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Show RSXR VAUXY LHADR. THURSDAY, ween, v.e iue naving a lair for our . , parents, or any one who wants to . Tmn,.j' liaraiierS come. Miss Craig put up a sample of Get Planting: Advice our penmanship. She put up our poem SCHOOL NEWS M Asi maps tlmm we maae when ' That io--.,... W&en "'" "T .he teachers and prin we were studying about the pioneers ., Thatch-- , and Utah. She also put up our Tre-- j onton, Elwood n or held a monton and sugar books. BoUiwell 't& te and country was. inPaiient ntm . , .. ! OUT v,, rame . - nard thiDKins. f".r that ,... think) . i"c .,'Msion ?3 at Tremonton STour the ! f It is to Wk tx over prop85' vS . u' ipm h fr aD power & " of " the .,,,, iv., would irwn - caTto ' chil- - therr Za. It was a show on dental 'holrtflll ni'fih. (J 3 was a ..Ai.tr vc.j hich r- - Council News-- The . ,c.t nrp'nriiy.f'd e .h00 Has ... IS At tVip wealth oo"". a- much rvrpcnt VjdedHCiu" campaigning mate charts and graphs we, as a group , lust classes, separate in behalf of our efforts the Utah us their & Light Company gave Lr 'torium for a show room. With the assistance of Doctor Green, the 't, of teeth went over very well. 'Z film was obtained through the of Miss Verle Baker, school ... Mve it fi "se, and along with Miss and our council advisors, will probably be hearing tm. f Tou i our acuviuco u i intend wt Nona much - to make a go of it. At meeting we elected officers .. Minors: chairman, Minnie Mae Bonnie Jean Whit- Potter; secretary, By Minnie Mae oner r ; Wre are Ess Adams' First Grade a Dutch program Friday We have made a stage and We are all on tinted the scenery. f af-Ns- program, we nope me to school Friday fie our parents , afternoon. Adams Marilyn By J ) ffiss . We Sanford's Second Grade studying about birds. books about birds. li kinds of birds. We have to put the pictures in. We are We have an enve- - Rasmussen's Second Grade our room we have art. We have big poetry book. The book is full j This Tliir our mothers are coming to our ana see our work. We have a have our folders on the We have our art wor k up in the In and also some veiy nice poems. By Mary Eldredgre We jarerry s rourm uraae we are g ready for our exhibit. We put f string along our black board and our booklets on the cord. We it our washing. We invited our ats. We are going to show them ;e of the things we have made, is some of them soap carvings, pIslets, maps, covered wagons, peo- 2d other things. Lola Dean Hill J (-- r iOss Craig's j. T" t "'Shorn .. ' . " ,: "iaP, m earlv exDlorers ' " WLhave ....,-.-.- . i ' . . J Fourth Grade t . THE FOUNDING OF THE lavomes now FltasT EMPEROR ac- ex- - r n one-ha- THE PRESENT EMPEROR, WILL BE COMMEMORATED WITH FESTIVALS ANP rw CELEBRATIONS THROUGHOUT THIS YEAR. IJoSYCCOOHRINeAT NlKO- ONE OF THE IOO.OOO SHRINES AT WHICH MILLIONS OF """s gardners to remember, Mr. Bachelor Button, Clarkia, Calendula, place And they always have a very pretty Bentley says, is the names of those face. By Maurine Brown noweis hardy enough to stand the early cold weather. Heie they are: Annual Alyssum, Mr. Orwin's Fifth Grade Friday. April 12th the fourth, fifth, and sixth grades had a dance. We danced from get better. To prevent having poor 2 0.clock tm 3.00 teeth we must eat the right kinds Tn aninmetic we know how to do of food and brush them twice a day. addition of fractions, subtraction of One of the proper foods to eat is fractions, and multiplication of frac milk, which is the best food for oui tions. teeth. Next there are vegetables and In social studies we are studying fruits, such as raw carrots, lettuce, about the Southwest and California. cabbage, spinach, apples and celery. Darlene Stenquist Two other things that are good for the teeth are cod liver oil, although Mrs. Crowther's Fifth Grade Fri-- ! il hasn't a very good taste, and bread. day Mrs. Priscilla Christensen and the White bread isn't very good for the Bazooka band played for the fourth, teeth. We should eat brown bread. fifth and sixth grades to have a dance By LaVon Thomas The 16th, 17th and 18th of this month we are having an exhibit for Mr. Jeppson's Seventh Grade We our parents. We have art work, pen- are having a school exhibit and our manship and other thing3 up where parents are to come