| Show 4 'le ir ' V 4 40t V V i Y WW V vv e -- O Vit f'4 go 1 F - 1 The Salt Lake Tribune 'There It Is Gentlemen—Our New I 1500 Millimeter Cigarette!' October Sunday A23 1961 29 1 : -- -- : - - ! ' : - - '''''''' "4' ' - ''TI)'0:1' TA P ' ) ' A 4 -3- ---t ' '' - A!111 ! : ' r:: ! 1: Y cm AFFORD III VA MOTU ONItrit (3 k : f i - s1'‘ et : ikrpot i 9 t v- 1 : -- ' : :13 lalC4r2a1SCAlotr - t : ' 4 - t- 77 ! ' - L ly lo - t- - 1 - ! i' 'ki :: ' '''' ' tranLVL:r4 r'N I ' - ) 4 1 k IN ' - ittl : ? t‘ pp - : ' '- cox)r7s E ilik (5zD ! - ' '?- ' 3 '' ''' - ei N kAN$ " ‘ l'Ir)0 : - ifitil(11 7!(12'4'' 'will met low DOASC t - 12' 1 - 8'7 : s' - : f - f' to ii t4k : : :4 - :t's- s -- 741 -- vomit ' 4 00ky '': - - iy':::'i - i'c' 1- - i- -'- i - 4-- ' - A - ::':k-- - - Nomotr smovmr Editor's Notebook Memory Films a Nostalgic History -is 4 - (Thoughts of July explosions swiin unpolluted ponds and rivers take camping trips on little islands in the Portage chain of lakes play baseball vacant lots and create considerable consternation for indignant householders on a birthday on t le le batch of cards reflecting modern- - k I it' miniskirted day Some - 1 other notable birthdays have been cele i brated including one at a small t e d n t''" -- airdrome Francecirca 1918— been re- - as I have e f A 4 p Halloween 1 Revel t '' A t' i ci y ' )J - I el I l't"'"'d 611 l' 1 4 E - by newspaperman Most of the rest — excepting a few — have come and gone rather quietly with 1 ' ? or a toast perhaps dear friends It - Quite t a two from close and Blending Kupcinet of the Chicago says "It's birthday greeting time tfor Mahalia Jackson publisher John S and Jackie Coogan" That is Knight iIndeed quite a blending of dissimilar Kup could have included Me Shah of Iran a mere child at 48 October 26 also saw the opening of the Erie Canal in 1825 the first telegraph line acmss the United States in 1861 decIlaration by Brazil of war against Germany in 1917 sinking of the US aircraft carrier Hornet by the Japanese in 1912 and 1949's wave of price increases and hoarding caused by a shortage of coffee In the United States Sun-Tim- E r 1 1 1: Gallant i'-- able - i - g ) Major Crises In many ways the youth of my gen eration were fortunate indeed The world was beset with no major crises the days carefree and happy Radio and television' had not yet been invented the occasional automobile still an object of wonder ' Yet we could probe the Indian mounds In northern Ohio for arrowheads build underground bunks become expert at No 'i 1 ' Unrestrained talk of LSD the pill motion pictures and observance filth in of easy morality taints their minds How can they have faith in statesmen who reveal their inadequacies by turning to war as a solution for international dis- rarental Neglect can squirrel shooting they honor pleasure-ben- t who neglect their responsibilities to impressionable children? What useful lessons can they learn from a third generation on welfare? Or from striking schoolteachers law officers who dodge the enforcement legalities by pleading sickness and the "easy justice" meted out in our great cities by a segment of the Judiciary! How can they be brought to respect law and order where none exists? Rioting looting and burning are now acSun State Editor's Notebook cepted as inevitable in the crumbling of parents values the environment In which have been raised my wonderment they mix potash and sul Q As South 1 — vulnerable hold: Just Try and Stop Me By Bennett Cert perfect English" Frank Sinatra seated to Lewis asked idly "Who?" Explained Lewis perfectly seriously "A cat It said 'Meow'" next QUICKIES: Classified ad: "Male basset bound desires to meet attractive female basset hound Object: bassinet Teacher: Use "conscience - stricken" in a sentence Pupil: "Don't consciousstrickens before they're hatched" most notorious elbowed his way into Sardi's Restaurant the other evening and very loudly and loftily informed the of One Broadway's s d': maitre man: the in 1962" "My usual one I had last table time my good I was here H Goren you Q 44Q53 EaAt North Pass - Pauss 1 Pass What do you bid now? Q z — Neither vulnerable you hold: V42 AQ82 The bidding has proceeded: North West