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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE. UTAH WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Are Both Parties Split? Observers are wondering if the Republican and Democratic parties Nation Displays Might on First Armed Forces Day; Atlantic Pact Nations Announce Defense Plans NOTE Wkoa pfaltai ft ro nprtNtd la (Mh eoluniM, thof Wcitert Newspaper Unlea's sews ftftftiysU sad set aaeeHtrUr of Itato (EDITOR r thou both ftf pewser Assails Truman ARMED FORCES: BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET POLITICS: ; A Workable Team Any doubts that observers might have entertained about the success ot armed forces unification in the United States was dispelled with the observance of the first national Armed Forces Day. For the observance, America s forces across the world paraded in the mightiest show of power since World War XL The fighting are going into the November election with split political fronts. The Republican trend came to light in the Gregan senatorial primary which was won by independent voting Sen. Wayne Morse. His campaign is not likely to resemble any other Republican drives this fall. In Pennsylvania, Governor James H. Duff defeated the old guard Re- publicans in the senatorial primary. In many quarters the Duff and Morse victories were seen as signs that many Republican voters think the party needs to offer more than mere opposition to President Truman's Fair DeaL On the Democratic front a few more cracks have been added to s the split caused by the conflict started in 1948. Southerners .'re still battling the program, and recently, have generally opposed Truman's plans for more government spending. The Brannan plan has added fuel to the fire of discontent among some of the President's best western friends. With these points In mind, the September and October political speeches of both parties may prove the most interesting in years. Reg a Meanwhile, publican took another swing at the President, charging that he seeks a "rubber-stam- p congress elected in November. GOP national chairman Said Guy Gabrielson: "The 1950 issues now are clear. President Truman has asked the voters to give him a rubber-stam- p congress that will approve his program of socialr civil-right- biggest show of all went on in Germany where more than 85.000 Yanks demonstrated their readiness. The days message to the world was plain: The United States is awake to the menace of Communist aggression and is teadying its defenses. President Truman took the occasion to tell the public that if congress had passed his universal mil- Sen. Robert Taft la shown above speaking over a nationnetwork. wide Be charged la his speech that the radio administration has shaken the confidence of the people and seeks to elect a "subservient congress to vote Into law policies that would wreck the country. itary training program five years ago "there would have been no cold war." He also invited all American "to take stock of the state of our readiness to defend ourselves against DEFENSE: aggression. And, in general, Americans were pleased and impressed with what they saw on parade. Although the forces were less in number, they seemed well trained, power-packe- d units that would form the backbone of new armies should the situation West United At one point In their policy making in recent years, the Russians reasoned, and not without basis, that the western powers would never really be united. That reasoning, however, has received a arise. terrific jolt. The 12 western nations, members of the Atlantic pact, have unification squabbles between the agreed to pool their economic and military might into one vast armed services. force, centrally directed to resist Soviet aggression. BOSTON: The plan, in reality a unification Taste of Tradition move, is American inspired. It will create a balanced collective Climaxing its Jubilee celebration, which means each of the staid old Boston let down its hair force, 12 nations will contribute specific by serving dinner to 10,000 on the units to the central western armed Common and holding a barn dance force and not try to maintain exat the Garden. over-al- l military establBelieved to be the largest meal pensive in each ishments, ever served to a seated group, the all arms. ot a taste tradition guests got by The move was seen by military consuming five tons of baked beans, men as the one means of three tons of potato salad, and the west a balanced defense giving force, 3,500 pounds of ham. in harmony, and with Earlier events of the Jubilee were working maximum efficiency. designed to call attention to the The United States is expected to cultural, business, industrial, and recreational advantages of Boston bear the greatest part of the cost, although each nation will share in and