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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, PAGE SIX Cash income from farm marketings an governments payments in Septem- ber totaled $1,325,000,000 and was 46 ' i ,nno nrf 1i"iA per cem more .iinnn me jw3,uvu,wu and 18 1940 received in September re- more cent $1,121,000,000 than per Seven breeders and seven hatcheries, farmer in August. 1941 have signed memorandums of agree-Income from g.roups of farm i iwa n,nt tn naiticipate in the National; Poultry Improvment Plan in yian year than in 194Q but toe greatest were in the income from during the coming year, Carl Fiscf vnwht extension poultryman at tne Utah State Agricultural college said. of hogg were smaller Per-- , To participate in the Record of 1940i but priCes were gg tember i , i u formance stage or me isauo.-mUnjted i T1 Eco of breeders must msiau Bureau Agricultural "jstaterecord the eggs laid daily for a twelve nomics reports. month period. Government payments amounted to E"" weights must also be taken by $28,000,000 compared with $54,000,- the "breeders on three consecutive 000 in September last year. seven unannounO O O days each month and 18 the Commodity ced inspections are made by official Since August acstate inspectors to check on the Credit Corporation has made loans on curacy of the records that are kept 258,602,533 bushels of 1941 wheat, ofthe year. ficials the United States f by the breeders throughout Department the of when To be officially legbanded Agriculture reports. vear is over, eacu. o o o av- laid a minimum of 200 eggs that estimates of produc- HTld Preliminary fiaCh n W rll7n erage for Utah are wheat, of tion V"" I,, disqual bushef female must be free . . . ifications and up to stanuu mosnnn- non-- 1 Mr. Frischknecht explains. mg3Ljr bushels; Utah breeders who have Signed. , Record of ler-agi cements to produce purposes birds 'or breeding formance Department of Agriculture gar- are: John E. has recommended committee den iotlZS. Hutch -Spanish on farm emphasis of ings of Springville Morgan Dyreng of gchool and C0Kmmun. I J. F erry WUUam Munk of Manti bu conlmittee mem of Provo, and D. H. Whittenburg of m emergency txists Utah Poultrymen Sign Agreement to Participate In N. P. I. P. modittiftolbtl , . ; James Preston 'ty Crw n, Workers Reminded To Check Security Board Seeks Reduction In Beef Herds ( icreas . Lu-gel- 1 t price-wag- buck-passer- f irapu. I wB. s. - 00 - , j bii-d- J j . - . T..at. i Curtailment of Slaughter Asked of Hog Producers Records at Once Cattlemen of Box memWorkers In this city were reminded advised today by T. E. Adams, S. D. that U. ber of the Box Elder County they should check on the Social beef in Board's record of their wagA. defense board to market Security the of before the end of this 1937 goals for es with production line D. B. Snyder of by "Food for Freedom" program. Manager year, Mr Adams' said that farmers thru- the Board's Ogden Field Office. It was explained that the law al,,r th nation are being asked to beef a of nossibilitv lows a period of four years after the iii. ti i siirnlua and the low prices which may year the wages in question were re- the result; and that by increasing meet Iceived, during which the worker can can farmers obtain a correction of any error that of beef, slaughter these two problems ana at me bame may occur in his wage record. Free cards on which a worker may time benefit through high returns and herds. request a statement of his wage recimproved per ord may be secured at the Social SeIt has been estimated that 25 rancent of the beef cattle on Utah curity Board in the Post Office bldg. Cattle- - The statement of his wages will be inferior an of are quality. ges men of Box Elder county should grasp received in a sealed envelope. If he this opportunity to build up herds feels certain that the amount of wag while market conditions are favorable. es shown on this statement is incor Old breeding stock should be marrect, for the year 1937 or for any keted instead of the younger stock of other best the period, the Board's Ogden of better quality. And to receive conditions stands fice under ready to help him clear returns present price more yearlings and two year olds up the matter. should be sold. "A worker's Social Security account "We need to conserve our range is the record of his wages as report land," Mr. Adams stated. "It should ed by his employer, and on this debe remembered that the forage crop was above average on the range dur- pends the insurance benefits of him ing the past year and that future and his family," Manager Snyder livestock numbers should be kept in pointed out "When errors occur in line with range capacity." the record, they may be due to Bull calves in dairy herds except of the worker's account numthose needed for breeding purposes and low grade female stock should be ber, perhaps a transposition or jummarketed. bling of the figures in the number, "Leading cattlemen throughout the perhaps a misspelling or other misstate feel that this program will not take in the worker's name, or to producmaterially effect the over-a- ll other causes." tion in the livestock industry," Mr. 0 0 Adams and LeRoy Bunnelll chairman of the County Beef Production comThe sugar beet crop this year is mittee said. "Rather, they think that estimated at 570,000 tons compared with the existing favorable prices it with 504,000 tons in 1940 and the will greatly improve the economic and average of 614,000 tons, Frank financial position of the industry. It Andrews, agricultural statistician, appears that by cooperating under this Farm Defense program, tfox &i der county fanners will be doing much for the nation's defense and at the same time will be obtaining good financial benefits for themselves. Elder-county-we- re Camtol Hill talk in the corridors Reprein tte offices of Senatorswelland as on the sentatives, at lunch, as re- floor and in committee rooms taxes, inflation, yoives around priced, talk. The amount of put it's used to pction taking place couldn't be car. stalled push a at The Administration is frankly the about price rising jist worrying Jevei, about me urgent need to diock Jtho incipient inflition. But the is no more willing than to settle down 10 seiv-puia Congr& wrestling with the problem. Each .wants to go on recotd as warning iibout Uii honors of the coming inflation; each does not want to be held responsible for