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Northwest Arkansas Times from Fayetteville, Arkansas • Page 4

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Fayetteville, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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NORTHWEST ARKANSAS TIMES. FayeM.vlll.. ArkaMO. Monday, April 4, Arkansas (FormtrljTayetTevlllc Daily Democrat) Published dally except Sunday bj FAVBTTKV1LI.E DEMOCRAT t'UBMSIHNO COMPANY Roberta FulbHeM, President THE WASHINGTON Merry-Go-Round That Makes Everything Just Ducky Founded H. 1SRO Entered al Ihe (wslolllce ni Kayctleville as Second-ClassJvlall jvlnttcir.

Sam Manatcr Ted R. Wylle. Kdllor OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tlio Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use (or republicatlon of news dispatches credlled to It or not otlltrwlse credited In this paper and also (he news published herein. All rights of lepubliwilion of special liatchra herein "Iso reserved. SUBSCRIPTION BATES Rv a i week 20c.

Special mall rale In Washington, M-ittison Carroll and Crawford counties in Arkansas, advance: One month. 70 cents: three Sl.OO: six months. one Mall subscription outside Northwest ArUnn- las IN ADVANCE: One month, 75 cents; three months, 52.00; six 3 one year, $7.00. Member Audit Bureau ot Circulation! Years Of Service Four of the faculty of the University of Arltjiiinas will tiiKe the emeritus nmk the end of They hnve xivciii of tlich- talents for ninny years, ami their now rank with honors. Dr.

John Clnrk Jordan, denii of the Graduate School; Prof. John Ralph Cooper head of the department of i in the College of A i 1'rof. Jsimcs Kessler, head of the department of romance IniiKiinBcs in the College of Arts nnrl Sciences, and Miss Mary McCutcnnn. instructor in education in the College of Education, arc the who take the emeritus rank. It is Hint there nre any four faculty members at the University more universally liked and respected than thin n.uarlet.

Dr. Jordan has been lit the school since 1918, coming to the University us a professor of English. Ho wus the first dean of the Graduate School, and has served also dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. He has served also as bend of the department of speech ami as head ot the department of English. Prof.

Cooper came to the University as professor of horticulture and head of the department in 1918. He has served during hia tenure of office as a member of. the staff of the. agricultural experiment is known throughout the state for knowledge of i and berry growing in Arkansas. Prqf.

Kessler took over his duties at the University in 1921 as associate professor. In 1926 he became- full professor and head of the department of romance InnguaROS in the College of Arts ami Sciences. Miss McCutcluin joined the University of Arkansas us a teacher of education and supervisor in the i i Training School in 1928. These four have given of their trme and efforts liberally and well throughout their years ef service with the state school. Their'writings, as well as their work in the classroom and with the individual students, lire recognized.

Bach has contrrb. ulccl also In the life of the i through work in city wide programs. The Symphony Appears The i i of Arkansas tonight is sponsoring the appearance in Kr.ycttoviHe of the Arkansas State Symphony OrchcK- tra. is i i i tbo alteiyl. It is an opportunity to hear and sec best musical talent the slate lias to offer.

Arkansas State oix'on- jears ago. I.as to grow I bough beset by many problems nnd i a i a troubles. It hnu won for ils pnstillations, and today is a valued part ot the i of FiurttwMe and i Arkansas i.rc fortunate to have the clinn. to enjoy the muprr of the orchcitra under liiidor. Josef Blnit.

By DREW Washlnglon-There'i been a lot of petty bickering between the proslienlV council of economic advisers, but there', one imp easant Ihcv all on. They foresee definite de- in 1950 or 1951--unless Immediate steps a i a lo heml il Tho council, It will be recalled win CM. ed hv Congress In 1946 lo advise the White Home oil how lo ward off depression. And the Ihrce members i on a lot of IWiigs. they fuel th.it depression can be stopped-- though i.nly bv the concerted cooperation of adrmn- Mrnilon, Congress, business, farmers and labor.

To a the background of tho economic council's vitally Important businesi diagnosis il should be recalled a for the past 100 years A i a economy lias been riding a rol- ler-colter nf tips antl downs, i a i ami del i of booms anil busts. In Ihe post 50 'ears these uii: and downs have become more severe su severe thai Ihc Politburo in Moscow is known lo have baser! ils global stategy on the theory one more economic depression would wreck entire American system. Since V-J Day most Americans have been cnjoyiiiK Ihe greatest wave of prosperity In history--(or two roiuoni: the public's unsatisfied demanii for goods they could not buy during the war; 2, the cold war, which has caused the government to pour billions into the worlds economic stream. However, the council estimates a the long pent-up demand for automobiles, refrigerators and other consumers' goods is now just aboul filled, while the vasl expenditure to Europe in another year will begin to taper so thai depression will conic in 1950-51. Another factor is Ihe psycholoKics! of i rising prices followed by dropping prices.

