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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH. UTAH REAPEB ffHE RICH COUNTY toured e second clan matter Feb. 8. 1928 at the Peat nOffice. Randolph. Utah, enter th . i. 18i. act ul ftlar-ffm. E. Marshall. Badness Msnscer -- WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS QUISLING: Defends Self Congress Backs Pearl Harbor Probe, But Stiff Fight Looms Over Trumans Domestic Policies $1.50 Per Year in Adranee SUBSCRIPTION Layton Maishall. Cditer and Proprietor v. i.y.w.T'.V.Xv ropean statesman and passionate foe of Bolshevism by his counsel Henrik Bergh during the closing stages of the celebrated treason trial in Oslo, Norway. Though no political disciple of the notorious collaborator, lawyer Bergh depicted Quisling as an idealistic eccentric, who, while contact- Released by Western Newspaper Union, are expressed In these columns, they are those of UnM newo analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) We?teews?aTer Increased Profits and Yields by Rotation With death staring him in the face, pale and grim Vidkun Quisling was pictured as a constructive Eu- w.ssy. The growing of intertilled crops such as corn and soybeans not only uses plant food faster, but the loss from erosion is greater too, on rolling land, according to carefui checks made at Iowa State college To overcome this condition rotation is important. The first requirement of a good crop rotation is that it contains plenty of legumes. of legume-gras- s combinatior produce much feed per acre, and in addition, they: Increase the yields of other crops in the rotation. Help maintain soil fertility, particularly the nitrogen and organi Sod-crop- v . . r T ip"- -. 'SS 'Si s ut four-yea- Ml - nru W ion was cut sharply at the Ford and Hudson automobile plants following a variety of labor disputes. In Washington, D. C., the govern- ment remained in close touch with the situatibn, in keeping with President Trumans avowed determination to prevent a reconversion slowdown through labpr differences. At Fords, over 26,000 workers were laid off as a result of strikes at parts suppliers plants, with the walkout of 4,500 employees of the Kelsey - Hayes Wheel company over the discharge of union stewards chiefly interfering with production. The stewards had been fired for instigating a brawl with a foreman. Curtailment of production at Hudsons followed the walkout of 6,000 workers in sympathy with 500 foremen striking in protest over a reduction of wartime wage rates. OATS- - MEADOW-CATC- CROE) -- i Revise Plans Calf Parentage Proven By Blood Test Method m Paternity of quadruplet calves born to Adam and Eva Arcady, pure bred Hereford cow and bull owned by C. D. Lucas of Dyer, Ky., was scientifically entered into animal husbandry history books following ' ft : x .J Speaker Rayburn (left). President Truman (center) and Majority Leader Barkley. Barkley himself took recognition of this sentiment, declaring that the probe should bring out all facts relating to civil as well as military responsibility, with no effort to shield any individual. Though support for a investigation of Pearl Harbor was nigh unanimous, the administration faced rougher sledding on other important legislation, with the Republicans threatening a bitter fight against paternalistic aspects of Mr. Trumans domestic program and liberal foreign lending provisions. Particularly acrimonious debate was expected to develop over such higher-up- s. '48? joint-congressio- so-call- ed The Arcady quadruplets. i the blood test made by the University of Wisconsin. Di;. I. Hendrick, veterinarian of Owensboro, Ky., who is the Dr. Dafoe of the quad calves, stated that he could find no record of the birth of four healthy, normal calves at one time by a single cow. Quadruplets have been borne by cows but have only survived a few hours or days, Dr. Hendrick says. Supplement to Urea Urea, the nitrogen compound, protein substitute for animals, works well for growing heifers in a ration made up of roughage, molasses, urea and a small amount of either protein or starch. Molasses, urea and roughage does not constitute, a good ration alone but should be supplemented by some such protein as casein. The molasses does not stay in the animals rumen long enough tor to convert efficiently the molasses and urea into protein. It is for this reason that some other form of protein must be known as a cud-chewi- low-prote- micro-organis- added. in administration-supporte- Considered its answer to widespread criticism on the part of servicemen as well as the public, the army revised its redeployment plans to free an estimated 665,000 vets from Pacific duty. Under the new plan, G.I.s exempt from overseas service will include those with 45 or more discharge points; those between 34 and 37 years of age with a year of service, or those 37 or over. Previously, the army had required 75 points for such exemption. Meanwhile, 200,000 army officers looked forward to early release following the announcement of discharge plans based upon the point system. With points computed on the basis of one for each month in service, one for each month of overseas service, five for each combat award and 12 for each dependent under 18, colonels, lieutenant-colonel- s and majors need 