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Show DREW PEARSON SAYS What the State of the Union Should Be Saturday, January t Beef Shortage IHF MMiAN. UTaH HKRAi.lt JOI RNAI -- t??-t- IS, Dr w h!w iw w-?,n- yecj THOUGHTS & ACETANILIDE POISONING THINGS U44Vry Seen Imminent er pelling fiom Latin Amenca. The cold fact is that beef production has not kept pace with rising population and public purchto buy steaks, asing-power Packers and butchers are also catering to finicky tastes, thus losing millions of pounds of beef kctljS potential. Beef is being marketed at from Pearson pounds to get choice cuts, instead of 1, 500-- H(X) pounds. Putting more frozen cuts on the market, which off prices. packers are reluctant to do, would level ber, As it is, prices fluctuate like a i cause the supply drops when the big cattle runs are over. Latin Americu, paiticuiarly Mexico, could supply plenty of beef if arrangements can be workdisease. ed out on The Gillette committee suggests that Individual farmers raise sheep to ease both the wool and lamb shortage. There aie less sheep in the U. S. today than at any time since thp Civil War. Looking ahead to the day when meat may be rationed, the report recommends that pork ration pig points be flexible. Ine the spring of 1943, thehead. high of 74,000,000 crop reached an It dropped way back the next year, because the poik ration points wete not lowered and sales lagged behind the supply. Bread and Mil- kBread The Department of Justice should crack g down on by bg bakers. Also, a roll- -' back of bread prices is urged. Committee studies reveal the cost of a loaf of bread on the grocers shelf has jumped to as high as 25 cents in Albuquerque, N.M., despite the fact that the cost of ingredients has dropped. Lard, for example, dropcents a pound. The ped in price from 26 to 11 bakers margin on a loaf of biend has rised from 6.2 cents in 1939 to 6.5 cents at the height of the war and 10.5 cents today. Milk The uneconomical system of home deliveries by competing dairies should be drastically revised and curtailed. A study in Buffalo showed that the cost of delivering a quart of milk to a home r and collecting for it was 12 cents. Good home and grocery refrigeration have outmoded the costly delivery system. Another practice which raises i prices is adding one tent a quart for milk with J vitamins added. The actual cost of putting In the vitamins is a sixteenth of a cent. 3 Chairman Gillette is behind the drive to set up a new over-aprice watchdog. committee, which k pres-- ; Jean expect the same kind of sure against high prices that Leon Henderson exer- cised in early OP A days. Gillette wants the new J committee cut loose from the Agriculture commit-- J tee which frequently restrained his investigators In the 81st congress. a I Republicans Get The Jobs J Sen. Paul Douglas, the Lincolnesque Democrat from Illinois, compares the current Republican yearning for more power In fixing foreign policy jwith President Lincolns problem during the Civil nerve-deadene- WEBSTER SAYS THAT the word Babbitt is to of scribe, in a derogatory sense, a person who conforms to the respectable materialism of his class. is, Yer-fmon- i i 7 t Fast-Mov- er ever-read- J 5 1 good-nature- agreed. A ) could announce bis new Then, before Russ-dvill, Malone jumped the gun with a press release, jiroclaiming: The first hill in thp hopper of the U ew congress was introduced jointly by Senators George W. Malone, Republican of Nevada, and The Richard B. Russell, Democrat of Ceorgia jrelease went on io tell all about the bill and TTalones comments on it without so much as mentioning Russell a second time. I: : ts The Herald - Journal .1 Printed Every Day Except Sunday at Logan, Utah I'l.S 5- ! l - Robert r f ' A X 1 W. Martin Ray Nelson Reid Pedersen Grace Allred Cyril D. Garr A H John L. A .... Ripplinger MKMIIKR r, af ! . 