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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH, UTAH THE RICH REAPEF COUNTY Cntcred es second class matter Feb. 8, 1928 Act of March 3. 1879. ad (he Post Office, Randolph, Utah, under tb Wm. E. Marshall. Hufins Mnnaecj gUISCRIPTlON 1.60 Per Year in Advance jyton Marshall, Editor, and Proimetn- - WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS ( Civil Strife Rages in Greece; Set Vise for Japs on Leyte; Quake Shakes Tokyo District Released by Western Newspaper Union. In these columns, they are those of (EDITORS NOTE: When opinions are expressed Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) Plant Trees in Fall Or. Early Winter - SENATE: Hit Appointments Gems of Thought LIVERY great and command-T-- a ing movement in the annals of the world is the triumph of enthusiasm. Nothing great was ever achieved without it. Em Plans to hurry through the appointments of Joseph C. Grew as Undersecretary of State and William L. Clayton, Nelson Rockefeller and Archibald MacLeish as assistant secretaries in the department struck a snag in the senate, where a rebellious contingent forced hearings to be held on the principals fitness for the offices. Leading the attack was Kentuckys Happy Chandler, who, in referring to the appointments of Businessmen Clayton and Rockefel. . . I was told ler, declared: that the pool: folks would be given opportunities as a result of the elec-tion. . . . Instead of the poor people obtaining the jobs, the Wall Street boys are getting them. In pressing for confirmation of the appointments, Texas Tom Connally decried the allegation that business interests would use their position to . . . influence policy, declaring: Presknows the who senator Every ident knows that he is going to dominate the foreign policy of this government. . . . erson. The affections are immortal! They are the sympathies which unite the ceaseless generations. Bulwer-Lytto- Man is of soul . Best Results Secured From Local Grown Ones Trees, fruit or shade as well a$ for fuel and lumber, can be set out any time during the fall or early winter, so long as the ground is not frozen more than two or three inches. If the ground is frozen at planting time, no frozen soil should be used in firming the earth about the roots. Fall planting is recommended in order' that the young trees will have time to become established and the roots will make some growth in the fall and early spring before there n. and body, formed for deeds t I 2 .. L m. .A 74 ' New love is brightest, and long love is greatest, but revived love is the tenderest thing upon earth. Thomas Hardy. . ... Stiffen Policy First official act of Secretary of State Edward Stettinius was to blast at Britains and Russias maneuver- As train lies at bottom of Moselle river after plunging through wrecked bridge, French youth scramble over debris to salvage food from cars. PACIFIC: EUROPE: Civil Strife ing, in liberated European countries to establish governments favorable to their interests. We expect the Declaring . . Italians to work out their problems of government along democratic lines without influence from . . . Stettinius aimed his blast at Britains objections to the naming of Count Carlo Sforza as foreign minister in a new Italian administration. Britains attitude, it was said, was the result of Sforzas tendencies. Although not specifically mentioned, Russia could get no comfort from Stettinius statement, which indirectly hit at Moscows political activities in reoccupied countries by . This policy would declaring: apply to an even more pronounced degree with regard to governments of the United Nations in their liberated territories out-.si- Fasten Vise . Fall and early winter planting of trees profitable. is great demand for water by the expanding leaves. As a general practice, Prof. R. L. McMunn of Illinois recommends, the trefes should be secured from nurseries in the same latitude and located near by. Those obtained from almost any part of the country will prove as winter hardy as elsewhere. However, when they are obtained near by, they will be fresh and have j a better chance to survive. rethe hole to Dig large enough ceive the - root system without crowdirig. The tree should stand two orthr eg inches, deeper than it gtood in the nursery. Cut off the broken roots back of the break and remove those smaller very small roots than the lead of a pencil. The tree when planted should lean about 30 degrees toward the prevailing wind. The trees should be mounded around the trunk to shed water. Place the top earth near the roots and work it around the roots by lifting the tree several times. Use the subsoil to finish filling the hole. Bake with de Striking again with characteristic suddenness, Gen. Douglas MacAr-thu- r moved the 77th division ashore below Ormoc under the heavy protective cover of U. S. naval guns, cutting the Japanese defenders