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Show TWENTY-SEVE- A PAPER WHICH N READERS AND MERCHANTS KNOW THEY MAY DEPEND UPON YEARS OF CONSTANT PUBLIC SERVICE TO BEAVER AND VICINITY ALL THE NEWS OP BEAVER COUNTY VOL. XXVIII, NO. 3. n farm i BEAVER, UTAH, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1932. NEWS NOTES FIVE CANDIDATES High School and Lions Club to 1 Sponsor Annual Chautauqua By LEW MAR PRICE County Agent Beaver County Feeds Fine For Fattening Livestock Utah is fortunate in having a wonderful variety of fattening feeds, and feeders who take advantage of this variety will find it in itself to be a valuable factor in securing heavy gains at low cost. Corn silage and beet molasses are excellent fattening feeds with which to add variety to the ration. Beaver county feeders could secure the beet molasses at an economical cost. In fattening lambs with barley and alfalfa this grain and hay combination may be greatly improved by the addition of a half pound of sugr rbeet molasses or a half pound of Jvheat bran per head daily. In many instances this fall, bariey at 45 cents per cwt. and alfalfa at $J per ton are being used in fattening Last winter each ton of operations. beet molasses added to a barley and alfalfa ration in lamb fattening experiments conducted at Monroe saved or replaced 944 pounds of barley, 2G3C pounds of alfalfa and 39 pound j of salt. Even at the present extremely low prices of grain and hay this beet molasses has a lee replacement va'ue equal to eleven dollars per ton, nearly twice its cost not to mention its conditioning value in the ration, which has proved very worth while. Wheat bran when added to a barley alfalfa ration in a recent feeding test increased gains on tht lambs by 5.2 pounds per head in a little over 100 days. Two pounds of corn silage per day, per 100 lbs. liveweight, may be counted upon to impiove and cheapen a barley-alfalf- a ration for fattening Wheat bran has jflatjibs or steers. leen used with excellent success also to supplement a barley-alfalf- a ration. In a recent feeding experiment the use of approximately one-hapound of wheat bran with barley, wet beet pulp, and alfalfa hay increased the gain per lamb by 8.5 pounds at the same time decreasing- the feed cost and increasing the selling price per cwt. The Beaver Lions club will sponsor their Annual Intercommunity Chautauqua the 7th, 8th, and 9th of December. The schedule is as follows: Beaver at Beaver, Wednesday; Cedar at Beaver, Thursday; Parowan at Beaver, Friday. They Will exchange with St. George in the spring. The high school orchestra will fur- nish the music. ' The play will be enacted by Emily Price, Martha Hurst, and Bill Mur-docAnn Price will give a reading entitled "The School Frogram." Beaver, under the direction of the Lion's club, is preparing a fine production under the supervision of Mr. Kirkpatrick. Will L. Adams is directAt St. ing the play at Parowan. George the Chamber of Commerce and the Dixie College are combining for something better than the many good things that community has presented in the past. Cedar City will have its usual good performance with such actors as Mrs. Madsen McClellan, Scott Yvonne Matheson, Allen Cannon, Miss Margaret Williams, Miss Roma Jarvis, Miss Ina Bennett and Ray Bush. Mrs. Reid Gardner is directing the play. Season tickets will be 50c for adults; 25c for students; 25c and 10c for one night. The chautauqua will start promptly at 8:30 p. m. k. OBITUARY Mary died 21 Eliza Robertson Smith, 35, at her home Monday November from an attack of flu pneumonia. Smith was born September at Spanish Fork, Utah and was the daughter of John T. and Margaret Robertson. She married Grant Smith February 17, 1925 in the Salt Lake Temple. Three children were born to them, Loudean age 5, Clinton age 3, and Ray Martell age 17 months. They have made their home in Beaver and have been active workers in the ward in which they lived. Mrs. Smith wa an officer and teacher in the West Ward primary for several years. Besides her husband and three children she is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John T. Robertson, a sister, Mrs. Iona Buterooff, all of Spanish Fork, a brother Grant Robertson, of Salt Lake City, and a host of relatives and friends. Funeral services were held Wednesday at 2 p. m. in the West Ward chapel, Bishop Wesley Farrer conducting. Song by quartet, Kent Morgan, Chase Murdock, Milo Baker and Cannon Thompson; prayer, Taylor Farnsworth; girls chorus composed of Elsie and Bardella Shipp, Helen