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Show THURSDAY. OCTOBER 23? 1952 Proro. Ptilt County. Vuth 2-- A Grand Coulee Darn, Hard Work Gasolins Tax Eurdsn Imprt issd On Driven ROCHESTER. fUT) 'Tht; timers tervict tlatiar.t. Monro County Petroleum ) depart are prated la freeu Make Garden Spot of Desert tries CommiPe has paper about tie tilt and sitpt DAILY HERALD lechnico lor Peace at N.Y. Headquarte rs UN'S f By SUMNER AHLBl'M SEA Staff Correspondent- ) UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (NEA) A little man ia a frayj ault stood at on side of th rost- rum and spoke into a microphone. Tma Is a test of. the system of the United Nations General Assembtyh all." he said in a precise voice, tinged with an Oxford accent. - Nobody paid much attention. Up in the balcony a man in overalls was busy running a vacuum cleaner, and on the main floor somebody else was distributing headphone sets among, the chairs,; dealing them off his arm like a! waiter setting tables. in one Today, If of the earphones and listened, you could flick a switch and hear, in any one of seven languages, the deliberations of the seventh session of the UN. General Assembly, meeting for the first time in its permanent headquarters 'on the banks of New York's East River. a way to Irrrreis motorista with .ef a rtrular dollar t.:i a.d-t Z PI I RAT A, Wash. fTJP) Grand year crops. Potatoes, beanj. peas, "the hlddea burden tf g iso-- xttm art red m:cn sta Coulee dam and hard work by a alfalfa, cora. sugar beets and Iin taxes." 'f asohr.e taxes paid by New York modem pinoeers have ether 'crops followed la order, of ."fas State motorist amounts to 2f ctsta group j It't issuing thousands changed tht one arid and for-- Some farmer did not get their Ux dollars" and dutrifcuUeg thera'ea each doUtr purefcast. oiaoing coiusnoia . Basin irom eroo, n,Ph r tfc.v 'iwasteland Into a rich agricultural ;wr unabi. mtitT t Und !mueh region to ocp a few months, w NVfr. i tit i TRANSLATORS, TV, & RADIO s tl barren, necetry. 1 area ratuesnaae-inieste- a Wl4 R armful and dotted with rockj, sand dunes. Now partial results en Aa mlbt be expected, tht Erst- Picture was not one of bump-er- a that land ahow some potato zrtw-y- r harvesu. Reclamation official have grossed $1,000 aa acre. for Grand Coulee, world's Largest'"11 ttw "optional, but one dam. was the ky ionlon grower expected tocroat hn t.ru rhn ,!,. than $fiOO per acra. Another 'possible. The Columbia River P JrW Ura. behind ft were diverted! T,w,r ,emB vup eanala which thread-;.huge through i toar - Most farm era ROSTRUM M their way into Irrigable tee-,- f eB a P l Uona of tht basin. With Irrigation, l"v land became fertile. tht II Ont of tht biggest problems was , ij urtp rauart uw ef teed caused by wind rang- lol, g ji The Burtauof Reclamation up to 40jnilea per hourlijring i ducted land drawings am oaf hun- -t planting season. However, the dreds of applies nta many of "blowing" will be reduced once whom had been forced from mid- - farmers get mora alfalfa and other Ob this day you would have western farms by flood, and grasses to takt root and hold tht heard the man in the gray suit to determine who would j top soil down, drought only on. channel one. which is for homestead there, , j Eventually. H.000 I r?l English. The transistor, were not a seven-yeTht under will be created In an area farms bureau, In their booths, arrf as yet there development program, had com- - twice tht sixe of Delaware. When was no Russian harangue to dis f 'pleted facilities to serve 825 farms the basin project la completed. turb the carpeted hush of this; it this year. farmers will raise products valued 5,632 acres early brand new $12,250,000 meeting Z, However, only 3&5 farms were at $120,000,000 a year, baaed on j place of the world. 