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Show ESTABLISHED Court.AAvenue IN 1890 . . Murray, Utah . ..LI;.L is puunsnea every Ihursday at The Murray cagie 155 Court Avenue, Murray, Utah. Entered as second class matter reo. o, tvz, ar me post office, Salt Lake City, Utah under Act of March 3, 1879. j. b. Wallace Managing tditor 155 rl I . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Salt Lake County, ii i i t Outside ot oarr lokq In 1 year 2.00 2i50 f ounry i guilty, along with the aggressor, ten years from now. (Excepts from Time Magazine feature of March 29, entitled "Struggle for Survival.") Years From Now a divided. stnnn mH be U.S. defeated may trying to adjust itself to a Tpn world. Communist-rule- d stairs when they heard her scream, discovered that the young lovers had their dental braces And Papa danced once too often . . .A fellow and his mother took their complaint to divorce court: The young man's pretty Dutch war bride of an hour had run off with father. A United Press Correspondent, the third more likelv than the second. Almost L. uone collection. The collection consists of unusually in those ten years, some Americans will bits of skull bones which belonged t0 a rew milldie score, pernaps fighting possibly ancient relatives of present-da- y s. lemurs and ions. Almost certainly, billons of dollars will be poured out. There will be no safe course only They were found in the bridger basin of Wyocourses. Ctioices ueiwccii uangciuus ming by Dr. Charles L. Gazin, Smithsonian Curwell-preserv- ed tar-sier- of the next ten years a shape every decent man wishes were different. It will not be charigecl by wishing. This decade of struggle for the survival of freedom might or might not include a war between the U.S. and Russia. Ever if there is no war, the struggle will be more "total" than World War it. I he stakes are Digger, tne danger is greater, the battlefronts are broader. If the Communist terror machine keeps rolling over and in freedom, faith Asia, erasing Europe the Reds will be strong enough to fight a war with the U.S.; they may be strong enough to win it. If the Communists should get control of Europe and China and hold them, they might beat the U.S.,Bomb or no Bomb. At present, however, freedom is very much alive in Lurope, still flickering in China. Despite some hysterical yipes from Washington in the past month, the U.S. is by no means sunk. If it continues the positive line exemplified last week by the brilliant announcement on Trieste, the U.S has a better than even chance of prcventinr. World War III. That task will involve thousands of American decisions. Some of them were made last week, some will be made next month, others in years to come. The derisions will mean nothmcr unless the American people understand them and participate in them. They can't do that unless thev mc strategic situation in wuiui mcv placed. Some serious misconceptions about that Nation are floating around the U.S. One misconception is a tendency to confuse c Russians with the Japanese. Both the Axis nations were militarist, which means that they had preference for eoimr to war to get what they 'anted. The Reds understand very clearly the importance of military power, but they prefer not t0 use it if they can reach their objectives by " flhich k--rr mm Strtltt Birttttr . Fuel Supply Company, RHUBARB FOR SPRING Someone should invent rhubarb, but since it now comes only in the spring, let's make the most of its delicious tartness and deep pink color while its lasts. For family meals, here is a simple but most effective dessert. Served hot or cold it is just the thing to take on your first steak fry up the canyon. ng 2. Add all at once, BAKED RHUBARB X, Combine.. stirring 1 'a Vb cc. i(joros-l- y until mixture leaves sides of .. pan mln. lb. rhubarb cut In Time SO pieces water sugar 3. Remove 1 e. flour 4 t. salt from the heat and cool slightly. 4. Add unbeaten, one at a time 2. Bake. 4 eggs (beat thoroughly after each addition) NOTE: If baked slowly, the finished prod uct will have a rich, red color and 6. Drop by spoonfuls on a greased sheet. Bake. the pieces will hold their shapes. 6. When ready to use. make a cut In top of Variations: each with a sharp knife and fill with When lukewarm, add: Rhubnrb Filling. Sprinkle tops with 1 washed hulled box strawberries, (a) sugar or cover with seasoned powdered halved. Chill. and whipped cream. Yield 16 large puffs. (b) 4 slices pineapple and Vi c. pine-- . apple juice. Chill. RHUBARB FILLING (c) Use 2 lb. rhubarb. Add to It both strawberries and pineapple. 