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Show iAhd SdrtheU.S. Supreme CourF Begins Another Session By FREDERICK Ck OTHMAN black tails 4f his frock coat (so liiuwu rnu otut vu HKu nt woman i wrinxxe em ) ana si WASHINGTON", Oct 7 U.R Oyez, oyez, oyez: the honorable, the supreme court of the United States is now sitting. God save the United States, and this honorable court. . ' ". Having said that in tones which might have sounded ringing had it not been .for half acre of red velvet orcuerY- uuuuica u uwu- en echoes, the crier spread the down.' .'The eight justices sat down, too, thereby -hiding from public view eight widely assorted swivel chairs; which 'had .? given the1 chamber . of the multi-million dollar, white marble court house some of the aspects of a second-,woriH More Cancer Seen ms Lire L-engrnens CHICAGO (U.R) More persons will die of cancer as medical science sci-ence lengthens the average life span, according to Dr. Walter H. Palmer, University of Chicago professor of medicine. In an address on "The Fight Against Cancer," Palmer said the incidence of cancer, especially cr ncer of the stomach, increases svcciuujr w i ill "Twenty, million Amerians now living can look forward to dying from cancer, which now ranks second as a. cause of death," Palmer said. The disease takes an annual toll ' of approximately 175,000- persons in this country alone, he said. "We know a great deal about the cause of cancer, but our ignorance ig-norance still is profound," he y ' palmer said that surgery. .whenever it can be used, is the best weapon in the attack on can cer. "Some cancers are easily and .permanently cured by surgery he said. "Tumors, considered in operable only a short time ago, are now removed safely- by the surgeon." --- Palmer ranked radium and X-ray second to surgery in the treatment of cancer. "Skin cancer can be cured -rather easily in that way,", he said. "and inoperable cancers may be improved, although not cured." hand furniture store. The ninth chair, of black leath er with depressions especially se lected to fit the , frame of Justice William O. Douglas, was vacant. Mr. Justice Douglas was home, consuming , soup. He'd just had his tonsils yanked and for the 'One-Cent Sale' . Originator Dies TWO RIVERS, Wis, Oct. 7 U.R The originator of the "one-cent sale," Charles Kirst, will be buried tomorrow. . ... . The congenial 77-year-old drug gist, nationally recognized as the first business man to : offer two articles for one cent more than the price of one, died. Oct. 3. This city, in which Krist grew up and entered the drug store trade when he was 13, remembers him better as the man who built a $250,000 business by giving free candy to children. -Millions were the jelly beans and candy kisses he" handed- to the kids who dragged their parents par-ents into Krist's store. The patents stayed long enough to buy. QUICK CAS H at Low Cost 10M a month repays $100 lean $5.03 monthly repays $50 $20.14 monthly repays $200 $30.21 monthly repays $300 OFFICE BOCKS t a. m. to $ p. m. daily. I a. m. to 1 . m. Saturdays Appointments nay nad for after boor. Phono SIS-KEN SIS-KEN HOUSTON, Manager Tayjor Continues Crusade Against American Policy TWIN FALLS. Ida.. Oct. 7 (U.R) Sen. Glen H. Taylor, D., Idaho, today carried his crusade against American ' foreign policy into south-central Idaho and was to reiterate in a speech here .tonight .to-night that such , policy "has lost us every .friend we have in ; the Last1 night in Boise the senator told an audience of 400 persons, including a goodly sprinkling of Republicans, .'the big corporations corpora-tions and the generals and colonels are heading us into war. He said the army and the corporations cor-porations - "had to . have a public enemy No. 1 (Russia) to keep the time being was able to utter ;people ln good humor for military His cohorts looked fit and. suitably sun-tanned, as well as a little warm in their long black robes. These garments are made of fine wool, I was Informed, and are good for years of hard wear, barring moths. 