OCR Text |
Show ENDLESS ARGUMEBTS WHAT GOES UP llclt'asrd by WNl. WU ff ImJ ti.i "Mu. Ef:t Ei'.y" cf future :t Are L.nJ to t. ill. 1,1c iS they f.iii.--i I I) V ft.; AI fiitcf d !) I.ij li tli.-.- t: f.ji ir;-l:.;.ki- - U ei;r::'.:.t TJ.Ii-t- ifri. tli'it ere h re fl.ji M : i fcehy. ;i) ki li f ; n i er : d.iy. i! to Mhif.e. I.n.ri 71 i .re- - I i" : . Tlii fct'i s. .v h.iii- - .j i i - v i.u! .in- - n ; i - I -- ii . 's ') .it fiiiJriAiii Lilian u.-- r W i.r I. M.v v L..ii.n-iftii.i Ki.rr.Mi 1 -- t I:. - Hr l.i- - ili:1.'! n j ir!y i j'i"1 afu-liu- a, uln-ra- r Mi:-s- l PARALYSIS Is c.ipbcini.sticaily r f cried tu ai RaWasbu.gton'a dio center. Inspired (nr infuriated i hy Hie presence uf so many of the few wiio say so much to so many, my friend launched forth Into a tirade on the responsibility of the publicist "You can't play baseball according to football rules," he (aid, shaking a menacing fist at me, and that Is what Washington officials are doing. You studied political icieiire I. AMI KI( fs . . . Went up duiing and after World War I and Ihea 30 years ago. I studied It only 20 came tumbling down. Prices have not gone as high In World War II ago. And you know perfectly years aa before, but Ua-- are soaring. These charts show same trend as In well that the present generation is 1914 to 1910. not following the rules laid down by our founding fathers. You ought to tell the public about it maa will and be Inm.eduile in phnsphorua potash prusjierl, rhinery Now maybe the principles cf our he would a acre factor. bushels More it f.iriiicrs per jor figure liumy prnlitdblr move hi work milch more run, and will, mean more food from government are wrong. I am not deless land. bind Hull lien tiibirc." the slale-liicfending them. But I am saying that wc are deserting them. Rule of the If they will Increase 1'lclils, Nat Arret, points nut, the lutt. r afleruiiith of "The wise farmer will he the one majority, a republican form of govwhen fund World W.ir l's land who docs not buy mure land, but ernment operated by the representprices were even higher than they who increases the crop. yielding ca- ative! of the peuple, la a travesty, la when Jammed are tod.iy, they will mo- - the liuzurd legislation pacity of his present an cage by of sneh a move. soil improvement measures, lie will through by minontlei. And 1 mean nt "bnniu-world study the most practical um-nr later (lie of bureaucrats as well as lobbyists. food cn.eiger.ry will t solved and plant f's.d He will consult agronoThis happened when the senate tininaiiiiiinlh deiiiiiini fur was nerk-dee- p In the final debate mists at stale anil agriculfood pi miiicts will end. Then tural stations for the most effective over Hie OI A and my friend e Aincric.iii farmers will have to was revolt of fertilizer congress application. claimed in world iniiiki i The only way Hie analysis best suited to lus paring against what he called the hir.li is to ticular soil and crop conditions and pressure mcUiuds of tile administhey can do tins tration. Since the congress was tearproduce crops at n lower cm--t per the quantities to use. unit. In sueli a program, the steady This advice tu farrm rs to ing the administration measure to use of fertilizer containing nitiogeu. their present holdings rattier shreds at that moment I pointed out than to ariuire greater acreage, that while it was true that cuugi fu was (aiiioboriited by Hie rumiiut-ti-- i was sore at Stabilizer Bowles for what thi y culled propagandizing, on f inn land prices nf (lie American Hankers association which the example was not a very good member hunks to admonish one. So he proceeded to develop his iiig,-i- l would-bfarm buyers "go slow." theme with specilic references ail to disriMirugc lioi rowing to Specu-lat- e too familiar to me and my colill farm lands, and to tell leagues of Lite microphone and of "life h.izanis inherent in exci Mce land pi lees." 