to school and they can see it easily. We have also see it and talk over the progress of their child. In our room in our disdecorated the windows and wall. We hope our parents will enjoy play we will have some art work we themselves. Roma Jean Hill have done from September to April, also penmanship papers of about 38 Miss Maughn's Sixth Grade Mon- pupils. In our social studies class we are day morning Miss Maughn had us about Russia. How it grew, studying our write samples of best writing- in how the people live today and when we were to When down penmanship. was first began and its rulers gymn she put them up on the bulle-- i Russia tin board so that our parents could from then to the present day. We see them when they came to visit our find Russia a very interesting nation room Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs-- e to study. The baseball teams are practicing g day. She also put that picture and the girls team has not lost a ly Conger and Ralph Barns Drew, out in the hall. Last Thursday she game yet. Friday they play the team. We are sure they will had us cut bird houses out of scratch win. on trace and colored them papaper In Miss Maughn's class we are makper. Tuesday morning she picked out a lot of our best pictures and put ing bird houses and a few of them them on a large piece of paper and appear on our room display. Geraldine Nealson hung it on the black board. Last in- the fourth fifth and day grades Mr. Henrie's Eighth Grade For vited us to a dance and if we didn't dflnnA wp cnt flpnt lin tr rvnr rnnrrt the first time in the history of the and got ten pages of arithmetic to school ,we are making a year book. do. Some of the boys went out to We intend to leave this for a standard for other years and hope it will track and didn't dance very much. be carried on as well as it is this By Ralph Woerner year. We sincerely wish to thank the On Mr. Garfield's Sixth Grade and teachers who are helping students over went school our 1940, April 8, to the Utah Power & Light Co. to to make this successful. By Eleda Vee Smith see a show on teeth. I think we learned many things. Some of them were In the room we Eighth Grade that teeth helped in our personal apan art exhibit have been up putting pearance. If we have teeth that are of all art we have drawn through the to we should to go decay, beginning the dentist and have them filled. If school year. In this art exhibit we we wait until the tooth starts to ache have designs, pictures and figures. We have a small exhibit of penmanbefore we go to the dentist it may and manuscript writing. ship too be late. By Jack Haight We may have bad eyes, a bad heart, or bad kidneys caused by bad teeth. If we have our teeth fixed we will Sport Coat, Slacks - Cliffs Clothicry pre-seaso- AND DIRECT ANCESTOR OF to Gilbert Bentley. How er F S Nation. Seed of certain ropu ar annuals is not damaged by cold weather, he ex- Plains and seedlings that come up will prove able to withstand late cold j tO,-00- JAPANESE EMPIRE BY JlMMU TENNQ, y sow the 01 It ia hard to believe but a skillert 0 ship building force of more than men, is now working on Naval construction in the Government Navy yards and private ship building plants of the United States. This force of lf civilians is almost of the number of officers and enlisted men in the Navy itself. For every one of the civilians employed constructing these various ships, there will have to be at leaet one Navy man for the efficient operation of these ships after they axe accepted by the Navy. Naturalljr under such conditions, there is a greater opportunity than has existed in years for young men to learn a skilled trade and to be advanced to the higher pay grades. The Navy is now accepting young men for enlistment much more quickly than has been the policy in the past In other words a young fellow does not have to wait six or eight months before being called for enlistment. You young men who are about to graduate from high school, have you thought of the future ? The Navy offers a wonderful chance for a career and security for your old age, or if you should decide to go back inta civilian life after one enlistment, you are, with the trade learned wftije tn, the Navy, well equipped to i&ko a responsible position in your copcumm-It-y. ANN1VERSARV