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Show Familiar Road Double-Trackin- 1 ' ? rock-ribbe- , Since Franklin D. Roosevelt came on scene in 1932 there have been six the -its presidential elections. Iowa has castthree electoral vote right down the middle, times for Democratic nominees and three times for the GOP. For contrast, look at Michigan, with other, inheavily Democratic Detroit andDemocratic dustrial areas. It has chosen straight . . . UVTI a MpnnpTv Williams four niA aianfoi o HoTmvrfitifi senator in 1954J Yet since 1940 it has voted consistently Republican at the presidential level. d RepubliIowa hardly looks . - I . . rock-ribbe- . can when thus set off. ReIt has, of course, usually jjhosennamed publican governors and persistently GOP congressmen. But in 1954 Governor Hoegh, Republican, trailed for many, hours and wound up winning by a relatively modest 25,000. This isn't the whole story by 'any means. Careful research into Iowa's voting performance shows that in some of the better-off agricultural areas farmers have ; , the state. iNasser. et-pect- ti(d-can- than irfthe t TO DOUBLE canal capacity will cost 'estimated one and a half to two billion dollars as much M the proposed Aswan dam on the Nile would cost. . Nasser seized the canal on the prltlxt that tolls would provideThim with revenue to build the dam. Befoie he can build the dam, he must first finanle th r,f tion of a second canal, paralleling the exisfing channel, f I ra The Suez Canal UsersAssn. SCU proposed tPv Secy, of State John Foster DuUes is not rfgarded as wht its name implies. Private shipping and oil companies con- NEA Service, Inc. I Overtones In Contemporary Politics By FRANK ! never jui 1 . for them in monogamy or what famed Viennese psychoanalyst Viktor E. Frankl calls the "culmination of sexual development, the goal off sex education and the ideal of se&teJU et&lcs." So Patty's Nraiiuing wish to one know boy deeply instead of RUTH M1LLETT SAYS , knowing many boys superficially is not necessarily one to be ashamed of. Indeed, if her parm I I VI 1 1 III ents will try to appreciate her attachment as it exists ;' now in. What makes a happy family? what it First of all you must hae a husband and wife who love each stead . of worrying overshould be become, they might other enough to stand by each other when the going is rough. They able to take in it pride must also appreciate each other and all they have when the going . is smooth. Then you need children who are loved for themselves alone and 4Ttat itaMMie' ivTlf1a anil amliltinns J.. Then you have to add companionship, with the whole family interested in each other and, part of the time, interested in doing By HAL COCHRAN . i. things together, Bad luck doesn't seem to take You have to have cooperation, too. A family in which each a crack at the folks who always member is selfishly pulling for himself is never a happy family. You need family jokesf and family traditions. You need manage to keep busy. kidding, the kind that brings grins and not the kind that ' causes hurt feeling's. You can stop a lot of people want to argue politics by who LAUGHTER, KINDNESS AND MEMORIES You need laughterlots of laughter. Only a family that knows simply asking, "Did you reghow to laugh at mishaps and follies can stay happy for very long.' ister?" You need, sentiment, too. Snapshots must be treasured, birthdays Political campaigns will be edr and holidays properly celebrated in a way that creates memories. since we'll learn that ucational You need kindness lots of it inside the home and kindness that are. not .golfers and liars all goes outside it. And you need religion for comfort and warmth and hope and fishermen, v faith in things to come. It takes a lot to make a happy family, contributions from every A youth drew 30 days in Jail for stealing from the cash regsingle member. ister of a store where he had just landed a job. No sooner on SIDE GLANCES his feet than he lost his head. By All J Barbs i I good-natur- ed : t r , , galbraxth says that the average hubby doesn't mind being panned by his wife. Doesn't it depend cn how .heavy they are? A jud,ge didn't act a -- tie about iit- - refrains from beating her because war-again- The opinions expressed by Herald columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of this newspaper, i it is his legal duty not to use his fists on her. Duty, in my opinion, is an abasing word. Thoreau said, ''The greater part of what my neighbors call good I believe in my soul to be bad, and if I repent of anything, it' is very likely to be my good behavior." The difference between me and Thoreau is that I have very little good behavior to repent of, but such little good as I may have done has never been because I thought it was my duty. 7- apologetic j it. Thel J clue isn't hardvbw.; to find. All rich Air. Robertson and respectable people who are not traitors to their class have to be Republicans. Hie great unwashed of the nation belong in the j wife because he loves her is a better husband than the man who Going Steady But there is another, perhaps wiser and more truly loving view of the attachment between Patty and Art. For two years it has been teaching them to take responsi- - Correspondents Herald tta.lt correspondents leithearcvarious communities of Utah 1l Contact .them U tou hava County news District circuiction agents are listet also - They staeu ready to belp you with problems concerning da livery of tha paper Name Phone Community 0173-R- 1 Alpine Lorra Devey American fork Dexth Grant . 