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Show THE LEADER -- THE READER'S DATE BOOK U.S. Dairy Industry Stresses WASHING TON Nutrition During 'Dairy Month' What can every grown-u- p individual do to help this country progress into a nation of increasingly greater physical strength? The dairy industry of the 48 states suggests that one good means of building the national defense effort is through sound nutrition. The suggestion one on which there can only be universal agreement will soon be put into an action program spearheaded by the dairy industry with the full cooperation of many and varied industries. For the 15th straight year, the dairy industry is sponsoring a June Dairy Month campaign which will bring out in bold letters the facts g on the qualities of milk and milk products which nutritionists and scientists repeatedly emphasize. MAIN The role of the dairy industry in the national economy will be drama FEATURE tized. The 1951 June Dairy Month campaign has been built around the slogan, "For a Stronger Nation Essential Dairy Foods". The poster (below) shows a radiantly healthy boy and girl and such foods as milk, cheese, butter and ice cream which made them that way. Printed in six colors and 19" by 25 in size, this poster will be s seen by millions of from coast to coast. It will decorate Main Street grocery stores, restaurants, hotels, drug stores, department stores, and many other cooperating industries and groups during the month of June. health-generatin- smsn home-towner- Stronger nanon essentfef In cooperation with Dairy Month, June is the month of the Ice Cream Festival, which stresses the importance of this industry. On every Main Street in America ice cream is big business and is advertised as such by every dealer, from the n corner drug store to the milk bar. For instance, ice cream production in the United States in March was estimated at 41.6 millions gallons, according to the bureau of agricultural economics. This was 18 per cent more than in February and 8 per cent more than in March of the preyious year. By June production will nearly double and will remain high until August and September. Governors in many dairy states have proclaimed June as Dairy Month. So have mayors in many small towns and cities. In many states the dairy industry has organized from its biggest milk markets right down to the home town and the farms for this effort to let the world know of the nutritional value of dairy foods and economic significance of dairying. Millions of dollars of advertising will be sold during June Dairy Month by daily and weekly newspapers to dairy organizations, farm bureaus, and allied industries from cheese to ice cream, to spread the story of milk to the public. The importance of Dairy Month to other industries having a direct influence on the home town economy can not be stressed too greatly. Whether your home town is in a dairy state or not, a large part of the farmers' Income is from milk and cream in nearly every section of the nation. super-moder- This does not include the millions of dollars that change hands each year from the sale of butter to a few choice customers by many farm wives. And it does not include the dairyman who is in business to sell the home town its daily requirements of milk and cream. These farmers and their wives, these dairymen, spend their money in the home towns for the essentials to conduct their businesses. They spend it with the hardware store and feed store, the grocery and department store, the shoe and furniture store. That is why many of these businesses in the home towns of the nation are assisting in every way they can to pass on the story Ice Debatt Arms Boycott lications. yt'- The importance of a healthy and vigorous dairy industry in the area surrounding your home town is recognized by economists on every level. That's why local civio clubs and Junior Chambers of Commerce in many communities lend their full cooperation in observing Dairy Month they're interested g in the of their home - '1 JU I .'