'You've probably read how the 1947 term of the court barely had started, before Justice Robert H. Jackson, was objecting to a de cision his cohorts made last session. ses-sion. Actually he just mumbled, kind of, and thereby managed to confuse even further the 35 nervous nerv-ous lawyers waiting for one of the big moments of their lives. They sat in freshly pressed pants and new cravats of digni fied pattern, waiting to be sworn In' before the bar of the supreme tribunal; each had his sponsor along to inform the court that he was a -smart fellow and well ablewin a war against Russia io practice mere. First up was Attorney General Tom Clark to introduce his new solicitor, Phil Ferlman. They looked like the Smith Brothers, without the whiskers, in identical clawhammer coats with white carnations in ' the lapels, and striped pants, like diplomats. No spats. The chief justice told, Clark's L man to go over by the clerk to be sworn in: then came the rest of; the lawyers, one every 15 seconds. we had frindly. relations wit Mr. Chief Juetice Fred Vinson :rss5, whon the late President appropriations.' The senator said that Russia Rus-sia wasn't the ogre some people peo-ple were trying to make her out and that she "had reason to be suspicious of the United States," And he added: "I am duty bound to speak my mind regardless of the conse quences to me politically. I want to find out right now how . the people of Idaho, feel about this problem. If they think our fore ign policy is okeh I will bow to their wishes and keep silent on the matter." Taylor said, in effect, that other peoples of the world hate the United States so' much that in event of war between Russia and the United States most of the other nations would be on Russia's side. "There is a doubt ln my mind." said Taylor, "that we could even End of a Day He said the United States should adopt a foreign policy that would furnish the peoples peo-ples of Europe with "more food and less guns." He said the present bi-partisan policy "dividing the world into " two camps." He added that the foreign policy should be either Republican or Democrat. "We all know," he said, "thel waved 'em; all over toward the clerk. ' When all were packed tightly in the aisle, including two lady lawyers; in skirts with the new long look, the clerk told them to raise their hands and be sworn in. Then he led 'em out the side door. The entire proceedings pro-ceedings took 14 minutes. ' The justices walked out to - lunch, . which consisted of spaghetti ereole, 40 cents.s They had theirs in their private' pri-vate' dining room; the new ' practitioner before the supreme su-preme bar slapped theirs in the court's cafeteria. Next week the justices will be gin handing down opinions; I must report one earlier decision which indicates the court is cooperating co-operating fully with the fuel-saving fuel-saving campaign. Its retiring rooms de luxe contain automatic wash basins, which used to fill themselves to the rim and then turn themselevs off. No more. The supreme court this term gives a man a half inch of hot water in which to wash his hands and not one smidgen more. Roosevelt was alive.; Russia dissolved dis-solved the internatonale commir -tern as a gesture of friendship, but xf course it has just now been re-established. - Bodies of Two Taken from Lake CALDWELL, Ida., Oct. 7 (U.R) The bodies of D. L. Stanley and John Ulrich, both of Nampa, were recovered from Lake Lowell today to-day after they were sighted from the air by Canyon County Deputy Sheriff George Zeal.. Still unrecovered is the body of Mrs. Stanley The three Nam-pans Nam-pans were drowned Sept. 27 vhen their boat capsized during a brief windstorm. Mrs. Ulrich survived the disaster. She floated on the lake encased in a life jacket, for 14 hours before she was rescued. The bodies of Stanley and Ulrich Ul-rich had risen to the surface. Efforts Ef-forts to drag the lake failed when the grappling hooks snagged into a submerged orchard. Church-Going Teller Steals $50,000 Sum NASHVILLE, Tenn Oct. 7 (U.R) A well -tanned, chureh-goin teller who admitted walking out of a Toledo, O., bank in June with a sacX of nearly $50,000 o' the bank's money, faced arraignment arraign-ment here today on embezzle - ment charges, But for an unlucky turn arounJ the dance , floor of a local nigh' club, the 29-year-old bachelor Clarence Joseph Hudgin, migh still be living a life of ease on the bank's funds. He was recog-nied recog-nied by a Toledo musician in the band Friday as he danced wit new-found "friends. He had told them he was Joe Hempstead, t businessman from St, Louis. The FBI which had been looking look-ing for Hudgin for three months nabbed him as he started to board a plane Saturday. Most of the three months, Hudgin Hud-gin said he spent acquiring a tan in Miami at an expensive hotel. Authorities are still looking tot "about $30,000" which he claim." he hid in Florida. They foun $8,300 of the money in a safe of a Memphis hotel where he war still registered