on jhe northwestern shore of Leyte iii mier Papandreous Rightist ele- haif. The generals move came after ments were allowed to retain theirs, the uprising brought British troops bad weather, coupled with stiff enemy resistance from strong hill eninto action to restore order. Situated just north of the Suez trenchments, bogged the American canal, Greece commands this vital drive on Ormoc from the north and waterway route linking Britians south. As the 77th secured its beacheastern empire with its homeland; head below Ormoc, the huge LSTs and for this reason, London has dumped supplies ashore, the general was able to apply both frontal FARM YOUTH: taken the greatest interest in condiand rearward pressure on Japanese Win Honors tions there. To assure its position about troops operating in the sector. In events at Chicago, 111., attenPrior to the American landing beSuez, the 'British have backed tion was focused on the nations oulow S. U. artillery opened Papandreous Rightist elements as a Ormoc, tstanding young-heavy bombardment op enemy poagainst the Leftists, including Comfarmers: 18 - year munists. In calling British troops in- sitions to the north and south, drawold Donald Mowery, to action to suppress the rampaging ing strong Jap reinforcements to Terre Haute, Ind., both to moveareas counter infantry Leftist elements, British Maj. Gen. 4 - H achievement ment. ' Then, as their withdrawals . . ., I R. M. Scobie declared: winner, and stand firmly behind the constitution- weakened their positions about OrBen Greve, BryMacArthur struck. moc, aid them al government and shall ant, Iowa, raiser of Even as the 77th was hitting the to the limit of my resources until the Chicago Marthe Greek state can be reestablished beaches below Ormoc, U. S. fliers ket Fat Stock grand with lawful armed forces behind wiped out a Japanese convoy, bearwhich was 4,000 champion. headed troops, ing it. Left fatherless at for Leyte. Added to the Allied military burden in Europe was the political problem posed by Leftist rebellion in Greece. "Started when Leftist liberation, guerrilla forces refused to surrender their arms on the ground that Pre- Yes, ma'am! You too, can SUCCESS INSURANCE , ... , , r-r With Amazing a mSAVGAGT? The Fast, Dry Yeast ; JUST LIKE COMPRESSED JUSE YEAST! ... Nazi Strategy In heavy fighting on both Euro- EARTHQUAKE: pean fronts, the Allies continued to Rocks Japan punch forward, with the U. S. 3rd from the away spotlight army taking Centering in, the Sea of Enshu, Agriculture Pioneers 100 miles southeast of Tokyo, an the 1st and 9th in the west in its n Saar drive into the vital earthquake, so powerful that its tremors threw a recording mabasin. Louis Pasteur chine in London out of gear, As a result of General Pattons The father of pasteurization, Louis ininto the the struck smash Saar, great Japan, causing serious Pasteur, first came to the rescue dustrial of Saarbrucken was loss. city of of the farmers Without immediately revealunder the muzzle of heavy France when he brought U. S. artillery fire, with many parts ing tlje exact extent of damage, originated a meththe Japanese reported that the ' od of inoculation aflame. tremors caused landslides, cavinThe 3rd army claimed the limeof sheep and catthe 1st and 9th U. S. armies houses and streets along as g-in light tle against the slackened their a belt across the main heavy pressure dreaded anthrax east of of Honshu. where German the island Aachen, Huge tidal which was ruin, waves rolling in from the Sea high command, under Field Maring agriculture." shall von Rundstedt, had concenof Enshu flooded coastal disIn one district of trated its comto tricts below Tokyo, deluging major strength Russia, 56,000 bat General homes. Eisenhowers great head of cattle which carried within 22 miles drive, claimed Although the from died anthrax - that the quakeJapanese did not damage in three years. of the Rhine. in the mind of Altheir war industry centered The . Pasteur liedBig question was how long could strategists , around the Tokyo district, they method eliminated this high death the Nazi high command continue to remained silent about the effect rate. that the mounting tidal .wave He is better known by his discovhad upon their of which was ery pasteurization, and at port. . v shipping, first used with' beer. The main to is kill purpose of pasteurization HELP WANTED: germs. It is the process of heating Seek Arms Speed-U- p milk or cream for a sufficient period of time to kill the microorganisms." Once deeply concerned with reUndulant fever was reduced by 50 conversion, government officials per cent, typhoid fever by 45 and have once again swung their prindeaths among children were recipal attention back to war producduced to an extent that was almost tion, what with munitions shortages unbelievable the first year that OnGeneral Eisenhower (left) confers with on the battlefronts threatening detario had compulsory