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Show Friday, June UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH 24, 1949 uirdlays, Job Music by Rudy Krissman and His Orchestra of Vernal Winnifred Carrel The Evans boys, Harley and Doyal, have been baling hay for the past week in this community. Dale Cumming and Mr. and Mrs. Sharon Cumming and children are spending their vacation with their parents, Mr. and Mrss. Floyd Cumming. They are students at the USA.C, Logan. Berlie Iorg returned to Logan Sunday after spending the past two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Iorg. She is employed In Logan. The state road crew is working hard to save the twin bridges which cross Lake Fork river. Flood waters have nearly washed the bridges away. Mrs. Marie Pierson and two chldren of Delta, Utah, arrived here last week to spent a few days visiting with her mother, Mrs. Vernetta Mitcohell and other relatives, and also to get her small daughter, Jerry Dean, who spent some time visiting with her grandmother. Mr. Thacker Elvin Mrs. and made a business trip to Salt Lake City over the week end. Donna Mitchell spent several days in the Roosevelt hospital last week where she re- ceived medical care. Mrs. NetMrs. COZY Theatre with JOHN LUND CARTOON First Show 7;45 Last Show 9:30 June - ' w Sat. Sun., June 23, 26 Miss Tatlocks Millions Wed.-Thu- ., tie Potts took care of her baby while she wa3 away. She returned home Saturday much improved in health. Mr. and Hrs. Norman Murphy and children, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Murphy and children, of Roosevelt, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Rees and children and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Taylor- and children spent Fathers day with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Murphy. and Williams Mavi3 Mrs. small daughter, Janice, spent the latter part of last week in Bridgeland with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Merl Jennings. held a The Relief Society work meetinng in the ward hall on Tuesday of last week. They made quilt blocks and enjoyed pot luck lunch. Arnon Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. spent. a week in Salt Lake City and Idaho points visiting their parents and other relatives. Shirley and Betty Iorg submitted to tonsil operations at the Roosevelt hospital Wednesday, June 15. Mrs. Novella Potts, who has been ill for several months, was rushed to Salt Lake City Sunday morning and was placed in She was acthe LDS hospital. companied by her husband, Percy Potts and daughter, Mrs. Vivian Dennis, and small son, Billie, who had spent the past month in Upalco with his grandparentts, Mrs. Dennis and son live in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Williams and small daughter, Janice, and were visiting Doris Williams, and sister, their brother-in-laMr. and Mrs. Glendon Hanburg at Bluebell one evening laJt week. 'Howard Iorg i3 visiting with home folks after spending the spring months at the sheep herd. returned has Kay Pulley home after spending the past six weeks at the Dave Smith sheep ranch. Mr. and Mrs. George Retallach and two sons, of Salt Lake City, arrived at the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Parley Mitchell, to enjoy the opening of the fishing season. Mr. returned and Mrs. Retallach home Sunday, but the boys remained to spend the summer va- 29, 30 DOUBLE FEATURE JIMMY WAKELY cation with their grandparents. Little Robert Iorg spent the latter part of the week at the sheep camp with his father. d Mr. and Mrs. Stanley are the proud parents of a baby boy, born in the Roosevelt hospital. Mrs. Fieldstead and baby are staying at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Mecham, for the present. IN SILVER TRAILS Field-stea- JOE YULE IN Jiggs and Maggie In Society First Show 7.'45 Last Show 8:45 Romola Mrs. Rogers and daughter, Joyce, spent a few days in Salt Lake last week. """" 4-- Marie Baum The children of Mr. and Mrs. M. Campbell, of Vernal, are vis- LOCALS Mrs. Bertha Angus Violet Gentry Mr. and Mrs. Murel Benson, iting with their grandfather, of Roosevelt, visited the Archie James G. Ivie, and other rela- Bensons, Friday. tives. Mrs. Elmer Yergenson enterMr. and Mrs. Merton Wardle tained the Thursday club at her and children were Sunday visit- home on June 16. Delicious reors with the latters parents, Mr. freshments were enjoyed by 7 members and the following club and Mrs. Ed Williams. Bill Hayes, who has been em- guests; Lucy Edwards, Elizabeth Gentry, Freddie Dart and Mrs. ployed in Beaver for the past of Myton. several weeks, returned to his Yergenson, Mrs. James Lloyd spent Thurshome in Strawberry last week. Mrs. Florence Bates, who has day in Orem with relatives and been in charge of the welfare friends, Mrs. Myrtle Fausett visited in office for many years, retired last week, Mrs. Bates was forc- Vernal with her daughter, Mrs. ed to retire from active duty