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Show . Friday, February UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH 4, 1949 daughter born Jan. BLUEBEL Mrs. Garda Seeley A large crowd from Bluebell attended Stake Quarterly conference at Mt. Emmons on Sun- r weath-eday in spite of the severe conditionss which prevented Elder Harold B. Lee of the Council of the Twelve, and members of the stake from attending. Two musical numbers were presented and by Mrs. Vola Hancock, Beth Maxine Winkler and Carma Goodrich. Mr. and M,rs. Ernest Winkler announce the arrival of a baby COZY Theatre Sun., Feb. 5, 6 HOMECOMING Sat. - with LANA TURNER and CLARK GABLE CARTOON First Show 7:15, Second 29 at the Roosevelt hospital. Patty, Doug and Rae Lynn, small children of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Winkler, are staying with Mr. and Mrs. Hosea Lisonbee while Mrs. Winkler is in the hospital. Mrs. Agnes Anderson returned Friday after spending the past three weeks in Salt Lake City, where she recently underwent a major operation. A large crowd from here attended the Stake Gold and Green tall at ML Emmons Tuesday. The Stake queen was Miss Lor- aine Dastrup, of Mt. Emmons. The queen from each ward was resented with a gardenia. A floor show was presented by the queens, their attendants and their partners. Mrs. Betty Goodrich entertained 13 ladies at her home Thursday afternoon. Larry Bristol visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs Clarence Bird. Larry is employed at Vernal by Calder Milk Assn. Bishop and Mrs. Gardner Goodrich and Marilyn, and Mr. md Mrs. Wallace Seeley went o Mt Emmons Monday evening o help celebrate Mrs. Mary Ann Cases birthday anniversary. Syrup from Tangerines A high vitamin C ayrup is made from tangerines. 9:10 : ; ; s : ; lay m ; ; ; ; ; ; : : ; : : ; FRIDAY and SATURDAY, FEB. 4 and 5 : CORN FLAKES, Kellogg, 13 oz ... MACARONI, Globe, 16 oz ; ; ; ; SPAGHETTI, Globe, 16 oz rORIv & BEANS, Pierce, ; ; ; ; ; 19c 23c 23c 2s 23c SOUP, Crocker Yeg. Noodle TOMATO SAUCE, Hunts ; ... for 23c for 11c 2 . 2 ; PEAS, Green Gnt. 303 20c .......... ; .PIE CRUST, Pillsbury, 82 ; ; 17c oz 25c TOMATO JUICE, Del Monte, 46 oz CHILI, Nalley, 15 oz ; $ : : ; : ; : : ; ; ; , : : : ; : : ; : : : ; $ : ; ; ; 8c ... SALT, IGA, 26 oz VEGETABLE SOUP, Campbell PINEAPPLE JUICE, Dole, 46 oz SALAD DRESSING, IGA, quart ; ; : 31c -- . 13c 43c 53c TOST, TENS, package 31c PUFFED RICE, Quaker, package TAN G, Nalleys, pint 15c 31c PANCAKE FLOUR, 35c : : ! : : ; 22 A-- l, BEEF STEW, Nalleys, lbs 39c 15 oz 37c SWANSDOWN IGA FAMILY FLOUR, 25 pounds BAKERS CHOCOLATE, .BAKERS COCOANUT Vi $1.79 39c pound 17c SCHILLING EXTRACTS, 2 ounces SNO KREEM, 3 pounds 37c 99c ; . ; : ; ; . 35c NUCOA Margarine, pound KELLOGG ALL BRAN 39c 55c 21c SWIFTNING, 3 pounds $1.07 CALUMET BAKING POWDER, pound COFFEE, Maxwell House, pound 18c TUNA FISH, White Star Grated, can S U G A R, Utah Beet paper bag pack, 10 pounds CIIEESE, Bordens Chateau, 2 lb. loaf 39c 56c M E A T . ' 96c 83c 7c -- I u v al vation practices. Through these practices farm- 3 ers of the county have made material progress in controlling ero- - ! I - at Altamont, Tuesday. Each ward was represented by a queen. Barbara Beebe represented with Ray Lambert as her i prince charming and Minnie Lue Jessen, Rex Fowler, Barbara Smith and Hyrum Loutensock as the attendants. fU'.' T Ed Davis visited a few days in i Roosevelt last week. Jane Page, daughter of Mr 1 h 'Mt 4 1 and Mrs. Leo Page, was operated 1 $4 k on for appendicitis, Wednesday, r iitr fv i at the Roosevelt hospital. The roads in this section were Mr. and Mrs. James Thain, of Cache Valley, shown here looking ovei opened again Tuesday, following of issue in the Countrj February their family scrapbooks, are featured and the school farm offers in oppon Sundays wind, able Gentleman to illustrate what the to run their buses are again tunities for modern, satisfactory living. full route. Norman Murphy and Mr. Roberts ,of Upalco, were in charge of the grader. Utah Farm Family Warren Beebe took his wife to Roosevelt for medical care on Featured in Monday and again on Thursday. Mac Burton, county commisBig Publication Ethel Beebe sioner from Talmage, was in town Wednesday. Continued from Page 1 Mrs. Mary Bowden, who is Guy Lindsey and Silas Morrell, article points nut, with an un- of Mt. Home, were busy several quite ill, is staying in Ioka with limited irrigation supply guaran- days here with the county grader her daughter, Mrs. Lee Anderson. teed by prior water rights to clearing roads. Mrs. Lola Jones visited five The home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bear River, its