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Show , I , .; - I, '- r 4 4:4,1,04gt ttAl- .4,04 - 61monmantladlin. " - .. - , ' 0."'" ,, tk,4,. 4 ;- 1, - t It 4 ,-- , " '''' ,,,,,rr r -1: - r , , , A - , - -- 1 . . . - rrik , , , W'' . - ' .' .,:t...., , -- - . - . . ,, . - - - '0,- 'get ,' - . ,,, - . ,,-, -,-- ' - ,- - ' ........................00"'""" ,- , ....- 1' .,....-- ,. . - , V01944,1111 - 4. IF., . :' ,- - . ' '- - ' , .- - - - - ' ' -- " - ' '''..;.--- - 1 - .,"...,,, ,; . - ' . , ,, - ..,7 - ' i ' - 'I. - - 0,- - .,,- . ., ' - r:',...,016,.' - t - -' 1 '" ' ' - . ' - - , t-- el', ' . ' ,,, ' ' - , - ,.. s ,' - . , , 4 - '' - , , so.-0- s ., -- ' - "'' - --00. PP"- - - ' ''- -- A -' i '4'1 . - . - ,)' -.: -- f- .- '' ' '''''' n''. - t ' ' .... , :.: . ' : ''. ' '. - c ,, - - c: - ' ' -- ,- , ' ..,, ,-- " - - - . '' '- '',. L.,.e, - 4j'. ''' - - -- - ' , '' , -- .!, ''' '-- - .' - - - ' - - , , . 4,,' - --TOM , r - ' s'i.--t- "- '.'",4-',,- , ;?-- r - , tt -- , ", ',,- , ll ': i ' - " - - '' . ,. . , '''''- - -, - t- " - " - ''''''''.'t .4 .. "'''146'.'""e''.16111"1111 ' AND JERRY BEST OF PALS COUNCIL BLUFFS, ILJerry, the brown and white rat,: perches on the back of Torn, to prove they share a real friendship. Harold Ross, 13, who owns the strange buddies, says Tom won't extend- his affection for Jerry to two other pett white fats 'in iininute it he 'got- a rats. Harold says the cat would kill the- Other-tchance," so he's going to sell them. (AP Wirephoto.) I G,,,h,,,, - wo Surgeon General Says Flu Cosis on Decline Lenard A. Scheele, serves of the U. S. Public Health Service predicts an early break hi this year's wave it influenza near-epider- - Illy DR. LEONARD A. SCHEELE Surgeon General el the U. S. Public Health Service (Written expressly for International News Special Service). We WASHINGTON (INS) look for a decline in the number of new influenza cases in the near future. In the meantime, the Ameriean people have no came to fear a yecurrence of the large number of deaths which resultfrom .the ecord influenza epidemic of III& Medical science has at its disposal today such forces as penicillin, the sulfa drugs and wMch are effective. in warding off the VirginiaI Vows fans Only Op -- CHICAGO lithiSul;eirvamous Virginia iPeliPot-,---tpossible dePorlatiOti of hex new husband, tlectired Thursday that Hans Hauser is "the only man I have ever loved and I will go back-tEurope with him if be is deported." She made the ardent declara--- 1 lion in an exclusive interview n. with the Chicago Later, she broke a earner. over a news photographer's head and punched two other earners-me- n when they snapped her he o . - Herald-Ameriea- picture. Miss Rill and Hauser, an Austri- ski instructor, pleaded with the reporter who talked his wax into their swank hotel suite, to be left 'alone. She "What have I done that reporten bound met If I have committed a crime, why doesn't the FBI pinch me?" rl friend of slain The mobster Benjamin (Buoy) Seigel, who was 'shot to death in her Beverly Hills, Calif., home while she was touring Europe, said: "What it I did we for Mr. Siegel? He.. was a wonderful the best friend I man to me , ever bad-- I have told people that Mr. Siegel was trying to live down his bad past but no one will believe me." Hill emphasized she , Miss !did not love SiegP1-- Stub perted: I ever have only-man loved is my husband. I married hint, didn't I? And if he is deported, I, will go with him to Germany; Austria, Switzerland or whereVer they send him" an-born - ST. JOSEPH, MO. (APS Edward F. Higdon. 75, is writing a case history of a rare disease that ustudis fatal. He is the patient Dr. Hidgon is compiling every symptom and detail of the ailment in hopes that others may 1)07 helped hi his 51 years of medipractice the ohysician never encountered the disease,..diagnosed as myasgray's. The malady attacks the voluntary muscles of the eyes, face, lips, tongue, throat and neck. It spreads to the resplut4, torY IYatem pid Many the heart. 8,4-th- e patient dies of Irigaustion. --- Dr. Joint ' , . 2The 77-- - ment e Dewey. 10kehl- After Surgeyy - ,' - .. -- - -- ' , 1 , - , 79 . - Atl0 . . 1. ... , - ... . f- . .. , , AT ISIGE GREENS :.