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Show , HENRYMcLEMORE -- - - - -- - Article Recalls Some Fish Fables -L- . ti!. i IN S -DD , VEGA41110 Goasnot lineages By R. J. 2 r-1-- T-i- -4-- 4 9 1 14 1 b 2 10 9 4 6 12 9 4 8 14 1 7 11 1101PWIA 3 2 To- 9 2 3 8 6 -- al .46 Eltsawns :fit:- . Al. --- rt f ,...-- - ,..,,., - , ..... ----2.-- - .....' F.? ..- ,,. CourtSays 'No' day for on extended run of Walt Disney's "Cinderella" in Chicago's loop. but Federal Judge Michael L. Igoe limited Roberto Rossellini's "Stromk boli" to a stay in downtown theaters. Judge Igoe had been asked to modify an injunction which forbids loop holdovers to the of detriment neighborhood showplaces. The judge. announcing his ruling forbidding an extended run for "Stromboli." declared: "It's about time someone stands up. Stromboli will not run more than two weeks in the is the limit. You loopthat won't use this court to run that picture beyond the limit" , 4 'Aki - - ,.,..i:,,o, . -- 11, --7- . lok.110 C---- , 4e, 7 ,. ' 4-- 1.4!-',- ---- ... .....dr , Y . . sS p By beetag to come 11M1PrIloW . . , -- 'MOMS TUESDAY, FEL 14 4 3 9 11 10 7 9. ,- IINW 11.7.4 111111 i my eyes. I awakened at 4 p.m., refreshed and rested. But the other guests were tired out from their strenuous activity. So they retired early, leaving me with a book, a Jackass, a barn full of roosters and the cattle, to pass a quiet night in the country. Students Stage 39-Ho- ur Revival Session M. (MS) An which evangelical marathon rolled unchecked for nearly 39 hours at tiny Wheaton College ended Friday with some 1300 students ordered back to their classrooms. But the "old-timreligion which inspired coeds and tieless youths alike to make public teetimonials of wrongdoing did not vanish with Pres. J. Raymond Edman's order. Mani students who were not able to give full statements during the revival were reported gathering in small groups to continue their "confessions." The demonstration which erupted from a routine religious service Wednesday nightwas ordered ended following chapel service at 11 a.m. Edman explained: 'This remarkable outburst of religious faith has had its effect and we want to end it now. We do not want it to become too sensational." "We don't want this to get out of hand. These kids are tired out. Some of them have come up to speak two or three times." WHEATON. e" ss re AI", 17 IMMS Zoo:467LP ; ONLY 62Y2C Minimum 'Ittimi p. Cations At t:: apo, afP a EJJ 117 U- . -- oo,' at;altwao awake to waat to ge back to sleep." TEITELBAUI'S .44c-4tor,- de .stheret. dist It eft rat too Prime , 17 EAST BROADWAY Phone 31 Willnil I 1.11 ffiS Fa AllolinoftE I Jr i i) , ' Nog, et4i.. c ; 4 .....: - elo It - 7--1,N,,,I4- . . , in.:404 111110,14brig .0 ,1,1A cmp. MO. .11111...--- il WI 1.."1 . t 1 JOHNSON (News Stet Writes) WASHINGTON should the United States dramatically rise and offer the world $50,000,- 900,000 for peace? Three western senatorsSen. Henry Dworshak SenArthur Watkins think Zales Ecton that, at least, this nation ought to consider doing just that. The propqsal was made by Connecticut's Sen. Brien McMahon (D), chairman of the congressional atomic energy committee. It is the child of desperation. Its gigantic irony, of course, is that the U. S, or anyone else, should have to make an offer to give the world what the overwhelming majority of the world yearns for peace. But the president's announcement that the U. S. was moving ahead with the hydrogen indialTiMbomb, a super-dupinate mass killer, and the logical assumption that Russia was doing likewise, has made it clear that mankind, born with a love for living, is lunging forward in the direction of suicidal war. The question, "Are the days of man numbered?" is no longer constricted to philosophical speculation. It is a question plaguing political leaders addicted to Washington--m- en to practical, earthly thinking. CHALLENGES