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Show THK INCH rf'ITVTY RCNCFR RANDOLPH. UTAH HOUSEHOLD War Front Moves to North Atlantic Sea As Nazis Unleash Bombers, Submarines By ROGER SHAW (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) NEW YORK. This is a funny war, but no longer a phoney war. The phoney phase, if any, passed with the Norwegian campaign of a year ago. Since then, things have been grimmer and grimier. Various fronts have evolved. There are the Balkans. There is Gibraltar. There is North Africa, and East Africa and Albania. There are the fifth columns all over Europe that favor, German rule, and the opposition fifth columns that detest German rule the treadmill of the Nazi military boot. Then, there is the hammer and the anvil phase. England is the sturdy anvil. Germany is the vengeful hammer. The Spitfires and Hurricanes and Heinkels and Messer-schmidfight it out in the third dimension, on an aerial front such as mortal man never saw before. There are Coventries and Hamburgs and all manner of hapless atrocities.. But are these aviatory antics decisive? Apparently not, to date. London may be gutted, but it still laughs and goes to the movies and sings "Therell Always Be an England." In Berlin, only 500 houses have been damaged, according to British factory recent reports. power has been slowed up, but the arsenal of democracy, is gaining momentum and hastening replacements to the scenes of e of insular carnage. The Medthe runs up empire no longer iterranean and on to India. Instead, it runs across the North Atlantic, from Roosevelt to Churchill, and back again. , Most Important Front. This is where the most important front comes in, as this is written. It front. The puris the watery to cut the new is of the pose life-liof empire, nullify the American "arsenal," and leave the damaged British factories to shift for themselves as they face the hideous hammer of Thor. It is also intended to cut down on foodstuffs, and thereby loose still another of the terrible horsemen of the vaunted apocalypse. In the minds of many threat outweighs critics, the the Balkans, North Africa, the late lamented battle of France, and even the airplanes. It is, as they say, of the essence. All this remains to be seen, but the weather is getting better which means that things may be getting worse. threat The high point of the in the first World war was April, 1917. ' It was the same month in which America entered the conflict. There was a connection between these events. But in those days, were not too nuthe active merous. Seldom were there more than 30 at sea, at any given time. They operated only from such limited spots as Cuxhaven and Kiel in Germany, Ostend in Belgium, and Austrias old Adriatic ports, for the Mediterranean trade. In 1914, Germany started the war with less than 30 submarines, and perhaps 10 more in the process of building. In the couyse of the war, there was something like 700 laid down. Long Training Needed. It takes a long time to produce commander-soand train a good me critics say all of five Despite the hundreds of years. German submarines between 1914 and 1918, half a dozen experts accounted for no less than 70 per cent Naval of the Allied ship losses. fact. this astonishing statistics verify ts so-call- life-lin- Sauces shouldnt be added to boiled onions, cabbage or celery until time to serve. DAIRY CATTLE NEED ROUGHAGE Grease can be removed from an iron by rubbing cornmeal over it. Constitute Important Part in Soap and water will remove ink stains from washable fabrics if stains are first soaked in milk. Balanced Ration. To beat egg whites quickly add a pinch of cream of tartar before By DR. W. B. NEVENS starting to beat. The eggs will (Chief in Dairy Cattle Feeding, University af froth more quickly and hold their Illinois College of Agriculture.) One of the new developments in shape a longer time. dairy cattle feeding is the discovery, made in recent investigational work, that the roughage portion of the ration is by far the most important Most delicious "bag11 part. If dairy cows are supplied of the season.. . quick and with liberal amounts of easy to prepare , . . nourishing legume rough-age- s, the balance of the ration is of . . economical . . . order; today; i little importance from the standfrom your grocer. point of the character of the nutriwell-preserve- d, high-quali- ty ents. Germany isnt the only nation conscious of the submarines power. Another new addition to Americas large submarine fleet is shown being christened by Mrs. Wilhelm Friedell at Vallejo, Calif. In this war, the Germans have an are under aerial bombardment, to 100 boot. At night there are blackouts, air fleet schooled to cent with Of subs. the per these, in and these delay loadings and un1939, there were about 60 to 70. What loadings in the ports. The ports, the figure now is, nobody accurately too, have taken a terrific hammerknows. 