OCR Text |
Show I An Independent Newspaper Devoted To The Interests Ot The People Ot Rich County and Lower Bear River Valley $1.50 Per Year In Advance Randolph, Utah. Friday March 11,' 1938 Volume 11 Number 8 THE STORY OF LINEN Randolph Club Loses (Reviewed by Barbara Gray) Flax ranks next) to cotton among the Match With HeneferLvegetable fibers of commerce. The linTen members of the Randolph Rifle Club motored to Henefer, Utah to Bhoot with the Henefer Rifle Club members. The boys were much outclassed by the Henefer sharpshooters, but they were very much out of practice, as the match was shot with small bore guns and because of the fact that the Randolph Clulb had the misfortune to have the rifles destroyed last July by fire, and have had no practice guns since that time. , The Henefer Cluib has a very strong team' and are having matches with all the other clubs in the state. The Randolph Club is looking forward for a return match with Henefer in the near future. The score follows. The shooter. Standing Position. Kneering Position. Sitting Position and Prone Position, and Total, follow in respective order in the frilowng table, of the content : , 22-ca- l. . 00 51 62 14 58 7S 48 41 ' en fiber comes from the stem of the flax plant. It is the soft silky, lining of. the bark which lies between the rough, woody outside and the pith of the stem. Linen filbert are supple, glassy, silk and are very strong and thick. Linen was used long before cotton was known. The old Egyptian mummies were kept by being wrapped in linen. Flax is mentioned many times in the Bible. linen is ;woven in many places today, mainly in Northern Ireland, Scot land, Belgium, France, Germany, Russia, Italy and Spain. Our country produces hut few fine linens and Europe is called the linen continent. The great bulk of European Flax comes from Rus sia. Other important countries are Poland. Lithuania, Latvia, Belgium, France, Czechoslovakia, Ksflhonia, Neither lands, Yugoslavia, and Ireland. In U. S. the crop is raised for the seed not the fiber, so we plant and harvest it by m a chin ry, cut the traw with reap rs and thrash cut the eedis. The seeds are called linseed nmcl ar vahiahl0 for oil and (V- oi cake they produce. Linseed oil is used in making paints varnishes, linoleum, and oilcloth The flax plants are about as high is your waist, covered with tiny bhr flax-raisin- D'd 75 60 87 ci 71 91 68 66 79.8 The Henefer Club has a very nice ball and Thev are verv good sports and made Randolph Club d. men'll0'' welcome. Rifle Club Stats Engineer, Jack Burns and Steve ceed $400. Farmers who can obtain the funds they need from an individual, production credit association, 'bank, or other concern are not eligible for crop and g 1 1 T) feed loans from the emergency Crop and Feed Loan Section of the Farm Credit Administration. The loans will not be made to standard! rehabilitation clients whose current needs are provided for by the Farm Security Administration, formerly known as the Resettlement Adminirtra tion. As in tiie past, farmers', who obtain emergency and fet'd loans will give as . first lien on the crop finanto ced, or a first lien on the he fed if the money bwmvod is to be used to produce or purchase feed for liv-etoc- I Wilson, accompanied the Rifle Club members to Henefer. Where loans are made to tenants, the landlords, or others have- - an interest in the crops financ'd or the live took to be fed, are required to waive claims in favor of a. lien to the Governor of the Farm Crdeit Administration until the loan is repaid. Checks in payment of anoroved Bans f will be mailed from tlio Regional the Flmieror"nev Crop and Fed Loan Section ait Salt Lake City, Utah. manufacture. The s.o'ps are: Ripnling: The stems of the plant re stripped of all leaves, seeds and nets Retting: The stripped stalks are out in water so that the inner bar-v.ts and s'merates the fibers from the "'v-dstalks. Breaking: The dried woody part is broken. Scutching: Machines beat the broken stalks and throw out the chaff, caving the fibers fairly clean. Ilackiing : This combs out all loose, tow. short, uneven fibers, called Thase a: e milo into coarse inexpensive linen materials. Sorting: It is sorted according th-ri- Of-o- test-bloc- South Rich News Finn The school play, Hucklebe-rwas presented at Randolph Friday, March 4; and at Laketown, Saturday, March 5. A large crowd attended at The play turned out to both towns. y k. be a big success. Farmers Now Are Going Places Randolph City Ordinance This process draws the strands of yarn, Twisting : The strands of yarn are All rifle club members are req nested slightly twisted. come out to shooting practice. (Continued on Page Three) Spreading: fibers into 1 two of the 