srasss ,...,! their pockets ,. ,.f U1 a "uiuocr Fri-poetr- y. Luetta, Gloria. Neva tool 7" world. Our we1 Dew-eyvil- j Jfiss jiek ow- - no anrl that Wes-ikin- ' Beverly Goldsberry Iflco'PptArarvn'a finished our map H 2 60 0T-OF HE tSns Z JAPANESE WILL PAY HOMAGE -- 10 US. re I ic minutes at1 Birds build their nest in a very high Light Company's "t 7"::, This ' ' tlPR-- le I940 l r I.J t.7 net .m CrtlinUI 1.11(1 BY 3? WLIKETHAT OF THE CI ON rrCtTKAI MflMTW BY MONTH THE GREAT EVENTS AND DEEDS OF JAPANESE HISTORY It tJE FLOWN AT THE NATION WILL ATTEND LIT HE WHOLE FESTIVAL. DENOTINO ILETIC Ul NOBORIwCfiRPSTraAMERa ' THE THE 'PFATUrjING- THE ANCIENT NUMOE.R. OF SONS IN RTS OFPENClNtr ANU1 HOUSEHOLD AND SYMBOL IZJMGr COURAGE AND IWKEVTLINCr C7krt-- tt BOY-S- TOURNAMENTS, - MfcM 1 STOI CISM ' rue urrininuuLi Fincu. m JAPt)M FOn THE HHVFt y fE7ERTTfifCTP (Submitted by J. P. Woocffing, CMM, U. S. NAVY). 3 California Poppy, Cheiranthus, Larkspur, Pansy, Petunia, Annual Poppy, Portulaca and Snapdragon. Of these flowers, Clarkia, Larkspur and Annual Poppy may prove even healthier if planted early, for growth in cooler environment is more natural to them. Where this early spring planting is performed, Mr. Bentley advises that the seed be broadcast and then raked lightly into the soil. All annuals which perform satisfactorily when planted in early spring may also be planted in the fall, when cold weather has definitely arrived. Commodity Credit Corporation has announced that as of April 1, 1940, the outstanding loans of the corporation and lending agencies under the 1939 wheat plan program aggregated $74,166,051.06 secured by 105,198,463 bushels of wheat. In Utah 294 loans granted on 494,793 stored bushels of wheat amounted to $296,383.67. young pigs, lambs, calves, or colts should be given some of the best roughage Rapid-growin- g sun-cure- NOTICE OF TRAFFICOMETER monton Daily Reminder. To all concerned and to the (By II. S. Carter Professor of Highway Engineering Utah State Agricultural College) 1. Q. How is the arm signal given that indicates the slowing down or stopping of a vehicle? A. The arm is extended downwar d pointing toward the ground. 2. Q. How is the arm signal given that indicates a left turn? A. The arm is extended horizontally pointing in the direction the vehicle is to turn. 3. Q. How is the arm signal given that indicates a right turn? .A. The arm is extended upward bent the wrist so that the hand is pointing in the direction the vehicle is to turn. 4, Q. At what distance from the pro posed vehicle maneuver should the arm signal be given ? .A. During not less than the last one hundred feet prior to the maneuver slowing down o. d 5. Q. Please take notice that our partnership has been dissolved and I any not responsible for any obhgatlon.j incurred by M. S. Turner. The TVev monton Daily Reminder is owned an ' operated locally. D. A. cf Dated this 18th day April, 1940. DAVID C. WATKINS, Manager of the Tremonton Daily Reminder. an arm or mechanical device signal be given prior to turns,', slowing down or stopping (4 ft. motor vehicle? Yes. CAM SXout of. every TtTAf Troffle Ibtolrtitt Dart tfapp&t After tmmtn f coafcMMM turning. WIIM - it nil If t - 1 F J t M -- $rmtjmo EXOIHIV! NfW SHOT On oil models at no extra cost. Only Chevrolet hoi thi marvalout Exduiive Vacuum-PowShift . . . supplying 80 of the shifting effort automatically, and requiring only 20 driver effort. er rum, m Of THI 10T" LONGEST Frota front of grille to rear of body (181 Inches) Chevrolet for 1940 it the longeet carsl of all bwest-prlce- d snrin fvvm general-publi- : Does the state law require that VACUUM-rOW- z DISSOLUTE In the matter of the dissolution of the partnership of David C. WatkJkna and Madison S. Turner in the T "THI ViW i Advancement for Young Navy Men DDI THIS S A BIRDS Birds are happy through the year ul uirm ma i.i .. . . e to the Greater Chance of , tt discussion pevs-ep- Vw- Err.irj EACH APRIL. 18, 1940 4 J m like These! , 11 A Complete Store for Gardners! a complete stock of "GARDEN CLOTHES" Spades, and Other Gadgets to make gardening more fun Seeds Galore . . . Plant Now and Celebrate .... 1 comWninfl oil the We have h.re. Rakes, . and Remember, only nchevrelet brlnfl. 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