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Show THE LEIII SUN. LEIII. UTAH Miracle Insecticide -DDT Nol a Panacea New Deadly Bug Killer Has Effective Use But It Also Has Its Limitations and Danger When Improperly Used. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is a guest column written by Winfield J. Dyrden, WNU Staff Correspondent, and was not prepared by Bauk-hage, Bauk-hage, whose column generally appears in this space each week.) DDT, much publicized Insecticide, saved thousands of lives of our fighting men and civilians In countries coun-tries where our operations were extended, ex-tended, but it Is not the panacea that we would like to believe. The Irony of the story Is that It was discovered nearly seventy years ago by a German chemist named Zeidler, but was almost forgotten until rediscovered during the present pres-ent war by Dr. Paul Muller and Dr. Paul Lauger. These Swiss scientists scien-tists asserted recently, upon their arrival In America, that with proper control, flies, mosquitoes and other harmful insects can be eliminated entirely from the United States. But along with these Insects would go our pollen carrying insects, bees and other beneficial friends of mankind, man-kind, also perhaps our birds and fish. Gone also would be many plants and trees that depend npon insects for pollnlzatlon. As they point out it Is a Job for entomologists, entomolog-ists, not laymen. DDT has been made available to the public in limited amounts. There will soon be a sufficient supply to meet every demand. Manufacturers of the products, whether in liquid or powder form are careful to give complete Instructions as to its application, ap-plication, which must be followed. Scientists Tell of Effective DDT Use Despite Its inherent toxicity, DDT In the desired lnsectlcldal concentrations concentra-tions in air is of such low order that it will not cause Injurious effects In humans, Dr. Paul A. Neal, chief of the research section of the division of industrial hygiene of the TJ. S. Public Health service has reported. It was this knowledge that made it advisable to spray from the air the Jones Beach area on Long Island, N. Yn and part of the city of Rock-ford, Rock-ford, Illinois. In both cases the purpose pur-pose was to control insects, Jones beach to kill sand fleas and Rock-ford Rock-ford to kill polio-carrying flies, believed be-lieved to have been the direct cause for the serious infanlle paralysis outbreak in many sections. Lt Col. A. L. Ahnfeldt, TJ. S. surgeon sur-geon general's office, after a study of results secured In the army, reports: re-ports: "In pence time DDT may well change the destiny of the earth's population . . . Our postwar world will no longer be scourged by typhus and malaria and other insect in-sect borne diseases. DDT Is not a cure-all, but in the perpetual war between humans and disease, DDT Is one of the most effective weapons yet discovered by man. "DDT will be to preventive medicine medi-cine what Lister's discovery of antiseptic anti-septic was to surgery and should close the door forever on those diseases which are companions of death dealing Insects." In the field of agriculture the results re-sults have been far from disappointing. disappoint-ing. Remarkable results have been obtained by some of its application, while in others the results were either negative, Incomplete, or Its use not recommended due to effect on birds and other insects. : Will Prove Boon To Hard Worked Farmer While agricultural use of DDT must still be considered in its experimental ex-perimental state, reliable and complete com-plete tests at various state experiment experi-ment stations have proved that it Is the best insecticide now on the market mar-ket for the control of the apple's most destructive pest, the codling moth. It will kill Japanese beetle adults, while current remedies are based entirely upon their repelling value. The grape leafhopper and other learhoppers are highly susceptable to DDT and excellent results have been obtained with lt against Oriental Orien-tal fruit moth. It also has proved effective against apple red bug, pear thrlps, grape berry moth, fruit tree leafroller, apple maggot, cherry maggot and many others. In California it was proved that DDT was effective against codling moths in walnut and other orchards. At Missouri lt was found that a three percent dust was effective In controlling blister beetle, squash bug, white fly, thrlps, sowbugs, corn