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Show UTAH THE RTCH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH. IHE RICH COUNTY REAPER Cnttred u second class matter Feb. 8, 192 t the Post Office, Randolph, Utah, under i. Act of March 3, 1879. Wra. E. Marshal, Bntiness Manager 1.50 Per Year in Advane SUBSCRIPTION I st I on Mat. hall, Editor ind Piooriets Dont Rob Calves of .WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS. Billion Congress Fashions 5V.i Dollar Tax Reduction for 1946; Ponder Postwar Army Training Released bv Western Newspaper Union When opinions ore expressed ln NOTE: (EDITORS or Western Newspaper Unions news analysts and not necessarily hs Essential Food ii .rn..l3--- First Milk Necessary For Proper Development thnYwspaper?! .... fi vi .''A Veterinary Medical association recently reported. Unfortunately, the dairyman has interfered with nature to such an extent that few calves get enough colostrum to meet this need. It becomes necessary to feed vitamins in concentrated, or even in pure form. Vitamin A deficiency in a calf causes watery eyes, a cough, pneumonia and scours. Vitamin B deficiency leads to flabby muscles and digestive stagnation. Vitamin C is needed for the proper function of the guard cells in the intestine. While some dairymen have tried methods of raising a calf without allowing it enough colostrum, they have produced weaker calves at a greater cost by substituting certain patent panaceas. Instead of following this practice every effort should be made to encourage the calf to secure all of the first milk possible. . TAXES: Good News Though the senate and house had yet to compromise their differences, John Q. Public could look forward to substantial reductions in income taxes in 1946, and American business was assured generous relief for the immediate postwar period. billion dollars No less than 2 was expected to be lopped off of individual income taxes as a result of provisions for permitting $500 exemptions for dependents before payment of the normal 3 per cent levy and the scaling down of surtax rates. to another 8 billion dol- lars was scheduled to be pared from one-inc- Hogs Health Can Be Aided by Use of DDT t cies, such as the stablefly and horn-fl- y which will not normally enter a fly trap. Tests have proven that when sprayed on hogs that raw patches caused by stablefly will disappear within a week and no further injury of this nature was noticed throughout the balance of the season. take-hom- SNAPPY Over 300 patents dealing with rub- b,r nemitry are among the 45,000 United Stales patents seized from aliens land .nationals of occupied countries which are now available for licensing to American citizens. With their fundamental platforms variance,'-France- Even at peak production rates. If inay take eight years for manufacturers to meet the demand for new automobiles. s In five years the number of synthetic rubber President Truman asks congress for military training for youth. want no truck with compulsory military conscription. 'Meanwhile, it was estimated that ... ed re BEGoodrich QJ RST USE LIQUID, TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE USE ONLY A5 P1RHTED DROPS THE HEADERS DIGEST OFFERS an opportunity to add materially to you: income by accepting subscriptions from your friends and neighbors during your spare time. Become our Community Representative. Enjoy liberal profits, cam money for Christmas this pleasant, dignified way. REDUCED HOLIDAY offer , RATES and special to both service men and immediate orders. No experience needed to make many welcome dollars before Christmas. Mail penny postcard now for full details and free package ol Dept' selling aids, to ALLAN SCOTT, WNC-- I The Readers Digest, Pleasant-villN. Y. HALF-PRIC- E men-ass- ure e, When Yourlnnards" are Crying the Blues fed WHEN CONSTIPATION makes you on stomaca brings as the dickens, punk upset, sour taste, gassy thscomton, take Dr. Caldwells famous medusae to quickly pull the trigger on lazy to and help you feel bright nards, ' chipper again. sen- DR. CALDWELLS is the wonderful na laxative contained in good ola oyrer to make it so easy to take. J 800,-00- th 666 COLD PREPARATIONS NAVY: Speed Releases one-four- d Tpi combat the shock from contact with Icy waters, B. F. Goodrich has produced a new synthetic rubber suit for fliers. al With nearly 300,000 enlisted men and officers already released since V-Day, the navy planned for the demobilization of an additional 0 by the first of next year through a reduction in discharge scores: Following establishment of lower scores November 1, the navy contemplated an even further cut December 1, with male officers point requirements pared to 44; enlisted male personnel to 39; WAVE officers to 30, and enlisted WAVE personnel 24. In cutting its discharge scores, the navy left its point computation unaltered, with one-ha- lf point for each year of age; one-ha- lf point for each full month of service; 10 points for dependents regardless of number, and point for each month of service outside of the U.S., since September 1, 1939. tires