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Show Plan G::::o Plans 1952 Foresterd 1952 Program r.lsrchcndising In Vernal Confab District rangers from the Program At Dinner Ashley National Forest have of-asApproximately 26 local Continental Oil Company distributors and employees met recently at the Frontier Grill to see and hear a preview of Continentals $3,500,000 advertising campaign for 1952. The meeting was preceeded by a banquet and the presentation of service pins to those who have sold Conocp products ten years or longer. Pins awarded ran from 10 to 40 years. The campaign, which has been pretested in several major cities, will use newspapers, radio, television, outdoor posters, and magazines to feature new 50,000 Miles No Service, it was anWear nounced by A. T. Farrell, assistant division manager, who presided at the meeting. Newspapers will continue to be the backbone of Conoco advertising in 1952, but will be supplemented by liberal use of other media, including radio, television, and outdoor posters to bring Conoco Super Motor Service Oil and our new to as many car owners as possible, Mr. Farrell said. Continentals plans call for the use of advertisements in newsI,- 073 daily and weekly papers; commercials on 72 radio stations and 19 television stations; ads in The Saturday Evening Post and 13 farm publications; and the use of outdoor posters in 1,244 cities and towns A basic outline of the comto panys plan ' was - presented of the Conoco men in the form a sound movie featuring Conoco President, L. F. McCollum; Harry J. Kennedy, vice president in charge of marketing; J. L. Wait, general manager of marketing, and O. B. Lloyd, general sales manager. Present at the meeting, in addition to Mr. Farrell, were: R. S. Passey, district sales representative, and Don Benson, Conoco merchandiser. Con-oc- os . ALL-STA- Thursday. March 13. 1931 First1 Team Choice Grc:Jic:fcrcr Of OES - . -- -- -- . UU Tribal "C" No. 1 (located in Roosevelt Pool in SW SW of Crews ' drilling Sec at 3861 feet. Uta Tribal "B" No. 1 (located near Roosevelt in NE SW, Sec. Plugged back total depth 0838 feet. Total depth 9954 feet. lease equipment. Rosemary Lloyd No. 1 (Roosevelt Stepout - Well located in; NW- - SW Sec. Previously reported core between. 1 feet, recovered 53 7 feet. A core at feet recovered 126 feet. Crews drilled from 11,127 to 11,135 feet, and are coring at 11,173 feet Uta Tribal No. 3, (located Jn RooseVelt 'Pool in SE NE,"' Sec. at Crews 3700 feet. H-Peterson No. 1. (located Pool. in SW SW, Sec. Crews are rigging up rotary, tools. Moon No. 1 (Duchesne Wildcat well No. 2 located in A core SE SE Sec 2 at feet, recovered 12 3 feet. A core at was reported with no description. CTews are drilling at 4080 feet. Duchesne Ute Tribar No.! 2 (located in Duchesne Pool in SE NW, Sec. A core 0 at feet, recovered 3 feet. Crews are drilling at -- KEN NICKELL HU steady and consistent play retas him top man on this an team makes him captain A junior at Union year's honor that and guard. High. all-st- ar GWEN BODILY Second choice in the Roosevelt Basin Record poll, placet him at forward on our team. Last year - at Union High. Stand-ard-Uint- ah Installing ! E) - 10,948-11,00- 10,001-11,12- - - drilling M-1S4- E) er n 3811-363- Heating 3903-395- universities toTfcoScrvto ttcvo :3H Correspondent , d n, IRA D. KYERSOLE Mrs. Emma' McCord, of Clearfield, v who is a ; guest of her mother. Mrs.:. Emma Birch, received a -- telephone call from her son, Sgt. Ira. Donald Ever-solthat he' had arrived in ihet United': States from Japan by plane. He had been serving for 10. months in a Korean combat zone. Sgt. Eversole, who' served with .the! 34th' Infantry Division, has-bawarded the Purple Heart-with- : an Oak Leaf Cluster. i Mrs. : McCord said that her son expected to come home on furlough some time next month. For -- the - present he will be a patient rat a veterans hospital basic training fox men land in Fairfield, California. Sgt. Bveraole was a student women, headquarters