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Show Lb ffi, sr ill Jps Aristocrats of Slock World To Be Shown at International iflfef Lal)ors Interests Fused With Average Citizens VcM sewr-- l HU" vc-ir- ur.i i.'l by hii w!n CrVi unit helped t.f the iin:t a frit in.pui tun I wr f..-- Dr..l lii I' Jilt k wnrm rai in Afin-r-- V Fnd.ue 10 it'iizc that ict CU:l:d wlilit Mbs UlC ri.iliPiry riot.n of its tin.e t be l.iki-twice In a general inn. , I II was this fell sun-- , which caused Anier-liaiof all sorts to awing much tardier toward the conservative sidr than tbry nurnially would have done. Thrtr patience had been cxbaustid by the effort of a screaming iniiiurlly to implant ( ummuuisiii on our soil and thus allcinpt In bring to this country the very thing from which Anii-ra was supposed te be tlie cm ape, tyranny sf tin- - minur-ilf i:.y! t l.uS J. hours before the shuttering blowI of Japanese sneak attack on 'curl Harbor, tiie curtain had been rung down on the greatest InternaOnly a few I'barai-lenstlc- UlillVlli-Udl- filit Hint ; m la . bor on i iiis after- - Lm Now, live ye.irs later, the curtain will me on l!,e 43rd edition of the universally Interiiatiniial, famed ' l.ci aided ss the "world's gi cutest" same in Uie exposition, uriij l.ilI.euOe fitting. mi November 30 The i xj.oa.t.i'ii, ranked as one nf the leading exponents fur live- iiiil.ruvelT.eiit, was disbuniled OX BAK4DK . . . Highlight of the 43rd International Live SUM k expoduring war years. animals sition will lie the calile parade, at which all Uie lievival nf the International after slinwn. be will tin- wartime lapse will be marked ).y color Ai.d far. fare at opening day won the gi a i:d championship a total may see quality steaks vegetables, in the amphitheatre, ciTcmnuh-well as grains, canned products as which is the largest structure in the of nine limes to date. and a dress or fashion resewing exId to la livestock win exposiBidding en all claxxrs view will be a feature. tions. The show will Continue until pected te hit a new high. There The International Grain and Hay Iitceinber 7. even are hupes that the winner show, fur 24 years a popular feature rewill at the grand rhampiua Improved Show Keen. Lf the allow, again will boast the ceive more than the $41,100 givAll are that the 1D48 farm crop competition in the largest Kansas en the winner at the entries from nearly evIntematiimHl will far excel the one with wvrld, City show. union and from Canthe in held in 1941 in all resperts. Missing, state ery Entries in the sheep department ada. Tlie collegiate crop Judging however, will be B. H. Heide. for record, with contest also is a feature of this years general manager of the show. will pass the W'O head s exhibits (run) at least 30 states. show. Last year's winners were from William E. Ogilvie. former assistare usually numerically the Oklahoma Agricultural and Meehan- ant manager, who has been Identified with the International inure than largest, closely followed by Shropleal college. 20 years, will serve as manager fur shire! and Hampshire!, Corn kings, wheat kings and hay 1946. Stress Woul Show. querns will be competing against With exhibitors registered To encourage production of better corn princes, wheat princes and hay al-from every state, the entry list wool, to stimulate interest in proper princes. The junior division is give strong commay surpass the previous high preparation of wool for market and ways on hand to elders. Junior en- ef 11,149 animals reprreenUng to ascertain commercial grading of petition to their all leading breeds and breedrra fleeces of the various breeds, spe- tries are also winning factors in the at North America. In addition cial emphasis Is being placed on carlot contests of catUe, bogs and the Jwlor department. Including sheep. The entries will be larger the wool show. than usual. the club, will be represented Tins year's barrow show is expectby 2,909 young breeders. ed to surpass all previous exhibitions Tlie NaUunal Boys' and Girls' in Interest and size. This is attribClub congress is an Important feauted to postwar production conditure of Uie International. Many of tions and increased interest among the grand champion awards are car- boys and girls. Bulk of the entries