1 lout-sid- MOST VICTIMS of chronic or acute acetanilide poisoning do not know they are taking a dangerous drug. The amount of acetanilide in the nostrum they take is stated on Ihe label but, poor nioions. they believe the government would not permit sale of the nostrum if it were dangerous. Why in Sam Hill the gov- rs THE LARGER VIEW Logan Memories Applause For 2 Great Movies; Entreaty For More Good Ones BY PRESTON NIBLEY ELDERS FREDRICK YEATES BY M. L. NIELSEN and A. P. Rose served as home WEVE HAD A RICH movie missionaries in Cache Valley Stake fare in Logan recently. Two outduring the winter of 1882-8andj here is the report of their labdrs standing films in ten days. That, as they submitted it to President you must admit, is like manna from heaven and W'illiam B. Preston. a cause for rejoiWe feel it is a duty as well as cing. King Solo-- . a pleasure, to report to you a few mons Mine s jottings from the journal of our j and Ail About experience, while on our late misEve. We hope sion in Cache Valley Stake of Zion not too many of We commenced our labors at you m s se d Hyrum on November 19th, 1882, them. And if and with the exception of two days you did, be sure spent at home on business, after to see them the being in Hyrum and Paradise, all next time they of our time has been spent in come around, visiting the settlements. We went even if you have Nielsen up the west side of the valley as far north as Garden Creek in to mortgage the furniture to do Marsh Valley, and then to Gentile it. 0 Valley and back by way of Mink IT USED TO BE that HollyCreek, River Dale, Preston, Frankwood would concoct a thriller lin, and Lewiston, and so on, visitAfrica without ing all the settlements on our way about darkest Culver ever leaving City. But except Logan. Both officers and people made they really went to Africa to us as comfortable as possible and make King Solomons Mines, rendered us every assistance nec- and they came back with a suessary. As a general thing they perb picture, one which offers seem to manifest an excellent the kind of excitement and enwhich only movies spirit. The people In some places tertainment want to see their leaders a little can. There was a good bit of melooftenpr than in times past. We also drama in the picture, but it was found In some places the Scandinavian people desirous to have all handled with admirable resthe word of life taught them in traint. The color scenes were their own tongue once in awhile. magnificent, and the whole thing We also found in almost every was authentic Afiica fioin beto end. You could feel place a Sunday School in progress, ginning and where there was none we that. The animals were caught recommended that one be started by the cameras lens in such as soon as possible. In all cases we close convincing detail that we found the children willing and are sure a visit to any zoo hereaffair. anxious to come together on the after will be a o- pale Sabbath day for instruction. In a SINCE SEEING THE picture few places suitable teachers were filmed have read that we in and the those scarce, places very it on actual safari in the Belschools are not doing so well. Ruanda-UgandWe think the towns of Wells-vill- e gian Congo, Kenya, with and Tanganyika, of are and Hyde Park worthy imitation in respect to their Sun- a stopoyer at Murchison Falls. latter is where Deborah day Schools. In some places the The houses are not wd-- i enough to Kerr (pronounced "Car, as Jack keep the children comfortable. We have been present at ten sented. All organizations were doSabbath Schools and eight-seve- n ing well except that of Trenton meetings of different kinds. We which was in a sort of a comatose must also express our pleasure at state, requiring reorganization. After a brief spirited discourse seeing Elders Bell. Hurst and Cur- -' t is at Preston Ward on January by Elder Seth A. Langton the exer14th and listening to their re- - cises of the forenoon closed. Prayer was by Elder Stephen Callan. marks Service for the afternoon ses-- j THERE WAS A Y.M M.I A. of the settlements on the sion was resumed nt 1 p. m. Prayer, west side of Cache Valley, held at by Elder Baker. Elder L. R. Mar-- j Clarkston on Sunday, February' t menu then explained that the1 Clarkston association, consisting of 11th, 1883. "At dawm on Sunday last, Elders Elders Thomas Godfiey. president.' iL. R Martineau, Seth A. Langton. Elder Thomas Gliftin, fiist. and Joseph Morrell and B. F. Cum-- j Elder Chailes Shumway, second1 mings Jr., pf the Stake Board, counselors, all having been catiedi started in a sleight for Clai kston.lpn missions, it would be necessary to hold a Y.M M.I.A. Conference of to reorganize. Their successors' the settlements on the west side1 were appointed as follows- - Eldr of the river. After three hours'john Burt, president. Elder Orini ride with the thermometer below1 My lor. first and Elder Richard B. zero, ttjey reached Bishop Jardines