Show Utah Job Service aiding employers Local seminar scheduled Utah Job Service will be aiding employers in meeting the requirements the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) which was signed into law on November 6 1986 The law which affects all United States workers and employers requires that any person hired after November 6 1986 must have documentation of eligibility to work in the United States According to Louis M Pickett Director of Field Operations for Utah Job Service the immigration law provided for Job Service to perform the certification process and release employers from this responsibility and who place job liability “Employers orders with Job Service can request this service and will be sent a certificate aton testing to this verification dividuals who are hired” Pickett said After September 1987 employers who choose to conduct the verification process themselves will nevertheless be referred only those applicants who can meet certification requirements Job Service has been conducting seminars throughout the state to acquaint employers with provisions of the of new immigration law The Delta Job Service is presenting a seminar on Tuesday July 28 1987 at 12:00 noon at Rick’s Family Restaurant 540 East Topaz Boulevard Delta It is a No Host Luncheon with Louis M Pickett as the presenter His theme will be “Options for Certifying Reform Immigration and Control Act of 1986” All employers are invited to attend Louis M Pickett has a Masters Degree in Personnel Psychology from the Utah State University and is the Director of Field Operations and the Employment Service for Job Service During his career with the Department he served as Personnel Director Counselor and Interviewer He has served on a National Committee to formulate policies for implementation of the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 The seminar as others in the state is sponsored by Job Service Employer Committees Interested (JSECs) employers may contact trie Delta Job Service Office for more information What makes the Beefmaster breed unique? There are three points which make the Beefmaster breed different from other breeds and unique The Beefmaster has evolved from a crossbreeding program The three way hybrid proved to be far more functional than a hybrid The Beefmaster is the only breed which from its inception has been selected for beefmaking solely characteristics Since 1937 the Foundation Herd of the Beefmaster breed has been closed and selection for sires and replacement females has come from within the herd These animals have been selected for only six characteristics: fertility weight milkhardiness and ing ability disposition conformation These characteristics have become known as the Six Essentials Unlike other Brahman hybrids a Beefmaster cannot be recreated today All Beefmasters are purebred descendents of Tom Lasater’s Foundation Herd or are produced by at least three consecutive crosses using certified Beefmaster bulls Weaning and yearling weights crease for two reasons Firstly have been selected for heavy weaning and yearling weights weight one of the six essential being characteristics Due to years of selection for weight a Beefmaster bull’s own gaining ability can be predictably transferred to his offspring Secondly breeding Beefmaster bulls to your cows will maximize hybrid vigor This results from the fact that no other breed is closely related to the Beefmaster and the more today distantly related two parents are the greater the effects of hybrid vigor in the offspring Beefmasters have been selected for fertility and this is carried beyond conception figures to include the ability to calve unassisted at two years of age To accomplish this difficult task nature has designed the Beefmaster calf to be relatively small at birth and tubular in shape Newborn calves look like wet jack rabbits They are all legs and ears Beefmaster bulls are’ prepotent and the size and shape factors will be evident even in first cross calves With the demand for leaner beef buyers do not discriminate against fast growing high yielding Beefmaster steers In many areas they bring a premium because feedlot operators know they will convert feed efficiently and have a yield grade 2 carcass just the kind demanded by packers Keep your heifer calves as The basic Beefmaster replacements characteristics of fertility and milking ability plus the added production boost from hybrid vigor will make these first cross females excellent brood cows Slow maturing rates may or may not be characteristic in Brahman hybrids but in the Foundation Herd and most other Beefmaster Herds both bulls and heifers are bred as yearlings with heifers dropping calves at two years of age This has been the case for many years so there has been long term selective pressure on the breed to reach early sexual maturity Beefmaster bulls will pass this characteristic on to their crossbred progeny Beefmasters originated on the gulf coast of Texas and over the years have been accepted throughout the hot humid southeast The Foundation Herd has been on Colorado’s eastern slope since 1949 and other major breeders have herds the plains and the west throughout where severe winters and drought conditions are the rule Having been selected for hardiness Beefmasters have proven they will adapt to a wide range of environments Seat belts save lives According to the National Highway Traffic world's largest beetle has a and two black and white striped body It feeds on fermenting fruit in African forests The Safety Administration 17000 deaths could be estimates and 4000000 injuries prevented dramatically reduced each year with the use of seat belts Don’t fall for the lie that you don’t need to wear seat belts on trips close to home 75 percent of all accidents occur within 25 miles of home by Cluff Talbot I guess I can’t remember when Hinckley did not have a celebration on Pioneer Day It seems my dad George E Talbot Jr was always involved some way in the celebration The first rodeo I can remember was around 1926 ’27 or ’28 I remember that my dad owned the Hinckley Meat & Grocery Store Dad awakened me long before early one morning daylight and asked me if I wanted to go with him Some of the men in town were going to bring a band of wild horses to town to buck out for the 24th rodeo I got up and we went up to the store Dad had an old Model T pickup Dad opened up the store and got out cheese and milk He had crackers already brewed up a 5 qallon can of hot coffee and we went out west to meet the guys coming in with the horses I can’t remember who all the guys were but I suppose Alton Theobald Tuck Draper Loc Petersen were among the I do remember Spot many others Wilkins because his horse fell with him just as we got there it was a horse that belonged to Melvin Webb We