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Show ThursJ,y April, 6 1950 and Mrs. II. S. Ttngey. Mr. Richins attended a veterinary school Mj'rle L'df noti 1 April, City of purpo.se shall hi such i'U B H Pi ci b tt ai w tt ai tc cc 2-- fr i in P st tt to in Pi At sai Tlngey accomer panied her brother, Howard Cap-ento OgJen Wednesday. Mrs. Lenore Silvester visited in Ogden on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Delos Jensen vidted in Ogd-- n during the week. Alton Davis of Berkeley, California came unexpectedly to visit his parents on Friday eve wno ning. His wife and baby, some time been spending have with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. in Toppenish, George Hales will fly to Salt Lake Washington, will then visit for and Tuesday Riverside. a few days in Lenore Silvester was In Logan Lillian Mrs. Saturday. The ladies of the Birthday Club spent the afternoon on Friday with Mrs. Josie Bourne in honor of her birthday. Mrs. Ruie Macfarlane spent the dav Tuesday In Salt Lake. T. J. Udy accompanied by his daughters, lone Udy and Mrs. Nina Burnett and son, Norman, and Mrs. Madge Udy spent Wednesday in Salt Lake visiting relatives. The Jr. Birthday Club spent a very enjoyable evening In Brig-haFriday. There are no birthdays during March, so they spent one evening In Brigham. Mrs. Mina Ward spent Sunday and Monday visiting and shopping in Ogden. Miss Maurine Capener spent the weekend at home from school in Salt Lake. Primary conference was held r Sunday evening. Mrs. Ellen of the stake board was m, For the If Wi stv. On the ri Cap-erve- present. Mrs. Ruie Macfarlane spent Friday evening and Saturday in Preston, with her children, who live there. Her grandson, little Joey Bowcutt sang the lead In a school operetta, which she attended. Tremonto Box Elder State of I At said o'clock A. The pd voting dlj Civic Cull and the jt Nell Puzej DATED this Cth d BY ORI BOX EI1 ATTEST. R. ! ai? Wc Mrs. Josie Bourne with her sisters, Mrs. Ann Rugg and Mrs. Lillian Loader of Salt Lake were honored for their common birthday on Sunday, by their families. The group met at the home of Mrs. Bourne. Out of town people who were present included Mr. and Mrs. Claud Earl, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Johnson and two daughters, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Rugg and Jerry Rugg and Mrs. Vi Famsworth of Salt Lake; Mrs. Clara Earl and Mr. and Mrs. Duane Bourne and daughter of Farmlngton; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Phillips and son, Kaysville; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sears, Clearfield; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Earl, Ogden and Leland Bourne and daughter. Diane. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Coombs of Fielding, entertained in honor of their fatter, A. A. Capener, brother, Howard and niece, Mrs. City. ild" Trees Plsnietl Marriage Training Is Popular Course ForBoys,YoungfAen By Washington - Tna-canthos- ). 3 Siiil Standing Ditch Blasting Demonstration set by Soil Conservation Office at men-lar- gely boys and young rethe That's their own request. pro PREPARATIONS MADE FOR port of Dr. Ernest G. Osborne, EASTER BREAKFAST teachers at education fessor of university. Columbia college, The annual Easter breakfast courses on courtare life the Sunrise semce" following ship, marriage and family are already on Easter or morning, win be held' The being organized Amherst. at the Methodist r. underway at Princeton. Church under Osborne the direction Dr, Cornell. and of Mrs. Thomas W dark a,.. Rutgers said. Mrs. Steve De and 1 lives by', Matney na the In line with this trend, nett. Everyone is invited jar that fV( with work on t no' tional committee Christian tickets reauired Men's the of Young boys association have appointed a com- to be made. The breakfast wffll K00; mission to study ways of "family start ai I a. m. 1 in? centerings" its programs, providing and life more education for family more opportunities for family activities. Results of the investigation and the commission's recom mendations will go to all Y.M.C.A Have you any land that isn't prodJ boys' work secretaries. Dr. Osborne, who is also presi be drained? Let us help dent of he National Council on Estimates and information discussed the fm Family Relations We specialize in the education in family use of films manufacW PIPE - IRRIGATION : courses. of the some PIPE ( Corrugated Metal ot (w! He explored briefly difficulties resulting from the PRICED - from factory to f involved in romantic us a card and our Represent, Drop of dif love. He discussed a study call with no obligation to yon. ferent personality types and how of stress. they react in moments PIPE It is essential that the showing of