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Show Bossy Meets War Production Cliallenire u As Dairy Industry Supplies Vital Foods Industry Observes Gth 15 MILLION mole CANS OF MILK Ersatz Rubber Problem National Headache Still ;.s Annual JunTr . fthoduaxLcoeXu month. Campaign. Total Supply May Dwindle in Years Time to 50 Per Cent of Needs for Essential Military Operation. J Ljaiii.ti.Vw KtlHHI'.'JKu Ac N-- 1 but a d.gresswn. Tall, Senator Gillette from out where the tall corn grows and where both corn and men grow tall, had the floor. He had digressed to speak about the utilization of surplus products for the manufacture of articles which have become scarce because of the war. Specifically, the manufacture of synthetic rubber frim gram alcohol. The senator from Iowa walked back and forth between the desks, suit, tense in trim in a slate-blu- e manner, an accusing finger continually pom' mg from a long, arm. He had just come from a hearing of a senate subcommittee of which he was chairman where they had heard testimony by Dr. William Hale, president of National Agrol company, to the effect that if opposition of the big petroleum companies could be eliminated, we could make budta-dien- e synthetic rubber for five cents a pound from surplus farm commodities. Senator Gillette was bursting with or so at least he Indignation seemed from his words and the voice in which he spoke them. We had demonstrated to us, he said describing the committee hearings, that plants for the utilization of farm products can be established the cost of the critical at of the time. d materials in silver-haire- d straight-stretche- d one-tent- h one-thir- OMahoney on Monopoliei To illustrate opposition to such efa story of how a Polish scientist, an expert m the making of synthetic rubber who had come to forts he told this country, was suddenly ordered to keep his mouth shut and spirited away where he could not be found. He charged that this sordid romance" as he called it was the work of men in certain agencies in Washington who, while they might be as patriotic as anyone else, were still protecting monopolies which they represented to the farmers disadAt the word monopoly, vantage. slim, dynamic Senator O'Mahoney was on his feet to expound that subject which is his pet the evil of the monopoly, and after h:m Senator Wheeler rose to echo the charges. The senators remarks had their effect. Immediately the War Production board was heard from. A WPB spokesman declared that Donald Nelson had been working like hell on the whole rubber problem. The next day Arthur Newhall, WPB called a press rubber conference and set forth m detail what the WPB was doing and planning to do to meet the rubber needs. Shortly after Senator Gillette's speech the WFB stated that it had ordered preparation of a plan for nation-wid- e rationing of gasoline so that those states where tanks were still flowing would be restrained from the use of gasoline and in turn the use of rubber tires which make up Americas greatest rubber stock pile. Rubber From Dandelions One possible source of rubber which offers the greatest theoretical possibilities and therefore is looked upon with the greatest doubt by the realists who have seen many tall promises collapse, is about to be tested it is the humble dandelion. Not the one that ruins your front lawn but an imported Russian variel. The rubber experts of the Bureau of riant Industry are going to give the P.ussian dandelion a chance. They have received a shipment of seeds by air from the Soviets, where it is claimed that these dandelions yield 30 to 50 pounds of rubber per acre on an annual basis RAZOR BLADES Washington, D. C, WAR FLASHES s saboteurs have Belgian blown up one of the largest synthetic fertilizer plants in their country. This is a serious blow to the Nazis, who have been using the output of tills plant for food production in Germany. For more than a month there have been no cereals of any kind on the Sofia market Also the lack of feed, commandeered by the Nazis, is so severe that thousands of horses have d.ed of starvation. Four small Buffalo concerns are demonstrating that where there is a will there is a way to aid war production. Three of them, tombstone manufacturers, have obtained contracts to sandblast castings for battleships and machine gun mounts. The fourth, which formerturn signals for ly made trucks, is now making armaments military operations and transportation, exclusive of civilian use. Souct-U- Faces Death One Frenchman with the soul of a philosopher and the pen of a poet faced death over his beloved France in the spring of 1940 and found the meaning of life. He was Antoire de and between the covers of his latest book, Flight to Arras (Reynal & Hitchcock, Inc.) he has put down as significant an autobiography of a few hours in a man's life as can be found. It was in the last days of May. 1940, "a time of full retreat, of full found disaster," that himself. Filled with a sense of futility, be saw airplane crew after crew "being offered up as a sacrifice . . . as if you dashed glassfuls of water into a forest fire in the hope of putting it