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Show i H ow Do You PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, i 1 . I ! anti-Stali- . were short-live- d. Apparently boldness at and starts to satellite best Monies, and Western Reds accustomed to operating undr Moscow's thumb. Russia acted as if it took the criticisms seriously, though this might just have been part of the show. in-f- its By PETER BDSON You can almost always; measure the de- gree of Communist embarrassment over internal disorders by the intensity with which Red authorities seek ijo spread the blame to Outsiders, j Vj acute over was Evidently unhappiness j I theJPoznan riots, rnow estimated to have taken 1,000 Polish workers' lives instead of the 600 calculated earlier.; For the Communists are screaming that America financed the uprising as part of a broad cold war plan to generate subversive activities within the whole Soviet orbit, j As our State! Department quickly t declared, this is pure bunkum. Our information agencies shouldn't rest until they have beamed the true story around the the truth of world again and again. this episode constitutes a terrific blow at the myth; of Communist service to the workers. ;v.!y r y v 't' ' I peace-and-love-fe- Ex-Go- THE RESOUNDING apathy with which this "Stassen Second" outfit was greeted may have been one of the reasons why Stassen switched his support to Gov. Herter ..; for VP. This wasn't the reason he gave. What he said was that he was supporting Herter "out of loyalty to President j j . ; ' j - - - a- ed ' Eisen-er-Hert- er . i ,,' n r r .: "' : r-- t- - , greater popularity. a Central Utah Men in Armed Forces 47th Regiment, entered the Army in October, 1954, and arrived over- Pvt. Thomas C. Parry Studies Transportation erbert G. Watkins 4- -- d tip-to- j , if ; - '1 I j I j ; THIS FIGURE itself is open to some doubt, however. For Nixon as vice president, is probably better known nationally than Gov. Herter, whose fame is limited to New England. But all this puts Gov. Herter himself on something of a. spot. In Washington not long ago, Gov. iierter was asKed it ne tnougnt isixon was tne oest vice . ; presidential candidate. Herter ducked. "May I be pardoned," he said, "from commenting on any of my friends who are in the Administration today?" Asked if there was a "Knight-Herte- r Axis" with Gov.. Goodwin J. Knight of California tp stop Nixon, Herter replied: "None that I know of." ; V Asked point blank if he would Je interested in second pbLce bn the ticket with Eisenhower, Herter said, "Dick Nixon is a friend of mine. The President ; is entitled to the man he chooses for Ihis running mate." Stassen was asked if he would withdraw his backing Herter in" case President Eisenhower should again Gov. for say he would be dejightedito haVe Nixon as running mate. "I doh't anticipate that," Stassen replied. He cautioned reporters against taking WtratVioe President Nixon, GOP National Committee Chairman Leonard A. Hall ,or White House Press Secretary James Hagerty might saj; as the precise position of the President. Only what the President himself might say on, the subject should be considered , 4 j J . authoritative. ' r v ; , AS A POSTSCRIPT to all this, there is a card now material. It is head.. being distributed as Nixon campaign te ed, f'WhyvThey Fear Richard Nixori.V 'They the "when Richard Nixon is in, politicians know that ........... they will be out way out." v , If things should develop that way, this latest political moveof desperation by StasSeni will turn out to be just another effort on his part to commit slow political suicide.' Tvnti Vil. "Rfnn Nivon" idrivft aoross.- he's rRitf if Ho ; a hero. That's his political gamble.' des-nera- X" V ; - , - - , . - ' j . 2700-ma- ; , half-grow- $64,-500,0- 00. ..Jo j i i light-weapo- ns Listen to a Real Doctor . . ; , - - , - j ments !: With Gov. Herter succeeding to the presidency this resentment might be reduced. According to Stassen's figures as of today, an how ticket would win by 62 per cent majority, An EiSenhower-Nixo- n ticket might win by only 56 per cent. The 6 per cent differential is the measure of Herter's j I - ' ' re-elect- Hardening of Vessels Affects Aniitials Also - - rxr5 ...