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Show Crocheted Lamp Shades Ml Ml JM 5777 IVE your living room or bed-room bed-room a fresh new look with these distinctive crocheted lamp shades. Simple shell stitch makes the drum shape while the bell shade is crocheted in dainty knot stitch. To obtain complete crocheting Instructions Instruc-tions for the two shades Illustrated, stitch Illustrations and finishing directions for Crocheted Lampshades (Pattern No. 5777) send 20 cents In coin, your name, address and pattern number. SEWING CIRCLE NEFHLEWORK 530 South Wells SL Chicago 7, III. Enclose 20 cents for patten. No Address. Classified Department AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. FINE USED CARS Liberal Credit Terms JESSE M. CHASE, INC Buy Sell Trade Main at 4th So. Salt lake City AUo location! in BOISE POCATEUO BLACK FOOT FARMS AND RANCHES CANADIAN FARMS Writ, u for HUE! INFORMATION IN-FORMATION n turn fettlemtnt snportunltlM. Fftililt Mill. Aiimnnblr priced. C. 1 Cor ill, C.nadlu I'ttldc Biilviy, Tancomi, B.C. 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History Monopoly CINCE THE FOUNDING of the J government, a Ad until the pa si few years, precedent, but not law, has decreed that no administrative government official, holding a policy-making position, should use information in-formation acquired through holding that position, in writing for pay, oi for any one newspaper or publication. publica-tion. That precedent applied to all policy-making officials, from the President down, while they were in office. NO LAW HAS BEEN ENACTED which established a distinction be tween government papers and private papers. Precedent has decreed that all papers or documents docu-ments pertaining to the official activities activi-ties of the policymaking policy-making official while in office be considered the PATTERSON property of foe gov. ernment. DURING THE PAST 12 or more years many nationally circulated periodicals have been literally filled with contributions by policy-making government officials. The information informa-tion contained in these contributions comes from what are claimed to be the private papers of the contributors. contribu-tors. TONS OF SUCH PAPERS have been carted away from Washington by retiring officials. Largely they constitute the behind the scenes activities ac-tivities of the department, or the official who presides over it Much of interest and value in writing the history of the nation could be found in the papers if they were available avail-able to all historians. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT removed re-moved great quantities of such papers, pa-pers, containing, presumably, information in-formation of great value, to the memorial library at Hyde Park. Much of it has not been made available avail-able to the public, and will not be until such time as he provided. Then it will be available to those who he selected as historians. In them there may be details that would clear up many an unsolved riddle. THE PRIVATE (?) PAPERS of Harry Hopkins were left for naturally prejudiced friend to interpret, and not made available avail-able in the raw state for all historians his-torians writing of the momentous momen-tous events in which Hjpkins participated. Many, including the commentator, Fulton Lewis, who knew Hopkins intimately, refuse to accept the friend's interpretations in-terpretations seriously. FOR THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS the policy-making officials have picked up many dollars, running into the hundreds of thousands. The publications have paid extremely high prices; more because of the byline than because of the quality of writing. But the greatest harm to the American people lies in the taking of such papers out of the reach of those who would write an unprejudiced history of these times. Out of them the historian would have dug many an illuminating fact. THERE IS A LAW that provides a penalty for removing from government gov-ernment files any papers or documents docu-ments that are government property, prop-erty, but there is no law that clearly clear-ly defines what is government and what is private property. That has been left to the judgment of each policy-making official. Senator Ferguson, Fer-guson, of Michigan, proposes to change all that He will introduce a bill in the next session of congress that will definitely specify what are public and what are private records. The public records will he those that in any way have a connection with the public activities ac-tivities of the official, whether It be a scribbled memorandum, a letter, or an official document. Should Senator Ferguson's bill become law