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Show THE RICH COUNTY Entered ct second class Act of March 3. 1879. REAPEB matter Feb. WEEKLY HEWS ANALYSIS at the Post Office, Randolph. Utah, under tb Wm. E. Marshall, llntiness Manarer SUBSCRIPTION 81.50 Per Year in Advanct Layton Marshall, Editor and Proprietor Delos Wheeler Lovelace XJEW YORK. THE CHEERFUL CHERUB , The sun turned sky to $old Italians Feel Power of United Nations As Sicily Topples and Rome Is Bombed; Navy Blasts Japs in Battle Off Munda; U. S. Civilians Get Rationing Forecasts By Consolidated Features. Son Decorated 8, ,1929 WNU Release. Hitler himself must doubt the persuasions of Nordic kultur on noting that Poznan provides the new Polish premier to replace the Polish Premier a dead Sikor-sk-i. And Poznan HNsiam Miitnonanap It scattered sparkles made the whole beautiful. world it then simply sunburned me.. TTninn SOUTH PACIFIC: FOOD: is the most the on the see.. And a i dl 1. Planes blast Jap shipping tryto supply beleaguered garrison ing Maintenance of the present meat at Munda. ration at about the present level" 2. Navy sees six mojre years of was predicted by the War Food ad- war in Pacific. ministration following the allocation Air Power Scores Again. of estimated supplies among civil-anThe devastating striking power of the services and other users d aircraft against surface for the next 12 months. was vessels again amply demonstratwere Total allocable meat supplies offensive when Solomons the in ed put at 23y4 billion pounds. Civilians American Liberator, Mitchell and 100 will receive 63 out of every bombers attacked a strong pounds produced, the services will Avenger concentration of 11 warJapanese be given 17 pounds, the Allies will and transports in Vella gulf, get 14 pounds, and allotments for re- ships a cruiser and two destroyers sinking serves, the Red Cross and exports and the others. scattering 6 will amount to pounds. in the dead of night, the Sailing Of the total supply of beef expectwere making another try at ed, civilians will obtain 66 out of Japs their entrapped troops at reinforcing services every 100 pounds, and the on New Georgia Munda airfield, 23 pounds. Other claimants will get S. dive bombers U. where island, Of the pork production, 2 pounds. action in were also supporting the the civilians share will amount to attack on the units creeping ground 59 out of every 100 pounds, the servdefenses. ices portion will be 12 pounds, strongholds jungle The attack in Vella gulf followed allotment will apand made upon Jap vessels in others 25 pounds. proximate mutof and lamb Total supplies ton are expected to drop sharply from the 939 million pounds of 1942 to 539 million. This compares with the 1935-3- 9 average of 863 million pounds. Maintain Meat Ration western half province of Poland. Germany embraces it, and from it for a hundred years Germans have tried to squeeze all Polish flavor. Once the squeeze got so tight that even the Poznan school children went out on s, strike. land-base- ' Stanislaw Mikola jczyk was five then, and might have led a kinderbut he was all the garten way across Germany in Westphalia. His father, a farm laborer, was trying his luck there. Luck was poor and when Stanislaw was ten and the first World war only three years away the family trekked back to their old home. When Stanislaw was 16 he stood in the thick of the waxing revolution against Poznans weakening Prussian rulers. The Polish Republic followed and he rose to leadership of the Peasant party and to a seat in parliament. He is himself a true peasant, off a farm, stocky h His and of bristling moustache is only a minor concession to urban influence. When the Nazis struck he enlisted as a private, the rank he held in the war against the Reds 19 years earlier. After Warsaw he was interned in Hungary but made his escape. In the years since, first under Paderewski, then Sikorski, his main assignment has been to rim the Polish underground, and his name has become a household word to patriots inside his oppressed country. His blacklist of Nazi criminals is the longest in Europe. This, also, must be of depressing interest to Hitler. sit-dow- n, lend-leas- 50-ac- re thick-necke- half-inc- d. Cheese, Butter Decrease of government purchases through August, September and October will make available 527 million pounds of butter and cheese for civilians, the WFA said. Of the total, approximately 400 million pounds will be of butter; 92 million pounds of cheddar cheese, and 35 million pounds of other cheese. WFA also announced that plans were made for about 7 million additional cases of canned baby foods, condensed milk, other milk products and certain canned vegetables qnd fruits by an increase in canners tin quotas.' However, it was pointed out that shortage in fruit crops may offset the extra tin allotments. Increased production will allow civilians 388 eggs apiece during the next 12 months, WFA said, 18 more than in 1942.. The Office of Price Administration also stepped into the food picture and announced prices of cabbage and lettuce will be rolled back 25 to IT A IS a long time since President Roosevelt got salt fish three times running. The housekeeper called in g first lady now by the ofter This the cou,d 19 luncheon menus if the much-travelin- UJ, I. President demanded variety. Now there has been added the confusion of ration coupons, but Mrs. Henrietta Nesbit, placid, bespectasorts