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Show UTAH EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, Bossy Meets War Production Challenge As Dairy Industry Supplies Vital Foods Industry Observes 6th 15 MILLION mote CANS OF MILK Newspaper Man Stuff: WHEN A REPORTER CRL'SADES against dirty elements in a community or country there is very little glory con nected with it, but he puts himself in R. great personal danger . . . Donai MelleU of the Cunton (Ohio) Daily News was killed by gangsters because he exposed their activities . , . In 1922, George Dale of the Muncie fought the K. K. K. One night a few of them attacked him and almost beat him to death. He shot one of his attackers with a gun he wrenched from his hand. Kluxers in high places railroaded him to jail. And it wasnt until 1926 that the State Supreme Court ruled in Dales favor . . . For many years the Butte (Montana) Daily Bulletin slugged re courageously against the gardless of how powerful they were, Because oftthat, they had to keep loaded rifles in the city room and every reporter had a gun laying beside his typewriter , , . This reporter has also never stopped firing his typewriter guns against the slimey members of our community and country, in spite of all kinds of threats. Yet some people wonder why we tote a J8. Notes of an Innocent Bystander: Annual June Union. Released by Western Newspaper Campaign. INFLATION A SERIOUS PROBLEM A INFLATION IS MOKE THAN danserious THREAT. It is a very Should it come ger which we face. by experienced form in the wild extent by Germany, and to a large it France, following World War I, us cause would, in all probability, to lose the war. June dairy month brings a picture of cows on nearly five million farms in the United States, each performing an important function in winning the war. Quietly at work in the barns and on the pastures from Maine to California and from the Canadian border to CHICAGO. 26,-000,0- 00 the Gulf, these 26,000,000 animals are daily producing a third of a billion pounds of milk. That means an average production of 166,666 tons of milk every day in the year. If placed in ten gallon cans, 3,921,569 cans would be required to hold an average days milk production in the United States. This is enough 25-to- 25-to- , life-givin- g ... over-runnin- d ar The Front Pages: The Heraid-Tribuneditorially declared war on Laval Sc Co., and advised the State Dept that Vichy has ratted on the USA from the start. It okayed Jap bases for attacks on China, the paper reminded, and cautioned Hull that Lavals word wasn't any better than a police court package If Vichy wants to be thiefs chummy, how come those uniformed brats demonstrated in front of the U. S. embassy Monday? e ... Barry Faris of INS once pointed reporters should never piHe said: geonhole their stories Stories are like vegetables. Use them quickly or they spoiL out why ... He was blind . . . But every day he had his secretary read every Item in a newspaper. He wanted to know what page an item was printed on, how much space did it fill, how much was devoted to headlines, were what were the cross-headany boxes used, what about the il- lustrations . . And thats the way one of Americas greatest publishers guided Tne of the countrys greatest ... His newspapers for many years name: Joseph Pulitzer. The paper: The N. Y. World. news- I i- ... The Wirelesi: See how the Axis milk to fill 6,666 big n tank whimpers when you get tough. cars. If these were all put together Churchill slapped a couple of (fhips in one big milk train, we would have off Adolf's shoulder, and Berlin tried each morning a train of n milk its eyes out. You ask for gas, tank cars 57 miles long. taunted Winston, and gas youll The flow of this stream get. The Berlin press whined next of food rated by nutritionists as the day, Please, mister, you got us No. 1 protective food is of vital wrong . . . The overseas exchange to our nation at all between Oliver Littleton and Donald importance times, but especially so this year. Nelson, with Quentin Reynolds The Allied nations and the soldiers was no encouragechairmaning, of the United States must have milk ment to Nazzy eavesdroppers. They and its products. Factory and mutalked great big production figures nition workers need have that won't make it an easy summer than ever for milk andgreater milk prodfor the Fritzies Another ex- ucts. Office workers, housewives, citing bulletin was the item from school children .and all other classes Burma how the Chinese tricked the of the American population are comsecg chesty Japs into to realize, as never before, their ond base. And putting the