OCR Text |
Show rim reporter in' appreciates your calling local to s ' item your neU'S correspondent before Tuesday evening ' YOUR ADVERTISING HITS HOME WHEN YOU USE YOUR OWN NEWSPAPER Forty-Eigh- t- Volume -- large crowd at Queen Contestants . Eureka, Utah, Friday, July 16, 194$- - WINNERS NAMED Amateur ahow on Monday with winner from all participating, namely nnvka. Santaquin, Spanish Fork, SDringville and Payaon. were Winner in the final first Payaon, place; Bowan, Monty e band, non smith Keond place and Zina Brimhall, Springville. third place. The final-will alo appear over KOVO radio station, Provo. Date will be announced later. The Talent Show winner on the previous show were James Hint, first and Bonnie Ryan, second. Jovce Garbett won first place, but withdrew because she would to attend the finals. be ELDERLY FOLKS PARTY WED. JULY 21 CONCERN ROBBED George Forney's place of business on lower Main street was broken into on Monday night and mbbed of a considerable sum of money. The main door of the safe was broken open and according to Mr. Forney, about $800 was taken. Entrance was gained by breaki- ng the glass in the front door. ORE SHIPMENTS FOR THE WEEK ENDING JULY 9 Chief Consolidated, 22. lime, 2 carloads; Gemini, 8; Bullion Beck, I; R. L. Garrity, silica, 2; Iron Blossom, 2; Tintic Standard, 1; Eagle and Bluebell, 2; Empire Leaf, 1; Mountain View, 3; Godiva, Con- solidated, 1. TURPIN APPOINTED DIRECTOR GAME Randall L. Turpin of Salt Lake City, an employe of the Utah Fish and Game department for 20 years, has been appointed director to succeed Ross Leonard. The new appointment came to fish and Turpin by the five-ma- n game commission after several hours of deliberation at a meeting Monday. The vote was unanimous for Turpin after others had been considered. Turpin will take over the office on Oug. 5 when the resignation of Mr, Leonard becomes effective. Leonard will leave after that date for Washington, D. C. to be. briefed on his new duties as western representative of the Wildlife Management institute under Dr. Ira N. Gabricl-soshortly n. Mr. Turpin, who will assume the duties in the state's highest fish and game post, will bring a wealth experience with him. He of first the department in October of 1928 under J. Arthur Meacham, then fish and game commissioner. The new director served successively under Newell B. Cook. Mark Anderson and Ross Leonard. One of the west's recognized authorities on big game and range management, Turpin has the distinction of being the nation's first federal aid coordinator unSer the n federal aid to wildlife probram. It was on his drafting board that the first d project ever came into being. That was m 1938. during the administration of joined nttman-Robertso- H Contest for queei of the s,tvr Jubilee celebration to be held at Sjnia T ,the gU? 1 queen a,d lwo attendants will be named at the Praaen- l S,lv;r Gardena- - Quw,n contestants in the above picture n- SX" Ue Childs. Joan Echevarricta, Dalena i"rafdirBnlyuLou Rich' Onlleen Dean Rank J'man. ?.arbara Long. Carolyn Gardner. Bonnie Ryan, iSorma Snell. Marilyn Hansen. Helen Robinson was not present when the picture was taken. Si Eureka Fire Destroys Garage, Car, Took SANTAQUIN FIRE BURNS COOP, RABBITS, HUTCHES Fire of unknown destroyed a chicken coop A cosily lire wliitli destroyed a enrage, car and about origin and rabbit hutches at Mr. and $ 1.0(H) wortli of tools occurred on tlie o! Mrs. Mrs. Stan Gilson's Tuesday night roerly SANTAQUIN Wilma Webljer last lliursday e cuing. Hie splendid work ol llie Lurekn firemen and neigh- bors saved the house from being 9 destroyed also. The pantry and part of the kitchen in Mrs. Web- FIRE DESTROYS CAR ber's home was damaged considerably, and damage resulting from ELBERTA The car of Milton smoke to other rooms in the home Jewett of Cenola was completely will run high. destroyed by fire on Monday Cause of the fire has not been morning while Mr. Jewett and determined. Kenneth Shoemaker were on their way to Elbcrta. Wanted Buttonhooks The fire was apparently caused A timely hint for the cherry by a flooded carburetor just as season An old fashioned button ! the car passed the Goshen Dam. hook does a slick job in removing j Mr. Shoemaker ran most of the the