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Show 6, 1948 geptenib UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH trip through Wyoming, Yellow Stone Park and Idaho. They had a wonderful trip and think the crops in Idaho are really something to talk about. What they Anderson saw of Wyoming was George just so Mc- - much sagebrush. Farnsworth, Gary Ander-- " Last Monday Mrs. Alta Beck-steaPaul Hill Dean Mrs. Adaline Anderson and and Marvin Vex Donohue, Mrs. home Edith Burton went to Roosereturned In Sorensen six-da- y 10 velt to attend the teachers in- a from ,v evening stitute which will week. Last continue all Thursday the Talmage Primary held its opening party. Punch and cookies were served after the games. Mrs. Rose Lindsay of Mt. Home is spending some time with her daughter, Mrs. Margaret McDonald, in Talmage. Arlon Potter came home last Tuesday to help with fall harvesting before returning to the U. S. A. C. at Logan to continue his studies. Mrs. Maud Anderson and Lee were in Salt Lake and Heber City last Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Brother-so- n and Mrs. Margaret McDonald were in Duchesne on business last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Davis of Denver arrived last Wednesday to visit with relatives and to fish m Rock Creek for a few days. Mr. Wilford Stevenson was in Salt Lake and Ogden last week on business. Mr. and Mrs. Elray Larson were in Duchesne last Wednesday shopping. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Jarvis left last Wednesday for an extended trip through Idaho and to Vale, Oregon. He returned home Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moffitt and son of Salt Lake were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elray Larson last Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Hal Brotherson of Mt. Pleasant came Friday evening to spend a few days with his brother, Blaine Brotherson, Miss Enid Sorensen, who is employed in Duchesne, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Arley Sorensen. Mrs. Hazel Davies and Mrs. Leah Davies of Utahn were visiting relatives here last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne McDonald and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McDonald left for a weeks fishing d, As-dy- if A iv.Wtffi! ilSlI i m mi kj THE BIGGEST AND BEST EVERYTHING! . . . SEE OF State Fair since prewar. . . in newly renovated buildings and landscaped grounds. First full-scal- e Daily Grandstand Shows, featuring the brilliant GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY REVUE. 1946 UTAH STATE Sept . 1FA 16-2- 2 SALT LAKE CITY Tmtm M, . -- I- 31 i&a - Duchesne County Men May Enlist In QUOTES Airborne Units For Eighteen Months OF THE WEEK The World Is In Bad Shape. Young man You may now fly and jump for new peace- Must You Be, Too?" Sign in a time Regular Army. You may N. Y. corset shoppe. now enlist for 18 months for It requires hundreds of nuts airborne units, unassigned. Three anj year enlistees may choose their to hold an auto together only one to knock it apart. theatres. Columbus (O.) Dispatch. months enlistments Eighteen will give 2u2 years paid college No man has the morhl right or trade school. Three year enSen. Arthur listments will give four years to veto peace paid college or trade school Vandenberg, Mich. rights under G I Bill of Rights. Prices are the throat of our All men that enlist prior to October 5, 1946, will get bene- economy. Thats where the OPA chokes the American people. fits of G I Bill of Rights. See your local Army rcruiting Pres. Robert R. Wason, National officer or traveling recruiting Assn, of Manufacturers. team on their next weekly apShall we permit opportunity pearance in this city. to perish because we are gullibli enough to believe there is a for Centenial Seeks mula for securjty from cradle to Youn? Utah Beauty grave ? Dr. H. E. Fritz, B. F. Goodrich Co. For Queen of 1917 state, and local National, honors, unprecedented in the his tory of any Utah miss, awaits 3ome pulchritudinous and talent-iyoung lady of the state. '"They will go to the fortunate girl who wins the title of Centennial Queen, it has just been xnnounced by David D. Trevi-ihick- , public relations director ol the State Centennial Commission The search for the queen was declared open this week, and the jueen will be selected about November 15, the exact date to be announced later by Mr. Trevithick. Coronation ceremonies will be held some time during the first week in December, and the lucky girl will take over her regal duties in the new year. The contest will be