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Show !!0'rY The Herald Journal 2 nn Al'Ol rT (lllie lA)rttl Cliunu, i v, L t ,h - ..- X - ' -- 2-- '. THOTS AND THINGS . i Here's The Hew Ike-Bens- X Farm Program In Capsule SINCE THE EISENI ( Y K III E N SON faim progiam in now a reality, you may tip inteiested in a digest of in main provisions. The best way to understand the new law passed by Congress is through a lis of dates on winch changes from the old law will go into effect. Peter Edson of the NEA Washington Matf notes that as di ought telief for livestock iaiscts. from now until Match 1, 1953, Commodity Credit Cot notation may sell its sutplus feed grains at 110 per cent of the current support pt ice. After March 1, the pi ice will go back to 105 per erit of paiity plus tallying 1 chaiges. f iV - - i. Wftf ( '44, f" ? - & 1 f ' ' Lc f '' ' - v - j X jqZ,' Xrzf: p 'A ' . '' ' .4". - . IS THAT W , ,1 v U" Xr v V iJ ljf7x- kzu ' " o The date on which the secietary may proclaim the area remains Keb. 1. Maiketlng quotas for corn has been ended for 1955 and later crops. But acreage allotcorn-produci- ment authority remains. Beginning April 1, 1955, and for four years thereafter, Incentive payments may be made to U. S. wool growers, up to 110 per cent of parity. The money to pay for this incentive is to come from 70 per cent of specific duties collected on wool imports in the proceeding calendar year. Customs receipts on wool were approximately $50 million last year. Seventy per cent of that would bp $35 million, which Is a fair estimate on this new subsidy, intended to Increase domestic wool production. The U. S. now produces about a third of the wool it uses. This is a marked change from the present 90 per cent of parity support on domestic wool. Mohair prices in the future will be supported to within 15 per cent of th new wool support price. THE LATEST DATE ON which the secretary may proclaim wheat marketing quotas and acreage allotments has been moved up from July 15 to May 15. This is well ahead of the harvest season. A new noncommercial area has been established. It Includes any state producing less than 25,000 bushels annually. This will probably be the six New g England states and Arizona. There will be no be at only will in and states these price supports quotas s of the commercial wheat-raisinstates area. No changes have been made on any dates affecting the cotton crop. But county committees are given more authority to allocate cotton acreages on the basis of plantings during any of the three previous years. County committees may also limit any farm acreage allotment to not more then 50 per cent of the cropland on the farm. wheat-producin- g wheat-marketin- three-fourth- g For the 1955 basic crops, wide changes will he made on price supports. Only tobacco will continue to be supported at 90 per cent of parity. Wheat corn, cotton, rice and peanuts will drop to a flexible 82 2 to 90 per cent of parity, as proclaimed by the secretary. price-suppo- understood. The other big change is that beginning with the 1956 crops, but not before, a gradual shift will be made to a modernized parity formula for wheat, corn, cotton and peanuts. The present formula was based on 1909-1averages. The new formula will be based on price relationships of the most recent ten years. The base period will thus change annually in continuous adjustment. Shouldn't Own BY HENRY McEEMORE m Lambeau 1 AM FOR CURLEY and against George Preston Marshall. That I declare. So what You may sa.Y, Okay. I'll tell you. My stand is for knowing and against not knowing. Lambeau is knowing. Marshall is Marshall owns the Redskins, a professional football team that woiks out of Washington. Lambeau. until a few days ago was the coach of Marshall's team. Marshall fired him. That surprised no one. Mr. Marshall fires like a Browning automatic. He is the tree among pio loothall owners. and his coaches are as leaves he sheds them with the change: of seasons. The Washington Redskins lost make It nineteen, two. three if you wish, exhibition football games. So out goes