CRITICS In making his proposal, McMahon conceded it might, with basis. be considered starry-eye- d and impractical, radical, or outlandish. But be flung back the challenge: Then, please, come fourth with another propoial to shock the world out of its dive toward suicide. His proposal was this. (1)The U. S. make these two requests of all the other nations of the worldincluding recalcitrant Russia: that they accept international control of atomic energy. including n an international inspection to assure that no nation is barging ahead on Its OWn ad building up a store of atomic weapons; and. that they reduce armaments expenditures by By RATHERECE 0 (R-Ida- .), er A .-- rr - -- Mee , for the r 000.000,0004-yea- -- work ds $it; next imt on advocate st I thhdt it would be the aray et te011011ty tor the U. L to spend $10.000.000.00, a year tor Bee years on the rest of the world with the as. gored prospect that vre acod4 be relieved of the $11100S,0000 000 a year armaments program that we must now support, and that At now ppears we have te support Indefinitely. But I cant become one of UN rs for Abe McMahon econoimy. five years to all other nations of the world7-inc1udi- ng Russia for economic development and development of atomic energy for its promising peacetime indushial and medical purposes. It would entail no increase In the current federal budget. The president, who has steadily shed modesty since taking over the reins at the White Rouse and nowadays is rather buistent on senators endorsing Truman proposals Instead of Truman endorsing senator's proposals, has indicated a turndown of the McMahon suggestion. But the three staunch GOPers we talked with Watkins, Dworshak, Ectontake this attitude: IVs worth tryany reasonably plausible proposal offering a straw of hope of diverting the world from its drive toward suicide is worth a try; it probably won't succeedRussia's past performance indicates she would deviously sabotage international inspection, even If abe agreed to the plan, which is doubtful; but even if the U. S. offer "got no place," the offering of it, dramatically em- phasizing to the nations of the worldexcept those the Iron Curtain would bar from hearing -- our intensiveness for peace, would be a valuable public contribution to the cause of freedom over the globe. AM , ' flag-wave- proven' becaun I caul make myself believe It would work. I ara just too afraid the Russian dictators would wAy 'lure' until they had received our tonney,-- ; and then turn around and sabo tags Oa attpulations for Intim. national Inspections that w4mt along with It. But shim theres no other proven' for staving off the present armamtmts race, am in favor of serious sideration for the Malabo' - . - WOULD : , , - 2 MAKE OM Montanas Beton said: doubt that ere could ruches, peace with Russia or $100,000.0 Its 000.000. die. power-craze- d - H - - - - - - . t , . - 4, et' ' - - - aye-ter- 0 - - g - two-third- 215,000,000.000-a-yeararro- a. 0' , al 1i - i t ri E pounsE, plan today. Call 54581 Hotel Utah. office, , ,,, rLi ,..,..i... , February 16.- - t - asana lie alas - MEN and WOMEN : : , asammasal sollakmasta ay- - yea manoti Ion be skelaikawaamaiona ilenk amok, maanala sallanakkas, low bap as ela awake, sboll k donimul'obb papa am elleadve spesitst , t - k STARTS .;,, , Inursacy-Nigitt- ,, 'Nib . ,, : 1 i; . , :Dat':-.Ca-,-;-,,i'''.;--;:-- $'' ,. e ,,., - :' Only 2 hrs. S5 min. flying time Coll Av.. LEADELSKIP ..sissill,readway,-- , , t an.,9.09411 Don-- I MILLSNS .kNNw i R - r D, NIT Iwo MORI VVIRANIWIlat IMMO aii;dolco Cann INN Appose. MitnIN00 " , ,-- . . tutors are set on wtwid conquest.It the U. S. would follow throulth and make the otter propmed by Mcitahrm, though, it might have a beneficial publia relatices effect for the cause of freedom. aM so. I certandy think the U. shotdd - con- sider nuking the otter. But the publeet ladng the tverld - to. day is not the hydrogen bomb- -. that is only an Inddental. The WATIEDIS POI WM problem is human nature. 