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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY. APRIL 30, 1936 PAGE FOUR jj Big Ten of Farm Crops Includes Woodlot Trees Classified Ad Column Livestock Show ' Forest products are tenth in the Big Ten of farm crops. They are ranked in value only by cotton, wheat, truck crops, tobacco, fruits and nuts, potatoes, corn and hay, and outranks 35 other major farm crops such as beans, rice, rye, peanuts, and barley, See lots. FOR SALE A house and according to latest figcrops, sugar z 76.0-Mrs. Gilbert Parker. Phone ures of the United States Department Pe- of Agriculture. TOR SALE Tomato, Cabbage, These figures shows that farm Garland tunia and Pansy plants. woodlands pay their owners nearly Green House. $63,000,000 a year; that farmers received $5,636,00 a year from such LOST One roan riding pony, weighsales in New York, $4,695,000 in Geor branded H on in Wisconsin. ing about 800 lbs.; one gia, and $4,022,000 left shoulder; one white and These sales are returns from farm black eye. Finder notify George forests and do not include industrial Office. Leader George Mfcrasi or Reward. . Safeway Stores Purchase Prize Stock At Bv DWIG SCHOOL DAYS "t rte SiTr'.V. J ra om Trte dvumh iwsseu. Fit In line with its policy of close cooperation, Safeway Stores, Inc., was again this year a stock to heavy buyer of the Ninth Annual Junior Livestock and Baby Beef Show. The purchases, according to Rilea Doe; in charge of public relations for the company, are made with the idea of giving encouragement to the boys and girls of the and Future Farmers of America clubs, and indirectly to aid in the work of raising the standards of meat animals in the West. Included among the Safeway at this year's show were AnJ, gus, Hereford, and Shorthorn cattl raised and entered by George Charj, W. N. Helphenstine and Eugene Bri&g San Luis ford, Obispo; Robert Anderson, Louis Beban, Eugene Foust, Bill Nutgress and George Barnett, Madera; Claire L. Hunt, Santa Barbara; TTfe uutf unmsw ih produc- er-consumer prize-winni- wm 4--H . F"" . ) Pjpw r pur-char- production. In Southern States forest products WANTED Girl to work in Telephone Office. Appjy ai oince vi uJouogH. were from third to seventh in importance among farm crops, with a cash income of nearly $24,000,000. Forest products were first among farm crops in New Hampshire and SPECIAL SPRING third in Missouri, and thirVermont, mattresses, fully New spring-fille-d and Illinois. Ohio in teenth guaranteed as low as $9.95. Yourthe Forest Service Farm woodlands, into Aid mattress remade springan average of 2,- provide estimates, imefl as low as $7.75.. For 10 days 500,000 farmers with supplemental only. We call for and deliver. cash incomes, plus wood and building EVERTON MATTRESS FACTORY material for their own use. The For Brigham. Phone 127-est Service urges farmers to apply woodland management practices that on XAWNMOWERS SHARPENED will their farm woods continu keep serthe Ideal Sharpener. Prompt productive. ously vice, work fully guaranteed. E. S. Sercomb, Tremonton, Utah. Hilliard MATTRESS Men-donc- Resistant Plants Best For Control of Disease 4-- lime-sulph- 4. ur 650 Times More tf. HEROES OF AMERICAN HISTORY Soil Loss When Rows Follow Slope tf. 4-- 67-0.- 2. v. - wilt-resista- nt then mmH AMERICAN INVOLUTION- nt FOR SALE OR TRADE Small radio wheat, oats, corn, potatoes, tomatoes, with carrying case, for typewriter strawberries, pears and other field, or small trailer. Inquire at Leader garden, and orchard plants have been developed. office. Plant breeders must work for more CASH PAID for dead and useless than simple resistance to disease., A cows and horses. Call Maple Creek wheat, for example, which is resistant to rust, may not have desirable millTrout Hatchery, Brigham 493-J-A sweet Reverse Charge. tf. ing and baking qualities. corn resistant to Stewart's disease NOTICE TO CREDITORS may not yield a plantable ear. A cot ton resistant to wilt might be low in Estate of George Allen, Deceased. yield or inferior in quality. Often reCreditors will present claims with sistant hybrids are sterile. vouchers to the und&rsigned at 3289 Agronomists and pathologists work Adams Avenue, Ogden, Utah, or to ing together have progressed rapidly her attorney Lewis Jones, Attorney in recent years. Among their accomat Law, 1st Nat'l Bk. Bldg., Brigham plishments are wheat such as ThatchCity, Utah, on or before the 16th day er, highly resistant to stem rust and of June,' A. D. 1936. yielding grain of excellent quality; JU ANITA C. ALLEN, hybrid oats all but immune from smuts and rusts, and flax selections Administratrix of the estate of that resist rust and wilt and at the George Allen, Deceased. same time yield abundant seed and ItEWIS JONES, or that produce for Administratrix. fiber, oil, Attorney t5. and are resistant to lodging. 