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Show im IT Ml !O0 TITF III K V I 11 JOI UN l Thursday, November 3t, DREW PEARSON Hey, Hold It! Lets Talk This Over! lii.Mt SAYS- - IDr. & THINGS THOUGHTS Brady Says HEALTH TEACHINGS ituafion AND QUEER NOTIONS REVIEWED False Alarm Ever is Ideal Alerts Pentagon WASHINGTON It w.is nil liu-lup, but one iiiili'iiv men in day l:iM week pi ,n irally eei Washington w,.s anxiously 'tanning tin' sky in of an nemy air rant on the nations capital for tin ir contain was a ml'!'1 fi om India which lead: Alert all U. S. nln-- thev are due to hums." be bombed within th next twenty-tou- r Astonished (leiks at the made a (unl'P muni 'h (locri t nines on message tenter fm nts 'tnd shot tin m out to the k y nffietx. '1 lie ciyptic message, on". iff" ml slaitoneiy, had all the h n pi aiam es of being an olficial 9 f .bow K' warning, and icinembciing 'X . Washing ton w as taught d asleep dui in g I1' at Ituiboi wot ol the atl.it x was Hashed impending key 1,1,111 the Pentagon to the uly CJ office tin ougtiout eluding the While House .speed 'Ihe Word! Pearson to Mia tin- r.its,.iK couucrs sped Uniformed 1 in land a council. .seigeant tional security Ikc t ntral e olli. shull's Mm fens-Secretary nleitcd, I onl.igon telligcnee iiL'iiity was news li antic phone in the grapheis licai nut Tension calls lo advise tneir mends .mu was mounting to the breaking point. sea Then the bubble buist amid a faces. check the name A few calm ol ficers decided to discovered ,.fl to the cdile Uom India. They Stale Dethat the signer wasnt employed by the wasn't in army, navy partment, wasn't a CIA agent, S. gov or air intelligence. In fact, he wnsnt a L. eminent employee of any kind. He was, they learned, an American tourist stopof the original ping off in india. Kxammation -- 3rd. cable revealed it had been sent on November One officer glanced at a calendai. November I hen he 23rd w'as Thanksgiving day," he said. to do if Americans some apt what aie queried, on day? in Thanksgiving India they're Get drunk," was the reply. The assembled officers nodded in agreement. Washington was saved .Soviet Secret Weapon SovAmerican ordnance oflicers are popeyed at so iet weapons, captured in Korea. They are estiamazed that they are hastily revising their mates of Russian military might and ate convinced that the United States has been underestimating Russian strength y as much as 50 per cent. A preliminary survey indicates that Russia sent worth of military aid to pearly two billion dollars North Korea, which is more than the total Americ.fi deliveries to all North Atlantic pact countries combined. And this does r.ot include planes and ships which the Russians did not supply to North Korea in quantity. Furthermore,' markings on the equipment have been traced to Russian factories, that U. S. intelcivilian goods. ligence thought were producing These captured weapons are now being tested and evaluated at the Aberdeen, Md ordnance center. The most effective weapons captured from the North Korean are heavy mortars and burp guns, which laid down the most terrific firepower that the American army has ever faced. ItS no use for one to sit around thinking: "Oh, if things wore only difleient! Or, "Why couldn't I hav e had this or tin.t. B cause no situation is ever ideal. Ones happi-- n s and contentment are pretty much a state of mind, an attitude, and what one makes them. It is useless to think that once we get in an "ideal then well situation succeed, or then well be happy. i- I un nies-xa;- a in ev-n- O 4.2-inc- 120-mm- l l U1U. cars were also cap- Several BA-6- 4 tured. However, they are distinctly inferior to tht American M-- 8 In maneuverability, firepower and defense against small arms. Most captured Soviet rilles are modeled after the U. S. Springfield 1903. They weigh 10 pounds, d use clips and fire at a slower rate than modern U.S. rifles. antitank gun However, a novel, was captured that Is easy to maneuver and can inches. The pierce armor up to two and one-haRussian-mad- e Goryunov machine gun can also be used against aircraft by reversing the gun and elevating the tail. Its effective range is 900 yards but it is difficult to carry and load. The North Koreans also used an SU-7- 6 gun, mounted on a 4 tank, which, as effective until the Pershing and Patton tanks showed up and out-shlight-armor- five-roun- lf T-3- ot it- - nten-cinl- relations. Judge Marion Hat ion of the U.S. Tax Court her reappointment was pushed through the administration and senate against the American Bar Association by Mrs. Edwards. The bar association disapproved of a woman in that position. The Herald Journal - Printed Every Day Except Sunday at Logan, Utah i' Robert V. Martin Ray Nelson Reid Pedersen . . . Grace Allred Cyril D Carr .. . A H L. A. zr-THE