- jj: ' I k SPRING.. . U -- ' '''''''' ''''!'''' ''' A''''''''''. T 0 ' 1 it SHORTIE COATS Values to $29.00 .1 ,, - 95 I , - BRAND NEW 100 I , - - . :"-- 1 y 'c 7 ' ,, it I , ' 4: I i1 - t , "1,114 . -- - II t, . N i. 1 I, t ,,,,--- -, ' - 'P , ,,,,.. 11111 k t 1 ' , - , i , .:,', ,,- - , , . - - "'" Other Special Groups , , FITS ANY JACK-DAVID - Smolt, modions I - .2 - - - . , sin is JACK-DAVID- AI -- t CI t, 11 LI , - -- , 1 ' , wiP , . , 0 ioil:T4mi.41.: , - ., 'se ) - ,t 1.1 D ,i , , . . - ' ..., ( - 1'207:: . , 0 II , - r. - , 1 7- bogs otodt; ,. 'S ., -- - I 1 7 SIZE!' largoyogi,' find tin ilei WOOL TOPPERS , .i li . - Grand styles for Easter and comfort- wear on through this season and sea- -, sons to come. Don't miss this opportune , ) right 0 N .., ., - - -- 4 -- : ALL WITH TWO PAIRS OF PANTS- WHILE THEY LASf $ 400,01 ,$3450 ,$3950 $4450, , ., , 4 . , - , ''' - te - 50 New Spriqg - , - -- - TWO PANTS. FIT t. - -- 1 , 1 12 to 16 .. S , i Sizes JACK-DAVID- ALL WOOL HARD FINISH . . I! 41 . 1, ......: , ... . -- ',. . . dose lo tho postfino folnics, septet tailoring, ' . outstanding value. ( REDS , - , loos 'Pros yea the gooey peers, JACK-DAVI- D utmost In style, enonty sod value in mon's woo. 'Their OontribuHon' for your spring wardrobe 1 is now rood), for your approval! Titers ore the some outstanding charactertistics that won your confi- , ., 0 , 7 hit '''....- 1..;!....: ,r 1. ,, j. , .. FOR ih., - , , - - , , .. VIVID NAVY . PINKS SLUES YELLOW C.?, - - Pastel Shades of , t s. - - .... .... z .... 1 or ., " .. .... - .. " .....,,.... ., . , , con- , ut m stip & gA -- . --be- con- t Apartment Operators - - . - , . :i , . - - .,,---- - -- . ' - , ' riew-Arh- ee, lieetep-teersele- - I .EMMMMM.nM.M.1 I . st, , - HCT16.VTIWTE111 r ( ,,,- - air-stati- on, l'othing Down 1- : -- a . : "1 , The small island located 411 miles south of the lEvrimpt province port ol Pakhol and 100 Mlles north of the huge Nationalist-hold bland of Mahlon., was captured by Communist 'from tho amphibious invaders I, South China- mainbmd. It could be used for airfields to stage softening-u- p serial at--: , tacks on Hainan. -- The waterborn assault onWaichow eras - apparently coordinated with a simultaneous landing of 500 Red troops at Tanshien on the west coast of ot N m I - Portion': ar His report also cited instances of families being without food for several days and critical need of medical attention. The camp is owned and op-- I crated by the Arizona-FarBuleau Federation and consists of some 300 tin shelters. 12 by 20 feet. The huts have cement floors, windows, and are furnished with cots. stoves and tables. They rent for 210 per month. Everett E. curd! of Litchfield Park, Ariz., manager of the camp, told International News Service that as of Monday the camp rester consisted of 90 families numbering 243 personk They owed a total of $1209,30 in v. NEW YORE Thomas Z. Dewey was repotted in excellent condition Friday after a shoulder, operation for Cute bursitis. - - - The goverrior underwent an operation Thursday at the Columbia - Presbyterian Medical Actor in Hospital Center after a trip to New York LOS ANGELES (AP)Stew. from Albany the night before. The calcium growth in his art Granger. British film actor, 1 - right shoulder had bothered him is under treatment at Cedars of " at times eve since the- 1948 Lebanon Hospital Friday for an attack of plemigy; , presidential eampaign. (41.12)--Go- (Formosa). CZ45) of strategic 'Vtalciows loss Island to Chinese ,Communist forces was admitted today by Nationalist - headquarters es equipped specially' a pressurized o ,.......-- - ducted at the Isazuke Air Force Base on Kyushu Island in southern Japan; the Johnson Air Base near Tokyo, and the hfisawa Heavy Bomber Base on northern Honshu Island. The official announcement stated the purposes of the talks .will be to increase the coordination of the three services in defense preparations. MacArthur's ground, sea and air forces staged a- coordinated -defense maneuver two Weeks a back when beat ago they simulated paratroop attack on Japan fr4m Okinawa. An infantry combat. training program has been under way in Japan for the last sizmonths. . TAI1P12 , ' egord lag announce- Thursdayi-w- ill : - The - planes in rican'Triba l (Chief attack. 