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Show ).S a. ml Elrt--- - ..'.:"! . THE BEAVER PRESS. BEAVER, UTAH r WWWW' . ! . r ; v Pegler WProk Features. 1 "leased I,, mm nart that a i.tice normally takes su- ui h.,T with hac rFLIX FRANKFURTER " WIre by WNU Q W t . s social .uj . u . :llonal in'". lifo nt m"drton, there would be no f1,." u: !,,niipnce on the charol Vand the political direction horn at government, 'American f - " ',La eatk no written A re- - JUS-ii- " ",,t UEMENT FORBIDS I r r TO DO ANY OF THE DID. j'SGS FRANKFURTER rif?ht to plant his pro- stooges or political jmsey" -a MEWl tJK It and ideological agents wherever he He had a could. legal right to plant them in the war where department he finally did put his old friend. Henry L. Stimson, - as secretary at the age of 73, first jos? tling Harold Ickes i frank Murphy out of the way. to recom-i?n- 4 He had a legal right and see to the placement of ifn ho were, to his mind and for f vaiuauie seimms ui lis purposes, t government in me siaie uepan-pnand in the agencies which sohitelv rule the radio industry com- ode a poly saturated with J?'- CL BUS 3 RIGHT '(, Vint, 3LE.Gt0.JiP l ll. Uh e jnism. AND bat such was and unbecoming. And, standards of many by? the Americans, it was unetnicai. FRANKFURTER WAS A JUDGE p TO HIS EYES IN POLITICS. He had this right, iBierferenre certainly SFtT PUSHING, WAS E un-ssa- al SHOVING, tBO'.VIXG INTO BUSINESS tHAT WAS NO PROPER AFFAIR FAN'Y MAN SITTING ON THE PREME COURT. Foreign rela- were none or nis ousiness. was none of his busi- ar mm ',1 Hersfiey's Draft Plans JOT all the details have IS THERE been yet. but released officially Lewis Hershey. selective service director, gave a brief report on draft plans to a closed-doo- r session of the senate-hous- e armed services committijes recantly. He told the solons that the selective service machinery would be ready to process the first batch of draftees by October 15. but estimated the second call would not come before January 1. Hershey told the senators and congressmen there was strong pressureat that time to start drafting first, since they were not ready to settle down and would be less likely to be upset by army service. The two armed services committees, however, argued the opposite Unanimously they agreed that the 24- - and should be taken before they passed the eligible age. This was later decided. The selective service boss estimated that 9,000,000 youths were available for the draft, but only 1,380,000 would be eligible under the loophole-riddle- d plan for deferments. Of those who will be caught, the bulk are under 22 since many of those over 22 served in the recent war. The number eligible for the draft in each age group was broken down by Hershey as follows: 8,000; -1 N s s 4 v i i i i FACE TO FACE AT LAST . . . Although each was afraid the other might steal the show. President Truman and Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York plucked up their courage and shook hands smilingly alien they met for the first time since they were nominated by their respective parties. The occasion of their meeting was the dedication of New Vork'a new Idlewild airport, largest in the world, and the air show was good enough to make them both forget politics. 1 475,-00- - i i Race for Uranium Most encouraging sign on the horizon is what the Russians now are doing in Saxony. e uranium deposits in this southern Gerfound are strategy an intimate social man state and the Russians ss.: He was have been working feverishly to and ideological comrade of velt and an avowed partisan mine them. They have been us much of Roosevelt s violent pni- ing a great deal of labor and Tjnumr icprv of government. going to great lengths to scrape Mum The sly, insolent up this uranium, which is so Expose low grade that in Canada it power of Frank- .' r J ,1 1 furter in directing would be ignored. 0f . i the destiny of the The fact that the Russians are iccfica United States never taking all this trouble over such V v- y ' f - Sa iri sjtei spotted by a better author-- j poor quality uranium in Germany 4an Ickes, whose expose of this obviously means only one thing: REVIEWING STAND IN ISRAEL Government heads of the Jewish undercover agent never- - They don't have any worth-whilstate of Israel are shown on the reviewing stand taking a salute from 1es his unnoticed. almost gone f uranium of their own in Russia. the passing troops during the big military parade that marked "Nation in pulled the whiskers off Frank- jrter-- h:s Day" in Tel Aviv, capital of the new Jewish state. Left to right are friend, by the way in Minister of Finance Kaplan; Premier David Ben Gurion; Brigadier fea itutallment of his commercial- Corporation Gravy Jakob Dori, chief of staff, and Minister of Labor Bentov. ad memoirs in the Saturday Eve- While the cost of food to the H!J Post. housewife has zoomed, here is In this piece Ickes writes that what has happened to the dividends 1 ?rank?'