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Show THE RICH COUNTY Call Dads Oct. 1 FDR Favors Higher Taxes to Restrict Size of Public Debt, Defeat Inflation; Russia Continues Steam Roller Attack; Unconditional Surrender : Allied Terms Farmers Can Raise Spices Now Imported ?! In thee columns, they r (EDITOR'S NOTE! When eplnlene nre iiprmeinst and neeessaiUy 1 this newspaper.) Weetern Newnpnper Union's new analysts Released by Western Newspaper Union. Western Hemisphere Can Supply All Needs . TAXES: More in War Economy herb that in short, taxes Every spice, seed and the United States has been accustomed to importing from the Orient ITALY: Allied Terms When Benito Mussolinis government fell, one of the requisite conditions for an Allied treatment with Italy for peace was established. To Marshall Pietro Badoglio, Italys first soldier, was given the charge of a new military regime. The hectic days following Mussolinis fall saw a diplomatic stew, Axis sources declared that Badog-lio- s assumption of power was a perfectly natural evolution since what was more appropriate for a country faced with invasion than to concentrate all action in the hands of a Meanwhile military commander? indicated diplomatic skirmishing proposals from the Allies. supplies. The Allies laid down these terms Hence the Presidents conclusion: for peace: 1. Cessation of resist More taxes with which to meet cur- ance; 2. An end of collaboration rent expenditure and restrict the with Germany; 3. Withdrawal of size of the mounting public debt, and Italian troops from Greece, Alwith which to mop up excess infla- bania and Jugoslavia; 4. Surrender tionary buying power. of war materials undamaged; 5. Establishment of an 6 Billion at Most military government of occuPresident Roosevelts call for in- pation; 6. Arrest of war criminals; creased taxes was met by Sen. Wal- and 7. Release of all Allied prisonter F. Georges ers of war in Italy. is that, President Roosevelts recipe for offthe tremendous federal warcan be grown successfully in the. setting and at the same time Western hemisphere, either in North time expenditure off inflation. heading A. or South America, believes John Said the President: The govern-men- t Sokol, president of a chemical comwill spend 106 billion dollars adpany bearing his name. In an the next year. The public dress before the annual Chemurgic during to increase by 69 is debt conference recently held in Chicago, billion toexpected 206 billion dollars by June, he divided the plant products into 1944. two groups, according to the climatThe national income should apic conditions under which they grow. 150 billion dollars for the proximate First, he said, is the temperate year. But the manufacture of civilzone, which covers central Europe, ian goods has been sharply reduced, the Mediterranean area, Russia, thus leaving the public with large northern India, and northern China. amounts of surplus money with The second zone would comprise the which to bid up prices for smaller Higher and particutropics, larly the East Indies close to the semi-tropic- s, equatorial area. From the temperate zone we have been importing herbs, such as sage, marjoram, thyme, savory, rosemary, sweet basil, oregano, laurel leaves, saffron, red peppers (paprika), and many crude drugs. From the tropical zone we have been importing peppers, cloves, allspice, ginger, cinnamon, cassia, nutmeg, mace, turmeric, etc. The items in the first category, namely those grown in the temperate zone, can all be grown in some part of the United States, and the items from the tropical zone could be grown in some of our possessions and also in Central and South America. All of the items under spices for seasoning and condiments could be grown in the Western hemij sphere. That these particular items, he said, could be grown in the United States has been demonstrated. Other seeds, such as poppy, caraway, dill, coriander, celery, fennel, and anise, have been guown in the United States to some ertent. None of these items are available from Europe now and with the present difficulties of obtaining these seeds from India, China and other foreign countries, there are prospects that the growers would find these profitable for the next couplp of years at least, Mr. Sokol thinks. The herbs which have been grown and cultivated here are sage, marjoram, and basil, and an effort is being made to increase their production in this country. All of the products grown in the United States have been found to be of very good quality and most of them compare very favorably to the products imported from abroad. Also with the American ingenuity to adapt special methods of plantand harvesting, ing, cultivating much of the low labor cost in foreign countries could be overcome. Some of the outstanding products which have been grown successfully in the United States are mustard seed, grown in Montana and Califor ilia, paprika (the sweet grade), grown in California, Louisiana and South Carolina, and sage, marjoram, thyme and basil, grown in practically every state of the United States. Mr. Sokol continued that he was not giving any figures of the quantities grown, but that he felt assured that with the proper effort and cooperation of the various agencies, American housewives