100 points for discharge; captains, first and second lieutenants, 85, and warrant and flight officers, 80. measures EMPLOYMENT: com- d as increasing unemployment pensation to a maximum of $25 a week for 26 weeks; entrusting the government with providing for full employment; banning racial or. religious discrimination in hiring, and extensive federal public works building. Opponents also girded to fight the administrations reconversion pricing policies, which seek to hold charges to 1942 levels until mass production permits volume. In military matters, a lively fight loomed over extension of the draft for 18 to 25 year oldsters, with the issue somewhat tempered by efforts to boost voluntary recruiting by pay inducements. Set Goal rehiring of many diswar workers by reconvertcharged ing industries will be necessary if the War Manpower commissions goal of an immediate postwar factory employment of 14 million is to be achieved. . The necessity of speeding up reconversion to absorb the postwar labor glut was pointed up by the WMCs own estimate that four million persons would lose wartime jobs within the next six months. Aircraft plants alone will discharge one million, with ordnance releasing 800,000, shipbuilding 600,000 and government over 100,000. JAPAN: Manufacturing industries cannot Details Defeat sop up all of the available labor supBecause of the disruption of com- ply, WMC said, declaring that inmunication lines and the blasting creasing numbers of men and womof heavy industries in the wake of en will have to enter mining, build the U. S.s relentless forward ad- ing, trade and farming. Because the vance, Japan was finished last June, war restricted much activity in told the 88th these enterprises, and anticipated Premier Higashi-Kusession of the imperial diet. postwar markets will lead to busiThe premiers analysis of Japans ness expansion, WMC predicted defeat followed Emperor Hirohitos wider employment in these fields. ni Speedy 6 spotted damp clotJ press it wi k iron. The egg slicer is good for much besides slicing eggs. Thin, even slices of cooked potatoes or beets may be made with it, and some fruits slice nicely that way. Bolivias City of Peace Is Highest in the World The name of the capital of Bis La Paz, which means peace. Built on a lofty mountain, nearly 2 miles above sea level. La Paz is the highest city anywhere in the world. The country is often referred to as the Switzerland of South America, not only because of its high mountain cities, but because it is the only nation on the continent that is landlocked. olivia HEARTBURN RsBevod In 5 niBatss or doable money back When ozena atomaeh odd canaa painful, rof fomt-i- n Stomach and! hawthorn, doctor, ru, aoor osuall, the futcat-actin- ff medicine, known for raptotnatlc rU.- f- medicine, lik. thoMin Bell-acomfort fototofrSwSS bonr,tnrao' h Ina SNAPPY FACTS Rubber production from native plants in Southern Florida is not promising at and commercial present, planting of tropical rubber plants there is not ustified, in the opinion of the I). S. Department of Agriculture. N- CORN s, When clothing is rain, place a clean, on the material and a moderately warm SECT RITES FATAL ni ( commu- In the first serious work stoppage in the reconversion period, product- Home as well as factory industrial facilities felt the lash of U. S. air raids, with only the machinery standing in the ashes of this burned-oresidential shop in Tokyo. appeal to the Japanese people to fulCONGRESS: fill the obligations of the unconditional surrender and work to reFight Looms word an gain the confidence of the world. 18,000 Highlighted by In detailing the Nipponese downfrom President Truman, message congress went back to work after fall, Higashi - Kuni revealed that a brief recess to tussle over legisla- combined U. S. sea and air might tion extending the draft, tiding the had sharply reduced Nipponese nation over reconversion, holding shipping and rail communications the price line until volume produc- and cut down the flow of materials ybM fhm Icftm. " tion develops, readjusting the farm to war industries. In turn, these nHwratitim MaM economy to peacetime, and provid- plants suffered heavily from air bombardment. ing credit for foreign countries. The first congressional move, howDeclaring that the ruins of HiroS a shima and Nagasaki were too ghastever, concerned none of these Z to look upon, Higashi-Kun- i even 3Mweighty problems but rather the ly Pearl Harbor debacle of December admitted that the use of the atomic I 66 7, 1941. Stealing the ball from the bomb proved the real turning point 3 Russias entrance Republican opposition, Senator of the war, with 8tturn of disastrous the capping for a called Barkley (Dem., Ky.) events. into the joint senate-hous- e inquiry Even as Higashi-Kuspoke, U. S. disaster, with an amendment by Sento into Japan forces continued ators pour and Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.) ROTATIOROTATIOFerguson (Rep., Mich.) broadening for occupation duties, with an estiMEADOW the probe to include the Philippine, mated 300,000 to 400,000 men eventuWake and Midway islands setbacks ally needed to complete the operaLegumes in rotation increase the as well. Matching speedy passage tion. With U. S. troops fanning out yield of corn. Marshall