1. Cook about 20 Diln. or until These can make any gathering rhubarb is soft a party: and mixture is 1V4 c diced rhubarb thick CREAM PUFF SURPRISE t c. sugar Vi c. water Time 0 mln. 2. Cool. Temp. OO L. . e. crtam. whipped 3. Fold In I. Brinjf to Yield 1 Ml c. filling or enough for 12 boiling point . .1 c. water large cream puffs. it c. butter 3&-4- ator of vertibrate paleontology. These creatures were among the oldest primates the animal order to which man and the apes belong that lived in western North America. At the time they lived the face of the earth was much different from what it is now. Instead of being divided by seas and straights, the continents apparently were linked. Because modern close relatives of these ancient inhabitants of Wyoming now live in as widely separated regions as the Unilippines, Madagascar, and bouth America. Some millions of vears before their time, the primate order had split up into lines which ulti- mately produced man and the apes as well as Tarsiers. Lemurs, and Monkevs. For some reason the primates of North America died out. In a matter of "only a few million years" after the time of the creatures found by Dr. Gazin, primates "completely disappeared" from this part of the continent. In the North America of 50,000,000 years ago the largest and most fearsome beast was the uintatherium. The smothsonian has a complete skeleton of this animal found in the Bridger Basin in 1940. It was about the size of a large bull with extusks, tremely heavy bones, six horns, sabre-lik- e and "a remarkably small brain," it has no living relative. Compared with the uintatherium, Dr. Gazin said, the most stupid of all animals alive today the rhinoceres is " an intellectual giant." Drop in at THE DO-DRO- P INN 3890 S. State MM 3890 SO. STATE 4.4.4.4.4.4.,H' Add Glorious rv With war rumors flying throughout the United States and continued talk of draft, universal military training and of increasing U.S. defenses, the following reports from several world capitols gives a little clearer picture of European thought that RusStockholm. . .Chances arc 0 ts Propaganda, conspiracy or blackmail, lhc sia will try to push ahead this year. Real war a with U.S. the are not likely to unify would go mainly through Germany to Atlantic itarv Pearl Harhnr. in Stockholm, 'that Russians ports. It is believed, Japanese and German racism was almost im could take all Western Europe to the Spanish is to possible to Frontier within four weeks. export. Communist ideology easy or a sense in lot m more lxPrt ; fact it makes Berlin. . .There is less war feeling among in4cr countries than it docs in Russia. Because in of formed sources in Germany than more be will Russia the with lK struggle Russia it is believed' here, still is wrapped Europe. mc economic, nuu3 and uiciogicai political that Soviet leaders up with limited objectives was the strimrrle with the Axis. ... rr f to be able to reach without war. hope nas, one of these nonmilitary lights tvy Paris. . .Top Frenchmen agree war is inevitable ever, a military meaning If the U.S. loses within six months. "gh of them, it will get into a military position sooner or later, possible . . p til.:., wmr ""m the Communist states can push ocr ...!!, Rome. . .Much less war scare is evident in General opmuch risk to themselves. Italy tln in U.S. public opinion. N Long-rang- e shots arc being, fired in the present Battle timism prevails for the short range. a f Kv; but if the Communists win Italy in thinking is that war is inevitable within four or 'e election, that will have an clTcct equal to five years. porc and Manila in World War II. It would conLondon. . .Britain's leaders arc acutely thousands and dollars 7? )"rs and billions of be carried scious of the danger that Russia may ofllv to retrieve the loss of Italy. The nations what she can without away bv her effort to get share a bear II War British sec it is the No. t danger by the Axis in World nave war! Thar, as the could Thev is evident on the Mil lilt M.lll!iiv. of war now. Feverish haste 'j HitJ stopping bloodlcssly-- by diplomatic side. Thev in 1938. even in do '933, 1036, perhaps' . .Top officials in Washington Washington. ;a have stopped Japan in 193 war this spring, barring a sharp turn not expect to U.S. and its friends have the power Russian policy toward armed conflict. of be will VVorki War 111. If they don't, they m Mountain Temp. 800 certainly, That is the shape Horn ever-beari- Joseph Myler Ten Years From Now a wearv. mangled n uncovered the following information on our ' victorious U.S. may berrying to salvage what it ancestors, way back. lll can rroui mc Kiujuavc wicuKugc oi trie world. Tiny distant relatives of man swarmed in the "Ten Years From Now a busy, peaceful U.S. trees of western North America 50,000,000 years to push forward the frontiers of ago. may be helping freedom everywhere in the world. "They ranged in size from that of a small chipmunk to that of a large squirrel." The Smithson The problem for Americans is how to make ian institution said today in a report on a new the second alternative more likelv than the firsr and Prepared by PHYLLIS SNOW Aint love grand . . .The parents of a teenager in Toronto, eavesdropping on daughter's goodnight to her beau, came downgot 194S UN WISE & OTHERWISE tangled. peace or War The Murray Eagle, April 1, L-1V7L 50-5- uom-founis- clsc-whc- Frequency Modulation To your own radio with F M rc m i PILOTUNER! ui n wi pleasure o frequency mouuiunun scratch-ing-n- o no 32.50 rif no fading-interference with regular programs. FM PILOTUNER, handsome wood cabThe inet, is only HEAR IT TODAY! is yours! No drifting lteDG Gray - it-a- Not All America's talkink about this ama2ing new a handsome, separate unit which is attached In a a radio-b- ut Presto-t- he magical iiffv to ANY radio, old or new, small or large. !most 4914 So. Sfofe Phone Mur. 42 |