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Show A list of the marriage licenses issued from Oct. 10 to Dec. were released recently by County Clerk Porter L. Mer-relFollowing is the list: Oct. 10 Gerald Richard Norton, Springville and Mildred Kolleen Wilson, Duchesne. Oct. 15 Rafael Brinkerhoff Chidester. Roosevelt, and Amy Joyce Hall, Roosevelt. Oct. 22 Charles Hairston, Vernal and Lola Chivers, Vernal. Nov. 7 Donald R. Anderton, Roosevlt and Lorraine Anderson, Roosevelt. Nov. 12 Senor F. Mortensen, Jr., Myton and Shirley Meyer, Bridgeland. Nov. 13 Russell Earl Myton and Ila Rhae Tridell. Nov. 14 James Keith Duke, Duchesne and Beth Winkler, of Bluebell. Nov. 18 William D. Lewis, Roosevelt and Glenda Jean Sowle, Roosevelt. Nov. 19 Harley Hughes Evans, Upalco and Laura Jean Potts, Upalco. Nov. 21 Lester Fay Kerr, Roosevelt and Cleo Evonne Crow, Roosevelt. Dec. 4 John Keith Farnsworth. Mt. Home and Marjorie Elaine Wright, Duchesne. Dec. 5 Robert Lee Clark, Bluebell and Marolyn Atwood, Bluebell. Dec. 5 Robert Keith Mortensen, Myton and Sharon Johnson, 5 By Carl Holley SCOUT COUNCIL MAKES JAMBOREE REFUND A swell present from the Utah l. National Parks Council arrived to some sixty boys in ther Uintah Basin last week. It came in the form of a check for $54.04. This refund was due to superior planning on the part of the Council Jamboree committee and a portion, $13.50 was refunded from the National Council from its fee of $50.00. Probably the greater part of this refund will be put into Christmas presents for the family, but its certainly great to get such a nice piece of change out of the clear blue sky. A word of caution comes from Scout Executive Holley . Several of the mothers picked up the envelopes containing the checks from the post office and believed the envelope to contain only advertising. They almost destroyed the envelopes without , companies. looking in them. Heres hoping Leland Olds, former chairman that no checks were lost of the federal power commisplease cash the checks sion, charged that the private as soon as possible. in Washingpower monopoly ton has grown too powerful for democracy. The time has forward come, he said, for march in the electric power proThe following is a summary gram of the American people. He laid down a long specific of oil well drilling activity for proposed power pro- the week as released by the gram. Scouting division of Carter Oil Private utilities, he charged, Co.: Myton. are determined to restore the Eyner Nielson No. 1 (Located two-da- y Inci-dentl- y. Oil News e SE NW, Sec. 36, 3S, 5W Plugged back total depth 4644 ft. Dec. 3, pumped 83 barrels oil, 473 barrels water in 15 hours; Dec. 4, pumped 123 barrels oil and 139 barrels water in 24 hours; Dec. 5, pumped 122 barrels oil, 349 barrels water in 24 hours; Dec. 6, pumped Of 96 barrels oil and 366 barrels water, 24 hours; Dec. 7, pumped TOMMY APPAH 90 barrels oil and 388 barrels The Uintah Basin Record re- water, 24 hours. Well completed ceived the following letter from on December 7th. Waiting on Thomas Appah. who is stationed gravity report. in Korea: Bluff Bench Unit No. 1 (LoI want to extend my deepest cated NW SW, Sec. 29, 39 S., thanks for the copies of the Uin- 22 E.) Moving in rotary tools. tah Basin Record. It helps to strengthen me during these monotonous days on the front lines. It also ke?ps me informed on the happenings back there on the home front, Up where I would like to be right now. who' atfoolish are Persons Please pay my extended greet- tempt to chisel on unemployings to those wonderful people ment compensation, for they alof the Basin, especially Du- most always get caught and it chesne. costs them much more than The Christmas card is a scene would stand to make, in Japan, as I was there not they Heiner, manager of the Spencer very long ago on a leave of local Employment Security ofabsence. I had a nice time. . While there I visited the Mis- fice, said today. a false statemaking Anyone sion Home and was welcomed ment to collect unemployment by the missionaries and mission