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Show STANDARD Jgnuory 29. 1976 Obituaries He was a farmer of the Uintah Basin Funeral services held for John H. Haslem the Files of Uintah Basin Standard and that work on the flour mill was progressing and that it should be open in The people of Roosevelt got a local newspaper in August of 1914. The Roosevelt Standard vu to remain and grow with the town and surrounding country. It was felt that Roosevelt and the tributary country vu entitled to a good paper and the advertising patronage in the first edition bore out that belief. Some of the people in the news in 1916: Bert Allred and George CNeil opened their barber shop in the Henderson building. Their equipment was all in place and the shop was considered among the finest in Eastern Utah. It was in every respect Todd of Talmage was a candidate for the nomination of County Clerk on the Republican ticket The Republicans held their county Convention at Altonah on September 16. Professor J. F. Day, principal of Duchesne high school gave a talk to the pupils of the Trinity Sunday School. Lott Powell of Altonah reported that Altonah section wu coming along nicely, the falL lt26 In 1926 a reward of $25.00 was posted by the directors of the Commercial club, to apprehend and convict the person quilty of deliberately breaking one of the clubs plate glass windows. Those having charge of the Bingham Relief Drive in the various towns in the County were as follows: D. W. Mitchell, C. I Johnson, U. C. Harmston, EIRay Wilkins, Charles F. Shrader, Morris Benson, J. H. Robinson, Thomas. Todd, Ovie Richardson, Clarence Brown, W. K. Dye, Leon Jenson and Lewis E. Allred. George N. Larsen of the faculty committee reported the completion of the septic tanks and drain at the Duchesne County high school during the Roosevelt PTA meeting. Helen Bircher presented a violin solo. 193ft Headlines in 1926: Great Basin of Utah Held To Be Big Oil Reservoir-Diamon- d H 3TT mm HJ I Survivors: wife, sons, daughters, Kenneth, Salt Lake: Niles, Vernal; Mrs. Arvil (Helen) Wad ley. Pleasant Grove; Dean, Logan; Mrs. Edwin (Rhea) Lewis, Mrs. Wendell (Marie) Russon, Acel, all Orem; Lynn, Beaver, Verl Myron, Roosevelt; 58 grandchildren, 2 Watt A musical number was given by Norman R. Haslem and Nila H. Batty, accompanied by Joyleen B. Haslem. The invocation was presented by A eel Haslem. Sue Zann W. Kohler presented a Philosophy of Life followed by a musical number given by directed the small by Flossie H. Walker. Dean W. Haslem was the next speaker followed by another musical number by Don Haslem on the Organ. The final speaker was Lynn Haslem, he was followed by Bishop Frede E. Thomsen who offered remarks, and a final musical number by N. Chad Watt accompanied by Kay H. Watt The Benediction was given by Veri Haslem.' The dedication of the grave in the American Fork cemetery was by Kenneth J. Haslem. Pallbearers were Malcolm J. McLeod, Melvin J. McLeod, Max Haslem, Kenneth J. Haslem, Edwin S. Lewis, and Wendell G. Russon. John Henry Haslem 87, Salt Lake, died January 21, at a sons home in Beaver of a heart ailment He was born August 11, 1988 in Vernal to Joshua and Alice Southam Haslem. He married Florence Wagstaff. January 15, 1908, in the Salt Lake LDS Tmple. She died October 30, 1918. He married Rebecca Hartle, June 1, 1923, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. She died March 2, 1965. He married Pearl McLeod June 6, 1966, in Salt Lake City. was played by Kay H. the Oil company prosecutes work in Field of Pass OpiVast Possibilities-Engineer- s nion on Structure; Larger Oil Operations in brothers, sisters, Clair, Orem; Von, Roosevelt; Mrs. Ruth Anderson, Reno, Nevada; Mrs. Gladys Price, Mrs. Katie Horrocks, both of Vernal; Mrs. Lloyd (Florence) Brown, Salt Lake; Mrs. Velda Johnson, California; stepstepsons, daughters, Malcolm McLeod, Salt Lake City; Melvin McLeod, Mrs. Roy (Donn) Ipson both of Bountiful; Mrs. Richard (Marjorie) Smith, Roy; Mrs. Howard (Betty) Russell, Murray. Paul E. Ames Paul Edwards Ames, aiuuimmjl, wuv day old son of G. Allen and Ulla Halonen Ames, Altamont, died January 19, 1976 in a SLC Hospital. Born January 18, 1976 in Roosevelt """- Duchesne County. Survivors: Parents, brothers, sisters, Rodney Allen, Toni Katrina, Aaron Samuel, Clint Anton, Sarah Anaika, all of Altamont; grandparents, Mrs. Toni Holonen, SLC; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ames Altamont Graveside services were Thursday in the Altamont Cemetery. PASSPORTS Roosevelt BPW Club adopted a resolution to prevent married women in business from being discriminated W 1 ' la 1946 a disas terms fire which. .broke out in Bluebell the evening of January 81, completely razed the home of Mr. and again! But only once a year! Mrs. Lee Lisonbee, and destroyed all of It's RCA Super Value Days! Your chance to save big on a new RCA or black and white S portable TV. Many screen sizes and furniture styles. Don't wait! Buy nowl their possessions. . The National Oratorical contest an annually sponsored . American Legion event for high school students presented aa it's theme. "The Constitution in a Changing World." Special Prices End January 31st! 1 Continued high production of food and greater conservation of water and soil resources was the message Victor Brown, . chairman of the Duchesne County AAA committee brought back to the farmers in the area from a three day AAA conference in Cedar City. that The FFA Toyack Chapter boys held their contrast Flesh tones stay natural. Colors stay in lifelike balance from scene to scene and from channel to channel. Picture brightness adjusts automatically to changing . room light XLrlOO II I ColorTrak I JL : iw L I 1 MMIMFM75 Come see the RCA XL-1- 00 ColorTrak System sets jji (rjf i W 2-- 4 that a poll of 2,022 consumers, RCA's new "thinks in color" was overwhelmingly chosen best! Come see a demonstration today! TV In clscxi Furniture end VJcstcrn Auto BR . 