Show wap SWyilBHBMBtWaM B4 pm Thursday April 4 1974 Cottle Gravron Hold Meeting Here Saturday The Eastern Ttah the group was Joe TayAssociation lor Held their annual buui-neDirectors Pete Dole and Arthur Ekker were meeting last Saturthe courthouse day also Special resident of guests were Sherm Har-mexecutive secretary ON LAKE POWELL of’ the Utah Cattlemen's Mrs Gertie Bonner of Assn and Lamar MonSanta Fe New Mexico roe Sevier County first Mr and Mrs Austin Bonof the asner and two sons of Los sociation Alamos New Mexico i Over 100 people at- Mr and Mrs Howard tended a banquet that uidMrandMrs ening held at the Steen Frank Shields spent the House weekend on Lake Powell at Bullgrog Basin They Commercial Printing enjoyed boating and fishThe A ing great time was Cat-£fn- sa ed Re-elect- ed er vice-preside- nt 1W1 Ctfe and cafvaa pHratf aim 40 mmm of Mai cadi focafoto far aS agriadhiral pradoM CaHla ara is aS canadai af tha aMa hat Ifca Mtu caatratiaaa ara la tha aerfh central caatrd ev-Shie- lds Times-Independe- all had by nr 259-75- 25 Need a Job? Coat from Page Here eve few tips to use when comps ring' a civHion Job with on Air Free enlistment You should receive at least $30720 starting salary This sum reflects take home pay after medical insurance is taken out Also request regular promotions with pay raises for length of employment Request 30 days paid vocation par yoar starting with your first yoar You should have lew rate or free world travel privileges anytime on vacation You must be able to continue your education with the company paying 75 per cent of the cost of learning If you are selected for college your tuition should be paid and your normal salary con- - tinued Askfor $300 worth of clothing and a monthly: meinteiiunce allowance pins rations and housing allows nca Moke sure the company has a swimming pool tennis courts golf course library and ietneatei for your use Your employer should alto provide unlimited sick leave with pay end don't forget free dental i you and free medical cere for yea end your family The company should provide grocery department laundry variety ana other stores which expenses up to 30 per cent sure the retirement douse states that you may retire offer 20 years at half pay To learn more about opportunities in the US Air Force contact YOUR AIR FORCE REPRESENTATIVE 135 South State St Salt Lake City Utah 521-62- (801) 82 Cottonwood Mall Salt Lake City Utah 272-41- 41 (801) 621-19- cattle raising because he demanded that these cattle run on the rough dry San Juan ranges Just like toe "grade" cattle Unlike toe imported and sometimes pampered bulls of toe day which were often overfat and standing on poor legs and feet toe bulls under Redd's ownership would have to take what nature had to offer Those that would take it were kept for herd bulls The bulls that faltered and the cows tost flailed to conceive or raised a poor calf went to slaughter Under such strict culling - Charlie admitted some good cows may have unjustly gone to town but his consistent 90 per emit claf crop proves toe worth of a selective breeding program Hardy Redd who heads toe La Sal Livestock Co said of Ms father “Charlie was an 'improver' " i s 375-41- 27 r -- J-- recalls friends say- ing "Whenever Charlie bought a place he always improved it fixed toe fences built good corrals killed toe prai- -' rie does ploughed up toe sage brush and planted 348 West Center St Provo Utah (801) 61 f- B1 bought a herd of registThe ered He refords rough and hardy spirit of his ancestors must have been injected into Charlie’s philosophy on He 727 24th St Ogden Utah (SOI) CALL COLLECT “- thinking “It costs no At the time of Ms more to feed sheer or father's death and the de- lamb a we pression of the early than a ewe" 1920's liabilities on the Later he was to be of Redd holdings put Charhelp to toe whole wool lie “in the Shadow of industry as president of calls industry as president of An easy way out was the National Wool Maroffered - paying crediketing Cooperative He tors 50 cents on the dol- helped organize the cooplar - to wMch Charlie erative in 1930 which said "I'll work as hard worked to standardize as 1 can to preserve the wool grades and prepare business and to pay off wool for market more our debts in full I don’t scientifically know if I'll succeed but At age 34 he ran for if not I can still look and was elected to the myself In the eye and say Utah legislature serving I tod my damnedest!" three terms A member Drouths and the deof numerous committees pression of the early he