OCR Text |
Show JULY 25, 1952 THE SAUNA SUN. SAL1NA, UTAH THE SAUNA SUN from a months trip. They visited the Wayne Christensen family at Portland, Oregon, then down the coast to Sacramento, California, and into Nevada for a visit with Aurora News by ILA SHEPHERD Tablisbed Every Friday At Salina, Utah Advertising Rates Given on Application matter Entered at the postoffice at Salina as second-clas- s under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. the Delbert Gurr family. Glen Gurr was at the Scout Camp in Payson Canyon with 18 members of the troop from Aurora, that participated in the activities. Parents of the boys were at thewamp Friday to participate in the special day for parents. Mrs. Nada Steward, Marva Dawn and Merrill Cowley of Venice, and Mrs. Mary Christensen returned to Aurora with Miss Lorene Stewart, who has served a mission in Butte, Montana. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mason and family; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bastian and family, and Bishop and Mrs. Vern Freeman and family, have returned from a week-lontrip to San Francisco, Los Angeles and points of interest enroute. Mr. and Mrs. Jeston Anderson and family of Aurora; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Johnson of Springville; Mr. and Mrs. Veldon Anderson and family of Gunnison, and the Monty Anderson family recently spent a week in the mountains near here. Miss Mary Lee Anderson accompanied her grandmother to Springville to spend a week. The 500 Club were entertained last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Deon Taylor. Prizes in the evenings game went to Mrs. Sarah Huntsman and Vonda Huntsman. Mr. and Mrs. Delos Andrews and children, are spending a week in Idaho Falls, visiting the parents of Mrs. Andrews. Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Anderson visited a few days in Aurora with relatives and friends. Mr. Anderson was home to be near his father, who is very ill, in a Salt Lake hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Fay Roberts returned Sunday from Salt Lake, where they have been visiting Mrs. Alida Mason. Mrs. Mason is reported getting along better under a doctors care. Mr. and Mrs. Venoy Curtis and children are on a trip to Texas and Old Mexico. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Bagley and son are visiting at the parental home in Aurora for two Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gurr and family and Mrs. Gurrs mother, Mary Christensen, have returned species in restricted areas, and some good has been done. However, Dr. Huffman stated that we had not eradicated any poisonous plant, as far as he knew, that stockmen had simply learned to live with them intelligently. Stockmen need to study the poisonous plants, learn when they are dangerous, stay off them when animals are hungry, and provide sufficient amounts of other feed to prevent animals eating enough of the poisonous species to do damage. Animals can throw off a certain amount of poison, if it is taken over a period of time, and the job is to see that they do not eat enough of such feed at any one time to kill them. All poison trouble on range and pastures, can be avoided by good management and supplementary feed during poisonous periods. Overutilization causes erosion, and eroded areas not only lose moisture and grass cover, they also lose ' the nutritional elements that plants need to produce growth. These loses make it difficult to start new seedings of grass, and those that do grow do not provide the nutrients that the animal needs to maintain healthy growth, as shown in our difficulty with brisket poisonous Range And Pasture Tour Completed by ALBERT L. STARR (Editors Note: This is the second and final section of a two-da- y range tour, as reported by the Salina SCS director, Albert Starr.) will grow better while cows are on green feed, and giving more milk than they do when the cows are on dry feed in the winter, with resulting decrease in milk flow. This system of manageThe first stop Wednesday was ment would also help to keep on Seven Mile Creek, where the heifers away from the bulls unUtah State Agricultural College til they were ready and large and the Forest Service are co- enough to breed successfully. The big per cent of loss from operating in a study of the Brisket disease. Stock- calving comes with the heifers men using this range, have sus- bred too young. Dr. Harris talktained considerable losses in the ed at length on the nutritional past, and are still doing so. Some aspects of the brisket disease animals have been successfully treatment, and answered questreated, but most of these are tions put to him by stockmen, grown stock. Few calves have on proper feeding of supplements been saved, once they were af- and salting. flicted. It was suspected that the The next stop of the morning disease was one of nutritional was at the reseeded area near the deficiency, and the college men Loss Creek Reservoir. Attention started their work with blood was called to the increased diffitests on affected animals, and culty in getting good grass stands have progressed from there. at the higher elevations. Wil-for- d Rasmussen led a good