100 W Am Fk Ouane Ourrant cir. 508J Benjamin Mrs. J R Peay 0119R3 Edeemont Tana Richards rs Goshen Elberta ' Marsruerite Water bury 089J 1 Highland Cressie Greenland0318-R1 Lake Shore. Wrv Bellows Lake Mrs Kent A Prue AC Lm.1u' Josephine Zimmerman 71 W 101W Paul Willis clr I Lhi 5574 Lindon. Evelyn Blake Mapleton Doris Rowberry HU 21 Feohi Lee Bailey Orem Margaret WhJtwood AC Orem Irene Keith (dr.) AC 0311R3 Palmyra ' Shirlene Ottesen 223J Parson Madolinc Dixon Pavson Amber Jackmar. fdrj 327 J PI Grove Beuiah G Bradley 2551 PI Grove Guy liillman (sports 4382 PI Grove Jennie Gilbert (cir 2694 PI Vtaw Yvonne Perry FK 0107R1 Salem Marrrette Taylor 9902 Sazitaquin Esttlla Peterson 323J Sp Fork Frank G Kins Sp Fork Vtrsrinla Evans( Society) 297 Sp Fork B Davis Evans (clr.) 237 Spring Lake Hortense Butler SorimrvUle Evelyn Boyer HU Sp Katherin Cheffield 1IU Vest lltn. lira. Llvera ULihon CZUi , : 33 4-3- View-Vineya- rd 6-3- 524 74 5-35-1- - 4-0- O TM. tVr. OA ftrt. (ML tS4 by MCA IMh. HMrs. Welch, O m m bet sometimes a you wish my mother 9-6- 42 9-6- Pretty Package Preferred - l ftelJ self-addresse- d, self-address- ed . . cross-examinati- on . They Say - . self-address- ed ls . , . : I . self-address- ed (D-Mo- nt). - y, . QWhat is the origin oi the 1 . I i -- QsandAs and ammonium citrates (a single By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. In recent years one after anoth- substance) in water. This is a party that has been --their cham- er simple household remedy which pleasant iron tonic with practicpion, and they feel that maybe I have recommended to the fol ally no astringency or irritant action, as thousands of followers they ought to clean themselves up. lowers of this of this column know. But if you That, I think, is all right, but column has become try to buy an ounce of this year the Republicans are car- somehow imtransparent garnerying it too far. They have adopted difficult or obt-red scales today, you become the same attitude of those Chris- possible to v , y '' persona non grata, or the clerk tians in Dante's Inferno who lean- tain. will show you the can plainly Why? ed over the rails of hell's gallery labelled "to be sold only by preand got such enjoyment out of ' ; or, if i you look kinda ; the main ingre-scription" watching the writhings and twist- - dient dumb, perhaps he will offer you a in, the ings of the sinners on the redhot blood tonic which is really much coals below. If it doesn't get too proof homemadeLj better and all ready to take, etc. Dr. Brady hot, I prefer the company of those cougn meaicine i Since iron ammonium - citrate described in Volumette 5 of the sinners. And our Republican Pocket d garnet-rein scales has virtually Cyclopedia of Health (Calll friends may wake up and find have been recomI C disappeared, 25c and there are more of us unwashed it) RI, some other remedies for cimending with our lean and hungry guts stamped envelope) is .sodium in- anemia, all of them ready to take "citrate of soda." The than there are the sleek and well trate, to hand the. customer structions in the booklet make it and ready fed like those five hundred so off shelf. the These are: deeasy for anyone to whip up a right ciety dames who stood out in the batch of cough medicine at any scribed in Volumette 18, or send stubble of Ike's ' field, and got a time envelope grandpa, Aunt Em, or the stamped, folder describing the inside of the on for Red Blood the pamphlet to needs or ease baby house instead of being asked to loosen cough.something Vitamin. come in. Your workingman just QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Ten or fifteen years ago even can't see himself being identified a timid soul Witchcraft could ask for and with that crowd, and there are now Sister living in Italy,' left get an ounce of citrate of soda still more Joe Smiths than there in Cairo, Egypt, last year and still any store that purported to suffers are Mrs. Vanderocks. from, the persecution of the sell drugs, without submitting to We have this year witnessed the or humiliation. natives against her. She insists have used hynotism, greatest conversion since the You see, citrate of soda is so safe they must and witchcraft against magnetism, Apostle Paul's, as Vice President that, as the authoritative United . . . L. her L.) (Mrs. Nixon found himself unable to an- States Dispensatory, twenty-firs- t