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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER lated to that of the United, tions. WASHINGTON Na- - so far the United States has little more than passed the halfj way mark toward maximum pos- sible war production. In rela- 10" t0 their available resources sa-:- - i eadlijie wheat nounced that examination of RuSSla have pr0 to and from prisoners of war and!? more weapons than the U.S. interned or detained civilians has has, in spite of the fact that one been transferred from Chicago to New York City. Letters sent to is a battleground and the other an offensive base. .He said the U. such persons should bear the S. must strip its civilian economy no.ation Vie New York, New to the bone if American fightYork. ers and those of Allied nations CM OUR CONGRESSMAN are to be assured of the vastly DISCOURAGING W. 1C GRANGER CONSUMER CREDIT greater quantity of ' weapons The Commerce department an- needed to turn the tide of the armed forces war. nounced department store charge signed leg-ti- account balances President Roosevelt in dropped July SCRAP SALVAGE to permit members of the to the lowest level since 1933, of where President Roosevelt told his ed forces, regardless due to government credit in hugely press conference the are stationed, to vote average - regultaions. American home had not been jaral elections by absentee balI RATIONING j "hatched for scrap sufficiently jF Patter-- 1 The Government Printing office urgently needed by the nations Under Secretary, of War Mich- - has received an order from OPA war industries. While the nation speaking at Muskegon, has not yet reached the point of said more than 600,000 men for the first issue of 150,000,000 metal doorknobs and orj,'.e armed forces are overseas ration books, de- taking force will be signed to ration any article or namental ironwork for the scrap V that this aubied and doubled and doubled commodity and to be distributed campaign, if the people do not limit of our manpower un- -j throughout the nation as soon as hurry their collections the gov9 the He possible, probably Ve defeat our enemies. shortly before ernment will have to be more wherev-- r Christmas. and literally take the These books, which drastic dd. The fighting front covers will be known as War Ration needed scrap metal away, he said. it may be and if it is the first front Book No. 2, are the first type of Mr. Roosevelt said a three-mont- h jay sections'! painstaking search of the White i four There will be other fighting a series of alits and the crucial one will be books, which the office said are House and executive offices yieldto provide ultimate ed about five tons of scrap. Judgjjinst Hitlers fortress, Europe... necessary no easy Versailler complete flexibility in the ration- ing from his own- personal expertjere will be ience, he said, he is convinced ing mechanism. wty for us if we lose. the people have not completely LEND-LEAS- E AID 7IATHER bureau President Roosevelt reported to searched the average home for scrap, and a lot of it is still lyteds women pilots Lend-LeaWeather Bureau asked for Congress the value of j The around. He said people with shipments in the last 18 months ing women pilots to take courses ) was $5,129,000,000. August deliver- available scrap who have encounmeteorology tered inadequate collection organbeginning next ies were down about $50,000,000 izations should make the siuation anuary at Massachusetts Institute from shipments of approxi- known. t Technology, University of Chi-9g- o, mately July $600,000,0000. However, the California Institute of Technoverall report showed a steadily FOREIGN RELATIONS ology and the University of increasing volume of aid to the Secretary of State Hull told his Allied Nations. The President press conference the Vichy gov- - j in X) from cke f srael- - j 1916 on Ogden irt o! Sait week his ig of vis. e quests akes. 3rd with the se gash while It close son By. se nests Mr. Salt f s. U. I. met - Cal-Jom- ia. eek, anee f J0 MENS ARMY ont- - have been more than 400 newly-jraduatofficers of the WWACs ie War department announced. Sghteen were assigned to Washier ngton' headquarters, effective 17, but the major portion i the class will remain at Fort s Moines as cadre officers or as flderstudies to the military staff ad faculty, members, whom WAAC and ;von the the ame of ay. ernments plan to send thousands of French laborers into Germany would constitute, if carried out, such aid to one of our enemies as to be wholly inconsistent with Frances obligations under international law. At the same time Mr. Hull denounced the Vichy undertaking to deliver