ried away by the youngsters in com- will come from the Corn Belt region. petition with their elders. In addi- By counting Uie carlot entries as tion, Junior contests are held for the individuals, nearly 2,500 hugs will be various breeds, as well aa ter meat entered in the International. Many animals, garden, girls record, cloth- of the entries will be shown by ing. food preparation, canning, bet- leading colleges of Uie nation, as in ter methods of electrical use, home the case of CBttle and sheep enbeautification, achievement, leadertries. ship, poultry, dairy foods, field crops There may be fewer horses on and frozen foods. Four-boys also the farms than II yrara age but will take part In tlie sheep shearing rnlrira at the Interamtiaaal will contest Draft Indicate no shortage. Big Money te Winners. horses from many states and Canada wiU compete for the Chicago packers have available Uat ef awards. Draft grid-la- g nearly six million dollars, winch shew wiU be particularly will be used to purchase prize animals exhibited at the International. strong. Breeders are rrporUng a greatly rrvivrd Interest in More than $100,000 In prizes for fathorse breeding, whirh has test steers, hugs end sheep also will the breeders to display be given the winners. wares. their In- of the Importance Rerognizing Most popular feature of the terexting young men In the study to tlie general public. Is an( improvement nf breeds, special were I rniiurily citizens vi nil crimp Vt wnl-tiii- -y aJ haukiiiiKr - to olhlT I'ille'M. didn't look at tluinsrlvi s ax a political unit. In analyzing the new congress, luine people have made the mistake cif puinting to the defeat of candidates conspicuously endorsed by the and the viclnry of those marked for puige. Then, tlie 1AC is an Institution which has behind it one of the two big international union organizations, these depeople imply that because of the feat Of the I'AC, labor itself wax defeated. Ax a niulU-- of fact, labor was not beaten by uny opposing group, it wus not a question of labor, politically organized, meeting urgumzed political opHisilioii. It was a case of a lot of men wlui happen hi belong to unions plus a lot Partita Split of others wlio don't going to the On Hot taauea polls and utterly disregarding the It may be that after the next elecwishes of a group which bad tried tion we can get down to the old parto attach itself to the labor union ty lines again, but It can't be done and thus proving (aa my friend said) yeL is still a pretty bad There Amerithat American labor ia an of Democrats and Rescrambling can citizen first and a lot of otlicr publicans on many issues which will things next and when he alia In his split parties as it has before. union meeting he ia a member of It will be a relief If we do get back that local and nut a member o! a to honest labels again. political party. The BrtUeh are ellll having 1 haven't the allghtcat daubt their Irouhlea on this scare. The that many an American rlUxen. C'snaervaUvea, who are the who ntherwUe might not have "eats," have dlsraaMd changing enthe ef aa did became voted, their name. They have done H ergetic) efferta at peruana Inbefore. They have been known booklets spired by the I'll)-I'Aa the "Tory," the "Unionist" and contacts, lha chief aim of and Uie "NaUMal ae weU aa which waa te get valeri la the lha "CanservaUve." Blr Hartley 1 certain that am equally polls. brilliant British Khawrr.es, exercised sf these eaters who presenter, U anted them a boat their frnnrhlao chiefly because this rerenUy sad even went nn ef Budging, many antfar as calling them "ac-Nasled quite the apposite te what This sounded strange from those wished. the dignified lips which hurled one of the most restrained and yet most devCOP Win Sterna aststing charges against the NuernFrom Many Cauaet war criminals that I have ever But this election was something berg heard In a courtroom. It would more than a revolt against tlie frank take a Inflamed Imagination effort of CIO to reward those who to see pretty in the great majority of had espoused specific measures or American or British conservatives, to punish those who didn't When similarity to tlie Nazis -- a differGuffy, Mead and Murdock were ent breed of cals! mowed down In the senate, men who certainly spoke the speech as labor considered It should be spoken, Marianne Ready when SO congressmen, mnrkrd for To Forgive Frit the purge at the PAC meeting in AtTwas the day after Christmas In lantic City last spring, were all re- Frsnkfurt, Germany, 1945, when all elected with one exception (and that through the ether there was static c was Representative Slaughter, beatenough to make a en by Uie President's own special broadcast Impossible. 