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Show fyyyy Board Names Teachers to Serve in Ly-nor- e Laura Rninehart, Erma Summers. Park Valley fu f rVTV FftMM v 9 Total $4,195,000 KNOW YOUR Year District Schools for 1958-5- 9 (Continued From Page One) Goulding, Lasca Eyre, Clair Hailing, Mae Kimber, Norris Larsen, Jane Linford, Vera Mills, Edna Munson, Faye Moody, Ruht Iverson, Mary Owen, Mae Iris Sehow, . Petersen, Blythe Nellie Wight, Delores Tingey, Woodland, Cora Vauncka. Deweyville Jay M. Stokes, principal, Virvinia Blackham. Elwood DeVern Rasmussen, principal; Pearl Grover. FHdiug-Rul- on Cook, prinei pal Mabel Hansen, Edna W. Taylor. Garland Glen Tay'.oi, principal Lolita Garn, Frances M Getz, Joy Jones, Marjorie Ma Elnore son, Dorri- - Peterson, Pugsley, Arfa M Smith, Virgil Waldron, Millie Welling. Lyman KimGipuse Creek ber, principal, Eula Kimber. Hooeyville Jay Hawks, principal; Leone Hunsaker, Janice Nu hols, Estelle Maero. Howell Vida L. Forsgren, pi inclpal. Junction Carol W. Lind, principal. H. Ross Coombs, Lincoln principal; Ellen Anderson, H. Clark, Noal Cook, Evelyn Daines, Darel Johnson, Evelyn S. Kay, Thelma Kotter, Sara l.aieille Jones, Zula Kelly, Nelson, Kathleen Rock, LaVerne Stuvens, Kathleen Win-tie- , yt Rex (Special to News & Journal) NEW YORK Food maintained a high place in Box Elder county budgets in the past year. A grand total of $4,195,000 was spent in the local supermarkets, grocery stores, bakeries Quartermaster Anna Romer, Pugsley, principal. Perry Robert W. Morgan, principal; Verna Markham, Eva Voung. Plymouth Don Potter, prinei pal, Mildred T. Baer. Portage Josh R. Hawks, principal; Hazel Hawks. Wanda C. LarPromontory sen, principal. Cornell Stanger, Snowville principal, Elva Anderson. Thatcher Myrtle Miller, prin-ipal- ; Wanda Adams, pee O Leak. Willard Arch Sims, principal, Iva Archibald, Ivy A. Graser, J. W PulsiCarolyn Broman, pher, Webster Tucker, Marie B. Ward. Yost Zane Wheatley, principal; Norma Campbell. THl 6UARTIRM ASTIR IS MAH, MM AMY YOU WILL A UNO HIM THl BRltGl OR IH THl CHART HI SCRVIS AS STURSMAH OR CAH TAKl OVIR THl IRtDGl IN AH IMtRCtHCY. AS PITTY OfltClR HI IS THl MOT OT SMALL CRAFT. HI PIRTORMS HAYCATOHAl tUTIlS, SIHDS AND SY LIGHT SIGNAL OR WATCH Rial VIS MISS AOIS SIMAPHORl. Win-nitre- The state road commission gained an order for immediate occupancy of land in the Snow-villarea Tuesday in First DisLittle Valley Jessy Earl, printrict court. IrIlka cipal; Gregory, Myrtle vin, Sylvia Palmer, Helen ZolInvolved in two separate conlinger, Baibara T. Strong. demnation proceedings brought Mantua B Glen Marble, prin- by the commission were Mr. and cipal Rula J Foote. Mrs. Ralph J. Taylor, Mr. and Ford Jeppsen, Mrs. Charles R Taylor and Mr. McKinley e Emer-inArdes Adams, principal; and Mrs. Eugene Petersen. Anderson, Minnie Ashton, Amelia Cannon, Phyllis ChrisThe action was taken to secure wide strip of land runtensen,, Vesta Ferry, Elva Korth, a Ruth Frederiekson, Dorothy ning parallel to U. S. 30S, west kelson. Katheryne Nesson, Ele-no- r of Snowville. It was stated the Peteison, Mona S. Rhead, property was needed in connection with a current project to widen and realign the highway NEWS for 5.8 miles between Snowville Wednesday, August 27, 1958 and the Utah Idaho state line. Brigham City, Utah In granting the order of occuA weekly nw$papei eitebi thtd m 1896, pub pancy, Judge Lewis Jones stipuentered at ihdClass eery rednesday nid that the road commission in lated Matter at the post office for protecting Utah under the cf of Mdrch be responsible Brtqha t679 y drains crossing the prifate Ciii W Clvbduqh publisher and adequate providing Subscription rat $3 00 per year payable in advance in combined n with the Box fclder fencing Journal, (pubJ $hd Fddjvs) $5 Q0 per year, Walter Budge, assistant Utah nnle cooy 10 cents $2 50 for 4 months, Attorney General, was present at the procedtngs Recommends Fall e Planting of Grain Awarded Navy Rotket Contract Receipt of a Navy prime conof package liquid rocket engines by the Reaction Motors division of Thiokol Chemical corporation, was announced this week. The contract, under cognizance of the Bureau of Aeronautics, covers production of the rocket engine which has been designated by Reaction Motors as the Guardian. This contract award represents the first military commitment for production of packaged liquid locket engines, the design concept pioneered and developed by Reaction Motors The engine can be supplied in a fully loaded condition comOf THf UTAH STATS ISSOCIATION plete with propellants loaded at Visitor (in county jail); What the factory. Based on utmost Utah Audit Bureau Circulations terrible crime has he commit- simplicity in design and operaNational Editorial Stetp Preii Atiociaflon and United fress, Advertising Association ted? tion, the Guardian engine is an Utah State Pratt Association Representative; unit which includes Sheriff: None. He saw a man integral lake C'ty, Utah shoot another man and hes be- propellant tankage, thrust cham-- NATIONAL EDITORIAL ing held as a material witness. ber and