.Turn well-bein- towns. But the popularity of June Dairy Month is rooted deeply in the recognized fact regarding the healthful' ness of milk and other dairy foods. Dairy foods, it is reported, supply s of all the calcium, aph of all the proximately proteins, nearly half of the ribothree-fourth- one-fourt- flavin, and over 18 per cent of the vitamin A consumed in the diet. Calcium strengthens bones and teeth, proteins aid growth and maintain muscle tissues, riboflavin promotes better health as well as growth, and vitamin A protects health and increases the vitality of tissues. In addition, 17 per cent of the food energy of the American diet is furnished by dairy foods. Is it any wonder, then, that June Dairy Month enlists such widespread sup port? WHEAT FOB INDIA . . . Students from two St. Paul denominational colleges dramatize support for pending federal bill for aid to India by loading a truck for the "Wheat for India" caravan bound for Washington, D.C. The caravan included several autos of students from Macalester College, a Presbyterian-related school, and Augsburg College, a Lutheran institution. In Washington, the truckload of wheat was delivered to the India embassy. Students who coold not go to Washington were urged to bombard their congressmen with mail advocating immediate relief for India's starving. Ice Cream Industry Is One Hundred Years Old The ice cream industry is observ ing its 100th anniversary this year. It was in 1851 that Jacob Fussell opened the world's first ice cream plant in Baltimore, Maryland. This year more than 14,000 ice cream manufacturers across the nation will pay homage to Fussell and celebrate the expansion of the ice cream industry into its present bil volume. Evisioned originally as a solution to a local dairy problem, the industry in one hundred years of growth and progress has become one of the vital factors in the nation's dairy econo my. Although the industry is Just one hundred years old. Ice eream itself is an ancient food. But until Fussell put commercial manufacture on a wholesale basis, the cost and labor involved in making ice cream had limited its market to the very wealthy. In 1851 Fussell was a dealer in country produce in Baltimore. To ensure an adequate supply to his customers, he had made an agree ment with local farmers to take their full milk and cream output. But in the spring of that year he found that he was being supplied with more milk and cream than he could sell. Simply as a means of disposing of this surplus Fussell decided to convert it into ice cream, but his product met with such favor that he soon opened a plant exclusively for the manufacture of ice cream. Fussell then opened a second plant in Washington, a third in Boston and a fourth in New York. The New York plant was in partnership with James Madison Horton. It is though this plant that one of the present-damanufacturers traces its history through the full one hundred years of the ice cream industry. Fus-- . sell's New York operations were acquired intact by Horton. In 1927 Horton Ice Cream company became a part of the Borden Company. It is on this basis that Borden's claims a direct lineage from the founder of the Industry. Probably Ice cream plays its most important economic role as a stabilizer of the nation's dairy industry; ice cream today solves exactly the same problem it did in the time of Mr. Fussell. In winter, when cows produce the least milk, enough dairy farms must be maintained to supply the nation's fluid milk demands. But with the lush pasture season of spring and early summer, milk production shoots far above the yearly average, and farmers are left with a surplus of fluid milk that can not be absorbed through the usual channels. It is at this point that the ice cream industry steps in. The surplus milk is bought by the industry, condensed and stored for use in ice cream the year 'round. y ' " e with a growing Mac-Arth- J ,i aMMmwm-i.iiiiiimi.iiwiiiiiiii.- steam-powere- d m m iii 7ii mmm 'ii m OET A BEAUTIFUL table witb these doilies! Pineapple design is used in a big splashy pattern for oval and round matched 6et. Easy to crochet this lunch set and you'll love to use it! Pattern 7398; crochet directions. ClrcU Sewing P. O. Bex P. O. Box 8740, Nttdltcraft Dtpt, Chieat Enclose Pattera IU. SO, Old Cheltea New York 11, N. Y. ISIS. r SIUa, cents for pattern. 