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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH Make the DUCHESNE Paul F. Henderson, who for the past six years has been Project Engineer cf the Uintah Irrigation Project 'at Myton has received a promo on to the position of Engineer, District four, with at Los Angeles. This district includes all Indian irrigaton projects in California Utah, N.vada and Arizona. In addition to the regular operation and maintenance work, Mr. Henderson will have charge of a larg amount of P. W. A. Upon completion of the Grey Mountain dam and headgate, Mr. and Mrs. Henderson left for a short vacation in California. Mr. John T. Burke took over the Myton project. FEED STORE Your Buying Headquarters for all kinds of Feeds and Groceries head-quaite- COZY THEATRE Sat. and Sun. May HAROLD LLOYD 9-- 10 in By Jean Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hart Were calling at the Morrison home Sunday. Mrs. Evelyn Birch who has been quite ill the past week is reported well on the way to recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Reddin and son were guests of Mrs. W. B. Brennick, Saturday. Mr. and Mr3. George Brandon and son Georgia, were visiting relatives in Bon eta, Saturday. Steve E:auk and Sheldon Woodard were calling at the Carlisle home Sunday. Miss Lucille Rhoades was a guest of Miss Betty Jo Morrison, Saturday night. We were all surprised to hear of the mariage of one of our young Utahn members, Miss Ruth Hadden, who was married to Hiram Rasmussin of Strawberry last .week. We wish them a very happy married life. Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Spratt and son of Bingham spent fci few days in Utahn last week visiting at the home of Mrs. Mary Spratt. Mrs. Martha Shanks has gone to Salt Lake City, Tuesday where she will spend a short time. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Abplanalp and daughters, May and Joyce, were visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Abplanalp, Sunday. Miss Blanche Burgess is staying at the Spratt ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mayhew are visiting in Salt Lake City. Mr. J. E. Hadden was a Utahn visitor Tuesday. Mr. W. B. Brennick of Utahn has gone to work at Moon Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ab Smith jind children were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Abplanalp, Sunday. The Milky Way Wed. and Thurs. May 13 14 William Boyd and Jimmy Ellison, in -- Three on the Trail Our TOBACCOS SOFT DRINKS CANDIES Are the Best! Our Service Is Always Courteous SIY1ITR Pool Hall DARYL and DOUG Thru Bus Service between Salt Lake City and Denver via U. S. and Craig, Colo, over Berthoud Pass was resumed Saturday, May 2. Streamlined motor coaches on a fast schedule over the scenic route between Utah and Colorado. 40 thru Vernal, Denver-Sal- t R. McGuire, Agent Lake-Pacifi- c Trailways Phone Duchesne 19R2 nsa Call Roosevelt - 88 or 92 for Mortuary Service We have now completed arrangements with Bud Wlngo of the Roosevelt Drug, to take charge of the Roosevelt branch of our Service. He will give you courteous, prompt service, day or night. Recent purchase of the Jenkins Funeral Home in Roosevelt now enables us to give the same high class funeral service to patrons in Rooswelt and the Eastern part of Duchesne County that we have always maintained in Duchesne. Combining the equipment of the two establishments provides a better service in either locality at no additional cost. For complete, modern Funeral Service, properly and efficiently conducted, call rs Mr. land Mrs. Arthur Brown transacted business in Roosevelt on Friday. Mrs. Jane Davis received word this week of the death of her mother- Mrs. Hanna Parker of Verbal. Mrs. Parker visited Mrs. Davis for several days just two week? ago. Mr. and Mr3. Dave Huish of Roosevelt were Duchesne visitors Thuisday. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Pack spent Sunday evening in Myton, guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Dalgleish. Mrs. Lutellus Burdick of Bluebell spent the week end with her daughter Mrs. Guy J. Hollenbeck. Mrs. Ernest Schonian and Mrs. Nina Burger spent Friday in Roosevelt. They were the dinner guests of Dr. and Mr3. D. P. Whitmore. Word wlis received in Duchesne Monday cf the birth of a son to Mr. and Mr3. Theron Snyder. Mrs. Snyder has been staging with her mother in Goshen, Utah for several weeks. W. S. Peatros3 of Myton was tiansacting business in Duchesne Wednesday. Thomas R. Faddis, assistant state director of the National Reemployment Service was transacting business with Ernest W. Crocker, district manager, Thursday. Mrs. Katheryn Ketarney of Salt Lake City arrived last week to spend a few weeks with Mrs. Geo. Leach er. Miss Erma Stevenson and Clyde Jensen motored to Vernal Saturday to spend the w'eek end with relatives and friends. Mrs. Marlon S Shields Mrs. Clarence Horrocks spent the week end at Vernal at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Workman. Mrs. Thomas M. Gilbert has returned home after spending the winter at Duchesne where the children attended school. Mr. Ed Montgomery has moved his family from Myton into the government house by the steel flume, and he has resumed his work as ditch rider. Mrs. Luretta Rasmussen and son Woodrow of Provo were Saturday night guests of her daughtMr. and Mrs. er and Don Levitte. Byron, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gilbert is ill at this writing. Ralph Shields who is attending school at the B. Y. U., spent Saturday afternoon visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Shields. Clark Young made a business trip to Mountain Home Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Richens of Duchesne were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Richens. