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Show By PAtX F. ELLIS United PreM Science Writer PRINCETON, NJ., Oct. 4 (U.R) The farmer of the future, to acquire land, may have to prove to society that he knows how to till his soil scientifically, and the use of coal as fuel alone may be prohibited as "criminally waste-ful," waste-ful," scientists in engineering said today. One speaker at a conference of "engineering and human affairs held in connection with Princeton university's bicentennial program, said that the United States al ready had "ruined, for further) practical cultivation, about one fifth of our original area of till able land." He was H. H. Bennett, chief of the soil conservation service of the U. S. department of agriculture, agri-culture, who also said that a "third of what remains already has been badly damaged," and that "another third is highly vulnerable." Another speaker, Dr. C. M. A. Stine, vice-president of E. L Du-Pont Du-Pont de Nemours and Co., Inc., said that the day is past when this nation should consider "coal as coal, wheat as wheat, wood as wood." Bennett said that throughout the world there is only 4.000,000,-000 4.000,000,-000 acres of immediately arable land left, and that the world faces a "shortage of good land." He said that the United States has "little margin left," and that the country can not hope to maintain main-tain its present standard of living if much more tillable land is lost through erosion and improper farming and lack of conservation, He asserted that the cost of erosion in this country is now running to about $3,844,000,000 a year and that farmers now are being organized to conserve soil and take care of the tillable lands. Tarming," he said, "will become be-come an expert profession; the inexpert and inept will be forced off the land. It is not impossible that the prospective farmer of the future will be required to satisfy society that he is qualified by training and experience to take on the trustee-ship of a piece of productive land." Stine said that corn, wheat and cotton may have uses as "yet undiscovered." As to coal, he said: "A few generations ago, the most efficient utilization of coal might have been considered to be achieved by the invention of a better coal-burning furnace. It is now not beyond probability that, a few generations hence, the use of coal as fuel alone may be prohibited by law as criminally wasteful." Pheasants Rife . In South Dakota PIERRE, S. D. CU.R) The gaudy Chinese pheasant has found a second sec-ond home in South Dakota and has turned the state into the nation's na-tion's lushest ringneck hunting grounds. More than 7,500.000 birds were killed by 194,000 hunters last year, and, another good season is expected this fall. When the first pheasants were planted in the state shortly before the turn of the century, they found an ideal home. The weather was just right and the range and farm lands provided plenty of food and cover. . The plantings were not too successful suc-cessful until 1JH4-15, when thej state game department released 4,000 wild birds. Several thousand more were, planted the next few years, and the birds thrived so! well that hunting was permitted in 1919. By the early 1940's the fame of the South Dakota ringneck had spread throughout the country! and ardent sportsmen flocked to the state. Family Relations Expert Talks On Divorce Reasons SALT LAKE CITY. Oct. 4 (U.R "Romantic Infantilism" was cited today as the cause for a major part of the divorces in the nation today by Dr. Paul Popenoe,! noted author and lecturer of the I American institute of family re-j lations for Los Angeles. j Popenoe, who is in Salt Lake; City to deliver lectures under the sponsorship of the Utah state department de-partment of education, said that, most marital problems can be l mapped out in advance of mar-' riage. It is better to prevent a' bad marriage than have one end. in divorce, he said. ! w : :vr PAGE S &AyT7,aAH DAILY HERALD Carnero-Bolcl end Cnmcra-Shy World Faces Shortage Of IP"' (m Good Land, Says Scientist : t-" " 0 9 f VV" I (i: Br EDWARD W. BEATTIE United Press Staff Corresaandent NUERNBERG, Oct 4 UX German civil authorities and the' American military government have agreed to give Franz von Papen, Hjalmar Schacht and Hans Pritzsche sate passaga to the British zone without threat of German