OCR Text |
Show Page Four - The Eureka Reporter - March 26, 1999 Scientist creates amazing health product! Health wealth! is talking about recent discoveries in nutritional science as it and your health. Find out for yourself how fantastic you can 30 days on a cutting-edg- e system of nutritional products in cellular nutrition. Treat your world's the one of leading experts designed by g nutrients. Call cells to a feast of health with these powerful the number below for a catalogue. You'll also receive FREE a Special Report entitled Your Health Is In Danger. I'll also send a coupon for a discount off your first order. Fee better or your money back. EVERYONE immune-enhancin- big Animal Control Eureka city would like to remind all citizens of Eureka that there is an Animal Control Ordinance In effect within the corporate limits of Eureka City. Anyone owning, keeping, harboring or maintaining any canine species, must abide by City Ordinances 980 (including amendments). this ordinance will be enforced from now on. Owners should read the ordinance at the City Hall to find out all regulations pertaining to animals within Eureka City. Published In the Eureka Reporter March 26, 1999. Many perennials and shrubs in their arrive dormant condition. They may be packed in damp sphagnum moss or excelsior. These plants look nothing like the catalog pictures! Don't send them back. They are not dead. The roots will soon sprout leaves and grow into nice plants, with a little proper care on your part. The care for both perennial and woody, bare-roplants is similar. Open the box, dont let it sit around unopened for days until you get around to it. This allows the packing to dry out and roots to die. If you can plant within a day or two, just check to see if the packing material is still moist. Keep plants in a cool, (not freezing) place. Before planting, soak just the roots, in a bucket of water overnight. This helps bare-roote- d, ot THE WEATHERMAN .. ?.? . ' v- V i, IT WAS lli ii t: t . & r Kids Dont let bare root scare you in planting 1 1 1 . I it ms. ;:4 UNPREDICTABLE. act fast, so do poisons! restore moisture. If you know it will be more than three days before you can plant, a procedure called "Heelinwill benefit your plants. g-In" Select a site with good light, but out of direct sun. Dig a little trench, lay the roots out, and cover them with soil. Water the plant in, and dont let it dry out during the coming days. You may not see any root growth or top growth on a heeled-i- n plant for weeks, but some roots may have grown, so handle the plant with care when you move it to its final destination. Whenever you set a plant in its permanent home, be careful not to plant it too deep. You will see a soil line or a change of color, or a thickened area where the stem meets the roots on woody plants. Use this as a guide to setting them in at ground level, or just slightly below. Perennials are a little trickier. Try to leave the crown at soil level while burying the roots. If you plant it higher, you may expose the roots and they will dry out. If you set it too deep, the crown may rot. If your new perennials have no obvious top or bottom, search for tiny buds or swollen points (the new shoots) or for something that looks like roots. If all else fails, plant them on their side. If less than ideal planting conditions exist due to wet weather, or heavy clay soils, forget about heeling-i- n plants in a trench. Make a mound of vermiculite or potting soil and heel-i- n your plants in the mound. If you have no place where you can heel plants, or if you know it will be weeks before you can put the plant in its final destination, think about planting it in potting soil in a big container with drainage holes. Give the plant good light (not direct sun all day) and dont let it get too dry. Children Act Fast... So Do Poisons! Is the theme of National Poison Prevention Week, It is a week set March 21-2aside to remind eveiyone that they can prevent unintentional of poipoisonings. Over 60 chilinvolve soning exposures dren less than six years of age. The Utah Poison Control center recommends that caps be used on all medications and vitamins. Use 7. child-resista- of caps is impor- child-resista- nt tant even in households that do not have children living in them. A study conducted for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) by the Ameri- can Association of Poison Conof trol centers found that 23 the oral prescription drugs that were ingested by children under the age of five belonged to someone who did not live with the child. The CPSC estimates that packaging for oral and prescription aspirin medication saved the lives of about 700 children since the requirements went into effect in the early 1970s. containWhile ers provide an increased element of protection, safe storage is still important. Remember does not mean Store all medicines, vitamins, cleaners, and other potential poisons in locked cabinets out of reach. Children act fast, and adults must make sure that household chemicals and medicines are out of reach or in a locked cabinet. Please write the Utah Poison Control Center at 410 Chipeta Way, Suite 230, Salt Lake City, to UT 84108, or call 581-75obtain free poison prevention and information emergency stickers. telephone child-resista- nt child-resusta- nt child-RESISTA- child-PROO- F. 04 Methods are habits of the mind and economics of the memory. In a moment of insight you can perceive everything; but it takes years of exactitude to give it expression. That's the best way to describe 1 our weather this time of year. From INVITATION one day to the next, nobody knows to a what Mother Nature has in store. But RETIREMENT OPEN HOUSE there is one thing you can count on when bad weather hits crews will be out there working. Because no matter what the weatherman says, the fact that our crews are on the job is totally predictable. So if Mother Nature packs a punch that knocks out your power, give us a call at LEONA G. FRANKS Who Is Retiring from First Security Bank, Eureka Office After 29 Years of Dedicated Service EVERYONE IS INVITED WHERE: Fisrt Security Bank At Utah Power, we're here to help you weather the storm. UTAH POWER A PacifiCorp Company at Eureka WHEN: Monday, March 29 & Tuesday March 30, 1 999 TIME: OUT www. pacificorp.com Honoring Utah Power Monday from 1 0 a.m. to 2 p.m. and from nt 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Come, wish Leona "A Happy Retirement (No Gifts Please) |