'Its on the up and up, for ing from Herr Goering, and in some fast streamline production has been cases their dock facilities are badly introduced in the German shipyards, damaged, or even closed up. No and in interior-locate- d factories. longer may floodlights be used to can easily be shipped about on hasten a schedule. In short, railroad flatcars even up over the the German planes dovetail "niceand the French Alps, like Hannibals elephants. ly with the Further, most of the British navy and Scandinavian ports, to produce is now busy in the Mediterranean. an picture of ill omen. In the last war it was based on ScotChurchill has a clear naval head. land, and therefore in a far handier He recognizes the true state of afposition than is now the case. The fairs. He relegates subs, Balkanics, French coast is a great basic con- and Africandering to second or venience to Hitlers Admiral Rae-de- r, third place. His cry is ever the g and so are the same: For the new corvettes," Norwegian fjords. The Kaiser for destroyers, for convoys, for submarine detection devices to catch the Meanwhile, "sitting. in the German naval ranks, two or U-bo- ats 24-ho- ur all-rou- nd north-reachin- U-bo- three small submarines are taking the place of any single big one of the 1918 type. The mutinous mermaids will soon be learning of mass production at its deadliest, and in its most sinister form. The land of 1941 is the billowy north Atlantic, and its doughboys are old salts. Watch it. Its the presentday Hindenburg Line. U-bo- at U-bo- at ne no-ma- ns One of the facts which has led to 'this conclusion is the finding that dairy cattle require vitamins A and D in large amounts and that these are supplied by the roughage or sunlight, the concentrated portion of the ration supplying little or none of either vitamin. As a rule, either the other vitamins are supplied in adequate amounts in the ration or dairy cattle have means of synthetisizing sufficient amounts. Not only has vitamin A been found to be of tremendous importance in the health of dairy cattle, but dairy cows have the ability to convert a considerable portion of the carotene of the ration into vitamin A and to secrete this vitamin in the milk. In view of these facts, it has become increasingly important to make sure Virtues Complexion that roughages fed to dairy cattle Once he saw a youth blushing, contain large amounts of green color and that they are in excellent and addressed him, Courage, my condition that is, not moldy or boy ; that is the complexion of virtue. Diogenes Laertius. musty so that they can be completely consumed. Sunlight obtained by dairy cows while at pasture or in their exerd cising yards or hay are ordinarily the sources from which vitamin D is supplied. However, even during early spring, sunlight i$ very low in its power to impart vitamin D. d hay is probably the best source of vitamin D for dairy cattle large enough to consume at least 2Vz pounds of hay daily. Small calves, as a rule, do not consume this amount of hay and it has been found advantageous to supply them sun-cure- Sun-cure- with Aluminum Utensils May Be Restricted U-bo- at one grade of each day. teaspoonful cod-liv- er of oil in feeding the milk Woodland Makes Poor Pasture, Foresters Claim By Defense Needs the woods from the Divorcing homemakpasture and the pasture from the ers have their hearts set on buying woods, has been recommended by aluminum pots and pans in all the foresters for many years. One reason is that theres more THE BETTER WAY TO TREAT shapes and sizes they want, theyre esfind a to little it difficult, danger of live stock being poisoned going Constipation dub to lack of PROPER BULK IN THE DIET IS TO pecially in the next few months to from plants in a woods pasture come. And if papa decides the than in an open pasture. CORRECT THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE With a delicious family needs a new radio about two Woodland offers poor pasture to months hence, hes liable to dis- cattle. Bluegrass pasture should CEREAL, KEU0S6S cover hes out of luck. EAT yield 3,000 pounds of dry matter an IT EVERY DAY AND It appears that civilian consumers acre, while woodland pasture yields DRINK PLENTY in this country will have to stand only 450 pounds. OF WATER. back for a little while and watch the The productivity of the woodland shiny, strong, light metal shaped for wood crops is also impaired, around airplanes, put into military and after several years the area motors of all kinds, fixed into place is devoid of trees or contains only in innumerable parts of ships. As undesirable species such as persimGetting Started The distance is nothing ; it is only for pots and pans the army and mon and hickory. the first step that counts. Mme. navy will need plenty of those, and For these reasons, the combined Du Deffand. will come first. value of both woodland and pasture - A spokesman for the Aluminum