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Pace of Boneta and Miss Verna Bennion of Mt. Emmons were dinner guests Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin G. Shields. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Richens, sons Lamar and Ervin, daughter Thelma, Misses Lutie Mott, Dena Cope and Wilda Bell made a trip to Moon Lake Sunday to visit Mrs. Velma Riggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Richens. Mrs. Lynn Ross land daughter Merlyn are visiting relatives at Vernal. Following are those who attended the Seminary graduation exercises at Roosevelt on Sunday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Farnsworth, daughter Fern, Lynn Ross and son Floyd. Mrs. G. A. Solomonson has returned from a visit with relatives at Richfield, Utah. son-in-la- WEATIIERREFORT For week beginning April 30. Koy A. Schonian Mortuary DUCHESNE Thones 2t and 27 UTAH UTAH TURKEYS GET GRADUATION HIGH RATING ON EXERCISES TO EASTERN MARTS BE HELD FRIDAY P. F. HENDERSON GETS NEW POST ROOSEVELT Phones 88 and 92 (Continued from Page 1) to increase their cred ts. Budget Presented Superintendent Reuben D. Law presented the tentative budget for the school year 1936-3- 7 to the Board for consideration. Total expenditures on the budget were listed at $271,575.00. The budget meeting will be held sometime during the latter part of June, Clerk C. C. Mckelson stated, when 'the budget will be adopted. Sanction was given by the Bdatd for the janitors from the five larger schools in the district, Duchesne, Myton, Roosevelt, and Neola, to attend the Jam tors school, to be held in Salt Lake City June 1st to 6th. A motion was passed to allow the Rural Resettlement Survey crew, who are in the Basin making an agricultural suryey, to use the chemistry laboratory in the Roosevelt high school to make their soil analyses. nt TALENT ISNT EVERYTHING Turkeys are becoming more and meat, reports more a year-roun- d Dr. O. J. Wheatley, extension economist at the Utah State Agricultural college, who has just returned from a visit to a number of large eastern cities where he studied the marketing of meat. Various meat wholesalers reported a very brisk demand for turkeys for the Easter season and commented on this as a rather unusual condition, but indicative of s the unusual interest of consum-ethe in turkeys throughout whole year. Dr. Wheatley stated that he had an opportunity to talk with many meat dealers of the eastern cities and found that a substantial number cf them are familiar with Almost without Utah surkeys. exception they had some favorable remarks concerning the quality of turkevs received from this state. were Nearly all of the wholesalers of the opinion that the turkey business was going to increase substantially for the next few beyears, due to the consumers turin interested more coming keys as compared with other meats. Several of the large chain stores last year experimented by selling half a turkey. This increased the sale of turkeys to small families vho could not consume a large bird. At one of the east's most progressive chain stores, both turkeys and other poultry were being cut into pieces and placed in an attractive container ready for immediate cooking. Dr. Wheatley said. The chain store manager reported that this practice increased their sales of poultry rather substantially, since it had relieved the housewife of dressing the bird or waiting at the store for it to be prepared. Harold Loyd found the experience gained in his first job handy in making his new' comedy, "The Milky Way which cones to the Cozy Theatre, Saturday and Sunday, May 9 and 10. Thi3 job w'as as a helper" on a milk delivery w'agon, and in The Milky Way he portrays a milkman. Next he was a telegraph messenger boy and then an apprentice in a blueprint shop. Then a stockroom boy in a department store. He also sold peanuts and popcorn in baseball parks. Then he sold newspapers. He also tended furnaces in winter and cut lawns in the summer. The job to which he looks tack with greatest amusement is the time he functioned as nursemaid in a bird store, where he had to clean the cages and NEW CAFE TO OPEN keep the water cups filled. The AT MOON LAKE DAM boss always threatened him that if the canaries ever grew . sulky, A new restaurant, The Dam I would have to s.ng to them to restore them to good humor. Cafe, will open for business next The supporting cast is compos- Friday, May 15th, in a natural ed of Adolphe Menjou, Helen Mack, setting of p.ne and quaking aspen at the site of the million dollar William Gargan and Dorothy Moon Lake Dam project, it was announced today by the proprieA1 Riggs and Irvin Caldwell. MARRIAGE