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Show FAGB UTAH EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE, F0C3 EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS Et tabllihed, 19M Official Newspaper of Emery County, Utah . Subscription, $2.00 Per Year Foreign, $2.75 Per Year SAUNDERS A. C. and JESS E. SAUNDERS, Publishers Published Every Friday Morning at Castle Dale, Utah Publication ol notice of meetings where admission is charged or collection taken will be charged for at our regular advertising rates. All communications and items for publication must be signed by the writer, whose name need not appear in print. Write on one side of the paper only. Use no abbreviations. Ail communications subject to acceptance as the Judgment of the publishers may determine. A First Class Publication Entered in the Postolnce in Castle Dale, Utah, as second class mail matter, under the Act of March 3, 1879. war veterans, died at his borne in Castle Dale, Oct. 3, 1918. Mr. Shiner was born February 11, 1835, four miles east of Winchester, Virginia. His father was born in the same town in 1797, as was also his mother, who was born in 1800. Mr. Shiner migrated west, living in Illinois and Iowa, and in the latter state enlisted in the Civil war. He mustered out of service at the close of the war. In 1872 he received a visit from his wife's uncle, John T. Thayne, who interested ihim in Mormonism. In 1873, with his family of a wife, five sons and two daughters, he moved to Salt Lake City. Later he in Sanpete county, and finally located in Castle Dale in 1895. He left a wife 77 years old, ten children, ninety grandchildren and fifty-tw- o home-stead- Mrs. A. Gardner Jewkes and family moved to their home in Orangeville from Salt Lake City in August 1918, where they had resided for four or five years. Mr. Jewkes was la Montana working for a large smelting company. Mrs. H. P. Rasmussen, am elderly lady of Molen, died Aug. 3, 1918. Her ten sons and daughters were present at the funeral. Edwin Ralphs, who had been In the navy for a year, was visiting home folks in Ferron in August, 1918. L. W. Peterson reported tJhat the beamen of Ferron had shipped four cars of honey from Price during August, 1918. J. W. Nixon, Jr., of Huntington, left for Camp Riley, Kansas, In August, 1918, as first lieutenant in the medical corp. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Reid, of Orangeville, received word in August, 1918, that their son Clairmont had Just been commissioned at first lieutenant in the signal corp of the U. S. army at Camp Stanley 'lni Texas, and had been transferred to Ft. (Leavenworth, Kansas. Coy Justensen, of Orangeville, tipped over with a load of honey in August, 1918, and broke his arm. Word was received that a number of Orangeville boys had landed lni France in August, They were LeRoy Luke, Ray 19-1- 8. Humphery, Alvin Guymon, Tlhayne and the two Allred boys. Lamonte Pilling of Sunnyslde took up land wo miles east of Elmo In August, 1918, and built a frame house on the Wil-fo- rd two-roo- m land. Mr. and Mrs. James C. Jensen concrete a new eight-roohouse in Elmo during the summer of 1918. Mr. and Mrs. Nephi Mortensen also built a new three-rooframe house in that town the same summer. Dr. J. W. Nixon and family built m m WIS Tast semi-month- NOTICE t jj u ed Headquarters tan .enough to comfortably seat 100U people j. Her. Pure d Kda c"" ' Montana. forenoon l. Jonei. " P",'.,,! be Mf at vzistiL ssss sMa sections of the state will be shown Many other spots lu that and other Fish 4 Game Department In still another hall Lee Kay of the State of wildlife in I tan will present colored pictures and reels In the west and this pro! one of the best informed men on wildlife educational. and gram will be equally entertaining & Rio Grande band from The Exposition band and the Denver concerts. band with will entertain Price, Utah, in these features Fair visitors from other states will be interested in the Ha o festers Just as they are Interested in the Utah exhibits & Gardens States and the Church exhibit in the Homes Tabernacle targe mlnature of a The church exhibit consists Island ,s rondurte every 20 program short a where 30 to seat