pits and the cherry isn't all way to Elbcrta to secure aid while broken up in the process. The Mr. Jewett attempted to keep the Eureka housewife giving this hint blaze undei control; however, by stated that If anyone can't get a the time help arrived the only buttonhook, she will gladly rent thing which could be salvaged was the tires. hers for DOLLAR A DAY. ; Program Planned For July 24th SANTAQUIN Santaquin will celebrate the 24th of July with a program sponsored by the Church. American Legion. Auxiliary. Civic organizations. Riding club and the Firemen. Miniature parados, children's sports and ball games will feature the day. Utah University Reports Large Nitrogen Prevents Moss Over Lawns If patches of moss are rrowding out your lawn grass, it means that the soil is hungry for nitrogen. saya E. R. Jackson. Oregon State College crops specialist. Put on a nitrate fertilizer, such as ammonium sulfate, at the rate of a per 100 square feet in the spring. Then in the fall put on a quarter-poun- d per 100 feet. Next find that the moss has year you'll Journal. Farm disappeared. half-pou- nd Home Study Classes con-fJj- reports from the Unihome study deUtah of versity Cook. all previous toppd partment in Sjnce then, Turpin has served records with 1.600 registrations 1947-4Students from 28 Utah continuously M the department's Alaska and federal aid coordinator. Turpin's counties, 35 states, PPointmcnt will have the state Canada enrolled in a new high of wildlife federation's wholehearted 2.1M courses, with 38 registrants third JUpPprf according to Verdcll from Utah county, ranking Wchie. Utah Wildlife Federation In county enrollments in Utah. Year-en- d at 10:15 p.m. No one was at home at the time the blaze started. Mrs. Gilson and her family had attended the Talent Show at the Miner's Union Hall and were on their way home when they noticed the fire and sent in the alarm. Approximately 75 chickens were a number of rabbits destroyed. The coop was burned to the ground. Santaquin firemen battled the blaze for one hour and saved the home and further burned and chicken coops. Robert LaRue Jr. deep gash on his leg from a barbed wire as he was attempting to turn water down the ditch to fight the fire. It required five stitches. All Except Cackle Of Hen Now Used that we've learned how to make wigs out of feathers the only Now unused parts of the chicken have been the cackle and the shell of the egg she emerged from,- says - op-Pa- ed Roliert Frock of Nebraska haa taken the egg shell off the list. He makes flour out of the ahells. Frock is running the only eggshell dehydrating plant in the U. 8., in Omaha. He's doing and grinding up half a million sheila a day. Most of them go into livestock feed, to replace bone meal or limestone as a source of calcium. Some, however, are being used for human nutrition, mainly in hospitals. Egg-she- ll flour. Frock saya, ia cheaper than bone meal, and more digestible than limestone. He predicts that soon there won't be wasted egg shell in the country. now OUNCES MADE IN LEADERSHIP SANTAQUIN A alight change been effected in the organize-JJ- S of the I D. S. Girls' com-liHr- V liudaon ia acting aa irman. with Mra. Zola Ahlin iisrt assistant and Mrs. Zelma ccond M"Itant. Mrs. Lila wraon. secretary and Mra. Mrs. LaVieve Steele. Ilore nd Mrs. J2!lnaon a" advisors. "rs, Rldora and Mra. W Oms-- wereChilds released. n. I J" an nt vl nd Ear..Kjr' Freckleton family held July 10 and 11. in Prow Canyon, jrk j 'ndnt ISO union. in O. attMdwl the ELBERTA The committee in BRITAINS HEALTH charge of the annual Old Folks Outing. Milton Jewett and Stan- SERVICE TO COST ley Pnwelson. art' completing plans for the party which is scheduled TAXPAYERS PLENTY for next Wednesday, July 21. at Statisticians have figured that Suntiiqiiin Festivities will begin at 10 a. m. Britain's new Socialistic "free" when a free show at the theater health servile will cost the tax-, in Santaquin will tak place. Kol- payers $600 million for ita first honored all 12 'months of operation. guests, this, lowing will be treated at dinner in the The service la labelled free rl stake house. A program presen- - ' hetause the theory ia that ward each from teil with numbers the Labor government the in the Stake will conclude