should She Answer have the adswer the gentle Ike's question: edition stated: a of a doctor vice "Dick, why persecutest thou the "Sodium citrate is widely em- who limits psychiatrist to his mental Democrats?" and overnight chang- ployed in the modification of disturbances. practice doctor you Any ed from a great conservative to a cow's milk for infant feeding for she knows will refer her to one. or great, liberal. But I wonder if the purpose of preventing the Drink More Milk even in Biblical days there were formation of large hard curds." Is it true - that drinking milk not some who still considered Saul The foolproof homemade hardens the arteries of older perof ' Tarsus suspect. cough medicine became so pop- sons? (Mrs. N. H.) Even those pollsters who trudge ular in some communities that Answer On the contrary, it infell the demand for tends to keep 'em soft, cough syrup wearily around the best bars so the drugterviewing the better dressed and away alarmingly, better shod inmates on their presi- gists pulled string with federal dential preferences are reporting officials and had sodium citrate So a swing toward indecision at this restricted to sale on prescription , , time, and that is always bad for only. I have never doubted the verThen there was the homemade dict of the jury 4hat convicted the party in power. which many followers him (Alger Hiss). Independents who still like Ike blood tonicand used with satisfacprepared Adlal Stevenson. are saying, "Well, he's only car 18 Volumette as in directed tion, rying out the Democratic program, of the Pocket Blood Cyclopedia We are no$ trying to organize and what if they did start it?" and Health,- for which send 35c any boycott of the (Suez) Canal, The' answer to that is that as a and en- but we cannot be blind to , the second term president Ike's power, velope.stamped This blood tonic was simply fact that conditions might beif any, over the men who" really a solution of "thin, transparent, come such that transit through run his party will be gone. They garnet-re- d scales" (as the 'Phar- the canal is impratical or greatknow his coat-taiwill have given macopoeia described It) of iron ly diminished. them their last ride. . Secretary of State Dulles. Fm not predicting at this time I Signed letters not more that there will be a Democratic than one page or 100 words I believe that even with the to, victory, except in Congress, but personal long, pertaining present (armed services) the party of the rich is going to health ant? hygiene cfyt to strength, if we were called upon know 'that it has had a run for disease, diagnosis or treat to honor more than, one commit. . ment, will be answered by its money. ment at the same time, we Dr. Brady If a stamped be in difficulties. would envelope is enI am always puzzled when I closed Addrest Mansfield Mike Sen. sucb corre-hear people talk about doing their v, spondence to Dr. William duty. They seem proud of it, even Churches qan express the atBrady co The Daily Herald. though Jt is usually accompanied jProTO, Vtsh, titudes of the vast body of their and they by a cote of self-pitmembers. That will drown out . " DR. BRADY'S COLUMN . . ? i - , Daily Herald sider themselves as the real users. They resent the fact that they have not been consulted more byftne diplomats j . There is some feeling that the Suez Cn41 crisis wouid have adjusted; itself, or that it would haW improved, If the diplomats had stayed out. They think liegotiations bl- tween the old Sue?: flana! fin "Rmmf'a rm Loviol ,,v.Jl. and the shipping company users would hae worked outfci deal. And it would have included a finahcirfe kan f or canl expansion to handle its future traffic loa&s f IT IS NOW admitted that the are' going to be able to operate the canal, after Egyptians a fashion. It is a common mistake of westerners to underrate the skills of people from less developed coliiftries. Thus was thought the Russians couldn't developfan atomic borrijt and the Chinese Communists couldn't fig?t k t modern air power. It is consideredvjust as wrong td assunle that Egypt's operation of .the, Suez Canal tvill fai- lThe proposed boycott of the canal by fhips of the user nations is said to offer no better solutiofi. There simply aren't enough tankers or general cargo slips to haul the canal's normal traffic around Africa. PRESIDENT. NASSER has said that If SCUA tries to force ships through the canal with its own pilots, it will mean war. A war in this area would probably meab that all pipelines across the Arabian penjnsulafrdm the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean, wouli be closed an,d 1 sabotaged. That would create a real oil shortage in western Europe. Its effect would be worse than mere stoppage of canal traffic. And this is what has th$ private oil arid uaiuta wucu. uxpiuiiiiitic, ianures W . i niaiie a settlement. " ; girl got to meet any other boys with Art. on her trail like this?" If the T.'s can't change