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Show NOTICE OF SALE UINTAH BASIN RECORD Weekly E. J. Schonlan, Publisher Roy A. Schonian, Editor PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT DUCIIESXE, UTAH ADVERTISING Display RATES Advertising Entered as May 26, 1922 second-clas- Constitutional matter s .fryAAAX 2jc. Per Column Inch, 30c. - Why does our Constitution limit the powers It grants to our govern- RATES One Year 75 .... 1.00 $2.00 the industrial doughnut fice. Powers of Qovernment March, 3, 1879. Classified and Reading Notices For Sale, For Rent, Wanted, Lost SUBSCRIPTION and Found, Miscellaneous, 10c per Three Months line, first insertion; 5c per line for each succeeding issue minimum Six Months charge, 30c. s Five room modFOR SALE ern home in Duchesne. A bargain at easy terms. Call at Record Off. at the Postoffice at Flat Rate, For Plates, Per Agate Duchesne, Utah, under the act ot Line, BERNS- ment? The age-ol- d theory of government was that It and not the people was that the people possessed only such rights as the government saw fit to grant From this sprang the idea that "the king can do no wrong and the divine right of kings. It took four centuries for the English to force their kings to sign the Magna great liberating charters Charts in 1215, the Petition of Rights In 1628, the Bill of Rights In 1689. The American Colonists suffered similarly. In the Declaration of Independence they complained about the king for a long train of abuses and usurpations, for making Judges dependent on his will alone, for combining with others to subject us to a jurisdiction unacknowledged by our laws, for declaring the right to legislate for us In all cases, for altering fundamentally the forms of our government, and other "repeated injuries and usurpations. Profiting by these lessons, our HUGE PROGRAM IS OUTLINED FOR UTAH STATE FAIR Constitution reverses the age-olgovernment and Instead makes ours a government of limited powers a govern d Idea of an Legal Advertising ment in which the people are preme. Then to further assure keeping the government within the scope of power given It, the Tenth Amendment declares that "the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by It to the states, are re served to the states respectively, or to the people. Copyright 1937 by Max Berns su- and variety of agricultural and horticultural entries, plus a bumper crop year, means displays of Utah's farm and orchard products at their very best. Livestock, too, will be shown to the greatest ad- that far Mr. Murdock. With the exception of the development program underway on land utilization there is probably no greater good that can be done for the Uintah Basin than proper adjustment of the Indian relations question. Ever since his election to his first term as congressman the Uintah Basin has felt that Mr. Murdock has been its friend and his subsequent record in Washington has not shaken the citizens from this belief. If Mr. Murdock can work out an adjustment on the Indian grazing and irrigation problems which will give the white man a fair opportunity to utilize the resources of the Basin he will indeed have cemented his friendship with the Uintah Basin There should be little necessity of permanently. pointing out to those interested in these problems, (and who in the Basin isnt?), the importance of having all available mfoi mation, complaints etc. ready in hensible form for presentation to Mr. Murdock apprewhen he comes for his investigations. It would be a time too, to present any additional informationgood we can gather or if there is nothing new to renew our appeal for Federal assistance in the form of taxes on Indian lands. There is still a great discrepancy in the tax burden because of this great amount of untaxed land and the Uintah Basin should never give un its fight to have the government recognize this discren-anc- y and make an effort to correct it. a e . I , j G- 2 r- - 4-- in the manufacturhas been taken for the showing of products of Utah3 manufacturing plants. Number STEADY WORK - GOOD FAY RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call on farmers in Duchesne counrety. No experience or capital a to day .$12 quired. Make up Write McNESS CO., Dept. S, Freeport, Illinois. p. A show of shows. This Is just what visitors to the vantage. 