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Show Makes Initial and p, (.for Improved Fall Show m&S Uairman Completes Committee JV.S f! enments; Premium Book Distribution Planned For July 1. pununage Board Fair jv . 3f ncting - rU 25, ju1 Poulson V as assi 5n. The? County ' vas ven fnr arTd;nrGv d- dMrs.l weekendl) d- rk calendared laid, g a-- c:the 1950 following ,the embletmg 5' D the Chairman IVSnced that most "See heads andbeen have - pl Sfl With a view to' rounded-pro- - iresult in the m interesting fair big-sl- lt Cv of Duchesne county, rlTenseerid and Mrs. Pierson directing Ad-- a the premium list, should te tet feSng.by July 1--- compilation of department rules and the solicitation of advertising for the list will get underway immediately. Last year each community was asked to assemble a display or an exhibit of material produced in the community. A misunderstanding as to . what entries were expected resulted in only one Duchesne county town, Neola, entering an exhibit. Neola was awarded a $15 prize for its effort. This will be used to develop Neolas 1950 entry, Lionel Jensen, chairman of last years community exhibit announced. New ' additions to the list of committees hnd department supervisors read as follows: Beef cattle department, John Young; Fruitland; field crops, Jack Nielsen, My ton; entertainment, Tal Wardle, Neola; clothing department, Mrs. Rosanna Bench; and Secretary, Herbert Clark, Duchesne. The Fair board will hold its 1 at 8 next meeting June classroom Veterans m. in the p. at Duchesne high school. . VOLUME 19 DUCHESNE, NO. 44 Eimkeme HHSglld Sefis Driller Killed, Two Injured In FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1950 UTAH, Truck Mishap Pmgssim To Receive Twenty Seniors Diplomas On May 19; Class Speakers Announced A water truck, operated by the National Geophysical company and engaged in oil exploratory work, overturned in Indian canyon Monday afterschool will Duchesne noon, , killing Jesse O. Brown, graduate. 20 high from its seniors 28, a driller for the geophysical 1950 class at exercises scheduled company, a passenger in the for May 19 at 8 p. m. in the truck. high school auditorium. Injured in the accident were Following the theme of the Keith Duke, driver, and . . . and departing class motto Buckalew, both of Du- leave behind us footprints in the chesne. sands of time, the program will Mr. - Brown was crushed to death when the. truck went out OK of control after striking a soft shoulder. He was pinned beneath the truck as it rolled over, Price-17- 3 according to Sheriff Arzy MitThe Price to Myton road, chell, who investigated the acState Route No. 53, now occucident. top pies position on Duchesne Duke and Buckalew were takof secondary program countys en to the Roosevelt hospital by under the Federal aid highways Don Bench. Buckalew was later A resolution plan. adopted by transferred to a Salt Lake hos- the Board of Commissioners a from fractured gives the Price-Mytopital, suffering road pripelvis and broken ribs. Salt ority, the and opens way for Lake hospital attendants report- an of funds Federal ed Tuesday that the lower lobe for expenditure its improvement. of Buckalews lung may have An inter-countthoroughfare, been punctured, and that he was... being given blood transfu- Route 53 received the joint approval of both the Duchesne and sions. Carbon county boards for incluMr. Duke was released from sion in the secondary highway the Roosevelt hospital after an system. examination showed that he had any road can be added received face lacerations and to Before the secondary network, and bruises. start with the graduates proces- sional. A class member, Evelyn Brown, will offer the invocation. Salutatory addresses will . be delivered by Elaine Wright and ' Wilcfeen, Virginia f for the class. Reid Merrell farm of handle the valedictory aswill survey ationwide, construction signment, and diplomas are to farm Twill get underway be presented by B. A. Jacoby, coun-f- i Duchesne in representing the Duchesne 15, 382 different of one County Board of Education. is Mrs. Ruby Dr. A. Reed Morrill, Brigham to' be surveyed. Duchesne, has ater-Young university, is