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Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION vmmmmjtt'mmii 'Food Will Win the War' And Maybe an Election Washington Politicians Awaken to Fact That Voting Public, Like an Army, 'Moves on Its Stomach.' By BAUKHAGE News Analyst and Commentator. l vfa " - L-- L. The governor tells me that the FCA has been used heavily since the first of the year to see that farm-ers are getting the credit they need to achieve all-o- production. He ad-mits that the 50 million dollars loaned to farmers and stockmen isn't much compared with the total amount of production financing which the farmers use in a year but it's something even in these days of astronomical lending, leasing and spending. WND Service, Union Trust Building Washington, D. C. Wars and rumors of war, war pro- - duction, man power, post-wa- r plans, ' race riots, gas rationing, strikes, floods, offensives you can think of a lot more probably. All I right, pour them all into the hopper. Grind them up. This is a pretty dish to set before a voter in 1944! Don't worry, he can take it. But take away his bread-baske- t, and he is a different animal. Food will win the war. Lack of it can postpone victory if It doesn't spell defeat. The loans are made through the Regional Agricultural Credit corpo-ration. Here are just a few of the facts Black produced from his briefcase. Take flax flax is as important in its way as tanks are in theirs. The automobile manufacturers have had it made worth their while to manu-facture tanks instead of autos. The farmers up in take North Dakota, for instance have "shared the risk" as Black puts it, with the RACC (Regional Agricultural Credit corpo- - And food, or lack of it, can lose an election, that is what you are hearing in Washington these days. An electorate, like an army, moves on its stomach. On an empty stomach, it moves away from the "ins," hollers for the "outs" to bring back the bacon. And when you get a customer with both an empty stomach and a full pocket-boo- k hammering on the table and demanding service, you have a hard customer to please. Slowly, the Washington politicians are beginning to' awaken to that fact that food is going to be the big issue in the next election. President Saw tt First The President and his keen-eye-political scouts recognized it first, and when Phil Murray, head of the CIO, and Wil-liam Green of the AFL began to call for the roll-bac- k of prices, the administration was quick to prom-ise that they would be served "right away." Meanwhile, some of the oth-er guests are beginning to feel neg-lected. But before roll-bac- au gratin could be served, congress stuck its foot out and tried to spill the For tray. a while, it looked as if there was going to be embarrassment in the political kitchen. Even if the administration is able to silence the demands and threats lazuli wiucn exxenaea tnem creait to "change over" to flax. Instead of one million three hundred thousand acres of this valuable crop that was harvested last year, a million EIGHT hundred and forty thousand acres were seeded this year (41.4 per cent government financed). Take dry beans In Montana: 0 acres seeded this year, double last year's planting, 84.5 per cent of the crop government financed. I could go down the list with peanuts in South Carolina, sweet potatoes in Louisiana and Mississippi, ad infini-tum. Simple Machinery The way this share-the-ris- k thing works is simple. The farmer puts up his land and labor, the RACC puts up the costs after the county war board and its own representatives have approved the deal. If the crop comes out ' all right, tne farmer pays the loan. If it is wiped out by bugs, drouth or dis-aster (and when Ol' Man River went hog-wil- d this spring, there was a lot of wiping out) his liability isn't wiped out, too, because his liability is limited to what he took in from the crop and the incentive payments or insurance on it. "It wasn't so much a matter of how much money was loaned," Gov-ernor Black said to me, "as where it was loaned and what it was loaned for. In the past few months, the country has awakened to the neces-sity of producing the vital crops to the limit, and that's where we con-centrated our financing." Well, that is one agency that has been able to go ahead without hav-ing to duck the political brickbats. Other government agencies, not so lucky, had to take a lot of punish- ment that wouldn't have been di-rected at them if it weren't for poli-- 1 tics. The poor Commodity Credit corporation, which everybody seems to love for itself alone, got into an unpleasant jam with the subsidies, and had a tight squeeze partly through pure politics, partly because congress and the President