OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, Local and Personal GRich Co. Furn. Co "Where your trade is appreciated and where your dollars by most. J We have a number of Bed Room. Suits just arrived. Cali and see them. The price y mo- You can buy a Monarch Range or a Voss SUGAR, Why not trade in your old radio on a new Philco, we will make liberal allowance for your old one. We have some 9 x 12 axminster Rugs priced from $30.00 to $35.00 also Hi x 12 priced about $47.50. You cant beat the price j Bishop and Mrs. L. B. Johnson motored to Salt Lake City Thursday. They were accompanied by Miss1 Marie Res. dry goods and groceries, hardware, paints and varnishes. Air. and Mrs. O. T. Wilson have moved to Hooper, Utah. Mr. Wilson has taken a lease on a farm there. Mrs. Chester A. Ashby is visiting relatives at Salt Lake this week. Mrs. Leo McKinnon was reported on the sick list Wednesday. Mrs. Audrey Peart has scralet fever The telephone is our greatest saver of time for the ranch and in the home. It enables ns to talk to our freincis and neighbors. It brings all parts of our country near together. Enjoy these benefits by having a phone installed. CHOW unproductive land, suffer from their own midfortune. It can be demonstrated, however, that these attempts to use land for purposes to which it Ls not suited also cost the taxpayer money. 75 2.90 30 .22 'S' .40 .70 45 70 .24 20 Swifts Large Bars, T. N. T., 6 for .27 .25 "profit by Grading at rROFFirs a Phone Evanston, 327 Urie 1 3-- 2 Lyman 28-- 2 NOTICE TO WATER USERS LEWIS LONGHURST Notary Public LICENSED ABSTRACTOR Of Rich County, Utah " , A specialty f of making Deeds and Titles OPlace cHotel Confectionery Cafe ind., T. 11 N., R. 7 E. ; Secs. 1, 2. 3 & 12. T. 11 N.. R. 6 E.; and Secs. 33 & 34, T. 12 N., R. 7 E.. SLB & M Candies and stock-waterin- Ice-Crea- m g The Home of those Good Fountain Drinks CPhone 3AA E RAY DURNFORD nt and -- J. ARTHUR DURNFORD - i ( i ii and for incidental domestic and purposes. It is now proposed to store said 14 sec. ft or not to exceed 2300 ac. ft. of water from NoEXPERT WORKMANSHIP-BE- ST vember 1 of each year to June 30 ind. OF MATERIAL of the year following, by means of an dam across the South WITH A PRICE TO FIT ALL impounding fork of Ot'er creek at a point E. 2440 SHOES AND POCKETBOOKS. ft. from the NW cor. Sec. 12, T. 11 N., ASK ABOUT OUR THREE-GRADR. 6 E. The water from North fork PLAN. of Otter creek will be diverted at a point N. 33 deg E. 1105.5 ft. from the COMMUNITY SHOE Sec. 2, T. 11 N., SW cor of the NE REBUILDER R. 6 E., and conveyed by ditch to the H. L. Atkinson, Prop. reservoir on the South fork. The waiter will be released from storage 922 Main Street from April 1 to October 31 and reEvanston, Wyo. diverted and used as heretofore, to irrigate the lands above described. By Grade AA Conference Certificate exchanging storage water for the Ale an Ancient Beverage natural flow of the streams during the Ale Is older than literature for la irrigation season, it will be arranged he first fragments of recorded hlstorj that the benefits of ' this storage occurs mention of the beverage as hav- will be applied to lands heretofore irwhich are situated above the ing previously existed. Bibliography, rigated reservoir. proposed which is bewilderingly extensive on is designated in This application te the subject of ale and beer, seems the State Engineers Office as File pretty well' agreed on the statement No. a 1301. , that ale was known in China 4,000 All protests against the granting of years before Uhr'st and in Egypt at said application, stating the reasons least 4,000 years ago. therefor, shall be submitted in affiform and in duplicate, accompandavit t Lady Attendant When Necessary ied by a fee of $1.00 and filed in this Depth of Lake Superior comOffice 913 Main St., Evanston, Wyo. .Lake Superior, is the deepest of the office within 30 days after the no of the publication of this Great Lakes, most of It being more pletion Day Phone 49 Night Phone 49 or 90 Oce. than 600 feet, as compared to Lake