30 ........... No. Mama (Please Print) Street Address or P.O. feox No." City State CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT MISCELLANEOUS Cash fer STAMPS, COINS ajHl Ohl Mall Eanlepes. Check ikes eld truks aa4 exes, wrts ZIM STAMP A COIN CO. See East 2nd Seetk, 8sM Lake Ci7, Utah1 POULTRY, CHICKS A EQUIP. DAT-OL- Jena Pheae OMS-J- GOSLINGS W. Palter Aaaerieaa rerk, Utah PERSONAL f SS.M and a fer ISS Frtailtti-Llack Penny 1S7T SS. fer Utt-S- i Indiaa f Head Penay er I Uaceln Bead Penny. Alse wanted eld U. 8. Ceinn Cold Celns Old Letter BaTefapet nrier u im. Write EARL US Senta State gu. Salt Lake CMy, TJtak PERSONAL HILLSIDE MANOR an excellent and can for older people. Hit Beat 18ta outk. Salt lake City, Utah. Send foci free booklet. MISCELLANEOUS ur 0. iiia Ben-Gurl- Cask fer STAMPS, COINS and Old Mail Check those old trank and Envelopes. hexes, wrte ZIM STAMP COIN CO. S44 Eaet 2nd Seath. Salt Lake City, TJtak eNSpS,WeaoSVhiaelNnWANTED TO BUY WANTED Scrcp Iron, Steel and Cast Alao Surplus Items MONSEY IRON & METAL CO. 7 BO g. 3rd Whi Salt Lake City, Utah Child Farm Workers It Is Illegal to employ children under 18 years of age In agriculture during school hours. This does not apply to the children in the farmer's family. ft help your YOU can country-Ha- ve a career for lihl Ben-Gurio- LEARN NURSING of Nunet at yapr local hospital about professional Schools of Nursing for which yea can qualify. Ask Mm Director Merry-Go-Rou- Robert Mack, a senate elevator operator, literally stepped into Senator Kefauver's shoes the other The Tennessee crimebuster day. worked so late that he had to dress for dinner in his office, bolted out the door wearing dinner dress, but brown shoes. In the elevator he noticed his mistake, traded shoes with Mack, who had on black shoes, and got to dinner on time. Hirsch-man- n . , . Congratulations to Ira and his radio station WABF y in New York for winning the award for good music. If Wonderful the Way Chewing-Gu- laxative m Acts Chiefly to REMOVE WASTE --NOT COOD FOOD Pea-bod- . , x r". -- jt a 1 Chinese Give Up con- sumer demand, mechanical and technical advances have figured prominently in the expansion of the industry. With the introduction of ice cream equip ment by Horton in the 1870's, ma' production was made available. Hull. Pussyfoot No. 3 came when Mussolini invaded helpless Ethiopia. This was one of the crudest cases of aggression the modern world has seen, and the tottering League of Nations conscientiously tried to act. But although an economic DESTROYERS TO ITALY . . . Italian officers and crew stand at attention during ceremonies at the blockade was voted for the first Brooklyn navy yard as two destroyers the U.S.S. Nicholson and the U.S.S. Woodward are turned over time in history, two things made to the Italian navy. Reviewing the officers and crew members are (left to right) Lt. Alfonso Salvatore it unsuccessful David D. Hawkins, director of trainand Lt. Commander Vittorio Savarese of the Italian navy and Capt. One was the exclusion of oft. ing, third naval district. The two destroyers which were received by the Italian navy are shown in the The big American and British background. They will enable Italy to hold her own in the current tense world situation. oil companies pulled backstage wires, managed to scare British and American diplomats Into permitting the continued shipments of oil to Mussolini. Without oil, his fleet would have been paralysed and his tracks could not have moved. But we pussyfooted. Pussyfoot No. 4 is taking place right now in regard to Red China, an obvious, wanton aggressor in Korea. While the British are the worst pussyfooters, we in the U.S.A., including General himself, have pulled our punches. MacArthur, for instance, has permitted a steady driblet of strategic materials to flow into Red China from Japan. From July to October, in 1950, he permitted $8,108,000 metals, machinery and textiles to leave Japan for China. From Octo' ber to January, Jap exports to the Communists Increased to $11,100,-00Since MacArthur controlled all Jap exports, this could have been stopped. However, the flow of British goods entering China through Hong Kong is the most shocking scandal of the entire Korean war. While American lives E '""''iimimmii., isrwinil ft f ,lVKn 1 are being snuffed out, British millionaires are being made ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER . . . Israeli's prime minister, David SWANSON CLOWNS . . . Gloria overnight. Swanson dons Charlie Chaplin at(left) greets friends upon arrival at Washington's national airYet the state department has takport recently to participate '.a celebrations of Israel's third independtire at New York affair In which ence day. scores of theater greats acted in en no tough steps, such as a threat Former secretary of the treasury, Henry Morgenthau scenes from great plays and to cut off U.S. economic aid to n is (right) was on hand to greet the arriving