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Show Tha Payson Chronicle, Payson, Utah THURSDAY, APRIL 2 A, 10'6 1 rf4i- - -- - state in the national dairy princess contest in Chicago and the industry in its traditional cheese Utah tour. festival goodwill ' Pat 1956, of Obray dairy princess fi i mindt d this week it is to take charge of this countys of Paradise, Cache Valley, was t me ti beg n a for to the nations dairy preparation contest runnerup S R is Boswell. Provo, o' mt ta.k Selecting the coun-- t Utah princess. county agent. agricultural '36 d.iiv princess. Utahs 1957 dairy princess will The reminder came from Wal-P arn.h, Logan, state be chosen in September, he sad i i. an of the dairy dairy princesses will be princes-- County f nahsts in the state contest. coi committee. II Mggo.t d that county dairy He reminded the dairy leaders le. r. ii. kf plum now to hold the girls competing in the conthe c icnty da ry princess contest test must be high school graduii June, as a fe iture of their ates, whose backgrounds in some way are connected to the dairy industry. Goshen Will Dance Thjv also should be fond of dairy products, he said, adding, In U cf U They almost certainly should GUARANTEE! be, since beauty and a diet full of SAMS PHOTO LAB protein-ricdairy foods, such as Production This Week I'iah Dairy Queen Contestants Should Enter Name I . t!c:r Future VV.th Local Dairy Leaders D .. Utan Named n County Dairy Month festivities v . 3 y - I r r T- " ' - - ( , i -t v .A A ? MONEr-tAC- i' Mrs. Cowan's K ndergirlen We are bus m in k nd ignt h n ,t ik v ' 'viil make car-so nation. out of paper we cm put thrm on Mothers til it we at" going to D is C ircl i milk, cheese and ice cream, go Steele, a University of hand in hand. Ut ill .udent fr im Goshen, will The winner of the Utah dairy dance .n the annual Orchesis con-et- princess title will represent the of the U of U Thursday and Stuiday (Apnl 19 and 21) a; t'.-u- e nril e We have Moilin- - 11th at St -- it a fir th(m Friday, liiviiu' Don surpii.o for onr whin t lit y come to our Tea which we are I) ii'ithim 8.15 Mav 30 oclock. Biun-r- m . ? L brought a - on h s treat f birthday Wo WHO WILL BE NEXT DAIRY PRINCESS? ane Hart)' Birthday to Steven That a cm ' . n uppoimo-- t in the minds of the 1956 Dairy is and wiite him a birthday letter Ouiav of Paiadi.se, Cache Valley, and Wallace A ParPat Darling, li v cod we planted in The sit they relax over Masses of milk, Mr Parrish, state coltn'i h ve sprouted and sent rish of Logan,, cnntL.-- t chairman, pr.nccs-urged county leaders this week to dairy week-n I le the ives ovei P gio. plan the mdustiya queen contest-- , for June. The state contest will end ! i n- -- -- have onr room decorated be held in September. It looks nice, pr ng now like prmg with apple blos-.ii- i. and daffodils to sheer us that have helped the most are mathematics, English and hisup Mrs. Operohaw's Second Grade tory. Science We oo learning to weave The science class is studying things with yarn and warp Wi enjov weaving very much about airplanes They have just We aie happy to have Marcia fin. shed a un.t about the uniWiddsun hick m school. Marcia verse. had her tonsils removed a few In the hopscotch tourney at davs ago the Peteetneet School, Christine We miss Larry Dunston and Mitchell and Carol Ann Otteson y 8 trips Li pe he soon recovers from his of the sixth grade were two of illness, and can be back in school. The flower seeds we planted growing fast. Some of the j'are I plants are six and seven inches high. Our bean plant is two feet high. Miss Higginson's Third Grade We have a newsboard in our room. It looks something like a large newspaper. We named it the Peteetneet News. We change our news every week We have a place for trips, illness, births, accidents, and ac1 tivities. TRY IT! We have some news under each 2 Greyhound's Scenicruiser j d. vision this week. We also put our schi ol news from the Payson offers complete wash- - I Chronicle in a place