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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH Annual Report of Nebo School District KE 'KITTS Al I ! DISBURSEMENTS NEBO SC1KK)L DISTRICT 1, 1029, to June 80, 1980 July RECEIPTS: . Received from: Current Taxes Tax Sale Redemption, Interest and Costa State High School Funds State District School Funds Stale Land and Interest Funds Federal Vocational Aid Forest Reserve Funds Interest on Daily Bank Balances . Miscellaneous Loans Total Receipts 1929-3- $229,215.59 10,191.35 0,4 58.24 132,284.08 12,244.08 1,200.00 772.39 449.18 960.16 " .. $392,770.07 100,000.00 Cash in Bank at Beginning of Year 192,775.07 2,536.92 Total Cash to be Accounted for $495,311.99 DISBURSEMENTS: Expenses as Follows: Administrative Expense Instruction Expenses Operation of School Plant Expense Maintenance of School Plant Expenses: Repairs of Buildings, High Schools Repairs of Buildings, Elementary Schools Repairs of Equipment, High Schools Repairs fo Equipment, Elementary Schools Repairs of Grounds at High Schools Repairs of Grounds at Elementary Schools $ $ Dr. L. D. LeGear, V. S. 0 12,883.99 235,380.63 34,506.72 St. Loui, Mo, LcGcar is a graduate of Ontario years of Veterinary College, 1892.Tiiii veterinary work. Eminent authority on diseases and railing of dairy cows, oilier livestock, and poultry. Naliouuiiy known lecturer, writer and author. - r lr. ht J GOOD PASTURES NEED GUARDING rn.y in the world is to save money on feeding. Your cows will produce in diiect proportion to the amount o! collect feeding. Mistake to Be Avoided is lowing Cattle to Graze Tot Early in The Spring swisliis One Al- Editors Note This is another story series of articles on dairying writ, ten by the well known national dairy and poultry authority, Dr. L. I). in a OOETMIEI V. S., of St. Louis, Mo. The en- tire series will appear in this paper. Our readers are urged to read them carefully and clip them out for future 5,251.38 reference. Heating Plant Humidifier Eliminates Cold Weather Electric Shocks. housewife quickly turns simple cream into .many dessert treats successful cook uses one over egg yolk, stirring vigorously. Rewhich has uever turn to double boiler. Cook until thickEVERY included In any cook book ened. Remove from fire. Add flavoring. Fold In egg white. Chill. Serve recipe. It Is "a dash of imagination." in sherbet glasses. Garnish with Luckily this precious ingredient is available to every home maker, whipped cream and a few berries or whether she has an unlimited food alpieces of fruit. Serves 8. lowance or whether she must count Turn This Tapioca Cream Into These every penny. Surprise Dessert: For instance, "a dash of imagina1. Serve wllh chocolate, or caramel tion" will turn plain tapioca cream sauce or maple syrup. These may Into a dozen new, delicious and ecobe folded into pudding or poured nomical desserts which the family will over each sprvtng and garnished ball as a special treat. with nut meats. And what a time saver. Make up 2. Serve with a Fig Sauce made of enough tapioca cream for two days stewed dried tigs, chopped. dinners. Serve it plain one day and 2. Foil whipped cream into pudding. dressed up for the next day. Garnish with orange or grapeFirst of all, here is the basic recipe: fruit sections, with Jam or jelly, Tapioca Cream or with a fruit sauce or canned fruii syrup 1 egg yolk, slight4. Fold in whipped cream. ly beaten Garnish 1 teasp. tlavoring with sauce. chocolate fluffy 1 egg white, stff-l(Waippod cream and chocolate beaten sauce folded together.) Add tapioca, sugar and salt to m.lk in addition to these suggestions Cook in double boiler 15 minutes or every womnti will be able to add soma until tapioca is clear, stirring often. of her own, such as shredded coco mt, Pour small amount of tapioca mixture candied fruits, ca'-ucfruits.'' Modern 11.147.S6 In a country where land is nr 119.04 680. 