LARGER John .Ripplinger Publisher . . Managing Editor Advertising Director ... Classified Adv. Manager Office Manager Mechanical Superintendent Circulation Manager - InlTfl Press tiiertwlre Audit Bureau of Circuintion Pacific ( oast adierilsinc Service McNausjht Svndicate . i - To Of The World THE AUTOMOBILE is here to stay. In New York, anyway. If you doubt me, please try to drive an automobile in New York, and you'll know that it is here to stay. There isnt room for it to move, and there is no place to park it so it just stays. I brought my car up here, planning to use it to save bus, subway and taxi fares. I might just as well have brought a Mississippi paddle wheeler, for all the good It is doing me. Ivy vines are growing on my car, and both Princeton and Harvard have made me bids. They want it to add another touch of the old, the very old, and the classical to their REMEMBER WHEN YOU were a kid, and sat back of tne of your dad's car, twisting and turning the steering wheel, putting on the brakes, and blowing the horn, and never getting BY M. L. NEII.SEN YES, WE ARE GOING to return to our little sketch of Lazaro Cardenas. We really do intend to do But today, with the news from Korea so bad and with the prospects for any kind of peace for our world so. I , ( t standing at Eoj about zero, w e OSs',' li just cant bring 'f- fasLii'niftMMii ourselves to do Nielsen anything but la ment and wonder and feel 1 "WHAT A SAD STATE the world is in, I rental ked to a Years Total Traffic Deaths Exceeds 28,000 which O IT MIGHT JUST AS WELL be the first car brought out by Mr. Haynes, or Mr. Locomobile, or Mr. Stutz. or Mr. Apperson. The speedometer shows that my car is capable of going 120 miles ppr hour, but that means nothing. With New York city traffic the way it is today I stand very little chance of covering 120 miles in the next fifteen years, much less in one hour. The traffic conditions aie no one man's fault, really. The truth is and I know this hv studying a map of the town as it was in G. Washingtons day New York's streets are little changed from the days when wigs, snuff, and stagecoaches were part of American life. O Broadway, save for neon lights, is just about the way it was when the goose quill pen that would wlite under water was thp rage. There isnt much that New York can do about it. either. If you widen the streets, then someone has to live in the Hudson or the East Rivets. I know what I am going to do. I am going to get a bicycle. I wont look very pretty on it, thats for sure, and Ill he pointed out as the only nevvs-papNew Yoik who man rides without hand',, but 111 get where I'm going in ne month, year, ne year ne year ne ear, earner $ carrier mail mail Un Cache Valiev (outside Cache Valley iSaiurday s only).... ........ - I ALREADY KNOW WHAT I want for Christmas. t reuser d A pair of clips, a mudguard for the rear wheel, a pair of mittens lor frosty mornings, and a luminous belt for nigijt riding. Oh yes, and a wicker basket for the handle bars when I go shopping. I am going to turn my automobile in for a bicycle- - and I'll tiade even 1 Of) 12 00 loin) no 3 00 112 Distributed hv Syndicate, Mi Naught Inc. I we could win of course with other persons, their activities, and with a lot of other factors. For instance, millions of Americans in the eastern states durrng the past week were and shoved back a hundred years or so and it was pretty tough on them. The storms cut off their electricity, voided their telephones. For transportation, they went back to shank s ni.ue, hiking over and through giant snowdrifts. A Pittsburgh man had to pull his wife on a sled to where an ambulance could take her on a rush trip to the maternity ward. Two women gave birth to. babies in an Ohio firehouse. tied-u- p can define a pretty giil, but thank we all know one wiien we see one. Lrilish Lord Chancellor Viscount Jowitt. An ideology cannot be suffocated by poison gas nor demolished by atomic bombs. It must be answered by a better ideology that has power, when applied, to bring better life to man. Methodist Bishop G. Biomlev Oxnam. Feminist causes dont seem so prevalent any more, get a little careless about their voting responsibil'ties. They have equal education, equal lights end the vote. So what else is there? Mrs. Learned Hand, wife of the distinguished jurist, und once a piofment suffragette. Unlc'S we have a const ant awareness llmt our lo maintain thet peace so that the put e dene" relic vaiuts wp chenxh may continue their u ion, we i un the risk of allowing power to become an end in itself.