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Show THE MURRAY EAGLE, MURRAY, UTAH By 3 e GRntmnnn WNU , ::,. Yank- - r o Harris and give the Yankees the top. Their next of mbination should at tlass r IDord VkeMy Game Army-Nav- y y For 1H COLBY FRANK By corner Readers' -- Los E. G., Angeles: dear Colby, ti, aii E7 please come brother, to Join :xg you, crusade. that won't turn your you mv clieht! tent the best vear Kit on in the V in fight). the face of a popular rid of "our Je!p rr.e get xtaal friend." )r You've talked me into just another lost nay be to nf mv but "mutual f iich is incorrect, accord-Mer- n usage, may be laid r of Charles Dickens who r believe, Mutual I Friend" as the because of Dickens -our mutual as correct by . TL ice iruin is, how- - uience, accepted ss f"(fme .... uue is a quotation of rharanlftre by SOmp UJaSe Home Pasteurization Now Proven Practical Small Herd Ovner Now Able to Sell Pure Milk Pasteurization the process ot heafing milk or cream to kill the micro-organism- has been gen- s erally accepted throughout the tion. Most states do not have laws covpasteurizaering na- tion. Without exception, however, leading cities re- WNU Sta Correspondent Bureau Eye St., N. W. ... quire this safeguard. Development of home type of pas1W.Viuj.v1v.v.V.'uiiV. teurizers now makes it possible for the Safgard home dairyman, no mat- type ter how small his herd, to pasteurize the milk he produces. To meet U. S. public health requirements, the temperature of the milk is held at 143 degrees usually for 30 minutes, after which cooling is accomplished by either flowing cold water through the unit or by placing the milk container in a cool ing tank. Dairymen will find, in most locali ties, that they can increase their profits as well as insuring the health of their customers by selling onlj e record. pasteurized milk. Portable units Of course, Republican leaders now on the market will permit farmers, who do not market to here in Washington are enthusiastic creamery units, to provide pasteur- and boastful. They are perhaps sincere in their promises of what they ized milk. propose to do to alleviate any real or fancied ills. On the other hand, the Democrats, realizing their misKNOW YOUR BREED takes and their peculiar ineptness in Chester White conducting this campaign, are look ing askance at 1948. By W. J. DRYDEN . Pomp and pageant still mean a lot to this country. Army and Navy at Philadelphia will be a sellout for 104,000 spectators, even if Army figures to win by 40 to 0. Which Army won't do. ' While it appears as though. there has never been an Army-Navgame that looked as it must be remembered that Navy still has good football payers. Navy has had a rough road this season, but so has Army. It will be different after 1946. Navy next fall probably will return better material than Army will have. Navy is taking her postwar shellacking now. Navy already Is pass ing through her major depression. Army still has one to face, as far as anyone can see. Any team that loses Blanchard, Davis, Foldbcrg, Poole, Tucker, Fuson and Enos, with only two replacements left from the 1946 starting team, must stare into the shadows for some time to come. Army-Nav- y games are always closer than they figure to be. A year ago, Army ran up 21 points against Navy in the early going. Everyone 1 looked for a 40 to 0 count. But after that first crash, Navy had the Grand champion Chester White better of the argument in the last barrow at Chicago fat show, 1945, two periods. owned and shown by Callahan So there not only will be an Army-NavDros., Milford. HI. game, but also 101,000 specta-tor- s Chester Whites originated in will be on hand to sec it. And it can be a much closer meeting Chester county, Pennsylvania, and are believed to have descended than one might predict. from a cross of English hogs, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Cheshire. Football vs. Baseball The breed is prolific, has a good No matter how peaceful the disposition, early maturing and good seems to be, there is always feeder. White in color, they are someone taking the joy out of life. also exceptionally good dressers. Now an inquisitive correspondent Six months' boars weigh 225 wants to know which game draws pounds; gilts, 200 pounds; yearling the greater number of people foot- boars, 500 pounds; gilts, 400 pounds. ball or bascbalL He also asks for Mature boars will weigh 900 pounds an exact check on this count. and sows 700 pounds. For one thing, baseball has a far Boars arc rugged, with head fealonger season five and a half tures, bone and primary sex charmonths against two and a half acters well developed. Sows are months. For 'another thing there refined in head and hair coat, roomy are close to 200 football teams with of middle with well developed varying degrees of real drawing The hair is straight and considerto a as compared power fine, particularly on sows. able less number of baseball teams that can match this collection at the one-side- d, j Walter A. Shead W ashington 1616 MacPhail is not the type to ace brand with what If a team that finished cept a third-plac- call you might the Yankees equanimity. Mac- season, too rnau is and keen a peraery at- JD past sonage to accept the general verdict cords ny that it will take two or three years fble mar' to bring the Yankees from the barwere the ren lands into the uplands, which 1.t110 league jr they held and defended for so long istory to a time. two milA team that has Robinson as catchwith a er, plus an able infield Heinrich at Jred thoufirst, Stirnweiss at second, Rizzuto jare. at short and Brown at third plus iat about DiMaggio, Keller and others in the new man-toutfield, can't go badly two years Yank- in a row. L Hams, Bucky Harris What about the pitching? One anin best ie swer is that Yankee pitching allowed pi assistant is Charlie fewer earned runs last season than nodeers, who, among any other club except the Cardinals. ecual New men will be added and the us, is given a105 m'rjo Durocher for the present guess is that the Yankees C showing of the Dodgers of 1947 will be a long leap beyond the Yankees of 1946. Their hitless J is one of the most under- - postwar dip should be over by now, in uaseuau. with such especially normally good the cast to be an able hitters as DiMaggio, Rizzuto, Stirnwith weiss and Heinrich. and he has proved i nimble Dodgers that he Ji into the second slot and The By and regulations to prevent inflation and to