in this thou-san- I. S. Vulnerable war-wrack- passenger-ca- r country has risen from a few tires to about 33,000,000. FIRE RAIDS: Back from a tour of Europe, Anthony J. Mullaney, chief fire marshal of Chicago, 111., and a noted authority on fires, declared that investigations showed that no great city could withstand concentrated explosive and incendiary raids and domination of the skies overhead was the only assurance of safety. In making his disclosure, Mullaney cited the obliteration of Hamburg, Germany, where all walls were of brick, numerous firebreaks existed, no skyscrapers reared up and an efficient fire department operated. In a contrast indicative of the vulnerability of American cities, Mullaney cited localities dotted with frame buildings, wood lathe and plaster construction, tall buildings, and few empty spaces for allowing a sweeping fire to peter out. In burning out Hamburg, Mullaney said, great squads of Allied bombers first dropped explosives to rip up structures, with incendiaries then being loosed upon the open wreckage. Towering flames licked up the oxygen to create a vacuum into which air from surrounding areas then rushed in, creating fierce fire storms. With instruments recording temperatures of 1,400 degrees F., over 40,000 persons were said to have died from the flames, heat inhalation or asphyxiation. FACTS RUDDER ... take-hom- The outstanding advantages of DDT would appear to be (1) its convenience of application and (2) its lethal action on bloodsucking spe- CREOMULSION forCoughs, Chest Colds, Brondiinl . about 975,000 youth would be called up for training each year under the Presidents program, with 250,000 rejected for physical or mental deficiencies. Because of weather considerations, the largest number of LABOR: camps undoubtedly would be located in the south, with regular Setting Pattern army officers and With both Henry Ford II and officers in charge. Fewer routine United Automobile Workers leaders tasks, such as kitchen police, would expressing confidence in settlement be in store for reservists, military of a wage adjustment atsthe com- sources said. pany, government officials held high hopes that n agreement might re- JAPAN: sult in the establishment of a post- Reform Imminent war pay pattern and clear the way Her military machine smashed, for speedy reconversion. Government optimism was a wel- Japans highly .developed economic come note in the dreary labor pic- monopolies, designed for foreign as ture, pointed up by the deadlock in well as domestic exploitation, also negotiations between the UAW and faced imminent dissolution as part of General Motors over the CIO the Allied program to strip Nippon unions demands for a 30 per cent of her potential and wage increase to maintain wartime democratize the country. e The losers figured to be the five pay and the corporations resistance to the demands great financial-industrifamilies of because of possible effects. on prices. Japan, which, as the dominant ciSetting the pattern for other CIO vilian powers, had exercised strong unions, the UAW declared that Gen- pressure on the nations foreign polieral Motors was well able to dip cies. Backed both politically and into alleged huge wartime profits to financially by the government, the carry . over any losses accruing big five, known as the zaibatsu, from higher wages until future pro- were heavy investors in overseas duction reached big volume levels. development. Reflecting industrial sentiment for By smashing the zaibatsu, the its own part, General Motors denied Allies planned to loosen their grip exorbitant wartime earnings and de- over Japanese politics and clared any withdrawal from reserves more liberal and democraticpermit elewould crimp expansion plans. ments to exert influence over govAs the companies and unions ernment direction. At the same clashed, the administration worked time, destruction of the great comon a reconversion wage policy de- bines promised freer opportunity for signed to guide negqtiations through economic development in the counthe troublesome days ahead. Strong- try. ly influenced by labor, the governAs steps were taken for the disment reportedly favored substantial solution of the zaibatsu, the politiwage boosts to maintain wartime cal transformation of Japan slowly e pay while freezing gained ground with new in prices at prewar levels, except in the development stage andparties libmore hardship cases. eral political institutions impending Giving both capital and labor, its in the rewriting of the national say in the formulation of a reconver . at tion. As the three major parties and a smattering of smaller organizations moved to write a new political charter for the country, the Popular ReMILITARY TRAINING: backed by publican movement, Await Response General De Gaulle, loomed as & between the CommuHaving received President Tru- counterweight Known as a and Socialists. nists mans recommendation for one year of postwar military training for Catholic Liberal party, and led by the Minister Bidault, American youth 17 to 20, congress Foreign of