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Show iTHE DESERET. NEWS: Salt Lake City , Utah Menace To Farmers Seen In Proposals ' Plan Would Introduce Wagner, Wage Acts, Meeting Warned' President CHICAGO, Dec.' National Cooperative Dec. 2. (AP) threatened food shortage coupled with manpower problems on the farm brought; from leaders of organized agriculture today a demand that the governments triple-- program be abol- 2. -t- ished at least for the duration of the war. . Officials of the National Association of State Commissioners, Secretaries and Directors of Agriculture, meeting here in a two-daconvention, said th,ey were drafting a resolution to that ef- r-feet. These leaders, who asked to remain anonymous, asserted that abolition of government control over at this time would be helpful in meeting the problems of the nations 30, 000,15 000 farm population. Officials of the association arranged with Senator Thomas to put their opinions before Donald Nelson, director of the War Production Board, later today. Indicative of the associations attitude was the statement of President R. A. Trovatten, J of Minnesota, that we are against controlled production and never have been for it. Farmers were assured 'by Chairman Paul V. McNutt of the War Manpower Commission that the government will take whatever steps are necessary to provide enough labor for next years record crop goals. Plans are under way, McNutt consaid, to create tinuous employment of mobile groups of experienced farm workers transported at government expense from one area to another as the crops mature. The program also calls for bringing farm wages more nearly into line with those in industry, he said, and the transferring of experienced farm operators from substandard lands to more productive areas. Declarations that the government has been at fault in handling farm problems came at the Agriculture Associations dinner last night from Flank E Gannett, Rochester, N. Y. publisher, and Democratic Senator W. Lee ODaniel of Texas. Gannett urged aDpointment of a food administrator "entirely devoted to that task and said "most of our distress In regard to food has been created by the administration through frightful mistakes. redrafted, measure- - granting President Roosevelt new wartime powers reached the full House ways and means committee today amid mounting demands that It be subjected to the give and take of public hearings. The modified measure would authorize the chief executive to suspend tariff regulations, but would ignore his request for authority to oveiride immigration laws. g it The federation presidents . were contained in an address repared for delivery to annual the group's twenty-sixtmeeting attended by representatives of the Cooperative Dairy Industry from 41 states. Hits Bureaucrats PLEADS FOR BALANCE Sen. Lee ODaniel declares Discussing manpower, Brandt asserted that in our planning gasoline rationing is a paswe must decide the size of our to sion ration." operations, army, our defense and food production so that the three Will be in balance. It is simple folly that can only result in disaster if we increase our army and our defense factories beyond our ability to produce the food that will supply the energy generated by this manpower. He decided that the use of correct the dissubsidies Sen. ODaniel Says parity and inequality that exists for agriculture would result in Bureaus Department eventual collapse. A proper analysis of subRuns Government sidies as they apply to agriculture proves that they are neithWASHINGTON, Dec. 2 (AP) er subsidies to agriculture nor The bureaucrats have "taken a preventative of inflation. the government away from the is Too much emphasis people, and everything will be being placed upon the quesall right with agriculture only tion of inflation and not enough when the government is reon the question of unlimited and stored to the people, Senator all-oproduction. Price ceilings ODamel last night and subsidies as a means of told a convention of the National thwarting inflation or increasing Association of State Commissionproduction will end in disapers, Secretaries and Directors of pointment. Agriculture. AGRICULTURE HIT The department of bureaus "Records will prove that the is now running the government," Imposition of ceiling controls, insenator asserted, Its as tended to stop inflation, have the to close as dictatorship fallen first ana almost completeyou can get. ly upon the shoulders of agricuCharging that government lture with the disastrous result of bureaucrats had contributed to turning a threatened scarcity inthe farmers problems, ODaniel to a famine accompanied by un said the only way to restore a controlled inflation. democratic form of government I think we are extremely egowould be "to change the memtistical as a nation and woefully bers . of Congress as they did lacking in judgment and appreFarmers Are Asked last Nov. 3. He added: ciation of the problems of the I came down here with some people of the world, when we To Supply Foods Ideas, but I havent.been able to convey the Idea that we can not sell