will font the bills for anything dtv's activities. from a had tooth to a broken leg. As in the past, each ward will, The patient won't have to pay the dot tor. jeaponsiblc for the gniup from the din-- J if vicinity who attend It is generally agreed that not from n r Transportation to and doctors have Nigned up to enough by; handle the service. The the party will be arranged atmajority to and tbmring any Bishops, of British physicians have been them. with In touch tend niav get feuding with the Borialist Minister This party sponsored by the L. of Health lecsiise they refuse to Is enjoyed f. s, Church ofannually become mere civil servants. all denominations, t.v Tcmbers mt!,,. committee sincerely Mr ;!vl Mis. Bert Thomas and e v.- tes al! oldsters over sixly-rivchildren. Kicky and Rhnuna. of their with to plan on attending have been visita crowd Maytr. Ar.z-n- a, expert They partners. their parents, Mr. and Mrs and ing hundred two of approximately to to enjoy the affair. Ed Thomas. They toreturned of twenty-fivlast dispose Friday Mayer all for guests printed ribbons their muling property. When the e presented by the Stake, w.- o sale is completed they will return and flow, is will be .kmated by to Eureka to make their home. tlie two Santaquin Wards whleh m i' y friends will welcome is. ! so kind in taking care Their back. them in the past. ,,f this detail henre-forewa- Sanlquin First ward. Wi re- e Eager are attending the David Artna family reunion. uniLid,,r8' Grlh Xlanaon ftcr 1 vacation Yellowstone Tark. ANNUAL REUNION . ftslph Dumkf Kelt ia famed 'bho Uo1 i Santaquin Woman Given Car At Nephi Celebration De I --one Childs, Helen Robinson. SANTAQUIN Congratulations are in order for Mrs. Pearl Greenhalgh who received a 1948 Chevrolet given at the Ute Stampede in Nephi Saturday evening. One year's free lubrication waa given with the dol-la- rs car, also $50. (TWenty-fiv- e by R. A. Richter of Bozeman, Montana, who produced the allow and $25 by the Nephi Rodeo committee.) iVarl aaya it all aeema like Judged by unknown Judges. Crowds will assemble (we hope) around 9 o'clock for tha done and the climax will be the Queen's waits presenting the beautiful ronteatanta and their eacorta. All Tintic awaits the decision of the three unknown judges for the three winners. To make a choice will be an arduous task, aa Eureka haa lung been known for its lovely young women. Mra. Aflon Obom ia chairman of the Queen committee and she la being assisted by Mrs. Lula Baker and Mrs. Tola Newman. KIWANIS ENJOY tend. OUT-DOO- IAits Of Smoke But No Fire . The Eureka Klwania club held their firat meeting of the season at the Park, Wednesday, July 7. and had a very enjoyable time. The horse-slio- e pitchers began warming up for the summer season and also for the return of Ken Archer. A very appetizing meal was prepared by Mra. Vem Never and Mrs. John Rowre. The regular business of the club waa transacted and meeting waa adjourned until next Wednesday out-do- Mrs. Lauren Atherley had a frightening experience last week. She returned from town to find smoke pouring out of her house. Upon investigation found her refrigerator motor billowing smoke. The refrigerator had Juat been overhauled but the motor waa burned so badly that it will necessitate the buying of a new refrigerator. VET HITS DESERT PAY DIRT; CLAIM YIELDS BIG SUM MEETING R or at 7:30. ing several days Recovering the Payaon SANTAQUIN Theron Hone, 4. hospital, where he underwent a son of Mr. and Mra. Glen Hone, rather serious operation. He ie underwent an operation recently reported to be recovering aatiS' at a Salt Lake hospital. He ia convalearing at hia home. factorily. In Elberta Water Company Issues Certificates KIJIKRTA During the past' week, the issuance of stock certificates was compkled by the formed Elberta Water newly Company. The company replaces the Elberta Culinary Water Users Association, a voluntary organization which served the people here for the past twenty years. The former organization had no legal status, but waa deemed sufficient until Elberta people decided recently to try to Improve the rulinary water ayatem. On January 16, 1948, the Articles of Incorporation, prepared by C. N. Leather-bur- y of Eureka, were presented to the