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Show THE BEAVER PRESS, BRAVER, UTAH A Ah 1' I Truman Draws Battle-Line- s Against Red Expansionism tyj CLASSIFIED DEPART Mjy BUILDIXGjlArrPllu hour, brick mlihi"'.md?'lw-- 100 FARM MACHINERY WESTERN News Analyst and Commentator. (liditor's Note: This Still, there are 153,238 farms in New York state, the appraised value of which Is more than a billion dol- another in the "Stories of the States" series.) By EDWARD EMERINE Let's think of 2,000,000 cattle and 350,000 head of sheep. Just imagine pastures so lush that each section of land cares for 40 head of cattle. Picture a state where farms average 112 acres each. No, it's not some western state. It's New is often as high as 210 days, par- ticularly in the Long island section. New York's own fruits and vegeta- I; Neth-erlan- - '4 x VMS.W CHIEF EXECUTIVE . . . Thomas E. Dewey, who was born in Owos-sMich., March 24, 1902, began his meteoric rise as a national figure In 1931 when he was appointed United States attorney for the southern district of New York state. As prosecuting attorney for New York county, he gained fame in prosecution of gangsters. Defeated for governor in 1938, he ran again In 1942 and was elected by He was rea wide margin. elected In 1946 after losing the presidential contest in 1944 to the late Franklin D. Roosevelt. o, Those who live In New York anywhere In the state have close at hand. playgrounds There are mountains, seashores, lakes, rivers, waterfalls, farm lands and more than 70 state parks. Niagara falls, the Thousand islands, Ausable chasm, the Palisades, Howes caverns, Lake George and many others are points of interest for natives and visitors alike. Lake Placid is internationally ery, Valley of the Mohawk, the Niagara frontier from these grew known as a summer and winter New York, a state which has mush- resort, with toboggan slides, ski roomed from scattered colonies to runs, skating rinks, stables for skithe most populous state In the union joring horses and kennels for sled with 13,479,142 inhabitants! dogs. There are literally hundreds of other places in the state for wincentuthe the Through years, ter sports. Saranac lake is famed ries and many wars, the great as a health resort as well as a winindustrial of commonwealth ter and summer sports center. New York has emerged. DurLures Vacationists. ing World War II, of all the war contracts awarded by the fedConey island, Brighton and Maneral government In the 48 states, hattan beaches, and Long island, 11 per cent went to industrial with its Riis park, Rockaway, Long beach and Jones beach, provide a plants In New York state. Of the 100 largest industrial corplayground for the great metropolitan areas. Southampton is the scene porations in the nation, 94 are of a noted society colony, and Staten represented In New York City. island has a number of resorts New York's variety of products And there's still New York City, range from heavy metals and machinery to exquisitely polished dia- with its universities, its cathedrals, monds. Shoes, paper, books, maga- museums, libraries, subways, zines, furniture, carpets, business bridges, parks and driveways one machines, locomotives, cameras, of the great wonders of the modphotographic films, precision instru- ern world! ments, electrical equipment and Yes, New York state has so many the list grows on and on all these firsts they can't be counted. It Is are produced in the factories of rural; it is metropolitan. And alNew York. Its apparel industry pro- ways it is refreshing in its variety duces 48 per cent of the nation's of pursuits, pleasures, recreational clothing, and 45 per cent of rugs advantages and unusual natural and carpets comes from there. beauty. PENNSYLVANIA ' fTT Jj d, al bles supply the state's large ning industries. Wines, champagnes, oysters, seafoods, poultry, eggs and other products go to nearby markets. The last prewar year placed a total value of more than 300 million dollars on New York's agricultural products, with milk the largest farm revenue producer. Today the port of New York City is the nation's foremost center of foreign trade, and yet its people like to recall that it was there that George Washington was sworn in as first president of the United States. Buffalo is the nation's largest freshwater port, yet when white men first came they found a basswood forest and Erie Indians fishing and hunting along the creeks and lake. And there are Binghamton, Rochester, Syracuse, Utica, Yonkers and others all playing an important part in commerce and trade today. can- York! After all, Manhattan Island Is a small part of the area of New York, which Is 49,576 square miles of farms, orchards, mountains, valleys, streams, lakes, forests and other