I.ambeau. I SAW THE Redskins in their exhibition game. They played the Los Angeles Rams for the Los Angeles Times Boys Charity. There were 80,000 customers, and not one of them thought the Skins had a chance. easily, which The Rams won was no surprise. They had too many players who were good, and if they had chosen they could have won by six more touchdowns. Lambeau knew this. So did Hamp Pool, the Rams coach, who held down the score. Lambeau and Pool know football. Theyve played It. They've gotten their Jaws rocked, their brains scrambled. But they remembered never to forget that the boys make a team, not the coaches. NOW TO MY column. Paul Schissler, who runs the I,. A. Times charity games, gave me what he thought were perfect daughter. n. pro-giam- Republicans Survey Congress Races At Cincinnati Workshop - Critical - j , olf-ve- , . s, 4 SO! , j BY FLORENCE GEARY The James Mather family held Its yearly reunion on Saturday. Dinner was enjoyed at Mack Park and the afternoon spent visiting and games for the children. In the evening they moved to the Klwanis Lodge where hot dogs and ice cream was served and a program and picture show enjoyed by over 100 descendants from various places in Utah and Idaho. To Great Falls Mrs. Matilda Mortensen has spent the summer visiting at the homes of her grand-childreMr. and Mrs. Ardith Farrell, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Winget, Mr. and Mrs. Weston Hales and Mr. and Mrs. LaVern Riggs. She is leaving by plane Wednesday for Great Falls. Montana, where she will live with Mr. her daughter and and Mrs. Ron Sundquist. On Monday, about 50 of her friends and relatives called at the Winget home to visit and chat ilh her before she leaves. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Barber and children of Centerville were Saturday guests of Mrs. Gladys Bingham. Mrs. J. Arbon Christensen and children and her mother, Mrs. Charlolet Allen, are visiting in Salt Lake this week. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Facer have received word that their son Wade has been transferred to Fort laonard Wood, Missouri. Wade was home a few weeks ago rnroute from Fort Leiws. Washington, to Oiicago where he went by plane. Quilting Psrty - Mrs Eliza Ixiw was hostess at a quilting at her home on Monday. A dinner was served to Rubv Sorensen. TJllie Hansen, Fmm Hansen, Fontella Reeder, Gladys Bineham. Edith Lovvder. and Rosabell Facer. A lovely Mr Pore, Mr. and Mrs. Dewayne Manning and two daughtei - of Scatt'e, visit wan Wash., made a ten-daMr. Mannings parents, Mr and Mrs. W. Manning. While heie the couple received their endow-ment- s at the Logan temple. Mu. Manning is formerly Miss Folgerbcrg of Seattle. The family returned to its home aiir making a trip into Yellc i stone y d spoon-shape- If Might Have Happened ' HP Gonser. 35. Sun failed to make one of San Francisco's many hills in her car yesterday and set off a costly chain of ev ents Her auto stalled on a hill and slipped back Before she could slam on the brakes, it dislodged a parked car and sent it rae'ug down the street The dislodged ear sheared off a concrete pole, and struck thiee cars and a pickup truck. Felice officer George How an! of the Accident Prevention Bui eau issued no citations. Miss Gonser was pretty nerv- oils. But it could have happened to anyone. I guess," Howard said. I sent her on her wav." 7. I am a fast and powerful Mr. and Mrs. Alf White and swimmer. Because of my heroic family are planning to leave sue beginning where most fresh- Preston and make their home in where Mr. White is water fish leave off I have been Logan by Valley Motor. a of a to out boat. man known pull Nailing me has been described Mr. and Mrs. Reed Hart visited as throwing a hook 'nto the side of a speeding locomotive. Man in Preston Friday with relatives has been known to use a horse to 'enroute to their home in Salt the pull me out of the stream per- Lake City after having spentJack-son, at week vacationing is the past where that expreshaps Wyoming. sion horsing a fish came from. 8. FEMALES MATURE slowly, Mr. and