1949 pricea. Perhape that ia the 'planted. , . sev-" i of the Since the harangues j Small reason the development Is called wheat. mostly PUBLICS-EYE grains, UN VIEW new of General Assembly auditorium shows how the elaborate new hall enth Gwtetal Assembly began this! Wrt BT far tht moat Mnu ir f irt. th kv tn rraulni imnln J month, the news cameras and TV; looks from the balcony. Mural at far left ia one of twp abstract designs by FernandeLeger. yes have focused on the hall s with leather in. a lighter they will bear the "coat - of arms' of aomt weird atomic axDerlmenL i ...,n of h,d green. Blonde wood from of each UN member. la' (For that matter, right now there when ifa empty really see it frames the desks and tbej "And Web. above in the center!" plenty of verbal atomic Then, without th distraction ot; Sweden clairs' the dome, a five-focircular Ploions going on underneath tht Important People and their And when ; down admita the fronj"! hall's you peer skylight has only jdmie. and it debates, gestulations balcony at this pattern of natural light. On a sunny day. it ia But in its virgin atatt, aa you the impact of a surrealistic sun- -' idesks and chairs on an empty a bright sUring eye in thecell- - tread the carpet that makes you get a new iig- - ihk. uui u is uw icruie io cora-- "' Then it is like walking into thei""'- - otwimou; e brilllanct General Assembly hall seems to delegates to break - up the pete with the fanciest of movie palaces beforeur'" achieve what the UN is after a of the decor. that feelingyoy i get the th show beeins and this new vlsrm 1 I , i t i i i 11 n .v - li "cloo-I 1 i r V f i 11 11 hall would make the fanciest ,of suuuniy II an tauen into sea, green angry and the for the movie palaces look, shabby. balcony tor the chairs are upholstered in public are two abstract murals iDy French artist Fernand Leger. Ncw Tht earpetlnr from France ort of robin a egg' blue. Type of Tomato These flank the rows of one- which covers the floor is forest e seats lor 234 news-gat- Raised In nd the 10 rows of dele- -j l the green, fronting the desks (750 seats, room delegates' area, fluted wooden paprmen. perhaps on the theoryGENEVA N.Y. (UP)-N- ew York press is hardened to anyenough for 72 delegations arejstrips. painted gold, rise 75 feet thflt theThe eastside mural looks State tomato growers soon may to the central dome broken by thing. two" tiers of d booths lilte a giant with bloody feet had challenge the superior quality and Paysbn News for XV, radio.' and translators, stepped on a nice wnite Datnmat. jquantity yields of! West Coast westside mural defies analy- - farms thanks to a new type toma-tecYour guide will tell, you the archi-'Th- e to developed here, felt the wood strips gave an sisProfessor W. T. Tapley. at- eifect.' To an irreverent organ-lik- e t ached to the State Agricultural reporter. it looked more like the sage-brus- h" ".WO-per-ac- wa-l1- n id no ra GET YOUR GAf.lE CUT AND 'P4 "0 ed you-plugg- t.t f-scs i- I public-addres- Indus-Tfct tip with on com 0' -- FROZEN FRE- E- Jlr i -- "Etcutiful Home Frttztr ky Jornlrtg Tht Grtcf Plus con-iln- jp . CIOF IN AND gated ar UiUi iM " RICH PLAN - HI C2 CAU US, M K Ft,u hi A Hi r .nun"u : ba,W 1S3 NOSTH 1st IAJT -- j tx-Ve- ry 1 ! ot . ut .... vv aarK-suue- man-mad- fc II II 800-ke- at j 1 r '.I I - 1 J 1 i 1 9 O-- f f s. 1 , i - NeYork es ch rm-iun- hall-circl- v glass-enclose- ts Family Receives News of Arrival Of New Grandson - r seven sion, originated the tomato and enters -- itoTough Right behind the rostrum, sur-- . public 'ntrd"c'd UN "cent New are tht six from doors emblem, Canada. rounding rows of circular shields, three feet From, outside, the assembly 1 TVv ir v,..L Dubbed Red Ton.M it ts a paitt- By MADOLIXE DIXONV across. They look like, grotesque hail's I- makes the assembly to meet the omto Mrs. Emma Wilson pushbuttons now. but eventually building look like the secret PAYSON home - : 2 -- (limited season otNew York ; 7 received word recently of the safe- ;yet . . rivalling the West Coast products arrival of a nine pound baby boyL I B. d to her son and his wife. Elmo r0'n under mor 'vorahlt IJrp FflVOrC CYtPHflPfl IdiUons. Seed for the tomato wiU Rubv Page Wilson, at be available in 4953. Nnhl hosoital. The Infant brlnesr Mrs. L. in a Jail, ft has frequently been! It hat a plum-lik- e shape, meat-the familv to a total of four boys- EMMETT. Ida.. (UP) and two airls. Duke Page of Span- L.. Maxrieid Wednesday had the alleged in this campaign that I unng two to tour Inches In length and one and a half inches across Ish Fork is the paternal grandpar- personal assurance of. Dwight D. am against sociaL security ent of the newborn boy. The fam-fl- Elsenhower that he favors extended) Nothing could be farther from running from seven to 10 