'Whet Commented UtahIs Watkins: that's put in order, the hydrogen bomb vrM be of no cancer& But "Certainly the proposal ought to have very serious considers-ston- e today the worM is saturated grasping,--selfisk-mmust be left un- - bon. AM as long as that is turned in our desperate attempt to steer the world from its cur- (lupe. dash Is ineyttabgef TOO smelt DITEIBRISZ: rent course toward destructim No armaments race never has, Secretary Agriculture nor ever will, kid to peace, and Charles Brannan wishes Amer.- -I am wholeheartedly briny ica's potato growers - had k plan that might end this onc, of that American spirit of priConsidering the present disposition ofRussia, I don't think - "This year, - Branntax1S--agrl- -McMahon's plan has a chance culture department and the to carry. But I can say this, I growers agreed on acreage eut-would prefer to have the U. S. backs--e- os the , government's t s, a cr os spend $10,000,000,000 a year, if bill for surplus potatoes tor : nd agree to an international in. peace were assured with that dumping would bri lets than spection system to assure en- outlay, than to do like we are last year's $125.000.000.: ' forcement The money saved doing and spend it on arms-Idaho- 's would go toward raising the firedBig :triintitterPrianggralmers.uetivel standard of living of peoples DWOrshak told c spirit, it develops. planted their around the earth. 'Ira a meritorious proposal, rows this year twice as doss ' WOULD AID ALL NATIONS- and I certainly with it trould I together. (2) In return, the U. S. would offer: to cut back its WESTERN Alit LINES tEtn , al:mmm; AMIE RICNS - Iris ,,, "'-- ''' ments program by two-thirand offer the saving of QZzin or Wednesday. Children tool Find out about this money-savin- g or your travel agent, or vin1 the Western Air Linea ticket , Ten Billion FoiWorld I Peace? Worth Try Say Senator, S half-far- e D IS was U. WESTERN SLANTS ON WASHINGTON , - .,--. s - - "Belmialeas hi the world is a triirldienteir Convair: Fly the 1 A to Los rooms. - 17- o'-"- Lae pm.;.i Spdhook 1011.1161,t10. ' - 1.;'..-7:N"!"'""- -- N -glIZEllibiPiviaPOP - Mr. and Sirs. IrMiara Bakeri,-----.--who Nye kt the house, say the Sheet now-doe.niggly routing-uand doors the stain with tut - Imidattigied partneri Somethates It sounds like they're drachtle' setnetimes like wrestlinSt ' The Baber theory is that Ike origind ghost which they named "Mrs. that et a ' woman vrho died hi the house 11 years ago. "Mr& It" first beon -- prowling around the place la December,. - Jay,..m..- - - tugnweutBoa ntete.in.t7itH. agate, ' with a Only three vreeks ag- o She haunt was exorcised by a Church rd Itngland vicar ,11-religiout rite to drive sway spirits takes from eartr amis. thort-live- ' 1 L --,- . el7fibi 12 11 1........NINeo ,41414 gill (A7) The peace 'I fOICI R . ., , (aril, t.b. LS Vegas tw.,40 min. Leaves daily 4:50 p.m. Other fast Rights to Las Vegas and Los Angeles at 8:05 a.m. and 9:35 p.m Daly Ights at 7:50 am. and 4:20 p.m. to Idaho, Montana, and Canada. ON TIE MIL take your wile along for any Monday, Tuesday, sin EACH nit - a 1, d - . - - A c!CS:SSSZ;1Z Two Haunts FollowExorcism ,, , rr-,01.- 4C:PWel4t "I like to skin 25," he said. "That way you can get a hand in it. I can skin 1000 in ten hotirs. Insley has been going out to the marshes, the brackish wastelands that vegetarian muskrats love, since he was IS. season be In a single once trapped 2900 muskrats, or about 40 a day. He works on a share-alik- e basis with the owner of the marshland. "I should have had a piece of marsh myself," he said a little wistfully. He farms and does day labor out of trapping season. In his lifetime he has seen the pelts sell from 40 cents to 4.00 or more. BAD YEAS "I've made as much as MOO in a