New England. to its resources. The proportion "baked-beathe Serving supper and all the trimmings took less U. S. share is expected to cost than an hour, some kind of a rec- more than a billion dollars this ord. The trimmings included 2,000 year. That the West la deadly serious loaves of brown bread, 12,000 inand intends to have the plan in opdividual apple pies, 12,'QOO servings-ocheese, and 12,000 Parker house eration as soon as possible was evident by the creation of an over-a- ll rolls. council of deputy foreign ministers, One thousand volunteer waitresses, supervised by 40 home econ- meeting all year round, to put the omists and dieticians, served the plan into force. This council will have a permanent powerful chairfood. man who, it is understood, will be an American. UNEMPLOYMENT: Some sources predicted the U. S. Worker's Output Up may require a larger air force and since this According to the federal reserve navy under the plan, board the individual worker's in- country will be entirely responsicreased output has been one of the ble tor atomic and other strategic big factors in the unemployment bombing in case of enemy aggression. picture since last summer. The board analysis of "labor market developments point to DEMOCRATS: two influences at work on the part Harmony Disturbed of business management: 1. "Large profits and strong fiSurface harmony prevailing nancial position in recent years among Democrats at the Jefferson have encouraged business to spend jubilee celebration in Chicago was record amounts for new machinery shattered by the controversial civil and equipment of highly efficient rights issue, which split the party in 1948. design. . 2. "Intensified competitive presThe Democrats were startled besure on management to reduce cause of the unexpected source of costs, partly by curtailing employ- the dissention. ment and by utilizing those emMost southerners who attended ployed more efficiently than earlier the Chicago meeting chose to ignore in the postwar period. the civil rights paneL Jonathan In addition the board reports Daniels, North Carolina national there is an increased "tendency committeeman and former White for married women to work out- house aide under both Presidents and a similar Roosevelt and side the home, Truman, did not so s. trend among choose. Army, navy and air force put on a united front that was pleasing to observers who remember recent n f high-rankin- The agriculture department predicts that the cash income of the rations farmers will be well under totals. The department explained: "Prices farmers receive for their products have generally been below those of a year ago, while their costs have declined only slightly. This situation is expected to continue for the rest of the year Cash receipts from marketings in 1949 totaled 27.5 billion dollars. Forecasters expect the 1950 total to be approximately 25 billion dol1949 lars. NATIONALISTS: progressive measure. Moscow Tool Ready for Last Stand Observers believe the long expected last stand of Chinese Nationalists is now underway. They base their opinion on the fact the Nationalists have withdrawn from all except one of their blockading bases along the China coast. The independent United Electrical Workers union has been denounced Communist again as dominated Maurice J. Tobin, secretary of labor, and Phillip Murray, president of the CIO, made the charges Apart from Formosa and the m speeches at a rally of General Pescadores islands, Electric workers. The UE was exneighboring the only territory remaining to the pelled from the CIO last year on tenNationalists appears to be Quemoy charges of having dencies. island, off Amoy. I left-win- g The other night, however, a real estate man buttonholed me coming out of 21" end told me a chiller about a deserted house in the Flushing section of Queens, and on the that your acalp can use a tingle or two, I'd like to pass It along On the night of the big snow three winters ago, a doctor in Queens anchief, and though the doctor want swered bis doorbell and found a through the motion! of an exsmallish man in a amination be knew at once it was faded mackinaw an advanced cese of tuberculosis. "I can give her something to restanding on t h a lieve the congestion, stoop. he told her My wife is very husband, "but shell have to be I sick, he said. moved to a hospital first thing in hate to ask you to the morning." come out on a night He then wrote out a prescription. like this, but its Ill get it filled right away, said the man, and showed the doctor to only a few blocks. The doctor folthe door. lowed him to a Next morning, wondering how the woman was getting along, the large wooden house near the intersecphysician stopped by the wooden tion of Vine street and Broadway, house, but there was no answer and when the man unlocked the when he rang