compensation is leaving himself Mr. and Robertson, president, wide open to a charge of fraud, Mrs. Robertson, of the L.D.S. he declared. Our detection serI church. attended the services, vice is extensive, with a numboth ours and the Japanese ber of field representatives and . people. investigators working to uncovI remain as ever er fraud attempts. Tommy Appah There is a spot check made of all earnings declared, with the employer, and a consistent check of payrools records whether kept in Duchesne County or elsewhere. Some think they can collect a jobless check and, at the same Speed in the .treatment of time, take a job with an cattle that have swallowed wire, employer, figuring he nails, or other metal objects is wouldnt report their earnings. highly important, according to But they are wrong, Mr. HeinDr. E. H. Gibson, Cache Valley er stated. veterinarian. For example, he said, payDr; Gibson, whose experience roll records of chain stores may with hardware disease in cat- be kept yet we have tle is reported in the December the records of employers pay17 issue of the Utah Farmer rolls. The program, for unemploymagazine, said that unless the metal is removed from the ani- ment compensation is primarily mals stomach at an early date, designed to give assistance to it usually causes an abscess and workers who become unemployultimately death of the animal. ed through no fault of their Dr. Gibson has performed sur- own. Those few who attempt to gery on 289 cattle in the past obtain benefits fraudulently and three years to remove such met- violate the intent of the proal objects. Cattle, he reports, gram, jeopardize the rights of usually pick up the wire or every potential recipient of benhardware with their feed. efits, said Mr. Heiner. In The Service Country Chlslers Most Generally Are Picked Early Treatment Urged For Nail Swallowing Cows out-of-to- e, Phone news items to 7441 FEMALE HELP WANTED Earn extra cash doing assembly work at home, pleasant, easy to assemble product. Good Kenroe Mfg. pay. Write to Co., Yorktown, Indiana. tp FOR SALE 40 acres choice corrals, good farming land, small house and choice water rights. See Doug or Arch at McKinlay Motor Co., y Roosevelt. Highest prices paid for hides, pelts and wool. Roosevelt Shoe Shop. WANTED Dead pf Useless WANTED animals. For prompt service cal Reed Stansfield, Bridgeland, 4181. Highest prices paid for hides, pelts, furs and wool. Reed Stansfield, Phone Bridgeland, 4181. 1st house west of Bridge-lanService Station. d E. A. Call Service refrigeration Electric Motors Wiring Phone Arcadia 4306 Roosevelt, Utah Inspect Brown Swiss Cattle, Suggests Ag. Dept. Farmers who want good cattle, just about perfectly adapted to the mountain states climatic and other conditions, should investigate the Brown Swiss breed, according to Seymour Mikkelsen, head of the agricultural department, of Snow College at Ephraim. In a lead article scheduled for the December 17 issue of Utah Farmer, Mr. Mikkdsens account describes the Brown Swiss as a hardy and rugged animal that is both a good meat and milk producer. Although it is by no means a new breed, the Brown Swiss is little known in many American communities. Intermountain area farmers are more interested in becoming this breed as a good cow, the article points out. It is reported that no other dairy breed in America has grown so rapidly and steadily during the past two or three decades. The Brown Swiss breed is one of the oldest of the dairy breeds, and is descended from cattle used in the valleys and mountain slopes of Switzerland since before historic records began. dual-purpos- e UINTAH BASIN RECORD Injured In Freak Accident For Two Months The public power policies of the Eisenhower administration were assailed during a recent conference of the National Electric Consumers, who met in Denver, Dec. 10 and 11. Leading the blistering attack on the- administrations policies regarding power was Senator Robert S. Kerr, (D) from Oklahoma. Among the 650 delegates from 29 states, representing American consumers of rural