arrest. Nuernberg de-Nazification officials offi-cials had ordered the three men arrested as former Nazis. One hundred policemen had surrounded surround-ed the palace of justice waiting for them to come out The police were withdrawn on directions of the American military government govern-ment The arrest order remained in effect, however, and the three acquitted Nuernberg defendants may spend another night in their chosen sanctuary the Nuernberg Jail. Schacht said earlier that he was not leaving the courthouse, partly part-ly because of the police outside The striking photo above shows sharp contrast in the way two convicted automobile black morkctccrs react to their fate. Pictured leaving Detroit, Mich., federal court, John D. Lovins, of Paducah. Ky., sports a brazen grin. He sot an 18-months jail sentence and $10,000 fine. Manacled to him is Ben F. Fishcl. of Cairo, 111., who uses his free hand to cover up. Leader of a $2,500,000 used car black market ring, he Rot two years and $10,000 fine. Grandma to Do Strip Tease Army Unwilling To Let Chairs Go SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 4 (U.R) The outlook for an army quartermaster corps release of 2800 table-arm chairs for use at the University of Utah annex building at Fort Douglas was CHICAGO OJ.Ri Three grandmothers grand-mothers will dance the caii-iv.n in Chicago Nov. 10 to prove that the old gray gal is all that she used to be. They will bump through the saucy French number as members mem-bers .of the all-grandma cast of "The Grandmothers' Follies of' 1946." About 150 grandmothers aver aging 43 years of agf will do hula I bad today, according to Dr. A Ray Olpin, president. j Utah's senators have been attempting at-tempting to obtain the release to add to the 500 folding chairs bein used in the university's expanded facilities. However, the army i unwilling to release the 280 chairs now stored in a warehouse in Ogdcn, Olpin said. numbers, a Salome dance and even a strip-tease as the feature of b fourth annual convention of the National Grandmothers' club. The strip-tease will be done by two grandmothers in old-fashioned dresses," explained Mrs. Rose Dyvig, 56, vice president of the club. "They'll leave a pile of clothes nearly as high as they are. Back m the 138('r one woman wore more than 10 women do now." Von Papen, Schacht. Eriizsche Get Safe Passage to the British Zone and "besides it's safe and cheaper tin h a V The German police chief said the directive to withdraw his men came from "higher American military mil-itary authorities." Arrangements had not been completed for guaranteeing the three men safe entrance into the British zone. A U. S. military escort presumably will be required, re-quired, as well as a promise to keep the Germans from carrying out the arrests. German warrants were issued for each of the three acquited defendants, outlining the reasons for the proposed arrests. Fritzsche was described as "under "un-der extreme suspicion ... of having been active in a leading position and of having given support sup-port to Nazi despotism." The warrant war-rant said. "It is urgently to be feared that he will escape responsibility respon-sibility through flight." Schacht and Von 'Papen were charged with "being active in the Housekeeping On Highway Okeh ST. JOSEPH, llo. U.R Sheriff Gus G. Hillix and a deputy brought an unidentified woman to jail when they found her sleep-ng sleep-ng alongside a highway. At the jail she was found to be wearing six dresses and two coats. She carried a bulging suitcase, a pocketbook that contained "ev- erything but a five-foot bookj shelf," and a mandolin. Hillix! said. "When she unloaded the' pocketbook for our inspection, its contents covered a big tabic in the jail." Inside the suitcase, he said. were two white rats, gnawing; placidly on a green garter. The woman identified herself! government of the third reich to, an extent that was permitted only to leading Nazis' Prison authorities called Berlin to seek safe conduct authorizations authoriza-tions for the three men. Their baggage was packed and ready. It appeared they might make the trip later today, but Schacht himself him-self said he was not sure about the arrangements in view of the arrest warrants. to the satisfaction of police, who decided that if she preferred to sleep outdoors because hotel rooms were so cramped, mat' was