- - Dean Acheson. Light Co. , sav what wc do la t. About toe most salislving thing a man in public an have is the knowledge thal his people like him enough lo ca'l oil him again and again. Rep. Raheil Iioughlnn D. N. C i. upon ins i ion to Congress ior the 20th tune. tins only to i inline Communist appeals -i in the vvoild lo realize tli.it laeial and ic'igidiis iieisa uliims play only technically differ- . "t id's in the j opagnuda of fascism and Am u u an Jevvisn C'jniimtiee pre.snlinl v vv l,- com-amiii.- Jamb Biiiusuin. a,ll,ou. stir up ' lf h the pub )h thpP v. !i agement of hea.t disease of kind involves vi much fok ir and almanac hokum that it . Wunder Hue auvne ot Dr fers widely from that of Dt 4 in a given case. QUESTIONS & ANSWER llke ollr Pnion flu shoo the company wan is ail emplovesi take. (Miss M c Answei I behove thpvanr re"6 , jou d and worth the double You'mav , some beneficial advi,e on ,, prevention of t c j a t o ry luft tion by smdv nig tle b k, CALL IT C R I f0, cop 25c and siamptd envelope. Babv Likes Charcoal Son, two veais old, east th burned ends nit wooden the ashes q Answer - Infants commonly (, diit, sand, ashes, plaster fre the wall, chat coal etc, and seldom does anv haim It hat paitieular significance. Just childish piank Swollen Lem Since I began taking y'ourW, Ration the swelling of myanDi and legs has disappeared. It h2j bothered me for years som times it would go down befo morning and sometimes not Ar way I am giateful. (Mis, c ? L.) j self-adi- ti,s occasional Answer-Instruct- ions for ta ing an iodin ration are given the pamphlet THE IODIN Pj TION, available on written n quest if you provide stamp It envelope. food, not medicine, and It pn vents or corrects the cond,ti you describe, in many It promotes healing, many cases of varicose ulcer. g. LINE- - r to drop one on Japs: as quickly as possible. The: why did he wait until after v planned dropped it on Hiroshima, of the w the fading few days Before sending against Japan the Red Inr; in order to get on such spoils as were offered DURING THE LATE WAR Lieutenant Colonel named Ton Paradine was stationed at th Los Angeles tion, and one ship countless mountains of Now hes in job. port of embarka of his jobs ' was fighting men a armor into wa a happier expr Paradine, a past command-o- 11 the Schenley Post No. or the American Legion Is n tional director of the legior "tide of toys. His goal ti year is to send 10.000.000 gif This coupon, with the thinks so. Hes national chairman hon the of Tide Toys. C0XRA' FROM HOTELMAN HILTONS vigorous sp after receiving the annual of the national conference Christans and Jews . ... "We have broken aI , those who fought and freedom and who ou break faith with die we shall not "If we believe what the) we here tonight konw . nflicp. boys do not sleep and we also know that live in peace - and ravine when the bo perl thpir victories at ar,J'sli0te of milted the forces justice and appeasmeny the victories from them. jr- -j btVl I Cookbook 15c, presented office, Herald-Journ- No. 15, will To entitle you f "250 Ways to Mak' Candy." THE f to needy youngsters through!) the world. American Legion Pc in every city in this country a as collection headquarters ! the campaign and they wii! distributed on the other r by Care, Inc. Paradine suggests that ea child who gives up an old t new toy (toy guns, solto1' a tanks, etc., are not allowed) to note taeh a personal kid who gets it ovetseas. It could make for a beE world. Bing Crosby is one 15 COUPON FOR COOKBOOK NO. ( (hie ev ei h' H m'ght localized inflanc-moSU(T ?,PPe"dirUls ani i: flammation so rej, ,, h'he geneial pen,, nltl. The enure of inactivity and exelciw Wot! reasonable aenvuy in ',he set-u- so women pile W'ill w no me j Vg 'wPV,rairJ , in recent r. been trying t0 the DANGER The danger , m SO THEY SA- Y- i be c, doing well. The non-cowho decoded and delivered it, without knowing its meaning, expressed a wish to a Stimson aide that Mrs. Stimson and the baby would thrive. (Mrs. Stimson was a very old lady at the time.) THE AMERICAN DELEGATION at Potsdam (this was July, 1915) now knew we had in our possession an Instrument so appalling that it could end the war against Japan. And this being a time of which palsy-alsiness between our side and the Russians, we probably would have told all if prompted. We might have given away the whole process, or them-relve- s. ns an inducement to persuade Russia to enter the war against Japan, STALIN, BY AN EXCRUCIATING coincidence, was chairman of the next days meeting of the big three. An item on the days agenda went something like this: "Atomic energy, progress in. But when Joe got to that item he said through his interperter, "we will let this pass and go on to the next item." Had his spies In our atomic p told him, and was he waiting for us to do the talking? Had his own progress in building reached such a po'nt at that time that he chose to keep us from knowing how fur along it was? Or did he pull one of the prize skulls of history? If he had known about