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Show ITINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH quite ill for some time, and she What is Going On entered the L D S hospital for Beneath the Deep treatment. Hugo Mitchell was in Bluebell Snow of Winter Time IVinnifred Carrell Saturday where he called at the home of Bernard Winkler on busiWhat is going on beneath the The members of the Lakefork ness matters. snow of this winter may be far anIrrigation Company held the Mrs. Eliza Mitchell has been more important to the orchard nual business meeting in the ill for several days, but at man than anything which might ward hall, Saturday, February 12. qui:e Earl Rees returned home from present is reported to be recover- go on above it. For it is entirely possible that beneath the snow California on Tuesday of last ing satisfactorily. Mr. of Cartrite, Myra daughter thousands of dollars worth of valweek. Mrs. Rees met him in and Mrs. Claude Iorg, and Lin- uable property is being destroyed. Salt and they both returned to ford Mitfhell, son of Mrs. Such a possibility exists beUpalco. Mitchell, were joined m cause for the field mouse the Hugo Mitchell and Earl Rees made a trip to Ogden Sunday. Marriage Saturday, February 5. deep snow is an ideal protection We wisii the young couple a long from cold and from cat, dog, They took a load of horses to the and happy married life. hawk and owl enemies. Under Ogden stockyards. Bud Murray, of Bluebell was a such protection the field mouse Fred Carrell made a trip to Salt Lake City Saturday taking visitor at Sacrament meeting last mutiplies to unbelievable numbers in a very short time. And Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mecham Sunday. because it is capable of doing with him. Mrs. Mecham has been SUBSCRIBE DONT BORROW damage out of all proportion to its size, the field mouse can completely ruin an orchard between now and spring, say3 Clarence B. Ashton, Utah State Agricultural College Extension Horticulturist. Even though a careful program for control of field mice was carjg'f'y v'' ried out last fall,' no grower 1 ' v ' A 4 should rest easy at this time, believing that his orchard is safe, WW J ' continues Prof. Ashton. J Careful examination of the orchard should be made at least UPiUGO Ver-net- ta 300 Miles of Tunnel Is UtaSis Mine Record , s K -- -- ... v - tv & s h"v, k , v" 'Vv f ' A. 4 ; '' y V- a - ' A ,i wv v, 4 r7 .u jI ' i :l - ? ot - 1 v - f V $ V i 1 v & - . i Making Way for Another Blast at Extensive Workings in Silver King Mine at Park City. There is an old adage in the mining game to the effect that for every ton of ore mined another must be ound. Adhoaring to this policy at Park City, Utah, the old Silver King Coalition mine has driven over 300 miles of underground workings, some of it to mine ore of course, but much of it seeking out deposits for continued production. As a result the property has had about 70 years of almost continuous Under present costs it would require the expenditure of approximately $47,000,000 to duplicate the workings of the Silver King, an interesting figure to contemplate. Moreover, workings of the mine are progressing deeper and deeper into the earth, and the overall expense of operating is becoming greater. The Silver King is not an average mine, it is an exception. But, its extensive exploration indicates that future mineral production of Utah must come from deeper and more costly workings. l.HrfT over on Gome , Enjoy the whiskey that's iUlsfa A ''Owfy&M ifo UoamS Kentucky Whiskey-- If there is general infestation in the orchard, such a station should be placed for each 10 or 12 trees and snow should be moved at least a foot away from all tree trunks. mice have destroyed Field from a few to as many as 700 trees in single orchards in Utah. Each spring some grower who has never been troubled with mice in his orchard before comes to the county agent, in various counties, to learn if there is anything that can be done for mouse injured trees. Dont you be one of them next spring. Evaporated Milk Evaporated milk may be successfully whipped if it is first chilled thoroughly. Two tablespoons of lemon juice for each cup of milk may be added to help stiffen the Jift milk. Something to Remember match stick dipped in ini- - is an excellent substitute for a pen m addressing parcels; it not only saves the pen. but makes the writing bolder and clearer. j i : j 71 Lonlsa Railroad NATIONAL DISTILLERS PROD, C0RP., N. Y. 86 PROOF Ns 652 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS In 1836 the Louisa railroad was organized to build a railway line to the Blue Ridge mountains. This was the railway line of which the Chesapeake and Ohio Is the direct descendant. NEW YORK. Far more women m the parliaments of the world today than ever before. Hundreds have gained their seats in recognition of the fight women waged In World War II, in both underground and open warfare. A check in Europe, Latin America and the Far East shows there are at