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Show I - X V ' : i s - 4 I x ' x - ; ,i 5 0s N - N s r v -My ? N x x 5 V r : - 'S:vL-:v-'::-: - ' 1 s x s " It" V I ' 1 ' ft. X x X xl V j I ' faJ jjrp mZt'i?- I ' &&f4&mmja$ -rra??4'7 Q CHANGE report card C's into B's with BETTER LIGHT! Hell learn faster, easier, when you give him the right light for study. Choose table or desk lamps with reflector bowls. Use a 150-watt bulb. Keep reading surfaces free of i shadows or glare. Dim lights cause eyestrain, make study difficult. Eyes are precious good light costs so little! 5 TELLURIDE POWER COMPANY J Buy frm y0ur dea,er' Jtotal electric home" ! - f WHAT IS BAN - H E'S A BIG MAN . . . He's a small man . .T He's a laughing, working . . . tall man. jbtVI S ' ' V j3 He comes in all assorted shapes and sizes ., . ffCf ' ' Yv Happy, sad ... Wide and lean .. . ' He's the meat and potatoes of a 1 'I He's a farmer nation . . . He's the ham and eggs on the menu at a restaurant . . . He's Hal- He's tomorrow's breakfast with a grin on his loween pumpkins and cold watermelons " ' face . . . He's the nation's bread-basket with a at a Fourth of July picnic . . . He's the cocked left eyebrow . . . turkey and yams on a Thanksgiving Day tT , , r , . dinner table ... He wakes at dawn to feed the world. He carries nation's on his big shoulders ... He e s a farmer, holds the earth in his hands and lives bv the t , , , . sun and the rain ' . lan and lea", he's always the first of the pioneers. He breaks frontiers and clears the He's America riding a tractor . . . eartn anc tames the land for the city men to Democracy wearing a straw hat ... He come ... is freedom holding a hoe . . . He's the hv 1 future of the world in a pair of blue "l fg T and ,a Stle man Strong overalls ... enough to hold a plow in line against the hard earth , . . and gentle enough to caress a new- I Since the dawn of time he's wrestled the born calf with loving hands . . . land and squeezed life from the angry soil . . . tr; tn r , , . , 5 r His tall, strong sons fight the nation's wars Armies march on his muscles . . . Cities eat " and his bustling wife brings gentleness and on his labors ... He fills the market place and Peace t0 the raw Plains a"d the wild valleys. j makes the wheels of commerce whirl ... u c ne s a tarmer . . . Always a pawn He's a farmer. of the times . . Politicians promise him things . . . Bankers He's a gambler. He throws his seed like dice respect him . . . Middlemen live off him ... on a gia"t gambling table of land. He bets his tt j 1 . , . ,. muscles and his know-how on the heat of the mafand bo s " V Handy- d the tUrn of a rain cloud Somedmes he VeteS rChaniC ' WnS- etimes he loses. The Gods make him Veterinarian, salesman . . . Purchasing agent, sweat for his winnings production manager . . . Weather forecaster ... ' ' ' and good neighbor .... " He builds the schools and hews the He likes the smell of alfalfa fields ... and the look of dawn coming over a mountain ... peacerui acres . . . and the sound of cattle in a meadow . . . and , And he makes the smoke rise from friendly the jaunty jig of a hoe-down fiddle. He likes the chimneys dotted across the plains. His hands music of small streams and the look of trees .to11 the church bells on country Sundays. He climbing a hill. He likes the breath of air fil- hvLes by the code of the land and never refuses tered through growing fields ... and the echo a helP"g hand to friend or stranger of a sharp axe cutting into a tree trunk. He it , likes the look of corn shucks at autumn time i?p 3 Arnenca's best customer . . . He's the ... and the smile of a harvest moon r , S most constant hope . . . He's the most useful man in America . . He's a farmer. , - . v He s a farmer! Milford State Bank and Beaver City Branch CopyriBM 1961 by Dan Volnlln A)( Ri9h, R,rvd I I |