electricity were Myron Brough, president of the Uintah Basin Telephone Co. and Louis Reese, manager of the Moon Lake Electric Association. They accompanied Heber Bennion, field man for National Farmers Union who sponsored the conference. According to Mr. Bennion there was a tremendous amount of enthusiasm engendered into the conference for marching on Washington to stop the power monopoly of private power loose federato keep the tion of colonies regions of this country as their financial colonies. Mrs. Elsie Gunter Marriage Permits Policy Changes On Rural Power Sought At Confab Gin-gel- l, Thursday, December 17, 1953 family have moved from Cody, Wyo. to Salt Lake City, where Mr. Ward is employed in the Union Pacific Machine Shop. A new baby at the Christmas Mrs. Ward will be remembered time seems such a wonderful as Ruth Harris. gift to share within the family. Clinton Harris has a Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bancroft leave and will spend it with could hardly wait for the bus home folks. He has completed duty on to arrive from Denver, Friday, 9 months of over-sea- s Dec. 11, as they had talked to the aircraft carrier, Boxer. their son, Bobby, from Denver, MARRIED IN WYOMING telling them he was released Mrs. Earl Ward announces from the service and would be home on the morning bus. We the marriage of her son. Doyle know that theirs will be a very Harris, to Bettv Linke. of Cody. Wyo. The marriage was perhappy Christmas. formed bv Eishop Taggett at Mr. and Mrs. Chester Lyman j (he Ward home. and Mrs. Reed Timothy and fam-- i ily went to Salt Lake, Friday,1 Bobby Bancroft was a visitor on a business trip and to permit at the Record Office and looks the children to enjoy the thrill fine, after Tiis two years of serof Christmas lights and stores vice duty. He was thrilled about at' Christmas time in a big city. being home in Duchesne. There are a lot of different ways to receive injuries, as Mrs. Elsie Gunter can testify. RecentMr. and Mrs. Walter Nelson ly she was hanging out her and granddaughter, Linda Jean and washing, experiencing quite a lot of difficulty as a strong Nelson, returned from a trip through Idaho, Orewind made her task almost imand gon Washington, They vispossible. ited friends and relatives in As Mrs. Gunter labored hang, Rupert, Twin Falls, Jerome, ing out her washing, the stiff Shoshone and Boise, Idaho. They wind blew over one of the poles, also visited their son, Gene Nel-- j the cross bar striking her on top son, and his family, at Eugene, of her head. She has no idea Ore.; a sister of Mr. Nelsons at how long she lay on the ground Mt. and their Vernon, before coming around sufficient- daughter and Wash.; Mr. ly to drag herself to Judge and Mrs. Elvin Thomas, at George Wilckens home, where North Richland, Wash. Their her daughter, Mrs. Connie Rob- grandson, Dee Thomas, came bins, was called. back with them and is staying She was taken to the doctor with his grandparents, Mr. and for an examination, who as- Mrs. Dave Thomas and the sured her nothing serious resulted from the crack on the head. Except for a couple, of black Mrs. Lowell Clemons returned eyes, and a head ache. Mrs. Gun- from the Roosevelt Hospital on at her church and Thursday, Dec. 10, bringing the ter was back Mrs. Gracia Olsen is home History owes its excellency other duties in a few days. new baby brother, where his from the hospital. more to the writers manner five brothers and sister werei than to the material of which Phone News To 7441 Goldsmith. happily awaiting their return.1 Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ward and it is composed. two-wee- 30-da- . i son-in-la- ( " FINE PERFORMANCE The Taming of the Shrew, William Shakespeare, was presented to a house of about 300 students and a hundred parents in the evening. It was such wonderful acting and such a splendid performance that all are still rather breathless, but wish to say, Please come back again. Some of the towns people have already received cards of thanks from the folks who stayed at their homes. by