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Show THE RICH WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS REAPEfl COUNTY fettered e second class matter Feb. 8, 1928 Act ol March 3. 1879. st (lie Post Office, Randolph, Utah, nnder th Wm. E. Marshall, ltminess Manaevr $1.50 Per Year in Advance SUBSCRIPTION ljyton Marshall. Editor and Proprietor Allies Jolt Nazi Grip in France; Reds Carry War to German Soil ; Summer Drouth Hits Ohio Valley Released bv Western Newspaper Union. they are those of When NOTE: opinions are expressed In these columns, (EDITORS ol this not Western Newspaper Unions news analysts and necessarily newspaper.! Butterfat Can Be Increased by Water Proper Methods Will Give Better Returns Dairymen whose cows can have a drink of 'water whenever they want it night or day will get more milk and butterfat from the same amount of feed and care than the dairymen Who water their cows only a couple of times a day. This has been proven by extensive tests conducted at Iowa state college. The cows while being watered by means of water bowls drank ap- cent more 3.5 water and yielded per cent more more butter10.7 cent milk and per twice watered while fat than being a day at the outdoor tank. reached from the Conclusions tests also showed that the temperature of the water was not nearly so important as the temperature of the air. In other words, if the cow had to stand outside in near zero weather, she was likely to drink proximately 18 per CIVILIAN GOODS: Reconversion Step With Allied forces everywhere on the move, the Nazi hold on France loosened, and German troops fell back to escape the death traps that lightning U. S. armored thrusts were forging. In the north, U. S. columns that drove on Paris threw out a long arm around the left flank of the German army that wriggled out of the n pocket in Norman- the War Production Although board has allowed the use of surplus labor and factory facilities in the manufacture of civilian goods, no appreciable increase in the output of such material can be looked forward to until Germany is defeated, when it should jump 39 per cent to prewar levels, WPB Czar Donald Nelson declared. WPBs order permitting limited manufacture of civilian goods constituted the fourth and final step in its program for gradual reconversion, previous provisions allowing use of aluminum and magnesium; construction of postwar working models of products, and immediate ordering of maehine tools. Under the WPBs latest ruling, manufacturers able to employ surplus labor will receive priority assistance for producing such items as electric ranges, heating stoves, pails and buckets, electric flat irons, farm machinery except tractors, and water storage tanks for agricultural use. threatening the retreating ene- my with still another entrapment. While these U. S. columns under leadership of Lieut. Gen. George S. Patton pressed the Germans around Paris, British and Canadian forces hammered at the enemy in the region extending to th English chan-ato the north, pushing him back on i continuous front. Swift Allied advances in the north were matched by equally successful gains in the new invasion area of southern France, where liberation troops spearheaded el that much less. Agriculture In the News Milkweed Floss The milkweed has gone to war and no longer cn be considered e, farm pest. The seeds of the milkweed furnishes an edible oil, chemically similar to soybean oil. From 100 pounds of the seed at least 20 pounds of oil may be extracted. In Canada, the leaves have proven an excellent source of natural rubber. Perhaps the greatest war use is the floss of milkweed as a substitute for kapok, from which life preservers and linings for aviators flying suits may be made. Early September is the proper time to pick the pods, after the seeds have started to turn brown. Call has been sent out for farmers, Boy Scouts and war workers to gather the floss to fill urgent need of the navy and war departments. by Maj.-Ge- n. Alex- ander M. Patchs American Seventh army thrust far inland before encountering stiffening enemy opposition in the mountainous country. As the regular army formations drove inland, they joined hands with scores of paratroopers, who had been dropped far back of the beachhead areas to sever enemy communication lines and hamper his forward movements to the fighting zones. As was the case in Normandy, many Czechs, Poles and Russians were included in the German units which manned the coastal defenses, and as the fighting raged further inland from Toulon to Nice, the Allies bucked up against a better caliber of enemy troops. Encouraged by the Allied successes the French underground intensified their sabotage of Nazi communications and installations. EASTERN FRONT: Enter Prussia In the face of heavy Nazi resistance and repeated counter-attack- s supported by rocket fire, Russian Gen. Ivan troops under Cherniakhovsky crossed the East Prussian border to carry a war to German soil for the first time in 30 years. As the Germans savagely countered the Russian invasion of East Prussia with continuing counterattacks, the Nazis were reportedly throwing fresh reserves into the battle from Himmlers home guard. On other sectors of the e front, German resistance was equally bitter, with the Nazis yielding ground grudgingly in the Baltic states and employing tank and infantry forces to slow the Red drive on Warsaw. To the south, the enemy also brought his mechanized units into counterattack to impede the Russian advance on the central German border, 75 miles away from the front. 