OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UiAti Capitol Dome News All I The general accord existing between d Utah members of the legislature and Governor Henry II. Blood was well exemplified last week when the joint senate and house ai propriation committee and the chief executive reached a harmonious agreement on problems arising in connection with the budget proposed for the coming biennium. Discussing the states fiscal policy to be adopted, Governor Blood and committee members found themselves sitting on the same side of the fence relative to expenditures recommended by the former. The committeemen agreed that it would be the proper procedure for them to work in close harmony with the governor in achieving a balanced budget. They extended him a vote of confidence and appreciation in accepting his proffer of cooperation. Governor Blood explained in considerable detail why it had been found necessary to provide for some increases in state expenditures. The committee then announced that a tentative appropriation bill already prepared might be revised after study of state institutional and departmental needs. The executives budget as submitted calks for expenditures of $6,341,786.10, during the two years beginning July 1, 1937, for the support of various state institutions and departments. This is $1,044,739.25 less than the total requests for funds made by heads of institutions and departments. Increased costs of government due largely to restoration of amounts cut from salaries during the depression and growing costs of maintaining state institutions because of increased food costs are given as the chief reasons for the advance ill' budgeted items. I Owe to My Angel Mother twenty-secon- i ! i LITTLE girl, rearea m poverty in the backwoods of Virginia, destined for a brief' :and none too happy life, war to igrow up and bear a child whose career more than fulfilled her ftigh-edreams for him. A st ( Born at Pattersons Creek, Va., Nancy Hanks went at the age of twelve to live with her aunt and uncle, Thomas and Elizabeth Sparrow, in Mercer county , Virginia. She had a chance to attend school there, and made the most of it. In a community where many of the men could neither read nor write, she learned to do both, notes a writer in the Indianapolis News. She was skilled at needlework, !too, and hired out to families in the neighborhood. Though she worked for wages she was never regarded as a servant, but sat at table with the household wherever 'she went. Report says she was tall and handsome, with a frank, open countenance and a voice pleas-linboth when she sang and when jshe talked. A young apprentice named Thomas Lincoln was learning the trade of carpentry in the shop of Joseph Hanks, uncle of Napcy. The two young people were attracted to each other'; and were married on June Thomas took his bride 12, 1806. (home to a tiny house fourteen feet square. He could not write his own name until the ambitious Nancy taught him how. But his ambition could jnot keep pace with hers. Her dis- 1784, jin ; ; ; : : g ! Straws to show which way final legislative winds will likely blow in consideration of old age pensions and proposed changes in the Utah liquor control set-uappeared in the senate as 6olons showed evident preference for President Herbert B. Maws pension SCHENLEY DISTRIBUTORS, INC bill and for measures calling for policy NEW YORK alterations in the complexion of the present liquor commission. The straws apparently bent toward the Maw plan of paying $30 a month to every person 65 years old or over who has no income or enough to make this amount if the income is less. They veered in this direction when the sen33SS ate voted to appropriate $50,000 month SKIMMED MILK AND ly from state liquor sale profits and The telephone is our apply it to an old age pension fund. The vote, however, showed a majoriCALF MEAL PROVIDE greatest saver of time for ty of only one. home. in the ranch and the The senatorial weathervane tilted FEED CALF THRIFTY It enables ua to talk to our toward changing the liquor control setfreinds and neighbors. up when the upper house favored adfood for baby calves is ministration of the act by one man The natural our of all It brings parts whole milk as it comes from its to be paid $5000 per year and two country near together. mother. Today, several factors make commissioners each to receive the natural way the "impractical $1000 per year. All indications point Enjoy these benefits by Newer and sounder methods of to hectic verbal battles in both houses way. having a phone installed. before the liquor control policy is finfeeding calves are being offered. Today, milk has attained a commerally fixed for at least another two Utah-Wyomicial value that makes it almost pro- years. 1 hibitive as a calf feed. At present Tel. Co. LAKETOW NNEWS day milk prices one gallon of whole milk testing six percent contains abouf f A package shower was held Saturday pound butterfat. and has a market value of around 20 cents. When afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. A. you stop to consider how many gallons Cheney in honor of her daughter Mor-itof milk each calf requires for fulfill(now Mrs. Bob Fisher). Quite BEAUTY SALON a number of ladies were present and body needs, the impracticability ing in Latest Duart Permanent Waving of such a feeding program Is imme- the bride received many beautiful and LEWIS LONGHURST Eyebrow Arching Facials useful articles. Mrs. Fisher for the diately apparent. and Manicures Public two years has been interested in Notary past Are ELLON Scours WILMA I)ONN Likely Cafe at Kemmerer, Wyo., the Triangle ( LICENSED UTAH BEAUTCIAN) But there are other reasons why where she will continue to make her LICENSED ABSTRACTOR Phone 460 feed 400 Center St. not milk for home. The best wishes of the comis the best whole Of Rich County, Utah Because butterfat does baby calves. munity