.;rter elbowed I him out of of big corporations. , I V1 . , f? she c;T.ce The figures were presented reof secretary of war, Democratic pick Roosevelt was in a mood to cently by to him Sen. Joe O'Mahoncy of Wyoming, as compiled from official reports: The enormity of this is that Profits of 100 corporations after Frankfurter, a justice of the taxes: supreme court, was scurrying H 1940 SI. 875,000,000. wound v-tf- e go last t lobbying and running y Low-grad- H J jbltMHwe KfitW. i 1 ''ji BEANS SPILLER . . . Elizabeth Bentley, who says 6ho headed a huge Communist 6py ring in the U. S., told a senate investigation subcommittee that she gathered secret military and political information from some 50 government employees. th i myseif k s end bof 1945 government. 'man who served with Frank- JJrttr in one of the bureaus in iroduct'it Washington in World War I told 3ut tie' e rot Idi! z ago that Frankfurter 3 into ic said to him and some associates that he envisioned a situation a which a small group of influ- It ifcb. by audacity and initi- J. Itia. tectial men, aUtCES!JV, could become the rulers of n ingrwiifi 4 United States by ruling the A 7 M 3.'. irVA 194753.730,000,000. O'Mahoney also cited a Federal Reserve Board report, stating that business profits this year will exceed the dizzy high of 1947. Pointing to individual corporations which btve shared in this bonanza, he recomported that General Electric expany now is making profits in cess of 20 per cent of net worth, General Motors, 19.9 per cent, U. S. rdsofr1 president 10 per cent. it hast Certainly id world War II and Steel. The 1947 profits of General Elecfat feme time before this nation r cerua were paid, were times tif formally entered the war, Frank-fjrte- r tric, before taxes iddencfive times greater than its 1939 profdid wield power over Roosevall otc elt and 'he more important its, O'Mahoney charged. HIS INFLUENCE WAS Meanwhile, he declared, wage in- t looses KERTF.n HY SUBTLETY. have been obliterated by creases HE risis'i: BAD HIS costs, as evidenced inflated ALL MEN living PLANTED nobiie OVER THK Ulcil DV IOC PLACE. UU 3. And Ickes tells us ers are paying 37 billion dollars elpllfc Jockey that on November more for what they buy this year I for than in 1940. 21, 1939, Tom Corsmontl known also coran, Position I took1 a Cwi, the mien1 Tnmmv . r. i ... "I wonder," VOTER quipped President Truman in Independence, Mo., when an election worker asked him if he was a Democrat or a Republican as he went to vote In the Missouri primary election. o wppniB f1 'j the ilf! IBilW detartmpnt?" lies dc n't say so, but I say wt Frankfurter shoved Murphy ju t a hen Murphy thought it wa., gojng to make him of war. This was Mur-grc- n J'vy But Franker ree pr ized in him a itubborn. Irishman who particular-- ? i.at.d ?h English for their Wnitmr,s of the Irish and n t send them American if thpy got int0 war wUh Hit. ior anymp eise. Frankfurter tne'ln- Tan wh0 would 80 out aoot-ve- there-wouli- so' at poo? vttit' !tti ,,e that apprehended I,p he able to get along Murphy and handle him J"1 fvcm, have borne him out urphy nw nalpi hlg vfrT for doing him out of tha Mn'i Till" TIM. itnALTOGETHER, MU- - ANI. Visitors who called on President Truman at the White House after congress opened, found the chief executive hopping mad at some of his top executives. He was parof ticularly irate with Secretary UnderRoyaU. Kenneth the Army H. secretary of the Army William chief of the and army's Draper staff. Gen. Omar Bradley. Mr. Truman said he was fed for op with Royal! and Draper their sabotage of White Hous. of repolicies. Draper's policy exbuilding Germany at the Secand of her neighbors pense retary RoyalUs Inept handling of army racial discrimination had got under his skin. Thn President was more hurt than angry at the way his fellow had Missourian, General Bradley, reaffirmed segregation and the 24 hours after army caste system had issued his commander-in-chie- f segreorder curbing an executive gation. I AT,,, . One JJtS out-tid- " tLTn renon " e J, r 4 VHf' ! V 1. f . i - t 5: w '1 i 4- last track is 35. for weeks. longer jSTo 5 J Conslipalcd n "Sine I made my breakfast cereal I've stopped taking laxatives!" Mrs. V. DeDonis, Fhiladcl-phiAIX-bra- a. "1 realized then," Paddock told me, "that as we are developed today, we ure capable of handling only so much speed. 