1937 Utah State Fair during the club and Womens work, eight days of the big state event, Future Farmers of America acopening September 25th and clos- tivities on the farm and in the ing the evening of October 2, will home, agriculture machinery exfind programmed for their amusehibits, fish and game, mining proment. ducts and mine equipment, rabAssurances that the coming bits and hares, pigeons, poultry, event, now just around the cor- and a thousand and one displays ner on the calendar, will offer the in the various departments all most outstanding entertainment will be at the fair dressed in their features of any similar event were Sunday best. given in the announcement by Special shows, such as the dog Ernest S. Holmes, fair manager, show, flower show, will vie with that the annual fair horseshow contests for attention at many would be combined with a rodeo the OVERCOMING A LEGISLATIVE JOKER fair. Every department big and circus acts to form one gala will stage its special contest There is seldom a session of the legislature helc grandstand show. events. With these and the mydoes not produce some piece of legislation which For years past the horseshow riad of attractions will go the leaves us in some sort of legal tangle, which, when one has been staged in the fair music of many bands, the joyous Coliseum. The limited clamor of the carnivals, the shouts considers the great maze of bills through which our grounds of this building for show of the concession barkers, and all capacity legislators try to wade each season, is not very as- audiences and fact that one of the other attributes of the states nation's foremost rodeos had annual exposition. tonishing. Rather, one wonders how any sane legis- the been booked led to the suggestion To miss the 1937 state fair is lation can possibly come out of the jumble at all. that the two events be combined to miss the biggest and best of This year a great joker has shown up in the Pri- to give fair visitors an attraction all such events. To miss it is to never before offered. erase from the calendar the great mary election laws. It seems in enacting this law the Its immediate means est of statewide frolics and the adoption legislature repealed laws governing nominations in that in front of the grandstand educational and informative ad' all cities and towns, and then made the primary laws each evening, beginning Sunday, vantages that can come only from September 26, audiences will wit- such a combination of big doings effective only on 1st and 2nd class cities. This leaves ness the in the same as the Utah state fair. 3rd class cities and towns without any legal means of arena of appearance intermountain blueblood horses and the outlaw broncs of Wm. Wimmer ana son Howard nominating candidates. the range. Thoroughbred jumpers of Manti spent the week end the were no restrictions made upon and gaited aristocrats will share with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. WimFortunately latter communities and with the advice of the attor in the spotlight with the wildest mer, the latter couple returned of broncs, bulldoggers, to Manti for a few days visit, ney general and the State Municipal League of Utah and bucking all the other features of a cities and towns of the state are finding a way out of rodeo at its very best. Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Marcusen the dilemma by passing ordinances setting up their Add to the horseshow and ro- of Salt Lake City stopped in Dudeo events the appearance of sev- chesne for a short time Tuesday own nomination regulations. eral noted performers of the cir- enroute to Vernal on business. Election time is not too and cities and cus away ring and there emerges an towns wishing to elect new officers in compliance evening's entertainment that "Let Us Do Your Job Printing' should prove a classic in amusewith the statutes will have to get busy, if they have ment annals. The big show will not already done so to create means to do so. have as accompaniments the carnival and amusement row ride and WANTED CONGRESSMAN MURDOCK OFFERS HIS HELP other attractions too numerous to Word has been received from Congressman Abe mention. Fruits and Vegetables Murdock that he will definitely spend several days So much for entertainment the On Subscriptions best in state fair history. Allotin the UintahBasin early in October, gathering in- ment of availall (New or Renewal) formation concerning the grazing and ' irrigation able space practically in all exhibit departprovides just as authentic Will Allow Market problems here, especially as affected by Indian rela ments assurance that displays will keep tions. No definite date has yet been set, but it will pace, and even Prices. Bring Them surpass, former probably be around October Tilth, according to state fairs. Senator G. V. Billings who is in correspondence with All space ers building whichhaTT''" complaint, 1 F with the clerk of the IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF titled court. This action JUDICIAL for the purpose of forecL '' FOURTH THE DISTRICT IN AND FOR THE certain mortgage, dated 1'' OF DUCHESNT, 24, 1925, and recorded COUNTY Mrs. fice of the county STATE OF UTAH. recoil v Boy chesne County, Utah, ) STATE OF UTAH, at tgages, pages 123 Plaintiff, ) son ;Vedi 125, 126, on the 26th day' Z ) vs. and ust, 1925, made and eicu ) known also CLAUD IORG, f&ly John Hardman and Mary LndMrsas CLAUDE IORG, and ) Hardman, his wife, &s IRENE IORG, his wife; ) ors, to State of Utah I HUGO K. MITCHELL and ) agee, and being for the JANE DOE MITCHELL, ) on L and $3,500.00. his wife (whose other and ) 2 and Mrs JOSEPH CHP? true first name is un- - ) Attorney General of E. ) WILLIAM known); (Signed) By S. D. HUFF Alto HUNTER, F. M. McHUGH, ) Assistant Attorney R. ) W. FLOYD HATCH, - To The - RECORD OFFICE to the entire Basin. Tabiona citizens, tiring of carrying culinary va ter from rivers and canals decided to build themselves a water system. After incorporating their town they found their assessed valuation far too low to take care of a bond issue to cover the expense, so a few of the enterprising citizens made themselves personally lesponsible for the costs and the system is now complete, delivering probably the best water available in any community in the Basin, from a spring on the nearby mountainside. Much of the work was accom-ilishe- d by cooperative labor. When the question of connecting the school with he water system came up and it was found that the district s budget would not provide sufficient funds tor all of its share of the cost of the system and the other costs necessary to install pipe, fountains, etc, citizens of Hanna and Tabiona, joint patrons of the school said If the school will pay what it can toward tne system and furnish the necessary material for the installation we will make up the balance of the fees and furnish the labor for the installation. Thev even went a step further and implied that they are ready at any tune to furnish much of the labor for various school improvements they desire, similar cooperation has been manifest wherever example in of community betterment have arisen questions Citizens along the uppercooperation Duchesne river have a habR of displaying a juilding of cooperation and initia- chesne up a reputation for citizens of the upper Duspirit as a group which knows the tive which could well be set value of initiaup as a shining example te e and cooperation for mutual improvement. TYMBALE, GEORGE W. ) and SAM- - ) MIDDLETON ORDINANCE AN UEL H. ALLEN, as the di- - ) rectors of the INTER -- ) Be it Ordained by the City MOUNTAIN CLINIC, a De- - ) Council of Duchesne City: funct Corporation; THE ) Sect. 1. The Mayor and four (4) LAND BANK ) FEDERAL and Recorder Councilmen, the City - ) the City Treasurer shall be nomi- OF BERKELEY, a Corpor) ation, nated for office in the following Defendants. ) manner: TO BE SOLD AT SHERIFFS Sec. 2. A certificate of nomination containing the names of can- SALE on the 8th day of October, didates for offees to be filled, the A. D. 1937, at 10 oclock a. m. of name of the office, the name, post said day at the Front Door of the office address and residence of Duchesne County Court House, in dethe candidate shall be signed by Duchesne, Utah, the following Du- scribed property located in said voters within residing fifty chesne City. The signatures to a county: The SVs of NE4, Sec. 26, certificate of nomination need not be appended to one paper. No perTwp. 2 S., R. 3 W., U. S. M. Cont. 80 ac., more or less, son shall sign more than one certificate of nomination for one oftog. with any and all bldgs., fice. impvs. and appurts. thereunto Sec. 3. The certificate may desbelg. TOG. with 50 sh. of water ignate upon the face thereof one or more persons who shall repreright in Lakefork Irrig. Co. sent the signers to fill all vac DATED September 15th, 1937. ancies, and such certificate shall (Signed) ARZY H. MITCHELL, Sheriff of Duchesne County. designate the newspaper in which it may be published. Each voter Date of first publication, Septsigning the certificate shall add ember 17, 1937. to his signature, his place of resiDate of last publication, Octdence and shall acknowledge his ober 8, 1937. signature before an officer duly authorized to take acknowledge SUMMONS ments, and take an oath that he is a voter within and for the said Duchesne City, and has truly IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF FOURTH THE JUDICIAL stated his residence. DISTRICT IN AND FOR THE Sec. 4. Such certificate shall al OF COUNTY DUCHESNE, so contain a statement that the STATE OF UTAH. names of the persons nominated ) therein shall not be printed upon STATE OF UTAH, Plaintiff, ) the official ballot otherwise than V8. ) under the name adopted in the MARY ELVINA HARD- - ) certificate. Sec. 5. Each certificate exe MAN, also known as Mary ) cuted as provided herein shall be E. Hardman, and JOHN W. ) deposited with the city recorder HARDMAN and JANE DOE ) his wife: ) and such recorder shall, in mak HARDMAN, CHRISTENA A. ) HERBERT, erase official the ballot, up ing therefrom any nanie or names of MYRTLE E. FAUSETT, ) nominees contained in such cer- DELSA J. MITCHIE, MIN- - ) tificate that will otherwise ap- NIE HARDMAN, ANNA ) pear printed upon the official bal- M, MITCHIE, HAZEL L. ) DROLLINGER and MARY ) lot. Sec. 6. All certificates shall be G. HARDMAN, as the sur- - ) heirs of JOHN ) published prior to election