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Show tSAJt RIVm -- Towcrsto Warned Insure Si -- Date t growers were tTtbey warn-8ri- cf have until Feb of the Ferry, chairman AAA committee, farmers have t Liady many for this year Smef has not already in- -' and crop for 19 wheat may only spring 8evim3eif 75 per cent of a his yield by insuring cor- Insurance Federal Crop insurance cooperative PTiJniiniatered by the county P9 and applications for Jt ? G JTSit ffZov - rT TiAA office, ty farmer may have the deferred. He premiums tf he is able as jtfeSI his premiums de--S the premiums nave may be to from AAA payments program. farm the 2d under tSuns are based on the record of of the individual farm. ""rfSftr unusual weather or oth- Premiums are n loss oondiUons. of wheat and Z V I ue wiUbepaidin in- - i dtmmXauivalent of wheat and when due wUl be paid in equivalent of wheat stored STsole purpose of paying for Warnick Family Makes High Record With Dairy Cows M. registered cows from Bangs disease. During this period which records have been kept Mr. Warnick has purchased three sires two of which were proved. During the depression, the first sire which was proved in Mr. Warnick's and his neighbor's herds, Carnation Superior Cinderella, (575529) was sold for slaughter because he could not be sold to a breeder for a price equal to that obtainable by slaughter. This bull had increased the butterfat production of his daughters an average of 105 pounds over their dams for the testing year. A second sire, Carnation Governor Pontiac (677086) was recently proved and sold to a large California dairy farm for a favorable price. This bull had increased production of his daugh ters by an average of 21 pounds of butterfat over their dams, which averaged 437 pounds of butterfat Average production records per cow are as follows: 1931, 377 pounds of butterfat; 1932, 453 pounds; 1933, 331 pounds; 1934, 392 pounds; 1936, 350 pounds; 1937, 318 pounds; 1938, 370 pounds; ;1939, 408 pounds; ;1940, 412 pounds; and 1941, 502 pounds. Mr. and Mrs. Warnick together have been local club leaders for 26 years and their son, Elderidge was awarded a trip to the National Dairy Show at Memphis, Tennessee last fall aa a result of his outstanding dairy projects. For Victory: Buy Bonds ten-ye- Successfully boosting production and profits from dairy herds by a e planning program is the achievement of Merrill N. Warnick of Pleasant Grove. Mr. Warnick, who is president of the Utah Dairy Federation, has increased the annual production of his dairy herd from 377 lbs. of butterfat per cow in 1931 to 502 lbs. in 1941, according to Lyman H. Rich, extension dairyman of the Utah State Agricultural college, The National Holstein Association has verified the 1941 record. This increase was brought about by building better quality livestock through the use of proved sires, good management, and efficient feeding methods, Mr. Rich points out. When the first tests were made in 1931, Mr. Warnick had a small registered herd but by 1935 most of the original cows had to be removed from the herd due to mastitis, breeding trouble, and bloat, but a few descendants of the foundation herd remained. But this wasn't the end of Mr. Warnlck's trouble for in 1935 the drought forced him to lease his cattle to a dairy in Salt Lake county and still later when Mr. Warnick got his herd back on his farm he lost two long-tim- VALLEY LEADER. TlfCESDAY, ITCRUART 12, IU2 ar 4-- H stock Club in Garfield county on "the ."iSTfeature of the crop open shed for dairy cattle will be givFrench Missionaries teat when year is en at the meetings. Recreation will French missionaries visited Indo-Chih of f?jmer insures any part include as games, dancing, procampfire early as the Eighteenth Ibeat all the wheat he grows is and campus tours. gram, century. Imatically insured. Separate neces- separate farms are not insur-rogmmt- na PENROSE World'. Largest Aircraft TLere is no company J ia tie The new Douglas 3 is the largIt United State, army because when Mr. and Mrs. George Hewett are est airplane ever constructed. the for the of in Willard this week visiting with Mr. has a winga span greater than It the ij'Etera was using letter, 1C13 the in cf adopted building. companies height and Mrs. George Woodward. were written carries a bomb load of 18 ton. letter. "I" and Mr. and Mrs. Ferry L. Stanf ill and and fully loaded weighs 2 tons. alike. Mrs. Arthhr Pederson of Tremonton were Ogden visitors last Wednesday. Mrs. Eff ie Petersen, of Brigham, is BY &5 epson THg CUM PS visitini this week with her daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Jack '3? ' look, requests I From my thousands of V Leak. J EMPLOYEES AStOM3" ME T& Mr. and Mrs. Fred L Petersen, of v I I TAKE PART OF THEIR. ? Brigham City, spent Saturday with V SALARIES To BOY Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Shuman. A very delicious dinner was served. The Boy Scouts furnished the pro gram in meeting Sunday night commemorating National Boy Scout week The leaders are Harley Granger and I B-1- 17-sto- folks son-in-la- Emery Nelson. Mrs. Morgan Miller attended the meeting In Tremonton Saturday. Help ful suggestions were obtained in the preparation of foods. Mrs. Miller is our Relief Society work and business leader. Fred W. Peterson and Leonard Peterson were in Huntsville Saturday visiting with Mrs. Theadore Fuller. Bishop and Mrs. Jesse F. Peterson and Mrs. Alice Miller were in Brigham Saturday on business. Oleen Shuman, Rolf Nelson, Bob Winzeler, Reese Allen and Coach Smith were all visitors at the U. S. A. C. Saturday. After a tour of the campus Coach Smith took the boys to the Blue Bird Cafe and treated the boys to a very delightful dinner. 