it would put a serious seri-ous crimp in the side revenues of many a public official, and give to the writers of the nation a new opportunity. It Is too late now to aid the historian in recording re-cording and evaluating the events of recent years. AFTER LISTENING to both major ma-jor party candidates' interpretations of their farm programs, the farmers farm-ers did not see much difference in the width of the opening to the vaults of the treasury. IT IS A LONG and hazardous trail between ambition and realization. Those who succeed carry on to the end, as did the Pilgrims a THERE CAN BE NO valid rea-son, rea-son, other than an over-supply of subversive minded teachers and professors in our schools and col leges, for the growth of communistic communis-tic tendencies among American school and college students. TO THE AMERICAN FARMER the collective farm is not a desirable desir-able institution. He wants none of it THE SO-CALLED RICH MAN is merely temporary custodian of wealth. MONEY MAKER Mechanic Has Mint WASHINGTON, D. C. During the depression, when a man could barely buy sowbelly and shoe leather leath-er on what he made fixing old cars, something happened by accident to Verne Starling, a mechanic, out in Perry, Iowa. The accident made him think, he could do better by making real money. "I didn't want to get rich," he later told the Un.'ted States secret service. "I just wanted to make a decent living.". Like all easy money guys. Starling Star-ling made a mistake now and then. One of them a phony half dollar-is dollar-is now on exhibit in the treasury building. How it got there is an interesting in-teresting story dug from the fat files of James J. Maloney, chief of the secret service. Mechanic Starling, Star-ling, in his confession, told his own story: Once, in 1933, he was fiddling around with an acetylene torch, fixing fix-ing to weld a truck axle. He reached in his pants pocket for a cigarette and out tumbled a nickel, which came to rest between a spring and a railroad iron on the floor. He Gets an Idea. A light went on in Starling's active ac-tive brain. He forgot about the broken axle and placed the nickle on the railroad iron and applied his torch to the fiat piece of spring. When it sizzled cherry red he took his tongs and put the spring on top of the nickel and let fly with a heavy sledge. A perfect imprint of a nickel! And from where Starling stood, the garage business looked pretty dull So he began to study up on dies and knurling wheels, the things that make the ridges around some coins. It took a lot of time, but he was a perfectionist. At length he came up with a near perfect duplicate of the 1912 Columbia Co-lumbia star half dollar, although it took him almost four years. To look at the official record you'd think Starling was out of his head. He put 22 cents worth of silver in each coin at a time when the government gov-ernment was only putting 18 cents worth in each. "But at that the guy made dough," Jim Maloney said. "A couple or three cents worth of copper, cop-per, iron and tin pitched in as alloys al-loys and he had a nice profit And he also had us humpin' for a long time." Coins Look Real. The coins looked and acted like the real thing to most people. But they showed up bad under the eyes of examiners at the federal reserve banks. He finally was traced, as most coin counterfeiters are, through his purchases of silver. That, plus asking ask-ing neighborhood kids to help him steal silver around Perry. He even suggested raiding the trophy cases in high schools for loving cups that Iowa athletes had won in basketball games and track meets. One rainy night the law federal, county and local moved in. The culprit said in his statement that he was a lone worker. He'd go into dime stores, groceries and cigar ci-gar stores around Iowa, spending a nickel and getting 45 cents change. In a closet in his home the agents found sacks of Bull Durham, squares of eating tobacco and gum. Starling said he turned out no more than 300 half buck pieces a month value $150, minus expenses. But, as the man said, crime doesn't pay. The government chopped Starling's elaborate equipment equip-ment to junk and sold it by the pound at auction for $2.60. And he died in jail while awaiting trial Typist's Error During War Cost British Two Ships LONDON. A typist's error was blamed for the loss of two British destroyers in the battle of Crete during the early phases of World War II. It was disclosed in newly released admiralty dispatches of that battle from Adm. Sir Andrew B. Cunningham, Cunning-ham, then in charge of Mediterranean Mediter-ranean operations, now Lord Cunningham Cun-ningham of Hyndhope. He explained that on the night of May 22. 