Jardine. second counselor. Samuel house at Clarkston, where theyc. Stewart and J. B. Jardine were were received with a coidiality) presented as secretary- - end treasur-- l that few hosts know how to attend, or. All were unanimously sustain-- ! Conference convened at 10 a. m. ed. with a large audience of young Elder Joseph Morrell then old. Prayer was by Elder cunied a few- - minutes with some Thomas Godfrey. interesting remarks He was fol- -' "The program proceeded with a lowed bv Eders Griffin, Shum-- I lecture on the first principles of 'wav, Rmby, Burt. M' ler and Jnr-- i the Gospel" bv J. B. Jardine oDine E'dcr .Tosenh V. Thatcher' Claikston: this was followed by'then followed with a good d'-- 1 an exceedingly- well written essay roifse and be in turn vv as followed on Duty by Phineas Tempest of j,v Flder Cummings who s'oke on New ton; tnen there was a select missionarv work The conference closed wilh a song and reading on Baptism by- Joshua of Clarkston. This was lowed hy a lecture on The Mission O of John the Baptist hy William, THE CHURCH Organizations Jensen of Mendon. Then there was Spomed to be working H.iioontvi an essay on Gaining and losing a Murine the winter of isqn.cq ;n testimony by Edwin Caibine of Cache Valiev. That is phoet pM Clarkston. news on" finds in the nd "The various associations were nnnorx. Here is a note from 'Un- then vet bally reported as follows; don written in 1?3 Clarkston by Thomas Godfrey;1 -- Tpp Saints Mondon were Newton bv Peter Nielsen Wcsiort pup. fijrlr fivered tp p t bv Joseph . Daw son Oxfoid bv dav, from Annt!p 'foo-Jospph Y. Bovce; Trenton hy A C. President William B Pi is on Eld-- , McCombs. Clifton was not icp;e-- j (Continuec on Tage Three' O O ANOTHER REASON FOR then-films- I er te Fch-nar- vi-i- . 19' ' dis- appointment in certain quaiteis over ths picture was the iuct that Eve (Anne Baxter), after being built up as a sweet and charming and innocent young thing, gradually was reveaied as a ruthless killer who stabbed all her friends in the back to get what she wanted. This is pretty haid to take for people who are used to seeing vntue lew aided . and dishonesty puaished in I bene-Hom- 15-3- o THE STORY AS SUCH wns not at ail original the aging act i ess. the stage-struckid, the and elegant ctitic, the brilliant young playwright, the great direct oi. But the way the stoiy was handled was absolutely "prmia." The lines were alive with wit and the acting excellent. It was an adult and intelligent picture (though longer than it had to be. Most of the lines and a good patt of the action could haidly be followed by anyone si ill in k d pto-hab- ly the adolescent stage another obstacle in the way of its being acclaimed by gieat numbeis of mov n OTHER PICTURES WE would like to see. Unless vv c aie mis- taken, none of these has yet been to Logan. "The Glass Manager usay this fine play has been tiansteried to the screen with most of Its power intact, Tiio." Thiee uf Someiset - - Maughams talcs "Cyrano de Bergerac No Way Out. Conti uveisial film about race pipjudnr. 'Bowel ful and distrumng," say the i ev icw ci s A slo.y Difficult of Italy s "lutlc man Mapped ir. the coils of the Fasust suite. V osis blueness of skin, nails, lips. Used frequently or habitually it s, depi esses the higher brain and often causes irritability, Insomnia, confusion and irrational behavior. With the mental depression brought about by cen-tei.- O Elmer's incantation is taken from the same novel: I can be whatever I will to be; I turn my opened eyes on my self and possess whatever I aesire. I am God's child, God created all good things including wealth, and I will to inherit it. I am resolute I am utterly resolute I fear no man, whether in offices or elsewhere. Power is in me, encompassing you to my demands. Hold fast, O Subconscious, the thought of Prosperity. In the divine book of achievements, my name is written in gold. I am thus of the worlds nobility and now, this moment, I take possession of my THE MOST FASCINATING of all the tribes shown were the giant Watussi. The member of this tribe wr.o served as guide to Granger-Ker- r and company was by actual measurement seven feet eight inches tall and his fellow tribesmen were not much shot ter. And the boys put on a beautiful tribal dance for the cameras. We wouldnt be a bit surprised to learn that Cecil Baker has sent out a safari of his own to get a few of