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Show r The Rhodes were at the Edvalson home in C.zden last Mon- day and were Brigham City visitors, this Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Isaacson of Ogden called on Mrs. Jane Isaacson, Monday and Mrs. Loda City. Different rates of phosOyler to wish her Happy Birth1 100 phate were applied on day. acre plots of alfalfa. Yield Mr. and Mrs. LaVoy Belnap, data will be obtained when this Tremonton and Mr. and Mrs. hay is cut next June. Ken Austin and Mr .and Mrs. Mrs. Peterson By Eph Aattended the annual Wells-,vill- e Monte Austin, Garland, spent Mountain Area Project Sunday at the Jack Austin home. where Corporation meeting Mr .and Mrs. Gilbert Allred Robert Stewart of Brigham and Susie, Mr .and Mrs. Douglas City, Winford Barrus of Dewey Allred and Vicky Lynn were in Salt Lake City, Sunday. ville, Wm. Leatham, mayor of Wellsville and John O. Hughe$ Mr. and Mrs. Alva Rhodes The Birthday Club met Monto of Mendon were and Mrs. Keith Rhodes, Carey, afternoon at the home of day the Board of Directors. Rob Loda for her anniversary. Ida., were overnight guests of Oyler ert Stewlart was The afternoon was spent play- Mr. and Mrs. Bill Potter during president of the Corporation ing Bingo with prizes. The birth- the week. ifor 1957. day pillow slips were presented Return From Trip Frank Reeder of North Brig to Mrs.' Oyler by Ellen Rhodes. Mr. and Mrs. Ursel Rhodes ham City was catching some Refreshments were served by spent two days on a business calves in the yard west of the Mabel Oyler and Leah Oyler. trip to Enterprise, Ore. They David Larson and Walter Han- also visited Mr. and Mrs. Elmer house as we stopped by to ap34 ply fertilizer on a test plot. sen and class leader. Essip Pet Taylor in Burley, Ida. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Oyler, Mr. Frank and his hired man, Jerry erson, attended the Gleaner and Jergensmeyer, were having a. M Men Stake Banmiet at Gar. and Mrs. Gus Foreberg and Mr. the land. Saturday evening. and Mrs. Jasper Shaffer attendlittle trouble lassoing Jim Chnstensen, Ogden, was ed open house celebrating the calves so he got us out in the at the Marion Sorensen home. 80th birthday anniversary of an yard to help catch them. They Dr. James1 Saturday, to attend the funeral aunt, Mrs. Lillian B. Hunsaker, were expecting for Mrs. Linda Somers. Sunday at the home of Mr. and Simper in a few minutes to service Mr. and Mrs. Leland Watt of Mrs. Alton Hunsaker in for calves these vaccinate "All dairy Layton were here Saturdav for Bangs disease. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stokes calves should be vaccinated be- the funeral. They had supper and the with Mr. an M Men and Gleaner spent attended 4 evening 8 and tween the ages of and Mrs. Harmon Pierson. banquet of the East Cache Stake months," Frank told us, and, Earl Harper left Sundav for Saturday evening. The affair these calves were just right. Fort Benning, Ga., for further was held at the Union building The vaccine is free and imwith the Armed Forces. on the college campus. Mr. munizes from loss in livestock service Mr. and 6 from the dreaded Brucellosis. Salt Lake Mrs. Claud Love of Stokes sang a number on the Sundav visited City program. In a contact with Dr. Robert with Mr .and Mrs. Louis Larson. Mr. Stokes' school at Fielding veterin- -' K. Hedelius, federal Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ovler enjoyed a April Fool costume we arian from Brigham City, and Mrs. Eula Thompson. El party, Monday. were told that the western part wood, visited Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dora Shaffer and girls, of Box Elder County should Dewey Wood in Brigham City, Vera Westergard, Garland, Len-n- a be accredited, by Christmas Sundav. Oyler, Barbara Grover, and & 'time, as a Bangs free area. Dr. Relief Society Honors Members Effie Wilde, Salt Lake City, Hedelius said that the stockMrs. L. M. Holman attended who they met at Cache Junction, X Promonmen in Snowville and a party Wednesday afternoon at when she came by train, then tory had been unusually co- the home of Mrs. James Walton went on to the home of Mrs. Ira operative in blood testing all in Tremonton with members of Godfrey in Clarkston to celeadult animals and in vaccin the old Relief Society Stake brate the birthday anniversary Board. The partv was in honor of Vera Westergard. ating calves. "In fact," he said, "Bishop of Mrs. Margaret Humphries. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sparks, Mr. Hickman of Snowville not only Mr. and Mrs. Carl Edvalson and Mrs. Boyce Sparks and Mrs. helped vaccinate his own calves and son, Ronald, were Sunday Gary Grover and children of but went with me and helped! dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clarkston, visited the Orval vaccinate other calves in the Blaine Rhodes. Grovers Sunday evening. community to wind up the test." "We have only one more herd to test in Promontary and ithe work is completed there. There has been no infection on the Promontory area. Claud Staples, Merlin Larson and Wendel Jensen have done everything possible to pro mote this Brucellosis eradication program there on both sides of Promontory mountain Ray Firth of Lynn has helped promote the program there. In fact he has set up a tentative schedule to vaccinate the cal ves in the wlhole community." FARM and HOME NOTES COUNTY AGENTS NEWS By A. FULLMER ALLRED PLANT GRAIN EARLY Box Elder County farmers are finding it pays to plant grain early, reports A. Fullmer A Monthly report of the farm agricultural county Allred, home accidents for Box and agent. Leon Michaelsen, farm man- Elder County showed that there agement specialist at Utah State was $4,280 property damage in Agricultural College, reports February with a total of nine that an experiment conducted at USU over a three-yea- r period accidents; two of these were in showed that the earliest planted home and two in the yard, the gave the remaining were on the high grain consistently y highest yields. For each an way. Five deaths occured as a was there in planting delay in 18 to 20 percent drop yields. result of these accidents. John Larkin of South Will, "This was especially true in areas where soil moisture con- ard was down in the west field ditions are good," Professor with his son John William, Michaelson adds. discing and harrowing as we SPRING CLEAN-Ucalled. They were each on a Spring means time to clean tractor working like mad to get fire of and get rid up farmsteads a seed bed for sugar and other hazards in Box Elder beets. "I prepared fall certainly prefer A. Fullmer advises County, as us told he John plowing," Allred, agricultural extension a hole into the soil with dug agent. toe. "Look at the tilth of J. Donald Wadsworth, exten- his sion agricultural engineer at that ground where it wps fall he said. "We find ITtah Stato Agricultural coHcf". plowed," it quite difficult to conserve is imsays a thorough clean-uthe moisture when we work the portant from a safety standpoint too much in the spring1 ground because it eliminates dozens of for an early crop like beets. hazards. Because there is a danger of "Cleaning away trash rids a farm of fire hazards. Picking up this sandy soil blowing all winscattered debris prevents costly ter long, the Soil Conservation recommends that this falls. A good clean-ujob and Service be and worked in the plowed in order greatly setting things spring; but I can prevent blowg improve the efficiency and of the whole farm family," ing if I don't plow up too large Just Visiting 15-da- P p p well-bein- field." Set up two fertilizer demonstration, the one at John Rulon Larkin's farm in South Willard and the other at Frank Reed-er'- s farm in North Brigham a he adds. A neat, orderly farm reflects credit on its operator. The whole family can take part in the anLet's get an early nual clean-ustart, Mr. Wadsworth suggests. p. Northern Utah Soil Conservation DISTRICT NEWS The supervisors of the North- conservation program in the ern Utah Soil Conservation Dis- area. This is the first such award trict held their regular meeting presented in the state of Utah. Anchor Chains To Be Rented Monday, and discussed a schedA grant for mthe Soil Conule of engineering assistance to farmers of this area. servation Service was accepted, Included in the schedule are of two units of surplus ships the following projects: 1100 feet anchor chain. These chains of open concrete ditch lining for weighing two tons each come Voss Ward, 3500 feet open ditch lining on the East Branch of North Elwood Irrigation Co.; 1320 feet of concrete pipe on the Center Branch of the North Elwood Irrigation Co.; 360 feet concrete pipe on the West Branch of North Elwood Irrigation Co.; drainage and waste-awa- y in 90 foot lengths. They will be rented to District cooperators for the control of sagebrush and juniper. forward to Soil Looking Stewardship Week from May 26 to June 2, the supervisors ordered a number of booklets on "Sermons for Soil Stewardship structure for Day Gar- Sunday," to help in the observfield and Elton Newton; canal ing of the week. structures for East Fielding IrJack Craven, district highway rigation Co. engineer will be invited to atThe Equipment Dealers Con- tend the May meeting of the servation award was presented supervisors to discuss erosion to John W. Hess in recognition control problems arising on the of his efforts to further the soil State Highway right-of-wa- y. THE LEADER. Tremonton, Utah Thursday. April 4. 1957 I EAST GARLAND Birthday Club Protect Against Livestock Loss by the Use of Franklin Products! Meets 'T'he right FRANKLIN Product at the right time can prevent a large share of the losses d that too often rob the stockman of his d, hard-earne- profits. ADAMS DRUG STORE S. Phone AL Tremonl GROW SAFFLOWER IN 1957 No Surplus - Guaranteed Prices Experienced Safflower growers expect Safflower to be their most profitable crop in diverted acres. Production contracts available for limited lime only. Contracts available at Stohl Elevators, Tremonton. or call Reuben Hansen, Hyrum, Field Representative. I Pacific Vegetable Oil Corp. San Francisco, Calif. ENTERS HOSPITAL FOR EYE OPERATION Mrs. Henry Oyler was taken to the St. Mark's hospital in Salt Lake City last week for surgery. She has cataracts on both eyes. 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