season," he said. "But I'll be lucky if I clear $50 this year." Good pelts now fetch about $1.25- - And the skinned muskrat carcass Jena for. 40 to 50 cents. They are listed on the menus hereabouts as "marsh rabbits." "Man, they're good eating: exclaimed Insley, "good as black duck. You can fry 'em, or pot 'emlust like chicken." Steady trapping and an increase of preying natural owls and raccoonshave cut down the muskrat population. "So far only taken about 100," said Insley wryly. "I think Fli stop 'ratting after this year. Man, it is pretty hard to trample the marshes all day long." His neighbors take this deelaration with a grain of marsh salt, however. They feel awe Insley will be out there trampling as long as there is a muskrat skinned. en-m- ice. atellil ,It ' 74-d- -- f:ry fifigi 1 - An; ENGLAND MERRY . -' irlinrial nu: -- NZ, -- j-- , . 71 I ...,.,,vo. , ckass had broken out in song. yoke .roso of brays that tore the night asunder. ROOSTERS BEGE4 quiet settled down and I again sought slumber. It was 4 o'clock by this time and I was becoming sleepy when a Bock of roosters began crowing. They ran the scale for several minutes, then went back to sleep. By the time drowsiness began to crowd in again, though, the cattle began bawling and before they had completed their serenade, dawn appeared. Groggy and tired, I appeared at breakfast. I had neither appetite nor enthusiasm for a day on horseback, which the host suggested, nor for a walk. As soon as the guests had gone their several ways for the day, I went to bed. Normal, daytime noises were all around me and I closed do. back-to-cla- i.e.'!" e c 610 His rasping in a series ONLY Baby Vanda Orchids ..,..r....- 1111 . i '''' 6 (AP)-.--Th- . -- 1 ' de' . .0 w.44...gm... Z:, ...0.. b 3 4 7 9 OC, 4:, ,'. - To Stromboli Film CHICAGO (INS)Court action has cleared the way to- .2 i it''''' ,,,', 11 EDWARD T. AUSTIN I -, . 4 2610785IZTTX if-fai- 714 ..- 9 7 6 two-wee- , 11 TTA118111 T f 111 s Country life invariably is described in song and story as an hem one can idyllic- existence; get away from the noise and cares of the city. Nature, when let alone by mankind's noisy inventions, we are told, is soothing to the nerves. So, an invitation recently to spend a week end at a country place, where the climate is warm and soothing, with a delightful host and hostess, was accepted with enthusiasm. We arrived late in the afternoon arid soon were established in a comfortable guest cottage, away from the main house. The whole Iplace reeked with an air of quiet contentment. FINALLY CAME Rost, hostess and guests gathered in the big ranch house for cocktails, a ceremony which lasted, as it so frequently does i lin the city, until the pangs of hunger gnawed vigorously. But dinner eventually came, and the menu lived up to all of our expectations. After dinner there were conversation, card games and a lively discussion on world the atom bomb, polities and the prospects of an early spring. Then the party broke up and the guests retired to theirl various cottages, to enjoy a night of rest amid the silence of the great open spaces. HEARS ROAR The silence began to settle down as soon as I hit the pillow.' At first, it merely was the abeence of distracting noises. Then I began to feel, rather than hear, a dull, distant roar, but finally realized that this was silence with a capital S. Not a sound. I had been sleepy and drowsy, but by now I was wide awake. I counted sheep, I tried Very mental device I knew to induce sleep and after what seemed like hours I began to doze. Then, just. as I had about lost consciousneu, an unearthly racket broke out that brought me out of bed with a feeling that the roof had caved in. My memories of boyhood on the farm identified the noise. A Fred Neher ----. 5 4 18EL 111111111ILD 2116-1- 1 By s,..,,. I .4.! 