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Show 4 , V -'-V 1 ,,T-:4'Yiyiv---5 ,,.... , . , ... i 4-s c Horses Little Knovn B EEtEV rjrf.TrVrt Baited Press staff Correspondent rTORT WAYNE, lad, flM9An lmrecognized, but Important cas ttaitr or World WarH la the American work horse, whoso ex istence t has been . made almost economically impossible by war-? vm speea ana mgn price ez feed. thltmffhmit th natlrt fcaran to dispose of their horse en'mar- is : oui ine resimant flooding has caused prices to hit an all-time all-time low. - ' .; .: tt At one time live horses sold for cent, a pound, but now the price has Aranrm-A until rflnvunl arent payln&jmythiii' lor them. Starratlon Reported reed, txt only. is scarce, but SJCT-hi rh. : ThM - fa ptnn mnnlwl cr Wlth,tha Ktnra wlnti vnthx nave raaae ruia Bobbin sutler from man's inxratitude of the horses cart services. . . . In many Hoosier counties, hu mane society oxxiciais receive re-ports re-ports almost daily about horse y xoun(iieaaAfrom starvation or cola. xye fines and sentences Imposed on the anility parties have nof prevented others from neglecting- their animals in the same manner. Harold Schmidt, manaeer of the . Stadler Co., reported. "Fox farms and doc-food factories used to buy a lot of horses, but this year they are not takins them and as a result we have been literally wampea. Tractors Take Place- ftk "DOS m food fietorlH nntntn w elevators and others are buying Mrnxgw wnounM ox onimai crack lings wnicn we produce, but they appear to be out of the market as elves." farmers have been forced to forget about the horses, not only because of the high feed costs, but also due to labor shortages, and instead are requesting tractors wun wmcn to do their work. In the first World War the sit nation was different. Motorized eoulsment waa nnt in . - .7 large extent and the government Dougas uousanas ox horses at fugn prices to serve as artillery ana omcerr mounts. Twenty million American ciga reported aboard i Swedish ship en route to Sweden r wnen does the next passenger liner leave? yeJcomes Investigation v.. . ' (NBA TUpkoto Pvt. Renry Weber, former Vancou ver. Wash, shipyard foreman, sentenced sen-tenced br Army court-martial board to Ufa imprisonment for his refusal to drill, tanas himself a political objector ob-jector to war and says ha would welcome wel-come a congressional investigation of his 34,000 Workers Leave Pudget Sound SEATTLE (U.R) War plants in the Puget Sound area suffered an aggregate loss of 34,000 war workers during 1944, it was reported re-ported by the state manpower commission. War plants were forced to import im-port almost 23,000 workers, while jobs vacated by an additional 8,000 never were filled. A. F. Hardy, commission director, direc-tor, said "premature talk of reconversion re-conversion and victory in Europe" Eu-rope" caused war workers to pour out of the plants and head for home. DEAD GIVEAWAY WESTBROOK, Me. CU.R When Harold E. Brinkerhoff of Providence, Provi-dence, R. I., wandered into, the Westbrook police station to get warm, he made the serious error of standing directly under a poster pos-ter seeking his arrest on burglary charges. Cqitlp and Crops Dio From Heat In South Africa ' JOHANNESBURG. S. A. (UMD Most of South Africa has been in the grin of a heat wave and drought this summer and resorts from outlying areas tell of shriv eled grazing, caiue dying, &y thousands of thirst and lack of feed, rivers and streams drying up and failure of crops on an aiarming scaie. One small town called Komatl-poort, Komatl-poort, on the border of the East ern Transvaal province and Por. fugues East Africa, has bad tem peratures up to 117 and 120 de grees. The whole town had to keep inside, except foe a few minutes at a time, to escape sunstroke. Several Negro- women found their babies, which they had tied to their backs, were dead from suffocation at the end of .the day. The officially recorded maximum maxi-mum temperature for any day was 123 degrees, In the district of Tembuland, in Eastern Cape Province, on Jan. 28, 1903. Denver Men At Kiwqnis Meeting In Spanish Fork SPANISH FORK Glen O. Elliott, Roger Nash, Ronald Sweitzer, all of Denver, and will ard Richards, traffic represent ative of the Rio Grande Motor Ways, were the guests of the Spanish Fork Kiwanis club at the luncheon held Monday night at the Kasey cafe. Mr. Elliott showed a beautiful film in tech' nlcolor of Utah and Colorado scenes. The visitors were intro duced bv "Governor John E. Booth of the Utah-Idaho Ktwans clubs and Mr. Booth also gave a Tribute Trib-ute to Abraham Lincoln." S. R. Bo swell of Provo. county agri cultural agent was also a guest at the meeting. Two new mem bers were inducted into the club, Willis Hill, local school teach er and manager of the Utah State Junior Livestock show and Glen Steiner. manager of the Spanish Fork Co-op. ONE GOOD TURN STONE HAM, Mass. (U.R) The Golden Rule was observed here when Frederick J. Lang rescued his dog, Blackle, from a fire when the dud coUaosed while trying to wake his master. Rockets on the Docltefs for the Japs' m J' v 1111 (NEA TtUphoU) Massed batteries of rockets give this LCM the striking power of a much larger warship. Because they so largely eliminate the problem of recoil and the heavy intricacy of machinery for recoil control, the rocket batteries, unplaced on small craft like this, have proved ideal to fill in the bombardment gap between the opening barrage and the actual landing of troops on hostile shores. U. S. Navy photo. Moral ssuo Hold Paramount Facing U. 5. Education The one