'Voui.lry h.inkers." a committee Town Seethet spoki sman said, "aie fully With Lobbyiiti of polio, iiieliid-in(or the Irciilini-ii- t nf the dangers inherent in the You. too, are familiar with the hospitals which norimilly do farm laud price situation. f not power of the "pressure boys" us my piitlnnls suffering With presentare urging farm owners now friend Kenneth Crawford railed contagious diseases, and he added: They to reduce their debt and to plan savthem In his revealing book by that Sueli planning is for farm improverni id during name. Crawford estimated there necessary If nderiuatn care is to he ings of these because high mcuine, were 6.000 active lobbyists in Washgiven to all who contract the when years coiidiiiuiis tu return normal disease. Under the guidance of those ington when World War II started. There are many more now. Sfienk-e- r ofllrlalt ctiarged wuli the enmmu-liily- s and American agriculture is in with other countries for health and with the substanRayburn said the town was world markets, it is probable that with them. tial aupiNirt of the National Koinidii-tioseething" We all remember the seven-digfor Infantile Paralysis anil its farm earnings will not support at current levels. sunt of money contributed tu a camchapters, every conmiuiuly in prices till- - United Slates can la- prepared paign fund which came out uf the to meet epidemics of ti,liniiiy members' dues of one great iubiir without fi ar or panic." union. True, the head of the union later quarrelled with the president whom he hud helped elect hcruuse the president refused to take his orders. Nevi i thcli ss, this example 10 atfllustratei what "lug nmm-v- " and soiiietinii-- suereeris In tempts, -MO FVKKTON. Mrs. (l.ila O. doing. Klelrlier of Kverlou, by avtn.il acWe know, ton. Hiat alien the encount kept In ail 1.1.1 lnli'cr. has tile ii'imiiTiiy of the country was clnirnc.1 Hl.lHki ("Min. Is of IniPer by loeke.l tu a dead eertler by strikes h.ii'il in an ui.l f.ihioin-i In twu essential imbislrrs. coal anil iI 7H rx-ill her vc.irs Si:c transportation, aril that when the lams l!i. it s'.c lias government gave imlers, hiitter s.m v she was four ye:n old Mithose orders wenw!ieii she hail In sl.m.i mi a wi- - rii'ii nority rule was operating then, MibiiinHi-"Ibox to cr.i-- . the d.isl-rnority groups null. lied Ibe wishes of w.nilil lx 11110 a lake if all the represent itives of Hie ere. nn I have cl. Hint ii slio'iitl th- - people. into one in.o," she sanl wi'h all Ins veMy friend, tly hemence. with hi to n'.lcipnnce The chai n is a o otury rr inacemeut made no claim that ol.l mill sic lias uoin out a the deiiiani's of the rariina.l mesi, liomc marie (liisl-i-in ii She kiefs the cojI mm. rs. were unjust. He He criMtn only a s'mit t:n-- lcfurc merely said that In order to obtain !ic churl's it m Unit the bii'H-she what they considered just re. the 1 V it be swoi t mokes powerful leaders of the orgamr V Aflor the she is cliiii'i-orto which they belm-- were able ' pli. cos il in a la rcr c.ntl-ccrock tn p.av baseball ace td.ug to footwhiili li.is bci-i- s.iumrg for scvci.il ball rules leninoriiti'.v at least. Tlcn she shuts woik-it The theory that be ere alt a of the Kit1, a ciicul ir move1: a laws of Li e land has been token Ihil wioricn paiiillc. That wotks the ft out the hands of the elected reprei"i!k fioin the n ah ut lii sentatives of fiie people was put si4 J J tuinu'i-puts tin- but', r away ' by Crawf. rri In "T!:e Trcv;re for and limn w.iks It r seven year sc. . when he to out tl:,. last of the ae.uigot said: It is improbable that a sinI K.iVr is a drops rite gle Important la enartid In tin Ml ball last Id years l as been written by In older to haw the hci-- t iti. ( 111 t K I.tliDI It . . . Tu prevent II ror,gic:ii:il sp. user or its it ilk. Vi-.Fletcher bows (inn JriiileiiN. the Natlmul noiiuisil an'hor lui"i r Ib ata-- in il After i,.,ic Miclv ccuncil wants ilinse who bill are prepared by New Deal she be'. eves s':e r use ladders la set tile base lirin-Iin executive departments. s! nds all phases of h.irir m..k.