statesman. considered by the citizens of Israel as the "father" of their country shows. The spectacle was designed Britain, as a means of stopping this trade. and the man who did most for its freedom. to encourage a national theater. and was an overnight sensation. The resulting demand for ice cream encouraged the opening of hundreds of new ice cream plants across the country. Side-by-sid- IMPORTANT diplomatic debate of the Korean war has been going on backstage at the United Nations namely, an arms boycott of Red China. So far our U.N. allies haven't got around to voting to ban arms, let alone an economic embargo. However, it remains a fact that this is one of the most important steps to be taken against any aggressor. Furthermore there is a long history of diplomatic pussyfooting regarding this by our supposedly good friends pussyfooting that eventually has landed them in war. Here is some case history: Pussyfoot No. 1 was when the British undercut us in 1931 when Japan first invaded Manchuria. Issues almost identical to the Korean aggression were involved in Manchuria, and the late Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson saw them clearly. He saw that Japan was sowing the first wild oats of aggression. Just as Russia is today, and that if she got away with one aggressive bite there would be more. But Stimson never could get the British, who had more at stake than we, to cooperate. When U.S. Ambassador Cameron Forbes would deliver a note of protest, the British ambassador did likewise then dropped round to the Japanese foreign office an hour or two later to explain that Britain's note was merely to please the Americans and not to be taken seriously. Pussyfoot No. 2 was when President Roosevelt tried to organize an economic blockade of Japan in 1936 in order to stop further aggression against China. By this time the British realized their 1931 mistake and went along with us. But Roosevelt could not get the support of other European powers. Hitler and Mussolini were too strong by that time, and he also faced the private opposition of Cordell jyjOST of Dairy Month through local pub- Cream Cone Expanded Industry Through its history two major forces have qombined to effect the expansion of the ice cream industry. One of these forces has been consumer demand created by ice cream spcialties. The ice cream soda, introduced in Philadelphia in 1874, is one of the earliest examples of a successful ice cream specialty. Even more dramatic was the advent of the ice cream cone. The cone made its first appearance at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904 Pineapple Design THE ... GUIDED MISSILE CLASS A reserve training assembly enables army OSC members of the 1325th AAA group and 1394th guided missile battalion to examine and assemble an air forces missile which the units have received in New York for study. Examining the missile, left to right, are Col. Vincent A. Lane, Lt. William Latino, Arthur R. Musselman, Lt. Col. James A. Hart and Col. James Nesmlth. Missiles play a large part In modern war. LIFESAVER . . . Scientists say a substance developed by Germans during war may save lives during atomic blast. Dr. Charles Dutchess holds bottle of which Is used In the treatment of shocks anj burns. PVP-Macros- e, ship-to-sho- rr, rrt It didn't get into the press communiques, but a small naval task Chinese thrust force turned back down the Korean east coast recently. The Chinese Communists sent two units to prod for a weak spot in the South Korean line that is defending the east coast. However, two American cruisen and four destroyers hurled broadsides all day Into the attacking Chinese. After 1,000 rounds of devastating nese gave up. have Barn's the secret millions of folks mod-am the CUeoorered about --rum as Tea. bare laxatlr. chewing action Is ao wonder why tally different I Doctors ay that many other laxattrea start their "flushing" action too soon . . . where food Is twins rttht la the stomach digested. Large dosea of such laxatives flush away nourishing upset digestion, food you need for health and energy. You feel weak, worn out. taken as recBut gentle ommended, work chiefly In the lower bowel where lt removes only waste. no good food I You avoid that typical weak, feeling. Use tired, worn-oand (eel your "peppy." energetlo aelfl Oe No Increase la price) still sat. w or oniy fire, the Chi- nxn-a-scn- rr. rxm-a-ac- ut rrl T WNU is. FGCN-A-fAIN- W T 22-- 41 |