OCR Text |
Show THE. T7nnn we watched the j winter. We liked Vfru rvnVi tUrt iiiujj tmr Ul1" are plants- They growing bigger films of stories i v Vltfll' . , nlants and bigger. ana we .J to s' Miss Phyllis Christensen's First hav made """y feeds. some same Easter ,a thintrs Grade Now that spring is here, we in a glass Jar, feel like big first graders. We near toe can do so many things. first The and second .?ul ,m neaand saw seme film grade Mrs. Rhead's First Grade RoomWe seeds learned strips radish about went ; many things fish, turtles roots SPRING the leaves and animals in science. We saw ,ln of the how Eskimos live in summer and Spring, oh Spring, What happy nays you Dring. It is the time of the year when' the robins hniin r,H ine Deauurul birds are busy building a nest, and many little eggs will be covered by the SUPPLY AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES ifllTP Mother bird's breast. totem AH GOi lini cut co- tirtcid el itoy errugeid irl We, the children of Mrs. 's Hoar ! root, loio Ire grade hope that your t tk botl, mo oco- Easter eggs won't fade. We wish owcol preitttieo Jo jrow groin. Tkty'ro a happy Easter. you oiy to fill and Reporters, Ha Rae Jackson provide lor oovy re aovol of Ofa a. Fred Selman &r0Und - - E SEtVICE EASY TO SET UP Tkt Colon AM iitol GrcA torn comei I knoki , AVAILABLE DEALERSHIPS and 4 3 oi 26 DISTRIBUTOR Soli toko City. Uioh jice of Bond Election of Box Elder County y Education State of Utah Box Elder of ffej County, District; IS HEREEIY GIVEN that a special election will IW Elder County School District, Box Elder CountJy, ii on the 25th day of April, 1.950, at which election there fritted to the registered voters who have paid a property I said district, during the year next preceding such i NOTICE - following question, kinds nd Elder County. State of Utah, be authorized to "ii sell bonds of the District in the amount of Five H Thousand Dollars ($500,000). in the denomin-Bex i Thousand Dollars ($1,000) each, numbered ji to five hundred (500), both inclusive, the bonds to t in numerical order Thirty Thousand Dollars One Mr. and Mrs. J. Barfuss and Mr- and Mrs. Diverge Kelly sun Floyd and Mr. and Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Priest School is not all work, for Charles Rirf ci PouLen, Montana, called at is here spring and the boys and and Friday of last week in Idaho U.e Robert Allen home Friday, on their way home from Cedar Sirls of the eighth grade are Falls. City. Iwkina: forward to developing a Softball and baseball team. We Sunday visitors at the J. G Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hansen of hPe to have as successful a Burgess home, were Mr- and Mrs. Salt Lake City, spent the weekai.x in scftball and baseball aslDuane Lower and daughter Sar- - end with her parents, Mr. and we had in basketball. dra of Ogden. Mrs. John C. Barfass. We are anxiously looking for- - ara w some com- petition in softball and baseball. inter-scho- ol Mr. Garfield's Eight grade Reporter, Floyd John and Kirk Waldron ' , j STUDENTS HOME FOR WEEKEND VISITS Melva Castleton, spent the weekend with her parents. Mr. and Mrs- MeMn Castleton, Liane Bunne11 and Betty Deakin from B- Y- U' were nome for the wcekend also. - - - i TI,E KELLERS RETURN j TO TREMONTON Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Keller turned home this week, after spending the winter in Arizona. MAIN powder. After the cotton is harvested, it is made into threads, cloth.es, the seeds are made into cotton seed oil. soap, cottonseed flour, and feed for cattle Mrs. Anderson's Fifth Grade Reporter John Christensen had an interesting project art We learned to draw figures of dancing girls, gilrs jumping the rope and roller skating, hay pitchers, boys play- With Less Work! Here's a smart farmer. lie knows that electricity can do a lot of jobs around the barn, in the pump house, in the farm home and do those jobs better, faster and at the lowest possible cost in money and in manual labor. THE STORY OF A B'G SHOT ROSSEN ROBERT t S p .Pirn We ie He's preparing to Got More Work Done Academy