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Casper Star-Tribune from Casper, Wyoming • 4

Location:
Casper, Wyoming
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Friday. May lUuA THE CASPER TRTBTTNE TTETI A TD CASPER. WTO. Pao Four AkU s-i A MODEST MAIDENS The Job in Germany One of the first nights we had to take a young German woman into custody for violating the 9 o'clock curfew, and you know what she said?" they asked. "She said she was a 'souvenir of 1919." She claimed her father was a Doughboy.

It's a on our men, but non-fraternization is a difficult thing, particularly since the tactical phase has passed." Pvt. Roland Morris, Tacoma, and T5 Stanley Ludine from Kansas operate a radio patrol car six hours daily in Coblenz. Capeskin is named for its dom emharkation. Can ty.t 1 Sou-; Africa, and comes from African sheep. Non-Fraternization Rule Will Be Enforced with Difficulty SANDISON'S Bowles Explains Meat Situation Clarifies Apparent Discrepancy WASHINGTON.

May 18 UP) OPA says its rationing program is but one of a number of ways Ameri "There are two things our Amer- HP 9) i phone cffinro) ULi (This is the fourth of five stories by Daniel DeLuce. veteran Associated Press war correspondent, on the magnitude of problems facing the occupation armies in Germany.) By DANIEL 11E LUCE COBLENZ, May 18 Cheery from 345 East Second soldiers can't resist kids and a glimpse of friendly family life. Those are two things the Germans are sure to tempt us with. "I'm not worried about the bio-locical aspects of boy meets girl. That can be fairly rigidly controlled.

But the kids here look about like the youngsters back home. The old folks seem harmless and their houses in i cans share in limited food supplies. In the case of meat, for instance, Belgian affection and cognac, two American officers were approaching th frontier when one said to the are nice and clean and they appear to live about the same way we do. "We are going to have a terrific job keeping a sharp line between friends and enemies as the occupation stretches out unendingly month after month." only about half the estimated amount available to civilians will be accounted for by red points. Price Administrator Chester Bowles offered an explanation today in response, he said, to many letters from housewives puzzled by official announcements to the per capita supplv of different rationed foods.

"Without realizing that a consider HONEY BUTTER SPREAD Tomatoes Firm for Slicing LB. 23c A 1 other: "Look, we cant go Dae, into Germany in this condition." They wheeled their jeep off a highway down a tree-shadowed lane leading to a green hillside. Slowly they got out and opened a wooden gate. A sign said S. Military Cemetery." Bevond were row upon row of wooden crosses.

On each quiet mound of earth were bouquets of Belgian flowers. "This is what we've got to remember all the time we are in Germany," said one officer. The other soberly nodded. They told the story when I asked them about the problem of non-fraternization. I've made the same inquiry of American soldiers ranging from buck private to a three star Germans you meet In Coblenz flash smiles in your direction.

Girls lean out the windows to wave. Children crowd around jeeps and weapons carriers of the security guard. They draw fingers across their throats at the mention of Hitler. They beg chewing gum or "cigarets for daddy." Maj. E.

W. Mason, peacetime public accountant from Urbana. 111., admitted that "in our small unit we officers can keep a jaundiced eye able part of the total rationed food supply goes to civilians in the form of manufactured products and through restaurants housewives look at the figures, add up the number of ration stamps they have, and then wonder how in the world OPA expects them to obtain their share at present point values," Bowles asserted in a statement. The he said. COFFEE lit No.

2 cans. 2 lr Em All Brands except Sanka and Kaffee Hag SUGAR ORANGE JUICE- No Points No. 2 can. 2 for 5 lbs 37d 10 lbs. 6d 25 lbs SI.

70 I general. I In GI parlance it is known as "the 65 dollar question." "Hey, Sis! Did ya see He saluted That is the fine stipulated lor enlisted men convicted of intimate as- sociation with enemy civilians. An -w mm i results from the fact that per capita figures refer to total supdies and cover "not only that part that people get directly with their ration stamps, but also the part it is possible to get indirectly." Citing meat as an example. Bowles said that while the per capita estimate at present is 115 pounds a year, "actually only about half of that meat will move against ration stamps." Saying the 115-pound figure is based on "carcass" or "wholesale" III 'UkJ 1 TT by buying manufactured products such as canned soups, baby foods, pork and beams, and even pharmaceuticals." Many families produce their own unrationed meat," Bowles said, add Lt. Comdr.

Fidel Heads Group with Brilliant Record lb. PICNIC STYLE Cooked, lb. HAMS officer may be punished by a much higher fine and in addition may be jailed and broken in rank. I can not vouch for the opinion of the Allied supreme command, but among American officers and men occupying Germany now there seems to be general agreement that strict enforcement of non-fraternization cannot be carried out over a long term. A lieutenant-colonel who was asked last month to draft such a program for two American armies summed it up this way: "Our Doughfoots who fought in the Tunisian desert, on the Normandy beaches and the winter slush of the Ardennes never have wasted any love on the krauts.

