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Show May 9, 1957 (UTAH) PROGRESS EMERY COUNTY Page Two a verified statement Notice, which shall set forth as to such claim: mining (1) The date of location; (2) The book and page of recorda tion of the notice or certificate of location; (3) The section or sections of the embrace public land surveys whichsuch land such mining claim; or if or section are unsurveyed either the emwould which probably sections brace tuch mining claim when the to public land surveys are extended such lands or a tie by courses and distances to an approved United States mineral monument; (4) Whether such claimant Is a locator or purchaser under such lo- this (fautty ESTABLISHED WAY THE AMERICAN ognete NATIONAL I St EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION I soainoa U Editor and Publisher CLARIN D. ASHBY Printer Printers Devil Ray E. Hassinger Don Wayman Correspondents; Mrs. Glen Snow Mrs. Rose Olsen ' Lynn Ann Minchey Mrs. Cristy Humphrey Mrs. Doborah Huntsman Mrs. Flora Jensen Mrs. Bessie Wright Mrs. E. B. Simonsen Mrs. Sarah Pulsipher PUBLICATIONS i 1900 Published every Thursday at Castle Dale, Utah A First Class Publication Entered in the Po''jofflce in Castle Dale, Utah, as Second Class Matter, under the Act of March 3, 1879. - 1 year. 33.00; 2 years, 35.5a Subscription, in Advance: MiMKI UTAH LEGAL under salil lease as to the lands desNOTICE OF LEASE 2 of this Notice, Published pursuant to Section 7 of cribed in Section as shown No. the Act of August 13, 1954, (68 Stat. brining Serial of the Bureau of reiords the by 708) Department of Management, TO WHOMEVEH IT MAY CON- Land the Interior; and, CERN: 2. That said lease covers lands in NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN In pursuance of a proper Request for the County of Emery, State of Utah, Publication heretofore filed in accord- described as follows, to wit: ance with Section 7 of the Act of TOWNSHIP 20 South, RANGE 14 August 13, 1854 (68 Stat. 708) and East, Sait Lake MERIDIAN the regulations thereunder (13 CFR Section 4: SW14SW14 186 8): Section 7: El, 2 1. That on or about June 30, 1952 Section 8: Ail Section 9: All effective July 24. 1952, there was Section 1: NW14, N12SW14, issued by the United States of America under and pursuant to the min- SW14SW 14 Set turn 17: All eral leasing laws as defined in Sec3. That if any person claiming or tion 11 of the Act of August 13,- - 1954, (68 Stat. 708) an oil and gag lease to asserting under, or by virtue of, any claim located Avard Fairbanks, as Lessee, and that unpatented mining Nicholas G. Morgan, Sr., Charitable prior to enactment of the Act ot Foundation, whose address is 504 August 13, 1954 (68 inStat. 708), any Leasing Act Walker Bank Building - Salt Lake right or Inteiest 11 City. Utah, is me present lessee minerals (as defined in13,Section as 1954) of said Act of August d or lands any to tile thereof, shall fail to file in the part I .and oftice of the Bureau of Land Management at Suit Lake City, Utah and within 150 days trom the below stated dale of first publication of this Notice, a verified statement which shah set foith as to such mining claim: (1) The date of location: (2) The book and page of recordation of the notice or certificate of location; (3) The section or sections of the land surveys which embracs Milk drinking beauties in Emery public such mining claim; or if such lands county were invited this week to are unsurveyed either the sectionem-o probably enter the annual Utah Dairy Prin- sections which wouldclaim when the brace such mining cess competition, rules for which public land surveys are extended to courses and were released by Wallace A. Par- such lands or a tie by distances to an approved United rish, state chairman. States mineral monument; (4) Whether such claimant is a Mr. Parrish said entries for colocator or under such lounty Dairy Princess honors will be cation; and purchaser of such received by local chairmen beginname and The address (5) and names and addresses' so ning this week. Chairman of Carbon- caimant far as known to the claimant of any -Emery area competition is Lo- other claiming person or persons renzo Peterson, Wellington, Ameri- any Interest or interests in or under such claim; unpatented mining , can Dairy Association of Utah dir- such failure shall be conclusively ector. He is assisted by Ray H. deemed (i) to constitute a waiver relinquishment by such mining Finch, Castle Dale, Emery County and claimant of any and ail right, title, Agent. Wilbur C. Parkinson is as- and interest under such mining claim as to, but only as