worth about $255 in Altamont last week with an acre, or $10 more than the Woodard was destroyed by fire dayssister-in-lawhile her brothher was 18. on saved Jan. Everything cost whole 160 acres pioneer except 2 beds, the stoves and re- er, Dave, was in Salt Lake for John T. Thain. frigerator. The Woodard children medical care. Priesthood meeting is being James Thain, founder Johns are staying, with relatives in son, is responsible for "most of Provo until the family can get held each Wednesday evening in the original wonders worked on located, temporarily, in the mod- the ward hall. Mrs. Mable Maxfield gave a the place, according to the ar- ern barn which they have just birthday party Friday afternoon ticle. His own sons, Marvin and built. Mrs. Mike Christensen and in honor of her son, Normans, Roy, who now share equally in visited Wed- 5th anniversary. of daughter, running the farm, complete what nesday withBoneta, her parents, has proved to be an unbeatable and Mrs. Jesse A. Fowler. Mr. Wet Clothes team. The bankers and univerHang wet clothes on the line A crowd from here attended sity professors of Logan say: the Stake Gold and Green ball their firmest and heaviest parts "Marvin Thain and his brother Roy are among the ablest men In this valley. They take after their dad. Mrs. Thain, Sr., offers an explanation of the familys success in dairy farming, cattle showing, and erecting all their own farm If theres been a buildings: cross word spoken in this family, "I havent heard it." the changes the Describing Thain farm has seen in the 38 years that James Thain has been on the Cache Valley site, the magazine recalls their sugar-befarming, back in 1915, with a d pump on the river. It goes on to tell of the arrival of electricity and the familys experiments with surface and subirrigation, as well as their eventual shift to dairy infarming when the sugar-bee- t dustry .folded. Thi3 was accomplished painlessly thanks to Mr. t m V r well-manag- THE HAUNTED HOUSE THREE ACT MYSTERY DRAMA Its Funny Holds You Spellbound coming again by popular request DUCHESNE STAKE HOUSE STAGE SATURDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 5 Admission 50c 7:00 p. m. BIG DANCE TO FOLLOW Good Music by Local Talent Proceeds to be used for Youth and Adult Entertainment Program I mission Seruice CHEVRON GASOLINE R P M MOTOR OIL ATLAS ACCESSORIES w Phone D. R. TIMOTHY 741 I J gasolme-engine- on Thains early in3istance es- tablishing a milk route in Logan. Brothers Marvin and Roy are responsible for the fine purebred Holstein strain the family established, according to the magazine, which gives details of the many awards they have won. OF THANKS We wish to express our thanks and appreciation for the many acts of kindness and words of sympathy extended to us during the Illness, death and funeral of our beloved father. The Family of Samuel R. Sands. HALIBUT, center cuts 59c pound ILM pound SHANKS AND BUTTS LARD 19c pound ....... 49c , 25c pound ; ; K M Weed Killer If a weedkiller works by pene- trating the leaves, com- pounds should be used; if it Is absorbed by the roots, water soluble compounds are preferable, according to scientists at the University of California college of V ; Dutch Elm Disease 0 Dutch elm disease has killed In elms in the last 15 years many New England communities, famous for their towering elm trees, every elm has been killed. Discovery of the d sease in Denver is the first Indication that tt has crossed the Mississippi river Into the western United States. 150,-00- UTAH . Apple Sauce Flavor of apple sauce generally Is better if the apples are peeled before cooking. If the apples are cooked unpeeled and then strained, the sauce may have a bitter taste from the peeling. Apples should be cooked rapidly In a covered pan, for long, slow cooking may destroy the delicate flavor and may even darken the sauce. - DUCHESNE ; VV ; ' ' ; ' ; y yy y rn&zn4- - feZZTv AiivicC tkit Anti-Locu- st Locust swarms, which destroy billions of dollars worth of crops, can now be attacked from the ground with special machines bein' built in Britain. chemicals are also being sprayed aircraft like rain from DEPARTMENT v . H i- - low-flyin- g GROUND BEEF : f Anti-locu- ........ JELLO, six delicious flavors, package ; f ,v-- A vJ CARD PETER PAN PEANUT BUTTER CAN MILK, popular brands, 4 for ; ; : K chesne county cooperated during the year 1913. The ass.stanee provided under the program was not very much for each farmer. The average for the county, according to Mr. Wilson, was f$100 per farmer. But this little assistance served as a lea.