ball on ing need for quantities of these them with a thump that just about vital foodsgreater in order to keep America laid the skull open , . . Byron by making Americans strongPrice is a sensible censor. Too tight strong er. a clamp down on radio news, he Dairy Program. said, would make the public suspithe National Dairy Council Today . . cious of the war effort . The which the industry has March of Time flubbed on the Malta program; for 23 sponsored years, is finding more Bad than anyepisode. timing new recognition and new support thing since the show went on the A national nutrition program is exair oefore it really got going in panding and materially strengthenMalta. ing the realization of the fact that nutrition is necessary to optigood The Story Tellers: Gen. de Gaulle mum health, vigor and vitality. This was in the doghouse with the brass national nutrition program has been hats before the war started. Elliot in operation for more than a year. Paul, in bis book, The Last Time I Just how are these 26 million cows Saw Paris, mentions that de Gaulle the Maginot Line, the and those responsible for the prodthe of army clique. He uct meeting this challenge and this darling foresaw that Hitler would skip opportunity? We need not wait for that answer. around the end . , . Scott Feldman Those bossies and their masters in The with a Woman surprises you meeting the challenge. Starting tip that the best way to get a stage are 104 job is to troupe for a little theater. with an average production of Theres always a Shubert or two billion pounds of milk during the 1935 to 1939; there was 111 lurking there, he says, to hire you years for a hit. Imagine Lee Shubert go- billion pounds of milk produced in 500 million pounds ing TOWARD an actor! . , . Film-ste- r 1940; 115 billion Joan Davis, according to Lup-to- n of milk in 1941, and the production Wilkinson in This Week, live; for 1942 is estimated at not less than in a purple house with yellow knobs 120 billion pounds of milk to be proat the corners, sleeps in a 'Du duced in the United States. In other Barry bed with mauve and lilac words, for each and every dayhol-of streamers. The glass in her bou- the year, including Sundays and idays, there is being produced more doir mirror is tinted peachbloom. than 44,000,000 pounds of milk over What's she looking for? Nightmares that of five years ago. That is the in technicolor? equivalent of a fully loaded milk train of 50,000 pound capacity cars, Nazi propagandists keep repeating that they love peace. Every IVs miles long over and above their time Hitler or another Nazi makes normal production. Terrlfio Handling Problem. a speech, they insist that they are peaceful. And the tragic part of Stated in terms of ten gallon milk this is that this propaganda bullet cans, if these were filled and placed aimed at America was manufacside by side, we would find that we tured by an American press agent! had every month a line of filled milk . . . When the Nazis first came to cans 3,150 miles long over and above power they never stopped boasting the amount of milk that was proto the outside world about their war- duced in this country in the same like attitude . . . But when this period during the preceding five-yepress agent was in Germany, he period. Producing such a vol- told the Nazis to base their propaganda on disarmament and peace . . . Youve probably guessed, his name Ivy Lee . . . And so it was this tip by a press agent that made many Americans and people in other democracies believe Nazis really wanted peace. Strange as it seems, we might not have had a war if democracies weren't lulled to sleep by Nazi peace talk. pooh-poohe- Plain color mat Box 166 WAlNT EnCl0Se 15 desired. Pattern Name ANGELES Souza-- U 5 Dtpartmtnt of Agriculture the democracies, the dairy industry of the United States has increased its production from 1935 to 1939 by nearly As its contribution to feeding cans of milk enough cans to make a row from Los Angeles to New York. ume of milk in addition to the regu- tant in the manufacture of dry milk lar supply is no easy task. Just the solids are Minnesota, Michigan, job of hauling milk to fill 714 miles Ohio, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Idaho of 50,000 pound capacity tank cars and Vermont, in the order named. The increase in the manufacture from the farm to the milk station or dairy plant each morning, is of dry milk solids has forced seenough to stagger the imagination vere changes in both farm manof the average individual, but that agement practice and in the operais simply a little before breakfast tion of butter factories. Farmers chore as