1 had an exefforts In the primaries); when clusive story, so I sent It as a distilings like that happen, you know patch to David Wills, my substitute, that plenty of perfectly good union who was sitting at tlie microphone members in perfectly good standing In Washington to cope with such were voting against tlis preach' contingencies. men Is of Uie PAC. Perhaps if it The story H said in my dispatch) had not been for two other circum- would probably be dented, and I adstances PACs views might not have mitted it seemed lnrrcdible, for It been so vehemently opposed up and revealed a plan of the French govdown Uie Une. Both have to do with ernment to help France good old American customs winch by admitting German war printers spring from frontier days when to citizenship. It seemed impossiemergency situations had to be met ble, that, with the ancient Franco-Germa-n with emergency measures for the hatred so recently fanned to new fury, Marianne would take her sake of simple One of those customs which has "traditional enemy to her bosom. The story was broadcast and that precedent Implied all through Uie constitution Is thut too much power was the end, until, some 10 months Isn't flood fur anybody, and In later. It was confirmed in a matter republic you don't elect people for ol'fact statement of the Fi ' uch minlife, or put one party In power In- ister of population, then touring America. definitely. A copy of ths original dispatch That Is one tiling that accounted for most of the votes against the which 1 exhumed from Uie files re"Ins regardless of the candidates' flects my feeling in its incredibility Another factor which as I stood adinldst the ruins of a persuasions. added to the landslide quality of the German city with the memories of vote is Uie old law of action and re- a France clear in action. Americans have a habit of my mind. The idea now apparently (oinfl to extremes. They have cer- is accepted without comment. How well the plan will succeed. tain tastes Inherited from pioneers that make them like their music 1 do not know. But to me It Is loud, their horses fast, their stakes s comforting thought Uint it has high, their goals wurih winning. been proposed because It shows so They are not as fast to start either clearly how war hates are artificial a fight or a frolic as some nations, things, and bear no part in the rebut when they do get "het up" oh, lationships between individuals. iilU'I'C Sli I'ulllIlK'll Thi-- CIU-IA- Short-down- ' i i i the rest of the world is Juvenile delinquency, with plagued Pownal Center with her 150 inhabitants sits back and wonders why the center has never had a case of Juvenile delinquency. It would be quite true. In une erne, to say that nothing ever Nothhappens In Pswnal Center, flow ing. that is, but the ebb and af the seasons and the ebb and flow sf life Itself, of births, sad deaths. Nestled in Hoosic valley and hemmed in by mountains on both the east and west, Pownal Center is linked with postwar realities only of Ethan through the rushing traffic Allen highway. Servicemen Return. But there is no Isolation In the world today, even for a community that epitomizes peace. Out of the community's 150 inhabitants. 11 men and one young woman served In the armed forces during World War II. Now all the men are home again, the community rejoicing that all are safe, and the girl, married to a naval officer during the war. lives in Virginia. Few residents of the center believe that the atom bomb will ever shatter the peace of their own little valley. What really worries them is what the bomb will do for the rest of the world. mar-rlxg- CIO-FA- C Inter-naUun- , Scientists Bumper Cranberry Crop Is Harvested trans-Atlanti- mu LLWn,;l! Jcrp-car-- , ... "ZJrcaBu" the b... available. Pair- . 