didn't see eye-to-e- on the of labor, there are a lot of ojher Oliver Twists who "want some more" and who will twist out of their straight-ticke- t voting and start looking for "a better 'ole" unless this food question is solved before the ides of November MCMXLIV. - Through the days when congress was first trying to fold its tent and steal away from the banks of the Potomac, one thing was clear: the administration pulled a nice, fat and succulent rabbit out of the hat which could be served up to the electorate with enough left over for the fighting forces and the hungry Allies and other pospective clients, the Gallup poll vaulters which had the New Deal in advance would have to start their polling all over again. The enemies of the administration are building up a barrage to the ef-fect that Mr. Roosevelt has babied labor and has left his old friends, the farmers, in the lurch. They say that because he was afraid to of-fend labor, he listened to .their de-mands for lower prices and turned a deaf ear to the farmers' troubles. This, of course, since it comes from hardly quarters. has to be taken with a grain of salt, but whatever the working man says, when he sees the cost of living eat-ing up his former "raises" if he has had them, the record will show that despite John Lewis' polysyllabic at-tacks on the President, labor has not been treated exactly as a step-child. What most people fail to realize is this: even now with all the splendid effort the farmers have made, agri- culture has not yet been entirely "converted" I don't mean convert-ed to the "all-ou- t" idea but convert-ed in the sense that civilian industry was converted to war productio- n-cut wnat has the farmer been getting meanwhile? A couple of assists, at least, which have benefited him and the war ef- fort at the same time. FCA Head Reports Let me report to you what I learned from Governor Black of the Farm Credit administration, an which has managed to es-cape the attacks which most of the government agencies have had to weather. Governor Black was in Washington the other day the head-quarters of the Farm Credit admin-istration were moved to Kansas City a year ago, you know, in the inter- est of decentralization and with the idea that after all, Kansas is nearer the center of American agriculture than the Atlantic seaboard. auius io lames ana planes, sewing machines to machine guns. In-dustry had plenty of "incentive." The farmers have had some help, will have more. And the consumer (who is really everybody) and the farmer and the worker, haven't gotten' it through their heads yet that unless they all hang together, they'll hang sepa-rately. If we don't get the food, we won't be able to eat the dollars, no mat- ter how many we may have in our sock. The per capita use of eggs in 1942 was 316. Prospects for this year are about 324 per capita. The army and lend-leas- e need about 3 eggs out of every 10 produced, which leaves 7 out of every 10 for civilians WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS FDR, Churchill Seek Italy's Surrender As Allies Smash at Sicily Resistance; MacArthur Forces Gain in New Guinea; Farmers Get First Call on Gas Stocks s wfORw? NOTE: y,h" opln'oni are expressed In these columns, they are those of Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) ' Released by Western Newspaper Union. CABINET: FDR Restores Order Hereafter, if any administrative heads in Washington are in conflict over fact or policy, they must re-solve their differences quietly or else turn in their resignations. That, in short, was the ultimatum Presi-dent Roosevelt laid down after Hen-ry Wallace had charged Jesse Jones with interfering with the operations of the Board of Economic Warfare, which Wallace headed. The President solved the Wallace-Jone- s fracas by abolishing the BEW and establishing the Office of Eco-nomic Warfare and then appointing as its director Leo T. Crowley, alien property custodian and chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance cor-poration. The action relieved both Wallace and Jones of direction in the gov- - Kis k t J' - -- 'w"'tfr.y - j 4 K. ; f !x , - ft t ' "v. , I ernment's purchase of foreign ma-terials. Previously, the two agen-cies had shared in the program, with the Reconstruction Finance corporation, which Jones heads, sup-plying the funds for the buying. OPA: Raps 'Bright Boys' Declaring the best thing that could happen to the Office of Price Admin-istration would be a reduction of 50 per cent in its staff of 2,700 attor-neys, Lou R. Maxon, deputy ad-ministrator of OPA, turned in his resignation. Maxon's withdrawal came at a time when he was being prominent-ly mentioned as a general manager for the OPA, a job later given to Chester Bowles, a New York adver-tising executive. He complained of the government's failure to estab-lish a definite food program, charg-ing that instead nf wnrkinff nut a - . -- .".