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Show J MILLARD COUNTY IUSPS 446-74- i Ay vFOUNDED Ay- - 0 Fou n0 MILLARD COUNTYS FIRST NEWSPAPER 666 NNA SUSTAINING MEMBER IN 1894 25 CENTS NATIONAL NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION rfsY 1982 Volume 88, Number 7, mountain man run and which covers all events. Prizes for Saturday's ladies. contest will be awarded at There will be a big pot the campfire at of CHILI for the contestSunday's prizes ants. There is lots of room will be awarded on or for camping but no water about 1:00 p.m. so you might want to The race is located on bring some along. Fire- Fish & Game property on wood will be available for the northwest corner of campfires. So bring your Halfway Hill. The easiest tepees, campers, tents or way to get there Is to There will be contests whatever and have a good come to Meadow, up and prizes for all contest- time. Meadow Creek Road then ants. We will be shooting Sighting in will be Sat. turn north at the micro-wavthe novelty targets, like the until 10:00 when stay right on the running deer, mashing a competition starts. We road 'till you get there. few potatoes, perhaps a hope to start shooting We wish to thank the paper target or two, and promptly at 10:00, but Division of Wildlife Rewe'll probably break a few were flexible. sources for the use of the hearts (but we won't hurt Registration for the land the range Is on. anyones feelings). We'll shoot will start at 9:00 'till So come one come all probably ring a few gongs whenever. There will be too. We'll surely have the only one entrance fee and have a great time. Millard County may be looking at two new hospitals in the near future. Hospital Administrators, Dell Ashby of Delta and Ben Fisher of Fillmore, along with Joe May of Mt. Pleasant, met in Delta on Tuesday and Thursday of last week with representatives oif Design West. They, along with other frying pan throw for the dark-thirt- MIMlEH 1883 Of TH( 'UuSf? TWO NEW COUNTY HOSPITALS? THIS WEEKEND The second annual spring shoot of the Sun Muzzleloaders Canyon will be held the weekend of Feb. 20 & 21. This will be a great opportunity to try your skill with a & flint muzzleloader, steel, tomahawk, black powder pistol & throwing knife. - Friday, February 19, 1982 Millard County Progress, Fillmore, Utah 84631, MUZZLELOADER SHOOT TO BE HELD 4jocia' on Fiunaetl y. staff members, developed the first set of new hospital plans. The hospital designed will provide a current state of the art facility, meeting the communities current needs. There will be no increase in Kindergarten Materials and Meth- beds. It is being specifically designed ods, a three-cred- it course offered for easy expansion in all service areas through the Southern Utah State College Outreach Program in Teacher Education, begins Feb. 19th in Delta. Officially designated Education 338, the professional education course is designed to acquaint students with the kindergarten program and learning environment, with activities and curWort is progressing on the riculum for kindergarten children, and section of Interstate 15 between Nephi with development of readiness in readand Scipk in central Utah. The Utah ing, mathematics and social living. Department of Transportation opened The first class period will begin at bids today on a project to do grading 6:30 p.m. at Delta High School. Taught and drainage wort on another portion of on Fridays and Saturdays through that road; from Mills Junction northeasMarch 13, class will be held Fridays terly to four miles south of Nephi. from 6:30-- 9 p.m. and Saturdays from Of the sixteen bidders on the project, Three local women have been select- participate in the program. Serving as 8 m. a. noon. Owl Constructors of Irvine, California ed for inclusion in the 1981 edition of chairman of the programs Advisory Elisabeth Barker, family life instrucsubmitted the apparent low bid of Outstanding Young Women of Amer- Board is Mrs. Dexter Otis Arnold, tor at SUSC, and a kin$7,404,960. UDOTs official engineers Morrill, Tanya ica, the Board of Advisors for that honorary president of the General teacher at Enoch Elementary estimate was $9,836,962. dergarten announced organization recently. Federation of Womens Clubs. A wholly new School, are the course instructors. section of road To be included in this prestigious book The women listed, along with apcan be completed during will by graded from Mills Junction north Registration are Rita C. Giles, Ann Nielsen, and e proximately 23,000 fellow Outstanding the first class period. Additional inforto a point a few miles south of Nephi. Cooper Stephensen, all of Fillmore. Young Women of