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Show nmCMHKK THIS JOURNAL 1C GREEN LIGHT cattle raisers and other meat experts In expressed the belief that the national meat shortage had ended. During the first two weeks of the month beef output was 18 per cent above the same period in October, and 9 percent greater than a year earlier. This was the result of various favorable influences, one of them being the fact that our cattle population now totals e high. But one important 90,000,000, close to the factor deserves special mention. In the words of a New York Times editorial, While we have heard much about the crippling of control legislation at the hands of Congress, a case can be made to show' that the present turn for the better in the meat outlook is attributable in part at least to one of the relaxing amendments passed by Congress. The OPS some months ago had under consideration placing ceilings on meat at the live cattle level. Threat of such action, it is maintained by some in the packing industry, brought almost to a standstill the purchase of lean cattle for purposes of fattening up for market. In the revision of the Defense Production Act authority to impose such ceilings was repealed. This w?as the green light, it is contended, which induced the feeding industry to resume operations. Heavy buying began in July and has continued ever since through the entire range coun-- 1 mid-Novemb- er all-tim- I 5 1 Brought Down MIG was by Cliffoid Baiber and prelude and pjstlude music was played by Mn. Alice Hailey and Gor- Illness Claims Syracuse Baby 15, don bhlson. Mrs. Marie Robins and Mailin Beautiful Gailey sang a duet, included Kail I). Home. Speakeis Orson Bybee Zaugg, Joseph Cook, and Bishop Cl iddle. A vocal solo, was sung by R. and Lois Weaver Bodily, who Some Sweet Day. Ohlson E. Goidon David Cook; died Wednesday at an Ogden hos- musical a violin a lendeied solo, pital following a months illness of leading was given by Mis. Helen' leukemia. The little gill was bom on Apiil1 Biiggs and a vocal duet. Lullaby was sung by and Goodnight. c. l!rl, in Ogden. Mr and Robins Mis. Gailey. Suivivois include the paients, ai hi other, Gaiy Bodily, and three Benediction was by Geoige H. gi andpai ents. Mrs. Robert E. Bod-li- Bennett, Ji. Dudley Pearson was Syiacuse, and Mr. and Mrs. palibearei and the floweis weie in Porter V. Weaver of Ogden. charge of the waid Relief society Bishop Lawience 1. Ciiddle of- and cariied by cousins of Diane. ficiated at funeial services. Piayer The grave in the Syracuse cemeat the Bodily home was gien by tery was ded:cated by Denial d W. Aither Ii. Andeison. Invocation Smedley, Funeral sen ices Saturday morning at 11 a. m in the Syiacuse waid chapel for little Diane Bodily, daughter of Phay SYRACUSE were conducted eight-month-o- ld j j I y, IN BATTLE AGAINST POLIO full-sca- le try. In other w'crds, here was a case where less control not more control acted as the spur which helped bring abundance where there had been scarcity. There is a lesson in that for those who hopefully think that the easy way to solve any problem is to pass more laws and to saddle enterand more edicts. prise with more regulations, more No economic system ever devised by man has worked half so well as supply and demand in the free market. The dramatic change took pace in the beef situation after Congress wisely restrained OPS from imposing ceilings on live cattle in evidence of that fact. Controls may be well meant but they just red-tap- e, LIEUTENANT William R. Dawson (above ) , of Columbus, O., accounted for one of four Russian MIG-1- 5 Jets in a recent major air battle over Korea. According to a U. S. Defense Department announcement, nineteen F-Sabrejets tangled with 18 MIGs and shot down four enemy planes. (International Soundphoto) dont w'ork. 86 YOU'RE TELLING ME! By WILLIAM RITT Central Press Writer CUSTOM TAILORS GUILD, we centuries before the Vikings did. read, is proposing tighter fitting The Greeks, no doubt, had a word for it and wed guess a more attrouseroons for us males. Probto the eliminate pockets tractive one than Iceland. ably plan i i i for which we dont have much use anymore. This is one season, the sports t t i ed moans, when there seems to be The trend could, of course, go more upsets than football games. too far. We shudder to think of r t i d how some of our pals To the thirsty alumnus, the gridwould look in knee pants. iron battle seems secondary to the i i i stadium bottle. Today it's a poor family that t t i does have a roof but not a teleWinter does have one advantage vision antenna over its head. i over summer never, well, hardly now a ever, do people annoy one with, historian The Greeks, Is it cold enough for you? Iceland many saytr, discovered VETERANS ENTITLED ID NONSERVICE- - CONNECTED I PENSIONS WHO ARE SO H&PLESS THATTHEY MEED THE REGULAR AID OF ANOTHER PERSON IN THEIR HOMES MAY BE ENTITLED It) THE HIGHER PAYMENT OF $120. A MONTH UNDER A NEW LAW how-legge- 0 BASEBALL IDOL BOBBY THOMSON, whose home run clinched the pennant ld for the Giants, shows Robert Gott, a polio victim, how to swing a bat. A native of Richmond County, N. Y., Thomson has just been of the Richmond 1952 appeal for the National appointed Foundation for Infantile Paralysis drive. (International Exclusive) five-year-o- CHART LINE FOR KOREAN TRUCE For fall information contact your nearest VETERANS ADMINISTRATION offlca AMTRACK TAKES ON 'CASUALTY' IN MANEUVERS Allied and Communist liaison officers work to line where the shooting In Korea might stop iraw on a map the cease-fir- e before Christmas. CoL James Murray (left), U.S. Marine Corps, pencils the map as Lt CoL Tsai Cheng (sitting opposite him) of the Chinese Reds watches Intently. Other members of the two truce teams look on. (U.S. Dtfen Department Radiophoto from International Sound photo) AT PANMUNJOM, KOREA, the field at Camp Lejeune, N.C., Navy Hospital Corpsmen carry a The Leatherneck Amtrack. to a exercises staged a simulated full-sca- le waiting "casualty landing during were of evacuation Medical personnel handled the wounded under conused. methods which all casualty ditions such as are faced on the Korean battlefront. (U.S. Marine Corps Photo from International Soundphoto) TRAINING FOR MARINE CORPS DUTY In |