to, Leasing Act sociate state chairman. minerals, and (u) to constitute a "All girls will be wise to remem- consent by such mining claimant thai such and any patent ber that their best beauty cream issued mining claim therefor, shall he subject to comes in Utahs dairy foods, ad- the reservation of Leasing Act minvised pert Shirley Chugg, Weber erals specified In section 4 of Baid 13, 1954, and (iii) to Act of College coed, who is the states preclude August thereafter any assertion by Princess. Miss of any right such claimant mining present Dairy Chugg In any Leasing will participate in the crowning of or title to or interest Act minerals by reason of such minthe 1957 winner. ing claim. The date of first publication of this It would be preferable to have Notice shall lie May 9. 1957. county princesses selected in time DATED March 21, 1957 to participate tn June Dairy Month Ernest E. House, Manager, Mr. Parrish said. Utah Land office observances, Bureau of Land Management However, some counties may wish cf the Interior to choose their winners at later Department First Publication: May 9, 1957 events. State finals will be Septem- La ;t Publication: Juiy 4, 1957 above-describe- ' - Castle Dale 2885 Emery, 4249 Cleveland, 6486 Orangeville, 3330 Ferron, 5755 Huntington, 4221 Clawson, 5533 Greenriver Elmo, 6637 Contest Open For Naming of Utah Dairy Princess EgnOBIAI Answer: Big Enough To Do The Job! We Owe a Big Debl indirectEveryone in Emery county benefits directly or sources These resources. ly from agricultural soil and water provide food, clothing and shelter, and in Emefy county, they provide a large percentage of the annual income. Teachers, specialists, and other professional people are affected by soil and water resources because the prosperity of the community affects the amount of education, special and professional services required by the iesidents. Businessmen who sell seed, feed, fertilizer, insecticides, to machinery, gasoline, credit and other goods or services with farm concerned profarmers or ranchers are directly of farmers cash reduction and income. Over two-thirexceipts from farm marketings go to pay such production ds penses.- Warehousemen, transporters, processors, salesmen and others who handle farm products after they leave the farm two-thirdepend directly on agricultural production. About of the bill consumers pay for farm products as a whole goes to pay for these services. Manufacturers who depend on farm and ranch resources for raw materials also are directly affected. Seventy percent of the dollar value of raw materials going into American industry and commerce comes from agricultural resources croplands, grazing lands, and forests. 'Yet, with all this dependency on farm and ranch resources, little thought is given to the basic ingredients of this production soil and water resources. Agricultural water and land resources must be used, managed and conserved in the public inteiest. With an eye to the future, it must be realized that less and less land must be used to provide the necessities for a rapidly growing number of people. What does it boil down to? It simply means that we must practice some form of soil and water conservation. In this area, where water is at a premium, it appears that there is a vast need of water conservation. Conservation ti.at is directed towards eliminating the high percentage of loss sustained at the present time between the time the precious liquid leaves the mountain streams, and when it enters the fields for imgation or culinary water lines. However, it has been pointed out that in some cases conservation practices have cost more than the value of the benefits. For this reason conservation has not been practieet to as high a scale as necessary. In an effort to speed up the conservation work in this area, an ACP (Agricultural Conservation Program) committee is on hand to assist with planning, and government funds are available for cost sharing. Emery county, due to the seriousness of the water situation during the past few years, has been placed in a category allowing the Soil Conservation Service to plan conservation practices providing for government assistance up to 70. This can only be done during 1957; Such an arrangement makes it possible for farmers and ranchers to complete practices that will do a great deal to improve their water and soil conditions, with very little cash outlay. In some cases where the labor is done by the individual, the allowance for labor has more than covered the farmers share of the projects cost. Water and soil conservation go hand in hand. As water loss