these boys to come in and cope with fellows like BYUs Hutchins. a, - - THE AFRICAN TRIBES who alternately hindered and helped Stewart Gi anger and Miss Kerr on their trek were the Masais, the Wagenias. and the Watussis. These people were presented without the usual patronizing air. Their life was shown to have some meaning, and there were even a few simple lessons for "civilized folk. o "ALL ABOUT EVE was of course quite a different kind of show, but no less good in its way. The New York Movie cn-tivoted it the best Hollywood film of 1950. I understand a lot of Logan people vv ho saw the picture didnt agree with them. One reason for this probably is that Bette Davis has too little glamour and too many years to please the younger set, which always makes up the major part of a movie audience. Hollywood has established a tradition which puts the accent on youth, pleasing limbs, and poor acting, and a large section of the audience is outiaged when this ttadition is broken. ernment requires the maker or vendor of the nostrum to reveal the acetalilide content is a question that never enters the alleged mind of the customer. Acetanilide is as cheap as dirt. It numbs ache or pain of any kind. It interferes with the vital oxygen-carryin- g function of the blood. It destroys led corpuscles. It impairs the strength of the heart. It causes a peculiar cyan- From Elmer Gantry come these notes on "practical theology lectures: Pastoral visiting: No partiality. Don't neglect hired girls, be cordial. Guard conversations, pleasing manner and laugh, and maybe one funny story, but no scandal or criticism of others. 0 minutes. Stay only Ark if like to pray with, not Insist. Remember great opportunity during sickness, sorrow, marriage. Ask jokingly why husband not oftener to church. made clear the other night) took her bath, not the least beautiful of the beautiful scenes in the movie. Benny 1 s Unite! Pnss direct wires Audit Bureau of Circulation Pacific oast advertising Sen tea ' MrNaugh Syndicate Features King Features-Bel- l ntered In Iogan Post Office ns second c'ass matter r.ilman Mrol Kuthman National Advertising Iteprrvntatho. J ; i. Advertising rate aa per Card. St ItsritJPTlON KATE 4 ! Cme month, currier 25 5 ht" One year, carrier 15 no 1:I Mi One year mall (In Cache Valiev) non ' i One year mail 15 00 Cache Valley) e : One year, (Saturday 3 75 only) ONE OF MY PLAYMATES on the bowling green came home at about 4 in the afternoon, apparently in fifle fettle. By dinner time he was feeling some discomfort which he called indigestion. He took a dose of a nostrum containing a heavy dose of acetanilide in each teaspoonful, to settle his stomach. The distress continued and within the two or three hours he took rxt several more doses of the nostrum. About midnight he died. 1 reached his bedside a few minutes after his death. As a friend, not his physician, I believed he died of acetanilide poisoning. But hs family doctor ascribed the extreme cyanosis (blueness of skin, nails, mucous membranes) to heart failure," although he had not examined the man for a year or more and had never found any heart trouble. O oc-a- Publisher Managing Editor Advertising Director Classified Adv. Manager Office Manager Mechanical Superintendent Circulation Manager drug. A sensational event was changing from the brown suit to the gray and contents of his pockets. He was earnest about these objects. They were of eternal importance, like baxeball or the Republican Party. They included a fountain pen and a silver pencil (always lacking a supply of new leads) which belonged in the righthand upper vest pocket. Without them be would have felt naked. On his watch-chai- n were a golf penknife, silver cigar-cutteseven keys (the use of two of which he had forgotten), and incidentally a good watch. Depending from the chain was a large, yellowish elks tooth proclamation of his membership in the Brotherly and Protective Order of Elks. Most significant of all was his loose-lepocket notebook, that modern and efficient notebeok which contained the addresses of people whom he had forgotten, prudent memoranda of poslel money-ordewhich had reached their destinations months ago, stamps which had lost their mucilage, clippings of verses Dy T. Cholmondeley Frink, and of the newspaper editorials from which Babbitt got his opinions and his polysyllables, notes to be sure and do things which he did