America from across mation about the course or about the Culverts and other drainage features the United States, will be presented in outreach can be obtained by are also included. program The Outstanding Young Women of the prestigious annual awards volume. Ms. Carrie Law, the SUSC The new Interstate section will run America program is designed to honor In addition, they are now being con- contacting Outreach Representative in Delta, at three miles west of the existing road. and encourage exceptional young sidered for one of the fifty-on- e state Danger to migrating deer will be leswomen between the ages of 21 and 36 winners, the Ten Outstanding Young sened by construction of a six and one-hawho have distinguished themselves in Women of America will be chosen. The foot barrier fence that will channel their homes, their professions and their ten national winners will then be honorcheck-of- f the animals to safer crossing points. communities. Accomplishments such as ed at the annual awards luncheon to be stretch Completion of the these are the results of dedication, ser- held this fall in Washington, D.C. from Nephi to Scipio will close a gap in vice and leadership Our Board of Advisors and Editors qualities which Interstate 15 and provide four lanes of deserve to recognized and remembered. salutes all those honored as Outstanfreeway from Tremonton to the Arizona This is the goal of the many leading ding Young Women of America. We womens organizations, college alumni take great pride in bringing their associates and public officials who accomplishments to the attention of the The 1982 nongame state income tax nominate deserving young women to America public. check-of- f program got off to a running start recently, when 42S runners in Sah Lake, Ogden, Springville and Cedar 2nd Gty participated in the four-mil- e Annual Run Wild fun run. Extra law enforcement and safety Kris Cary in Springville was the measures are planned for Easter weekmens state champion with a time of end, 1982, at Little Sahara April 20:09. Maiylou Sedwick in SLC was the Recreation Area, according to David womens winners were Hernanda Her- Carter, Juab County Sheriff. nandez with a time of 20:21 and Linda Plans were discussed in Nephi on in the because of inflation a Ekstrom with a time of 27:05. In Property taxes charged low of 0.36 Ogden, February 8, when Sheriff Carter met on a home in Fillmore unincorporated area of property with a current the mens and womens winners were ofwith a current value of South Summit School market value of $70,000 in David Andreason with a time of 21:00 with Bureau of Land Management medical ficials, technicians, emergency $70,000 during early 1981 District to a high of 0.96 early 1981 would be and M. Camille Davis with a time of would average $51 6.00, or in Sandy City. valued for tax purposes at 2S:05. In Springville, the womens win- and other law enforcement personnel. BLMs House Range Resource area adot its market value. 0.74 Foundations analysts only $50,000 after applicner was Lanise Porter with a time of ministers the sand dune she, which is This compares with a explain that the wide ation of Tax 27:33. In SLC, Ed Murrell's time of the statewide average proper- variation in the property Commission rollback fac- 20:43 was the fastest in the mens located approximately 30 miles west of Nephi. ty tax burden of $515 on a tax burden in the different tor. division. Because Easter weekend typically $70,000 home, or about areas of the state is the According to the FounRun Wild was the kickoff for the draws a large crowd to Little Sahara, 0.74 of market value. result of differences in tax dation report, this provisDo Something Wild campaign to enmeasures are taken to promote special These were some of the rates and assessment ion to "freeze" local courage Utahns to donate a part of their safety for the visitors. The assistance of facts published by Utah levels. Both of these property values at 1978 state income tax refund to the Nongame state and county law enforcement perFoundation, the private factors are equally im- levels for tax purposes is Wildlife Fund. By checking a box for $1, sonnel has contributed to a marked dectax research organization, portant in determining creating inequities bet$5, $10 or any other amount on line 15 of rease in violations and other problems in its latest analysis of the tax burden on specific d ween the short form or line 28 of the long in will The and state past years. county comparative property tax properties. property and other prop- form, they will by helping to assure the this assistance provide year. again loads in Utah. Several years ago the erty classes. As