of the Human Resource Research Center, at Duchesne High School for and home of AFs Officer Cantwo years. didate School. His basic training is preparing him for entrance into! Air orce technical training andtifor assignment in specialized wfcrk. The course includes s scientific evaluation of his aptitude onnd inclination for following a vocation end career. ? -- e, w een - gar-ticul- ForBROADHEAD ward and smallest on the first REX team, was also the league's top scorer and established stale record for single game score. A senior at Duchesne High. 1A320 4iMt U.S.A. No. Who fin. ished the season with a total of 104 points for Uintah's Utes, rates the other guard DON BARR spot along with Nickell. He winds up a great career at Uintah. 1 003 Do (Vernal Wildcat, HcnCllSS - - - List YltH Lotffa call. your ranch or farm? If yen! do. yow-waatfi- 579 feet with 275 sacks. Drill- clients inihe stete of Toxas, Arkansas. Oklahoma. ColoSUdo. Wyoming Montana, Orogon. Idaho and. Utah. LUfyour property ing at 2005 feet. whaco your p aspects of a quick sale aro the beibwe have nanny, Canyon Government No. I, (Jack Canyon Wildcat well located in SW NE Sec. Down 11 hours for repair and waiting on mud. Crews drilling at 5773 feet. assay customers, for largo and small able fully oqy&ped end fully stocked 1,000 head of cattle or 1,000 to 3,000 wish to sell ..phene, wire or writ at C. CD 117 E. 3rd BOttth. . farms and ranches, profarand carrying from 180 to aheap. Dont- delay, if syou our oxpoueo. - LEWIS CO. .'REALTOR Balt Lake City, Utah Phone AWC6S from Factory and SAVi Buy Dire sf sesUkOeg CAN SHU DEjJVIR STOACO cnabiwies wtadowt mJ doocs Me the Coms oe tbi nuke. AH ifaetaan with ernnseding corn rtrMH., frMlfWrM Wf WINDOWS, Sto-A-C- Oat to yoa. TKy Steak I com DOORWAYS, PORCH, Inc. Murray, Utah Id like Free Estimate With- Llv DUANE Hls 6 ft 7 in. physique made him a natural for the center post. He is the tallest man in the league and played soma fine ball for Uintah. He's a senior. out Obligation. Mining product ... Mid ttoy last a littina Address Phone City Aluminum Combination Windows, Door and Awnings hr Be Wsedw Is leaf fcsesw K1TEOUI1TAK, INC. It Factory 4981 So. Stale St.. Murray, Utah World's most beautiful - fuel saving - all weather self storing aluminum windows and doors Office SLAUGH Lacked a BASIL DEFA few votes in making the first team, so was placed as captain and center on the second. A junior front Tabiona, ho scored 96 points for third in area. . Seasons Fifteen Name lot Wu than jroa STO-A-C- O PATIO Intermountain, o tar 4981 So. State St., control you bom this Vil onsaw ... CALL as today . . . Us os .xpUia S wml.fi lotoyou compels Garofcaturetyfija-tus- Top Scorers Unofficial records compiled by the Roosevelt Standard - Uintah Basin Record reveal the leading scorer for the 1952 basketball season in the Uintah Basin division of Region 5 is that handsome little forward who has spearheaded the Duchesne Eagles bid for district honors, and who in the .last game of the season set a state scoring record fdr a single game in 1952 among B schools. Rex Broadhead with the 34 points he tanked against Tabiona last week ran his total to 118 for the year, which is 14 ahead of Don Barr, husky guard on the Uintah High School team, who finished the season with 104. In third is Basil Defa, center from Tabiona. with 96. sharp-shootin- g finer flavor! Ton gtet flie facts car value.. aAwLwe nzaa - FINAL TEAM STANDINGS ' rrrrUCKY ka:i CUNDED WHISKEY 86 BPIRIT8THE OIO.SUNNY.BROOK PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL CO., LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY And pleasure is no crime except when it strengthens the influence of bad inclinations or lessons the activities of virtue. Mary Baker Eddy You have not fulfilled every duty unless you have fulfilled that of being cheerful and pleasant. Charles Buxton. ! tisuij gfveyo tirproof! others giva you sel'We The Dodge ''Show Dowrfihaoklet lets you comdoors, pare Dodge heed room, teat width, euy-entr- y wheelbase, and many, many other speciBc features thst mean extra comfort, safety, cmvmfience and economy . . . with can coating hundred! of dollars' mere.