any of them. only feed and supply our own Dec. 2 CAP) An DENVER, When the bureaucrats in nation and, at the same time, finspokesagriculture deoartment ance and feed all the rest of the Washington hear about the shortman urged American farm famworld. age of milk, they go out and ilies today to produce their own The possibility of a food shortshoot the bull. cupboard supplies to ease the Down in Texas we thought age has caused public sentiment deman on retail stores. to shift in favor of the farmer we had two great industries are Already several items and his problems, Brandt said. agriculture and petroleum but scarce and others scheduled for "Now that rationing is closing it looks like the bureaucrats have ratioriing, said J. L. Boatman of in upon us, he continued, the got both of them. the departments extension serviassailed gasoline rapeople are realizing that the phll-- ce.- Jn an address prepared for ODanjel even osphy of iJlenty, though ir tioning, saying It was his imat the western regional delivery create a temporary surplus, is pression that Washington had agricultural conference. better than too little and too a passion to ration. The more ships we build, th late. It is sounder than planmore men we send abroad. The on based temporary expedning more people we reiency that views surplus as a na- 30 lease from oppression the less tional calamity. food there will be for the home Edward A. O.Neal, president X-Ra- y folks. This applies especially to of the American Farm Bureau animal products, he said. Federation, in another speech the home In this situation for the said convention prepared of the farm familys production the farm production was retardCHICAGO, Dec. 2 (AP) A food supply assumes great imed by a lack of equipment and new machine producing 30 portance. laborr and by restrictions demillion electron volts the most If we can remove the major signed to keep food prices down. In the world was demillion of food needs He said farmers and their fam-llle-s powerful scribed the Radiofrom the leuiil farm people were working 70 hours a logical today before Society of North Ameristores we will release a victory week and more to meet governca. avalanche of essential boosting ment food goals and that they The device, called the Betafoods to other outlets. had little sympathy with indusat the Unitron, was Most farm families can protry working on the average only versity of developed Illinois by Prof. Donduce the greater part of their 43 hours a week. ald W. Kerst, who said it may own food without reducing the ONeal recommended as a medical a powergive specialists output of marketable products. quick and effective way of meetto use against maligful ing the manpower shortage that nantweapon In the human body. growths everybody work 64 hours a week, He said, however, that the manine hours a day for six days a chine not la ready for mediweek. Under such a program, he cal use and yet no tests have that of millions workers could said, been made on living tissue. be reelased from their present yetThe Betatron, built by GenerNEW YORK, Dec. 2. (AP) jobs and put where the need was al Electric Company, was patz most critical. e Discovery of false sides and botterned after a toms, mislabelling and weightwhich Professor Kerst Gets Long Sentence chiselling in soldiers Christmas made two years ago for research gift boxes has led to service of in atomic physics. NEW YORK, Dec. 2. CAP) . for a ' rfl Jnufttetur-- ' 'summonses is far that power beyond Markets Anthony Gramef,'42; Yorkvilie' er and a distributor. of present day medical mechanic, convicted of treasonCommissioner Daniel F. Woolley most of which machines, develop ably aiding two of the eight energies up to 400,000 volts. announced yesterday. disNazi saboteurs landed by Among the containers Kerst said one advantage in the United States last of Prof. at a department office played the machine voltage higher June, today was sentenced to is that its maximum effect apwas a jar of caviar labelled to 45 years in prison and fined contain four ounces, but actupears to be about. 1 inches beally holding only one ounce. low the surface, whereas the efmachines is Investigators said they hsd fect of present found a gift package which sold fl greatest on the surface and defor $1.29 While it contained only creases as the rays pass into the 29 cents worth of tidbits. body. h Bureaucrats Claimed Taldng Peoples Rights S d They wmuld get within 25 yards of our base but still could not hit anything. There are plenty of them around all the time hut nobody pays 'any attention to them because they are such poor shots, he said. "I can tell you this, the Japs aie not equal to the American soldiers. It's true, however, that "they are nat afraid to die. Each one carries a diary, a flag and a picture of Tojo. And from all accounts they have pledged themselves to kill two Americans each before thev die. Cpip- - Middleton left the island Oct. 11 and after 20 days here he hopes to go back for more. Million Vplt ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Dec. 2. (AP) Lieut, Col. Edson Raff, who trained United States paiachute troops In Great Britain for the Invasion of Noith Africa, was promoted to full colonel today by Lieut. Gen. Dwight Eisenhower in recognition of the accomplishments of his Outfit, in the African action. It- - was oficialy disclosed that Col. Raff's men celebrated his thirty-fiftbirthday Nov. 15 by landing from the air on a Tuni ON SALS THURSDAY PRICAY -- A SATURDAY Swan Soap 3 URGE x BAR Nr and STAMPS 2 iBflSffi TOILET TISSUE 21 e e- - MJ II e O SIX Nmt PUNCH Delicious! 