rural, beautiful and natural things. Times square, Greenwich village, Fifth avenue and Wall street are rivaled by Niagara falls, the Adirondacks, the Catskills, Lake Placid and Mount Marcy. The sub ways are no match for ski runs and toboggan slides. It's a long step from the Bowery to country lanes and old farmsteads. Champlain Came First. New York has so many firsts they can't be counted. Samuel de Cham-plai- n was the first white man to set his foot In New York as well as the first to teach religion to the Iroquois. Within a year Hendrik Hudson anchored his little ship off Coney island, finally sailing up the river which bears his name to the present site of Albany. Two years later some Amsterdam merchants were given ft trading charter for New as New York was to be known. The first post was set up In 1613 on Manhattan; the second In 1614 at Fort Nassau on Castle island, south of the present Albany. Ten years later all Manhattan Island was purchased from the Indians for $23 worth of trinkets. Forty years later, in 1664, a British fleet demanded surrender of New Amsterdam, and Director-GenerPeter Stuyvesant found himself with little support. He capitulated, end the duke of York was granted the conquered land. "New York" became the new and lasting name. As years passed, more and more people flocked to the New World, many of them finding the rich lands of New York state to their liking. Hamlets, villages and cities sprang up, knit together with a network of aboriginal trails that eventually became roads and highways. Albany's geographic position, at the crossroads of the state, made it a key frontier settlement in the 17th century. Leads in Population. The battleground of Saratoga, Champlain valley. Fort Montgom- - The average growing season lars. WNU Features i jn..i'rfi;r"r. S 1 t J 2 TYPICAL NEW YORK SCENES . . . (Upper left), The largest single unit of its kind in the world, the grain elevator at Albany, with a storage capacity of 13.500,000 bushels, handles precious grain cargoes from the Great Lakps and the West via the Barge canal. (Upper right), Modern, scientific methods are applied to agriculture, as Indicated by this scene showing care of tomatoes In a greenhouse. (Center right), Historic spots stud the New York landscape. A far cry from atomic warfare are the ancient 18th century mortars and cannons at Fort Ticondrroga, defiantly poised to stop the Redcoats as they came northward on Lake George in stately procession of death. (Lower left). Farming Is big business In New York. This large farm In the upstate region Is one of the 153,238 farms throughout the state which are assessed at more than a billion dollars. New York City does not belong to New York state alone. It is the metropolis of all the states, the chief city of a nation. It is the largest, the richest, of all. Moreover, New York holds the same proud position relatively in the entire world. No other city has so large a population within equivalent boundaries. No other city in the world controls such great monetary wealth or buys and sells such quantities of com- modities. No other city handles as Rv periodical not li- given to poetic centlousness. f f called , Li 1 A "Demo- cracy's Monroe Doctrine," he probably didn't realize the multifarious effects ''If thereof. At this writing neither congress nor the country has quite recovered from the Impact of those Baukhage words read with undramatic, the matter-of-fac- t, diction of cracker-barre- l l. undramatic, a matter-of-facman. When cracker-barre- l I heard the President read them, standing there, calm and confident, at the lectern of the reading clerk on the house rostrum, looking up from the text only occasionally with tilt of his head, as the that bird-lik- e television cameras purred gently from the opposite gallery, I felt a little worried. The cabinet members seated in the well, the senators in the first rows of seats, the house members crowded into rows behind them all seemed almost glum. I didn't realize the solemnity of the message which held them in a restrained silence. Only thrice was there applause after he began to speak. Before and after there was plenty and it was evenly balanced, not weighted it was adminis-tratio- n heavily on the side of the party as it usually is when a President speaks. When the speech was over It was the same. The senators left In silence; there was little or no comment. As Senator Lodge said when a radio man plucked at his sleeve and asked if he would submit to an interview: "I can't think THAT fast." Even the fast and sound thinkers wanted time to think leisurely and deeply. Since that day thousands of words have been spoken and printed in thousands of cities all over the world, about that message which covers a tittle more than four