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Show HIE EUREKA (UTAH) REPORTER Page Four made a trip to Yellowstone Applications now being taken in Salt Lake for elk permits Applications for permits on all elk and moose hunting units will be received at the Salt Lake Office of the Utah Department of Fish and Game, 1596 West North Temple, Salt Lake City, between August 2 and August 12. Applications may be made by mail only. Elk applications must be made in the green colored envelopes provided by the Department. These may be obtained from Department offices or license agents throughout the State. Dual applications will be accepted for elk only. Envelopes containing appl ications for moose permits must have moose written on the outside of the envelope. The proper fee must be made in the form of a certified check, cashiers check, personal check or money order. Any personal check returned for insufficient funds or refer to maker will void the permit of the successful applicant. Only residents of Utah may apply for elk and moose permits. Applications must include the full name and address of the sender, choice of hunting unit, sex of animal, fee and big game or combination license number. It shall be unlawful for any person to apply for or possess an elk permit who was successful in obtaining a permit in 1961, 1962, 1963 or 1964. Date of the public drawing August 0, 1965 Park. 9 Ed Snell left Sunday afternoon from the Salt Lake Airport, after spending a two- week leave here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Snell and other relatives. He is stationed with the U.S. Army in Denver. Weekend guests at jme ef Mr .and Mrt rieit Hanks was her sister, Mrs. Henry and son, Vic, of Murray. for all oversubscribed units is August 23, beginning at 9:00 a.m., at Department of Fish and Game offices, 1596 West North Temple, Salt Lake City. ey Carla Lee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lee of Ephraim, spent last week here with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Robinson and family, and with her grandparents, Mr .and Mrs. Wilson Lee and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Nash. She was a house guest of the Bob Robinsons. Litter barrels being used on highways Ellen Rac Dorman spent a few days last week in iSalt Lake with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Fletcher and family. She returned home on Wednesday. Mr. and and James week. This has paid off by cutting down costs of picking up debris along the highways," Mr. West said. The cost of picking up litter has declined from $90,000 for the previous fiscal year to $72,000 for the well-identifi- two-wee- Mrs. Harry Sorensen, and other relatives. They visited with friends and relatives in Wallace and Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and were over-nigguests of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Banghart in Hailey, Idaho. The Bangharts are former residents of Eureka. evening with her parents. ht Mrs. Earlean Gear returned home last Wednesday, after an enjoyable vacation trip to Montana, where she was the guest of her brother and sister-in-laMr .and Mrs. Gene Cromar in Cook City, Montana, where they are spending the summer months. Side trips were taken to Mt. Rushmore in South Dakota, and they enjoyed the Passion Play Pageant at Black Hills. They also fiscal year immediately past. Peace Officers are helping in the enforcement of the state's litterbug law which provides for a fine up to $299 for littering highways. Mr. West stated that there are approximately 2,500 trash cans located at various intervals on the states 5,600 mile highway system. These trash cans are and are placed in areas where motorists are inclined to stop for water, shade, Janalee Eastwood, w, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Eastwood is spending two weeks at the Girl Scout Camp Trefoil in Provo Canyon. Her mother and Mrs. Edna Jasper and Mrs. Arthur Smith, accompanied her to the Canyon last Sunday. Miss Mildred Davis underwent major surgery Tuesday morning in the Utah Valley Hospital. Her host of friends in Tintic are wishing her the etc. In some cases maintenance crews have been emptying trash barrels daily and in all cases, twice weekly. ed Lawrence family returned k home Friday night from a vacation spent in Montana and Idaho. They spent several days in Poison, Montana. visiting with her mother, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fainter of Midvale, were in town on Sunday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dorman and family and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Snell. The Fainters daughter, Terry, had spent a few days here at the Dorman home, and returned to Midvale Sunday Motorists and their families are making good use of litter barrels placed at strategic locations along Utah's highways," Jim West, Chief Maintenance Engineer, stated this Mrs. best in the way of a speedy complete recovery. Her sister, Mrs. Frances Sellers of Maywood, Calif., came to Provo to be with Mildred. Mrs. Sellers is the former Francis Davis, a former resident of and Mammoth. Young Richard Dorman, the small son of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Dorman, returned home on Saturday, after being confined to the Payson Hospital for several days, where he was being treated for double pneumonia. Friends of the family arc wishing the little fellow continued improvement. Mr. and Mrs. Sterlin Hutchinson and Miss Trudy Hutchinson of Evanston. Wyoming, spent the weekend in Mammoth with Mrs. Hutchinson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Rose. T