600 different operations which go into the manufacture of their vacuum cleaners. The young lady is balancing the fan, an intricate job in which he puts tiny drops of solder on the light side until the balance is perfect. Inset, operator testing air passage, suctior power and wattage, on a governmen according to A1 Consumers Information, surpasses that of any other country in its exact methods of testing products ana so assuring maximum performance before passing them on to the user. One company reports, for instance, that 25 of its labor and cost of production goes into testing. Above are shown tests of Quality. NOTICE k livestock. Wft' v RS trip. tain credit from any other source. The money loaned will lie limited to the farmers immediate and actual cash needs for growing his 1938 crops or for the purchase of feed for livestock, and the amount winch may be loaned to any one farmer in 1938 may not ex- the lower part of the straws have turned yellow, the people start pulling the stems from the ground, shake the dirt off and then they nrnare the plant for 91 84 Thanks1 to (he Henefer wp ensured the Applications for emergency crop and feed loans for 1938 are . now being received at the office of the County Agent at Randolph, Utah. The loans will be made, as in the (vast, only to farmers who cannot ob- : 50 549 membe-'- Emergency Crop And Feed Loans 1- Laketown News Mrs. LINCOLN COUNTY BOY It shall ' An example of aggressive agriculturIs taking place in New York State. Another issue of the Seminarian, Nearly 100 cooperatives representing 50,000 dairy farmers are now working will emit out Friday, March 11 as it was delayed last week on account of under the recently enacted Rogers-Alie- n co- - the school play, which Mr. Peart diauthorizes which selling law, operatives to carry on certain activi- rected. All subscribers watch for ties essential to serving their member- your issue of the paper. ship. The Trojans? will go to Hyrum, The cooperatives big problem is to to play a game with South reason Friday a at milk of stabilize the price Cache. This game is to determine who onable level. That means a level that tx the state tournament. goes to farmer the return a fair will brine not a level that gouges the consumOur Senior class is presenting the er for every cent possible. And even annual play in about a mouth. The return in the rise a largo percentage of name the pay is not known at to the farmer does not necessarily this nor the cast. time, be must mean that there comparable rise in the price charged the consummeet- for any person al to drive any vehicle within the city limits of Randolph over 25 miles per hour. Any person convicted of violating this law, shall be punished by a fine of not less than $3.00 and not more than $25.00, or by limprisonment of not exceeding 21 days or both such fine and imprisonment. Passed by the Town Board of Randolph, Utah, this 1st day of March. GETS HONORS IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Bert Thompson, with her son be unlawful I Bruce, moved to American Fork, Utah The Electrical Engineering magato join her husband, where the e will make their home for a time. zine for February contained a article, with diagrams, on the Wm. J. Lambom attended the subject, The Properties of Three Leaders Training Course at the U. S. Phase Systems Deduced With the Aid A. 0., held recently. of Matrices, prepared by M. B. Reed, a son of County Commissioner and Mrs. F. C. Williamson and daughter Mrs. John W. Reed, of Sage. Reed is 1938. on assistant professor of electrical en- ATTEST: Virginia, of Logan, Utah, are g. arch McKinnon, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. N. gineering at the University of Texas, Clerk. Weston. at Austin, and is well known in this K. E. MUIR. and was where he brought up, President The Sunday school sponsored an en- who has vsited here several times in 1 tertainment Friday night for the bene- late years. He went to New York T? pLpnrssI fit of the Sunday school City, where he read this paper before the AIEE winter convention, Jan. 24-- lviass er. Better distributio methods and The South Rich High School play. 28, 1938. Reed has gained much promI a fairer allocation of profits to the choir mass the rehearsal of Another of Huckleberry Finn, presented here inenoe in his work following years is the answer. wei, patronized. intense study. under the direction of stake chorister, parties involved, Saturday nighr.