1 mean our muscles and our ligaments. In the course of evolution and develop. ment someone will run the 100 yards in 9 flat. But not now." This was proved when Mel Pat ton ran 100 yards in 9.3 and wound up later with cramps. Patton was moving into the danger zone, due entirely to excessive speed over a hard, fast track. He was finding out what Paddock had discovered years before. "How does this sound?" I asked Jacobs. "It sounds 100 per cent sensible," Jacobs said. "You can't drive either horses or humans over fast, hard tracks Into records without paya ing the penalty. Which breakdown. What do the owners want a record or a sound horse? Jacobs claimed Stymie for some thing like $1,500 and turned him into a million-dolla- r probability. The racing game is packed with, fine trainers. We could start with Ben and Jimmy Jones. We could bring you Maxie Hirsch, certainly one of the greatest. We could call on Sunny Jim who knows horses better thun horses know . themselves. A great trainer. There is Honest John Partridge, who has been a fine trainer for 50 years. Most of Ben Jones, these are veterans Fitzsimmons, Hirsch, John Part ridgeable, smart, can take you back more years than you can FiU-simmo- Pa. 11 your diet lacks hulk for normal elimination, this 5"v ' . I delicious cereal will stippy it. Eat v an ounce eyery I day in milk and f drink plenty of water. If not sat- f isfied after 10 days, send the if r empty carton to the Kcllocg Co., Battle Creek, Mich., and get ixum.B YOUR MONEY BACK. Order KELLOUC'S today. ALL-bh- an Yodora ch ccks perspiration I.:. - 1 WS odor ',3 THE OaaqfXEi WAY Made with a jace cream Lute. Yodora is actually $oolhmg to normal tkini. Ne harsh chemicals or irritating salts. Won't Lara skin or clothing. Stay soft and creamy, nerer gets grainy. Try oen&e Yodora fed the wondnrful a difference! remember. .4 Young Trainers Are Good There are any number of younger on the Job Johnny Gaver of Greentree; S. E. Veitch of C. V, Whitney, one of the best, and sev' eral more. But I also like the training methods of Jacobs, who wins his share of races without any In $50,000 or $G0,000 investments young talent. Jacobs is a condition man. Condition to me means so much more than anything else. A champion must have many things. But above all he must have condition. Joe Louis had little condition in either his first or second Joe Walcott Walcott kept in condition. fight. But he was a second-rat- e fighter. As a result, Louis, rated one cf the best of all the heavyweights, was far behind Walcott after 23 consecutive rounds. When Louis' legs began to put on weight you knew what happened. He was far over the top. "Condition," Jacobs tells me, "isn't a matter of pigeons, horses or human beings. I've trained pigeons and horses. Human beings would be just the trainers jJUtfck .,niirmtMtz&tsm;""i:' m.mma. IT'S ALL PLANE TO HIM NOW . . . Practically any airplane scemi mammoth like big to a small boy, but when you come up against David this the total effect Is almost overwhelming. Bonvouloir of Washington, D. C, Is completely nonplussed by the tremendous bulk of this new navy airliner, a Lockheed Constitution, recently christened and opened for public Inspection. Ten-year-o- FULLERETTE . . . There something new under the sun a Fuller Brush woman, commercially known as a Fullerette. This one is Mrs. Rae Iliter of Springfield, Mass., first woman in II. S. to be appointed by a dealer to sell line of cosmetics and soap. A L' 3";, ' fit: -- r uii'. 4'- ? ; - , ; ' v . same." 5 . Spaat: Speaks aT cm" 01 slJ" "" "" Tooev" Spaatz rcureu "Tii, iivsteria WIIICE .rmv was that he felt he could dc FOR LAW THESE on the the air force more good he now is first time, For the fiis.ullsand that after a lot of preparing to speak his mind feartrimming lessly in a flood of magaiir-- and Kc, &aUalIyPl'tical Wcnt 80 ,ar to w l articles. " n.rn he would make him newspaper restricof war if he could find JT-t-.Unhampered by military will tell bluntly row 10 tions. Spaatz replace him hou.d meet the 5e thinks America interior. r. threat of another IVIII V J a Limit on Speed l ha Cabinst Pains President nf thp pntir ' ''Set 0( ha: v hot Hnire ien tl rama tn note1 kim Ullins! of a conversation he had with Roosevelt. He said he had sair) say, tn Rrvwpvplt thai rrank Murphy is going ft su,- reiT.e court, how about r J'l vv: w-- j tremely sore and strained." And don't forget that Paddock had two of the strongest looking legs anyone ever saw on a track star. IWMtllOK ! K tjf a picnic. of You can build wonderful pieces of lawn furniture at very low cost. The calves of both legs were ex t Ji-'l- vr ( "I couldn't run again g $1,943,000,000. thrill dangerous. It has wrecked many fine horses. I would J . v V, say mere is a umu ttirtiil.