-- i resents." r In only one respect does this make political sense, ac cording to Washihgton observers. They point out that if Eisenhower should have to resign the presidency for reasons of health after having been and if Nixon should then become president, there micrht be some resent Other leftist parties in Europe would indeed have to be extraordinarily gullible to see even momentary advantage in combining, however briefly,! with parties whose leaders endorsed the wickedest of crimes so long as'thise offenses did hot imperial their, own petition. A.nd less radical leftists jean hardly find much encouragement jin the-- f that men like Togliatti and Thprez jiave gone back to servile parroting of Moscow after temporarily appearing toLaJserithemselves. Both within and beyond Russian borders, communism is in real ferment. The West's opportunity is ideal to make capital of its confusions, contradictions and boiling cross currents. It would be a great pity if, out of the whirlpool stirred by the Kremlin, Western leaders! could not find the force to drive home tp wavering free inen the inevitability of Crime and death K under Red tyranny. v Good Exercise for Children v. On July 5, an organization calling itsel! "Young Americans for Eisenhower First, Stassen Second, jwas unveiled in Washington. Nobody could have cared less. It was an even more futile demonstration than the "Knovvland for President If'vmovement launched earlier rby followers of Gefal K. Smith in California. anti-Stal- in j i time. un-loa- . ast r 1 at . j WASHINGTON (NEA)-J- ust when everyone was rubber-stamp dull predicting h Republican convention at San Francisco, up pops the unpredict- able Harold E. Stassen. of Minnesota to head ud " a iew "Stop Dick Nixon" drive. Stassen's proposal to nominate Republican Gov. Chris-tia- n A. Herter of Massarhusetts fnr viVo on of the quietest paper bag explosions heard in a long" seas the following March. n Artille ry Tra i n i ng He is a 1952 graduate of Spring-vill- e Va. - Pvt. FORT EUSTIS, FORT SJLL, Okla. Pvt. HerHigh School. His parents live ( Thomas C. Parry, 24, whose wife, at, 94 W 2nd S.;- - Spingville. bert G. Watkins, son of Mr. and Caroli'i lives at 143T E.' 2nd; Ni, Mrs. Ray Watkins, 984 E. Center Spanish Fork, Utah, recently was St., Provo, Utah, recently comL. Hutchinson graduated from The Transporta- Quinn pleted artillery surveyor training tion School's stevedoring course at Ends '..'j at Fort Sill, Okla. School Artillery Fort Eustis, Va. Watkins received the training! in He ias trained to load and Tex. Second FORT BLISS, 617th Field - Artillery Oberva-tio- n the IS THAT SO! cargo and to maintain freight Lt. Quinn L. Hutchinson, 27, son Battalion. records. of Harvey Hutchinson, Payson, The 22year-ol- d Ispldier entered Utah, recently was graduated from the Army in February of this year. Army's Antiaircraft Artillery Pvt. Wayne K. Thatman the Guided Missile School at Fort and By EUGENE BURNS weathering it is believed, have taken to their newhomes. Doing In Artillery Training Tex. Bliss, Dowell D. Allison this kept the jOst to a minimum warped up to five degree. Ranger Naturalist in His El lives wife, Marian, p Canadian fishery biologists are and the fish arrived in DID yop know that . . . the averFORT SILL, Okla. Pvt. Wayne Paso, Tex. 1 Stationed in Korea anesthetics to condition. Some of the marked K. Thalman, 22, whose, wife, Na- age person eats 'his own weight in, using "knock-out- " later dine, lives at 1685 W. Center, Profeted every six to eight weeks. 