Jewish refugees back to the Axis. These he said, policies, include the delivery of these unhappy pepole to enemies who have announced, and in eonsdierable degree executed their intention to enslave, maltreat, and eventually exterminate them under conditions of the most extreme cruelty. The details of the measures taken are so revolting and so fiendish in their nature that they defy adequate description. - Beet Growers Pledge Vote Against No. 2 Ya South Cache Courier Hyrum, Utah. The Board of Directors of the Utah Sugar Beet Growers Association, representing more than 6000 sugar beet growers in the state, met in regular session in the offices of the Utah State Farm Bureau Federation in Salt Lake City September 17th, and adopted the following- - resulution: Recognizing the value to Agriculture of all channels of wholesale and retail distribution of beet sugar, we the Board of Directors of Utah Beet Sugar Growers Association call upon our members to vote against the proposed Chain Store Tax No. 2 National Distillers Products Corp., N. Y. on the November ballot. The bill, as enacted by the last session of is the Utah State Legislature, unfair to producers and consumers. We understand that the Utah State Press Association has taken similar act'on in opposition to this discriminatory tax. Realizing, as you do, that such laws are not in the best interests of producers or consumers, we are F calling this resolution your attention as a matter of information and for publication if you so desire. Sincerely, Utah Sugar Beet Growers Association, Selvoy J. Boyer, Secretary. 90.1 Proof ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS GIVEN Eligibility requirements for machinery in cl iss A include inadequacy of present equipment and inability to meet farm production goals by repairing, or by purchasing or rentr.ig used machinery, or by custom or exchange work. A purchaser must turn in replaced equipment and agree to rent or let others use the new machinery on specified terms and conditions. who are refused Applicants certification may appeal to the slate USDA war board. Equipment in class A must not be purchased later than October 31, 1942. ed ling iere and hat lo. :er. ap- - JEeers will eventuaally .. Si inter-mountai- vr.etA'v re-ia- Other activities to which hey were assigned Included the Aircraft Warning system, the A t-school for Bakers and Cooks it Fort Riley,. Kansas and the Recruiting service.-The members if the first class,, graduated August 9, have the rank of third sfficer, equivalent to that of second lieutenant. (( J. ter nd lid ;he APPOINTMENT Jacqueline Cochran, famous wo-Bflier, has been named by Ihe Army Air forces commander ( ek ief he co-op- SAFEWAY n 47-ac- re . ity yys All A in the country, Mr. managed farm s Erekson told me. By careful grading the Farm Reporter Association has earned a fine reputation Advertisement for delivering high quality eggs, and this by egg money. helps assure us members top prices. Even 6 acres of steep, His setup includes so, we have our marketing problems, parflock where land his bench prolaying ticularly in the spring when heavy laying piles rocky duces, and a more recently purchased up the egg supply and threatens prices. farm, partly in orchard, where the young pullets Regularly during such periods weve had are kept. Current egg production varies from 14 help from Safeway and other food chains on a cases weekly (30 dozen eggs per case) in late generous scale. Theyve used special advertissummer to 45 cases weekly during peak laying ing and big 6tore posters to increase egg buying in the spring. featured the Springtime Egg Festival. before An expert machinist he turned to poulThe Safeway method of direct selling also Mr. his Erekson built in himself, coops appeals to me. Eggs for example Safeway try 1926, demands high quality eggs and pays top prices mixed cement forthe floors, did all the plumbing for them. Then they deliver to consumers by and wiring. For the past 8 years he has served as the quickest, least expensive route., which saves a director of the Utah Poultry Producers Coopfolks plenty of money. erative Association and was its president in 1937. Your Safeway Farm Reporter is Association of the best one our Fortunately J. Erekson of Payson, Utah, has today one of the most modem, streamlined states. poultry farms in the Best thing is, its practically all paid for E. Sep-anb- nan an . Arnold and director of Womens training within the Army Air Forces. Miss Cochran, the ttnouncement said, will be in charge of a program designed to create a pool of trained women Jilots from which will be drawn, ,M needed, for noncpersonnel