H. HUMPHREYS, T. Eries maximum depth of 180 feet State Engineer. North of Copper Harbor, Mich., Lake Date of first publication, Jan. 17, 1936 Choose Poison or Rope Words in Dictionary 1 Superior attains 954 feet, but the to death in condemned Persons of a standard dicThe vocabulary greatest depth Is about 20 miles off The Term John Henry allowed to choose whether are Estonia about 455,000 1.008 Ontario feet Jtter Head. The term John Henry is slang, and they prefer to be hanged or take tionary aggregates dead words of our the words. If t has been in use for at least twenty poison, according to a criminal law. be added, the total, as shown The Sprnce Hen years. It is in wide use among sales Under the law the executioner remains speech New English Dictionary on the The spruce hen is widely distribu- men or solicitors who have substituted anonymous and his nahfe Is not even by would reach Historical Principles, In areas ted through all the wooded it for the older term, "John Hancock," mentioned In the tribunals record. for 700.000 the tongue English words, the Northwest territories, and the meaning . 1 Probably the signature." dead. and living partridge or ruffed grouse has been similarity of Henry to Hancock sugTop Soil Slow in Developing found as far nortb as the MacKenzle gested the original humorous substituIt requires 2,8P0 years for nature river delta in tho Aklavik area, hard tion. The older term 'arose from the to build up seven inches of top soil, acMany in India Illiterate Indias by the Arctic coast In the southern prominence of Hancocks signature on of extension the population, equal to all of to estimates cording parts of the territories the sharp tailed the Declaration of Independence. Litservice of the soil erosion service of Europe, exclusive of Russia, la still 90 grouse is found in plentiful numbers. erary Digest per cent illiterate. the Department of Agriculture. FROM OLD TO NEW WITH ANY SHOE er on relief, private charity and uncollectable loans given out during four years to farmers, mort of whom lived on land that could never hope to yield them a living. Taxpayers, and the people who supported private charity, were therefore praetcallv sitlvs'dizinsf these famiiea to stay on land where thev wouQd never npport themselves. The land utilization program of the federal government is aiming at a correction of these conditions by help ing these families to move to good land, and by putting the poor land to some use for which it is fitted. This may be either forestry, grazing, or other forms of conservation. Taxpayers in every rural county of the United States have a deep Interest in promoting a wise use of all the land in their cojunty. Wise action may save them many' thousands of dollars. .60 .27 SOAP, ball-roo- m off In another state, it was estimated that more than $7 000.000 was spent 30 20 Sols It is obvious that poor farm familtrying to make a living on ies, vaCnly pense. .07 Picture Show (By L. O. GRAY) Absisstant Administrator Resettlement , " Administration cut-ov- .29 .10 CRYSTAL WHITE GRANULATED SOAP, Large pkgs. PAR SOAP POWDER, Large pkgs Ar-gyl- his land to provide suffiicent food and clothing to his family, there is bound to be very little money for taxe.-;- . This is evidenced by the fact that large areas of land are tax delinquent in regions where land is oeing misused. Poor land in farms cannot pay taxes. forest land, Idle, where fires have prevented reforestation, also produce little if any revenue that will pay taxes. Yet roads and schools must, be kept up wherever there are people living. Roads and schools form the major part of the expenses Incurred by many rural towns and counties. Persons living on good land are forced to make np the dcfiicit incurred by the tax delinquency on poor land. Studies of this problem have been made by the Administration in cooperation with several slate agencies. In one place twenty eight families were found, which, cost the county .