1,000-mil- -- just accept liPe. tKe, CLASSIFIED WHEAT: DEPARTMENT m FRANCE: Form Pincer 111 Irked by the armys interpretation of the political propaganda ban in the soldiers voting law, which resulted in exclusion of much popular reading matter in military camps, the senate moved to ease the tight administration of this provision of the act. Originally, the law stipulated that no newspapers, magazines, motion pictures or literature paid for or sponsored by the government, and containing political propaganda, could be distributed to the armed forces. Much of the trouble lay in the armys rigid interpretation of the word "sponsored, which it took to mean permitting the sale ot popular reading matter containing political material at service posts, or use of company funds to subscribe to newspapers. Agricultural pioneers even back to the days of the Czars, when they developed artificial insemination at royal stables, the Russians claim to have developed an edible perennial wheat with a gluten content of 60 per cent. According to the Soviets ace agronomist, Prof. N. V. Tsitsin, the perennial evolved from cross pollination of wild grasses of the agropy-rufamily with wheat, produced satisfactory initial harvests, with real tests to come next season. Although plant breeders in thf U. S. have long worked on develop ment of a perennial wheat, thej have met little practical succesi With landings in southern France and sweeping advances in the north, thus far, with one hybrid composed the Allies are forming a huge pincers to squeeze German forces in that country, of wild grasses and the grain lackas arrows in picture show. ing regular qualities. dy, relatively less regardless of the temperature of the water. As might be expected, the cows drank more as the weather became warmer. The experiments were made with water bowls, which are almost impossible to obtain during the war. However, many dairymen can include watering inside their barns where the cows would have access at regular intervals. If some method can be devised so that the cow will not have to sip her needed water out of an icy tank she will drink more water, produce more milk and of a higher butterfat content. If the cow is getting silage or green feed with a lot of moisture in it, the cow will drink proportionately less than she will if she is fed entirely on dry feed. There is a tendency to balance up the total amount of water in the feed and that drunk. If the feed has more moisture in it, then the cow drinks THE CHEERFUL CHERUB Perennial Brand Falaise-Argenta- Ideal Dairy Layout SOLDIER READING: Ease Restrictions No Fun acts of And never weep end reve. And iF I cent be. elweys gled I cen be elveys WNU Features. HELP WANTED Persons now engaged in essentia! industry will not apply without statement oi availability from their local United States Employment Service. Pharmacist Registered Good Plus Commission Salary Six day week plus overtime pay Excellent Possibilities for Advancement THE OWL DRUG CO. 24th and Washington, Ogden, Utah Or 2nd South and Main, Salt Lake City. SCHOOLS SALT LAKE BARBER COLLEGE approved school. Fall term beginning Write for information. September. - Salt Lake City, Utah. 170 Regent St. An Business Opportunities FOR SALE A GOOD PAYING secondhand furniture store and building. $2,000. - New Plymouth, Idaho. E. DADDOW OFFICE EQUIPMENT WE BUY AND SELL Furniture, Files, Typewriters, Add-In- g Machines. Safes, Cash Registers. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE IS West Broadway, Salt Lake City. Utah. Office Used Cars Trailers Buy War Savings Bonds No different than a million other young men but not as 2, of Danhires, lucky George Pittsburgh, Pa., crawled halfway through the opening of an ' eight inch areaway between PACIFIC: the walls of his home before he got stuck. Firemen were comStep Up Bombing pelled to chop part of the livWith U. S. bombers operating west ing room wall to free him. If of New Guinea and pounding the the pictures any indication, it enemys shipping plying beyond the was no fun, fellas! Philippines and Celebes islands, the position of 150,000 Japanese troops COTTON: trapped within American lines in the South Pacific continued to Seek Parity deteriorate. In an effort to raise cotton prices As U. S. bombers continued to to parity, which is from $6 to $8 per range to the west of New Guinea, bale above 1944 loan rates, Sen. other U. S. aircraft hammered at John H. Bankhead (Ala.) urged Japanese bastions in the Bonin growers to keep the commodity off islands, guarding the southern ap- the market. proaches to the Nipponese homeSenator Bankheads action came land, 600 miles away. in the midst of his conferences with While U. S. bombers continued government officials and cotton their softening up campaign of the manufacturers over elevation of enemys strategic island defense the price level in conformance with system, American ground forces his congressional act calling for atdug into newly won positions in the tainment of parity of agricultural Marianas, Adm. Chester Nimitz de- crops. clared that it might not be necesDuring the conferences, Senator sary to invade Japan to win a last- Bankhead said, it was agreed that ing peace. early OPA revision of textile prices to reflect parity would help boost DROUTH: the market. As a last resprt, he Crops Periled to 100 per cent parity said, 97 With only half a month of the loans were considered. summer season remaining, the Ohio valley anxiously DEMOBILIZATION: hoped that showers east of the Mis- Study Discharges sissippi would develop into substanThe but complitial rainfalls and break a two and a cated problem of how to release half month drouth, during which Tennessee had only about 45 per servicemen and women from the cent normal precipitation, Illinois 50 armed forces after the war is reper cent, Indiana 52 per cent, Ken- ceiving the consideration of both tucky 44 per cent and Ohio 61 per President Roosevelt and the high command, it was reported. cent. Under a reported proposal, perBesides inflicting damage ranging from 10 to 70 per cent on corn sonnel would be discharged under crops in some areas, and threaten- a point system, with so many points ing soybeans and gardens, the heat granted for service abroad, length and drouth seared pasturage, com- of service and number of campelling farmers to dip into dwindling paigns, and marital status and defeed supplies, and inducing many pendency. Personnel with the to hold back on purchases of Stock- largest number of points would be ers for future fattening. the first released. Although the Ohio valley reAt the same time, the President mained hardest hit by the drouth, was said to be considering use of continued dry weather threatened some camps and training facilities crops and pasturage in a wide re- in this country for vocational study gion, including the North Atlantic and rehabilitation of and modcoast area, the Northwest and ernization of others vets, for future, deTexas and Oklahoma. fense forces. B? ilT Heat rash irritated B thrills to the touch feEriPl EJ 11 skin of Mexsana, soothing, medi- cate Powder. For cool- ing relief, get Mexsana. THE P bn I To relieve distress of MONTHLY Female Weakness (Also Fine Stomachic Tonic) Lydia E. 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