great issue facing Am erican education is the moral issue not the issue of improved training and equipment Dr. A. C. Lambert, dean of BYU summer school, said today in the regular weexiy aevouonai at the Joseph ftimin ouuung. Citing statistics .which show that there are more students enrolled en-rolled in private universities and colleges than in state controlled universities and colleges. Dr. Lambert said, "l am glad that education in this country is not fully owned by the state." The only principle In higher education which will endure and do the job which founders of universities uni-versities and colleges intended is to keep education free, Dr. Lambert asserted. MI am glad that there is the right to venture to find the truth and to teach it,' be. added. Cupid Takes a Bow in Seattle Project SEATTLE UJ!5 When housing authorities opened the Michigan SL dormitories for girl workers in Seattle, little did they know the project would be a stomping grounds for Cupid. For across the street, conveniently conven-iently for all concerned, live students stu-dents at Boeing Aircraft Co.s Superfortress Su-perfortress school. Numerous couples cou-ples from the two projects have tripped to the altar since the dormitory dor-mitory opened a year ago. The dormitory's 500 residents represent every state in the union. VET INJURED AT HOME ORANGE, Tex. (U.R) S-Sgt John G. Kennedy returned to Orange after 51 bombing missions over Europe without a scratch, when duck-hunting, and shot off the big toe of his left foot Starts IRSTANTLY to reOtra ASPGG-PAIIUG Scfgnssscntmrts3s For Massed prompt relief rab en oowerf ally soothing Masterolf. It . - aetaaUy brask up eaiafat much easier to apply a mustard plaster. "No fuu. we wit M asfaratoT Jest rob tt on. Ia 3 Strengths 9 local Adv. Goes to Jail To Help Shortage AKRON. O, (U.R) The city jail er and his trusties had manpower troubles, too, and thus welcomed the voluntary services of a 49- year-old Akronite. The man walked into the police station and asked to be locked up, pleading intoxication. "I want 10 days just to get straightened out," he told the judge. "I want to help the guys out back in the jail." "Why, sure, you can stay as long as you want," said the Judge magnanimously, and gave him a 10-day suspended sentence. The volunteer didn't post bond and stayed at the jail as a "hired hand" for 10 days. (7 BtBMSVB daoteaeeM...letaHttle time-tested ...wanes One! v VAPORI (Adv.) uonTHEnn tissue Gentle, Soft, Safe Bon ZERO Cleaner Quart 15c ParU's QaaWV Meats MILK ALL BRANDS 4 tall cans 39c center lb. 37C sh-?r. rs ATS. Gr. A ID- RED STAR 50 LB. BAG .... DRIFTED SNOW 50 LBS 2.39 1 I Tender. .SaC5Sl,W b- 37C 1 g 08 1 1 PURITAN HANVS whoi. ip g 1 I Mulder Cut m A 1U. 32C l tAlo Fresh Muo ID SAUSAGE pork- I ii ,e flavor I .tfK55. Bound Steak Bee o 0 With Bacon - 2 NO. 2 CANS . . . YOU- ' a lb Pound LETTUCE l&ad, lb. Oc nEPPEflS.Sgr Ib. 15c POTATOES 2 10 lbs. 43c ODflfJGES IgSS,8'.".1. Ib. Oc CELERY lp Ib. 15c LEKOIIS sL, lb. 10c Ib. 13c nilTTIffn AA Grade UU I I KM Calder's. Ib. 49c FnESU EGGS S A Doz.52c UI-LAfiD HIL 2 qts. 25c snnusBOVJiJ a. 2Cc WALDDT MEATS i2 lb. 53c COnn, S0rJU3T, .2 rio. 2 cans 29c GDEEIl DEAHS SL' 2 cans 23c CRACKERS Sodas 21b. box 31c OXYDOL tge, PI(g.23c SUPER SUDS Lge. Package - 23c Old Dutch Cleanser Ffflk Can 7c W PARKING PROB1EM AT PARK'S 266 SOUTH UNIVERSITY mm &C0 "xFCOS DD3 Zl THE NEED: Never was there greater need for increased production of sugar beets than today. Three crops in America have been designated as critical bj War Food Administration: flax, dairy products, and sugar beets. O.P.A. has said that "sugar is the mainstay of army combat rations ... wo will have about one-half million tons less sugar available for civilian use than in 1944." Moreover, More-over, each soldier actually consumes over twice as much sugar a year as the average civilian now receives . . . the home-canning .program will have to get along .with one-third less sugar than in 1944 . . . there is not enough available shipping to bring in sufficient sugar from other areas for all our needs ... military mil-itary and other governmental requirements of sugar will be larger than in 1944. THE PROBLEM: With' the nation's sugar stocks lower at the first of 1945 than for many years, and with other producing areas unable to supply all our essential needs, it's up to farmers in beet-growing districts to produce sugar beets to the limit of their ability to handle an enlarged crop ... 49 more than last year, if we are to meet the goals set up by War Food Administration. The sugar beet goal for this district is 43 larger than 1944s production. This year's beet acreage will have a direct bearing on future quotas for individuals and districts dis-tricts when the quota provisions of the Federal Sugar Act again become effective at the end of the present emergency. Growers should protect future quotas by planting maximum possible acreage in 1945. THE CHALLENGE: To meet this challenge will require the whole-. hearted co-operation of everybody farmers, farm workers, farm labor committees, commit-tees, volunteer workers, processors, federal, state and county war crop and labor Committees and all other interested parties. The undersigned pledge their best efforts to meet this challenge. AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT AGENCY Orville L. Lee, Utah State Chairman UTAH COUNTY AAA COMMITTEE G. Frank Nelson, Chairman UTAH COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT S. R. BosweU CENTRAL UTAH BEET GROWERS ASSOCIATION Ed. A. Thomas, President y - ii I '-0 n. |