Mrs. Mae Gambles spawning at about 25 years when they weigh 30 pounds and are and Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Dunn over a yard long. It is not unusual were among those attending Bear female about 50 years Lake County Fair at Montpelier for a old. come summer, to lay over 5 Thursday. million blackish eggs weighing over 250 pounds up to ' of her weight. These eggs are attached to rocks, stubs or other hard objects in the water. The young remain in the fresh water about a year before the call to the aea overwhelms them. 9. DURING THE PLUSHY days of the Roman empire, we were Million! LOS ANGELES HP borne to the table in splendor, of persons have been subjected tc profusely decorated with flowers. some irridation from atomic and In Great Britain, I was declared hydrogen bombs which eventualand still am a royal fish ly will produce many freaks in to an the belonging soverign by the human race, according to a alunrepealed law of Edward II, noted scientist. though if captured in the Thames Dr. A. H. Sturtevant, internationabove London Bridge, I might be ally-known geneticist at the claimed by the Lord Mayor. California Institute of Technol10. The most expensive part of me is my roe which comes in ogy, said yesterday that tests by little tins and is marketed as Americans, British and Russians have caused a serious sturgeon's caviar at $4. an ounce. already menace. acis this an caviar Admittedly, There is no possible- escape, quired taste but it goes weU al- the noted heridity authority said. most immediately when sprinkThe bombs already exled with a few drops of lemon ploded ultimately will result in juice. the production of numerous defective individuals if the race survives for many generations. Hide-And-Se- ek "It is already true that millions of us have been subjected to some OSLO HP Western defense irridiation from atomic and hyhe added. k drogen bombs, authorities played He said "overwhelming gene today with a Russian naval task force last reported off Norway. changes in humans caused by A security blackout was drop- such super weapon tests can inped over what the defense men crease the probability of cancer knew or didn't know about it. , as well as encourage an early Officials werent even saying death for many. Every new bomb exploded, just how much of a game it was. Some quarters suspected that the j since its radioactive products are three Soviet cruisers and 12 de- widely dispersed over the earth, stroyers had been ordered west will result in an increase in the from regular maneuver areas to ultimate harvest of defective m-- I feel out Western preparedness. Dr. Sturtevant said. dividuals, Bombs May . Give Us Freaks ... hide-and-see- , n. - i - Gladys Valiev. Idaho, NClair and Murtis Mendenhall, small sons of Mr. and Mrs. jin! Mendenhall who recently moved to Twin Falls, are spending their vacations with their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Edvvaid W, Maughan. j Chris-tofferse- JtjO Mil'll j The Herald Journal Pr inted Kverv Afternoon i Kvceptlnf Saturday! nn.1 Si.nrt.iv Sunday Hrrsirl Jonms! nuhtljhed Sonrtiy n'orn'.re - f p- Crn-h- e af onn t'tih he Valley Xewapsper Compinr T MFMRFR rrt Visits Utah SU.T 1 VKF. CITY di I' - inner pp-i- Ri.-ea- (V-- St u (Proof n -e t '1 r. e'aroy o' ' dvrot.ci - S'nO'.'Uf Per- s,.f. fe U0zSdl.ll Fes ores Features En.ered In Lorsn Fos Office a ennial lloPvwood O- -i ar-class matter second Walt DDnev was in Salt Lake Uitv todav to vtieteh his curiosity Bl'msn. Wot) A Ruthman and see the west National Advertising Representative The Missoun firm hoy who SUBSCRIPTION RATES made uood m a big vav as the Or-J 1 S' month carrier of animated wni id's top vear carr'er ts.o ('re cannons ami fantasies said he One year ma l on Csc Valley) 16 00 vear Cach mail One h is nevetoutsida tah capi IS V Vs'les) tal city before. 