| OCR Text |
Show Washington News Letter W. K. Granger to reestablish- President Roosevelt personally surrender leading of ment Germany as a people delivered to the House and Senworld might accept the whom a message in ate, joint session, as decent neighbors. recent Crimean the regarding President Roosevelt told the attended by the Conference, President, Prime Minister Churc- joint session that an American hill and Marshal Stalin. proposal regarding voting in the which no President Roosevelt told Con- Security Council (upon at reached be could had agreement conference gress that the unaniCongressman Oaks) was two main purposes, namely, to Dumbarton by Russia and accepted mously posthe quickest bring about He Britain. expressed the Great to sible defeat of Germany and would find that foundaCongress opinion the further strengthen a fair sothe agreement accord voting tion for an international once which would make lasting peace. lution tothis big problem, refor is the ready agreement In addition there were the follease. lowing problems to be thrashed the In upon commenting out: Occupation and control of be to conference Nations United desthe complete Germany with presithe San in held Francisco, truction of her military power, differences concerning the Inter- dent stated: A conference of all national Organization the United Nations of the world Security devised at the Dumbarton Oaks will meet in San Francisco on 1945. There, we all Conference; general political and April 25, economic problems related to the hope, and confidently expect, to orliberated nations; special prob- execute a definite charter of lems regarding Yugoslavia and ganization under which the peace of the world will be preserved Poland. stressed that and the forces of aggression perHis message unanimous agreement was reach- manently outlawed. Insurance of repairs and imed by the represented nations on loans by the Federal provement he and each point emphasized that he believed there had been Housing Administration is curachieved a unity of thought at rently paying its own way. This is the result of five and a half the meeting. the experience of charging an between years conferences Daily insurance Great premium authorized by Chiefs of Staff of Russia, Britain and the United States Congress in 1939. This premium s of one resulted on a complete plan for amounts to final defeat of Germany, the per cent a year on the net amount of such loans. continued. President ArrangeAlthough there were no revments were developed for daily enues obtained from Title I opdirectinformation exchanges of in the first five years erations Eisenhowers General between ly of FHA insuring activities under of Soviet those Russia, armies, and our armies in Italy. Plans this title, total income during period from July were formulated for effectively the five-ye1939 through June 30, 1944, exdistributing material and transceeded estimated operating exportation to the strategic spots; penses, exclusive' of insurance surrender unconditional and was defined to mean not des- claims, for the entire ten years truction and enslavement of the of operation by more than $9,- from Revenue pre German people, but the complete 700.000. miums and fees, which made up most of the Title I income from July 1939 to June 30, 1944, amounted to approximately $15,- three-fourth- ar 922.000. Both currently and for almost a year, collections on previously defaulted loans have exceeded by a substantial margin claims paid to insured institutions. All these loans were made to individual borrowers through private financial institutions, with FHA insuring the individual institu-ton- s up to 20 per cent of their total loans during the first few years and later up to 10 The percentage of per cent. defaults on all outstanding Title I loans is at the lowest point at the present time, being 1.88 percent at the 1944 call report. Deliveries of food and other agricultural products for shipment to the allies under Lend-Leas- e 1945 during January totaled 597.6 million pounds compared with 391 million pounds in December 1944, and 695 million pounds in January a year ago. The 597.6 million pounds were as follows: United assigned ' ' Combines a fall dose of Blackleg Bacteria tb a full dose of tbe killed cultures of the causative organism of Malignant Edema 10 cm don with discounts for quantity. Duchesne Drug Store DUCHESNE, UTAH Saturday Specials MSQUICK ) LL Large Package WHEATIES Giant Package, MOTHERS 2 oi OIL for OATS Q(v With China, Package GRAPE NUT WHEAT MEAL Large Package LETTUCE Pound 9,, .'