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Show UTAH l'AKOWAN TIMES. PAROWAN, Roosevelt Family Turns to Farming Elliotl and Eleanor Begin Moveinenl d ljnrk-to-Lan- By Nru i HAIKU AC.r. itu!t t and ( o limit-il- l jl'. Mom's Smith, I urult rsttinil, has retired, :;Nt;TnN. the 140 iicrts he has boi fainmi f r 27 yt .irs His w ,.!.w atnl her son are lihiu to w rk it from iv on. Muses Smith h e Was dressid m his t time I saw were hath up m ias farmer lan Herds its We v,,tne of the neighbors. It was a sad iie.eion. It was the .aini el s.irv hut he Ki i hi en dea.i n. ail lim M...S The s.ane to ..loses oral h is f r a as w 10 a i i n it ' in n w t.on to talk ovt r I.n m anil etia r Imsii ( q i t. f,,i i r eeeu-- i ti-.llas xhjpti.s wtio ty the g gown was lying on the was one of the landlunU th.,t l. n.ir.N tike M - t. Id me t.ouse. :s t.eleie. when I visited tain at las w: jo I.tinte .i i ( (V 4 ( VfiVi WV V V 4 ' s ' V r , 1 tu for 22 he told rue pull," "and yt t to find a Whenever he Rt ts a chance he comes over here to say hello and poodt've but he doesn't fault. And find ha Ive made No- body is perfect. The landlord the a pretty op.nion of tenant, too, as I had Rood learned later. Smith that knew He :s i '.recp I 4;t didnt go pleased, but it day, il President drove over here w'l'.e back, with Princess jjJana. lie told her about this kise bcirg over 100 years old and It told him about the Jij gone bad. So he said go ahead I rd dig a new well. Smith and faJied over to the new well. It was "It will last 100 feet deep. ! years," said Smith with the pride leu find up that way in good things The little well-wate- r. 140 acres, Herald-T- ;at last. this time you have guessed that Smith was a tenant on the By r Roosevelt estate at Ilyde Fark, N. Y. I take it he Is a comforta- LESSON IV WARFARE . . . Army served combat battalion of marines tion as part of operation Eamid II. ers inspected the phases and talked were still in foxholes. EQW. !r bfc l0?i fd I cin - ; .1, 4. cadrU and navy midshipmen obstage mock beaih landing opera- POLE-TO-POL- f,- . , t . i . v , 1 t . . - ' ' . ' . - r- - 1 . ''tr ; r.',' - ' I v- - Vv7 v After its completion, the observwith the marines, some of whom Joint Defense Pact Set; Fear Large Corn Loss 1KAIEK AMO.Mi THE EROSM S . . . Row upon row of while crosses strrtrh out behind this woman who stands, with tears in her eyes, before the grave of an American at the Henri Ehapelie except that of human rrnirtery, Helgium. Hearing no relationship, compassion, to the soldier, she clenches her rosary tightly and prays silently. E: Mutual Defense Jjmrt Monroe, filth I'niteJ Stjtei. had hit leait, at the ference at Petropohs, inUr-Ameru- Ireiuhni i ay. of the in ifnnt, at dtlcnie con- Brazil, in Augml, 1947. When the conference aereed on a mutual aid treaty for North and South America and their territorial waters, and set up a vast. North h Pole hemispheric security zone, the celebrated Monroe doctrine was developed to its logical conclusion 124 years after its Pole-Sout- IN WASHINGTON . . . John Sampson Kirby, CD, (above) of Tennessee was placed under observation after police had nabbed him packing apistol in the capitol building and doclaiming loudly that he had just been elected president of the United inception. This was the burden of the MonIt is only roe doctrine in 1P23: when our rights are invaded or seriously menaced that we resent injuries or make preparations for our in this hemisphere . . defense Today, the Americas are making preparations for hemispheric defense in advance of any menace or invasion of their rights. The mutual defense treaty embodies three ... Herald-Tribun- f. States. IN NEW YORK . . . Virginia ton Brooks, just returned from an African hunting trip with her parents, proudly revealed that she had shot not only an elephant and a lion but also such esoteric creatures as a kongoni, two gerenuks, an oryx, a two e, dik-dik- fox, bat-eare- d and a s an im-pal- a, klipspring-er- . IN CHICAGO . . . Mrs. Anna Metzger, 47, had had a pain in her leg for 40 years, finally became curious, pressed the irritated area and sewing needle. pulled out a two-inc- h ... j -- Wal- 14, mam points: duct similar experiments. the 1. In the ease of armed attack If Mrs. Roosevelt," says i "does no more than from outside the hemisphere, all nations have the automatic fasten remembrance on the fact right to meet the attack with that land endures . . . that stability of farming is that of a renewable military measures. 