OCR Text |
Show THE MURRAY EAGLE, MURRAY, UTAH i 0 In These United States In the beginning, however, the observance was neither a "month" nor was It June. In 1937 the dairy industry promoted a national milk week for November 14 to 20 In an effort to sell more milk and Ice cream. Everyone was urged to purchase an extra quart of milk on Friday of that week. It was not until Trade Idaho Spuds For Rica Bancnas The fast BOISE, IDAHO. on the Caribbean run, which bring bananas to the United States, take Idaho potatoes back to Costa Rica, aayi C. 0. Rice, Idaho adverwho visited tising commission, Central America recently. Idaho housewives who buy Costa Rican bananas as soon ai they arrive have nothing on the women of Central America who await shipments of Idaho potatoes just as eagerly. Rice checked several shipments of the potatoes and found that they s arrived at Costa Rica In condition and the trade there bought them up the minute they were put on the market. first-clas- ,,,, ... , - ...u.,.. ,mmm. 4 V mr t i:7 SKI BILLETS . . . White hickory, used for making Norwegian sklis, grows la Florida, the tropical playground state, J. S. Adklaon of Ocala, Fla., Is shown sizing up ski "billets" before shipping to Norwegian manufacturers. "A If that once." Elizabeth did not suspect that when he heard her say that he had nearly burst out sobbing with defeat. He had been so sure, back In 1918, that when he gave her the chance to start over It was the chance to build for permanence. Now he had no consolation to give her, or to give himself nothing but a desperate courage. There was nothing to do but go on telling her what he had already tried to tell her: that in the final analysis life consisted mostly of doing things one did not want to do, and the only way to keep any through the whole wretched business was to look squtirely at what had to be done and then go ahead and do It. Now he had to tell Dick the same thing, Not tell him to go to war, that Dick was ready to do; but he could understand from the boy's awkward little letter that now Dick wanted to be told what it was all about. It would be so much simpler If Dick could be left with the idea that it was merely a matter of killing Japs and Germans before they AIRPORT CHATTER airpark has been approved and licensed at Plainwell, Mich. . . . Use of Lamesa field, Lamesa, Texas, as a municipal airport for that city has been allowed on a temporary basis. . . . Some 48 CAA towers are now guarding the 131,9 megacycle for private flyers and the number will be increased to 100 by June 1. . . . Remember, July 1 Is the deadline for the annual inspection of aircraft by the CAA. Owners or operators of uninspected aircraft will be subject to penalties of the civil air regulations after that date . , . Howard W. Sinclair. who is been with CAA since 1942, has been appointed assistant administrator for aviation training. . . . Col. Fred M. Glass, wartime chief of stall for the Pacific division, ATC. has been appointed vice president in charge of PCA's southern region. A municipal killed. Kessler turned to his typewriter, the paper with his thumb and forefinger while he turned the platen with the other three fingers, made steady by the pressure of his palm. He wrote: holding I Students of meteorology, cloud formations and other aeronautical subjects at the Midlothian elementary school, Tlnley Park, Chicago, are given a plane ride by Lester Palmer, their teacher. & yf "V: f IJO YEARS OLD . . . Not the Irl above, but the city of Cleveland, Ohio. Mary Dublin, blue-eye- d and 21, has been crowned Sesqulren-tennla- l Queen to rdtn over Cleve-lan150th birthday anniversary this year. d't SOLOS BY ITSELF! Fremont, Nebr., recently a pilotless plane took off by Itself when Its engine was left running. For nearly three hours It flew over Nebraska and finally landed 42 miles from Its take-of- f point with only a damaged wing and tail and a broken propcllor and Its gas tank empty. At OWNS AN AIR FORCE Paul Mantt, a Californlan who learned to fly abut 20 years ago, owns more airplanes than any of the smaller nations! His 509 planes make him the seventh largest air BERKELEY. CALIF. In the ttcstern part of the United States, power In the world. He recently 475 surplus planes from the the average young woman Is S feet, S. government, but plans to m Jnchci taU and weighs IZl U. cut his fleet down to about 1 10 pounds, while ti e average male Is I fret, m Inches In height and j planes. Taul holds the world's out- side loop record 45 In sueces-slon- , ci.dt 153'4 pounds His planes are used for speThese avcrscei were gathered In cial trips of all kinds. I measurement survey by Dr. Thco-- i re D. McCown, University of Pilot I .raws