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Show THE BEAVER PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1943 "HITLER'S DIVIDING WEDGE HELD IN PLACE BY ISOLATIONISTS" UTAH The following editorial reproduced from Last Monday s Salt Lake Tribune, shoul dbe read by every true American, and we cannot resist republishing it in its entirity in STAIEiiiS ASSOCIATION : and the N. E. A. Adolph Hitler is not a military genius, but he is an expert strategy. He may not know how to handle an army, but he can twist opponents around his little nngur. He seems to O. S. WILKINSON, Editor and Publisher have an uncanny Insight into the vagaries of humanity which, fortified by his library of personal records compiled by Professor PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY enables him to start an agitation in any allied country against which he has designs. is the SUBSCRIPTION RATES Year, 2.50; fl Mo. $1.25; 3 Mo. 75c. Propaganda, as defined in his celebrated book of threats, a democracy in most effective weapon a dictator can employ against (PAYABLE IV ADVANCE) indelpeace or in war. By circulating plausable fictions, playing on on political conible prejudices and exerting an untraceable influence A First Class Publication Entered in the Post Office ia occupy their to later one more he divided has than people, Bearer, Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter, under the Act of troversies, The March ammunition. gesiapo Congress of 8, 1879. country with little preliminary waste of does the later. shooting Phone 24 Advertising rates quoted when requested. In this way he separated France and England to bomb London to ruins and reduce France to the status of a nazi province ostensibly government to repay the trust with an Invasion marked by wanton YOUTH NEEDS A FRIENDLY HAND ferocity in which women were outraged, men were tortured, children starved to death and whole village populations burned alive. When An editorial finder is placed with accuracy on the root of Russians resisted, the nazi schemer undertook to array the reat of lo.uut) the evil of juvenile delinquancy in many American cities in the world against them by accusing the Soviets of slaying Poles in cold blood. were Poles when 4,000,000 Germans slaughtering comment by the Courier-Journof Louisville, Kentucky, says The deplorable and dangerous effect of such adroit dissemination the Christian Science Monitor editorially. of lying propaganda is to be seen in the kiiiu of converts or peddlers The editor hit the mark, we believe, when he saw as a prin- It finds in the enlightened circles of North Americans. Hitler is now using them to circulate an accusation, based on a document precipal cause "a lack of knowledge or interest in the conflicts set pared by German prisoners of war, distorted and interpreted to make up in young people by the impacts of war and unrest." it appear that Stalin is trying to negotiate a separate peace with The comment is given point by a recent letter to The De- Hitler. Soviet concentration camps hold several hundred thousand troit News signed by several boys who said they were between German prisoners, not all of whom are nazi followers of the fueher. 15 and 17 years of age and who protested there was no place for Under the harsh decrees of fight or see your parents tortured and them tf go for wholesome profitable amusement in the evening your sisters maltreated, a million youngsters born in Germany or in their part of the city. The needs of the smaller children were the occupied countries under Hitler's heel have been forced Into the met in the playgrounds, nursery schools, parks and the like, army."In the name of true Germans" and for the preservation of a but when the children were abed and the adults off to seek their "free Germany" after the war, hundreds of these prisoners have orown pleasures, the youngsters in their late teens, just under ganized and issued an appeal to Stalin to exert his influence to preBlaming from being dismembered or obliterated. vent military age, were left largely to their own devices. This sit- HitlerGermany for the predicament in which their people and country are inuation is almost too well known to need comment. volved, these prisoners said: "The troops of England and America are at the gates of EuJuvenile delinquency, resulting in "crime waves" of greater Geror less significance, such as noted in Harlem, Los Angeles, rope. The day Is drawing nigh when blows will rain down on many simultaneously from all sides. The weakened Germany army, parts of Boston, and elsewhere, is no new thing, but obviously pressed back by superior enemy forces, will not be able to hold out The facts it has been exaggerated by a situation which has thrown out of much longer. The hour of Its collapse is approaching. the war can Is war lost. show the that prolong Germany joint not merely law enforcement agencies, but those whose aim implacably awhile at the price of unheard of sacrifices and deprivations. for is character building. And, as always, the problem is accenThe continuation of a hopeless war, however, would be tantamount tuated in heavily populated slum districts. to the nations doom." In an agonized outburst of lingering affection for a betrayed Folice clubs, barred cells, and terms in the reform school the prisoners cried: "But Germany must not die! To be fatherland do not remedy such situations. The emphasis should or not to be such is the question