least 685 feminine legislators and that the most spectacular increase has occurred in countries where women had little or no political stature before the war. Outstanding among these are France. Italy and Japan. In other European countries the number of women lawmakers has increased from two to eight times since the immediate postwar period. By contrast, in the United States and Great Britain where women's political activity is a much older story, the increase, is much less. The United States moved from five o nine women national lawmakers and Britain from 13 to 21. Effect Studied How effective are women legislators? In the United States and Britain they have been as effective as men in helping produce legislation of primary importance. In countries where they are relatively new at the job, opinions vary. Men legislators of many countries say their feminine colleagues' voices are rarely heard, and that the laws they do push are confined chiefly to the social field. The women answer that such laws are extremely important because they correct social evils believed to have been at the roots of many wars. In a few parliaments women serve on important economics and political committees. Here is the story In different countries: Fifty women now are seated in the parliament of France, where before the war women played such a minor political role that thousands did not even want the vote. Thirty-eigh- t are in the national assembly (lower house) and two are vice presidents. In Italy, where women had no political voice under and fascism, 43 women are seated in the republics first parliament of 914 members. In last Aprils important general elections women voters outnumbered men and some Communists credited them with defeating communisms drive for majority political power. Norway Has Eight Scandinavias record is less spectacular than some, but it shows a steady gain. Norway has eight women national lawmakers, compared to one before the war. Sweden has 27, compared with a prewar 11, and women are included on every Important Riksdag committee. Denmark's women legislators have nearly trebled since 1939 and now total 23. In Belgium (where the only women allowed to vote are war widows and certain mothers) men voters have seated eight women in parliament double the number there before the war, Belgian women deputies have supported measures suppressing legalized prostitution, favoring credits for day nurseries and giving all women the vote. The Netherlands has one woman In the senate and five in the house. are seated Rival Town Laughs Last At Post Office Opening Park. GAS have you saved? But there were gasps of dismay from the crowd of spectators when the scaffolding was taken from the y front of the new post office building, for, carved In the limestone over the doors were the words: Garden City Park. The contractor said, well just tear out the front of the building, remove the limestone block and put a correct one back. one-stor- Styles in Cars Pretty Well Set for Present DETROIT, -S- tyles in cars are Suppose you saw in person everyone you talked with on the telephone. How far would you have driven or walked? How much time would it have taken? buyers pretty well set. wont have to worry about the jobs New-ca- We're serving twice as many telephones now as we were nine years ago. .Several men from Talmage attended the REA annual meeting it Altamont Monday, Feb. 7th. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Davies ,vcre taking care of business in Roorcvelt Monday. took his Laron Beckstead y ichool bus to Du.hesne last to have some repair work lone on it. Mrs. Evia Thompson had her ;mall son, Max, in the Roosevelt rospital last week for medical Solons Than Ever N. Y. HILLSIDE MANOR, Residents of this Long Island community were quite proud of the fact that they were getting a post office well In advance of the rival adjoining town of Garden City many SALLOWS tr.. George Anderson as d A wooden v Blend A Snow should every two weeks. be moved away from sample trees to determine if mice are at Trees along work beneath it. lines ditch banks and fence should be examined carefully. Any place in the orchard where there is a heavy cover crop should be examined by removing the snow in a few areas. If signs of mice are found, poisin bait should be placed for them. Bait can best be applied this time of the year by clearing the snow from a six or eight-fosquare where mouse runways are found beneath the snow. Several handfulls of poison grain should be placed where runways were, a few fork fulls of straw or hay or even a few old boards should be covered lightly over the grain and the snow thrown back over the cover. Such a bait station should be placed where ever evidence of mice is found, Mr. Ashton advises. r 1 i '1" A The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. to' XX attention. Gurt Walker of Mtn. Home and Ivan McDonald are keep.ng busy iay and night trying to open the oads In this vicinity. Some of .he roads have been too bad for ven horses