out. He stood in the midst of a world that was cracking up so completely around him that death, in such a tumult, ha . ceased to count." Then came his turn to be "offered up. With a photographer and gunner he was ordered out on a sortie at 30,000 feet and a reconnaisance flight at 2,000 feet above the German tank parks scattered over a considerable area around Arras. He took off, weighed down with the sense of the futility of it all and his inability to understand why he ought to die in such an empty gesture. At six miles above the earth, when consciousness would drift gently toward oblivion if the oxygen line fouled, when controls froze and stray German fighter planes spat contemptuously at him as he looked down on a "world in decomposition, struggled fruitlessly with the philosophical meaning of his venture. Then swooping down to within 2,000 feet of the German guns around Arras, he suddenly found the meaning of it all. Surrounded by an "ack-ack- " fire that "drowned (him) in a crop of trajectories as golden as stalks of wheat, flying at the "center of a thicket of lance strokes . . . threatened by a vast and dizzying flutter of knitting needles," he found himself bound to the earth in a "coruscating web of golden wire. And in that moment, encircled by flame through which there appeared to be no escape, he was suddenly released from himself. He was stripped of the fear for his physical body. Suddenly he knew that "Man does not die . . . there Is no death when you meet death . . , when the body sinks into death, the essence of man is revealed. And when thus found himself he found, too, that he was a part of that larger concept Man. That his ties were not alone with his friends and his village and even his country, but beyond his country with all other countries. He became aware that He who is different from me does not impoverish me he enriches me," that "Each man bears the sms of all men. In this understanding he found that It is Man who must be restored to his place among men. It is Man that is the essence of our culture. Man, the kej stone in the arch of the community. Man, the seed whence springs our victory." (Because I am an I was afraid to try to assay this book which made a deep impression on me. So I asked a colleague, Pauline Frederick, a child during the last war, to write of it. I can tell you it's strong medicine. A tonic If you can take it.) Samt-Exuper- Saint-Exuper- y Saint-Exuper- y Jcpirtaii'it of Agriculture As its contribution to feeding the democracies, the dairy industry of the United States has increased its production from 1935 to 1939 by nearly cans of milk enough cans to make a row from Los 15,000,000 Angeles to New York. ten-gali- ume of milk in addition to the regular supply is no easy task. Just the job of hauling milk to fill 7'a miles of 50,000 pound capacity tank cars from the farm to the milk station or dairy plant each morning, is enough to stagger the imagination of the average individual, but that is simply a little "before breakfast chore" as compared with the extra effort necessary to raise the feed, do the additional milking and cool and care for that extra milk train load of milk each morn- milk to fill 6.666 big tank cars. If these were all put together in one big milk train, we would have each morning a train of milk tank curs 57 miles long. The flow of this stream of food rated by nutritionists as the No. 1 protective food is of vital importance to our nation at all times, but especially so this year. The Allied nations and the soldiers of the United States must have milk and its products. Factory and munition workers have greater need than ever for milk and milk products. Office workers, housewives, school children and all other classes of the American population are com-lto realize, as never before, their need for greater quantities of these vital foods in order to keep America strong by making Americans stronger. Dairy Program. Today the National Dairy Council program, which the industry has sponsored for 23 years, is finding new recognition and new support. A national nutrition program is expanding and materially strengthening the realization of the fact that good nutrition is necessary to optimum health, vigor and vitality. This national nutrition program has been in operation for more than a year. Just how are these 26 million cows and those responsible for the product meeting this challenge and this opportunity? We need not wait for that answer. Those bossies" and their masters are meeting the challenge. Starting with an average production of 104 billion pounds of milk during the years 1935 to 1939; there was 111 billion pounds of milk produced in 1940; 115 billii n 500 million pounds of milk in 1941, and the production for 1942 is estimated at not less than 120 billion pounds of milk to be produced in the United States. In other words, for each and every day of the year, including Sundays and holidays, there is being produced more than 44,000,000 pounds of milk over thrt of five years ago. That is the equivalent of a fully loaded milk train of 50.000 pound capacity cars, 7'i miles long over and above their