today facing our country." be on crime prevention rather than law enforcement. The work This plea is called a "manifesto" by isolation editors and comhere must begin in the home. Even the( school and the church mentators who ascribe its Inspiration to Stalin merely because the cannot always reach the root of the problem without parental soviet censor permitted it to pass. Further perusal of the prisoners' appeal might Indicate to an unprejudiced reader that the address was Complications arise because of frequent made public for propaganda purposes, emphasizing a .possibility that, in fighting for "unconditional surrender," the coalation armies will employment of the adults. our national independence and our state of existence with disY. M. C. there or A.'s their aren't equiv- "end Obviously enough memberment of the fatherland." alent, in crowded cities to provide an outlet for juvenile energy. Why should any of the allies object to such a piteous appeal American cities could use them every few blocks in many dis- being sent to the bewildered people of Germany? It proposes elimitricts, and membership should cost a lad no more than a dime nation of Hitler and all his nazi .gang leaders. It gives assurance a state Is not desired by the Germans. It demands a week. The social center, too, does a great work with youth that communist restoration of the rightful owners of land and other property "plundof both sexes. Rather than let such work lapse because of the ered by the rulers." It is just the sort of document any member of the united nations would like to see circulated in axis war, every effort should be made to enlarge and improve it. territory. But certain elements who have persistently tried to discount Russian sincerity in spite of the losses the people have susGreat ideas come when the world needs them; they sur- tained and the magniflcient fight they have made for results to which round the world's ignorance and press for admission. Austin our boys have dedicated their lives, are still libeling our hardest fighting allies at the obvious Instigation of the fuehrer. Phelps. It might be interesting to view the situation without racial preju dice or partisan bitterness, for it must be known by this time that there are Americans wh.o. while native-bor- n and prosperous under NO ONE KNOWS successive constitutional administration of our government, are With the uncertain radio reception in these rural districts stepped in a hatred that Hitler might envy. place it may be assumed that Russians have suffered particularly in the summer season and during electrical storms, too In the first at the hands of ruthless invaders to consider as sincere severely it is hard to keep fully informed on the rapidly changing world In the second place Stalin has any proffer of peace from Germany. events. The retirement of Mussolini from the ;txis orbit, the learned from bitter experience how much faith can be placed in a seething unrest throughout Hitler's European fortress and even treaty with the Germans. In the third place a most implacable and in Germany itself, the ever increasing strength and persistence uncompromlzing animosity is that which the Cossacks have and express for all Germans. In the fourth place Hitler would rather make of allies bombing of war objectives in Germany, Italy and axis a separate peace with the United States than with the Soviet Union he knows that the Russians are inexorable, while he has reason to occupied countries, peace feelers and peace rumors, the desperbelieve that sob sisters and sentimental spellbinders In this country ate fighting on the Russian front, with the Soviets slowly nosare waiting to weep over the sad fate of defeated Germans until aning the Germans out of their "impregnable" key positions on other frenzied fakir rises to assert false claims to mastery over the Russian soil, and the developments on the home front, includ- rest of mankind. Aided by an ever present clique in congress, simto that which threw away the fruits of victory 23 years ago. the ing axis propaganda and axis supporters in this country, are ilar mourners might restore to the nazls their status quo ante bellum. only a few of the highlights from the world kaleidoscope. Few There are isolation commentators and publishers In this repubif any can predict what the immediate future holds. Some are lic who are just as adept at driving wedges between factions as Hitler predicting the early collapse of Germany and the close of the has been withIn allies malcontents who alternate blows with the nal leader "dividing to conquer." Evryone wants peace, but war in Europe. Senator Murdock expressed the opinion that not the kind that politicians distort and delete until it t might be over in as little as six weeks. Yet Manpower Mc-Nu- is merely an lnterunv between wars. Nor should the admonitions of Hoff-hause- r, al America BONDS, mean (0?l)AR America and the the future future ! of of your backed bonds are the These United by baby! States government, the best security in the world ! They can mean a better life, a finer education for your child and freedom worries for you. Make this from post-wa- r best of all investments regularly for your family for Victory! Full information will be cheerfully furnished by this bank ; local headquarters for Government Securities. BEAVER CITY BRANCH OF MILFORD STATE BANK MKMBER CEUKIUL DEPOSIT 1SSUBANCE CORPORATION More Milk Needed to Reach 1943 Goal 1943 15? 