If Ol'A and Inflation controls had not been thrown overboard by Congress and prices had not shot up so high, business dislocation might not be so bad now. For while falling prices at the moment may be healthy, ycl a lol of business--espec ally small business--always gets hurt by a i prices. And the psychological ol a i prices encourages depression; for people, wailing lor lower prices, don't buy. The three members of the president's council of economic advisers are: Chairman Dr. Edwin Nouise, a New Yorker, lone-time member of the HrooklnHs I i and generally considered the most conservative counselor.

Leon Kcyserliug, a a i of South Carolina, former secretary to Scnaton Wagner, ami who has had a long experience in the government, chiefly In the U. S. Housing Authority. A liberal, Keyserllng frequently disagrees with more conservative chairman Nourse. John D.

Clark, a native of Colorado and former economics professor at the University of Nebraska and Ihc University oi Denver. Clark usually lines up with liberal Key- serllng. However, the council has composed its cui- forences lo recommend a program to President a which it regards as absolutely essential lo block depression. While all three agree, Dr. Nourse considers the voluntary phase ol the program more Important, but Keyserling and Clark, though not disagrceine.

would place more emphasis on Ihc government phase. The program which Nourse considers most important Fanners--Convince farmers to grow bigger crops and accept lower support prices, thereby reducing Ihe consumers' food bill, but continuing a reasonable return for farmers. Business--Sell businessmen on lower profit) per Hern, thereby getting creator volume and continued reasonable profils. Labor--Persuade labor leaders not to wage increases that will throw the economy out ol gci'r. Tho Clark-Kcyierllng group, while agreeing with the nbovc, gravely doubts governments ability lo "persuade" business, a and labor Therefore they put more emphasis on hard-and-fast government Incentives which would prop up Ihe economy regardless of persuasion.

They propose: 1, Increased social security benefits lo take care of unemployed and the aged. Present old- age pensions are woefully low and unemployment benefits last only a brief interval after unemployment starts. 3. Increase minimum wages lo 75 cents. This is aimed fit Increasing buying power the lower brackets.

At present, union labor's constant round of wage demands has put organised labor far ahead of the great mass of unskilled and unorganized labor. One sure wny to prevent depression is lo promote buying power by lower Income groups. 3, Low-cost housing, built through government subsidies. This also helps lo provide work. Aid to education.

This would Increase teachers' salaries and new schoolhousa 5. Stockpiling critical materials. This is not only an essential safeguard case of war, but the 'buying of raw materials helps to bolster sagging economy. Dr. Nnurse agrees a this phase tho pro- Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo YCKWIP.

ISMT TrlE OIL 1 GUV WHO LEAVES A PARTlALLV USED ROLL OF FILM IH HIS CAMERA FOR MOWTriS FINISHES INRUSHES IM AND INSISTS IT DEVELOPED AMD PQIMTEO IN ABOUT TWO HOURS ly JOSEPH and STEWART AtSOF a i a will happen when Stalin dies? The question grows increasingly urgent, if only because it is a i a i reported that tho aging dictator suffered no less a four strokes in 1948. The Immediate consequences mourning, grandiose as though for a dead god; the rival heirs' bitter struggle for power, no less cruel for being hidden in the ss--all these can be correcl This theory, based OS ue correct, i i i is upon the reported assessment of the Kremlin's Inner politics by that no single individual will fnslead, it is believed, that the power will be roughly dl- tov and Bulganin, Malenkov and licria and Mikoyan and Vosnesen- skv. The Molotov-Bulganin assets peace with Moscow. The reply was seemingly cryptic: "Stalin cannot live forever. I thi-i reply, however, tn terms of the foregoing theory of the succession to Stalin.

Among one or another of Ihe three i a almost a i retains secret friends. In Yugoslavia itself, and above all in the Yugoslav government's ill also be Ions port.int assets which he can con- the utmost tribute i one st Rcnle. power. be the Red Army, the communications net of the Soviet foreign office, and the a i derived from Molotov's seniority, which may secure for him the formal title of chief of state, and will certainly influence the Soviet satellites. The assets of Malenkov Beria will be control of and this faction eliminates its rivals, Tito will then be reconciled with Moscow.

