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Show The Cache American, Ixran, Cache County, Utah Pase Seven States In These United "irm. f . j 7UecJt04ne cutut S tlcji&it&i 'I" Rapid Growth Needed For Better Results j, J. Drydcn I'tta Accidents one crop we can do without! And that is the reason why July 21 to 27 has been set aside os Farm Safety Week to carry the annual warning message to those who work with tools, livestock and machinery. Accidental death marches through the farm and ranch lands every day. By W. WASHINGTON HNU Woller Sheod t I - Fast Feathering Chicks Annual Farm Safely Week Is Sel for July 21 to 27 WNVCmM W WNV W itkintlo Cut Down Feed Bills Jtuffin. W, Houses Now Selling for By W. J. DRl'DEN Efficient, rapid growth is best Double Tbeir True Worth measured by the weight of the bird I an early age. Studies cf the one of those who are ARE YOU under USDA on the growth of cockerel pres of clrcum-(tancehave Indicated Umt the greatest to spend $8,000 to $7,000 out variability occur between 3 end 6 of your war savings to buy or build week of age. If good diet I fed a home, and out of low grade mateand the cockerel have accen to dl rials too, and In 6 to 10 year see reel sunlight and the equivalent of It deteriorate In value something free range. Thl the bet period like 85 per cent? In other words, are you willing to apend $8,000 today for a home, and In 10 year aell It for $2,100, and take a loss of $3,900? At any rale, whether you are willing or not, that what likely will happen under present Inflated values of homes and home construction. That1 what happened after the last war. and thata what government. In the face of overwhelming opposition by the real estate lobby, is seeking to prevent after this war. It la having Twelve-day-ol- d Sew HampahJre little luck so far. chicks ahow fast feathering, left, And yon may be lurky If yon and alow feathering, right. don't lose the whole thing. After the boom and bust period which in which to make accurate (election followed the last war, millions of of the most efficient bird by their borne owners who had purAt thl body weighta. age. Dr. chased at Inflated prices, not Charle W. Knox of the USDA aay there are maximum difference! In only lost tbeir equity, but they aw the mortgage foreclosed weight between the slowest growand their borne go Into the ing, the average, and the faateat band of Insurance companies The lesson growing individuals. and other real estate mort-gagor-a. from these experiment would indicate that culling should start when the chicks are still In the brooder Farmer were In the aame boat stage. Ai Professor Rice once said The only difference between now a real poultryman has the eye to and after the last war is that now cuU and the heart to discard. Cullmore land at Inflated value Is being ing aa an art of optimism the art purchased for cash than 25 years to see and the w'ill to discard. ago. Thus the purchaser of high cost farm land today stands a better chance of evading the mortgage foreclosure . . . that is, be may save his land, but suffer the loss in value. Aberdeen Angus By W. J. DRYDEN 65 Home The great outdoors, it seems, is not so healthy when you look at the figures. Farm work accidents s, 1 Know Your Breed Pricet Jump In a survey recently completed by presidents of Federal Home Loan banks, regional managers of Home Owners Loan corporations, Insuring officers of the Federal Housing administration, all constituents of the National Hous ing agency of which Mr. Wilson Wyatt Is administrator . . . these results were disclosed: As between 1940 and 1948, low' priced homes, homes selling under $6,000, have gone up 65.1 per cent, medium priced homes, $8,000 to $12, 000, have gone up 57 per cent, raw land has jumped 60.1 per cent and fully prepared building lots have upped 61.8 per cent . . . and the report disclosed that this inflation held true In small towns and large cities alike . . . and some of these communities showed real estate W VU'IT ti 'lyWinStVi Ws prices skyrocketing as high as 100 Elgon of Sunbeam, excellent per cent. bull. type of Aberdeen-Angu- s The Pacific coast region led the of price rises with an averparade at least age increase Victoria, Kans., imported d on homes three bulls and ran them with comof 96.3 per cent, while the Midmon stock. This was really the foundle Atlantic region showed the dation of the present breed in smallest, at 44 per cent. America, although many importaSome of the answers to this intions have been made since that flated value of homes and home contime. struction are seen in the Wagner-EllendThe Aberdeen-Angu- s are bred and - Taft bill which the real raised almost exclusively for beef, estate is opposing tooth and lobby although some strains are fairly nail as socialistic. The bill, howgood milkers. They hold an envie bill and will ever, Is a able record in the feed lot and as not answer