the success of the New Mexico test, he would also probably have known that we If your furnace conked-ou- t, how would you keep your house warm? If jour electi icily failed, how would jou cook juur meals, light jour house? The piuneeis didnt have these clutteung conveniences. They provided their own fuod, fuel, sheltei, ttansioitauon. lights, etc. in the familj ? Is there a Boy Kiss Hie giil if you like her whether its joar ot n.. I. but by all means be sincere. A A? M home life counselor Mrs. Gladys Mai shaP. in in, ,, ixp T'at any emeigeriv a no.,ni:; castor oi! am.sahvl.u? NEW YORK. Nov. 27 (INS) The Passing Show: One aspect of the endlessly incredible story that may never be told, even by an is what lay in the mind of Joe Stalin at the Potsdam conference, the day after we proved at Alamagorda, N. Mex that the fantastic weapon worked. The word had come to the late Henry L. Stimson, then our secretary of war, in a code. It was in the form of a message reading, Baby boy born today mother and child nt tT'.l d ito t'kMho.na Oh VJ He Pull A Prize Skull? DEPENDENT NOW DAI S ? No matter how a person may feel at times, he cant get away lrom the fact that in 20th century America, ones welfare is pretty tightly 1 ,,S j,,s ui Was He Smart? Or Did LN A GREAT PART of the wot id is already ruined and bankrupt as a result of having won too -- ON THE O undone. many wars. It is a bitter thought to think that our own country WEN ON MI SHIRLEY might soon join company with Paris those other nations, both the vicThe Fielding High School Par- tors and the vanquished in recent ents Teachers Association spon- wars, who not too long ago were sored a square dance and cake and vigorous and prosperous and fillpie sale Friday, Nov. 24th at 8:30 ed with hope and now are walp.m. in the Paris Pavilion. The lowing in impoverished weakgeneral public is invited. ness and bleak despair. The proceeds from the evenings o entertainment will he used for a AMERICA WAS BORN just steam table, purchased for the hot lunch program initiated this year yesterday, so to speak, and it has at Emerson school for high school just now arrived on the internastudents. tional scene as a great force. And Tickets for this project were it will be a tragic thing ind ed sold by Fielding students and at if it should turn out that Amerthe door at the dance. ica's great strength is dissipated bit by bit on the vat lields of Montpelier The following registrants left China or the frozen wastelands Rear Lake Nov. 20th for Boise, of Siberia. where they were inducted into the armed forces Nov. 21st. "WHAT WOULD YOU do now Earl, Keith Whitaker. Montpelier; Donald Bruce Dimik, Mont- if you were making the decipelier; Lund Arnell, Dingle; Gor- sions? That question has been don Floyd Ipsen. Bennington; and asked us a number of times in Leslie Junior Hill. St. Charles. The the past few days. ou start diopping Would local board has received call for 3 men for induction Dec. 4th; also atom bombs right and left on all a call for 2 men for physical ex- the centers of Communist powamination on Dec 5th. er?" That is a decision I cerWeather Inusunl tainly would hate to tnce. To me the atom bomb still seems the Spring like rains with accompanying warm winds and rainbows vvoist atrocity ever to come out against snow covered hill, came to of any war, and I'm not conBear Lake basin the fut of the vinced that atom bombs will win week. City lawns and grass cover-war ed meadows freshened under the "Would vuii p 'll out of the warming temperatures Old timers Far East, pull out of Europe, pronounced the weather most un-- 1 come hack home and sit tight in usual. ths storm cellar, turn the test ot Cumulative proeipation for Ihe, the wotld over to Communism?" month Monday at Camp Litton No, impossible Theres no such was 1 48 in, u cm ding to infoimn-- l thing as a storm cellar anvmore. turn fiom E. W. Roberts. This is; And youd just fight the same 45 ol an inch greatei than He war in the end anyway with the local normal lor ihe entire month odds muth heavier against vuu. The wet November tha already has had pieripalion on 13 days' "WELL, WHAT WOULD Jou piodured two heavy storms, onej on 'he 17i ti and vvdh a recording; do? Rich her, I don't know what ot 51 of an rah and a second mil I would do. As of this moment Hie Sth wnh ?! of an inch, ac-- j I would just hale to bear the o ding In, f .Pi'is f'lim Camp awful i 1 on hi ' v leshng on b n is to Luton 'i Hie I tail Power ami the pei ops win., well-bein- four feet away. He squatted dejectedly in the box in a cramped position, his head lowered and resting on his crossed arms. He had neither food nor water. At first he was incoherent, apparently from shock and neglect, when deputies asked him who chained him to the post. "Mommy done it, officers quoted him later