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Show RICH CPUN . I t KtAht RANIKJLH . UTAH. CAUTION NEWS WATCH T, FARMER jr Utahs First Miners fb - This year something ' ! --J s:2 jf r iv-- 1 - fr , -- . ' .. "i1 Sk ,7 , H Tl r , , ' ; ? --J Vi..-- 1--t - v J "''' '' 4 VV ' 'V. . ',5 jiJ I,v Ci Xf,1 ,t - 57't - , . :j :V. Mr. and Mrs.' George Kennedy daughter Vendla, Mrs. Gladys ,, Conley and sons Darval ,and Nicholas, of Ogden were in Randolph Sunday visiting with friends and relatives.' I., Earl Wilson was hurt Sunday when he was thrown from a hotee. iA. j. , Mrs. Ralph McKinnon and children returned from A short visit to Evanston Thursday. v 7,' t - 'V - ' f Mra Chas. Hendee is visiting m Logan with Mr.;. and Mrs. Kay Barton. U - General Connor first commander at Fort DpugiaS'Utah, who becamo " known as the "Father of Mining in Utah It may be a peculiar happen- he is referred to as the "father stance that soldiers made important of mining in Utah. mineral discoveries, in Utah that It is interesting that these Same have Jed-tthe .establishment in over a half cenSalt Lake valley pf the largest non-- , mines, discovered J are such ago tury today and ferrous mining smelting center ' service for the armed doing forces and in the world. j ., 7- ' the nation as a , whole. i - Soldiers under the1 command of However. many of the mines are General P. E. Connor made mineral discoveries - in Bingham Canyon, rapidly being depleted because of now one of the greates mineral the lack 'of sufficient exploration producing areas on harth,., The dis- and development work. coveries .wera made , by. General Inadequate, manpower in the Connors men in 1S63, while they, mines of Utah has prevented capacwere panning for gold at the mouth ity production and essential de' of the canyon. , i velopment worlj: at many properties. The General encouraged his Therefore, the need Is more miners men in Lhis activity and as a result as production Soldiers. ..... v:' M ... .Marriage Ucense for James Hayward son of Mr. and Mrs. Lou Hayward, .and Miss Dorothy Louise Stuart of Huntsville, were seen in Thursdays Salt Lake v ' Tribune! !'. ; ' - - . u . Glen Hoffman and Hyrum Smith were stage passengers Monday enroute to Salt Lake City. '''' Mrs. Mildred Jacobson' and baby of Provo came Tuesday for a weeks visit with Randolph relatives. , Miss Mary McKinnon and Mrs. Katie Keys and baby of Evanston were stage passengers to Evanston Thursday. Thay both had spent several days with. Randolph friends and relatives. - like 3,500,000 Mira. Kite Bryson returned home on the coun- Saturday with S&ir. Willard Tingey,4 She try to help with the most important reports jUither- as feeling better and is crops our farms 'have ever grown. City out ofi thfe hospital. ' ' Dee. slickers, stenographers, file clerks, stuCWoe Jay, Dean, (chidents, school teachers and housewives ldren !bf Mr.' and Mrs'. Waldo Dean, of will don blue denims to put more food Bvaitoh Ipent the week end with their in oui national bins. m .. V grandparents,- Mr. arid Mrs. Ray Disan. Theyre off to sunshine fields of wav,Alq Dean apeht. the week end in ing wheat haymows and lowing !kirie, AlrriyWith-hesister!; and her family, which, it turns out , unpoetically aro Mrs. Clarence Moon. ,, just albout twice as hazardous as workiMrand M?s. Ray Spencer and Mrs. ing in a nice Jittle, TNT plant, with the Thea Neville iriotored to Layton to suibway rush thrown in. tomatoes and other fruits and pickTrue, hoeing, threshing and milkirig les. , They motored 4owri Sunday eveput a sparkle in the eye that1 is,' If ning. Mrs.- Lewis Buck they donit close it permanently, For a.,and . when it comes to downright menace,' at farmyard chores, it seems, are in the Memorial cervices were held Sunday danger bracket; next to soldiering. afternoon ' for Morgan Rex, who was Of all industries, the National Safety lost Jin the,' Pacific area. Many folks ' Council reports, agriculture is the No. X about town attended. farmers 18,500 and ; ,Some is Mrs. Frank Frazier manslayer. spending a few farm helpers lose their lives every year days with her daughter and family, through accidental causes; more: than Mrs. Bruce Frodsham, at Evanston. 1,500,000 are injured 70,000 of them so Mrs. iMaud Cox is ' spending a few grievously they are never able to work days ;up-tEvanston with her daughter . 