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Show bf- PAROWAN TIMES, TAROWAN, Skirts Will Be Short Throughout the S ummer 'I.I WASllINt.;iii. 62 Fat Hog Go to Market But Their Caah Goes AUo - CH- James GO. Hendry wn C. Moose brought 82 big, D. , to market front Lebanon, their new truck. day they didnt have the e $1,340 they got for selling r their truck. the farmers had auctioned nogs they drove their truck alley to park and were con. by three men. said one 'At re sheriffs men, We want to see if rf in.- - trio. .ngs all right." r'.i 7: e gunmen went through Herns-:e..lid Mooses pockets, took the hog funds, said "everything's ill i t." and drove away m the ) S . i.'..ck. T;. v werent so smart, Hensley rural police in reprirting the loht "They missed $1,000 from ; trip I had in my shoes." r.c-- hol-L- restrict;. changed Scpt.mt.-r- A ns ! , .1,,., administrut 'men's style :;,ne un '.'U t . ., . ,t-- in r, ' Aug. i .t a. I pi'iductun ced in ord. r it they Would to quash jU!i or ; Le lift, d at muiv.ar In p.iti.cnlur it ',Hild he clear-Will. I stool t t .. .. tXlstl. '.!. ail sweep ,f -- l;1-- U drees tull.e I," said will lleil. tt H be IM--. al . -- I te-'- r C( 'l.lMHUS. OHIO Agi i.'uLural Sl.it. university ..I.- hu-- v thinking up new was to h. p tie f.up'.-.to 1. work with ..emu .iiui less pcipiration, s.i s the Imtcii 1ies.s. 7 . y l..i v e ...ready drwVpeJ a "n liking p.irloi " th.it s,. es stan-e- !. .'ii room in dairy barns and keeps t! e eii.vs neve g m double file past a milking machine. They get their etd ..t the same time, thus greatly Nimpiifj, mg that job for the farmer. I he tnemeeis are wot king on a gadget that at the- ton. h of a blit-t"t- ) scoops manure fiom the trough la hind t: e M.m. limns arid dumps it mto the spreader, New Cotton Ticker. F arm maehmery companies also hae th.eir plans, some of them still O: i.i - t):ay revolutionize cotton farming in the south; a one man piekup haler that rakes up cured hav ill the fields and kicks out bales as it goes along; l and a lor combine that applies the principle to wheat harvesting 1 11 t also has a new tractor for farms of less than 40 acres that comes equipped with a specially designed line of implements. The Oliver corporation claims its new plow "solves the problem of deep plowing." They say the new plow will plow to a depth of 12 inches without turning over the hard pan of the substrata. C omfort on Tractor. Oliver also has a new-typ- e tractor that moves on rubber tracks. Its good for use on muck farms or on farms that are hilly or have loose soil. The rubber tracks permit its use on highways. Another device recently demonstrated was a "cut-of- f corn harvester" that cuts the stalks, snaps them off and husks the ears, delivering them to the wagon; then shreds the stalks and distributes them over the ground. Prompt disposal of the stalks in this manner cuts down corn borers by 95 per cent, it is reported. One manufacturer with an eye for comfort has mounted his tractor seat on hydraulic shock absorbers. The one the farmers are really going for is the home freezing unit. Dr. Glen R. McCuen, head of the Ohio state agricultural engineering department, warns that manufacturers cannot keep up with the demand for freezing units. This will represent an oppormanufactunity for the McCuen Dr. warned. turer, "It looks as though the disreputable home freezer salesman will be the next to victimize the farmers on a vest-pocke- ... v to give your PAPERS ( "printed salesmen" more selling power. BUY YOUR PRINTING HERE LONG DISTANCE Calling grand scale. Atom Accident Fatal to Scientist From Canada - Since Last Summer More long distance calls are being handled at our switchboards this summer than ever before in history. The great surges of traffic which seemed so abnormal on VE day and YJ day are being far exceeded every business day now. The greatest increases have occured on calls to neighboring towns Provo, Salt Lake City, St. George, and Heaver. Some delays are inevitable. We are bending every effort to relieve this situation as rapidly as possible, but serious shortages of facilities delay the needed circuit additions. Until we can provide ade quote facilities, we ask your cooperadis- tion in avoiding unnecessasy long tance calls and in keeping necessary calls as brief as possible. The Mountain States Tel. and Tel. Company British Throttle . !i i Documents Uncovered ea Extensive Plans. r t ' t l t IV-- 