ombat flying purposes, to release as many men pilots as possible for combat and other important duties. . ;s. - Five 1UXILIARY CORPS Initial assignments )een v- .'l'jc' lying . of :h c- xi of d. d IF labor supply FSA I Administrator McNutt static the shortage of manpower is ore acute and serious in the re'd of nursing than in any er aspect of the war effort. said Nursing is not only of j national significance, but its importance in the entire allied war cannot be overestimated. e program of nursing of the rlted States must be closely re i lrt constitutional AMENDMENT i . Compensation of Members Legislature ef the 4 JOINT RESOLUTION PROPOSING TO AMEND SECTION 9, ARTICLE VL OP THE CONSTITUTION OP UTAH, RELATINO TO COMPENSATION OP MEMBERS OP THE LEGISLATURE. Be it resolved by the Legislature f the State of Utah, two-thirof AU members elected to each of the j two houses voting in favor thereof: Is Section 1. That it is proposed to amend section 9, article VL Constitution of the State of Utah, to read: 3 Section 9. The members of the f Legislature shall receive such per oiem and mileage as the Legisla- re may provide, not exceeding ten dollars per day, and ten cents Per mile for the distance necessar-ij traveled going to and returning from ; the place of meeting on the j ffiost usual route, and they shall j receive no other pay or perquisite, i Section 2. The secretary of I state is hereby directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors of the state of Utah at i next general election in the Slanner aa provided for by article , 43, section 1, Constitution of Utah. I Section 3. If adopted by the Sectors of the state, this amend-- j. f: ment shall take effect the first day of January, 1943. E. E. Monson, Secretary ef ji L tote of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing J a full, true and correct copy of Constitutional Amendment f - Proposed session of by the h toe legislature ofregular 1941 as the same (: aPPears of record in my office. In witness whereof, I have here--l onto set my hand and affixed the . I :Seat Seal of the State of Utah, 24th day of August, 1942. g L'. MONSON, Secty. of State. ds large laying coops like this, E.J.Erek-so-n maintains about 3 000 laying hens highly nervous White Leghorns which produce best on strict routine. We gather the eggs three times daily in summer, at 10 a. m., 2 p. m. and 5:30 p. m., and in winter, at 9:30 a. m., 2 p. m. and 4 p. m., Mr. Erekson explained to me. During the summer I feed the whole at 5:30 grains (scratch feed) at 6 a.m.-an1 p. m. During the winter I mash m. at p. feed the whole grains at 7:30 a. m. and 4 p.m., and the mash at 1 p.m. If I varied my routine as little as half an hour my hens would probably go off their lay for several days. Collecting three times daily allows cooling of the imeggs soon after they are laid, and thats conportant for quality. My hens are always fined in the laying coops I dont believe yards are necessary. Twice a year around July first and the middle of September I cull and sell all hens over three years old,and all broody hens and early moulters. Every fall we thoroughly disinfect and clean each laying house. The straw litter is changed twice monthly during the damp winter weather, once a month in summer In six d Mrs. Erekson. "Starting on a shoestring aa we did, E. J. told me, Id have soon been through if it hadn't been for my, wife shes been a real Erekson told me she learned years ago that food dollars go farther at Safeway part-ner,M- rs. Clyde Erekson, 16,highschool student and helper on the farm, wants to be an aviator x . I 3 Each spring the Ereksons buy about 2400 best 'grade sexed chicks as replacements for the laying flock. After 9 or 10 weeks in the brooder house, these young pullets are put in open air screened frames and allowed to range an apple orchard. The natural cover crop here gives them a lot of greens. "Ranging this way makes good strong pullets they get so vigorous they go to roost in the apple trees," Mr. Erekson told me. "Of course we keep feed and water in the screen houses so the pullets never stray too far. Before they are put in the laying houses my pullets are vaccinated against chicken dox t- - i" Floyd Harmer manages the Payson branch of the Utah Advertising and selling support for eggs given by Safeway is a big help to his Association, reports Mr. with a poster isBruce Walton, manager of the Safeway in Payson where the Ereksons trade Poultry Producers Cooperative Association. Mr. Erekson hauls hi3 eggs to this plant daily for grading, packing and shipping. He also buys all his chicken feed and sells culled hens through the Association |