normal production. Terrific Handling Problem. Stated in terms of ten gallon milk cans, if these were filled and placed side by side, we would find that we had every month a line of filled milk cans 3,150 miles long over anu above the amount of milk that was produced in this country in the same period during the preceding period. Producing such a vol- n n A Philosopher S e ing. Dry Milk Solids. For many years, the cream from about 45 billion pounds of milk each year has been used for the manufacture of butter, including both the e factory and the product. n farm-mad- 7a J A "V ? f I a U f Kf X i Milk made the difference both dogs had the same food, but the larger one received a daily milk ration. Of this, about 30 billion pounds of milk have been farm separated with the remaining skimmed milk being kept on the farms for feed for calves, pigs and chickens. One of the severe which the industry has been called upon to make in order to furnish sufficient dry milk powder to the United Nations has been to shift from farm separation of much of this milk to the delivery of whole milk. Manufacture of dry milk solids is gaining rapidly and in March reached an high of i9.800,-00pounds. While the speeding up of the manufacture of dry mill: solids has necessarily been delayed longer than seemed desirable on account of the vast amount of changes in practice necessary, both on the farms and in the plants; yet, it is now gaining momentum rapidly. Production today is approximately 120 per cent of 1941. The three states of Wisconsin, New York and California produce of all the dry more than milk solids in the country at the present time. Other states i, ipor- e one-ha- five-ye- 0 lf Saint-Exuper- y a j'milf.Muz'' a S.t 'inctfrs'u Vi ,.a A. dairy cow weighing 1,000 pounds (providing she maintains her weight aDd produces 7,605 pounds of milk a year) eats approximately the following amounts of feed in one year: two acres of rich pasturage In five months of summer; 6,300 pounds of silage and 2,730 pounds of alfalfa hay during the seven remaining months; and 1,700 pounds of grain throughout the entire 12 months. ii iiaA w gain ra 1 n- jtfr, Jk.vaGA-'j. A tant in the manufacture solids are of dry milk Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Idaho and Vermont, in the order named. The increase in the manufacture of dry milk solids has forced severe changes in both farm management practice and in the operation of butter factories. Farmers have had to adjust their operations to new methods of feeding. Creameries have been obliged to put in new equipment, to train new personnel and to their operating and merchandising plans. This is in addition to another difficult problem which the butter making industry must face every year and that is, the varying seasonal production. During the year 1940 to 1941 butter manufacture varied by months from a low of 115 million 700 thousand pounds in November to a high of 205 million 300 thousand pounds in June. North Central States. Most of these changes have been brought about in the North Central states where butter production is the heaviest Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin rank first, second and third in the order named as the "big three" in the butter industry in the United States. After that come Michigan, Nebraska, Missouri, Illinois, Ohio, Kansas, Indiana, California, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Washington. These 15 states produce more than 85 per cent of all the butter made in the United States. Cheese is another important dairy product, the manufacture of which has been materially affected by current conditions. Largely as the result of the war and the demand for American cheese abroad, production of this product has been stepped up The government reenormously. quest in March, 1941, for 250 million pounds of cheese amounted to an urging, on its part, for almost 50 per cent increase in production. The industry has met that request and more. Nearly 300 million pounds of cheese had been provided for purchases from March 15, 1941, to April 1, 1942. Cheese production is now running about 150 per cent as much as a year ago. Cheese is a product containing practically all the ingredients of fluid milk, and as such, it is one of the first on the protective list of foods. Its value and its importance are gaining recognition rapidly. In the production of cheese, Wisconsin alone produces more than half of all the cheese in the United States. Following Wisconsin are New York, Illinois, Indiana, Oregon, Ohio, Missouri, Texas, Michigan and Minnesota in the order of their importance. Evaporated Milk Industry, War conditions have had an equally important bearing on the evaporated milk industry. To fill the demand for a concentrated milk product for the United Nations, the government asked for a step-uin production sufficient to supply 25 million add.tioaal cases of evaporated milk. This called for an increase of more than 50 per cent in manufacture. It called for changes in farm management plans, for adjustments in evaporating plant operations, for the training of personnel and for shifts of merchandising