'li.1!.,nlZ AIRPORT CHATTER Former combat fliers In the Phila-- . deij hia area have formed a pilots' chib. Pui'ixiscs of the club are to give veterans an opportunity to keep abreast if latest aviation developments and to participate in hpugar flying, air carnivals and barnstorming tours. . . . The word "Glenwood has been painted on top of the Glen-- , wood, Iowa, armory for benefit of air traffic. The sign includes numerals giving distances to the near- -' est airport, Council Bluffs, and the nearest paved landing field, Omaha. Using materials salvaged from two barracks on an old civilian servation camp site, Montrose. Colo., is constructing a new hangar at its The hangar's ' municipal airport are specifications designed for stor- age of eight planes. . . . The airport operated at Clarinda, Iowa, by Ray Schenck has been approved by Civil Aeronautics commission, and 10 stu-- 1 dents are learning to fly under the ' G.I. Bill of Rights. . . . Sundance, Wyo., has completed its air marker, the first in that section of Wyoming and third in the itale for mercial airports. The marker has the name "Sundance" in letters 10 feet high and information indicating direction and distance to the Sun-- dance airport. . . . Nevada, Mo., dedicated its new municipal airport hangar with an air circus sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. Prizes were awarded the' oldest and youngest visiting pilots ' and the pilot coming the longest distance. Spot landing and paper cut--, ting contests were other attractions. 5: 1t k. 5 ,,r t J -i Ova 4 li i t ' YOUR . , j j , ; ipu TROUBLES AWA- YWhy toss and turn sod Iok precious sleep over acid iede gestion, easiness sad bhci stomach? Do as ihousututi men and women do sleep non-com- ' such simple stomach away! Just take ' J trauUtt swift-aai- a Stuart Tablets before yte retire and wake up feeliig relaxed anil rarin' to golEaiy to lake no messy mixing, ss bottle. Praised by thoaiudi, used for years. Ask yosr druggist for genuine Stan Tablets. In three conreaieM ' 25c, 60c or sizes Clayton Myron and Pearl Westerman of Seattle decided to get married, It was only natural they ahould want te exchange vows In a plane 2,509 feet above Lake Washington. They met while working In the Boeing plant; their first date was a plane ride. Whcn RECREATION CENTERS Development of airports as recreation centers for small towns and rural America is envisaged In an analysis of building trends in airports. With 3.050 new airports and 1,829 Improvements already planned from a program of federal aid, in addition to almost an equal number to be built from private capital, virtually every rural family will be within easy distance of an airport. CLASSIC OF SHOW The nightTo make their airports a eut show horse ly packed brings airport operators are seekhouse. ing out every possible source of revenue. Additional attractions, acTo cording to present trends, will include bowling alleys, retail and service stores, and amusement concesThe Atomic Age sions, providing recreational activiWASHINGTON. ' to December 2. 1942. accord-honin- g ties for the entire family. WASHINGTON. Turkry eaters. The survey also revealed an arofficial decision of the army, nS their appetites this holiday chitectural trend toward constructthe west season, will not want for tangy cran- - On that day. under p ing airports on the open Stngg field at University of plan, berry sauce, for another bumper large window areas providing specof the tart berry that adds rano. scientists in the Manhattan tators with an unbroken view of field laboratory tradition as well as zest to holiday project's metallurgical feasts has been harvested In the made a nuclear reactor work for operations. By encouraging spectathe first time, proving that man can tors. the small town airport will add Cape Cod district to its concession revenue. and control energy. Cod the True to form, sector release Cape As a result of the army's decis again will supply about sion. December 2 will be observed of the nation's cranlierry supply. as the anniversary of an event Occasionally, as in 1944, the Cape "which was a milestone in the adCod crop falls short of exiectations vancement of science." according to and the berry Is scarce in