noted, future of nongame wildlife in Utah. In addition to the Juab County Sher- The study shows that Utah Legislature provided property values establishwildlife not usualNongame wildlife, or the average property tax that all ed for tax purposes were ly hunted or fished for, account for 87 d load on a $70,000 home property shall be apprais- approximately 29 below percent of wildlife species in Utah. could vary all the way ed at current fair market market values in the case However, until last year, when Utahns d from $250 in the unincorpropdonated $214,000 through the nongame value and the value of of The 208 bulls of 12 different breeds d of area the South porated state income tax check-of- f such property rolled back erty. program, Summit School District to to Its January 1, 1978 property, on the other nongame received only four percent of on test at the Centerfield bull test staa high of $672 in Sandy level as determined by the hand, was assessed at a the budget allocated for wildlife pro- tion of the Utah Beef Improvement established grams through a small legislative Association show an average daily City. Property taxes averState Tax Commission. In currently gain of 2.87 lbs. day with an average of the effect, value. age less than 1 this provision appropriation. feed conversion of 7.22 lbs. feedlb. current market value of a "froze" local property Another inequity of gain on a high roughage ration after d home in all areas of the values for tax purposes at between the first 56 test days. state. They range from a 1978 levels. 2 Thus, Continued on Page High gaining individual bulls by breed include: a Simmental with an average daily gain (ADG) of 4.91 Thirteen desert bighorn sheep were owned by Glen Johnson of Manti; recently released on the shores of Lake a LeRell Hansen Blonde at 4.20 ADG; Powell, thus completing a three year a Sheldon Quarnberg of Scipio Hereford effort to reestablish bighorns t 3.93; a Leo Gillespie of Fairview transplant Bt Ruth Zmilruich in the Kaiparowits Plateau region of Angus and a Neal Kellett of Moroni Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. or Albert, Monday, Fab. 22: Chicken-a-la-kinAlta, The thirteen sheep will compliment Wadneaday, Fab. 24: Spaghetti, 20 sheep already established from le of a trophy ram permit. meatballs. of the It is the goal of the Division of Wildtwo transplants years. previous of Beef and 26: fab. stew, -f- rom the old scrapbook-He- lp Friday, This project was totaDy funded by life Resources to reestablish the desert course there's all the f ixln's, too. a man out of trouble and he'll donations from The Foundation for bighorn into much of its former habitat not forget you when he gets into trouble North American Wild Want to go to Salt Lake City on Sheep and the that still remains uninhabitated and Fab. 25? Call Ruth, again. Safari Gub International, along with the void of human disturbance. Thursday, Outreach class begins today in Delta e, rather than overbuilding now, well beyond the needs of the community. Each community faces special problems. All three must weigh the cost of financing an upgraded state of the art hospital facility. Delta must decide on a progressive new hospital or renovating and adding to their present facility. Fillmore must consider their community support of the existing facility; and therefore, a questionable need for a new facility. Mt. Pleasant is faced with finding and financing a centralized building site location. It might be interesting to note that the Fillmore and Mt. Pleasant hospitals were built from the same set of plans a year apart - 1947 and 1948. Despite these current problems, the administrators see both a timely and golden opportunity to provide a unique, efficient facility that will meet the needs of each community at an reduction in construction costs. This is dependent upon the communitys desire to build simultaneously within the next eight to ten months. The initial floor plans are available in each hospital, and administrators welcome an opportunity to discuss these medical facilities with interested residents. 