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Show CACHE AMERICAN Ix-ia- WM. C, ENGLAND. ? .1 -- AM? if Swt-on- Hates: County, one year . Inside Cache County Advertising Ratos Made Known Upon Application , A Wp UM TAH V.t.Cif AIWOXiavTF. 28TCnS taiu-m- t a Cluv Matter, Novcrt her 2, 1931, et the pint Office at Logan, Utah, under the Act of March 3. 1897. Outbid a hr, j AtSlOMCHU $2 00 $1.50 tn-u- A'tAM At 17 AvtAce-vi- e A liiudu-m.J minimal church worker. Mr T. L. While, of Weal Vrirn. Utah, Hates, "I had inch severe hradarhci that I thought I J'ij THIS IS AMERICA This is America. Mountain peaks strung together beads on a giant chain. Fertile river like rough-hewvalleys where grasses and grains grow lush, and corn ripens in the ear. Broad expanses of prairie land where waves of wheat and oats ripple like endless swells of an ocean. Stretches of dark, rich loam etched with symmetrical rows of cotton on which the white, eloud-pufballs sway. Stone walls encircling green meadhillside pastures. ows, stony fields, and granite-studdeThis is America. Bustling, teeming cities. Whirwheels of Trains and busses and factories. huge ring trucks carrying mens goods to ten thousand destina-tonGreat stores thronged with people. Small stores serving neighborhoods. Newsboys calling their papers. Subways and airplanes. Tax cabs and pushcarts. This is America. Long docks by the ocean side. Steamers and freighters and ferries. Miles of wharfs and warehouses. Files of merchandise going back and forth to serve mankind. Fishermen's sloops in small U) n - ;r ,ns T d s. harbors. Dams that control rivers Dams thirst. Dams that make lights flash in cities far away, and wheels turn because of an unseen power. This is America. Men and women who have caught the vision seen by others long ago. Men and women who know that human life has dignity and integrity. Men and women who believe that there are standards for human beings for nations. And this shall be America. C. S. Monitor. WCtSCAM 60 HOA If lAASt ARftAue TAFM fAPtiFST Invention 6RAUTCPA AN IDEA WA4 WENT US AM ice AM ice Of THE cut FBcezeRHHnum 61At AAA MR. T. L. WHITE lid, I bloated and belched sour liquids alter meals, had eak kidneys, stabbing pains In my back and limbs. I could hardly work. "Hoyt's Compound gave me the first relief 1 have found, and I am pleased to tell tire public of tins wonderful medicine. Headaches are rare now, bloating, belching and sourness have disappeared. 1 enjoy eating, and have renewed pep!" Hoyt's Compound Is recommended and sold by the City Drug Store and by lording druggists evMall orders promptly erywhere. filled. Send $1.25 for one bottle, or Adv. Just $2.19 for two. Ay Of would go FT SO tAKTiy TnAT car aoT meyAvee of Pe 7RKKACSS MUST TAey if) THAH OF A Andorra, oldest REPUBLIC IN IMP vjcrlP Poes HOT ALLOW SACnElQRS -Owe M MACU'U TO MOST VOTE cPtKArp k 60 , HourbiopteP wtKrMi MACHWtBOMUBlMiiMg lHOR million-acr- e FREE PRESS AND FREE ENTERPRISE The free press, said Grove Patterson, editor of the Toledo Blade, recently, is the major defense that can keep one man or one group of men from stealing a government. and operating it in the interest of a privileged few-- The newspaper not only because of its information service, not only because of its analysis of national policies, but because of its advertising service, g of this is vital to the economic health and country. Business deserves to be immeasurably more free from bureaucratic regulation than it is. No medium is in such good position, so well equipped, as the newspapers to preach and to teach the value of free enterprise." A free press exists only where free enterprise exists. In the total state, the newspaper is of necessity the voice of the clique in power. It dances to the dictators song. It spreads lies and advances corruption in high places. It is used for the selfish ends of the few not for the service of the many. Here in the United States the free press has done a magnificent job in building and perpetuating the democratic, free enterprise system. It was the newspapers of America, small no less than large, which encouraged private industry. Our electric power development, oil production, coal, and metal mining, and a thousand and one varieties of enterprise have had the aid of a free press to the great benefit of the pub lie. And this same free press has been the first to ferret out and publicize graft whenever it appeared in industry or in government. Socialism would mean the destruction of the free press precisely as it would mean the destruction of free enterprise in all elds, because it necessitates a dictated press and a dictated industry. As President Roosevelt has said, a free press must be maintained against all costs. And the only way it can be maintained is to preserve and protect