00 On year (Sunday only) Mfwktuuj e l ct Park. i NEW' YORK (IP Two Brooklyn thugs made a mistake when they picked up the Rev. Gerald Butterly, 28, an Irish priest who armed here five days ago The two men were giving Father Butterly a lift Sunday when they suddenly stopped their auto and announced a holdup. Father Butterly lunged from the car. dragging one thug with him. The second thug followed them and in a matter of moments the two Brooklynites, bruised and battered, lunged back into their car and sped away. I can use my fists when I have to," the young Irish priest told police. FRWCISCO M.e-gar- rm-plo- lf Irish Priesf Was Too Many For Two Thugs SN southern hemisphere but in the northern we occur in everv continent. Begfore the day of plastics. isinglass was made from quilt was made for Mrs. Lows an inner membrane. A century ago. we were exceedingly abundgranddaughter, Marilyn Low. in America, hut Mr. and Mrs. Grant Webb left ant, particularly due to mans reckless predaTuesday evening and drove to St. tions with gill nets, we are Charles, Idaho, where they nnt1 scarce today in many areas. Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Cleveland and 3. Biggest of fresh-- v ater dweltogether traveled to Chicago. Ill , lers, it would take a platwhere Mr. Webb and Mrs. Cleve-- ! ter and a dozen stout men to land are delegates to the Inter- serve up one of mv kind which national Brotherhood of Electric-- 1 lives on the Pacific coast. In al Workers. They expect to he Russia, allowing for propaganda, weeks and one weighing over 3.000 pounds gone two and one-hawill visit many plares of interest. and 26 feet long was caught. No some Guests last Tuesday at the doubt, I have inspired sea monster home of Mr. and Mrs. Grant grand stories in Webb were Mr. and Mrs. Niles my day. We grow slowly, attajn-- l Crooks of Shelby. Idaho. Mrs. ing venerable ages. Claims of Crooks visited at the Webb home 200 years have been made. 4. AS ANIMAL LIFE goes, we while her husband attended a three day conference in Salt Lake are old timers and have changed little. Our skeleton of today can City. Dinner Guests hardly be distinguished from fosMr. and Mrs. Alma Baker of sils found in ancient rocks, milMagna were dinner guests at the lions of years old. Furthermore, home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester we are today the most widely-sprea- d living representatives of Facer on Thursday. They ..also called on other friends during the such ancient fish. 5. My slender body, not unlike day. Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Moffett that of some sharks, is with five rows of bony and daughter Joy visited over the week end with their son. Mr. and plates harking back to our anci- -' Mrs. Rex Moffett and family in ent armor plating. My head has Idaho Falls and wits Mr. and holes in the upper part, to admit Mrs. Bob Moffett and family in water to my gills. My snout is conical and tapering, the eyes and Shelby. Idaho. Miss Rosalee Pilkington return- nostrils paced at the sides. Of mv kind, one living in the US. is ed home on Saturday after spendabout the strangest-lookin- g Just ing the past three weeks with of all large fish: its snout is a Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Hinning in d blade flat thin, Pegram, Idaho. L no less than the forming length House Guest of the body.- I have a single fin Miss Patty Lou Forsberg of on my back, placed well in the Ogden was a guest of Miss Rae-Lee- n rear. Forsberg last week. Her 6. BENEATH MY LONG snout parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar is a small, toothless, circular Forsberg, of Ogden, visited at mouth with thick sucking lips the Herman Forsberg home on which I can push out to a remarkSunday and Rae Leen accomable extent. To help me locate panied them home for a visit of food which I root out of muddy several days. Other guests at the bottoms, I have four catfish-lik- e Forsberg home on Sunday were whiskers in front of my mouth. Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Cazier, a Despite my size, I feed chiefly brother of Mrs. Forsberg of Salt on tiny fare crayfish, insect Lake City. larvae, and small fish such as Mrs. Mary Griffith, Mr. and sardines, smelt, and suckers, toMrs. Dean Cantwell and json Bill! gether with dead animal matter. attended the wedding and reception of Mr. and Mrs. Francis C. Morawetz Jr. in Salt Lake City on Friday evening. Mrs. Mora- wetz is the former Gayle a niece of Mrs. Griffiths. Visiting over the week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Tilkington were her sister and brother-in-laMr. and Mrs. C. F. Winters of Salt Lake City. Scandinavian Meetinr Mr. and Mrs. Anthon Jcncn and Mr. and Mrs. Amos Nilson attended the Scandinavian conference and social Saturday eve-- j ning in the Logan Eleventh ward chapel and amusement hall and1 Sunday in the Logan tabernacle. Mrs. Gladys Bingham and Mrs. IMargurette Balls accomnanied other school lunch managers of the county to the Utah School Food Service training ronvenMon held in Richfield August 16 to 19 They returned home Friday and report having a most inter-- ! e sting and valuable time. Mr. and Mrs. Ravmond McBride and two children of Provo were overnight guests at the home of their grandnarents. Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Moffett. Mrs. Fd Howell of fton. Wyoming visited last week with her sister. Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Moffett and familv. Mr and Mrs George Larkin a'd familv attended the I familv reunion hed in Box Elder Canyon on Saturday. j son-in-la- Even To You wafer. Most of us migrate from salt to fresh water to reproduce. None of us exists in the tropics or the 100 Attend Annual Reunion Of the James Mather Family Who n on a m . u-- 2. But right behind me sat George Treston Marshall. Just one seat away. He never stopped talkiug. lie never said anything that made much football sense.' He fired a 4 tackle because he missed an aslie said l.amheau signment. didn't know the T formation. He said the blocking was bad. and he named names He didnt like o a thing. He had no more appreciTodays calculations ate that for 1956 crops, parity prices ation of a guard than 1 do. Will drop by 39 cents per bushel on wheat, 22 cents per DEAD STRAIGHT: Mr. Marbushel on corn, 1.8 cents per pound on cotton and 2.8 cents shall is a very successful laundry-maHe Is rich lie is married to per pound on peanuts. a lovely lady. He is, in my poor But to prevent .such abrupt drops as this, it is piovided opinion, the sort of owner who that the deadline may be no more than 5 per cent in any shouldn't own. one year. He doesnt belong. The sports writers of this country have been CCC is given authority to set aside $2.5 billion worth of very kind to Mr Marshall. Exs. .supluses for school lunch, disaster relief and stockpile kind But he should The effect may be to boost prices in the face of tremely remember this- In a showother expected drops. down. when the real owners of sports teams aie named, he might have to buy an ear trumpet to hear his name called. MY ADVICE TO Mr. Marshall is this. The day you talk football to Lambeau. come in begging. Mv own personal advice to Mr. Marshall: Promote a dart team. Foo'hall plavers are strange peoCINCINNATI. Ohio ,U The in the Senate and three in the They 'Ae it the hard wav. ple. Republican high command kicked Houve. Distributed by lie predicted they could unset Svndicate. lee 1 off its mid-terelection camMcNaught histoiv and obtain a real wot king paign today with a warning that maiouty if they joined hands and it must reverse history to give on asset s" of the President Eisenhower a GOP ma- capitalized first Republican aiimmistiation m Two SLT LAKE CITY P jority in Congress next vear. 20 years. reThe warning was issued by Re-countv Lake vsidents Salt he listed: assets the Among Leocondition in Chairman "critical National mained d Republican-guide1. The record of the publican nard V. Hall as he opened a 83rd Congress which he here today with burns suffi'p'd ,n three-da- y workshop session of the said has won a reputation, even blasts at their homes Friday GOP National Committee to set among critics, as the do some- night and Saturday. up their campaign for the crucial thing Congress of modern times. November election. 