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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH i A' RESOVERT... United Auto Workers President Salter Reather, shown here with his daughter Linda, has been released from Detroit hospital after re-covering from a shotgun, blast that almost cost hint his life. Mystery still shrouds the attempt on his life, and the assailant, who shot Reuther in his home, never has been caught. jeiasd b, WNU Ftur ill revelations of MTE in my T influences at work be-- " 'C nd, Republican front of rk Herald Tntre J :! lyed up on my toes, "" and used the ring. :J1 stand BNOTKEPABTEE. THIS .SEs.uare Garden a up the tist crowd for Henry Wal-t- t '5I1 lace, incited a riot J -- ' let s si,. i at the Eoxy thea-ter close by, where a film was show-ing called "The Iron Curtain." This is an film. It is be-lated and insuffi-cient by far to re- - 'oulj -- s the record of calculated as" PH ce of the movie industry to Use mason of the Hollywood Mus-h-j. cs over many years. He riot against the film had vten advertised in advance by the Cimmunists so frankly that the fork police were on the ilert. . speaker at the rne preliminary ,ren was a notorious thief and "'"tier, a nimble opportunist in re- -' "jus 'matters and a preacher of "i Communist policies and pro- - m. He is known by the alias of i jam S. Gailmor. His original was William'., Margolis. He 5 to Gailmor after he had fraught stealing automobiles in Gailmor, or Margolis, first came a s, notice as ':3011s" commentator in 1941. By a he was making propaganda in i" local radius around New York " V Roosevelt and the fourth term. I :k investigation was difficult and to.- ins unable to denounce him until jr election. I then presented his her joiinal, and psychiatric, history 'Mi a Ed Noble, president of the old ft lie network, a New Dealer who ;i very well by himself in the ra-ie-a business. Noble called in his K." 'KTSonnel" chief, who produced a tn. digree filled in by Gailmor. IN b(. HE SPACE SLUGGED "RELIG-- ;0.r THE ANSWER-WA-iti NONE." About 24 hours later, Claims learning that he was )ei He't discovered, Gailmor Reliffi'oHj confessed his past to m his employees but said Jl could not be a Communist be-- J ;aise he was a very religious man. fl had, in fact, been educated to j St 1 rabbi but had abandoned that J :;:eer alter his arrest. He escaped i prison term by accepting a com- - raiment as a victim of a mental border called a "compulsion neu- - He couldn't resist the temp-:ifio- n to steal. That is the trouble im - all thieves. fen Henry Wallace set out on tii northwestern tour last winter, Giilmor bobbed up in the troupe j the role of money-raise- He coursed a patter to loosen up the B rakers and he and his assistants ) re using a large milkcan to carry the collections. The New York Herald Tribune "'i a reporter along who wrote a - ?;cial story about Gailmor. It was amusing and altogether favorable. i f ade no mention of his com-- 1 linistic associations or his crim-w- , '"'Past. 0 the night of the riot at the Sor; theater Gailmor said from le platform of Henry Wallace's j in the garden: "A few blocks ii" inn the sireet Uley are going to a fascist picture that should jil, boycotted by every right-- " person. So you know kl to do." AI the close of the rally a scream-- , mob of 2,000 Communists went ae Eoxy. There wa3 disord2r !eral persons were injured. J ;T SURROUND THE TBIBIJNE. " Last October Gail-m-mor made a local, it- in broadcast in New j wI'orfcYork with a guest ,j! r artist who was Joseph i .',"erfcr& city editor of the "'tale. Herzberg had written : of and edited a new book . I 'La,e City Edition." k "is introduction, Gailmor t.;p bert Maltz, one of 10 rewrite hands indicted "sal to answer before the t committee whether they r Eer had been members of " 'jl?tTist party- - He also 1 i fa defense 'of himself ,: ik e oft" nine as "the con-"t- e ' mankind." j introduced Herzberg " Ctagant terms- - Th thief - uTO:' f both his relieius U , tte profession of journ-- 7? oa, t0 be an 0,a '"HdT.v edUr 0f thC beD ' whlch Professes )i lican PaIer- - Ga- - . Pi C necity edUor 'Joe'" "Bill." The '"Wa e ree'ved the of recogni- - S '" TT,"1" " great DeWS- - " W0Uld Uft t,,e H'T 41 p,,;.el of e Daily Worker x his estimation. S ' " 1 s t i - " !, : i ' . , ' , ' ' - f J .5. . x f U- - : v : HAT, JESSE NOT LAID IN HIS GRAVE?... Claiming he is the original Jesse James, the slightly tarnished Missouri Robin Hood of th 1870s, Frank Dalton of Centerville, Tex. , came out of his hide-out cabin on advice of his lawyer, who told hln the 'heat' ought to be off by now. That wasn' t Jesse James that Bob Ford shot in the back in 1882. says Dalton; it was Charlie Blgelovt. Now living in Lawton, Tex., Dalton is shown blowing out the candle on Jesse's 100th birthday cake. EVER SO GAY, For gala occasions, gala aprons, of course! Easy needlework vari-ety too. Simple sewing, and each of these thrifty-cu- t aprons takes yd. Flowers to crochet and embroider. Pattern 520; embroidery transfer; cutting charts; crochet directions. Send 20c (iri coins) for each pat-tern to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dppt. 564 W. Randolph St. Chlca;o SO, 111. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No Name Address The juice of a lemon in a glass of water, when taken first thing on aris-ing, is all that most people need to insure prompt, normal elimination. No more harsh laxatives that irritate the digestive tract and impair nutri-tion! Lemon in water is good for you! Generations of Americans have Jtaken lemons for health and generations of doctors have recommended them. They are rich in vitamin C; supply valuable amounts of Bi and P. They alkalinize; aid digestion. Not too sharp or sour, lemon in water has a refreshing tang clears the mouth, wakes you up. It's not a purgative simply helps your sys-tem regulate itself. Try it 10 days. USC CALIFORNIA SUNKIST UMONS t'$tfJf t. Double-dul- insecti .Wjf . ode: Kills by contactj ,V ifj f&-- '' HHs by fumes. Destroy M?i"&-- planl lice but sPare . beneficial insects. Imist One ounce plus on Original jactory-seale- con soon makes 6 turners to insure h 1 1 strength, gallons of ef- - TOBACCO 4 feclive ophid- - CHEMICAL CORPORATION spray. Hicotine Specialists Since IH85 ' ' lOUISVlUE 1, KENTUCKY t.'i-- i iri'Uri-iiiir,'yiii- il PILES TROUBLE? For Quick Relief DON'T DEIJVY ANT LONGER! Now, a doctor's formula you can use at home to relieve distressing discomfort of pain Itch irritntion due to piles. Tends to sof- ten and shrink swelling. Use this proven doctor's formula. You'll ba amazed at Its speedy action relief. Ask your druggist today for Thornton & Minor's Rectal Oint--- ment or Suppositories. Follow label In-structions. For sale at all drug stores. Help Them Cleanse the Blood of Harmful Body Waste Your kidney are constantly filterlni waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lajf in their work do not act as Nature intended fail to re-move Impurities that, if retained, may poison the system and upset the wool body machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nights, swelling puQiness under the eyes a feeling of nervous anxiety and Loss of pep and strength. Other sig;ns o( kidney or bladder dis-order are sometimes burning, scanty or too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment Is wiser than neglect. Use Doan't Pills. Doan't have been winning new friends (or more than forty years. They have a nation-wid- e reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the country over. Ask pour neighbor t .'TV' 1 ' t I ; A -- " 'A 3 l "! s REPLACEMENT. .. Jacob A. Malik, Russian deputy foreign mini-ster, is scheduled to replace Andrei Gromyko as Soviet dele-gate to the D.N. Gromyko, apparently called home for conferences with the Moscow heads of state, probably will not return to the U.S. Malik is an expert on Korean and Fax Eastern affairs. Convicts Lccrn To Make Living Without Pistols In Prison, Inmates Study Trades, Learn Skills In Occupations JOLIET, ILL.-'T- his is the irs prison I have ever seen where any body showed me how to make money without a gun." It was a StateviUi penitentiary Inmate talking. He'i spent 16 years behind prison wall! In half a dozen states. He came here three and a half years ago or a five to sentence for armec robbery. ; Now he is one of about 2,500 con victs, out of a population of 4.S00 ai StateviUe and the old Joliet prisor here, who ere fitting themselves foi better lives. He's learning to be t printer. He plans to use his new skill when he gets out. "A guy can make more money ii three months operating one of thes machines than I got in all my rob-beries," he says. "And he doesn't have to spend 16 years behind walls for it afterward." Printing is one of 37 trades whicl convicts can learn at the prison vo-cational school. They are learnini to repair radios, watches, type-writers, shoes, auto bodies and fen-ders. The system, says Warden Josepk Ragen, is based chiefly on the ides that many men reach the prisoni because they lack sufficient aca-demic or vocational training. Gives Prisoners A Chance "For one reason or another, thej have not had a chance to develop their ability to make an honest liv-ing," he says. "We try to fit men to compete, on an honest basis, when they are outside again. "A man can study everything given in the average high school course except physics and chemis-try," the warden says. "We don'1 want a student to come up with a homemade bomb." Convicts who complete