compared with the extra have had to adjust their operations effort necessary to raise the feed, to new methods of feeding. Creamdo the additional milking and cool eries have been obliged to put in new equipment, to train new perand care for that extra milk train load of milk each morn- sonnel and to their operating. ing and merchandising plans. This is in addition to another difficult Dry Milk Solids. For many years, the cream from problem which the butter making about 45 billion pounds of milk each industry must face every year and that is, the varying seasonal producyear has been usecKfor the manufacture of butter, including both the tion. During the year 1940 to 1941 varied by product. butter manufacture factory and the farm-mad- e months from a low of 115 million 700 thousand pounds in November to a high of 205 million 300 thousand pounds in June. North Central States. Most of these changes have been brought about in the North Central states where butter production is the heaviest Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin rank first, second and third in the order named as the big three in the butter industry in the United States. After that come Michigan, Nebraska, Missouri, Illia, nois, Ohio, Kansas, Indiana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Washington. Milk made the difference both These 15 states produce more- than dogs had the same food, but the 85 per cent of all the butter made in larger one received a daily milk the United States. ration. Cheese is another important dairy the manufacture of which product, of 30 Of this, about billion pounds has been materially affected by curmilk have been farm separated with rent conditions. Largely as the rethe remaining skimmed milk being sult of the and the demand for war kept on the farms for feed for American cheese abroad, production calves, pigs and chickens. One of of this product has been stepped up which the the severe enormously. The government reindustry has been called upon to quest in March, 1941, for 250 million make in order to furnish sufficient pounds of cheese amounted to an dry milk powder to the United Naurging, on. its part, for almost 50 per tions has been to shift from farm cent increase in production. The into of of milk much this separation has met that request and dustry of whole milk. the delivery more. Nearly 300 million pounds of Manufacture of dry milk solids is cheese had been provided for gaining rapidly and in March purchases from March 15, e reached ah high of 49,800,-00- 0 1941, to April 1, 1942. Cheese proWhile the speeding up duction is now pounds. running about 150 of the manufacture of dry milk solper cent as much as a year ago. ids has necessarily been delayed Cheese is a product containing longer than seemed desirable on acpractically all the ingredients of count of the vast amount of changes fluid milk, and as such, it is one of in practice necessary, both on the the first on the list of protective farms and in the plants; yet, it is foods. Its value and its importance now gaining momentum rapidly. are gaining recognition rapidly. In Production today is approximately the production of cheese, Wisconsin 120 per cent of 1941. alone produces more than half of all The three states of Wisconsin, the cheese in the United States. FolNew York and California produce lowing Wisconsin are New York, Illiof all the dry nois, Indiana, Oregon, Ohio, Mismore than one-hamilk solids in the country at the souri, Texas, Michigan and Minpresent time. Other states impor- - nesota in the order of their impor15,000,000 ten-gall- K re-va- Cali--forni- lend-leas- lf tance. Evaporated Milk Industry. War conditions have had an equal ly important bearing on the evap orated milk industry. To fill the demand for a concentrated milk prod uct for the United Nations, the gov emment asked for a step-uin pro duction sufficient to supply 25 million additional cases of evaporated milk. This called for an increase of more than 50 per cent in manufacture. It called for changes in farm management plans, for adjustments in evaporating plant operations, for the training of personnel and for shifts of merchandising methods fully equal to those the cheese industry met. Here again the goal was equalled and more. Approximately 30 million cases of evaporated milk has been furnished for "lease-len- d operations. In this industry, too, Wisconsin leads with almost 30 per cent of all the evaporatA dairy cow weighing 1,000 pounds (providing she maintains her ed milk production in the United the eats of a milk and 7,605 approximately year) pounds produces weight following amounts of feed in one year: two