Dut nt Ihc same time, the Tito heresy, ot national, or popular Communism. will inevitably extend its mflu- By the same token, satellite i Poland's and oup- Czechoslovakia's will have chances )lo- fish in the troubled waters. As jorkenau's classic history of the Communist International a shown, the Stalin-Trotsky slrug- as re- and gnim also is essential In otherwise inevitable depression in of 1951. Quigg i i mayor of Denver, is lobbyh-8 to gel i Morrison Shafroth, appointed to the U. S.

Court of Appeals. The Justice Department isn't enthusiastic, however. For when a was chief counsel of the Bureau of I a Revenue. FDR wanted him lo (estily before Congress regarding the yachting income-tax deductions ol Hoy Howard. Shafroth refuted Lobbyists for the big potash companies have been calling on Sen.

Clinton Anderson of New Mexico. They are fearful of increased laxcs in his state Congressmen Klein and Kcofih, both New Yorkers, will sparkplug a congressional investigation of illegal wire tupping. They'll try to get legislation requiring a a of wire-tripping equipment to number nnd register every i of their eavesdropping devices as revolvers are numbered. cd for a Boston newspaper, where he was perfectly lumpy i 'ic discovered one day that Ihc owiuVs'wcre payins more ncr week for a syndicated feature called "The A of cler Rabbit" than they were f.ir his exclusive His pride stung, P-iul wired the are robbing Paul to pay Peter. Demand ten dollar increase." The editor wired back, "Your rerignnlion reluctantly accepted.

Elliot enlisted in the Signal Corps. i Try And Stop Me By BENNETT CERF One author who offers a vast of stories about himself is F.lliolt Paul, aiifior of "The Last Time 1 Saw Paris." A Ghost Town mi the Yellowstone," and a dozen other best sellers. Paul protests, "There's 'nothing unusunl about me at all. Just because I refuse to be fenced in and made to live tho i of a colorless drone, you fellows make tip all sorts of ridiculous stories about me." His I i a i however, is short lived. The next moment be is launching on some new, a tastic reminiscence, with a twinkle in his eye, fully aware a his enraptured audience is thinking.

"Boy, oh boy, what a liar!" Paul's first literary endeavors were perforrn- Questions And Answers are barberry bushes undesirable in an area where wheat is grown? A--Barberry bushes arc subject to a rust Ihai attacks a was the artisl James discharged from the United Stales Military Acad- was discharged from the United Slates i i a Academy at West Point after three years for a i to pass a chemistry ex- a i a i Q--Is Ilic Wayside Inn still in existence? A--The Wayside Inn, an old tavern, is still standing in the town of Suclbury, Mass. It was made a by the poems of Longfellow, en- tilled, "Tales of a Wayside Inn." was the first co-educational college established in this country? A--Obcrlin I i now Oberlin College, 1 Obcrlin Ohio, opened December 3, 1833, with an oi 44 students, of whom ZU were men and women, the i 100 per cent coeducational college in the United States. Q--What is Ihe i bcUvtcu an "inferior" and a "superior" planet? A--An "inferior" planet is one whose oroit is inside Ibat of the earth, that is, closer to the sun than the earth. A "superior" planet is one whose orbit is outside thai the earth. Russian Communist party, of the Cominform apparatus, and of the secret police.

As for Mikoyan and relatively minor a the i i heads of the vast economic machinery of the -Soviet Union, ami this will be their legacy. On the surface, the strength ol the Molotov-Uulganin seems unchallengeable. But after i Lenin's death, Trotsky also stood forward as the man who had made the Red Army and as the greatest leader of the state. Stalin defeated Trotsky by the police and power which will now go to Beria and Malenkov. And while this former situation offers no parallel tor the much weaker groupings of Mikoyan, he should have opportunities to play swinj! mnn between the stronger rivals.

Perhaps tile almost inevitable power struggle may be kept within the secret confines of the Politburo. If it follows the pattern of the struggle between Stalin and Trotsky, however, Ihe effects will be felt wherever there arc Communists in the world. A sense of its possible future i a was conveyed to one ot these correspondents in Belgrade, when he asked a high jle worked two ways on the Communist parties outside Russia. The Russian factions bid for Ihe support of the German and other Communist leaders. The non- Russian Communist parties were in turn rapidly divided into furiously warring Stalinisls and Trot- skyites.

