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Show LEADER THE RETURN FROM VACATION Mr. and Mrs. Reid Oyler returned this week from an enjoyable vacation trip to California. They visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm. D- Egley Jr. in San Francisco and with Mr. and Mrs. Neil Zundel in Los Angeles. NO April City purp shall such ATTEND LODGE FUNCTION PRIMARY OFFICERS COUNTY FARM BUREAU. MEETING HELD BE HELD MEETING TO A meeting for the North Box Mrs. Delia Udy Elder Co. Farm Bureau will be were held at the home of Rebecca Mortensen on March 16th at 2:30. Ladies are asked to bring knitting needles If you wish to knit or huck toweling to work on. Arrangements are being made for an interesting lesson. group of local women were RETURN FROM TRIP in Salt Lake City Friday night Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Whitto attend the annual visitation returned home this week ney of the Matron of Worthy Grand visafter The spending three weeks vaStar. Eastern of Order itation was sponsored by the cationing: in the Southern States. five days in New Lynn Chapter at the Masonic They spent Mardi Gra. the at Orleans Temple. Utah of Price. Pesetto Evelyn Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Teeter of was present, and from this area. Yost. Utah were guests of Mr. of Lois Lundberg. Grand Martha Mrs. Harand Hughle Thompson from Helen the Grand chapter; to Wednesday. Brenkman Blanche Sunday rison, Ogden; and Birdean Conine attended. CARD OF THANKS A banquet and program were We sincerely wish to thank featured during the evening. each and every one who helped Mrs. Lewis A. Dodd visited in in any way during the illness Providence Sunday with Mr. and and death of our beloved wife Mrs. Keith Barkle, who are par- and mother. Ellen Shuman. Ward Shuman and ents of a new baby daughter Earl Shuman bom on February 23rd. A At Used Cars with an "O.K" that counts 1939 1939 1940 1940 1938 Sedan OLDS CnEV Club Cpe STUDEBAKER Coach OLDS Sodajv CHEV Sedan 1937 CHEV Sedan Tremoi EU State o At st 1947 o'clock The : voting i KAISER 4 door 1940 BUICK Sedan FORD Model A 1936 CHEV Coach 1937 FORD Coach USED TRUCKS 1948 CHEVROLET i4 ton 1947 CHEVROLET V. ton 1941 CHEVROLET 2 ton 1ft wheeler 1939 DODGE 1Y ton 1939 FORD 1H ton 194ft DODGE V; ton Army Surplus 1929 rl0M( CHEVROLET TREMONTON Civic B and the Hell Pus BY O BOX El CO. PLUMBING & HEATING SERVICE CONTACT LYNN MELDRUMatthe Ore TREMONTON LUMBER- an cm FOR Til IALELE CITY, B STATE PURPOS - HDWE. TREMONTON PHONE 2301 QU. SAID CI A THEREli PRECED THE QUI Mrs. Elva Korth BONDED THE ISS WORKS has assumed management of and will operate the AJt TOR Til FRAYIN( TNCREAi LARGINI - Tre-mont- AND SYS CITY B STATE C SAID CT TANTST WHICH AND Wi SHALL I TROLLE1 BONDS 1 AND SE( your continued patronage will be appreciated. i AND SYJ WHER1 room. We had a very interesting story in our science classes. Tom thought that he could live without plants. His mother told him if he could get along withouts plants he would not have to work in the garden. Tom smiled and started to sit down on a chair. His mother said "No no, the chair Is made of wood. Wood comes from plants." When Tom went to eat his dinner, all he could have was salt and water. "Can't I have some pep-WASHINGTON. Censored! to eat with my salt and water" That word still rules the news for many sections of the world. said Tom. "No, pepper comes The degree of restraint varies: from plants too." Tom could not In some countries t h Soviet even play ball because that bat Union is one the censor sees all and ball both came from the the news and cuts out anything ha He couldn't even go to plants. considers unfavorable. bed because the sheets and mattIn others, restriction! and presress were made of plants. Did you sures are heavy upon the press and upon persons or organizations ever stop to think that plants that make news. That amounts to were so important? Mrs. Gunnell's Third Grade a censorship at the source, to a stoppage in the flow of Information. Reporters Jerrold Ward Considerable restraint affects the Carolyn Stohy 3, coc JWojr ftht Pbatmac'M Dtfs hw fads A About . .. URETIIANE $135,000.0 "Bonds oi Ulder Coi W H E administering oral and intramuscular doses of Urethane (Ethyl Carbamate), a group of doctors in Milwaukee. Wisconsin, have been able to prolong the lives of patients suffering from the almost always fatal blood discese Leukemia. While not a cure for the ailment it gives hope for longer life to those afflicted with the disease. By Tormlty the State larly Sect man com mo 23. Granger tofore del tier said provemen , and has made a ( of the vs 1 waterworl the cost o'. bcttermer and of th V ADAM'S DRUG STOIIF, A y ry .mi ... 