'G : LOS ALAMOS, N. M. Dr. Louis scientist from Slotin, Winnipeg, Canada, died recently from the effects of exposure to radiation, the army announced. Dr. Slotin and seven other physicists and technicians of the Los Alamos atomic bomb laboratory were injured May 21 in an accident while working with fissionable material. All were exposed to radiation, but the other seven are reported recovering. Dr. N. E. Bradbury, project director, credited Dr. Slotm with dispersing the material at the moment of the accident to prevent greater injury to fellow scientists. A native of Winnipeg, Dr. Slotin came to the atomic bomb laboratory from Oak Ridge, Tenn., in December, 1944. He had been associated with the Manhattan engineer district since 1943. "We dont like the best deal W'e at least, that extra Sees Big Increase In Building on Farms WASHINGTON, D. C. - Expen- ditures of close to one billion dollars a year for farm buildings during the next five years are predicted by Frank J. Ilallauer of the forest service. In a report made public by the senate comsmall business mittee, Hallauer said this prospect was based on such factors as an accumulation of deferred maintenance, a healthy agricultural balance sheet, a high level of income and a growing appreciation of higher standards of income. Expenditures for farm building have been less than depreciation, he said, since 1943. Warning that the farm balance sheet could change for the worse, he said; The forces of inflation have not yet run their course; postwar adjustments are yet to be made. Marines to Cut Points Needed for Discharge - Marine WASHINGTON, D. C. corps headquarters recently announced a revised demobilization schedule that affects 40,000 men and forecasts an end of the point system after July 15. Points for male personnel will drop from 30 to 28 on June 1, to 22 on July 1, and to 20 on July 15. Thirty months of active service also will establish discharge eligibility beginning July 1. On August 1, the service requirement will be cut to 24 months and all fathers with two or more dependent children, regardless of the time spent in the corps, will qualify for CAPETOWN, UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA. The Asiatic land tenure and Indian representation bill, which restricts the purchase of land by Indians to certain areas, was passed on third reading in the Union senate recently. It then went to the governor general to be signed. A Nationalist (opposition) amendment providing for a referendum on the measure was rejected, 22 to 10. An outcry in India while the bill was before the South African parliament led to the recall of the Indian high commissioner in South Africa. Trade sanctions against South Africa have also been imposed in India as retaliation for the W. Cor- it. This place was had. to me, we were getting some ' i , ! l i "I - ; , . i i o i ; i ;c .! i I , ,1 i, 1 to . i t W . ! i '1:.17 i c. Be., lie I as ' ' .a c . .a ;;n , t: I ' .! . e i o: N.C Mil ill- t'e la bed 1 - - Is I. ill cl eup.lt Oc I S.c i , I i ; g ( at h i . d .lb'll!' e ' 'i d ' oi I'll ,ir l: . , i c i ,, i 'Vi-ir- c i ol : ,. Mu It ,,th , ' , h ,.r g.iiu.di"i,al huge si, 'll-- ! ' .0.1 VII no; lo pt B.in.i uodi I i six numb - li'i.iai.g wi II as , i It - ,j, p,,!-- , .1 I .mm It; I,. II, s.od III n s, '"C'd.- f , p .a o I... a I "( ii n 2 i c I si . v c X ,w p I, S. ha! it i dish tloup, and I. n i lil-- t pil I, .oilliol it ii s a.d N inch i'ii eal old lit mol j I, h i only ol the 8 win ph , go I'V, disclosed lot u'lon , , f t x. " 's i v es and inip.u ah d wo I do Ic adds m the plol hi wink bed attempts to hi mg deiia-e- i to Get many, they s.ud liana planned to mtr, da. i "lillh column" into approved v sock ties and stir unrest among , population, according to authmih The group was said lo have fanned at the grave of Go t Clue f Himmler, who swallow I "c "ii when eaptmed by the B isli in May, 1915, and was him at the edge of Luetu hel'g fmest The grave was unmaiked u British ollieials thought it was a secret spot until, shortly alt. w.nd, lloial wreaths appealed on they said. I " i ang III a-- l 1 ! Get man ;irma:m ul livl niqia vitli the help of vour guat and in" t mi poitant linn. "I am puttii g down tho-- e Inn m order to make a leeonl m my tdi, in which theie ib alieadv the letter T.I21 which sets forth that, tliiough my initiative as reichschancellor and firm nee minister, you) Ingnlv i ti enn d lit m was secured