people enough Elder Hansen minutes during the day by young Mormon missionaries E e rlc "gan. Th of Syracure. Weber county, plays the Hammond this bull d og there to feature is attracting wide attention Just outside a part of the roof cut out with tabernacle mlnature smaller another is built. That too .howing how the huge tabernacle in Temple Square attracting attention. In The evening program will be conducted in the largeandballroom Program. This will Include a banquet the California building. Governor Culbert Many distinguished visitors will be present including President H. Blood of Is Ltah, Governor Henry Heber J Grant of the L. D. S. Church and other prominent people from Gate Utah and California. Leland W. Cutler, president of the Golden numInternational Exposition, will be master of ceremonies. Musical bers will Include selections from a male chorus of 35 voices from Oakland and a mixed chorus of 150 voices from San Francisco. Those who desire reservations for this banquet should telephone or write J. Plumhof of Ogden, Secretary Ernest Holmes, Salt Lake City, Mr. H.Francisco. The price, or Will R. Holmes, 656 California street, San There are ever so many places to obtain meals at $2.00 per plate. reasonable prices right on the Island. Not only is the World's Fair the exhibits, entertainment and all that of interest to visitors to this International Exposition, but the Island Itself, Is of great Importance and situated between the two largest bridges in the world. When bigger bridges are built and bigger Islands are raised from the bottom of the sea, San Franciscoans will build them. Here 400 acres of land has been thrown up by skilled workers, an Island "created" out In the Bay, one of greatest engineering fetes on record. On this Island out in the bay is located the Golden Gate International Exposition. It Is accessible by ferry boats and trains and automobiles Francisco bridge. over the famous Oakland-Sastreets including the Now, visitors can walk down flower-line"Avenue of the Seven Seas", to many buildings containing exhibits of the world's Industries gathered from all lands, where they can see beans growing without soil; mechanical devices sever heard of before, new Inventions in all lines of endeavor, including the electrical eye, electronic music, television and other marvels. Probably the greatest entertainment of the age is the Cavalcade of the Golden West reproducing historical events since the discovery of the Pacific In 1513 by Vasco Nunez de Balboa, leading a rugged weather-worbund of Spanish adventurers to behold the mighty Pacific This outdoor stage, known theatrically as a topographical ocean. stage, is 400 feet wide and 200 feet deep with the Sierra Nevada mountains some 50 feet high as a background. It was necessary to paint 50,000 square feet of scenery to make this stage. Of special interest to all Utahns is the reproduction of driving the Golden spike at Promontory. Here it is in all Its splendor, real steam railroads and old engines operating under their own power right before your eyes. Practically every word uttered and every movement made by that group driving the golden spike is reproduced. Over 2000 characters play through the 24 scenes of Cavalcade of the Golden West The property list includes the pen used by President Thomas Jefferson to railroad trains, surveys, covered wagons, stage coaches, handcarts, old fire equipment, everything necessary to reproduce the 24 historical events since 1513. The last one Is Panorama of 400 Years of Progress. It Is great, but you'll have to come to Treasure Island to ee it. L. Olson of California. 