OCR Text |
Show BEAVER PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY (UTAH) 18, 1956 A Seventh and Eighth yradr Adel, daughter n.f Mr. and Mrs. FORMER FISHI.AKK FOREST class party was given Sunday eve ieber Gillins, entertained at a SI FKRVISOR GETS .NEW :ning after cburih at the home oil uirthday party on Monday. Many PROMOTION IX OGDEX OFFICE' Mr. and Mrs. Ral:li Pearson. Itliiitle friends tame to wish her a In a move to reorganize the Divvas a farewell By RJEV A ALBRKCHT parly for their nappy .birhtday and enjoy games vision of Information and Educateacher, Garth Fisher. A nook was and refreshments. Mathews Family Have Dinner tion and Personnel Alanagement, as a gift by '.he class to Mr. given enterMr. and Mrs. Jule Gillins the promotion of Lowell G. Woods and Mrs. Fisher. J A K BON PAPER, TYPEWRITER 'to the position of Assistant Retained Sunday at a Mother's Day RIBBONS. ADDING MACHINE gional Forester in charge of the dinner in honor of Mary Ellen: A ward farewell party was given PAPER and other SUPPLIES Division of Information and EduMathews. Other guests were Mr. AT THE PP.E33 OFFICE. and Mrs. Melvin Mathews Mrs. Thursday evening for Air. and Mrs. cation was announced today by ReBonnie Parry and three daughters Utwayne farter, who are moving gional Forester ('. J. Olsen. Air. Your grocer will help you Break of Cedar; Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Ma- - "J as egas. ana .wr. aim .virs. Woods served as supervisor of the! Cold with lemon and soda 'our are to who risher, Mrs. going thews and daughter LaRae, rishlake Forest from 1950 untilj i .v where Garth enter the 19 54, and was well known in this' Lucy Nicholes, Judy and Roger of Texas, Ail Force, lioth ...uples were pre-?a- lf NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN area. Antimony; Mrs. V. D. Spencer of I.ak; Mr. and Mrs. Llovd lilted a like book as a token of NN'OTICE I.S HEREBY GIVEN The two divisions have been Lei Carpel Mathews and Tommy, Mrs. Leola J'bipieciauon tor then- services in that I, Lee R. Fillmore, sheriff of temporarily managed, daring the Dcn't 'ward by the officers. Gillins and Mr. and Airs. Sherwin R. at sell A. will Standing, cast 2L years by Utah, Mrand Airs. Dewayne Carter Beaver County, Wood. Ronald Ward of Reaver sheriff's sale to the highest bidder Regional Forester. Mr. Cleaning Floor You als0 a vel'e book the to in by railed later the afternoon given for cash at Kirk's Phillips G6 Sorv-- i landing will 0e in charge of the S;ake Missionaries. visit his grandmother. e. in Beaver City, Utah, at the division of Personnel Alanagement Now you can clean all types hour of 12 noon, on the 28th day ia the Ogden office, according to This is the first time Airs. Ma-- . ll carpets quickof krws has had her family together Harold Jameson, son ,!' Air. and of May, 1956, the following auto Air. Olsen. ly and easily with the new i'or several years. Mrs. Alerrill Jameson Blue Lustre Carpet and Uphas been mobiles; Air. Woods is a native of Ogden. 1!H9 Packard convertible, Cleane,. inmsterred holstery from shepherd's Field .Motor No. C42169S0E, also Air. and Airs. Richard Clark and August, 1954. he has been; in Texas to Nell is Air Force Base This very gentle foam cleanNew to chief t'.ssi.Mtant 1948 Yorker, Chrysler Floyd Iverson, boys of Salt Lake visited Sunday llll iiniM f'Vai H er is brushed into the carpet in I'nJw also Alotor No. ' ;., the division of Range Managewith Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Gillins. Vluf WW1. . v, n without sagging or matting, , u.,,,, v ii i 1 ii u .Ul till' 948 Kaiser, Motor No. ment in the Regional office. the pile open and A5rs leaving Jameson went over and visited Airs. 'Maureen Edwards and MS59989N, "Air. Woods brings a wealth of The original colors lofty. Ernest lien a io foreclose Mothwere of Stockton against daughter sperience in multiple resource spring out like magic as you er's Day visitors at the home of Joseph Eyre is visitinir in Ross- - J. Olsen on the automobile first management into his new position aipply the foam iwith a long in the Vlrs. Marie Rollins. Jwell, New Mexico, with his grand- - described, of Helper, Utah, Infor of handle brush. (Easy as playchief of division the is sam of $50.00 for towing and Hub Bonn and family. Alr.l ... ing shuffle-board.at (ho hnmp nf.son, snmtflv vlHimru storage furnished by Kirk's Phil mation and Education," Air. Olsen K're accompanied Air. and Airs. lips GO Service on and since .Utted. "His duties will include Blue Lustre leaves no rings. Irs. Augusta Marshall were Mr. uf .Manlr;loIl l!ots Jjorrtlim You can remove spots or traf14. 