demonstration PRMs surprising adopted a cautious attitude on the inwas in elections the for strength with ear one perked question, popular reaction and the other for dicative of the quick defense thrown up by moderate elements against military argument. Personal congressional response to the threat of extreme radicalism. The new alignment found the Presidents request varied, with Senator Revercomb (Rep., W. Va.) Frances political picture charac. . . I am open minded teristically mixed, with the Socialdeclaring I want to hear both sides of this. ists joined with the PRM for a west. . . while Representative Celler ern bloc of European nations We against Communist opposition; the N. Y.) exclaimed (Dem., Communists committed to a swift program of nationalization of industries; the Socialists favoring more study of such an undertaking and the PRM for a moderate course. war-maki- ng The pigpens as well as the pigs themselves get DDT applications to stop the fly nuisance. your money back parforthcoming management-labo- r ley would result in the voluntary creation of machinery for settlement of important disputes. f More Weed Chemicals pena laden phlegm, and SnSSS to soothe and heal raw three great Commuthe political parties nists, Socialists and Popular Repubsion pay program, the government lican movement prepared for the moved slowly in the establishment establishment of a new constituof policy. Hopes ran high that the tion as demanded in the recent elec- corporation income taxes through substantial reduction or total elimination of the excess profits assessment; repeal of the declared value excess profits and capital stock Twine Ball Holder levies, and graduated decrease in surtax rates on companies with less than $60,000 net return. J 'Ball ofTwine In addition to income tax reductions, the use tax on automobile and Twine boats was expected to be dropped. Solons were divided on the question Board of wartime luxury levies, however, with the house for cutting present Hole rates to prewar levels July 1 and ' Sickle Section the senate against the action. With reserves well over 6 billion Staple dollars, both houses were unanimous in freezing present social security payroll taxes at 1 per cent on Studding employee and employer alike ard forestalling an automatic increase to 2 per cent apiece January 1. Cage for the Twine Ball ana Cutter. Under the tax relief bill drawn up h boards as by the senate, G.I.s would not be By ust of shown in illustration and a sharp- required to pay taxes on service ened sickle section, a time saver for compensation during the war years, twine ball and cutter can be erect- and officers would be permitted to ed quickly at little cost. spread tax liabilities over a three year period interest free. Success of chemical killing of weeds gives promise that this method will continue to grow ixr popularity. Michigan State college has found that dilute sulfuric acid may be used in onion to eliminate 75 per cent of the hand labor ordinarily used. Use of oils and other materials in rots, has met with considerable success. Bronchitis , FRANCE: Left Swing Japanese assnred under Allied orders, former addresses gathering in Tokyo. Under proposed liberalpolitical prisoner ized constitution, all Nipponese elements would be afforded opportunity for recognition in nations governmental councls. Close How To Relieve ds ill-fe- d, With freedom of speech trum. Quebec, Canada, with 30 nations formally signing its constitution. Though possessing no executive powers over member nations, FAO seeks, through voluntary interchange of information and effort, to improve agricultural production, raise nutritional standards and better the living conditions of rural populations. Indicative of the big job of FAO has on its hands, the worlds population is estimated to be with many facing periodic starvation. Signatories to the FAO constitution include Australia, Belgium, Canada, China, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Egypt, France, Greece, Guatemala,. Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, India, Iraq, Liberia, Luxembourg, Czechoslovakia, MexNew Zealand, ico, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Peru, Union of South Africa, Philippines, England, United States and Venezuela. m tmma ' permanent body of theUnited Nations, the Food and Agriculture organization (FAO) came into existence in the grand ballroom of the Chateau Frontenac in First two-thir- Nature intended that the calves should get .all the colostrum (first milk) because this colostrum is 10 times as rich in protective substances as normal milk, the dairy cattle committee of the American Dont rob the calf of all the colos- PERFECTGR00MIN6 AGRICULTURE: Global Pact Pepsin use pepsin PreP m tions in prescriptions to make the cine more palatable and agreeat) take. So bo sure your laxative is tained in Syrup Pepsin. MANY DOCTORS ,. V t INSIST ON DR. CALDWELLS-t- he jtj vorite of millions for 50 Jears'consuP that wholesome relief from it. tion. Even finicky children love CAUTIONS Use only as directed. DIL CHDBHIS "iSw tiar, $anM |