8, f d te k, two-da- 8 of a MriM. that is Deing maae m year caimp. . XcoM , progress JVmeet AdjomlM former Utahns Oregon. Washington. Nevada Wj,S?.nii du All these can be visited with he ent.re d ay of that day. In this same hall during . the man who placed Utah on the scenic map.In of people thousands ha. pleased that program ctu m for In the nation during past years. The p scenic selected group showing the most Ira portant Utabwand Assistant District Educational Advisor H. V. Henderson made an ffiHni visit to Co. 529 where he checked educational records. An exciting game of baseball was played between the camp team and Castle Dale City team, May 30. The camp team carired away the honors with a score of 9 to 6. James Olidewell and Edward Carlton with a number of their Memorial Day in friends-spe- nt the mountains. They reported a fine time. John Maxey is back in camp y leave and a fine after a vacation. six-da- Elmo To ebtain cash in 20 minutes without mortgaging your furniture, assigning your salary check or obtaining wdoreers payments you stin owe on y:K - PRIVATE LOAN CREDIT COMPANY Silvagni BIdg. PHONE 397 Going ,772.0 TO THE And that's just the bter tax ravmua this lUto itse collects to lift the burden of direct tax ation from your shoulders. Nationwide, contributes over a million dollar a day to the cost of government. Think what that means In 'paying for relief, in public works, In old age assistance right in your own community. Then think of the million new Job that beer made. And then add to that a 100 million dollar ... market for farmer' crops I btr rescue fflp ... for you How can we keep these benefits usT Brewers of America realize this depends on keeping beer retailing as wholesome itself. They want to help public officials as In every possible way. They cannot enforce laws. But they can and will- -' cooperate booklet telling of their wnd Mar and for br 1 yu Unusual program? Address: United Brewers Industrial Foundation, 19 East iOtb Stmt, New York, N. Y. self-regulati- Dept. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Franklin have been visitors here several days last week. Ira Oviatt and family, of Price, visited here last Monday and Memorial Day with his folk, Mr. and Mrs. Eeeman Oviatt. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Strong, of Huntington, visited here Sunday with their daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Ein:.r Erick-so- n and family. Litle LaRue and Blair Bricks )n returned to Huntington with their grandparents for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Richards were visitors in Price, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Axelsen, Mr. and Mrs. Don Barnes and John Larsen, jr., all of Salt Lake City, spent Memorial Day here with relatives. Mrs. Omer Oviatt and children, of Emery, are visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Oviatt. Volmer Oviatt, of Hiawatha, visited here Monday with his friends. Oscar Soderquist, cf Ferron, and his brother Gur.ar, of California, visited here last Friday evening with their brother-in-laand sister, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Erickson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Einar Erickson visited at the Ira Strong home in Huntington, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Don Barnes, of Salt Lake City, who are visiting at the home of Mrs. Barnes' sister, Mrs. Orson Brotherson, motored to Scofield and back Monday. Mrs. Vernice Neilson and two daughters, of Cleveland, were iiere on business, Monday. Claude Erickson was a visitor in Green River one day last son-in-la- w, w week. UBrf NOTirp np friends C. tnd J IN THE DISTRICT rvvrL COUOFM STATE OF f". UTAH, Plaintiff and his wife. CORnJ TO BE SOLD SALE cm th. ,1JSHftOrl AJ. MM 1939, Cpfece. D Icastle Imd Mrs W the A and fat, W JUnai Cls vis sp .ayj ft said day at the the Emery Countv in .Castle Dale. Utah the tag described property in said countv fjir. and 3 4 M S3 C accor Cwilliair J IThe Ny2 of the SW'i 0f Best Le: cnnctninj ti "UH the existence nf uiereon thi Jfh"'nT1W Toother issues (crops, growing or se3 ed) and nrnfif- i... said premises after default J -- "" panics oi a;e fir' part in the performance of M - k2 PS of the conditions or covenani of said promisory note or th allowed by law""'s for rwiomntS in event of the sale of saJ picimaes unaer forel pruceeamgs. Together with 60 sh. of wad 1 Reservoir Co.; also together wiJ nrnnw Sk. uir oil vurci .every km iignus amd an "u,c viuauic nature, however evidenced uj mc oic oi waier, aiiches am vaiuus lor me irrigation of sa premises. Dated: May 27. 