disFeeding treatments include addition of such trace elements as cussion on hauling water to red copper and cobalt and iron, lieve congested and since these were found to be range, and at the same time lacking in food samples analyzed. utilize grass available on the Feeding tests so far conducted, areas remote from water. This have included addition of copper practice proved successful in the and cobalt in the sulphate form Loss Creek and Browns Hole to bone meal mixtures, which areas. Portable troughs were reare fed free choice, and feeding commended, and it is advisable of alfalfa hay. Best results to to change watering sites at readate have come from feeding al- sonable intervals, to avoid damfalfa hay. age to plants near these sites. In On the Seven Mile range, the two areas mentioned, water creeps have been constructed to was hauled from Vz to 2 miles, allow free choice feeding of and this action proved to be less calves, where they do not have work than trying to herd the to compete with grown stock. cattle into the unused areas. This year, facilities for feeding It was thought best to put the alfalfa to calves in the creeps water out first, ahead of the cathave been provided. The disease tle. This program held the catis not contageous, but it has been tle off the high range about 10 definitely established that cattle days, and gave this range more poorly fed in winter are more time to mature feed. Where the susceptible to the disease. Treat- growing season is short, and the ment each year for affected cat- soil is shallow, it is more diffitle, seems to prevent the disease. cult to keep good range and still The disease is prevalent in the more difficult to restore it, once valley of Wayne County, and it has deteriorated. Native grass desert wintered cattle are better species do better here, but the off than those wintered in the seed of these grasses is hard to valley. Some of the symptoms obtain. of the disease are lack of gain, The tour pulled into the lack of red corpuscles, diahrea Gooseberry Ranger Station at and swollen brisket. noon, where Dr. Huffman led Since the major losses in live- a discussion on poisonous plants, stock from the disease come from as they affect the livestock instated calves born on the range, the dustry. Dr. Huffman stockmen insurance best of the controlled that breeding subject was discussed. Dr. Lorin Harris could get against poisonous from the State College, led this plants, was to let some grass discussion. He pointed out that grow. Studies show that trouble where controlled breeding pro- with range poisoning usually folgrams are in operation the calves lows dry periods, and range losscan come in March, April or es are in direct proportion to of the range. It May, and be in better shape to survive on affected ranges. This was stated that oak poisoning is practice also gives a uniform usually heaviest when the range calf crop, which is an advantage is used before it is ready, and in sales. Uniform steers or the best preventative is to give heifers sell better in the feed the stock feed at the time they lot. It also helps management need it, and give them a chance to eat it. Considerable work has problems, and care is easier. It was also noted that calves been done on eradication of over-utilize- g PAGE 3 Redmond News Marjorie Mickelsen, Reporter 4 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Poulson and Mrs. Bryce Johnson and son, Meredith, were in Salt Lake, Monday, to visit Mrs. Poulons sister, Mrs. Lyda Mason, who is in the L.D.S. Hospital. Mrs. Mason underwent a major operation, and is reported making a satisfactory recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Poulson were business visitors in Arizona from Saturday through Monday. Thirty-eigmembers of the Jorgensen family from Redmond, attended a family reunion at the Gunnison Reservoir, Sunday. and forty attended the affair. Luncheon and a program were the highlights. Mrs. Carl Anderson and son, Robert, and Mrs. Leona Jensen, a of Salt Lake, are vacationing in Los Angeles. They left Saturday of last week, and will return home July 27th. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Allred and Burton Allred, accompanied by Mr. and Ms. Doyle Curtis of Salina, recently enjoyed a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Allred in San Bernardino, Calif. Lowell, a member of the Air Force, is stationed at George Air Base, Victorville, Calif. Mrs. Clifford Mickelsen and Mrs. Terrance Jorgensen, accom- disease. Following Dr. Huffmans remarks, the group responded to the call, Get It While Its Hot. There was no argument here. The morning trip at high altitudes, had built up a good appetite in every traveler. A tasty meal was served by the Salina Jaycees, at the expense of the Sevier Soil Conservation District Supervisors. The boys did a good job, and we can recommend them highly. After lunch, the group went on to the reseeded plots in the Mud Flats area. One Crested Wheatgrass plot had been severely damaged b y grasshoppers, so the expected seed crop will be lost this year. The tour was dismissed at Mud Flats, and from comments of members who stayed with the entire tour, we will have to stamp it as