-,abmil uiie lniirlh nf (lie ladder's Lctpsl.ibcn iiuiepondently Inauguas nmopg cows rated it almost Invariably preheight (nun I lie wall or tree, and impel tai l to good butter as tb,. not the rung s Stasp Hie sides pared in the office of a lobbyist. ax iliev i limb up. right kit d of fee,!, she believes Congress maintains a Ini tiative pix-e- Aini-ri-ca- rum-H-t- s Muvi-.'sfiill- No Community Is Safe From Polio Epidemic Arras that huve been free of infantile paralysis outbreaks fur a number of years may be mure vulnerable to the disease Hum those with recent epidemic experience. Dr. Thomas Purran, surgeon general of the U. S. public health service. recently stated. Disrussing rycles nf epidemics in the June Issue of Huspiluls magazine, nfficiul pu- blication the of American Hospitals Dr. association. Parran said such theorizing had nu scientific basis but was founded on out the community. It mince tlir number of susceptible individuals win re Hie rpidt'iuie f.m to a no lui la r niuu-t.iitself. V'i.t1 a new- group of victims grow lip. whicii may lie from four In six should be eais. tlial cninu-iuutloss vulnerable to ntf.uk." Dr. I'. it ran said was danun Ibis ger in "relying too since recently exposed anas may be "I'.iibd lulu u f. clwhile localiing cf fake ucrunty ties which have I bee nf tindisease fur several jc.us mny unduly al.iimnl." "Tlir s.ifcsl proccduiv by far." he BdviMd. "is f r all cnmmuuii i s to " pM'p.ire for epidemics. Dr I.irran's nrlcle in the AHA was one nf 10 no li mag.i.-mparulyMS t ti reach none mcri.bi-- r S.h'iO than thn'iiiihi':!'. lbs eoimlry before enact nf the polio epidemic Usually raegag fioin lute Jane I.' Si ptcM.bi r The nil-- r lobca-provide inof liruln-ciit- , fer n uliun nil - Hx-i- flu-ugl- bii-oin- c fan-til- s i s nf e key posi'.io'i nf in lit ride nf the over-al- tl-- gi . In-- i ls, r.ue l seal .itn-.ei-- su-.r- i iiri-cp- cum-petiti- n I - s &; )m rr-n- w st-- fmf; i X'f'fy .'r.X w-;- l i f ? . ""Yc i Nf V - yi-.- $ -- A l"y" 7- - v i ('oiiti-nt'net- New Matches Can De Mutches win eh ran lie submerged in water for four hour nrd Still light have been annoiir.i-e-- i by a U. S. match company. It Is stated the matches will withstand innumerable drenching and still function, and will be a boon to farmers, hunters, fishermen and others who often let caught in showers. These matches ere developed during the war tu water-resista- A f lli-- and Still Light Rain-Soake- d provide a sure the light for mem. hers of the armed forces under the wettest eu' ditior.a of aniphih on and warf.ro. but will soon be available In civ. ii u s. Accepted 1? '.lie war III 1943 uf'.er ngeiotis lets. niill.ens t of the water matei-.ewere xhinperi the fiet.uy to fighting fronts. M t of the jut-.gl- resi-it.if-- -- wairr-re- s stjiit is the fam.iuir wee pink-age- rickie wri"'-- s Mils Miiih'cs, but it s- - Mom is u; kiii by ii.il.viri i.il leg.ii.i'.ors dr.if iig service which f r c. c.i.if-- f ir us j.ivu-- wining any minor Iri lj;"s." LaFollette Bill Would Revamp gEGABC BA K boxes f r the armed f uves, but type, a to y w.n, rpi.