the belL Moreover, door the physician could see bythe there were no tracks in the snow glare of an unshaded droplight that to indicate that an ambulance or the lower floor was empty except any other vehicle had pulled up in for a few kitchen chairs and a front of the place. length of carpet Puzzled, he went to the office of a real estate agent on the next "THIS IS NO PLACE for a sick street and asked if he could get woman, he said. You ought to some information about the residents of the house. have some heat in the house. The man led him up a erttkj let of iteirt to tbt second floor, "THAT'S A FUNNY sort of quesend in the front room tn tmac-iste- d tion, said the agent "There arent women was lying in an old any residents and there arent likebed. Sbe kept coughly to be any. The house hasnt been d handker ing into a occupied in 15 years, and though .... four-post- er blood-flecke- THE Wet but Undefeated FICTION battered Winnipeg slowly returns to normal With nearly a fifth of the city at one time under water, the citizens raised a banner proclaiming they were "wet but undefeated on the court house and waited for the Red river to show its first drop. Before it came flood waters had reached a record high for the century. Some 100,000 of Winnipegs 350,000 population were forced to evacuate and many of southern Manitobas towns were deserted. When the river showed its first drop, flood waters were about two feet below the absolute peak at which engineers figured nearly all of Winnipeg would be waterlogged and the whole population would have to be evacuated. Even with the river back in its banks, however, observers said it would be near the last of June before the city would be back to non CORNER Flood mal MRS . ROOSEVELT: Comforted Distressed Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt was awarded the seventh annual WiSettlement lliamsburg award for typifying the American way of life and aiding the underprivileged. At the presentation dinner, former congresswoman Clare Boothe Luce called her long-tim- e political d toe the woman in the world and said that no woman ever had "so comforted the distressed or distressed the comfortgold-med- al best-love- able. "When her justly notable tolerance and patience with the Communists finally gave out, that day tolerance of communism in America ended officially. It is safe to say that her resistance to Soviet communism is a more potent factor in winning the cold war than an extra billion dollars ot Marshall plan she added. aid, Something New its always been on my . list nobodys ever wanted it "Do you think squatters might be living in It on account of the housing shortage?" asked the doctor. "Could be, but 1 doubt it said the agent "Theres been a lot of queer talk about that house, and the last family that moved in during the depression could only stand it for a few weeks. The husband and wife slept in the front room on the second floor, and to hear them tell it they were kept awake night after night by the sound of a woman coughing. It finally got so bad they packed and left "I know its sounds absurd, said the doctor, "but I examined a sick woman there last night, and if youve got a key Ill walk over with you and prove it iEOSCREEN JAM HOLDEN record in 1949 made quite he did five pictures at four studios; this year promises to be equally ' busy. His role in "Sunset Boulevard is one of his favorites, though he had to figure a bit over just what to do after Gloria Swanson shot him. That very effective bit of acting came after long study of the HODGES had lived in the city for two years and he was getting tired of it Country bred, he longed for the smell of sweet, fresh air, the sound of roosters and crowing cows lowing. H e wanted to go to bed to the tune of crickets cheeping bullfrogs and "Maybe youve got this house mixed up with another one, the agent suggested. "I still think its the same place. Lets look upstairs. On the second floor they went into the front room. It was also empty. Empty, that is, except for a piece of paper on the window sill the prescription the doctor had written the night before. all the investigations that have been under way in Rep. Usher L. Washington, Burdick of North Dakota has come up with a new one. He asked the house rules committee to approve a resolution to investigate of ail things congress. The committee postponed action on the resolution With ... Fred Uttal. anouncer on Mr. District Attorney, has two boys, Bro and Lyn. aged 2 and 1 respectively. He says that if he and his wife has a third one hell call It Ook "Put them all together and they spell Brooklyn. ACROSS Lew Ayres began his career as a dance band singer, but in his years Indefinitely. in pictures hes done everything but sing. At last, in RKOs The EXPLOSION: Capture, hes a singing cowboy has one scene where he plucks a Second in Generation and sings "Git Along Little The stunned and battered com- guitar But Ayres ran into diffDogie. 