'I...,, er news flowing from about a fourth area. That figure may seem small, but the effecls of censorship are so far reaching that they leave the world in doubt and suspicion. the Correspondents throughout world have completed another periodic survey of censorship conditions. The survey shows no major barriers have come down in the six months since the last roundup of the situation. In fact, new barriers have been erected for example, in China, torn by civil war. The main exponent of censorship remains the Soviet Union. Censorship there is especially important because it helps hide from the rest of the world the conditions that axist in one of the two most powerful countries. Thus it is Impossible for an American reporter in Moscow to send what he considers a balanced raport of economic conditions in the Soviet Union. Unless there is an official announcement, he cannot tell you the current ratio of wages to the price of food in .jiii.m..-- The Rocky Mountain staw Riding Association held a m7l ing In Tremonton at the Oati Cafe. Friday night The folio officers attended the dinner Our crop this year gave us 18 ing President Ralph r meeting, million pounds of oil. Some day Lake City; Dr. Phil Salt Jones, will grow up h this baby industry Idaho Graves, Falls. Idaho- Ted own our we can tung and supply Lewis. - oil needs. Mrs. Andersen's Reporters, Belva Lewiston; George Buzi? Tooele; Alfred L. Hahn nis, Grade Fifth Jean Harris Blackfoot, Idaho; ... bo d'Ti 19 26-1- at Salt Lake City to attend We have finished our science books. This month, March, has come in like a lion and we don't know how it will go out. We are going to put on an assembly on March the 10th. It is all about the Irish people and St Patrick's Da v. We are supposed to have 5 book reports this year besides the ones we read In class. Linda Peckenpaugh told us of the good time she had in California. News reporters Linda Ann Christensen, Beth Peterson and Maralyn Parker. Mrs. Saunder's Room LAVOY UDY HAS OPERATION LaVoy Udy of Riverside underwent nday a major operation on Mo- at the wic vuufs una cennyj Veterans hospital in Salt Lake City. IMMUNIZATION CLINIC SET The next clinic for giving free immunization shots to people of the valley will be held March 20th at McKinley poems: School. No THE BIG BIRD Once there lived a very big bird. Who made a sound you've never SAVE YOURSELF heard A Traffic He flew around and caught a mouse And took it to his little house He cooked It long upon the stove Then was buried in an apple grove. By Ida Funk Have your State ' Tl car test; Inspection THE INSPECTION t LAW WW ENFORCED I Please Come There was a bad boy Who played with his toy. He went for a walk Ei: SMITH'S GARAGE Beet Gra Meetiii will growk All farmers who attend cordially invited to or. ing meetings as scheduled: BEAR RUB ffj Monday, March BOX ELDER 13, BGH G.I.andYounjF 13, Monday, March Agricultural Cfcj March Wednesday, March MALAD Thursday, March CITI j 1 THATCBB March BEAR RIVER j 1 HICJ;. Agricultural 1M Friday, March It G. I. and Monday, WITH THE FAMOUS EZES O O SPREADS ANY FERTILIZER CONDITION IN BROADCAST EXACT SPREADING IN ANY AMOUNT! APPLICATION Colored films on soils a will be shown. Educational the subjects will be led b) tural Superintendent, his v AHriiUnrl Extension Problems and policies O DRILLS OR BROADCASTS SMAll GRAINS . . . ACCURATELY UNIFORM!. Yl O SOWS LEGUMES AND GRASSES (EVEN 1 s rosea of ' TTVi.lfl' Sugar ROBBINS' IMPLEMENT 1 F"") 11 Attendance at these forum general farm practices, beet production BROME GRASS)! 37 Young March 20J cussed. OR L Pi about a hundred million pounds CHIRP, CHIRP of oil every year which we have to had There was a mother bird. buy. from China. In 1906 we began planting Who laid on eggs all day. tung trees. Now there are hun- Then she heard a chirp, chirp dreds of acres of tung orchards in And there her birdies lay." the "Tung Tree Belt". This belt By Jerry McMurdie is a hundreds miles wide and extends from Jacksonville, Reporters Janet Nicholas and Florida into Texas. LaRaine Giles Mrs. Rhodes The nuts of the tung trees fall sixth grade si 1 IE TEIS THE NAUGHTY BOY TREMONTON f v v the Lumbermen's Convention, shots will be given children of the school without the signature We have been making poem of parents. booklets in English. Each one of Anyone desiring to consult the the students made up a poem records kept on immunization by and then we copied them all in a the health nurse, should contact leaflet. Here are a few of the And fell on a rock. A New Baby Crop of the U. S. A. His clothes he did tear Tung trees have started pro- And oh! did he swear. By Lloyd Nelson ducing tung oil for our country. Why is this so exciting? A PICKLE Tung oils is used in paints. It is also used for oilcloth, linoleum As I was walking down the street, and other materials. Tung oil on a long pickle comes from the nut of the tung I slipped tree. For years China has pro- Thinking I'd slipped over my feet I looked and saw a nickle. duced all the tung oil In the By Gary Woodruff world. The United States uses Dial project ' and "y L. E. Morgan' Marco Stohl Malad; Wayne Robinson, Amer-ca- n Fork and Harrv Tavinr monton. Mrs. Nesson has started a girls The next meeting will ho choir. We are singing