at juvenile iiaii. Authorities began searching for Mrs. Marjorie De Leon, who, they said, was the mother of four other children and on the county relief rolls. Her husband was killed in an accident three years ago, they said. Officers estimated Eugene was chained to the post at least 9!i hours. after ten or fifteen years or so, but only at a cost which would be ruinous. That cost would refer not only to dollars but to many of the institutions and the way of life for which we would be fighting. Our pessimistic mood of the moment tells us that we might end up like Pyrrhus of old who said, after defeating the Romans in a bitter battle: "One more such victory as this and we are South Bear Lake teir home. of This is one of the most aggravated cases of its kind thats come to our attention, said Capt. William A. Barro of the juvenile bureau. The hungry, frightened boy was found yesterday huddled in a box under a rough lean-t- o at the rear of his home at South Whittier. A chain was padlocked around his waist and anchored to a post a picture, but at this writing it looks iike war between .the United States and China, which would mean war between the United States and Russia, a .war that nothing. Eugene De Leon romped happily searched for his mother who allegedly chained him in a box at the d at juvenile hall today while officers Vro j ,s j, because the ieS', '"ns lm upon such of the oldr. t, ,s,i , n hav Ra ed authentu rv : i ,, rg is like the p..uLt. o Press yesterday: rear in indulged , IF THIS Si ary for a acute ?o:on,uv IN 1935, TWO YEARS after the first coronary attack, vegetables and fruit were substituted for a substantial part of the concentrated, refined carbohydrate (starches, sugars) and the excess of protein (lean meat) in his diet green vegetables instead of meat at one meal a day, and fresh fruit in place of refined carbohydrate desserts at dinner. He continued to indulge freely in oysters and clams several days a week in season. His skiing holidays in 1936 and '37 brought marked increase in the feeling of The O WE HOPE WE MAY be forgiven if we are painting too black In He TO CHILDREN Nothing is quite so infuriating to a compassionate person as to hear of an adults cruelty to children. This item from Los Angeles came over United Seven-year-ol- the swimming and dancing. CRUELTY problems. At CHICAGO, Nov. 30 (U.P is exactly what least 3,410 persons died in traffic New in an automobile accidents across the nation last driving You go month, bringing the years total York is like today. never so far to more than 28,000 11 per through the motions and gain an inch. You can get blue cent over a year ago, the National in the face, while the lights are Safety Council announced today. The October toll was 12 per cent turning from red to green and from green to red, but your pro- over October, 1949, and Council President Ned II. Dearborn warngress is nil with a capital N. My car has floating knee ed December could be even worse action, acid proof gears, inner because of poorer driving condisuspension glove compartment, tions. October was the 11th consecutive torque spring rubber cushioning, headlights, and is month to show an increase. safer than a hot glass of milk at midnight, but it all adds up to Well, Be Sure! friend yesterday. "That is just what Hamlet said several hundred years ago, he replied. But in talking it over we decided that Hamlet really was very well off compared with the citizen of 1950. All he had to worry about was the murder of his father, the lechery of his mother and his sweethearts insanity. Though he knew there was "something rotten in the state of Denmark, he probably didn't even know of the existence of Korea and Formosa and Tibet. So he didnt have to worry about them. No doubt things were rotten in Korea in Hamlet's day too, but since he didnt know about it, it couldnt bother him and he was left free to worry about his own clear-cu- t and relatively simple anywhere? hand-painte- Kins Fmure Dell Feature rnfered In Locan Post Office as second class matter. Oilman Nirol & huthman National Advert! sin Kcprehenfatite. per (ard. Advertising rates M IlSCKIPf ION HATK9 Dr. Hansen even contended that these are good times! Full of challenges, of course. The times are great because the challenges are great. It will take wisoom, honesty, strength, unselfishness to meet these challenges. Regarding the younger generation, he said; I have exceeding faith in them. One man explained; The younger generation wouM be fine if only the oldsters would die off before corrupting youth. Something Rotten In State O MKMHKK I.'