This was the real cause of their rapid decline in the late 1920's. Today, important a throughout the satellite area are already known lo look with envy upon 'Tito's independence. At a minimum, a great power struggle in Moscow should give these men the chance to bargain for a loosening of their bonds. And If Bui- ami Romania, Poland, liun- China and Czechoslovakia ire inwardly lorn and rent by fac- ional conflict, as the Communist parties of the outer world were lorn and rent by the Stalin-Trol- sky fight, certain of the satellite resjimes might even conceivably fall There is no end, in truth, to the possible co'nsequences of such a contest as Stalin's death is now expected to initiate. Foreign policy will be an issue--Molotov is considered the "hard" policy's author, while Beria is thought lo have had something to do with the secret overture to Ambassador Robert Murphy at Berlin last year.

The end of the struggle might be another withdrawal behind Russia's metropolitan borders. Equally the end might be another of Ihose wars in which tyrannies indulge to escape from trouble at home. Forl the present, the West Yugoslav' i i a 'whe'th'er Marshal i must arm. and wait, and' watch. Tiui could ever hope lo a his The end is not yet.

Dear irmrried Miss i I have been i i her a square deal unless married for five years and i they provide her with some place Tat time I have been blissfully where she can receive her beaux a But something has happen- of earshot her curious reed my marriage. I don't know ilalives, and sale from the maraud, i st what bu thai i i ings of little brother and sister juss i i 11 i npnillr abfe "something" is missing. The thrill seems to have gone from my i I lu I the violent struggles ol the two i i My i a iid feels the same vioieni sirugRies oi trie iwu ti a men had caused most ol the hull and rotten decking of the galleon baf! fl to give way. But stout eurv- le has become rest- WHAPYA KNOW My OLD CAMERA-TWO SHOTS LEFT OW A ROLL Of FILM, TOO' WOklDER WHAT I WAS TAKIM6-? LET'S 6O CUT AMD THIS A CAMERA SHOP OR A ARE EITHER GET PRINTS OR, ycxj LOSE A XLI1 rpZUM smiled but his moulh was stiff nnd his Instructions panted through it. "It's your turn.

Mr. Barselou. Face the wall." Dumbly, the big man obeyed. "Put your hands up just like the others." Trim stepped catlike across the deck nnd shoved Ihc m6llth of his pistol into the small of Barselou's back. "Now just hold still." John Henry fell Ihe perspiration beading his palms.

He held his breath back and waited for the moment. Ihe only possible mo- A muscle twitched where IBarselou's shin was tight across his huge shoulders. John Henry lashed out with his foot at Trim's kneecap. The little man danced back, howling, and stumbled on the uneven timbers. Over Sin's high shriek came the blanketing roar of colossal rage.

With one motion. Bnrsclou jerked a rusty chain loose from its moor- and whipped it ferociously at the cocked hat. The hat spun away crarily. Trim sank to one in the center of Ihe gun deck. lood streaming his bald head.

He raised the revolver. John Henry (ought lo escape the gyves. He grl one hand free of the loose cuff of iron. But Barselou had leaped. With another reverberating a he sprang from the gun platform for the crouched figure.

The pistol exploded against his chest and in the narrow bowels of the galleon was like a cannon blast. Bsrselou's huge body enveloped the little man. his knees and fists battering, a i Trim howled and his revolver bliited again. deafening noise joined the ol the first explosion. They 'bounded igalmt rocky.walls up and down the canyon, doubting and redoubling, until the wooden ship was a trembling fury.

The Reina groaned, shuddered, she began to move. piercing voice and tried, to claw his wny from beneath Barselou's nailing bulk. John Henry Ibrew his free arm nround Sin's waist nnd her close. A subdued was born ing timbers of the Reina's sides had remained, an empty oval between the canyon wnlls. The curb on which the Conovers huddled had been part of the funnel through been part 01 me lunnei I which the ruins of the hulk h.id cept a you a quit thrilling poured.

And the beam to which at each other's toui-h, and no long- Ihrce of their four wrists were cr have palpitation of the heart at among the dying echoes. It grew loudf and louder. Then the deck liltel. 'ONOVER braced liis feel as the gun platform shivered. The d.cck tilled more and Hie a i bodies bclC'ie his hypnotized gaze What is it all ahuist the remedy? Worried Couple Answer: Wh.it 'ins happened to your marriage? all.

ex. It isn't lhat the young people left would do or any- that the elders cramps thii'g wrong. II presence of their their style. They vvanl to be silly And a is and giggle and laugh, and they rolled toward the stern. Old timbers creaked agonizingly and sand poured from abnve.

Two of the great overhead planlts parted. The stubby root of a mainmast fell through. A.convulsion seized the Reina as the roar of bursting seatns soughed in the narrow canyon slot. Trim scrambled from Barse- lotl's gr.i.sp and hugged the i ing deck. A hairy hand fastened around one pirate boot and pulled him jjack.

