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Show "V MILLARD COUNTY PROGRESS September 26, 1975. mo3i Harvest rorn silage properly Girl Scout fund drivu of Girl Scouts in The 1975 Girl Scout Fund Drive is under wav in Filink C. Swartz, Ex- lmore to give citicns and rector of the Utah businesses an opportunity to c a; ' .out Council; Miss contribute financially to the Ci. h i'ird. Field Advisor Girl Scout Movement, which Ml Il is flourishing in the area. Ralph vim VI; and Mrs. Chair--District Ml.!. hi. Mrs. L. Jack Peterson ere in Fillmore during Fund Drive Chairman, has n in .si week to train and prepared volunteer solicitors ith local leaders. to make personal contacts Sv artz explains the u! the Girl Scout Mt.t as "helping girls iii rough a national- program an ap- of themselves and an i of their natural o'll Growers and legislator oan environment, 'i iolcncc who cxcct to end to be positive abl'ti and coercion in farm Ijbor l o to their com- relations by extending the National Labor Relations Ac .priate that dur-- i ti or similar Icgisltation .tioiial Woman's agriculture arc sadly mistaken s are focused u Violence is encouraged with op- girls not discouraged - bv the fedgrowth and ad eral labor law. which sets Better corn silage can be produced if corn is harvested at the proper maturity. The ideal time to harvest for best storage and maximum nutrients is when the kernels begin to glaze. This is past the time when the kernels are just dented. The total feeding value, (total digestible nutrients, or energy) increases right up to the time the grain is mature. The digestibility of the leaves and stalks and the keeping quality of the silage decline before full maturity so the best time to harvest for silage is at the glaze stage. It is better to let some of the lower leaves die and fall off rather than harvest too early. It appears that many of our farmers are cutting corn silage too early to get the maximum nutrients. Studies show that when the crop is with only harvested of the kernels dented only 50 percent of the potential nutrients arc obtained. With half of the kernels dented this increases to 70 percent. With all kernels dented and in the hard dough or early glaze 90 percent of the possible feed value or nutrients are harvested. Studies at Cornell University show that a 20 ton crop of corn silage in the milk stage produces 6,000 pounds of TDN and at the late dent stage to 8,800 pounds. If corn is not mature it may pay to delay harvest until it freezes. If it is harvest ed too young liquid flows from the silage and valuable are lost. Delaying until frost will increase nutrients in the corn and reduce losses in the pit. duce losses in the pit. When corn is frozen if it is properly mature as described above harvest it as soon as possible. If the corn is immature, in the milk oi early dough do not harvest if only the tops above the ears are frozen. It will con tinue to mature and produc: i . v - Labor law . promotes I violence i en-the- f ; up relationship an adversary between emplyccs and then employers. S. U. Solictor General Robert Bork notes that "Om labor law . . encourages the organization of employ ces into fighting gourps. . The rhetoric of union organization and struggle is the rhetoric ol war. in this war. Inevitably indiv idual rights are trampled. In recent years, union violence has been particularly widespread in the construction industry, which resembles agriculture with its isolated job sites and mobile labor force. One of the hardest-hit firms is Altemose Construction Company, a Pennsylvania building contractor which has angered union officials by daring to on the hire basis of ability rather than union membership. In June 1972. a rampage ol 1000 union members leveled an Altemose building site, causing $300,000 damage to and equipment. property Three years after the guerilla attapk. only seven of the terrorists have been fined and sentenced to jail. Union officials m it said I. ii u." , S.i Cot i COME JAY AND ison as new mem-- Ward. Jay is the .. ..nd Mrs. Jarold null. Susie is the I! . 'll - e mi-ina- iiu Imlmg violence . il NT MEETING acted by Bishop Bill !. vocation by John ualllS. a.. me of Clair Crook .ted and approved ..ted to the office ol . 'he aronic Priest- I Hi. to the ; C har-ze- sacrament hidds, and Dean as passed by i a Clark Crook, Gail u Pavne and tig i Bur- - Councilman, Roy was accompanied ..'.Key Bennett as "I-- -. related faith promot-- i 'in cs while in the ssion. n by Steve Chris- - ,dt t . sev-Min- more . l Two girls earn scholarships Two local girls leaving for this week have earned scholarships from Union for their outstanding in activities, Camille Petersen, daught- er of Mr. and Mrs. Duani Petersen, Fillmore, will at- tend Weber State College. She plans to major in dental hygiene. Tauna Dastrup, daughter Indian-Virgini- a rauiPRD DEfbAT Das-colle- s EtcVd (( S. vrFRSS I a 19. 'Three cheers imiyummi plant. proper maturity At SEARS two thirds of the nutrients d are in the ear and only in the stalk and leaves. In terms of TDN the ear is the important part of the plant, the leaves the least important. Keith J. Chapman USU Extension Agent onc-thir- at earl, Getyogr TTec. CJ'sh hcof only at SFflRS today!!! redued leakage from the harvested crop. Dont worry too much about losing the leaves, they make up only 15 percent of the total weight of the green corn iw s. Mrs. Don trup. Holden, will also tend Weber State. Her terests are in Interior sign. ' Both girls plan to use their scholarships to help with ' tuition and books. of Mr. and 4-- Chau-dier- st FANYA DASTRUP , it Check the JAMILLE PETERSEN allowing better storage and . ' for learned that the bateaux had an been extremely poor choice. The river water was fast, rough and full of rapids, around which the bateaux had to be carried, and Arnolds men were inexperienced as boatmen. The men were were also inexperienced as woodsmen and found the wilderness though they sometimes marched very hard going. The advance was painfully slow and supplies began to run out. Fresh supplies were brought in in November but by then desertions, injuries and death had reduced Arnolds force to seven hundred, and these remaining troops were subsisting on a diet of pet dogs, shoe leather and shaving soap. Arnold pressed on despite the heavy toll the march was. taking on his men and met General Montgomery outside the fortress city of Quebec in December. There was, however, good news for the embattled colonists 200 years ago. The out break of a frontier war. which would , have sapped fighting strength, was delayed for over a year by an peace conference at Pittsburgh that began on September 26 and ran through October glaze stage. If the corn is immature and is frozen below the ears or to the ground, let it dry several days in the field. The moisture level will decrease NNETTS PAR- attendance with at .x: Doug and Ann I.. 