OCR Text |
Show 1 4 JOURNAL, Brigham City, Utah Thursday, October 6, 1960 THE BOX ELDER - . . . Cows Produce Vf ' TtSk.-- , s ." f - nT t Better on Nixon Schedules Visit To Utah Next Monday Vice President Richard M. , Nix-- on will make a major campaign address when he visits Utah next Monday, Oct. 10, acording to Vernon Romney, Utah State Republi- can chairman. The vice president will speak in the Salt Lake tabernacle as the climax of his Salt Lake City visit, Romney said. Nixon is coming to ytah during an important western campaign swing. During the time he is in Utah, the vice president will pay a call on David 0. McKay, the president of the Church of Jesus Chrst of Latter-da- y Saints, and other members of the First Presidency. The vice president will be accompanied on the trip by his wife, Pat, according to Romney. THE VICE PRESIDENTS party, plus a special plane carrying some 70 reporters, photographers, who will be radio and covering Nixon's campaign trip, will be met at the Salt Lake airport by GOP state officials, local and state candidates who will join in motorcade into downtown Salt Lake City. SETS VISIT Vice President Richard M. Nixon is slated to make a campaign address in Utah next Monday. entering the U. S. World War If. He Pacitic Battle stars mendations during Navy during won two South and two comhis service. married Patricia Ryan in They have two daughters, Tricia and Julie. The Nixons have Romney said it is our belief made their home in Washington, that many of the main isues in the D. C., since his election to the campaign, such as world peace congress. and foreign relations, can best be explained to the people by the vice Painful president in a personal appearIn New NEW YORK I feel this will be a key appearance as far as voters in the Intermountan area are concern- ance. ed. A NATIVE Californian, Nixon was elected to the House of Representatives in 1946 and served as a member of the House Activities committee. During that time he won national recognition for his role in exposing Communist infiltration into government. In 1950 he was elected to the Senate by an majority and two years later g became President Eisenhowers running mate. Nixon was graduated from Whittier college and received his law degree from Due University. He practiced law in Whittier before He 1940. (UPI) Yorks Bellevue hospital, a tiny, two-daold baby squirms violently in his crib. He has trouble breathing, seems hungry but often ignores a bottle. He screams, restless cries and is nauseated, and irritable. His problem? His mother was a drug addict and hes suffering The the tortures of withdrawal. addiction of narcotic problem among newborn infants is not new but its become more and more of a problem in recent years, Drs. Annabelle Vincow and Alvin Hac-kreport in the current issue of GP, the journal of the American Academy of General Practice. During a recent nine month per12 iod, the doctors have treated infants at Bellvue. y 1 2-H- farmers barn had burned down and the agent from the insurance company arrived to discuss the claim. Explaining the policy that covered the structure, he told the farmer that his firm would build another barn of similar size instead of paying the claim in cash. The farmer was furious. "If thats the way your comhe exploded, pany does business, you can just cancel the insurance policy on my wife. d 1 - y V, ft r tv "I Basis our Our good dairymen, such as Ted Burt of Corinne have claimed for a long time that their cows do better when they are milked and fed regularly. According to A. Fullmer Allred, county extension agent, recent experiments prove they are right. Cows being milked twice daily at Cornell University did best when they were milked at reguintervals. The cows lar averaged about 2.75 pounds of milk an hour. On a interval, this rate dropped to 2.59 and on a interval, it dropped further to 2.43 pounds of milk an hour. Indicates THUS the research that dairymen might expect a 15 percent reduction if they only miss one milking, such as during a power failure, or a disaster. If they should resort to milking only once a day for longer periods of time milk production might well drop 40 percent or more. Research done at the University of Missouri, has shown the value of frequent regular feeding. Dairy cows on test produced up to 14 percent more milk when fed regularly four to seven times a day than when fed only twice a Besides producing more day. milk the cows fed more frequentmore efficiently. ly produced Cows fed four times a day produced .95 pounds of milk per pound of feed as compared to .89 pounds for those fed twice a day. About 4 percent more of the feed consumed was digested by cows fed more frequently. A - v Cent Sale at Macks f LIKE ITS SMALL SIZE!" "I LIKE ITS , 'I LIKE STYLING! SMART THE DIAL THAT LIGHTS UP!" new PliilMi phone ! Members of the Missile Mixers form a square as they begin Friday SQUARE DANCERS INVITED evening dance activities. Dancers are lone and John Baxter, Lew and Trudy Damon, Ernie and Maxine Park, and Kate and Irvin Krai. 450,000 TO Under the old rule, which BENEFIT re- mains in effect until the end of 1960, a person is required to give up his entire monthly social security check for every $80 or part of $80 by which his earnings go The change in the over $1200. new law eliminates the possibility check for every month no matter that a person may lose considerhow much he works and how ably more in social security than he earns from his work a possimuch he earns; bility that existed under the old 3. A person will not have any law, Hansen said. deduction from his social security Hansen further stated that there check for any month that his are 11.1 million people of 65 years earnings as an employee are $100 of