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Show mimi m? MMf HONEYVILLE REPORTS South Stake Plans Party Next Tuesday Town Vacations, Hosts Guests From Monticello, Ogden , , By Mr. George Wlntle of Salt Lake City spent SunSouth Box Elder stake day in Honeyville visiting with Bobs parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mor- and Gleaners announce a party on rell Hunsaker. The following news was reported by Rosalyn Hunsaker: The Clever 2 Quintets of Honeyville were busy making plans for camps. They spent Wednesday Thursday and Friday at Cub River, near .Franklin, Ida. Betty Hunsaker, club leader, and Mrs. DeVern Rasmussen, mother of one of the girls, went with the group. The first day we were busy making camps. The second day W a went on a nature hike to the springs and on the way learned all about the plants and trees. Then we did handicraft. We made nice bongo drums. Later we watched other clubs put on skits in the amphitheater. The day to go home seemed to come too fast Tor all of us. The girls who went to the camp were Roslyn Hunsasaker. ker, Gae Coombs, Karma Brady, Sheldon Hunsaker has been in Leigh Ann Brady, Ann Nicholas Monticello visiting and returned and Sharon Rasmussen. home. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Anderson of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hunsaker and Nibley, Utah and Mr. and Mrs. C. WHATS GOING ON AT PENNEYS? WERE REMODELING Yes -- We Are Still Open Eor Business As Usual. Farmers would do well 1958 was 747,058,306, compared shares in 1957. of Hyrum, were all guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Wintle, Sunday. Mr, and Mrs. Darrel Benson and family of. Ogden were in Honeyville on Sunday visiting at the home of Mr. Bensons parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Benson. Mr. and Mrs. Courtley Holman and baby, and Darrel Holman, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith and baby all of Downey, Calif., are spending their vacation in Honeyville visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Hunsaker and calling on other relatives. Return Home Mr. and Mrs. Verl Hunsaker and have family of Burbank. Calif., returned home after visiting t in Honeyville with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hunsaker, and other relatives. Their son, Lesley who lives ni Honeyville with his grandparents, returned with them to California to spend his vacation. Enjoying a family gathering of picnic and visiting was the family of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Hunsaker on Sunday. Absent and unable to attend was the Stanford Hunsaker Newfamily now of Stephenville, foundland. Stanford is employed as civilian classifier and administrator at the Harmon AFB located on the island of Newfoundland. July is a very important month for the Hunsakers as six members of th family celebrate their birthdays and ther are two wedding anniversary dates during the month. w. D. McBride fyszz: This is the chukar partridge which is gaining in UNDER STUDY number and popularity as an upland game bird in Utah. Research will be done on them at Little Mountain. v IS NATURAL PEN RESULT! ...LONGEf Little Mountain in Box Elder county has been chosen as the site for research work on the Chukar partridge, according to Dr. J. B. Low, leader of the Utah Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit. Essay Contest Offers Prizes For Writing its 25th annual NaOpening of tional High School Essay Contest has been announced by the Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The topic will be Civil Defense An American Tra- e 1,805-mi- le dition. Students in all public, private and parochial high schools are eligible to enter thp contest. NationFamily Picnic Enjoying" the outdoor picnic be- al prizes are; First, $1,000 cash; sides the parents were Mrs. Sheryl second $500; third $250; and fourth, H. Lewis and her family of $100; plus 20 cash honorable menMr. and Mrs. J. Newel tion awards. Kearns; In addition, the federal Office of Welch and family of - Pocatello, Civil and Defense Mobilization will award a $100 U. S. Saving Bond to the first place winner in dach state. State andjocal contest winners also receive additional Auxiliary awards which vary with the community. During the last school year more than 35,000 students from all 50 stated and the District of Columbia entered the national contest. Further information on the 1959-6- 0 contest may be obtained from local" Auxiliary units, or from the essay department, V F.W. Auxiliary, 406 West 34th street, Kansas City 11, Mo. TT - THURSDAY - FRIDAY O. P. Skaggs store where you buy Brands You Know at prices that " please ft POT ROAST ROUND (9Lb. BONE WHEN YOl ea. IE, OWt USE) CffliOMBCISb CjnH QH32ZH13GD LOCAL 4 lbs. Country SAUSAGE SUMMER 98 ,fl SEASONED MILDLY 'i,rjrrT 39' CHUCK ROAST GROUND BEEF upon; SATURDAY at your ECONOMY YOUR f LANKINTON, S. D. (UPI), The South Dakota Highway Commission has been asked to comstretch of road plete a that will make U. S. 281 completefrom Canada ta ly hardiopped Mexico, South Dakota also has been ask. ed to name the highway the American Legion Memorial Highway. It has received that designation from the legislatives of all the other slates through which the route travels.. sample. For several reasons, fall is considered a good time to apply phosphate fertilizer. At that time the material can usually be obtained at a slightly lower cost. It can be applied anytime belore the snow falls and the winter moisture will carry it to the root zone of the crop. On relatively flat fields the phosphate" can even be applied on the snow. Phosphate usually remains available for crop use for several years. It is not all used by the crop the first year, and it is not leached out of the soils. Those farmers The chukar is a new