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Show rr B2AK r; :.rr ..J Continues Study On Diseases Of Tomatoes pathologists of Utah Agricul- tural experiment station are confident tomatoes they can produce a strain of that will resist both "curly top" and bacterial "canker,1' officials report-Sinc-e tomato diseases have proved thwnselves to be the cau.'e of poor inferior crops on Utah tosma, members of the experiment station etaff, Including- collaborators of the depart ment of agriculture, have made an effort to insure more and better tomatoes in Utah, as it is believed Utah (uw capable farmers and soil which is adapted to production of superior tomatoes. The partial control of canker was announced in 1934 when the fermentation process of seed extraction was recommended with strict sanitary methods of handling young tomato plants. However, to bring about control of the "curly top" problem the staff has even gone to South America for a solution, and it is hoped that soon a tomato can be developed which will bej resistant to the disease. Experimental plots at Hurrican, Utah, have Iwn used to furnish information conceding the disease, and trials show tftst the wild types, the home of which is South America, were more papkitant than others. Dr. L. H. Blood, collaIa 19.37-3- 8 borator of the department of agricul ture with the experiment station, led n expedition into various South American countries to collect plants wfl seeds of the native tomatoes, and work Is being carried on to develop the disease strain. SHOP THRU THE LEADER APS REAL ESTATE JAMES BROUGH INSURANCE UTAH rinding - Rolling - Cleaning ALFALFA - CLOVER AND LAWN SEED All Kinds of Seed Grain STOIIL f U e"m - , " T life and manners. The Bethlehem Girls' Council A came into being three years ago. women heard of enlightened irroup of a plan dealing with the problems frirU and set about of high-schoThey succeeded putting it into effect. ho well that the National Council of Women now has adopted the Beth- r lehem rian and stand ready to spon-aoover the girls councils ail ol country. d "Better Home Living" Living." These leaders represented most of the civic, business, agricultural, and church organizations of the Bear River Valley. They met in response to an invitation issued by Superintendent Hervin Bunderson, of the county schools, who called them together to help work out plans in connection with the government plan of Home and School Relationship and better home living now being begun in this Bunderson, Princi Miss Angelyn War-nic- k department of edu Olive Hale, coordi . f mini ill Bi .nun, .1. . iTTZ, off ICoBileff FOR PLUMBING SERVICE PHOfJE 10 8 Extra Heavy Rivited and Welded A 30 Gallon 40 Gallon ss tha written mixtions frankest sort of questions which tno lecturer answers in equauy nia-npr- frank language. Thanks to the Bethlehem Plan, girls of that "uncertain age" are going to have an easier time of it. They will be able to meet the world with greater assurance, knowing that what they have been taught will help make them better wives, better mothers and better citizens. The National Council of Women i3 going to act as a clearing house for communities throughout the country, providing them at cost with detailed outlines of the Bethlehem Plan. The National Council of Women, Inc., may be reached at International Building, Rockefeller Center, New York City. nator of family life education, each outlined various parts of the program trj-rrz- Ward Choirs Featured Eastern In Conference Concert Pheasant Projects Will Continue Here On Enlarged Basis selected from 59 wards be will presented in a massed ward The Eastern States Mu,i Approximately 2000 pheasant eggs choir music festival, the highlight of union will be held club Friday entertainment, week will be distributed to Utah conference 8:30 p. m. in the Gold for the evening, April 8, 1039, in Tfewhouse boys and girls sometime in May Saturday Hotel, Salt Lake hatching under hens, and 24000 day the Salt Lake Tabernacle. The choirs distributed, be locatold pheasants will also participating come from stakes Carl O. Davis, assistant extension ed in Salt Lake, Tooele and Davis ing, and novelty floor shf will be under the direction poultryman with Utah State Agricul- counties. of er J. Kirkham, as a announces. tural college, the gen1500 voices . . . . .... $10.73 013.55 1 6. BURGESS PLUMBING Pm'- projects are The pheasant by the cooperatively ing sponsored extension poultryman, J. Whitney MurFloyd, extension forester: D. P. leadclub and state girls' boys' ray, and fish game deer, and the state partment. At the end of the growing season the fish and game department will pay the club members 75 cents for each bird raised to maturity from day, old pheasant chicks and 80 cents for, each bird hatched from eggs, Mr. Da- vi3 said. During the past six years boys and girls in pheasant projects have