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Show . . MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH GOOD CITIZEN Laws Are Rules People Make jo They May Live in Harmony '5n?-o"."- ''" can. ' and dutl" ' Amert-- THE THIRD promise of a good citizen: I will the laws. respect and obey I will assist public in preventing crime and the courts in giving evidence. Laws are rules people make so they can live together without step-Pin- g on each other's toes. The simplest law of all, perhaps, is the traffic light. When it is green it s supposed to protect you against the other fellow. When it is red it's supposed to protect the other per- son from you. Ours is a government of laws not men. Our constitution guarantees that our laws may be made in one way, and one way only, by the people, through their elected represent- ativesnot by one man, or a few men, or by any appointed group. No man in this country is so big that he is above the law, and none so insignificant that he cannot look to the law for protection. A good citizen cooperates with the law. He assists public agents in preventing crime, and the courts in giving evidence. - A good citizen does not evade the law. He does not say, "I know somebody who can fix my ticket." Laws necessarily change with needs of the times. A good citizen's attitude toward a law which he regards as unfair, unreasonable and out of step with the times is that of working to get it changed but obeying it while it is on the books. There is the letter of the law and the spirit of the law. You cannot make men good by laws, and the hope of law and order is grounded in the reverence I of a major- - 3J j. ity of peo-- V f Ple fr jus-- l ' tice, truth and good-- A l ness. But, l the final I analysis, a 4si I? M w has teeth in it. I 1, Using fed- - eral offenses as an example, one great historian says, "If you refuse long enough to make out a correct income tax re-turn and refuse to obey an order to appear in court, you will get a touch of government power. Three or four husky fellows will take you by the scruff of the neck and the seat of the pants and hustle you in-to a police van motored by the power of internal combustion." To guard against hasty and action or the concentration of powers in any one man or body of men, a system of checks and balances is provided by the federal constitution. Of these: It would take six years com-pletely to replace the elected branches of the federal govern-ment composed exclusively of members of one party by the mem-bers of another. This is due to the fact that: The President is elected- for four years; the members of the house of representatives are elected every two years, and one-thir- d of the sen-ators are elected every two years but for a six-ye- term. Laws passed either by the sen-ate or by the house of representa-tives must be approved by a ma-jority of the other body. The President can veto laws en-acted by congress, and his veto can be overridden only by a two-thir-vote of each house. The courts have the right to in-terpret laws passed by congress and to review the legality of acts of of-ficers of the government charged with the administration. In many cases the courts have held acts of congress invalid as being in con-flict with a provision of the consti-tution. The senate has the power to re-view and reject Presidential ap-pointments of diplomatic, judicial, and certain other officers of the government, as well as the power to approve or reject treaties with foreign governments. The house of representatives has the power to impeach and the sen-ate the place of trial and to re-move from office all civil officers of the United States including even the President. This arttele ts Chapter S of the booklet "Good Citizen" prodnoed bj The American Heritage Foundation, sponsors of the freedom train. A complete book may be obtained bj sending 25 oents to the American Heritage Fonndatfon, 17 East 45th Street, New York, N. Y. Plants Lose Leaves? The rims of clay pots in which soil chemicals have collected may be causing your plants to lose their lower leaves. You can prevent damage by using a glazed pot, by dipping the upper rim of a clay pot in paraffin or by covering the pot rim with tin foil. - V--,.. IN