-- '' to how fast a horse s can run before he Tup. At set illustrated above was cracks up. tspe- - The built from patterns. These patterns take all the mystery out of J1 records over a hard. the full T 7 fc track " . . . woodworking. Each shows for cutting and size, length shape This reminded Wherever two parts Grantland Rice me of a story that each part. fastened are together, the exact Paddock Charley location is indicated on the patonce told. "Just at the time," the World's tern. Step by step directions exFastest Human said, "I was at my plain every part of construction in peak. I had just tied the world's easy to understand language. record at 9 35. I knew I could do Making a home is traditionally better. I was set that day at Los American. The strength of the Angeles in a Southern California country rests oh the people who have built a home for themselves meet. I broke in front. I was fly and their families. Building lawn ing at the 50. furniture or any other home equipmark I "Around the ment is not difficult. You can do knew I was headed for at least it if you try. Each pattern is a 9.1 for the 100 yards. I knew designed so that no special tools the record was mine. Then the or skill are required. Build this calves of both legs began to lawn set for immediate use. shiver. I felt all my leg muscles pulling apart. The thought Send 35 cents for Lawn Settee PatPattern No. 55 to Easi-Bil- d suddenly hit me that I was on tern company, Dept. W., Pleasant-ville- , my way to being a cripple. I felt my legs were breaking up N. Y. over this hard, fast track. I pulled up aud still finished ia 9 e plain-talkin- turn your backyard into a . rd - v t. 635,000. atomic-energ- s aS 22,000; . picnic ground. You'll be agreeably surprised to see what fun dining out can be. Food takes o an added zest when flavored with the - L 15,000; 19,000 ; 222,000; f4 BLEACHERITE . . . It's ft far cry from the cloistered dignity of ihe United Nations to a sod pop epree in the stands of the Olymplo games, but Trygve Lie, U. N. secretary-genera- l, seems happy about iU r porch, terrace or MAKE your nn nntrlnnr living room T is ' or the equine frame carry just so much drive before it starts to crack? We put this query to Hirsch Jacobs, one of the finest condition ers in any sport, one of the best horse trainers of any given decade. "To set a record," Jacobs said, "one must have a fast track. That means a hnrd track. FT-fw-r-Cpttini rprnrrts nn s A a limit to speed for a Lawn Furniture Can Be Made at Very Low Cost V- v - t f. . , V 'j J et- - ifir lJ f achool wnlors rrom 45 RINK INSUBORDINATION . . . Ninety high to study forum American third annual Legion the attended states government operation In Washington. During the course of their tour to see the army actup, and Chief of tney visited the Pentagon building for them. Billy "Ray CJark of Jonese sat himself np Staff Omar Bradley horo, Ark., named "secretary of the army" by the forum' even got a 1:it from the general. NEW CHAMPION . . . Freddie Mills, England's contribution to the leather pushing trade, upset all the dope when he won the championlight heavyweight ship from Gas Lesnevich on points. "What are the main qualities?" I asked. "Too many things," Jacobs said. "The amount of work they need. Food. Rest. I'll take up horses. You watch a horse. You watch the way he runs. He may be overworked. He may need more work. These are the things to look for. "No one is ever quite alike," Jacobs said, "I mean a human being, pigeon or horse. Each case must be accorded individual ofUFE?cii Are you rolng through tho functional 'middle age' period peculiar to women (36 to 52 yn.)T Does this ciuke you suffer from hot flashes, feel to nervous, Blghirtruni?, tired? Thea do try Lydta E. Mnkbam's Vegetable Compound to Teller such symptoms. Pink ham's Compound io has what Doctors call a stomachic tonlo eSect! LYD1A It L PiNKKAM'S cowwm And Your Strength an4 Energy Is Delow Par may be catwe4 by (Unorder of kid-ae- y function that permit poitonoua to accumulate. For truly many yeuple feel tired, week and ntiaeraale whra the kldnrya fail te raiT exrrn aeida and rtaar waste matter Ireai the klood. Yoa may aufer barrtnt; beckirke, rhearaatie paini, headachia, dizzineae, op nighta, leg paina, welling, pttinf nometieice frequent ana nnenty urinaer tion with martlur and kureinr, ie i ten tbat enmetkiuf ie ru( wnk Ibe Wrlneye or bladder. There aheuld be ao doubt tkat pre Dipt treatment la wiser tbaa Deflect, tee Dun l rtllt. It ia better te rely on nedirln that baa won eonatrywide ap- on aomethiaf lem favorably troril tkea Ova'! kav been tned and tailed maay yeara. Are at ail Aru eteraa. Oat Voan t today. utl |