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Show Friday, February 1913 1G, The Cacne America, Lojran, Cche County, Utah Pace Three AMERICAN Toia eoluui U oprn U anyone oho Ultra to prrornt bit rltai on a oubjrrt. Ailiik-- s must be lned and the ('ache Aoterlran dura not aiutunie any reaponalbUlty for anrb art I c Ira. Opinion eiprewd are tbooe of Ute contributor and are pot nreeaaarfly thoao ot thla paper. wm S Ucar LAdeuAT. GAAAkA 1KtV e a.rpljur auir&iAd ' 1 y rrfe' . OPA. The OPA la everyone who tv A MOUM7AIMOT ti scuy $Ar ubhea to maintain a stable IMMXtVM pR'MXKOS 5lTl4 ClWCUMriKtNCC economy and a prosperous nation. S.ncercly yours. Dear Mr. England: CAIL MARTIN. a v I want to thank you personally District Information for your splendid support of the Executive. price control and rationing program. Your attitude has constantcTits3 as a stratosWeet chaj era, TOMATOES ly exemplified the highest ideals, THIS PlASIlC BOa'BIRKjOSE EVAHtt-A?H vJeitwHw fruits uca. of American citizenry and patri-iNCVSTRlAl fN6ik.'FES TO THTAsarfcA'f VEfTEtABlES BUT EQUIPMENT UNDER MH AniTJCE OOlT Of.C oUsm. You are surely doing your ere 9 f 9 WHILE 04 THE CROA.P on home , front. the part ROBERT CROOKSTON By As a former newspaper man, Each day as I'm a comm' home I also want to congratulate you on the Cache American Forum run from work the uppermost thing In your columns. Recently Rob. on me mind, Is there any mesi ert Crook st on wrote a thoughtful sage this day in that ma-.- l box letter on what should be done ifrom soldiers far across the sea? ' 1 to prepare for postwar conditions. Some of me neighbors have re i He made one criticism of the ceived that unwelcome and hcart-OPwhich should be corrected. brc.ikin telegram by the war people scent to think that partment about their son. t the OPA Is the other fellow, the n i, only the mast indifferent : employee-t- he paid government and unobservlng people who fa'l I . bureaucracy. to appreciate the seriousness of CCWAfY MFMATlcai PPC$:E '.hr Enclosed is a copy of a reply the labor shortage, and local ' That vjmio ta;e excepts vc-e.d-s to Mr. Crookston pointing nu-rAifjD 70 WdevV7-HOmay get some relief should S'C?V-AT-E. out that the OPA is every Am. the war SOWED MM FChJ CVs si CA. department decide to C'j erican citizen. If you could print Lend German here, prisoners ME.tvWlWU. '& V N I- Am.1' l.'D IP C '.C z A this reply or use some editorial FC41 vA I. j'l ? lookln Joe a suitable place comment A- D UJi.L-Jon Sr-this the h0Use.SUch ljbor" public school of thought, it would help'10 or better known as the fair mlght.ly. ground on the outskirts of town Sincerely yours, is being considered. GAIL MARTIN, Some residents near the fair j DistrkLon Information grounds have set up a howl and Executlv e. bewail the plan as contamination By RUTII TAYLOR to their home. Such people should Mr. Robert Crookston In this war. as in all ideological get down on their knees and Cache American each participant has conflicts, thank God those men of the Logan, UUh super-racare coming as talked much of its past. Each naprisoners and not as they went tion has boasted of its culture Dear Mr. Crookston: into France and of the high level of its clvi Holland, Your article in the Cache and Belgium, all the other European coun. lization. Each group has bragged FROM OUR American of February 6 came to CONGRESSMAN of its where tries, they brought mur- of the accomplishments my attention just the other day. 1C. GRANGER one seems no to forbearers. But W. destruction and scorched I agree most heartily with you der, have remembered that the culture PLANE PRODUCTION that better preparation should be earth. Those Germans, If they are of each, the civilization of each, sent will In work here, the fields, SUPS IN JANUARY made for the postwar world and is no than that displayed greater the return of our men and worn-e- and thats more than too many Chairman of the Airfract Pro- of your high. school yaps will do. by the generation coming up. In the armed services. If we of the present generation who The war department must be the lies and prejudices However, I must state, that do not reteach the lessons of the whichspread the you are mistaken in your refer, left unopposed to get this thing Founding Fathers past, so that the next generation ence to the OPA. You state that finished, civilians should not had been left behind in thought