doesnt approach what the site Company of America, at the mo- would have produced either in ment the only producer of virgin woods or pasture separately. MENTH0LATUM aluminum, estimated that the botcan woods to Grazed be restored Quickly Relieves tleneck made by the defense de- their comSTUFFINESS by original productivity withmands will probably be opened SNIFFLING of live removal Carroll stock, plete in 120 days. Retail distributors concluded. SNEEZING have a much gloomier outlook. Radio manufacturers seem plainly 1 scared, and one manufacturer says Advise Special Care openly that tie thinks a shortage of 1441 the useful metal will utterly disrupt For Orphan Lambs WNU W radio production. Orphan lambs should be fed Defense needs can stop the promilk from a recently freshened duction of radios, for you see, alucow if possible, but warm drawn minum is a requirement for conmilk from other cows will do, acdensers, and other parts in a radio. to P. A. Anderson of Unicording Manufacturers of ordinary alumiversity Farm, St. Paul. If it is May Warn of Disordered num household utensils have been necessary to heat other milk, do Kidney Action informed that all future orders will not to it About come a boil. let life with its hurry and worry. Modern deweeks at for least eight require and 98 degrees Fahrenheit is right. Irregular habits, improper eatinginfecits risk of exposure and livery. Heretofore, the metal could drinking diThe cows milk should not be tion throws heavy strain on the work be picked up almost immediately. of the kidneys. They are apt to become luted with water. A houseware buyer in New York and fail to filter excess acid and other impurities from the For the first three or four days reports that, although the stocks of blood. feed the small lamb one tablepots and pans appears to be adeYou may suffer nagging backache, intwo headache, dizziness, getting up nights, hours, spoonful every quate for a few weeks, there is alleg pains, swelling feel constantly creasing the amount and reducsigns ready a shortage on delivery of certired, nervous, all worn out. Other someof kidney or bladder disorder are tain items mainly the ing the feeding hours until at the frying too or frequent times scanty burning, end of a week or 10 days three pan. urination. help the feedings per day are sufficient. The spokesman for the Aluminum Try Doans Pills. Doans to pus off harmful excess body kidneyi Company of America estimates that Overfeeding may cause scours. waste. They have had more thaa half a century of public approval. Are recomInduce orphan lambs to eat grain nearly 600,000,000 pounds of alumimended by grateful users everywhere. and fine hay. Place them in a Ask your neighbor I num, will be produced by that orlamb creep where crushed oats, ganization in 1941. Defense needs are expected to total some 350, 0 bran and some corn meal are available and provide a rack for pounds, which is about what the entire output was in 1939, leaving hay. 250,000,000 pounds for civilian, use. KINGSTON, N. J.- -If -- U-bo- at Germanys outstanding submarine hero is Captain Guenther Prien who steered his craft into Scapa Flow in 1939 to sink Britains Royal Oak. In the first World war 70 per cent of Allied ship losses were attributed to only six such experts. didnt have such an advantageous frontage. The royal air force is constantly along the bombing German vast coastal stretch, when they might better be hammering German factories in the interior. This costs men, planes, explosives, time and money. - Meanwhile, the Germans have been concentrating on small These can be built submarines. more quickly, they cost less, and they are just as effective for short trips around the British Isles and west of Ireland. Another very important factor is this: They require much smaller crews, and submarine crews are singularly hard to train. When it comes to Germany may be more pressed now As than for for for sub commanders, to date there are no outstanding individuals exn Gunther Prien cept the the Perriere of the second world war. Even Churchill admires Prien, and has said so. Small Craft Needed. What the British need is small craft to hunt the subs. They have a produced a sort of "corvette type modeled on the fast little chasers that professional whalers use today. The British have lost heavily in shipping, in the past year and a half. They had never made up their losses from the last war, and the fresh inroads cut seriously into the sum total of his majestys tonnage. The British shipyards, at Newcastle and Glasgow and elsewhere, Winston Churchill recognizes the are trying to speed up production as true state of affairs. His cry is best they can. But its far easier destroyers, Jfor to sink ships than to build them, ever for and in some cases the shipyards convoys. U-bo- U-bo- at U-m- en ts. well-know- sab-fighte- rs, QUESTIONS ALL-BRA-N. llWHiliHWim , over-taxe- d ch 000,-00- j |