Winner! ' V in 1) Garland THIS YEAR'S they have airplanes that spray the fields with yellow ing basketball, football, marbles, on May 1 in each of the years 1952 to 1961, both flying kites, swimming, track, and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) on May 1 and boxing. the 1962 to to bear racing both 1965, inclusive, i years We drew these figures by havnot to exceed three per cent (3jf ) per an- -i id the purpose of raising money for purchasing ing students from the school i for buiiding or purchasing one or more school pose for us. It was difficult to s, I sid supplying the same with furniture and and sometimes we became do, school and for improving grounds?" an shall be held in the five (5) school representative discouraged. We p'aced them on and the a background to suit the figures. d the polling places within said precincts fiave been appointed to conduct the election are as Starts SUN., PRuDUCTIOH Of rrrrf-rrT- If your farm is not taking full advantage of electricity, make it your Number 1 project this year to install electric equipment. You'll be money ahead in the years ahead. - . MON, TUE., April 3 9, 11 B RODERICK CRAWFORD won the ACADEMY AWARD for a MALE ACTOR for his performance in "All the kings Men" SEE THE YEAR'S BEST PICTURE. CP2 UTAH POWER Horn. Ownership ate of - juage. ' School is not all work, for now we have started the baseball team. Mr. Orwin is the coach for th is coaching and Mr toe boys. April 7, we are going to puti on an assembly. Mrs. Nesson is helping us with it. We are rushing through our oook reports. Spelling. Social Studies, and other subjects to finish them. April 20, we start our nomi-- , nations for student body officers. Mr. Orwin's Seventh Grade Reporters, Karen Smith and Bobby Gephart rne students of the eighth grade are very relieved because the State Achievement Tests included Reading, Vocabulary, Arithmetic, funda- Reasoning, Arithmetic to-w- it: l ie Board of Education of Box Elder County School not by a ly D sea-isla- nd SUPPLY CO. I f.O. II carefully ongi neerod thol l men con totily id I p i ten llton Ctf lull doy. Ottoili ToSoy. WRITE OR WIRE WHOLESALE J down. THE STORY OF COTTON Cotton first came from the continent of Asia, mostly from China and India. There are two of cotton, and staple cotton. The grows on the islands off the coast of Georgia and the Carolinas. Staple cotton is grown in the United States. When cotton i s planted the g r o u d is plowed six inches deep. The cotton needs five or six months of hot or warm weather without frost. If it rains too much it will make the crop small and may ruin it entirely. The farmers have trouble with the boll weevil. To kill the wee-b- il sea-isla- .... OM - 1 Gun-neU- IO0f . that Spring is here lATON GRAIH BINS THEFT . Mrs. Rhodes Sixth Grade Reporters, Deanna Eggli and Kennard Hales S-- WtATHtl fIGHI HIE flOOF IO0ENT HOOF . see mem- - -- bt s . lit-i- e i . r"u ... j iiity maue....a verv Drei:vJ hr.rHnana r wuuia i:ne you to come and means lean n;,0. ".,,. V. AO.1 LEADER & LIGHT CO. - A TAX PAYING COMPANY - local Control sites, necess--aratu- 1 FIRST SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVE PRECINCT ; 7. I Judges of Election Mirl Mason, Earl Wood, Ariel Sorensen Albert Aebischer, Crosley Glenn, Max Pvde Roland Toombs, Parley Tingey. Chester W. Stokes Polling Place Districts Howell School Blue Creek Store Boo the Valley School I iley .'.cry LD.S ii and jftaricti Clear Creek School 'and neidmg School L. D. S. L. D. S. Myrtle Gleason. Ruby W. Nielson. George H- - Church Plymouth School Dewey Lamb, William J. Rudd, C-Mary E. Estep, Gibbs Grace John, Leslie Hoskins, J. Portage School THIRD SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVE PRECINCT - Incts Judges of Election Polling Place Jennie Adney, Leona G. Cheal, Julius H. Campbell LaVon A. Christensen, Mary A. Anderson Charles Oil cck 6 tts Archie A. Munns, Parley Christensen, Amos P. Hansen James Peterson, Joseph Nelson, Floyd W. Adams Jesse F. Peterson. Gerald Leak, J. Wilford Miller Earl Firth, Mrs. Rosco Anderson, Ella Anderson Eva Green, Vaudis