5 2 PARADE Opir:;01A467.5;1 ft)) $ 12 This fascinating game will give you an important message daily. Tor tomorrow's 'words of guidance, look below for the key number eor responding to the date of your birththis changes daily in accordance with the Aladdin's Lamp secret formula. Next, circle the letters In the chart which ire under your number. Start at the top linoroad left to right. Doc.23 to Jan. 21 Att1.23 to Sop.25 Apt.21 to May20-- k. 3 Map21 to Jua.21-- 10 Jas.,22 to Folt.20 lopt.24 to 00-23--Oct.24 se Noo.22-- Fob,. 21 to Mot.26II Joa.22 to JeL 21-- 12 lid. 24 to A0s.21,441 Nor,.23 I. Dos.22. Moil I so Apir.20 4 was told Monday by Lady Astor and part by the Sunday newspape "The People." NOT TOO BAD She said her husband died two years after they reached Moscow; up to that time things had not been too bed. "He was a steel factory worker," she said. Thli pay was enough to live on, andI the Russian people seemed friendly rand kind." Mrs. Morton was given a pension and in 1934, after the secret police began to watch her family, she asked permission to return to Britain, but was turned down. Mrs. Morton told of the brutal German siege of Leningrad, of widespread starvation, and of her son Alan being killed while fighting with the Red Army. Her daughter Mary, she said, is. the widow of a Russian Army officer and is living somewhere in Germany. ---- -- 6 Md. world's champion muskrat skirmer says he's going to quit trampling the marshes. "Man, rve handled many a muskrat in my time, and I have less now than I did when I started 40 years ago," said Curtis Insley. Insley. a tall, of 53, is to the fine old clinn can art of muskrat what Joe Pillaggio is to baseball. At least he is along the tidewaters of Maryland's famed eastern shore.It cam. as ao surprise to him iast Saturday when he won the connational muskrat test at the Cambridge outdoor show against trappers from Maine to Louisiana. I really never have ' been beat fair," said Insley, "and that ain't bragging." ,, vi s MLNUTESt To win the $250 first prise Insley skinned five- muskrat In onir minute, $0.4 seconds. As usual onc.of his chief rivals was,. George North. an older . .trapper. To skin a muskrat you first to out on the marshes and catch one with a steel trap, and to an outsider this looks like Abe,', easiest ,PaTt. whole thing. The skinning can be done In two ways. Insley is a lap skinner, who works seated with the muskrat between his knees. North is a foot skinner. He skins with one knee on the floor and One foot on the muskrats tail. In either case incisions are made at the base of the animal's tail. He is then shucked inside out and separated from his pelt by a series of rapid knife slices, any one of which could take off the trapper's finger. And the pelts must be removed in marketable condition. They go into fur coats. SINCE AGE OF 11 Insley doesn't think five e enough to show muskrats what the contestants really can CAMBRIDGE, R$101,1'8111 To Live in Soviet Dismayed By 9 14 4- c ,...,,,t211, I -- -i 1 Woman Who Accepted Offer LIFE'S LIKE THAT 1-- Tr-1 45 10 ,0-1- For a reason no one has been able to explain. thousands of fish of every variety swim up the salt. water gulf to the fresh water pool and stay there the year round. The pool is jampacked with fish all the time. The Homosassa River affords magnificent fishing and it is possible to ancrior your boat near where the gulf and the fresh water meet and catch a salt water fish on one side of the boat and a fresh water fish on the other. That sounds like a fish story, but it is a true one. If you ever come down the west coast of Florida don't miss Nature's Giant Fish Bowl. For sheer, unspoiled natural beauty Florida has nothing to match it. And for your information, !Int a mile away from Newell's place is the Homosassa Springs Hotel, run by Vicki and Oscar Johnson. Tor comfort and eating, it can't be beaten anywhere. After the first meal Jean always took a notebook ktto the dining room with her to copy down recipes. The fish, the turtle steaks and eoup, the ducks and quail the Johnson' serve make you want to pitch a tent in the dining room and never leave the place. The hotel has the charm and easy atmosphere of a private anglers' club rather than that of a hotel. If the government ever gives me another bonus I'm going right back to Homosessa Springs and eat up every pecmy at ft. (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) ac- - - - - - ''.