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Milligan's hi reviews Mr. Truman's poll-- I We and reluctantly finds him. .1 last, not innocent. relatively few other With those who understood the "Liness of the Kansas City Milligan had tried ' Truman's relationship to rationalize Pendergast and excuse his con-duct Now he finds that it can't be Ami No honest man with a loath- - trior such criminals as Mr. Tru-- I mn found congenial, even admir-- ; can disagree with Milligan. i can't make him decent. Mil-L- a recaUs that when Mr. Truman -- assumed the greatest responsibility i ever thrust on an American citizen." aU Americans were for him. h " That is true even of those who, J by familiarity with the Kansas City crimes, had to keep in mind the depressing truth that Mr. Tru-- , man's whole career in politics was ' based upon fraud and corruption 1 0f the ballot and government. He 2 had been the knowing beneficiary f of notorious frauds in his elect-ive offices he had held up to the vice presidency of the United States. The Pendergast machine in Mr. Truman's own active time protected -- the criminal underworld of prostituti-on, narcotics and bootlegging and shared in its revenues. Mr. Tru-e- l j man knew it. It stole elections, thus frustrating the civil rights of the people. Mr. Truman knew that and ojil how it was done. "In the weeks that J) EeBore immediately fol-i- Jl gjV lowed" Mr. Truman's mil Burdens inauguration to sue- - ceed Roosevelt, MU- - ligan writes, "All of us were pulling for Mr. Truman. On his shoulders u'as the burden of the world." But all Mr. Truman did was trans-- ' fer his allegiance from Old Tom to Tom's nephew and political heir, :vj Jim Pendergast. In December, i 1945, alter he had become President, J he publicly paid his dues to Jim Pen-cil dergast's political club, the same m one through which Old Tom had W ruled and robbed the town. His check and the accompanying letter are framed oh the wall of Jim Pen- - office. On the same wall hangs a White I House portrait of Mr. Truman "To James M. Pendergast j, friend, comrade, adviser." He bade " him to the White House as his fam-- j ily guest. ; Alter Old Tom's release from r prison he was forbidden by the terms o! his parole to take active part in ) politics. The evasion was simple. I He acted through Jim. 1 Milligan's final abandonment of I hope that decency might exist in r E Mr. Truman, was restrained until 7 I in 1916 the President ordered Jim Ptodergast to purge Roger Slaugh-- , kr, & Democratic congressman N 'rem Kansas City. J- Scandal ensued, but the corruption now had spread notoriously to the department of justice in Washing- - ton. The federal investigation and TJ prosecutit"i stopped dead. Milligan had con-- S Amefeen victed 259 of Mr. Tru-Ar- e man's and the Pen-?- r, Dhmissed dergasts' henchmen of V vote frauds in the 1936 X election. Of the 278 who were d for aImst unbelievable ras-51- ! ." in the polling, 19 were dis-Kt- l! missed, but all who went to trial Ib' Mre convicted. chaff' pYet' Mr- Truman, then serving ,ef;d "ndergast in the senate, rose up in f !,,eMC!,amber in 193S- - in the midst , Ml"'San's conduct of these trials, ffl 0 Wose his reappointment. It was ,n "u'rageous attempt to influence verdicts. President Roosevelt, -- i some reason, reappointed Mil-Z- l "evertheless, but in 1945, when - become Tru- - ma ,. t M i? Uy was abIe to eliminate to h'San and substit"te a man more ai moral and political liking. Truman's current political u$ 'tr ubl" ith the old Solid South m,6, m a Pretense of high -i rr.,.00,lcern about civil liberties right to ote. him!'.' Was Migan who bethought 5-- S sol" dead-leUe- r laW' ample Mr t case today, to punish city f man8 0WD ea"S to Kansa stitu Ping to violate the con-f- ft in " right ' dtken to vote 1 be ,0 a counted 2'k Persecution. w?41 City story is 016 story 1' allied w niman. 'or he has always T. nti with the lowest ele" Mtic, nSas City Wld Mis"""11 s ; ! f V X r ' L ' SUB ROSA. . .Secretary of the Nary John L. Sullivan informed congress that submarines 'not belonging to nny nation west of the iron curtain have beer sighted off our shores.' He saic that Hussia has five times as many subs as Germany had at be-ginning of World War H.. .. r vis SJ COMMON SENSE.. j,! Jyjl proved thousands upon j f k ffiousoncs of iimesl j jvJALL-VEGETABL- E Jj ' LAXATIVE J ft j ; In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tablets, there are no chemicals, hp minerals, phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are different act different. Purely vegi- - J r table a combination of 10 vegetable t ingredients formulated over SO years ago. 