when arrested here. In Toledo, his grandmother who reared him said he "never missed church but once." ' His fiancee. Miss Vivian Demuth, also a bank employe, said he "must have done it on an impulse." Hi? bosses said he had been a reliable worker. His feminine - nightclub companions here described him as "a perfect gentleman." Make Barbizon Lingerie LIMITED NO. OF JOBS OPEN ON SEWING MACHINES . Only STEADY Permanent Workers Wanted Apply GENERAL DRY GOODS CORP. 149 NORTH FIRST WEST PROVO C05nCS GO OVER BIG NEW YORK- (U.R The influ ence and educational possibilities of newspaper comics and comic books will be studied by the department of sociology of New York university. Prof. Harvey Zorbaugh said surveys show that more than 60,000.000 adults read the Sunday comics every week,, that 92 per cent of children between be-tween 10 and 17 read them regularly regu-larly and that about 35,000,000 comic books are sold monthly. New England has a vital part in the motion, picture enterprises in Hollywood in that a fair share of the financing of films is handled han-dled by the First National Bank of Boston. FHEJE QUAIOT Y ME AITS FROM YOUR HANDY MEAT MARKET FOR LESS MONEY - Sii?Hoiim StteaEic 31 ib. XUt A TTGi Picnic Style, Lean ' it f"fa KulLAoV'jj (No Extra, Cost for Slicing) .;.. ID. )5 Gi?ouaraifl EBeeS ... ib. 39 VeaD StteaCis Fine to Bread . Ib. Lean Short Rib. lb. IS YOUR FOOD BILL TOQ HIGH? SHOP AND SAVE AT 2791 wuvn . . "171 NORTH FIRST EAST 5 Plenty Of Parking ;1 .V , j ir'":.'L- jl v I Operation No Worry to Boy Though Odds Are 1000 to 1 Against Him Emperor Hirohito of Japan re-" moves his shoes at the Murao Hotel in Fukishima after a day's' inspection tour of the prefecture. prefec-ture. This is the first time he bas ever been photographed with his shoes off. DENVER, Oct. 7 (U.R) Forrest "Nubbins" Hoffman was in a Denver hospital today, to-day, for " a ' diagnosis and checkup in preparation for a serious kidney operation, but attendants reported he did not seem too worried about the 1000-to-l odds : against him. The six-year-old, whose .home is in Cheyenne, Wyo., won out over similar odds in 1944, when it was thought he would not live for Christmas and celebrated the day with ' toys from well-wishers throughout the nation in November. Attendants', who said he was not scheduled for surgery today, reported he was sleeping sleep-ing soundly.; last night. - Nubbins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hoffman; entered en-tered the. hospital yesterday afternoon,, after pleading a trip to Denver's Zoo and a lunch downtown. He didn't want to go to the hospital and asked his mother for just a 'few more hours" before he was checked in, carrying an armful of . picture books and a model racer. Doctors said that this week's -operation would be the first of twoboth delicate, but necessary to save him from death within two years. His father was v to v return here today, after an earlier trip to make a "deposit" in a Denver blood bank, which may be drawn on . during Nubbins' operation. DAILY HERALD Tuesday, October 7, 1947 Typewriter Rentals Limited Number Available We Repair AH Makes Ribbons, Supplies HANSON Office Equipment Company 239 West First North Phone 130 . Formerly . Utah Typewriter Shop One Cookie Or A Million! That is our way of saying say-ing what we will do for you-. You are assured of fine flavor, fine quality foods. . . .regardless of quantity we bake. Drop by this evening for a tasty sample. - FtOWERS" HAVE MORE SCCWt THAK SOME PEOPLE 1 KMOW. Pink Birtliday Party 99 IS IN FULL SWING PINK BIRTHDAY CAKE AND PINK LEMONADE BEING SERVED SEVERAL TIMES WEEKLY! TAYLOR'S BIRTHDAY PRESENTS TO YOU: LOTS AND LOTS OF RED-HOT. VALUES! RADIO BROADCASTS DIRECT FROMTAYLOR'S TVICE VEEKLY AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION! COME IN AND MINGLE AROUND OUR GIANT BIRTHDAY CAKE -9 FEET HIGH! o SIGN UP FOR OUR WEEKLY CONTESTS! o COME IN AND SAY "HAPPY BIRTHDAY"! ANT SALE "Taylor Bros. Since 1866" ESSES! PR ilk or: INT DRESSE H OUSE'DR One Rack Only! The most Gorgeous Array o Silk Dresses Ever Seen in Provo ! One Rack Only! Beautiful Print Dresses thai are dark enough to wear the year around! The Regular TAYLOR Quality. One Table! The very best in house jj dresses! Rerularlv Prieerl jP to 4.95. now going for 11.00, $1.50 & $1.95 PRICE PRICE Art PRICE and Less COME IN TOMORROW AT 2:30 AND PARTICIPATE IN OUR RADIO BROADCAST. PINK BIRTHDAY CAKE & PINK LEMONADE LEMON-ADE BEING SERVED BEGINNING AT 2:00 P M. "81 Years On Top With Styled Values" 5 |