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Show THE BEAVER PRESS. BEAVER, UTAH Where Seeing Is Not Believing Butterfly Chair Set Is Easy to Croehet SNAPPY FACTS RUBBER ; . Newspaperman uuw By Stuff: V Add Things I Never Knew Till Now: In 1812 a newspaperman named Nathanlal Raunsavelt was taken into custody for refusing to divulge the source of his information about the secret activities of some He was threatened pollticos. and cajoled but stood firm. . . . Thus was established the principle of the reporter's duty to protect his news source. . . . The first American newspaper was discontinued by authorities because it published some gossip about the family troubles of the King of France. J' (W V.. fin'. . J&- -J. i.... : , This neaccful village Isn't it lust: dnosn't vi mis ume, xou can see mat me 6m, viusuiy JL, houses only look like houses and the trees are strictly imitation. About the only real things here are the lrb. Suzette Lamoreaux and Elmor Offenbach, who use a "safe" catwalk and stay off the chickenwire farmland of this elaborate camouflage which has been built to protect a vital 9 plant from threat of possible Japanese air raids. This Is the first photograph of this camouflage project the top of a an arrangement of overlapping rubber lips, a zipper has been developed by B. F. Goodrich that effectively seals liquids, air and gases. Now being used In pressure-sealin- g doors for airplanes waterproof supply kits and aviation fuel cells, its postwar uses are numerous. B-2- factory! USS Santa Fe, Cruiser With a Record .AAvvw.-i"sr'- ': Automatic tire Inflation such as now used on the Army's amphibious "Duck" is a post-wpossibility for passenger cars. Heywood Broun was a skilled exponent of the rapier retort. He directed some of his most devastating arguments against Huey Long. . . . He once accused Huey of "murder-ln- g the truth." Long promptly shrieked for a retraction. . . . Broun replied: "Huey says that he never murdered the truth. That's because he never gets near enough to do it any bodily harm." RB97 i Iw il v1 '.",iv ; 1 in Tim iiTmsffriifff r classio about the small town COMPLETELY out of the crocheted chair set is this one with the "pineapple" stitch forming the butterfly. The chair-bacpice is 18 inches from tip to tip and the arm in length. You II want piece is to make two or three sets for gifts in addition to the one you'll use chair! Dn vour own upholstered ga- BIGoodrich k zette which conducted a vigorous campaign against the town council. . . . One of their yarns was headlined: "Half the Town Council Are Crooks." . . . The outraged politicos demanded an apology, and the editor promised to run one. . . . Next day the daily carried this headline: "Half the ' Town Council Are Not Crooks." To obtain complete crocheting instrufor the Butterfly Chair Set (Pattern 5897) send 16 cents in coin, your name, iddress and the pattern number. Due to an unusually large demand and ;urrent war conditions, slightly more time is required In filling orders (or a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: cts So. About a century ago the press was in its Mother Hubbard stage. . . . Namby-pambyiswas rampant. Editors took a lorgnette view of the news. This sidelight illustrates their attitude: One gaUltra fuddy-dudd- y an apology to its zette front-pagesubscribers because a reporter had used the word "trousers" in a yarn when he should have used the word "unmentionables' ' ! You CAN m d In picture at left a destroyer transfers wounded men from another ship to the USS Santa Fe (right) for treatment after an action in the Pacific. This cruiser has an enviable record in the Pacific war. She has taken part in many major engagements and never lost a man in action. Above: A striking photo 'r! if. tUS "- -. 'tVr,Bf . made from the bridge of the Santa Fe as the cruiser rode out a typhoon while operating with a fast carrier task force in the South China Sea. Make History Vienna Comes Back to Life Tiffs among newsboys nowadays category belong in the taffy-pul- l when compared with the journalistic slug-fest- s during the James Gordon Bennett era. . . . Bennett was phystimes ically assaulted a by opposition editors who had been editors clawed by his barbed-wir- e als. . . . But Bennett refused to dilute his potent attacks against competitors. He merely reported the brawls on his gazette's front page and reaped added circulation. . . . The journalistic barrage also blasted his family. The slanderers finally drove his wife and children out of the country. They moved to Europe and made infrequent visits to America, while Bennett continued his style of journalism. half-doze- n SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 709 Mission St., San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 16 cents for Pattern No. Name. ,wr i 4 .. ..4bW'4f .mi x 80.6 of cases showed clinical improvement after onlf FOOT Addres- s- 10 days treatment with SORITONS is impartial, scien tific test Tax on Whiskers Americans who groan under their heavy tax load may be glad they were not living in Russia in the days of Peter the Great. To raise more money he put a tax on whiskers and compelled his subjects to pin their tax receipts to their beards. SORETONE Midt by McKesson Sals' wltt