1941, he received a "most Immediate" message reporting the battleships Queen Elizabeth and Barham were "empty" of anti-aircraft ammunition. The message should have read the two battle wagons had "plenty." As a result, the two ships were ordered back to Alexandria, leaving behind the destroyers Kelly and Kashmir, presumably to protect their withdrawal against the Germans, Ger-mans, v Both were sunk. Meager Diet Is Leaving Mark On British, Expert Declares LONDON. Sir Jack Drummond diet expert, says serious signs oi malnutrition have begun to appeal among British children and adolescents adoles-cents as a result of bread and potatc rationing. "The body weight records of ado lescents are rather disturbing," h wrote in the Medical Journal. "Full-ure "Full-ure to gain weight and actual loss 01 weight are not uncommon amoni boys and girls." Adolescents need from 3.5O0 tc 4,500 calories daily, he said. Th present British diet totals about 2.700 calories. Autumn Brings Washington A Potpourri of 'Occasions' By BAUKHAGE Newt Analyst and Commentator. WASHINGTON. After a tropically terrible summer the capital burst into autumnal glory with cool weather providing the zest and zip necessary to meet the feverish renewal of activity after the summer doldrums. Let me review some of the varied events which provided pungent relief from the news of diplomatic quarrels, political billingsgate, and war. Out at the airport, an American Airlines plane, christened tor the occasion "Don Gaspar de Por-tola," Por-tola," dropped out of the skies. Down the ramp came a black bearded, helmeted Spanish Conquistadore, resplendent re-splendent in flowing flow-ing scarlet cape and shining broadsword. broad-sword. Next came a charming Chinese Chi-nese girl in her ruffled dress, alluring al-luring as a lotus blossom. Then a less exotic crowd BAUKHAGE of beauties, sportsfolk, business men, headed by the mayor of San Francisco. They had come to tell us about the resumption this year of the Portola Festival at the Golden Gold-en Gate. (They visited eight other major cities, too.) Don Gaspar de Portola was the famous explorer whe was sent to America from Spain in (769 to chase the Jesuits from California, the English from Canada, and the Russians from Alaska. He didn't quite fill that order but he did locate and explore ex-plore San Francisco Bay and discover m couple of other har-oors. har-oors. I paid my respects to His Excellency Excel-lency Don Gaspar, to the tall, slim, pretty and modest water-nymph, Ann Curtis, Olympiad winner, and to my old pal Jimmy Abbey, onetime one-time international photographer who made even Stalin "look pleasant" pleas-ant" Now Jimmy is an ABC commentator com-mentator on the Pacific coast But something better was to come. We sat down to luncheon and I felt right at home! There was Chef John Lischetti, of the Nugget Grill, founded way back in the gold rush days when nuggets were the medium of exchange. And better still there were sand-dabs, that strange flat creature sans-scales in PORTOLA AND ENTOURAGE the ocean and sans-rival when prepared pre-pared "a la Pescad' oro." (Get the nugget?) But best of all was the crab salad nugget which makes all other crabs seem crabbed by comparison. com-parison. The food was all native, flown from San Francisco for the occasion! Viva Portola! George C. Marshall At a Humanitarian The Marine band blares out a march from the platform overlooking overlook-ing the huge Presidential room of the Statler where more than 800 guests are gathered for the ceremony cere-mony in which Variety International, Interna-tional, that cheerful and charitable group of show folk, is to confer its annual Humanitarian award. In march the guests of honor, statesmen, diplomats, tycoons, actors, ac-tors, legal lights, and whatnot They stand at their places at the head tables which form two tiers banked with roses. A fanfare and George Catlett Marshal takes his place amid cheers that drown the music. The salute to the colors. We sit down to drown any modicum of sorrow that has survived the preceding reception. recep-tion. Speeches are shirt and good. Marshall, as secretary of state, could say little that was new, something some-thing that was grim, much that was encouraging and all of it "off the record" for we are already in the midst of parlous international negotiations. ne-gotiations. Variety club president reads the citation: "The career of the Hon. George Catlett Marshall has embraced leadership in peace as well as In war. "Soldier by profession, he has ever displayed a conspicuous and consistent genius for the military. "Shunning the opportunity to seek surcease from the cumulative cumula-tive