not intend to do, and the one curious inscription D S S D M Y P D F." (Which means: Don't smoke so damn much you poor damn fool.) V Lincoln was just as anxious to get Democratic for a policy as President Trueman la today, Senator Douglas explains. S In fact, the Republicans of that day all com- plained that you had to be a Democrat to get a had Jjob in the Lincoln administration. All you do was control about 1,000 Democratic voles in ;to a Illinois, according to Douglas, and you got apthe federal army. pointed a brigadier general in Demo-Icra- ts jThe interesting thing is that some of those made pretty good generals. a Today, says the Democratic senator from "the Republicans are doing the same thing a voice in ;to Truman. They taik about notcallhaving the roll. There ifixing foreign policy, but lets tare more Republicans running foreign policy than Democrats. First, there is the U. S. delegate to the United L JNations former Senator Warren Austin of I never heard, says Douglas, "of a Democrat coming from Vermont. adviser a Then there is the chief foreign-polic- y who sits at the right hand of Secretary Acheson to me, says Douglas, jJohn Foster Dulles. It seems conducted a very vigor-ou- s athat I recall his havingSenate in New York and campaign for the hurling every name in the book at the Democrats. Then there is the very able young senator from J Massachusetts, Henry Cabot Lodge, also a Republican, who is a delegate to the United Nations and ;there Is another able young Republican, John -Cooper, former senator from Kentucky, who has undertaken various important diplomatic missions jjfor the State department, J And recently. concludes Douglas, the head of the American Telephone and Telegraph company Swas appointed ambassaaor to London. And I never heard of the president of the A T. and T. being a Democrat. Note Senator Douglas gave his rollcnll as a jresult of Senator Tafts claim that Republicans had no voice in fixing foreign policy. Malone f v J Nevadas GOP Sen. George Malone ihlyly stole ciedit this week for introducing the first bill of the new congress. This was the "national security training act, a bill providing for .universal military training. Actually it was prepared by Sen. Dick Russell of IGeorgia, chairman of the Senate Armed Services jcommittee, and Malone isnt even a member of Xlhe Armed Services committee. However, he buttonholed P.ussell begged to have his name included Russell obligingly Jin the bill and the excerpts from Ba1 price-fixin- i support safety whenever I took a dose of DR. BKADV I lay aspirin down or at least sat at rest for at leas an hour afterward. This is a precaution which I believe every one should take whenever he qr she lesorts to any such bbitt: Babbitts spec t a c e s had huge, circular, frameless lenses of the very best glass; the earpieces were thin bars of gold. In them he was the modern businessman; one who gave orders to clerks and drove a car and played occasional golf and was scholarly in regard to salesmanship. . . a Solid Citizen. all-tim- 3 took a dose. As a measure of O A couple oiler-coaste- iWar. or four occasions when I actually USA. 900-1,1- scowl-and-bar- seda- tive, pain killer but only three The man who coined Babbitt died this week. He was Sinclair (Red) Lewis, Ameiican novelist who was pretty ren'iMic about what he considered a "Main Street sense of values. Red Lewis wrote 22 novels, and most of them needled the the provincialism smugness, and the culture of Smalltown, 'i ll IN MY LIFETIME there have been peihaps twenty or thirty occasions when I might have taken a dose of aspirin or some more dangerous r, analgesic, Americana hard-workin- ON THE BY BOB CONSIDIME YORK, (INS) Few members of the Fourth Estate live a moie engrossing life than the news photographer. In an age when the increased education of the reporter has filled him with restraint, or caused him to look upon his job as a stepping sone to something big like public relations counsel, the cameraman remains a throw-hac- k to a hardier day. He is still expected to jam his foot in the door as in the days of old. and flush the famous and notorious out of their lairs. He is generally honest and, up to the point vvhete it interferes with his business, law respecting. But m his book it still aint a confessing sin to cop a tintype out ol a family Bible, if the tin-t- v pe is that of Uncle Jake, who has just been