slapping on ane other stiff tax bill or a rigid a like fixing bill. So it looks reat futute for the It's a fair bet that a compromise, and hence not very effective, piice several J)ill will be worked out months hence. The new tax plan proposod by Secretary llorgenthau, is even failher off. The fact is the JSecretary of the Treasury placed the jproblem of new taxes in the hands of the House Ways and Ueans Committee, which is just beginning to show Pachf ield. or js jn sigbt that Would warrant in-A total of 2200 R. O. P. candidate tensive city home vegetable gar. signs of recovei ing from drafting the will be trapnested by these den camnagnSi biggest tax bill in hiatoiy. . Federal taxes this fiscal year will breeders during the coming year. re se while of each about $13,000,000,000, After visiting produce breeders must .the expectation is that we will spend ers recently Paul Bwnior, . (about $25,500,000,000. Obviously, that poultry coordinator of the Bureau ot whintnn. D. C. the supervision of an official state leaves a deficit almost equal to the entire tax receipts, stated that he was well pleased with of the birds ' unfavorably to While several proposals for raising the progress and quality of breding the tests. The reacting last test must be made in done utan, within 12 months more revenue are being discussed, the work that was being immediately preone prompting the most comment is He was especially pleased to see that the of sale of hatching date ceding se were the suggestion by the Secretary of the most of the Utah breeders eggs or chicks from the flocks. All ,Treadury for a 15 per cent check-of- f lecting their R. O. P. candidates from carriers of pullorum disease must be tax on 1912 incomes. This tax would families of superior breeding quality. removed from the breeder's premises be collected monthly during 1942, Hatcheries which will participate in upon of the test and all while the taxpayer is worrying about one or more of the breeding stages birds completion in the flock must be remaining the taxes due on the 1941 income. In and pullorum disease control classes properly legbanded. other words, it would be like paying; of this program during the coming almost two year's taxes in one year. hatching season are; Hansen Breed The plan, uuder consideration pri- ing Farm and Hatchery of Spanish vately by the Treasury officials for Fork, Hutchings Breeding Farm and more than a year, met a cool recep- Hatchery of Spr.ingville, Intermoun- tion at the Capitol. One Congress- taln Hatchery of Logan, Manti-Ape- x man, whose inaction may be regard- Breeding Farm and Hatchery of Man-t- i, ed as indicative of Capitol attitude, Peerless Cooperative Hatchery of said the "check-of- f is o. k. if you'll Manti, and the Timpanogos Hatchery of Provo. give me an exemption." The Treasury leans to the checkMost of these hatcheries, which There will be enough to go around off as the most practical way of col- have a combined capacity of 416,712 lecting revenue. Congress would'nt eggs, have indicated that they will These items listed here are limited over the coundispute this but they believe it would qualify for the new United States Pull"work an unreasonable hardship to ask orum Controlled class, added to the on 1942 incomes and National Plan this year. To qualify the check-of- f try as a whole new stock just arrived. salaries run concurently with 1941 for this pullorum disease control payments. They reason that most peo-- 1 class, all chickens over five months pie have no leal notion of how severe ly mey win ue mi oy uie iy income vance in the purchasing power of av- uu bnouia nave a cnance to re- mui erage hourly purchasing power themselves before being hit by men are still worrying and with cent cut hl wa&e or satery- good cause about the increasing de Officially, the Ways and Means Inlands frr wap-- inrro.anM in nntiri. Committee has decided to defer alpation of higher prioes. They know decision as to when next tax legisla-- 1 full well that the race between wages Hon will be considered. Many more and prices inevitably leads to the will be held before the prob- - old inflation whei prices rise lem of new taxes is under way. The because of spiral, higher wage costs, and guesamg in Washington now is that wages in turn are pushed up because vi. will be of higher prices, and everyone is the oa thevectjr books, but not 15 per cent, and sufferer. m aime me to come. If this seems academic and pretty uoraion ne tact ha.s dull ntuff x? Kftt- vcwiiulc, Cloths just come to the attention of Con- - self. Prices, inflation and related mih. gress. The fact: that living costs have jects are bound to be the news for advanced 5.6 per cent since the first months to come, and the price con of this year, but average hourly earntroversy is going to play an imporings have risen 11.3 per cent. The tant role in the net result has been a 5.3 per cent ad sional elections. coming 1942 Congres -- 1911 A plea for a reduction in the s' ter of hogs by Box Elder ducers was voiced today by GlL wan, member of the Box Elder T C" U. S. D. A. defense board. Mr rwJ1 said the slaughter should be red31 12 per cent in line with the asked of Utah growers in the natin "Food for Freedom" program He pointed out that this decree is one of slaughter and not one tf production. Utah does not nif j.. enough pork for home coumnc although she possesses all the sary means of being By decreasing slaughter for 1940T siaie uoua uerense Board itu &e!f-suffi- Z ho-- provide for increases in slaughter tt I ensuing years. Present plans call for tte iffipjov ing of breeding stock. Producers Deing asKea to breed more giltafot f arrowing in the spring of 1942 of the County Hog committee gested the planting of more barl and less wheat in line with feed f I the new program. They pointed i that farmers of Box Elder cou' have been asked to increase production 14 per cent in 1942, wbj ' to maintain the best breeding sw in the present herds. j Mr. Cowan and Ed Ward, chaimj wheat allotments have been decrease I "The swine producers of our count, i should look to the future," Mr. Cowr" said. "Utah and Box Elder couJ need to step up their hog product5 in coming years. We're letting farj. I ers of other states get theprof from our own market. 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A small deposit will hold any coat until Christmas. lay-a-w- ay ll . $29.50 - Trccntcn,Utah --Glttorfs If JSHfS STORE |