and a half pages, typewritten (on both sides of the sheet since wartime economy still is practiced at the White House). In many odd corners of the bazaars and market places those words crackled like tiny electric sparks. And everywhere thoughtful, intelligent people in foreign countries those who had always looked upon America as a nation whose political and cultural outlook was most sympathetic to their political and cultural outlook, but whose economic theories pointed further to the right than their own socialistic leanings-ponde- red. These were people to whom Soviet Russia was primitive, harsh, cruel in its methods. Nevertheless Russia's economic theories differed less from their own than did the economic theories of the United States, whose civilized, friendly and humane characteristics attracted them. They found that they must choose. They must say to Russia or America: "Whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy people shall be my people; and thy ways shall be mine." Perhaps never before in history had a great nation so certainly divided the sheep from the goats, the friends from the enemies. The President's plan is more than a moral question. It involves more than abstract principles of political economy or social philosophy. It sets forth with shuddering simplicity to the wavering nations of the world the warning that they must run with the hare or ride with the hounds; they must have no other political god before Demos the spirit of the people. Either majority rules in your house or your house is ruled out of bounds. In other words, cabinets and cabinet makers, premiers and will no longer dance to the Kremlin's tune if they expect Uncle Sam to pay the piper or the butcher or the baker. unor-atorica- t, Commie Aim At Revolution Recently when Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach urged that the Communist party In America be banned by law it brought forth an emphatic protest from the secretary-genera- l New York Rates as Glamour City of Nation and World "New York City!" The words are magic. New York City means finer Jewelry, better places to eat, more entertainment, glamorous personalities, artists, writers, songs, the stage. Broadway and Fifth avenue, Times sauare. Wall street, Greenwich villege those names have charm and lure to dreaming youths in Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, even California. , WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. When Harry WASHINGTON. Truman enunciated what the Wall Tniirnal. a r.4 BARBS large a volume of foreign trade. No other city on this earth manufactures an equal volume or value of commercial articles The park area in New York City covers nearly 8,000 acres. Largest is Central park, covering 843 acres in the heart of the citv. World famed monuments and sculptures include the Statue of Liberty Grant s tomb, th Egyptian obelisk the Washing-toarch and man) others. n An automobile Is being built in Los Angeles whose aluminum body Is as smooth as an egg and almost the same shape. How will it look scrambled? e BONNER of the party, Eugene Dennis. What are the Communists aften The new Kiplinger magazine, published in Washington, says in its March issue: "As spelled out In their own words, American Communists have three major aims In the United overStates: The revolutionary throw of capitalism and the capitalist state, a Soviet form of government under a 'dictatorship of the proletariat and finally, the Coma collectiv-ls- t munist heaven-on-earteconomy leading to a classless society. "Of the three alms, their first is revolution. Not merely change, but revolution, planned, led and controlled by the disciplined Communist minority. 'The liberation of the working class from the yoke of capitalism cannot be effected by slow changes, by reforms, but only by revolution. " (Editor Kiplinger says if you want chapter and verse for his authority for the above statement, write to him at 1729 G Street, N. W., Washington 6, D. C, and he will send them to you.) It is not likely, however, that the party will be banned by law. Not because congress loves the Communists. But even that ardently anti-re- d group, the committee on activities, doesn't approve of wiping out the party. An anonymous member of the committee recently pointed out that if the party was broken up, it would simply go underground, where its devious ways would be harder to follow. A worm on the surface is worth two dozen underneath the soil as any early FBI bird will testify. CU,' LIVESTOCK IT O0O C. B. MIXED age ewes, 1400 same kind L. apr. S7uo C n yearlings this spring. CI.EO D p,? 1388 So. 6th East, Salt Lake ClV. S" thone Murray Una- - '' MIS CJELLAN EOUS ROLL Developed OverriiKhPsZr 2 High Gloss Prints each negativ. ? 