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Show 11.V CANYON. ifH ' j mirfr V , ".'Si?.!-..- iff 3 SECRETARY. Charles Sawyer, former U.S. ambassador to Belgium, now a Cincinnati law-yer, has been appointed by President Truman to the post of secretary of commerce. He succeeds W. Averell Harrlnan who has been named special U.S. ambassador to the 16 nations participating In the European recovery program. WANTED TO BUY WE BUY AND SELL j Officii Furniture, Filed. Tyiwwritera, Add- -' Inn J'lnohinM, Safes. Cash Retrrmrra. HALT LAKH DESK KICHANUB 2J South Stats St.. Salt Laka City. Utah " MISKJULANIMHJS Roll Dawloppd OvernlKht Srrvlca. 8 JiitrMilasa Friiita. All nu'l 25b So Each. Jumbo Enlargement 5e each. Fox Studioi. Blllinirs. Montana BUSINESS INVEST. OFPOH. COAL MINE FOR BALE j On of tha brat mines In the wast. Eltivem miles weat. f Huntlnjiton. Semi--, modern, Utah Power ft Light, autting ma--' rhine.elcctrlo drills, ate., atnraira bina. ahnkera, canrayora, ahop, cabin, modern lanipa, 184 auras. Cot. lenae, 135,000. Writ Box 603, Huntington, Utah. j LIVESTOCK j YOUNO stallion. I'eroheron-Shlrs- , about! 1X00 Iba. Almast 4 reara old. Fin' gentl animal. Dredr. Writ P. O. Bos 1!31, Ua Vegas, Nevada. FARMS FOB BALE '. ' ll r1ADMM FARMS-W- rlts n f FllER IN. rottMATIoN ea firm miWm.nt epportimltlM. 1'ntllt milk Reuonthly pr.ctd. 0. t. Co ill. Canadian Fulila Ballwur, Vtncounr, B.C. j TRAILER HOMES FOR CONSTRUCTION WORKERS We ar headquarters far trailer hoanea and have a large ator It of new and uaad trailer home. 7.IMMKK ROYAL WHIRLABOUT COLUMBIA SCHCLT For your onvnlae trailer market ar located ta 8ALT LAKE CITT BOWK FOCATELLO RENO JESSE M. CHASE, WNU-- J0-4-S i5SYfc ldi KflH by contact VfellPr m bf fume5-- De,,ry AvUfr' P'o P" Om vnc phn " oritinal actory-trale- d K0 makt 6 tuintrt t insure full strength. esllens f f-- TOSACCO a ftcfcV aphM- - CHIMICAl CORPORATION proy. Ncatme Specialists Since mat I ... I IQUISVtUt , KENTUCKY Eia;a"J'fr 'f&9-- t at AanaBj( Stf ' "JSam! Ovr 100,000 aalitjert ' I''" 'uatomra 6old with Iros-Cla-m ii ur" F1 --L Cuarante. Order 1mm this ad. Writ for FREE ImSS IIAUSTRATBD CATALOG inuuiTsT BEHMiirS tOLlATEHM. LOAD (INK """"' QtW.t3MtW.1s.SL.iflat,Mt I - r ft A xfzl i w S': c ' - , , I " if . 8 V COME TO THE FAIR... At a White House ceremony, President Truman ?6S el2?n!,sc?11.,i71ation t0 the Chica railroad fair from of the Chicago and North Western railw-ay- 8 replica of the famed Pioneer locomotiTe. and Miss Norma bykes, typical passenger of those by-go- ne days. The original Flc-neer- . first train to run west from will star in the Chicago 100 years ago, Railroad Fair scheduled for Chicago's lake front starting July 20. Pip WHO would llko U YOUNGSTERS money few yean from now, and not work too hard should start throwing baseballs r various targets. The N.P. (slung for National Pas time) is running out of pitchers. The N.P. needs more than doubl Its present allotment of right 01 left arms that can get the ball ovei the plate with enough stuff to baf fie the barter now and then. Last year, for example, the Dodg ers were good enough to win 1 pennant with a pitching staff com posed of three or four-innin- g hurl ers. They usually needed four 01 five pitchers to finish out one game. Yet they won a pennant. The American league had onlj eight or 10 pitchers who were able to finish games. Both leagues weri shy of arms that could locate a plate or go the distance. Old-tim- e pitchers such as Ed Walsh, Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson, Icte Alexander and Cy Young could Individually out-pit-the greater part of an en-tire modern ctaff. Bob Feller could and can handls his share of work. So can Hal Newhouser, Ewell Blackwell and Warren Spahn. Few pitchers today can work 250 innings in a season. Johnson, Walsh and other ware pitching more than 400 innings a year. Any pitcher who can't work 250 innings shouldn't be listed ai a starting pitcher. He is certainly no part of a regular. Yet, few pitchers now getting relieved around the fourth inning could think ni working 200 innings without an at-tack of palsy. Hurler $ Pitch Less Today Feller Newhouser Blackwell Dickson Munger Marchildon there wasn't a pitcher in the Amer-ican league last season who worked 300 innings. Feller and Newhouser were the closest. There wasn't a pitcher in the Na-tional league who worked 300 in-nings. Spahn, Blackwell