such films be preceded by prep! 1625 Wall Avenue, aratory work and followed by well Ogda led discussions, Dr. Osborne said. I Phone or I Pictures that are intended only to raise a problem for discussion can create anxiety and tension in the audience if the difficulties presented are not talked about afterward with a skilled leader In to The Northern Utah Soil Conservation and the Fish and Wild life Service are sponsoring a demonstration to show how ditches may be constructed through wet land by blasting with dynamite-Thdynamite will be placed at the Samuel L Forsgren farm, south west of Corinne at 10 a.m. Saturday. April 8, and the ex plosion will take place about 1:30. The purpose of the ditch to be blown Saturday is to increase muskrat production in that area, but ditches for drainage may be made in a similar manner, say offcials of the Soil Conservation Service. e Results of Field Trials Given First place in the puppy events of the Utah Field Trial Association held near here last weekend was won by Spunkanette, a female pointer owned and handled by Rulon W. Everton, Twin Falls, Idaho; second place went, to Jackie Tattersall, owned by Fred M. Hunter, Blackfoot, Idaho; and third to Song Spinner, owned by Ralph Spackman of Ogden. In the Open Derby, Jay Hawk er Mack, owned by J. W, Lincoln, Witchita Kansas and handled by P. R. Schaeffer, Twin Falls was the first place winner; Vandal's Lumiline, owned by Ray L. Davis, Layton, took second and Time Limit, owned by Mr. Everton was third place winner. On Sunday, in the Open All Age class, Monte M. Crockett, setter dog owned by Mr. Hunter took premier honors; Little Bee-be- . owned by R. L. Crowder, Salt Lake, took second place and Aldebaron, belonging to Harold Day, Salt Lake City was third place winner. A chuck wagon was put on the grounds by the Jayoees and the Bear River Wildlife Federation assisted with the i t. notice:; jl W. R. WHITE r. WORK MEETING TUESDAY FOR 2ND WARD i 02 WILL YOU W charge.. Developing a feeling of guilt and a sense of sin may be all right in religion. Dr. Osborne said, but his experience has convinced him that such negative feelings create a poor basis for building better personal relationships. It is easy to get across to people the idea that they have fallen down, but it is not very helpful. 20 LARGE GLADIOLUS BULBS-- W give extra long spikes of flowers this Large bulbs only, 25 EXTRA LARGE you have ever seen. and yt I NO f kR Best valJ BULBS $2 00 only. ?J. f We Also Rave the id I its ANNA MAE Early pure white BEACON Scarlet Yellow Throat COVER GIRL Tall, large pink CHAMOUNY Cerise pink, silvery efc! STOP LIGHT Perfect red SNOW PRINCESS Pure snow white j Many others. Send for complete list. It i that will flower this year. j H . Mrs- - North 1st West, 169 For your convenience Harry ii jve.: iof lata I site! land :ara .con mat: m P oster Shoe ::itor t WMQ. tatttt Si DSfflH LLJ-- VJ JUL- JL , I par U--L-xv ?aad PLUMBING & HEATING ATTENTION at Lake FOR EXPERT PROMPT tO mc TremoEt?r. orders C jf 0 GEORGE E.GE Mrs. Brig Williams of Sugar City, and Mrs. E. L. Thompson and daughter Linda of Rexburg, Idaho are spending a few days, this week, with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Foxley. Ogden. 3 -- iliie Ray Bolton spent the weekend in Eugene Oregon. Mr. ! $ sal -- Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ballard, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Jule Harris, visited in Salt Lake City, Saturday. Jf PHONE 4741 or 3201 Re ar Extra-curricul- so-fa- Peckenpaugh RELIEF SOCIETY Tremonton Second Ward Relief Society will hold their work and business meeting Tuesday, April 11th beginning at 10:00 a.m. In the meantime anyone interested in making a feather bouquet, of Richins Grouse Creek, please call work leader Afton Douglas at a birthday supper Tuesday Bradshaw for information on evening. There were fourteen materials needed. Luncheon will be served at 1:30. present. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Richins of Grouse Creek, spent the past Mrs. K. H. Fridal II spent the two weeks with their parents, weekend visiting In Salt Lake two weeks with their parents, City and Murray. EWE FHOi at Ogden for a week. and Mrs. Keith Gardner spent the weekend in Salt Lake Mr. IIOLDAWAYS RETURN FROM TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Ray HoldW accompanied by Mr. and itJ, Lyle Holdaway and Carol Clark, returned this week frZ a twelve day trip to UriSS for Education NEW YORK. long Michigan. While in the easttS marriage and family living is visited in Kentucky i the primary concern for girls, Louis, Missouri. anwr.f rapidly being expanded uV the estate he' jnieTe-shis is which of the evidence writings. other sr.d dianes of two white The 16 trees consist one a,h (Fraximns Americana), , Americana (Ulmus elm American , Canadensis hemlock (Tsuga L , American hollies (Iks Opaca), wo honey locusts (Gieditsia coffee two Kentucky . Diocia (Gymnocladus bean trees . Glabra (Tilia one Linden or Lime Sixteen one white mulberry (Morus Alba). WASHINGTON, D. C. Tulip-ifera.