7 : e Red . ZL CENTRO, Calif. (INS)--- Navy parachute jumpers at the Naval Auxiliary Air Station at El Centro prepared Thursday to begin experiments with bailouts in the stratosphere , at : heights up to 85,000 feet,: Naval authorities at the tesC Ing station said that the chute experts will be released from I. the.-cit- y se ese :Victory e Bailouts Slated Mac-Arthu- r's The meeting. to a headquarters Nation Usti 65,000 Feet fighter capsule resembling a teardrop. The pilot will be inside the 'capsule and the whole thing ' will be borne earthward by the conventional parachute; , The pressurized :capsules, It to-- protect - was explained, are (f sudden decomfrom the pilots pression of air that would cause blood to boil at the 63,000-folevel and front 67 degrees below zero cold above 37,500 feet. Lieut.- - Com. J.A. Morrison, RAGING CONTROVERSY bead of the parachute experimental unit at the said that the P430 Shooting The Nationalists elaimed 400 Star trainer type jet planes will of the Hainan invaders were Sot the expert-mint- s. killed or captured while tho be modified The tests probably will remaining 100 escaped inland is--vrhitit- Sabds,--Ere- vi to leiti Ceinnuilist Mexico. Communist invaders of Want. , A raging British national con- - at the border of my own coinichow, according to the Nationalist announcement, - 'truck oversy centers' on Seretse try. Afri-across the northeast earner of I welcome help from Ameri- Russian Dies Khama Oxford-educate- d moscow (AP)---T- he in plbal chief, his "White ca. and feel that I have death the Gulf of Tonkin.' force of Nation--- Queen," Ruth Williams, - 24- - ceived extremely unfair treatter- ot Anatolil Itopytov, Soviet mhs -old former London stenog- ment by' Ms Majesty's isteroot cinematography, was re- alist Marines were evacuated by rapher, and Seretae's claimed thenL ported here Friday. The 43 cowiter-attackin- g ..gun boat 1 "Inheritanco of 10,000 cattle." died after a which destroyed ten Communist minuted know yet whether year-ol- d not 'do - The British Laborite Govem I will to New Tork sod go pro. shortylnesa. ment has ,imposed a five-yesent tbe we to the 'United ban ton Seretse's return to Nations but old:course I am exT ecbusnaland. British protec- ploring every possibility and STW-171-'I torate, became it fears violence would gladly speak to the Genie to some tribal leaders' re- end ,Aseembly if asked, ee Heetiotenty el bee Iretera...-riell- e yes greet sentment -over the marriage. have received s4 several - eulogistic tremble free he II rem wafer This actión- provoked cries of cables from my wife (who went "injustice" from both Laborite to Bechuanaland' last August and opposition parlianient mem- and is expecting a child.) She - litativared and Installed ' bers. Is terribly Upset by this unjust In the following article behavior of her own governavar-t'N- a link' Vie ant els fornhb shag- Seretse Rhama gives his tido of ment. . ea the case. adequate to row needs A MOM.. 4 I have applied for permission tottos.1similar MI Pint Perrino OOP to return to my homeland. By SERSTSS 'MAMA ALSO GUARANTIED WATER SOFTENERS A British refusal to admit -ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS AND (Written exprissly for z me to Bechuanaland would International-New- s Service) becreate a situation difficult LONDON (INS) -- I carmot cause the British would have e p, illutina Urge will be anything to jail me. 1ST SOUTH 1371. but troubbt. and disturbances in I feel very bitter., Bechaunaland if His Majesty's government refuses to allow MO to take nty rightful position. ,. The British Government cannot keep me 10 Enjaand and I i ..:.. am definitely returning to :I ''.X ' Africa even if forcibly rejected .. .. k .' ,, 1' e.;i,' -- mediate attenti,on. Some have food but are too sick to eat. Some have medicine but can't get fiioci. Medicine and. food go hand in handone needs 'the other. are not interested in fix'We -ing responsibility now, but in giving , immediate relief. Tha county welfare board and private agencies will have to take , over from there as we haven't the money.": , The poverty-stricke- n condid tions of the families in the camp was brought to light by Juvenile Probation Officer John Z. Thompson, who was sent out to investigate by Judge Croat( after the jurist had been advised thaLan unhealthy condition existed at the camp. Thompson said that the need for food, medical treatment and clothing at the camp was critical. Some of the children have distended stomachs. associated with the first stages of starvation or malnutrition," be add- I ferences of Gen. Douglas Army, Air, and bTavy commanders will be held next Tburadayto improve plans for defense of Japan against any air -- i , one.hait years old. , The situation developed this war James F. Murray Jr., son ot a Jersey City Commis- machine and entered--Iti011tr: decided to buck his name An the primaries. machine then added James Murray Jr. (no rela-tion) on the ticket which iolitical observers called-aneffort to confuse the 14)ters since Murray, Jr. No 2 is only 23 and therefore cannot be seated. 