41 3c each 25c. sizes, FOX STUDIOS Billin,., M,(U( OWNERS: Refinish voiirSr-- ' Blue or "Brown" guns, riflps "Temper" springs. Money saving facturer's secrets. $1 each, the fhti 'nrR P. CHUBB P.O. Bo 776. Walla Walla, Washl. GUN Si' WE BUY AND SELL Typewriter! lng Machines. Safes, Cash RegisiJ'.r' SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGP SS Weil Broadway. Rait Lake Ci'tj. Om! Office Fresh Apple in Bran Muffins! Wonderful! AUK mm W IN H0 TIM! Crunchy, toasted Kellogrg's and fresh apple taste Just dresmjl 2 tablespoons 1 cup Kelloert On the average, Vanishing Furniture, Files, For Your Future Buy U. S. Savings Bonds Increases in U. $4,-30- : & Aj.pu VENETIAN Bf Ivno ' STEEL & ALl MIl-Made to your order; Colors Ivory. Send lor free instruction 5Lt( ( blank. Factory to you. Bes Tonal?,''0' UTAH VENETIAN BLIn Wto So. Stat. St.. Salt LakV Life Insurance S. there were over 4 life insurance policies per family in the United States at the end of 1945, it is revealed in a survey by life insurance companies. In amount of life insurance owned, the average per family was $4,000 at mid-yea- r 1945. The average 1945 protection per family was more than 20 per cent larger than that of 1940 and was 2 times the 1920 protection average. The 1945 average per family of life insurance owned was nearly equal to the 1945 average income per family, the average per family of national income in 1945 being In 1920, the average protection per family was nearly 50 per cent below the average of national income per family. This gap was narrowed in the ensuing years, until in 1927 the protection average exceeded the income average. In the years of depression that followed, the protection average went as high as 2Vi times the income average. In 1943, as wartime incomes expanded, the income average again topped the protection average. EQJ & BED CEDAR KENrT; Sale by Carloads CEDAR CO.. Sand-.,- .. HOME FURNISHINGS h, full-fledg- r SON EQUIPMENT By BAUKIIAGE is f . shortening cup sugar All-Br- e 1 cup grated raw apple 2 cup milk cupsiftedfloar teaspoons baking powda teaspoon salt Blend shortening and sugar. Add en; beat well. Stir In apple, Kellogrt and milk. Let toak otM most of moisture U taken up. Add sifted dry Ingredients to first mixture. Btlr only until flour disappears. PU fulL greased muffin pan Bake In moderate oven (400 P.) about 30 minutes. Makes 12 muffla YouH want to make them often. All-Bra- n, two-thir- ' Good I Tool Nutrition, ia I made from the I VITAL OUTER LAYERS of finest j wheat j daily as mm serve cereal YOU can have a Crane with SEED TERRY-MORS- E DETROIT 31 CO. SAN FRANCISCO M WHOOPING CRANE This Illustration of a Whoop Ing Crane was supposed to accompany gome remarks on that fast - disappearing species of American bird life that appeared in this column recently. Unfortunately the picture, like most of the originals, went astray. Since that article appeared, two national magazines published storis about this magnificent bird, whose whoop Is becoming falnur and fainter every day. One article estimated that only a hundred specimens were stilt alive and The other article whooping. placed the number at 29. Says the Fish and Wildllre service of the department of the Interior, which Is conducting survey of these, the tallest (mar-sizr- ) and most beautiful of American birds; "fewer than 40" have been, counted. They ar In the coast region of southern Louisiana and Texas. GIRLS! WOMEN! try this if you're On "CERTAIN DAYS' Of Montb-- WNU W May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Uedtni lift whk Its harry l"tiJZ Improper dri.kins iu risk of Mpoture uH i tlaa throve heavy itrain on tM", I the kidneys. Tbpy are spt lrrrulr btbiu. over-tiie- d Rats in Los Angeles cheese bait but they fall fluve he Hollywood rodents ht ,! probably sisting on orchids A chimpanzee in the Oregonians, according to Business Uk a sho, Week, are going to school to learn very other day. A)chol how to make tourists happy. More of nian-wsmiles per gallon? win it . mi, Seya, aid fall to filter sad otber Impurities from the by Baukha .hS C"'J h8t Do female functional monthly disturbances make you feel nervous, JrrttM to weak and tired out at such tlme Then do try Lydla E. Plnkham'' VT table Compound to relieve such WW toms. It's turnout lot thUl Taken regularly Plnkham'a Compound W build up resistance ai?ainst sucn oir treai. Also a great stomachic tonicl "JfS Mv blood. . ... Von may suffer srtn bsadaehe. dl.xl.MS. fetting ig p.im, swelling fe tlivd, nervous, sll worn out. Other" of kidney er bladder disorder times burning, scanty of too " urination. t. pilU. Doa Try nsrmful Hdntys to pass off wests. They hsvs bed more tr.es eontury of public spprovsl. s'errw" JlLi, ended by grsteful users Aik your neipfefcorf Pd, Mi r'll |