her privilege. The woman donned her six dresses and the coats. Head Jailer Howard Smart said, then stopped by his office. She wore one pair of stockings and put two more pair over those. ' Lady," Smart said he told her, "you've put on three pairs of stockings." "That's all I ever wear in the summertime." Smart quoted the woman as saying as she picked up her suitcase with the rats, her bulging pocketbook. and her mandolin, and left the jail. Local Oil Company manager wishes lease or rent 6 or 5 room house Prevo or Sprint -ville. Best references furnished, furn-ished, rhone Provo 5221. Charter Airplane Service Fast, Safe - 1 to 3 passengers Phone 555 Merrill Christopherson PROVO FLYING SERVICE N"" n r.ml.aa' with r.ot 14-fataiaaaa' 14-fataiaaaa' bvttarmilk Savas. A Jy to mi wltfc dittinetrva butkwhaot fWver. 'FoH MM Craamy wttsot haolthfwl for babt, yavngrtars, adult. Albers CORN FLAKES Our Johnny'dote rm Alher Oats (it helps build sturdy frames) That's why he leads the neighbor kids In all endurance games I Albers Oafs . gives you bofrh 1$ wsmr si Tait tfc Difference! OVEH tSH FROM THE WEST Qwidl-eoeking AoliH whivf with 50 mor V'rMmiii St. mrnhnU wwffiM ' greajj for mmf C0j HsrasHHSflBrMP m m t . . ;.v7- : t i r i t i;- 1 1 I IMS , v SJtfA V i All tha growth, stamino, energy IK 'f7 wtjf ' BENEFITS OF TRUE OATMEAL r-V-L' 1 1 fcjt&S1' : All the extra TASTE APPEAL OF iW. &:s,&:r m "CONTROLLED TOASTING" ! fc m hi The Tmil Ifereeat is ea cad ymm AO StacM r pleas hmj aahr Sm bel al the ate. Ttoa taV S Skate titiowi lb aat at their f Ut keyiV yewer by tsrhii mIt heat ei tMty art bNl pMlaU Te XI totf ! lM4i el New Pack t ymm i I AG . Plea k AU tw smh Sse AG v7 t mm . US 4n$m& Royal . . no. 21 can 1 2 Household Hints Western Family Mogaxine lETOKE HSATTIfO MUX. nnse eut tha aaurpan with a littla hot water. This will pravant the milk from stiekifiq te pan. IAVI a Viacpry wax papar baas whleh coma tn aalotln and pud eUivg pockooaa. Wash and uas for atorinq eut onions in tha ra rncarat:; if you twiat tha and tightly togathar, onion small will not aaoopa. MAKE A lOU of Wtorar esh4 petotoas, using; waaad papar. Stera in rafrifaroler and aliea eU potato caka whan dasirad. DnTTT CtTITAlMS soaked in cool wetar to which half a eup M aodi a added wash out dean and bright. PTBSPrHAnOK CTAtm will dtsap-paar dtsap-paar If n coupla of empirtn tab-lats tab-lats ara diaiolvad in war-n wortar m whirh tha aOaotad ortidaa ora woshed. WHEN GIZASE DtOTS an tha floor, pour lea cold wotar ee : Unmadiarr. This fcerdans tha qraoa to pravant ia okine tn-t tn-t tha wood and to allow easy ramovol. WREN COWrTIOffTED with a ftack of diahaa crftar a hah fry. don't ha diacouraqad! Simply pour raid wotar evar tha diahaa. rub alt on aach one and rinsa. Tha dec will disappear. mm Mokes Delicious Spicy Pumpkin P . . uiiilc it lasts . IgC. pkg. Foster-octing, longer-lasting suds. PEAWiT BUTTER ?ft -37' Puts the Right Touch to Sandwiches GilBiA Hersheys Breakfast . I ib. can ) 0' for a Real Bveroge Fall Harvest Vegetables TOLIftTOES'd. 19c today IS HOIT MUXUE CAT 41 aa. Its Back-vtao 4 as. SSe Nw Pack apiaaaaaaarwia TOMATO SOUP lis flovar hoa aava baan aauailad' cans 29c Nutritious and Miosis. , tUNllll nincn PAnnnTC su UlVleW UMIUIVIU KNTTH Glass . . uil Haet jn4 srs. nnnn whia tac.i WWIIII No. t tlsa Can Jus of! !h eb fl-rar ST. ELMO nivcn ucncTAni cc no. MIAbU lliUblHUs.bg SUa Cob MajLu Wondanui &a.ad ABGO DCAC No. 2 I hMU SUa NEW PACK SUIIKIST PEACHES TaUaw CUite Ma. Vfc nttm av Sttead tor rkeUcious Salads Pradvaa Pri as SaMaei a DmlT Morksl CTeasfst. SuNCST JUICE ORANGES Ib. 8c Chuck hall ei )ui- xcoutw GRAPES 2 Ibt. 29c Crup and luicy ior food aaunq. V- fl. MO. I ICiHO RUSSET POTATOES 10 Ib. mesh bog 41 e Tha tomeuj tAKING Potato. SPAMTSR ONIONS 50 Ib. bog 97c Its tuna to tors thsm lac win'.si us. DTAB FANCY BLEACHED CELERY per stalk 15c Latf. Fancy Crisp Stalks. tOOtaiANA V. S. 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I le FLOYD'S MARKET PARK'S MARKET REAM'S BETTER FOOD MKT., No. 2 Nertb 8tb West t6S 5ootli University 7SS Ne, 5th U'est CHRJSTENSEN'S MARKET MOUNTAIN CASH MKT.. REAM'S BETTER FOOD MKT.. No. 1 m Ntrtb tth West Tth East Between 3rd and 4th Nerta U9 West Center St. MESERVTS MARKET 33S Nerth Unlyersltj HANSEN'S MARKET ZS7 Nertb 1st West PAYNE'S MARKET A & H FINE FOODS 49S East Sth North 697 Eait 3rd South J |