- iWiB Seabees are shown about to board a transport somewhere in Australia for duty in a combat zone. A naval band gives the men a lively sendoff. Although performing construction work, Seabees are also trained to pro- tect themselves against attack. SICILY: 'The Hour Has Come' Axis resistance on Sicily stiffened as Gen. Bernard Montgomery's Brit ish 8th army moved on the big port of Catania, which is 55 miles from the terminus of Messina, where but two miles of water separate the is-land from the Italian mainland. As the battle of Sicily raged. President Roosevelt and Prime Min-ister Churchill told the Italian peo-ple the hour had come to honorably PACIFIC: New Guinea Victory With the fall of Mubo, the big Japanese base of Salamaua in New Guinea lay in peril of capture by Australian and American forces op-erating from all sides. Mubo fell about two weeks after the start of General MacArthur's Pacific offensive. American troops had landed on Nassau bay to the east of the town, and then marched into the interior to cut off Japanese set policy, the administration was meeting each crisis with a make-shift compromise, thus creating the basis of another crisis. Price Ad-ministrator Brown replied that OPA had a definite policy in "roll-backs- " to reduce retail costs to Septem-ber, 1942, levels. A Detroit, Mich., advertising ex-ecutive, Maxon flailed OPA "theo-rists" and "professors" for attempt-ing to institute a grade labeling pro-gram for goods, which would elim-inate all trade marks and brands and have the effect of eliminating competitive merchandising. While British troops clattered toward the great plains which roll around Catania, Gen. George S. Pat-ton- 's 7th American army fought its way into the area of Vizzini, from which the British flank can be cov-ered or an assault sprung toward the Axis rear. Hundreds of Allied paratroopers continued to be dropped behind the enemy's lines near Catania. To the front, the 8th army recovered from A hMVT Avic Mniir nnfV. n.l...U forces from the rear and effect a junction with the Australians. At the same time, Allied soldiers at-- tacked the enemy's main lines, and thus, completely enveloped on all sides, Mubo was overrun. The Allied success at Mubo came as American troops pressed closer to the Japanese air base of Munda on New Georgia island. Approach- - ing the stronghold from the north and east doughboys worked cau-tiously through jungle foliage to gain CATTLE: g Marketing Increases Marketing of cattle increased in the face of talk in Washington that the OPA was considering establish-ing ceilings on livestock to break the speculative angle of growers and spur liquidation of herds. Plans also called for modifying the govern-ment's support price of $13.75 for hogs, to , discourage feeding for heavy porkers. Although cattle marketing in-creased over recent abnormally low levels, supplies still were well below last year's runs. Calves remained tviui WIUI11 UlCJf had driven into Montgomery's base at Augusta before being repelled. FUEL: Gas for Farmers Predicting a tightening of the sup-ply of crude oil in the West, the Petroleum Administration for War took steps to provide sufficient gaso-line for farmers throughout the country by giving them first call on available stocks. According to WAP, farmers are using about 100,000 barrels of mo-tor fuel daily, 90 per cent of which is being consumed outside of the East. About 70,000 barrels are re-quired in the Middlewest. ground. Squeezed, the .enemy launched one counterattack, but withdrew Are after being stopped. CANNED GOODS: Cut Civilians' Share Already rationed, canned fruits, vegetables and soup supplies for civilians will be cut another 15 per cent in the next 12 months, the War Food administration announced. Of the prospective pack of vegetables and soups, domestic consumers will get 70 per cent, and of canned fruits and juices, they will receive 53 per cent. The total supply of canned vege-tables and soups in the next year is expected to total 262.000.000 cases I I ' As the WAP made its announce-ment, the big-inc- h pipe line running from Norris, 111., to the East was opened. Eventually the line will pump 300,000 barrels of crude daily, thus draining the West of supplies that had previously abounded be-cause of a lack of transportation facilities. Meanwhile, the oil industry con-tinued alarmed by the drop in oil reserves, partly caused, spokesmen said, because of a virtual cessation of exploratory drillinc as Of this amount, civilians will be allotted approximately 180,000,000. The