M. Brough, Ruth Watland Corinne School Bear River City School Kwood School Thatcher School D. s. Church Bothwell School L. nets Tremonton School FOURTH SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVE PRECINCT Judges of Election Polling Place - FIFTH SCHOOL :ricts f J-- J ! more mies per S. Church Ward Lincoln feU(?i Krhi sha11 be bv t our ours per are not talking here about excessive speed. Sensible people, regardless of the power they have at their command, obey the laws of the highway and the rules of safety. We are talking about distance about the miles you can cover at the wheel of a 1950 Cadillac entirely within the legal limits. First, let's consider an hour . . . You settle yourself comfortably into the engine into action and within seat, touch the a matter of minutes, you begin to understand what we mean. When the light turns green, your rightful place in the traffic line is definitely assured. You take easy advantage of every opening that presents itself. On the hills and grades, and float on you merely give the engine a little throttle loss of speed. up without the slightest Braking is so certain, steering so easy, power so abundant deep-cushion- soft-throat- ed ed jay r that you move instinctively ahead at every opportunity. And at the end of an hour, you can scarcely believe the odometer. Did we say an hour? It seems little more than half that time! You're so relaxed and at ease that not until the sun shows red in the west do you realize that you've been sitting behind the wheel for a much longer time than you'd planned on driving today. And how wonderful you feel! Both you and your passengers are carefree and happy as you decide to call it a day. Maybe just a little bit hungry because you probably forgot to stop for lunch! And where did you get to? Most owners say it's a good one hundred miles beyond their expectation. Better come in and see about this. You'll need only an hour because an hour will reveal what a day would be like. Ray Booths Abinadi Tolman, Ethel W. Walker Marion G. Perry N. Peter Marble, Clarence Fryer REPRESENTATIVE PRECINCT Judges of Election Polling Place P; Vfi w ' Suzie W. Facer Ezra W. Nebeker., Fred A. Woodyatt Leland E.Thorn e Ruth D. Barnard, Wendell P. Nebeker,M. Peterson C. Wilford Hailing, Clifford Hansen, Samuel Welch, James S. Harper, LaRue Yates, Willard School ferry School Mantua School L- D. s. Church Honeyville School Deweyville School ,1 , Davis Robert J. Potter, Loda Oyler, Hazel Riser Leland S. Capener, Thomas J. Udy, Karl Welling Eva F. Munson, Earl Holt, Oleen Garn Mryon T. Hansen, Odell Bigler, Joseph A. Enckson Church Collinston School jCity V Park Valley School SECOND SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVE PRECINCT Judges of Election Polling Place Garland Public Library f ' Luella Tracy, Charles Montgomery, Almy Fehlman Cora E. Lind, William Babbitt, Curtis Jtelson George Paskett, Delbert Tanner, Frank Lee John Vance, Vernal Montgomery, Richafd Meacham Junction School Grouse Creek School t f r , Charles E. Kunzler, Antonio Olague, Rudger Palmer JHorton Hurd, Dan Hickman. D. G.Nelson Earl Teeter, Hyrum Campbell, Duane Campbell Church Yost School i Lakeside C , Snowville School I ' ' Elizabeth M. Eskelsen, Joseph II. Peterson Charles N. Sheffield inriiin o.-orctpiin v Philllns. Martin L. Reedcr of the which balloti will be furnished by the Clerk be them :theTOcWschwiDistrk Election, to 'MterTV-- - VV" :' ." "ff by SXrPilr sha" be opened at the hour of 7:00 o'clock A. M. and will be kept the hour of 8:00o'clock P. M5h.;! ' to vote at said election unless he .shall be a registered JottT residing ?P&Blttt5Precinct tax in which he olfers to vote and shall have paid fiirict r ng the year next preceding such election. ?ofU;a???F' the Board of Education of Box Elder County School District B.)X Elder ' c'"ucl ihis notice to be given as required by law tnis 2th aay of Marc.'.. p,ac(? cl0Si'd at - ! Ionard of Box President Board oi FiucationBox Elder L. Bishup Eldrr County School District, County. Stale of Utah. Sandail Motor Co. Wayne dlvl TKCMONTON vJT |