Davis, Beth Hutch'iigs, Josephine Thomas and Mattie Murdock, rendered a number; Georre Pace spoke words of comfort; solo, "I Know That my Redeemer Lives," Cannon Thompson; talk, President J. F. Tolton; solo Thelma Barton, by accompanied Clara White; closing talk, Bishop Farrer; male quartet, "Though Deepening Trials;" prayer, Melvin J. Wit-we- i. Flower girls, Lourena Bur-lidgIsabel Muir, May Atkins, Daryle Smith, Phillis Warr and Kathleen Farnsworth. Pall bearers, Ber-ne- tt Swindlehurst, Caviyle Smith, Albert Smith, Edwin Smith, Jack Yard-le- y and Williams. guests were Mr. and Mrs. John T. Robertson, Mr. and Mrs. Butenooft all of Spanish Fork; Mr. and Mrs. Grant Robertson of Salt Lake City, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Smith and three children, Bille, Leland, and Mildred Smith all of Salt Lake City. Mrs. 21, 1897 lf Cull Potatoes for Livestock Culi potatoes, when fed in rations to livestock, are comparable to good corn silage. They contain about 20 per cent dry matter, which is largely made up of starch. This means that they are high in available energy for the amount of dry matter they con- tain. Potatoes may be fed raw to cattle, horses, swine, and 3hetp. Although raw potatoes have ooly about two-thirthe value of ooked potatoes when fed to pigs, they have proved to be just as good as cooked potatoes when fed to cattle or sheep. Potatoes should not replace more yilifin half the grain ration in fattcning pigs. They have an acrid, with a tendency to increase the digestive juices in the stomach um intestines. For this reason they should be grad ually introduced into the tation. Alternate freezing and thawing of notatoes causes a fermentation of the starches and sugars, and a concentration of a pinsonous material, making them unsafe for livestock feed. With potatoes as cheap as they are this year, it is advisable to cull rather closely and feed the culls to livestock, leaving a high grade that will sell more readily and at a more satisfactory price. ds e, THE VALUE OF MILK By Kathleen Farnsworth As Prepared by Extension Service o 0; J RACE F0RSCH00L BOARD POSITIONS Four residents of Beaver and one from Milford have file.l as candidates in their respective districts for the school board election to be held in Beaver county on December 7. Candidates in district 4, which includes only Beaver, are W. W. Farrer, Isadore Lessin, Frank Smith and Albert Muir. In district 2, which includes the petition of only one candidate has been filed, that of Jos. C. Smith. Mr. Smith has the support of the district, and no opposition was presented. In Beaver the successful candidats yrill replace John P. Barton, who has been on the board foi many years, but who was a candidate for d, The milk way is the wisest way to steer a growing individual along the road to health. During the first twenty-fiv- e years, one quart of milk each day is desirable to insure optimum development. After twenty-fiv- e Henry Bowman, whose term expiryears, one pint each day is desirable es in district 2, having removed to tp maintain optimum health. Milk not only is our most abundant Provo, was not an aspirant for ansource of calcium, but it supplies this other term. mineral in a form which is most completely utilized by body tissues. One (juart of milk each day insures the growing boy or girl with adequate calcium for building strong teeth and CAPTURED bones, for building steady nerves; for BEAVERPOOLHALL LOOTER supplying normal clothing power to the blood for keeping muscles firm and elastic for insuring normal heart action, and for keeping digestive fluids in proper condition to do their work. Milk also is a good source of phosphorus, which is necessary along with calcium for bone and tooth building. Whole milk is one of our best sources of vitamin A, which is needed for growth and health at all ages. This vitamin builds up resistance against infectious diseases of the eye, lungs, air passages, skin, frontal sinus and bladder. We do not get an adequate supply of vitamin A from skimmed milk nor from milk substi- tutes. Milk is a fair source of vitamin B. This vitamin stimulates the appetite, increases the abilty to resist disease, aids digestion by stimulating the secretions of the digestive glands, increases muscle bone, ;md aids in the prevention of neurites. (To be continued next week) MILLERSGARAGE IS ROBBED OF $20 Someone familiar with the nightly habits of Jack Miller of Miller's Garage last Wednesday night entered the garage and stole twenty dollars from his cash drawer. This