- ) trees still standing at George Washpoplars (Lirodendron are estate Vernon ington's yount The discovery of some old photoundoubtedly among those planted trees from by Washington himself. This has graphs eliminated many been annuonced following the appli- the list that up to that time had "Washington cation bv Mount Vernon families been designated of "detective methods" to history planted." to determine the announced fact. These are wet plate photographs Robert B. Fisher, horticulturist taken at about the same time of the at Mount Vernon since 1946, says Civil War, showing trees near the it Is virtually certain that 16 trees mansion. to an exhibition area near the man-lio- n date back to about 1785. Navajos Remain Relaxed In 1850 Benson J. Lessing wrote In a book: "I have before me the As World End Predicted original plan of these grounds AZTEC. N. M. Sixty thousand (Mount Vernon) made by Washing-ton'- a Navajos didn't bat an eye at a own hands. It is very care- medicine man's prediction that fully drawn, the exact position and the world was going to explode bename of every tree to be planted fore next winter. are laid down." But 300 white neighbors rushed Plan Disappeared down to buy extra copies of the This plan has disappeared, but weekly Aztec Review, which carthe book contains reproductions of ried the prediction, and discuss it portions of it. With this the Mount excitedly with their neighbors. The prediction came from an Vernon authorities have been able to locate the exact spots where elderly, unidentified medicine man Washington planted trees of various who noted that the ants and squirtypes. Today some trees of this rels had not bothered to store food r mild winter. As a type still are growing at these for this exact spots and are of the size result, he concluded that next winthey would be if Washington, or ter would never arrive. his slaves, planted them. His exact prediction was that tree-loveHis Shiprock, a huge volcanic slab Washington was a diaries contain scores of notes which can be seen for miles acrcss about trips he made to nearby Vir- the desert, would "blow big ship fall down on ginia forests to mark especially blow, go high in air, beautiful trees for transplanting to white man and John Collitr." Coltie mansion yards; of specimens or lier was commissioner of Indian seeds obtained for him by such affairs under the , late President people as Thomas Jefferson, or of Roosevelt. The medicine man said the white orders he had given his plantation man was to be punished because staff concerning tree planting. "It Is always In one's power to of his treatment of the Navajos cut a tree down, but time only can (which once drew a congressional and because "the place them where one would have investigation) crazy-like.- " man lives white is them, after the grd. (ground) The tribal leader indicated a few stripped of them," he wrote in 1795 from Philadelphia to his manager, Navajos would survive the desert holocaust he predicted, and that William Pearce. He also told Pearce that as a he would be among them. But he no hope (or any of his general rule whenever a field was held out to be cleared, some single trees or white brethren. Townfolk who plant crops half clumps were to be left. Indian lore and half by seed by May Hare Planted 42 catalogs indicated they were imSome students believed as late pressed by snapping up 200 extra as 1932 that around 42 trees dated copies of George Bowra's Aztec back to Washington's time, but Review. only the 16 now are Included in "However," the editor Bowra, the "undoubtedly planted by Wash;aid, "nobody's been impressed ington" class. enough to offer me his bank book, "It's entirely possible that Genhouse or farm yet." eral Washington himself took a hand in the actual planting of some of them, at least he probA dinner guest of the Don ably stood by and directed the work personally," Fisher . says. Peckenpaugh's last Sunday was "That ' certain beca me of the J. of t Mr. Trcmonton, Utah LEADER THE K f GIVEN TO REPAIRS 'City MELDRUM PLUMBING CO. TREMONTON FRI I A i V' Y 5 V" " T.4 SLEEP IN CLO ALF .. 1 1 A - m .'M s ..-- F . 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S.d or Soomlinor including white Pwr.packd The Brifham City with CM Optional DE LUXK EVERTON MATTRESS Cmr Straight U Chimin Car! mi si IFinae lawi-Prlc- d STANDARD S177900 Certain Busin." Coup. " S.da Strain" Priced At ROLI '1 COMFORT A CI . w"4-.- V EVERTON Alio "- U2 " ; t : i |