1955, and to foreclose work with the press, Joan Ashworth and Mr. and Mrs. Works fic lanes in a jiffy. 'a lien against an unknown owner women s organizations, schools, Leo White of Ruth, Nev.; Mr. and Several boys and leaders fromlnn the mirmnnhilp secn-dl- v Hes farm on upholstery too. beautifully organizations, groups, youth oeuvei, mi. ttu Minersv e at tended the Ktakelrribed in the sum or rttO.OO for It's economical as y2 gallon He Mrs. Ray Barnson, Junction; Mr. Aaronic Priesthood ontinn- - at stltowiiur and storage furnished by md otlier organized groups. of Blue Lustre concentrate .vill fire head Service the Forest a..u m.s. aiuwi jum..su.. mm ia.u- - George on Saturday. cleans three 9 x 12 rugs. Bishop Alar- - Kirk s Phillips tjti service on ana prevention activities throughout Uy of Stockton and Mr. and Airs. snall Hollingahead. Delmar Grav s ine September 9, 1953, and to he Intermountain Region. a lien against an tin Bevan Mcintosh of Salt Lake City.'nnd Dalton Fails Beaver Home accompanied the i jreclose "These changes will be made now n owner of the automobile 18 R"len boysDotson also planMr. and Mrs. Earl Morton and thirdly described in the sum of effective June 1," Air. Olsen said. w " Kroup .,t i.oys .'55.00 for towing and storage Furnishings baby of Fillmore visited Sunday ,cu lu with her parents, Mr. and tMrs. "ul ".,ne way na1 a sllM acci- - furnished by Kirk'p Phillips 6fi ut,ut wu" nls ,ar- uolnS '"ru the service on and since September 21, Want Ads (iet Kesul- UGoldie Marshall. t'ass, ne hit a rock and blew out H55, all of said sums having been Franklin D. Williams of Chicago a tire and punctured a hole in the due on April 15, 1956. visited last week with his parents, gas tank, so several boys had to LEE. R. FILLMORE, Sheriff Air. and Mrs. F. D. Williams. ret urn home. j j i of Beaver County, Utah. Mrs. Vivian Marshall and Mr.j The band uovs and irl Penla Hirst publication. May 18, 1956) and Mrs. Marcine Davis spent last Patterson, Jan Truman. Raymond last publication, May 25, 1956) week-en- d visiting ,AIr. and Mrs. Baker, Robert Gressman. Gerald NOTICE Horace CoHbridge of Trona, Calif. antl Mitchell Myers, Douglas AI- auu , uuvia 1'iyui presenret Bids will be received by the Pur. Mr. and Mrs Neal Carter oni !"a.nii1v of fpHar werp Mother's Dav 'Air. ana Mrs. uarth Fisher a lovely hasing Division of the Commis- aun,a ... ha hm nf iw ia Diltal)le la"ip planter as a token ofision of Finance of the State of 147 State Capitol Building appreoiaton to .Mr. Fisher for all!' iua Carter tne nours ne spent with themi"- wis vay, man. uuui iu n.ui. 'Mav 31- 1956, on the following Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jameson of helping them with their music. n'.u.ts. neMinauou. Cedar and Mr. and Mrs. Rex Limb Mr. and Mrs. Vlcror Davis and and family of Beaver visited Sat- FISH AND GAME: NATIVE urday and Sunday with Mr. and, family of Cedar and Air. and Airs CEDAR" POSTS, WIRE FENCUsing the effective ' Kent Terry, Beaver, spent Sunday Airs. Merrill Jameson. ING, BARBED WIRE. CLEARING METHODS Of 13 Aihnf STl visiting at the home of Airs. : he reTHE NATIONS FEDERAL Finance Commission of Marlene Seegmiller of StJlia Davis. RESERVE SYSTEM AMD serves the right to reject any or George visited Sunday with Mr. CORRESPONDENT BANKS, ;U bids: or to accept or reject the was eve A given party Saturday and Mrs. Harold Baker. CHECKS SWIFTLY COM nr nnv nart nf anv hid nr ning for Air. and Airs. Dewayne PLETE THEIR JOURNEY Mrs. Fern Church and Mr. and Carter at the home of Mr. and Airs. .) waive any informality or tech"s I I ! COLLECTION.' TOWARDS 'bid in in interest the any nicality Airs. William Willden, of Beaveri Hilton Gillins. Among the couples re the be of will All bids State. I? visited Sunday with Airs. Racl el attending were Air. and Airs. Thur- tTIOPIP YNT)irTI j ; jected or awarded within 5 days Dotson. man r.yre, i.ur. ana .urs. ueimar,.lfter ,bid Only bids 0ening. Mr. and Airs. Sheral Carter, illg a firm qotationn will ibe A Fathers' and Sons' banquet Mrs Heber Gillins and the cepted. and was held on Friday evening. A Everyone should have a checking account. Our T. S. Curtis, of honor. nice group was in attendance and guests PURHASING AGENT officers cordially invite you to establish an Clinton Boyter's parents have; published in iBeaver Press, May lovely program and supper