But our older veterans will long since have weight, the price chief added: "Because of shrinkage and trimming losses, there is an average loss of about 15 per cent before carcass meat is sold over the butcher's counter XXX." He said that in addition to meals purchased at restaurants, "most people get a part of the total supply ICIOUS SWISS STEAK, lb. GINGERBREAD ing that nnaiiv some people, unfortunately, get meat in the black market, thus cutting the supply available to housewives and dealers who play fair." Bowles stressed that ration point values are set in line with supply when supply improves, he said, point values will go down. Want to Rent a Jail? Here's One for $1,800 Lt. Comdr. John (Jack) Fidel, former resident of Casper and now leader of Navy Torpedo squadron 2.

which has made a brilliant record in Pacific aerial warfare, recently visited his wife and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Fidel, also former residents here, at their Seattle home, according to word received by friends.

He holds the Distinguished Flying Cross with Gold Star, the Air a whole palate-pleasing panful in one handy box of Duff's! The sugar, spices, shortening, eggs every thing's already in S. JV I Medal and the Philippine liberation ribbon. His squadron has shot down 1 HILEX DOES THE WORK DUFF'S MIX FOR BEST RESULTS Toomey's Pancake Flour For Best Results )6tt Japanese aircraii ana suns 'A Look Forward To An Evening of Pleasant Relaxation TONITE AT 000 tons of enemy shipping. The lieutenant commander attended the public schools here and was been released while the occupation still is continuing. "Buchenwald.

Dachau and other horror camps have served to stiffen the American attitude, but they've had to be cleaned up now and they don't make the same terrific impression any more on GI visitors. RlMOBSRflPJflU FLO URN. Just add WATER that's all! LEONARDTOWN, Md. (P St. Mary's county has a nice new S80.000 fireproof jail for rent, since county commissioners refused to accept the $1,800 a year rent.

graduated form Natrona County high 1 1WLBJU, MwJ I RILEY'S BAR Meanwhile prisoners are housed in la 171-year-old iail which has been The on condemned by grand juries and Friendly Bar East Second 239 E. Second school. He received an appointment to the U. S. Naval academy at Annapolis, where he was graduated in 1939.

and a year later he secured transfer to the navy air corps. Mr. Fidel, former purchasing agent here for the Midwest and Stanolind companies, is now engaged in the same work with the Western Gear Works at Seattle. it I 111 I ine ederal wofks Administration built the new jail. Commissioners claim they settled for $1 a year rent when the building was proposed.

mmm rass The "Toast of the Town II 1VDDH II IIMII ll- Em IT me this rancher says to his son is very 11 true. Grass does provide their living and Fo BUY MORE WAR BONDS A revolutionary new baking method! NOW, you can get bread that's full of flavor with no big holes that leak sand-wich fillings on clothing. Compare a slice from the middle of the loaf of our new Wigwam Bread with ordinary bread SEE THE AMAZING DIFFERENCE. EAT WIGWAM BREAD BECAUSE IT HAS NO BIG HOLES EVER. s4(aAa ZZr-sfatt Jh WESTERN RANCH MEAT LOAF a good part of the living for all of us here in America.

More than half a billion acres of the United States roughly, 50 c'c of all our farm and ranch lands is in grass. ''Should its harvest fail for a single year," said John James Ingalls, "famine would depopulate the world." Grass is the preserver of much of our agricultural wealth and the basic raw material of many of our necessities. It is a major crop. And more than that, it's nature's way of transferring health-building materials vitamins, minerals, and other essential elements from the soil into the foods that nourish the nation. Grass must pass through livestock to be converted into products useful to man.

So let's give our pastures, meadows and range lands the care they deserve. Grass on your steeper slopes should never be broken. In the long run, it is your most profitable crop on hillsides because it controls erosion by tying down your top soil and reduces evaporation of essential moisture. Your State Agricultural Experiment Station will tell you of new and improved varieties of grass you might try to your profit, and they will also advise you about reseeding, lime, and fertilizer. And never overlook this important rule of grass care don't overgraze! We at Swift Company are marketing the products of your grass, and so we say with you, "Grass is our living, too!" 2 pounds ground beef, or 1 pound each beef and lamb 1 medium onion ft cup diced celery or ground carrot cup lard or shortening 2 teaspoons salfr 2 eggs 3 cups soft broad crumbs 1 i cup water a cup tomato juice 2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine cup diced green 4 peppers or teaspoon pepper r' There's a Black Sheep GET VITAMINS, IRON Chop onion.

