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Show 2, 1944 ursday, November BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, TREMONTON, UTAH Smaller Percentage Of Secretary of Agriculture, Claude Food d R Wickard, points out d Shipments of food Yet, even after the great adirom the United States to our al- vance of the past ten years, only lies in the first nine months of the current year represented a gener- 43 out of 100 farm homes have ally smaller part of our national electricity compared with 95 per supply than in 1943, the Foreign cent out of 100 in cities, Wickard Economics Adrmnistration reports. reveals in calling attention to RurMore than 90 per cent of the food al Electrification Adrninist ration consumed by our troops in the for wide extension of its plans South and Southwest Pacific is program on a complete area covsupplied by Australia and New erage basis as soon as materials Zealand as a reverse In and manpower are again available, terms of volume, e contin- and to President Roosevelt's recent ued to supply about 10 per cent that Congress make it posof the British requirements and to request sible for further great extension of play an important part in supple- rural electrification. Post-wa- r obmenting the rations of the Soviet jectives of the REA are: (1) Elecarmy. tric service to all rural people; (2) Full use of electricity on the farmElectricity More Important to (3) Its full use for rural stead; Farmers Than City Couins community welfare, and (4) Its Electricity is needed even more use in developing local rural inon the farm than in the city home dustries. These objectives have since it serves not only to make been developed into a five-yehomes brighter and housework electrification program that easier, but also aids in dozens of would create a $5,546,283,000 outfarm production tasks, the U. S. let for goods and services and pro ---- LeJid-Leae- FARM WAR NEWS lend-lease- Administrations Znce of Pi W:7of the ceiling price on bogs between 240 and 270 lbs. r2n '1m75 Chicago basis, from $14 results from and situation grain sxt- - L Kl hundredweight, and oils in the reduction The hogs in this weight to $14. Chicago Zm was due to thr at the time shortage of corn to check necessary made it numberS Urge feed heavier weights. lss favorable fat Te ml lend-leas- Siay, S Seed Vegetabl Supplies Ample 1945 goals WFA's preliminary seeds up the point vegetable Zt that the United States has Imrle supplies of vegetable seeds for all purposes, including exports ud a substantial carryover. High vtelds from an increased acreage 1943 have and the carryover from such situaUon made the supply vegethe for goals that preliminary of table seeds range from4 a high cent. of a low to per cent 71 ar vide electric services to 3,655,000 pers Friday. rural homes. The Relief Society conference was held Sunday evening. Mr3 Hansen, of the Stake Board, waa in attendance. A very good program was given, but owing to the rainy weather, there was not many in Dr. and Mrs. Wilford Mason, of attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Hess and Tiemonton, and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Hess of Fielding, weie Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohlhepp. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Hess and children, of Ogden, were Sunday and Monday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohlhepp. Mr. and Mrs. Orvil Pilcher, of Ogden, were Monday guests of Mrs. Fred Kohlhepp. Kid Brockman was a Tuesday guest of Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Mason. Mrs. Keith Lamb and Mrs. Don Ii. Lamb were Ogden visitors on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohlhepp were Logan visitors Thursday. Mrs. Hannah Kohlhepp and Mrs. Jesse Lamb were Tremonton shop- - PLYMOUTH children, of Malad, Idaho, were visiting relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Udy and children, of Ogden, are visiting relatives here. Mrs. Archie Hess, of Shelby, Idaho, is here visiting relatives. Primitive Sport Wrestling is the most universal and primitive of all sports. EVERY WEDNESDAY MIGHT KELSON TREM0NT0N FEED MILL per Ellfift i ROBERT ARMBRUSTER'S ORCHESTRA Production Guides XWA On Winter Vegetables W&le there are no WFA STEAM ROLLING goals production, winter vegetable for e. lend-leas- ceil-TTvri- ce Page Seve FEED MIXING CUSTOM GRINDING to for fresh market consumption than the !944 avreage. Acreage reductions of 10 Pr oen in snap beans- - let" 15 tuce, celery and winter peas; 20 per in cent peppers; green per cent in beets, and 30 per cent in cabbage, spinach and tarty spring onions are recommended to producers by the War Food Administfarmers are advised by WFA plant less of certain vegetables Will Buy Any Kind of Grain Phone 107 or Seed Wheat or Barley for Sale Station KSL at 3:30 p. m. Tremonton UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. 