all components necesVisitor; Where is the man sary for its operation. It can who committed the crime? be safely stored, fully loaded Sheriff: Hes out on bail. with propellants, for extended periods of time. It is anticipated that reliability of the unit will be extremely high, unaffected by storage or extreme environmental handling conditions (with your old electric turned in) According to company spokesIF YOU OKDER YOUR NEW men, the Guardian represents the first step in the development of a family of liquid propellant rocket engines based on this design concept. Simplicity ' FROM US and produeibility of the power plant deign should enable de- velopment of engines of different sizes or performance ratings which could covdr most of the or of current NO PAYMENTS. UNTIL NOVEMBER requirements forthcoming missiles. 21 Years in Business Developmi CLOSE enough and BIG enough to serve you. has been conducted under govHonest and Fair in meeting every need. ernment and company funds. The development phase of this overall program was completed in May of this year, two-anmonths ahead of contract HEATING APPLIANCE & schedule tract for production 20-f0- IBoxlHer bac-en- fp right-of-wa- 1 Ia$Soc5t8n GAS WATER HEATER FREE GAS FURNACE MOW! Farmers who intend to grow tjrain on irrigated land next year might well consider planting this fall instead of next spring, says A. Fullnper Allred, Utah State University Extension agent for Box Elder county. There are many advantages to planting fail grain rather than spring grain on irrigated land Some of them are: 1. Good yields can be obtainn-with less summer irrigation water, because fall gram matures eailier, it makes better use of spring rains and can do with about two less summer irrigations. This is a real advantage where late summer water is short. 2 Fall grain is an excellent crop to use uh controlling weeds. Since it grows so fast early in the spring, the winter grain gets the head start of the weeds. This way many weeds are crowded out and stunted. After he grain is harvested in the summer, the land can be cultivated or sprayed for further weed control 3. Fall grain is ready to harvest early, before the rush of other harvest operations. If you plant fall grain on irrigated land, a few items must have special attention. Some of them are 1. Choose a good variety. Bre- vor is the best wheat. Alpine is best barley Good seed of these varieties is scarce; you should make arrangements for it now. The county agent can help you m locating a grower who will have seed for sale as soon as it is harvested. 2. Prepare a good seed bed and plant 60 to 90 pounds per acre in early September, if possible. Provide sufficient moisture so the grain will tome up and get a good start. 3. Usually 40 to 60 pounds of available nitrogen per acre will boost yields. Washington Blvd. OGDEN, UTAH Collect for Appointment Dial EX Stock Market Note WELLESLEY, Mass. (UP) Mrs. Grace Babson, wife of the famed economist Roger Babson, started playing the investment field 50 years ago on a $600 bank account. She died several The California Highway Pa- months ago at the age of 82. A trol arrested 313,919 persons for large portion of her $5,800,000 speeding in 1957, an increase of estate was attributed to stock 14 5 percent. market profits. To The Busy Housewife t, d d 2232 Farmers should apply now for refund on gasoline purchased and used on their farm between June 30, 1957, and July 1, 1958, according to A. Fullmer Allred, Utah State University extension agent for Box Elder county. The federal tax paid at time of purchase for gasoline bought and used on the farm between June 30, 1957 and July 1, 1958, can be refunded if a farmer applies for the refund prior to Septemebr 30, 1958. Forms and information are available at the local internal revenue office, or at your county agents office. To fill out these forms you must know the total number of gallons of gas used on the farm (off improved roads) for farming pur. poses. A refund of 3c per gallon is authorized. Claim forms can be completed and forwarded to the District Internal Revenue office in the federal building in Salt Lake City. i Last year, slightly over 4,000 Utah farmers applied for a gas tax refund, according to Professor Leon Michaelsen, USU extension farm management specialist. Payments averaged just over $50 per farm. It appears that only one farmer in five applied for th refund authorized last year. It takes some time to keep the records and file the but. evidently, it is worth the effort. a SIA-C0- Department officials state that farmers should keep records date and gallons (1) purchased, (2) number of gallons used on the farm for farming purposes, and (3) the gallons used on the farm by custom operators. A farmer should be in a po sition to prove his claim if cautions PTofessor questioned, . Michaelsen. CHICAGO Thiokol Supplies Rocket Engine For Moon Missile Thiokol Chemical corporation enproduced the fourth-stag. moon rocgine for the ket fired by the Air Force from Cape Canaveral, Fla., it was revealed last week. The abortive try at putting a