-ethat got the work started. It is estimated that this assistance was responsible for at least $50,000 worth of conservation work in the county. This, says the chairman, still does not .n elude the value of a continu-n- g production in terms of a more permanent agriculture, Increased business stability in the oxmunily and a stronger and better county. et : : ' V - - ftfri inliT ; : Sr? b y sion and making the land more The chairman points productive. out that to the farmer this means that he can look to his land for continued production. To the man on Mam Street it means Duchesne county is richer and a continued and stable business, more productive because of the a permanency which permits for work done by farmers of the the future. As Mr. Wilson excounty who have cooperated in plains, "It will not be like a the Agricultural Conservation mine that means an end of busiProgram, says C. L. Wilson, vice ness when the coal or the ore chairman of the county AC A gives out. The conservation proJoru.nittee. gram is getting farmers away Few people, besides the farmrom mining the soil. ers themselves, realize all that Most, or a high percentage, of has been done to protect and imthe farmers of Duchesne county rewater soil the and prove ire participating in the Agnc-lltursources of the county. Under Conservation Program. 50 the 1948 program farmers have cet of the farmers in Du per consermore one or carried out Conservation Program By Farmers Helps Build Duchesne County O Leaders of unions representing railroad engineers and firemen seek to force railroads to add extra, needless men on diesel locomotives. This is sheer waste a make-wor- k program nhich would mean fewer improvements and higher costs for you! Railroads use modern diesel locomotives because they are one of the means of giving faster, better service to you. Two men compose the crew of a diesel. They occupy a clean, comfortable cab at the front. The engineer handles the throttle. The fireman sits and watches the track ahead. With no coal to shovel, he has practically nothing else to do. No Benefit To Yon Now the leaders of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen want to use the diesel locomotive as a means of scheme on the railforcing a feather-beddin- g roads. The extra men they propose to add to the diesel crews are not needed. There is no work for them. The union leaders are fighting among themselves about which union should furnish these extra, needless men. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers have even threatened a strike. You may not be interested in this dispute of those two unions, but you would be groups succeed in vitally concerned if these scheme, putting through this feather-beddin- g because it would mean a slowing up of the improvement program of the railroads of which the diesel is the outstanding Bymbol. Diesel crews are among the highest paid traders of to unions ttiinli its La J 3 IowHIviwvW JLaajy railroad employes real aristocrats of labor! is high by any standard. Granting of these demands, therefore, would mean that the railroads would be paying out millions in unearned wages to those in the very highest pay brackets. Wed Like To Spend This Money On You You know how much the diesel has meant to you in increased speed, comfort and convenience. The railroads hare many more of them on order for even greater improvement in service to you. But needless drains of money, such as this present demand of the unions for needless men on diesels, reduce the ability of the railroads to spend money on better service for you. Proud as the railroads are of the diesel, it is only a small part of their improvement program. Since the War, literally billions of dollars have been spent on improvement of Their pay tJd-- &ud' tklf iHvicl, tirueto. tracks and stations, on new passenger and freight cars, as well as on diesel locomotives, and on the many other less conspicuous details of railroading that contribute to im, proved service. Feather-Beddin- g Means Less Service To Yon But brazen like the one now proposed would, if successful, divert large sums of money from our present Improvement programs. Even worse, they make improvements like the diesel worthless, by making the cost of their operation prohibitive. These demands are against tour interests as well as those of the railroads. They are schemes to "make work. Neither you nor the railroads should be forced to pay such a penalty for progress. Thats why the railroads are resisting these "make work demands to the last ditch and why they are telling you about them. 105 WEST ADAMS STREET CHICAGO 3. ILLINOIS We are publishing this and other advertisements to talk with you at firsthand about matters which are important to everybody. |