turned back an estimated 4000 grown depheasants to the fish and game counUtah 12 different partment in ties. The project work has earned approximately $32000 for the club members. Eggs have been hatched under domestic hens and are usually grown to the age of 10 to 14 weeks. Usually the grown pheasants are released in the immediate locality. be- 4-- H Gabriel Martin Dies At Clinic Wednesday Gabriel Martin, prominent Both-we- ll farmer, died at the Clinic Wednesday evening of infirmities incident to old age. He was 79 years of age. Mr. Martin was an immigrant from Switzerland, coming to America 53 years ago. He has lived in Box Elder county for 30 years. He never married and has no known relatives in this country. He has a niece and nephew in Switzerland. During his long residence in this county, he has made many friends through his honest and upright dealings. He was a capable farmer and considered successful in all of his undertakings. Funeral servicese will he beld Fri day at 1 p. m. in the Ward chapel in Bothwell and interment will be made in the Tremonton cemetery. Spotted Fever Ticks Found In Mountains HOSPITAL NEWS - Leader J. S- A ' , r;;j 4 World-Telegra- m ri L 4":"y i : - ) i Smart Economy Home vice-chairm- Lock-woo- d smooth-workin- time-consumi- ng Wilson Lumber Co. . t Easter Flowers Lillies Potted Plants - Cut Flowers REASONABLY PRICED Add a Touch of Life and Color to Your Home or Give Them to Your Friends KORTH FLORIST mm UP 1 EASTER & HEATING - 1.200 Miles of Islands The Aleutian islands, owned by the United States, extend 1,200 miles westward from Alaska. UU' LmJ ' You CAN Do It ECONOMICALLY! ADD Beauty to Your Home and You Add Value, TOO! Select from our complete stock of QUALITY PAINT Building Material fSi.. i: u'e of The festival, sponsored by program. eral music committee of the Church All returned miSsionar,, ) of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Eastern States Mission arl i3 intended to creafa new interest in invited to attend. c',;"ward choirs. One of the objectives of of Reun commit the committee is the organization a voluntary choir in every ward of the church. The music to be rendered at AdsJBet Result the concert will be anthems and devoserchurch for suitable music, tional vices, by well known and home composers. J. Spencer Cornwall, director I of the Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir, will conduct the massed choirs of the festival, and Dr. Frank W. Asper will be at the organ. Frederic Dixon, well known and distinguished American pianist will be guest artist.' Mr. Dixon has crossed .VP! r- -- the continent many times on concert ' tours and has received the acclaim of music critics wherever he has appeared. In January of this year, after his recital in Town Hall, the New York stated: "Novel arrangement and unconventional selection were merits of Frederic Dixon's piano recital in the Town Hall yesterday. The welcome departure from the beaten track should be pondered and imitated by other pianists. To the performance of the program Mr. Dixon brought his intelligence, musicianin Ki ' ship, earnestness, and well developed labor 9 rewas The audience y duly technique. 9 coat v y sponsive." Months of preparation assure a concert of highest quality. Rehearsals were first held by the many ward in hardware for the choirs. This was followed by sectional rehearsals, and now for several weeks combined rehearsals have been held in the Tabernacle. Many of the doors in your Elder Melvin J. Ballard heads the new home will never require locking with a key, general music committee of the That is where wise home church sponsoring the festival. Tracy builders are making saof the Y. Cannon, 2nd vings, by the use of Bor-i- n Latch Sets. general committee, is in direct charge of the concert. A simple, inexpensive, but g A small admission charge will be ragged and latch that requires no necessary 25 cents for general admortising, mission and a few reserved seats at Made with inside locking 50 cents each. device for Bath and Bed Rooms. Dr. McKay addressed to all the Samples and further information gladly furnished. physicians of the state today a letter discussing Rocky Mountain spotted fever vaccination. Your physician is your best counsellor as to your protection against this devastating disease. If you are to be in mountain and desert areas, Dr. McKay warns, you should see your "Everything to Build Anything" physician at least ten days before TREMONTON, UTAH AND HAVE QUALITY mm i 1 4-- as previously planned. Mr. Bunderson announced a con ference of experts from the Department of Education at Washington, D C. who will be in the county for the week bginning on April 24. Since the project is one of com niunity cooperation it is necessary that all organized groups that have to do with adult or youth, education should help to carry it forward. Many ideas and