is the decision Mr. Miller and local officers came too when the details of the loss became known. The money was missing frcm the drawer, when Mr. Miller came to work Thursday morning, yet there was no sign of forced entry. A key which he had secreted under some papers on the desk had been used to rifle the drawer, then it had been put carefully back in its usual place. No arrest has been made. ANNOUNCE MARRIAGE Following a trail of depredations from Hurricane to Fillmore, Philip Pausner, alias Raymond Blades, was captured in the latter town last week and returned to Washington county, where at a preliminary hearing he plead guilty to a serifs of robberies, among which was the looting of the Lessing pool hall in Beaver. According to the evidence presented, Dausner entered the Hurricane store at about ten o'clock on the night of Friday, November 11. Re moving his own clothing, he put on a suit from the men's clothing stock of the place, and at about 12 o'clock left town through back streets. Entrance to the building was effected by breaking a window in the back door. The accuseel continued on to Anderson's ranch, arriving there at 6 in the morning. There he caught a ride and spent Saturday night in Cedar City, Sunday in Beaver and was caught in an attempted burglary at Fillmore Monday. At Beaver he entered a pool hall where he stole checks, confections and tobacco. He was returned here Saturday by Sheriff Wm. Brooks. While passing through Beaver he rhowed officers where he had thrown away checks he had taken there, and a few were recovered. RELIEF SOCIETY OUT FOR "BETTER HOMES" The mayor and city cousel have a disease that is surely going to be It is the cleaner town contageous. and better home movement. We the East Ward Relief Society would like to catch this contagion in order to get a little more enthusiasm on the subject, Mrs. Thorpe of Cache county was invited to take up the time in the East Ward Relief Society Tuesday, November 2j, She has been at the head of the Garden club and Better Home club in her town for fifteen years. Her talk was full of information, enthusiasm and love of flowers and other things that go lo make for the better home. We find that this movement of cleaner town and better home is being taken up by many towns of our state. Why can it not be taken up in Beaver now that our mayor and city counsel have made such a good start? East Ward Relief Society. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cartwright announce the marraige of their daughter Vie to Elmer Paice, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Paiee. The wedding took place at the bride's home November 23 with the groom's father performing the ceremony. Following the wedding a supper was enjoyed by the immediate familo ies. WEST WARD RELIEF SOCIETY MET TUESDAY BELKNAP CAMP OF D. U. P. MEET DEC. 5 The West Ward Relief Society held their regular social service lesson The Belknap camp of the Daugh- Tuesday afternoon. The lesson was ters of Utah Pioneers will hold their given by Mrs. Ruth Wlttwer to a regular monthly meeting Monday, good attendance of sisters. December 5, at the home of daughAfter the lesson was given Mrs. ter Vie Smith. Kathleen Farnsworth gave a very A good program is being prepared splendid demonstration on cleaning and they would like a good turn out. and pressing which she had taken at Vistors from the other camps are in- the Extension school at Logan. Othvited. er helpful things for the home was given and all enjoyed very much. EXTENSION WORK Many nice Christmas presents MEETING TODAY were shown and ways of making the same discussed. Mrs. Farnsworth is Mrs. EfTie Barrows of the Home prepared to help the ladies of this Demonstration department of the community with many things that Extension service. Mrs. Edna May-coc- will help to lighten the work in the state vice chairman of Better home if they will only take advantHomes will be in Beaver Friday to age of the opportunity. o meet with all leaders and committees to plan for thier different work. The Miss Margaret Thurman visited in meetings will be held in the Beaver Salt Lake City over the Thanksgivlibrary at 10 and 2 o'clock. ing vacation. k, PARENT-TEACHE- IN Mil-for- Out-of-to- The Red Cross WELL KNOWN TENOR By Director William Peterson, Utah TO GIVE RECITAL State Agricultural College Extension Service Arnold Blackner, Ua'.t Lake's notPrior to November 10 the Red ed cowboy tenor ,wll be heard in a Cross organization had distributed concert program at the Granite stake during this