to the social security "to give greater rthe truth. Actually, in a atatement pound. Tests conducted at the sta is formerly of Payson. Mr. and Mrs. John Lottenock of assurance to older persons who are which I issued in Denver last "on have produced yields of from th n August 9th. I not only reaffirmed ifiv' to 15 ton! t0 the tcre Magna have visited here with their so greatly dependent upon it." running around nine to 10 sisters. Mrs. Emma Wilson. Mrs Mrs. Maxfield made public a my belief in the necessity for Ed Patten and Mrs. Earl Simmons. letter she received from the Rep- cial security but urged that it bejtong- 11 rowf " clusters of four even ach n Jow compact Mr. Lottensock joined family mem ublican presidential .nominee in re- - extended to give greater assistance!10 , bers, Boyd Wilson of Sprihgville, sponse4. to her inquiry. regarding his to those older citizens who are so,pl,nUand Elmo Wilson of Nephi in theistand 80Cial security. Kreauy aepenaeni upon it. . v. . .. It; is not unusual in political annual deer hunt. Mr. and Mrs. Duane ..(Elaine ,. RESET YOUR DIAMONDS "V ""1 I Jcampaigna to have facts distorted " and misrepresented for purely fac Packl Cristianson and In a Modern Mounting ork-tNew from old daughter. Valerie tional advantage. That is what has at . return to their home in Clear- - Dear Mrs. Maxfield: happened in this case, and I should visitBecause I once said, in quite b very grateful if pou would pass field Saturday morning after Fisher Smith Co. ing here witn ner parents, Mr. ana another connection that it seemed this word on to your friends. 1(3 Nt. University tn m that invniw uhn Mrs. Stanley Peck. (jcii?nfr!) Tlu.'ijht Tiianknu Mr. and Mrs. James Webb." .in perfect security "would find it best Sincerely. Company- wiui ir. ana ran. ivan Webb, spent Sunday at Dugway with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert (Dorothy Peck Oxspring. Mr. and Mrs. Glendon Herring "A little luxury is good are expected to arrive here Sunfor every man!" day trom Overton. Nev.. and on their return trip will take with them their four children, who have been with their grandparents, Mr. 'Especially at this new and. Mrs. Jared Tanner, the past seven months. ' price'" . Mr and Mrs. Dean Simmons entertained their couple club at their home Saturday evening. A hot dinner was served after which the evening was. spent playing bridge. On Wednesday. Mrs. Simmons was hostes. to )ier ladies' hridge club.; wi'jh three fables, arranged for; luncheon and the card game. Mrs.: Grande Gudmundson was ai .i i special guest. Mrs. Mab'e Robinson entertained at the Turf cafe recently for a group of frirnris who enjoyed lunrh-eo- a followed by games of bridge. Covers were placed for Mrs. L. D. Stewart. Mrs. Jess Earl. Mrs. Will McClellan. Mrs. Ray Stevens. Mrs. L Ella Amos. Mrs. Clyde McMahan. ( Mrs A. K. Wall and the hostess. to her was hostess On Monday she with the follow-i- n club at bdies enjoying her hospitality: Mrs. Rebecca Johnson. Mrs. A. E.' Mrs. Wall. Mrs. Bert" Stevens. I Kmma Cluff. Mrs Ella Amos. Mrs. Kathryn Betts. Mrs. J. R. Ray Stevens,. Mrs. Leah Frickrson of Downey. Cal.. has visited here with friends and relatives. nickel-plate- .tSycu'' d , f thejW - SnPlfll SliriiritlT ' ... - wA t con-an- JttUllly i , - v so-ive- r,e - ' - ... two-month- : 0": " ' v r;i, s- - - -- Ann.-expe- - 1 1 - down-to-ear- I-- th e . -- m TREAT YOURSELF TO hex-hom- e, Groes-beck.Mr- s. fPV? !- t .- M mm mm mitilni. If Anoint;! Iho ' ' w Tcr fsHcsH beem end burfc! ever SuTuhino Alwcyj pick year old BELMONT straight bourbon -- at a price you'd pay for whisktes two years younger Yzr?:zzl tho nsver-til- a Q w w ' wl a. tr bread thct tiros yc:r--c for iho HrJt timo Sunshino Vitamin D In every tHa! 1 I Enjoy the smooth luxurious quality of c!I-r.5- vv cw&ck! Ysncv.vrcpscr beccvo RstsOhSSil Vrcp keeps fv, WHISKEY -. r-l- For s i " W'H. . . mrfoi Tk "wt 4 wMiwy vrry t to s:lt a - 3 ... mi 30 3 u L ftA iy floird MwtM ft . C tlS Daily, KIN HOUSTON, i tW tKm. trum J41J or " ". ukkly m"4 $1000 r Takt yur t.m in fMyinl- - Heart: tf I I EMERGENCY? iVw - Jrm n UJ I Bat. tvsiigs' iii'iMSit 1 6 YEARS OLD STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF .vi:m:ihBELMONT - CtSTILLIMS COMPANY, UWRENCEBUIS, ISO. J vrJ JUL UZ71 ' ss' at aj - -. 1 |