LICENSES tors, A rustic building, built accordJames Lovell Wheeler, Straw- ing to specifications of the foresberry, 21, and Ida E. Rasmussen, try department, will house all new equipment, Mr. Caldwell said. Reg15, Strawberry, April 14th. Hyrum Rasmussen, 22, Straw- ular me;als will be served with berry and Ruth Hadden, 15, Du- special fish and chicken dinners on Sunday and holidays, in addi-to- n chesne. to short orders. Samuel Arthur Powell, 23, of Bountiful and Alda WJson, 26, The proprietors stated that they had leased the concession for the LaPoint, April 28th. John Guenon, 25, Altonah and duration of the dam construction Gladys Berrett, 23, Altonah, Mlay and will operate during the winter 2nd. also if business warrants. Conoco Chemist Wins Renown For Oil Researches Bv Mrs. Ethel L. Curran Sheron and Vennor Meacham were calling at the Claybum home in Bridg eland. Sunday. Mr. Ray Thomas is quite ill with pneumonia at this writing. We wish him a speedy recovery. Jack Emry spent Sunday night with his cousin. Keith Slane. in Duchesne. d Mr. Warren Meacham of Fruit-lanhas the Fouse place rented for this season. The bus students are eagerly looking forward to a week from Friday, when they can lay down their books and enjoy themselves. A large crowd from here enjoyed the dance in Duchesne last Friday night Mr. Harold Powell left Saturday for Vernal to attend the funeral of his brother. The community extends its sympathy to him and his family. Mr. Lew Jones was calling at the Curran home last Thursday on business. Observer. H tvS E'3 1 Leaders of the older the Utah clubs have ed into conference for .W , 4-- H short course at the Ut Agricultural college, 6, according to n r. state club Cve w leader. Delegates to the selected from each f it Mur-- j course cov,; state and the based on four number !ll percent compfetion years titparations are being made u. commodate from 150 to 200 bers. They will be furnished G sleeping quarters on the cac; 4-- H Present problems facing .. young men and women will the central theme of the tr course, Mr. Murray said. The fs, for the class ulty work will 1 composed of extension 3:r,,: staff members and probably -esentatives from the federal fice at Washington & D. C BEER ta KITS' Now dispensed thority of the under only license In Duchasne Issued by Utah Liquor Control sion. Conunis, GOOD BEER Properly Handled COME IN AND Ever watch a bird circlin around way up in the sky? He Jes sings his head off so youll look up an know hes there. A lot of the merchants of this town oughta watch him and take a lesson. That bird Is advertising the best way he knows how, and the merchants have a lot better way to advertise. TRY IT! Ed. Wilkins - Schonian Bldg. Duchesne Announcement -- The Dam Cafe .... AT MOON LAKE WILL OPEN FOR BUSINESS FRIDAY MAY 15TH Regular Meals and Short Orders At Reasonable Prices A1 Riggs - - - Irvin Caldwell Proprietors prases of the most of scientific discoveries the "alloying of oil to extend the life of automobile is engines credited in large part by engineers to L. L. Davis, unassuming young chemist in the laboratories of the Continental Oil Company at Ponca City, Oklahoma. With Bert H Lincoln, the companys chief chemist. Davis patiently tested a thousand obscure chemical compounds to find one that, mixed with oil at the refinery, V'ould establish an independent and permanent protective film on motor metal and thus permit the oil to do Us work satisfactorily, even under the higher stress of modern lubri- ra33B-KMrf- Family Protection Comes First ONE Send for the family or the individual Certificate. and It has old death benefits up to $300.00. The cost is less than lc. a day to persons under 30 years of age- - Send no money for Sample Policy. Give your name, age and name of Beneficiary. If you decide to keep it, send small monthly payment to put it in force. cating conditions. No such chemical substance existed, so Lincoln and Davis synthesized a chlorinated ester which thev called diffi action tests conducted by Professor O. L. Clark of the University of Illinois showed its behavior. Lincoln and Davis put Ibis compound with a bowtogether to Sir William Bragg, an English physicist who ton years earlier, while blowing snap bubbles, made observations indicating that the presence of an ester might bring about a desirable regimentation of oil particles. First revealed to the scientific world at the last meeting of the quasi-niigneti- methvidi-'chloiostenm- e y , L. L. Davis, Continental Oil Company chemist, whose recent discoveries m the field of friction and lubrication have attracted nationwide attention. tured fop,-- ' of discussion before the America:! Chemical Society mem-lei American Petroleum Institute, the in its ship annual piocess was a fea- - Kansas City last week. meeting at Benefits do not decrease as you grow and the Premium always remains the ages 1 to 75 years. Home Office: Salt Lake City, Utah. $ 00.00 To Be Given Away 1 It is Not Necessary to be Present to Receive Cash Admission $1.00 par Couple older same, First Security Life Association Davis-Lincol- Cooperative FOUR-- TO HOLD TR COURSE AT Box 2133 Llccnsixl by (he Department of Insurance. the. Laws of the State of Utah. Chartered under Saturday |