War Services will obtain prac-tically all of the remainder, with about 4 per cent going to the Allies and other purposes. About 61,000,000 cases of canned fruits and juices, excluding citrus, will be produced, WFA estimated, and of this supply, civilians will be allowed approximately 31,000,000 cases. Approximately 24,000,000 cases will be allotted to the serv- - Calves scarce in market. exceptionally scarce. Continued heavy shipments of hogs and sheep however, bolstered the over-al- l meat production. OPA's plans for livestock ceilings have been bitterly contested by con-gressional farm spokesmen, meat packers and cattle raisers. Under the present system of setting whole- sale ceilings, small packers have found difficulty operating since no bar has been set on prices paid for stock. BANKING: Deposits Rise The extent to which banks are financing the war was illustrated in the announcement that the invest- ment in government securities by 20 of the nation's largest banks 18 billion dollars on June 30, an increase of 7 billion dol- lars from a year earlier. The announcement also revealed that the 20 Institutions had total de- posits of 31 billion dollars on June ?oV ' SiX bUUon d0 over of prices for crude. Between 50 to 60 billion barrels of new oil will have to be discovered within the next 20 years, it is said, to maintain present production. RUSSIA: Giants Locked Rain drenched the sprawling Ukrainian plains around Belgorod, hindering mechanized activity on the south end of the flaming' Russian front, but Red armies attacked in force above the northern pivot of Orel, extending the battlefield to 225 miles. Both the Germans and the Rus-sians were agreed on one thing: the great number of men being used on both sides. Around Orel, the Nazis admitted that the Reds had broken their lines at two points, but had been driven back in counter-attack-s. Heavy ground action at Orel was supplemented by strong Russian aerial action. Red bombers blasted the principal railway installations of the town, from which the Russian lines bend southward in a great arc thus offering the Germans a pivot for encirclement from the ices, with the remainder marked for the Allies and export. FOREIGN DEBTS: Mexico, Canada Pay An improvement in financial con-ditions arising from the stimulation of the war was noted in the action of the Mexican and Canadian gov-ernments in announcing plans for the discharge of their debt obliga-tions. For the first time in years, Mex-ico resumed payment on 15 issues of national debt, excluding all rail-road bonds except the Tehuantepec National railway 5 and 4 per cents. Annual distributions on the issues will amount to only $2,050,-00- 0, however, on a total Mexican debt of 1 billion 200 million dollars, including back interest Last December, the Mexican con-gress ratified an agreement to pay 40 million dollars in settlement of all U. S. claims except for expropri- ated oil property. Canada's improved financial con-dition was reflected in its redemp-tio- n and prior payment on 106 mil-lion TtreSources amounted to 33 billion 700 million dollars. GREAT BRITAIN: Discuss Post-Wa- r Growing American seapower and the administration of neutral colc mes after the war were subject, lengthy discussion in Great Britain' Labonte Emanuel ShinweU sairt that the end of the war will tte 30 merchat marine of million tons against Britain's million tons. He proposed J ganization of an n board to regulate shipping in the post-wa- r world. Refusing to be drawn out on the subject, government spokesm contented themselves elation that American sZg spared Great Britain fronffe Emphasizing that Great intended to administer owl omes after Lv co1' said mat the govTrn sidering a plan certafn onies would be adnTstered hi' mixed commissions consist. y. representatives g of territories and nfons whfch"8 financial interests tovolved! j Who's News This Week By Delos Wheeler Lovelace Consolidated Features. WNU Release. NEW YORK. Hitler himself doubt the persuasions of Nordic kultur on noting that Poznan provides the new Polish premier to replace the Polish Premier a dead sikor. Native of Kultur- - ski. Poznan Infested Poznan is most western province of Poland. Germany half embraces it, and from it for a hun-dred years Germans have tried to squeeze all Polish flavor. Once the squeeze got so tight that even the Poznan school children went out on strike. Stanislaw Mikolajczyk was five then, and might have led a kinder-garten but he was all the way across Germany in Westphalia. His father, a farm laborer, was try-ing his luck there. Luck was poor and when Stanislaw was ten and the first World war only three years away the family trekked back to their old home. When Stanislaw was 16 he stood