. n 1UL 1 o ORANGES Pound SALAD DRESSING I. G. A., Quart COFFEE 31. J. Ik, 2 Pounds WAX PAPER Cutter Box, KARO SYRUP 5 QOn ft 1 125-Fo- ot Roll , Pounds Dark r IOC i. HAMS, Smoked Whole or Half, Pound FLOUR, North Star 50 Pound Rag CHEESE SPREAD 2 Pounds Kraft SALTINE WAFERS 2 Pound Package 7 no vLyO Q 1 90L on OUC AND SAVE $$$$$ who homemakers have so much trouble preparing satisfactory meals without butter will find little comfort in a the current announcement by United States Department of Distracted : Farmers of 'Duchesne More Nurses Needed To Care For Men Wounded In Combat Improve Quality Of Their Market Milk The intensive nationwide drive for additional nurses for military service now being conducted has resulted also in an increased response by laywomen to the need of Red Cross Nurses Aides to serve in the hospitals, according to Verne Simmons, manager of the Pacific Area office of the Red Cross. dating from Citing records Simmons Mr. 1943, December, stated that the number of students enrolled during January, 1945, was higher than at any time during the past six months. Figures show that 1,328 students are taking Red Cross nurses aid training in the seven western states comprising the Pacific area, as compared to a September, 1944, low of 890. Simmons credits the response to an increased awareness on Can-nethe part of the public to its responsibility in releasing nurses for military service. The families and friends of our men overseas and in military hospitals in this country know how vital it is to the welfare of the wounded that there be a sufficiency of nurses to tend them, said Mr. Simmons. The manner in which laywomen are offering their services as Red Cross nurses aides to relieve overburdened hospitals' and are taking Red Cross Home Nursing courses to enable them to care for the sick in their homes, shows that they are more than willing to do their port in releasing nurses to the service. We are confident that all eligible, trained nurses will see their Klippel and Wilcken duty as clearly and respond as Good fully, said Mr. Simmons. Report Progress The Army alone needs 10,000 In Food Locker Sales nurses. additional Registered Gail Klippel and George Wil- nurses are urged to contact the cken report good progress in the local chapter of their American sale of lockers in their project. Red Cross to enroll for military They are also convinced that it service. pays to advertise, as they have received applications for lockers Work Gardens Early to in their plant from several persons in answer to the ads they Achieve Success have placed in the Record. Advise Specialists One application was sent by To get the most from early O. LaMar Nielsen who now is in Las Vegas, Nevada. It stated vegetable crops, gardners need that he was there for a short to be ready to spade as soon as time but would return to Bridge-lan- d the ground is workable, accordin April and wanted one of ing to victory garden advisers of the U. S. Department of Agthe lockers. riculture and the USAS ExtenIt pays to advertise. sion Service. Planted early enough, such DUCHESNE COUPLE PLIGHT as radishes, spring vegetables TROTH IN L.D.S. TEMPLE lettuce, beet greens and other Miss Dorothy Moore, daughter greens, onions and also peas, if of Mr. and Mrs. Marvel Moore, the garden is large enough will of Duchesne, became the bride of give profitable returns. However, Dean Larson, son of Mr. and if the planting is late so that Mrs. Elray Larson, of Talmage, warm weather arrives before in a double-rin- g ceremony at the they have much of a chance, they L. D. S. Temple in Salt Lake are hardly worth planting in City on February 9. The rites many garden areas. were performed No definite date can be given by Jesse W. Knight of the Temple Presi- for gardners to start working dency, a friend of the Moore the soil. Between the southern and northern family. parts of the The bride was lovely in a country, the ground may be sheath gown of white satin with ready to work anywhere between a baby-do- ll neckline embroid- February and May. Late March ered in seed pearls. Her finger- and early April will prove adtip veil was held in place by a visable for planting in Utah. coronet of orange blossoms made The tried and true method of of seed pearls. The