69-J- 3 Brought to you by ration. Hieher Milk Output predicted For 1945 c If returns to dairy farmers, dairy production payments. are held at about the same level as in 1944, rnilk production in 1945 may reach 119 billion pounds about one billion pounds above the indicated 1944 production and just short of the 119.240.000.000-poun- d record of 1942, the USDA's latest outlook analysis predicts. Present llwili! indications are that milk producers will experience fewer problems in meeting feed requirements than in 1944, and that compared with the ' S, average, dairy-fee-d price relationships in 1945 may be more favorable than other important livestock-feeprice relationships with the possible exception of the ratio. v:: e long-tim- .:.y:. vyjo:; w.: mm d hog-co- rn '"SW1"WWf.,,,, Farmers a Program Even full demand for our farm Wickard Says Need W"B products, both er countries at home and in othcould not in itself all of the difficulties that farmers are going to encounter, solve especially within the next few years, Secretary of Agriculture, Claude R. Wickard cautions. "They are going to need strong, broad, flexible national farm program," . a says. "You will remember the strains that agriculture suffered in the long period he shocks and readjustment after the last war. the war we are in now is a vastly greater one." of Well, 2 WFA Office I Snrplus The War Food Admin istation has established an office of Surplus Property and Reconversion to supervise and coordinate surplus property disposal, reconversion and contract settlement The office is headed by David Meeker, who has been chief of the Farm Machinery and Supplies branch of WFA's office of Materials and Facilities. Higher Yields Are Probable Some crop statisticians believe ttat with average weather, U. S. crop yields the after the war may per cent above av-jra- ge as much aa 20 1923-3- 2 of Jtf ultural Bureau of Agric- Economics, rfe J",consem.Uon 1 practices, hybrid lime and, fertilizer, winter crops and improved varieties " maJT Eas? J t0r factors to tt5 Problem Eased wler Tractors has relaxed an order which JB Wred manufacturers to eet Pr cent of ! I an track-lay- - armif01, repair parts for the "Jed services. still required to .wUfactUTC" K2i 011 critic! ot critic it Palr part services "Wtlcar. order. Whcn eXCwd 0, Peru hav Prts 18 to the considered unfilll purchase S lnventories. should bccom more dvllian tmder the J? JT WwiiSUcms- u rtze 1 v ... pp 2) Pfflffl IJ y vjj r ":: a: ry . ffMT1'f '1'' jntfrr 'lifl: ri Mil i Himifi in t fr ItSSiil " r nr f IT 11 "ITi" tr n" -- I period, H. R. Tolley, USDA'g points out Average yields have increased as result of improved soil, seed and Practices used by farmers with greatly expanded use T Ji- Establishes Non-Men- - nstTic' formerly limited the dwUcr Inventories of been removed. You don't do It with hay, brother! It costs 86,000 good hard American dollars to lay a smoke screen on a 20-mi- beacl-- ! le ead for a single hour. Worth it? What would you think if you knew your life depended on reaching that beach without being spotted by the enemy? chance to live and win. ..money no object. You wouldn't have It otherwise, n War Bonds are your safest, and smartest, investment. In ten years, they'll bring you back four dollars for every three you put in. And that money will mean purchasing power... for you. It'll mean jobs and a healthier economy in America. would you? Then remember you've got to do your part by buying and holding War Bonds. Your dollars are needed to help lay the smoke screen ... provide the "softening up" bombardment... flatten the deadly That's what your War Bond money So buy more Bonds than you've been buying. Buy more than you think you can afford. does right now. And in the future it will do still more They help toward a quicker Victory ...and a happier peacetime for you. pill-boxe- in this You'd be miiiy glad that war everything is being done to give the American soldier the best possible ...both for you and for your Country. s. n mm m& w mm 111 |