7T1TDIV., Korea Pfc. Dowell quiet sports fish f and then trans- fish were caught a few days Worse D. none for ve, Utah, the in Glade Rasmussen and J in were, bedded gill The level of the oceans has risen ferring them chipped D. of arson Mr. and Mrs. Allison, recently completed and transfer on tillery surveyor their "kndc-out- " about four inches in the last ice from lake to lake, Dan at Fort Allison, Utah, is a training Gets Combat Training member of theHeber, j pickerel chipped ice. due to an increase in It's like this: in moving 7th Infantry Dicentury Sill, Okla--. With the use of nuclear radiation, vision in Korea. Private Thalman received the temperature and the melting of and pike over 40 miles of road in CAMP PENDLETON, Calif! ' the Prince Albert National Park white carnations have been chang- training in the 617th Field Artillery Marine Pvt. Glade D." Rasmussen, A squad leader in Company D glaciers. ' Observation Battalion. ;Hundred year, old marble grave- last summer, the big fish were ed into red ones. son of Mr. and Mrs. James F. of the division's 31st Regiment, Alstones in the Grove Street Burial placed in canvas tanks containing A former employe of Wayne's Rasmussen of Provo, Utah, 'has lison entered the Army in January Every iyieai t the equivalent of Ground . New Haven Conn., are an anesthetic in the water. When about 10,000,000- bottles of cognac Texaco Service Station in Provo, completed four weeks of individual 1954 and completed basic training bending with the weight of years. they were "out cold," the fish goes up into air it is lost by he entered the Army in January combat training at the Marine at Fort Ord. Calif. Some of these flexible stones, due were bedded down in chipped ice He attendeH Wasatch High during storage for of this year andri completed basic Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, to the force of gravity and in wooden containers and then evaporation School. at Fort Ord, Calif. Calif. training aging. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Want tp keep up the rate of K. Thalman, live at 935 W. 1st S. RUTH M1LLETT SAYS growth of your pigs during hot Seaman Guy K. Shields j weather? In keeping cool in hot George E. Cruz fPyt. Aboard USS Hollister weather pigs ;will lie quietly for Albert B. Snyder Jr. In Special Parade hours at a time and severely limit Guy K. PACIFIC; FLEET their intake which of - course Stationed in Germany FORT RILEY, Kan. Army Shields, sonarman seaman, USN, Pvt, George E. Cruz, 22, son An expert on physical fitness claims that American children results in a sharp decline jof growth of 9TH DIV G. Budd son of Mr. and Mrs. Germany Specialist Mr. Mrs. aren't physically active enough and suggests our children be given rate. So1 keep 'em cool- artifi- Third Class Albert Amerand MarionCruz, B. Snyder Jr. Shields, 1710 N. 1350 W,., Provo more physical exercise in schools. .. , ican marched cially.' whose 23, wife, , Jeannette, lives reported recently t aboard the de in a Fork,n Utah, recently Another solution might be to see that our kids get a little more Tree in west the parade honoring diseases at 326 S. 5th ij., Payson, Utah, stroyer USS Hollister, operating Colonel S. E. physical exercise around home. Gee, 'root diseases and heart departing commostly rpt n recently was" assigned to the 9th with the Pacific Fleet. children hire, all the cause an annual los of about Why should any family with of the 1st Infantry t Dimander Division in Germany. He reported aboard the Hollister vision's 16th work done, twhen pushing a lawn mower, pulling, weeds, dig- yard HA This means a total loss Infantry Regiment at Fort 11 A.AvllMi n ehmiho ac iui in an. Sins "viva in from a the Fleet Sonar School in welder : Specialst Snyder, CACI USC CAtcncm aiuuua, ctv( is Kan of almost 4.3 pillion board feet. Rilex, Service Company of Uhe division's San Diego, Calif. Why should Mama hop in the car to chauffeur Junior anywhere Cruz is a infantryAlthough the earth's climate he wants to go that is more than a block from home? in the 'regiment's Company A. man to seems ' be the warmervin getting Why should having a perfect lawn have become so important DR. BRADY'S COLUMN that lots of kids living in suburban houses with big yards .don't past 100 years ocean temperatures have a place to play baseball or football; because Mom and Pop have