7. i Mrs. Earl Nebeker and family. again. A farmers life is just a continual o Mr.t Shelby Huffaker motored to ' -' round of barbed wire, missing ladder Tuesday.--, rungs, balky gasoline engines, somer(Mri- - and- Mrs. Orso Cornia received saulting tractors, broken harness, and from their son Dale Cornia, bulls as gentle as .a. demolition bomb. who was in Sicily. He was reported Add the human factor carelessness fine.-; j and in the time it takes to read this (Mr, Cbfta. Y- -, Dean went back to Ogpiece, you have' fifty .more people cut den. , or trampled or crushed somewhere on farms. These' accidents, remember, are happening to experienced farmers, vers1 'ou ed in farm lore and farm ways. What, then, is going to happen to all the simple and trusting city folk once they're loose among these pastoral hazards? 77 Of course you want that new bathCaution, caution, and' more caution is the solution, the National Safety Counroom. But not now, for raw macil says. Their safety engineers, workterials are going into War. equiping on a special grant from the War ment and tools for our Boys on the Production Fund to Conserve Manpower battle front.' But your investment in have studied the appallingly repetitious War Bonds today will buy that new causes back of farm accidents. They bathroom when the War is won. ' insist 'accident losses can be pinched down and every farm producer ' kept sound, if only conspicuous use. is made of that cheap and soverign commodity called caution. i t Here are the things to watch espec; ially: , Machinery:' Tractors kick, buck and roll over. Keep your thumb on the same side of the handle as your fingers when youre cranking it, or a broken hand will remind you of the wallop in a tractor's kick. 'Neglect to fill its tires with liquid, and it can bounce you out onto the loam, maylbe under its If you have not 'done so, join4 the n own wheels maybe under the Payroll Savings Plan at your office load its hauling. Hitch too heavy a or factory today. Put ten percent load to it, and it will rear up on its or more of your earnings in ' Wrir GTnd wheels. Cross a hill field or turn Bonds and get back $4 for $8 from at more than four and one half per, and Uncle Sam. Lets ; Top that Ten U. S. Tnatury Otparmmt Percent.. , it may roll like a May colt. .In other words, tractors are vicious ''' y compared to the Ordinary domesticated feeling. a' of are lot car. tractor There With there remember things jto family history in front of them, safety engineers warn: about horses. Theyre highly temperamental and easily frightened. So they Never stand up in one. ' are even touchier than cows about a Never carry a passenger. To prevent accidental starting while gentle "Howdy from you to warri them piling, be sure you know which wires youre entering their stalls, which dont to disconnect, and disconnect them. forget, is always on the horses left Dont fool with belts while pulleys are side. Four, other important "nevera in motion. are : - ' Never approach directly from the Keep out of the space between rear. . trailer. .7 ' 7 Never ' bump them. Beware of gushing steam when reNever leave an unhitched team standd moving radiator cap. New radiators, substituting during copper ing "alone. .Fasten the lines so they dont fall under the horses. shortages, have pressure cooling Never tie lines about your body or Meaning, theres steam even when the tractor isnt overheated. , wrists. I'Barns and Silos. , Farm fires cost Dont show off. t Corn pickers, mowers, harrows and Soout $225,000,000 every year, not coimt-- . threshing machines have the same black irig the burned to death history with their moving treads, cogs, in these fires. So, never carry! loose fans and belts. Merely losing your bal- matches in your pockets when youre ance around them can be final.' It working around in- -a bam. Neve was for 4,625 farm helpers last year. strike matches there. Hang lanterns on Look Out For Ferdinand. pegs where they cant be knocked over. Livstock: A bull is just about as An never, never smoke in a bam. peaceable as a loaded gun. If you must Dont clown around in hay. Its deenter the bull pen, know how you can ceitfully. slipperiny once its in the loft. get out in a split second. Never lead. You- can break more than a leg fall- Km without