1939 fori Sheriff of Emery vAaij Count Last publication June 23, 1938 NOTICE TO WATER USEES The State of Utah. Office d State Engineer. Salt Lake cm Notice is hereby given thi Horseshoe Irrigation Compan ITodat's Spring City, Utah, has mad apert lu Application in accordance wit kllfi tiie Laws of Utah to approprlat 80 sec. ft. of water from th wdine: head waters of the Black Can job ea yon creek, tributary of Lowrl I ude fo Jf ork and thence of Cottonwoo creek in Sanpete county, Utal heed. M Said water will be diverted froi "ran" a April 15 to October 15 inclusin kicant i of each year at points and quantities as follows: (a) 10 sei Hut's th ft. from an unnamed fork lionyour Cedar creek, E. 750 ft. and 315 ft. of Cor. Sec. 14; (II ifie for y 20 sec. ft. from Cedar creek, I ation coi 390 ft. and S. 113 ft. from W koab Cor. Sec. 14: (c) 20 sec. ft. froi Blacks Fork. E. 291 ft. and 314 ft. from SU Cor. sec. i: (dj 30 sec. ft. from Brough Fork, E 684 ft. and N. 617 I from WV Cor. Sec. 22, all in 16 S., R. 5 E, SLB&M. Sal water will be collected by feede CAST! canals and diverted through tt Spring City tunnel, the W.tali5' portal of which is located ft. and S. 936 ft. irom tne i Cor. of said Sec. 22 and the oufl let portal of which is located A 2300 ft. and N. 1140 ft. from til BE Cor. of Sec. 16, T. 16 S., B. A sym E.. siafeM. The water will tafl tunnel released from the Oak creek, allowed to therein and rediverted into afU Phoni plicant's canals as followsWaU One Mill Race canal, (2) High ditch, (3) Chimney ditch, Unnamed ditch heading w ft. point W. 300 ft. and S.T. 645 15 S., the NE Cor. Sec. 26, 3 E, SLB&M., and (5) Black HltoV, Tho tor will be USCO ' to in a supplemental supply emM t ypurau I i' Utah's winter wheat crop for 1939 is now forecast at 2.814,000 bushels compared to 4,389,000 bushels in 1938 and a average production of 2,983,000 bushels. The acreage for harvest this year is estimated at 201 000 compared to 209.000 harvested in 1S38. Some of the acreage snown each fall for harvest fails to survive the winter. Last fall ..u.i.umj acres wore sown for the ten-ye- ar V TITO gate 6779 acres of land u ed in parts of Sees. 17 to 21 elusive and 26 to 35 mclusiv T. 15 S.. R. 4 E., and Sees- i DA. M 9R as and 36. T. 15 o, ' 3 E., 'See's. 2 to 10 inclusive, T. 16 S.. R. 4 E., and Sec. 1, RT.RfeM. S R 7 - TT designa' All the necessities of the fisherman may be found at our store FISH BASKETS large selections from the inexpensive serviceable baskets to the delux. Rods, Reels, Flies, Lines, Leaders, Etc. A Most Complete Selection CAMP EQUIPMENT AND SPORTSMEN'S SUPPLIES PRICE pumication Mav 5? Last publicatinr. luff narve.st of 1939. Fishing? PIE LUMBER (5 past' 'J. -- sitoiT r,J rirsi L 40 pr i YO- U- 1939-19- oont. 'an an and aU bldgS7Prro and appurtenances ttaX belonging, now built or heSn r CXTCNSION WORK AN AUTOMOBILE LOAN WILL HELP PRICE of I ioried i ftfcporiaj josep m ly -, . n, No. J Assistant District Inspector J. ismery County ScwT on his will meet at theb inspec-firHuntington, ut regular Tuesday, Mav 26. Caotain Hazard a budget for ti1939'1 adopt the with well pleased seemed be Treasure Wand TJUh D.r t the World Fair c,n The .June ,4. green ipot Ught for all UuhH Wednesday. R rememt.ered oVand all highways will lead to this 11 to of June week In a .a participate history of the Nation. In The come Uo those of the lives the most eventful this program. vnts has promised Special Da Chairman William B. Wagnon ofover Uahns ,o Island to practically turn Treasure fjr The protrtm residing In California on that day. occasion Is ss follows: H c' for June 14 will be at the n, Facts That Concern You 529 Legal Publican The Board of pvw,. HOLMES By WILL R. Amanda Tuttle, of Orangeville, on September 27, 1918. Mr. and Mrs. Pratt Allred, of left Huntington early one morn- Cleveland, received a letter of ing in September 1918, for a vis- congratulation in October, 1918, it at their old home in St. from King George of England, George. (They expected to reach complimenting Cnem on having Beaver that night. so many sons serving in the Ernest Jensen purchased the army. There were three, Archie, John Peterson property at Che Earl and Maynard, then at the upper end of Main street in front. Castle Dale in September, 1918. Dr. T. C. Hill left Huntington Miss Vivian Evans, daughter in October, 1918, bound for one of Mr. and