second-han- d in any way. Farmers may profit by them; if we do not the old world from which they stoves have been add to the culture we have refled? sold for as much as $20.00 when boys gone into combat duty have ceived so that the coming genGer-mathe ceiling should not exceed left the farms It isnt what we were. It is on can build turn in eration it, You ask $16.00. prisoners can carry on the Where's your what we are, and what the next of avail is then the what past? OFA hiding?" Without any sense farm work and food production. that really No nation, no group is entitled generation will be of rancor or criticism I might Any act whatever to hamper matters. And what they will be to on be deeds the brave judged food production that prolongs Have you been ask, with us and the example hiding? It must be starts Did you report this price ceiling this war is accessory to crime, of its ancestors. and precept we give them. on actions of the the judged violation to your local War lTice and that crime is murder of Have we kept faith with the present and the promise of the and Rationing Board? If you did American boys, and any past? Will we keep faith with the future. not you have neglected a very hrough any act to prolong this Of what good was the storied future? That is the challenge! necessary precaution toward We are the link in the chain upon the j war has the blood of our boys art of when a people Italy, defeat of inflation. (upon their hands. which the strain now rests. Will on weakened the by dependance The OPA has eight million ar- - j f yo? pass the fair grounds past, let In the Fascist ideology, we hold, as did those before us? tides of all levels to price and!,ake notitce f ,one outfits indif that destroyer of the democratic It is the present that counts. food production and fifteen million rental units and ferefce wast where about 100 bushels of ideal that had been the glory of three million business establish- Rome, and of which Virgil had ments to supervise. For this tre- - w at was nice uicy apPles left sung? mendous load, the OPA has, in 01Lthe trees: Of what good was the world, about German complam the forty-eigh- t states and terri-- ! 7 loved music of Germany, when a little grati' tories of the United States, fewer i f8011"8 shows d to face people, too pride-boun- d ur tude who faced them td, its enforcement f1 employees on the drowned out that facts, hel-guns wlth fixed staff than the total police force 'hen they music with the screams of torin their hands. of New York City. It is physical- bayonets tured thousands? the OPA to ly impossible for Of what good was the boasted check on all violations unless Coal Prices Up sun-go- d lineage of the Japanese these are reported by citizens. To Increases in coal prices of 10 when their cohesive strength was enforce gasoline price and ration- to 40 cents a ton to the consumer used to lay waste peaceful lands ing regulations in Utah the OPA are now in effect. Increased cost and enslave millions of their felhas about twenty-fivpersons. of mine operation warranted the low Asiatics? This includes stenographers, clerks price increase. All mines, shipping Of what good is the thrift and and lawyers. area courage and steadfastness of the by rail, in the Carbon-EmerSo if you are intetsted in are affected by the price Increase. pioneers who founded America, to price control and rationing in There are variable increases for those who carp and cavil at every building a better, world for to- mines in other parts of the state, restriction, at every inroad upon morrow, May I suggest that you and for those which ship entirely their accustomed manner of livcall on the chairman of your by truck. Prices will run from ing? Of what good War Price and Rationing an increase of 10 cents a ton on are the high Board and volunteer to help him stove lump to 40 cents a ton in- sounding phrases of the Consti. either in the information or the crease on premium lump (10 inch tution to those who here in our lump or up.) The increase to the free United States deny equality price survey fields. Please tell your friends and average family will amount to 10 of opportunity to all Americans, who condemn groups en masse, associates that they constitute the to 15 cents a ton. Mr. William C. England Editor, Cnche American Logan. UUh x . Under rlTG MiW hWV A T u p - n yeS i -- -- Zl N Have We Kept Faith? 