Brown onion and celery or carrots in lard. Combine with green pepper, salt, eggs, tread crumbs, and water to make a dressing. Add half the dressing1 (one and one-half cups) to the meat, mixing well. Pat out half the mixture in a two-quart loaf pan. Cover with remaining dressing, then top with remaining meat mixture.

Bake in a moderate oven one and one-quarter hours. Baste twice with tomato juice and butter to keep loaf moist. Yield: 10-12 servings. in almost every band. But he's not as bad as his 5' reputation paints him.

Permanent! vdved black by nature, his fleece can EXTRA ENERGY IN EVERY LOAF OF WIGWAM BREAD not be bleached. The MORE MONEY FOR DAIRY FARMERS 1. Grow plenty of high-quality rough-ago. 2. P.alance your herd with your feed supply.

3. Keep production records on each cow in your herd. 4. Practice disease control methods. 5.

Troduce milk and cream of the highest quality. 6. Adopt labor-saving methods. 7. Take care of your land.

8. Develop a sound breeding program. uses for black wool are limited so care must be exercised to keep it prop ALWAYS DOUBLY FRESH erly sorted in the wool clip. However, manufacturers do weave it into broadcloth. And believe it or not the wool from the black sheep in the flock becomes clothing for the clergy.

VVFA' 8-Poinf Dairy Program IT'S 2,049 MILES FROM HEREFORD, TEXAS, TO HARTFORD, CONN. To the west of the Mississippi fa produced two-thirds of the nation's meat. To the east live more than $5 IDEA WINNERS To test a spark plug, take a lead pencil, sharpen both ends and a hole in center, place one end on top of spark plug; ground the other end on cylinder head. Spark will jump the gap in pencil. C.

W. Wagner, Oak Hill, 111. To save time in greasing the tractor, paint all the daily lubrication spots one color and all the weekly lubrication spots another color. These should show up plainly against the color of the tractor. Mrs.

L. K. Schatts, West Union, Iowa. For Flavor, Nutrition and FINE TEXTURE Meet Bill Renekcr, Swift's Head Hog Buyer If you have marketed hogs since 1907, chances are that Bill Reneker bought some of them for he has bought more than 30 million for Swift's some of them in Western Canada where EAT WIGWAM CASH PRIZES FOR BEST LETTERS Write us a letter, 250 words or less, telling us which of the six Swift Company advertisements that have appeared in this publication since November you prefer, and why. If you wish to refresh your memory, mail us a request and we will send you all six advertisements.

Letters will be judged by an impartial committee whose decisions will be final. First prize, second prize, third prize, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth prizes, $10.00. Contest closes July 15. Address your letter to F. M.

Simpson, Department 128, Swift Company, Chicago 9, Illinois. Swift Company VNION STOCK YARDS CHICAGO 9, ILLINOIS two-thirds of all Americans. Under these conditions either livestock or fresh meat must be transported from the West to the East, and ss we know, it has boon found to be more economical to slaughter the animal3 in central plants in surplus producing sections, save the by-products, then transport the meat in refrigerator cars to the consuming sections, than to ship the live animals. To have a market for livestock, we must find a market for meat. The job of nation-wide meat packers is to bridge the gap, an average of more than a thousand miles, made up in part from such trips as Boise, Idaho, to Boston; from Denver to Detroit; from Paducah to Pittsburgh; and from Hereford, Texas, to Hartford, Connecticut.

It is necessary to have a large organization with proper facilities to handle efficiently nationwide distribution to the thousands of consuming centers of America. This is the last page of information that we will issue until September. But please don't let the recess keep you from writing us when we can be of help to you. Better still, come and see us in Swift Company's he was buyer from 1916 to 1923, and the rest in the U. S.

A. He became head hog buyer for Swift Company in 1932. When not buying hogs. Bill Reneker likes to judge ASK FOR HAS tnem in the show ring. Right now he's booked until next September to judge at several shows and hog meetings.

An interest in hogs comes to Bill naturally. His father was a livestock salesman and his grandfather conducted a commission business in Pittsburgh a3 far back as 1SG8. His hobby is sharing his vast knowledge of hogs with farm boys and girls. If you should see this big, friendly man in a show ring, don't hesitate to get acquainted with him. omce building at the Union Cm Stock Yards, in fhira f'' i-' mpson.

Agricultural Rcattmh Drpartmtnt WHEN YOU CALL FOR WIGWAM BREAD, ASK FOR WIGWAM PIES, CAKES AND PASTRIES NUTRITION IS OUR BUSINESS AN YOURS Right Eating Add Life to Your Year, and Year to our Life.

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Pages Available:
1,066,329
Years Available:
1916-2024