-Ceyour free copy today. Let the fee apeak ftatfaamsai w V ar . 10,097-10,20- R ALUMINUM A. one luneheop nnd an evening banquet at the' Frontier Grill complimented Mrs. Evelyn- Carle. grand lecturer of the- grand chapter of the .Order: of Eastern Star of. Utah, who made an official visit to Dnveromy Chapter, No. i 17. Tuesday, March 11. Mrs. Sadie Blank, worthy matron of Duveromy Chapter, was hostess at the luncheon which complimented Mrs. Carle,- - with the following, guests in attendance: : Mrs. Ted " Hatch. 1 Mrs. Maxine Hatch. Mrs. Willis Stevens. Miss Helen StevenaMisa Betty Hackler, . Mrs. Margaret Sweatnsan, Phillips and Thomas'Martin.-Curtis all of Vernal; Mrs. and Mrs. Mildred . Stone. Fort Duchesne; Mrs. A L. Norman, Roosevelt; and Mr... and Mrs. ..Harvey . . Higgle, and the hostess, of Neola. At 6:30 p. m.j a. banquet honored the visitor at the Grill, followed by a regular meeting at the Masonic. Hall, where the Blank.-anworthy matron,-Mrs- . the' worthy Pstron. 'Mr. Siueat-mapresided. Centerpieces in emblematic colors of the border, including white stocks, blue iris, yellow acacia and red csmations, With green foliage, served as tgble decorations for both the luhch-eo- n and the banquet, with yel-lotapers adding a- completed touch to 'the (occasion. Initiation ceremonies ware, conducted" for new: members, Mrs. Elnora ' Creech, of Roosevelt, and Mrs. Elaine NailJhnd Mrs. Margaret Nye, of Vernal Hostesses for the social hour, following the meeting, were Mr sr Elizabeth Winslow amd Mrs. Nellie Jones, of Duchaane. . Hear A Noted Foreign Resmussen Cite 0K:!Uj:it oclock YU Will guest-speak- iE&SB?2CCD UINTAH TEKJ n sembled at the Supervisors fice in Vernal for four days of conferences in preparation for the 1952 field season, according to Wm. D. Hurst, Forest Supervisor. Timber and grazing management plans for the coming year will be given special consideration by the federal land managers. A feature of the meeting will be a discussion on timber insect control by Leslie Orr of the Bureau of Entomology. Monte Lewis of the Division of Range Management, U. S. Forest Service, will assist the rangers in their range management planning work. Ashley Forest personnel who are attending the conference include Ranger Ernest C. Hirsch of the Manila District, Ranger Clyde Lambert, Altonah; Ran- , ger Robert Hoag, Mountain-viewWyo.; Ranger George Walkup, from the Whiterocks District; Ranger Glen A. Lambert, from the Vernal District; O. Lawrence Olpin, Burton Clark, Howard J. Makela, Ward Evans and Wm. D. Hurst, from Vernal. John Scott, author and foreign correspondent who will lecture at Brigham Young University on March 18 in Tuesday devotional at 9:55 a m., will give three talks under the auspices of B.Y.U. He will participate in a special roundtable session sponsored by the B.Y.U. Journalism Department at 2 p. m. in Smith, Banquet Hall, when he willj discuss his evperiences as aj foreign correspondent, and in the evening he will be the at a meeting in Salt Lake City of professional members of the Sighia Delta Chi, national professional journalism fraternity. The time and place of the evening meeting will be announced later, according to Dr. Oliver Smith, journalism department chair-maat B.Y.U. Mr. Scott was educated In Europe and America. Currently NO JOB TOO SMALL he is speaking on journalism to 7 NO sJOB TOO LARGE colleges and Bethroughout the country. of wide his cause journalistic For Quick. Courteous- Service experience over fifteen years in CALL 138-various capacities as contribut- Roosevelt, Utah editor 'tq Time magazine, ing Let Us Give You a Bid on That and as correspondent for newsMow Homo or Remodeling Job papers and news agencies This Spring abroad, he is richly qualified to talk on his subject. 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