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Show 1937. September 7, BOX ELDER NEWS, AAA MAPS Semi-Weekl- y Page Thrga Union Pacific in 1936 when it showed In its "Challenger experiment. Its EjasaoEg a greater increase over the previous success is evidenced by the fact that year than any other railroad. the original seven stewardesses now In fact, in 1936, the Union Pacific have been increased to more than canied exactly twice as many pas- sixty now in service. The very first of all of them, Miss sengers as it did in 1933, when Florette Welp, now Is chief stewardthe low point was reached. ess. Beside the mentioned The registered-- n u r s e stewardess above, five Union Pacific streamliners service was one of the unusual fea- and one other steam train also have tures pioneered by the Union Pacific stewardess service thus far. 1938 ACREAGE PROVISIONS Farmers Advised A Starlets Favorite Lunch On Plantings 8-l- Winter wheat producers and who grow n crops were advised by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration today to take account of the probable provisions of the 1938 Agricultural Conservation Program in making their plans for plantings this coming fall. In anticipation of provision for acreages in the 1938 program lower than the acreages in 1937, AAA officials suggested seedings of crops of not to exceed 80 per cent of the 1937 base acreages. Although keeping seedings to 80 per cent of the 1937 base should qualify most farmers In 1938, individual farmers who have large percentages of their crop land In bases, or farmers in areas where land may be designated for restoration of native vegetation, such as parts of the Great Plains region, will need to make a greater adjustment in order to meet the requirements of the program. The suggestion is made at this time for the guidance of farmers who need this information before the full details of the 1938 program are an- nounced. An outline for the 1938 program Is now being developed in Washington but Is not yet completed, In drafting the 1938 plan, considera-- ! tion Is being given to recommenda- -' tions from the field. Wheat seedings in the United States for the 1937 crop were approximately 81 million acres and with normal yields and abandonment would have produced 950 million bushels. Winter wheat farmers seeded 57 million acres for 1937, as compared with average seedings during the period 1928-3- 2 of 45 million acres. If wheat farmers seed as many acres for 1938 as they seeded in 1937 and obtain average or better yields, declines in wheat prices are likely. These declines might be sharp if there are average or above average wheat yields in the United States and other wheat producing nations of the w6rld. other farmers tter sight Iter study! your children the glasses they need. better sight . . ter study . . . bet-- I and marks . . It important of all better HEALTH. IPhone 198-- fall-sow- soil-depleti- soil-depleti- A portly woman had, by mistake, taken a seat in a railway coach Classified reserved for smokers. With uncon- MAN WANTED For nearby Raw-leiroute of 800 families. Write cealed indignation she saw the man next to her fill his pipe. today. Rawleighs, Dept Denver, Colo. Sir, she said In frigid tones, smoking always makes me 111. The man calmly lit his pipe and FOR SALE We have approximately puffed contentedly, and at the same 60,000 tons of lime at the sugar time replied: factory grounds in Logan, Utah. Does it, Maam? Well, take my This particular lime Is recommended advice and give it up. by the government as being very good for insulation of houses or buildings, by mixing Mom: "'Where is Jimmy this sawdust; will do for fertilizer or afternoon ? mixture in cement. Are selling it much as about knows If he Pop: at $1.25 per truck load. Prices canoes as he thinks he does, he is quoted in carloads. We still hava out canoeing. But if he doesnt a lot of I beams, pipe, sheet steel know any more about it than I think angle iron, tanks and other mahe does, hes swimming. terial, at very reasonable prices. Phone, wire or write. Beverly Two London cabmen were glaring Machinery & Supply Co., phona at each other. 