-ehr.M hp'e mi- -e than an inch long, was a'.'C produced for rnu-- t gettey k:ls. The w.ilei rr vi.mt matches for civilians bl be m packages , f ci,:h.t bexe ef pocket sire, each hex cur:. .mug rid m.itehis. These new mulct wh eh "shed water like a r. dink's buk." carry a m.viey-ba.-- guarantee if they f.ol to light after a fo'.ir-Iic::- r There are 630 rittfrri Mechhn. writing on thus subject in the currei t Virgin, i . Ljiiar-.ly lioview, hnielii a on the subject nf readymade legislalinn loi. by "gels it own He tell how s'aif bj.ictln r and knocks out a bill which the fruiit office would like tu l' marie a law evcitiial'y. It then runs the lir.ifl over tu a large law I'. ra which has one of It member in c jr. gross. Altiiou.'.h the cannot iiorsur.ally repre-icu- t tlie client, the methi.d used in legislation sni.ii.itiing the proims.-through the body' of the firm takes If the lobby is care 1 that. It will exploit publicity from then on pulili-cnoi- s, ward-heeler- South Dakotana See Swearing-In Twu recent visitors to Washington, Mrs. Evelyn Baser and Mr. James Magee of Custer and Uv 11c Fou relic, S. D.. cun tell their friends bark home in the Black Hills region that while they were here they took In three events which might set the tone fur all such future events. Tlie ladies, winner of a radio contest to honor women who did their bit during tlie war years, visited Washington during the week when three govt rnmrnt officials, all close friends of Harry Truman, were sworn intu new jobs. uf a cabinet offTlie swearing-iicer used to be a rather modest affair. The swearmee. his family, a few friends, and his office stall, a few of the press, umi.iIIv gatht-rri in hi new uffiee. and the whole was over in about the time it bride and groom to suv "I do." n i Fr,d I? S acres cf forest land In the United States i'irt-.tuf tall timber tu take to when Hie prices tart tu rise. Earl Browder plans tu open a publishing house fur Russian books In New York City. Why don't we Russian to get some open an American book publishing venture in Moscow? i Vinson :n-r- l did travel to Capitol for their iii.muui.i ury and labor secretaries lint these event ucca.-ind no such a d.d the which made Monday Tuesday Wednesday Washington news one late wvek in June. Mrs Magi-- and Mrs, linker and five thousand other speeta'ors. plus tlie navy band. ga:hcrej on H e White 11. ms,, lawn to wuleh Mr. Vinson take over Ins new office as chief justiee of Hie I'niti-Sfa'es; they saw John Snyder' big moment made Lucger when President Truman strolled from the White House to the treasury portiee to wateh his St. I.ouis cronv take the oath as head of the treasury department; and they observed t.i'.l. your.it-lu- . rising J 'hit Sti elm.iii's swearing-ias reconversion director, a cercnv-nwhich to. k tuui-in rose gardens of the White !!uiio. Having observed tin se iir,Ti-s-tvoccasions, the Black It.',: visi-to- r could apprs'ci.ite the d remark cf Undersecretary cf Navy J hn Sullivan. d me quietgut his ly a"d trnditi 'iinlly on Jut-IS i A Pull. van congratulated John after tlx rose gar len ceremony. he asked, "Well, are you the last of the June brides?" l oi hii-pl- eere-miuiii- s widely-whispere- by rni Tie inm MT Concrete Block Fait, hund oi l ,. riji. 'V It HA1, CJt I'rwkideat B.df., 1C White H fci INsll(('T10! tINKOLL IN J'ltoi FK0fTtt hi. Murkll ll0K,.ai Kurairid cum vnooi Grata UniverKjiv uil HKITK HI M i r. 