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Show Grazing Men Elect Officers Tremonton Man Will Direct Activities Israel Hunsaker of Tremonton. Saturday was elected president of the Cache National Forest Grazing association at the annual meeting in Logan which emphasized specific speci-fic methods of producing more wool and mutton for the war effort. ef-fort. He succeeds Lorenzo Hansen of Hyrum. Harold Selman of Tremonton was elected vice president to succeed suc-ceed Mr. Hunsaker. Officers reelected re-elected were A. D. Allen of Hyrum, secretary treasurer and Alfred Kearl of Laketown, Frank Frazier of Woodruff and Frank Clark of Malad, Idaho, directors. J. O. Stewart, Cache national forest supervisor, reported marked progress toward the goal of having all ranges in the forest properly stocked by 1945. Arrangements have been made with most permittees per-mittees to meet the goal by adopting adopt-ing shorter grazing seasons, grazing graz-ing fewer numbers and keeping long term holdovers until ranges improve. ''To produce more wool and mutton mut-ton for the war effort, we must-produce must-produce more feed on both private and public lands, Mr. Stewart said. "This can be done by using range at seasons when grazing will do least damage to forage and by reseeding." Many experienced employees of the sheepmen undoubtedly have left for war work, Mr. Stewart pointed out, as he urged stockmen to warn new employees to be especially es-pecially careful with fire this summer. LeRoy Van Horn, assistant professor pro-fessor of animal husbandry at Utah State Agricultural college, suggested that growers adopt a "unit producfion" system for sheep, selecting t' 1 best ewes and saving sav-ing their ;e lambs for breeding stock. B described experiments conduttd ; USAC which showed that the value of the heaviest fleeces from 100 ewes picked at random averaged $6 while the lightest 10 picked from another 100 ewes were worth only $2.96 on the average. V. L. Johnson of Salt Lake City, assistant district agent of the state fish and wildlife service, told the ranchers that funds for predatory control will be somewhat limited this year, and that trappers are proving hard to find. Two men now are trapping coyotes on the forest, for-est, he reported, and officials are seeking another. Dem Rowland or Logan, district forest service ranger explained the new method this year of placing sheep in Blacksmith Fork and Logan Lo-gan canyons on both July 1 and 2, instead of crowding them all onto the range on the opening date. Opening the range to half the : sheep each day will facilitate their i movement, and permittees delayed a day this year will move onto the range first next year, he said. 1 " It Dr. Earl K. Peckham, director of :, the Junior Red Cross for the Am-n Am-n erican Red Cross in the Pacific . area, will visit Utah State Agri-j Agri-j cultural college today and , Wed-. Wed-. nesday to discuss the Red Cross ; and Junior Red Cross program with ,j education classes, according to . Milton R. Merrill, director of the summer session. ' ' THEOJ) JITOGE SAYS . . ' j :' 11 f fill mentioned a booklet written about "Just one more question before you go. m m nment telling how Hitler s Jute What this thing called propaganda "enf s t0 maintain contact with foreign you tear so much talk about these days? organizations and how it con- "I'U give you an example, Hant Last tempe inlernatlonal tem. nightlwasreadmganmterestingini perance union. . tte6 in called' Hitler is inFavor'.lt told how H.uer v bc( Haler t interested in w7uld very much like tosee Amencam .fight- ,on advanced m our county ; ing among themselves over proh.biUon be for any reason except that he Uws it s a cause that would create d.s unity wahe w up trouble That s hat time of Congress and legislatures "J"1? they mean by propaganda, Hank. ,. .1 :.rSuments and cripple our war efiort. I 1 ' " Conference of Alenholie Be, rr,,e InAnsU-.rs. ':::::: I , hlujj.ii- , mnm 11 1 in . " ft f:"& Yf r " j. ' , - s m J S v rP . , V:VV mr'-. " l , A' 1 .-.'v ' 'i & -. h u I i .rt Xi 1 : jy ' -"' -,' " l - - -Ly -i cvAii bt-iA "Jjgp VeKS " BONDS IULD FORTRESSES FOR FHHDOMI ' ) That's the way most electric company men got ( -OAKIOC AHAVI' I their start. It's the yl wrican way. And it ujorto. V DW(llD') nWrV J n works so well that the electric companies under esperienced business management were J Bble to push power production up and up to supply war plants with far more electric power than any nation has ever known before ana To THE wide-eyed boy beside him, this Fortress at low rates- pilot ranks with Superman. Dnsinesg Bystem that is helping to One look at tie instrument panel and yon fed the war today will bIbo enrich the peace the same way. It's hard to believe that ordinary when ajr freighters are delivering: radios and mortals could ever master that maze of dials, refrigerators instead of block-busters 1 buttons, levers and switches. But young Americans are doing it with deadly ' tt I efficiency. (Ask Adolf, Benito or Tojo.) And the? Jjtf UTAH POWER & don't learn their job, just by reading a book. It Cf 1 UIAH FUWtK 61 takes intensive training and practical experience. LIGHT CO. ' 1 The electric poweT business is like that You II can't make kilowatt-hour, with theories. You va C eot to learn how by erowine up in the business. . . |