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Show in tV Crst P. T. A. Post of. ofeeting ISext the Jj.iuraday en s' a at ne P.T.A. II will Trcmcnton their first meeting of the on Thursday niiht, Oct. 21 at the McKinley school. .:00 ,v r"'rs. E. G. Carter of the USA. vill Wk on "The Children's r; " She will bring with list of book suggestions to a , tlO fcr children. Mrs. Carter a survey on books in the Y e for children in the Box district and 5116 tFn r scho1 make a reoort cn the con- llyoHns found. 1 Hi6? good musical program is arranged. Machb1 Parents are urged to help meet a big suc" Every e this first C0R?J -- i VOLUME XXIV Ml IB TREMONTON CITY, UTAH, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 VOLUNTEER POLIO TRAINING CLASS AT BRIGIIAM, OCT. 2 BRYCE ERICKSON LOCATED IN WISCONSIN letter received this week from Elder Bryce Erickson, who GEORGIA VISITORS is serving as a missionary in AT TOLAND HOME Superior, Wisconsin, tells of the by attendinSpie's Bishop Jesse G. Williams and busy life he is leading there, and -- END FUNERAL IN of the varied experiences he had family of Axson, Georgia, spent while traveling without purse or a short time visiting with his TH DAKOTA sister Mrs. A. C. Toland and script during the summer. Following are excerpts from family, while enroute to Tetcn, r. and Mrs. Eldon Adams re Idaho to visit his daughter. Anhis interesting letter: ed Sunday evening from "We found the rural people as other daughter of Bishop WillLkton, South Dakota, where a rule much more friendly than iams, Mary Ann is attending went to atend funeral ser- those in the cities. Helping them school in Tremonton this winter. for their son's father-in- out when they needed help inEd Lehman. - creased their friendship toward us. Experience at milking cows, threshing grain, picking up potatoes, etc, came in handy . . . . The first night out back in May, was the only night that we slept out . . . Most of the people we came in contact with were farmers, but farming isn't done on too large a scale here too short a growing season. We met many different nationalities of first generation immigrants. The large majority' of those were Finnish people. It would have been nice to have been able to talk the-- language, because so many of them can speak little or no English." r. and Mrs. Hyrum Shumann the proud parents of twin October i, bom Wednesday, in Elko, Nevada. They now i five girls and one boy. , ;w Books i "VI r Library yde 3j f I i 4 ris Morris, Mrs. Leland and Mrs. Martha Stone hf T.ihrnrv Rnarrt wprp in Lake during the week to hase new books for the li- - SPEECH CONTEST SET y, which are expected to be FOR BEAR RIVER CITY Jhe shelves in the near fu- - A speech contest will be con-- I ducted Sunday evening in the K STAMPS AT Bear River ward under the diT OFFICE rection of Mrs. Axel Frederick-sestate WCTU speech director. inters are advised by the It will be held at 7:30 in conoffice that duck nection with the regular Sunstaff, for hunting migratory day evening service. ips 3 must be obtained before hunting season opens, and VERNON SMITHS are available at the Post HAVE DAUGHTER Mr. and Mrs. Vernon J. Smith are the parents of a baby girl : and Mrs. Lamoin Cowley bom Thursday, October 7. This Salt Lake visitors Tuesday. is their first child. j n, SOW YOUR VALLEY NEIGHBORS V NUMBER FIVE FLUMBERS ASSOCIATION MEETS IN TREMONTON 21-2- A IN GIRLS BORN TO tUM SHUMANNS 14, 194S "FLYING DOWN TO UIO' The Nothern Utah Master Plumbing Association held their Under the direction of The regular monthly business meetNational Foundation of Infantile ing and luncheon at the Oak Paralysis, the State Polio com- Cafe on Monday, October 11th. circled the fuid and flew directly over the after take-of- f, mute will hold a Polio Volunteer Fifteen members atended. of the Tremonton class in hangars Flying Service on first leg of flight. Brigham City, Training for Box Elder County. BILL SIIUMAN IN This class will be conducted VETERANS HOSPITAL at the Brigham th ward, on October 21 and 22"at 10:00 a. m. Bill Shuman is in the VetArrangements are being made eran's hospital in Salt Lake, B. Owen, county by Mrs. Ezra chairman and her board mem- where he underwent an operation the first of the week. He bers. The first day will be in the