acres of rich pasturage States. Ohio, California, New York, in five months of summer; 6,300 pounds of silage and 2,730 pounds of Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, Indiana! alfalfa hay during the seven remaining months; and 1,700 pounds of Washington and Pennsylvania follow in the order named. grain throughout the entire 12 months. During June hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of publicity in newspapers and trade publications, in food and drug stores, radio programs, publicity stunts adLong regarded as the all Ameri- one million cows. In the manufacture of ice cream, vertising material at can dessert, ice cream is rapidly soda fountains, as well as educationcoming to be recognized not only as Pennsylvania leads the nation closean economical food, but since it also ly followed by New York. These al programs, combine under the leadcontains all of the ingredients of two states produce more than ership of the National Dairy council of all the ice cream in the with the efforts of nutritional authormilk, as one of the best protective United States. Illinois, Ohio, Cali- ities to make of this the most gifoods. Within the past eight years, consumption has risen from about fornia, Michigan, Massachusetts, gantic effort to bring home to all 414 quarts per person per year to Texs, Wisconsin, Indiana, Missouri, people the realization of the need of over 1014 quarts per person per year Minnesota, New Jersey, Iowa and better health and the place of milk in 1941. That figure is rising rapidly Maryland follow in the order of this and its products .in achieving that Ice cream takes the output of nearly productive importance. goaL p Ice Cream Consumption More Than Doubled point-of-sal- one-four- th e, selves. What business needs is as competent an advertising manager and staff of copywriters for itself as it has for its products. It needs to sell its silent partners on its value to them. The fact that business has not done this has not shown us our relationship as silent partners is largely responsible for our present attitude of soak business. FARM LABOR IN CALIFORNIA THE GOVERNMENTS of the United Nations, including our own, are calling on American farmers for greater quantities of food. The farmers are asked to produce more at a time when they, like all other industries, are short of help because of the. call to the colors of hundreds of thousands of farm boys. California proposed to solve, or at least partially solve, the farm help problem during the fruit and grain harvest season by inducing school boys of 15 years and over to forego their summer vacations and volunteer for work on the farms and in the canning plants. High school teachers encouraged the idea, and some thousands of boys volunteered. Then the United States ment Service stepped into Employ the picture with a statement that the boys could work, provided they paid for union membership cards and paid union dues for the period of employment. These California boys will be permitted to do a patriotic job if they pay the unions for the privilege of doing it and agree to work not more than 40 hours a week. That at a time when hundreds of thousands of farm boys are fighting for the fiber-tie- s of the American people, for our cherished philosophy of goyernment. for our very life. And this is WEST COAST AND JAP ENEMY the SfT ?dejense Hitler of England and is the strategy of our military commanders and we should and must let them the decision, but people on the make West coast feel the Japs are thinking defeat of the United States is the the first object to be To the people of the accomplished West coast. Enc-lan- d and Hitler are a long way off but without straining themselves they can see the Japs peeping over the western horizon. sPr mao? ran t that Tl 500, MO. change for jjjurnent ut the purchaser. But business makes no effort to sell itself to the people, its silent Business takes it for partners. granted that we know all about this American institution in which we are so vitally interested; that we are familiar with our relationship to that institution and that it can call upon us whenever it is in need of assistance. Not realizing our relationship to business; not realizing how vital the continuance of business is to our personal welfare, we do not heed its call. To us, the rank and file of the American people, business is an enemy that will prey upon us if we do not prey upon it. It is our part to take from business all it is possible to collect, not realizing that in doing so we are taking from tau or? ol ops. Address Germany recovered largely we eye of Mr. Turtle THE skeptical