methods fully equal to those the cheese industry met. Here again the goal was equallod and more. Approximately 3C million cases of evaporated milk has been furnished for "le; operations. In this industry, too, Wisconsin leads with almost 30 per cent of all the evaporated milk production in the United States. Ohio, California, New York, Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, Indiana, Washington and Pennsylvania follow in the order named. s During June hundreds of of dollars worth of publicity in newspapers and trade publications, in food and drug stores, radio programs, publicity sturts, advertising material at soda fountains, as well as educational programs, combine under the leadership of the Nat onal Dairy council with the efforts of nutritional authorities t make of this the most gigantic effort to brirg hon.e to all people the realization of Die need oi better health and the p'ace of milk and its products in achieving tiial goal. p lend-leas- wig-wa- g parts. When Nazi stooge Quisling recently issued a call for enlistments in a select Quisling Guard" only 35 in the whole of Norway responded. The labor shortage in Italy has become so acute that all males between 14 and 70 and all females between 16 and 60 have been required to register for war work service." CONGRESSIONAL GRAB Even Washington, where congressional boodling is an old story, was startled when some 300 senators and representatives took X" rationing cards giving them an unlimited supply of gasoline. The capital well knows that few members of congress have sufficient "official business" to warrant an X" rating. Also, after the way the boys got their fingers burned in the attempted crude "bundles for congress pension grab, it was thought they had learned their lesson for this session at least But it seems they haven't for the gas grab is only part of the rationing ducking story. OPA has said nothing about it but the inside fact is that a number of the congressional statesmen have privately demand! i that the drastic tire restrictions be lifted for them so that they can get tires for campaigning purposes. Further, none of these politicos said anything about extending such a concession to their opponents. They want tires for but their rivals themselves, must abide by tbe regulations without any special favors. So far OPA has turned a deaf ear to the tire demand. Note: One reason why X" cards were dished out so freely on Capitol Hill was that a number of congressional wives acted as registrars. FAST THINKER at Selective Popular pastime Service is swapping stories about draftees. Here is the latest making the rounds: A prospective draftee was taking his physical examination and the doctor directed him to look at the chart on the wall and tell me what numBers you see. What wall? asked the draftee blankly. After looking him over a few minutes the doctor told the registree the army couldn't use him. He put on his clothes and departed. But on the way home, he stopped oil to see a movie. When the lights went on at intermission, he was startled to find the examining physician seated beside him. But the draftee was equal to the occasion. Nudging the doctor he asked innocently, "Can you tell me if this is the bus to Alexandria?" JAP OIL Navy experts are closely watching Jap efforts to rehabilitate the destroyed oil wells and refineries in the Dutch East Indies and Burma. Orders have been Issued that samples of oil, grease, gasoline and furl oil from captured Jap equipment be rushed by the fastest ro. te to the Engineering Experimental station, Annapolis, where analysis will attempt to ascertain from what region, and even from what well, the original crude was obtained. Nearly all oil wells and refineries were destroyed when the Allies were forced to retire from the Netherlands Indies and Burma, but the Japs are workirg feveri. h!y to get the fields back m production. So f.ir there has been no sign of any Jap use of this oil. Note: A quart is needed fur a thorough analysis, but if no more than a smear can be found, the navy wants it. thou-sand- B R I E F S The capital is so crowded and beds are so scarce that sold.ers coming here on leave fill the benches in the Ur.mn station and the bus depots at mght. If the ded, nonpartisan their way we wood r have mobilization of today. That is a lancy name for draping civiLans for war work. experts cold-bi- had man-powe- Ice Cream Consumption More Than Doubled by Baukhage In a land of free men we can't decree or command or legislate peace and harmony and efficiency." John R. Steelman, director, U. S Conciliation service. After three years, gauyule yields more than 390 pounds of rubber per acre, but if left four years, it may yield as much as 600 pounds per acre. Long regarded as the "all American ice cream is rapidly coming to be recognized not only as an economical food, but since it also contains all of the ingredients c milk, as one of the best protective foods. Within the past eight years, consumption has risen from about 4,;2 quarts per person per year to over lO- quarts per person per year in 1941. That figure is rising rapidly Ice cream