925. Sugar Factory Grounds, Logan, Aw, whats the matter with you? Utah. (It one. demanded me. with matter the Nothings You gave me a narsty look," CASH PAID For dead and nselesa cows and horses. 'Phona persisted the first (adv-t- fj Reverse charges. Well, responded the other, now you mention it, you certainly have a FOR SALE Special prices for the narsty look; but I didnt give it next few days on windows 34x59 to you. inches inside measure, 35x60Vs Inches outside masure with frames, sashes and weights at $4 each. Doors 2 feet 8 inches wide, 6 feet 8 inches high with frames sashes, locks and hinges at $5 each. Solid oak round tables $4 to $5 each. Anvils at 7 cents per pound, sizes 50, 75, and 100 pounds. Sledga hammers, 16 pounds with hickory; handles at $2.50 each. Hotel at Sugarton in Lewiston, Utah. 'Phone Ads soil-depleti- for j PETERS 4 WELRY CO. jlllton D. Ietors Optometrist much of a Ialindy? nothin else, maam. He get some new furniture, e gits de money; he gwine money, providin' he go to Ividln de job suits him. s J jh such a providin man days. 0 CREDITORS of Margaret I. Dodd, i fo de- - will present claims with the undersigned at Har-taR. D. 1, Utah, on or m I 14th day of November, I- - J first t1937. publication Jensen and Sons W. B. I gh UTI-6-S- soil-depleti- ee b. soil-depleti- ng f Appointment. husband SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY! COFFEE (All Brands) lb..... 28c SALAD DRESSING, Quart Jar .25c MOTHERS OATS (With Plate) Pkg...29c MARGARINE, lb 23c CHEESE (Full Cream) lb 19c . . . . LARD, Pkg.. $1.29 LETTUCE, Large Heads ,9c GREEN PEPPERS, lb 5c POT ROAST (Corn-Fe- d i6c Beef) lb RIB BOIL, lb 13c SAUSAGE OR HAMBURGER, 2 lbs.. . .33c BACON SQUARES, lb 29c trains Winter Wheat BBSS Af , j j j beres the way her mother is nothing more tempting or grownups than a ifTTHERB plate of , tender green garden-freshcooked to be palatable and yet Just detain some of their raw crispness. 'Add a glass of fresh cold milk and. 'you- have a lunch fit for a queen or a princess of the movies. Virginia WeicQer, Paramount starlet currently appearing in "Souls at 8ea. likes nothing better, and - SPEAKING-O- recom- mends preparing them. To keep green vegetables crisp and fresh in color, drop them into rapidly boiling water and cook uncovered Just enough to be tender. In the case of cabbage and cauliflower "which develop a strong flavor if cooked long or covered, a large amount of water should be used. Cover with plenty of butter and serve piping hot. two-thir- SAFETY F iTooesnt TAKE for scandal FORCE A MOVIE Long TO STAR OUT PICTURE. OF THE GREECE Union Pacific M EWPT Provide Greater Train Service SSts A PRIZEFIGHTER. WHO DISREGARDS TRAINING RULES SOON PASSES VVAftS 17-J-- 2. CAUSE TO As a Tesult of the PASS OUT OF THE Attorney for Executor. popularity of the service of registerPICTURE OUT OF THE PICTURE ed-nurse stewardesses on its trains, the Union Pacific railroad on SeptemIss ber 15th will extend this feature to transcontiAND DAMPWOOL three of its mces nental trains, the Los Angeles LimiDRIVING CAUSES ted, the San Francisco Overland g. MGToR-MOROTOle Fire Insurance Loans Limited and Portland Rose. inbe with This will OUT OF PASS jnds. Etc. - Notary Public Chalof the brand-neauguration Appreciate Your Business THE PICTURE? lenger train service from Chicago Telephone No. 6 to San Francisco. Previously, the famous "Challenger, de luxe economy train, ran only from Chicago to NORMAN LEE Los Angeles. Some of its features ponded Abstractor are offered on other Union Pacific I Estate Insurance trains which carry all types of National Safely Council I Loans Bonds accommodations. ft Forest Brigham City are exclusively The Challengers for coach and sleeping Challenger Choir practice was out early last I car passengers amd the rates are night. Wasnt it? Man & SORENSEN "Yes. Bmblng and Heating "What was the trouble? Ho Job Too -e type of service in August, 1935, paved someone biew an auto horn Large Ho Job Too Small in Increase marked for the way slde and the male quartet was all Aone 62 Brigham passenger business enjoyed by the that was Things are looking