-- METENtroi-Iday,Febiuory-13T19! STRICTLY RICHTER- ' --'' A IC 1.10BOAESR I E V - Lady Astor's offer to pay fare and expenses for any Britons desiring to live in the USSR. MISTS LADY Gray-haire- d Mn. Morton returned to her native country a few weeks ago and recently had tea with Lady Astor at the Utter's famed estate, Cliveden. Once firm in her belief that The workingman stood to gain much under Soviet rule, Mrs. Morton told of purges, wartime starvation and the "secret po lice who made Russia a hell, Part of Mrs. Morton's story 4 -2- I 0 -- 9 4 81WONUA 1 se husband 1 -V- - Here's How. To Skin A Muskrat pstre.,IA - 1 65 1181.C1 8 6 4 X American-bor- n 1 C I- e- 11 7 3 6 -- r- - cepted HAL-BOY-LE-- lova Itights j - - , . 1111UN DIP 111111T.DTL 1914 38 6114YDEN 67 410 29 612LTPO But it was the truth, so help me. and whit I found him doing a few days ago undoubtedly will get me another 100 lettersiof the same sort but it's also the truth. Dave was preparing td do a taxidermy job on a tarpon ounce. I know the tarpon that, weighed exactly one-ha- lf weighed that'because I weighed him mYsdrontostarscales: The little cuss was about the size of my little finger and Dave, who has caught just about every kind of ruitt in his time, and 'hunted everything from grizzly bears in Alaska to jaguars in Brazil, is prouder of that tiny tarpon. I think, than any other fish ,or animal he ever caught or shot. He caught the tarpon. which he believes to be the smallest ever hauled in on- a No. 14 trout fly and4-- leader. I asked Dave what sort of board he was going to mount his battler on and he said he thought he'd use either an airmail stamp or a special delivery. Asked how long he bad to fight the tarpon before bringing him to gaff. Dave said almost three seconds of fierce fighting took place before his savage catch was in the boat. PART OWNER As he explained in his article. Dave now is part owner and operator of Nature's Giant Fish Bowl in Homosaasa Springs, a fantastic place if there ever was one. The 'Prints are 55 feet deep, and Sow better than 9,000,000 gallons of crystal clear water per hour. It is the source of the River. which runs nine miles into the Gulf of factory-work- er , . AD 1- 4-- $ B bell." The stranger - than - fiction story of Mrs. Rachel Morton began In 1925 when ahe and her Cerp;mill-Wetti- TO ALSO Mt-T- A SOLONDON (INS) British widow.. who year-old with her Unhand accepted Lady Astor's challenge and went to Rtunia 24 years ago, is back in Britain, convinced that life under Communism "is realty - 65214345121111124311 1113111D1BEDACAIG I T IIIED TiiITi ZG ill' ITV OLOR 11'11 -1 r4 IT I 4 TIT T T.11T NAM JR LE 01 ITOOEVD - Tr TTi 11141M OBWMIRSEW KEA 117 Dr1N DOTBYTLit 1'17 ZLI LY 11 OZNAFD 84 214 After reading Dave Newell's story in a national magazine entitled, "I Maki a Living Dping What I Like," I drove over to llomosassa Springs, YU., to ask Brother Newell If he could use an assistant. I hadn't seen the former outdoets editor for quite a few years but I will recall that last meeting. We were at a fishing lodge in the florid& Keys and Dave used to entertain us at night by sitting on the front porch and calling owls in from the trees. I wrote a story about his ability to make owls stop what they were doing to come in and visit him, and I must have gotten a hundred letters calling me a liar. - -. - ' i' 1 Pbs41 ammo , 3459IO- 4 i |