through seepage is eliminated, the cause of most of the land is eliminated, allowing this land to he back into placed production within a few years, with the use ds non-producti- ve Looking Ohaad -- by Dr. George S. Benson . NO COMPROMISE grams 18th Freedom Forum just concluded at Searcy, Hollington K. WITH EVIL Ambassador of the Republic Tong, Shortly after the end of World of China which now has its Govfriend a In the Pacific, War II ernment on Formosa, took notice brought to my attention some lit- of successes which the Communists erature being used in his Sunday have achieved toward the creation School class which said the Com- of a opinion in America munists in China were different which public would accept recognition of from the Russian Communists, that Red China. they were really warm-hearte- d Some Say Coexist humanitarians who wished to bring There are some in America, he about land reforms in China and the downtrodden said, who are proclaiming that otherwise aid millions." This same statement the United States can safely coexist China. about the "good Communist lea- with a Communist-rule- d ders in China was being heard on They want to restore trade and oversea radio broadcasts to Amer- diplomatic relations with the Comica and was being published widely munist regime and to admit to the said in scores of books and magazine United Nations. Nothing, Ambassador Tong, "could be more articles.1 At the same time, Generalissimo disastrous to both the United Stwho opposed the ates and China. There can be no Chiang Red hordes trying to take over neutrality on the great moral issues China, was being attacked as a which confront mankind. Ever since God created the unicorrupt leader" who sought to man has always been converse, his at the power expense strengthen of Chinas little people. We know fronted by stern choices between what happened. Our own nation diametrically opposite alternatives. tried to make Chiang bring the There is heaven and hell. There is good Communists into a coali- good or evil. Thre is right or wrong. tion" Government. And American There is love or hat. There is public opinion was so confused peace or war. There is friendship that our people took no effective or hostility. Man is always chalaction when the United States gov- lenged by these painful decisions. ernment failed to give Chiang the The neutralist is the man who kind and amount of aid he needed. lacks the moral stamina to make a China fell to world Communism. decision and who hunts for a safe middle ground The U. S. A. lost 500 million allies. and An immediate result was the Kor- where he can evade a choice between the two extremes. The neuean War. tralist attitude is always the' attiTo Confuse Propaganda When the events are reviewed tude of weakness. Usually, it proves there seems little doubt that the to be not neutral at all, but an aid Communists engineered a propa- to the worst of the alernatives. A Moral Decision ganda campaign which confused people, diluted the power of public In the present issue of world opinion, and ultimately brought Communism versus freedom, the about the fall of China to the neutral is always a CommuReds. Today the Communists are nist-serving position . . . Despite position behind the scenes to bring these glaring facts, the drift working toabout another great victory for ward neutralism in some countries World Communism the recogni- of the free is continuous. tion of Red China by the United Ambassador world an Tong States and the United Nations. examination of the said thatfacts published Propaganda is their instrument of shows that Red China is an abject thought shaping. Soviet satellite. And the claim that At the National Education Pro- - it enjoys a broad base of popular support, he said, "completely overlooks the 20,000,000 corpses in Red LEGAL DEPT. China killed by the Communists since 1949 for the crime of opposing the policies of the ComNOTICE Notice is hereby given that School munist regime. The Ambassador cited magazine Board Meetings will commence at articles and literature being circu8:00 p. m. on the second Saturdays to discussion groups, high schof each month, at its offices in lated ools, and colleges which declare Huntington, Utah, until further or subtly suggest that Red openly notice. China should be admitted to the At its May 11th meeting, the U. N. and recognized by America. Emery County Board of Education Lets not be taken in by such propis planning to discuss the feasibility aganda which seeks to influence a of effecting a number of changs compromise with evil. Ambassador in the 1956-5- 7 school budget. Tong