earworm, Colorado potato beetle, spotted and striped cucumber beetles, northern corn rootworm, pavement ant, lace-bugs, ieafhop-pers ieafhop-pers on grape, flea beetles on eggplant, egg-plant, and a ten percent dust for roaches, fleas, and squash bugs. The U. S. department of agriculture agricul-ture reported that "DDT Insecticides were found experimentally to be definitely more effective than those currently used for control of some 80 pests that attack field crops, man, livestock and trees. These Included codling moth, cabbage looper, catal-pa catal-pa sphinx, cotton ball-worm, cotton flea-hopper, eastern tent caterpillar, elm bark beetle, green-striped maple worm, gypsy moth, horn files on cat tle, Japanese beetle, Lygus and four REORGANIZE FARM MARKETING AGENCY Consolidation of more than a doz en offices and agencies of the De partment or Agriculture into a new Production and Marketing Administration Adminis-tration has been announced by Secretary Sec-retary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson. The new Production and Marketing Administration (PJIA) Is Bow headed by Cnder Secretary of Agriculture John B. Hutson, and Is made up of 10 commodity branches, 8 other branches, the Commodity Credit and federal Crop Insurance --orpc-ttoDg 2 other kinds of sucking bugs, mimosa webworm, pine sawtlles, pink boll-worm, boll-worm, spruce budworm, velvetbean caterpillar, vetch bruehld, white fringed beetles, mosquitoes, bedbugs, three kinds of lice on man, and houseflies and fleas in buildings. A Good Insecticide For Postwar Home Brig. Gen. Simmons, army medical medi-cal corps has said, "DDT will exceed ex-ceed even penicillin 'in Its ultimate usefulness and will prove to be the outstanding medical advance made during the war." One of the newest products Is a paint containing DDT to be used on walls of kitchens, dining rooms and In Institutions. Other industrial uses have been found by dusting with, a 10 percent DDT powder around the sink and other places where cockroaches and other Insects stay. DDT will eliminate the bedbug problems in hospitals, as well as la private dwellings. It may be applied appli-ed as a five percent spray or as a 10 percent powder to both sides of the mattress and springs. It also provides freedom from flies and mosquitoes In hospitals. The new aerosol bomb, which releases the DDT as an aerosol a cross between a fumigating gas and an ordinary fly spray, Is excellent for this purpose. A power spray may be used in applying ap-plying la five percent DDT solution. Just as lt is proving effective on the agricultural and Industrial front, and as it saved lives on the war fronts, DDT has started to contribute con-tribute to the health of the home front. The story of spraying for mosquitoes against malaria is well known. ' Painting door and window screens with a five percent solution of DDT In water or kerosene leaves an lnsectlcldal ln-sectlcldal residue that will kill every ev-ery fly, mosquito, or other insect lighting there within the next sev-. eral months, the U. S. department of agriculture reports. A five percent solution of DDT In kerosene sprayed on floors or over rugs eliminates the flea nuisance. A hand sprayer is adequate. By spraying spray-ing deep into cracks, DDT will re-, main toxic to these Insects for several sev-eral weeks. A ten percent powder applied to cracks with a small hand duster can be depended to kill any brown dog ticks that may be hiding tfcere. Baseboards, especially those that have worked loose from the wall, af-' ford excellent breeding places for' bedbugs, cockroaches, and brown dog ticks. DDT is sure death to. these pests. A hand sprayer, held, close to the opening, will send the Insecticide, a five percent solution in kerosene, down where the insects are concealed, or a large duster, of 10 percent powder may be used. Average Citizen Has Answer to National Welfare There is considerable difference p of opinion with regard to the atti tude civilians will take during the next few months. Their attitudes will largely determine whether we have a recession of several months' duration and the extent of the recovery re-covery from such a recession. One group thinks that In spite of lower Incomes, based on a shorter work week, civilians will have more leisure and spend more. This group would expect a brisk trade based on free spending. Important Im-portant segments of the federal government gov-ernment would seem to favor policies pol-icies that would lead