field r.ilif nia anthmpulugist for Via The Gettysburg. S. D., city coun. ?' it i!il!tee on rth"t!e devices ef cil has given mnnaermen! of the '.ht National Research council. "Die municipal landing field, south of averse itudy was made to to Bob Clark, rm and leg measurements, ai d standard ita'.istlfl obtained will l I um-- J In the improvement nf Collcqo Students Taller than GIs - pur-chas- y te artl-ScLi- li'iil'ii. lliff I.ontf )oinj women meaure.J ete e lleee ihtdentt and WAVKS Men rneamired included 8"X) srl-i- ! tti and sailnri, 700 collett 3i mski from the tm. r t ti'ult:nn. Greater rol-eg- 'Sailors Have a Girl in Every ' CHICAGO. - A lnl SOI IU K ItOOK FOR I LTI R$ pi'Jt In teaching K.tu. "Aviation aviation to Education Source Ho. k," prepared under dl ttrth rf Dr. Taul R Hsnna, Stan, ford university, for CAA is flow eval1at le.lt contains !.40 tars and rnoie than l.otffl rhntcgrapts. Ha It eetts 13 00 a copyl ? ly !ip PI PI K PA II . . . Carries three pawxrngrrs. Has 100 hp molar and rrulalng speed of 100 U 105 mph, A Woejatfcet a randy tore and twilight It boxes ef randy. He kfl lnlra ttnnt U bate ihrtn rnl It difrrrrnt In all parts of the ', ft. w WVa he stkrd If It's Use that Mill "fets a girl la eery port," fce grlnnrj but fceiKommllUL staled "Don't get too discouraged about your country, Dick." Your friend, ERICH KESSLER. Ize, because we are Individuals and we can't think except In terms of Dick .;f Twenty students are enrolled It the Bltit Iratnlnj mtir at the Inltersily f Arkanas, the eenrxe Im hides blh grnund ork and fl g ht training, li lit fn i jtuyi i Ma-rln- mm an M? x 0v I I I - im I se several of the most powerful nations of the world, people were actually asking one another If any commonwealth was benefited by keeping part of Its citizens In compulsory degradatioa In cases where they were still doing so as with the Ne- groes in this country they were ashamed of It and made excuses for It. The march toward human freedom seemed to be going along very welL But then, certain persons, more farslghted perhaps than their neighbors, looked ahead and saw what we were headed for. The result was a long, long way ahead, so far ahead that most of us never thought about it, but for those who did visualize it the very suggestion was so dangerous, such a threat to all nations and all established institutions, that something simply had to be done to stop the march, and quick." "Gosh, go on!" exclaimed Dick. "What's that suggestion you're talking about?" "Can't you see It? It's very logicalsimply the suggestion that It a country could be Improved by releasing the talents of Its people, might not the world be Improved by releasing the talents of all Its peoples? That's a terrible idea." "Why?" Dick asked with ingenuous defiance. Dlckl "Don't be so simple-mindeWhy, that contradicts everything we're used to. It takes away our colonies. It drives us out of places d where we've Invested our the that It means money. coolies no longer have any respect for their betters. It makes us acknowledge we are no longer called of God to meddle with the private lives of the heathen. It turns us upside down and flattens us out and leaves us no better than anybody else." Dick considered this, slowly and soberly. At length he said, "I believe I get it." He turned it over In his mind atTin, then ventured, "It means "all men are created free and equal, endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights It means all Not Just us. Everybody." "Most of the important facts of life are very simple, once you make up your mind to look for them, but they're often very hard to accept. Like that business of loving your neighbor as yourself, for instance it's very difficult to admit that he's as much worth loving as yourself. Most of us hate nothing so much as an idea that threatens our good opinion of ourselves. We don't like owning up to it that if the earth belongs to us, it also belongs to the Chinese coolies." Dick began to laugh suddenly, then he sobered again. "Cherry said once that Mr. Wallace thought this war was being fought for the coolies. We laughed when she said It It sounded preposterous. But you mean it really is?" "Why yes, though not many of us are willing to admit It But that's what we mean when we say we're fighting for human freedom." "This country Is still uncertain." said Kessler, "because It has gone Into the war on the side of history. The people know It's the right side, they're fighting valiantly for victory, but they're frightened at what victory will mean," "It will mean?" Dick stopped. "That Americans will have to go on. marching through more blood and pain toward a goal they are not sure they can bear to reach. You are