at viving least once in a newspaper desig- HARDMAN, deceased, to- - ) nated in the certificate and copies gether with all other per- - ) thereof shall be posted in three sons unknown, claiming any ) conspicuous places in Duchesne right, title, estate or inter- - ) est in, or lien upon the real ) City. Passed and adopted, and order- property described in the ) ed published, this 22nd day of complaint, adverse to plain- - ) tiffs ownership, or clouding ) September, A. D. 1937. ) DUCHESNE CITY COUNCIL, plaintiffs title thereto, Defendants. ) (Signed) By Arthur J. Orr, Acting Mayor. THE STATE OF UTAH TO SAID Attest: DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to (Signed) Helen H. Poulson, City Recorder. appear within twenty days after service of this summons upon Notice Of Intention To you, if served within the County in which this action is brought; Make Proof otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above DEPARTMENT OF THE IN- entitled action; and in case of TERIOR, U. S. LAND OFFICE at Salt Lake City, Utah, Sept. your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you ac21, 1937. to the demand of the I, Lyman Chlarson, of Duchesne, cording Utah, who, on Nov. 10, 1933, made , stockraising homestead entry, No. 050944, for EVgSEki, SWj Sec Section 8, Township 11 7, Si South, Range 12 East, Salt Lake Meridian, hereby give notice of my intention to make final proof, to establish my claim to the land above described, before H. B. Hollenbeck, Notary Public, at Duchesne, Utah, on the 1st' day of November, 1937, by two of the following witnesses. Cyrus Nelson, of Duchesne, Utah; Harold Wimmer, of Duchesne, Utah; Soren Nielson, of Duchesne, Utah. (Signed) Lyman Chlarson. Date of first publication, September 24, 1937. Date of last publication, October 22, 1937. SHERIFFS SALE IN THE DISTRICT COURT, IN AND FOR DUCHESNE COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH. HOME OWNERS LOAN ) CORPORATION, a corpor- - ) ation, j Flalntiff. vs. P. A. LUBLIN, also known as Alfred Lublin and ALICE LUBLIN, his wife, Defendants. ) ) ) ) ) ) To be sold at Sheriffs sale at 10.00 oclock a. m., the 24th day of September, 1937, at (the front door of the Courthouse in Duchesne, Utah, the following described property situated in said county, Lots 26, 27 and 28, Plat "A, It 8, Roo.seyelt Townsite Survey. DATED: September 3, 1937. (Signed AUZY H. MITCHELL, Sheriff, Duchesne County, Utah. Date of first publication September 3, 1937. Date of last publication, September 24, 1937. P. O. Address: 224 Capitol Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Date of first publication ember 17, 1937. Date of last publication ober 15, 1937. ( Cl t r SHERIFFS SALE IN THE DISTRICT COURT AND FOR DUCHESNE cd ' TY, STATE OF UTAH HOME OWNERS LOAN ) CORPORATION, a corpor-- J Plaintiff, ) VS. H. GAGON and AB-BIE E. GAGON, his wife ELWOOD T. BEAR and J WESLEY BEAR, WM. ) ) ( Defendants, ) To be sold at Sheriffs sale 10:00 oclock a. m., the 24th t of September, 1937, at the door of the Courthouse in t chesne, Utah, the following cribed property situated in t: county, i s to-wi- Beginning at a point loo West and 150 ft. South f; the Northwest comer of B 6, Plat B, Roosevelt Town, and running thence West . ft.; thence South 50 ft; the. East 200 ft.; thence North ft. to the point of begin., Being a portion of the unpla ed section of Roosevelt, t situate in Section 21, Towns. 2 South, Range 1 West ot : U. S. M. DATED: September 3, 1937. (Signed) ARZY H. MITCHEL Sheriff, Duchesne County, r Date of first publication, St publication, St ember 3, 1937. Date of last ember 24, 1937. Professional Card L. A. HOLLENBECK Attorney-at-La- w CW Duchesne H. B. HOLLENBECK Notary Public North County Duchesne LEATII of House Court j&ECTIO ;SX12 A STEEL TWO 160? M A. SCHONLUi OPEN Registered Mortician CARD T 100 X F0( Duchesne 44 FREE: A SERIES OF ARTICLES UN UTAHS MINING INDUSTRY HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED IN THIS PAPER. ADDITIONAL INFOR-OR j MATION ON THIS IMPORTANT SUBJECT OTHER SPEAKERS TO ADDRESS CLUBS OR GROUPS OF CITIZENS WILL BE FURNISHED; - J WITHOUT COST ON APPLICATION TO THE ! MINING COMMITTEE SALT LAKE CHAMBER j OF COMMERCE ; ARE YOUR COWS IN JAIL? Smart Dairymen kindness spent upon production. Kindness doesnt able, clean quarters bedding, whitewashed shine, and drainage. are coming to realize more and n,orefj cows brings dividends in increased mean kisses it means warm, con!l for each cow it means clean straw' barn interiors, proper ventilation, fiUfl . (Dirty barns taint milk give it that cowy" is mighty undesirable.) True it is that contented cows give more milk! MUTUAL CREAMERY w1" odor The CO. Duchesne, Utah Rue: STERLING TRANSPORTATION Uintah Basin To to-wi- t: & From Salt Lake, Provo Intermediate Points P-l- CO. EASTERN UTAH TRANSPORTATION Uintah Basin To & From Price and Intermediate Every Day Service Each Way ; Roo A 40 Bat . I $2 to CO |