to free spending spend-ing accompanied by what might be termed controlled Inflation. The other group expects people to be cautious and unwilling to spend their accumulated savings. What will happen probably will be determined by the extent and promptness with which civilian Industry absorbs the millions of men being discharged from war Industries, those temporarily tempora-rily idle, and the discharged men from the armed services. The committee for economic development de-velopment has Issued a report which gives business men's estimates of postwar markets for manufactured goods. These estimates are optimistic. opti-mistic. The committee points out that the postwar years can roughly be divided Into three periods: first, short period of reconversion, which may last through 1946; second, from 1946 or early 1947, for a year of deferred orders, and the last, period of self-sustaining. Although Secretary Anderson Indicated In-dicated that meat rationing was on the way out, possibly matter of months, storage stocks are relatively low, and it is expected that the strong demands for meats will be maintained long enough to absorb the rather heavy movoment of cattle and hogs that Is anticipated during the fall and early winter months Range conditions have been excellent, excel-lent, and cattle men report that the ranchers are In a mood to carry larger than normal supplies of range cattle over winter rather than to sell them at substantia discounts now. .WEEKLY NEWS Japan Now Fourth Rate Nation, Says MacArthur; Banner Harvest Depends on Favorable Weather O a 1 a ft mm A k CUf in (EDITOR'S NOTE: Whsa plnioni ar expressed la this eolomas. they ' " , Weilira Newspaper Union's news analysts and not assessarlly f Ihlt newspaper.. I n . .i v V' 1 j Jt Iff i C? A , A f ' ; jffrft lK -v &fl3mi.m22mt. Seared ground and fragmentary remains of base of tower from which atomic bomb was set off to test mark experimental site near Carrizozo, New Mexico. Viewing scene are Prof. J. R. Oppenheimer (left), who was In charge of technical construction of explosive, and MaJ. Gen. Leslie Graves, over-all supervisor of project. JAPAN: F ourth-Rater Even as former Premier Hideki Tojo lay quiet and ashen in an American army hospital with an ugly self-inflicted bullet wound below be-low the heart, conqueror Douglas MacArthur told newsmen that the once proud country which the stricken war lord had led into conflict con-flict now was a fourth rate nation. Hoping to keep Tojo alive so as to be able to question him on the affairs he directed during his wartime premiership, Amer-can Amer-can doctors applied all the treatment treat-ment of modern medical science, sci-ence, including blood transfusions. trans-fusions. But as they labored, Tojo, having accepted full responsibility re-sponsibility for the war, groaned: "I am going to die anyway so don't go to any trouble over me." Tojo shot himself as American troops began a round-up of 40 Japanese Japa-nese suspected of war crimes, including in-cluding all of the members of the former premier's cabinet. Besides the Nipponese politicians, generals and prison camp attendants, several sever-al American, Australian and Dutch were also being sought in con nection with propaganda broadcasts. In pronouncing Japan a fourth-rate nation now, MacArthur pointed to the complete defeat of her military mili-tary forces and the destruction of much of her industry. Though Nippon may assume commercial leadership In the Orient, he said, her confinement confine-ment to the home islands will prevent pre-vent her from, returning to the ranks of the major powers. Regarding the Emperor, Mac-Arthur Mac-Arthur explained that he was both a religions and temperal leader, and that while America would not interfere with Japan's spiritual life, the mikado was subject to U. S. dictates in political polit-ical affairs. By surrendering, the Emperor furnished evidence of a reversion from the military clique which had encompassed him to a new liberal Influence. BIG FIVE: Discuss Italy Formulation of a peace treaty for Italy headed up the agenda of the council of foreign ministers of the Big Five meeting In London to lay the groundwork for the reshaping of the map of Europe. In dealing with Italy, disposition of her former African colonies and Mediterranean islands poses the most difficult problems, prob-lems, though settlement of Yugoslavia's Yugo-slavia's claim to Trieste also abounds with complications. Regarding the .Italian