IQSO.WILL PIND WELL OVER? ' yfe) FROM THE LAKES, K STREAMS AND J V W S F THE UNITED ATES! : . PnCHE HAVNFS OF THE SENATORS V5.f ' THE REra?0 BE ING KNOCKED - - OUT OF THE BOX MORE THAN tuimer American league Hurler; I How mild can a cigarette be? MORE PEOPLE SMOKE CAMELS than any other cigarette! and among the millions who do... EZIOPINZA UZTl who ttarrtd in fi 1 "South Pacific" $ V 1 Ezio Pinza says : : V$ ? "Mildness is all- - $ f & $ Important to me r f as a singer. I , J smoke the ciga- - il rette that agrees KK. I with my throat... I VV V Camell" f ? A j HUSBAND FEELS GOOD NOW WITHOUT HARSH LAXATIVES "For my husband, it was pills and medicines every night for 6 years! Then he began eating ALL-BRA-for breakfast. It's i ' wonderful, it keeps him regular!" Thyra f - s? A Nelson, Star Route 1. S Box 651, Union, 4 Sy Wash. Just one of 0 ' 0 f many unsolicited let- - v N ters from ALL-BRA- - - " users. You, too, may expect amazing re-- L J suits for constipation due to lack of dietary bulk. Eat an ounce of tasty Kellogg's ALL-BRA- daily, drink plenty of water! If not completely satisfied after 10 days, send empty carton to Kellogg's, Battle Creek, Mich. Get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK) i!MQfniSfP2S!III she knows riMp Ciabberfe'' ' J results "afcmg ( 'ill .themint-.'- 7 in fy&" VI-sM?- " ' Guaranteed by "VfQcs i&L nfl iVfood Housekeeping 2j&$fffi3i m...--- - ..f .. r ,..1; 'i' .'c j Persona. To Women With Nagging Backache Aj we set older, ttress and strain, over-exertion, excessive or exposure to cold sometimes slows down kidney func-tion. This may lead many folks to com-plain of nagrfng backache, loss of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness. Getting up nights or frequent passages may result from minor bladder irritations due to cold, dampness or dietary indiscretions. If your discomforts are due to these causes, don't wait, try Doan's Pills, a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for over 60 years. While these symptoms may often otherwise occur, it's amazing how many times Doan's ive happy relief help the 16 mites of kidney tubes and litters Gush out waste. Get Doan's Fills todayl O.OAirs Pills mam Are jroa going through tho runctiuua. Mmlddle-age- " period peculiar to women (38-5- 2 years) ? Does this make you suffer from hot flashes, feel so nervous, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms Regular use of Plnkham's Compound helps build up resistance against this annoying middle-ag- o distress! LYD1A E. PINKHAM'S compound lV HOOKS SCREW TYPE J INSUlA.TORS GOOD IvCLQTHESL.NES... CflOSSWDRD PUZZLE fTsi ' ' iKnTAgion ACROSS 4. Jellylike 22. City (NE. 6 IlfrTjj M A? TH 1. Long nap substance Turk.) l vt? ffu m TTj el on cloth 6. Hits 23. A signal of i. Li3M ijS" t 5. Furnished heavily danger H & a pFi with shoes 6. Dwelling 24. Partner-- IE X jAJlTeJ 9. Arrived 7. Sphere ships r3 .Ip - MBj 10. Learning 8. A pigmy (slang) sSffiHT HlfciIrS 11. Relating to deer 25. Girl's name DoTfTRfemf-5- the navy 11. Medieval 26. Winnow tj C Tj e" 11 12. Flower Vessel 28. Wager if "DJjETlTs rfl cluster 13. People of 30. Grew white ' 14. Before Lapland 31. Kind of NO n 15. Grow old 15. Land- - linen tape 16. Radium measure 32. Units of 35. Scorch (sym.) 18. Venture electromo- - 38. Gazelle 17. Mudguards 19. Subside tlve force (Tibet) 20. Lofty 20. Corjper S3. Female 39. Milknsh mountain (Rom.) sheep 40. Pinch 21. Man's nickname 1A' U VAA l h Is VA 22. Retain AA AA, AA, 23. Bitter 3 g 26. Goes AV, AA without T3 food x 27. Wash - 777,777 777, 28. Stripe YA 7 29. J3xclamation Ai 7; ?7 u 30. Thoughtful 34. International ttt? 777 ipyp j - 77 language , Ay 'Ay 35. Flutter, as an eye Ay 36. Present 641 .!