1 fM Robert Morris' lather was a Liverpool nailmaker and merchant, When Robert was 13, his father brought him to America and apprenticed him to a Philadelphia firm of merchants. Morris made rapid progress. ana at 35 owned one of the richest trading companies In the Colonies. Enalieb by birth, he allied himseli with the American cause, and was one of the signers oi the Declaration oi Independence, and later a member oi the During the Revolution, Morris became Constitutional Convention. the chief financial manager oi the Colonies. He used his personal credit and all his property to purchase large quantities oi supplies for Washington's army, and founded two banks that loaned huge sums oi money to the government The dishonesty of his partner in a real estate deal ruined Morris. Unable to pay his debts, he was tailed for several months, and, despite his great services to his country, died a broken pauperl 2. 6-- high-quali- ty ff STEP ON THEJM THE CLOTHES! The Maytag has brought washday freedom to nearly a million farm homes, with and without electricity. Most farm women prefer Maytag because it offers more for the money more speed, convenience and thoroughness more years of satisfactory service. Let the nearest dealer show you the tub, the Gyratator washing action and a score of other features originated by Maytag. Investigate the easy payment plan. m one-piec- e, GASOLINE If J. G. Read lid tot cn th Bros. IHWHtTWnB Id Jo butn W HWK SEE- BESSIN6ER BROS. TREMONTON, UTAH -- : Dundee's, known for Ameri- ca's greatest clothing values, offer PRICE, SELECTION, TAILORING, STYLE and QUALITY. 1936 graduates are sure to find just the suit a small deposit they want will hold your selection and alterations are free! $ r7 UUP the sugar one-hal- Ogden, Utah 6 :- - MAKE GOOD OR WE DO Fronk Chevrolet Co. Tremonton, Utah - Phone 28 We Will Call for and PAY CASH for DEAD or WORTHLESS HORSES & COWS I Just Ring Logan Enterprise Extra Trousers ... $3.25 Headquarters for Graduation Gifts, Too! Gifts of wearing apparel are always appreciated youll find the very newest here shirts, ties, hats, etc., all nationally advertised quality merchandise! NOTICE TO FARMERS ltTW. WW FOR ICE Beverages & Coal -- one-ha- lf tfteir one-fourt- h. J. A. PACK, Representative, Tremonton WYT9 COMWT CO. PRESENTS SHOTS medium-thic- k ed for in-bu- ilt DUNDEE Students Receive honey is substitutin cake or quick-brea- d recipes, reduce the liquid If honey is substituted for all the sugar, reduce the liquid f. If the honey is very thin or very thick, this proportion may have to be altered accordingly. MULTI-MOTO- R A simple, dependable, gasoline engine designed for a woman to operate. Electric models for homes on the power line. Ftdmi Hoarisi Act New bclvdu MoyUj w:!i HE JEWELRY Office Hours: 2 p. m. to 6 p. m. Office Phone, 75.0-- 1 ;Res., 735 A Scholarship Cards At University THE MAYTAG DR. WILLIAM ELI HAWKINS CHIROPRACTOR Offices at ROBERT SEVIONSEN Leader Ads Get Results A rhubarb betty is likely to be as popular as that other favorite, apple betty. It is made in the same way, using either stewed or raw rhubarb. If the latter, sprinkle each layer with sugar, dot with butter, and hake a little longer than when the rhubarb is Scholarship cards were given out cooked. already of Utah last week at the University to approximately 300 college students, There is no known way to sweeten according to E. J. Norton, Registrar. rancid fat. It cannot be used sue These cards represent exceptional cessfully for food but it needn't be scholastic ability, recognised by the thrown away. It will still make good University, during the Winter quar- soap. a as is ter.' A 2.5 average required minimum for scholarship attainment, The difference between a prune and a 3. average being perfect. a plum is that prunes are a variety