18-2- 0 UDOT schedules more work on Death Strip Local women selected for Outstanding Young Women of America -- 13-mi- le Jo-len- state line. The section to graded is part of the final link. Within two years, approximately stretch percent of the last Interstate will be graded. Completion le be 88 of of the new highway must await future funding. Local traffic may encounter short delays during construction, but mainstream traffic will not be affected. NURSING DEGREE PROGRAM TO BEGIN IN FILLMORE Beginning in March, courses leading to a B.S. in Nursing will be offered In Fillmore. If there is sufficient interest, general psychology and beginning algebra will start the week of March 22. An organizational meeting to explain the program, assess the interests of the prospective nurses and answer ques- - tions will be held Friday, Feb. 19 at 2 p.m. in the Fillmore Gty Building. The program can be tailored to meet the needs of everyone from and RN to an LPN to someone who has never taken a college course. For more information, please call Nancy McDonald, 743-531- 864-206- lf Nongame program gets off to running start 41-mi- USDA to distribute another 70 million pounds of cheese additional WASHINGTON, leb. An 70 million pounds of surplus cheese 5-- Safety measures to be taken for Little Saharas Easter weekend Property Tax on $70,000 home averages $516 in Fillmore locally-assesse- ifFs Department, the County Attorney and Justice of the Peace will be stationed at the recreation area for expeditious arraignment of violators. Ten Utah Highway Patrol Units will assist the Juab County personnel. The West and East Juab Ambulance Services and emergency medical technicians will first aid station at the operate a Little Sahara Visitor Center, located one mile from the main entrance. BLM personnel will be available at the visitor center to assist the public and provide information. According to Tom Jensen, BLM Area Manager for the House Range Resource Area, law enforcement and medical emergencies have been minimized at Little Sahara due to the coordinated efforts and assistance from state and local agencies. Persons planning to visit the area are advised to use caution and good judgement for the safety of all recreationists. 24-ho- locally-assesse- from stocks of the U.S. Department of Agricultures Commodity Credit Corporation have been made available for release without cost to states for distribution to needy persons. The initial 30 million pounds were made available on Dec. 22 and about 25 million pounds have already been requested. States will have until July 1, to request cheese from todays authorization. The amount each state will receive will be determined after consideration is given to each states specific request. Agreements may be extended for those states having already signed for a portion of the original 30 million pounds. As with the initial distribution, cheese must be distributed locally by charitable, organizations, including food banks. The cheese will be blocks. distributed in USDAs Food and Nutrition Service regional offices have signed agreements for the original 30 million pounds with 42 states, 16 of which have begun diswith tribution. the Agreements remaining states are in progress. No state has declined to participate. About 547.4 million pounds cf cheese, purchased under the dairy price support program, are currently in the CCC inventory. non-prof- it five-poun- d Testing places Scipio bull as high gainer at UBIA show locally-assesse- State-assesse- locally-assesse- BIGHORN SHEEP PAHVANT VALLEY SENIOR CITIZENS SCHEDULE g. 743-574- 2; 743-546- 4. 743-537- RELEASED Charolais tied at 3.84; a Karl Dean of Salt Lake Limousin at 3.57; a Chianina owned by Elmer Yergensen of Roosevelt at 3.39; a Phil Black of Lehi Beef Master at 3.21; a Pollen Hereford owned by Phil Allen of Antimony at 3.13 and a Gark White of Perry Red Angus at 3.04. Special attention is being paid to the progeny bulls from the 28 herd sires represented on the test. The high gaining sire groups by breed sire, owner and ADG are: Angus - 1339, Leo GilMr. Barton lespie, 3.20; Charolais 8116, Neal Kellett, 3.26; Hereford YL1 Tiberius 122, Southern Utah State College of Cedar Gty, 3.08; Polled Hereford Big Sky Domino, Reed L. Orton of Parowan, 2.57; Limousin TCC 7K, Karl Dean, 3.14; and Simmental Chester, Grant Hansen of May-fiel3.48 ADG. The top feed conversion rates in lbs. dry feedlb. of gain for the pens of 5 -- -- d, in increasing order by breed - owner, and feed conversion rate include: Simmental - Grant Hansen, 4 91; Simmental - Kent Bangerter of Bountiful, 5.04; Limousin - Karl Dean, 5.28; Hereford, John Hinckley of Ogden, 5.49; Red Angus - Gark White, 6.09; Charolais James Freston of Bridge-lanand Juel Rasmussen of Manti, d 6.11. Performance testing of bulls like these measured the main economic factors in beef improvement rate of gain, feed efficiency, and rib eye measurements upon completion of testunder controlled uniform condiing tions provides the only suitable means for comparatively evaluating bulls within a breed coming from many varied management units. Bulls conof the genetic imtribute over 85 of a herd over three generaprovement tions. Improve your herd at the sale April 10 in Centerfield. |