'oFMiiE St. Mark h! I.ADIKS Rook ey und nine f N'SI iix.nu . S Muuu-hoi- BI1UWX - MUiiMOi; MISdl.I.ANEOCI W K IIP If AND SEOfflee Furniiurr. ,:es. - Machines. , ARK 1,1 RC..ih HlS,: out. I am constrained to admit that much In all of these assertions is true. But 1 would like to mention three hopeful signs on the horizon, Un-i- r Is trrts fill) d minuscule though they may be. Two were measures Introduced but not acted upon In this session of congress. They will be presented again and have a good chance of passing. One is the LaFollette measure fur revamping congress, one provision of which increases the technical available to members. The bill Intruduccd by fecund is Representative Sabatn uf Illir.uis, which pruvides fur an investigation of lobbies. Most congressmen don't like lobbyists and Sabiith's bill, as Mvrhlm admit, was a crystallization uf till feeling. Tlie third indication was a resolution introduced during tiie OPA light by Senator Taylor (D. of Idaho' authorizing the publication uf a document on how each senator voted on every measure. He said thut the pimple are more aware of political responsibilities. that politics is nu loitgi r solely in the hands uf s and lobbyists is sensitive tu tlie need ul j restoration uf n.ajuil) i.ov. but the only real ho lie within the majority itself. Unfortunately, the giant sleeps. (ggrrtsrt KOK kXI K. A Kegm l.o e. . K'.ir.d. Mi I'tmpAiu ... lirovi-I-imi- I the N.iti-n.- il Foutv.l.itn-f.'r Iuf::'-t;!ParjJys s ill liuiineir.--: pnlio at gi'ovrul hutpil.ns tn t Dr. that all cornimiT-.ities should inventory their fuciiitu-s il s us un epidemic spreads through- (Wjuiriit itm. -- Tons of Butter that s. li vet-eia- Woman Has Churned dence, adding: observMany ers have tluvried oigari.-al.o- e 1ik-u- evi- presumptive i: : mova and spe.ik and have ti.nr lieii.g in what r TIIUksTm T .!,!!. U who klirnt lixun-(lOVriiimrnt farm land prit I'd during World Mil II inure Hull dnublrd in Indiana. North and Kuulli ( Kentucky, Trnnmiwr, ( and tV tinning, lntirjsia of niuie tli.m Mi rout liave Ixi-r- i nnnrinl in ijmh, Michigan. Arkansas and M .niui.a. Ki r the country as a uliu'e. firm estate values have jumped 13 cent in the past year. Fnun Hie hrgiiiiurig of World War 1 to the inflation peak in liflKi, land prices Jumped 70 per cetit. friccs at the start of World War If were lower than in 1014. but the increase tins tune is already 71 per Cent, altliouiLh the urtiii.l prices aie Pot yet at Hie 1B20 peak. Higher Land, leu Irefit. farm sales are continuing nt the high level they attained dining l!l4fi. The number of forms resold after limited pciiod of owiieislop ims Increased, indiciittiig a cul.ition. farmers who have a "sen to acquire additional acreage, aaya a alalrinru! by the Middle Weal Soil Improvement roiiiniit-trr- , should bear la mind that the higher tlir cost of land goes, the harder ft Is to allow a profit, rvrn at prraent prices rrcelved for crop. With suns home (ruin the war and with more and better farm ma- - INFANTILE Is a sort of g!!i-nruui- . I." fji irt's for radio folk and olbeis .:ni I' i ! .1 uiui WM; Service, 1CII Eye Street, N.W., Washington, I). C. A bright y Jung railroad exec.it. ve who has l..i rum luude in law from a fori-university was s.'f.ng w.'.h me in the oiher Weill W.rl7 W.litl.enetof t ACTOS. By IJ.M KIIAfW: Yraa Anal tiji . i depart- II 4 pr'-:-.-)- u i 1 CLASSIRg - World Awaits Second Test of Atomic Bomb Few Legislators Authors Of Bills They Introduce Is f MCE U- 5,-.- ,. I .iA, H Wssl Brudwar. LXCSMU Sail L.U Qg, u Buy U. S. Savings Bond; WALTER A. SIIEAD WNU ABOARD USS Csrrtsp.sSrsn APPALACHIAN CROSSROADS. OPERATIONS Second or Baker test of tlie atomic bomb in Bikini lagoon, now tentatively set fur July 2j. will be like dynamiting th'h in a pond. Lock.ng will be toe glainnur of the army air force and precision bombing as the wh le thing will be a navy show. Tlie bomb will be submerged some 7! feet beneath the surface in about 30 fathoms of in the water, liii) feet, and which is midst of the target ' being rt grouped to meet new