work get eighth grade and high school di-plomas recognized by the state de-partment of public instruction. Warden Ragen is optimistic about the chances for his graduates to find jobs when they leave. He has a list of 35 large industrial plants In the Chicago area which are will-ing to hire all trained men the pa-role board can send them. Do they make good? Topnotch Master Mechanic "We had one fellow who came in here with a fifth grade education," the warden recalls. "He completed elementary school and then learned the machinist's trade. When he was paroled he went to work in Chi-cago. Today he is a master me-chanic for one of the largest indus-trial plants in the United States." Prison farm training has even turned some city men into farmers. "We got one fellow in here who didn'J know one end of a cow from the other," Ragen says. "He spent three years in the prison dairy. "The owner of a string of dairy farms called me up to ask if we had anybody capable of operating' a farm. I recommended this fellow, and when he was paroled he went to work for this owner. "Today he is in charge of a large dairy farm. He gets $200 a month, his bouse and other incidentals free, (and S per cent of the farm's profits. "Some time later I saw the farm owner and asked how this parolee was getting along. He told me the fellow was the best farm manager he had," ; , , s - s A 1 ' . - A" 4 ' ; , ' I' fA: , . - CONGRESSIONAL PRESSURE. .. Every year Republican and Democratio congressmen play what is laughingly known as a ball game for the benefit of charity. Red. Tom G. Abernethy (Dem.. Miss.) will remember this year s melee for a long time. He is the one being sat on at first base by the obviously weighty Rep. James P. Schobllck (Rep., Pa.) who moves the Indicator to 295 pounds every time he steps on a scale. Stitch in Time Skirts are getting longer, girls, so why not let your hems down? In doing this you may find that there is not enough material left to give the desired width. Two or three rows of seam tape can be sewed together and used to make the hem wider. til', l A I 'V' A u AA $ "-- j.. ' r A ? ji 1 L ''V4V ' I ,A5 CONVENTIONEERS... Democratic executive committee has named Alb en W. Bark ley (left), senate minority leader, as keynote speaker of the July national convention, and recommended Sam Rayburn (right), house Democratic leader, as per-manent chairman. WARREN WRIGHT, Calumet's owner, Ben and Jimmy Jones, Calumet's two trainers, were look-ing on ahead as the 1948 Preakness arrived. They had seen Calumet's Whirl-awa-take the money-winnin- g rec-ord away from Seabiscuit. They had seen the flashy Armed take tha cold cash collection away from both Assault and Stymie, only to have Hirsch Jacobs' $1,500 claimer re-gain the lead in the race to be first to earn a million dollars in purses. Ben and Jimmy Jones are not quite sure how the veteran Armed will come along. But both are pretty sure that whatever Stymie turns in, Citation will beat it, put-ting Calumet ahead again. With the Derby purse and over $250,000 under his saddle. Citation faces the Preakness and the Bel-mont. That will mean close to an-other $200,000. But that isn't all. There is the American Derby at Chicago there is the Massachusetts Handicap at Suffolk Downs there is the Subur-ban at Belmont there is the $100,-00- 0 Santa Anita Handicap there is so much money on hand that rac-ing can almost match some of these radio programs where, I under-stand, they will give away entire states fairly soon. The big races on ahead for three-year-ol-run from $40,000 to $100,- - 000 and it is quite possible that Ci-tation will finish his three-year-ol- d career above the $600,000 spot. We talked with Ben and Jimmy Jones about this situation. The Jones boys are a trifle better than normally bright citizens. They would rather talk about what has already happened or what might happen tomorrow than about what might happen next month. They are not limb climbers. They have no use for limbs, except those limbs belong-ing to Calumet runners. "You made $1,400,000 or more," 1 said to Parnell Ben a year ago, "how much will you make this year with Citation, Coaltown, Fervent, Armed, Faultless and your two millions?" "All I know is what we've won so far," Ben said. Ben Jones counts no purses bo-fo-re they are collected and put in the bank. There is a rumor out that his will soon chase Citation and Coaltown off the tracks. It could happen. Baseball's Upsets It may be that the cold, raw, windy spring has had more than a little to do with the odd aspect of the two big league pennant races. Something has taken place that has an odd, lopsided look. For example, if we owned a ball club and someone had offered us three pitchers, the odds are we would have broken both legs