silt loam, in the senate, House Speaker Rayover the Japanese home islands, Soil burn Conservation assured (Dem., Texas) Experimental prompt efforts were made to speed up the Farm, Clarinda, la. (Years 194244.) action in his chamber. Barkleys resolution for an investi- release of American war prisoners, poor and good rotations will probgation followed on the heels of con- many of whom charged mistreatably become greater the longer the gressional clamor for an inquiry as ment during their captivity. Avitreatments are continued. a result of general feeling that the ators especially were singled out for One of the most important reaarmy and navy board reports con- abuse, first being pummeled by sons why crop yields decrease when stituted a whitewash of political any civilians upon parachuting to land is kept in grain crops such safety, before being turned over to as corn and oats is that these crops military guards, j lower the nitrogen and organic matREDEPLOYMENT: ter content of soils. N- also RECONVERSION: Strikes Interfere i3? c? Produce good soil tilth. Help control erosion. r Where corh was grown in a rotation of com, oats, followed by clover and timothy for twc years, the yield of corn was 32 bushels higher than when grown ir a corn-oat- s rotation. In poor crop years, the difference in yield may be smaller than those obtained in the good crop years of 1942 to 1944. However, the difference between the - 1939, nicated with Chamberlain in an effort to bring about peace between Germany, Britain and France. Bergh attributed the collaborators, sympathy with the Nazi occupation of 1940 to a desire to prevent Norway becoming a battleground like Poland through a British landing and subsequent German counterattack. First sympathetic to communism while doing relief work in Russia in 1923, Quisling changed his attitude in 1930 upon seeing mass imprisonments, starvation and plagues in the soviet, Bergh said. matter. 70 Hitler in ing Erosion Controlled by Proper Farm Planning w Baste a line down center ol the dress you are another down center makrng back tr these lines as guides in fitting. "I may be bitten and I may die" Lewis Francis Ford, lay preacher of , the Dolly Pond Church of God near Tenn., told a newspaper reporter before conducting his sects snake handling riles. But if I do," Ford continued, "it will be because the Lord wants to show unbelievers the snakes are poisonous." Shortly afterward. Ford was bitten on the right hand as he was removing a three-foo- t rattlesnake from a wooden box, and was taken to a near-bhome where several of the followers of his faith prayed for him. When his condition worsened, however, he was rushed to a Chattanooga hospital, where he died. FortTs death followed that of Mrs. Harvey O. Kirk of IVise, Va., who succumbed from a rattlesnake bite on the wrist during a religious rite. Before dying Mrs. Kirk gave birth to a child, which failed to surBirch-wood- A special railroad coach equipped to demonstrate tyro (British spelling) conservation has traveled throughout England. y More than 40,000,000 heavy-dut-y truck tires have been produced since Pearl Harbor, even though 90 of the sources of supply of natural rubber were lost qt that time. vive. JAP RESETTLEMENT: Lift Coast Ban Of 110,000 persons of Japanese ancestry, who were removed from the Pacific coast following Pearl Harbor, only 45,000 will return with the lifting of the ban against their resettlement there, U. S relocation authorities predicted. Out of the 110,000 removed, about 50,000 have found new homes in other sections of the country, where they have entered a variety of industries ranging from g to mechanical dentistry and proven their efficiency and trustworthiness. Another 50,000 have remained in relocation camps. f .With feeling running high against Japanese-Americajp some Pacific coast communities, Maj. Gen. H. C. Pratt, commander of the western defense zone, called upon residents there to accord resettlers the same citiprivileges of other BEGooMeh watch-makin- ns v, law-abidi-ng ' zens. h-- sr . J .. SURPLUS GOODS: Sales Policy Hoping to speed the turnover of material and permit wider distribution among dealers during the im mediate period of scarcity, the department of commerce reported that most surplus war goods would now be sold on a fixed price basis rattier than sealed bids. The department revealed its policy change at the same time that it announced 300 million dollars worth of material is being made available to wholesalers and retail. ers, with items including chicken wire, trucks and other vehicles, hardware, shotguns and shells. Under the new selling plan, material will be disposed of to wholesalers and retailers under OPA ceilings, with allowances for profit margins. Thirty days credit will be extended. An estimated 80 per cent of dollar volume of all surplus sales will fall under the new pricing policy. jiV CM.O Xr! 1TH UJ0MEH'30ti52 injoi mbarmsed by HOT HASHES? klf you suffer from hot flashei feel weak, nervous, blghstruns a bit blue at times due to the func tlonal middle-age- " period peculiar t women try this great medicine Lyai E. Plnkhams Vegetable Compound t relieve such symptoms. Pinkhamo Compound hups natvh. Its one the best known medicines for th purpose. Follow label directions. ( |