- -. III 39. Leg joint 51 54 54 41. Ripped 42. Droop, as 54 Ay, yA 777 u " aflower A 43. Grit 37 5a 44. Mimics yyy DOWN 4J i35 1. Frighten AY AO. 2. Harbor 3 S. Old wine tl II I ti3? I II SPORTLIGHT Pro Football Awaits Big Season L By GRANTLAND RICE . I .j j FEW DAYS' NOW, close to a ' ithousand mammoths, mastodons ml gazelles will be turned loose on !l it public domain. These repre- - r ' i !,! i i sent the pro loot-ba-ll crop for 1950, with peace finally established. There will be 13 teams in action, where each squad will be large at least in the earlier days of practice, before the nruninff knife Ted also remembered that he isn't getting any younger. He will be 32 years old in October, which isn't venerable, but which also isn't too youthful. In other years Ted has mixed his home-ru- n hitting with more atten-tion to mere base hits.' This season he is really giving it the full treat-ment at a time where as Ford Frick says "Even the pitchers are trying for home runs." Williams will have plenty in the way of competition the rest of the way from Rosen, Kiner, Dropo, Stephens, Campanella, Snider and a few others, in-cluding DiMaggio and Easter. But from the way long Ted is taking his cut at the ball, he is the one more likely to reach the goal, if anyone does. Ralph Kiner is leading the Na-tional league and he is sure to pick up his pace later. As a rule he falls into the groove after July Fourth. A year ago he hit 20 home runs the last 30 days of the seas-on. The same output in 1930 might just push Kiner over the top. He is the one drawing factor the Pirates Gnollind Rice falls. Inst what the aggregate iM night of these 13 squads will ' be is beyond our guess but the 4 weights ran from 153 to 285 ' pouods and there are more pliTers over ZOO than under M. The 13 head coaches and their aids have a tough job to lite in reducing the oil and fat (intent where steaming blub-t-o must be taken off in tons. The new season will open with a friadelphia explosion where :;gles and Browns are figured to cw some 100,000 clients. So players, good and average, at been shifted around, back have left for the season. It might interest Joe McCarthy to know that no manager ever left the scene with a better press than the departing Red Sox leader drew around the circuit. Maybe a manager who wins nine pennants and seven world series doesn't need too many boosts. What's With Baseball? It has become pretty evident that something has been shaken loose from the baseball we all knew as it is now played in the two big leagues and the leading minors. Either an extra charge of TNT has been inserted in the ball or an extra zip has been removed from pitching arms, something is wrong to break the news mildly. We have the Red Sox scoring 20 runs against the Browns in one game and a day later the Red Sox piling up 29 runs against the same team. Then the Cleveland Indians pile up 14 runs in the first inning against Mr. Mack's disintegrating Athletics who have hit the soapy chute at record speed. Is this baseball or cricket? Scores ranging from 12 to 16 runs are common. Few pitch-ers ever complete seven inn-ings. The pitching can't be that bad. The war has been over five years. So the war can't be used as an alibi for so much inferior play-ing all over both leagues. a forth, that it is only a raw J ;. ;s now to start picking any B ers. but you can be pretty sure a Eagles, Browns and Bears will a tp there. Bo McMillin's Detroit j; will be another effective out- - 0 X especially with Leon Hart's P S Poinds in the cast. 1 flirt may not weigh quite that V: mien but it won't be far away, mordujg to Frank Leahy's M judgment last faU. "The boy still growine," Frank said, ... "to Hart reached 260. "He is Mly 20 years tii f rang th0se who wm b(J fea. V season are Van Buren Eagles, Lujack of the Bears, ,"iltld ' the Rams. Graham of J Brms, Conerly of the Gi-- ; nd other good passers with J laakees, Colts, etc. leagues are well fixed for rs but the Eagles still look to Z better passulS and running I to an at-- I to, ' 'hers' however, getting the draft have aU been ; lengthened where Greasy aile h to stand pat--or nearly I ' ' I Williams Goal Cyes on te Babe Ruth J mark of 60. I 'UT 'he ,act tha' I ttUU,saseasoB as the aU at least bUonraitaU,n0,JaCk By INEZ GERHARD JJANCY 'OLSON'S career so far has been one of those amazing Hollywood success stories; a tal-ent scout saw her in a play at the University of California, two years ago; she had a screen test the next day, a Paramount contract the day after that. One month later she was with Randolph Scott in 20th Century-Fox'- s "Ca-nadian Pacific." She had a fine role in "Sunset Boulevard," her second film, so perfectly suited to her that she wore her own clothes. "Union Station" is her third. But