pasteurization Field Marshal Montgomery In Holland. velopment of mounting Allied atof milk. manipulate its forces to ward off a tacks. With 300,000 workers needed in To Pasteur also belongs the credit at any one decisive for the discovery of transmission of spot. Although the munitions plants, labor became the enemy was said rabies, and for an inoculation that, to have about 6,000,000 men afield No. 1 consideration of officials, with has resulted in the saving of thouin both the east and west, only War Manpower Commissioner Paul sands upon thousands of lives. about 1,250,000 were said to be V. McNutt calling for intensive recruiting of women; transfer of emcrack troops. within a plant to more esployees That the enemy has few troops to sential jobs; channelling of workers Fertilizer Labels evidenced his in tactics by spare is, to more important industries ;. disCommercial fertilizer should be the Balkans, where the retreat toof labor turnover, and appraised by the percentage or ward the Austrian border promises couragement of manpower authorizasuspension of his to all draw on each troops up packgrade figures given tions for civilian production. age and not by a brand or firm presently strung out along the HunOf the 300,000 people needed, McIn addiand border. colYugoslav garian name, the University of Illinois Nutt tion, reports from Italy indicated a and said, 130,000 were for heavy lege of agriculture recommends. small arms munitions. IndusAnimal manure, crap residues and German retirement in that country. tries requiring the remainder inAs lines Nazis their reformed the legume green manures should be clude air - borne radar ; assault, used to" their fullest advantage. Such in Hungary, flying Red columns ad- transport and cargo 13 miles south of ships; tank mamaterials, when used properly, are vanced cotton duck for tenting; terials; Budapest, where civilians were put efficient fertilizers. These byprodtrucks and tires, heavy artillery, to for work entrenchments a digging ucts of the farm, used in conjunc9 and Superfortresses. last ditch stand. tion with lime and phosphate are deal. coal-lade- . . 150-mi- le . . , . , a-s- ea ! break-throug- i h, ; . . . , B-2- 16, over the Mowery took operation of familys 58 acres, and through purchase of modern equipment, rented and shared an additional 112 acres, besides doing custom work. When bad weather set him back a week last summer, he toiled 130 hours the next, making it up. In nine years of farming, Mowery has earned nearly $14,000. Greve enterprising, Equally paid $91 for a 650 pound Hereford calf in New Mexico, and fattened it up to 1,170 pounds at 20 cents a pound before toting it: to the Chicago show. There, the steer won the junior and grand championships, brining Greve $585 in prize money, before being bought at auction by the Firetone Tire and Rubber company for $5265. " Theres nothing new to learn when you use this wonderfully convenient yeast Mata requires no special methods or recipes. It acts so fast, rises so quickly your baking is all done in a few hours. And what a baking it is! Maca Yeast gives bread and rolls a rich, golden beauty, a smooth, even texture flavor. and a delicious Stays Fresh for Weeks Without Refrigeration Think how Maca saves you extra trips to the store on bake days! You can always keep a handy supply on your pantry shelf. For your complete protec- tion, we date every package. So bake with success insurance! Use Maca, the original fast, granular.yeast Ask your grocer for Maca today! SEAWAY: Back Again Rejected as a treaty requiring a d vote by the senate in 1934, the $421,000,000 St. Lawrence Seaway project, providing a complete waterway link from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic ocean, bobbed up again in the upper house, this time in the form of an agreement requiring a simple majority. Calling for construction of dams, canals and' water-work- s at an expense of $277,000,000 to the U. S. and $144,000,000 to Canada, the proj- ect was to be introduced as an amendment to the rivers and harbor bill by Sen. George Aiken (Vt.). One of President Roosevelts pet projects, the St. Lawrence Seaway has been the subject of lively discussion, with advocates charging private power interests with blocking its passage, and opponents claiming that only Canada stood to benefit from it. Aikens attempt to pass the project as an agreement rather than, a treaty further fanned the flames, with opponents stressing that anything as vital to our inter-national relations properly deserved the extended support of the country; as a whole, as exemplified in a senate vote. two-thir- . two-thi- rd the way: Maca is serving the armed forces so, sometimes, your grocer might be out of it If he is, ask for Yeast Foam (Magic Yeast). It, too, gives flavor. bakings a grand Cy ed NORTHWESTERN YEAST COMPANY 1750 N. Ashland Ava. Chicago 22, 111. COPYRIGHT 1144, NORTHWESTERN YIAST CO. |