$185 per year each to transport their children to school. Each family paid an average of only $6.40 In taxes, in other words, taxixavers from other ports of the country had to take about $5,000 out of their pockets in order f carrv these children to and from school. The cost of keep- lug up the roads and of supporting the school was in addition to this ex- - 29 SODA, A. & H., 3 pkgs It is reported that Mrs. Matilda Jones has been sick for the past two or three weeks. Calvin Jones is suffering with . badly infected hand. bottles OHOW, 30 oz. -- If a farmer cannot make enough 45 . SANDWICH SPREAD. Brookfield Qt Jar .' WHEATIBS, Large Pkgs BRAN FLAKES, Medium Size, Jerseys PEANUT BUTTER, 2 lb. jar SYRUP, Gallon, Amaizo WESSON OIL, gallon can OLIVE OIL, Gallon Can, Pure BAKING POWDER, Worlds Biggest Seller, 50 oz. cans State Engineers Office, Standard, Whitehousc Cafes Salt Lake City, Utah, Jan. 11, 1936. Notice is hereby given that A. W. 25 - 30 35c Dinners Utah'Wyoming Thornock, Henry Nuckolls, Alma First - Class Cooking Ray Hoftman, W. T. Rex and Ind. Tel. Co. Jackson Land and Livestock Company, Excellent Service Randolph, Utah, have made application in accordance with .the laws of Utah, EVANSTON, WYO. Co change the point of diversion and QnalityGoods Wing Wong, Prop. nature of use of 14 sec. ft. of water from North and South Forks of Otter creek in Rich county, Utah. Said water has heretofore been diverted from January 1 to December 31, incl. of each year, at points as follows: From North Fork of Otter creek into FEBRUARY 15th the Swenson ditch, Reservoir ditch, TOP HAT South Ditch, Kearl ditch. Island ditch and Ward ditch and from the FRED ASGINGEiR ROGERS, stream of Otter creek into the main EDTAIRE; EltIO RHODE'S. son Rex dutch, HORTON. EVERETT WARD Jensen North ditch, ditch, Highline Music and Lyrics by Irvin Berlin ditch, Dwlkin Howard dutch, Thorn See Fred Asltaiire and Ginger Rogers ock dutch and Argyle Hoffman ditch, nadance the PIOOOLINO, this gay aM of which are more particularly deadventure. La- scribed) in the tions new application filed in the dies and gentlemen, here Is a show. State office. The water has Engineers Nice girls? Enough of them to send been used to 3000 acres of land irrigate you home a nervous wreck. embraced in parts of Secs. 3 to 10 IIOW TO CONSERVE AND DEVEOLP LAND WISELY 60 WILLA PT. OYSTERS, 1 lb. cans, 3 for HONEY, 10 lb. cans m,.f COFFEE, Folgeris Yellow Oans, 2 lbs. MILK, Tall Oans, 12 for TEA, 1 lb. Japan, Fancy Grade STARCH, Amaizo, Com or Gloss, 3 for The Randolph Sunday School is putting on a picture show and vaudeville February 20th. 'Watch for the hand hills. The Best Place to Trade .jg .25 j Wilson Norris left for Ogden with a truck load of horses Thursday. We always carry a complete stock of ,55 JAM, Western Brand, gal. or .No. 5 can SALAD DRESSING, Brookfield, Qt Jar Peart, motored to Kemmerer Thurs- day. $1.45 10 lbs.. Granulated RICE, Fancy Blue Rose, 5 lbs. BEANS, Navy or Red Chili, 6 lbs. LARD, 4 lb. pkg., Silver Leaf Mr. and Mrs. G. Willard Peart. Mrs. Annie Oorless and Mrs. Geo. A. j PRICES AT ALL STORES FIDUR, Big J., One 48 lb. bag Dr. and Mrs. Reay and son Claude, motored to Salt Lake Tuesday. They were accompanied by Mrs. Don McKinnon or Maytag Washer on easy terms. Specials for the Week February 10 to 15, Inclusive: BUY AT STORE NEAREST YOU. SAME LeRoy Slielby returned home from Ogden Thursday. "He reports Mrs. Shelby getting along nicely. is low. , Evanston, Urie and Lyman, Wyoming Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Lomghurst, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wamsley and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Hellstrom motored to Sait Lake-CitWednesday to bid goodbye to the missionaries who left Salt Lake Thursday. Geo. A. Peart and C. M. Booth tored to Salt Lake Wednesday. H. Proftit G. Leo McKinnon, N. L. Gray, Vllate and Billy McKinnon and. Francis Jacobson, motored to Salt Lake Tuesday for Mrs. Billy McKinnon. They returned Wednesday. General Merchandise. Utah Funeral Directors and Licensed Embalm&rs for UTAH and WYOMING Funeral Car Strictly and Ambulance Service Anywhere at any time up-to-da- . C |