satellite into orbit around the moon was short-liveas trouble rocdeveloped in the first-stag' ket engine. Thiokols solid propellent engine was to have taken over after the instrument package was 228,000 miles along on its moon journey. It was designed to produce 3,000 pounds of thrust. Whether the engine was built at Thiokols Utah division or not, company officials would not disclose. The Brigham City plant currently is working on a number of contracts for the Air Force. Mounted In Center The fourth-stagengine was mounted in the center of the instrument unit which weighed a total of 84.8 pounds The instruments were intended to photograph the moon, measure its field of gravity and magnetic field, and accomplish tasks. A other number of transmitters, including a scanner television camera were to send various data back e d d e e '- - use. Sales in apparel shops came The years purchases in the lo- to $374,000, or two cents, while cal food stores, if apportioned drug stores chalked up $576,000, equally among the local popula- equal to three cents. tion, would represent an outlay of $662 per household. The facts are brought out in the annual study marketing made by the Standard Rate and Data Service to determine how the consumer spends his retail dollar and foi what. The survey covers all parts of the country. Among Box Elder countys retail stores, it shows, the ones selling food collected a larger part of the consumers dollar than did any others except automotive stores. They got 19 cents of it. Part of the years large food outlay is attributable to the trend toward a somewhat better diet than before. Many housewives, also, paid more in order tp get "convenience foods, such as ready-miVOTE FOR products, brown and serve rolls, T-dinners, and cut-uchicken, J. ERLE COMPTON as well as frozen and products. A man that knows the As a whole, the public had more money available for spendneeds 6f Box Elder County ing during 1957 than they had and will ight hard to get the year before, enabling them them. i to improve their scale of living Most, but not all, of the other Compton Is Running for retail lines also did well in the year, according to the survey. COUNTY Stores selling new and used cars and other automotive equipCOMMISSIONER ment, except trucks, had sales totaling $5,102,000, representing on the Democratic ticket 23 cents of the retail dollar. General merchandise stores accounted for $1,602,000, amount(Paid Political Adv.) ing to seven cents. x p d , NOW AVAILABLE IN UTAH space-probin- earth. to . , . The Thiokol engine, mounted upside down was to have shot the satellite into line with the moons orbit. A gyro stabilizer In the third and fourth stages was intended as insurance that the rocket would be traveling in the right direction when the last stage was fired. Remote Control Tried The rocket nose was pointed counter-clockwis130 degrees irom the line of travel. As it passed through the space void, the rocket was to be fired by remote control from Hawaii, altering its course in the direction of the moons orbit. Moving at an anticipated speed of l'OOO miles per hour, the instruments were expected to be dragged into orbit at the moons 2,287 mile an hour rate of travel. .The unsuccessful moon shot was attempted with the Thor ICBM as the first stage. Another attempt is not ex pected until e Home Financing No Longer Easy American (UP) expecting another money down ft have a long nancing probably wait, according to the president of 'the United States Savings home buyers boom of no $3,952,000. Added to this were expenditures in restaurants, 'at soda fountains and in other places selling food and beverages for Apply for Refund ROOM. Gains Right to Snowville Land years Farmers Urged to OH Toad Commission and the like for food for home consumption, it topped the prior U arid Loan League. Roy M. Marr aid . that until the past two years, many of the ' homes built since the close of World War II were sold with no down payments or with fractional down payments. But it is highly unlikely that we will see much of this type of home financing for some time to come, Marr said. He urged that various segments of the housing industry assume the responsibility of inpublic forming the American that the unusually easy orae financing prevalent in the decade after World War II was the exception, not the rule. When credit is easy, he said, houses are sold more readily and not enough attention is given to keeping building costs in line. The higher costs are usually added to the mortgage balance. But the ultimate effect of somewhat tighter credit in times of prosperity is to produce bet ter values for the home buyer, Marr said, and give him more for his money. Try Samovar Vodka Hate to Tell You Texan passed away and upon arriving at the gates of his eternal home, remarked, Gee, never thought heaven would be so much like Texas. Son, said the man at the gate, sadly, this aint heaven. A tonight! Made from grain. 80 Proof. Schenley Dist. Co., N.Y.C. J I can feel the difference ! Big Bonus . . . 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