for ID i.ns l y pul'ing at its disposal coiisiiiei able mi ails of the lfeieh tor mainlenance of unwa-men- t technique in the lien ads seiv-ice- . I of Dr. Wiedlleld of Mikado, Yank Shake Hands; Japs Awed - CHIBA, JAPAN. Emperor Hirohito publicly shook hand--witan American army oth ccr recently. Awed Japs saw tli unusual exchange as the cmpei or arrived here on the final lei of his longest meet the pc oph trip. Lt. Col. Frederick J. Stcvct son, FI Paso, Texas, milita' governor of Chiba prefectui was waiting at the railroad s' lion when the emperor stepp off a shiny maroon coach his imperial train. Stevenson snapped his nuhtar; police escort to attention, salutec the emperor, then extended hi. hand in greeting. The emperm Money Sent Yearly. Attached to Wnlh's I, lit r was a confidential memoi anduni by one of Krupps staff wlnih is expelled in in any Allied figure prominently trial of German imlustr lalists. The memorandum slates that Wit put 48 million dollars woith of muiks at Krupps disposal al Mendelssohn & Co., Berlin, from which the money was tiansfened to an account earned under the name "Cus-todia- " in Ainstculam The account was later nomished by yeaily remittances from Stockholm in Swedish crowns." Because ot senile suite mn.g of the brain, Gustav Kiupp von Boinen und Halbach was excluded limn the present Nuembeig war times trial. His son, Allied, may he included as a deiendant if industrialists uie put on trial as a la. s. 1 c grasped it. Earlier in his ' ' j swine tin two-da- y around Boso peninsula of Tokyo" Ilirohit drove along streets packed witl "kitchen c , to visit Umckirhi Sekine, keeper of Inn bo lighthouse. lan7ai-shoutin- c people Atom Information Group Army Is Seeking Police in Gifts Reports $50,000 Dogs to Fill K-- 9 Rank - The emerPRINCETON, N J gency committee ol atomic stun-tists- , headed Ly Dr Alhct Einstein, announced rei nhy that it had collected S5D.OOO in tie lii.-- ID ihp.s of its campaign to raise $2D0,()(j() lor the duration ol the Arne i lean public to the social significances of atomic eneigy. A spokesman for the giuup ;,aid response to telegrams sent to several prominent citizens by Ein.-- in on May 25 had been "veiy good" and that contributions had been received from "every state in the United States and every walk of life. t G.I. Surgeons Used Junk Tools for Operations WASHINGTON. .A made from steel rout, bum A home-mad- e dci.ta! dull powered by a part from a " tomobile. Both were used efh American doctors irnpii Jap concentration c.m.p war. Comdr Mack L. medical corps, him oner for four years, fold H is duiy of Yankee ingenuity. h bulWriting in the Nava' letin, he said the m.m"'oh:i st;ing saw was used for an j .h'.r.r,- - and for removing ribs. Got-nava- l NT- i WASHINGTON, D. arm C.-- The started out recently to recruit Gei man shepherd dogs to fill the ted ranks of the wartime c K in ps. An undisclosed number will h purchased outright, the war purtment announced, to take d t1 place of dogs which were lent the army by their owners and ha been returned. Animals of many breeds saw w; service, hut the army decided I concentrate on German .shepherd which did "outstanding work" a. miMwngers, scouts and sentries. For healthy and fearless lauds between one and tl rec ,u. f year- - old, weighing tween 70 and DO pounds, the q n tei master corps will pay up tt. ii' l one-hal- Price Ceilings Boosted On Bkes, Boat Moto - WASHINGTON. Retail pi : ceilings for bicyc les are going a 10 per cent and ceiling-- , for u hoard motor-- , aoout fi per ccr of producers' high wage a materials this, the OP, s j that in the case- - of both items d increase is over 1041 prices It an1 ed that manufacturers genera!!' have been maintaining tao-- e j Ti.e producers increase is Elective immediately. j Doughnut Dunkers: United States Army Ships Heres News for You Put Ban on Younger Babes WASHINGTON. t ! x South Africa for Land Curb Against Indians The era of the AmeriPARIS. can doughnut is just about over in liberated Europe. The Red Cross, which estimates it has served 450 million doughnuts along with 200 million cups of coffee since the invasion, has closed up its hospitality activities. The Columbia club in Paris was the first to close and the eight remaining Red Cross outposts in Le Havre, Reims and Namur, Belgium, followed. Dorothy Villiger, the Columbia club director, said 22,000 soldiers a week had used the Paris club's facil- ) ' V ' ( discharge. On