go to the newlyweds for their NOTICE! EVERY COAL USER have such a high commercial value, success. A specialty of making Deeds and Titles dairymen are. and have been, breedYou can positively save 25 per cent ing cows that will produce milk with Mrs. Zettie Kearl is visiting in Rana higher fat content. Research shows dolph and the lower valley. of your coal bill this winter. Just that high test milk is really a dangeraend us your name. We will tell yo FOR SLE - One Fire Plac Circulates ous feed for young calves since the how. Agents wanted. in still erate Jesse Reed was seen leaving Tuesday ing Heaterola .brand new, of fat makes It diffiAddress MASTER COMBUSTION high percentage a suit case headed for the Office Post carrying call at any one interested cult for the calf to digest ConseCO.. Sheridan. Wyo.. Box 8H3 North, so we are wondering if we will quently, scours develop, leaving the be hearing more wedding bells. The calf sick and weakly. ScourB may be year seems to be starting off in a good CAPACITY! TAXED outgrown but their results show up way, matrimonially speaking. later in disease and lower production. The calf raising problem becomes A miscellaneous shower was held in even more serious when one realizes the ward hall Wednesday night in that removing the cream from the honor of Mr. and Mrs. Denning Smith. milk doesnt do much good. Skimmed A host of friends participated. Tht milk falls far short of being the ideal young couple were recipients of many calf feed. In feeding skim milk, one timely and useful articles. Refresh, of the causes of scours is avoided, but ments were served and the balance of skim milk alone does not provide the the evening was spent in dancing. 1 essentials calves need, and must have. If they are to grow and develop Into GARDEN CITY FACTS cows. When cream is removed. Vitamin A, the growth and Bishop Paul A. Spence and family health vitamin is taken away. With- have gone to California where they out plenty of Vitamin A in the diet, will winter for the next six weeks. calves slow down in growth becoming Paul K. and Douglas will attend school weak, scrubby animals that lower the while there. herd average when they finally mature and become milkers. Mr. Lashbrook L. Cook, a director business manager of the Bear La ke and Butterfat Substitute Made Dairymen Assn., attended Cooperative A great deal of research has been several regarding marketing meetings conducted at the Purina Experimental products at San Francisco, reFarm to find an answer to these dairy troublesome questions. Since feeding cently. high test milk ts both dangerous and Principal Leo Johnson is wearing a expensive, and since skimmed milk broad smile, and upon inquiry as to A does not provide sufficient Vitamin the cause, we were informed that the to properly develop a calf, some di- stork had visited his home and left a gestible and inexpensive ingredient to young man weighing 10 lbs. Dr. replace butterfat has to be added for Reay was the attending physician, and skimmed milk to do an acceptable job. Mrs. Renyard Young, the nurse. Mrs. Through years of research and experi- Ellsworth Johnson, Leos mother, is scienmentation with numerous calves, in the care of the young man tists at the Purina Experimental Farm assisting have answered the probThe inside painting in the basement lem satisfactorily in the form of a new of the church house is completed and calf chow meal to add to milk. are now painting the inthe This newly developed calf meal con- side painters of the hall. This is a security and is actually made tains program. so high In Vitamin A that there is worjjs more Vitamin A in the skimmed milk Mr. and Mrs. LaVoy Ilildt have reand meal mixture than is in whole turned from Southern California whore milk. Calves fed on this new calf visited with his parents. Mr. and chow meal have more vigor, vitality, they Mrs. Theo Ilildt and Lottie. They reto disease. and are more resistant port an excellent time for the past NEWS ITEM: "Motorists paid $685,000,000 in state gasoline taxes 1936, taxes month. , federal in during additional gasoline and $190,000,000 . estabboth lavi from revenues with indicate, reports .preliminary Subscribe for the Reaper lishing new high records. p - I ng Ind. one-hal- a, OO-E- D Finger-Wavin- Nancy Hanks, Mother of President Abraham Lincoln. , g ways appointment at his was forgotten in her children; first, a little girl, Sarah; then, in 1809, jthe son known to history as Abraham Lincoln. Between this child and this back-wooeasy-goin- ds mother there was a powerful bond of sympathy. They understood each other without words. Perhaps she felt in him her own fierce hunger for learning, for a larger, richer world. She was thirty-foyears old, and Abraham Lincoln was nine, when she fell ill of an epidemic disease known in southern Indiana (to which the family had migrated) as jthe milk sickness. In seven days she was dead. iv Abrahqm helped his father to make her coffin out of green lumber cut with a whipsaw, Helped to bury her in a forest clearing. There was no ceremony. This troubled the boy until several months later, they secured a wandering preacher to deliver a funeral sermon over the grave. lonely ' His mothers influence stayed with him always, and was voiced in that most famous of filial epitaphs: All that I am or hope to he, I owe to my angel mother. ur . lakers Once Banned sneral court (assembly) of usetts Bay colony, whose :rossed the Atlantic to of worship, barred upon pain of lashes and ion. A fine of $500 decreed master of any ship into the jurisdic-a- e in colony, and all brought 20 stripes, be jailed, given to. work until deported, ; th colony, Connecticut, the n Manhattan and Virginia with similar laws. Virginia a fine of 5,000 pounds of the master of a vessel g a Quaker to Jamestown. en-;do- trans-Quake- I to-ip- rs g, TO money-makin- g 1-- caif-feedi- pur-a-ten- e, We Do Job Work 2 |