23 la the mini- mum age for U. S. Representatives. But James F. Murray Jr., struck bac-k by i the James IP. III in the race. He said the child will campaign actively on the slogan.: "Try SM.One.YOUnew '1950A3 . MacArthur Calls Meet TOKIO (MS) t iming I 3rffmmrr 13th ConCITY, N. scene 'the was District probably y toda. gressional U. & election James T. Murray Jr. against James Mar. serve too to if is elected, and both who young ray Jr.; are running against James r. Murrily 111 whflis two and 10, ' There are mere than SO laboratories Alrehen 'throughout the cothAty which are collaborating !Oth the Public Health Service rand the World Health Organization M identifying the various types of influenza virus present in the United States. The number of cases 'so far this year is still below the comparable period for several recent years, although greeter than at this time last year. There is no solidly proven explanation yet fm: how the influenza virus is transmitted os why we have a larger incidence in one year than another. However, wi have succeeded he identifying the virus strain which seems to be causing the Most trouble this year and further progress toward oomeertainly bating the disesseAs - ' to be expected. In my opinion, while there Is an increased incidence of Influenza at this time which is causing considerable loss of time from work, there is no occasion for very real alarm. ex-gi- - FATAL AILMENT 'Ile - er 90-od- DOCTOR WRITES OWN CASE OF more serious diseases width can result from influenza. The mod significant point is that- a large part, if not most, of the deaths in 1918 were caused by streptocci infections which set in as a result of the 'flu" epidemic. lowered the resistance of millions throughout the world, making them susceptible to more serious diseases. Unfortunately, there were no sulfa drugs, or penicillin. or aureomycin with which to help them at that time. It is important that an persons who find their resistance appreciably lowered by an attack of influneza consult a physician. From a clinical standpoint, no influenza vaccine has yet been developed which the Public Health Service feels would Justify community vaccinations. There is a multiple vaccine which has produced results but there still are many obstaciG to surmount before im!!Ufliza lion can be complei earan, (la the Mewing article, written at the request et International News Service, Dr. (INS)---Turth- as DESERET NEWS, Friday, March -- - Mli !MEE . '..a... ' ', .- i' ., - - -- ), -- 't ''' '- - '- ,r---; i' - - . , ,- 4' . . ' ' - 4. ',. , , ,' '- - - .- '..S. :--s ' ., - - --- '''-- ' ; , :46"so,:-.1'- 1 . . - '' -! , ,01; v,e-.-- ' ...de. t " .e-- ,". - , -- ' .,,, "?' ' J...., - --- VS. PHOLVIX. Ariz. emergency action by the Maricopa County Juvenile Office was taken 'Thursday to food to nearbring medicine and ly IQOdOdrezl- renofted- - near starvation at farm labor camp near Phoenix. , Superior Court Judge Thomas J. Croat who also is Juvenile Court Judge. ordered the unprecedented action of using limited Juvenile Office funds after deputies reported that appalling conditkms of poverty existed in the camp IS miles west of Phoenix. Judge Croaff declared: - - --- - -- , r I abor Camp tr,.:M.ORRArys.: muploy Tots Near MURRAY IN h JERSEY J. (INS)New Jersey's of the Starvation race in history, strangest ' t 1 ; , Adfit.d0.11111111Ar.o,111101grhordatiON14-4,11tE446 .; e , i ,, ,, , , , , - , . , ,,, . . - - . - - ' - , !, ,, , , , ,, ,, , , - v,,..,,,-- , .,,,-- v,,,.z, .,,,,,,,,' 10 ,,,, ,;,,,.,...k.;Az:,t,;vrto-,,,,v,-,vsr'-',..tr'to,',-,0t"re-,.trill v.,- - ,,,,e. ,,,,e", ' I'trreovrot.'o!r."',"','"sAo"''.''''b''"'"'".."'"...-.'- s |