3f' cheap and as plentiful as it is in V:"ty people bale been fi Iglileneil 136.55 the United States it is not surpris- l electrical discharges from their he not we have 10.00 ing perhaps that hands or oilier parts of the boil) upon brothour come the pasture experts coniact with radialors. electric out$300,016.47 ers claim to be on the other side of lets, switches or even othei persons. the water. Although there is a slight sensibility Activities and Expense. is ! In Holland, for instance, land of shock and a crackling accompany170.60 Midieal and Nurse Service worth anywhere from $5,00 to $1,000 ing these discharges, they are harm-lc- : Auxiliary Agencies and Expense: s, according In the Holland Insit 12,692.83 an acre. To make that land profitTransportation of Pupils, High Schools hi lit). Mith. 10,002.75 able fof pasturing requuires no little tale of Thermnlogy of Transportation of Pupils, Elementary Schools skill especially where you have to These bodily electrical disclmi ges 22,695.58 pay in rental each year as much as are generally experienced during i!ic land sells for in many sections of winter heating season, especially on Interest Expense: The sod has real cold the United States. days. Technically they are Interest on Bonded Indebtedness 3,600.00 been pastured for centuries. The Interest on Floating Indebtedness 2,527.44 Hollanders nurse it and protect it known as electrostatic charges. They as carefully as we protect our most accumulate in the bodies of active 6,127.44 important crops. persons wlieu t lie air lias a low humidity, the percentage varying from bedifference To show you the Insurance: and land tween poor good pasture 369.83 Schools High 517.99 uasturing in this country, an ordiElementary Schools nary cow can get. along very well on 887.82 3 acres of Kentucky or Canadian blue grass, or any other good perOn the manent grazing ground. Expended for Capital Assets and Improvements: t ! i m-i-- H -h !' I I i m 1H fr School Sites 2,500.00 other hand it takes from 10 to 20 western wild of our School Buildings 27,835.73 acrep ranges IN School Furniture and Equipment 8,341.55 ir unimproved prairie land to sup200.87 port the same cow. School Library Books AND School Text Books One rule is never violated by care10,771.17 School Trucks 1,980.50 ful pasture owners, that of allowDuring the past the years the consumption of fuel oil for domestic School Automobiles 1,021.00 ing the cattle to go onto the gras1-tohealing inis increased by leaps and bounds, according to the Uollanfl 145.00 Water Stock early in the spring. The grass ust flute of I'hertnoli.gy of Holland, MIchlgun. The output of fuel oH must be allowed to get a good start foi tills purpose Inis more than doubled in that period. Manufactured 52,795.82 before it is called upon to withstand Bonds Retired gas also is becoming more and more popular with home owners. la 15,000.00 fhe sharp hoofs of the cow. It is r.127. according to the Institute, Notes Paid 100,000.00 also very injurious to the sod to alapproximately twelve billion cubic feet 600.00 low pasturing during the winter or Accounts Payable of manufactured gas were used for tills furpose. In I!)29 this figor ho late fall when the ground is apt billion cubic feet. Natural gas consumption fof jumped to twenty-seveto be wet and soggy. Total Disbursements $498, 293. t3 domestic heating, according to some authorities. Is far in excess of thU Add Warrants Outstanding at Beginning of Year 1,685.45 It is a little difficult to fix exact ; iiinoiitit. dates at which cows should go onto These figures tell an amazing story of prosperity and Indicate that on of Static $499,879.18 he pasture because of the different Discharges Electricity anything that t. lakes for greater comfort and convenience Is received Deduct Warrants Outstanding at end of year 3,821.98 Himatic conditions in various parts Cold Days Indicate That the Home with open uruiH by the American public, even T It does cost more. ; of the country. As a general rule Air le Too Dry for Health. Many home owners whose homes are now equipped with coal burn$496,057.20 pastures are ready in the southern ing plants raise the question us to whether present plants can be utilLess Cash Overdraft in Bank at End of Year 745.21 starts about the middle of March 10 to 20 per cent. Persons who are ized for oil or fuel healing. If heating plants are In good physical conin of low this is active air ma1st a safe day for the humidity April condition ami If they elliclently function hs heating systems during th Total Cash to Be Accounted for $495,311.99 jority of pastures in northen Okla- tent are prone to lie affected. Often extremes ot cold weather. It may be taken for granted that they wilj homa, southern