colonies, the U. S. reportedly favors the establishment estab-lishment of an international trusteeship trustee-ship over the territories, with administration ad-ministration left in Italian hands. Thus, while being given an opportunity oppor-tunity of redeeming itself, Italy also would bear the administrative expenses ex-penses and utilize her colonists to reconstruct war damage. ' At the gateway to the Dardanelles straits leading to the Black sea, Italy's Dodecanese islands in the Mediterranean loom as a strategic key in near eastern geopolitics. Friendly to Britain, which possesses heavy interests in the region, Greece has sought to regain the vital vi-tal islands at the same time Russia has striven to neutralize the entrance en-trance to the Black sea. Italian held with a large Slavic population, Trieste has long been CROP INSURANCE: With cotton leading the list of insured in-sured commodities, a total of 164,444 applications covering 199,300 fcrms was written by the Federal Crop Insurance In-surance corporation on 1945 crops, according to the department of agriculture. ag-riculture. Over 95,000 applications covering 113,183 farms in the 18 producing pro-ducing states were received for cotton. cot-ton. Applications for insurance on wheat planted last spring totaled 14,390 covering 23,394 farms and for flax 31,131 covering 33,072 farms. ANALYSIS- NniflnBn fTnlnn cherished by Yugoslavia for its strategic and commercial value. Re-. ntly a clash of British and Yugo-av Yugo-av interests there resulted in Marshal Mar-shal Tito's withdrawal from the area. CROPS: Weather Factor Should early retarded plantings mature rapidly enough to head off killing fall frosts, the U. S. will be assured of another banner crop this year, the department of agriculture reported. Under favorable condl tions, production would equal the record 1942 and 1944 wartime output. Added to the prospective record wheat crop of 1,152,270,000 bushels and oats harvest of 1,570,356,000 bushels corn production was esti mated at 3,069,055,000 bushels if late maturing acreage escaped damag ing fall weather. During August, the crop showed about a 225,000,000 bushel increase, bringing the pros. pective final yield up near the 1944 high. Favorable August weather also improved the outlook for potatoes, tobacco, soybeans, grain sorghums, tame bay, dry peas and beans. On the other hand, heavy boll weevil infestation Jkwered estimates for cotton production, while hurricane and wet weather damage influenced smaller predictions for the rice and peanut crops. RELIGION: Attacks Instruction Religious education programs in 46 states may be affected as a result re-sult of a suit brought in the circuit court at Urbana, 111., against such instruction in-struction in public school property by Mrs. Vashti McCollum, wife of a University of Illinois professor and an avowed atheist. ' In bringing the suit against the Champaign board of education, Mrs. McCollum charged that her 10-year-old son was embarrassed because he was the only pupil of his class not attending the voluntary 30-minute per week courses sponsored and financed by the Protestant, Jewish and Catholic faiths. In pressing Mrs. McCollum's suit, which both sides promised to carry to the. Supreme court if they lost, Attorney Landon Chapman declared that indirect pressure from fellow students and teachers virtually forced a child into such classes on public school property in violation of the constitution providing for separation sep-aration of church from state. MEAT: Lift Bans Despite the government's withdrawal with-drawal of controls over meat slaughtering slaugh-tering and distribution, officials refused re-fused to forecast an early end to meat rationing, reiterating that such action would be taken once there was assurance of a balance of supply sup-ply and demand. Set up last April to steer more cattle from local to federally inspected in-spected packers qualified to ship meat to the army and between states, the slaughter program was lifted as military orders dipped and a heavy run of cattle was expected this falL Established along with slaughter control, the fair distribution plan was designed to assure the shipments ship-ments of meat along the same geographical geo-graphical pattern as in the first quarter of 1944 and therefore prevent pre-vent the decrease in supplies to former markets. Assails 30-Hour Week Declaring the first step in the downfall of France was the 30-hour 30-hour week, Senator Byrd (Dem., Vs.) attacked the proposal for a similar government work week. Asserting that all industry would have to follow suit, Byrd said that America cannot afford to become a nation of drones without impairing its economic stability. Adoption of a 30-hour work week by the government would increase costs by two billion bil-lion dol'ars a year. Byrd said. OIL: Foreign Concession With an eye upon the development ; of his country through foreign investment, in-vestment, Emperor Halle Selassie' irrant the .Sinclair Oil corporation of the U. S. sweeping oil concessions in Ethiopia. Under terms of the agreement signed In New York, Sinclair received re-ceived exclusive development rights to the country for five years, when 50 per cent of the territory will b released. After a further exploratory explora-tory period of five years, Sinclair will relinquish another 25 per cent. In northwestern Africa, Ethiopia equals Texas, Oklahoma, Massachusetts Massachu-setts and Rhode Island In size. In return for the broad conces-lions, conces-lions, Sinclair will pay production royalties to the emperor, build one or more schools and hospitals, clinics clin-ics and research foundations. In addition, the corporation agreed to pay for the education of Ethiopians in the U. S. for the next 10 years. NAVY: ." Speeds Discharges To the 327,000 men eligible for discharge dis-charge under original plans, another 423,000 were added by the navy In a revision of its point system for release. In all, one out of every two men will be released within six months, with over 2,700,000 out within with-in a year. Following the army's pattern, the navy established credit for overseas service, allowing one-fourth of a point for each month of such duty. Other credits include one-half point for each year of age, one-half point for each month of service, and 10 points for dependents, with enlisted enlist-ed men requiring 44 points, male officers 49, doctors 60, WAVES 29 and WAVE officers 35. In defining overseas service, the navy included duty on any ship in commission and activity outside the U. S. with fleet or shore establishments, establish-ments, armed guard crews, communication commu-nication groups, convoys, marine forces and hospital units. British Seek Funds Asserting that they have emerged from the war heavily in debt and with their export trade and foreign investments seriously crimped, the British opened negotiations with U. S. officials in Washington, D. C, for extensive postwar financial assistance. assist-ance. As the conversations got underway, under-way, with Ambassador Halifax and Economist Keynes advancing the British interests, U. S. officials were expected to turn thumbs down on suggestions for making outright Economist Keynes (left) and Ambassador Am-bassador Halifax. gifts instead of loans. Aid most likely will take the form of long term credits at low interest rates to enable Britain to rebuild its industrial indus-trial machine and acquire materials materi-als to resume large-scale exportation. exporta-tion. With U. S. officials holding the up per hand, the conferences also were expected to ring in Britain's overall over-all imperial trade policies and their effect upon this country, and Britain's Brit-ain's participation in international cartels restricting production and distribution of such strategic raw materials as rubber and tin. QUISLING: End of Run With the court rejecting his claims of having fought the extension of communism, of having worked for Norway's interests and of having spared the country from becoming a battleground, big, bluff Vidkun Quisling was found guilty of both military and civil treason and sentenced sen-tenced to death before a firing squad. Denied appeal, he was given the right to ask for a lightening of the punishment In finding his defense wanting, the court countered his claim of hav ing fought communism by stating that he had actually volunteered to organize a militant Red group in Norway before turning against it; that rather than advancing Norway's Nor-way's interests, he had injured them by consenting to German occupation, occupa-tion, and instead of preventing Norway Nor-way from becoming a battleground, he had brought the country into the theater of war. With Quisling's own checkered career ca-reer finished after 25 years of involvement in-volvement in national and International Inter-national politics, including representation represen-tation of British interests in Russia, his cabinet