of Out of town students ranked high plum suited for drying. Such plums in the scholarship attainment, said can be dried without removal of the Mr. Norton, making up approximately pit and the flesh will not ferment dur25 per cent of those who were given ing the process. recognition. Box Elder county students, who You may not be tongue-tie- d but gained recognition on the honor roll, if you can't occasionally say someincluded: Helen Jane Johnson and thing kind or cheerful you're dumb. Virginia Carter of Tremonton; Frank B. Freeman and Harold Madsen of OUR Brigham City. B. E. WASH ; A doping plot of ground near Ithaca, N. Y., planted last summer to potatoes in rows up and down hill, lost 650 times as much soil and 14 times as much water from July 7 to November 15 as two adjoining plots planted to potatoes, oats, and clover in strips across the slope. The three plots at the Arnot erosion experiment station of the Soil Conservation Service were each 21 feet wide and 311 feet long, with a slope of 7 percent on the upper half and 14 percent in the lower. The plot planted up and down the slope lost almost 14 tons of soil per acre and nearly 14 percent of 18 inches of rainfall. The two strip plots each lost only 43 pounds of soil per acre, The run-owas 1.1 percent on one plot and only 0.35 percent on the other. The Arnot ctation, first in the North-eas- t, has completed its first year of operation. a, HoHister; Floyd Varnon, Tom Byer, Bakersfield; John Carricaburuv Ray Highs, Wheatland; Jimmyright Santa Ynez; John Guggia, Santa Maria; Bill Siddoway, Rexburg, Idaho; Ray Highs, Wheatland; Jimmy Wright, Elko County, Nevada; Ben Violini, Salinas County; Tommy Hay, Weeks County, Nevada; T. Mahoney, Dumpny County, Nevada; Yynona B. Hunt, Santa Barbara; Croston Stead, Reno, Nevada; Jack McGee, Lyons County, Nevada; Dan Mahoney, Eureka County, Nevada; Adrian WhitiV. man, Monterey County; Jeanne Roberts, San Joaquin County; Richard Was son and David Tremayne, Merced County. Also included in Safeway 'a purchases were championship lambs raised and entered by Leland Kergel, Woodland; Doris Righetti, San Luis Obispo; Richard Gray, Santa Rosa; and Bill Troup and Don Billington, San Luis Obispo. In addition" to the stock purchases, Safeway this year awarded a cash scholarship, to be used during his first year of training in the California Polytechnic School at San Luis Obispo, to Robert Anderson of Madera for his special aptitude and care in the raising of livestock. Robert is a member of the Future Fanners of America. His entry was a Hereford, which was bought by Safeway. 5-- 4-- AND Ijichi, e; tf. FOR SALE 16-- 6 Superior grain drill Disease has always ravaged the and John Deere beet cultivator, upon which man depends for plants complete with tools. Call Karl Well- food and fabric. Research has deing, 28R3, Bell phone, Riverside. veloped remedies or controls for many 9 tf. of these crop maladies such as Bordeaux mixture for downy mildew of FOR SALE Cream separator. Call or a spray for grapes 56.0-apple scab. But the ultimate method of plant disease control is the breedpullets and cockerels. Leland A. ing of plants resistant to disease, say Hansen, scientists in the United States Deof Agriculture. . C. Richardson, partment Livestock Wanted crop disease with resistControling 9 Elwood, Phone ant plants dates back to about 1900, when the control of fusarium wilt was FOR SALE Big discount on $150 undertaken credit on Dodge or Plymouth. In- strains of by breeding cotton, cowpeas, and melquire at Leader Office. disease-resistaons. Since Kosuke Santa Rosa; Richard Pratt, Tulare; George Roney, Rors Cole, Chico; Troy Carter, Dos Palos; Donald Sande, Dos Palos; Claude Frankum, Jr., Porter-villJ. T. Abbott, Tremonton, Utah; Harold Ford, Willits; John Grab, Richard Gaisford, King City; Elwood Fontes, Dick Jacobsen, Salinas; Lewis Ahem, Charles Stevenson, Los Molinos; Joe Roberts, Red Bluff; Edwy Richter, Maxwell; Drey i FOR SALE Team of horses, cheap. Bemice Hunsaker. Comstock, es "America's Greatest Clothing Values" 30 This is Our Private Long Distance Number the Operator Already Understands That We Pay for the Call. COLORADO ANIMAL BY-PRODUC- TS CO We Also Buy HIDES - PELTS - WOOL About iy2 Mile South of Logan East of the Sugar Factory 2461 . Washington Avenue 174 So. Ogden Main, Salt Lake City |