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Show ClUBS HELP IN 4-- H tea; ers; LATEST IDEAS IN MILK RAISING ELUCIDATED PRODUCTION 7- - Red Cross Field Men Tackle Yanks' Problems Overseas CLOTHING LINE The Untied States Maritief C- - aft cap. ) cat every other civilian in drank an average of 246 tarts of milk last year ror a Lional total of roundly 362 which illion uuarts. This volume, ! .,,1,1 fill a row of quart bottles You a nd lines false. I'lair, jectsf an; I ,, ami , ropa. se to "over thence to Los Angeles, billion quarts more milk t h !n a tan; I riau- - YorK L."y V nation's e population lirink during an average year in jne i):i.Vl!t39 period. immeasurably to J contributing lioost in milk production that this increased consumption !i,e were approximately rural boys and girls partici-Ltin- g i" dairy animal attf their I'hicii uth" 85-ni- O pro-Jcct- s. outstanding achieve- the national dairy :! S of the youthful !ients and maids in 41 states Jfceived medals of honor from the kraft Cheese Company for having fop records in their counties; 171 Linpi'ising blue award groups in ?S states were rewarded with $25 E'ar Bunds; ten sectional representatives were given trips to the Club Congress in ..National Chicago, and five recipients of tational honors each received a J For tueir 4-- H in scholorshlp. college 55200 helping to increase milk proalso made a duction, the By idirect contribution to the welfare jof our armed forces, every man jjin which needs at least 200 quarts milk annually. if CIRCULAR DESCRIBES TREES AVAILABLE FOR PLANTING of forest trees for planting are now available Price lists farm I in Utah as 1'rotessor J. Whitney forestor of the Utah Extension service, released lists this month for the use of farmers ! Floyd, throughout the state. conditions have been setup by the school of Forestry at Utah state Agricultural College which smust be agreed to by purchasers iof planting stock. These are the Six 'conditions: (1) All college trees secured from the must be planted on farm Latest ideas and improvements in the field of clothing and textiles will become part of the information given out through the Utah extension service to state homemakers. following the return last week of .Mrs. Lois I'. Smith extension clothing specialist, after attending an extensive training school for three weeks at Oregon State college, Corvallis. Back on the Utah State Agricultural college campus. Mrs. Smith explained the new training methods described at Oregon State by Proffessor Gertrude Strickland, outstanding clothing specialist at the Oregon school, who also emphasized in the three-wee- k training the theories and practices of clothing management. While there the specialist also visited the Oregon extension service staff, and viewed the clothing program which is beine di rected by Miss Lucy It. Lane, The special advanced work included classes in fabric identification in which Mrs. Smith covered such features of fabrics as weave, fibers, and use as home textiles and clothing. An advanced clothing course brought work on draping on live models, which produces a better fit, also, pro duction of a more distinctive and stylish garment. Another course featured home tailoring, and brought in work on women's coats and suits. In clothing construction, basic patterns for individuals with physical irregularities. Personal selection rather than wholesale type of selection was studied in a ctass on clothing selection. land in Utah for woodlot, windbreak or shelterhelt purposes; (2) all trees must be protected from fire, grazing, trespass, and other injurious agencies in so far as reasonably possible, even if this necessitates fencing; (3) all trees must be cultivated and irrigated for the first four years after planti ing; (4) when requested, the operator must furnish a report to the Extension Forestor showing the condition of all trees received and planted by him; (5) all plantations must be held open to inspection by representatives of the United States Department of Agriculture and of the Utah State Agricultural College at all times; co-- Jungle Barbershop vm B3 V A "UK. to 11 ' rv-- 4 r M V ss&l i POST OF VALOR MARINES AT "POINT" POSITION WALK IN ADVANCE OF THEIR .PATROU...THEIR DUTY IS TO GIVE WARNING OF THE PRESENCE OF AN ENEMY AND TO FIRE CN ALL HOSTILE ELEMENTS WITHIN EFFECTIVE RANGETHESE HEROIC FATALISTS OFTEN SACRIFICE THEIR LIVES DETECTING SNIPERS AND JAP JUNGLE TRAPS. A.J.JENSENsmc aviator7recejved the LT. navy One ot the very important functions of the American Red Cross Is the CROSS FOR DESTROYING 24 JAP PLANES IN IO SECONDS direct communication it affords between the fighting man and his people ...HE CONDUCTED A ONE MAN STRAFING RAID ON THE back home. Here Red Cross Field Director John L. Barnes (left), of White Plains, N. Y., gives a message to Sgt. William J. McDonald, Jr., ENEMY AIR FIELD ...WRECKING THE PLANES ON THE GROUNO. of Mamaroneck, N. Y. Picture was made in Sicily outside a straw