took the saddle off put it in the back of the pickup and Spot got in with us The horse was crippled so we just let it come home on it’s own power The men had quite a large band of wild horses surrounded and was headed for town There was a place just west of Hinckley that was surrounded by open drains except for one place they could cross into It was all brush inside I can still show you the place One rider was out in front of the rest were surrounding the wild horses There must have been about 30 head They drove them into this place The mustangs were trapped because they would not try to cross the open drains All of the men got off their horses parked at the opening and then we drove up in the pickup The sun was just coming up so I suppose the men had gone out the night before and had the horses spotted Then when it was triem towards daylight they started town As we drove up Dad got out and The heron pictured above was found in the yard of the Sheldon Skeem residence in Deseret Michael Skeem son of Debbie and Sheldon noticed the bird wandering It appeared to be weak rather than hurt Family members tended the bird during the day feeding it small fish and providing protection in a utility building on their property Following the advice of Fish and Game people the heron was taken to the river in the evening and allowed to return to the freedom of nature The biggest fresh water fish ever as having been caught recorded with a rod and reel was a sturgeon caught in California in 1983 txxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxy INTERMOUNTAIN BEEFMASTER Tburs July LISPS Millard County Hinckley 24th of July Rodeo ItY RODEO: Left to right Patti Croper 2nd Attendant 3rd Attendant Jami Peter MISS HINCKLEY handed the men the cheese crackers milk and coffee They sat on the top of the drain banks wriile they ate and watched the wild horses After they had rested their saddle horses they surrounded the wild ones and drove them to town They drove them to my dad’s corrals which were just south of the rodeo grounds This was a few days before the 24th The next day the men rode down to the river to get some big steers You see the cattlemen in those days would not sell their steers until they were 3 or 4 year olds The people from Deseret would let us round them up and bring them to town I remember they would try to get EJ Eliason steers mostly because they were big and had long horns There were only two corrals at the rodeo grounds and one bucking chute We had a race track with no rails and no fences around the park so they had to ride the mustangs either with a loose rope or the mane hold and the steers with a rope and cowbell so that the ropes would come off They would let those horses go back on the desert and the steers would go back down on the river I remember one time when one of the long horn steers bucked in front of the judges stand and a cop from Delta who was Lorin Taylor got caught in the seat of his pants with the horns It ripped his pants completely off and left him standing there in his long barrell i i i son Queen Theressa Natalie Ekins ed underwear The saddle broncs were big work horses that belonged to farmers in town that were not broke to ride They would always lead them in front of the grandstands ahd one man would be on a good saddle horse and snub him up while the men that were going to ride would put the saddle on and get on and then hand him the rope They could always catch them because they were always broke to lead They would always have saddle horse and pony horse races and of course the trotters and pacers with their racing carts Then sometimes during they day a baseball game with Hinckley playing Deseret or Delta would be played and the day would end with a dance at night Later on after the WPA Days they built a rail around the race track with an arena so the cattle could not get away My dad always loved kids and wanted to see his grandkids ride and so got a junior section started Now this has got to be 40 or 45 years ago because those grandkids are 50 years old now Dad always had a feed yard so he would furnish 30 to 40 calves and pay the kids $1 00 per head to ride them He would have plenty of help Bud Bassett Broze Roberts and many of the kid’s dads to help the kids on and give them plenty of advice George Talbot would stand there or be on his favorite horse Old Jerz and give each kid a silver dollar that got on a calf He would have judges there and "i — r i i ‘"i 23 1987 - and 1st Attendant Dad would go to the stores in Delta and get prizes for the best rider This is how it all got started After many years dead Teepies furnished the calves free of charge to keep this junior section going Walter Ekins furnished the calves for some years Dean Talbot furnished them last year and will again this year He wants to keep the Jr Section going Dean is a son of George Talbot who started the tradition and his son Ken is in charge of the rodeo Many stores I could not name them all and not to forget Perry and belt have furnished Taylor buckles for the champs The town for several years has given to those who ride We give thanks to all who have helped to keep this tradition alive I’ll have to tell you how the colt scramble got started It was getting hard at one time to get horses to buck So with Curley Swenson as out Mayor Wayne Peterson and I on the Town Board and with Grant Hardy as good help we bought horses from Ray Skinner that he got from the Ibapah dian Reservation We let the cowboys ride them out for several weeks each Saturday night to practice on Some of the mares had coits and we did not know what to do with the colts so we held a colt scramble and let the kids that caught the colts have them We have made lots of kids happy and lots of parents mad but this tradition still goes on T i i X IPP has blue grass sod for sale at $08sq ft 1 Limit 2000 sq ft per buyer be sold on a first come basis Sod August 8 1987 at 10 AM At the Neal Mortenson 3 Creek Ranchi will Public Invited - Bring a Friend! Located 30 Miles South of Richfield 4 DIRECTIONS: Take ranch exit off 70 at Clear Creek Summit (Cove Fort Summit) Go East on Old Highway 13 miles take dirt road north 3 miles to seminar Reserve your sod now! There will be a $500 fee charged An old West Dutch Oven lunch will be served and a drawing for a $100000 certificate toward the purchase of a Beefmaster Bull from a IBB Breeder will be held A tour of 3 Creek Ranch will also be included We will also hear from two speakers one from FBA and one from The College of Southern Utah am and between 7:00 3:30 p m Monday through Friday Cash sales at time of i ill i i l I r -- T 3 i— £ Evans 0 BREEDERS FIELD DAY xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxKxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxy Page pick-u- p I I I I lT |