Craig Caldwell, one day last week. on account of poor health. Mrs. O. A. Dart entertained a Miss Lois Lusty, a representafew friends at her home Monday welof Duchesne tive the county honoring her daughfare office, visited with Mrs. afternoon, ter. kis. Scott Riensimer, of Salt Clarence Baum Monday afterLake, who has been visiting her noon. parents for the past 2 weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Mott made Jimmy Aitken visited in Roosa business trip to Duchesne one evelt Sunday night. week. last day Mrs. Clarence Baum spent a Mrs. Ross Finley and children, few days last week with her oi are making an extendW. Mrs. R. Peatross, ed kogan, daughter, visit with Mrs. Finleys par--tat Myton, who had been ill with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mar- influenza. viiant. Bob Ferron, of Myton, was in Mrs. Margaret Lloyd visited this locality Monday taking care in Orem, Thursday, with her sister, Mrs. Gwen Shirtz. of buusinness affairs. Mr. and Mrs. Junior Benson Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh Ivie and children visited with Mr. Ivies and son, of Salt Lake, are visiting here with Juniors parents, the father Sunday. M. J. Bensons, and other relaAllen White is visiting for tives. few days with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Lowry Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baum. and family attended the MIA conference in' Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Timothy, Mr. and Mrs. William Ostler and Mrs. Edna Drollinger attended funeral services, Thursday at . Payson, for Mrs. Emily PEGGY ANN CASE s, E110NS Clay-son- Visitors at the Angus home on Miss Eva Dean Crosby and were Mr. and Mrs. FulSunday Miss Deane Case attended the MIA conference in Salt Lake last ler Merrell, Vernal; Mr. and Mrs. Ted Handy and son, Tom, week. of Alaska, and Mr. Leda Beckstead, of Talmage andAnchorage, Mrs. Orie Cook and family, i:l staying with her grandmother, Legion Collects Data On Veterans CLUB H ACTIVITY The girls have organized a cooking club this year. They have met four times and at the second meeting they chose a name for Maids of Eats. Jhemselves The officers are Connie Ivie, president; Darlene Gines, vice president; Ila Mae Casper, secretary; Marvel Gines, reporter. The club leaders are Elva Jones and Ina Van TasselL This is the first year for work for these girls and they are really enjoying every minute of it. Before the summer is over they will be able to prepare and serve a very nourishing and appetizing breakfast to their family. Each time they meet they don their little green and white aprons and white caps with the club name written on them, and have an enjoyable and worthwhile time cooking a part of a breakfast menu. After the cooking has been done they arrange it attractively and the rest of the girls Judge it then it is sampled. An important part of the procedure is cleaning up the house after they have finished. Last week the club met at the home of Ople .Chat-wiTABIONA Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McRae and son, John, of Alameda, Calif., visited last week with Mr. and Mrs. E L. Fouse, at their ranch home on Lake Fork. Mrs. Nellie Feller, pioneer resident of Duchesne county, celebrated her 85th birthday an- niversary Thursday, June 17. Durmng the day friends called and wished her many happy' returns of the day. Mrs. Feller whose health has not been so good during the past winter, at present is feeling much better. Mrs. Vern Rife, Mrs. Clarence Wilson and Mrs. Ed Gee made a trip to Provo and Salt Lake City Monday, for the purpose of eye specialists and consulting physicians. They returned home the same evening. Ed Wilkins, who had been visiting with his mother Mrs. Hannah Wilkins and other relatives and friends for the past week, left for Colorado points Mr. Wilkins Monday morning. states that he will probably leave Grand Junction in the near future and make his headquarters in Salt Lake City. His two daughetrs, Louraine, who grad- uated from Grand Junchtion High School, with honors, this month, and Ann Rae, are now in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Anna Nielson left Tuesday, June 14, for a visit with relatives in Ephraim, Utah. On Friday she returned to Salt Lake City and came out home Saturday, June 18 Mrs. Ernest Schohian accompanied by her. grandson, Rusty Schonian, returned to Duchesne Monday. Mrs. Schonian recently submitted to an appedicitis operation but is now well on the way to complete recovery. She remained at her home in Duchesne while Rusty returned to his home in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Muir Nellie returned home from Sunday evening Roosevelt where she had been visiting with Mrs. Ivy Murdock for the past two weeks. Mr. Les Bywater of Salt Lake City was in Duchesne during the week taking care of business affairs. Mrs. Dave Thomas and Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas returned to their