and the food industry can be fully Supplied with many of the spice seasonings from products grown in the United States, the tropical possessions, and some of the South American countries. could be expected to be raised was 5 or 6 billion dollars. The influential finance committeee, Senator George, said of the 5 or 6 billion dollars, about 60 per cent will have to be obtained from individual taxpayers. The rest could be gotten by raising the corporate normal and surtax rate and broadening the federal tax Russias steam-rollin- g . No Soviet President ber 14. The Soviet union has no president. The man who is generally even by the called "President, heads of many other governments, is Mikhail Kalinin, chairman of the Presidium. This is a "Congressional Committee, which carries on the work 6f the Supreme Soviet, the highest executive body, when the latter is not in session. According to thte WMC, fathers will be called only when draft Doards run out of men in the other classifications. Some boards are expected to be faced with that predicament by October 1, others are not, thus delaying the induction of dads in their districts beyond the date. Approximately 875,000 childless married men are to be called by Oc- tober 1,300-memb- 1. er 780 Miles Per Hour! Last September, Lieut. Col. Cass S. Hough of Plymouth, Mich., took his 8 CONSTIPATION P-3- Lockheed Lightning fighter plane 43,000 feet in the air. Then Colonel Hough coolly nosed the plane into a power dive, and down it roared, cutting through the wind before it, at 780 miles per hour before being leveled off at 18,000 feet. But last February, Colonel Hough decided to crowd two thrills into a lifetime. This time, he took a Thunderbolt 39,000 feet up and again plunged it into a whining power-divstraightening out once more at 18,000 feet. Technical director of the 8th American fighter command, Colonel Hough undertook the two flights to obtain scientific information for assisting fighter pilots. For his services the European commander of fighter planes decorated him with the Distinguished Flying Cross. In private life vice president of the Daisy Air Rifle Manufacturing company, Colonel Hough is married and has two P-4- HAUNTED HE It hung on and attack on also found out that KELLOGGS gets at ALL-BR- the cause of such constipation and corrects it. 7 Boy, what Id been ing before I tried all-bra- e, Its a break- swell-tasti- ng my constipation was concerned, it sure worked. I eat all-bra- n regularly now and drink plenty of water. And Ive "Joined the Regulars! Made by Kelloggs in Battle Creek. 2&SS' fc motor. Capable of flying 32 miles per hour, the plane could stay in the air 2 hours and 19 minutes. Today, American aircraft production averages 7,000 planes a month, with the army air forces receiving 4,500 of the total of sleek, craft. Since the attack on Pearl Harbor, 73,132 planes have been delivered to the army, and up to June 30, 1943, 40 billion dollars was allotted to the air forces. Against Americas record production, it was estimated that the Axis puts out 4,000 planes monthly. Of this total, Germany makes 2,200, Japan 1,200 and Italy 600. high-power- SS.rw!iK. protect ERTY DAMAGE . . . $'0.0 INJURIES. lot BODILY ,VoHn III ma ill ed BERLIN: Ordered Evacuated With Germanys great industrial SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT RUBBER of modern rubber usage is vulcanization, a word that is derived from Vulcan, the Greek God of Fire. The basis The cryptostegla vine yields about 17 drops of rubber latex a day, Hevea tree three a to six pounds of rubber a year. Properly treated Hevea trees, when 10 years old, can give from 1000 to 1500 pounds of rubber per acre per year. About eleven pounds of rubber are used in making a small automobile tire. seven-year-o- ld Tanks in Jungles Brought into the fight after aircraft had failed to reduce sufficient- ly strongholds the Japs had hewed in the jungle, tanks led the lected. Wild ruAmericans drive on Munda in the mors began to Solomons. circulate, a pop Unable to detect the Japs posibottle was thrown, tions through the dense brush and and the worst riot foliage, aircraft were compelled to since 1935 in drop their bombs over a wide area, Americas largest hoping that a heavy tonnage would city was set off. land on some defenses. But whenNegroes stormed through Har- ever the infantry to adlems business districts. Plate glass vance after the attempted stiff it met barrage, windows were smashed; stores were enemy machine gun and mortar fire looted; crumpled merchandise lit- from the concealed tered the streets. Six thousand poThen the tanks were flung into the licemen aided by 1,500 wartime aux- battle. way through iliaries were called to restore order. the thickGrinding their drew the fire growth, they In imposing a 10:30 p. m. curfew, of the hidden the enemy. Following Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia moaned: course of the the tank crews "Shame has come to our city. discovered the Japs strong points Five Negroes were killed and 543 and then blasted them at blank persons were injured. More than range. By such tactics, point they grad500 arrests were made. Property ually overran stubborn centers of was estimated at 5 million resistance as the drive damage approached