hey had been vacationing in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Las Vegas, Nevada. tSunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vem Nevers were Mr. and Mrs. Whitford Bate of Provo. Mrs. Luella Thompson of Beaver is visiting here at the home of her son and daughter-in-laMr .and Mrs. Lorin w, Thompson. Ken Spurrier of Highland, California, was in town on Wednesday afternoon renewing acquaintances. Mrs. Spurrier remained in Payson with her mother, Mrs. Matilda Brady and with her brother and family in Santaquin. Mr. and Mrs. James Brady. -K-H" Special deer . ' permits go on sale soon Applications for special deer permits will be received by mail only at the specified deer permit sales offices until 5:00 p.m., August 16, 1965, according to spokesmen for the Utah Department of Fish and Game. If any unit is oversubscribed at this time, a public drawing will be held at 1:00 p.m., on August 20 and permits will be mailed to successful applicants. On any units not oversubscribed, permits will then remain on sale until the authorized number of permits are sold on that unit or until the close of the season on that unit. The Board of Big Game Control has decreed that each possessor of a valid 1965 big game hunting license may procure only one special deer permit. Applications for special permits must contain the applicants full name, address, choice of hunting area and big game license number. Special deer permits shall cost $5.00 for residents and $7.00 for nonresidents, and this fee must accompany applications. Not more than six applications for special permits per envelope will be accepted. Anyone applying for a special permit should check the 1965 deer hunting proclamation for special permit areas and the correct sales office before making application. "The 1965 forest fire sen.son is almost upon us and state and national forest services remind all of us that the FIRST item on the agenda is PREVENTION! San Juan BaSan Juan Missions tista, Calif., News. NAMES OF THE ORIGINAL BAND' OF PIONEERS. ' FIRST TEN. y' W Ilford Woodruff. . Jacob D. Burnham. Joseph Egbert. Marcus K.' Thorpe.' Oorge Wardle. " John S. Fowler. Orson John - Pratt M. Freeman. George A. Smith. SECOND TEN. Thames Grover. . Barnabas AmM I. Adung M. Lyman. - t. Schofield. Ptringham. . FOURTH TEN. Luke Si. Johnson. Edmund Ellsworth. George ft Grant. Samuel Fox. EU H. Pierce. Jacob Weller. V. . X Tunis TUppleyeo. William Dykes. George Scholes. a . Mlllen Atwood. Z. Coltrln, John Dixon. Conrad KUnemaru , Ferry Fitzgerald, James Davenport. Benjamin Itolfe. TWELFTH TEN Norton Jacobs. ' George Woodward. Lewis Barney. Andrew Gibbons, John W. Norton. Charles A. Harper. Stephen Markham. George Mills. Joseph Hancock. THIRTEENTH TEN Shadrach Roundy. Levi Jaekman. John Brown, David Powers. Oscar Crosby (colored). Hans U. Hansen. ' f . . . Francis Boggs. . FIFTH TEN. Stephen H. GoddtrU H. G. Sherwood. Sylvester H. Earl.' Samuel H. Marble. William Henrik Tar I ton Lewis. . , Franklin G. Losee. Dot u Ensign. Monroe Frink. Qcro F. Eastman. EIGHTH TEN. Seth Taft. Stephen Keltey, 'Charles D. Bara urn. Lev! N. Kendall. David Grant. ; Horace Thornton. John 8. Kldredge. Alma N. Williams. Robert T. Thomas. Elijah Newman. :,l I -- NINTH TEN. H. Kimball Wm. A. King. Hose Cushing. George I. Billings. Philo Johnson. Howard Egan. Thomas Cloward. Robert Uyard. Ed son Whipple. William Clayton. TENTH TEN. A. M. Harmon. XL K. Whitney. O. P. Rsckwell . ,J . s J . i Lyman Curtin Matthew Ivory. Hark Lay (colored).;- ' I , . 3 - r FOURTEENTH TEN. "Joseph Matthews. John S. Gleason. Alexander I. Cheoxlsy.'. Norman Taylor. Gllternld Summe. Charles A. Burke. Rodney Badger. Green Flake colored). Harriet I. W. Young, Clarissa Decker Young, 13len Saunders Kimball. Two children Isaac Perry Decker.- 4 Lorenzo Z. Young. K I ii , , 4 JL y Solomon Chamberlain.' Joseph Rooker. , John H. Tippett. Henaon Walker, John Wheeler. Rufus Allen. James W. Stewart. A. 1. Rockwood. Nathaniel Fairbanks, Aaron Farr. , ELEVENTH TEN, John S. Illgbee. K. R. Dewey. - Addison Everett. John Y, Green. . Brigham Young. T. O. An gel I . John' llolman. .Alvarus Hanks. : Franklin Stewart. -- . s Kric Glims. Arte mu x Johnson. Thomas Tanner. U. - Thomas Woolsey. Entstu Snow. WilUam S. Wordsworth. Simeon Ilnwd. Andrew Hhumwajr, Chauneey Loveland. .James Craig. WOiiam Vance. Seeley Owen. SEVENTH TEN. W. C. A. Smoot. William Carter. . Jlurr Frost. George W. Brown. K. T. Benson. Roswell Stevens. Sterling Drlgga. Thomas Bullock. Willard Richards. THIRD TEN. P. II. Young. L. Young. , J. 8. SlSwTHTEN. Charles Sh urn way. .James Cane. Albert Carrington.' J. C. Little, ' R. J. Redding. Carlos Murray. O. K. Whitney. Nathaniel T. Brown. John Pack, Franc-iPomeroy. William A. Kmpejr. . - Note The first, named In oach group of ten was captain of that number. Thtn there were captains of y fifties and hundreds. In addition to tho 11 souls of the company ihere. were'TS'wagons. W horses, 62 mules. 46 Toxen. 12 cows, 17 dogs and a' flock of chickens In the Pioneer Caxnp. It is not definitely known how many of tho original hand are' now living. .Their ranks have; been rapidly thinned out during the past few years and It Is estimated that not more than and other states. inip"riTvT"inrHiirniirprr, A LIST of the first pioneers who arrived in Ulali was found recently In nn old Utah newspaper and is licing re- produced herewith along with the notation at the bottom rj'vriT of the list. It may prove of interest to descendants of those n MopIe as many of Hie names arc slate ns well as local names. They are listed In groups ns they arrived. well-know- |