was known for abso1930’s provided more lute honesty and toe courhard times but Redd held age to stand 19 for what fast to his convictions he believed to be right and continued improving Today it is refreshing his livestock to look back on toe life of this man who was said to have been elected and without mak- f fence gained by working ing a single political pro- with his father’s range mise He judged an issue flocks that Charlie em- - on its merits rather barked on a scientific than on its political sheep breeding program standing This carried over to With toe base of the Ms ranch management as Colum-dias range - proven cattle accordhe let judged he purchased rams to upgrade ing to their merit on toe wool quality and started range On livestock shows he a selective breedingpro-grawith these and was quoted as saying "Show ring standards are Hampshire rams to denot caewes necessarily s guide velop larger on toe pable of producing more to whatandis inbest the feed-lrange wool and larger lambs Animals should be According to Charlie’s judged on toe basis of what they can do with the feed given them and animals taken to a show should be a sample of what's on toe shelves at m ot We’re first again By a long long way As a matter of fact we loaned over 65 million dollars more to Utah farmers and ranchers than any other Utah bank Person to person banking And the right 1 w inilfi- 4 Utah farmers and ranchers have learned through experience that when they want an agricultural loan they come to a banker who understands and believes In the agricultural business And is willing to get personally persons 14 j ft'-if-- ' S They've always been able to find that banker at First Security You'll be able to find him there too Let’s talk Your place or ours it t 5tWajtf‘ BBT We believe in you ' FIRST SECURITY BANK Of Utah NA PIONEER Member 1011 krrfycu:: MMB FDIC SEED CONN mwnauww wiwtqqiRMr'M'iMHHM'iFWHimiWlW Produced by Pioneer Seed - Ww if Ui - Company Do Moina s nhV6l IA JnwrnRPQnto OA IA at vc ini lAaliiaa -- tifacts diaries " gislstion that would a "comprehensive program of salinity control" for the entire Colorado River Batin In a joint letter to Rep Harold T Johnson Chairman of toe Subcommittee on Water and Power Resources of too House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs Moss and others urge that file UJS concern itself with the in-creading problem of sa Unity in too Colorado toe upper basin as well as the lower basin and in Mexico ' as-tabl- ish docu- 2TJ2L!sisJlds This is toe kind of man the livestock industry is proud to look up to as s "Stockman of toe Century” b V? V frees C it STANDS UP YIELDS involved em- who ergency help should apply direct to the State Energy Office (SEO) for a temporary emergency allotment using FED number 20 form or any other form developed by toe SEO The forms are avail -abel at toe Regional FEO State Energy Office for toe toe and local ASCS office notes that Framers" It Training sessions are toe Federal Energy Ofbeing conducted so tost fice has designated agThe Federal governcan get help in riculture to receive top formers ment filltoe ASCS in office plans to build a priority in toe distributoe plant near the Mexieant forms tion of fuel and lists steps ing out to redweq oak Mr Holy explained border formers should take to the of the Cothat salinity formers less using get fuel supplies lorado River than 20000 of gallons The pamphlet suggests "The effort by the State foel a year who do not that formers tell toe loto maintain have a use Department supplier may of cal distributor their with relations FEO form No 20 to friendly appresent and future needs our Mexican asfor is ply neighbors permanent so that distributors or signment to the supplier laudable" wrote Most dealers can know in adFEO regulation re- - and the others "we revance what toe customer formers and others spectfully submit that we quire local distriIf requires butors do not have enough receiving allocations at should take the long view toe 100 percent level to While we iendeai of western universities certify to their suppliers to solve toe immediate A few years ago he that they have an energy problem with Mexico we donated about $400000 to conservation program in whould at toe same time effect Farmers are to undertake a comprehenBrigham Young Univeruse priority feel only for sive program of salinity of creation the for sity s School of History of agricultural production control that will be of toe American West This and to buy' no more than tong - range benefit to learning