in a sprint for Ewell Blackwell, Hal Newhouser and Warren Spahn. Well, It so happens that the last time we looked we discovered neither Blackwell nor Newhouser was among the first 40 in his re-spective league. Both had been blasted and blis-tered, start after start. In the man-ner of a brace of rookies. Also Bob Feller had been chased to the show-ers two or three times. Looking over these morbid de-tails we discovered the Athletics and Indians leading the league, and the Browns playing as well as any other team. They beat the Yankees in a game that was taken away from them by poor umpiring, as far as eye-sight goes. This made a difference of two games for the Yankees and two games for the Browns. What Makes a Coach? Frank. Leahy is a great coach. He also has the best material. Does Leahy make the material great? Or does the material make Leahy great? I'll let you answer that one. There are at least two coaches I know who have the jump on Leahy or any other coach you can mention in the way of what you might call "a favorable press." Which isn't unimportant. These two men are Herman Hickman, now of Yale, and Bo McMillin, now of the Detroit Lions. Hickman and McMillin have left two big gaps at Army and Indiana, where they have been big factors not only as coaches, but in the way of popular appeal. In this season on ahead both Hickman and McMillin are heading for rough roads of travel. Hickman will need all of his art as a star line coach to give Yale a first-clas- s line. T"he Blue has the backs, but the line material of other years Is missing none of those big guards and tackles is lingering under the elms. McMillin has many notches to climb before his Lions are up with the Cardinals, Bears, Eagles and Giants to mention only a few. But they still will draw a good press and hold the loyalty of their for a year at least what-ever happens. When you can da that In a game as frenzied ai foot-ball, you have to ba popular. " ' ' ; ' ' - 1 i - " " , ' - " ' --i tl " -- , ' - V - , 1 . ' - ' r ,' - . i SOKE HORSES ARE GOOD MOTHERS. ..Laying aside such stale and un-profitable jokes as 'This horse certainly was foaled when she had twin colts instead of the usual one,' the fact-remain- s that she did have twins--a- n unusual event among equines. She is 'Arkansas Lady,' a Tennessee walking horse, and is owned by RJ. Cunningham of the Hereford Manor stock farms near Zellenople, Pa. The twins will be exhibited at the Allegheny county lair in September. ill - f tut iK$: i "4 k'S 3 4 v v 5 I 6. . ImMdUU ',x&!&,l-:Atkt- i.) WARRIOR... This lethal looking legionnaire is typical of the type of fighting men that make up the Arab Legion of King A-bdullah, Trans-Jord- an monarch. The Arab Legion is said to have been in action against the Jews of Israel, but such reports so. far are unconfirmed. Fisherman Clings to Mast 26 Hours; Rescued by Liner VANCOUVER, B. C- - Fisherman Patrick Kelly, 41, was rescued from his slowly sinking boat after cling-ing to the mast for 26 hours. When the Canadian Pacific steamer Princess Elaine rescued Kelly only six feet of the mast water. The boat had been swamped by heavy breakers 10 miles northwest of here. "I don't think my boat would have stayed afloat much longer," Kelly saiai "I prayed to God that somebody would see me before I went down. "I lived all my overseas experi-ences again. I thought, 'Well, may-be I didn't get it overseas, but I'm going to get it now.' " Kelly landed in Normandy on D day. f t j COEDUCATION... Hiss Helen Maude Cam, lectorer in medieval English history at Cambridge university, will assume duties as a full pro feasor at Harvard university-f- irst woman ever to hold that rank at Harvard. f ' ' ' 1 PARKING PROBLEM SOLVED... This is one of then mirages,' said the cop on the beat as he rounded the corner of --East 33rd street from Third avenue in New York. And he walked slowly and maje-stically toward it. But it didn't fade. It stayed there--- a bantam-siaa- d car parked cozily on the sidewalk, snuggled up next to a building. The cop closed his eyes, counted to 10, and n the car was still there he parked a ticket on it. School Boy Is Too "Ashamed" To Tell of Bullet in Head ATLANTA. The prolonged nose bleeding of a high school boy mystified doctors here until revealed a bullet lodged near his brain. Then Robert G. Liggett admitted what he had been ashamed to tell before: That he had shot himself ac-cidentally. The youth said he was inspecting a gun when it discharged. The bul-let penetrated the roof of his mouth and ranged upward toward his brain. The youth said he went to bed without first aid of any kind, but saw a doctor when his nose be-gan bleeding excessively. Hospital attendants said no effort would be made to remove the slug at this time. |