hold down the cost of liv ing for the masses who bent their Republican Congress Faces backs to produce the food, the material and the tools of war. Many Grave Problems But apparently, however prosperof PEOPLE our or protected, the American peoous democracy "pHE again have spoken at the polls, ple buck their backs at being told as is their sovereign right. And they what to do and this past year has spoke in no uncertain terms to the seen a chafing to throw off these reeffect that they are fed up with straints and let "free" enterprise shortages . . . with rules and regu- take over. The great trouble with a lations in short with the planned free economy, as one government economy under which the nation has official put it, is that we revert to been living for the past 16 years. jungle law, for the law that might As a result of this mandate the makes right governs free and next congress will be organized by competition and the the Republican majority, with Con- weak, the little fellow, is gobbled gressman Joe Martin as speaker up or is put out of business, no matand very likely Senator Vandenburg ter what field of endeavor. It is a of Michigan as president of the sensurvival of the fittest. ate. When so organized, the 80th Republican leaders in the senate congress will move along just about and house have declared, as have as did the 79th congress and the the southern Democrats who voted next two years probably will be a with them, that the only domestic period of strife, stalemates and economy which has ever worked in vetoes, this reporter predicts. this country is the economy of free As a result of the peoples' vote, enterprise. But has it? It has made our domestic economy very likely some men very rich, it has estab-will change from a planned econ lished Big Business, huge corporaor into a free free tions and monopolies, and it has omy economy enterprise, as some call it. That brought about depressions and panword "free" is a magic word with ics, booms and busts, periodically lhe American people and the for the past 150 years for the strange thing about the recent elec reason that jungle law is opposed tion is that for the first time in his- to moral law. A planned economy, tory the American people have voted however irksome it may seem, is against the administration in power based upon the moral law. It was a despite the fact that employment is collapse fit the free enterprise sysit an e peak and prosperity tem in 1929 which brought about the n money and goods has set a new reforms of planned economy. WNU 1947. star. Washington , service Sox-Tig- er For both " irry In problem will be a ball club that can handle the Red threat in baseball in 1947 . n( sin HOME TOWN REPORTER Ju lJ y ... all-tim- all-tim- It was interesting to note only .very recently that the first to cry out and demand that the govern- ment do something were Senator Thomas of Oklahoma and his southern colleagues in the Democratic party when the cotton market skid-- ; ded so sensationally after govern-- : ment controls were taken off. Senator Thomas, Senator Ellender (La.), Senators Eastland and Bilbo (Miss.) and others were among those most Protection of Weak outspoken against any government in Now what will the people get control of prices or commodities. exchange for their votes on elec' tion day? The planned economy of Few Startling Changes Of course, everybody knows there Franklin D. Roosevelt came into be1933 has in into and is a presidential election coming ing back spread every area of the nation, and for up in 1948. With this in mind, it four succeeding national elections is predicted that whatever curbs are the people approved. A majority put upon labor unions will be limapproved of all the progressive ited; that congress will be unable to measures and social reforms which stop strikes; that it will soon weaken have been written into law. The the President by immediately rebasis of a planned economy is protec voking the war power act; that the tion of the weak against the strong President will use his veto to hold . . the setting up of rules and congress in check; and that one of regulations, with the government as the first dangers will be rapidly the referee, for this protection. When dropping farm prices with probably the war came there were more rules more expensive price supports. Showed Ambassador What Iowa Land Does sky-lin- e f ihould be f Peaking, avoided in the "shared in common." mulual JWI Interchanged; mcans rccipro- Anus, J share a , mutual friend- wcy may work al 4 " a C 't 11 Vantage; by a incrr-clvc- s ' . -mit,,.i mends-th- cir reciprocal or inter- - "a, ,,e mutual friends" is ,.C"rl?.,!"d mends, by e iA C m , havc a fric, ?L changed na B. y C. or Introduced i , (they are !ct- - lhcy y iv 5 ii 0Vcr ? ut they ln anor both city, c fri,n;s thcir "mutual )nri,r fharc between thit f ' r,tJ ci A and B. ud-dcr- s. gate. Mend." b ai , league baseball last season drew close to 18 million customers through the turnstiles. The Yankees drew well over two million admissions in 154 games. No college or pro football team can match this count in nine or 10 games. Army, Notre Dame, Michigan, Navy, Pennsylvania and Ohio State ore among the leaders this falL They should average around 400,000 spectators each. For example. Army drew C6.000 at Michigan. 80.000 against Notre Dame, 73,000 against before Pennsylvania, and will 100,000 against Navy. Big rv Gassing Proves Safe In Eliminating Rats In rural districts, cities and farms where poisoning rats might be hazardous to animals and children, trapping and gassing arc valuable and rat supplements to clean-uout Harold proofing methods, points Hundcrson, Iowa State college. Gas sing with calcium cyanide is a quick and easy method of killing rats under tight floors and in undcP ground burrows. The calcium cya nide should be used in a gas gun and blown with force throughout the entire system. . p The New burns of Eagle Grove. Iowa, showed the British what real productivity is. One look at Iowa corn, hogs and that no nation on so on convinced Sir Archibald John Clark-Ker- r earth can rival the United States In agriculture. It all started when on a student Roger Ncwburn, 21, met the ambassador In Washington tour and got Into a friendly argument. "Come out to our farm and see for yourself," Invited Roger. Sir Archibald took Mm up on It, and I. to r., Kdnard, spent three days with the Ncwburns. Picture shows, Roger and Francis K. Ncwburn. am-bassad- or |