was an overnight guest in my Changes appear to be desirable in home. We have mutual friends in the following accounts: Adminis- China where I lived for 11 years. tration, Instruction, Other School I consider Ambassador Tongs mesServices, Operation of Plant, Main- sage and the morality of his cause tenance of Plant, Fixed Charges, of great importance to our own Summer School, Adult Education, nation and to the future of all manand Capital Outlay. kind. Published in the Emery County Progress April 18, May 2, and May Jaywalking was costly in the U. 9. S. in 1956 3,170 were killed. Kai-she- k, -- "so-call- ber cation; and (5) The name and address of such claimant and names and addressee so far as known to the claimant of any other person or persons claiming any Interest or interests In or under tuch unpatented mining' claim; such failure shall be conclusively deemed (i) to constitute a waiver and relinquishment by such mining claimant of any and all right, title, and interest under such mining claim as to, but only as to, Leasing Act minerals, and (ii)' to constitute a consent by such mining claimant that such mining claim and any patent issued therefor, shall be subject to the reservation of Leasing Act minerals specified in section 4 of said Act of August 13, 1954, and (lii) to preclude thereafter any assertion by such mining claimant of any right or title to or Interest In any Leasing Act minerals by reason of such min. Ing claim. The date of first publication of this Notice shall he May 9, 1957. DATED March 21, 1957 Ernest E. House, Manager, Utah Land Office Bureau of Land Management Department of the Interior First Publication: May 9. 1957 Last Publication: Juiy 6. The state winner will receive an AiOTICE OF LfcASE expenses paid trip to Chicago to Published to Section 7 of pursuant for of American the title compete the Act of August 13, 1954, (68 Stat. Dairy Princess. 708) TO WHOMEVER IT MAY CONCompetition rules are: CERN: 1. She must be a high school gradNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN In uate by September 1, 1957. pursuance of a proper Request for She must be single. Must be in good health and be able to present a health certificate if she is chosen to represent the state at the National Contest. 4. Must like and use dairy foods. 5. Must have a partial understand ing at least cf life on a dairy farm. 6. Must be willing to spend time appearing in public and promoting the use of dairy foods. 7. Must not be a professional model at present or have worked as a professional model. 8. Girls will be judged upon the following points: (1) Beauty (2) Charm (3) Personality (4) Poise -ability to speak in public should be encouraged. 9. While meal making will not be a factor in the judging, contestants are encouraged to familiarize themselves with recipes featuring dairy foods. 2. 3. Publication heretofore filed in accordance with Section 7 of the Act of August 13, 1954 (68 Stat. 708) and the regulations thereunder (43 CFR 186.8): 1. That on or about June 30, 1952 effective July 24, 1952, tlieie was issued by t lie United Stales of America under and pursuant to the mineral leasing laws as defined in Section 11 of the Act of August 13, 1954, (68 Stat. 708) an oil and gas lease to Avard Fairbanks, as Lesstje, and that Nicholas G. Morgan, Sr., Charitable whose address is 504 Foundation, Walker Bank Building - Salt Lake City, Utah, is the present lessee under said lease as to the lands described in Section 2 of this Notice, as shown hearing Serial No. by die reionls of the Bureau of Lund Management, of Department the Interior; and, 2. That said lease covers lands In the County of Emery, State of Utah, described as follows, to wit: TOWNSHIP 20 South, RANGE 14 East, Salt Lake MERIDIAN SURVEYED: Section 3: Lot 4, SW14NW14, SW14 Section 4: Lots 1, 2. 3, 4, N12S12, SE14SW14, As of the end ofFebruary, 107 schools in Utah were operating the Stamp Day program. Much credit goes to the local units of the American Legion and AuxilAssociation iary, Parent-Teacheand Utah Federation of Womens Clubs for providing revolving funds for the purchase of stamps, and helping at school on Stamp Day. rs Nearly 28 per cent of U. S. drivers involved in fatalities in 1956 were under 25 years of age. Sl2-Nl4 2, Sl2-SE1- UNSURVEYED LANDS: which when surveyed will probably be: Township 19 South - Range 14 East, SUM. Section 21: SI2NW14, Sl2 Section 28: All Section 33: A'l 3. That if any person claiming ot asserting under, or by virtue of, any claim located unpatented mining prior to enactment of the Act of August 13. 