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Show '"n & nfw An Independent Newspaper Devoted To The Interests Of The People Ot Rich County and Lower Bear River Valley " Volume f, 1, Number 4 Randolph, Utah, Friday, March Rich County Is Coming To Front Rich County bids fair to be a place WILLIAM JOHNSON RETURNS William Johnson arrived Tuesday from Ogden where he has been for some time with his wife, who was operated upon five weeks! ago. We are pleased to say that she "is improving at this time, but will not be able to return home for a few months yet. Mr. Johnson was accompanied home by his daughter, Mrs. Fletch Wlison. who ha3 also been visiting her moth- of much profitable activity during thi3 year. A group of progressive fanners and their wives met at Randolph, Utah February 26 and started plans for the years activities. er. This group were Farm Bureau oo members) who were very much inter- ested in the welfare of the State Organization and what it is doing for the fiarntfng and livestock interests of the state. The group also wished to have Rich County participate in the worthwhile activities of the Farm Bureau so that their county might benefit from their efforts. Rich County though isolated in a way is favored with many splendid and promising resources. Of the promising resources the most outstanding are the strong healthy alert and willing boys and girls. The people now in possession of the lands and livestock of this great land of are awakening to the opportunity fact that if they are to hold this source of power and energy that something must be done to make the county, attractive and productive and are a place where opoprtunities available and made iniviting. Therefore a development program is being planned. k baby beef club for boys anxious to learn something more about the beef cattle industry is in the making. A dairy calf club has been organized for two years and the boys and girls are learning the fascinating features about this new and promising enterprise. The girls are organizing clubs in Home management, Nutrition, nothing Construction for the purpose of becoming efficient in the prin eiples of better home making so that county homes may become attractive, comfortable and up to date. Increased effort in production prob lems are being considered. The land resource of the the foundation wealth of the county is not doing its best, therefore a few new practices and crops are to be tried and with in keeping with information already available. Improvement-in housing facilities for livestock is being considered, especially for the dairy cows. The social entertainment 3ide of life is also receiving attention. At this meeting tentative dates were considered for a Fair and Rodeo again next September. to come out later. A Farm Bureau Day at the Lake where ail of Rich County could take part and get acquainted, is being planned. A Boys and Girls Club Gamp could also be sponsored,' Mr. Esplln, the Sheep and Wool Specialist from the college Is to visit Rich County the 13th and 14th of March to add encouragement to this industry. Later in the year many other Extension folks will be scheduled into the County for special work. The people of Rich County are Just beginning to appreciate the benefits of the institution known as" the Extension Service that brings as best it can the benefits of the College and Experiment Station out to the people of the State giving to them knowledge and information in a simple and digested form. A movement is being started whereby a full time for Rich Agent may be employed County so that the south end of the County may receive the advantages as well as Randolph and Woodruff f the north end. Those at the meetings were Frank Jackson, the present local Farm Bureau president Percy Rex; Mra Orin Jackson, slecy., ex))eri-mente- South Rich High William Hoffman, one of the board was a school visitor Tues- Tuesday was the last day for names to be submitted for the annual. Quite a number of names have been contributed, which will be judged by the executive council and the staff of the annual. The name will be announced next week. A special assembly will be given under Friday by the Sophomores, the dilection of Elmer t Moss, Sophomore class President. The High School will play a game with the town team Wednesday nite. They have been defeated but once. We hope their good luck will last. of baskebali , Vice-Preside- Law returned Friday nite in a very pitable condition. He and Wilson and Dwain on Norris went eabbit hunting,, horseback. It is reported lie stood up to' eat his supper that nite, and see him now with that artificial blush on hisi face you would think we had a bashful prof. Wilson says he made him blush and he hasnt got over it yet. Anyway they had good luck, getting ten rabbits between them. The basketball boys started to Evanston Friday the 15th., in good hopes of winning tlie game there, but they were unable to get there on account of bad roads. oo PIANO OPPORTUNITY d De-kai- ls ProfesMafr, Mr. We, have in the vicinity of Raiir dolph, two pianos'ahd a player piano', slightly used but in good condition, also a saxaphone, on which a cash purchaser can make a great saving, terms will be given to responsible parties. We prefer selling these locally