2. If military attack occurs Inworld in which seedtime and harside the hemisphere, American vest are still more lasting than dythe new velts have other dwellings. nations may go voluntarily to nasties and dictators will have done the aid of the victim, with con! partnership farming commercial for They are going in sultations to follow. of value before the first furmuch farming, Mrs. R. said. Elliott hadnt 3. If attacks occur both inside turned. are rows keen interviewed since the senate the hemisphere and outside the I wonder if you feel the way I war investigating committee startsecurity region, immediate condo. I think, regardless of the ed looking irto the Hughes airplane, sultations will be called. sentiof ones political color and ended looking the other way ments, anybody who loves the and blus! ing. The testimony had a Thus, despite the opposition of soil can offer his well wishes some Latin American nations to the let to do with the night club Monroe doctrinto this venture with the hope U. side of young Rooseit that the young man will do as velt's aitivities but nobody could ism," appeared certain that the well with his hands in the earth find a hi le in his war record. Even hands off the Americas' policy as he did with his plane in the was in for a big revival in the Ls mam critics admit that. air. Elliott s friends are heavng sighs ic bly retired farmer now, living the nearby village of the same name. And Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and her son, Elliott, have taken over. I dont know who will live in the farm house. The old Roosevelt homestead is a museum now but the Roose- - 1 ! I REVIEW iXFAVS I in 0PP1 vlt 'ti'fj ' . 1 New up-stat- e Smiths which were devoted to general farming, arc or'v a fraction of the more than .fa 0 acres, much of which is wooded, and part of which has been devoted to a scientifically - cultivated evergreen crop, which n nke up the estate. Mrs. Roosevelt explained that she and her son couldn't afTnrd to keep the estate as a country place, as her mother-in-lahad I noticed that the New York ribune made editorial note of Mrs. Roosevelt's plans and mentioned that a lot of acres along the Hudson "were untilled. It mentioned that Dr. Samuel Bard, a wealthy retired physician, had a place not far from the Roosevelt estate where he carried on valuable experiments which made an important contribution to agriculture. Mrs. Roosevelt hopes to con- to his independent, a typical, I and several years York remember he said to me sitting on the front stoop, !' in f i mis- too. takes. n to hi ir tKit e g ..mi in "i: eti ing ci r.'truitiM War a t f i mirage and skill, too, hut it iMit e i y const: ui live. Neither is night life This is a challenge, Mrs. Roosevelt explained in her column, which l.lhott and I will enjoy." Every farmer knows chalshe's right about the lenge." They aren't going to try to raise whi at, curn, potatoes, or attempt to ki ep 14 eows, as Smith was doing when 1 visited him. Thty are going to continue raising Christmas trees, a venture which the late Piesident started and seriously pursued for i f hr fault K . r ! 1 lien him tlun. 5 , s , thfte . V v tr r A f t-- TV - h v - eft. w, J t h KC ' V v CLAIMS SMALLEST CALF IN STATE . . . William Gahi, a farmer of the living near Huntington, Ind., claims that this midget member bovine species is one of the smallest calves ever born In Indiana. breed, is 17 inches tall. 21 The calf, a mixed Guernsey-Shorthorinches long and weighs only 13 pounds. Photo shows Gahi holding a normal size calf while the little fellow is dwarfed in the foreground. n SAY UNCLE: Ford Ci v es Up his laudable, if efforts to stabilize automobile prices, Henry Ford II ancocktail-lnounced that prices on most models of Ford passenger cars and all truck models would be boosted from $20 to $07, effective immediately. It was an average increase of 4.2 per cent, the announcement said, the rise being dictated by the simTORRID ZONE : ple necessity of keeping Ford Motor on a sound economic Corn Declines company basis. any Thermometer-happAmericans, It was a coincidence that while 1 money out of trees, one way or The action, following price inthe people and the birds and struggling feebly in the moist of V'as remmisc other, on the subject ing creases by virtually every other aua of record heat wave, have to trees, clutches tie Roocevelts new adventure in the bugs who need tomotive the manufacturer, marked the who from comfort and others could take cold of my neighbor in the and tothe government Fords lonely stand defeat were them. being that fact and temperatures preserve protect building across the street presented try of inflation. forces the the tosser in match against price exceeded by height only One r.e with a couple of typewritten can undo a lot of his work. All this gave rise to a disturbing of corn. ,, pages containing some striking If the Ford dynasty is unhot weather prequestion: With facts about tree destruction. abnormally They hold the line against inflato able of most the nation, Ere apropos, vailing over I think, now, as we if anything, can from to what, deteriorate tion, continued ove toward the close of grains (we hope) lack of moisture and prices of both ,tr.e worst season of forest fires in a corn and oats hit new record highs. THE SWIFT: decade. f This period September corn was selling at $2.45 Oysters Lose of holocausts began and September oats a bushel before the ink was bills on dry Oysters simply arent fast enough zoomed to $1.083i. passed by congress making deep to get away from predatory snails went The grain market prices hashes in the interior whose departments pace has been clocked offthrough the roof following a depart- icially at .00363005 miles an hour. appropriations