only; gon6 up about on fiftieth of one degree.! Stanley! H. Nuttall don't wan t any bare spots on the front lawn?, Animals sucfi as dogs, cats, lions, TV CAN BE SHUT OFF in Hawaii ' Training sent to kid ever six blocks the grocery tigers, elephants, horses, birds Why isn't the modern By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. - nomycosis, or lues, with the lesion store the way the older kids in a family used; to be relied upon for cows, baboons gorillas and llamas, 25TH DIV., HawaU Army Pfc. An eastern doctor, writes: like man, suffer from hardening of .. as yet apparently limited to the Stanley H. Nuttall, son of Mr. and errand running Dear Dr. Brady: Why do so. few kids walk to and from school these days, even the arteries. tonsillec- Mrs. William R. Nuttall, 1650 E. wife is-- one of your most tonsil, the desclbe clean when the distance isn't .great? We say it .is because of traffic My By using Carbon-1- 4 would be atro- 1350 S., Provo, Utah, is participatdating avid readers, and "Dr. Brady tomy you hazards but after school a lot of these same' children play in the methods, jit .has been ascertained in cious, Why such ing in annual battalion training my opinion. streets. that glacial ice thousands of feet says" is common in our house- radical ' Doctor? Is ton- tests with the 25th Infantry Disurgery, Why do so many parents moan that they can't get Junior to thick buried the area where Mil hold conversation. vision Artillery on. the island of sil n harmful? tissue any way rdav outside in the summer because he would rather sit m front waukee, Wisconsin, now stands However, your views and mine Hawaii. Instantaneous removal of the, obof the TV set hour after nour rne thing can be turned off, can t it? some 10,700 ypars ago. This was in J regard to the direction control specialnot our schools if the kids blame aren't Let's gfving their muscles the last ice age to blanket south crime 01 tonsilstructing portion 6f enlarged ton- istAinfire 90th Iield Artillery ' Batthe sils (with the snicker-sne- e Exertisfi for kids and teen-ageshould em Canada and the Northern U.S enough of a daily work-ou- t. are lectomy talion's Battery A, Nuttall entered :an operation as quick, begin at home and there's no reason why some of it can't be 'spelled g The My Portuguese man the Army in December 1954. He as safe and as painful as extraca jelly fish, can be either wife's sister, had tion 6f a tooth is desirable if the completed basic training at Fort right-o- r i left "handed. Under the Chaffee, Ark., and arrived in HaSIDE GLANCES youngster's breathing By GALBIUUTH influence of i wind, it has been of tonsillitis in t Mrt t n ly obstructed, his hearing impair- waii in Jane. 1955. He is a 1954 tin' J:' HUM found that the OO, 1U, tX, jelly ed, his voice thick 1 and muffled, graduate of Provo High School. fish move to, the right of the down- finally in '46. or his swallowing difficult. But ward direction of the wind and the Then came the child Pvt. E. Peterson ; d I before this is done, the jellyfish go to the swollen knee Lv..- - lX should get a break a summer in left. This movement, in only one joint." The Dr. Brady the open. Often this summer va In Korean Division direction with the wind apparently Ave. superman diagnosed the case cation alone will bring ' about has survival value: it prevents an as strained internal ligament' of 7TH DIV., Korea Pvt. V. E. shrinkage of the enlarged tonsils entire brood ifrom washing up on the knee joint, but when all the and son of Mr. 23, and. Mrs. correction of the , troubles Peterson, shore. Right and left handers are major and some of the minor mentioned. Eric Peterson, 211 E. 100 N., about equally divided. joints swelled up, jmy diagnosis The ideal treatment for an adult Provo, Utah, is a member of the The poison of the black widow w dcuie lueumauc iever. with such a history as your wife's 7th Infantry Division in Korea. tontook spider is 16 times more powerful of care the Penicillin; Peterson, a rifleman in Company than rattlesnake venom but for sillitis