South Pass 1 1 V - ? What do you bid now? Q 3 — Both vulnerable as you hold: A983 4Q103 VAQ5 The bidding has proceeded: Eat North Pass -- p 14 2 you Pass AKQ65 The bidding has proceeded: West North as South 41Q1 3 Pan It Pass Pass Pass Pass bid hold: 141083 410653 VKQ1087 The bidding has proceeded: West East now? 6 — Neither vulnerable as South Q 4K42 24 34 Pass 2 you IN? West 1 V South South 1 South ? hold: V AKQJ What do you ? What do you bid now? - South 4KQ4 East Pass Sontb Pass Pass Pass 48763 What do you bid now? Q 5 — Both vulnerable 41 4AK63 vulnerable you VKQ194 Emt Pass Pass 24 - as South The bidding has proceeded: Pass Pam ?‘ ' a — As hold: 492 V - newspaper years have been memorable ones — exciting challenging and I hope productive of some good for huMy manity Most of the "giants" of the profession — including my father — are no longer with us Yet recollections of the departed including William Randolph Hearst Roy Howard Adolph Ochs Robert R William Allen White Col Herbert Bayard McCormick Swope Henry "Marse" Watterson Kent Cooper of the Associated Press Hugh Bat Ille of the United Press Ricardo Castro Byche of Costa Rica H L Mencken Lord Beaverbrook and Gov James L Cox still and stimulating provide absorbing memories It has been my privilege to know most of the great and near great in the realm of public affairs Presidents from Warren to Lyndon Johnson the incomparable Winston Churchill and Prime President Minister Nehru of India numerous Osmena of the Philippines s heads of state in Latin America Juan Peron in Argentina and Batista of Cuba and yes even the bearded one Fidel Castro Harding (Leta-tor- Book of Memories Highlights in the book Inexperience Apropos of nothing Joe E Lewis suddenly announced in Las Vegas one evening "I just met somebody who speaks K1095 4KQI0982 The bidding has proceeded: West North South VQ 1- Challenging Career races AA North East South West 14 Pagil 1 Pass 1NT Pass IP Harry Truman drinking getting Eisenhower otk 0 0 0 A 9 0 0 A0 01 0 0 000 0 00 AA A 1 Diabetics who drink run the risk of going into shock that is blamed on alcog hol rather than lack of sugar friends 011 who suggest he c' "sleep it off" may the victim find dead within a few : Now Even More Changeable This is the root of the problem and if It was true then a few recent news items Indicate how much more changeable the world is now The Commerce Department announced this week that the population of the country will pass the— 200 million mark one double what it was in day next month 1914 The Council of Economic Advisersin now celebrating the 80th straight month of the largest economic boom in the history of the nation We are not only being led into temptation but kicked into it The United States Bureau of Labor Statsitics meanwhile disclosed the other day that the amount of money a typical American city worker's family of four needs to live "moderately" has risen by 50 per cent in the last eight years to more than $9000 a year Yet the government is grappling with a poverty problem and a housing problem and a war costing between 25 and 30 billion dollars a year and inviting us to police a billion Chinese as well That there is no common faith or body of principle to guide the people through this convulsion of change is perfectly clear It is not even possible to get much agreement here in the capital on the guiding principle and purpose of the war let alone find any common ground on what is primary and what is secondary in this staggering catalogue of prob- be-th- 1 hours If the per- s o n MVPS the sugar deficit may 1 have caused irre vers ible brain 1 damage A Texas Dr Van Dellen physician Dr Leonard L Madison writing in Diabetes Outlook suggests that such individuals carry a card stating "I am a diabetic not an alcoholic" More Complex Entity is Alcoholic hypoglycemia Sugar Needed Not Sleep Intravenous glucose (sugar) is a more 61nalefilent I ---- 7 Il 1 1 ' it' g leg Aoto let ciciAto : ::it ''' 111 Myrdal cli'sputeS— 211N ci ittletisiceiousiA1 '1i e111is L ir my"' 71-- -- r need-sug- ar Social drinkers and many alcoholics do not develop a serious lowering of the blood sugar level because they do not drink after prolonged periods