Patty's mind about Art, they can always alter their own a little. It's natural for them to dis 1 s C. ROBERTSON seem to think they should be rereof warded for doing the right thing, course, are Republicans, Demome a for and being sponsible imply that if it wasn't for the THE MATURE PARENT crat. Their smug attitude that it's reward they would be regular all right to be a Democrat if you devils. Teen-Ag- e don't know any better, but of Must a man be reminded that course you know it's not quite re- it is his duty to provide for his ' of teen-ag- e "going bility for their sexual impulses. spectable, my dear boy, put me family? Must he be reminded that By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE approve U learning this responsibility over the fence years ago. This it is his duty not to steal from his Patty T. and a boy, named Art steady' As parents, we know that our isn't the big ; lesson of adoles- year the Republican assumption of neighbor? If he goes to church behave been "going steady" since monopoly on morality and virtue, cause someone has told him it is what is it? . they were high school juniors. adolescent is f a terribly uncer- cence, teen-ager" wisdom and money almost makes his duty, rather than to enlarge als' danger is The T.'s haven't liked it. They tain person, One minute, he's The . me proud to sav rehis spiritual experience, has he want Patty to know many boys contemptuous of our most pre- ways that boys and girls will othto main a I'm Democrat sexual objects each contributed anything to the cause go she can discover what she cious opinion; the next, he's abof er instead of religion other than perhaps beI've becoming persons. wants in a husband. But so long seeking a pat of approval as a RepubPatty and Art have survived it. 1known coming a statistic to prove that as she's seen Art every day at jectly as a puppy. : i To their attachment has j: about 1 11VU1 His church going is more popular than was both, UIUU Willi no everything possifeelings school fnw separation 1 been been are the to becrooners hair that's as act if from it used to be? Is not the man who greenhouse ". styles ble. just sexwe the unfixed that can't so kv one l crude, believes in goodness from the kindentitled maturing X ilea ATI UCUUCU changeable ing knowlof inadolescence with into his to credit to him ness of his own heart a- - better a. uality "going steady" badge university Patty's going one of As into either. deepenperson, much edge steadiness, he'd Jhonor of man than he who does good only of some stead of the men's college in and tenderinterest sure we're ing understanding kind. I've selPatty's because, he is prompted by a planned on. 'belief ness. 3 her a terriis Horn one, Art known t sense of duty? Surely, the man passing Writes Mrs. T.: "We're who refrains from beating his It's hinted at ; what is waiting Democrat that )S bly upset. What chance has. the that it's permanent terrfies us. k al Bitter Lake. THE CHOPPING BLOCK rather than one of the last. If there is a Democratic landslide in the corn-land- s, ed j 1 shifting soil of the Iowa v - I making in this or any other year, its signs will have to be detected somewhere other dent Hopes for a United Nations settlent are held In be no better. One extreme view ' is that She negotiators ' should forget everything they hajve donefifp to now aijd sutrt iresn. The reason given is that th!e prinefbah Suez Canfil issue has been ignored. This is that canll j traffic is to double in the next 10 years, just & jit has doubl4d m the past 10 years. I j This means that the canal itself ms"t be "doubli-tracked- ," so that ships can move in both lirections at rjil times. Today there are north ant! sduthj convoys whiclh must pass each other on schedule in, the Grelt There are signs, too, that many of the smaller Iowa towns, dependent on farmers have for a satisfactory level of business, of their size the steadily been increasing Democratic vote. two (Though Iowa is rated one of the richest farm states in America, its heavy concentration on corn and hog production has linked its fortunes tightly with government policies on price supports and similar "matters. Thus it is highly sensitive to any price trend or other development which affects its farmers incomes. The record indicates that when trends are down, or there is a threat of trouble, the sensitive areas turn Democratic. Consequently, far from being nearly automatic Republican, Iowa has in fact become one of the more delicately balanced states in the nation, politically. It is likely to be one of the first to turn, i I NEA Washington WASHINGTON (NEA) Waghingtonfrepresentative? on ana snipping companies which are Big users of ttye Qt Suez Canal take a dim view of wjhat thediplomats haje done thus far to resolve the canal's seizure by Egypt s Co-respon- consistently tended to vote Democratic in presidential years by percentages greater than recorded inthe state as a whole. The more prosperous