and Branca were the closest up around 280. Today, someone you'd rate as an average good pitcher works in less than 200 innings soy 180. The decline in pitching pitching has been startling. This means in games pitched in games finished in innings pitched in bases on balls in games won (from 30 to 41 a season). Walsh worked in 67 games one season winning 40 and saving 12 others. Today the pitcher who can go nine innings without being re-moved is a local hero. This is why we advise all kids to start throwing. You won't have to be too good. The pitchers we rate as real pitchers this season are Blackwell, Feller, Newhouser. Spahn, Dickson, Brecheen and pos-sibly Munger, Trout, Houtteman and one or two from Connie Mack's Athletic group; very likely Brissie; he mnv be the best. A Championship Score The finest championship golf score of the year to date was Claude Harmon's 279 at the Augusta National's Masters show. It was better than Een Hogan's 27S at Riviera, where the next open will be played. There have been endless discus-sions of what a championship score should be. but Harmon baa slipped in the best answer t date. The Augusta National was keyed to its toughest test in every way. Riviera wasn't, with its rough ent, its baked-ou- t fairways and its soft green I doubt very much that 283 will be broken at Riviera in the Na-tional Open. And Harmon happens to be a golfer who is quite capable of winning a U, S. Open or the P.G.A. Arcarols Comeback A year ago there was pretty fair evidence that Eddie Arcaro was slipping. The slender Italian from Kentucky was still riding fairly well, but he was no centaur. He was booed around New York tracks whether he won or lost. It came to the point where it didn't matter to him whether they booed or cheered. This was the situation when Ar-caro headed for Santa Anita last December. But on this occasion his health was better. He was in better condition. And suddenly a new ambition was born. "It will be different out here this time," he said. "It will be a lot different." Eddie began winning. lie began outriding Longdcn, Reeves and the rest of the outfit. When he saw he couldn't win he was no longer content to pull up and let other horses place and show. Now he was riding them out. All the way. Be also was taking nar-row open'ngs, rising recklessly at times. He was the old Arcara of winning years. Then he came back East again. He began winning on opening day at Jamaica. He has been winning ever since. .... t t f , i , i . ? y ::uMWaM: vMmuMMMt FEELING NO PAIN... Pin pricks, burns and bumps mean nothing to one-year-- Beverly Smith of Akron, Ohio, who never has felt pain in her life. Her rare condition is described by doctors as 'a state of In-difference to injury of con-genital origin.' 'Bombing Scheme' Alerts New York For Explosions Crank Threatens to Explode Dynamite Charges in City at Rush Hour NEW YORK A scrawled plan for destroying communications in Manhattan by means of more than 150 rush hour bomb explosions put strategic parts of the borough under heavy guard for three hours The plan was believed to be the work of a crank when it was found by postal employes but it was suf-ficiently detailed to cause the po-lice to take no chances. Patrolmen, detectives, special-ists of the bomb squad and of the fire department bureau of com-bustibles swarmed into Grand Cen-tral and Pennsylvania terminals, Times square, the general post of-fice on 8th avenue and subway, tube and ferry terminals and sta-tions. Eleven police emergency squads stood by. Fireboats were alerted, and seven police launches inspected the abutments of bridges, and In some instances followed fer-ryboats, as a safeguard. Besides the rail terminals, Times square, and the post office, places specifically marked for explosions included the subway tubes leading to Brooklyn, the Hudson and Man-hatta- n tubes to New Jersey, and the Battery terminal of the Staten island ferry. In the case of the last objective the "plan" envisaged de-struction of three ferryboats by means of trucks loaded with high explosives. Consists of Five Sheets Contained in a plain, unaddressed and unstamped envelope, the "plan" consisted of five sheets of lined paper, apparently from a loose leaf notebook. Each sheet bore a heading giving the number of the plan, and continuing: "Five to five-fiftee- y. Vodka Each sheet carried a diagram or sketch of the area