Missouri, KentWcy, these charges may lie generated by serve etliciently for oil or gas heating, provided that the new type burn1020-3- 0 Tennessee and states in the same merely shuffling the feet across rugs COMPARATIVE TOTAL COST BY SCHOOLS 1028-2- 0 ers are of approved design and correctly installed. Warm air heating latitude. From April 20th to May or carpets, and on personal contact 5th takes in the north central states with a systems of t he vapor air type which are equipped with an automatic or a radiator as such humidifier and also an electrically operated ait propeller unit for dl such as Nebraska and Iowa. Across metal ground, hardware, a bright, electrical the northern section of the United triliuting the warm air as It Is generated, readily lend themselves U Is discernible. discharge States it is frequently advisable tc the use of oil or gas fuel. They are undoubtedly more effective beWhen conditions of this sort exist of forced warm air circulation and because or the humidifier ielay pasturing until the latter part in homes, cause I mil mijs the Institute, they of May or first of June. which maintains a proper moisture content in the home air. f Is too home the cate far that air dry One way to test the eifficiency of These are important factors ti consider when using more expensive your pasture is to see whether it is for health or for comfort. It is then fuel. In lieu of customary high indoor temperature, approximately 7$ able to furnish sufficient feed thro- that abnormal high indoor temperato 82 degrees I lie maintenance of a proper dpgree of relative humidity bodI" tures are necessary to maintain ugh the normal grazing season. assures bodily comfort at nmderat. temperature of 70 or 7$ definitely your pasture gives out to early it ily comfort. Some persons find it difunit uniformly distribf degrees. The electrically operated may be that you are using it too soon ficult to "feel" warm utdess the Inuies the wurm vaporized air throughout the home, and there .are no exi in the spring. door temperature approuches approxitreme dllTerences In temperature, such as characterize homes equipped These are minor points perhaps, mately SO degrees Fahrenheit. The will) t he old style healing systems. Therefore, definite economies arg but dairy animals should not be re- element lacking is a proper percentage in ortler, as far less fuel oil or gas Is required to mulnlain the lowef quired to travel a long distance in of humidity, or moisture. Electrostatic t order to secure their food. Therefore, indoor inperulure. when not the do accumulate charges it is highly desirable to have the pasowners warned are Home the Institute not oil to or by gai expect ture near the bam. Also, that it have air has a relative humidity of from beating units to overcome any heating deficiencies that may charactera sufficient supply of good drinking 45 to 75 per cent, for then the electroize systems now Installed, due to Improper size, physical defects, or poof I static charges are conducted by lie water in it or near it. location. Another mistake many farmers moisture in the nir to Hie ground as make is to shut off the feeding of fast as they appear. I I 111 IH-HIM ' the cows in the spring. That is a With modern heating systems of 1 good way to cut down on their pro- the vapor-ai- r type, t he discomforts of duction because grass in the sprino-i- dry nir, high temperatures and electroLOOK OUT FOR THE TAX economical, efficient business practmostly water. It cannot possiblv static charges are eliminated. Heatices for the present wasteful metheds. COLLECTOR contain enough of the necessary food ing systems of this type are equipped value to maintain the normal diet with automatic humidifying devices COMMUNICALONG DISTANCE of the producing cow. Therefore, y In 1913 the aggregate cost of govan should continue the feeding of gra:- - which supply the indoor air with ; TION INCREASES and hay or silage. As a matter of adequate amount of moisture und ernment Federal, State and local was Use of long distance telephone facseathe maintain throughout heating $135 per family. In 1920 it was $460 pact, even the best pasture is not a ilities by the American people is a sufficient diet for dairy cows any son a remarkable uniformity in the One out of each eleven families ' Where a increasing. time