done in by aunt 1 lo via the kitchen disposall. An address given at Stockholm, which he entitled The American Fear of Literature, contained these Lewisian ideas: "To a true-blu- e professor of literatuie in an American university, literature is not something that a plain human being, living today, painfully sits down to produce. No; it is something dend; it i something magically produced by superhuman beings who must, if they are to be regarded as artists at all. have died at least one hundred years before the diabolical invention of the typewriter. To any authentic don, there is something slightly repulsive in- the thought that literature could be created by- any ordinary human being, still to be seen walking the streets, wearing quite commonplace trousers and coat and looking not so unlike a chauffeur or a farmer. Our American piofessors like their literature clear and cold and puie and very dead. That was said when he received the Nobel Prize for Literature, Dec. 12, 1930. HERE AND THERE The Governor's demands for more and more economy in state government, and his specific ieference to a carefully considered reduction in appropriations to institutions of higher education, have supporters of USAC a bit worried again. We all sinceiely hope that economy- - programs won't iesult in damage to Utah State Agricultural college and its services. -- ' The I SAC board of trustees has an amazingly large list of applicants for the coaching staff positions. It seems that a lot of mn many of them good ones are interested in coming to Logan and lie Sky line Six conference. Bearing Down on the News IF IT'S GOING to be guns instead of butter us the first lefusal. Let's take 'em without give apple sauce. h, I' ft nut to QlMiaaa will b, Bmdy. Nrnd a stamped self enHpr it h the torrmpundeni-t: rd.v. Herald Kiigan. i, - THE AMERICAN PB BL1C never beefed when all the rards were on the table. But it never did like first-han- d infotmation from a second-guessO good-lookin- photo-toginphoi- s. Snap-Happ- ' ... ' J frequent indulgence there i. sidetable digestive d, anemia and geneial There are on l eon d d ber of fatalities from ace an?' poisoning due to tary nostrums whuh ateS more than disguised aretTni So, when Uncle Sam s.e quires makers or vemimsp L" nostrums to state on the how much of the po.son thet trum contains the old Sr0Un" does so with tongue ln thwTf though to say Well, there printed right on the label, K- derned fool! - ACETANILIDE "so causes a skin rash men,.. iesemM that of measles. When a victim of the ilide habit pleads weak nmt or bad nerves as jiist,f,Catil( for more of the drug, whethr-aacetanilide or in the fon8 , a harmless noxiiuni it u to remenfber that eai h day'i n tion of the diug still furth weakens the nerves," destro, still more red blood corpusJ and increases the damage t ready done to the heait with this drug habit placed under supervision treatment of a physician, t. no fooling. e shou-b- QUESTIONS & ANSWERS Near-Doct- Kindly tell me what I shoij not eat or drink, as I have jn y had an and have BE TOLD I have mucous cofti (B. M) Answer Only a charlau, would pretend to diagnose mi cous colitis" by There n many good doctors in your tog Perhaps you may learn some thing to the advantage of yog health by studying the boa. let THE CONSTIPATION Hi BIT AND COLON HYGIENE For a copy send 25c and stair, ed envelope What! Two Dentist You cant be serious about dc tists. Whatever the general pr fession may think about oc fine articles on dentistry, pley count me as one who fully rec ognizes the great work you h doing in educating the public a various of dentist; phases ( , D. D. S.) (Copyright 1951 by John T. Dille Co.) big studios had banned futt visits of stars to Koiea. Billy Grady, of icbutts: rulia The came front the department oftt army, not from us, he wr.w "As for the drunks: There tt only three people remotely cor neeted with our business intlr horde of souses arrested over J holidays. "Number one was a driver who retired tlW day and was celebrating theft of his returning to imva U good. The other two weie pa time baeklot laboins. Jus thought I'd pass this informant' along for what it's worth happen to think nunc is a pre' good business and 1 kep patt ing slabs whenever I can" tranpo-latm- o The retuin of the ChailtU' takes on fiesh menace Sor Heme will lecture it when si I opens her annual Hollywood Revue at Madison Squat