center museum enough to meet 100 perwaternserrto botoeoun cent of currents needle' tries" and library has a growarof collection ing - menls and' books about toe American West He has served on the board of regents for the Utah State Agricultural College at Logan and was home" Ms a member of toe board to As testimony acumen business trustees at Utah State of sharp outside the cattle busi- University for eight ness he has held many years His accomplishments positions with private and public concerns includ- and service ere equaled ing being a Utah repre- by toe honors snd resentative on toe Hoover cognition given Mm He Dun Commission chair- has been heralded by man and director of toe Hereford breeders and Utah Water and Power livestock leaders in genBeard director Amal- eral as a promoter and gamated Sugar Co di- upholder of agriculture rector Utah Power and and the rural way of life' In 1846 - The Record Light Co director Federated Security Insur- Stockman named him Man of toe Year in Livestock ance Co vice president Inofr Ms vast contributions Life National Pacific to toe industry His most surance Co and president of the State Bank recent honor as a Stock-ma- n of toe Century came of San Juan Along with his business from nominations sent sense is a keen aware- not only from Utah but several states ness of toe value of highIn making their nominer education It is Ms should from Buhl Idaho ation "We belief tost do everything possible to one couple said "Somedignify agriculture so one is slipping if the name tost our sons will be of Charlie Redd does not proud to go into Ihebusi- - head toe list of nomination of Utah stockWith this in mind he men" traveled countless miles Although suffering toe and spared no effort to after effects of a stroke bring qualified profes- several years ago Charsors and department lie’s interest m people heads to agriculture remains undimmed His son Hardy recalls schools and departments an incident wMchoccured last foil that is typical of toe Charlie Redd who go out of Ms way BIG towould help s cowboy down on Ms luck or give a neighbor advice on what PIONEER Corn nnd to do for an ailing child Does the JoM "He recognized a man who did not recognized Tha Pioneer com rasaarch "a program— largest In tha world— him" said Hardy gtvos you hybdd wKh tha right had met in the he man combfnaU at fatturw Thoy After Charatari last buHd strong stalks early 1940's snd pump out top yields at lie had somehow got across to this man that high Quality grain Seai the man who sails FMC Agricultural he knew him before the Chemicals man remembered and said ‘Charlie" gave me Agricultural toe courage to do some —3 Chemical Division as m projects that engineering Foweri Nuraory Company 1 wasn't sure would work Oram UT He encouraged me Last year First Security Bank made more agricultural loans than any other bank in Utah 17 ber 17 Farmers needing re-elect- ed i J to meet even agricultural production needs they can ask FEP to correct the shortage through use of an FED form num- 100-pou- nd Ram-bouil- 1m is sstotonftaj versl members 135-pou- nd FIRST RI AGRICULTURAL : Utah Senator Frank E ed) Moss is tow cf sea grass” bS & MttsSttb (far Stockman of the Century Honors Come to Southeast Utahn Charles Redd ts VAUET HOME 261 Soon Mata AUTO Mob 2SW676 Not quite 116 more than that In the good old days irrigation was done by hand by foot by animal or by accident Today electric power mans the pumps That means that more land than ever before can be used for f75000 acres in Utah Power A Light raising rrops-so- me Company's service area And it's needed --because there are more people than ever before It's not just the farmers who are more new jobs in the food reap the benefils-the- re industry and a general boost to the area economy Since ISM the amount of electricity used for irrigation in our area has more than doubled reaching a whopping 300000 kilowatts Farmers are bringing an average of over 25000 acres of new land under irrigation each year It's our responsibility to be ready with enough new power to dr the job Not only for the sake of the farmers but for everyone wlm direMly and indirectly depends on the farmers That means building new power plants and transmission lines And it means spending a lot of money Not only for the plants themselves but for keeping them as environmentally safe and as pollution-fre- e as proven technology allows For food produc tion more electric power is a necessity not a luxury uiah pouisr&llghicsmposg ELECTRICITY -- KEY TO A BETTER ENVIRONMENT |