expects to be able to return form of lectures. "Poliomyelitis, home in the next ten days. what it is, causes of the disease and possible cure" will he dis- PROGRAM AT SECOND Word of the death of Mrs. cussed by Dr. A. C. Callister, WARD ANNOUNCED Nettie T. Brewer, 73, former president of the State Board of reached Health. Tremonton resident Marvin. Miller, a recently re Other prominent speakers will Mrs. friends here Sunday, turned be Smith State missionary, and now a Emily Stewart, Brewer died at 10:20 a. m. at at the B.Y.U., will furwill Woman's student who talk illdirectors, an Ogden hospital, after an on the nish work Nation"Woman's with program at the Second ness of six days. Until about three years ago, al." State Representative Frank Ward Sunday evening. The pro Mrs. Brewer, her son Harold and S. Emery will speak on "The gram will include special musical of the National Foun- numbers. daughter Lucille, lived in Tre- Workings its chapters and dation through monton. is what in the State done being 1875 in was 22, bom April She of Utah for those stricken with Be of a daughter Chanton, la., ' Polio." James M. and Dorcas McKee Raw The second day's program will Trozel. On April 27, 1900, she married George D. Brewer in include a talk on "Clinical DiDerby, la. He died in Iowa 18 agnosis of Polio and when to call a doctor," by Ralph N. Barlyears ago. Fanners of Utah should be She was a member of the ow, M. D. and child specialist. Mrs. Estty Anderson will talk on careful of anyone atempting to Methodist church. Survivors include a son an a "Physical Therapy" and give sell them raw rock phosphate as The Kenny Hot fertilizer, warns Glen T. Baird, daughter Harold T and Lucille demonstrations. U.S.A.C. Extension agronomist. D. Brewer, Ogden, and two sis- Pack method will be demonstraAccording to Dr. D. W. Thome ters, Mrs. Ethel Morrow, Ogden ted by the Box Elder and Cache head of the USAC agronomy deand Mrs. Leona Miller, Lincoln, county Public Health nurses. Luncheon will be served each partment, raw rock phosphate Nebraska. to all delegates. Make your is worthless in Utah soils, prof. day were services funeral Private conducted at the family home reservations by October 17th Baird reported. "The phosphate is combined Wednesday at 1 p. m., by Rev. with Mrs. Wesley Gephart, as Lawrence DanD. Atwood Bird, pastor of First the course will only accomodate in rock form, which only chang- Lt. Donald Adams, Col. Carl C. Hughes and women about a to to off Tremonton es take from forms iels the sluble under Just day. sixty airport. Methodist church. Burial was in prior boarding A special invitation is extend action of acid. Utah soils are the Aultorest mausoleum. ed to the women of the valley neutral or alkaline, and rock C-4Off 7 who have previously taken the phosphate remains rock in our JOHN SENN REPORTED Mrs. course, George Wheatley, soils,' Dr. Thome explained. CRITICALLY ILL Honeyville, Mrs. W. C. Rogers, Plants cannot feed n the fertilizIt is reported that John Senn, Garland, Mrs. Ethel Palmer, er locked in rock phosphate." Any doubt of the use of the Tremonton Airport for large planes a former Tremonton resident, is Tremonton and Mrs. Berneice Experiments conducted by the was dispelled early Saturday morning, when Lt. Donald Adams, USAC, by the University of Idacritically ill in a Salt Lake hos- Heaton, Tremonton. accompanied by Col. Carl C. Huges of Tampa, Florida and Master ho and the University of Aripital. Lawrence McDaniels of Memphis, Tencssee lifted an army Sergeant MARY WHITE CALLED zona have all shown that ground transport off the runway at the local field, utilizing about FOR FURTHER MISSIONARY rock phosphate will not incresase the length of the landing strip. WORK IN CANAL ZONE crop yields on our soils, he reIThe group had llown the new plane from California landing here ported. On the other hand, sup- early Friday evenmg.when the three men were entertained at the on home of Mr. and Mrs.Basil Adams, parents of Donald. Word was received Sunday by erphosphate doubled the yield Mrs. Howard Glenn will spend Dr. E. soils. same the flown back to Rio De Janeiro, Brazil for use is IThe H. being the next two weeks in Salt Lake that his White, informing him In the test in Cache Valley a of the plane Brazilian-Unite- d