these recled, middle-agesourcefully and to date has not been made either red or blue by the new The fact that her responsibility. husband is White House custodian of supplies may help. It is 14 years since Mrs. Nesbit signed up to see that when the master gazed around with the prophetic eye of appetite, there should be victuals to suit both his scrambled eggs and truffles moods. That was in his first governorship. Mrs. Nesbit, Duluth - born, with casually d, fluffed hair, had a catering es 50 per cent. SICILY: First Resistance History will record that the first real Axis resistance in Sicily was put up at Catania. Here, in the midst of the broad rolling plains d which are by several criss-crosse- rivers, German armored forces met the full shock of Gen. Bernard Montgomerys British Eighth army, charging forward after easy capture of the ports of Syracuse and busi- ness in Hyde Park previous to this, and Mrs. Roosevelt was sure that the author of such whole wheat bread was the needed woman. Nowadays, bossing a staff that jumps to 124 for a state dinner, Mrs. Nesbit never consults her mistress, even when her mistress is near enough to be consulted. She will even put on evening dress and drift gently among the ambassadors to make sure every tidbit is as it should be. She doesnt live in the White House and her usual shift runs from eight to six. She doesnt, however, mind working overtime in the kitchen she and Mrs. Roosevelt modernized from knife rack to range. Augusta. Adept at tank warfare, the Germans took no chances on exposing their mechanized ranks to the big Lewis Look Like Presiden James Caesar Petrillo has carried on one of the longest strikes since Pearl Harbor in a country whose labor lead No strikes." ers have promised, He has dished it out for more than 11 months. Petrillo has been boss of the Federation and its nearly 140,000 members for three years. He is president, too, of the Chicago local and between 1922 and now he jumped the membership of that from 4,000 to 11,000, all well paid. war-occupie- d Whenever the Flying Forts roar over the channel for Europe, Mrs. Mary Smith of Detroit, Mich., sticks close to her radio to learn the results. Her son, Maynard, a Fortress crew member, became the first living serviceman overseas to receive the congressional medal of honor for saving the lives of six mates on a recent flight over the continent. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT GUERNSEY HEIFERS HIGH GRADE GUERNSEY HEIFERS, under one year and yearlings past. Also heifers. Special price on four. springerCHANDLER. CHARITON. IOWA. FRED FEATHERS WANTED FEATHERS WANTED, NEW OR OLD Ship or write to Sterling Feather Company, 909 N. Broadway, St. Louis. Missouri. LABOR: Wants Cheaper Food Declaring profiteers and speculators are sapping the strength of the nations army of workers, William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, said that unless prices of food were brought down to a reasonable level, organized labor would demand wage increases. At present, wage increases have been restricted to 15 per cent over the January, 1941, scales. Leveling lis attack on food, Green said that AFL surveys in principal cities had shown costs in labors market basket had risen from 50 to 200 per cent since the war started. Criticizing the Office of Price Administration and War Food administration for failing to halt the increase in food prices. Green demanded intelligent and orderly action to assure workers and their families of a decent place to live in and enough nourishing food to eat within their incomes. Greens statement followed one by ,Sgt. Thomas Gacicot kneels at grave of fallen buddy on Rendova CIO chieftain William Murray, who island. similarly threatened that organized Kula gulf and brought to 24 the num- labor would seek wage increases ber of different enemy ships sent to unless food prices were rolled back. is committed to the bottom since the Solomons of- The administration k a program. fensive started. Sees Long War. HOGS: Because the war in the Pacific must be fought over great distances Ceiling $14.75 With a floor or minimum price and bases must be built from the of $13.75 per hundred pounds promVice Admiral Frederick ground up, J. Home, assistant chief of naval ised for hogs, the government esoperations, declared the navy was tablished a ceiling or maximum figuring on at least six years of fight- price of $14.75. At the same time the floor was extended to all porking. Home cautioned against optimism ers between 200 and 270 pounds. that the war would be over in a Despite the governments promise, that however, hogs were selling for less hurry, asserting every slight success fills the people with unwar- than the floor" in some big marranted hope and invariably results kets. In the Chicago yards, heavy in a drop of war production. To de- runs recently drove the average feat Japan, he said, we will need a price down to $13.35, with tops averfleet and air force twice as big as aging $13.85 and others bringing the enemys, and he claimed that $12.85. the present building program will Overhauling its present system of bring a seven-fol- d expansion in our slaughter control to provide for record receipts, the government annavy by 1947. Neither should we look for a col- nounced that packers will be lilapse in Germany such as occurred censed to operate if they pay not during the last war, Home said. less than the floor" nor more than