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Show PAGE THREE ... . -- ···- •••• . .. .. . . . - - ........... The PLATOON TRUMPET I Bishop and Mrs. David M. Haun and daughters Virginia, Dorothy, Goldie anci Fr-:tnces. left WednesMrs. Myrtle Malstrom and fam- day for a ten-days trip to Arizona Uv went to Ephraim. on Memorial and Bryce's canyon. -a-Day. They renewed acquaintances and vi~ited wlth relatives and Miss Delila Gardner Roent part f ... iends in Ephraim and southern of last week visiting with her sisUtah. ter, Mrs. Ann Logan. --o-Mr. and Mrs. Henry Egbert and daughter Ellen, of Salt Lake were guests at the home of their daughter and son-in-law~ Mr. and Mrs. Orin Beckstead Tuesday and Wedp.esday. --o- take place in the Salt Lake temple on .June 15. The couple will reside at Bear Lake. Encore --a-Sheriff Grant S. Young and his father B. S. Young were the speakers at the Draper chapel Sunday night. They talked on auto traffic. pointing out the dangers of careless driving and showing a number of lantern slides of recent accidents in the county. A vocal solo by Gilbert Rasmussen and a violin solo by Roberta Carlquist completed the program. I OUR TEEPEE This column Is edl- by tbe stuYesterday Maud and I made a dents of the Plstoon School In Unteepee. We had four sticks and a jon. canvas and some stakes to fasten JUNE it to the ground. We used some 'Tis in the sunny month of June. boards for chairs and played all How can summer come so soon? day in our teepee. It was not very When the sun comes out so hot good but it kept the sun off. We cannot play in tbe burning lot. VONDA SEARLE. And think of the mosquitos we have to fight GOING SWIMMING Your heart won't feel so very Twice a week a crowd of us boya bright go up to a pond where we have When 'tis in the month of June. great sport. There is a large log SHIGERU MORT. in the pond which we use as a canoe to paddle around with. I VACATION TIME got on the log and it turned and Are you going on a vacation ? I got ducked. Everyone started to I'll bet you are. I know a lot of laugh but I didn't feel like laughchildren that cannot go on a va- ing because it wasn't such a big cation. You:- mothers need your joke to me. help a.t home-. Jf you d.on·t need DELBERT POULSEN. tt to go so very much ! think would be bette- to !itay and help SCHOOL AHEAD your ::n:lt.r~er. School was out a few days ago BErTi:!: CRITTENDl:..~. but look in your mind a little farSchool will ther ahead of you. MY PET LAMB start pretty ,soon. won't it? Social I have a very clever lamb. It~ studies are just a few montllil aname is Sammy. When I call it head of you. All your studies will it comes running and I feed it with be here pretty soon, so a summer fl. bottle. vacation is not many days out of SAM BECKSTEAD. school. SHIGERU MORI. CLOUDLETS Six little cloudlets all in a. row, SIGNS OF SPRING So high in tbe sky-a sailing you When you see the grasses growing, go. And the breezes start to blowing, What are you doing away up And the farmer starts the sowthere? ingWhere are you going so high in Then it's Spring. the air? Can I go with you when I'm a. When the buda begin to swellin', And the frogs they start to yellin', man? My Daddy has castles way over in Cause the joy of life tbey're tellin', Spain. Then it's Spring. Will you take me to see them and home again? BESSIE CRITTENDEN. When the birds are northward head.in', And the old cow starts to shedPICKING BERRffiS ding' rm picking berries every day. :It is not very much fun but I am And you throw off half tbe beddin', earning money. I hope we will Then it's Spring. soon be through. BETTIE CRITTENDEN. MAXINE DENNEY. WEST JORDAN NEWS Midvale, Utah, Friday June 8, 1934 THE lnE SENTINEL --a-The greatest spread of the sea- son for legionaires, auxiliary members and their partners will take place at Draper park Sunday when the annual chlckeree will be held. Officers in charge anticipate a record crowd at the annual feed because of the greatly increased enrollment in the legion brought in by the season,s membership drive. The program will include a. chicken dinner, ball game, horseshoe pitching, and otber sports and will begin at 1 p. m. --a-- Employment In Utah Increases May 