rather than have the expense of shipping them. This is your opportunity. For particulars write at once to the Great Western Merchants! Adjustment AsP. O. Box 685, Ogden, sociation, Utah. , -- oo Mrs. Ernest Corliss left Thursdav for Ogden to visit her sister. Mrs. William Johnson. and treas., Mra Samuel Rex, J. D. Muir, members of the Farm Bureau hoard of Directors. Also Mr. Orin Jackson. J. O. Rex, W. T. Rex, Mrs. Frank Jackson Norris. and others. Mr. J. O. Rex was appointed publicity agent for the Randolph section. Many others are interested in this movement who were not able to be present at this meet- Wil-for- d ing. Members of the Randolph dairy calf, club are rejoicing over the arrival of pure bred calves from their club heifers. Walter Marshalls heifer has a fine heifer calf and Wilson Norris is strutting over the fact that his purebred heifer also has a purebred heifer calf. Others expected soon. Bank of Randolph j I its customers that we are , WISHES tototell take qare of you if you need to get more feed for your livestock. Dont be afraid to ask. This is only one of many ways we try to help our customers. $2.00 Per Year NOTICE OF MEETING SCHOOL CONCERT Friday evening, March 1, the Sun The annual of the Randolph day School will give a concert at the and Woodruff meeting will be Canal Company Opera House. This promises to be one of the best concerts put on for held March 11, 1929 at 2 p. n. in the some time and a large crowd is ex- Court House at Randolph, to hear the pected. Secretarys financial report and any Following is the well arranged other business that may come before : program said S. R. H. S. Orchestr: meeting. Selection James Hayward Prayer Joseph E. Hatch, President Class Exercise Kindergarten Arch McKinnon, Secretary Department oo Cleo Barton Recitation Hanna Kennedy Recitation Girls Chorus . . . Primary Deparment Reading Inga Norris' Trio ...Ardeth Wamsely, Miss Louise Willis left for Lyman, Sheldon Ottb Kennedy, and Wyo., via U. S. Mail Monday 25th. Kennedy Girls Dialogue Fudge and She will be employed there indefinitely. Burglars. New Testament Department Mr. and Mrs. Alfrd Kearl have New Boys Motion Show returned home after a visit in AriTestament Dept. R. H. S'. Glee Club zona and California. Their son, Cecil Song Frost Drill, Jack ..Primary Dept. joined them at Salt Lake, after havRecitation Wendell Muir ing attended tractor school, and rode Direct- - home with them. Dance Peart. .'..Joyce ed by Mrs. Law The baby daughter of Mr. and Many McKinnon Reading Duet Oreta Morrell, Leda Law Mrs. Raymond Lambom is very ill wifh erysipelas. Dr. Reay was called Mary Woozley, Accompanist. to give medical attention on Monday. Recitation Fay Kennedy Limb Recitation Rebecca ONE ACT PLAY, Whos a Coward Stanley Mattson had the misforCast pf Characters: Walter Marsh tune of running a nail through the Wife ; palm of his hand. We are glad to say all, Husband ; Inza Norris. that it did not happen while the Ben Rex, Burglar. basket ball seasan was on. oo THE WAY OF THE STRONG i Charlie Hendee. our local mail AT THE KOZY SUNDAY hauler remained in our town over the Friday night. The roads were so took Livingfitom Margaret rough road to fame when she de- drited with snow over the mountain cided to become a motion picture that he found it quite a struggle to star. For weeks she went from stu- make if. Mr. Brough brought hi3 dio to studio without securing an horse over with Mr. Hendee and reengagement as extra. At last Margar- turned to Randolph with the letter et landed the coveted work at the Sen mail While here, Mr. Hendee nett studio; but her delight, was attended the dance held that niirbt. short for she was given a bathing He says, They have some dances suit and taken in the studio bus in Laketown. with fifty other girls for a dip in the Miss' Geddisi. school teacher from briny deep. The water was cold and Margaret refused to bathe with the Garden City, spent the week end as result that she was fired. the guest of Miss Elma Weston. Her firdt role came opposite School was closed Friday honoring Henry B. Warner in a Hampton production. Since,, she has gradually George Washington. risen to the front ranks as a film vampire. Comedy, however, intrigues Several of our sheep men are haulhert and it is her ambition to win a ing corn from - Paris,- Ida.,- - 4o feed reputation "as a comedienne.' their sheep. They are obliged to go Miss Livingstons successes with slelighs as the roads are not , Among The Wheel, open to car. are roles in Havoc, The Girl from American Beauty, Lane Willis, Ross and Vara Chenand SunLightning Gay Paree, ey went to Six Mile to help move rise. and load the Herbert Nebeker Following her success in the last sheep herd. They are shipping the named, Columbia Pictures signed herd to Stockton, where they will be for the feminine fed the remainder of the winter. Miss Livingston She belead in A Womans Way. Cheney Willis has accepted the job Columbia that so came popular of tending them there. a for on placed the star under contract Miss Livingston series of pictures. WOODRUFF NOTES may be seen at the Kozy Theatre on of Sunday, March 3rd., in The Way Mr and Mrs. Elmer Eastman rethe Strong, a Frank Capra Produc- turned to their home in Woodruff tion. from Provo, where they