scheduled visit farmers in to address the graduates, with named-trea. Principal J. Elliqjt Cameron to be making the scholarship awards. first survey tte sis Applications are being reS. U. Department the The program will also include by - ceived by the Thirteenth U. S. an historical review of the 1950 Ticulture,,. under the Hous- Civil Service Region for the poet of 1949- ?APts Will be class by Lloyd Abbott; a choral sition of Substitute clerk for ied from 9,000 farms from number by the senior girls; a employment with the Duchesne :tions of the country. The selection vocal by Thomas Ap-paReon .the Post Office, -C. L. Edwards, school and the ition, "collected song by the Civil- Service Director, f. of farm houses ;and tfceir gional graduates. anounced today. - The starting ies, wllhbe used by agri-a- l Hall Merkley will offer the an is for this job $1.06 groups,' government ;ag-kn- d salary benediction. hour.. ; statfe colleges interdeDiplomas are . to be awarded within the Persons living nin' tfre' improvement ofto the folowing: Lloyd Abbott, livery of the Post Office, or who bombs and', living standThomas Appah, Rosanna Foy, are bona fide patrons of the Ted Gilbert, Clinton Harris, Post .Office may .file in this additipn," the reports will June Humes, Gloria Jensen, Persons employed ibe' number of farm homes examination. Acey Kofford, Jennie Lee in the Post Office will .be conother buildings erected dur-,94Hal Merkley, Reid Mersidered bona fide patrpns of n thus become eligible for Federal rell, Bert Mezenen, the cost of hew Barbara Ann Jesse O. Brown was born in highway funds, it must be apand the cost of major this office. Potter Neil Pauline No specific education r or ex- Delhi, Louisiana, a son of Jesse proved by the Board of County Mickelson, Ardell rovements .and repairs. Swasey, Virappli- L. and Etta Manning Brown. Commissioners of the county Redford, le Housing Elaine Act of 1949, perience is required, but examWright, ginia Wilcken, He was married to Hazel Plem-on- s concerned. cant must take a Written ed by the 81st Colleen and Browm, Congress, set ination which includes a genEvelyn of Cortez, Colorado, Feba program of The addition of the Price-Mytoadvisory serf- eral test and a' test of their abil- ruary 27, 1947. He had been an road to the system will in s, financial aids and re-c- h Geo- no affect the priority or imfor farm construction ac-ity to sort material and to fol- employee of the National way physical company for four years, provement on other It also directed the De- low instructions. arrived in Duchesne to con- roads in the county, secondary Lie T cent of Agriculture to re-- t Chairman Further information on the. and field work, about a week James of the examination and the necessary duct He Board of on, the farm housing situ-sLloyd is survived by his wid- Commissioners and; the progress being card for applying may be ob- ago. explained. The ow. at le toward Postmaster be permitted commissioners will the from tained adequate housing conbe services or Funeral will to farms. -- The make s be-'Post recommendations for Office, Duchesne the 'survey that Re- ducted in Cortez, Colorado, af- each to Service as S. U. May 15 will Civil the from years appropriations provide some The problems of county adCus- ter which the body will be sent priority of construction, the information New the in Office the gional requested by ministration were aired here to Louisiana for burial. Board chairman concluded. egress. ... tomhouse, Denver, Colo. Monday at a school for Duchesne county officials conducted by the Utah State Association of County Officials and the State School for Vocational Education. With Mark S. Johnson, Millard county commissioner, and Grace Stevenson, Davis county Striking facts that, two oil Co.s Ute Tribal No. 1, a 1,600 Of utmost importance are the formed. recorder, acting as coordinators, dikes of the Uintah in gilsonite Eocene folds the Surface h! ,Te already been opened bbl. well producing oil ' congealfive, vital subjects were presentm occur-anc- e ' a Their Basin. widespread F. from too not Umtahv.; and are beds few well ed for the consideration of the Basin 90 tje of Utah, ing