4 fnM VVU ....I9 VZi 1llUUUlSoz... - ilsr I 495 iPeGsr?...... 455 JuuCBSETK Dog Foods:..'. Jcnm, JellyS E!Z?.:.: .....8W .. . 69' ......69' PouglhrautfSNon, 79' IDS jAb9 65 Pumpkin and Mixed 'Morton 24 ox 85' 10' Whits RusMtt unDons Yellow, Lb. 15' Applesr.?.0 Peppers Meat Cheese Green Bell Banquet Mild, . 215' Lb ; n Get in THE NEWS! Just Call 722-513- 1 49 49 Swifts, canned, 5 lb BARLETTA Model Guaoa 6.6 9ESEUBE William C. Foy of Duchesne was elected to president of the Duchesne Cattlemans Association. Ray E. Dillman was called to serve as president of the Hawaiian LDS Temple. Tht , hl Produce Bishop Duane Hunt dedicated St Helen's Catholic Parrish. The new Catholic Convent. The sisters had an p.m. open house from i9.i 1136 MM UP slUSISNali-ywIt- The Roosevelt Stake MIA scheduled . the Gold and Green Ball for January 27, at Victory Park. God Bless America was the theme set for the dance. First Security Corp. merged with Commercial Bank in the largest single bank merger in the history of the state. HOW 2022 PEOPLE RATED THE PICTURE OUAUTYOFWE FIVE LEADING CONSOLE COLOR TV BRANDS IN A RECENT TESl ColorTrak Gampfadb 1;; that beat the other four leading console TV brands in a dramatic picture comparison test! BrandE WtstfW .......,.439 $85,467.75. I 9 1 Paul Murphy and the city council of Roosevelt gave their approval to the 1956 budget which amounted to 1966: Mayor, 539 ffittttttftMi meeting, at the chapter house. Dale Cummings, president of the chapter called the meeting to order. Actually tracks and corrects the color signal before it becomes the picture on your screen. New RCA Super AccuFilter picture tube sharpens D CoflfeeKr.... history and also a border of pictures for their "thinks in color!" Brand Downy Evans Phillips, principal of the Myton school was appointed one of the committee of twelve by the Utah Educational association. school was making a time line for HT ColorTrak model! Brand C Popcorn..................2? . XL-1- Only Moodles....... 1961. IMo gp2 RCA XL-10-0 respiration but he kept getting up and walking away." Chow Wlein":!39 room, of the "Old World". Lowest-price- d even gave him artificial Specials January 29, 30, 31 Passports were originally official letters. U.S. passports first assumed booklet form in 1926: beginning in 1941 they were issued bound in flexible, green covers. Blue plastic-covere- d passports were introduced in The 6th grade of Roosevelt elementary zt U'Once By The Book Two cub scouts, whose younger brother had fallen into the lake, ran home in tears. "We tried everything, they sobbed. "We ..-..W- Superintendant Lewis W. Page, with the Uintah and Ouray Agency was honored at an employees banquet J. W. Dummound of Ft Duchesne acted as toastmaster for the occasion. K compile in one place, and in readily understandable language, brief explanations of all the laws over which we have jurisdiction.'' booklet are Copies of the available on request free of charge from the Office of Information, Publications and Reports, U. S. Department of Labor, 17010 Federal Office Bldg., 1961 Stout St, Denver, Colo. 80202 - (phone: 17-pa- A new publication outlining laws which the Labor Department administers affecting the daily operations of business is available to the public it was announced today by Samuel K. Martinez, Regional Director of the U. S. Department of Labor. The booklet, Major Laws Administered by the U. S. Department of Labor Which Affect Business, contains brief summaries of the principal requirements of Federal laws and provides information about the Labor Department offices that can offer detailed explanations and assistance to employers. "We want to do whatever we can to assist business people with the laws we said Martinez. "In our administer,'' experience, many of the difficulties that ' face in compliance are employers frequently due to a lack of understanding of legal requirements as they pertain to their operations, and applicability of various laws. Some of our laws apply to all businesses; others, only to those doing business with the Federal government under contracts and subcontracts. This publication is the first attempt to against Prospect I ' TV announces business publication retired. Funeral services were held Saturday, January 21, in memory of John Henry Haslem, in the Olpin Mortuary in Pleasant Grove, under the direction of Bishop Frede E. Thomsen of the Salt Lake City Tenth LDS Ward. The family prayer was given by Myron B. Haslem. Prelude and Postlude music From ltU Labor department MfflL Phone 738-245- 1 - Duchesne Phone Orders Welcome - Free town delivery before 5:00 p.m. |