CHRISTMAS VACATION Duchesne County schools are scheduled for closing Dec. 23rd for the Christmas vacation. School work resumes on Jan. 4. Indian Rights . . . (Continued from oage 1) the State of Utah, its counties or municipalities, and WHEREAS, the law enforcement in certain parts of the State is seriously hampered by conflicting Federal and Slate laws as they apply to intoxicating liquors and by conflicting jurisdictions within our State and County, and WHEREAS, the Tribal Administration and the Indian Bueau have been doing a splendid work in Duchesne County in bringing the Ute Indians to a realization of the advantages of citizenship. They are now attending our public schools, riding our school busses, building and maintaining good farms and . homes, WHEREAS, we believe that the welfare of the Indian peoples, the State of Utah and the County of Duchesne would be greatly benefited by immediately giving to the Indians all rights, responsibilities and duties of unrestricted citizenship, now therefore: Be it resolved by the Board of County Commissioners of Duchesne County that the Governor of the State of Utah, the Utah Senatorial and Congressional Representatives in the Nation Congress and the Legislature of the State of Utah be called upon to take every action available to them, collectively and individually, by memorial and otherwise, to the end that the Indian peoples residing in the State of Utah be granted the full rights and responsibilities of citizenship that the welfare of all concerned will be promot- ed. Specials Throughout Rest of Year CANDIES CANDY DMS 3 for 10c Chocolate Cherries lb. 69c HOLIDAY HARD MIX CHOCOLATES 2 lbs. 09c (XMAS 2 lb. 1.69 Shell Peanuts, lb. 32c - Walnuts Brazil Nuts Echo Park . . . 4 lbs. 3.49 .... Jelly Beans Filberts - Pecans lb. 69c .lb. 29c PRODUCE POTATOES HAUEL ORANGES RED BLISS 10 lbs. 25f IDAHO RUSSETS 10 lbs. 35c RED BLISS POTATOES 10 lbs. 25c ONIONS 10 lbs. 35c lb. 13c GRAPEFRUIT BANANAS ROME APPLES pink ..... lb. 140 lb. 17c GRAPES lb. 13f CELERY lb. lb. Pillsbury Angel Food Mix ... 59c 1 CHIP) Pillsbury Cookie Mix 34c SUGAR lb. 96c - 2 lbs. 1.89 Pillsbury Cake Mixes COFFEE (CHOCOLATE ........ 39c 5 lbs. 54c 50 lbs. 3.39 lb. 33c pt. 330 14-o- z. cans 33c 46-0GRAPEFRUIT JUICE -- Shavers 260 TOMATO JUICE - Libbys ... 4 46-ocans 1.00 TOMATOES - Woods Cross 2 212 cans 370 2 can 230 PORK and BEANS - Pierces 2 12-ocans 270 CORN - KOUNTY KIST 2 22 cans 250 PUMPKIN - Utah Valley. 2 lbs. 470 SALTINE CRACKERS - Purity WAX PAPER - 125 roll 230 7. (Continued from page 1) er of these proposed reservoirs will inundate any portion of the quarry where the dinosaur skeletons have been found. The estimated cost of the Echo Park dam is $176.4 mil lion. The dam would be 525 feet high, store 6,460,000 acre feet of water and would have 200.000 kilowatts of installed power capacity. The report also recommended the expenditure of $21 million by the National Park Service for the development of the recreational potentialities of Dinosaur National Monument and for archeological, wildlife and geological programs. Largest Single Job The largest single project of the first phase of the program is the Glen Canyon storage and 13 power dam on the Colo-adfrom Lees miles upstream Ferry. This dam, which would cost an estimated $421 million, would be 580 feet high, would And if you keep it for a day, store 26 million acre feet of why not always? But you can water and would have a power never keep it alone. plant which would generate Henry van Dyke 800.000 kilowatts of electricity. z. ....... z. Americana Album DOLLS o, J 17C 13C IN THE GROCERY DEPARTMENT MARGARINE - Tastewell SALAD DRESSING - Bordens 2 CATSUP - Del Monte tional Congress, the Governor of the State of Utah, and the Utah State Legislature. WRAP) - Party Mix PACKAGED FLOUR - Kitchen Maid Be it further resolved, that copies of this resolution be sent to the Senators and Members of the House of Representatives of the State of Utah in the Na- and NUTS 79c ea. We, At Kohls, Wish Everyone a Merry Xmas and a Happy New Year! y |