fighting for the coolies, Dick, not because you give a damn what becomes of the coolies but because you care great deal about what becomes of yourself. You don't dart not to fight for them. They've come so close to you that what happens to them touches you already, and will touch your children even more. Don't stop to think of this now U Ifi too much. I know It's terrifying. Co on and fight for your country. That's what is being asked of you now," "I want to think about It" said Dick. "But you don't think fm a dope because I'm-w- cU, kind of shocked, Co you?" Kessler laughed Unit. "Of course not It's the most shocking conception that has shaken the mlnJs of men and women since they were aked to belJeva that on the other side of the earth people were walking upside down. you ttid you weren't shocked by It, shouldn't believe you." Dick rambled among his own thoughts for a moment. At lcnJ he Inqui.-cd- , "How did you come'la think of 3 this?" "I as pretty badly hurt in the last war," Kessler answered frank, ly. "When a mart's lie Is so violently changed, ht bas to da i hi of thinking. At Cm I thouhl ln terms of Individuals, each learnine to manage bis cwn problems. But when hell broke bote again 1 bad to itart thinking all over, not jn terms of individuals only fcut terms of the human race Ain ENMDIO t Singleton Lake hit New York they just never stopped going; the stars of the movie's "Blondie" series and the CBS Sunday show are popular young people, and some of the season's nicest parties were given for them. "I haven't seen anything of New York, really," said Penny. "And what do you think happened to me? I gave my clothes to the hotel valet to press, and I guess 'Dagwood' r M i TO us cosrivtxn, thd,lcla''-pattern ' that g ivei ,nd materials, each piece ai5 steps. The seat Inches high and This lawn lV 253; and adultl.01, tern 209. PaUcnS sr. ordeVwith & mZM nanVM MRS. Rl'TH WYErailj Bedford li Is, N. I. H 4 Enrlnss I! n..l.,'. 25 cenU for iM Name Address ' ' r'if? Nil Moon 1 PENNY SINGLETON did my black crepe dress; it was pressed up and down instead of across, so now it's a lot longer than it was, and so tight that I look just like a sausage in it!" But with that cute face and wide smile, nothing could spoil her looks. "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again" and think of Ray Mil-lan- FormatiJ While hundreds of fons the moon, such a tains and seas. hav tJ and renamed in the pasta ou oniy or these names k retained. . 200 of th.v i,.Jj lv used havmerO hem 'man, the Italian"vv.uastroid VliliJtl cioii, m 1(351. 0 When you see Faramount's "The Imperfect Lady," look at the driver of the carriage In which Teresa Wright and Virginia Field ride. He's George Jenner, who was carriage footman to Queen Victoria for two years, 1892 to 1894, the period In which "The Imperfect Lady" Is set. He met arriving foreign potentates and conducted them to Buckingham palace. So It's practically type casting. wh IT d. The world seems to be his jfcotj ol smell iJ tone 4 fcif ol to: Tie Only since he made "Lost Week-End,- " but he made three trips from London to Hollywood before he finally hit his stride as a film actor. StOlKiSl For a brief Shakespearean episode with Sonny Tufts and Michael Chekov in "Cross My Heart" Paramount rented a set from John Car-radlwhich he Is reported to have purchased for $50. Paramount paid Carradine $400 a week. ne 'CetO'SullivanSOlBtA When George Bums and Grade Allen take their summer vacation-Ju- ne 6 to August 29 Meredith Will-io- n will carry on for the summer, with the King Sisters and Ben Gage Heels next shtts time pi repaired. THiypuuii a swav v Invest in YourCocC Buy U.S. Saving r, l4 dht4 l- fi !:'"i wi AS FASILY A5 A TELEPHONE" 1 y """i UiVl rW r1 t Penny WHEN Arthur tli. i UJ3 a suxnnure and vrX is often used bl1 STAGE'SCRE steaij of an otw Released by Western Newspaper Union, By VIRGINIA VALE ourselves." "I guess It didn't," Dick acknowl-edge"But Mr. Kessler, what's $ that got to do with us?" If you're Interested In the career "Don't get too discouraged about of a prospective Warner Bros, star, your country, Dick. The United don't xn seeing Dorothy Maione States has a standard It's trying to in "Janle Gets Married"; she'i one live up to of course you haven't of eight players being reached what you're aiming at, but groomed for stardom. She also has a leading role you're closer than you used to be. In "Cry Wolf." In which Errol Look back and you can see the idea Flynn and Barbara Stanwyck atar. coming slowly, painfully, cruelly, but always on the march. The Irene Rich, who makes her first American Revolution was part of It film appearance after five and the French Revolution another years' absence from