homes In Duchesne Monday from Sandpoint, Idaho, where they had been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Thomas and family for three weeks. Mrs. Stanley McDonald and to daughter, Dian, returned their home in Duchesne Sunday after a couple of weeks visit in At Anaheim they California, visited with Mrs. McDonald's bribher-ln-laand sister, Mr, and Mrs. Ray Tozar. Bluebell. Officers, teachers and children Mrs. Hyrum Smith recently re- of the Ioka Ward Primary atturned from a visit to tended the Primary conference Evanston, Wyo., where she was held in Roosevelt. This was the a guest at the home of her broth- first Primary childrens conferer, Doras Wall. ence ever held in the church, Loran Benson was brought Cliff Titcomb, who is employed by Winterton Bros., of Roos- home Tuesday, by ambulance, evelt, has been ill for the past accompanied by Murel Benson, week and unable to be at work. of Roosevelt. Loran was badly hurt in a car A meeting was held Friday near Ft. Morgan! Colo, night, after the show, to discuss wreck the cemetery project. The fol- on June 4. He suffered a broken lowing committee was appoint- hip. ed: George Rogers, E. W. Crosby and Edgar H. Miles. They will have charge of finishing1 the well and installing the water lines. Ned Wall, of Layton, son of Utahs adjutant general is preMr. and Mrs. Jeff Wall, former vetMt. Emmons residents, is spend- paring a card file of all Utah as a guide in erans buried with his summer of the ing part of such uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. for marking the gravesAmerican veterans, and local Hyrum Smith. posts have been assigned Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Iorg and Legion of collecting the infortask the Merdaughter and Mr. and Mrs. mation. rill Hansen and children, of Salt Survivors of deceased Veterans Lake, spent the weekend with of any war in which the United Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Hansen. States ever participated, now reIra B. Cannon, of Salt Lake, siding1 Home Canning Will be in the Roosevelt-Mytovisited friends here during the area are requested to furnish past week. information they can Given Particular Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Good- whatever to 64, or to Wm. Stress Basin Utah Fair rich and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Sands PostPost No. 5 relative to deMr. and and of Bluebell, Seeley, veterans. American The Utah state fair for 1949 Mrs. Alma Richman, of Provo, ceased visited Sunday with the Floyd has been set for September 16, Cases and with the Morris 24 and this year more than quicker service and a prompt to ever before its going to be a reply. real Administration reports agricultural fair, The Veterans Million Twenty-si- x reports that 36,938 disabled vet- J. A. Theobold, new secretary-managof the state fair board. Names in V.A. erans enrolled in schools and colOne of the divisions that is are 16 Law under Public leges Records, Washington to be , given particular training for employment object- going A master index file In the ives in agriculture. This 'in- stress this year is the home and Mr. national headquarters of the cludes disabled veterans taking canning competition, hi3 Theobold, representhrough Veterans Administration, Wash- institutional training. About half of all disabled vet- tative June Barlow, Miss Utah contains record ington, D. C cards of some 20 million veter- erans enrolled under this law for 1949 and queen of the fair, ans. These records go as far are training for employment ob- warns that now is the time for all good housewives and home back as the Revolutionary War. jectives in professional and canners to start thinking about fields. Whenever a veteran applies their exhibits for the big show, The VA sudy of the employfor compensation or pension, for Experts are predicting that education and training, disabi- ment objectives of 146,401 handithis year of plenty is going to edubeneveterans or other benefits, any capped attending lity cational institutions under Pub- set records for home canning fits, a claim number Is assigned to the veteran by the VA. lic Law 16 further revealed that: production. veterans Disabled This claim number is known as studying to And in preserving and adding the attractiveness of those numbered a C" number. It provides Im- for professions ' with 13,151 of this group delicious jams and jellies, housemediate and complete identification of the veteran holding preparing to be teachers and wives of the Intermountain area have a special advantage this 11,063, that number. instructors; engineers; The latest count of this index 9,357, accountants or auditors; year. For years and years all home file shows there are 203 thous- and 5,064 lawyers. The remaincanners have used parrafin wax were veterans named and Smith, ing 21,089 training for for sealing Jams and jellies desJohn medicine and related objectives, 12.500 of them named the fact that the quality