to travel. Men who ire in need of hay' are having difficulty getting the feed to heir cattle. Miss Anna Stark, primary The situation, therefore, the winter problem Is to keep this heat extractor busy extracting heat as long as R if needed . . . and to keep the heat coming even after the milk has been mm ichool supervisor, 't Leslie Thacker and Ross Case, of Vernal, spend Monday of Lasi week in Mt. Emmons. Mrs. Richard Lister has been ill with flu for the past two weeks. Most of the towns under REA power were represented at the annual meeting and election Feb 7, with the exception of 1 abiona, Arcadia and Briageland. The roads in these comumties were partially blocked with snow. The following directors were elected Ray Brown, Montwcll; J. C Hacking, Lapoint; William Field st'ed, JBoneta; Lyndon Hansen Mt. Emmons; Arthur Soderquist Vernal; Newell McKee, Tndell. Wm. O. Larsen, Bluebell. The capital credits plan was not voted upon because a membership majority was not present. Those whe drew lucky numbers and won appliances were as follows: Floyd Mecham, Mtn. Home, Molpoint range; Bernard Winkler, Bluebell, Speed Queen washer; A. C. Reay, Altonah, vacuum cleaner; Fred Lindsay, Mtn. Home, electric sheet; Glen Ames, Mt. Emmons, toaster; Pete Wall, Mt. Emmons, electric iron; Marvin R. Michie, Hanna, wall holder for an electric iron. All appliances were donated by the various Uintah Basin electrical dealers. J. Edgar Holder was taken to Salt Lake Friday for further medical aid after being treated for pneumonia at the Roosevelt hospital for the past two weeks. A telephone call from Mr. Holder, Sunday, stated that he would undergo an operation on his on lungs at the LDS hospital Tuesday. Mrs. Holder is in Salt Lake with her husband. Mrs. Harry Fieldsted and chilat dren, of Boneta, are stayingMrs. the Holder home while Fieldsted's parents are in Salt Lcilc0 Mrs. Gwen Sprouse and baby are of Roosevelt, daughter, with Gwens week a spending iarents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd 0dS6 Mrs. E. W. Crosby and daughters, Mrs. Wm. R. Evans and Miss Eva Dean Crosby, of Mt. Emmons, and Mrs. Fay Miles, a Df Mtn. Home, entertained at Lloyd shower, Saturday, for Mrs. Miss Rita Crosby, the formerwere enterBennion. Guests of task the amusing with tained of the .naking a scrap bookwith old jrides life. Supplied found pictures they magazines, Rita m go with such titles as Her first day of as a baby, school, etc. Many beautiful and iseful gifts were displayed. A ielicious luncheon was served. Cut of town guests included Mrs. Vlphonzo Madsen and Mrs. Lyle Bird. Fisher, Boneta; Mrs. Dora Yltonah; Mrs. Grover Mitchell ind Mrs. Wayne Williams and Upalco, daughter, Bobbie, ofRoosevelt ind Mrs. Marlm Lott, it' Altamont high school won sea-ofirst basketball game of the both Triday night, when first and second teams were over Tabions. A dance Allowed the games. hign Hyrum Loutensock,week-nichool principal, spent the Olive in Salt Lake. Mrs.econom-cThompson, of the home Mr. department, accompanied Boutensock and visited at her home in Layton. The high school basketball the home of oys gallic red at on Tuesday of Barton Hal joach act week and staged a surprise arty in honor of his birthday. The boys presented Mr. Barton with a Sheaffer pen and pencil vie-.orio- d ,g Courtesy, Electricity on the Tarra , above By IRA MILLER ! PEGGY ANN CASE 4 picture ehow bow to connect your milk cooler for heat pump duty. of Duchesne, Farm Electrification Bureau Cooling milk still Is a milk coolers Job. But, apparently, It can perform another very important chore equally as well. It has been discovered that the coolers compressor can be converted Into a heat pump. And that the heat pump can be used to warm the milk house. The principle followed is simple. It Is to extract heat from a warm substance and to transfer that heat to the area which is to be warmed in this case, the milk house. The milk cooler is ready-mad- e for this pur- cooled. It sounds complicated, but in realconity the version job is easy and inexpensive. The only additional parts needed are a room thermostat, a solenoid er magnetic water valve, and a short Inch copper tubing. The length of accompanying Illustration shows hour this equipment is used. In general, heres how It worki. After the milk is cooled, fresh water Is directed Into the cooling tank. It fiowf over the thermostat controlling the compressor, forcing It back Into action. This time, however, it removes the heat from the fresh water, bringing its temperature from the usual 50 degrees down to 35 the average point for water surrounding the cooler's ice bank. Cooled water Is allowed to flow outside. The cost of wanning the milk house by this method depends largely on! the temperature desired, water supply and whether the building is well insulated and tightly constructed. Most farmers find it most economical to use their newly discovered heat pump to keep the room temperature at a protection point of 40, and t employ infra-re- d lamps or