the immediate problem, fat slaughter cattle. as the veterans housing bill with its attendant subsidies seeks to do. nation-wid- e History of the Aberdeen-Angu- s breed In the United States dates back to the importation in 1850 of a cow named "Dutchess from Port-letheScotland. There is no record of any present from this cow. In 1873, George Grant, n, Lurfifttf rrf- low-price- er long-rang- Control Corn Earworm By Proper Treatment In order to prevent Cornell has found that an inexpensive medicinal type of mineral oil, heavy grade, will prove satisfactory. The ears should be treated after the silk has started to turn corn-earwor- ... ART RETURNED The above. Apostle In Despair Over the Passing of Mary, taken by the Germans from the Wit Stwoss attar of the Church of Our Lady, Cracow, Poland, haa been returned to the Polish church by the United State forces In Europe. HITLER'S SHAME Historic Church Altar Stolen By Germans, Returned to Poles (FDITOK'ft NOTE: Paillnt Frtitrltk, HM Ftrtlfii Crrtpndeiil. ( re Ibo nly Amrrlfi torrvtpondent ( arrompanr Iht t$llrU Inrnini Ihe H II Meai alur, Ibe Urges! in Larspe, Is the Polish esrrh from mhirli the Cermaas, aa llltlera artfers, bad alelea li. Uere is brr eaclasire ilerjr.) By PAULINE FREDERICK WM Fealarea. CRACOW, POLAND. It was after midnight when a special train pulled out of the loading yards at Nuernberg, Germany, and headed east. There were two passenger coaches on it, one of them formerly the private car of Joachim von There were 22 freight cars, carefully sealed, bearing warnings in English, German and Polish that anyone trying to pilfer the train would be shot. Armed G.I.s stood on guard. -Ribbentrop. This was a train to being shameto any German with a conscience. It was to bring tears of joy to the f eyes of many Poles. For aboard was Polands greatest art treasure, the Wit Stwosz altar, being returned x to Its home, the Church of Our Lady. I in Cracow, from where the Germans had looted it. This trip was the end of a mission begun in 193. In August of that year the international situation had reached such a critical stage that Prof. Charles Estreicher of the fine arts department of the University of Cracow decided that steps should be taken to safeguard the altar from possible looting. Consequently, he supervised the packing of the sculptures in great wooden cases which were placed on barges and then floated down the Vistula to Sando-mierz- . however, the Germans had found all the boxes. Hitler ordered them conveyed to the Reichsbank in Berlin. Hitler Orders It Set Up. Meantime, Burgomeister Leibel of Nuernberg conceived the idea of establishing a Veit Stoss center in his city. Veit Stoss is the German spelling of Wit Stwosz. Both Germans and Poles claim the artist as one of their nationals. The fuehrer ordered that the altar should be set up in St. .Lawrence's Lutheran church in Nuernberg. That meant that the framework which had been left in the Church of Our Lady in Cracow had to be torn out and brought to Germany. The pieces were unpacked in Nuernberg. Then it was found that the Germans had miscalculated again the altar was too large for St. Lawrences church. It now became (lecessary to find a safe place in which to store the unpacked treasure. There was an ancient tunnel beneath Nuernberg cas- - long-rang- h't ' ' ' '"'CSV'" : ' H. ii. ll st brown at the tip, from three to five days after silk first appears. Apply the oil with an ordinary Fill half full, medicine dropper. about 20 drops, for small ears, and s full for large ears. Insert the dropper into the silk just inside the tip of the husk as shown. The oil penetrates the silk channel and kills the young worms as they enter. three-fourth- DDT May Not Always Be Dangerous to Bees Latest findings indicate that DDT may not be as fatal to bees as was formerly believed. It is true that if the hives are sprayed with DDT the bees will die. Tests at Michigan showed that bees in orchards which had been sprayed did as well as bees in an orchard where DDT was not applied. It was found in California tests that DDT proved no more harmful to bees than other sprays. .. Riddle o! Ring Around Neck of Rear Is Solved WASH. HEMLOCK, - Fre- quent!) s black bear with a white ring around its neck bad appeared in this area. Some thought it was a tame bear with a gray collar of some kind. Others said it was a freak and actually had a white ring of fur around its neck. Joe Szydlo solved the riddle when he shot the bear. The white ring was paint. It is believed that the bear, in its raids on garbage and other pails, had got his head Into a paint bucket, probably tipping it over on his head. The bear could wipe the paint off its face with its paws, but must not have been able to wash his neck. , ... TOO LARGE . . . The Wit Stwosz altar in Church of Our Lady. The Germans found this too large to place in their own St. Lawrence church. Hampshire