Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 101, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1996 Page: 6 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Grandview Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Grandview Public Library.
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Finally, a Farm Bill
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Harris Methodist
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CAPITOL
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American/Great States mowers
are available at more than 400 retail-
ers nationwide, including major re-
tailers, hardware stores and catalogs.
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To make reservations for these Walls Regional Hospital health
education classes, please call WellCall. ------------ --------
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Cancer Sapport Group in
Association with the American
Cancer Society of Johnson
County.
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CPR (Cardiopulmanary
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May 16 Md May 13
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"“2 U.S. SENATOR
KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON
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Julie Kennedy got in the finals in the long jump but was unable
to score any points. She is a freshman. She placed second in the
400m dash and ran on the 1600m relay that finished fourth.
needs your "dough"
to keep on cookin’!
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Patrick Jackson takes off on his first jump in the ling jump. He
jumped 20 feet 3 inches on his first jump and won second place.
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Johnson County Committee on Aging. Inc.
1b01 N. Anglin Street, Suite B
Cleburne, Texas 76031
(817) 641-7895
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Watts Chapel To
Have Sunrise
Easter Service
Watts Chapel United Methodist
Church invites you to attend a
Sunrise Easter service at 7:00 a.m.
Bring a lawn chair. After the sunrise
service we will have a pancake
breakfast, then our regular Easter
services and an egg hunt for the chil-
dren.
Rev. Delbert Taylor will offici-
ate with music provided by John
Autry. Jon us.
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Free Childhood immanizatioas will be
aveilable at Lillim Elememtmry School, Keene
Elementary School and Venus Elemeatary
School Immunizations are also availabie at
the Texas Deoartmeat of Health's Clebame
office every weekday with a Shots for Tots
coupon. Please call WellCall for more
information or lb obtain a coupon
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arduritis, degenerase artkcitis or bursitis? If
one of these forms of ardhinis bothers you,
please join our Arthehtis Sapport Group at
Walls Regional Hoepimi Iyouoraloved
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clam and share wit us and maybe we cm help
each other.
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Mobile Mammography
Screcning maemogrems are bring offered to
women who: ate 35 yean of age or ahde,
have no known breast lump or other bueest
problettis,nopenonal history of breestcanos,
are not pregnant or breastfeeding and do at
have breast implants. There will be a
discounted charge and Medicaid, Medicare or
your private health iasuranoe cm be billed on
your behalf. In addition, there will be no
chergeforwomemnwidlowicemettmet--
financial guidelines. The mobile mam-
mography unit will be at Harris Home Healdh
Hillsboro in Hibboro Friday, April 11 Rare
call WellCall to schedule an appointment.
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Grandview Tribune, April 5,1996
own planting decisions for the first time in more than 60
years. Farmers will no longer be required to plant the same
crops, year after year regardless of market demand, to
receive assistance.
Not only will this return the ability to make crucial
decisions to the farmers, but it answers the charge that our
current policies discourage crop rotation and encourage
excessive use of expensive fertilizers and chemicals.
This bill is the most environmentally friendly agricul-
ture legislation in years. It retains the Conservation Re-
serve Program at current levels, and provides farmers with
an early out should they decide that planting, not idling
their acres, is a better management decision.
Bottom line here is, producers will have the discretion
to plant or idle all of their acres as they see fit. Planting
restrictions are greatly reduced, so the marketplace will
drive production decisions, not the government.
wise old Texas farmer once advised his less Among its other provisions, the bill:
prosperous neighbor that it takes more to plow a * Separates the requirement for crop insurance cover-
field than just turning it over in your mind. age from program eligibility.
After debating for nearly a year, Congress fi- * Permits haying and grazing on contract acres.
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This legislation provides seven-year market transition control of the federal government, or we can aim in a new
Mrs. Spence’s and Mrs. Russell’s third grade classes had an Invention Convention. Mrs. Spence’s payments for rice, cotton, wheat, feedgrains and oilseeds, direction - toward an even stronger farm economy that
inventors with their inventions are (front row, l-r) Brittany A Richardson, Ashley Parks, Megan as envisioned in the original Senate farm bill, the Freedom provides Americans with a bountiful, healthy food supply
Rydell, Matt Irwin, Amy Reynolds, (second row, l-r) Ryan Cordell, Justin Cochron, L. Brittany to Farm Act. while leading American exports.
Richardson, Landy Whitaker, C.J. Prater, Lindsey Bates, Kalyn Gaston, (back row, l-r) Cori Gann, Incorporating the idea of market-based decision mak- This farm bill launches our country on the second
Colton Johnson, Kristy McDonald, Adam Sweatman, Cynthia Morales, Jonathan Ayarya ing, it puts farmers, not the government, in charge of their trajectory.
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Since 1895. the American Lawn
Mower Company/Great States Cor- ,
1. poration in Shelbyville, Ind., has i
Mrs. Russell’s inventors are (front row, l-r) Brittney Chapples, Monica Fugitt, Barbara Hunsicker been crafting reel-type mowers. It I
(second row, l-r) Gonzalo Moreno, Justin Walker, Chance Parten, Rachel Stanley, Sarah Bowman', offers nine models, with four to sev- . .
Cody Grayson, (third row, l-r) Brandt Self, David Clayton, Ashley Elliott, Melissa Baird, Bethan1 en blades and cutting widths from f (
Neutzler. 14 to 20 inches, under the American
and Great States labels.
nally approved a farm bill last week. While this legislation * Reauthorizes the food stamp program.
does not contain every provision I had hoped for, it does go * Establishes a new, voluntary $200 million a year
a long way toward strengthening America’s farm policies, environmental quality incentives program to encourage
Cutting through a bundle of red tape, the bill elimi- farmers and ranchers to improve soil and water quality.
nates the need for most of the regulations and restrictions Agriculture, one of the historic foundations of
that now burden farmers - and keep a lid on our potential America’s strength and wealth, is now at a turning point:
for productivity. And it reduces federal expenditures by We can either continue to pile on more and more govern-
$ 12 billion over the next seven years. ment controls, until every last productive acre is under the
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Magness, Jack, Jr. Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 101, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1996, newspaper, April 5, 1996; Grandview, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1473094/m1/6/?q=%22texas%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grandview Public Library.