convection heaters to warm work areas. Perfection or even wholehearted acceptance of the idea, however, still lies in the future. Nevertheless, enough has been uncovered to date to encourage agricultural engineers to predict great possibilities for the mflk coolers - pose, since its avowed purpose is to remove heat from wai n milk This heat ext: action business is the job of the compte soi extia-currieul- laughter, Mrs. Lucille Winkler, ind family. Mrs, Merrell also zisited at Naples before returning home. ilLUEBELl Mrs. Garda Seeley Dollie Bird returned, Saturday Yom the Vernal hospital when she recently underwent an emer gency appendectomy. Keith Goodrich, small son Oj Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Goodrich, oi Bonanza, is staying with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Goodrich, while his mother if mder treatment at the Roosevelt hospital. Kenneth Goodrich, a student at the BYU, spent the weekeno at home. Mrs. Mary Merrell, of Sail Lake, spent a week here wittvhei and Mrs. Reva Owens, of Roosevelt visited the local school last Friday. Bertha Anderson was a week end guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. IT Reynolds Altamont. in Several roads in Bluebell were olocked last Saturday by the drong winds. The school bus was unable to make its regular run because of drifted roads. Mr. and Mrs. Hyrum Loutensock and Bovee Mecham, of Mt, Sacrament Emmons, meeting this week. The men gave inspiring talks on1 Testimonies. . Leon Burdick, of Salt Lake, spent a few days here last week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Burdick. Lyman Burdick and Wallace Seeley attended the Dry Gulch meeting, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Monson visited Sunday with relatives in Mt. Emmons. Ernest Winkler, of Bonanza, came for his family, Sunday, visit following their here. Harry Smith, of Greenriver, Utah, spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Smith. visited Mr. and Mrs. George Anderson were dinner guests Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. SUBSCRIBE Reynolds in Altamont. DON'T BORROW mission Oeruice CHEVRON GASOLINE R V M MOTOR OIL ATLAS ACCESSORIES D. R. TIMOTHY Phone 741 .I;, i. hMjmmttuk . . . . . . WINTER IS, HERE Have your automobile prepared to meet cold weather conditions. Bring your automobile in and let us make the necessary adjustments so that it will perform satisfactorily an-- start easily under cold weather conditions. s they buy now going out of style for aCMr. and Mrs. Milan Rogers, of quite a while. That is because tooling costs are Upalco, and Mr. and Mrs. Ear so terrifically high that the car Murray, of Bluebell, visited bun-ja- y makers cant afford to change over with the George Rogers. Stake correlation meeting war as often as they did before the war. Some day this is going to present ield at the ward house Sunday was in a problem for the automobile mak- afternoon. The session Presidency. Stake of the liarce ers, for it combines with another U. B. WinkBrothe-'-o- n, factor. During the war, people VmN Before M. Burton. Leon and learned that their cars were built ler a r n 1 1 n g for departmental e p to give good transportation a lot work, talks were given by Claur longer than was generally believed McDonald, Talmage, James I. Blue-be- ll to be the case. Jird and Mrs. Earl Murray, So when the day comes when the Miss Jean Mecham, represent Industry will have to sell cars, Instead of just taking orders for ng the Altamont high schoo Val them, they'll have to use some A'DS chosen Uintah Basin Ewect-irar- t at the Sweetheart, to mtino the get pretty strong arguments Ball at Victory Park Sat former buyers to revert wiU lrday. She was presentedJean to the old practice. Is watch. wrist beautiful r In Trend is to flesh and blood of Mrs. Ina Mecham he daughter automobile dealership names. For ind is a member of the junior instance, Kelly Auto Co. has mo:e -- lacs. Ior the dance she chose model personality in a community than i lovely "Main Street Auto Co. car-a-yea- r In some ways it Is too bad that milk doesn't require as much time for cooling in the winter as it does in the summer. It would mean that the compressor would operate more often and for longer periods of time. Thus, more heat would be available in the milk house in cold weather when It is needed. In view of this Wed-lesda- . That means more jobs your telephone can do for you more people you can reach. Milk Cooler Does Double Duty On Farm; Can Also Warm Milk House More Women Hold 18, 1949 Friday, February FARM MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS REPAIRED See SMOIvEY at DUCHESNE MOTOR ' . 4- TIIE TON wnn? .'; I V V V $10.50 y. k Per Ton $10.75 $11.00 Per Ton Delivery in Upper Country We have plenty of coal in the stock pile. You can bring your own truck or car and load coal from the pile if you wish. Mission senuicE CHESTER LYMAN I CO. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ANYWHERE I3Y I 1 COAL UY TIIE LOAD I, PIIONE 8321 k I I I .I |