the na- - j Mnj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, direc- lion's grocery stores. i of the Manhattan project, the . tor Thousands of harvesters, working army-atomic energy organization. finnimble and with slotted scoops A special anniversary meeting will gers through the full months, have lie held in Chicago December 2 by combed the nation's bogs to gather the Argunne laboratory, successor more than 81X1,000 bnrrcls. The crop of the Chicago metallurgical laboraIs second only to the 1937 output of tory, and 25 participating universi877,300 barrels. In 1942 as well as ties. In 1937, Massachusetts marshes produced a few thousand barrels more than their estimated total of 550,000 Police Join Collection barrels for the present crop. Morn than $50,000,000 la Invested Craze; Seek Collector In the scientific business of growing BALTIMORE. MD. Some peoNEW TRAINER Represent and processing cranberries. The Inple collect stamps, pipes or war ing the greatest advancement in 50 to use about square souvenirs. Someone in south Baltidustry puts navnl primary trainers since miles of land that previously lay more apparently collects hub caps. World War I. the Fairchild waste, unsuited to any other type of As tlie latest addition to his collecXXQ-1- , the navy's newest primary new worth The crop, agriculture. tion. he collected eight in a single trainer, made its Oral teat flight about $9,000,000, will reach stores In block one night. Now police have at the Fairchild Aircraft division ths form of sauce. Juice and dehy- served notice they may become colIn Hagerstown, Md. Bnilt nlong In raw fruit lectors themselves. Tncy drated fruit, as well as plan to the line of a lighter, It embodies form. collect a hub cap collector. several major improvements. ... . PLASTICS , enn-nual- ly While val-aab- le x. J $1.20 oa maker's positive money-hi- J d guarantee. Get them today... use them tonight ... be OX ( a !t .a Ei VIE m VHRf as Ae moss HUB ON flu ,U MEHTHOLANMr WNU-- W Note Anniversary Chi-cro- : two-third- J1V j PRICES . . . The stakes (and steaks) are high at aale of the International grand champion steer, another feature af the show. Previous record price at the International was $3.35 per pound, which undoubtedly will be rxreedcd by a wide margaln this year. SOARING livestock judging contests, both col- the evening horse show. OutstandIn which ing youths, harness classes, three-gaite-d legiate and classes, hackneys, roadsters winning teams from all sections of North America will compete, have and saddle classes will be shown. been arranged. Shetland!, harness horses, hunters More than half the total entry and jumpers will put on a show that will consist of cattle, with some 8.000 has seen few equals. heads entered. In this division. Arrange Displays. Aberdeen Angus and ShortWith horns will be largest classes enclubs, commercial ortered. Many of the national breed ganizations and U. S. department of associations will hold their annual agriculture educationmeetings in connection with the In- al displays and features will be of ternational. Boys and girls will be high quality. In addition to ths meat among the big winners. They have show where the consumer again s. ; g - by Baukhage What's happened to Uie man who used to brag about never having gone to college but ftaving three college men working for blm? When man the G.I. students get through, who hasnt been to college wiU be AIRMAIL FOT OFFICES From a single unit operated by a lone clerk in 1927, the list of United States airmail field post offices has NF.W YORK. Christmas club de- - multiplied to 31 with 1.013 clerks. It positors will receive a record total j was less than 19 yeara ago that of $124,557,484 from their accounts the first field station on record in mutual savings banks this year, opened its doors at Cleveland for nreordmg to the National Associa- - the purpose of expediting flow of tion of Mutual Savings Banks. The j airmail, then a comparatively new total, representing accumulations of j domestic service although the depositors, is 13 million eminent had been experimenting dollars higher than In 1945 Average j with it since 1918t Additional airmail distribution this year is $70.72 per j field post offices soon wert