. VIE- W- g Lady Judges India Edwards, the shrewd and dynamic womans Jim Farley, believes female judges w? bring a needed dose of common sense to Justice. That is back of her campaign to get more of her sex on the federal judiciary. Mrs. Edwards, who is womans director of the Democratic National committee, boldly told President Tiuman: "It's a disgrace there aren't more 'women on the bench. Why, women make wonderful judges. They are fair, interested in justice, and have lots more common sense than men." Few people realize it, but Mrs. Edwards, with y the help of Harry Truman, has smashed the rule m federal court appointments. Some of the topflight women lawyers brought lo the bench by India Edwards drive are: Judge Burmla Shelton Matthews. t S. District Court, Washington. D. C - Mrs. Matthews, a native of Missis. ippt and a distinguished woman jun.st, is of the National Association of Women I.aw7ers and author of the 1927 law allowing women to serve on D. C. Junes. Judge Edith 11. Cockrill, I). C. Juvenile Court former OPA attorney and specialist in domestic t O ( , and dancui, THE OLD TIMERS dismissed the patient with valvular insufficiency or "leakage with a prescription for digitalis and the advice to take it easy, avoid strains, live carefully . . . and the patient walked on eggs for the rest of his or her life. The . well trained doctor today determines how much reserve power the patient has, advises the patient what kind of daily exercise and how much will be beneficial, and in various ways assures the patient of the prospect of long life with moderation in all things. A man whose original coronary occlusion occurred in 1933 had 7 weeks of complete bed rest, and a month later began taking gradually increasing w'alks. Since 1935 he did considerable flying, as passenger and as pilot, about 100 hours a year, at altitudes 3000 to 5000 feet, occasionally up to 15,000 feet. He did considerable skiing in 1935, at Lake Placid and in Switzerland, and noticed quickened breathing when skiing at 5000 to 8000 feet altitude. Later in the week, another motorist stopped at the station, and asked: "What sort of folks live here? Im thinking of rftaking Logan my home?" The attendant slated: "What kind of a city weie you in before coming this way? A wondetful little place; we were sorry to leave, the traveller said. "The neighbors were grand, the chamber of commerce active, and there was a cheerful, progressive outlook. "Thats exactly the way youll find Logan, the attendant assured him. "There are good people here lots of them. Neighbors are pretty chautable, and progress blooms all over the place. f, 'Mv evi q , , S in fine mere functional troubles. But a little later dawned the era of pathological physiology and the newer knowledge of how the body works brought new refinements in diagnosis. Today the competent doctor endeavors to diagnose disease in the early stage when it is still only functional, before change in structure occurs, the change which makes the disease "organic. y. B. ?JL to 1 The diagnosis. doctors in that era gave scant consideration to He told about the service station attendant who answered a couple of men in this manner: One man stopped for gasoline, and asked the attendant: What kind of a city is Logan? Im recking for a place to live. The attendant replied: What sort of a place did you come from? "Terrible! Ihe neighbors were mean. The chamber ot commerce did nothing. A mess of a com-- , munity. Glad to be away from there. The attendant lollowed: "Im afraid you wont like Logan its a heck of a town, too. Trouble is all youll find. ..n 120-m- determined question: Whats the use?. e H" tis- lege. He sort of lamented the fact that as a group of Americans, Jfr't! were frightened of sentimen-taiitWe pride ourselves in being svwentific and practical We let despair and cynicism take over, with one result being a shrug and a , change of his gene sues and oigans, found on physical examination, These are some ideas expressed the other day by Dr. Harold I. Hansen, associate professor of speech at the col- f For example, the captured Russian h trench mortar is heavier than the comparable U. S. mortar; also fires 1,600 yards farther. In addition, the North Koreans used a mortar even ., which the army has heavier than the not yet evaluated. magazine The Russian burp gun has a drum-typ- e and fires at a terrifically rapid rate. Most of these were inscribed with 1050 manufacturing markings,-, thus refuting the Soviet claim that they had shipped no arms to North Korea since 1945. Soviet Jeep Probably the most fascinating captured equipment is the Russian jeep. This is slightly larger and more comfortable than the U. S. model, is equipped with softer seats, double springs and better shock absorbers. However, Its vital parts are still modeled after the outmoded A and B types, made itructura changes in O .i it'-i- y THE MEDICAL OUTLOOK in the earlier years of the century was based upon pathological the inatomy HERALD-JOURNA- L l |