affected. "Plan No. 1" began with a dia-gram of the post office. The text read: "Twenty-fiv- e men and women aboard train one hour before train Is due in. Suitcases with new high explosive bombs. Leave suitcases on platform, mingle with crowd nd vanish. Meet at HQ." Plan No. 2 Plan No. 2 relating to Times square, read: "Fifty men and women in crowd. Rush hour. Leave suitcases of high explosives on platform. Vanish. Surprise element is decisive fac-tor.""" "Plan No. 3" with diagrams of Srand Central terminal read: "Some as Pennsylvania railroad." "Plan No. 4" showed a diagram of the Battery area around the barge office, including the slip of the St. George (Staten island) ferry, with three ferries shown near by. After the heading, the "plan" read: "Rush hour. Twenty-seve- n trucks load in New York side St. George ferry. Drivers drive truck on ferry. Vanish without attracting atten-tion. Blows up in water and sinks without evidence." A diagram of the Brooklyn-Man-tiatta- n subway tubes accompanied "Plan No. 5." The text read: "Ten people in three groups. Enter with explosives. Get off at South Ferry." This was taken to mean that the explosives were to be dropped in the tunnels. A note added: "Same plan for H & M tubes." I r '7 - 'if r . " iTM K ;. p-"'7- -l ?l- - ' ' '' X'Xl v. j kVf . v W7 - i ' ' ' ' ' - t " " '''--''-- '" ....i.1.Tri1T.ni1n.c,ffllij'.11n-n-1(tf- ngsaminfmi ifn'Vrrniniriff TiHwlml MANLY ART OF SELF DEFENSE. . .These two sturdy specimens of adulthood, in whom all sorts of vitamins abound, are (left) Sen. Owen Brewster (Rep., Me.) and Sen. Allen J. Ellender (Dem., La.). It wasn't a grudge fight. They merely were thrumming each other' s noses with ce gloves in a one-rou- nd exhibition match In the senate gymnasium of the capltol where lawmakers try to pare off the excess poundage they develop while making laws. 5 ANOTHER S A General Quiz J THE QUESTIONS 1. When was the "Star Spangled Banner" officially adopted as our national anthem? 2. What is the fastest speed ever reached by a human being under his own power? 3. Where did the word "khaki" originate? 4. When is the last veteran of World War II expected to die? 5. How lonjr will the U. S. coal supply last if used at the present rate? 6. How big was Tom Thumb? THE ANSWERS 1. March 3, 1931, by an act of Congress. 2. 108.92 miles per hour which Alfred Letourner attained on a bi-cycle behind a wind-shieldin- g mo-- ( torcar at Bakersficld, California, May 7, 1041. 3. India. It means earthlike. 4. By 2030. The last World War I, vet by 1995. 5. For the next 1500 years. 6. Tom Thumb stood three feet four Inches when fully grown. He weighed seventy pounds. f&tV ffrfl J?ft ;. jr s d I ' , vt ; gfirt n utinrf.- T illti M.i flM HARVEST TIME. . . Dr. Leonard H. Newman, famed Canadian cereal-1s- t, has retired as the power behind the thrones of wheat kings. He developed many rust resistant varieties of wheat and a new principle for milling flour to vitaminize bread. l WNU reature. 'i I testified in recent pro-- f admin- - the Truman 'i Lst certain unioneer 'i Ltation as an alien i It he had acted as a iLltorous agents of the , 'gemy. He then was 5 lr be knew it was a vio- - I iation of the Wagner P act to pry into the 'i I secret and, more " I often than not, ne-!- i f (arious business of unions. His answer s j is beside the point of this essay, which is I I that, licit or illicit, such espionage is a 1 whatever any law may x funduct often is--and in I j wa5laudable on pa- - L ANY LAW AGAINST i tjx THE PUBLIC IN- - JD CONTEMPTIBLE. J 'vea peculiar group of I tics, all of them prl-- ! Nations acknowledging j responsibility. They I protection of the na-- lament for their confi-- " Jirs, even though they jffairs or conspiracies primary purpose of our jf. They are not public j I very often membership . jury rather than volun-- jrlective. (f this special protection j W3S to strengthen the t criminal and traitor for '! (s to be given to Roose-- i through professional I subtler terrorists, graft-r.descri- pt rogues. The i' that the unions were virtuous whereas the were mighty predatory B which hold plant sneaks i:cent councils to betray ' ims, their financial fig- - cir confidential disputes. ! I Actually, in most I cases, the union was J j the ruthless giant and r L the employer a wor-- . ried and financially His workers hated and but were compelled was forced to fire people from