of starve- tiom Diabetics may have an occasional drink provided the sugar in the cocktail is included in the total allowance of car- bohydrates The main objection to drink-ing is that it might duU the appetite and cause the diabetic to lose track of time This is most important when insulin is being taken And the victim may be mistaken for a drunk if alcohol is detected on the breath when he is in diabetic shock or coma 6ar1ini'9 ls 1e viaii 2 i scckfty 501412 its 13tor1 '' not sleep A little may go a long way when a person in stupor with liquor on the breath is taken to the hospi a collective ke Re clivevtake -- - sugar gloctlemEstill tiro® the Swedish social in was Washington recently philosopher estimating that the cost of eradicating the slums and rehabilitating the slum dwellers in the United States "would amount to trillions of dollars" "I draw the conclusion" he said "that the common idea that America is an immensely rich and affluent country Is very much an exaggeration American Gunnar complex entity than the shock many dia betics develop when they take insulin but do not at enough food The condition occurs also occasionally to nondiabetics who have fasted from 12 to 24 hours is interval the imbibing During sugar stored in the liver is used by the body and is partially depleted by the time the victim begins to drink The alcohol gets into the bloodstream and is metabolized by the liver In excess it may lead to stupor During this phase the output of sugar from the liver is inhibited leading to an additional lowering of sugar in the blood The danger occurs when stupor caused by alcohol is replaced by stupor caused by too little Well-meanin- lems vtdadkV - 1 ki '' 1 rs '' There really is a Tallahatchie bridge as mentioned in the popular song and by now it surely must have a sign warning people against throwing anything off of it - 2-- - loll - of memories with Winston 121I E):0C0 Sorto Prilmium bourbon with chewed out by be r'14-L iripto tt-C- I 0112 I 9511 i'lli it— IN 411 J1I - : Finn 76"x80" 01e- '"' 4t - OUP iti - 0 ittli l- 011 - - ! - -7- moo so Sial If tat —i el - ((trii-i1 qpil is A - - - - 4 ' k - 1 - -- Al"- 1 C:4'1 c 1 - '1 ' '' i l: - ' I ' i '' till 1! - $ 60 SI- "1- 4 -- - ora - - I - ( ' )kL: 3 - tiammeommtwoissigamossississigswwwr 4 t4 t '- ' Simmons Alusto hot Constatotias ' 7ratere 4995 If S- -- -- - t: 1 -- -- " s:- Ce'L-3- (‘ ' ' ' vs '' I k 11 COLOR CHOICES ' he : 1 Pi 4 aI Quilted fitted 'il Spread -oratiw t 'IP - '" 0it: rit — 6 A:' e -- zia)1oss!ciel 2 - Pillow: 71 saw Over 15000 - lit r- in Linens cmicial bar intr7— "" iiiawwwr: isemare ' Sheets Mil lat and tie 0 - 45 Pillowcases 1 p Al Ak4 i ) tt IT at fit-- LAM ft 4 - 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A ft-- : $47: Blanket Spread J95 : 4995 : 1 111 Mattress Pact 414IN3 King Pillows 4vvv 1 - 1101111111101 i t 1 - " s t ' r : :11 :spor FARK FREE! Al Ichards 4 t I 1 4 A I 1 ) 2 mJones ottro:t:Morgan Frame il I II N - Y'' Thermal Blanket 6TS : ' 47 ' also get You i cr -- 'd'4-'et- 4 Duty ' - KING SPREAD QUILTED Heavy 1 Qunt Top With Famous t4 :' e::e: : i : ' ) Li '- - fc I s' 14 r-- '':' ki t' ' Itli - A k ik - :isao h L gi 1‘ - s - ' Oaen Monday till 9 PM n t 4' i i 1 A:t I rt'' :'s 4 E0 - ' 9) Iria v- eta s -- - i rr ): ct INCLUDED During This Sale we are offering "The Choice of the House" These ore all premium quality sets comfort and type yoti choose your brand it's here at BIG big whatever your preference savings — Why not enjoy KING SIZE this week? If We you can't make it in phone us your order guarantee your satisfaction or your money cheer fully refunded ' r l I Horo's Tho Story - -- - geltIro Irf 0 44111 - t i '''' : ' 41 - FIRM toloolL 11rrc:t 4e A gillar1 'f 400!' i f-t -- s wci( tato '' A ssi 1 '1 t — sk 1 i I1 - 0118 f 6 kitr j'' r 'III 4t) --- 4 R - es - oprott21'11 tors Alrittie 5 11111S0110 - ''' A011104 litattoore 01111210 to EXTRA FIRM OR ORTHO S 0- Papioth ----1 :116100000110101 - t 44 4114047 711V° goo - '''seati- Support— 1 oilplittio - 11112z ClIZI A ap 4 'A1 tr 5 - FIRM ar 04 a 411 'q' :-: Sooty Luxury Quilt Top Sot—Extr a 17kl 1111 ri"—jt 44kC'" fair objec- A10401IN ri 76"40" EEO Bilr4t7111:1 L'Iltit111714:CL1311)flP