takes the output of nearly one mRbon cows. In the manufacture of ice cream, Pennsylvania leads the nation closely followed by New York. These two states produce more than of all the ice cream m the United States. Illinois, Ohio, Cali- -i j fornia. Michigan, Massachusetts, Texas. W.scor.sm, Indiana, M M.nnesota, New Jersey, Iowa and Maijland follow in the ordw of this p ductive importance. point-of-sal- I MERRY-G- ROUND CThe hens of the nation are doing their part for the war. This years egg goal is 51,900 000.000 eggs 13 per cent more than in 1941. And so far this year egg production has been running around 16 per cent greater than 1941. C Although one of the oldest men in the senate, Senator George Norris, "father" of TV A, is at his desk every morning by e.ght o'clock, never missis a meelirg of the committees of which he is a member, and rarely goes home before 7 pm. ini's pa per Man Stuff: A RFPORTlli CItlS IDES If 11 1 eetiinst dirty element in d community or country there r ery little pory coi netted uuh it, but he puts himself in 7; ElO KENT anti-Axi- June dairy CHICAGO. month brings a picture of cows on nearly five million farms in the United BAUKIIAGE By .cus Analyst and Commentator. States, each performing an function in winning WXC Service, 1313 H Street, The plant looks much like our important the war. at work in it Quietly C. is D. dandelion but and much Washington, larger the barns and on the pastures I leaned over the rail of the radio is from the large roots that the rubgallery in the United States senate ber is made. The weeds will.be from Maine to California and the other day and looked down on a planted and carefully watched m or- from the Canadian border Jo der to keep them from spreading and fiery debate on the agriculture supthe Gulf, these 26,000,000 anibecoming a curse instead of a blessply bill. mals are daily producing a ing. The touseled head of Vice PresiMeanwhile the miluary men are third of a billion pounds of dent Wallace, presiding oer the sespessimistic. They want the rubber milk. could see almost directly unsion, and they are afraid the garage door I Unlike over. me leaned when der That means an average will be locked after the tires are over who pres.de many of the men out. of 166,636 tons of or worn stolen production the senate or house, he was keenly They claim they will be short of milk every day in the year. Interested. His eyes never left the rubber in a year from If speakers. Naturally. He had been necessary placed in ten gallon cans, estia farm boy. He had edited a farm now. According toof unofficial cans would be re3,921,569 the next the end mates, by year paper, he had been secretary of to hold an average of crude and synthetic rubquired supply agriculture. ber in the country will amount to days milk production in the It was not the main subject of the about half, or pernaps even United States. This is just enough debate that interested me at the less, than the needs for essential moment CLASSIFIED D E P A R T M E U t rrauLlin's Creed i I believe in one God, the cre-tof the universe. That he govern treat personal danger . . . Donald a. it by His Providence. That He Melleu of the Canton (Ohio! Daily ought to be worshiped. That tie Sous was killed by gangsters because most acceptable service ue renhe exposed their actmties . . . In 19i, der to Hun is doing good to H s Oeoree Dale of the M uncle That the soul of a other children. fought the K. K. K. One night man is immortal, and will be few of them attacked him and almost beat him to death . He shot one of his treated with justice in another hfe its conduct in this attackers uith a gun he urenched from respecting lus hand. Kluxers in high places railThese I take to be the fundamental roaded him to jail. And it uosn t until points in all sound religion 1926 that the State Supreme Court ruled Franklin. lor many years the in Dales fat or or ... liulte (Montana) Daily Bulletin slugged recourageously against the gardless of how pouerful they uere. Because of that, thev had to keep loaded rifles in the city room and fiery reporter had a gun laying beside his I his reporter has also typewriter neier stopped firing his typewriter guns against the shmey members of our community and country , in spiteof all kinds of threats. let some people wonder uhy we tote a J8. ... du;:io:;s Get this quirk relief. Lifts Doe pressure, sootnee, cushion tne pot. Cost but a trifle. WTV J Quality of a Fool Notes of an Innocent Bystander: It is tiie peculiar quality The Wireless: See how the Axis whimpers when you get tough. Churchill slapped a couple of chips off Adolfs shoulder, and Berlin cried You ask for gas," its eyes out. taunted Winston, and gas youll get." The Berlin press whined next day, Please, mister, you got us wrong . . . The overseas exchange between Oliver Littleton ana Donald with Quentin Reynolds Nelson, was no encouragechairmaning, ment to Nazzy eavesdroppers. They talked great big production figures th; t wont make it an easy"summer ior the Fritzies . . . Another exciting bulletin was the item from Burma how the Chinese tricked the secchesty Japs into ond base. And putting