Friday oo been have visiting with their son. RATION DAIRY ROUGHAGE IN Delor. CUTS COST OF PRODUCTION , , dairymen, in their effort to incadase the iproduoiion per cow. have acauired the habit of feeding too much concentrated grain feed, says O. E. Reed, chief of the Bureau of Dairy Industry of the United of Agriculture. Stated Department More net profit per cow can be made undei some conditions, he savs, by feeding a limited grain ration or even a rongbJage ration in preference to a full grain ration. To demonstrate ' this statement Mr. Reed cites the results of an experiment by the bureau at Huntlev. Mont. In this experiment three planes of feeding were compared. Ten cows were fed over a period on For each of the following rations: one year (1) roughage alone, consisting of corn silage, roots, alfalfa hay, and irrigated pasture; for another year (2) the same roughages and a limited grain ration of 1 pound of grain mixture to each 6 and for pounds of milk produced: still another year (3) the same rough ages and a full grain ration of 1 pound of grain to each 3 pounds of milk produced. On the first ration, when production was fiured to a maturity, the cows averaged 478 pounds of butter fat, on the second ration 584.1 pounds, and on the third 619.9 pounds. At the prevailing prices for feed an'd for milk and butterfat. the returns over cost of feed were $161 per cow on the first ration, $185 on the second, and $132 on the third. The limited grain ration was therefore the most profitable, with rough-ag- e close second. Many Hazel Cornia spent the 4, ' , week-en- at the home of her parents in d Wood- ruff. Mrs. Ralph Ellis and small son. Stephen, spent a few days in Wood- ruff. , ar Mis. I R. Nelson list this week. Man wanted to run McNess business! in Rich county. $7 to $12 daily year around work experience un necessary unusual offer. Write at once. FURST & THOMAS, Dept. T.. , Freeport, 111. - " is on the sick Alton Friwfior returned Sunday from California where he ha been on a vacation. He came back sporting a new Chevrolet In Advance Dickson Passes Away (Contributed) Albert Henry Dickson passed away Tuesday, February 26, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Donal Walton, following a short illness of paralysis. The subject of this sketch was born May 8, 1862 at Brigham City, Utah. He married Julia Eastman, and to this union two children were born, one of which survives, Lael Ellis. After the death of his first wife, he was united in marriage to Ellen Bryson. He resided in Woodruff for some time. and while there served one term as sheriff of Rich County. In 1903 he went to Mackay, Idaho, where he resided foJ about 20 years and returned to Woodruff in 1925 where he made his home unlil his death. Three sisters survive him: Mary S. Shipley, Cache Junction; Sarah M., of Call, Idaho; and Mrs. Adalade Lee, of Idaho Falls. The following children also survive: Leah' Walton; and Wayne of Woodruff; William, Mrs. Valera Evans, Albert, La Verne, and Enid all of Idaho; and Warren, of Logan, Utah. Funeral services are being held today, Friday, at 2 p. m. in the Woodruff chapel. oo NEW PAPER AT RANDOLPH, UTAH Vol. 1, No. 2, of The Rich County a weekly newspaper recently Reaper launched by Bernard H. Ewer, of Evanston, son of George Ewer, Jr., publisher of the Evanston Times has reached our desk. The Reaper is a newsy little sheet devoted to the interests of Rich County, Utah, and the lower Bear River Valley, and should prove very beneficial to the people of that section, both as a newspaper and advertising medium. The Editor and Publisher is a young man of good habits, and qualified to handle the mechanical and editorial end of the business, having had considerable experience in his fathers office and on the outsida. The writer has known him all his life, and we wish him success in abundance. Big Piney Examiner. Thanks Hop. oo , Chas. W. Walton, cashier of the Bank of Randolph, returned home last evening after spending the week in Salt Lake. Turkey Raisers LOOK WHAT IS HERE Some fine young Toms that will weight from 20 to 25 lbs., from the famous Golden Bank strain, from Bird Brothers, Meyersdale, Pa. If you are looking for a young Tom you cant beat them. First come first served. Counfe. oo Members of the Seventh grade and their teacher, K. E. Muir, had a skiing party Wednesday afternoon. FRANK U. FRAZIER &. SONS Woodruff Utah KOZY THEATRE GEORGE BARKER, Proprietor SATURDAY, March 2nd Glen Tryon, in Hot Heels With Patsy Ruth Miller Hot Hoofs at the height of the brilliant Havana racing season! Hot of the show world! Hot romance heels that twinkle across the in the land where the 18th Amendment ends and the fun begins.foot-ligh- ts - Comedy, Broke Out with Buster the Dog. Admission 10c and 30c SUNDAY, March 3rd The Way of the Strong Lewis and With Mitchell MALE HELP WANTED - - - 00 CHas. W. Walton, Cashier A. H. , Laketowns Latest Members, day 26. Our home SUNDAY 1, 1929 . Alice Day Daring drama that shows conditions as they exist in the underworld where adventure and thrills are part of the daily routine and love takes queer twists. f Comedy, , Small Town Princess Admission 10 and 25 AAAAA AA A A AAAAAA AAAA AAAAA A A AAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAA AA A A A A J |