30 South N. of munity Amboy. J., he has a true ear, and had miles south of New York City, tied iculty; to practise hard to learn to sing up its wounds and, for the second time in a generation, went about the business of rebuilding. Melville Cooper and Elsa On May 19 four explosive-ladewere a vaudeville team 25 barges blew up with such force debris was splattered over a 10 to years ago in London, appearing in a miniature theater owned by Elsa 12 block area Twenty-sipersons Together were dead or missing and nearly and Charles Laughton. now in The Petty Girl. they did 00 were injured. their act for the cast off-ke- Lan-chest- n x 50. Self 51. Lixivium DOWN 1. A Greek (Russ.) geometer 9. Scorch 10. Frighten 11. An ancient 2. Constella tion 3. Edible rootstock language 13. Mulberry 14. 4: molding 16. Biblical name 17. Disease 5. 21. 22. of sheep Untrained for hardship Half an em First man 24. Farm 26. Tattered 19. met him in the lobby of her hoteL Hello, pal, she cried. "Looking just the same. Thinner, maybe. But otherwise old Bart himself. "Sadie! Bob stared In open admiration. "Sadie! How good it is to see yon. Tell me, how are things In Centerville? How sre the folk's? Tell me everything. Same old town, Bart Your folks are fine. Your dad owns a new tractor. Polly, the horse, died, But 1 suppose they you know. wrote you that The voters decided to run town water up to Williams Hill at the last town meeting. Not so much danger if fire breaks out now. Ed Salmon ran off with Bob Evans wife. Sbe came back two weeks ago, and Bob took her in. Shame. Poor kid . . THEY TALKED Bart for hours. By was ap- - fully News Hems 6. 8. 9. 10. building 29. piece Prosecute judicially Opposed to "former" 32. Labels 35. Elevated train (shortened) Send forth 86. 38. Apex 39. Diminutive of Alfred 41. 43. Heathen image Land-measu- re 44. Girls name 46. Kind of cement 48. Desert (Asia) 49. Astringent fruit news item, why do you always change it all around?" That question is one of the most frequently asked in every home town newspaper office in the country. Sometimes it is asked in con- siderable exasperation. The answer is, of course, that news stories are easier to read, better understood, take less apace, when they are written to conform to a somewhat flexible pattern. That style, developed over the years, is fairly uniform in all newspapers because it was designed to evaluate the facts for their news value and tell them quickly and clearly. A well writ- -' ten, straight story pre- sents its out news standing information in the opening paragraph, or lead. What follows after that is additional details. amplification, There are excellent reasons why news story style is best, among' them: (1) The reader can quickly read the lend, and quit there if the story fails to interest him or her.1 (2) It permits cutting or reducing the length of a story, to get it into a particular place in the paper, by1 eliminating from the bottom. As these bottom paragraphs contain less important details, their removal will not seriously reduce the information the story is conveying. The editor tries to pack his paper with as much news as he can get, written in clear, readable style, and arranged to give the paper a varied and attractive appearance. Yet he cannot prepare the entire content of an issue in an hour or a day. Because i n g, editing,, to Fit settingthetype,' The Space putting type in the page forms, and printing, addressing and delivering take time, they must start early enough to conclude at a specified time each issue. If news stories are not written so they can be made to fit the space assigned to them, much time will bq lost and the paper will contain fewer stories and be less interesting. The editor is a specialist whose e is an understanding of what interests people. He welcomes news and does his best to present it in accurate, readable, interesting form. Next time you bring in a news item, and it is "changed all around", remember that it was rewritten into news style to help you make it of interest to the greatest possible number of readers. writ-Writt- en stock-in-trad- LAST WEEK'S ANSWER 12. Ennead 15. Goddess of dawn 18. Short lance 20. Tight 23. A kind of tea (Paraguay) 25. Thrash 27. Zodiacal (Bib.) 28. William R. Nelson SSMD PUZilE 1. Consume 4. Total 7. River Her name was Sabina Good-noand sbe tdored him. Those 'Changed' Lead? Is Inclusive praised of all the events and happenings in Centerville during the past two years, and assured that his folks were welL He took Sadie out to dinner, and delighted in showing her around. She seemed a little awed by it all, and more awed by Barts indifference to the many wonders. "You get used to it after a he said indifferently, and while, stood