it hasn't all been just luck. Young Nancy has both beauty and talent, and has worked hard in college dramatic courses to get experi- - ence. Sen. Alexander Wiley, of the spe-cial senate committee investigat-ing interstate crime, held a screen-ing of Columbia's "711 Ocean Drive'' for Sen. Kefauver and the other members. The film, starring Edmond O'Brien and Joanne Dru, exposes the techniques and meth-ods used by horse racing wire ser-vices to disseminate their illegal information throughout the coun-try. Matt McHugh was cast as a hard-boile- d sheriff in "Return of the Frontiersman" because he looks more like a cowboy than most cowboys do. But Mat, born and raised on New York's Tenth Ave-nue, had never mounted a horse or carried a gun before the picture started. The brother of Frank Mc- Hugh, he appears in support of Gordon MacRae, Rory Calhoun, Julie London and Jack Holt FICTION TABLES TURNED CORNER By Richard H. Wilkinson pLIRTING was second nature with Deborah Bellamy. No one would have guessed, after one glance at her gay, laughing'' face, after one look into her mocking, tantalizing eyes, that inwardly she was afraid. I Afraid that Minute sometime some 3" Fiction .ne of her vic' tims was going to turn the tables. That is to say, she knew that one day she was going to fall in love with one of the men with whom she flirted. And that, she knew, would be the end. The end to all her gay, reckless happiness. She never dreamed that this man would prove to be a cowboy, named Lon Fairweather. Deborah had joined a party who planned a month's vacation at a dude ranch in Wyoming. Lon was the foreman. He was tall, fair, handsome. After one look into his sober blue eyes, Deborah began to lay her snares. Lon was different, but he was also human. Hence he succumbed to her wiles, just as had the others. The night he told Deborah of his love they were seated on a high boulder overlooking a hemmed-i- n lake. Something about the beauty and grandeur of the scene stirred De-borah's soul. She found herself listening to Lon's love - making more soberly than was her cus-tom. "Oh, Lon," she said a little breathlessly, "Not now . . ." She pushed him away and ran up the path toward the ranch house. Once back in her room she faced herself in the mirror and laughed. She found herself listening to Lon's love-maki- a little more soberly than was her custom. In the days that followed Lon persisted in occupying her thoughts. Some what in desperation she cast about for escape. And then a plan came to mind. She'd ask him to come to New York. .She'd get him on home ground, compare him with the sort of life she was used to. The idea seemed a good one and strangely enough Lon agreed to come in the fall. pALL CAME, and she planned a party. She invited all those who had been at the Double O Bar that summer. Lon arrived in due time and called at Deborah's apartment. She was a little taken aback at the ease and grace with which ne wore his smart new tuxedo, and in spite of herself she thrilled when he swept her into his arms. ine dinner was set for 8. At 7:30 the guests began to arrive. Lon was surprised when he saw that the men wore chaps and high-heele- d boots; that the women were garbed in divided riding skirts and blouses. A butler came to the door and yelled: "Come and get it, cowboy!" Deborah felt a little uneasy as Lon escorted her to her seat. Her uneasiness grew as he looked slightly puzzled upon discovering there was no silverware at his place save a broad-blade- d knife. He hesitated, watching in amazement as the other guests picked up their knives, and with suppressed chuck-les began to scoop up peas and shove them into their mouths. He watched as they poured coffee from their cups and drank from their saucers. "I understand," he said, looking directly at Deborah. "And I regret I can't appreciate the humor of the thing. You see," he added, "we westerners have had it drilled into us by you easterners, that we're crude and have no manners. "But," he paused and made a little, perfunctory bow toward De-borah. "Now I know something else; know that whatever other manners you folks might have you don't know the meaning of hos-pitality." And with this he carefully placed his napkin on the table, ushed