Italian hutch with the rear headquarters of the 1st Division near Mt. Etna. On Masera Island, up In the Per home town Immediately. It took Fiberglas is another suture sian Gulf, where there Is not a care of her, financed her operation FOUR-POIN- T made from iglass filamaterial, single tree standing and the wind and saw that she had adequate ments that are drawn to such blows across the Island ceaselessly. funds to provide for herself until the fineness that 204 filaments must Red Cross field men brought fishing allotment again came through. be combined to make a strand exWhen man books and to the Red Cross tackle, writing paper measuring 45,000 yards to the service men. Most welcome gift plained what had happened to the OUTLINED It has great tensile pound. from the Red Cross was clippers soldier's Commanding Officer, the is similar to silk and strength had for hair cutting the boys been latter promptly released the boy Four specific ways to strech the to the sense of touch. Sutures of from the guard house. From then without a barber for months. available feed supply in the poult- plastigut thread have been used In Persia, a Red Cross Field D- on the boy was all right His worflock have been listed by Pro- in 600 surgical cases in human irector was able to locate a soldier's ries were over, and the Army had ry fessor Byron Alder, poultryman of patients. a man. good gained fighting mother whom he hadn't seen tor Utah the extension service. All All over the world, In every the25 years. four pertain to good feeding and of war atre and battle Plan for 1944 victory garden active front In Africa, Red Cross field men good management practices. now. The first step is to pick your flew in Army planes, hitch-hikein go the American Red Cross field First of the methods pertains to location, a place that will have men helping soldiers with major supply trucks, bumped In jeeps over and minor troughs. Professor Alder at least five full hours of sunlight feeding bringpersonal problems, bombed routes, through convoy maintains that feed troughs which every day. A gentle slope, but not them as recreational items such ing storms and glaring blinding sand will feed clean, prevent too steep for good drainage, and comfort keep books, articles, magazines, sun to help men with personal POULTRY FEED PROGRAM d problems and emergency communications, and to deliver magazines and books, cigarettes and chocolate to isolated posts and bases. In Italy. Red Cross field men accompanied the troops in on the invasion barges. In India, a sergeant was sentenced to the guard bouse for disorderly conduct. His officer couldn't understand the boy's behaviour. He was a nice kid he'd never gone to pieces before. The officer asked the Red Cross Field Director to see him. The Red Cross man discovered a very worried boy. His wife had not been receiving his allotments, she wasn't well and needed an operation. She thought the soldier must have cancelled his allotments and a misunderstanding had arisen between them so that she was no longer writing him. The field man got in touch with the Red Cross chapter in the boy's athletic equipment and their contact with home. These men share the conditions and hazards under which the soldiers fight. They also shard their lives. They are on call day and night whenever they are needed. G.I.'s overseas have many problems. Often home seems very, very far away. With the Red Cross there at hand wherever he may be, the soldier knows be can always get in touch with home that he need never feel alone with problems he doesn't know how to solve himself. More than 3,000,000 service men passed through Red Cross field men's offices last year. On the mud clogged roads ot Italy, through the far jungles of New Guinea, on lonely desert posts. Red Cross field men take your place beside your boy. In order to continue this service, the Red Cross urgently needs contributions from the American people to its War Fund drive this month. $200,-000,0- waste, and make feed always dark sandy loam give ideal conavailable to the chickens, are the ditions. e type which will bring a improvement in poultry management. The second method Is stated by the poultryman as f o lo w s : "Never fill feeders more than U full, so birds cannot bill feed out of trough or wind cannot blow It out. Provide plenty of trouighs so that with this amount ot feed in LIKE to find out IF YOU'D each trough there will be an amyour speeiul aptitude Is ple supply available for the flock and put it to work to help win until the next feeding time. Plenty this war take tho opportunity of equipment reduces labor in care tho WAG offers jou of the flock. Join tho WAG and let Army A point which is not often emexports help you discover the phasized is the third one, keeping of work you can do best. on war rats and mice, typo up constant Let tho Army train you to do which not only eat considerable one of 2:19 vital jobs. Leurn a even waste more feed but and skill that will