Mrs. Tally Evans, of the medical service camps to and Ray Naylor, of Sunnyside, Uncle Sivm with his prowere married in September, '18. help fessional knowledge. Bam Zwahien of Ferron, who Mrs. Julia Wakefield passed had been stationed in Camp October 10, 1918, at her away Fremont, California, sailed in home in Huntington. "somefor 1918, September, Ervin Wimber suffered an acwhere In Siberia." David Denni-soof Castle Dale, arrived in cident in the mine at the Storrs camp in October 1918, and it England about the same time. was necessary to amputate a Emery county was called upon to furnish seven men to en- part of his left leg. He had servthe navy, returning train in, September, 1918, for ed a term inwas 'nome and married in June California. Camp Kearney, They accident. to the prior' were Edgar and Melvin Soren-seCarl Peterson', son of Mr. and and Denzll Jacob sen, of Emery; Myron Grange, Henry Mrs. Peter Peterson, of Castle J. Stevenson and Ralph Young, Dale, died in a training camp at of Huntington; Leo Greenhalgh Ft. Logan, Colo., in October, of pneumonia. He was 21 of Ferron; J. Houston Brown of Hlnkk-oyear old. On entering the war Green River, and Frank he had taken out the $10,000 Cleveland. Ivan Johnson, of Cleveland, limit of insurance, according to went to Ephraim lni September, his father. The flu epidemic whloh claim1918, where he purchased fourteen (head of fine milch cows ed thousands of lives over the with the Intention of going into United States during the World war period, was beginning to be the dairy business. The first letter ever received felt in the fall of 1918, in Emery by aeroplane mail in Utah, ar- county. Most of the local physirived in Salt Lake City from cians were in the medical service Washington, D.C., lni September, of tihe government training 1918. camps, and Dr. W. E. Henzl was A. W. Sherman an early set- sent here to cope with the distler of Huntington, died at that ease. He was formerly company place Sept. 23, 1918. physician for the Union Pacific The addition of Che twelfth railroad and had just completed work child, a boy, arrived in the home two years of of Bishop and Mrs: Heber Leon- In the east. His wife was forard, in Huntington', Sept. 21, '18. merly head nurse in the Chicago Mrs. Eugene Johansen, of county hospital. Castle Dale, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Birdella Sorensen Brod-ericMrs. George N. Kofford, died wife of Wilford Broderick, September 26, 1918, leaving a died at her home in Emery, on y old infant son. October 13, 1918. Owing to the Geo. W. Shiner, one of Emery epidemic of flu in Emery, an service was held. county's few remaining Civil open-a- ir post-gradua- COMPANY II hi . 1 T. Hazard visited Co. 529 Funeral services were held for 19-1- 1 IT CASTLE DALE GGG Utah Day At World s Fair 14th Set For Wednesday, June great-grandchildr- fichoes of the i - - Income for in Utah in the first, marketings rnnrtor icon v.i.s about the same as for the in. period last venr P.Au0rB. ment payments were and total income includinglarger governments was f.:rep fenull increases in income were ed to the office of the State u gineer as No. 12857. All protesj Application, with reasons fflni for, made in affidavit form, be filed with T. H. nwv state capi tol. Salt Lake City, Utah, wj w one extra copy and r Idaho fee on or before Juiy Ltah. where income from moat animals wnc State Engjn W. ceipts from the sale of J"! First publication May lo. principal i arm T act nuhliratinn JunO products in March 1939 amounted to $239,000 for and S2.124.0O0 for livestock crops ABSTRACT 01 and vestock products. This is some- - EMERY COUNTY Bher than in Marcn of CASTLE PAI.E. ncprtaW u There are enoug" ""v ,.n(jf thIhuU(SDA moilthly report on lies aDOUl. nau"'at the .u without guessing of the 1939 sugar SIDE quotas shows that the rtp nM THE SAFE quantity of 1J 1 ZotT'f Chged aSainst Demand an Abstract u3" offshore aras, -Our Abstracts Te ti UN 3 Ss infi I. O. SORENSON. Jr.. CO. MB M quota against the the mainland cane areaw charged in ifi.i tins acainst t.iat totaled continental sugar so oSfto LTtiS8" 161 W ing Were 7hPre January, February short tons of sugar, raw value, March this year. !- o- - n |