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Show 9:30 to 10 a. m. General session in Barratt Hall at 10l a m. Balloting for treasurer from 12 noon Anna Marie Rrown to l p. m. General sessions at 2 p. m. at Hall Glorious Barratt Easter. Gods gift The annual convention of the Wednesday, May l. General Of gladness and love supreme Utah Federation of Womens Clubs will convene in the Hotel sessions at the Hotel Utah at 9:30 Unsurpassed in unselfish Utah at Salt Lake City on April and 2. Report of elections and Sacrifice, held high in esteem. 7 29 and 30 and May 1 according Board of Directors meeting at Blessed Easter! Its beauty to Mrs. Sterling M Ercanbrack of p. m. This to is of interest Bids all to awaken and arise meeting Provo, president of the Utah women of Cache Valley inasmuch To nobler thoughts and deeds Federation. The theme of the as many of the womens ciubs Donning no deceitful disguise. convention is The Life of the are affiliated with the Utah Nation Has Its Roots in Its here and many women here Holy Easter! Renewing faith Federation, Youth are planning to attend the meet- That frees and divinely inspires There will be three lull days ings in Salt Lake City. The hope that arose with Him of excellent programs, suggestTo fulfill souls desires. ions and material for next years Bishop and Mrs James J. Facer activities. There will also he a of Hvrum visited their farm near Happy Easter! Bringing children breakfast, tea and banquet and Pocatello, Idaho for a few deys Laughter and sheer delight, a luncheon for the Juniors. tills week. In their belief in bunnies Sunday, April 28 will be the Hiding eggs colored bright. date for the meeting of the dirMr. and Mrs LaMar Jacobsen Womens Club v. . 9 ectors at an informal dinner. and little. daughter have spent the past three weeks visiting with Mrs. Jacobsen's grandmother, Mrs. Eliza Rose of Ilyrum. The Jacobsens expect to locate in Logan where Mr Jacobsen is attending school and also working. Monday, April 29, is registration day from 8:30 to 9:30. General sessions and formal opening will be observed at 9:30 and also at 2 p m. Tuesday, April 30, Registration Joyous Easter! When the worlds Finery is smartly displayed And Mother Nature flaunting Flowers, leads the gala parade. 2 Million Hurt at Work In 1945, Official Report WASHINGTON. Work injuries disabled about 2,000,090 persons in 1945, the bureau of labor statistics reported. H i.&mutsc. Approximately 16,000 workers were killed and 84,500 permanently impaired, including 1,800 so seriously injured as to be unfit for any future employment in industry. The total of injured was about 10 per cent less than in 1944, first year to show a drop in industrial accidents since 1938. The affected workers lost about 41,230,000 days of employment. ' :V:; . vi -- ' f- - 1 ' LONDON. - II 1 V' fcX A L f J? ? i s' YjM 4., A ,4(5. S ' LAKRO Many a promising calf, lost because of infectious scours, probably could have been saved by the simple expedient of giving the patient a transfusion of blood from a mature cow in the same herd. This treatment jean be followed by amazingly prompt and helpful results under conditions where more difficult, cumbersome, land costly treatments have met only with failure or mediocre relief. According to Dr. W. A. Higgins of General Mills Larro Research Farm, Detroit, giving a blood transfusion is !a simple procedure which can be done easily, with the help of a qualified bleedveterinarian. A 12 or ing needle is used to draw blood from the jugular vein in the neck groove of (a healthy, mature cow. This cow can be selected at random from the herd isince she need not be the dam of the Isick calf. The cows blood is collected jin a clean, quart milk bottle or other suitable container in which has been iplaced sufficient soluble oxalate, citrate, or other anticoagulant to keep the blood from clotting in the bottle. About of an fcounte, or 2 grams, of sodium oxalate hould be sufficient to prevent clothing in as much as a quart of blood. I I li $ ' '' to right, Kari Maertz, Henry Bchnke, Bernard Kubale, Ed Shimon and Roman Kugle. Coach Gable is shown in center of group. Photo Milwaukee Journal. Marine Comes From French The name marine comes from an meanQld French word, "marin, ing sea soldier. Told . DEAD RHSEARCH FARM and USELESS ANIMALS Horses, Cows, Sheep and Hogs that her house UTAH was burning, Mrs. Ethel Roys, 27, stuck her head out of an upstairs wtndow and replied: I cant come down. The doctor said I was not to get up. Mrs. Roys was burned to death. George Carter, who told the story at a coroners inquest, saved four other occupants of the house. PHOTO if the bottle is agitated moderately from time to time while the blood is being drawn from the cow. Approxi- mately a pint, or slightly more, of blood should be used to treat