in the thick of the waxing revolution against Poznan's weakening Prussian rulers. The Polish Republic followed and he rose to leadership of the Peasant party and to a seat In parlia-ment. He Is himself a true peas-ant, off a farm, stocky and thick-necke- Bis half-inc- h of bristling moustache is only a minor concession tn nrhan Infhi- - ence. When the Nazis struck he enlisted as a private, the rank he held in the war against the Reds 19 years earlier. After Warsaw he was in-terned in Hungary but made his escape. In the years since, first under Paderewski, then Sikorski, his main assignment has been to run the Po-lish underground, and his name has become a household word to patri-ots inside his oppressed country. His blacklist of Nazi criminals is the longest in Europe. This, also, must be of depressing interest to Hitler. JT IS a long time since President Roosevelt got salt fish three times running. The housekeeper called in by the much-travelin- g first lady now This Lady Is the Lobeon Boss of Domestic menus if iho End of New Deal Presidert de-manded va-riety. Now there has been added the confusion of ration coupons, but Mrs. Henrietta Nesbit, placid, bespecta-cled, middle-age- sorts these re-sourcefully and to date has not been made either red or blue by the new responsibility. The fact that her husband is White House custodian of supplies may help. It is 14 years since Mrs. Nes-bit signed up to see that when the master gazed around "with the prophetic eye of appetite," there should be victuals to suit both his scrambled eggs and truffles moods. That was in his first governorship. Mrs. Nesbit, Duluth - born, with casually fluffed hair, had a catering busi-ness in Hyde Park previous to this, and Mrs. Roosevelt was sure that the author of such whole wheat bread was the needed woman. Nowadays, bossing a staff that mPLto 124 for a state dinner, Mrs. Nesbit never consults her mis-tress, even when her mistress is CUUUE" to De consulted. She will even put on evening dress and drift gently among the ambassadors to make sure every tidbit is as it should be. She doesn't live in the White House and her usual shift runs from eight to six. She doesn't however mind working overtime in the kitchen she and Mrs. Roosevelt modernized from knife rack tr, range. Tu ed.f atl0 f Musicians lays against radio music transcriptions on the doorstep of La-b- Secretary Perkins but it still J. Petrillo Makes ?eems Pret-- Lewis Look ty Plain t Like President Short Order Cook James Cae- - has carried on one ofeSst' strikes since Pearl Harbor in a war erThV01"7 WhSe labor promised, "No strikes " U months " Ut fr Petrillo has been boss of the Federation ana , members for President, too, of thl Chicago He ,o! cal and between 1922 and now Jumped the member.), 4,000 10 u'ooo: wishesCannCaU " Stre he S3 susptdathmember UP to at wSTor dtchLT011 other responsibmtie te8i hpa!dahd both groups $46,000 plus exPp nsef then switched" years old, Ln VTPet Fifty dent as Nap, he gets al? COnfi'-wit-h the AFL. ng well He has, however sty,h Lewis and Lewis USe for f 6Very on, and his home town De is still his 0f home. Chicago CLASSIFIED DEPART GUERNSEY jgg HIGH GRADE GUERNSEt" under one year "ElFFo? Eprlncer heifers. Special t .11' FRED CHANDLER. CHArKJ "'It oi FEATHERSwgg-- FHATHERS WANTED vTi Ship or write to Sterlincr t,.fiw OR T7 N- - Broadway. . c. t . PHOTO FINTsggT' on enlarge, on portrait par- G & from old. new plct. OVrmpC0P'(! PACIFIC P. O. Bo 606-- SAN FBA&ift StJoseph p; WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER ttJ From an old French word from the Latin word 'V sus" meaning a course at a in- comes the Army's name "ny;! for its breakfast, dinner and ' per. Favorite meal with the so i is chicken dinner his CameL (Based on ac: j sales records from service stores.) A carton of Ca-- V by the way, is a gift that's alu- - welcome. And though there a; Post Office restrictions on fi t. ages to overseas Army men, v can still send Camels to so ' in the U. S., and to men iT'l Navy, Marines, and Coast G wherever they are. Adv. "I MEAT GOES F'J WITH ML-i-:. "BRAitBor;1 Here's a new way to serve th' ; favorite, the hamburger. Make it : KELLOGG'S to Stretch V meat supply, to give the popuhr burger new interest, and to :: all-bra- nutritional benefiis-u,-a- ble proteins, carbohydrates, and minerals. Kellogg's Branburjcis 1 eSB 1 tablespoon Z teaspoons salt chopped parsler teaspoon pepper 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons cup catsup minced onion 1 cup Kelto'l 1 pound ground beef Beat egg slightly, add salt, parsley, milk, catsuo ac: n. Let soak until most of rc: ture is taken up. Add beef and ej thoroughly. Shape into 12 pst .c Bake in hot oven (4S0P.) about i. minutes