con- dit ions i.f the test. This second test also will luck the drama of the bomb burst and the atomic cl ud. which is characteris- tic uf atomic bombs exploded in air. What is likely to happen is that the intense heat will generate steam in Hie water and the terrific force will expend a part of its energy in a waterspout with a cloud of steam and vapor shooting into the air. Intent of this test is to measure force of atomic energy upon the hull structure of naval ships spaced at various distanctx from the center of Hie explosion. Subs hi Submerge. There will not be the visible damage which was indicted wholly upon the topsides or superstructures as in tl.e first blast. Since there is to be no ship placed directly above the point uf blast, the prediction is being made freely that no capital ships will be sunk, although lighter craft may be capsized. Another feature of the secund blast is the placing uf suoim-rgi'submarines in Hie target tleet. and it will be interesting to t uf the bomb force note the vesupuM the steel hulls of tlu-ssels beneath tl.e water. Naval scientists predict that furi-of tlu- - underwater blast will create waves uf xudieient height, pntMhly 10 or mure feet wliifh will sweep over Bikini inland, although this was alxu lorieu-- t in the first blast and did not materialize. Meantime, endless arguments pro-e- t eu as to the degree f damage to tin- slops, the location of the bomb from the bi.ist, whether the du-plane was a "near nibs, probable loss cf life hud the ships Loon manned wilii full cuinplonieiit. and comparative efficiency of tins first lt.kiiu bomb as compared tu the bombs at Al.itncgurdo. H.roshima and Nugusak,. Irevi-in- n Ruinhing. Wnen it is consult red that this bomb was dropped fr. m a height if and hit something like ,x miiv-within a circle, tins reporter would consider that pretty good precision bombing. Arim. T. V biilberg nf the bureau of ships, however, declared that liisiifar as he ruiilri judge, every ship damaged by the lininli. with the uf the e, could he put into lighting shape williin two nr thrre imuttlis. Fi r the Ir.d peniirncv. buttered and ripped apart by explosions of her own torpedoes, her ammunition aviation gasoline and burning Lr almost two days, it would take j cIT.-c- low-lyin- g l.iXU-yar- exii-ptiu- a.-t- about nine months to put her shape. Also all ships damaged, with the single exception of the Independ- cnee, towed away and anchored far out in the luguon, likely could have pulled away under their own steam, had they been manned with crews. Study Effects. In the meantime, Bikini lagoon has been turned into a vast labora- tory of science, chief interest be- ing the etlect of the bomb and its subsequent radiological rays upon the live animals placed aboard the ships at various locations likely to be occupied by the men aboard. Amazingly, only about 10 per cent of the animals were killed by the force of the blast. Some are burned and sick and others may become ill from effects of radioactivity. As a matter of fact, a few already have been destroyed by medical doctora. who are studying this phase of atomic energy in an effort to determine how this radioactivity can be used in medicine in treatment of disease. Persons or animals which receive these powerful rays into their systems are variously affected and the boarding teams upon these ships are preceded by a traind man carrying a "Geiger counter," a small apparatus which registers radioactivity by a ticking noise. Estimate Losses. A fleet such as those which composed the target fleet would normally carry approximately 30.000 men. It is reasonable to assume then that apprixiniatcly 10 per cent, or 3,000 ' men. would have been killed by the