back his chair and strode from the room. "Lon! Lon!" she called. "Please come back. It was all my fault. I'm sorry. Please!" But Lon was already through the door and halfway down the stairs. Above, on the landing Deborah stood as if dazed. There was a ter-rible gnawing sensation inside of her, a great, desolate, miserable feeling. She knew then that Lon Fairweather had been the man she was afraid of meeting. BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET Television Versus IQ It Can Be Made Cultural Medium By BILLY ROSE As an old blab merchant, I seldom pay much attention to the other fellow's speeches, and when I do it's generally to take um-brage rather than notice. This week, however, I'd like to turn coat and tables on myself and do some hefty hollering about a speech on the future of television recently de-livered by Dr. Millard Faught, an economist, at the University Club of Chicago. I happened to pop-ey- e a copy of it the. other day, and while I haven't the space to give you the whole 4,000 words, here's a bit of the cream off the tOD ... To begin with. Dr. Faught ax-ioms that TV can be used for a lot of things besides selling eyewash, mouthwash and hogwash, and in-sists that its full potentialities will never be realized if we allow it to be taken over lock, stock and antenna by the hucksters. In his opinion, the new dingus can do an unprecedented job for us in a dozen esthetic Spanish, or child care, or interior decorating, whereas the average class on campus today consists of from 25 to 50 students. YOU-SE- E revenue from these home extension courses would pro-vide the monies for new university buildings, laboratories, scholar-ships and teachers' salaries, and once and for all our colleges could stop passing the hat. Education, the doc goes on to say, is our best bet to stand off totalitarianism, de-spite which it's probably the most obsoletely merchandized comodity in our society. The economist stresses that be has no quarrel with the adver-tisers, but maintains that if they're the only source of reve-nue, TV is a cinch to wind up the same sort of cultural pigmy that radio is. The living room, he argues, is probably the room farthest re-moved from the marketplace, and if Joe Jones and his missus want something in it besides cornflake and Cuticura commercials, they'll have to contribute the pennies to make it possible. The government could probably be pressured into doing it for them, but who with an IQ above zero, asks Dr. Faught, wants political appointees messing with our educational processes and cultural preferences? I particularly like the last line of his speech: "Never in the history of the communicative arts was there a greater premium on fore-sight." home screen as so much hash. To unscramble the picture one picks up the phone and asks the operator to pipe in the missing 1 per cent through a gadget on his set hooked up to his telephone line. At the end of the month, the charge for this service is included in his phone bill, and the gross take divvied betwen the television sta-tion, the creator of the program, and the phone company. According to Dr. Faught, Phonevision or some equivalent device will make it possible to collect millions of dollars in a single evening for, let us say, the Red Cross by putting on one nationwide benefit video show. It will enable our Hollywood studios to quin-tuple their audiences and double their grosses, and also make possible gates for championship fights and World Series games. But, opines the good doctor, its most impact will be on edu-cation. By bringing the classroom into the home, it will be possible for 100,000 students simultaneously to take the same beginners' course in fields providing, of Billy Rose course, that a method can be devised whereby someone besides the advertiser foots part of the bill. The gimmick he suggests is a television box office operating on a basis, and the one he specifically mentions in his speech Phonevision is due to be tested in Chicago this fall with the blessings of the F.C.C. LEAVING ELECTRONIC double-tal- k out of it, Phonevision, which was recently demonstrated for me, is simply this: a system whereby 99 per cent of an image is telecast dee of charge, but shows up on the |