or broil about 20 minutei Yield: 6 servings (12 indite burgers.) if back aches f c need of diuretic t - Functionalkidneydisturbancedcft" of diuretic aid may roust stabbin. ache! May cause urinary flow w ''- quent, yet scanry and smaningMr-'- lose sleep from "getting up niphr t . may feel dizzy, nervous, "hea- - '' Io such cases, you want to sir-- ? kidney action ast. So if there ystemically or organically wroi Gold Medal Capsulej. Tht7 : , motu for prompt action for 30 )", '; "Pi care to use them only u direoti tag no aubsututej. )st at your ir"j f-- iloQ WNU W !r (Civilian gorobCerp', trernea : uV . ?SI nil i 'l Why Bother About Cat When Meat Is at Mrs. Bronson was perturb find that the three b pound of she had bought had Her husband, helping T 1 search, noticed what he took f f a guilty look on the fam ffJSf' a?d pomted t0 h and "There's ,: your meat." "Why, no," objected Mrs r, son, "that little thing couldX away with aU that meat " i "Well let's weigh her and suggested the husband. They did so. The scales exactly three pounds ..I!Ye'"Sdmitted Mrs' Bn meat all rieht "i Where's the cat?" ' Launch Ship With Bananas 3 Greasing the ways of shir;:: to permit thousands of tons o.;: to slide smoothly into the vs'.i: launchings of battleships rec..' about 45 tons of a special Once, when a surplus of ov::r bananas was a disposal prob: : one port, they were used to j: the ways for launching. I B R I E F S . . . by Baukhage More than a million dollars' worth of schools are destroyed by fire per month. The number of women applying for admission to medical schools in 1942 was the largest in the history of the schools, and was greater than in the preceding year by 25 per cent In 1941, 636 women applied for admission; in 1942, 810 applied. Newest of the women's uniformed groups is the United States Cadet Nurse corps, set up to revive young women's interest in enlistment as student nurses. The war department has inaug- urated an employee suggestion pro- gram for its civilian personnel simi- lar to those now being used success-fully in private industry throughout the nation. Cash awards, ranging from $5 to $250, and more in spe- cial cases, will be paid for each sug-gestion adopted and used. The hog population Is liable to outrun the feed supply. A scientific "detective force" of six dermatologists and a chemist has tracked down causes of skin diseases, and prevented further out-breaks, among workers in more than 50 government and privately owned arsenals and war plants, U. S. Pub-lic Health Service officials announce, i All new heating and cooking stoves designed to burn coal, wood, oil or gas for domestic use (with certain exceptions) will be rationed in t, the OPA has an-nounced. Olympic game sports, Including more than a dozen track and field events and heavy gymnastics have been "abolished from Japanese life so that the Japanese way of living may be emphasized," the Tokyo ra-dio declared in a recent broadcast to Japanese areas. rear. dollars of bonds. HIGHLIGHTS . . . in the week's news 1 INFLUENZA: Navy physicians have developed a serum which they hope will prevent influenza. Tests on white mice have been 90 per cent successful. GERM WARFARE: Spreading deadly disease germs by bombing or any other means is not a practi- cal offensive weapon, according to the Journal of the American Medi-cal Association. CARRIER: The drive to sell enough stamps to build a new air-craft carrier, the "Shangri-La- " have passed the half way mark, officials say. The plan is to raise 130 mil-lion dollars by selling a dollar war stamp to every American. PLANES: During the last six months American fliers have de-stroyed 3,515 enemy planes in the course of 89,691 combat flights Lieut Gen. Henry Arnold stated in" a recent interview. He said also that 1,187 more planes were proba-bly damaged. American plane losses he set at 846. . 1 BARGES: The first of 100 new tugboats, built to tow oil tankers along the Atlantic coast, is on its way south from Boston to pick un its first load. WHEAT: Feeders and grain mer-chan- ts are bidding vigorously for the final allotment of wheat to be released by the Commodity Credit corporation this year, amounting to 215 million bushels. WHALES: Whale meat is being eaten with apparent relish on the West coast. In Eureka, Calif., more than 250,000 pounds of this unra turned meat has been taken from the ocean. SUBCHASER: The first subchaser to be completed in the Plant in Chicago will be coZv sioned as a combat ship of the Brit-is- n navy. TROTTING: Fighting Scot won tte National Stake trotting North HandalL traveling heats in 2:10 and 2:11, over the l lifi uuie course. Tree In PM0W PeSrsotprtnitCSiWe,0r8: in his pillow. Lumbp, tree learned have' KKaSSSKS' |