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Show AUGUST 23, 1952. Poultry Contest Again Offered At State Fair SALT LAKE BY WALLY BISHOP SKETK havenT vou say! S HERE J AROUND SOMEWHERE 60 BUT THEY STILL a-ga- in YOUNG AMERICA - - ty HOW MUCH 2 COUSIN? ?'' RESEMBLE! ,m J GRANDPARENTS 99 t5 5 The Iff Hr nd roast and serve in buns. 4. Packaged cookies and potato er of pickles, barbecue sauce and mustard. mood strikes. For a simple picnic, all you have 1. Canned meat spreads. to add to these staples is bread, a , 2. Canned luncheon meat to grill and serve with barbecue sauce on beverage and fresh fruit and youre on your way. And Dont Forget buns. 3. Canned frankfurters to These: Can Opener, bottle opener, napkins, table cloth, salt and pepmade the largest investment in its per, paper cups, knives, forks, history months before the strike spoons, paper plates, matches, grill, in inventories of tinplate, work newspapers, charcoal and a blanket. in progress, and finished cans to the full extent allowed by governTOASTED CARROTS ment regulations. We have also 12 cooked small whole carrots just rushed tinplate from the com- XA cup salad oil panys Hawaiian plants to help 1 y2 cups corn flakes meet immediate demands for cans 1 teaspoon salt to pack perishable crops. 18 teaspoon pepper In addition to their contributions Dip carrots in oil, then in finely to Utahs farmers, the canning and crushed com flakes to which the industries also help salt and pepper have been added. bolster the states prosperity by Arrange in pan and broil until corn employing thousand of workers flakes are toasted, about 5 mineach year in canneries and can- utes. Baste twice with remaining oil while toasting. making plants. Dr. Michl Yield 0 servings. can-maki- ng MAN-MAD- E . can-maki- Kiftf Heres a list of staples to keep chips, 5. Jars on hand for whenever the picnic fl r2 ' I ..iff' MONK...MYJT OWN Easy Picnicin' Canning Crops Doubled In 25 Years increasing importance of canning as a major source of Utah farm income is shown by the fact that the states vegetable producers are devoting almost twice as much land to crops for canning as they did 25 years ago, according to American Can Company, suppliers of metal containers. Dr. H. E. Michl, economist for a as result of the interest expected the company which adapted the stimulated last year. vacuum-pac- k method of canning to assure high quality and taste of ITS WINNERS PICKS canned vegetables, explained that in 1920 only 12,750 acres of Utah land were planted to vegetable crops for canning. In 1951 farmers cultivated 23,500 acres. He noted that last years vegetable acreage for canning crops alone was one and times that of the total 1926 acreage devoted to crops for both processing and fresh markets. If .The value of the states canf vS 'p"' industries to ning and the welfare of Utah farmers was sharply emphasized when the steel strike virtually shut off supplies of tinplate needed for making cans, he declared. ForV tunately, American Can was able to supply its cannery customers despite the strike. This was because the company 77-7- AND SEE WHAT xrBRANCH OF YOUR FAMILY Cp divided into two classes 10 to 13 years and 14 and over. Fine prizes will be awarded to the winners in each county this year. County winners will compete in the grand finals at the state fair in Salt Lake City in September. Watches will be presented to the state champions. Last year Ora Fay Wardle of Vernal won the individual prize and Daryl Gold and Erma Jean Call of Bountiful won the team honors. Dr. Lawrence Morris, producer relations chief for Utah Poultry, will supervise the program. A huge list of entries is Hi I'M GOING TO J FIND A MIRROR HEVl WHERE ARE YOU 60INJ ll i i 1J I! i CAN'T GET D0NT)0VER fclSS AT? three-quart- , I LOOK RIGHT TO rpsTTHEY RESEMBLE' MEM 1 Fl 1 6RANDMARM0SET AND GRANDPAPASET MY TOOTH PULLED... GRANDMA AND GRANDPA LOOKED ALL RIGHT TO ME) THAT WE COULD TAKE A LOOK BUT NOW THEY DON'T! HAVE jun ior poultrymen and women will compete for county and state honors in the second annual Utah Poultry and Farmers Cooperative poultry and egg demonstrations, directed by the womens auxiliary organization through the 4H clubs of the state. The program, inauguarated by Utah Poultry to stimulate interest and initiative in promoting better poultry practices and encouraging greater and more varied uses of poultry and egg products, was started last year. Surprising interest was displayed around the state, with 17 teams going into the finals at the state fair last fall. j. Many outstanding new recipes ' using eggs and poultry were demonstrated by the girls in the contest, and some excellent new ideas in brooding, cleaning eggs, ventilating, coOp management and other phases of poultry work were presented by the boys. The regulation 4H demonstration score card was used in scoring contestants and deciding winners. Contests are fall A I THERE THEY ARE1.! that's a swell GOT A PHOTO BUT, MONTY, WHEN I LEFT DOWNTOWN TO L OF THEM HERB TO CITY-Ut- ahs i 3 THE JOURNAL ng 'SAUCERS' MAKE DEBUT 53-d- ay r tD JjL 1 F B&A y' '' i- if, I- - ; S ' ' " ,, "'f, , w, ; , V A. - j V auditorium bean a striking resemblance to Chicago as youthful delegates to the Seventh Annual Convention of Boys' Nation wavs their state standards and hail their newly elected chiefs. Carried on the shoulden of the cheering lads are Howard Norton (left), of Fort Worth, Tex, president, and, right, Craig Swoboda, of Norfolk, Neb, vice president The Boys Nation, which has been meeting in Washington, is sponsored by the American Legion. THE UNIVERSITY OP MARYLAND Fall Instruction at Eccks and Ike think alike on fflacEPatt? Foreign Policy Sound Money Rich program of training in Gtnoral Office, Stenographic, Secretarial, and Accounting fields. Excellent course in office machines, including IBM key punch. WRITE US TODAY I BUSINESS COLLEGE Begins Tuesday, Sept. 2 Regular Autumn Quarter begins Sept. 22 date convenient to you Employment requests for highly qualified office workers are so numerous we cannot fill them all. If you plan a business career, in Industry or Civil Service, enroll as soon as possible. Choose the End of Trumanism Reduction of Taxes 2 End Machine Politics . In the research and development laboratory at Fort Belvoir, Va., Army physicist Noel Scott (top) produces a f.ery object that looks like a flying saucer. The saucer starts to bell jar, generated by the form (bottom) inside the glow discharge of electricity. The tiny object could be made to waver, jump about and even disappear at the wave of a hand. (International) WORKING WITH A VACUUM BELL two-foot-hi- Branch of Brigham Young University 70 NORTH MAIM SALT LAKE CITY gh |