gown was testing the soil is the "gardners accented by a corsage of pink squeeze: Take up a handful of rose buds. soil, squeeze it, then open the Mrs. Lapson is a graduate of fingers. If the soil has pasked Duchesne High School and Mr. and the imprint of the fingers Larson graduated from Altamont remain, itis too wet to work. High School. They are tempo- If it crumbles, the date for digrarily making their home in Salt ging has arrived. Lake City while Mr. Larson is employed at Garfield. IF YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO BUY OR SELL PUT IT IN SUBSCRIBE, DONT BORROW THE RECORD CLASSIFIEDS Cattle: Good to choice fed steers absen, quoted $15.00 to Medium to good steers $15.25. Common kinds $12.50 to $14.75. Stocker steers down to $9.00. with quality mostly $12.00 to Agriculture that butter manu- $13.00 with light choice yearfactured for 1944 reached the lings up to $13.50. Good to lowest point in more thaq 20 choice heifers absent, quoted at years. Butter made in factories $14.00 to $14.25. Best heigers last year amounted to only one sold Monday wrere dairy type x billion four hundred and eighty-si- carrying good flesh and soul at million pounds or about 11 $12.50 to $13.50. Medium heiStock poupds per person. This was a fers $10.00 to $12.00. drop from the previous years heirers $10.00 to $11.50. Light and heifer calves to $12.50. hundred amount of one Good million pounds or eighty-seveyoung fed cows $12.50 to $13.00. nearly a pound and a half per Older fat cows $11.00 to $12.00. capita. Medium to good $10.00 to $11.50. Since the peak year of 1941, cows mostly 8.50 to Utility factory butter production has $10.00. Cutters $7.00 to $8.50. dropped about three hundred and Canners mostly $5.00 to $7.00. eighty three million pounds or Odd head good heavy bulls at about three pounds per capita. $11.50 to $12.00. Medium to That means there were nearly good bulls $10.00 to $11.25. r four billion quarts less milk made bulls down to $7.50. Strirtly into factory butter in 194-- than good veal $15.00. Most good in 1941. Present indications point ralves $14.50 to $15.00. Medium to an even more serious situation to good $10.00 to $14.50. Comin 1945. Early estimates by the mon kind down to $8.00. U. S. Department of Agriculture Sheep: Good choice fed lambs are that there will be about two from local feed lots sold at in pounds les3 butter per person cent shrink. 2 with $15.25 per 1945 than in 1944 and that even Most good truck-i- n lambs $14.50 butter of farm with the addition to $15.00. Medium kinds $13.00 there will not be over ten pounds to Good ewes $7.00 to $14.00. for each person. Medium kinds $5.50 to $7.50. The explanation for this situa6.50. ewes Canner down to tion is that not only butter, but $3.50. other concentrated products of For further information write milk are being used in greater or phone Producers Livestock quantities to maintain optimum North Association, health, vitality and morale among Marketing the fighting forces, states the Salt Lake, Larry Moss, Manager. n 4 National Dairy Council. But, adds this organization, there is a silver lining in the clouds for those who miss so much the flavor, ty and nutritional characteristics which butter adds to nearly all foods. Milk production e is at an high. When war demands cease, ample quantities of butter, with all that it adds to the joy of eating, will come all-tim- back. Kingdom 273.9 million pounds million with 184,8 compared Russia pounds in December; 196.6 million pounds compared with 178.2 million pounds in December! and others, including Poland, Greece, French North Africa, France, Metropolitan French West Africa, Yugoslavia, the French Colonies Supply Commission, 127.1 million pounds as compared with 28 million pounds in December. Sponsors of school lunch programs, relief and other civilian agencies in the U. S. and in U. S. territories received .7 million pounds of food in January, compared with .6 million pounds in December. Total of all January deliveries of food and other agricultural products was 780.9 million pounds compared with 583.7 million pounds in December. The first WAC veteran to get a loan under the G. I. Bill of Rights was Mi33 Elizabeth M. Lutz, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and became news because it illustrates the way in which other loans will be made. Miss Lutz served for a year and three months with the First Photo Group