Qualtt - Giant Quilt Top JOHN S KNIGHT Editorial Chairman Knight Newspapers Ma a 1 a - rselves" need 0 Health - Diabetic Drinker Runs Risk change ou- we know how to of Dr T R Van De lien no precedents to guide us no wisdom quickly than tive and truthful And in the rash of newspaper mergers a few owners have become so enamored of the counting house that they are cheating their readers in the area of news and comment Yet on the whole make no today's newspapers apology Birthdays come much too frequently these days but the mortality tables are so encouraging that perhaps we'll make that 50th Reunion at Cornell alter all es John Gardner the secretary Education and Welfare has &so been discussing these questions recently not in political hut in moral terms "This is a day of dissent and divisiveness" he remarked at the University of North Carolina "Everyone speaks with unbridled anger in behalf of his point of the view or his party or his people fissures in our society are already dan this in itself is not new course i I ! ' that wasn't meant for a simpler age We have changed our environment more There is much to be said for being a free man unencumbered by alliances Thus I have and pledged to no man In newspaper found deep satisfaction work which demands only that an editor be true to his convictions Despite the laudatory references to the great newspapermen of the past — heard most often from retired editors and professors of journalism — today's newspapers are infinitely superior to those of yesteryear of course some mighty sorry ones are still enjoying a measure of prosperity even as they ignore what should be a What do you bid now? (Look for answers Monday) 7 devel- disturbing Mr Reston opments Obvious- ly all these spectacular symbols of revolt against the old political and moral order are merely the outward manifestations of a much deeper derangement in the life of the nation Gen Dwight rounding up some vodka for Ilya Ehrenberg the Russian writer in Washington's Statler discussing the Cuban problem with Jack Kennedy chatting with exiled Fidel Castro in the Miami Herald's newsroom rowing up in Akron with Wendell Wilkie being with Adm Chester Nimiz on Guam when he announced that the first atomic bomb had been dropped on Hiroshima meetings with Gen Douglas MacArthur in Manila and arrival of the Japanese peace envoys going Into Tokyo to find Jimmie Devereaux the hero of Wake Island the surrender ceremonies aboard the Missouri Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson's visit to my office during the 1964 campaign and a recent journey to South Vietnam I have never regretted my decisinn in the dark days of 1913 to stay in newspapering and eschew the temptations of running for political office Deep Satisfaction obligation to 4 Cause to b doing a headstand with Nehru at Chicago's Racquet Club long conversations with Joseph P Kennedy appointment to a war assignment in England by Franklin D Roosevelt even though he wasn't too keen about it being offered a captaincy in the 37th Division by Gov Cox which I refused because of Goren's Weekly Bridge Quiz By are they Churchill - C large are a day at the legality life ti values How and better informed and show greater curiosity about the world and its future than their critical elders Any bright young person comes directly to the point He or she wants to know to appraise the facts and — reach a conclusion Unlike politicians who fuzz up the Issues our youth can lay them bare and does Our admiration and best wishes go with them Considering The passing years have been Mied with a measure of accomplishment and some egregious failures Life is a leveler which permits one to rise and fall and then rise again The good years bring happiness and pride of achievement the tragic ones leave their permanent scam No individual or family is immune from misfortune One bears these calamities with fortitude or breaks under the strain or even wonders how this could have happened to me Yet the uncertainty of one's fate is the immutable law of '- We GIN Die On that day too an unknown number of gallant American fighting men died in Vietnam even as our leaders attempt In Justify prior commitments