Iowa farmers appear to have had strong Democratic presidential leanings. With this sentiment at work, it does not require too great a; shift elsewhere to turn the state into the Democratic column. In 1948 some 53 Iowa counties went Democratic (of 99), and Harry Truman took Different View of iri Row By PETER EDgON State in Balance Evidently no state in .the nation is more misunderstood politically than Iowa, and the misunderstanding seems destined f to persist through the; campaign yeslr 1956. It stems from the old notion that Iowa d is almost as Republican JI as elections. Maine in presidential From that point the argument proceeds that if a Republican candidate is sagging in Iowa, he must obviously be in considerable difficulty in the entiret country. election But the facts of Iowa's-recenhistory do not support Jthe contention that v , it is a top Republican State. Suez g Overlook Factor PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1956 lovaa I EPSON IN WASHINGTON Farm prices Show Drop Third Month expression "The real McCoy'? A It alludes to a boxer in the 90's known as "Kid MdCoy.'t So many people imitated his style that boxing enthusiasts became By BERNARD BRENNER angry and would raise the cry United Press sStaff Correspondent that they wanted "The real McWASHINGTON (UP) The At Coy" and not some imitator. riculture Department still expeefs farm income this year to top 193 Q Is it true that people may levels despite a drop in farm be poisoned by eating barra- prices for the third straight cuda? month. i. The department reported Friday A The meat of large barracuda is at times poisonous. But that farm pres, a key political if care is taken to preyent spoil- Issue in this ejection year, droppj lf of 1 per cent an age, barracuda meat has a good nearly the ended month Sept. .15. flavor. Ordinarily it can be Farm a steady started pricejs eaten safely. rise in January and continued ito Then thy Q How does the title of baron rise through to decline. began rank in British peerage? The Agrv4ilture Department A It is the lowest rank of also reported hat farm production the British peerage. d and living costs declined of 1 per cent fast month. This put Q How many of our former the farm index, in mid-Sopresidents were' over- 82 when tember atparity cent, the 82jper sai$e they, died? as at but 2 per1 ceat Sohn Adams, 90; below a yearago. A Three. Thomas Jefferson, 83, and James The farm parity index is the leMadison, 85. gal measure f the farmers' pur4 chasing power! compared with the Q By whom was old Panama prices he receives..; When he gets captured, sacked and destroyed? 100 per cent of parity, the f armory A Henry Morgan, an English is said to bef receiving a "f aif pirate and adventurer. price. f Don PaarlboVg, economic aide jtb Q What does "lanai" mean? A Lanai is a Hawaiian word Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. meaning "patio." It is in com- Benson, said the mon use on the West Coast. ' price report does not change official department forecasts that net How In are Q many persons farm income i this year will top the Boy Scout movement? .j Cub and Explorer 1955 levels. A Counting - months iirsi ninethe Scouts and their leaders, about During pf this year, prices received by farm4,175,000. ers averaged, per cent below the Q Is tuberculosis still in the same period !ff 1955. The average parity price: or the first niie top three of killer diseases? A No. Alcoholism has re--" months of 193!) now stands at S3 cent. j placed it in the third spot,' behind per. w H e v o e r Department econoheart disease and cancer. mists noted tijiat whik prices sharply in the last three QWhat are the chances for plunged months of lasj year they are exquadruplets being born? to hold :lose to current levA About one in every 950,000 pected els for the rcnfaindr of 1936. . - . , one-ha- lid-Jun- e. one-thir- b - mid-Augu- st i : 'I mid-Septemb- er ' '. 5i , , i ,J births. . OF NERVES . anyone ever bowled CASE '18..three perfect games' In one seMich. (UP) !. KALAMAZOO, ries? . Somrs, 17, pulled her A Hank Marino once bowled car at Up the:; county building to two in an official license test and a take drivers three-gam- e series, but no one smacked into the fender of right has ever bowled three for three. Gilbert Russell's Deputy Sheriff Som-eawarded Miss Russell car. Q Are there any, license her anyway, saying: towns in the state of Mississippi? A This year marked the 69th "She was a very good driver case iof once anniversary, of the founding of nerves.she gotfover her Mound Bayou, Miss., an town. Q Has .! i 300-gam- - es rs all-Neg-ro h . the noise from the radical hate ' groups. Rev. Donald Clark, Episcopal vicar of Fort Worth, pleading for brother, love before integration crowd. . . all-Neg- ro v IMPORTANT : INSECTS Honey bces great contribution to agriculture? is the pollination of 50 or more Important crops that are almost entirely dependent on them, for seed production. i I |