a staff through his nose mg out of - the haymow. Never carry a pitchfork i& your Jwnd going up r ring. TSo Bossy, even if her name is Alice down ladders. . Hoist thm up by ropes, is the proper conversational gambit and' when theyre hot in use, etand when youre entering a cows stall. You thein; tines up, against the wall'; have to milk her from the right side if Be careful about ladders. Watch for you want anything besides a hool in broken rungs, make sure the ladder is the bucket. Enren so, watch her feet. Secure top and bottom, and thkt the ' Shell be stomping a lot if the flies are base is less than one fourth the ladDad. Spraying helps this. der's height away from the wall! De Stay away from rams and boars. pend more on your hahds than on your n They have very .little feet; and hold onto- - sides,' not rungs: land-arm- .Mrs. Evelyn Burleigt and daughter, Gerry, were Jast week visitors at the home ' of he parents Mr. and jMr. V ; 7 Ernest McKinnon. of Mr. arid Mrs. Arthur , McKinnon were business visitors Evanston, Wyo., at Randolph Wednesday. . " Mr. and Mrs. Layton Marshall of Ogden were week end visitors at the homes of Mr. and Mrs: W. E. Marsha.il and. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Jackman. They returned home Sunday evening accompanied by Mrs. . W. E. Marshall and daughter, Doris. Wm. Kennedy was a business visitor at Evanston Monday. Cpl. and Mrs. Fred Hellstrom came home, Monday. Cpl. Hellstrom who is stationed at an Army. camp in South . Carolina. ; ProvCP- - VWayne ;Rex. of Dougway came home last Friday; ing Grounds Mrs.-- . Bess --Rex went to Salt Lake to be; with her mother who had the misfortune to fall and. break her hip. Mrs. Frank Jenseh,., postmaster of Garden City, stopped at7, Randolph a few mihutes ' while enroute to tESvah- ston, Wyo. ' WOODRUFF NEWS recruits y ; will go to - $'.' - - -- r , ob-ta- in five-oclo- ck .. ' , - were-ahop-pe- rs Evanston-Saturday- . . 5 o ' . Og-dt- w ' 7-- ' , ' - , - , Wiud Buy With WAR BONDS . , . Carl Kennedy and Mrs. May Nicholls CT Ogden came Monday. Carl returned home Tuesday evening. Mrs. Nicholls ; will remain here. Mrs. Ben Orvin and daughter were business visitors to Evanston Wednesday. Mrs. Kate Keys and baby of Eavn-sto- n who have been visiting Randolph relatives for the past week, returned ' home Thursday. 7 were Mr. and Mrs.v, Wm. Hoffman Eyanston shoppers Monday. .. ; . . two-to- ; . tac-tora- - Our military forces must depend upon aerial photographs for an accurate mapping of enemy territory. So the aerial camera is a vital necessity for our scout observation planes. These cameras cost up to $8,000 each and will make excellent pictures from tremendous heights. THE ASS THAT STARVES ; DIIIl HIS MASTED Both are hungry. For both there is not much promise of food, that you can. Buy Bonds with every cent that you dont actu-Wh- ..Because., they ..iive. in ally need to run your farm, Buying Bonds will not only help win the war, but Will pro- - Greece. V ' , f. Because, in ' y i Greece the Kv '.V- . y? ' V f took . every scrap of iood and every source of food and d'elib- - left the people, the dogs, and a few useless burros to starve . . v'r : v and to die. the farmer - ' f 1f. you with a nest-eg- g - - ' . very year. In " ten years, they c,: J are worth a third more than you v , 3,500-peop- - ' - for, the never sell for lesi than you paid : v 7; vfor them. They Increase in value - ,sys-teiri- s. - 5 , future.. They are the best invest-eratel- y ment in, the, world today They of - vide .. ; Remember ,r 'J,"1, x steel-core- A poor map may mean the difference between victory and defeat. So help your Boys towards victory with your purchase of War Bonds. Join the Payroll Savings Plan at your office or factory. Lets Top that ten percent.'. U. S. Trtatury Dtpartmint , ; . . 1 brother-of-ma- . 5 ' ; Greece as you eat your Friday evening supper. Remember him f;t paid. And you can cash them any the next day, as you market .your time after sixty days. Buy Bonds and buy produce. Remember Bonds. All the U. S. War Bonds ndw Perry Hotel Sait Lakes fr0m your bank, post office, or rural mail carrier. ' Popular?ricc4 7. Jiiqdcim Hotel - . - am mw Gam ? Beautifully Furnisheid : i 'i-- 7 7., a. a? osm m RATES: ; . . . . Sl.5Q,to $3.00 Broadway and WestTetnple FREE GARAGE; r -- ( |