ideals of education were brought forth, centering on the two chief kinds of problems of home living economic and spiritual. It was the opinion of a majority of those present that parents of the community would be willing to opc:: their homes as experimental labora tories for their sons and daughters to carry on any projects that the school Infected ticks which transmit might propose. Rocky Mountain spotted fever are be ginning to appear in mountainous areas at this aeason of the year, according to Dr. J. L. Jones, state health commissioner, who warned that all individuals who find it neces Golden Adams returned, home Sat- sary,- either-for, business or pleasure. urday following an operation for ap- to go lrito ottntahiOUs areas of the ' pendicitis. intermountain country should not fail White returned home Ray to take inoculations this di after a week's medical treatment. sease. Your family against Dr physician. Mrs. Hyrum Marble, Mrs. Jack Jones says, will be pleased to advise Shumway and Mrs. Vernon Woodruff you further in this matter. The State underwent minor operations during Board of Health recommends yearly the past week. Mrs. Marble returned inoculations for such people as find home April2 and Mrs. Shumway April it to go into areas where necessary 4. infected ticks may be found. Baby Forsgren 13 undergoing treatEach year cases of Rocky Mountain ment for second and third degree fever are reported from all spotted burns. The baby is slowly improving. sections of the state, according to Dr. John Carter, of Park Valley, is un- William M. director of the McKay, dergoing medical attention. division of communicable disease con Clain Stokes 3 J year old son of trol, which indicates that infected Mr. and Mrs. Leland Stokes, was opticks are rather widely distributed. erated on Sunday night for appendi- There were reported last year to the citis. His condition is good. state of health 19 cases of the board Mrs. H. Kunzler, of Park Valley, is disease, with four deaths. still confined to the hospital. Frank Alix had his tonsils removed April 1. Mrs. Roland Scoffield will return DRESS FOR home with her new baby Friday. A baby girl was born April 5 to Mr. and Mrs. Roland Allen. suq-cessf- ul Stater: " PLUMBING AND HEATING FIXTURES AND SUPPLIES If IT questions already successfully answered: How should you handle a boy wha tries to i;et fresh? Should you leave a boy when he has had too much io drink? What uo you think about going on blind dates? How do YOU rate at a dance ? 13 it right, when you have gone out with a boy a few times, to let him kiss you good-nighIn addition to these dramatizations, there are personal-appearanc- e and clinics and classes, usually reserved for senior girls, r'amous women physicians lecture on hygiene and health; then the girls hand in un- t? The plan is simply this: to let the eirls teach themselves, rather than be lectured to, through their own dramatizations of playlets of moralsi and manners. There is a question-bointo which the girls drop any do not questions they choose. They these quesFrom names. their sign tions the monthly plays are chosen. Members of the women's committee it prepare a rough script and turn over to the girls for polishing. Teenage language and atmosphere, of course, are employed. Helen Wetshimer. wha was sent to Bethlehem by Good Housekeepfirst-hanstudy of ing to make a the plan, relates her impressions in an article called "The Questions They Ask" in the April issue. She reports that all of Bethlehem agrees the plan is "the best thing that ever truck this town." The playlets range in theme anywhere from the problems of smoking, drinking and petting to how to acquire charm, poise and personality. The following are a few of the Superintendent pal C. E. Smith, of the state cation and Miss Tremonton, Utah KoMer ; ' more gracious because of these grows more pleasant, living their .rinds of questions they meetings; for here the girls unburden most the ask even sympathetic mother questions of morals would not a boy is in sight. district ELEVATOR CO. Phone 41 e a group of about fifty community leaders was asked to suggest subject matter for a proposed high school course for senior boys and girls. The course to be called "Better Home AGENCY I'lliE AND AUTOMOBILE j, in the teen-aggirls of Bethlehem, Pa., gather auditorium "to find out," The doors are locked; not a month the (B. It. II. S. Journalism Dept.) A new departure in school practice was made last Monday evening, when FARMS OR HOMES TREMONTON, ONCE Course Will Be Given Senior Boys and Girls MONEY TO LOAN vmr? Girb Of That 'Uncertain Age' Get Life's Answers Early Experiment Staff riant nrvrrt Hardware U Accessories Add New Life to Your Easter Outfit with Brfeht Accessories THEY COST LITTLE DOUDLE YOUR CHIC! Wallpaper DANCE SETS ALL LINGERIE For the Kiddies.. 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