year 59,384 barrels of tabernacle on December 8 under the at valued $150,000; 55,650,582 JTIour, of the Utah Genealogical "pounds of stock feed, valued at $450,-00- auspices society. cotton cloth of 169.3G0 yards ' Mr. Blackner has just returned valued at $16,930. In addition 14,040 Los Angeles, where he has been from cotton garments have been made up studying under 'Cimini, the well- and distributed to the needy. known instructor. His program will It is evident that if everyone of the comprise operatic numbers, chamber 100,000 families in Utah should take music, Irish ballads and songs of Inout a Red Cross membership at $1 dian character. Salt Lake Tribune. each, it would take more than six o years to pay back to the organization MINERSVILLE DESIGNATED the amount which has already been REGULAR SUNDAY SCHOOL distributed in this state. coninto take not do UNION MEETINGS OF L. D. S. These figures sideration the amount of food distriMinersville has been designated as buted during this time of shrunken the place in which the regular Unincomes. The distribution of food and feed ion Meeting of the Stake Sunday in Utah was fundamentally necessary School will be held on the third Sun Heretofore the in view of the 1931 drouth and finan- day of each month. Stake Sunday School meeting have cial reverses. Hundreds of families which were been rotated among the various towns 'in the stake. (Concluded on last page) $2.00 R RAILROAD CO. TO PAY ASSOCIATION NEEDED Beginning OVER $63,000.00 IN TAXES INBEAVffi CO. this week, the Scrip will contain short editorials and articles by various members of the foc-ult- Per Year in Advance y. The following is the first of a series by Mr. Moody, the principal. "There is a need in every community for a good, progressive parent and teachers organization that will unite the school and community for a common purpose. That great purpose is none other than good schools the best that can be had through cooperative effort on the part of the home and school. Rather than Parent-Teacher meetings being an entertainment, they should deal with problems that concern the lives of the pupils who are being trained by both the school and the home. Parents nor teachers can rightly understand the school or the home life of the students until a thorough analysis is made of the problem that confronts- - them from both sources. Parents misjudge the school and .eachers misjudge the home, until careful, investigations thoughtful and studies are made. Education has but one great purpose and that is to teach a greater citizenship that will cause indviduals to live a richer and fuller life now in the present. Lffe should be creative day by day and added to by both the home and the school. The child's being in this world of struggle has been none of his say; so parents and teachers are to see that his life is directed toward the noblest ends. This can not be done unless parents and teachers alike assume an understanding responsibility to com- ne their effort for the greatest wel fare of each young human life that comes under their care. There is a challenge to the parent to find out from teachers if his children are getting and are able to get the greatest good out of school under the circumstances. The people of Beaver County may rest assured that their largest will pay its taxes in full before the time set for taxes to become delinquent. For the Union Pacific System, in a communication addressed to Mr. Casterline, the Milford agent, has signified its intention of paying the total amount of he tax levied. Along with this letter is some interesting data prepared by the auditors of this company, showing the amounts paid to the various counties of the state for tax purposes, which altogether makes a grand total of one million one hundred forty five thousand eight hundred thirty-tw- o dollars and thirty-fiv- e cents Of this amount Beaver, tux-pay- er ($1,145,-832.35- ). county receives $62,772.43. The total tax for Beaver county is apportioned among the various funds as follows: Schools including State levy for public schools $35,692.23 County Roads and Hwys. 10,622.70 General County purposes 6,019.53 Charitable purposes 2,655.67 State general including higher educational institutions 4,072.07 All city and town levies.. 