States Military commission to which Lt. Mary, has with her grandchildren at the been call todaughter six months addition- moderate application of super- Adams is a.ssigned. The crew planned stop:) at Denver, San AnTheron Pinder home, while Mrs.i al increased alfalfa yield tonio, Texas and Mobile, Alabama, bi fore taking off over the Cenmissionary service. She has phosphate two tons per acre. But a treatPinder is on a trip to Chicago. tra) American areas toward Brazil. It was estimated that it would just completed two years labor- ment with five tons of ground take about 45 hours flying time to cover the 8500 mile flight. ing in the Mexican mission, but Hulda Meister had as her din- has been requested by the mis rock phosphate per acre, less than 10 feet away, gave no inner guests on Sunday, Mr. and sion LOCATED IN INTERESTING LECTURE president to go as the first creased Dr. Thome de- GLENN BARFUSS Mrs. Joseph Eisnan and daughNEW MEXICO GIVEN BY DR. AVAKD lady missionary to Guatamala, clared. yield," FARMINGTON, ter Helen and Miss Carol Jones near Panama to assist in orzan-izin- g FAIRBANKS LAST WEEK Save your of Burlington, Iowa. the work in that section. "Don't be a sucker. Working with the Indians in Dr. and Mrs. White left Sun- money. If you need a phosphate A verj interesting and edufertilizer, buy superphosphate. New Mexico, Glenn Barfuss has cational A. J. Ault and son Tommy and day for Mexico to a lecture was given by enjoy trip Mrs. T. A. Carter visited in Lo- through the country with Mary, Money spent for raw rock phos- written to express appreciation Dr. Avard Fairbanks of the U. as had been previously planned, phate in Utah, is money wast- for the news- from home in the of U., on sculpture and fine arts gan, last Sunday. Leader. after which she will take up her ed." at the Tremonton Second ward His first two months were chapel, new duties and they will reMrs. Jed Abbott has had her Thursday evening. spent with the Zuni tribe, and Dr. Fairbanks demonstrated brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. turn home. ACEL THOMPSON he is now among the Navajo In- with Jack Crossman of California, as SLIGHTLY IMPROVED clay, the beginning of man, He says he has never dians. MRS. GUS PIERCE ILL visitors last week. the first man on earth making found one of them who is un- and his search for food. From Acel Thompson, who is in the friendly, and he enjoys his work this man he traced his progress Mrs. George R.. Brough had Mrs. Gus Pierce who has been Veterans Hospitl In Salt Lake with them. to the time of conquest and emas visitors Sunday, Mr. and very ill in a Brigham hospital is City, is reported to be as well as Mrs. Glen Riley and family of now phasized his characters as blood improving and if she con- can be expected. lust. He changed his clay man Bountiful. WEST POINT STUDENT tinues to do so, she hopes to be to show Mussolini and Hitler. WRITES LEADER able to go to Salt Lake City From this he changed his clay Mr. and Mrs. Adam Brenkmanj where her LEAVE FOR VACATION daughter Dora will mould into Abraham Lincoln and F. E. Kespler and Mr. and; take care of her. Mrs. IN EAST Darlene, Cadet George Shibata, who Is and showed his traits as the Mrs. J. W. Hess, had dinner in another daughter from South the United States great Emancipator. attending the Old Juniper Lodge, in Logan Dakota has been home since her Mr. and Mrs. Adam Brenkman, Military Academy at West Point Dr. Fairbanks has built a stacanyon last Sunday. mother's illness. Frank E. Kespler and Mr. and has written that he would be tue of Abraham Lincoln which Mrs. J. Carter England and happy to see any of the people now stands in Hawaii, about ten Mr. and Mrs. Keith Rhodes WALTON'S ATTENDING Leslie of Burbank, Cal- from the Bear River Valley who miles from where Japan blasted daughter and daughter of Carey visited POSTMASTERS CONVENTION to leave ifornia, Sunday for go to New York, and would be Pearl Harbor. plan with her sister, Mrs. Henry Fox-le- y Illinois for a vacation glad to show them around the Virginia Erickson entertained Danville, and other relatives In the will The arrive campus at the school, if they with a piano selection. Englanda Mr. trip. Mrs. James Walton and week. valley this to from make would look him up. The students