age or over who are either reor less, or, if he is ceiving regular monthly benefits for any month that he does not or would be receiving them if the do substantial work in his busifamily breadwinner was not work- Social Security Amendments over town the lovely, little Princess phone is attracting attention and making friends because it offers so many features that people want in an extension telephone. Its small to take up less room on desk or table. The dial lights up. It glows in the dark so you can find it quickly and, when you lift the receiver, lights up brightly to make dialing easy. Its modern styled to go anywhere in your home, and go beautifully. Take your choice of five decorator colors white, beige, pink, blue and turquoise. See the Princess phone at our business office. Or sk a telephone serviceman to show it to you. AH Provide Increased Benefits Beginning in 1961, an additional 450,000 people will be able to draw some social security monthly benefits while they are working, Jay M. Hansen of the Ogden district office said. Hansen will be at the Thurslocal Employment office day, Oct. 6, from 10 a. m. until noon and from 1 to 4 p. m. Hansen pointed out that a provision of the new social security amendments changes the rules for determining how earnings from work effect a persons right to reecive monthly benefits. He explained further that the following rules remain unchanged: 1. Anyone earning $1200 or less during a year will still be entitled to receive hi sfull social security check for every month of the year; 2. Anyone who has reached his 72nd birthday will still be able to receive his full social security ness. THE CHANGE made by the recent amendments affects the social security beneficiary whose or from employment earnings a go over $1200 year, Hansen explained. For earnings from $1200 to $1500 he will give up $1.00 in social in social security benefits for each $2.00 of For any earnings over earnings. $1500 he will give up $1.00 of sofor every cial security benefits $1.00 of earnings. ing. Of these, about two million will be affected by the change in the law on the payment of social security checks to people who are working, 1.4 million of them have not applied for payments because a they are making over $2,080 year, the annual earnings figure that generally prevents a person from receiving any social security checks under the old law. TkPliMiJ phone iilh dial and night lights built in costs only pennies a day e after a charge. Your choice of Jive colors. . one-tim- MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHONE IFDDTBMl FRIDAY 7TH OCTOBER 8:00 P.M. HOMECOMING When the Democratic Presidential candidate was in Utah recently, he was quite enthusiastic about reclamation projects in the west . . . BUT . . . when he was voting in the Senate, it was an entirely different story. Lets turn to the record. HERES A STATEMENT SENATOR WALLACE GAME LEAGUE FIRST BOX ELDER BEES vs. BEAR RIVER BEARS BY F BENNETT At a time when we most needed Kennedys support on the Upper Colorado Project, he turned his back on us in Utah, and the people should not be allowed to forget it. the life or death struggle for approval of the Upper Colorado Project, Kennedy voted against the entire bill, including the Glen Canyon Dam, the Flaming Gorge Dam, the Central Utah Project, the Emery County Project, and the Vernal Unit. He also voted specifically against If Kennedy had had his way, we would not have the Echo Park Dam. water had any or power from the project. We should not reward him In ADMISSION: Adults $1.00 B.E.H.S. Students Junior High and Elementary Students The Post Office Department has come up with a new one hand mail box. Mrs. Norma Jean Biglin, a Washington Postal employee, is shown demonstrating the box which has three slots for mailing and is constructed so that can be deposited when only one hand is free. NEW MAILING CONVENIENCE B.R.H.S. Students . ..Activity Card 25c 50c Plus Activity Card rs now by voting for him. In contrast, our battle for the project." Vice-Presid- Nixon stood shoulder to shoulder with us in a JointStatement, Issued Last Month, Gov. George D. Clyde and Senator Bennett said: In Kennedys position on one issue of primarily local interest, gives us great concern. Having worked for years to get Congressional approval of the Upper Colorado River Storage Project, and having met with strong opposition from Sen. Kennedy, who voted against it, we are naturally concerned about the policy he would follow if he should become president. Mr. As President, he would be in a position to speed or delay completion of this great project and more important, he would be in a position to recommend for or against future projects for development of the West. as most Utahns know, voted against Echo Park, and also of Glen Canyon Dam, Flaming Gorge Dam, and the construction against Central Utah project. Much remains to be done on the Upper Colorado, with most of the Central Utah phase still to be initiated, and it is imperative that we have a friend in the White House. Mr. Kennedy, We urge that Utahns carefully consider what Mr. Kennedy promises in this field, since his record shows him to be a very recent convert to the idea of resource development. BOX ELDER COUNTY REPUBLICAN CENTRAL COMMITTEE (Paid Political Advertising) rin Lnl You don't have to hibernate call your Standard Housewarmer. He Is the man to keep your fuel tank filled with Standard Heating Oils. Theyll warm you up quicker, burn R. V. Reeder b TA N nann cleaner, put out more steady, even heat than other fuels! Only these authorized Standard Heating Oil Distributors guarantee the best In service and quality products. Brigham City on. COMPANY 1 OF PA 3-30- STANDARD HEAKNG OILS 26 PAUFORNI.L A |