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The kidney or Nature chief way of tak fog the wnw aod and tract out of the blood They halp noit people paa about 3 a day. put Wbea disorder of kidney funetioa permit matter to remain in your blood, it mayc nagging backache, rheumatic pain. leg pains, lots of pep and energy, getting up under the eyes, night, eweiling, puffin heed ache and diaainee. Frequent er Scanty and with burning ome passage smarting tun show there i aomething wrong with bladder. or 70ur kidney Don't wait! Ask your druggiet for Doan s Fills, need euooeeefully by millions for over 40 year. They give happy relief and will help the 15 miles of kidney tube flush out poison- cue west from your blood. Get Doan Pill. ltlny (A4rj HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2. (AP) Freeman Bernstein, one of the I few men who ever had dealings with Adolf Hitler and came out all right, is dead. It wag in 1935 that Bernstein, in Canada, sold to Hitler for about $250,000 a boatload of purported nickel which the Nazi leader later delcared turned out to be junk. In 1937, at Hitlers instigation Bernstein was arrested here on a New York warrant charging grand larceny. At that time, Bern-- stein declared Hitler got what nickel and he was promised steel. No, not much nickel, but some. He was freed after Frank F. Merrlam, then governor, declined to extradite him to New York, and has resided here most of the time since. Bernstein, 74, collapsed and died In his hotel room yesterday while chatting with William K. Howard, motion picture director. Born In New Yonc, Berristein for years was active in the amuse- ment' field. 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ILK WALDORF Cello-Wrapp- Package! - or lARi SOc TUBE r" Mah Whp Got Best OfHitler In TradeDealDies On Coast - (Adv Presents the PROUO OGDEII SALT LAKE BARBAS0L'3Qc r. y SHE SHOPS "CASH AND CARRY kU ywr memy tick Kdirnd to S wktm r Whs linn ttoatek told eausas painfvi. raffaeaU tag (to. tour Hattith and haartbum (teWi mittr for the faatMtaetiat msdlelnsa known preserltw Ilka thooa la BU-n- e symptomatic taHafaedtclnaa brines eenftrt te Tiblata. No laiatlra. Bell-an- a llffy or return bottle to 1 lor doublo boost beck. So. WALGREEN'S Yule Gift Boxes Found Fraudulent -- Acid Indigestion h BONDS y d k Buy WAR SAVINGS half-starve- Built For Science sian airdrome, capturing It,' and then beating off Axis attempts tw regain the field. The outfit flew 1,500 mile from England to Oran and regrouped t before starting on the venture. In repelling the Axis (counterattack, the American troopers, with anti-tanunits escorted by planes, destroyed five Axis tanks. December 7th full-tim- e Machine 3 REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR Production Of Needs Urged "atom-smashe- jiole on Guadalcanal Island, eating rice and co&ied beef twice a day, .Corporal R. 0. Middleton just knew hecould devour anything but the table cloth when he got the opportunity, but he was wrong. "When we got to the states the first thmg we did was-g- o to a restaurant and order a full meal," he declared, but we could not eat It all. The 19 year-olmarine, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Middleton of Baton Rouge, doesn't think much of the Japanese as snipers. Parachute Troop Trainer Promoted To Full Colonel y all-ou- high-voltag- BATON ROUGE, La., Dec. 2 (AP) After 60 nights In a fox (AP) A BY THOMAS A. John Brandt of the (AP) Milk Producers Federation declared today that the shortage of manpower for the nations farms would put farmers under provisions of wage and hour laws and might well bring a decrease in agriculture production. -is going toAsserUng hat-it takemore manpower than - is available from the families that remain at home to produce the needs of this nation and our allies, Brariut said: Lets be forewarned that the drafting of manpower to be sent wherever needed will bring to the farmers door the provisions ofThe Wagner AcFandThe Fair' Labor Standards Act. The drafting pf manpower not only will regulate farmers hours and wages, he said, but will saddle agriculture with the Influences ' and controls that are t now hindering production in Industry and defense plants. Instead of increasing farm production, it might well decrease t Dec. 2. WASHINGTON, Controlled Production Always Objectionable Declares Official For Drafting Labor Corporal Finds Appetite LessKeen ThanHeExpected Tariff Control Bill Progresses FarmLeaders Seek To Drop AAA Program Wednesday, December 2, 1942 BSS&Sm! kos 10 FtocaAL nciac ta i oh Ton.rrir. watches ahd clocks W m n I a |