bo useful to you may be carriers of disease as well. long after tho war is over! (If Last of the group is the signifialready' have a skill the Arcant point of culling all flocks you can uso It too.) my regularly and frequently. When full details at your nearGet g feed is given to hens or diseased, scrubby young birds, est U. S. Army Recruiting Stait is largely wasted. For this tion (your local post office will give you the address). Or write reason, in view of the 194 4 production goals in both eggs and Tho Adjutant General, Room 4115 Munitions Building, Washpoultry, it is important to eliminate all birds from the flock which ington, I). C. are not actually producing or of value to the poultry raiser. Professor Alder states that every poultry raiser, whether his flock is only 15 or 20 chickens in the back yard or several thousand birds in. a commercial flock, should either market or use in the home all low or long-rang- Have you a hidden talent? 1 non-layin- Two Grand Top-OlT- s ,.. L - W t Vs. , V.' s! ' I , I r) s. " V -- U. S. Mnn VOV ., 'Wit-'' S- - birds. Veterinary surgery is doing its part in conserving critical materials for war uses. One is in the employment of suturing material other than catgut which is needed in all hospitals. Instead of catgut many veterinarians are using sutures of specially prepared cotton and of plastic materials. Cotton sutures were employed in human surgery as far back as 500 B.C. and this practice is being revived both in human and animal surgery, according to a report in a veterinary publication of national ' Corp Phoio T" hnugainville sitnation well in hand, B.iff. Gen, Field Harrfa, Bougainvdle, " "i nding general of Marine Corps aviat.on on barber is CoL cs time out for a haircut at his headquarters. His ( i) T. Bailey, his chief of staff. ' V' i ! TASTY dessert and a really pood cup of coffee make the perfect climax for any meal. And when that one, the right meal is a ration-scadessert makes it seem much more satisfying. Have enough coffee for a cup with the main course, as well as with the dessert, for the addition of coffee will help mightily toward making up for any shortcomings there may be. Of course, you will want that coffee to be the very best. One way to achieve this is to use and to make the full plenty of coffee calls for. amount your coffee-makRice Ring with Coffee Cream is an inexpensive and tasty dessert. It's the Coffee Cream that does the trick. And now that there is plenty of coffee available, you can use this delicious flavoring to add interest to many of your favorite desserts. This Rice Ring is not only inexpensive, it requires no ration points either. And A nt Wounded Leatherneck er V- - s- - Marine, wotmded when Jap riva ana ,;u,uprneck io a first aid ftation . isuma-u- attempts to niU "." le.trainrd time b"""1 in discovered the trap when he pointed out Jap pillboxes 'or the Marine to the Japs. and nests destroy the oy w and ( 6 ) no trees from the colloge may be resold as rooted stock or used for ornamental purposes. The new forestry circular listing prices and conditions of purchase describes three softwoods which are available in 1944. These are the Eastern Red Cedar, Pine, and Blue Spruce. All three are described as valuable for windbreaks and Bhelterbelta. Pon-dero- sa Personal Stationery what is more you can make thewhole thing in practically no time. The entire family is sure to like this new way of serving a rice dessert. Here is the recipe. Of course, it's tested. Crtom Rica Ring with Coff I eup milk W euj tuitmr 4 tublmpoom flour H truponn vanllts 1 cup ricf, boiled or tea poo n ia!t a teamed 1 cup cold Itrong cofl Uhlmpooni raisins WE ARE GLAD to be able to announce that orders for Personal Stationery can now be filled. have wanted stationery with this added personal touch, call at the Press and see what we can supply. Prices are reasonable. YOU who Beaver Press UVES- -c GWE THEIR t Halved almond! . Mix sugar, flour and salt in top of double boiler. Stir in coffee and when well blended, add milk. Stir over hot water until mixture is smooth and begins to thicken. Cover and let cook 5 minutes. Add vanilla. Arrange rice in ring around serving plate and fill center with coffee cream. Garnish rice with raisins which have been scalded in water and drained, and garnish cream with halved aN monds if desired. Serve hot Yield: 6 servings. Wo only ..r money . lenuj Let's all tkcu JJiVVllI In hardwoods, the following are available: Green Ash, Siberian Klin, Black Lorust, Honey Locust, Russian Olive, Siberian Pea Tree, Mark Walnut, ft olden Willow and Lombardy Poplar. Most of these will be found valuable for wood-lotwindbreaks, shelterbelts and for planting as single trees for timber production in elevations from 4,500 to 6,000 feet. s, - THE ATTAC- K- nt .in "WAR BONUS! OLD f SunmyBroqk BRAND KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY "tilEF.nFVL AS ITS XAM- BNational Distillers Products Corp., N. Y, 90.4 Proof m; mi V |