gazing thoughtfully at the many lights along Broadway. He felt enlightened and no longer homesick. Strangely enough the noise and bustle associated themselves in his mind with Sabina. He was glad to be a part of it alL He gazed furtively at the comely Sadie and pictured her in the rural setting of Centerville. They attended a theater and dined afterward at an exclusive night club. Sadie would have liked to go back to her hotel, but she wanted to please Bart aha said, when at "Bart, last they stood outside the doer to her room. "When are yon coming home? When are yen going to give np all this and come back where yon belong? Bart looked down into her eyes and saw something that two years ago he had longed to witness. He sighed deeply. "Sadie, it's been just great seeing you. Just what I needed. A sort of tonic. He smiled at her gently. I'm not going back just yet, Sadie. There's something keeping me here, something that before 1 never knew existed. I know how that its something greater than anything. Some time Pm coming back, and when I do therell be . Walt Disney studied the appearances and careers of notorious pirates of history before camera work started on "Treasure Island. The famous Blackbeard, the ruthless Israel Hands and others appear as Stevenson characters. . Your Paper WHENEVER I bring in a night," said tba doctor , It wasnt as if the city hadn't been kind to Bert It had. It had taken him to its bosom, and be had prospered. Nor bad he been unhappy. He loved the lights, the noise, the hustle and bustle. And most of all be loved a girt. Tonight, lying on the divan in the living room of his apartment Bart was troubled with an annoying thought He wondered, strangely, which he wanted most: Sabinas love or the country. It was at this particular moment in Barts speculation that the telephone rang. A strangely familiar feminine voice answered. "Hen, there, Bart," the voice said. This Is Sadie WILLIAM HOLDEN Blake, fresh In from the eld home town. Come down and character he was playing. His pertalk to one of your forgotten formance is really tops. In private friends. life his severest critic is his daughter Virginia, who reads all his Barts pulse leaped. Sadie! IBs scripts; of this one she said, "Why boyhood pal! Sadie, whom one day do you play such heels? His he expected to marry! Sadie, in young sons walked out on a recent the city. Here! Now! Fresh from picture of his to look at an old Centerville, with news and notes Western on television. of the old home town galore. At that moment Sabina Good-noGloria Swanson, after her sensawas forgotten. There was just in "Sunset Bouletional come-bac- k one girl in the world for Bart And vard, plans to star in another that girl was Sadie Blake. He felt picture, which she will suddenly ashamed he had neglectwith William Dieterle. She has ed to write, to remember her at two of us. with in Istanbul, plans to make it Christmas partial Turkish financing. The Sadie, pink cheeked, blooming story sounds perfect for her its with good health and freshness, about a woman who is in love with a man younger than she, who cannot save her from death. w This ls By Richard H. Wilkinson nART By INEZ GERHARD WILT By . . .Thomas Tiny Tim) of Pittsburgh hopes that an apple a day will keep extra pounds away. SYLPH-CONTRO- L When they got to the house, it took the agent quite a while to get the rusty lock open, and when they entered there wasnt a stick of furniture in sight. 1 could beva sworn I saw soma chairs and a carpet down bare last BART'S DECISION Rhonda Fleming, star of "The Eagle and the Hawk, la featured in the June Issue of Holiday magazine In a color portrait shot at Malibo; she was chosen as "being typical of the 1950 feminine figure in a bathing salt. He sat through the meeting, listening to 16 speakers demand enactment of the Truman program, and then insisted upon speaking at the conclusion. He told them flatly he could not go along with them in favor of a compulsory fair employment pracYou cannot tice act, and added: have a prohibition law against discrimination in the south. He asserted the propaganda for the creation of a fair employment practice commission "gives a weapon to our enemies, the Dixie-cra- ts and makes it possible tor them "to hide behind the civil rights issue while they tight every of a chance in this town. WINNIPEG: teen-ager- Likely to Dip By BILLY ROSE We men of Manhattan are an undaunted and unhaunted lot or at least think we are and so ghost stories seldom stand a ghost ism. ' FARM INCOME: Ghosts Haven't Ghost of a Chance in Manhattan But This Haunting Story Gave New Yorkers Pause Fruit of the ralm 29. Girl's story 34. Nimble Foolish talk Supports Cracks Medieval sign name 30. Assert 31. Free 33. Chin whiskers 37. Spinning toys 40. Thrash 42. Soothe 45. Tropical tree (var.) 47. Plaything N. M |