and heavy dosage of sali- sister had, Doctor, I sincerely be- G of the division's 17th Regiment, would be electrocoagulation tunately ther is ' very little of it. cylates relieved the joint pains, lieves, with a view to dis entered the Army in May 1955 and of the tonsils, In, the ancient palace of King but, as I feared, she had heart received basic training at Fort infecting, sterilizing, pasteurizing, Nestor of Pylps, Greece a built-i- n damage. Carson, Cold. He arrived in the draining the septic focus in Far bathtub, decorated inside and out Three months in bed and she or Easf last March. with painted patterns, has been has had paroxysmal 'tachycardia the tonsil. This would be the unearthed. "The bath water was (spells of extremely rapid heart method of choice, in my judgment, regardless of the condition M. Hall carried awfey by. a drain. action) since, of the heart or particularly if the I have seen similar cases in jcjxcjxu. ry .special arrangement in Germany with the editors of the Encyclo practice, and I feel that you are heart condition made the patient a a bad for risk major operation. pedia Americana, my panel of wrong' inL tabbing all tonsillectoPfc. HOHENFELS, Germany in my opinion Ted that I will award each week to mies as atrocities. say again M. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. judges the reader who sends me the best I do a total clean tonsillectomy, a doctor who performs tonsuiec- - Mark Hail,' Route 2, Spanish Fork, true life nature adventure, the best removing .all of the capsule with tomy on a child who has merely Utah, recently participated in bat enlarged! " tonsils perpetrates an talion field tests,-witnature; observation, or the best the tonsil; units of , atrocity. With kind regards, I am question oh nature and wildlife, a the 9th Infantry Division in Gercomplete 30iyolume set of this - ; many. j.,,M.D. s Preference work in a As part of the AJ. S. Seventh "irst, I thank you for your courSigned letters not more .100 words or handsome Sealcraft binding. one than page not Doctor. It is a feature tesy, Army, the, 9th Division conducts a to personal 2ach week new submissions will always found in letters long, pertaining rigorous training program, includ' health and hygiene, not to be considered Sorry I simply can't write to or about me. physicians ing realistic maneuvers and field v'YvVtvt f.. f:V disease, diagnosis , or treatI take it you mean tori say a answer'your many friendly letters. . problems; ment, will be answered . .by Please address your letter to: Is patient recovers from tonsillitis a member of Company E Hall, Dr.' Brady if a stamped T M. Hcg. U.S. Pit. Off. That So! o Daily Herald, Box quickly or more rapidly if- - given 47th of the division's O 1M Seme, in. Regiment, envelope is en575, Sausalitb,-Calif- . 1954 in entered the October penicillin than 'without it it takes Army closed. Address such correI took that since women in a over to or more and week, basic interest less, lost of get completed training at ve kind spondence to Dr. William to 1814, the name of the tonsillitis" without penicillin.' of ' ots Up Calif. Fort you -do Ord, The V Daily Herald.. Brady co summer job in the s'upermartcetAustralian continent was New Except possibly in a rare case, Provo. Utah. He.wias graduated from Spanish em spend $20 for an order of food? j Holland. . of malignancy, tuberculosis, acti Fork High School in 1954. Fr I . , NfiA Washington Correspondent f, rf -- N Naturally the Kremlin wants no ?eal trouble with outside Reds. But it is quite obvious that whatever the truth of Russia's present relationship to foreign Communists, the Russian rulers jwould be quite happy to have the free; nations believe there is more independence within the Soviet orbit. ; They want Communist parties to seem acceptable in Western European lands as elements in new "popular front" governments, while still majntaining tight ties with Moscow. The Western onlooker may question whether the extremes of the drive are a way to jihis goal, whatever other end