September 1,' the length of service requirements will drop to 18 months and fathers with more than 12 months active service will qualify for discharge. Red Cross Closes Last Of Doughnut Canteens ities. Pfc. Walter Babicz of 1504 tez street, Chicago, said: i V l k.i.i 111 year. "This proves r Nazi Ycl'I.'i - self-prope- envelopes, folders and booklets. V'e give your work the distinction of pleasing typography, clean press work, and high quality we put fine craftsmanship into every job and use paper ire. . "t"p secret Inten. at. onal Harvester now has in produet'. ti a eotton pieher that Assured Satisf.utiox . . . ... is yours when we print your letterheads, Reis'! TECUMSFH, Mil'll e! IV II. den. Q :,iker miller, vv ve.iis : i his ago pl.ir.Ud a cubic Nll .. at, s.l'.d "dynamic kern. Is" cf a h.ll- recently tl.it this w.uv r vest would he mote than 11! mil! G. lion cubic in, lies. The cumulative pio.l.ut of tie original meh of "hib'nal l u e g wheat" would have a mat ket value of more than Sled. Dun, he ...i.i. ,1 .one t" Mr. Hayden pledged a t r.th if i I' , a . Caeh v ears .Top to the ihuuh in Vide i c What he celled "a demonstlatioli I, ,,:s of the principle of t. thing as taught Ki imp s ' in the B,1 le." I t The final public harvesting cereUT i!.: t t mony is planned for August 1 at :n ii.. I J ' near-bIdAdrian, vw.cie a .ere H I O'. plot of wheat, descended from the original inch, has been planted in (!) Illll1 I v the center of the county fair- V.iJt lor wiiT grounds race track. ; Because the final sowing could Sw it.vi u.,i be not contained m any tract in Mulligan, tin- seed was distiihuto.l to 287 farmers m Mulligan, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin and Tennessee. Each fanner has phdgod to give a tenth of the ntum to a church or lelut.-organization Mr Havdon repelled that ihurohos of 27 denominations, tile Gideons, tile Salvation Army and olher gioups would .share the SIO.ODU tithe expected from the years final crop He declaied that the biblical promise of increased returns under a system of tithes was borne out by the project. "The normal increase of wheat m Michigan aveiagcs under he stated. "The first year the increase from the original liuh of dynamic kernels was the second year, 55; the third, 18; the fourth, 27, and the fifth, 19 and these figures take into account the 10 per cent lithe taken out each - ! ATLANTIC CITY. N J. A pmo crful new anti n.ah.n..l drug SN 7(118. Which surpa-'- -. s t.eth and atabrine in eflectn rni'-- quote., , u s , developed by sclent. ts w h.o 14. 0(H) chemicals, 7. non t,f ti , tM. mg new compounds con. octed . daily for wartime research. Twas revealed by Pi.f Carl S. Matvei of the L'niversm . f Illinois at a meeting of the Am.-lean Chemical society. Yield Is S1C3.000 From Tithe Wheat Dynamite Kernels Multiply In Biblical Test. University Experts Seek Era Of More Comfort and Less Perspiration. ..t Powerful Drug Reported Perfected Anti-Malari- Hanning Rural Utopia on Farm UTAH, JULY 20, 1948. The war de- partment has decided not to carry any more babies less than six months old on its ships bringing war brides and children from the European and Mediterranean areas. It also bans wives more than six months pregnant and will not permit more than 2a per cent loading of any ship with children less than six years oid. CONN. - BRIDGEPORT, Jimmy Miranti, a baker, has put a doughnut on the market that he hopes will make dunking acceptable even in the highest society. The doughnut dunkers delight consists of a plain doughnut with a hole in the middle and a handle on the side. The handle is twisted like a cruller ar.d Jimmv said it would elimirate drip ping coffee on the tablecloth. Japans Shipping Firms Put on Restricted List TOKYO. Thire largest and most f t ping companies ha.c the list of restricted was announced. the They were Steamship Co. Ltd Commercial Steam-- ' l Dark-haireDop-e- i LONDON. Davies stood in the crowded kit'd. on of a friend's house in north Lend' n c it ri ntlv and was married t, telephone to a former G.I , Ja k Murrell of Fort Wort .. Texas Th ceremony at S4 r I t lv ; was performed ri. mute it. .ii. ter at the Texas end ol t'a with Doieens father serving a t..e ;c fur the bridegroom in Lo: dun. d r N (N (OSK); and Yama Co. Ltd. (YSK). The v a sidiaries formed t! " U. Jap maritime fleet, London Girl, Veteran Wed by Telephone ($60) : a ; r.f c i n- chip- d c trans-Atlanti- c -- r i i |