1942 notcan ht nazi-fasci- self-seeke- has announced the induction of fathers into the armed forces commencing October first, to meet the needed military quota. Since nobody seems to know what the future holds, perhaps late news flashes are not all important. We can each make our own guess, and then bide our time and await definite Jeremiah be forgotten "Trust ye not In lying words: They will deceive every one his neighbor and will not fepeak the truth. They have taught their tongues to lie and weary themselves to commit iniquity. They cry peace, peace, when there Is no peace." m em st tt n nrniTrii TniffiiiWi mhi sss In the flrt half of 1943 milk production totaled about the tame ai firet half of 1942. To meet the 1943 goal of 122 billion Ibt. of milk, in the last half of the year mutt be increased by 3 billion WITH Conditions in southern I'tah affecting ranges, farms and gardens are much more favorable than they were two or three weeks ago, and a number of communities which were hard pressed to obtain even sufficient water for culinary purposes, are now in much better shape, thanks to the fine rains we have been getting. The outlook now for fall and w inter ranges has improved, farm yields will be considerably increased over the previous estimates, and the culinary water supply has been ma terially increased for most communities. Which goes to show the truth of the proverb, "The darkest hour is always just before the dawn.' The changing glow and full effulgence of God's ideas, im ages, mark the periods of progress. Mary Baker Eddy. We waste our best years in distilling the sweetest flowers of life into jotions which, after all, do not immortalize, but only n lbs. dairy farmers following the wartime milk production program sponsored by the War Food .lummisirauon ana me uairy in dustry Committee, authorities be lieve that the 1943 goal can be attained. nr.VlntAvv More-Milk-- f reason why . mi . billion pounds are . i vcucu.J point program Includes the following suggestions for producing more milk: 1. Provide abundant pastures. 2. Provide plenty of good hay. S. Provide abundant silage. 4. Condition cows for vlth eight weeks' rest. freshening 5. Feed good roughage liberally. 6. Feed balanced rations using t rotein concentrates wisely. 7. Feed to avoid summer 8 Raise calves with less slump milk-s- end more milk to market. "Our nation's milk Is a of our own American foodmainstay and the products made from supply It are forces . nd allied t0 our fight,n nations," says W T Vardin of St. Louis, chairman of he Dairy industry Committee. The War Food Administration In message to the dairy farmers of merlca, says: ''Dairy farmers have sponded magnificently to the 122 me a . developments. The doctrine that rectifies the conscience, purifies the heart, and produces love to Godiand man. is necessarily true, w hether men can comprehend all its depths and relations or not. J. 13. Walker. the demand tor Increased milk production, but the world needs still more milk all the milk, In fact, that American dairymen can produce. "It Is extremely urgent that everything possible be done to lessen the. nation-wid- e decline la milk flow that always followi when pastures begin to dry up Much of the summer slump In milk production Is the result of failure to recognize tbt inadequacy of summer pasture! and to provide supplementary feeds. "An abundant supply of good bur and silage will be of extreme far portance in maintaining milk production at a high level this summer and also through the comlnj winter." Milk production in 1942 reached a record total of 119 billion pounds but requirements for the military forces and lend-leaswith the necessity of Insuring healthy diet for civilians makes the higher 1J goal a wartime necessity. There are nearly 27 million cows on U. S. farms more than ever be fore. Authorities aav efficient pro duction methods will enable the cows to produce the milk needed d e Labor Supervisor Calls Canners, Bean Pickers Caribbean Conspiracy states Mr. Carpenter, flean picEkers are needed In Cache, Box lder and Weber counties, while i iuu Women to i county . Biiii naa sum Ha?' raiin..rlfB as yet unnarvesitu. erries an.l children to pick bean the Ditchers needed in several hi)? need on the fann ,.,,,,. fronf tins week, according to (;. Alvhi counties an are general 'arm Carpenter, state supervisor of em- hands and workers to weed cropi Mr. Carpenter reports that tnO ergency farm labor. of the Ctah apricots, sweet sod Women who can spare the sour cherries, and berries bav time to assist in prepara- been harvested with a limits tion of food in canneries are urged amount wasted. Right now tM to contact tl,,.,,. ,(,a oJ.(i( fruit season in slackening tot 1 which has charge of pla(.,,1K u short period until peaches, PPle' bor for food processing plants and tomatoes are ripe. w,-- 1 M by BRENDA CONRAD nee-essar- A romantic and exciting story of Nazi and of a young New York newspaper e, y woman who, almost lingle-hande- was d, finally able to scotch a clever Nazi agent and defeat his deep-laiplot d to cripple tlie island water supply and bring about an uprising of Fifth Columnists. intoxicate. mm OK URAND Events are only the shells of ideas; and often it is the fluent thought of ages that is crystalized in a moment by the stroke of a pen or the point of a bayonet. E. 11. Chapin. StrUlly Kentucky Straight Bourbon WhUke, IN THIS PAPER VUKKiiFVL AS iTS NAM N.iion.1 Di.tilUr. Pro(lut c N JHaV,7 |