such songs at Malad, Idaho on April 14th a To as The Mountain Stream, a few Creed and Wild Rose. My MRS. WATLAND others. RETURNS HOME In basketball the seventh grade and beat Mrs. S. B. Watland is hnm. defeated Garland 38-5 again after spending the past six Elwood the eighth grade In arithmetic we are learning months in Riverside, California to read meters. One of the boys with her daughter, Mrs. H. g brought a meter from the Utah Waples. Power and Light to show us. Mr. Orwin's seventh grade ATTEND CONVENTION Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Hansen Reporters, Karen Smith Bobby Gephart spent from Thursday to Sunday Thursday, months during which its mother fretted and worried, the newest polar bear cub at the Washington Park too here finally had learned how to swim. The cub got a low opinion oi water when it slipped Into the Icy water accidentally. Like any sensible person on a cold day, the young polar beai got out of there as fast as possible and went shivering to the warmest part of the cave. After that, Sultana n, tht tub'a mother, couldn't get It near th pool Tha keepers tried, too, but the cub wanted no mora of It But suddenly things changed. Without warning, th cub started wtmmlng. and now thera'a no keeping it out of the water. Nobody knows what happened. The keepers guessed tha cub might have slipped In. Or its mother may have feared her child was becoming abnormal and pushed It In. delay um visions o cd t Rhead's First Grade Poles and Piling The western red cedar pole industry has always been important in the Northwest because cf the great demand for the durable, slim pole straight, easily-climbeof Western red cedar. Polar Bear Cub Learns To Swim, But Takes Time MILWAUKEE. -- After has detet a two-t- h ton City, of Utah, Granger prove, er present v works pU monton ( thereof - RIDING ASSOCIATinv MEETS IN TREMONTON The Moscow censor is likely to cut from a correspondent's copy any qualifying phrases the writer has Inserted to balance a news atory on Russim developments. The Russian idea of keeping a tight control on the press and radio, making it answerable to the government's orders, has spread to other countries within Moscow's sphere of influence. However, those countries exercise less restraint upon foreign correspondents. ENTIRE bv a on to the ground and are picked up by hand. The nuts are dried and a machine takes off the husks. Then they go to a pressing mill and are steamed and the shells are cracked. The oil is pressed out of the nut meats. Moscow. Korth Flower Shop THE PRI AND W OF THE - - of the world's populated For RELIABLE ATTEST to ri -- this 6th 1943, of the houses wjtn home of Dorothy Harris on Mon- the outside colored clay- They And vellow day evening. The lesson was of the houses inside the paint given by Mrs. Faye McMurdiewith white wash. They climb up into their MYSTERY PLAY PRESENTED cn ladders. houses BY THATCHER The women make clay bowls The M Men and Gleaners of and weave beautiful rugs. The the Thatcher ward presented the men make pounded silver rings three act mystery play, "Tiger and bracelets. Some Indians have sheep and House", to a capacity house last Friday. The Penrose ward were goats. They plant corn and grind it guests for the performance. A matinee was also pre sented into flour, then they bake corn on cakes in an oven that is built for the school children outside the house. Thursday. Mrs. Maurnie Wight and WanTrudy J. R., Betty, and Clair Mrs- Cannon's Second Grade da Adams announce that the play will be presented in the We are very busy. We are readSecond ward on the on March In 14th, Deweyville ing many books now. We like our 15th and in Bothwell on the 16th. arithmetic and writing. In our room we have the first sign of Mr. and Mrs. George Quinney spring. It is some pussy willows. attended funeral services for Mr. We planted some grain. We like new Quinney's brother, Wilford Quin- to watch it grow. There is a room. our in new a and girl Wedneson boy in held ney, Logan We hope they like our school like day. Censorship Rules Still Holds News From Most of World DATE ?6A-2-2- Harris at a meeting for the Primary officers and teachers held at the like cliff dwellings. They paint Mrs. Gail White underwent another of a series of operation at the L. D. S. Hospital In Salt We are glad to have a new puLake on Tuesday. Her many pil in our room. She came here friends here in the valley wish from Salem, Oregon. Her name her a speedy recovery and hope IsCarolee Webster. We had one she ..will be able to return home of our classmates move away last week. Now that Carolee has come soon. we still have forty pupils in our PLYMOUTH club cpe. 1947 CHEVROLET Club Cpe 1918 OLDS CLUB Sedan 1946 CHEVROLET Coach 1941 DODGE Club Cpe 1939 BUICK Coach THE We are studying about Indians. It Is very interesting. The Pueblo Tnrfinns live in houses that look Mrs-Doroth- Mrs- 1941 PAID and we do. On th( THE The Small Voice f Pot tl Box Tremontun. Utah DIAL 2513 j His sary |