'sen) Neilscn and t tl i. ter; ltah and Van Ko.iUy (UMtuig her sister Bis e George and family) Pttwhnxon, sister of , nutrients. periodically . ri v that ended in disaster. Allen and John Brown, with a combined force of less than 300 men, had planned to rush Montreal in a suprise attack, with Allen attacking from below the town and Brown from above. Allen reached his position and waited for Brown's signal, but when Brown failed to arrive Allen attacked anyway. The British captured Allen and 40 men. The American campaign in Canada, which the Congress hoped would become the "fourteenth Colony," was also headed for trouble in another quarter. True, Generals Schuyler and Montgomery had forced the surrender of St. Johns, Canada, a strategic site 20 miles south of Quebec. on September 5, 1775 and Chambly and Montreal would fall on November 13, 1775. but Benedict Arnold and his men were on their way to almost insurmountable problems on their march to Quebec. When Arnold and his 1,100 men left the present site of Augusta, Maine on September 22, 1775, they took with them 200 heavy goats called bateaux that had been hurriedly built for the advance into Canada e up the Kennebec and rivers. But Arnold soon ts . busi- nessman who refused to force his employees to join the union. Ironically, the St. Joseph raid backfired. A union repre sentative was killed when tin shotgun he was carrying m the sabotage mission accidentally discharged. I'nion violence is by no means limited to such spec tacular and incidents. Most individual' who choose to disobey unioi officials orders during a la bor management diputc in any industry sutler some form ol intimidation from tacks strewn in the plant's driveway. to telephone threats, to Molotov cocktails through through liv ing room w indow s. Yet despite the vvidespre.nl i use of violence as a union organizing tactic, the National I a bor Relations Board and the courts have decided that it is justified under federal labor law . The Supreme Court ruled in 19J that the use of v iolence in this case the dynamiting ol power lines to cerce an employer to meet to meet "legitimate" union demands cannot be defined as extortion under federal it statutes. In other words, union officials arc given suvli extraordinary privileges bv ament federal labor legislation that they no longer ate subtwt to the nations's civ il and inmtnal laws. Ihey can use am means at their disposal high-voltag- Mr. and Mrs. gersen, Fillmore. (tuple have pur-- ! home of the late I m rank-and-fi- a small one-fift- h nosh over-zealo- "rat raid" on "We cant Ut!, g" frequently protest they can't help it" i some of their members turn to violence t workers keep and businessmen "in line." The goons who attacked Altemose were earreid to the construction site in buses charter by officials of the and Philadelphia Building Construction Trades Council. In St. Joseph. Mo. a representative of the International Sheet Metal Workers I'nion reportedly was imported to help plan and carry out a Mary TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO THIS WEEK On September 25. 1775, Ethan Allen led a rash attack on Montreal, Canada Fall clearance Washer Model WWA 5500P and Matching Dryer Model DDE 5300P WASHER FAMILY-CAPACIT- WITH FAMOUS WASH SYSTEM TIMED AUTOMATIC DRYER WITH PERMANENT PRESS FILTER-FL- cdotdown. Acitvated Soak. Delicate. Three and combina- tions. Three water levels. coin-o- p proven MODEL DDE 5300P Permanent Press cycle. Three temperature selections. Manual selection of drying time up to 130 minutes. Separate start button. Electronically tested dependability. Wrap Electric Heat Pipe Insulation Insulation 3' or 6" width! with Vapor Seal Wrap 35 foot rolls m heat tape McBride's on Fiber-Glas- s ..v ,3 - ROItART HOME CENTER Gas Model DDG5300P with Automatic Glo-Ba- r Ignition available at extra cost. $199.95 $269.95 VX Pipe Protectors CYCLE MODEL WWA 55 OOP Cycles Include Normal, Permanent Press with cold water Dependability . 'jC0P AND ODE 5300P SAVE nballs & Co. -- BUY THE PAIR 429.95 NUTRITION & VARIETY CENTER FROZEN MEAT SALE THIS .VKF.K'S SF F.C H LS FRESH FROZEN LEAN GrfOUJlD BEEF more, Utah 84631 SLICED HANDLED I BACON FRESH EGGS in your carLon ROOD NUTRITIONAL PCS .69 lb. 1.59 lb. ANY .50 dz. FOOD MEAL to achieve their goals. It the National labot Relations Ail were extended to the violeiuc agriculture. wliiili has plagued larm laboi illations lor mote than a ili'i ade would not be stopped, but would reieive a legal stamp ol approval. Faun vvoikets. growers and loiisum-erwould be subieited to vvibal and phvsic.il abuse bv union officials seeking monopoly control of lood pro duction and marketing. Ihcv would have no choice cxicpl to give in to union demands. Christmas Cards In the Western Tradition bon $6.00 per box. Greet your friends with cards from the Progress i . 3 M0 FR3EZF.R BEEF Half or '.'hole 'The Productive Media' off on all cards ordered before Oct. 1. Ham. Not much tine left. T nn ie Cut, Double trapped 4 Frozen for your Freezer 79 per lb. FRt'ZEN FuOD STO ftaQF, R.vJTAL Large Drawers, per yr. $18.00 Regular Door, per yr. $15.00 iMMrn-im- I |