OCR Text |
Show SACCHARINE SAYINCS Samuel Singleton, the Ferron banker, merchant, and progressive farmer and stockman, is high man in beet acreage at Ferron. He signed up for thirty acres at the Ferron meeting Tuesday. Bishop H. G. Mills is high man at Victor with twenty acres though r p .rt has it that J. W. Warf, the Victor rancher, will"over" him though he has not yet made up his mind. Ras Andersen of Mt. Pleasant, who owns land in the valley, has faith in the introduction of sugar beet culture into Emery county ti the tune of 50 acres. J. Frank Killian of Orangeville, in talking to the secretary of the committee, commit-tee, made the statement that he would turn over his 60-acre farm on Rock canyon can-yon flat for the full period of three years to the person or persons who would plant it to sugar beets. Bishop Brinkerhoff of Emery, committeeman com-mitteeman from that place, writes the secretary of the committee that every man and woman in Emery is on the sugar beet roll, and that they are only waiting until Sunday's meeting to swamp us with contracts for liberal acreages. |