1 WASHINGTON NEiws rz: self-style- d e n short-hande- d. Millions Say Ulicn J ' Scribes Complaint Draws Reply From State OPA Official board reported that 6.535 were produced in Jan. u.ir- y- four per cent less than the 6 829 selieduled. While the total I number of plains accepted in 'January represents a decrease of two per cent from the December 'output, however, the weight in-which ttxk place in spite of the numerically fewer aircraft , jrodu.-edrmphaAzea the current uend toward bigger and heimr rather than h.rger numtjes. bers of planes. duriion ECECETOGK FORUM ME KWWILIEESE THE CACHE n er-a- Penn i OUTLINES STEPS TO MIET PROGRAM mum turns pro Because of gram will run over $61.000.000.000 j substantially above the 1911 level, i and because increasing delays In deliveries of component parts of war manufacturers threaten lojf war j delay production of vital j out-items, the WPB chairman lines steps Dial are being taken by the procurement agencies to ! enable Industry to meet thei expanded program. j j dt 10-1- . j x tllMU ; j AGRICULTURAL CENSUS j j The House passed House Joint j; Resolution 85, making an adch-- ,; tional appropriation of $6,784.000 ( for the Census of Agriculture. On k two previous occasions the House had refused the additional money needed to pay workers already in tile field. No objection is con. i j templated in the Senate. Gem of the Blends ; j Uhlliatn i: Unu EMPLOYMENT CONTINUES TO DECLINE The number of Federal employto decline, both in the Nations Capital and in the field service. At the turn of the calendar into 1945 the total nume ber of Federal workers was reduced by 16.207 since December 1, 1944. The Federal employee population in Washington was down to 235,185, which was 1937 under November, 1944 and 15,316 less than in July, 1944. Women hold a record number of the Jobs with 1,056,514 throughout the U. S 146,656 in Washington. In November, last year, eight per cent of Federal employees In the Capital city were removed for cause, II per cent resigned because of poor health resulting, they said, from overwork and working conditions. On January I there were 18,527 vacancies in the Federal service In Washington, 159,649 U. S. Jobs going begging elsewhere in the Nation. With turnover reduced to around three per cent, Civil Service must still seek to induce 8000 persons a month to move to this Capital to fill the jobs of those who go from here. ees continues full-tim- CHECKED a or Men Back For quick relief from it'ching caused by eczema, athlete foot, scabies, pimnles an J other itching conditions, use pure, cooling, liquid D. d. d. prescription, a doctor's formula. Greaseless and stainless. Sootlies, comforts and quickly calms intense itching. 35c trial bottle proves it, or money back. Dont suffer Askyc-tfruggitoday for D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION i'lAUt, (if T,vP $ 1 v)l tioar-U- o M $ W0RTJ I IN I899 v tTY'A wnuo UMITC0 HO1 , ml Blended Whiskey, 86 proof, 65 groin neut'al spirits GOODERHAM & WORTS LTD- -; Peoria, Illinois d. e y . lo-c- LITTLE MOMENTS IN BIG LIVES TUEfcefr W CUliWED) CHARLES was m Like an eager dog on a leash, the train .A BRIGHT Boy tM SCHOOL! -- r waits at the station impatient to start its long transcontinental run. The carman swings his lantern from side to side above his head. There's a swish of air as the en- gineer sees the signal to "set 'em up." That's railroad language meaning "test air brakes". . . one of the many Union Pacific safety operations. Over its "strategic middle route' uniting the East with the Pacific Coast, Union Pacific transports thousands of service men and women. , ar' Carloads of materials and supplies marshipped, east and west, to home-frokets and ocean port3. It's a tremendous job but despite the problems of manpower and maintenance it is being accomolished with remarkable efficiency. nt i putting the brakes on unwise personal spending, by buying war bonds and saving them, we can help guard against depression, keep the wheels of industry running, and the avenues of opportunity open for individual enterprise and initiative. By jc Listan to TOUB AMERICA radio program oa Muhul nationwide network orsry Sunday afternoon. Oonsnlf ydbx local newspaper for the Him and station. 7MPK.0eK.lSSVt union RAILROAD pacific OMRIEP P. UliNTLEY, ELECTS IQ. CLB CC0UT2Y. Or WE TO PP.EftDHJT &l XW N 0 TPt DITOlO 6P0PAl PUBLIC UTlUTy GOViPANiSS5 1 TW 9P0P.iT fOTTKy. W WE i |