3,710.23 The total amounts levied against the Union Pacific System in the various counties of the state are as follows: Beaver $62,772.43 Box Elder 71,621.27 61,472.72 Cache Davis Iron 56,86r.84 87,950.73 Juab Millard Morgan Salt Lake Summit Tooele Utah 87,058.08 110,285.51 64,579.21 173,662.79 136,745.74 58,957.62 - 67,944.80 2,364.72 TRIPLETS BORN TO Wasatch CEDAR CITY COUPLE Weber Wednesday morning at the county hospital triplets weie born to Mr. and Mrs. Foyer Olson, popular young couple of Cedar City. Two boys and a girl were born to them, all three being in apparent good physical condition, and the doctors felt that they had a very good chance of living and developing as any normal baby. However, Thursday the little girl died, the other two still living. One of the babies weighed 4 pounds 5 ounces, and the others 3 pounds 1 ounce and 3 pounds 4 ounces. Although Mrs. Olson has been in poor health for Ihe past several months she is reported as improving nicely at present. She was formerly Miss Faye Jackson of this city, an employee in the Peterson Drug Store for some time. Iron County Record. 103,546.89 NATIONAL RED I CROSS ROLL CALL Inability to assemble full accounts of the result of Red Cross Roll Call, due to the scattered territory, and the circumstances under which the membership canvass has had to be conducted make it quite impossible for the secretary to provide a complete report at this time. The American National Red Cross recognizes all emergencies involved in the annual enlistment of members; but it is increasingly a matter of local pride, and of gratification in being attached to the national, that combine to make membership worth p while, for the chapter as a and for the individual member as a distinct personal unit of the national program which is well known. o One of the primary obligations of the Red Cross is its activity in diPIUTE CO. STARTS saster relief, and it is a fact worthy WORK ON ROAD TO of notice that in every emergency of PUFFER LAKE any magnitude, or of vital importance to its particular area, at an earWork started Thursday morning of of recording events the Red ly stage last week on the Puffer Lake road is invariably found At work. It Cross under the cooperative work of the is thought that this phase alone juscounty and forest department on the tifies the annual practice of reinforcfollowing basis. Each man laboring of the organi"man the ing power" on this project would be given $1,125 zation on as a whole. per day cash, $1,125 tr.x receipts and The interests of men, This project 75c per day donation. Junior Red Cross, work, production is one of the relief projects to assist and Braille transcribing, all of which in caring for the unen. ployed. Wi'.h are being carried on by Beaver Chap this amount and previous appriationp ter, add to the credits that are given the road should be completed to the the iommunities who participate by lake and join the load to Beaver. of membership, and in any of way This would more than out the dis the work being undertaken as chap tance between Beaver and Junction iter These are habitual projects. in two, and is a project that has been forms of Red Cross service, and are worked on and urged by our citizens supplemented, as occasion arises, by for a number of years. Piute Coun- such further processes as are prompty ' News. ted by Congress or made imperative o by emergency. EAST WARD RELIEF who have not If there are tho SOCIETY HOLD MEETING Koan marKAil Kv ttiA nmmttfoA ftt the close of the canvass and such follow-u- p as is possible, they may make The East Ward Relief Society held wishes known, to Roll Call or Relief in their their their weekly meeting Hall. The Social service lesson was Chapter Chairman. K. K. Franke, Sec'y under the direction of class leader Vern Oakden. A very splendid talk and demonstration on "Home Beauti-ficatio- AMERICAN LEGION was given by Mrs. Thorpe AUXILIARY ENTERTAINS Mrs. Thorpe is the of Providence. Twenty-fou- r members of ther Am mother of Mrs. Bardetta Puffer. The many ladies present felt that erican Legion Auxiliary entertained they had been benefited by being pre- Tuesday in the Library building in officers honor of the seven sent. of the year. Mrs. James Yardley, Arnold Low was called to Cedar past president, was presented with City Saturday to get Mr. and Mrs. a beautiful gold pin. After a short business meeting a Scott Tattersall who were ill with influenza. They are at the home of .light lunch was served. The remaind-je- r of the evening was enjoyed in Scott's mother, Mrs. Mary Tattersall "Five Hundred," with Agnes is Low Mrs. playing and slowly improvingiWhornham so receiving high score and he son little that their for caring YarHlav mmnlation. lamni (ra will not contract the disease. unit-grou- out-goi- I . |