set up In aecount. , other strategic cities. ! I. takei rugged tim quickness, intelligent . soldi courage to make a America's peacetime RegsUr Army. can metYoung mm who 'a sure up to t.te Army hip mental ats and physical . erda are finding in - j 1 I n - variety of intereitinl k, j Ur Mi Ha th j I ji bs. stimulating -- 1 The Ketu.nr Army Uboertfr gigantic research constantly developr-- l scientific di'roveries med fields of avi ,ti.n, .vidcommum engineering tion, to mer.tK'fl of groundwork career, valuable fid and well as the orport) it the help guard Their abilities merits deserve U i onlf nndm" Qualified men are of every Us j j j ( j P and the citizen of country. YOlffl IE6UIM MT i THE NATION MD WM AND PEACE ! rarity. Some of the girls who want mink coats aren't really cold at all. ' 4-- C BARRS No one is very rich in Pownal Center and no one is very poor. It is essentially a farming community, The township "meeting is held anPeople from ull in March over the township crowd Into Pownol Cer tors union church, built in 17119. There the citizens of the townthe three selectmen, who elect ship ss govern the whole community, well as all other elective officers. In out the open meeting, they thresh matter of local taxes, road improvements and school matters. Peace la I'nmarrrd. In the six years he has been sheriff. Arthur H. Bourke hasn't had to 4-- C twice-devastat- renter. , iiKlii-ntiim- s as ' rXx, "AVIATION NOTES one-roo- prize-winni- e jj wu pme.ru"!:,,"1; Jewelry. r..i niurboimri j, Ur, 1L Maria, hot-do- j surer at the ni.ijunty. licid" and the "inub" Were Hie The rpJlhi'M of king.. lx mure n.iHlcrn n.aiui.ty-K-uriii(.infill nf ins lji.Miue. fh- jliiuns il so liiiit it will upi'cul to Ihc hiid winker" or tn the irj lrrs nf persuasive nl cxpi nr ive pHi;r in mclroMilitiin The linicii.iKe dilTcrs when it comes from the extreme right and tlie extreme left, but Us purpose is Uie same: minority rule. Totalitarianism us produced by a liitler or a Stalin is not too different from that more subtly suggested by tlie powerful pressure group in a capitalistic country. The BOIli congress Ims a tougher Job than the 7Ulh. We hope it will be able to handle it. It was not elerlcd to smash lubor. It whs elected to carry out a mandate farming others) to help keep labor from smashing itself. i A to search the wurld over 1 ir a serene and peaceful community as a world at model, it could not have arrived a more perfect choice than Pownal Center. Peaceful Community. The old. white New England church hf'.x its oct.iguii.il steeple above a community in which there g is neither j:.ke box. pool hall, or eir.poii.im, corner drugstore motion picture theater. Its handful of old homes, its schoolhuicc, church, a a garagr, a couple of tilling staa tions. a little grocery store, roadside souvenir shop, some neat tourist cabin, a crumbling, cemetery and an ancient inn strung along the these comprise the highway tional Live Stock exposition ever held in Chicago's International amphitheater. ll.e style In The "viil,: i (if lute it has classified DEPART M even consid-ere- d few weeks ago Pownal Center was not fa- road-to- day is it internationally the in a wide place United the and peace the abiding of deep mous as the epitome whole world. '"Ttcs hopes to achieve for therural scene to symbolize peace, Selected as a typical quiet was reproduced on the a pictuie of Pownal Center recent y Bulletin. Nations Weekly Uniu-of the ver bU(lf the U.N had appointed a learned committee of experts shin ItRYliEN WNL f arm Editor. Ey W. i the first time in its history, POWNAL CENTER, VT.-- For own town- a on map larger than thet of its Pownal Center is OMtffeiigWP ' i,, ?F- -. jr im-T.l- jfi CIO-FA- n From All Stales y. Hlftf ll:.lt Ill'll li'fl & reasons J'l.e J'.VI "i Tiny Vermont Town Picked As Symbol of World Peace H".M' Features Famed Exhibition To Draw Entries i! n.M'KM.ua: 4nut'i und Cum nirntnlor. . Mi ret. N WNB Service. 1MD Waoliimiluii. II. I'. ' r -- WASHINGTON S " U. the m I.ali'-a ;il be party t lln- e'n'tmri. I In Lite aft'-ni.aith-vniiiii. COij! i n't hi-l!!.;; i.:i . i ! I pulicn to If. e IH THESE UHITEC STATES ok lin ! lha deaert. IF.N IN Camprtitloa will br alreng Inr (be best 19 bead ef rattle. '.hi !'r |