the free enterprise well-bein- -- which gives 04 HOURS 10 am? PNuueil This is America. that slake a it life. THIS BUSINESS OF wiftfri c h: !Q ' S7 s. LJL- - Susan Thayer 9 A u Those Good Old Days' Great Aunt Matilda loves back" to the days when she wa$ young and she and Uncle Ezra had "gone west" to new land. "Those were the days, she said tlie other evening, sighing deeply and letting her kmtting rest in her lap for a moment while she looked with dim blue eyes back into the long ago fast. And then, taking up her knit"We ting again, she explained. didn't have all those gimcracks think you you girls couldnt get along without. Those fancy vacuum sweepers . . . and to automobiles go gallivanting around the country in . . . and electric refrigerators big enough for a boarding house. We did very well putting our butter down In a well. now-a-da- no one will even think of the good old days again. Even you. Aunt Matilda, will be too busy enjoying the good new one!" The carbon rod, electrolyte and zinc casing in a new flashto remain asserted light cell remain out of tap breaks an inner tube to allow the electrolyte to escape itno the filler fresh indefinitely contact until a slight compound- The Union of South Africa has required imports of and fertilizers derived from animal calcasses and animal bones to be manufactured into fertilizfeed-stuf- (TIVIL SIRVKIE EXAMINATIONS Granaries ere coming buck. Th s once the pr J vtliii.t and the lalu.ne lot lion ag.ili- -t gv.Uat.tre of Sed lor IJll )' Jtj crop Is becou.illg liulollJl.l ul'-cTo the a!h-aJivr of w-- as y early pioneers of U:ub, the gi.ui-arwas, i.rxt to the dwi Ihi g house, the most iii.poitani bjiM.ng Then cointi.crvU! on the larm warehouses and a "hand to mouth" t pe of farming pushed the old granary into the background. But with surplus wheat, the iosn program of tla AAA. and stress on the Granary Idea, the wheat bln U back as an important part of the arm set up In Utah. H E. Larsen of Corrtne. wheat loan supervisor for the state under the said Wednesday AAA program that approximately 76 per cent of all wheat In storage under the program in the state ts now In farm granaries and bms. Tills compares to 22 per cent for the nation. For the nation there are M 923.882 bushels of wheat In farm storage and 200,586 817 bushels in warehouse storage. In Utah there are 786.881 bushels of wheat stored on farms and 305.848 bushels stored in warehouses. In Kansas, the big wheat state, farm storage accounts for W.297.-67- 3 bushels and warehouse storage for 52,255.253 bushels . In Idaho there are 828.275 bushels of wheat stored on the farm and 3,243.726 bushels stored in w a rehouses. While the amount of wheat in storage in Utah is not nearly as much as some of the other wheatgrowing states of the nation. Utah d lends In the percentage of wheat, Mr. Larsen said. e d I Only one other state. Michigan, has more farm stored wlieat than warehouse stored wheat. Farm storage of wheal has been encouraged under the AAA prodisgram as it keeps the wheat tributed o'.rr the n.'lii and L in Via I wheat PH os ke p.ng a.rpla.MS dem al pri:.-u.a- l ar With a This e's. nIid Of sl.m.ace Solage ot be.a'l-1, mt. d freight fa.ihiles t fe: se m IP lUes slor.oe been of w hi at on the fvm the to contr.bitiun tUrxxi a almo'l dch use program. T!e 65 per c nt of puri.v loan rate, made possible through marketing quotas, has gnen farmers who stored their wheat money to the pay operating expenses and at same time has lmproted pnees. All wheat farmers hate benefited from this improvement In puce m-l- the amount of wheat going onto the market and the price support of the loan program, Larsen potn;. ed out- f.o with surplus wheat and a loan program to encourage fa:JJ stor ge, the granary Is again c unto be an Important bu:lj.Lg til 'on Utah lurms. For a sa!j,j no x fine atrip of sausage, tUj or as tluinnger, salami, smoked cooked tonue into a bowl of toma-tigreens, slued cucumbers, Serve with and radi'ht-s- . French dressing. -s When making molded salad to accompany the cold meat plat, ter, add the Juice of one lemon for every six people. non 5) YEARS OLD! PINT No. 61 PINT No. 62 QUART No. 60 fWIM O, farm-store- The U. 8. Civil Service Commission announced today the Inasmuch as no applications were received for the position of Junior Aircraft Propeller Mechanic. $1080 a year for employment at Lowry Field, Denver, Colorado, th. exts being reannounced amination on an open continuous basis. That will be received is, applications until further notice. Applicants must show that they have had certain experience in the repair of metal aircraft propellers. Applicants wiU be allowed to substitute metal patternmaking for machinist experience for part of required propeller experience. Full further Information and the necessary forms for filing may be obtained from your nearest Civil or from the Sendee Secretary, Manager, Thirteenth U. S. Civil Sendee District, 136 New Customhouse, Denver, Colorado. Applications should be filed with the Manager, Thirteenth U. S. Civil Service District. 