it may. serve. Red leaders abroad continue to be embarrassed at being made to look stupid. They cannot hide the fact heyf acquiesced in Stalin's brutal rijle afid now, after Tcriticizingihis" critics, are pnce again foU lowing the twists and! turns of the tortu ous Kremlin line. of Guilt Transfe EDSON IN WASHINGTON FRIDAY, JULY 27, jl956 Wo r d Com m u n ism I n Fe rmeh t ; 'Giiilty or Guilty?" Stassen On Spot With His 'Stop-- ixon' Drive I The West could not help but be suspicious when a virtually unanimous chorus of criticism was leveled! against the Kremlin by foreign Communists. That; happened after Russian leaders started reviling Stalin, but subsequent events suggest the suspicions were warranted. J was guessed the attacks jHight have been designed to give the world a false show of independence, among the Communist parties putsidfe Russia. If; that was the intent, the 3how was not very impressive j since Italy's Togliatti and France's Thor ez soon indicated they n were ready to swallow the new line like any dutiful Communist If the attacks were genuine, again they Plead , s , ton-sillotom- rs e) nt. man-killin- of-wa-r, j ous I j left-hande- d - : , y. right-hande- -- j ; , . - I Ernst W. Zwart Serve? in Korea 24TH DIV., Korea Army Pvt. of Mr. and W. son, Ernst Zwart, Mrs. Albert Zwart, 88 State High-waPleasant Grove, Utah, is a member of the 24th Infantry Division in Korea. Zwart, assigned to the survey section in' Battery C of the division's 63rd Field Artillery battalion, entered the Army in July 1955. He completed basic training at Fort Carson, Colo., and was assigned , at Fort Knox, Ky., before arriving overseas last Decem- y, ber. , Herald Correspondents Daily, Here ; Richard Serves Herald atatt eempulata Amelunq Far East Pleasant Grove Utah, and husband of the former Miss Goldie L. Speaks of Pueblo, tSolo., is in (he Far East aboard the light cruiser USS Roanoke.J , The ship will' visit many. Pacific ports during the cruise 'including Hawaii, Japan, the Philippines and Hong Kong. 33, View-Vineya- rd 9-4- 80 . t 60 5-1- D ; a 12 i r: i I , h . -- a. Stock up on cheese today ; ; HAY 1 . ed NaSON j t Editor and Columnist logon rierald Journal - self-address- c-- MCA 1 , j 1 V ; " ' Marguerite Waterbury 089 Jl Highland Cressle Greenland LAke Shore, vorvi ueuows osaq-- m Lake LK.nl Josephine Zimmermaa " .r 71W . 101 W Lehl Paul WUlis cir. M74 , LAndon, .Evelyn Blake Maoleton Zpra U Bales HO ... . 31 Nephi Lee Bailey Orem Marearet WhJtwood AC Qrem Irene Keith (cir.) AC- 031 1H3 Palmyra Shirlene Ottesen 2234 Payson Madollno Dixon S27J, (clrj Payson Amber Jackman PI Grove Beulah G Bradley 331 PI Grove Guy Billman (sports 4382 PI Grove Jennie Gilbert (cir.) J94 PI View, Yvonne Perry FH C107RI Salem Manrrette Taylor 902 Santaquin EstellaG. Peterson 3.26 J King Sp rork Frank Evans( Society) 27 Sp Fork Vireinia Sp Fork B Davis Evans (eirj; til Sprinjj Lake, Uortense Butler Snc. Katberine sitetfield ECU West altn airs Overs Blsbop IZIZJ JAIL TERM John PATERSON, N.J. (UP) in was Schafer jail today because be tore a notice to appear on a support charge in four pieces. Judge Milton S c h a ip a c h sentenced Schafer to four days one day for each piece. PRO-RATE- Pfc:Ted Traihr - J " mxm it. the various communities of .Utah County. Contact them If yon bar news. District! circulation agents are listed also They stand ready to help O. problems concerning d Sou with of the paper . in Name Foie Community 087 J Alnine. Lorna Devey r 100W Ame-lun- g, American Forlt Dena Richard EAST O, FAR Qrant Am. Fk. Duane Durrant (dr.) S09J seaman, USN, son of Mr. Benjamin. Mrs. J. R Peay 011rtl Tana Richards FB t and Mrs. John B. Amelung of Edsemont. Goshen Elberta j ; 1 world-famou- CAR BECOMES IIOUSEWRECKER KALAMAZOO, Mich. (UP) -O- wen Muncy exposed all, when he had a spat with his wife. The angered Muncy drove his car in his five-roo- m house three times, smashing in two walls and leaving the living room, a bedroom and th kitchen exposed. 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