ministers were next scheduled for trial in October. RETURN PLANES: More than 4,500 aircraft have been returned to the United StatP or deployed to the Pacific theater by the United States army air forces in Europe, sinoe the end nf the war with Germany, the war de partment announced. Among the aircraft remaining in Europe, according to present plans. wui oe neavy and light bombers, P-47 Thunderbolts. P-51 Mustangs," C-47 and other transport planes, night fighters, and training and liaison liai-son planes. f l ti " V Li 1 I J.WNUW.r.Tl 1 By JACK LAIT (Pinch Hitting this week for Wilier Winchel!) Memo from Manhattan With tny son, paratrooper wafi correspondent George Lalt, I saw a private projection of "The Story of GI Joe," which then had not yet. opened In New York. This Is a filmj centered around some of the famousi activities of Ernie Pyle. We both; have a sentimental Interest In Ernie, I knew him when he was an lncon-1 splcuous desk drudge on a washing-ton washing-ton newspaper, a nice little guy who rave no Indication of the Immortal ity he was to attain in our profes-i sion. But George knew him more Intimately than he knows his broth-' er. They crossed together in a tiny tub to Lisbon, flew from there to London, shared a little flat during the murderous bllts. They went to- gether to Africa and shared tents,i jeeps and foxholes during the ad- lit-- -. ,k. Ti.tf!ol, Aafant anil) retreat and through the triumphs of the allies from El Alameln to conquest con-quest of the desert and the Medt-1 terranean. They were side by side In Sicily and In Italy. George had cauflht malaria In the desert and came back here for a spell of rest After that he went through campaigns In New Guinea, Sal-pan, Sal-pan, through the bitter fighting . on Leyte. He made battle Jumps with the Eleventh Airborne Division Di-vision and was about to go on to Luzon when the malaria caught up with him again. Gen. MacArthur ordered him flown back on sick leave. Meanwhile, Ernie Pyle had come homo to rest and recuperate at his house In Albuquerque, N. M. I met George at my Beverly Hills, retreat, the day after he landed in: San Francisco, and while we were, there Ernie visited us. He was now-on now-on his way to cover the fighting in' the Pacific By this time, he was the most widely syndicated reporter' In the world, the only man In my knowledge-who ever had both thei top best-sellers on the book market at once, and he could have commanded com-manded princely prices to lecture, write for magazines or take any of a score of broadcasting offers. ... George, who had been through plenty, with him, told him he was bound for stuff much worse and more dangerous dan-gerous than he had ever known. George pointed out to him his situsr tlon, on top of the world, and liter-' ally begged him not to go. But; Ernie said the very fact that he had; built op so large a following was a; mandate and an obligation; he, couldn't quit In the middle; he had, a hunch he would never come back, but he insisted he should go on. Ernie was a light, slight chap ' who was always cold wore two . suits of long, heavy flannel un. i derwear during the earlier cam- j paigns. ... As we shook hands ; with him and he started off on j the Journey from which he was j never to return, he chuckled and j said to George: "Anyway, fellow, j . down there, I won't freeze to j deathl" "The Story of GI Joe" takes him! only; as far as his turning to the road to Rome. . . . Burgess Meredith, , who gives an uncanny personifies-1 tlon, studied under George and others who knew Ernie well and acquired his little Intimate manner-, isms; makes even those who knew Pyle think he looks like him. . . , But, though he is a star and playing a greater one, GI Joe Is the hero collectively of this brave film. I call it brave because Lester Cowan put two and a half million dollars Into It, though he had pledged Ernie not to glorify him, gave his principal character no suggestion of any sort of romance, and contracted to let Ernie throw out any scenes he didn't' like. He did discard several, which were quite costly, because they made too much of him and too little of the men he loved and who loved him. ... Perhaps It was this spirit and faculty that lifted Ernie Pyle above iany other reporter of his generation. 