e Garde, on Fndav. And on skates. Seems that Sonja won a leg the coveted Charlie MmiisonR at a Charleston contest at Char lie's Mocamba in the movie be not long ago. Bill Bui he. Sonja therm' geneial manager, and Ci h Littlefield, choieugiapher of ice show, suggested she put W violence on lie. haunttr. Theres something about the advance inioimatff-oever Sonjas costume for the It is a conservative bia ft pants ensemble of chait rU gold beads, "trimmed with I1 exotic featheis frum the vultuicc of mountain - LOST, FOUND rl ei OUR FOREIGN POLICY seems to have like a derk chair on a moonlight sail O ? o!ln; sed LET'S TROT OUT that Sunday punch a of days early. And take it easy over the week-couple - nd. vHICH MEANS WE'RE like Simon LeGtee huy-a- g six bloodhounds and a golden wig fui Little Eva going into production. uLL "Of j . O 'le'if Iku ij', LOT OF THAT lusty flair ed in a single New Yotk family, the slightly incredible Sai no In ood of Yonket s. Six of the g seven and robust Sat no bi others are news Their dean and the embodiment of their lespectivo oulluuk on life is Dick, chief phntugiaphei for The Ameiican Weekly" and official and unofficial adviser to hundi eds of his colleagues. The saga of the Six y Sai nos ean be found in the cut lent Colliers. It reads like something out of The Front Page, and if it didn't cany a imtiiip of the young men you'd think you weie leading an excitIts obviously just the thins ing account of an eia of journalthe Charleston, and b all mf ism long since mleiied. lets buy one just like it- s' Tlie hoys have been in enough I kinda feel a little sorry wais, death houses, guarded esthose shivering high mourlh tates, c'l lininal courts, private vultuics. Maybe the Mars bcacnes and gangster conclaves plan can look into their puS1 to star m a hundi ed movies. One of them, Tony, dresses so well that he is the envy of the Goulds, Whitneys, Vanderbilts and other toi) drawer fi lends but they and thi ir broods all converge each LONDON, Jan. 13 U P Sunday on the home of their lost and found office at mother for a thundering Italian airport was closed for 15 nu dinner. today. The lost property o had lost his keys. , ADD PUBLIC NOMINATIONS When a duplicate set , the for the job of successor to Secthe office was opened. retary of State Dean Acheson, ing keys were found insiua whenif he's shifted: John L. Lewis, New York Police Thomas Murphy, Sen. Joe McCai t hy Westbrook Pog-e- i. Wait.r Wmrhell. Kulton ATLANTA, Jan. 17 " r Lewis, Ji. and Charles E. Wilson, 'ance agent Felton E. Joi'W. o took photographs of an w Recently primed a letter Roman indignant lady who condemn- ibile accident at the Piedmoi" ris street in'ersection three . ed Hollywood for its cah'r drunken Christmas odgy. Her point was ago for use in a safety in an that this wns a miserable way for w'as injured yesterday Pi" the community to act after the niohile accident at (he Hmin strept intersection. A is Eii- Leo Earl has been named Cache Red Cross fund director for this year, and curiently is oigamzing his staff to conduct the annual mercy drive within a month or so. . . giite nTt no LINE- - NEW solved. or I hits,, i, At Some Current Celebrities O The biennial report of Utah Agricultural men! Station, of which Dr. R. H. Walkei is dnector, has been published. It begins thus: "The objective of an agricultural exnenment station is to help the farmer solve the technical problems of agriculture that he has neither the money, time, nor technical skill to solve himself. For 62 veais now the Utah station has been concerned with the problems pe- culiar to the state, problems of range management and of range cattle and sheep production, problems of farming under dry land conditions, and problems of irrigation agriculture. Many problems have been i.ied Idler. nr page ur to tuning h Considine Casts Sideglances kingdom. t . AND COMMON CAUSES Red Lewis And A controversial WASHINGTON t n how to stop the wild climb of food pi icesrepot is being prefor the Gillette committee bv its g pared iaul Hadlick. In stalf, headed by trust-bustits present undiluted form, the report has this to say about the nations chief food commodities: Meat The United Slates is on the vetge of a senous beef crisis which can be averted only by marketing live Mock at heavier weights, stopping the slaughter of veal calves, selling mote lio,en beef, and im- Brady Says 1951 , -- HIS RETURN |