pite social Smith. If your name is Brown, music, work, writing, the and protective ability of parafyou are only one of 150,000 cleigy and othn.' fiends. fin has gone down and down as Non - professional Browns. And, there are 130,000 occupations veterans named Jones. Rut, accounted for 11,215, with the the methods of refining have when Jones or Brown or Smith largest numbers studying draft- improved. A new thermoplastic product any veteran writing to the ing, commercial art, laboratory called l, which looks correct C" techniques, and sports instructVA includes his number in his letter, he can be ing. The remaining 75,460 dis- much like and applied like parafabled veterans are training for fin but a product that does a instantly identified. much more complete Job of proMany veterans have not ap- the following fields: Managerial tection, is now available In the and for benefits; therefore, clerical, official; salesmen, plied stores. as"C" numbers have not been agriculture, metal working, meThe new wax was designed signed to them. Veterans who chanics and repairmen, and alto meet home canspecifically Ln not can C" do have most ten thousand numbers all others easily by tanging from cooks and bakers ning needs and it has been acidentify themselves claimed by many of the best including in every letter they to woodworkers and upholsterwrite to the VA their full name, ers. An additional 86,864 dis- known home canners in the area. e abled veterans are training address, complete present number, and date of birth. under Public Law 16, R.R. Fuel Bill VA advises veterans to include with the most popular objectives Ihe fuel bill of the class I rail all of this information even when bo ng mechanics and repairmen, roads ln 1948 was more than 833 a "C number is given. It will metal workers, construction million dollars, an increase of $141.. 410,000 compared with that ln 1947 help the VA give the veteran woi kers and salesmen. Mrs. Anna L. Evans. Utah Pea Crop Will Top Last Years HERE AND THERE Heavy Production ld 4-- H The combined Utah-Idah- o pack is likely of canned peas for 19-to be higher than It sayrae to be higher than last years, according to preliminary crop estimates forecast by the agronomy division of the American Can Company. If good crop cocnditions continue, farmers of the two states will produce 1,500,000 cases this year, compared with 1,170,871 in 1948. This estimate would raise the area to fifth place Utah-Idah- o among the nations major canneareas, just below just above the Maine-NeYork area. The total U. S. production of peas for the year is currently calculated at 27,850,000 cases an increase of roughly 4,500,000 cases over last year. d-pea Catastrophies The Galveston tidal wave of 1900 catasis the greatest recorded trophe, claiming 6,000 lives, according to the National Safety council. Only six other catastrophes have taken more than 1,000 lives the Johnstown flood of 1889, the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, the explosion of the Sultana in the Missi? sippi river in 1865, the burning of the General Slocum in the East river. New York, in 1904, the Pesh-tigWis., forest fire of 1871, and the Florida hurricane of 1928. n. ooo AROAlDIA producing Illinois and The met at the home of the leader, Elveyn Gilbert, at which time the shoulder cover was judged. An overnight party was planned which is to be held on the river in the near future. Cup cakes and lemonade were served. cooking and the remainder worked on their files and received Nine members were present. Mildred Bird, reporter. instruction Terry Morrell and ooo Elmer Lemon baked the chocoIOKA At the last meeting of late cake and Dale Nelson and the Fancy Fixers of Fine Foods Larry Hardman' prepared the Club the menu con- apple crisp. Both were judged Boys sisted of apple crisp and choco- very good. Arnold Webb, relate cake. Four boys did the porter. 4-- Heio-emme- rs H FREEZER JARS 36 16-o- z. and 24 22-o- z. jars de- signed for easy filling, emptying. Included with your FRIGIDAIRE Home Freezer Hto Extn HOME FREEZING SEASON IS HERE COME fat IN TODAY! w n Dry Goods I j at Mon-son- SPECIALS ! I er y FOXCRAFT SHEETS on-far- m 0 ' Size 81 x 99, Type 128 FEATHER PILLOWS, $1.98 5 A . HAND TOWELS, 23c and 43c each j $1.50 pair : ij s. : a 59,-72- 6, !: CHILDRENS OVERALLS, pair 79c and 9Sc f :t ; 2 SUN SUITS, each 9Sc x ' A x . a TRAINING PANTIES 19c ANKLETS, dark colors, pair 13c --- LADIES LACE HOSE, pair K C0 23c L Sure-Sea- . Now you can enjoy your favorite foods all year round and save money, tool Have fresh fruits, berries and vegetables all winter long. Buy extra meat, poultry, fruits ar.d vegetables when prices are right, special kinds of pastry d or vegetables put them in your home freezer and be all set" for emergencies and delicacies. A Frigid-air- e Home Freezer saves time, work, trips to the store and money! sale-price- re3 Duchesne Electrical and ser-pie- HUGH E S N E U T A II 4 Appliance Store 1 |