Trim screamed. John Henry pushed Sin's face harder againsl his body. i a climactic nppinc: of I vood. the decks Ihc Queen col- apsed and plunged through the indent keel for the canyon tloor. Trim's final maniacal shriek spun thread of terror as the two struggling men dropped from sight wilh downpour of wreckage.

The noise wos drowned by the crash of timbers grinding into the earth below. The sound faded away, dividing itself among other canyons until there was nothing left Dust swirled the silent air. Sin opened her eyes. Fearfully. lifted her face from her husband's shoulder looked She began cry.

Below tiiero yawned the emptiness of the gorge with its churning column of brown dust. They slill stood on the gun platform far above the earth. The reverberations of the echoing gunshots and iiyved had stayed up as nan nf Lhe a spider web holding the hollow shell of the ship In mid-air. "TVfE'RE all right now. honey," said John Henry comfortingly.

Then he found his voice and repeated it out loud Sin kepi on "It's okay. Sin." "I know. Jehnny." she i pered. "That's why I'm crying." the sound of each other's foot steps. But what of it? What does can't do thai i the family gallery all about.

The parents who arc ml i i to i up the i i room lo Sally may well rcHecl that they are do- ing all they can In make her an old maid, for no youth is going to nay a return call on a girl he has to spend t're evening in the it matter" Nothing. Absolutely I bosom of her family, nothing. By ils very nature a i is hound to be evanescent. Repeti- 1 tion inevitably takes the edge off of it. You can't he a by a 1binc a i 'he second i You are prepared for it and yon are no loneer surprised, but a Dear Dorothy Dix: I am engaged i's Filone a i that she can help.

She has 1 she conccn- ir.o and clings to me like Gingerly. Conover pried at their doesn't keep you from enjoying it. Iron cuds. Two of the rusly hinges your pulse may not skip a beat at bent open easily. Ilis own gyve approach nf one you love and broke apart in his hands.

He tossed see ry the pieces al the wreckage below. The dust cloud was thinning and settling now. He could make out the dead campfire and the startled horses neighing and rearing at the new mountain of rubble a i had poured from the sky To the east, the red disk of morning sun had just topped the mountains lo beam on the jigsaw cracks of Ihe Badlands. John Henry took a deep breath. soon ns Sin fell better, they'd down the clif! again lo the lorses.

(n the daylight, it would be jasy to retrace their trail to Walk- ng Skull--and then civilization. It was going to be another hot day. Sin finally got her sobs under control. They looked down Into depths of the canyon silently Tar below, nothing moved in thp Now I love my mother dearly. but I would like to be able to go- out wilh my fiancee alone, without Mother always tagging along.

My girl i says that she is fed up with Mom's company, but a trouble with so many young do to a i don'l rlnv of your life, but I that doesn't keep il from being the drr.rcst thin? in Hie world to you. people is thnt when they cease i i a a i a they tic- Icicle lha! ev hii-'c 1 out of i and they seeking these to her leeltngs. A Son Answer: Tho only thing you car, 's to have a verv frank a thrills in forbidden olaces. and mg a a tha! is fatal. For no kisses i i i youl ufe Te ii her for long, and no a hemp can vou (Q b( a on( long exist in the rarSfied I TM I a Ask her if sphere ol mission, we have to i 0 0 remember her own courl- days when thiee was a crowd? There is no more insoluble prob- in the world than the come wn to eanh.

Horse Sense Needed The remedy for case is a me remedy lor case i i ln me worm man me mimiui little good, hard, horse sense a a spiritual parasite on her will enable you to meet with Children, philosophy a situalion that occurs in every marriage And a little change, getting away from each other" for little while, will keep leap of broken timbers that had wrecking your lives, once been the Manila galleon. "Funny," she said softly. "I feel sorrier for the Queen than I do for anybody." Her husband pui a gentle arm around her waist. To one side oi the wreckage, John Henry thought he the crushed shape of i "The old Queen." he agreed. nav( little she erf- "It took a long for the pirates to catch her.

Bui Sin, she put up i wonderful fight." THE END Dear Dorothy My mother i a a accuse me of i of ecause I o'--'er- to their i i in the living room whenever I have company. It isn't that at all, because I love my parents and am proud of trem. but don't you think that a zirl should nave a little her hov friends 0 Sally A 1 a i do. and don't i any girl's family F. H.

A. G. I. HOMElOANS Prompt Service UTLEY tr Company, FAYETTEVIU! Urvtna North.

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About Northwest Arkansas Times Archive

Pages Available:
145,059
Years Available:
1937-1977