2. President confidence" "A Republican that the national In an assets and prob- whose respect and popularity . . . committee meeting can chait the lems appraisal of the outlook, is near an e high . . . and way to overwhelming suet ess" Hall cautioned feUovv Republic ans whose calm leadership has been in the fall campaign. that they cant affoid to lo'-- e an magnificently proved. Paying tribute to the st'cents inch in the forthcoming camAppeals For I'nity determination with which the paign. to party leaders were tackling the Appealing to Republicans This is the when, ac- lay aside internal differences and problem, he said. cording to historical precedent, join in a common effoit. Hall 1 have the iul'est confidence the party in power is supposed to said: that if your gathering tnere ran lose seats in Congress, he said. There never has been a time find its counterpart among the Well, we just haven't any mar- in our party's history when the thousands of other devoted pauv gin to lose. need for cohesive action was so workeis and leaders thiougliout Margin Is Thin the land, then them com ' necessary. He reminded them that the ReMr. Eisenhower, in a message forts tins (ad . . will surely lie publican margin in the 83rd from bi' Denver vacation crowned by ovet whelming was razor thin cue seat expressed the 'fullest1 head-quaiter- til,lim Smithfield Sort Of Owner have given me He couldn't worse ones! They were on the fifty-yar- d line. Next to me was Bert Bell. High Commissioner of pro football, and his sweet. Irish rt jfA j, A y seats. FOR THE 1956 CROPS and there tftrr, levels for these basics will drop to a flexible 75 to 90 per cent of parity. This eventual shift back to a 75 per rent minimum has not been sufficiently emphasized and is not too well ' 'WORLD'S FINEST' Airvicw shows San Franciscos answer to the challenge posed by terminal. It was built at the progress of commercial aviation in its striking seven-stora cost 0? more than 14 million dollars and sets a new standard for airport terminals. h THE SECRETARY OK AGRICULTURE is also authorized to use any other means he considers necessaiy to get i id of dairy surpluses. art! , Jly ElGENE BURNS BRAIN STRETCHER: solve my identity by No 2 and youie expert: by No. 6 is still fair to middling. The last paragiaph contains the answer. Forebear,' ' dont peek. 1. Without water I could not' exist. To help locate my food. I have whiskers Attesting to my antiquity, much of mv skeleton consists of cartilage. Within re-- j rent times, some of , have at- -' tamed lengths of over 20 feet. My greatest popularity resfs securely i' 4 Hi o .vwn-on- A foi ce : -- - L Is Still A Rare Delight It - tdiS rt Kiom Sept. 1, 1954 until June 30, 1956, CCC may spend $50 million a year tu increase consumption of dairy products in the school-luncprogram. Dairy product surpluses may also be given to the Veteians Administration and the armed services, over and above their noimal commercial purchases, on payment of packaging and shipping costs. i.mr' . A Royal Fish Of It ;'SU , n an c :';Y - o - Before Jan. 3, 1955, Secretaiy Benson must report to plan on Congtess on alternatives for new pi next is Ihp a Until ikw adopted by plan dairy products. will and their whole hutteifat milk, products Congress, continue to icceive supimrt at 75 per cent (the present level) to 90 per cent of panty. These interim dairy surplus disposal plans will lx in Con-gie- ' Republic an nr Ftankiin ( ounty it 1 l.m Boise to attend trie sov p. c 01 m ((invention. Incluikd in me veie Harley (tiHU- - c., e .ste.v uit M. Mis Geddes. state committee-woman- . Llvin Cutler, county Republican .. Preston In tu!er, and will come Saturday . Aug 28, wi;n Senate Maioritv Leader, William county auditor. F. know land as keynote speakt-iconOn V ridav w.ll be held a of vention of state h ?jeratiun Mr. am! Mrs. Wavne Robert Women's Republican clubs and Hotel at and son Roaer of Phoeiiis, Gibson luncheon candidates' Boise The Platform convention Ariz , are visiting at the home of Mr. Gibson s parents. Mr. and Mm R B Gibson The vi'.iu.s v ere taken to Lava Hot Spimgs Friday where the entire famnv enjoyed the day piemcing and swimming. officials 1 on About town rr " |