burdens of two world wars, bis devotion to principle and couptry has led him along the paths toward world amity and peace since the end of hostilities. hostili-ties. "As author of the Marshall Plan, he translated into generous gener-ous and inspiring fulfillment the shining hope for liberty, honor and dignity of free men everywhere. every-where. "We salute the breadth of vision and warmth of heart of a great and beloved American." And so to bed. Review of Byrd's Antarctic Expedition Rain pours, we drive through the slippery Washington streets to the navy yard (now the naval gun factory). fac-tory). The Washington navy yard was planned by President John Adams when French aggression made "freedom of the seas" a menacing international issue. Work began on the site in 1800. Here the "Wasp" and the "Hornet" were built to play their roles in the War of 1812, here the "Constitution" and the "President" "Presi-dent" came for overhauling and repairs. re-pairs. We stop at the sentry box: "Guests of Admiral Davis." The marine sentry salutes. We know our way to the officers' club. Handshakes Hand-shakes and refreshments and into a bus that takes us to the event of the evening which the rain prevented us from witnessing aboard the hulking LST moored to the dock in the Ana-costia Ana-costia river. So we must go indoors to see one of the most thrilling things I ever saw on the screen. A motion picture pic-ture made from the actual photographic photo-graphic record of the 1946-47 exploration ex-ploration of the Antarctic under Adm. Richard E. Byrd. I hope you saw or will see it "Secret Land." It had its premier on Navy Day, in 80 cities. The commercial movie makers used the official film taken by navy, marine corps, coast guard and army cameramen on the scene. The picturing of disaster, of rescue, of tragedy, of suspense, of achievement, (in most cases the actual event as it happened) are something for which I have no comparison. One purpose of the 1946 expedition expedi-tion which was a follow-up of Byrd's original 1929 undertaking when he established "Little America" and explored the great Antarctic ice cap, was to train the navy in polar operations. Another aim was to make further discoveries and release the "unknown "un-known treasures" (which Byrd's earlier explorations indicated were there) for the benefit of mankind. Even the "routine" operations, the ships amidst the ice-floes, the landing land-ing on the ice-cap, the erection of the tent city and the operation of the planes, was an inspiring and thrilling sight a tremendous tribute trib-ute to the American skill In mechanical me-chanical achievement in personal endurance, bravery, ingenuity. It will make you proud to be an American. Amer-ican. Admiral Byrd didn't look much older than when we bid him God speed before he started on his first Antarctic venture. That was close to me for I was connected with the organization that syndicated the story for the press. But I was struck with the passage of time, and the years of study and research that have intervened, when I looked at Dr Paul Siple, polar authority and geographer. (He was present in the flesh as well as on the screen. I Paul Siple was chosen to go on the 1939 expedition after win- ' ning in a competition Involving 600.000 Boy Scouts of America. Then he was a tall, slender lad of 20. Now he's stocky and graying. As a prominent geographer geog-rapher he has done important .. research for the war department. depart-ment. The story of the Antarctic is studded stud-ded with great names Scott, Amundsen, Shackelton, to mention only three as well as with sacrifice and tragedy. This picture of the "Secret Land," less secret now, shows the tremendous advances in technology made since the days of the early explorers. It took thousands of years to shape the penguins' wings into the fins which make his survival in a polar land possible. In a few years in the laboratories and factories of America we have shaped the means which make survival and exploration explora-tion possible tn the same environment environ-ment exploration and discovery which some day may be of tremendous tremen-dous benefit to mankind. The Russians last month kept scheduling Red air maneuvers over Berlin airlift corridors. Perhaps because be-cause of the overcrowded condition of the heavens over Moscow, Minsa, Ptnsk. Baku, Tartu and Stalingrad? MB-naF TOUJn 0r IN WASHINGTON "HU1 I'lfT How Much Hcusecleaning? THROUGHOUT the campaign cam-paign the voters heard the endless refrain of promised economy in government, of firing the bureaucrats, of a housecleaning in Washington. At the Republican national convention Governor Dewey pledged a great housecleaning