conducted throughout the state by the Daughters of Utah Pioneers for the Centennial Commission. Under the organizational plan all instructions and application blanks have been turned over to the state organization of the DUP to be distributed to the county organizations. Aspirants for the honor may compete by obtaining entry blanks from the county organization of the DUP in their own counties and should not write either the State DUP or the State Centennial Commission. When filled, the blanks should be returned directly to the county DUP, since no contestant is eligible for the state finals unless certified as winner in the county. State finalists will include one contestant from each county with less than 50,000 population. d P.ethods Take Electro-Agricultu- re Over Farmer's Hay Hoisting Chore By IR MILLER Bureau New mown hay is the subject of many songs poems and stories, but few of the composers and authors who write so lyrically about hay have ever been beset with the problems of getting it Into a barn mow. particularly when electric power is not available to help with the hoisting tions, regardless of whether forks or slings are used. Many effective and hoists are being manufactured by a number of different companies. In the operation of the simplest type of hoist a single drum unit an electrically run hoisting drum winds up tlie hoisting rope, lifting the hay to a carrier which moves chore along an overhead track to the place Its a labor and ume consuming task where the hay is to be dropped. and no fun to fork hay into the mow Manually operated control ropes per farm Electrification d Coronet Salutes Hardv Citizens of Bingham Cannon ever in Nothing happens Bingham Canyon, Utah except an occasional major disaster. has been Bingham Canyon staggered by a scries of slides, floods, fires, explosions and other calamities in the past few decades, writes Dean Jennings in his September Coronet article, 1INX TOWN, U. S. A. Meanwhile the worlds largest open-cu- t mine has gnawed a milewide hole around the town, malignantly eating up homes, bus'i ness buildings and streets. Yet, marvels Jennings, the nining towns persistent citizens, nost of whom annually resolve to move away, still laugh and fight together against nature and the mine and plan for to- morrow. mu Uie man on the wagon to stop the cai rier at any desired place and to release the hay load A counter weighl on a return rope brings the carriei back1 to its position over the wagon By applying slight brake d wagoa pressuie on the hoisting drum, the Electric ha hoists are easily, safe- operator Is able to guide the speed ly and economically operated and at which the hay fork is lowered for can deposit hay in the mow at a another load The carrier can also power consumption cost of about 13 be pulled back by a return rope or kilowatt hours of power per ton Mo- returned by means of a second when tors of 3 to 5 horsepower are large drum, types of enough tor roost bay hoisting oim a hoists are used by hand or hoist It aloft with the aid of one or more horses On electrified farms, however, hay storage chores can be reduced to a minimum through the use of electrically-operate- d hay hoists, controlled by one man on s hay-fille- two-dru- In 1919 a fire roared down one of the narrow streets, destroying 20 buildings. Five years later another disastrous blaze cost the citizens $500,000 and he lives of two firemen. Snow-slide- s, wait a few days. Time wont by townspeople are healthy, happy until today one of the three sons and they have money in the Though there seems to they raised in Bingham Canyon bank. is the communitys efficient chief be little hope for the future 'of of police. Bingham Canyon, they refuse to leave, for, as the Coronet piece exuberance, Bingham Canyons thundering through the which bubbles like a mineral concludes, the town just kind of latural funnel in which the town spring, is never dulled. The grows on you. s located, one year killed forty people and flattened 17 homes. About two years ago a mountain or waste ore slipped and juried one entire street with its -- seven houses. The old timers, according to Coronet, say that Bingham Canbeen a jinx yon has always town. In spite of this the town s. is full of people ike the The first night they were there years ago, a mining locomotive jumped the track and rilled two people in the hotel lobby. Then and there young Matt Contratto and his wife decided to leave the very next day. In the morning they agreed to Shell Service Con-tratta'- 0 i j b Par Duchesne r II in Rock Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Brotherson and Mr. and Mrs. Keith McDonald accompanied them but returned home Monday. Mark Bleazard spent several days fishing last week. He achis brother Ralph companied and Ralph's father-in-laMrs. Evelyn Bleazard and Joan went to Salt Lake last Friday where Joan consulted her physician prior to starting to school. They Returned home Saturday. Mr. and Mi s Leon Burton and children went to Tabiona Saturday to visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Ottosen. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Erickson moved to Duchesne Sunday where Mrs. Erickson will teach school. Mrs. Earl Thacker and children were in Duchesne Sunday. Mrs. M. B. Donohue, Ralph and Rosalie spent a few days last week in Carbon County with relatives. Mr, L. D. Flake, who will teach at the Altamont High School, is attending the classes for teachers in Roosevelt this week. Gail Anderson and Mr. C. N. on Joysa were in Roosevelt business Tuesday. Mr. Ivan Johnson of Salt Lake City was here Monday looking after his insurance contacts. Sorensen Miss Belva spent Monday evening in Duchesne as the guest of Miss Enid Sorensen. Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence Stevens of Oakley visited at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Claud McDonald and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Burton this week. Mrs. Anrrie Anderson of Mt, Home is visiting her daughter Mr. and Mrs. and Harold Thompson. Miss Janet Lindsay of Mt. Home spent the week end in Talmage with relatives. Mr, and Mrs. Lorenzo Thompson returned to California last week after visiting some time with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Thompson and Mr. W. L. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Arliss Joy of Boise, Idaho are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Childs, before going on to Colorado. Mr. and Mrs, Joe Gumbman of California are visiting her father and brother, Wm. L. Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Sulser and sons of Midway and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Watkins of Salt Lake were holiday visitors with the Sorensen families. Mr. Payne and his sister are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert Davies, son-in-la- OVER $2000.00 IN PRIZES Rodeo Horse Pulling $100.00 $5.00 Fach Class Class Each 4 Teams To Enter Uvent l!l'ncho Riding bareback alf Roping Tea"i Roping Riding ces vent idd,e Horse U !'i Free For All $300.00 -F- AIR PRIZES Dancing Each Night Hikiau Music furnished by Johnny Orchestra and his Sensational Bridle Given to Horse, Saddle and Holder of Lucky Number of 20 Free Prizes to Holders Pony mile free fr all For Lucky Tickets Information Phone Duchesne 171 In larger counties there will be one finalist for every 50,000 population, or percentage thereof. That means two from Utah county, two from Weber county, and four from Salt Lake county. Eligibility rules are: 1) Must be a descendant of a Utah pioneer of before May 10, We make it a practice to sec that every car that is driven into our service expert and careful si at ion is given attention. The minute details arc taken care of and the owner can rest assured that his automobile has been completely serviced. t pi 1869. 2) Be available for appearances throughout the year of 1947. 3) A total abstainer from bacco or alcoholic drinks. 4) At least 18 years old by November 1, 1946, and not more than 25 by November 1, 1947. 5) Single, not previously married, and must agree to remain single during the Centennial. 6) If a finalist, must be. willing to submit to a general physical examination. 7) Must be a bona fide resident of Utah when application is made. GAS AND OIL to- TIRES AND TUBES OFFICIAL INSPECTION STATION Vernal Bromley, Prop. sfniTxrvn rotingy!RaM!y Announcing. TIIE NEW US ROYAL AIR RIDE TIRE The ALLRED TIRE CO., your US Tire Distributor in Vernal, invites you to his store at 8th West and Main to see the new US Royal Air Ride tire. It is NOT YL1 1 OL SALE Americas NEWEST, . . .but you will want to preview this tire most MODERN Premium Tire . . . designed by United States Rubber Company. The US ROYAL Air Ride is more than a new tire. It represents a completely new concept of tire engineering. The result is an entirely new kind of tire performance. The new US ROYAL AIR RIDE tire is now at your US Tire Distributors for DISPLAY only. Its WORTH SEEING, and WORTH WAITING FOR the tire youll want on YOUR car the moment its available! See it now . . . today . . . the US ROYAL AIR RIDE Tire at Allred Tire Company Arvel Allred, Mgr. VERNAL 7th West & Main |