at' degrees orchid inis unusual of interest, Green in most of six feet them defined being1 Duchesne of nearly million acres' depth fltiyt 9,300 county group. land are dicating an extensive source of noses or faulted folds. Seismog-raph- y yet barely scratched River strata of Eocene age. Speakers were C. A. Grant, of these two petroliferous material underlyithat 33 or more have, however, FOB surveys The of the asimportance executive, ys might, underlie the area, wells lies in the fact that they ng1 the Basin. defined some marked folds sociation, secretary new who discussed one conclusion Heavy asphaltic beds forming mostly of the plunging anticlin- legislation; Howard R. Williams, occur near the deep of the Uinimpiv al or nose type with small clos- Utah State Road commission, Uintah Basin is tah Basin and that there are Asphalt ridge on the northat side laroo hai the occur Basin and lmPrtant Uintah the of proures. As yet there have, not been outlined county road problems; 40 possible potential between 30 and - Oligocene contact. the Cretaceous area which in the ductive sufficient test holes to deter- I. Dale Utah county pays underlying ' Some geologists contend that mine the reliability of seismic planning Despain, irvw!OU 1 pace Utah among area. coordination director, secondary from mapping. Sates of county services; and Boyd M. nPfLtad The youngest beds below the the asphalt is once outcropped sand that JL?hn- nation , Dorsey Quaternary are Oligocene in oil ager The surface beds on the north Sheffield, association president, to the north mountains the in geologist, says age. dip south un- and Box Elder county treasurer, was washed into the Basin side of the Basin and 011 should r niagaz1ne.1SSUe feet of the Basin is spoke for the association. Thirty thousand ;Rep0rt; a fossil asphalt deposit. Two til the trough estimate accurate on the south An open forum discussion was be a fairly Carter Oil holes drilled just reached, while Eftm cording .to Mr. of the depth of these beds. They west of Asphalt ridge, where oil flank of the Basin the beds dip conducted by Ellsworth E. the Basin Weaver, asociate professor, instiattracted national are probably thicker west of ttention in beds above the north. On the edges ofunconform-ablfound was lie beds Eocene thinner tute of government, University d irl Weber tone at and the a this section such Rni to contact, fail to support beds. on the of Utah. underlying fr,nne y Uolo., east, and possibly contain 33 not localized A more origin Whether or not theory. in is it the WGm the Even folding 41 in b.y though smaller The school was held in the pays. Vaii should be sought probably con- Duchesne stake the reflects beds surface Wing fromh11 als0 p?0' likely that any tests will be or the in tabernacle, and Upper Cretaceous is W formable Vetcr forma- - carried out to the full depth the folding underground was attended by county officials, . Basal Eocene beds. Ae5Mtrikes came in the of 30,000 feet, the existence ake of the Uintah, questionable. All these facts in- road supervisors, legislators and The outcrops of Dakntiey valley gas finds of a large number of possible and Wasatch beds troduces the possibilities mayors in Duchesne county. River, Green the to and due the Morrison gas and oil .pays underneath overlaps traps r05 manv with bitumintnat are impregnated and unconformities and to lens-iniscvery nf ynCfr,s prior to the area encourages the idea and since the material; ous of an Are. you So Tired Insufficient evidence exists from the Weber any one of them may prove anyone. seems widespread, the to a Sale For Insert such as conditions empty purse? evaluate productive at moderate depths, i s clear that large evidence Ad in this popaper. more than guesses. valley deeper Ashley dependent upon the relatiye ell came volumes of oil have been Carter Oil sitions of tests in the Basin. Exam Slated For Post Office Job of - : - El-did- ge Commissioners yton Road n h; ; y . i 9, con-ctio- Me-cha- m, n y. School Held For n, County Officials . )eofogis op Labels Uintah Basin One Of Nation's PotentlallOH (Fields ; Conditions (Explained He ng - 4 : sand-,elope- y was-de-rhle- ( stra-tigraph- is j g. |