the icrecn In Renublic'i part They went as far as they The Angel and the Outlaw," owns could, but not as far as the Idea wss and operates 1.000 acre ranch near destined to go. The American RevoSan Bernardino, Calif. lution was war for liberty, but It didn't finish the fight haven't you You'll see Ann Richards walk up ever read about the howls that went a staircase, turn and go out of up in this, country, long after the light In "The Searching Wind." That was Revolution, at the suggestion of free the last shot of the day, and the public schools for all children?" company ganged up on her; DiDick shook his head. "I thought rector Willism Dieterle asked her to they always wanted schools In this do it once more. So up the stain country." and out of view went the blonde "Not for everybody. There wctt Then she came back, and found star. opponents who said compulsory that while she was on her way up would break schooling up the home the whole company had Quietly by taking children away from their beat It iarcnts and putting them under Control of the state. There were others BUI Edwsrds recently Introduced who .nJ it would destroy the orhis screen self to hit fiancee. Hard dained order of society by making Allen-to- ok her to a Paramount the working classes dUsaiisfied with fraction room where "Our Hearts Ute position la which God had t herd Were Yming and Gay" was them. Dut the schools earr.e, run ft And she confessed thai being were of she'd Uicy part the current Rone to set the picture some lime toward human equality." go, afvr a hard dsy at ht doc"Gee," said Dick, "You know, tor's tmce where ihe'i an ukistant, The you're encouraging. place Is but couldn't remember anything getting better, tsn'l It?" bout It; seemi the slept right "Cf course it Is. Whenever you're through it! templed to btl.cve it bn't, you might 4 remember that it was in 1BT0, a Frank l!ead r k tM ihis ore at a grtod deal kis than a hundred years vrlmt hnrUit" rchrariai, Two ti. it the Slate of Masiachusciu Uii 1h .har.u at the were crouched i bailed as an enlightened leader back to back. Wnen a Jhlrd cf it :rcis when the kfiuUre Joined them ht was told to elephant go away I.i:-- e4 a law that children under brcauM they were playing, flaying twelve should not be UocJ to woik hat h Kkrd. Why, bo, endsl in factories more than ten hours per day." C,;,er, D.ck nodded slowly, 'Tm begin hing to sec it" lie wtir.kled his to Otn rft , tfU.fi mt4-Thr. if forehral and enclalmed, "But right gjj , J fm), i t Dick was silent lit UW? -low, don't mind telling you, that to MrW, , hrf pUr ,u hirme tig idea sure Is up againt lot" -t, contemplating on uit Worl fiwlMirtf's, Ittlhrt in mH Kessler nodJed too, In agreement tnd himself again, finally ht t mr r.;,- - , , . s,,,nt (tVlW, "S ippe.ie I try to tell you why in "WelL I'm going to s'.irk to trt iw(n hit rt,n( Mrnt ri up agairit ad much right now. on country a while. 1 ykt Ameri. 'nn"t- cans and you can , lay ht plea.e but by and large t ja mnk lh ,M f AUn UMt "1 i h you would." dm, . . . ,Wra iheyre more decent than uPr few years ago pie. 'Well, you ee, TV"" ' ""h t""thi " U 0 e Ilea hm,4 i far that in jrrme rHm,.M d. te-tau- d!Tcr-ene- were amor.f the students than amor the sul d rrs and ti. College studmu were about we Inch taller and two and i.f r p undi heavier than rr il. tary peri wtl. Ice-rin- eon-fessc- d slu-an- il My Dear Dick, Can you come around Sunday afternoon about three? Margaret is learning to skate and will be at the k with her playmates, so we can count on not being Interrupted. I'll be very glad to see you. arrived at ten minutes to three. They did not waste any time on preliminary courtesies. Dick had a lot to ask and he immediately started asking It. '"You see." said Dick. 'Tm Just about to be eighteen, and as soon as I'm eighteen I'll get Into the service. Maybe I'll Join up before then. I kind of like the Marines. That's okay I'm not saying I'd Join the if there wasn't a war, but Uiere Is a war, so that's what you do, the Marines or whoever will have you. But there are some things" He hesitated. "The day of Pearl Harbor 1 was so mad I could have lit Into every Jap gardener I saw and It burned me up to think I couldn't do anything about It I Just wanted to kilk them. I still do. The Japs, I mean. I never did get that excited about the Germans. I guess It was because they were going after other people but It was the Japs who had tried to sink the whole Navy when the Americans weren't doing any. The Germans I thing to them. don't mean because you're a German, anyway you never da seem like one u I'd been hearing about Hitler practically all my life and 1 guess I'd got kind of used to him." "I suppose you would." Kess!er