19-26 of pounds 1000 proximately Brome grass seed containing quack grass was condemned; more than J.OOO pounds oi' rarllsh seed containing wild morning glory; a considerable amoULt of onion seed containing morning glory; approx:fmate-ly 1500 po1\nds of alfalfa seed containing white-top and Russian lrnapweed were COlll!cmneU and destroyed. TherE' were also several thoushnd pounds of altalfa se-ed which contained an excessive amount of dorlclcr. The farmer is planting unknowingly noxious weeds that are destroying his farm, ancl &.long with it, the resources of our state. An educational campaigo is being started, and the law perta.tning to viola.to:-s of the pur~ seed laws will be enforced as rigidly as the Department of Agriculture is able. Due mainly to increased activity on Public work projects employment in Utah gained by 254 jobs during the week ending May 26, as compared with the week ending May 19, Georg·e A. Yager, State director of the National Re-employment Service announced. Private employment also gained during the week ending May 26. Of tbe 1,176 who were employed through the service, 654. were engaged on public work and 522 by private employers. Compared with this, of the 922 who were employed during the week preceding, 413 were engaged on public work and 509 by private employers. The ~eater activity on public works projects materially changed the distribution of new placements Mr. and Mrs. Grozier Kimball among employment groups. the engagement of their announce During the week ending May 26, to Vernon Cook Bernice daughter 56 per cent of the placements were marriage will The City. Garden of made on public works and 44 per inprivate with cent were made dustry, whereas, during the week ending lfa.y 19, 45 per cent of the placements were made on public works and 55 per cent were with private industry. DRAPER NEWS Joseph Raynolds left Draper last week for Chicago where he will meet his father and visit the World's Fair. From there he will go to Ontario for the summer. --a-Miss Irene Raymond left Saturfor Pasadena, California. day where she will spend the summer. --o-- Mr. and Mrs . .rack Hendersen entertained the Social club at a chicken fry in Big Willow Saturday night. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. George Barton, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Stringfellow, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Christiansen, Mr. and Mrs. Reid Beck, Mr. and Mrs. 0. D. Ballard, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Bert L. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Orson Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mickelsen, Mr. and Mrs. s. J. Mickelsen, .rerome Brown, ;Mrs. Alta Andrus, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Rasmussen, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Bennion, Miss Freda .Jensen and Ray Beck. --a-- Bishop A. F. Smitb left Monday for a two week's visit in Chicago. --oMr. and Mrs. J. R. RaWllns spent Friday and Saturday of last week visiting in Logan. rcontin11ed on pa6e 4. l ·-·-·-·-· _,_o_a_.,...,....•. Morrison - Merrill Co. UTAH RATES THIRD IN EGG PRODUCTION Tuesday evening about sixty members of the choir accompanied by Bishop Haun and second counselor Hugh Finlayson went for an outing in Big Cottonwood canyon. Credit is due to the Utah Poultry It was sponsored by the choir of--o-ficers, Henry Schmidt was in Producers' Cooperative association for Utah's becoming one of the Mr. and Mrs. Orin Beckstead are charge. most important egg producing stamoving this week to the Parduhn --a-tes, according to a survey of the home in South Jordan. They will A number of friends called to farm credit adm.inistration's coopany friends be at home to their congratulate Donald Hogan on his erative division. time after .June 10. birthday, June 3. A dinner was The cooperative division's report --a-to twenty guests. Among reads, "A1though only 10 years old served Mrs. Charles Steadman and Mrs. those who called were Mrs. Profin- Lenard Steadman are spending a da Hogan, Mr. and Mrs. Arch Dun- the association is now second in few weeks on their ranch at Soda can of Centerville, and Mrs. Parry, membership and third in volume of products