a sick calfi As soon as drawn from the cow, this blood is introduced by gravity flow into the jugular vein of the sick calf, by means of a funnel attached to a piece of rubber tubing fastened to a bleeding needle inserted in the calfs jugular vein. The success with which blood transfusions have been used for some calf ills commends this method of treatment for much wider use than it has received up to the present time. The treatment is highly practical because it calls only for materials which are readily obtainable. The therapeutic or medicinal value of whole blood has received major attention and application in human medicine in recent years. Certainly it is worthy of further use in treating certain calf disorders such as those caused by infectious scours, where frequently, there is nothing to lose and everything to gain. A blood transfusion well might save a sick call which otherwise would surely peris! V J BY-PRODUC- If 'I CO. TS For i JUST SOUTH OF LOGAN rilOXE LOGAN 49 (PIIONE COLLECT) EASTER That man In your life will to the charm of these new COATS, SUITS, DRESSES thrill Home and Auto FORMALS, RADIO MANILA. , Bee Census Acconflng to lv, Lansing, Mich., must take a census cf bees every winter. HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Son of Hero Alvin York Enlists for Three Years , V WISCONSIN BASKETBALL CHAIM'S . . . The high school basketball five from Reedsville, which recently captured the stati title in championship series held at Madison. Reedsville, with a population of only 837, is proud of John Gable, principal and coach of his team. Left Doctor Said, Dont Get Up, So Woman Burns to Death O' ' Mrs. Edna Allen entertained at her home on Saturday evening at a delightfiri party for her birthday anniversary. Attending the party were members of the First Ward Birthday Club and Mrs. Lizzie Nielsen and Mrs. as Lucille Seamons special guests. A social evening of visiting and games was enjoyed and a delicious luncheon was served. Prizes were won by Mrs. Helen Jenesn, Mrs. Rosie Jensen and Mrs. Clarice Jensen. EASTER SOIIIIET Federation Meets 0 PAGE THREE SOUTH CACHE COURIER APRIL 10, 1946 Pfc. Woodrow Wilson V' t. enlisted in the army for three ears after his father, Sgt. Alvin York, World War I hero, wrote: I probably would do the same thing if I were in your shoes. The younger York, of Wolf River, Tenn., was drafted in March, 1944. He has been guarding Japanese prisoners of war in Lingayen gulf on Luzon. SERVICE WORK GUARANTEED ' LLOYD' Edwards Millinery OF LOGAN AND READY TO WEAR RADIO AND RECORD SPECIALISTS Liquefied Gases Production and use of liquefied petroleum gases has tripled during the last two years. 14 33 West 1st North, LOGAN Phone 317 West Center 1C SSflTSSSSrS The History of Mining at Park City V t. Si , 7 . i i.5 I 4 v , , The Silver King, a mine that has been In almost continuous production for 70 years. t (Editors Not! Thu is th eighth and Park Mining company developed concluding srticl of a series n th Park ora bodies that expanded the pro City district, pionwr Utah mining district.) ductlon limits of the district far te east ftn sodth. Among the men who rose to fame Under the hills of Park City is a with the Park City district were miles of Kearns, Keith, Holmes, McCornlck, labyrinth of hundreds of ' Judge, and Lambourne . . . men who underground workings. They all did much In shaping the early In- - lead to somewhere; either a yawn d us trial hlstory'of Utah. ing gap that was once an ore body Most of the early;day producers or to an ore body that is now being have been consolidated Into larger mined. It is Interesting to let ones mind companies and a number of the mines discovered in the early seven- - wander as he winds his way through ties are still producing after 70 the maze of underground workings, years, giving emphatic testimony Locked in the dark crevices of the of the farsighted policies of the underground is much of the root pioneer as well as the present day ance and glamor of the early sing of the west. From those dark tunnels has The Park Utah Consolidated Mines company Is a consolidation come the wealth for the building of the ntario, the Judge, the Daly of communities, homes, schools and West and the Daly. The Silver churches and payrolls for the work-KinCoalition Is a consolidation of er. May the type of courageous early-daproducers, a mine with a men who developed Park City never production record of nearly 70 be extinct either from natural years. In more recent years the causes, or because ssefaty destroys Park City Consolidated and New bis initlatlv or stlfel Vis courage, yvsk Y y Happy Easter is our wish for you at this glad season of the year. old-fashion- ed g ; y v) ' Ji Just a good SLACKS SKIRTS and BLOUSES Millinery and accessories to correspond. LUIIDSTROM FURNITURE COMPANY |