'He was a self-effacing little fellow, not physically brave, who sweated and shuddered during action, but who not only never ducked It, but went, weary and woebegone, to seek . It . . . George tells me that during the nightly Nazi raids on London, Pyle would be panic-stricken yet he was the first one at his typewriter type-writer when lt stopped. ... He had a lot of resistance, as many wiry little men have. . . . With the kind of stuff he wrote, he could have almost as well worked miles back of the front But the reporter in him drove him right to where things ' were thickest After many long years at every angle of the business, I am scarcely a starry-eyed worshiper of a man simply because he does a newspaper 1 job welL . . . Devoting all my space this week to Ernie Pyle makes the first time I have done that since, 30 years ago this week, I wrote an obituary tribute on Paul Armstrong, who was the exact antithesis of th( man I deal with here. . . . That bears out a theory which has long seemed i sound to me a man is judged in th I direct ratio of what he accomplishei to what be attempts. People Make run Mrs. DeuUh Har; INDIANAPOLIS, lNniivi Mrs. Beulah Hankini S K 634 S. Collier, wrK letter to Faultles3 staV pany recently. She said "I want to tell you abimi I wonderful starch. i S it's grand. Several T make fun of mefornotfr my starch. They starch Is for lazy V have, boy four yH I Iron ten to fifteen Z clothes a week for hjm f!( to iron them as p. Starch makes easy Q also have twins, eieht ' old,anddotheyha7eha -from twenty to twent dresses a week and these are white ones iv iron so smooth and smell 2 Thanks ag;ain for pJ? Starch. It sure saves oe S hours of ironing." SAVES TIME AND WORj X inai s proDaDiy the most J derful letter anyone could ! about Faultless Starch! Mrs p kins is a busy wife and mother she has found that Faultless S'-eaves S'-eaves time and work for herl makes starch without cookkj! Bhe has found that Faultless makes her ironing easy. She , a kick out of people sayin. I her Faultless Starch is fot I people. Certainly she isn't MADE A SPECIAL WAI I If you are busy, too especi on washday and ironing daw deserve the time-saving and saving help Faultless Starch give you. You see Faultless Star-is Star-is made a special way to help through your washing and to s-you s-you hours of ironing. So why, enjoy Faultless Starch? A1U have to do is ask your grocers it. Then you can make perfect starch without cooking 1 Andjj can make ironing so smooth, ee and beautiful. It's yours for j asking . . . Faultless Starchl ii . Lemon Adds to Taste If you have never added lee juice to ' hot, buttered vegetatt give It a try next time you sr asparagus or harvard beets. A fc lemon juice on fresh spinach orn er greens is delicious. I ' I Poison Weeds Peril Cows j Poison weeds, including wai hemlock and poison hemlock, shoi' be destroyed in pastures, or infese areas fenced off, if cattle or ofe livestock are to be spared from jc: sible poisoning. Red Hair Common There are no red-haired races, t cording to Encyclopaedia Brittac ca. Red hair is -almost as come: among those races with frizzy t as among those with wavy hair, f Save Meat Juice f In cooking meat, save juice using moderate heat. Save all dn pings in the pan and serve with! meat or in gravy. Excess fat a be saved for future cooking. Improved Pasture ; Improved pasture should not grazed until well along in the sc mer in order to allow the new settings sett-ings to become well established Rain Stops Bees Do you know that bees never woi in rainy or stormy weather? Tte wings are too light for rain it wind. , s Accident Toll j ' Around 40 to 45 farm dwellers s!' the United States die each fc, as a result of accidents. I : II war BloHfot Colo r rt DATA M TUIISI Million, of peopU fferJBj!!S impl Pile, hfiv to, relief with PAZO ointment. HTv why i First. PAZO ointment woid inflamed are relieve Pf''Z Itching. Second, lubricate hardened, dried P"T, help prerent cracking nd ne. Third, PAZO ointment t to red uc wellina and check nu bleeding. Fourth, It easy to PAZO ointment' P,or,,?Le. Pipe make application '" thorough. Your doctor can you about PAZO ointment. SUPPOSITOIIIS TOO Some person, and many "JpO prefer to usetuppotitori" r.y. come ia handy suppoltorie , The rame soothing relief PAZO alway Sle. .4 Gem for th of GI Krnle pressl1 fserv f nine 'duc j of t f onei j ten. fmar hen I tak( turr I will 1 bus T Joh Wh en I Tot wiUl farm Have plays as if bette rnovl jxa orchi "Ilol ! JE of v met BaU Way Bom Stro him; I I Ai CIrl port cille "Til i ic rw( a t Ihe pre Sol tea: "i fo jeei am fea ?a ne ea ! p Eic Sei Ha: ncl i i r 1 CI ,rie te e h h ji if 1! tt ll |