atomic bomb blast and that more would have been injund by radio- activity. Whether much of U:c damage to ships caused by subsequent tiles aboard could have been avert- ed hud crews been aboard is a moot quest iun. Some ships captains declare that damage would have been much less had the slop equipment been brought into play, and this seems reasonable in that mi st of the loss un the Independ- ence was ue e explosion and nut Ike blast. There is nu attempt huwever on Hie part uf naval authorities to minimize the terrible power of this atomic bomb. No ulher single bomb ever did the dam- age to a fleet that this one did . . . five aliips sunk, one com- pleti-lout of commission and approximately 10 others out of action for two months or longer, and small to negligible dam- age dune to 10 others. However, another atomic bomb likely would not find 73 ships tu make up a h. lpless ghost fleet grouped conveniently like sitting duck and whcilii-- i use of l!te atom- ic bomb as an cffons.ve weapon of naval warfare ujmjii ships at sea is mil. lardy sound still is a debat- ed question and one which the naval evaluation board will study during t.ie next few weeks or months. It must be remembered that whatever is said about this second bomb test before the actual test is in the realm of conjecture, and much of the conjecture made prior to the first test did not materialize. TO riietiiry ndhnlav of drinking mart oudden diangi.s in wnthcrcoik rclu-vrby WilteMft quickly Blackberry Ik.lsam. SnldatiMiq tom. Be rare to ask fa DUE i ' box-lik- Ji DAB A Dm keeps p 0aivw e Now cream potiHvalf riop underarm Penpiratiea OAf in ki ' 1 - Mot stiff, not mfc W13 1 I enum ! Pub it m X Actually mrthir -- Yn liyht ftfttr p)iiiuik Se Wont rot fabric. iwt 4. Kwpi soft I Yiilura (!' wane; prot1 far. IDro vinwhin Yet ht mad If CzimaU' 3 pnve thin anna imnificu!at-l- condltioniL Tiy 3PC. fii'f. ever ' rw.-t-- iarfrlU. g I. Ine., nriilirMpnii. YiJrlhJJ" r.iDvtu--x j YODOBJlih 111 DEODORANT CREAM RELI i ' One of the Tau girl, tod from tlmpie :': nu. drn.iJ.a in lack of r!o I V 11 v ' i Nik. hjl FMil I , I I.: I I Plnkliam'a T H.l E hume wnya ueh esw I . ' of the e.irnn-sbuy l At ah WNU Tt I In 6029 IfyulackBLOOD-IR- i Mun GU5C.9UP RSO ' in test home11 1 .oS-- I ; I I tAi 1 W ! . And ' . Energy II mar Say I kf funrO'-- a aata lo arrunq-.- ' paopla la.M-- il. Arkansas May Be Second Target Sliij i Baukhage The publicity man for tlie six stunmrg Goldwyn g;ri touru-the country to boost the "The Kid from Brooklyn" expected Hie President's daughter to have them to tea. Mix Truman was out of town. I made the patriotic suggestion they go to Annapolis stead. If there had been time to arrange it, I would probably have a navy cross by now. l. Turgot ship, or vessel nearest cut-to- r ,.f the blast, for the second atomic bomb test may be the overage biittiosh p Arkansas, it has been alindicated by n liable source though no il. Unite announcement has been made by Ad:m W. H. P. Hiundr. commander of operations crossroads and the joint task force. The carrier Saratoga was first ila'.i-to be second target ship. An interesting sidelight on fate of the Saratoga, which suffered only negligible damage in the first test, is that her command-- r. Capt. Donald MaeMal.on, knowing that she was slated for the second target ship made a wager with a friend in Washington, before bringing the ship to Bikim, that he would take her buck to the East coast under her own power. It looks now-- that has better thdn a chance of winning his bet. , 50-5- 0 at bar atgn mat ha kidnay. Thera alwoW Iraatmattt li H lHc a 'd... b Badirin tbit praval ihaa aa Rir -n r Rtle 'T .. A ,, ..,rii mm . ' Gil Dmud lo)' ad many iM'--- l ' V I .I Of |