and was discharged because of a dependency that made her indispensable at home. The loan was made by a private agency for the purchase of a home in which Miss Lutz and her widowed father will live. Under the plan, two separate loans were negotiated. The first was insured by the Federal Housing Administration, and the second loan was guaranteed in its entirety by the Veterans Administration under the G. I. Bill provisions. , Making the Most of Meat in Industrial Feeding is the title of a new phamplet just published by the WFA for food manin industrial plants, hotels, hospitals and other institutions. The pamphlet is designed to help those in charge of preparing meals in large quantities make the most of meat at a time when meat supplies are low, and discusses such problems as balancing ration points, using utility beef, and handling storing meat, methods of cooking, and recipes for meat extenders and alternates. The recipes are worked out for 100 and 500 serving portions. A single copy of this pamphlet may be had by anyono in charge of institutional feeding. Write to the Office of Information, War Food Administration, Washington 25, D. C. or to the regional office of the War Food Administration in New York, Atlanta, Dallas, Chicago, or San Franrest-uran- W hole Milk The equivalent of about 58 billion pounds of whole milk was used in Ihe manufacture of dairy products during 1943. Compared with 1942 this was a decrease of about 4 billion pounds, or 7 per cent. During the past two years we about have heard considerable Market Milk. By market milk we mean milk used for drinking purposes, produced and processed to meet the state minimum market Under requirements. milk we recognize two standards of production pastuerized, and raw or unpasteurized. Since the institution of the school lunch program there has been considerable interest in our state and county as to the milk used in the lunches. Principally because the War Food Administration and the state school lunch people have paid a preWhile safe milk. mium for this has been a very healthful addition to the school lunch program, it has also made available a good source of milk to some of our communities in the county, according to Alva C. Snow, state inspector. Before summer it is expected that we shall have five of these modern market plants in operation in the county, of which one and possibly two will be pastuerized. Perhaps it might be of interest to know some of the reapfor producing quirements These are: (1) proved milk. The cows must be healthy and O T free from any of cattle. Where milk is sold raw the producers are re. required to have their herds tested every six months. Also the milking parlor and corrals must be kept clean and dry, (2) The cows must be properly milked and the milk immediately This usually done by cooled. running the milk over what is known as an aerator. Lowering the temperature to between 50 and 60 degrees F. It must then by mechanical means, be put in sterile bottles and delivered to the place of consumption. These operations are changed slightly in the case of pasteurization. COZY THEATRE Sat.-Sun- March 10, The Doughgirls ., Mar. 14, Wed.-Thu- ., ts, AN AGENCY 3IY PAL WOLF and NEVADA First Show 7:45, Second 10:00 C E I GET YOUR COLD STORAGE LOCKER NOW! Subscription for Cold Storage Locker will not be accepted after March 20. If your subscription is not on record then you may not be able to secure a locker until after' the war. KLIPPEL & WILCKEN BROS; COLD STORAGE & LOCKER PLANT Duchesne, Utah See Gail Klippel or George Wilcken for Details IN KEEPING FOR The Readers Digest We consider this to be the outstanding magazine in America and recommend it to our readers. Send your subscription now and enjoy this fine magazine. $3.00 per year. Endow'd you will find $3.00 for which pleaae send THE READERS DIGEST for one year to . Pommor i. ROOSEVELT STORE FEATURE ITEMS FOR SATURDAY, MARCH 10, AT 11:30 A. M. Uintah Basin Record DUCHESNE UTAH 15 DOUBLE BIEL 3 TO ASSIST OUR PEOPLE 11 with ANN SHERIDAN, ALEXIS SMITH and JACK CARSON First Show 7:45, Second 9:30 INFORMED ON WORLD QUESTIONS THE RECORD HAS SECURED PAMPHLET IS ISSUED ON MAKING tMOST OF MEAT IN INDUSTRIAL FEEDING agers E cisco. SHOP AT Ill's RJarliet Producers Live Stock Market News North Salt Lake National Dairy Statistician Assures Us That Butter Will Come Back HOYS SPORT SHIRTS LADIES 13 GAUGE HOSE JQq fa QgC 02C |