1 poli-JiTf- or -For Schedule Short Course At State College Leaders 4-- H club lead- Utah annh twenty-fourt'en will attend the on the school campus ual training tf the Utah Stat Agricultural college February 23 to 26, David Sharp Jr. I More and club J than 200 Fem Shipley, leaders, Throughout 4-- H assistant state announce. the four-da- y and conference sessions at which vital national problems will be general 4-- H state disc- speakers will be and departmental meetings in the afternoon. Dr. E. G. Speakers will include Peterson, president of the college; William Peterson, director of the Extension Service; Dr. John C. Carlisle, 'assistant to the president; Dr. C. L. associate Anderson, professor of physiology and public health; Mary Omen, clothing expert of New York City;; and Extension Service specialists. During departmental meetings, the leaders will be divided into 6 groups club project according to their work, Groups will include clothing, foods, home furnishings, dairy, sheep, jeef, swine, crops and gardens, and ussed by prominent kid in the morning ; ? 4-- H j 'poultry. ! Demonstrations by girls from the Alston Clothing Club on shoe-fittin- g and by boys from the Spry Live Luiiiiiieir jnfiijH'ise says... All forty members of the cast of the "Musical Steelmakers" have signed up to buy United States Defense Bonds, under the payroll allotment plan, and are buying their bonds regularly every pay day. er work. Mutual news B. S. Bercovici, analyst, will be married shortly to Miss Katherine Hahn, of Cleveland. Miss Hahn, talented young sculptress, has been working and studying in New York for the last six years. Mr. Bercovici started his journalistic career as a youth of bleach linens, may need nothing more than sunshine if you leave extra inoisture in the material, after final rinsing. The damper the fabric the better the job Old Sol TO two-wor- yellowed ' will do in bleaching! B. S. Bercovici, VtoDR todwase and Which is available to you for remodeling and repairing the Home or Farm Buildings Dealers In CASTLEGATE COAL House and Kitchenware Paint Farm and Home Needs Mutual's daytime news analyst, heard daily at 9:00 a. m., KLO. Graduated from Columbia University, wrote scripts in Hollywood and did general publicity work in New York. Entered radio 13 in his native Bucharest, Ruin 1937. Later he joined Mutual's mania. staff of news analysts and has his orchestra Martin and Freddy since established himself as an outen Bands" recently heard "Spotlight news commentator. will soon appear in his first movie, standing "The Mayor of 44th Street." Freddy is scheduled to make two more pic- Charles Kullman who is heard often tures when he has finished his cur- on the Metropolitan opera broadrent engagement at the Waldorf-Astori- a casts. Mr. Kullman was a crack baseball player at Yale where he in New York. The National Farm and Home was studying medicine and fiHour is now heard from 10:30 to 11 nancing his studies with singing a. m. Mondays through Saturdays. engagements, which eventually led From baseball player to opera to his becoming a leading tenor of star may seem an unusual transi- the "Met," where he has been tion but it describes the career of singing for the past seven years. CLAM IKl Building Material "Skimp to Beat a Skunk!" tussle reThe recent Louis-Baquired five hours of preparation by the Mutual engineering department. This involved setting up and testing six microphones. Then Louis polished off Baer in just two minutes and 46 seconds. "Baukhage Talking" that simd statement introduces ple, a new program over KLO Monday through Friday at 11:00 a. m. with Baukhage, as special Washington correspondent for the Blue Net- ""lll w We Now Have a Large Stock of Ethel Clark's Radio Flashes Victory: Buy Bonds A.y I'S y,-?.- -f 6 Ml if Then buy defensb savings stamps instead of new linens that the sun will soon again shine on an America at peace! Farmers' Cash Union "Your Good Will Our Best Asset" Tremonton Phone 35 tefli f A (Hi and outstanding leader of the cas 1 3 u is-i.- ix ; ;..!, 3i" I I hi-' ! - s "kp: v It it m Designed to keep America's cars serving for the duration. . To prolong tho life of bUSs your car to avoid many major repair to protect your pocketbook to preserve See your your motor car transportation. Chevrolet dealer today for full details of Chevrolet's original "Car Conservation Plan' and keep your car serving well by keeping It well serviced. . " aura J X A f.'OSILE NATION IS A STRONG NATION ttJl K Lj STAMPS , J. MrTTT 32G THE VOICE OP LINCOLN DOWN THE AGES- -"I alw.jr. feel inclined, when I "". "lining to soldiers, to impress upon them the importanc. of success in today, but for .11 time to come, that we should perpetuate for . . d free government which we have enjoyed .11 our lives. u. Let ruin, of 8peed flna, m quiu ,ober. ,oubt"-that a ju,t God, in Hi. own good time, will gWe u. the , e ut u hjrPM to w'tit ywJWr Fronk Chevrolet Co. TREMONTON, UTAH PHONE 20 |