liandled by poultry and Spings, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gardner, Mr. egg cooperatives throughout the --a-and Mrs. Grandale Finlayson, HenMrs. Fred Burmeister entertain- ry Cooley and .John C. Richards United States. Today Utah is selling well over 500,000 cases of high ed at dinner Sunday evening, for besides their immediate family. grade eggs at premiwn prices and Mr. and Mrs. Parley Sprattling on a market 2500 miles distant." --a-and daughter Carol. . the spent Cooley Elsie Miss New York has received from 81 --oreland friends visiting week-end 94 per cent of the Utah cooperto of children and Pratt ~ifrs. Lottis Salt Lake 7 spent last week visiting atives in Bountiful. Miss Cooley ative association's eggs. Accordat the home of her parents, Mr. 2_ttended the Commencement ex- ing to the farm credit administraand Mrs. P. T. Bateman and at the ercises of the Agricultural college tion's survey, the total costs 'of marketing from the time the eggs home of her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Saturday morning. are received from the 6000 mem--oRoyal Sprattling. --oMr. and Mrs. Lamar Burkinshaw bers until delivered to New York Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peterson of and Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Bate1nan buyers amounts to less than eight South Jordan gave a miscellane- and son Keith, attended the grad- cents a dozen. The Berkeley intermediate credit ous shower at the South Jordan uation of Harold Bateman at Brigjunior high auditorium Saturday ham Young University on Wednes- bank made a commodity loan a month ago of $500,000 to tbe Utah evening, June 2, in honor ef their day of thisweek. Poultry Producer's Cooperative asdaughter Grace who was married to enable the Utah assosociation to Don Whipple of Salt Lake on ciation to place eggs in storage for Wednesday, May 30. About two The "Swiss Babouche" fall marketing. hundred guests were present. _::_ --oMr. and Mrf:. E. M. Bateman entertained at dinner on Friday for Mr. and Mrs. William Halliday of Sugar City, Idaho. --aWillis Goodridge of West Wood, The efforts of the people of California is visiting with his parUtah in the past few years to eliments1 Mr. and Mrs. George Goodinate noxious weeds have resulted ridge. in t;reat deal of disappointment. -aRecent legislatures have enacted Miss Virginia. Bateman who has pure sePd laws for tllts state that been on the coast for some time, are treated with contempt and returned home last Sunday. Miss the farmers are not inform'ed of Bateman visited in Los Angeles the seriousness of the situation. and Mexico. During tbe montb of April the visited 240 --a-1'1ie "S\VIS!it Bnhou~he, · M Uelmon State Seed Analyst Eldred French of Cs.lifornia is seed to selling were which stores the guest of Ivan Dahl. On Tues- shoe, copied l'rom sl10es worn by the farmers. 68 of these stores day they visited relatives at Pro- the Swiss nod French peasftllts and handled package seed only. Tb~ adopted t'or the use of the Ameri remainder were selling both bulk vo. It is m~~tde ot and package seeds. can sportswomnn. 26 per cent --o-a. contrasting were complyln£r with the pure seed wltb Mr. and Mrs. Carl Peterson of white buckskin Omaha, Nebraska. arrived Sunday black <'nlC. It 11ns a square toe to law; 32 per cent were C•')mplying at the home of Mr. Peterson's allow for plenty of foot action a.nd only in part and 42 per cent were mother, Mrs~ Stella Peterson on a super flexible sole. not complying with the law at all. Redwood road During tbe month of April ap- _ ___ Noxious Weed Danger Increases In Utah "The Lumbermen" LET US HELP Estimate Your Requirements i • 1 I On Your - Home Loan RepairsFENCE SHOULD BE PART OF YOUR PLAN MIDVALE, UTAH PHONE 28 "All I needed was attention. Now I'm like new, eager for the road and plenty of it." Let Jack and Ed bring back YOUR car's old hum and performance. The cost? It's much less than even tlie down payment on a new car! And The Satisfaction. . • • Plus The Genuine Economy . .•.. Will Help You to Forget The Drougth and Depression. 0. & E. ELECTRIC SERVICE "Jack and Ed." When you need Fishing Tackle Look Here Before Buying Phone 272 25 East Center St. |