was all. oeen visiting with the family here. lis, 1950). enjoyed 'by account at ithis bank. ESTABLISHED NOVEMBER Prti UTAH STATE 25, 1 904 ASSOCIATION MERLE B. MERKLEY. Auociatt Editor A1RD G. MERKLEY. Editor and Publiiher PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY SUBSCRIPT ION RATES Year. $3.00; 6 Mo. $2.00; 3 Mo $1.25 (PAYABLE IS ADVANCE) A lini Class Publication entered in the Post Office at Beaver. Utah, as sixond clajs mail matter, under the Act of Congress of Mar. 3, 187. Telephone 24 er 239 AdveilMiig rales quoieJ on request. i THE FANTASTIC FARM MESS '.4': - ; MINERSVILLE legal mnas wall-to-wa- title of an Fantastic Farm Moss" is the DiReader's of The in issue the April article h luhn Stmlini on of agriwriter a who Air. is Strulim, long experience gest. cultural subjects and a past president of the American Agricultural Hditnr's Assn., describes the present situation in these words: 'In a c,ustl hut futile attempt to support farm prices near the levels guaranteed to farmers during World War II, the l' S (hivernmcnt has succeeded only in amassing an eign doilar hoard of od and fiber which can't be eaten, used, sold or gp en awav. And as surpluses have skyrocketed, farm prices have tobogganed It's a grim example of what Gov eminent can do T( vim w liilo trying to do something FOR vou." The farmers aren't to blame, in Mr. Strohm's view they wen- led into the- mess by government policies and they should have help trotting out. A basic trouble is that so many false ideas about the farm program are now widely accepted as gos pel. Mr. Strohm deals in a very direct and unequivocal fashion with some of these ideas and here, in substance, is what he has to say. One is that price support rescued farmers from the depression. That's false farm prices didn't start moving up until 1940. when the impact of war and inflation set in. Another is that a simple farm law can solve the problem. False again for different kinds oil farmers, in different places. all have different problems. Says Mr. Strohm: "Trying to write a 'farm law' to solve the 'farm problem' is as silly as treating all the sick with one health serum Still anotlvr is that high fixed farm prices mean high in come. Also false for the reason that volume of sales is a deter mining'- factor as well as prices. Mr. Strohm observes: "You don't put more money in a farmer's pocket by boosting his price per bushel if you also cut his acreage. And any progam to be effective must include acreage controls. Also, it is reasoned that government can restrict production by restricting acreage. The factual record over the years refutes that. The reason: "Farmers are not dummies. They take their poorest land out of production, fertilize heavily on the remainder, aim to grow more on less." Mr. Strohm discusses many of the things that are wrong with farm legislation including the fact that it is geared to the past. For example, our eating habits as a nation have changed. We eat far less starchy foods and far more meat and dairy products, among other things, than we used to. Our per capita wheat consumption has dropped drastically but the support laws encourage maximum wheat production. Finally, Mr Strohm has praise for President Eisenhower's program, which includes vigorous efforts to increase over-- ! seas sale of surpluses; encouragement to farmers to produce for consumption instead of storage; the soil bank; more research designed to develop both new crops and new uses for old crops, and fewer controls, with government cooperation, not dictating. "This," Mr. Strohm ,says, "is a sound program for the farmer, and a fair one for the taxpayer. But it will take statesmanship of the highest order to resist the temptation to trv to unravel the farm problem on the basis of political "Tli teen-billio- eye-catchi- l" n - price-suppo- MANDERFIELD By Mrs. Hllma Sly Bradshaw were visitors at sacrament meetMr. and Mrs. Howard ing on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Baldwin were visitors at Sunday School and were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Airs. Kenneth Baldwin. A baby boy was born May 6 at the howpital at Cedar to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Baldwin. The mother and baby came home on May 10. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C. Goodwin d and Mr. and Mrs. Nielson of were visitors at sacrament meeting and the men were speakMil-for- ers. Mrs. DeLlal Ivie and girls of r NITRAGIF4 INOCULATION ... of Soybeans Alfalfa Clovers All Legumes Increases your yields Enriches vour soils Get NITRAGIN In 'he Bright Orange Van stf.r4 emma :t Tta n C. MJratH. km Wit. rt ll-- C36-10015- Sep-temb- er ... uraui, - aL1-c"- 1 ,ic BANKER'S STORY i - t giv-Gra- y, ac-A- lr. j SEE THE DIFFERENCE RSD mmmmmm With Ordinary suspension whceli hop and bounce retfh mdi ihown by actual oacillograph records. violently ou WHfl RSO Suspension (on the larne road) every wheel bmir.te b luataady tountencted, tmoothed out to i mere flutter on the . Kfllogmph. INow! wkk Doe Sktmu. The CUtrimn keep mm aaedi tee Way we! Dec, well I think ke pet in six-te- e keen a day at tke koapttal Bet Teeaday- -a been Ufa I oay be and I atipped away for a ride round TertSe Lake. Doe's driv-ina 1064 tramdinfer It'a like x tot just other trucks, even cars, l. are being put to shame bv the - ff a deed. ridisc e polat Doc Anyway, art slowed almost to a bait "Used to fish there a a bof, Joe," ke aeid. "Used to sH and kwafiae yetf a op eei C'4 highway eVlrk ear. Nowadays, I higk-pewei'- ed kaa A new hook every Latter-Da- is creating a landslide demand. You'll see why when you trythe RSD ride. And we want to book you for one right away. $ r 4 1 Published by The Inilructor, this important volume sparkles with Inspirational biographies of ancient prophet cr.d each of our modem prophets and apostle? since the resforatitn. Another vital section contains an enlightening discussion of the Articles of Faith by members of he First Presidency. Still a third section of this mighfly volume contains O tribute to the Proohet Joseph Smith from each succeeding president. Order your copy today. " 1- JCIN TRANSPORT YOUR FAITH AND YOU $3.00 by Mark fi. Peterson VfcSS tW $2.50 - - MOTOR y PRINCIPLES This sensational performance already So come in. We'll give you the details and arrange for the proof. Drop in today. Standard in tin Suiurianj tptional at moderate extra cost on all other n moJdi, Frees wkere I eft, few ef m are erer coatee wkk tke way tkian are at ay saiaitwt. If s aatare. Oa tke etker kaad. I've keea rootiatr (or years tkat someday ooerfoodf will akow eaoock good America toleraa to raeyert BRANCH OF THE MILFORD STATE BANK no wheel wrench, no punishment for truck OR driver. astonishing ride of our Blue Chip GMC with Road Shock Damper Suspension! It smothers every jolt and jounce. It blots up even little sharp vibrations from road joints. You drive at normal speed over washboard roads where others crawl and there's no slewing, jaet sit kere ad wiak down there afaia. t BEAVER CITY OUR PROPHETS AND a Daydream It's a treat whea I get together FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. that's amazing the country! Ad Joe Marsh WITH Saint should read. . . he noe 1 Doc Nurses 9 ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $10,000.00 MAKES Pill Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Bradshaw were dinner guests, Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bradshaw and family. Airs. Dave Kesler and son David visited with Mr. and Airs. Donald Baldwin on Tuesday. From where I sit 1 ' Flowell were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Baldwin on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Keel and hildren of Fillmore were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Garth Baldwin on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Edwards went to Cedar Sunday to take Arleen back to CSU, after spending the week-en- d at home. John Bradshaw has been quiet ill with the flue and mumps. Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Mathews of Cedar were visitors of Mr and Mrs Donald Baldwin, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Noal Gillies and children went to Cedar, Sunday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Horace Rosen berg. Mrs. Ed. Sumner of Cedar City visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown and family on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Swlndlehurst and Jeanne were dinner guests at Air. and Mrs. Vernile Bradshaw's on Sunday. fry a Press Want I . THE CHALLENGE OF OTJR TIMES . . $2.00 by V. Cleon Skousen a LEADS THB WAY 4f aeickkr's rifht U ea)ey a frieadlyrlaM of beer. Whea that day eeeses I soswre yee tkat I'll aeoer waat to ckance back. See us, toe, liluAElt for TritU-Chech- d FOR TIME OR ETERNITY bv Mark E. Petersen Your ley to Blue Chip value used truck $2.00 MAN HIS ORIGIN AND DESTINY by Joseph Fielding Smith UTAH Sip iQvauet . . pras $4.00 |