for fire control. ment of agriculture report that the Many of the cuts later were recorn crop d Plodding along on a treadmill at countrys thousstored, but not in time to save the University of Maryland fish and 2,437,000,000 only would produce ands of acres of timber in some wildlife bushel 223 laboratory, a test snail covmillion a drop bushels, areas of 22 and Vz inch in 11 hours America, notably Alaska. feet 1 ered estimate. from the August I "The sawtimber burned in a a pace swift and 30 minutes Although agriculture department enough, at least, to overtake an I single year in this country," this officials had hoped earlier ? says my friends memorandum, oyster. of one year for a 3 billion bushel corn are convert"wul(l be if sufficient, Parachute jumpers I food production high, Purpose of the laboratorys snailto keep ed to crop m getremost important factors building materials, to the shrivelled timing experiments is to slow the weeks of hot, dry winds Pfaee every house in the forest fires under control little creatures up even more. As of private corn the crops ting and near that hope, cities of New Orleans or Min- stand now, theyre doing too things swiftly. Here, Dick Tuttle, producing Iowa and Illinois, major pine foot neapolis. to Chesapeake Bays lodgepole 100 of steadimuch decline damage to top sections, continued assisted by "If the wood below sawtimber dicrop. oyster snag, is about to be lymensions could be manufactured Francis Luskin, forest guard. fr paper, it would provide a subscription to a monthly ; Pocket-siz- e magazine for every Wan, woman and child in our 142 I Bullion population. Abandoning ounge U0w ao:"- - G 11. tfflAfc Sf1 asge City. ondt! Tragedy in llie Foresls heat-seare- . This should be quite a shock to a their muscles. The girl on the to like who expand lot of of human poundage without apparent bottom, supporting the stack of Santa I effort is Beverly Jocher of Santa Monica, Calif. 10 roduct old. is she years only Muscle Beach, renowned Monicas LOW GAL ON A TOTEM POLE . . he-me- n -- ar FIRST VICTIM 5 ff it could be converted to rayon JPulp, it would provide I Wore than a huftdred for every woman and 1Ca' material for new dresses girl in Amer- - In terms of dollars, our annual fire loss amounts to 35 million dollars m ; payrolls lost to wood-orkers and three-quarteof a bil-- s i, .st Deflation a Threat to Farmer Producers of farm commodities entrenched although strongly and present economy ir. the farmers attributed to prosperous unurban consumers and an almostcould limited demand from abroad be reversed in a flash. The federal reserve board survey deflation to explained the danger of now factors three citing farmers by high. to keep prices operating The share of consumer incomes tor destined to remain so, at least be the may future, the immediate to feel the full impact bon dollars worth of wood products, first group of the current inreversal The tragic of any of all this is l part , trend. iat 9 out of 10 forest fires could flationary was issued by be 1. to food consumption is warning That 10 I prevented. Nine our of cusboard researchers in a muchgoing sre traceable to human causes larger than has been mfdvear study of the position of "T0 ncendiarists, causing more j that, even ins tomary. an 25 per cent of all Profit margins of producers and f agriculture, indicating of fires; to the 2 times, distributors are greater than j smokers, careless debris-burndelicate ba ance. trs railroads, campers and taa state ofboom usual. ere to play an lm-If the present wKfsworkers who are respon-- 5 J falls in 7 Speculative factors price in tailspm, maintaining the order named. portant part n'nthose w eli commodity fi eM on numerous markets. nrices m i are the sentiments of the Agricultural would be greater than Consequently, with any reversal Who is trying to probably the p economy, the of tendencies, food areas f JaCiliSh a balanced cooperation . Record returns to of inflationary t!ie men who make their points out. rs well-bein- g farm-!?si- -f J. re-p- S J or-- prices may be particularly subject to downward pressures. While the financial position of farmers has undergone a vast, general improvement as compared r wdth years, many individual farmers have increased their indebtedness, and the new debt is written on the basis of sharply adpre-wa- vanced values. In particular, the report declared that land values must start declining before much longer. Thus, while the farmer is enjoying a high level of income and prosperity as a result of the prevailing inflationary economy, the same forces which are now operating to his benefit appear as a lurking but altogether possible danger to his future security. Any' ... '4 At an age when most girls are TIIE RHINO Virginia Walton Brooks beSint to take jobs as African big same huntveteran a is already of Tenn., 11, Memphis, East Africa, in Colony, on a safari Kenya ress. While Brooks, the girl knocked over parents, Mr. and Mrs. Berry Boswell elephan , rhinoceros. She also bagged a this fearsome-lookinthe largest shot since the war, pins a zebra or two. list baby-sitter- s, I six-to- n g |