up for the City wide-spre- ad bargeron NS - , , out-th- Prospects For Egg And Poultry Prices Favorable poultryman- 'T'HIS YEARS crop of verdicts for auto- mobile accident injuries calls for min- up-to-t- he ute insurance protection. jandfUlost; (fynomicalHoodl AiTNA-IZ- E A Comprehensive Automobile Liability Insurance Policy can be written through The ABttui Casualty & Surety Company of Hartford, Conn., to cover every insurable motoring risk S. NORMAN LEE BRIGHAM CITY. UTAH PHONE 129 is the best food because it contains the most important elements of cium, minerals, and butter fat. Milk is the most economical food because it gites i the greatest nourishment per food dollar spent! Be sure you use SUPERIOR DAIRY PASTEURIZED MILK insuring you safely from Communicable Diseases! f .HP a temperature of 142 degrees to 145 of 30 minutes an degrees F. (67 deg. under boiling) for a period is 40 degrees F. or be ow. then quickly cooling to a temperature of possibility any eliminates process kills all harmful bacteria and wor s m disease in the milk. The health value of milk (the perfect food) Is not changed by Pasteurization. SUPERIOR DAIRY to annually. Write the W. Rawleigh Co., Denver, Colo.. $5,000 T. 25, TODAY. (a24-sl4- PHONE 504 The cabbage butterfly is the most common of all butterflies, yet It was Imported to the United States only about seventy years ago. ); WANTED To! REPRESENTATIVE look after our magazine subscription interests in Brigham City and vicinity. Our plan enables you to secure a good part of the hundreds of dollars spent in this vicinity; each fall and winter for magazines Oldest agency in U. S. Guaranteed rates on all periodicals and foreign- Instructions and equipment free. Start a growing and permanent business ini whole or spare time. Addresa MOO Inc., Wayland Road, North Cohocton, N. Y. lowest domestic - 0) to do a and I invita real estate business wish when consideration you your to sell or buy or to borrow. S. Norman Lee. (tf) AM . . . AGAIN LICENSED changing the color icultural Steurized Milk Means the heating of milk to and are not afraid of hard work, we will finance you In a permanent business with unlimited possibilities. Many whom we have financed are now making profits from $3,000 (s6-1- - Economics. Though storage stocks of eggs are unusually large this year, the effect of these stocks of egg prices this fall is expected to be offset at least in part by higher purchasing power But by next spring, of consumers. Mr. Frischknecht points out, we will have fewer layers In farm flocks and therefore smaller supplies of eggs. The number of young chickens on farms on July 1st was 19 per cent less than a year earlier. Chicken prices this fall are expected to be higher than In the fall of last year. This outlook is based on the small hatchings this year and the probability of higher incomes of consumers. situation also looks The feed-eg- g brighter, Mr. Frischknecht says. The relationship between feed prices and to egg prices is still unfavorable so than less much but poultrymen, earlier in the year, and It promises to improve as feed prices decline and egg prices start upward. if you have an average education, a car, substantial friends And Dept. n. CJhe Best ), . Prices farmers will receive for eggs this fall are expected to be about the same as they were last fall, says Carl Frischknecht, extension poultry-maAnd egg prices next spring, he points out, are likely to be higher than they were in the first half of this year. This outlook for egg prices, Mr. Frischknecht says, is based on the August poultry and egg situation report of the U. S. Bureau of Agr- IEH1 (s3-10- YOU ARE DISSATISFIED WITH YOUR PRESENT OCCUPATION w o 2. IF WHOLE NATIONS best-kno- asteurizing ds 493-J-- ROM-- e B. C. CALL, A. . . yes . . . its almost incredible the way a substantial bank account changes the blue of depression into the gold of real achievement. . . . . open one today at this home folks bank . . . STATE SECURITY BANK OP BRIGHAM CITY and profit by our sincere helpfulness and accommodation Member Federal Reserve System Deposits Insured Under U. S. Government Plan i V |