of question- - at age 12 elders tend to revel in such pleasant nostalgia even as we indulge in unmuted and often undeserved criticism of the youth of today Our generation knew no problems comparable to those which now confront our young people exposed as they are to a marked decline in moral and spiritual on history es per-&mant- les ' psychi- we got into trouble the school marm's switch and an irate parent soon straightened us out Our ele mentary education knew no homework other than strict insistence upon reading I had read more than 150 books mostly pules? Iry 1' Nostalgia had ever heard of a Mr Myrdal was sure the debt would not be met so long as war was at the center of our attention More important he questioned whether the American people really had the will to deal with the poor and whether they really had it in their hearts to make the sacrifices necessary to provide equal opportunity for the Negro people ! explored are Is that our young people have turned out so well The public print and television's glaring eye are focused upon the hippies and the freebies even as a new generation of is intelligent youngsters responsible in excellence new marks making By In atrist When a - us None of t ? - Mr Knight Eddie Rickenbacker who was honored recently on his 77th And then the fabulous party given by INiles Trammell president of the National Broadcasting Co at Claridges in the black of 1943 Irving Berlin the great composer came by and played the piano In 1964 the good citizens of Akron Invited me to a testimonial dinner which combined birthday greetings together with some mention of my 50 years as minded a r a1 ' in ‘ I Fourth in the then ‘ A t humor ? -- for phur The nice Congratulatory letters warm telegrams a few ties and the inevitable 're ! -- gerously deep We need greater emphasis on the values that hold us together" This is obviously the subject for a book and not a column but the need to get at causes instead of the newsworthy effects of these problems is great and will require all the moral and intellectual resources of the nation No such effort is likely to be made in the midst of such a war No basic change In the financial and mental and physical priorities of the government will be made as long as it is going on And even when it is over there is no assurance of a vast effort to get at the root causes of the social disorder For this will require a transformation of American values of the relationships between the individual and his govern-an- d of nationof the tax structure al priorities and purposes There is today no agreement about what kind of society we want in the future or what the relationship of that sodety should be to the rest of the world and as things are now going we will not be well advised to leave these two fundamentals to the politicians (Copyright) War Draws Off Interest "We are unsettled to the very roots of our being" Walter Lippmann wrote in Drift and Mastery in 1914 "There isn't a human relation whether of parent and child husband and wife worker and employer that doesn't move in a strange situation We are not used to a complicated civilization we don't know how to behave when personal contact and eternal authority have disappeared There T KI I and violence everywhere What has not been reported or with equal energy and e n thusiasm are the causes of these of 11 1g ?h WASHINGTON — In the last few the front pages have been full of MIA'S about marches on the Pentagon racial conflict in the days sities t '''''''''''-'4'- affluence is heavily' mortgaged America carries a tremendous burden of debt to Its poor people That this debt must be paid is not only a wish of the Not paying it implies the risk for the social order and for democracy as we have known it" New York Times Service drug addle- tion in the univer- - - ' ' - - '- t s tt:f:-"---- YOU : f y14- - ) : HO4 i: C - k 44 V ' ' A ' -: : ri '' ( ' t 1 rh 'N'' - ' V '''t:::- ) : - 41 Z l'f'i'' 8 ' ' 144 (f - 1 T' ' i t : - ) i11--4s t : We're Alert to Violence Blind '1W'nf - tgwi b ') 1 '1"t ty: ' 4 ' - - i k4 14-1- mkt v' 'AI':----''- t : '441 -- STATUS' ''-- : Du i : f - JaMell Reston lydwgi ir 'MkT ' ‘v 'w 4 - - -r A4111444-1M4h-tak- 0 1 S |