houseclean-ing in the federal agencies. Out in Des Moines on September 20, Governor Dewey said: "I pledge to you that on next January 20 there will begin in Washington the biggest big-gest unraveling, unsnarling, untangling untan-gling operation in our nation's history." his-tory." Senator Alben W. Barkley, the Democratic vice presidential nominee answered by saying :v "A bureaucrat is a Democrat who holds some office that a Republican Re-publican wants; and the only sort of housecleaning you will get in Washington in the event of a Republican victory in November No-vember will be the changing of the political complexion of those who bold the offices." This reporter is convinced, after being here in Washington for several sev-eral years that the only method of curtailing federal employment and expense is to curtail government services. We have pointed that out in this column many times. And yet instead of curtailing services, congress continues to enlarge upon present services and actually to add new ones. It will be remembered bow in 1946 the Republican leadership pledged to fire a million federal employees and knock six billion dollars dol-lars off the federal budget Even the then national chairman of the GOP, Carroll Reece, said the Republican Re-publican controlled 80th congress would fire from 500,000 to 1,000,000 employees. And yet today, aside from the armed services, there are from 20,000 to 40,000 more pople on the federal payroll than in 1946 and the number still climbs. Democrats, too, have agreed about the necessity of reducing governmental gov-ernmental expenses. But the fiscal experts see only one method of reducing re-ducing employment to any extent if present services are to be continued, contin-ued, namely, more efficiency through better organization of the governmental set-up. This now is being studied by a committee headed by former President Pres-ident Herbert Hoover and a report is to be made to the new congress in January. The first full post-war year under a Democratic controlled congress, the 79th, saw governmental expenditures expen-ditures of 42.5 billion dollars fixed for fiscal 1947. When the 80th congress came into power, the budget for fiscal 1948 sent to the congress by President Presi-dent Truman called for expenditures expendi-tures of 37.5 billion dollars. Expenditures Ex-penditures actually amounted to 36 billion dollars. The budget for fiscal 1949 as submitted in January, 1948, by the President called for expenditures expen-ditures of 39.6 billion dollars and the latest estimate of the budget budg-et bureau is that they will ae- tually amount to 42.2 billion. Thus the cost of government is practically back to the 1447 figure. fig-ure. Everything Is Growing The three biggest agencies, the national defense establishment the post office and Veterans administration, administra-tion, have 75 per cent of all the employees, more than a million and a half. The national defense establishment estab-lishment is growing. Post office is putting on more people and asking for more money to meet a deficiency. deficien-cy. The Veterans administration work will not reach its peak for several sev-eral years. Cost of living for government gov-ernment has gone up" along with private living costs. Then there are the items of expense the four big' gest: foreign aid, defense, veterans and the national debt. These also account for 75 per cent of the total cost. All the rest of the government has only 25 per cent of the employees em-ployees and the cost Cost of operating the general government gov-ernment amounts to about 2.8 per cent of the total. Social welfare, 4.8 per cent; transportation and communication, 3.8 per cent; agriculture agri-culture and agricultural resources, 2.1 per cent; housing and community com-munity facilities, 0.8 per cent; labor, la-bor, 0.2 per cent; education and research, 0.2 per cent; commerce and industry, 0.2 per cent; tax refunds, re-funds, 6.6 per cent. What do the bureaucrats get? In August, 1939, the average federal worker got $2,140 per year which, if he had a family of four, left him with $2,065 in net purchase power after taxes. In October, 1947, the average federal worker got $2,858 a year, but with a family of four he had only $1,569 left in purchasing purchas-ing power after taxes. So when the next President sends his budget to the congress in January, Janu-ary, don't expect it to be much le-low le-low the 40 billion dollar level of the lost three years. r Jx3i J 1 l Viiilff f il ilfL AtflllUklMl Ji ,71 lliriffDI I I I DID you ever try looking bad 34 years? We tried it W rolled back the years. The game we were thinking o took place on October 9, 1914. Dick Rudolph was