lake region all year around . , . James E. Wolfe, former army pilot, is now manager of the To Harlsville. N. C., airport vary life a bit, pilots of personal planes at the Fair Haven, VL, airport have been practicing formation flying. . . . Grant Eldredge, former army pilot, has leased the Salmon, Idaho, airport. He used to fly the hump In India with the ATC, so the Idaho mountains won't bother him. . . . The Sportsmen's Pilots association of Colorado will fly their planes to Estes Park for a convention August 22 to 24. , . . Traffic at , the Chicago airport increased 49 per cent in May. ... VETS AND AVIATION Thousands of wartime dreams are certain to crash, many aviation writers predict And yet we find veterans getting most of the new jobs in aviation, not only as pilots but also as maintenance men, clerks, and in traffic control. Many vets are creating jobs for themselves in aviation. But government estimates indicate that even 10 years from now the number of persons employed in the Industry will not equal the number of men and women who, while in the services, were hopeful of making aviation a peaca time career. GOVERNOR WONT FLYI Col. Roscoe Turner, the air speed king, has a project in mind for this summer to make Gov. John C. Vivian of Colorado get his feet off the ground! "Once I can get his feet off the ground and demonstrate what a wonderful thing it is to travel by air, I think I can change his whole attitude, Turner promised. Hell become so it will be a great thing for the state. Silesian miners were, brought in to lengthen the corridor which begins in an obscure little house ,tle. near where Albrecht Durer lived and slopes downward until the passage cut through the solid rock is some 100 feet under ground. The Polish underground kept track of the altar, reporting its whereabouts to Professor Estreicher who had gone to London. There came the all-oraid on Nueanberg and Poles waited anxiously to know whether the altar had been destroyed as the castle above it had been. The tunnel had been a safe place and the Wit Stwosz work was unharmed. Last October, Lt. Frank Albright of the monuments and fine arts division of military government, and a former professor of archeology at Johns Hopkins, began supervising, with the help of Professor Estreicher, the long task of preparing the altar for shipment to Poland. Carries Art Treasures. On April 28, 1946, the train was ready to leave for Cracow with the altar, furniture and typewriters that had been stolen from the University of Cracow; 2,000 chalices and monstrances from which the gold had been looted; da Vincis Lady With Ermine, and Rembrandts Landscape, together with other treasures that had been taken from Poland by Nazi Governor-GenerFrank. 1 had had nothing to do with bringing back the altar to Poland. But 1 wore an American uniform, and that was enough to include me in the little group on whom the Polish people lavished their gratitude. 1 was handed bouquets of flowers. The children clapped and cheered as 1 walked by. They sang. One handsome young blonde boy, about 14, reached his hand through the crowd and taking mine, said in English: Youre a reporter. Please tell the American people how grateful we are. Poles Grateful for Return of Altar v. AIRPORT (HATTER new amphibian and seaplane base on the lake front in Wolfeboro, N. H., has been completed for service of planes which vizit the New A free-wheeli- A survey of army and navy air forces showed around 1,000.000 were interested in postwar occupations related to flying. Present direct employment in aviation is around 300,000, of whom 185,000 work for aircraft manufacturers, 55,000 for the scheduled airlines, 10,000 for the federal government, 20,000 for airports, and the rest in a variety ol jobs. TOLERANCE . . . Two youth look at the Star of David alongside the crucifix in a memorial to the dead of all faiths in World War II, which was erected on the grounds of St. Brendans Catholic church in Brooklyn. Quote of the Week of the Great Plains are flying by the thousands. They would be flying by the tens of thousands Farmers if planes were available at the right price and for their special needs. Wall Street Journal. Eight Tractors Plant Two Fields in One Day TAYLOR, TEXAS. Recently a tornado ruined crops west of Granger, destroying stands of corn and other crops, including those of Louis Hanzelka and Julius Cepcar. Working almost as fast as the tornado, six neighbors with tractors volunteered to help Hanzelka and Cepcar replant the two farms. They showed up bright and early in the morning, and by night the fields had been plowed and planted. The eight tractors were manned by Hanzelka and Cepcar and Paul Repa, Albert Repa, Adolph Naizer, Willie Pekar, Louis Hajda and Hu-Gourbec. After the fields were put in shape the ground was planted to cotton and feed. Thats what a little neighborly cooperation will do! at . When our train reached Cracow there was a great welcoming cere-monThen we were whisked to the Francuski hotel. When the altar was unpacked, the center sculpture, the Passing of Mary, was set up for the dedicatory That was on Sunday. May mass 5. with spring in full bloom The great church was packed to the doors Sun streamed in on the Mary r ft bv wt tc hydiangeas tod glowing candies From high in AVIATION MOTES HELICOPTER FALLS If a Many people have asked: helicopter's engine konks out, can the craft be landed?" The question was answered recently at Dayton, Ohio, when an AAF helicopter dropped from 9,000 feet without damage to the craft or injury to the With its engine dead, autopilot. of the rotation, or rotor blades, allowed the pilot, Capt. j Irvin C. Steiner of Wright Field, to land his helicopter safely in a cow pasture. By Looks to Future Needs e This measure, foreseeing a continued emergency demand for new housing for many years to come, provides for the expenditure of some 6.8 billion dollars in public money for slum clearanpe and public housing, both urban and rural development, offers federal loans where they cannot be obtained by private loan, and provides for easy purchase or fair rental. Despite the determined opposition, this bill sailed through the senate without even a roll-carecord vote when the measure was passed.. It appears to this writer that the result of this impartial survey shows clearly that without regulation inflation comes upon the heels of widespread demand. In this instance, the greater demand is in low-cohomes and thats where the greatest degree of inflation rests 65 per cent as compared to 57 per Cent for the next bracket. It is for this reason that OPA and Housing - expediter Wyatt have been demanding price control of these homes and subsidies to partially provide incentive for material supply, and to ease the burden of costs with public money. It appears, too, that instead of preventing inflation in the real estate market, which is already here, the objective now is to hold it from goif this can ing farther be done in the face of all the obstacles which must be overcome We have the certain lesson of the last war in front of us. We have the facts of the present to go upon and is yet our psychological make-u- p such, that our fur is rubbed the wrong way when we are told regulation through governmental to do this or not to do this. What we want, we want now. t alone killed 4.500 person last year. These farm deaths were 28 per cent of the nation's occupational death total, more than in any of the other seven major Industrial groups. 'Eliminate a Haxard a Day That is the Information which President Truman undoubtedly had when he Issued a proclamation this year calling upon farm people of the nation "to observe National Farm Safety Week by resolving to eliminate at least one hazard a day until their farms are as safe as they can possibly make them. They must be made to see slso the peril of nails, ladders, machines. Because of truths like this the United States department of agriculture, the National Grange, the National Fire Protection association, the Farm Equipment Institute, the American Farm Bureau Federation, the Farmers Union, the and other leading agricultural organizations are taking an active part along with the National Safety council in observing Farm Safety Week from July 21 to July 27 as a means of carrying safety education to the farmer. the back the music of the mass flowed down across the worshippers to the priests before the altar. Then the mass was finished. Suddenly from the organ, reverently and with all the power of its great The Star Spangled pipes, came Banner." There was not a dry American eye in the church. As we came out into the sunlight to go to our hotel, a great cry went up from the people. Longjive the Americans! Miner Wants Army To Bomb Mountain WHITE SANDS, N. M.- -A gold prospector who owns a mountain near where the 2 rocket tests are being made has petitioned Lt. Col. H. R. Turner, commanding officer of White Sands proving ground, to aim a rocket over his way and blow up the mountain. It would save him a lot of digging, he says. Colonel Turner has revealed that they will nut be able to oblige the prospector. V-- ... ON THE BIAS The PT-1with the new cross wind landing gear, lands on the bias at the Hagerstown, Md., municipal airport. The development is under the guidance of John Giesse cf the CAA. The PT-1- 9 was built by Fairchild. 9, Urges Utah Airport The Parowan (Utah) Times received a telegram from Lt. Simon Benson who is in Berlin, Germany, urging his home town to build as airport Benson expects to return to Parowan soon. Lyle Nelson, witness In a trial at Jordon, Mont., Involving alleged illegal branding, testified he spotted misbranded animals from bis plane while flying 10 to 15 feet over the cattle at a speed of only 35 to 45 miles an hour. |