of the year. If your herd is propercentage of humidity. in the United States now draws its steadily Is 45 of relative degrees humidity In the single state of New York ducing twenty-fivpounds (pints) of milk daily per cow on grass, you maintained, bodily comfort Is assured support from the goverment. accord- calls of this averaged over half a should feed about one pound of grain with a temperature of 70 degrees. By ing to a searching survey, the waste million an hour during 1&29, an- apto every six or seven pounds of milk making comfort possible at moderate of local units of government alone over A cow that is producing forty pounds previous years. gain temperature, it is obvious vnpor-al- r totals more than half a billion dollars preciable of milk daily should have its past-urqg- e heating The reasons for the increases proopen the way for fuel a systems of ten cent their expper year, or supplemented by one pound of economy, ns it is much cheaper to bably are that such telephone service Bills for this cost were not presented until October, 1929. gram to each four or five pounds of: maintain a temperature of 72 degrees enditures. is being constantly improved and! the milk. into than the running temperatures The will collector to continue tax lowered. Nowdays it is almost cost This subject of feeding is so COMPARATIVE PER CAPITA COST TOTALS BY SCHOOLS And, aside from effecting fuel in connection with the vol- -' 80s. k as usual for us to his grip on the American tighten apeak to someone in 1928-2- 9 1929-3- 0 ume of milk secured from the herd savings, the discomforts ami electrountil uses the its next as to someone the or state public power city $ 44.614 42.55 that I feel too much emphasis cannot static charges due to over dry indoor to Washington force to substitute on the next government street. are obviated. air be 37.996 delinilely 38.59 placed upon it. The poorest econJefferson 43.426 42.43 Grant 43.519 41.58 Lincoln NEBO SCHOOL DISTRICT, June ill), I ; BALANCE sflliET - 47.355 46.62 Mapleton CAPITAL LIABILITIES: 54.0-62.14 CAPITAL ASSETS: Lake Shore Bonded Indebtedness, Building Bonds, Schedule 15 57,009.00 52.362 53.76 School 3 Sites .. Schedule $69,067.32 Benjamin . 45.61 49.969 4 5 School Fork Schedule $92 1,472.6 Central, Spanish Buildings Surplus Capital $826,74210 43.171 Rees . Less Depreciation Res 62.64 .174,473.37 749,999 28 4(7.969 48.71 School Furniture and Apparatus, Schedule No. Thurber 142,1 84.1 8 . 57.017 Less Depreciation Rea 58.56 07 Salem , .... .. 91,995.11 47, 6 45.063 School 51.85 Pavson No. .. 96 Schedule 312. 4. Books, Central, Library 42.599 Less Depreciation Res 44.67 Peteetneet 1,743.49 2,569.47 45.164 49.35 School Text Books, Schedule No. 7 50.514.97 Taylor .... 110.943 Less Depreciation Res ... . 107.69 9,887.28 40,627.69 Spring Lake 4 4 20.o0 49.658 49.19 Auto Trucks, Schedule 8 Santaquin Less Depreciation Res 67.78a 59.52 Goshen . 1.870.79 2.549.71 81.798 89.04 Automobiles, Schedule 9 Genola 2.206.00 61.484 Less Depreciation Res 63.70 Elberta 411.13 1.794. 87 75.517 68.22 Water Stock Owned (Est. Value) 1.290.00 Palmyra 57.676 Leland 62.90 Total Capital Assets 99.348 Colton 158.41 $883,742.10 .$883,74210 77.373 84.83 CURRENT ASSETS: Thistle CURRENT LIABILITIES: Clinton 140.004 111.81 250.0 0 Money on Deposit, State Bank of Payson .. .. Springville Hanking Co., overdraft, Sch. No. 1 $ 745.21 Accounts Receivable, Schedule No. 10 Dividend 66.041 63.11 38.37 Warrants Payable, Schedule 2 3.821.98 Notes Receivable, Schedule No. 11 Soldier Summit) 86.67 78.73 400.00 Account Payable, Schedule 16 2.443.08 1 No. 12 Schedule School 91.604 .885.74 89.66 Inventories, Accrued Bond Interest Payable, Schedule 15 ... Springvllle High 712.50 1 4 in 6 Tax Sales Districts Equity 111.746 101.16 9,62.3 Spanish Fork High School 1 Value of Unexplred Insurance, Schedule No. 66.59 63.634 1,504.46 Spanish Fork Junior High School 7,722.77 Deferred Charges to Operation 114.30 121.193 Payson High School 5,170.90 , Cuirent Surplus $51,150.34 1 School Junior 69.382 61.47 High Payson 58,873.1 58,873;il District Average not including Bond Interest 63.612 64.196 District Average Including Bond Interest 64.942 64.195 $942,615.21 $942,615,21 . 1 .) h-H'- SENSATIONAL GAINS USE OF OIL GAS FOR HOME HEATING I - 1 s nt pock-etboo- 18-9- . . ... , , 1 4-- |