facing Chief Bender, one of the great pitchers of all time. Rudolph was good but he was no Chief Bender. But the underrated un-derrated Boston began hammering Bender. And the smart, cool Rudolph Ru-dolph tied up the hard-hitting Athletics. Ath-letics. Rudolph beat Bender 7 to 1 in that opening game. This was hard jolt to Athletic fans. Not only that, but Hank Gowdy suddenly broke loose and began hitting like a com bination of Dickey, Cochrane and Hart-nett. Hart-nett. As I recall 11 Gowdy hit .545 in ft Connie Mack's crack pitchers in turn and flayed them. The Braves looked to be the best ball club you ever saw. I still recall the fine play of HARTNETT Johnny Evers and Rabbit Maran-ville Maran-ville at second and short. The overlooked ov-erlooked Brave infield made the great Athletic infield look second rate. That was s long spell back 1914. The Germans had been stopped at the Marne but they were still close to Paris. The First World War was- just getting get-ting up steam. I doubt that many of those playing m the 1948 series were even born at that far off date. We had a great bunch of baseball writers Ring Lardner, Hughey Ful-lerton, Ful-lerton, Damon Runyon, Boze Bulger, Bul-ger, Charley Dryden, one of the greatest, Bunk MacBeth, on and on. Rudolph was at his peak in this first game. He was the Johnny Sain of his time. He won 27 games that 1914 year, so you can compare him with Sain. He pitched and won two games in that 1914 series. I saw Dick only a short while ago. He was a little bald, but he still looked in condition to pitch a few innings. I've known few brainier brain-ier pitchers- than Rudolph, few who had cooler nerves or control What has become of control? Doesn't the plate mean anything any more to 95 per cent of all pitchers? pitch-ers? Important Events of 1914 What else happened in 1914? Babe Ruth was just breaking in. The Babe was a rookie. Bobby Jones was only 12 years old. Ty Cobb was in his prime. Jack Dempsey was five years away from Willard and Toledo. Jack was a stringy kid of 19, weighing 165 pounds. It was five years away from the start of sport's golden age. Man o. War hadn't been born. No one had ever heard of Red Grange, or Tilden, or Sande. That year win be remembered remem-bered as the start of World War I. But in basebaU it Is remembered remem-bered as the year the miracle Braves accompUshed the greatest great-est feat baseball has ever known the feat of beating the Mackmen four straight, and forcing Connie Mack to disband, dis-band, by sale, the greatest baU club he has ever managed. The Braves of 1914 were only fair ball club. They were 90 per cent pitching and spirit Johnny Evers and Rabbit Maran-ville Maran-ville had greater fighting spirit on a ball field than any two men I've ever known barring one a fellow known as Ty Cobb. And I'll put Pepper Martin up with Cobb. The only difference is that Cobb and Martin were physically equipped to handle the job while Evers and Maranville had to bank on spirit head and heart Best RoqUe of 1948 Richie Ashburn of the Phillies has been voted the best rookie of the year. There have been several complaints over this decision from other centers, including the Red Sox, who like their own Billy Goodman. Good-man. Whether or not he is the best rookie, I can tell you who Is the most useful. His name Is Alvan Dark of the Braves. Dark has done more for the Braves than any two rookies have done for other clubs. Shortstop weakness hurt them badly a year ago. This spring in Florida, Billy Southworth told a bunch of writers that Dark was the key man in his club. "I feel pretty sure he will make good. I know Eddie Stanky will help him a lot," Billy said. "Dark's an amazing all-around athlete." ath-lete." I ran into Bernie Moore, Dark's old coach at L. S. U. Bernie is now the southeastern footbaU commissioner. commis-sioner. "I don't think I have ever seen as fine an all-around star as Alvan Dark," Bernie said. "He was one of the best football players that ever came to L. S. U., and we've had our share, including Tittle of the Baltimore Colts. rV V I Practical Bib flD roa 'HIS pretty and practical J apron reauirps incf '1 colorful fabric in L A sizes. Wear it for kitchen cho-J a a xir oil da I,am : . i - " iiua leasing, 11 i J makes an ideal shower gift. roiitrm no. oiua comes in , 36. 38. 40, 42, 44 and 46? Ske 34 of 35 or 39-Inch. SBe3U JencUW S?W of the Fall . 1 1 t ' 11 domains eo men smart ntvlM. mtui V.sa Free nattern nrinTH K?" 25 cents. """H SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN OEft S30 South Well. St. Chis,u Enclose 25 cents tn coins for pattern desired. Pattern No Name Sos Address. 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