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Show THE Edited by A. E. Smith, County Agent KID THK WHKAT FIELD OP RYK I VISIT MADE TO CALLAO of the man who has saved his money and has thus been enabled to realize his ideals. Spending all always brings regrets and very often misery. Saving means happiness possible and comfort assured. We invite young men to turn from spending to saving and an account at this bank is the best to do so. 4 per cent paid on Time Deposits. . We also do a general banking business in all lines. Let us take care of your account. Nephi National Bank "The Peoples Bank" Scouts SHOE REPAIR SERVICE Good Shoes Means Good Service Ta!" A great quantity of Rye is appearing amongst the wheat on a majority of the dry farms this year, which should be removed as soon as possible in order to hold the wheat crops up to the standard of quality which our wheat should reach. The season following a very dry one, like we had last year, seemB to be conducive to the growth of rye and every precation should be taken to rid the lands of It. Just now it is all headed out and stands well above the wheat. It can be easily seen and should be cut or pulled out and the heads carried out and either fed or dried and burned to prevent reinfection. In most fields this can be done in a short time and it will mean a much better price when the sale of the wheat is made. Buyers are beginning to discriminate heavily against wheat having as much as two ner cent of rye in it. As a means for getting seed free from rye each farmer should grow a seed plat each year. This should be on clean ground and need not be large. Start with the cleanest seed available and rogue the plot several times during the season to make sure that every rye plant has been destroyed. This grain should then be carefully threshed, and kept for If this seeding next years crop. method is followed it will mean that no new rye is planted and by consistent roguing of the fields afterward we should soon be free from this pest A visit to Callao and vicinity was made recently to assist the people in that section of the county with some agriculture and home problems. Crops in this district look good and a normal production is looked for if some moisture in the form of rain can be had. The supply of water for irrigation seems to be shortening and will effect crop yields if no rain comes. Ground squirrels are numerous and arrangements were made to furnish a quantity of poison grain for their control, also poison for pocket gophers and grasshoppers. Cllao raised 90,000 pounds of clean alfalfo seed last year and with an increased acreage coming into bearing much more will be raised if this year is normal. Careful inspection was made of all the fields in the district and no noxious weeds were found. I think it is safe to conclude that this district will have the cleanest crop of seed to be found in any section its size in this State no no dodder, no thistles, no bind-weewhite-to- p and no cockle-burjust pure clean alfalfa. Demonstrations were given by the two lady visitors in the tie and dye work. decorative stitches, dress forms, and pattern making. Demonstrations were given by the county agent on methods of poisoning and trapping pocket gophers; the preparation and attribution of poison grain for the control of ground Mr. and Mrs. Ross Burton, and iMr. and Mrs. Alphus Miller, motored o Salt Lake Wednesday where they enjoyed a day's outing, also witnessed the big M. I. A. Parade. ket. To Have Five Day Outing "Ta, ta, Guarantee Means Good Materials NEPHI, UTAH S, GOING AWAY? Happy The Thoughts wray TIMES-NEW- ta. Ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, Ta! Ta! his town was changed from Summit Used and Good Workmanship. ALL. WORK GUARANTEED Some people may not know what mean, but. all all of those of the Boy Scouts of the Timpanogos Walk Down and Save Money District Council will recognize in They will them the assembly call. C. O. LOMAX know that that is the sound of the t bugle calling them to the rendezvous One Door East Cooper, Pyper Co. at Santaquin on next Monday morning at 7 o'clock A. M. PUBLIC NOTICE Next Monday morning, long . e sun is up, long lines of khaki scouts will wind down from clad The Board of Education of Juab the settlements in various parts of School District, Juab County, Utah, the council ready to embark in a car will nveet at 8 p. m. June 23rd, 1925 or truck for Santaquin where they are to meet Chief Anderson and the to adopt a budget and make appro-pratioremainder of the group who will to govern expenditures for make the trip into the Bryce canyon the school year 1925-2Meeting country. will be held in the office of the At Santaquin, the bishop will be Board, Nephi High School Building. ready to start the group off right by telling them an Indian story (Signed) Dennis Wood Clerk which will explain why the name of be-th- ns 6. to Santaquin. After the story, the horns will toot and the cars will leap forward, only to stop at Nephi at the corner of the famous old fort where another Indian story, as true as history, will be told. From this point the trail will lead south to Bryce, although the caravan will stop every few miles to learn the hlslorv of th surrounding reg ion. In this way, riding and listen ing, the caravan will go to Bryce and back. The scouts will find that the road is a long winding trail of interest, and that really deserves the name, "The Old Mormon Trail." This year the boys will carry food for the trip. They will camp out and do their own cooking, thus making the trip a genuine camping outing. It is expected that approximately three hundred will take this caravan trip to Bryce. The excursion will last five days. -- 4 FISHING SEASON OPENS MONDAY JUNE 15TH. Everything in FISHING TACKLE Drop your business cares and worries, let your We are still offering the $10.00 Prize for the Large Fish Robert Chappell Won it last year. Buy your Fishing Tackle and License here then you can Never mind life's little furries kick 'em all aside! Smooth away those wrinkles showin' on your anxious brow! Grab your rod and let's be goin' trout are bitin' now! Be again a kid of twenty; lemme see you smile! Vou have had your troubles plenty, now Just hold him if you hook him. Our Special This Season Steel Rods $1 We Will Be At The Store Sunday By E. A. BRININSTOOL troubles slide! rest awhile? Just forget 'em for