people at a meeting and were accepted by them to govern the new company. At that time, the following officers were elected: Presiden- t- Don A. Penrod, Glen and Erickson, members of the Board of Directors George W. Oram, John J. Bauer, A. Jolley. Elva and Malrolm Greenhalgh watt appointed to ser- ve aa Secretary-Treasurof the company. Since that time, the stock hooka, official seal, record bonk and stationary have been secured and the company ia going ahead with plana for the Improvement of the system. Through investigation, the company officials found that a spring with a present flow of water sufficient to serve approximately 200 families might lie available. The filing on this spring was completed and the approval fee waa I paid to the state on June 20. The spring is located four and one half miles south west of and according to contractors. Is ideally lorated to serve this area. At the present time, company officials are busy securing financial aid to fnstali the new a. water system. Incidentally, the water of the recently acquired spring la reported to be very soft. This fact will tie greatly appreciated by the housewives of Elbcrta. With the completion of this project, Kllierta should have one of the best water systems, both culinary anil Irrigation In the state. Since the $100.000 00 cement siphon was completed which brings the waters of the Mona reservoir to the Elberta canal, the people have been assured of a and plentiful supply of watrr for their cro'et. Maxine Mcllor, Norma Barbara Jerman, Joan Kcheverelta, Betty Lou Richie, Colleen Long. Carolyn Gardner, Dean, Snell, Three of these girls will be chosen to reign over the celebration. The Presentation Ball will be held Saturday evening, July 17, at the Silver Gardena. The contestants will lie presented by number and a dream. Pearl'a husliand ia Burdell Greenhalgh and they have three children. Her parents are Mr. and Mra. Bert Craig. The members of the Benonl and Edith Cole Patten family organization are holding their annual family reunion on July 17, 1948 at Canyon Glen in Provo Canyon. The hours are from 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Everyone Interested in this family are invited to at- Vice-Preside- nt Accepts Utah Role recently for the fall by the board of big game control. Mvm? FAMILY ANNOUNCES er authorized Har-Hudso- Old Folks party have set the date! for the party for Wednesday, July 21. The committee has planned a very enjoyable time for the old folks. The parly will be held in Santaquin and all those 65 years or over are invited to attend. The committee for Eureka is composed of Mrs. Ruby Bigler and Mrs. Ella Sandstrom, executive committee; Ruth Galley, finance chairman; Sarah Clements, transportation rhairman; and Celestia Thompson, advertising chairman. Forty thousand dollars worth of tungsten was taken recently in one week from on of tha thousands of claims staked out by war veterans In the Mojave Desert. California ia experiencing ita newest mining rush, but thla time the quest ia not only for gold, but for valuable metals such as molybdenum, titanium, tungsten, beryllium, chromite and a dozen others, according to an article in the July Issue of Cosmopolitan magazine. In addition there are to toe found ntmmelale like tale, graphite, mira, zircon, and dolomite which were mined to the extent of $00,000,000 in California's desert country in the first year after the war. Center of the new mining activity ia the triangle bounded by the towns of Randsburg, Johannesburg and Red Mountain. Many of the veterans who have become prospectors received their military training In California's desert country and had learned something of the art of prospecting from tha old timers they met in the saloons of the remote mining towns of tha desert, In their time off from training, they become spare-tim- e prospectors. Now, those who have come back to the e desert are prospectors, uaing terminal-leav- e pay and GI readjustment allowances as a grubstake until thry make the big strike." e Where the prospectors worked with a pack mule and the crudest of equipment, the new crop drives to hia claim in a surplus carryall over paved highways a good part of the way, and in many cost's he's home for dinner with the little