the Imion that the of the Truman Communists in the with suspicion. Bruman and Tom Clark, general, knew all about aist strength and influ-union- s I long before this :ar. Their onslaught dirty Bolos and, I may fce sudden 3b mercenary radio discl-- p late Roosevelt are rem- - Roosevelt's own strata-i- : election year of 1940 t Earl Erowder to prison i his wife deported. t2, when we had joined r brave struggle against pressor, Roosevelt ts back to the to the state t. fas released from Ir a short trick, done de Mania, His Muscovite led op to Canada by the ffl around and brought ' Wota immigrant, eligi-zensh- ip and forever safe "nation. "an is not above any per-mit's, and his current 'n against Communists yarded as a clumsy ruse ";d. or, at any rate, nomi- - aner, who never quite ;;! spiritual heritage of n and Germandom, may what his law does I'xactly It will be plain that I the real reason for the I brawling opposition of Ipj 'he union gangsters to the Taft-Hartle- y law II cbnips any chains on f the toiler, but, on the it strikes off the there by Wagner. The are forbidden to speak ir rules even though ey law would appear :,fficrn from the bondage "u were a waitress with ; a nursery by day, ;; ke a chance on your sPch and express your a reporter ( except promise of secrecy 7" t!i Bill of .tte by"Iaws f -- 'the "Any Amcrican ' member Rising any s,Crct9 !1 is lnral t9 upended or We discretion of this idontical r iml- - '2 hundreds of coura- - iultthat tw ChunCCS' With W. ud hund"ds of bcen denounced s i3 lUii vv? t.4J' i iff Jf P W4Kaym " ufmterRANEAN DUNKING.. . Dateline on this picture just reads mewhefe in the Mediterranean.' which could mean in the of Greece or Italy. At any rate, choppy seas made tho vicinity Dazardous venture when, on rescue of ""hDe8a?rcrftft carrier USS Valley Forge, their maneuvers i f ifcIdl the water. They are shown 'SSStm mtoeboCJ5 fhe'destroyer USS William C. La.e which nut out a small beat for them. fi ' , ; life LiMatoSM & 4, & iA- aTitia1im iiiiai l CATHOLIC MOTHER... Mrs. Richard T. McSorley of Philadelphia, mother of 15 children, includ-ing four priests and three nuns, was named Catholic Mother of 1948 by the National Catholic Conference on Family Life. Storekeeper Routs Bandit With Well-Aime- d Bottles JOHNSTOWN, PA. Pop Karlin-le- y packs a mean pop bottle. At least one thug has good proof of the storekeeper's aim. Pop, otherwise known as J. D. Karlinsey, owns a general store on die Johnstown-Ebensbur- g road. A man entered the place and an-nounced: "This is a holdup." Karlinsey walking toward the :ash register, stooped and grabbed Mi empty pop bottle, whirled and threw it in the same motion. It caught the robber on the head. The thug turned and ran. As he reached the door another bottle crashed through the window just by his head. "My sights weren't quite adjusted to that distance," Pop said. ; i haul IJAiSV-- , ;.l JOINED HANDS... On May 28 the U. government will then THEY coemorat ve four stamp. This is the issue this gapi torpedoed story beDl.nnd J0rth Atlantic in February. 1943. On board and inlains of three faiths: Protestant ministers were f"r ; V Poling. Father John P. Washington 6e2rf Alexander Goode. When the ship was hit each of and hM A"S"ilfebeit to nearby men without them. Then the f?uf iVlSsil and prayed to the one God they all served they "e bm bw u t le&ve tne 8hip The for the safety J' 3 of the survlTor8 of four chaplains tSSe wnJs This is the picture engraved the and hear m the S.S. Dorchester disappeared neeth the naves,' MONEY MAKER. ..Nellie Taloe Ross displays her commission as director of U.S. mint after she was sworn in for her fourth term lo that office. First woman ever to oocupy the post, she has held it since 1933. Boy, 7, Waits One Week For Dead Granny to Rise NEW YORK When a policeman forced his way into a strangely si-lent Queens house, a thin, boy in pajamas collapsed in his arms. "Granny went to bed and didn t wake up," the boy weakly told Charles Horn, patrolman. "Granny" was identified by po-lice as Mrs. Tilly Bonnan. 70, who tiad been dead in bed about a week. The boy, Murray Green, told po-lice he had eaten buns and milk for a week. Apparently he had slept in the dead woman's bed. Murray knew nothing about his parents except that his mother was lick Police said Mrs. Borman had !een granted care of the boy by the lewish Child Care association of Mew York. |