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Savings Bonds' ro ' your (ftxs'y RECIPE FILE V)J J W&tMUOUSQVARBf Soo - 7 Yi cup butter or margarine .,..4.-w-.-irtuTK- 3" lb. marshmallows (about ""S'v " teaspoon vanilla slBlia v5"s,. 1 1 pkg. KeUogg's Bice 'ifeRl'.'tSS2! 5 HS'wJ'jlA ' Krispies (5 oz.) JWJ dfS, Heat butter or margarine and marshmallows IiH ff0 over water until syrupy. Beat In vanilla. Put ' W--- B Eice P'65 greased bowl and pour mix-- '''' 11 B tt Ure on top' weU' tat0 9x13 greased 1 B snallow tin. Cut Into 2Vi" squares when cool. S X'A YieJd: 24 deUcious Rice Krispies Marshmal- - J toW Squaxe5' Everyone 'wm tove 0161111 y j IS ST HARD FOB 00 TO I cut oowri soosiiog? jr: Ffcen change to SAIIO, the safer cigarette with tAJ l nAIN J tj .;:Wi;::' . CORK TIP j iiiMwttiJ u&1r i Not a Substitute Not Medicated I I Kli X 7 i, Sano's scientific process-cut-s nico- - J k I tine content to half that of ordinary (ffYf1--- . J I' ' cigarettes. Yet skillful blending M. 1. U . W 1 makes every puff a pleasure. j ; 1I FLEMINO-HAL- L TOBACCO CO., INC., N. T. f - ''II Aceraoeba3edonconlltiulngtesl30f popular brawl sOiP ?$j J ',' ASK TOW DOCTOK ABOUT SANO OGARSTTIS itfJSn. I f VNy RECIPE IS a1 f(' IS REOSrAR. ) IT'S FASTER... 6EST OF V RED STAR DRY AS FAST AS -- Ml- - REP STAR KEEPS V ( yEAsr recipe ( other yeasts ? ) 1 for months on "S, --jSr'V. VSfWv. ( THE fANTRV SHELF .1 :' ft J ' . -- TrJ- - ill .'"s-3- - SUPBOARD WATCH IN EGiPT...As a welcome relief from pictures of profound significance, this is just a photograph of an -- Egyptian camel drirer standing on top of his camel in front of one of the pyramids of Giia and looking for whateyer camel drivers look for in Egypt. Probably more camels. B?4VMKV.WUow-w- ,',v,'.v,iw.v,v. -, . - n..i. PIP WHEN YOU HEAR someone or complaining about his bad luck or the tough breaks that have followed him, you don't have to pay the slightest attention to the sombre squawk. All you have to do is think about Al Snyder. His dream, ' that of every jockey, was to ride a Kentucky Derby win-ner. Beyond that, to be the win-ning rider of the Triple Crown. Snyder, after 10 tough riding years, was set to make his triple move in the Derby, the Preakness and the Belmont on a three-year-ol- d known as Citation, rated today as the surest Triple Crown winner in racing history. Unfortunately, Snyder went fish-ing in a small boat with two friends. They were in the famous Florida Keys. A gale came along without warning, and someone else will ride Citation in the three rich races. A whirl of wind at twilight and the small boat had vanished. As the late Mr. Henley so well wrote: "Into the night go one and all." Snyder would have drawn 10 per cent in each of these $100,000 tests. As far as one can peer into the fogs and mists of the future, here was $30,000 plus other big races to come as well as the fame of riding a standout champion. Citation is still here and ready. So are Ben and Jimmy Jones. But just what happened to Snyder is anybody's guess. Sport is always packed full of soul-seari- breaks of sudden turns that mean the difference be-tween victory and defeat. But this is a different case. This sud-den squall meant the difference between life with fame and gold and the sadden blotting out of a career that was just beginning to unfold. On the verge of moving into the greatest fame a jockey could know, Snyder suddenly came to the end of the road in the roaring, boiling water of the Keys. Fate never bothers where the aces or the deuces fall. Golf Winners in 1948 Who will win the Masters? Who will win the Open? Who will win the P.G.A.? Apparently it doesn't matter. Herman Keiser won the Masters in 1946 and has won little since. Lew Worsham won the Open at St. Louis last year and hasn't won a tournament since. Jim Ferrier from Australia won the P.G.A. but has set no blazing woodlands on fire since. Why