-wafarmers seem to be The Evanston a organized of a was the Reed is It very well presented and the graduate John Neilsorii will be hed at Randolph, have learned thor They enaraoters well sustained. The staff High School, class f ll.o, graduating going places. March 1. ,1938, at 2 p. m, is agricultures that cooperation Is to be complimented upon such a from the University of Colorado in Sunday' oughly This mass or stake choir is made UP best economic asset. By A. W . Thorn-occome 1924. For a year he was in jfcinploy We tine will play. hope they ' of the Utah Power & Light Co., at its of the choir members of the Randolph, again any time. 1 plane (in Grace, Idaho, uater he se- Woodruff, Kemmerer, Diamondville and It is reported that a child was born cured his bacnelor and master degrees the Evanston, First and Seoond ward Suffocation, Thirst, Hunger to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Webb (but at the University of Texas, where he choirs, an organization of 250 voices. Suffocation will kill a man in a is now an instructor. For many years particulars are lacking). This organization or mass will famish few minutes, but he can live withhe has spent liis summers, on the B. Q. Mr. and Mrsi Ellis Williamson and ranch near Sage, which his father has Ithe music for Woodruff stake confere-tee- n out a drink for a fortnight and Grandma Yonng of Sit Chares, visited manager for more tnan a quarter, j nee to be held at Randolph, March 20th without food for two months. at the home of Mrs. B. Y. Irwin last of a century. Kemmerer Gazette. Saturday. i GRADE SCHOOL NEWS Raynor Young has cone to Star Val-OUR NEW EDITOR .ey, Idaho for a few days. o Jack Nichols is our new editor, We The infant son of Mrs. Orson Thom elect a new one every week. 1 like him you help spread the news? as is quite sick wilh bronchial pneu- Cor an editor. The editor corrects the ' about? monia. v reports and, edits our school .paper i each week. t By DRUE JACKSON, PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP .Fifth Grade. o NOTICES CONSULT- - CLERK OF -:- DISTRICT COURT OR THE RE' PARTY THE LARKS SPECTIVE SIGNERS FOR FUR. The Larks in Primary, had a party o THER INFORMATION. Tuesday. The teachers are : Mrs. o 17, IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR Johnson. Mrs. Bingham and Mrs. HoffTHE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT man. We had all our mothers come to the party. We had a good time. o n By PATSY HATCH, Randolph Recreation Center. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Grade. in-ida- four-pag- 4--H vi-en- ty Ln:r 1 - s I I - I I k. Last week the Juniors had a ing to decide a date for the Prom. Mar. 25th was selected as the day for the fiance. Also committees were anpoint-e- d for programs,' decorations and the promenade.' It is two and a halt away, but this announcement will give you a chance to be prepared. - The school W still working on the year book. We ha Tie it will be completed soon. Practically all individual and group pictures are ready. Certificates of credit for successfully comnlerirg Part I of 29th Century (Continued on Page Three) . ATTENTION PLEASE! 1 Will What - The Randolph Relief Society Annual - j 1 D A N C E When? Thursday, March .Where? Fourth Estate of Mary A. Norris, deceased. OUR SANDTABLE Creditors will present 'claims with We are going to make a garden sand o vouchers to the undersigned in Ran- table. We arent going to have the dolph, Utah, on or before the 12th day flowers out because it is only March. of May, A. D., 1938. We are going to have the girls and i Date of first publication, March 11. boys bring things they have to rut on 1938 the sand table. We are going to have ARTHUR F. NORRIS. a farm house on it. We are to have Administrator of the Estate of Mary some trees. We are going to have a A. Norris, Deceased. vegetable garden and lawn. 1 Subscribe for THE REAPER By BEULAH JACKSON. Fourth Grade. 1938 Do We Eat? Yes FREE Refreshments. Music by Melody Boys 9 Piece Orchestra Extra ladies 15c Tickets Couple 60c Two chances on a Quilt with 60c ticket and one chance with 15c ticket ' Several prizes will be given. Come and bring your friends. WELL BE LOOKING FOR YOU. RICH COUNTY ROAD PROJECTS FOR 1938 Oiling of Woodruff-Randolp- h way and grading from Randolph to the Wyo. junction. high north Grading and graveling of Monte Cris-t- n Road not sure whether this work will be done in Rich County or not. State engineer Jack Burns, said road work would start next month. i .. SHALL THERE BE A TAX ON DOGS? What is to be done about all the stray and surplus dogs in the city? There has been complaint made, and reports of their killing Sheep. It has been suggesetd to the Town Board that a tax be put on all dogs and those not taxed to be done away with. Or would you rather take care of this problem yourself, by getting rid of all stray and surplus dogs. Let us hear your comment. - 1 Long Island Sound Once Talley Long Island sound was once river valley. a |