19219uintah001_May 20 |
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3 U R :2 A. U ff.S'f S I
Dint; hi County, U t a h,
Vernal, May 20, 1320.
NEWS BUI-122IU IX&2ES ITS' BOW.
The Farm Bureau Hews Bulletin herewith makes its first appearance
as an official organ of the Uintah County Fawn Bureau. Its volley
first, last, and always' will be for'community uplifti It hopes to be
fair to all With special privileges to -jmne . Should its pages ever be
touched with class distinction, or as some people 'call it - "favori-^.
tistn" to tho undeserving, its supporters will greatly appreciate a
gentle constructi>e tap on the shoulder.
In justice to those who- are its immediate supporters, the Farm
Bureau officers, project leaders, committees, and members, this one
thing must be made plain to all those whom it nay concern; namely. {
That after this issue, the News Bulletin will be sent to farm bureau"
members only. Every one, therefore, to whom this number may come and
•others too, is urgently reminded of the fact that doing today things
that should not be loft until tomorrow will be the deeds that count.
THE SILO CAMPAIGN' ON.
Tho fiist concrete silo constructed in Uintah County is now underlay. Bishop H. Be Calder, the owner, can well be proud of the beginning* The structure when finished will certainly stand as a monument
of enterprise and stability. According to the philosophy of UtahTs
veteran Dairy man, Mr. Ben R. Eldredge, Bishop Calder is building "a
structure of which his children and his children's children may well be
proudB" - ' ■'
It is rumored that there are people.in Ashley Valley representing
23cstern manufacturers who are offering wood stave silos at a cost of
over $1000 per silo. The Farm Bureau suggests that anyone who might
be thinking seriously of buying one of these silos, that they first
consider the matter of costs, stability, and safety with Bishop Calder.
FARM .BUREAU WOOD POOL.
Those desiring to market their wool thru the Farm Bureau should
deliver their wool at The earliest date possible to the Uintah Railway
office either at Ft, Duchesne or ac Vernal, Wool sacks should be plainly marked by either .tL'j owners brand, or owners name in full would be
better* When delivering any wool at either railway office, be sure to
gel receipt showing both weight and number of sacks delivered. Then
notify the farm bureau office in Vernal immediately. The above action
is necessary, A buyer may come in-at any time - it is therefore neces^
sary to have everything in readiness for a sale as opportunity might
present itself.
TO RE-SUBMIT TAX LEVY FOR VOTE.
At their regular monthly directors1 meeting, the farm bureaus of
the Western Division unanimously favored petitioning the Board of Education for a reconsideration of tho tax levy. Each local farm, bureau
is thoroughly organized for securing a large majority of the tax payers
as signers to the petition. The contention of those instituting the
move is that people heretofore, have not had a clear understanding of
the question - and in many cases did not even know that an election
was being conducted. To impair the present school system thru such
gross lack of understanding would be a decided injustice to the children of school agec
FARMERS MUST COOPERATE.
The Uintah County Farm Bureau has been in operation now for three
years* It has proven its worth by way of showing the public that it
stands for fairness in the matter of marketing the products of the
farm, - everyone knows the story of hog shipments out of the Er.sin;
the deal closed with the Williams Market in Vernal on Fresh pork; the
effect on prices of the nlfa] fa-clover iced" pool last fall; the saving
effected thru the cooperative combination wire fence purchase thru
Woodard-Curry Co. In the matter of? soil ana irrigation water improvements, the farm bureau..effected one of the "test of movements when it
secured tho Soil Survey, and-the Water Investigations for Uintah County,
As for public hot.lth welfare, it was with the assistance of the Farm
Bureau that the General (31 can-up of Carcasses throughout the county
has been accomplished. Right now it is fostering a movement in which
every man, woman, and ohild should bo interested,- that is in getting
a petition to the Uintah School District Board of Education for the
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Uintah County Farm Bureau News Bulletin, 1920; |
| Description | Uintah County Farm Bureau News Bulletin, May 1920-June 1920.; |
| Date (Display) | May 1920-June 1920 |
| Geographic Locations |
Uintah County (Utah) |
| Time Periods |
1920-1929 20th century |
| SubjectLCSH |
Newsletters--Utah--Uintah County Agriculture, Cooperative--Newspaper Cooperative societies--Newspaper |
| Source | Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, University Archives 19.21/9 Box 1 Fds 1-15; |
| Physical Collection | University Archives 19.21/9 |
| Digital Collection |
Extension, Enterprise, and Education: the Legacy of Co-operatives and Cooperation in Utah Digital Collection |
| Call Number | Archives 19.21/9 Box 1 Fds 1-15 |
| Date Digital | 2009-07 |
| Digital Publisher | Digitized by : Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library; |
| Type |
Text |
| Format |
image/jpeg |
| Language | eng; |
| Rights | Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Libraries USU Archives curator, phone (435) 797-0894.; |
| Contributing Institution | Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library; |
| Conversion Specifications | Scanned by Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library using Epson Expression 10000 scanner, 8-bit RGB, at 400 dpi. Archival file is uncompressed TIFF (400 dpi); display file is JPEG2000.; |
| Identifier | 19219uintah |
| Date (Original) | 1920 |
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