cause to a considerable extent at the thought with joy loaned We fed the German people. childish the of companions many dollars her 100 per cent American food hell soon have. Yes, he is a cudAmerican to which buy with and you She never repaid those dle toy for the little ones, products. have as much . fun making dollars. We could not find a friendly will able to feed him as the children will have in people who would be conditions. playing with him. us under inflation of evils the avoid to In an effort a inflation, we can certainly accept on limitation a on limitation profits, wages, a ceiling on prices, and pay heavy federal taxes for war purposes for the duration. We can do these for a things much more cheerfully limited time than be slaves to the Huns for generations. Thats Commendable We are engaged in an "all-oHolmes claims that he is a self-maman. war, and that means either sacrifices for the period of the war, or Well, at least you must admit slavery. hes not trying to pass the buck. BUSINESS AND AMERICAN PEOPLE WE, THE RANK AND FILE of the American people, are a part of We are the siAmerican business. lent partners. It makes no difference as to what our job may be, whether that of a mechanic, merchant, clerk, member of a profession, a farmer, or what have you, the continuance of that job is dependent, directly or indirectly, upon business. Business conducts an intelligent effort to sell its products. It buys newspaper and periodical space, time on the air, billboards and other forms of advertising, in which to tell of the advantages to the purchaser of those things business proIn its advertising it does duces. not tell of the advantage to business gained by the sale of its products. It tells only of the value to .called jjSvemoney? been -f-lor be- LOS single n tl I o You Bake at Ho If you do, send for a Just drop a chin, nose th labelled Bill Bra iuis, Mike belief func by being This cert: one of i postcard , name and address Brands Inc., 691 Wasto' City.-A- f dv all-ti- of wake ( physics was the of the I It fly ba de V hristy M ippened ii game and All in the Family Albert My father has another wife to support. James What? You dont mean to tell me hes turned bigamist? Albert Oh, no; I just got mar. ried. 1100,000 Idence I into Fr was the 33310- - Pollard, colts firs: :d to be semont we Taking Over close c was the twister it from at it bac the wip had mo )wen coi deal source of vitaminC supply valuable than $20' can't I imoun vitamins A,BiindG;a cium and other minenh Flared Up married again. I thought he said the light of his life went out when his first wife died . "Yes: but I guess he must have struck Heres Bronson another match. last ttle Oranges are the heap ours are changing from skirts to trousers. had, he When children emtr give them onnga.1 you want refreshment orange juice. Fruit s give you a quid lift! What do you think of this new slacks vogue? It proves that there is nothing new under the sun. Just about the time the Chinese women are changing from trousers to skirts, ca lishap l.f 1 Aisle alter hymn. That, someone has said, is what the bride thinks when the organ plays the wedding march. -- Lew Those stamped are the finest from 14, B Pastor B cooperating growers. weight the Co means, left quantiues-t- iq must be leave, s Louis a Different Route Farmer Stowit is about five miles from here as the crow flies. Soldier And supposing the crow had to walk and carry a rifle, full pack and have a bothering sore heel how far then? r. Loves Labor Lost Bystander Good gosh. Officer, what were those two men battling over that they battered one another up so badly? Officer They were arguing what kind of peace settlement we shoulfl make after this war. HE'S A bappei head b 1 all kinds of yeast., and cakes, its ah. New York Bill? Coni tick SELF-STARTE- 0bnOft GiFSJGiDflD' R t nts PAN ANW'Wlrt. WULLtk iJ cWJ SELF-START- breakfast istonis' Beaching Souft A81 ocean-flyin- g Clippers. got to keep ot mitt (VVIMMHS CORN (lOOOWK1. FLAKES ;. yo bill on breakfast that helps 55 WJ 615 Com in there pitching of Kelloggs fruit and plenty - 7U i Thi: :w sfi- - He r amoi el win J, e Yo both set u Yo: 50.000 at the acing 'tab playei there Mritbr in ce th e cd an H si S' the cughb smal wa THE and that hek hoi told taut R, y OF THE PRESS the Manufacturers and merchant power of the press. Early they beg it to carry their advertising facts f into homes. And they found it thei profitable way ia which to tell turn in to buyers. And the buyers it profitable to deal with those who t10 willing to state in print the services they offered. will snt ra Aft E heat sea deU or Dd Sridg re Sigh r |