oirutM Banty-bac- Q50 H luieiirAl I Robblns and SU)0 anti-Benne- tt k ' NkV Joseph Pulitzer's N. Y. World set Journalistic standards few newspapers have equalled. Yet Pulitzer arrived in America a poor, friendless, immigrant. He spent all his spare time educating himself. . . . His enlightened opinions on the subject of newspapers are always worth absorbing. . . . Frix-ampl"What is everybody's business is nobody's business except the Journalist's. It is his by adoption. But for his care every reform would be stillborn. He holds officials to their duties. He exposes secret schemes of plunder. He promotes every hopeful plan of progress. Without him public opinion would be shapeless and dumb. Our Republic and its press will rise or fall together. An able, disinterested, public-spirite- d press, with trained intelligence to know the right and courage to do it, can preserve that public virtue without which popular government is a sham and mock- v8 relieve ATHLETE'S free-swingi- I'M J n,s "jA A there's the 4 f S well-love- d Along similar lines production planning, By ... .4-.i-- ir: drastic and supervision of current supplies, tho quivalent of 900,000 tires was saved In one year In Britain. t k.v'v;iy,v.V. ' 7 A' M Jill semi-illitera- W :4"vMi. e: ery." after the Onre gay Vienna is grim as her people, who saw war at close hand, ""turn to her ruins. The city, so bitterly fought for. Is again coming to li'e as the citizens come plodding back with their possessions piled high o band carts. nappy honeymooners, first American wedding in retaken Austria, are Lt. David Talowsky of Chicago and American Red Cross Worker Betty Ann Goit of Philadelphia, Fa. Stationed In England, Mrs. Falowsky flew io Austria in the plane of Major General Taylor. Hollywood has depicted foreign correspondents as overgrown Rover It has created the impresBoys. sion that these newsboys have a glamorous occupation. Actually they have a difficult, perilous task with few rewards. . . . O. D. Gallagher, a British correspondent, dodged 0 bombs and bullets, and traveled miles in three years for his news stories, which readers forget five minutes after reading. ... 100,-00- Crime Wave Buster First Witness Testifies in Petain Trial ' fill! 4, "J " '" f This Is the wisest counsel for colyumists we have come across: "Get around town find out what people are talking about. Give your readers a little daily jolt on something they are gabbing about at home, perhaps, and can gab about some more. Controversial stuff so they can argue. The big idea is this: Make half of them happy and half of them sore." 1 r3t vLl ijK4 ,, d Reporters aren't as as the legends would have you believe. . . . When President Wilson made his gruelling cros-countr- y tour (In an effort to gain the support of Americans for his world peace plans) he was broken in body but not in spirit. . . . Reporters who accompanied him were aware that he was sacrificing bis life for his ideals. As Wilson made bis final stirring plea for world peace, newsmen listening to his eloquent address openly wept. hard-boile- J filtH,. n .. fv iiiti .iri) o IP "J wUness called to testify In the historic trial r"Ui In the Talal, de Justice In Paris, Paul his (arrnw) a. PcUln. sealed, right, caps his hand to the country was Reynaud resigned as premier of France when The XZS luiii itfrftii F r 'ii i mtuM Lawman, Cpl. W. W. Horton of New York State troopers, and his favorite bloodhound. Together they have tracked down many a lost child as well as escaped criminal. ... AJ(ith branches all over the World no Therb's more ion, business institut- thoroughly ican than the General Store. Amer- Yet, do you realize that America is not even enough to keep that General Store running efficiently and prosperously? For instance, its delivery truck was made in, America; but 300 products, from 56 countries, went lasting prosperity, as well as for durable peace, m must cooperait with the rest of the world. Truly, planes, radio, rockets, have made of this shrunken earth, one world. Cooperation means getting along even with peoples whose beliefs do not jibe with ours. It means contributing our share toward world order. It means making the effort necessary to understanding. into its making. The telephone It means every citizen must accept over which the orders come is the responsibility of making inAmerican-made- . But 18 of the teleternational cooperation work. phone's important materials came You can do these things: from outside the country. first, get and keep yourself inThe coffee, the tea, the sugar, formed about the specific prothe tin in die cans, the cocoa and posals for peace and international chocolate . . . these and many more cooperation which are now beof the tilings the store buys and fore us. Second, interest your friends in sells came from overseas. Take these Get them disand business them away languishes, cussed questions. in groups to which you becomes more difficult to operate. belong. Take them away, and the comThird, write what you think to munity's standard of living de- your Congressman and Senators, clines, life itself becomes less to your newspaper. Declare yourpleasant. No country can build a fence and hide behind it these days. For self. t f (PHNHI IT TIE 11 IITtiriilll IIIICIII |