the present don't fret anyhow! Gee, but ain't this weather pleasant? Trout are bitin' now! Can't you hear the canyon callin' where the water shines, Cunflin', babblin', murmurin', fallin', Jhere among the pines? Time to get some speckled beauties! Time to make a row. That you'll ditch your business duties troui are bitin' now! There's an awful restless feenn' romping out and it, Summer fishin' fever' slealin' through your tinglin' skin Drat it, man, why should you worry? Clear your troubled brow! Follow me I'm In a hurry! Trout are bitin' now! KENDALL BROS. Week-en-d Colgate's Package d, s, squirrels, and the killing and dressing of poultry and turkeys for mar- A very fine picnic party was arranged by the local ladies in which the whole community participated, a splendid luncheon was served and into your vacation bag or your over-nig- ht case. There's always room for this package of compact convenience. It is indispensable. The women's package contains four toilet accessories Cold Cream, Cashmere Bouquet Soap, Ribbon Dental Cream and Talc Powder which give a remarkable amount of Summer comfort. In the men's package are four toilet necessities Cream, Ribbon Dental Rapid-Shav- e Cream, Coleo Soap and Talc Powder all miniature in size but superlative in quality, and moderate in price. many fine games played. The people of Callao are certainly to be congratulated for the excellent way in which they received and entertained their visitors. Ord and Mangelson Lunt Pharmancy Company. DR. JOHN T. MILLER WRITES LETTER (Continued from page 1) NOTICE FOR. PUBLICATION (Publisher) OF THE INTERIOR U. S. LAND OFFICE, at Salt Lake that will be 88 storys high. Busses City, Utah. May 9th, 1925 are so numerous in New York that NOTICE is hereby given that they are a nuisance. There are three Leeta A. Squire, formerly Leeta A. the surface cars; the elevated rail- - McCune, of Ruth, Nevada, who, on, systems of streetcar transportion: 28th 1920, made Homeroad; and the subway or under- - February stead entry No. 0255 31 for W Vz S groud railway. The fare on any of E N E Vt, , E SW J4,SW them is only five cents. In spite of the size of New York City it is very easy for the stranger to find his way there. It is one of the largest if not the largest publishing center in the world. There is no other city in the world where as much red paint is wasted on the lips of women and girls as in New York. In observing the lives of the people in the mad rush for wealth and amusement one wonders in what way the gilded heathenism of such a city is superior to the crude heathenism of the Orient. There is a great contrast between the poverty and economy of India and the waste and extravigance of the great city of New York. The time will come when there will not be as much to waste in America as is now being wasted "On the way from New York to Washington I spent two days In Wil mington, Delaware lecturing in two At the Nation's Capital I colleges. spent an afternoon at the Bureau of Education visiting the United States 'Trout Are BitinT Slip a Commissioner of Education and Heads of Departments. It wag a time to be long remembered. In the even lng I dined at the home of the Dean of the Teachers' College, George Washington University, with whom I have been corresponding for a num ber of years. Washington Is a beau tiful city and free from the smoky industrial plants that are so common in the cities of the East. "In Pittsburgh I have lectured in the Byron W. King School of Oratory Dr. King lectured in many of the Utah towns a number of years ago Pittsburgh has the reputation of be lng the smokiest city In the world and perhaps deserves the reputation. This Is where Carnegie made his private fortune which enabled him to attach his name to many city li braries and other public institutions In such industrial cities there is a large foreign population, but the educational spirit is not specially noticeable. Pittsburgh is planning a University building 54 storys high to cost $10,000,000. "I am arranging lectures in sum mer schools In Michigan, Wisconsin Minnesota, So. Dakota and North Dakota, and shall go west through Canada and south along the Pacific Coast to my home In Los Angeles The world tour was the grentest school of my life and worth many times what it. cost. I am now through pioneering, .'experimenting and re- searchlng. The value of our work in (hild-studand vocational guidance Is now recognized by progressive educators. The past three years have been by far the most successful in our history. There Is work for the rest of my life connecting this work In human culture with homes and chools, and to train workers." JOHN T. MILLER y "He Builds Wisely Who Builds DEPARTMENT Well" TO BUILD WELL NepHi Plaster W, Section 24; N W V S E M N N E Vt, N E V N W Vt, Section 25, Township 15 South, Range 2 West, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three..year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before the Clerk of the District Court, at Nephi, Utah, on the 15th day of June, 1925. Claimant names as witnesses: George E. Howard, Dean Howard, William C. Orgill, all of Wills, Utah, and George McCune, of Nephi, Utah. Ell F. Taylor Register E. D. Dunn, Att'y, Salt Lake City, Utah. First pub. May 15th, 1925. Last pub. June 12th, 1925. HAS NO EQUAL The Largest and Purest Natural Deposit of Gypsum In The World NEPHI PLASTER AND MFG. COMPANY Miss Jane McPherson, who has been teaching school in American, fork the past winter came down to Nephi where she will spent a few days visiting with relatives and , friends. Lowitcost. Transportation ' Star tern Cars STAR SEDAN - $820 Remarkable Averages Reported by Star Owners 228 Star owners drove 2,976,234 miles at a total cost of $1,793.31 for mechanical repairs and re- -- placement. 560 Star owners, driving more than five and a half million miles, averaged 24.9 miles per gallon on gas. 183 Star owners drove an average of 10,527 miles on a set of tires. To drive their cars, it cost these owners, on the for mechanical repairs and replace average cent a mile; for ments, about th gasoline, approximately one cent a mile; for tire, a cent a mile. about one-hal- f Ask us to show you further evidence cf Star superiority. ' PRICES f . o. b. Laming, Mich. SEDAN . . $7SO TOURINO $540 ROADSTER SEDAN . . $820 $540 COUPE .... ...... $715 CHASSIS PANEL DELIVERY . $585 G. R. JUDD'S GARAGE $445 |