observed thoughtfully. "You were eight years old when he burned the books." "Well, t was pretty Innocent my. self until Just lately," Dirk with conf,d;ng wisdom. "I thought wars were Just wars, Somebody had to run the earth and it had tetter be your aide than their side, and mostly wars were fought to take csrt of trade and profits and H wss principally the Morgans who gnt us Into the last one, and we'd never have been In this one if the Jars hd minded thrir Own business. Now I see that's not right, you Can't go alng letting thirid happen the way they are harrming. thincs l.ke Margaret I mean. Dut what I want to know is, what can t say u my mother and father? I can t Just go of and have them smiling and shriveling up the way they are dMn. Dnn'l think my mother h?s said nyih:r;? to me, Mr. Keislcr! She hasn't. She won't either. "Let her ard your father uni1r Hand that you know what ymj're d Irg," Kenler aniwcrel "Din t Irt them telieve that you're g;ni p!? grinning, at y.u express it, Jii 10 put an eM t I -t of t" 'ht vil tains bef.ut m..s ha'red happens lfii hard-earne- self-respe- AVIATION NOTES r f1 MV merely right to think better of you than that. But If you expect them, and the rest of the decent people in the world, to get anything from this war except more destruction and suffering, if you want it to be something more than Just another war, you've got to have an idea of what you want it to bring about. Even If you know what you want you may not get it, but If you don't know, this certainly won't be anything but just another war." "Well, what do we want to get?" Dick demanded. He laughed uncomfortably. "I guess you think I'm pretty silly to ask that, don't you? I guess you think I ought to know." "No, Dick, I don't think you're silly not to know. We who are older than you ought to be wiser, but sometimes we feel we don't know any more than you do. I'll try to tell you how it looks to me. That's all I can tell you." "Go ahead," said Dick. He added with an embarrassed grin, "I guess I've been talking a lot. But now I'm listening." Kessler turned his cane under his hand and looked at it, then raised his eyes again. "Dick, the sweep of history doesn't take much account of individuals. That's hard for us to real- - He jerked himself back angrily. He had given her the chance to be happy and she had used it; if happiness brought its own penalties that was not his fault or hers. She had a great deal to lose. Nobody knew what the war might do to this country before it was over, and the whole fabric of her life and her children's future might be ripped to shreds in the days to come. She had made that clear to him when she said, "If my world is shot to pieces again I can't go back and start over. I did VM tATuRli, to be the emotion of the moment. that they have a It's not THE STORT THUS FAR: Spratt Her-lonmotion picture producer, met and married EUzabeth, whose first husband, Arthur Klttredge, was reported killed In World War I, but who later appeared In Hollywood and secured a Job with Spratt. Under the name of Kessler, and with his disfigurements, he was not recognized and became a good friend of the Her-longWhile Elizabeth, Cherry and Dick were helping Margaret, Kessler'i ward, decorate her Christmas tree, she told them about the man who killed her mother. Kessler later told them the truth of Nazi Germany, how Margaret's parents were driven to suicide, and how thousands of children were killed before they could contribute to mankind. CHAPTER XIX " ZWCSf x 'j" xs'. 3 GWEN BRISTOW States With production and distribution of milk at the highest levels in history, "Dairy Month" is celebrating its tenth anof June. Again the dairy inniversary through the month to the vital part played by dustry calls attention of the public milk and dairy products in America, 1939 that dairymen, fountain operators and others decided to promote dairy products one month of the year. June was selected because It it the time of year when milk production is the greatest. Milk cows were first brought to America in 1611 for the Jamestown colony. In 1624 a few cows arrived for the Plymouth colony. The first regular shipment of milk by rail In 1841, from was Inaugurated Orange county to New York City, Pasteur experiments were started In 1856, and since that time the dairy Industry has made rapid progress. The milk bottlo was not Invented by Dr. Hervey D. Thatcher of Potsdam, N. Y., until 1884. Fluid milk was not Included in the army diet until 1933, but during World War II the use of milk and dairy products by the armed forces was a must. t domovuow (Jr June Again Set for National Dairy Week in United "m h " ,'7" '' Sinry." -o- r. M i.l anil j. - a" tm" w" j |