under ClipI I pings. I room, new contour We think our newsboard is seats, another way to learn how to J "upstairs" observation J read, write and spell. Sixth Grade News J level, too! j Monte Montague visited the L.brary Reading class April 17. Ludlow Motel lie is home on leave from the 207-123 E 1st N. Phone navy where he is studying to be a dental technician. Payson, Utah In the Navy they call the floor the deck and the stairs the ladder. If they do not use the correct Navy words they are punished. He said the school subjects W f i luuuiiicrinser dif-feie- nt r LOS ANGELES K h the winners. Editor Judy Elmer. Reporters Kindergarten, KEMTOKV EfOQ PyT I KIT GLASS! n Mar- cia Ntel; First Grade, Carol Ann Ottesen; Second Grade, Lois Ann Haskell; Miss Higginsons Third Grade, Linda Miller; Fifth Grade, Janice Brunson; Sixth Grade, Frances Elmer. FINEST pm The concert will be presented n K.ng.bury Hall on the U. campus, according to Dr. Elizabeth R Haves, director A varied program is promised for the event, following two basic themes One will utilize dance ideas From the Pages of ILst tv, the other 'From th Pages of America Mr Steele, a graduate student in dance at the U , is a son of Mr and Mrs D C. Steele, Ga-heHe has appeared in several dance and music productions at lit o U. including Sing Out Sweet Land, Nutcracker Su'te, and others He received his B. S. Degree from the U. of U. in 1954. I believe in the patriotism and energy and in.tiative of the average man. Woodrow Wilson 86 PROOF V Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey OLD CROW DISTILLERY CO.. DIV. OF NATIONAL OIST PROD. CORP.. FRANKFORT. jGREY HOUND! at... ROOT LEVEL w ? O o j i' y;! 0, o VT A tilo t it v -- H c oV In 1924 Charles H. Winn started as a brakeman USE . . . Anhydrous Ammonia 82 NITROGEN Anhydrous ammonia is applied four to eight inches below the surface. It diffuses through the soil so as to make best use of available moisture. A healthy deep root system is encouraged. The plant easily assimilates the needed nitrogen. And fertilization is kept below the germination level of weed seed. Anhydrous ammonia is quickly and easily loaded and applied with tractor-operate- d equipment. It contains more nitrogen per dollar than any other fertilizer. Nitrogen brings greater yields and higher protein content when used as part of a balanced fertility program. Get the full facts on anhydrous ammonia. Phone MEMBER 01 the Bingham Mine of the then Utah Copper Company. Today, as a locomotive engineer at the mine, he still is helping to produce copper. What started as a job 32 years ago, has turned into a career at Kennecott Copper Corporation. And two more generations of Charles H. Winns family are following in his footsteps. His son, Charles E., joined the Kennecott family in 1951 when he started is a trackman at the mine. He is a dispatcher today. And his grandson, Kenneth W. Foster, started with Kennecott in 1950 as a trackman. He is now a payroll clerk. The "like father, like son history of the Winn family is repeated so often at Kennecott it can well be called a tradition. In all, 691 men at the mine, mills and refinery are the sons of Kennecott em- ployees. And hundreds more are related in other as brothers, uncles, nephews, cousins and ways This family allegiance to Kennecott tells only a part of the story of careers in copper. s. Another chapter was unfolded recently, when Kennecott honored 206 employees who had completed 20 years of continuous service and 51 other employees who had completed 30 years of service. Of Kennecotts 6,500 employees, 1,019, or nearly have served 20 or more years, a total of more than 30,000 years! one-sixt- h, With so many long-tim- e employees and father-so- n teams serving Kennecott, it must follow that the Kennecott tradition i s careers, not just jobs. COMPANY AGRI-CHEMIC- CARLOS at SCHRAMM I0-J- 5 OF AGRICULTURAL AMMONIA Payson, Utah INSTITUTE Kemiecott Copper Corporation A Good Neighbor Helping to Build a Better Utah KY. |