is it that we have no golf-ers who can win more than one tournament on a 3,500-mil- e Junket? Horton Smith won six around 1928. Jimmy Demaret won six or seven a few years back. MacDonald Smith won eight big ones in a year. Bobby Jones mopped up in 1930. Jones and Hagen won 24 national and international cham-pionships between them. Now you can't find a golfer who can win as many as two. Ben Hogan never has won an Open. Jimmy Demaret never has won an Open or a P.G.A. Sammy Snead never has won a U. S. Open, al-though the brilliant but erfatie Snead has won the P.G.A. and the British Open. Hogan, Nelson, Snead and Dema-ret are too good to stand on their records in the U. S. Open, the Brit-ish Open and the P.G.A., the three top titles of golf. Where is another Bobby Jones? Another Walter Hagen, another Gene Sarazen? I might add an-other Tommy Armour and another Jim Barnes, who won these three major events. The modern charge is made that Jones, Hagen and Sarazen played in only few tournaments that all three would have been nervous wrecks if they had followed the rough trail that Hogan, Demaret, Snead and the others have taken. This can be true. I am not going to deny it for I can't prove these charges are wrong, All I know is there are too many tournaments today for the good of the player. Especially the better player. Big money golf is much rougher on the. nerves than world series baseball or any form of football. The mental side is far more im-portant in golf than it is in baseball, football or boxing. Yogi Berra, iic "Arm" A year ago at the St. Petersburg dog track, I bought Yogi Berra a $2 ticket on a greyhound that paid $112. Lately I have given Berra several tips that finished last or close to last. Much to my astonish-ment, Berra still remembered the first and only good deed. "Who ' cares?" he would say as my tip j finished far out of the money. This made me realize that Berra was an exceptional human being. He remembers only the good that is buried with mankind, not the evil that lives after them. Berra, the Yankee catcher, has a friendly heart and a deadly batting eye. The pride of Dago Hill, St. Louis, likes everybody and every-body likes him. Ls kJ,s 1 BLOOD MONEY... 'He handed me thi! quarter and drove away,' seven-year-ol- d Teddy Martin of Dayton, Ohio, told his mother when ar unidentified motorist struck an killed his dog, 'Jigs' v fe ' 4 ' sVs1 V I 1 1 , r 1 L" A x'5fv, . . ' '1 BIG SHOT COMBINATION. . .Number one father-and-s- on combination rifle team in the in 1948 were Harry J. Grimesey (left) and son Robert, 17, of Janesville , Wis. Grimesey, senior, a supervisor in the Parker Pen company plant in Janesville, re-cently set a national record of 199 for the prone and kneel positions. Bob is an Eagle scout as well as a champion marks-man. I 1' ' i" J ENTHUSIASTIC. . . Retired Gen. Jonathan H. Wainwright added his iota of support to the for-- p res iden t drive. Speaking glowingly of his former army superior, Wainwright said, 'Gen. Douglas MacArthur is the foremost candidate for President of the United States.' ' v 4 JUST. A COUPLE OF ELEPHANTS. .. This is the season of the year when circus press agents start vying with politicians to see which can make more noise and get more space in the newspa-pers for their assorted exhibits and freaks. Here, for in-stance, are two eleDhants of the Dailey Brothers circus which wintered in Gonzales, Tex., and is ready for a tour of the country this summer. : DOGGED BIRD. ..Rusty, a Seattle, Wash., cocker spaniel, leads a dog's life with Kilrby the pigeon around. The bird likes to perch and walk on the dogs back and flap his wing's in Rusty's face, keeping him awake when he'd rather be asleep. COIMPULSORY TRAINING IN CHINA. . .Stricken with continuous war for a decade, China has turned to compulsory military train-ing to provide manpower. Here, at a ceremony held in the auditorium of the Shanghai city council, Shanghai's first lot drawing for military service was held. There were 211 num-bered bamboo plates in the jar. f 'V -; - , I ft', ,'4 " f fc"y:ibfJi-;sv.w'- BUSY. ..Here, .at agonizingly long last, is a one-arm- paper hanger. He is Cli f f ord RoSdy of New Florence, Pa., who lost left arm in an auto accident. Natu-rally, he's as busy as a... |