tbe ball on them with a thump that just about laid the skull open . . . Byron Price is a sensible censor. Too tight a clamp down on radio news, he said, would make the public suspicious of the war effort . . . The March of Time flubbed on the Malta episode. Bad timing more than anything since the show went on the air before it really got going in Malta. g The Story Tellers: Gen. de Gaulle was in the doghouse with the brass hats before the war started. Elliot Paul, in his book, The Last Time I Saw Paris," mentions that de Gaulle the Maginot Line, the darling of the army clique. He foresaw that Hitler would skip around the end . . . Scott Feldman surprises you in The Woman with a tip that the best way to get a stage Job is to troupe for a little theater. There's always a Shubert or two lurking there, he says, to hire you for a hit. Imagine Lee Shubert going TOWARD an actor! . . . Film-ste- r Joan Davis, according to Lup-toWilkinson in This Week, lives in a purple house with yellow knobs at the corners, sleeps in a Du Barry bed with mauve and lilac streamers. The glass in her boudoir mirror is tinted peachbloom. Whats she looking for? Nightmares in technicolor? n Nazi propagandists keep repeatthat they love peace. Every time Hitler or another Nazi makes a speech, they insist that they are peaceful. And the tragic part of this is thrt this propaganda bullet aimed at America was manufactured by an American press agent! . . . When the Nazis first came to power they never stopped boasting to the outside world about their warlike attitude . . , But when this press agent was in Germany, he told the Nazis to base their propaganda on disarmament and peace . . . Youve probably guessed his . And so it Was name Ivy Lee . tins tip by a press agent that made many Americans and people in other democracies believe Nazis really wanted peace. Strange as It seems, we might not have had a war if democracies werent lulled to sleep by Nazi peace talk. of a fool to perceive the faults of others and to forget his own. Cicero. DON'T LET CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP When bowels art sluggish and you feel irritable, headachy and everything you do is an effort, do et nvlhont do chew the modern chewing I fnm laxative. Simply chew FEEN-A-MINbefore you go to bed sleep without being disturbed next morning gentle, thorough relief, helping you feel swell Min, full of your normal pep. Try ! Tastes good, is handy and economical. A generous family supply FEEII-A-F.IillTT- of ffillDDLE-AG- E V0'iiEN(S) HEED THIS ADVICEI1 Tf youre crow, restless, suffer hot flashes, nervous feelings, dizziness, distress of "Irregularities" caused by this period In a womans life try Lydia E. Plnkhams Vegetable Comonce at pound female functional disturbance Thousands upon thousands o women bare reported gratlfvlni benefits. Follow label directions WORTH TRYING I ing . The Front Pages: The editorially declared war on Laval & Co., and advised the State Dep t that Vichy has ratted on the USA from the sta.. It okayed Jap bases for attacks t. China, the paper reminded, and cautioned Hull that Lavals word wasn't any better than a police court package If Vichy wants to be thiefs chummy, how come those uniformed brats demonstrated in front of the U. S. embassy Monday? Hcrald-Tribun- For You To Feel Well 24 hour, every day. 7 daya .very week, never .topping, the kidney filter Waste matter from the blood. 1( more people were aware of bow tbs kidneys tenet constantly remove surplus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that cannot stay in tbe blood without injury to health, there would be better understanding of tpiy the whole system la upset when kidneys fad to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urination sometimes warns that something is wrong. You may suffer nagging backache, headaches, dimness, rheumatic pains, getting up at nights, swelling. hy dm try Uoan Ft U1 You will be using a medicine recommended tbe eountnr over. boun'B stimulate the function of the kidneys and belp them to flush out poisonous waste from the blood. They contain notmng harmful. Get Doan 9 today. Lee with confidence. At all drug stores. e WNU W 22 HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH ... Barry Faris of INS once pointed out why reporters should never piHe said: geonhole their stories "Stories are like vegetables. Use them quickly or they spoil. ... He was blind . . . But every day tie had his secretary read every item in a newspaper. He wanted to know what page an item was printed on, how much space did it fill, how much was devoked to headlines, , what weie the were any boxes used, what about the il lustrations . . . And that's the ny cue of America's greatest publishers guided one of the country's greatest newspapers for many years . . . His came: Joseph Pulitzer. The newspaper: The N. Y. World. cross-heads- . .h knew fer 4 penonn . . 1H Fily Air Ooiefi LMtire B.tke to I4.H end Lakby Cede. She. I.p Rook Heme ef e Rotary hi warn Exchange OpUai ista CiualMr W Camera and A4 CIsb Dlninx .. Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN. UTAH Hakert E. VUick. Hji. 42 |