exotic game who have been applying phosphate bird with which the Utah Fish and to the same fields may annually Game department is stocking suitfinde thpt they do not need to able hunting areas, and since the this fall. Those who bird is relatively new in the state, apply any additional information is needed on habitat requirements and factors which affect the success of the bird, Dr. Low said. In view of this, Harry Williams, a graduate student in the department of wildlife management at USU has been assigned to study habitat requirements and develop possible census methods applicable to the bird, Dr. Low said. He Home-Owne- d is subsidized by a grant from the research unit. Little Mountain has been selected as the study site since it offers ideal habitat conditions for the Chukar and is isolated from U. S." CHOICE BLADE CUT other mountains by the floor of Great Salt Lake valley, terrain which chukars do not ordinarily cross. So the mountain may serve as a large natural pen for the study. CENTER CUT Chukars. slightly larger than the Hungarian partridge and a little smaller than a female pheas-an- t, were first released in Utah in Iflilp.- The State Fish and Game department has been engaged in an (tctive release program since 1951. 81,000 birds Approximately have been released. Of these, 750 have been planted on Little Mountain for study purposes, and will serve as parent stock for research now and in the future. SWIFTS PREMIUM JSome of the answers to the many management problems con2 LB. Pkg. THICK SLICED cerning the chukar, a newcomer be found from the to Utah, should projected study, Dr. Low said. FRESH GOOD ALL BEEF LASTING CALL Honored AlMcALESTER, Okla (UPI) Wilthough Lt. Cmdr. Leonard liams leported "our ship has lost its captain, we have no helmsman, our rudder is missing and our ship adrift at sea, nohoby got excited. Williams used that seagoing lingo in invitations to members of the McAlester Navy Association to a meeting to elect new officers. Oil Well Miles To Go Little Mountain Serves as Site For Study of Chukar Partridge Idaho; Mr. and Mrs. Collin Hunsaker and son of North Ogden, Dr. and Mrs. Lowell R. Daines and daughter! of Brigham City and Karen Hunsaker of. Honeyville. Also calling to get acquainted with their nieces and nephews and their families were Mr. and Mrs. William Sorrell of Bountiful, sister of Mrs. Leland Hunsaker, and Mr. and Mrs. Glen E. Iverson of Salt Lake City,, brother of "Mrs. Hunsaker. Stopping by for an hour during- the afternoon was Mi, and Mrs. Bob Daines and daughter, Heidi and son, Robbie, of Brigham City. YOU GET! year. to begin 1 The number of shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange in with 559,946,890 the need for putting some on this making plans now for applying phosphate fertilizer to alfalfa and pastures this fall, suggests A. Full- mer Allied Box Elder County ex-tension agent. If soil samples are taken now, the results will be reedy m plenty of time tor farmers to determine their fartihzer needs before fall. He cautions, however, that if soil samples are to mean anything, they should be taken according to standard procedures He will gladly advise on the methods of taking the soil samples The samples can then be sent to the Utah State University soil testing laboratory to be analyzed at a cost fee of $1 for each sample. If properly taken up to ten acres may be checked with a single soil Tuesday evening, beginning at 7 p. m. and Rees Pioneer park. Volley ball and other games are on the party itinerary until 7:30 p. m. when a picnic supper will be served to all present, according to the party chairmen. More games follow the supper. 'An ' community sing is planned near the end of the party. No admission will be charged. 24 havent applied phosphate in the past year or two should consider For Fertilizer baby Mr. and Mrs. Kay Hansen and children of Salt Lake City were Weekend guests at the home of Mrs. Hansens parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Dickey. Mr. and Mrs. Warner Stoddard and children and Mr. and Mrs. David Kelly and children spent Sunday in Ogden canyon. . Mr. and Mrs. Jack Spackman and baby spent Sunday in Logan canyon where they attended the Verl Anderson reunion. 1 Mr. and Mrs. John Mills and children of Ogden were in Honey-vill- e Wednesday visiting at the home of Mrs. Mills parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bin Tolman. Monticello Guests Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hunsaker and family of Monticello are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Morrell Hunsaker this week. They are the parents of Mrs. Paul Hun- Brigham City, Utah Thursday Morning, July 30, 1959 THE BOX ELDER JOURNAL, County Agent Advises Plans garden PETER PAN CONTRACTOR Planning A New Home? Tg!! Car 0 Better Start Now if you plan to spend Thanksgiving in that new Home-of-your-o- mm' miftffli DEL MONTE wn Your reliable, local contractor is not the only one who's busy these days. Our own planning department is hard at work . . . bur trucks are shuttling back and forth to job sites all day long . . . the people who arrange the financing and those who make the loans are right in the middle of their busiest season. Thats your cue to get started now . . winters less than four months away. Naturally, we'll be glad'to give you every assistance with plans and quality materials, help in arranging the financing and our recommendation for a qualified, reliable, local contractor. LoCif Iff uriif i b l CRUSHED TIDBITS Youll feel like a queen with a Frigidaire FROST- - PROOF Food Freezer. GHB: 10 CHUNKS BEFUG ! 5 ns 98i GEISHA - SOLID PACK - LIGHT MEAT Ask us about this amazing FROST-PROO- F LOCAL GUARANTEE! - TENDER FANCY NO. FANCY CALIFORNIA 1 HALE SEEDLESS ... 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