136 New Customhouse, Denver, Colorado. Creamed dried beef atop fried ers to be accompanied by sanitary have cornmeal much squares is in the certificates showing they We didnt have any of these been sterilized and are free from upper brackets for taste new Tangled things. But theres disease germs. one thing we did have and thats more Important than all of them put together. We had hope and we had freedom. Those were the good old days when America was great an we knew that if we worked hard enough and put our money in the bank, we'd be all right when the rainy days came." "But. wered, Aunt Matilda, I ansAmerica is stiU great. Greater than she has ever been. And today we have hope, too, as weU as vacuum cleaners . . . and you must admit they do get! all the dirt up even from the corner and from under the bed. Hope for what?" Aunt Matil-- j da wanted to know. "What kind of hope do you have? rtOtV. INIS WHISKEY IS 5 VEAS OLD . RCHENLFf DISTILLERS CORR, ooo O LETTERHEADS O STATEMENTS BUSINESS FORMS O PROGRAMS BOOKLETS POSTERS ENVELOPES Paper Prices are Rising Daily Hope for a better time and a better world with opportunity for more people. You talk about the good old days. WeU, for us, the good old days arent good enough any more, Were looking ahead to the good new days that are possible in a country like this with its fertile farms and walth of other resources, and the greatest industrial system the world has ever known. Here free men have speeded up defense production as much in a single year as Hitler did in six with his regimented economy SILENT SOLDIERS The four horsemen have ridden hard this year. They have brought War, Famine Pestilence, and Death to a large part of the world. It will take every last ounce of strength and knowledge possessed by mankind to halt their sweeping horror. Before many weeks pass the great annual Christmas Seal campaign will be on in earnest. The funds from these little seals are used to fight one of the most powerful of the horsemens allies Tuberculosis. "Perhaps a few years ago durThrough the ages tuberculosis has been known as ing the depression when production was at a low ebb, people had the great white plague. For centuries it was the num- some reason to sigh for the good desber one killer. In times of distress it literally old days. But the America which troyed whole populations. The fact that this is not the reformers said then was washed and through has found hertrue today is due solely to the achievements resulting up self once more. And, Aunt Matilmedical of sacrifices scientists. da, that America today is asfrom the continuous C. L. Newcomb, Chirstmas Seal sale director for the tonishing the world. When this depression is over, In National Tuberculosis association, recently said: let this same capacity to make Seal tuberculosis the Christmas 34 of sales, the years things be devoted to the producbut the dis- tion of death rate has been cut by e commodities ease last year tok over 1,000 more American lives than and let those commdities be sold in the traditional American way were killed or died from wounds in the American Ex- to the people who need them and peditionary Force in the frist World War. Tuberculosis is still a major problem. With the CITY CAB world again facing conditions that will make a fertile 24 Hoar Service field for a new outbreak of the disease, it behooves) PHONE 161 on the cheery seals adorning his greeting cards. They on thee heery seals adorning his greeting cards. They We carry public liability are silent soldiers in a gigantic battle, a crucial battle insurance between humanity and the four horsemen. . . We Suggest you Check Your Needs and call us at once. 1 three-fourth- s. KldiM-- JAMES i.NGIJVND, Lt.tur DAVID ENGLAND, Mechanical D, paitmmt Subscription nd Rclth-InI'.hallll Mabblnl Merry J'jtm llrlinril by lluyl'n ( Mr. T. L. WlilU. Mrjila, Manager n.j ;; r.g Granaries Are Returning for Crop Storage Utah Rancher is Generous in His Praise for Hoyt's THE POCKETBOOK of KWOVLEDGE Published Tucwiuy, Thursday, and Saturday Mornings Ly the Cuch American I'ubltaliing ComUtah pany, at 62 V. rat Center Street. Newspaper, lv Tuesday, October 28, 1941 The Cache American, Lojran, Cache County, Utah Pajre Two C.F.l, Everybody raves about your salads, Peg. Whats the secret? fHIE Cache A merican s, peace-tim- Phone ju 9 ill 1 AGREI Miracle Whip does work wonders with salads! A unique combination of boiled dressing and fine mayonnaise. Miracle Whip is by far America's favorite salad dressing. MILLIONS . ... & 700 N.Y r |