highly successful, and one of the best ever. Those who organized it, and those who helped put it over, did a good job. I 7 rU. One-hundre- d Copyu;Y, 1 t' niicd Slutei Urtwert Foundation The best thing you know wherever you go Buy them at THIS bank FIRST STATE BANK OF SALINA Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation panied LaVona by MAYOR McGUP By John Jarvis Mickelsen, spent Thursday in Provo. Mrs. Mickelsen and Mr. Jorgensen were visiting with respective got Conocos NEW 123 f83f v Service ! I housands of other car owners are discovering what this smart motorist knows: the way to help your engine perform better, last longer, use less gasoline and oil is to get Conocos great new 50,000 Miles No Wear Service! Its exactly the same service that kept test cars new in Conocos spectacular 50,000 Miles No Wear road test! In that famous 50,000-mil- e e test, with drains and proper filter service, test car engines showed no wear of any consequence: in fact, an average of less than one inch on cylinders and crankshafts. Gasoline mileage for the last 5,000 miles was actually 99.77 as good as for the first 5,000. Now you can get this same 50,000 Miles No Wear Service, at your Conoco Mileage Merchants, today! 1,000-mil- Rom where I sit ... fy Joe Marsh hands you can afford to hire. And from where I sit, I continued, you wont get away from people either. Neighbors are plenty important in a farming community ' whether its helping one another out or just friendly visiting over a sociable glass of beer. Hard work and neighbors dropping in all the time? he asks, looking at me over his glasses. Then he smiles and says, Sounds wonderfuL Youve just sold me on a farm. or stolen you get a prompt refund. Your double signature protects you. Thus, your National City Bank Travelers Checks are safer than cash, spendable everywhere in the United States or abroad. Cost 75 1 per $100. In values of $10, $20, $50, $100. Good until used. sister-in-la- th The Missus and I were invited to dinner over at Balesville the other night. I sat next to a banker from the state capital. "Mighty nice country youve got down there, he says. Dont be surprised if I come to live there myself. In a few years I plan to get away from everybody, buy a farm and just take it easy. "Well, I told him, "wed like to have you. But when someone plans to buy a farm gnd take it easy he often winds up working harder than ever. It takes work to run a farm right nUTnatter how many TRAVELERS CHECKS If lost ht tSS1 $j Advtrtittmtni Advising a Banker! NATIONAL CITY BANK sisters. The Stork Club met at the home of Lou Gene Johnson, Wednesday evening, with 15 members present. JoAnn Johnson was a special guest. The members discussed their part on the July 24th celebration. Names were drawn for prizes, with Koa Shepherd and Beulah Talboe being the lucky winners. The Variety Club met Tuesday evening at the home of June Bosshardt. They enjoyed pot luck, and presented Mrs. Bosshardt with a gift, honoring the arrival of a new baby. Mrs. F. C. Thomas and two daughters, Dawn Sharon and Sue, are spending a week or more with Mrs. Vera Anderson, weeks. mother of Mrs. Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Verr Durfee and Mrs. Eldon Christensen of Alfamily; Mr. and Mrs. Keith Sorenson and family, and Mr. berta, Canada, is enjoying a and Mrs. Lynn Shaw and family, vacation here. She came in for the Jensen last spent a few days recently camp- week end. family reunion, ing in the area near Sweet Creek. Elder Verness Andrews has received his orders to report to Ogden helping in the care of a the armed forces on July 29th. new granddaughter, who is reMrs. Hannah Spencer is in ported not doing too well. over-utilizati- Me you carry THIS kind of Protected Travel Currency You CANT Lose If -3 :v. i u it i Too hurt even to cry. A thousand feelings flood through you but your first coherent thought is help... doctor... the telephone . v Heres the Famous 50,000 Miles No Wear Service! A telephone call at such a time can mean the difference between painful anxiety and peace of mind, even the difference tw between life and death. telephone is not for emergencies It's the everyday convenience that makes your telephone one of the things you could least do without. But your alone. O Your Conoco Mileage Merchant Will Drain Out Grit and Sludge, preferably while engine is hot! Hot-o- il drains every 1,000 miles flush out grit, dirt, acid and contamination leave your engine sparkling clean! 0 Hell Recondition Air and Oil Filters! Hell clean filter elements, replace dirty mile- cartridges, record age. Every time hood is lifted, hell check mileage to be sure filters have been serviced at proper intervals. Oi52-CONTINEN- TAL Hell refill with great Conoco Super Motor Oil! Conoco Super is fortified The with additives that curb dangerous accumulation of dirt and contamination protect metal surfaces from corrosive combus- - tion acids fight rust Oil-Plat- e against wear. OIL COMPANY steadily increasing demand for service, from people in all walks of life, is proof that "your telephone is worth more than it Vhiiba HEAVY DUTY OIL costs." K853i!t izkl The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. |