California left Sunday for New York, where Friday are not allowed outside the lim- ATTENDS LEGION the the Brcnkmans with trip Mrs. Brig Williams of Sugar they will attend the national from car. its of West Point, however. Tremonton by FUNCTION City, spent a few days last week convention of postmasters. recent a Cadet Since furlough visiting at the Henry Foxley Shibata has been transferred to Mrs. Hazel Ransom was a home and with friends in Tre- ALLENS VISIT BURNED GIRL LOCAL PEOPLE ENJOY Co. 2 USCC. guest Monday evening at a monton. FIVE STATE TOUR Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen membership luncheon of the were In Mrs. Lewis R. Cannon of RuBrigham City units of the Logan Sunday to visit EAST TREMONTON FARM Blaine The and Dan with VanLinda AuxiliaryLegion relaBriggses Kay pert, Idaho, is visiting with BUREAU SETS MEETING ce, daughter of Mamont Vance, Yorks returned Sunday from a tives in Tremonton this week. FIRST WARD TO START who was severely burned six week's vacation trip, which took AT 7:30 Canof MEETINGS next Notice is the Mr. and Mrs. Henry Foxley weeks ago. The child i3 still in them through the Grand given of the Tremonton East the the two and will Mesa, Arizona, and meeting hospital daughters attended the require yon, Phoenix, The Sunday evening meetings funeral services of a relative in lengthy treatment with skin CarLsbad Caverns and to Juarez, Farm Bureau to be held Wed Mexico. The visited all the state nesday afternoon at 2:30 at the In the Tremonton First ward Idaho Falls, last week. grafting, before she recovers. capltols and other places of in- home of Mrs. John O. Garfield, will begin at 7.30, starting next Roscoe Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tanner of Heppler and Fred terest as much as possible while where a continuation of the Sunday evening. The program are durvisited California Rucker, among the Tremon- covering 500 miles dally. On the Christmas gift suggestions will will be given by the Youth comModesto, of ing the week at the M. W. Ward ton boys who are attending return trip they came through be given. All members are In- mittee under the direction Deakin. Leah New Mexico and Colorado. school at the USAC In Logan. home. vited to attend. C-- 47 Nellie T. Brewer Dies In Ogtlen Careful In Rock Buying Fertilizer M-S- C-4- From Loeal Takes Airport On Flight To South America Army C-- 47 two-thir- AS '. . " n iiothcr Young Farmer ILDON MUNNS, son of Mr. Mrs. Frank Munns of Gar- - ADAMS FAMILY ATTEND who has chosen farming FUNERAL OF RELATIVE s life's occupation. He is at IN SALT LAKE nt running part of his fa- - farm and recently invest-- i a dry farm west of Snow- - Members of the Adams family received word last Thursday of m though Eldon has his the death of Mrs. Martha O. s nt interests in dry farming, Peterson of Salt Lake City. She has resided in Salt Lake keenly interested in live-. i spending many of all days hauling straw and ying feed preparatory to winter's feeding activity, a Future Farmer, Eldon alized in hog raising. lie rs had two or more brood and a number of feeder In his pens. His future include a fine herd of He is j j,lrcd hogs. - '9fe for many years and was 94 years at the time of her death. Funeral services were held in the Highland Park ward, Salt Lake, Monday, Oct. 11 and graveside services were held in Ephraim where Interment took old place. Attending from here were Deles and Ardes Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Afton Adams of Fielding, the Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Adams and non was educated in JAnd elementary school and from htgh 2.)ialod 1938. BearwasRivermem-1 He a f the National Guard, and result was in the service 1941 to September 1945, the Pacific area. Alta Rhodes and one young son. At nt Lldon is active in the Farmers' Chapter of Bear functioning as vice presi-o- f that organization. ' ds Local Happenings - V ml 7, daughters Irma and Patty, and Mr. and Mrs. Vem Adams of Tremonton. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Adams and Mrs. Wayne Boothe of Ogden, also attended. TWIN BOYS FOR THE ENGENE HILLS Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hill of Tremonton welcomed twin sons at the Valley hospital, October 10th, their first children. B-- - |