Clever indoctrination of Nazi princi- the ceiling price for hogs, and if ples in the German people has giv- they make appropriate division of en the nation a firm will to fight the meat supplies among civilian, miliwar to the finish, he explained. e tary and groups. It was also revealed that the govROME: ernment intended to extend federal inspection to plants now without the Raid Momentous facilities. Under present regulaOne of the greatest stirs of the the government cannot purwar was caused by the Allied bomb- tions, chase meat from any packers withof Rome. Both here and abroad, out such ing inspection. The new arno effort was made to minimize rangement promises a more equitthe import of the action. able distribution of meat in the counThe Allies maintain that Rome constitutes a legitimate military ob- try. jective, as best illustrated by the RUSSIA: railway yards through which all north and south bound traffic in Italy Front Aflame is routed. Demolition of these yards, On the offensive for the first sumthe Allies say, would severely crip- mer in three years, the Red army ple Axis communication on the hacked at German lines along much mainland. of the vast 1,200 mile front. Besides the important railway The main drive remained directyards, Rome also harbors other in- ed at the Nazi salient of Orel, with dustrial installations, it is pointed Russian forces bearing down upon out. In the raid in which 500 Amer- that hub from north and south. A ican Flying Fortresses participated, junction of the two bethe Allies said a steel plant and a hind Orel would sealspearheads off thousands large chemical works were dam- of German troops now fighting aged. around the city and also sever the The Italian governments belief railroad from Bryansk carrying supthat Rome would not be bombec plies to the embattled base. because of the cultural and religious While fighting raged around Orel, landmarks which abound throughout the Reds home three other the entire area, was indicated by attacks. pressed Preceded by heavy artil-- , the lack of strong preparation made lery and air bombardment, they, against attack. fire assaulted Nazi lines below Leninwas weak, few planes rose to inter- grad, near Smolensk and around the cept the Allied squadrons and 166 German Caucasian base of Novoros-sispersons were killed and 1,659 where they had been beaten off ? this spring. PHOTO FINISHING BEAUTIFUL 4x PICTURES from fr 116 negatives, 3'x4Vi from all smaller sizes, 3ftc EA. Rolls 8 exp. 30c 12 exp. 45c 18 exp. 60c 36 exp. $1.25. Get price on enlarge, on portraitpaper, copies made new 120 from old. pict. OVERNITE SERVICE. PACIFIC PHOTO SERVICE P. O. Box 666-- SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. Faith and Enthusiasm faith in something and enthusiasm for something that makes a life worth looking at. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Its St Joseph WORLD'S LARGEST SEILER AT Humming Birds Fortitude Humming birds migrate 500 miles without stopping for food or rest. MEAT GOES FAR WITH ALL-BRA-N BRANBURGERS roll-bac- Heres a new way to serve that old favorite, the hamburger. Make it with KELLOGG'S to Stretch the meat supply, to give the popular hamburger new interest, and to get ALL-BR- nutritional benefits' all-bra- ns valu- able proteins, carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals. Kellogg's All Bran Branburgers -- 1 egg 2 teaspoons salt teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons minced onion 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 1 cup milk cop catsup 1 cup Kelloggs All-Bra- n 1 pound ground beef Beat egg slightly, add salt, pepper, onion, parsley, milk, catsup and Let soak until most o t moiAll-Bra- n. sture is taken up. Add beef and mix thoroughly. Shape into 12 patties. Bake in hot oven (450F.) about 30 minutes or broil about 20 minutes. Yield: 6 servings (12 2 inch branburgers.) God Made Garden God the first garden made, , the first city Cain. Cowley. and lend-leas- , HP HE Federation of Musicians lays A its fight against radio music transcriptions on the doorstep of Labor Secretary Perkins but it still J. Petrillo Make. Features. WNU Berthas of British warships plying along the narrow eastern coast of the island, and to the Allies heavy artillery, which could be concentrated in the tight coastal corridor. Instead, they determined to take their chances in the sprawling Catania plains, where they could maneuver more comfortably. History will show that as the Germans and British locked horns on these plains, with the enemy holding his flexible lines in the early days of the fighting, Gen. George S. Patton's American Seventh army rolled 30 miles inland to Enna, which is situated on high ground and commands important roads running east and west across the island. Anti-aircra- ft k, If back aches from need of diuretic aid Functional kidney disturbance due to need aid may cause stabbing backache! May cause urinary flow to be kc may quent, yet scanty and smarting! Youoften lose sleep from "getting up nights may feel dizzy, nervous, "headachy. In such cases, you want tt stimulate kidney action fast. So if there is nothing systemically or organically wrong, try Gold Medal Capsules. Theyve been famous for prompt action for 30 years. Take care to nse them only as directed. Accept no substitutes. 35 at your drug store. of diuretic WNU W 30-- 43 SAVE YOUR SCRAP TO HHP GAIN ICTORY Old EETAL, RAGS, EUSZER tad PAPER |