dollars. the encircled missn! fast cereal end, as far as Thirty-fou- r years ago, congress appropriated $25,000 for the army to purchase its first airplane a Wright brothers 1909 model Cl craft, with a wing span of 48 feet 6 inches and a four-cylind- on. Medici- nal laxatives relieved It only temporarily. Then I found my constipation was due to lack of bulk In my diet. And I PRODUCTION: 7,000 Planes a Month n. re- I of dads an immedi- children. Orel continued to meet heavy resistance even as the Red columns bore into the suburbs of the big Nazi base. As the Russians pressure increased, long lines of German troops were seen withdrawing westward toward the secondary Nazi hub of Bryansk. Slugging matches raged all along the winding 1,200 mile front. The Reds attacked heavily south of Leningrad in an effort to widen the corridor leading to the besieged city; both sides fought to a standstill in Maj.-GeG. G. Simonds, comthe Donets basin, and the Russians manding the First Canadian divi stabbed stiffly at the Nazis foothold sion, wades ashore during opera along the Black sea at Novorosissk. tions in Sicily. Principal action of the summer centered at Orel. Here, the Rus- Troina, theAmericans cut the supsians, with masses of infantry fol- ply road finking the Axis right flank lowing up in the echo of thunderous with their left and bending the whole artillery fire and chugging tank at- enemy line in this sector toward the tacks, jabbed deeper and deeper sea. into German defenses, until they Farther to the south, Canadians stood at the gates of the city itself. broke through the Axis stronghold of Regalbuto, thus menacing the RIOTS: enemys whole Catanian line from the rear. The advance also put the Sweep Harlem Canadians within sight of the supply Allegedly interfering with the ar- road rimming towering Mt. Etna, rest of a Negro woman in the lobby along whose slopes the Axis have of a New York entrenched themselves. hotel, a colored soldier was shot SOUTHWEST PACIFIC: by a police off- man forthcoming He was extremely mean, and pretty well known for this characteristic in the town where he lived. One day an old beggar woman, new to the district, began her appeal. Mr. Mean put his hand into his pocket as he approached, and she, full of hope, began to pour down blessings on his head. "May the blessing of Heaven follow after you, she said, "all the days of your life Mr. Mean extracted his handker-- I chief and blew his nose as he passed on but the woman, whose hopes were dashed to the ground, was not at a loss: "And niver catch up wid ye! she added viciously. when congress reconvenes Septem- RUSSIA: At the Citys Gates moved a hospital, a crowd col- 13-t- pill-boxe- n, draft phase of the fighting. With Montgomerys British forces stalled before strong Axis positions in the Catanian plains to the southeast of the defensive triangle, roaring artillery covered General Pattons Seventh armys cautious advance over barren hills in the face of mortar fire from enemy sheltered in trenches and caves. Capturing .y ;.v I drew ate promise from Sen. Burton K. Wheeler that he would press for passage of his bill postponing the :induction of fathers until January 1 Declaring the U. S. stands to collect 35 billion dollars under present rates, George said any increases in individual rates would bear most with low or moderate fixed incomes. was being to Hampshire South-dowowned by Harold Nelson of Morris, 111., won the blue ribbon and the Pillsbury trophy at the Chicago Junior Market Lamb show recently. It weighed 75 pounds. Fifty-on- e boys and girls from mldwestem states exhibited 255 lambs. the military authorities might well credit the Americans of Gen. George S. Pattons command and the Canadians under Gen. Bernard Montgom- on goods. I nouncement of in Sicily, Viewing the campaign inducted into 3e service starting October 1. According to the War Manpower commission, they will be called in their draft order numbers, regard-es- s of the num-e- r of their children. The WMCs an- chairman of the ery with decisive action in the final senate icer. While the cross-bre- d Fathers 18 to 37 years of age who are not "key men in agriculture and industry will prediction that the most that Decisive Action wounded A Beggar Woman Quickly Made an About Face DRAFT: REAPEB Sntered cs second class matter Feb. &, Act ot March 3. 1879. at the Post Office, Randolph, Utah, under tb Wm. E. Marshall. Uutiness Manager SUBSCRIPTION 41.50 Per Year in Advaner lyton Marshall. Editor and Proprietor s. gun-fir- e, Jap base. lay rubber articles flat when Besides the vast number killed, it Paul Goebbels was reported an additional 4,000 were missing and 18,000 were with industrial instaljured. lations, large residential areas were wiped out, it was said, and others were badly mauled. In ordering the evacuation of Berlin, Goebbels instructed residents with relations in other parts of Germany to make use of such accommodations, while those who could not were told to apply to the government for housing facilities. According to reports, the Nazis prepared for mass evacuation several months ago, laying up stores at central points throughout inner storing, allowing them to assume their natural position. Rubber loses its life when under a permanent strain. |