woman every desert-warfa- Farm Journal. President. Other business taken up during meeting included the commis-wo- n going on record as being to the doe kill figures 1 Mr H. E. Jones, our local D. and ft. G. depot agent, returned sustained a to hia home Saturday after spend- 8. GIRLS Twenty-nin- e Iwt-lof 1 inlirx K'iiulil nl young Lilies liaw entered llie ( unit's! for Queen of llie Silver Jubilee to lie licit! August The Central committee of the () uiul 7. lliey ure Donnie Ryan, M irilyn I (omen, Dalena EUREKA BUSINESS Eureka Hill, 4; Yankee Numbery Queen and Attendants Will Be Named For Silver Jubilee, Aug. 6 - 7 At Presentation Ball Saturday Evening EUREKA SCHEDULES three-piec- 1; -- Silver Jubilee Queen Honors Talent Show, Darrell Holman u the final wninff. 10c per copy- - Twelve Beautiful Girls fie for TALENT SHOW; under direction of -- USAC Expended More Than Half Million In 47 re full-tim- Utah's State Department of Agriculture expenditures exceeded dollar mark in the of the funda de1947, with 52 rived from special taxes and licensea levied upon agricultural products, it waa reported today In a release by Utah Foundation, the tax information agency. The Utah general fund furnished evening. Talk with any of these young 44 of the required total, the remen are seeking their formaining funda coming from Fed- tune! who in the desert today, and you reveral aida and fa n't help mining away with the enues. that America's frontier The Department administers impression on which historians have spirit, different relating programs sixty been the turn to development and control of of thehanging crepeia since aa morinot century, in Utah, bund aa we've been led to believe. agricultural products ranging from livestock brand Optimism shines out of the eyes and disease controls to of these GI and of weights and Inspection measures and regulation of mar- spark off their speech. "Furthermore it's a twentieth-centur- y keting practices. The Departfrontier spirit. Not as 1947 31. as of mental staff August included 228 employees, with three glamorous, perhaps, as the days that Bret full time commissioners at the top Harte Immortalized but more comprising the State Board of Agriculture. Seasonal factors re- likely to endure." duced the staff to 115 in Februold-tim- half-milli- non-prof- it a 'forty-niner- a' A GOOD WAY TO ary, 1947. Expenditures by the iJrpart-mein 1947 were approximately double the level, the result of added and expanded programs assigned to the jurisdiction of the Department. Bounty payments and other measures for eont rol of predatory animals and rodents were the major function front the point of view of expenditures involved, aecouiiting for $129,519 or of the 1947 outlay. Central administrative roots were $91,105. and inspection services nt pre-w- ar one-four- th cost $77,994. It has been the policy of tha Agricultural Department to accumulate substantial carry-ove- r balanrea In inspection, predatory funds. animal, and disease-contrThe ronihlmd balance of these funds totaled $310,612 at the end of fiscal 1947, compared with $42,754 In 1948. The balance In the brand inspection fund of $84,260 was the equivalent of more than two and years' expenditures at the 1947 rate. Travel exense amounted to $59,120 In the fiscal year 1947. 44 greater than In the preceding fiscal year, or the total. $2,922 was for travel. ol one-ha- out-of-sta- te lf REMOVE STUMIS Heres how John Krill, an Ohio farmer, takes out stumps. Firat he quarters the slump with steel wedges, widening splits aa much as possible with wooden wedges, removing the steel ones. Then he takes the bottom out of a steel drum, punching holes in sides to allow draft. When wood fire Is roaring In drum, Krill and son Johnny charge it about half full of soft eoal. By morning there's no stump- Just a hole where It usrd to lie. Knll finds that one treatment usually la enough. The splits usually permit the stump to burn fsr below the level of plow sole. Visiting at the John Rowe home over the week-enwere Mrs. Rowe's sisters, Mr. Emma George stid Mrs. tsuna Small of Salt and Jerry Glen of Burbank, Calif. Jerry has been visiting at the home of his grandmother, Mrs. Knuna George. Jerry's mother will lie remembered aa Miss Dorothy Murphy. d |