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Show The Cache American, Losran, Cache County, Utah Pace Six tv X . f ' tv a f ? 4 s 4 .TV' SPRING ON WAV . . . Spring must be on Its way when Lawson Robertson, veteran bead track coach of the University of Pennsylvania, takes bis team outdoors for a workout. Pete Mungor, sprinter. Is being clocked by Robertson. lie Is a son of the Penn head football coach and has been one of Pennsylvanias outstanding athletes. fj. x .v ( V h ... SAVES PERSONAL BELONGINGS AS FLOOD WATERS RUSH ON A high hat, battered cage contain-In- g pet cat, and several pails and containers which held her most cherished possessions, were saved from the home of Mrs. C. W. Voylcs, Atlanta, Ga., as the swollen Chattahoochee river flooded her home. T iCJjfl. UNO DELEGATES HOLD HUDDLE IN LONDON . . . Left to right: British Prime Minister Clement Attlee, U. S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and British Foreign Minister Ernest Bevln, as they go Into an Informal huddle after the first meeting of the United Nations organization general assembly In Central hall, London. The first meeting got underway with little opposition on major issues. "PT"r A JOB Former Federal Circuit Court of Appeals Judge William Clark, Princeton, N. J., who has Invoked the G.I. "Bill of Rights to regain for him lifetime post which he left to join the army. DEMANDS E V OLD . . p - 1 v . V V X. V m, form,., 'V ' S ' w' . V s H J v a , , M - fa y 4 VC i r . " . H ft l 7 fef -A y 1 1 ! V . -T- i JcS. r SANGELLS CITY LIMITS A' V,v t Jt.)V j " ' 4 Z f "H CHURCHILL VISITING IN THE UNITED STATES . . , Accompanied by Mrs. Churchill, left, the former prime minister of Great Britain, W'inston Churchill, center, Is shown with his Miami, Fla., host. Col. Frank Clark. The former war prime minister expects to spend several weeks in the South, resting, painting, fishing, with some writing thrown in. It has been reported that Churchill will retire from active politics. J . J-- ' AIRBORNE DIVISION HAILED IN NEW YORK CITY . . . Maj. Gen. James M. Gavin, commander the 82nd airborne division, and his staff lead the parade of his 13.000 troops up the canyon of Fifth avenue. New York City. Thousands hailed the troops, symbollo of our victorious fighting forces. Most of them have since been discharged, although more than 1,000 have This is believed to be a postwar record and has proven a big boost to new enlistments in the armed forces. of battle-season- STAY AWAY FROM MY DOOR . . Things have really come to the point where Los Angeles citizens would appreciate pleasure-traveler- f ed : 'y I - v"'r..v x .a s 'staying away from their doors for at least another six months. Do you believe in signs? I ? t , . . . This fellow was on his way to Loafers Glory, N. C., when he decided to turn this crossroads Into his own private loafers glory. The name was given by more or less spiteful neighbors of former days. The name took bold and stuck. LOAFERS GLORY HEAR UAW CHARGES . . . Gerald D. Reilly of the National Labor Relations board, who was appointed to hear charge that General Motors had failed to bargain in good faith. The charges were made by UAW officials. ... Mr. and Mrs. G.I.S LIFE INSURANCE GIVEN TO COLLEGE Robert S. Johnstone, Downington, Pa., are pictured in their home looking at photograph of their son, Robert S. Johnstone, 18, who was killed on Luzon. His parents have established a scholarship at Lafayette college, using his insurance money, with the provision that a Japanese student be given first consideration. They will add some of their own money. ... For the first time BLANCHARD, FORD WIN SULLIVAN AWARD in the history of the Sullivan award, a college football player, Felix (Doc) Blanchard, Army star fullback, was voted the memorial trophy by the AAU. For the second straight year, Alan Ford, Yales in the balloting. The winner last sprint swimming ace, was runner-u- p year was swimming star Ann Curtis, California young star. Blanchard Is a native of Bishopville, S. C. 16-ye-ar r Sj Jj ;lK. - Jr y; r $&& A Ay THREE OF A KIND WIN . . . Triplet calves, all females, born on the Baker farm, Averill Park, N. Y., have their first picture taken while frolicking in ti.eir stalls. The young ones were reported doing very nicely. ,vnini.wiiW. as: YOUTH CARVES A CAREER Bill Burnham, 17, Encino, Calif., has wood carving hobby pay. Using life animals for models. Bill bas begun to cash in on his excellent work. His latest order was from a motion picture studio working on scenic background for a new pic- made his ture. Bill bas three live deer, a buck and two fawns at his home. WINNING FRIENDS . . . Mrs. Arthur Vandenberg, wife of the U. S. senator from Michigan and delegate to the UNO, is shown making friends with a London tot. Mrs. Vandenberg is spending her sojourn in London studying social conditions. SAVED BY MEAT PACKERS STRIKE . . . Meat on the hoof, and it will stay that way if the strike of two meat industry unions continues. Scene Is the Chicago stock yards, where activity was virtually nil when the packing house workers and amalgamated meat cutters walked out. |