1954 (68 Stat. 708), any right or- Interest In Leasing Act minerals (as defined In Section 11 of said Act of August 13, 1954) a d to the lands or any part thereof, shall fail to file in the Land Office of the Bureau of Land Management at Salt Lake City, Utah and within 150 days from the below stated date of first publication of above-describe- 4, 1957 NOTICE OF LEASE Published pursuant to Section 7 of the Act of August 13, 1954, (68 Stat. 708) TO WHOMEVER IT MAY CONCERN: NOTICE 13 HEREBY GIVEN in pursuance ot a proper Request for Publication heretofore filed In accordance with Section 7 of the Act of and August 13, 1954 (68 Stat. 708) CFR the regulations thereunder (43 188 8) : 1952 1. That on or about May 30, effective June 3, 1952, there was Amerof issued by the United States ica under and pursuant to the mineral leasing laws as defined In Sec- - -tion 11 of the Act of August 13, 1954, (68 Stat. 708) an ail and gas lease to Fred P Schonwald, as Lessee, and that Fred P. Schonwald, whose address is Branlff Building - Oklahoma City, Ok.ahoma, is the present lessee under said lease as to the lands described in Section 2 of this Notice, as Bhown bearing Serial No. of Land by the records of the Bureau of the InManagement, Department terior; and, 2. That said lease covers lands in the County of Emery, State of Utah, described as follows, to wit: 20 TOWNSHIP South, RANGE 14 East. Salt Lake MERIDIAN Section 27: All 3. That If any person claiming or virtue of, any asserting under, or by claim located -mining unpatented of the Act ot prior toIS,enactment 708),1954 Stat. any (68 August tn Leasing r Ac right or Interest minerals (as defined In Section 11 of said Act of August 13, 1964) as lands or any to the to file In the part thereof, shall fail of Land Bureau of Office Land the Management at Salt Lake City, Utah ' and within 150 days from the below stated date of first publication of this Notice, a verified statement which shall set forth as to such mining claim: (1) The date of location; (2) The book and page of recordation of the notice or certificate of location; (3) The section or sections of the public land surveys which embrace ' such mining claim; or if such lands are unsurveyed either the section or sections which would probably embrace such mining claim when land surveys are extended to such lands or a tie by courses and distances to an approved United States mineral monument; -(4) Whether such claimant Is a locator or purchaser under such location; and " (5) The name and address of suoh claimant and names and addresses so of claimant any far as known to the other person or persons - claiming any Interest or Interests in or under such unpateated mining claim; Buch failure shall be conclusively deemed (i) to constitute a waiver i and relinquishment by such mining claimant of any and ail right, title, and interest under such mining claim i as to, but only as to, Leasing Act minerals, and (ii) to constitute a consent by such mining claimant that such mining claim and any patent R issued therefor, shall be subject to the reservation of Leasing Act minerals specified in section 4 of said Act of August 13, 1954, and (iil) to preclude thereafter any assertion by' such mining claimant of any right or title to or interest In any Leasing -- - above-describ- e-public Act minerals by reason of such mln Ing claim. The date of first publication of this Notice shall be May 9, 1957. DATED March 21, 1957 Ernest E. Honse, Manager, Utah Land Office. First Publication: May 9, 1957 Last Publication; July 4, 1957 Give Her a New IRONER of soil practices. In most cases, good conservation practices can he classi- fied as a sound investment. One that will bring a good percentage return for the investment. One that vili provide more water and more land, as well as a higher yield. However, conservation is a program that can not be done by conservation officials alone. It must be done by each individual farmer, or by a group of fanners. Conservation practices can be used by canal companies and other groups, and in most cases this proves more economical. In gratitude for the living that the water and soil resources have provided for us over the years, we should strive to do everything we can to maintain these lesources at a high level. Contact your local ACP committee or the Soil Conservation Service if you wish to carry on conservation practices. FIRST STATE BANK OF SAUNA SAUNA For Mothers Day, May 12 UTAH PRICE -- HELPER CAPITAL SURPLUS & UNDIVIDED Member $100,000.00 PROFITS $500,000.00 Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Iron ir life Box Phone ME 17.3 - 253 East Main Price, Utah CO. i |