAL CO. Flowers for All Occasions The following merchants will take your orders: Castle Dale Neilson Castle Dale; Garage, Ferron; Ware Merc, Orangeville, Huntington Drug, Co-O- p., Huntington. H. RL DAVIS, Price, Utah 14 N. Carbon Ave. Phone 349 THOMAS-DESERE- T MORTUARY pHONE 345 rJ rnl USE BUTTER KRISP BREAD Carried in All the Best Stores LESTER'S BAKERY Price, Ut. - SUMMIT MONUMENTAL WORKS CO., Inc. Established in 1878 Designers and Builders of Distinctive Granite and Marble MEMORIALS "SERVICE ABOVE ALL" 156 Day or Night Ambulance Price, Utah Telephone 164W East Main Phone 221 PRICE, UTAH LEWIS OPTICAL CO. MAKERS OF GLASSES DR. W. W. LEWIS, Optometrist We make a complete muscu- FEATURING r AND WE CAN PROVE County especially familiar with Orangeville Department home from the the summer. ts cv??,, ?ople of be IN PRICE LUMBER & HARDWARE GO, jr and Mrs. A. G. PPular hve been m the world fairs, mo- Uun pictures, museum riimi,,,, newspaper arti-liscmuilc mey were first ed nd "e a source of wonder and amazement to scientists and laymen alike Sa-- L A" 202 anlnials dinosaurs and " is cause that they "hth? kLi ii PRICE PAGE SEVEN Florsheitn Shoes and Dobbs Hat 8 Boyack's Men's Shop 15 W. Price, Utah Main PRICE SHEET METAL WORKS J. W. Holden, Manager EVERYTHING IN SHEET METAL Estimates given on Hot All Furnaces and Air Conditioning. Phone 124J Price, Utah WALLACE MORTUARY A. N. WALLACE, Mgr. Ambulance service and use oi new commodious dhapel. New Address 41 N. 1st East Price, Utah REDD MOTOR CO. HELPFUL FRIENDLY lar analysis as well as a vision test. Price, Utah ACCOMMODATING Three Reasons WHY YOU will enjoy doing business with the CARBON EMERY BANK Price, Utah Member Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit In-sura- ONE STOP SUPER SERVICE Gas, Oil and Accessories-Certi- fied Used Cars Agents for Chevrolets and Olds. Price, Utah Corporation. SMART FOOTWEAR TERRAPLANE HUDSON INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS For Spring and Summer PARIS FASHIONS Shoes at $2.95 and $3.95 -- -. TONY BRYNER'S Half Block East of Postoffice PRICE, UTAH Varro C. Jones R. A. Bryner EXPERT SHOE Repairing and Shining A trial will convince you. PRICE SHOE SHOP & SHINING PARLOR (Next to Star Theatre) DEAL SHOE STORE - Price SUMNER FURNITURE CO. Next to Lyric Theatre "Where the Best Cost Less" Phone Price, Utah 175 CO. SPROUSE-REIT- Z "Say It With Flowers" For All Occasions WARREN'S FLOWER SHOP Place orders with local agents Phone PRICE, UTAH Two-Two--Oh . PRICE, Utah Low LUNCH, Drink dessert included. Something Different Each PLATE an Evening for Dinner SPECIAL PRICE 35 Quality Merchandise Priced WESTERN AUTO CO. STUDEBAKER BUICK PONTIAC - WHEN in PRICE TRY OUR trr Incorporated A Written Guarantee with All USED CARS Sales, Service, Accessories-Ph- one Price, Utah 345 O SUNDAY SPECIAL SALADS CHICKEN PIES SANDWICHES Southern Fried Chicken Ice Cream Twisters something new and delicious. PLATE LUNCH 25c JACK S CAFE 2nd door from Tri State Lbr. Co This is a Union Cafe A. & W. LUNCH ROOM DINNER 50d -- |