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The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania • Page 3

Publication:
The Daily Courieri
Location:
Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i i DA A It), DAlLi OUUi-UJUK. CUNiNKLibSVlliUi. PA. FAUJa) THlUfiJD. THOMAS E.

DEWEY Continued from Page-One. 20 years of; uninterrupted Democratic rule in Albany, The late President Roosevelt personally urged the election of Lehman. Three cabinet officers campaigned against him. The-late Fiorella who had backed Dewey in his racket busting, came out for Lehman. A number of.

voters, who per- tonally favored Dewey, voted him, believing he could accomplish more good by remaining as the fearless and capable district attorney. AVith all those handicaps, young Thomas Dewey lost tho state by a margin of only 64,394 votes out ot 4,821,631 cast. He van tar ahead oC his ticket and actually defeated Lehman on straight major party lines by 331,108, giving the G. O. P.

top place en the ballot for the first time In 16 years; he helped elect the first Republican-controlled stale senate in six years, and he carried 5(5 of the 57 counties up- Dewey may have been surprised when he returned from a post-election vacation in Bermuda to learn that his star was higher than ever in tho political skies, but the voters weren't. In 1942, New York slate prepared lo elect another governor. Herbert Lehman was through, Ho had had enough. But the Republican party wanted only one man as its standard bearer--Tom Dewey. Dewey, it has been said, never makes the same mistake twice.

He knew ha had made some errors in the 1938 race. None them was repeated. Dewey ripped into the charging that the Democrats 01 TM' the Krcatesl epitaph accepted the support of 'hn country is here in Arizona. HARRY S. TRUMAN Farm Calendar Continued from Page One.

the broad, cross-section ot Amer- Scans who will decide the Presidential issue In November, The President, in a word, now speaks his own natural Missouri language, and the of most Americans. Late last winter, the President went over to the Statler make an ofl-the-cufl-record 'talk to a group ot prominent American: editors, This was one oE the first times' he used the new, carefully developed "off-the-cuff" style. The easy assurance with which he spoke, the sincerity of his words, and the punch he put in its delivery made strong impression on this highly critical audience. The same thing happened, when he addressed annual Democratic party rallies, The delegates to the Democratic convention in Philadelphia, drooping, dispirited and torn asunder by party bickering, got a large dose of it when Truman made his ac- ccntanco speech. The same thing happened in little towns and big cities on his recent transcontinental trip.

One of his most effective speeches was delivered at Butte, a in the same "off-thc- cufT" style. This was when he first opened up his big cuns on the Republican-majority flOth Congress. What is the secret of this new Presidential style? His style can best be understood by excerpts from his "ofT-lhe-cufT" talks. He tolls interesting and humorous stories about the part of the Feed Sows Well--If fall litters are to be strong and well-developed, the brood 'sows must be fed well during the i last two months before C. Madison, livestock the suggests; some animaij protein to to.

fourths one in1 cultural variia'" may mean 50 200' gallons ot gasoline saved per' for the year. There are as tractors in use now. as Provide. try' extension specialists Pennsylvania "State College say that an acre ptrgood range will carry 500 to 600 to 22 weeks of age. From 100 to 200 turkey poults can be on a like area until.pasture conditions indicate a larger area be "more desirable.

Use Safety Devices--Machinery manufacturers supply shields to cover dangerous parts ot farm equipment, but they do no good unless kept in place, reminds J. R. Haswoll, Perm State extension agricultural engineer. Keep the shields on and avoid accidents. Livestock--Pasture areas infested with water hemlock and poison hemlock should be fenced off to protect livestock from being poisoned, warns J.

B. R. Dickey, Penn State extension agronomist. Snakeroot and bracken fern also will poison Plant Late Crops--Lettuce, spinach, cabbage, and other leafy MOOSE HERD AROUND WARREN AT CHICAGO Worst Trouble. of the field! is the most common trouble i farm systems.

rival in Asia. In addition to mukinfi collections in Nepal, the c.NpcdiliO!) plans work adjacent areas ot India, including a survey for the Indian government looking to- ward a n.itionnl park to preserve the vanishing great Indian rhinoceros. Listen to RADIO EDITION of the DAILY COURIER At I 1 M. Dully WCVI Ki-tO On Vour counlry in which he is speaking, vegetables may be planted now For instance at. Winsloxv, A i a a to crops, says J.

H. Boyd, he said: 'You i i rn 1 1 criminals to keep themselves i TMT' A power. On election day, the young who thought ho was through in 1938 and again in .1940, was this r-pilaph says: "'Here lies Jack i i a 'Mo done his "I i that is the greatest elected governor by a margin ot more than 600,000 votes arid his presidential stock again rocketed. (Tomorrow--Dewey's record as governor, his nomination and dcCeal, for the Presidency In 1944), Already there Uilk throughout the country ot' Dewoy us the Republican candidate for President J.9'10. Two yoars passed and that a was translated into delegate support.

Dewey was in the lead on the first ballot nt the a i a convention in 1910, his hopes were dashed by the tremendous forward surge oT the Into Wendell L. Willlcie. Defeated for governor defeated the Presidential nomi- nation--nnd both i i two years! Dewey, by all the rules o( the game, should have been Rut he wasn't. epitaph a could have. Whenever a man docs the best he can, then a is all that he can do; and Penn State vegetable specialist Smock Woman Will Become Teacher At Uniontown CALIFORNIA'S GOV.

EARL A i greetecrin an by Moose lodge officers In Chicago on the GOP vice presidential.nominee's arrival to address convention and appoint Walter Gibson as supreme F. Gibson, T. Nciibert, Warren, John Jlm WostV (International Soumiphoto) The Century Girl UNIONTOWN, Aug. 10--A 19-15! graduate of Senior been trying to do for the last Hl Sch o1 Mlss BeUy Lou three years this country." This is how he counters the criticism a has frequently been directed iit i "I en mo out here so you con look at me nnd hear a I have to mid then make up your I Symptoms of poison ivy usually appear 12 to 2i hours a exposure. BACKACHE, LEG PAINS MAY BE DANGER SIGN Of Tired Kidneys Wlion disorder of kidney function tiermlut poisonous rnnttor to roninin in your blood, own mind as to whether you believe some of the things a have been said about your President." At Idaho Falls, in the.

potato state, 'he told his listeners: "I understand you raise a lot of potatoes here. During the war 1 was up in Presque Island, Maine, a i an investigation of an airfield up there, and I heard a tiiero was an Idaho boy in the guard house. I inquired as lo why he wns in the guard house. Hi; had on kitchen police and ho refused lo peel a i potatoes." A a i about himself: "They have been telling you a lot of things about your President, a he doesn't know what goes on, that he can't handle government. "It seems lo me that it has been pretty well for the last throe i yoars.

has got sorne- i to a and 'has got a little in his pocket--more than In- ovor had before, Murphy, 21, of Smock, R. 1, has been assigned as a temporary professional employs for the iontown school district and -will! leach intermediate grades a elementary school at a $2,000 annual salary. Miss re-. ceived her B. degree i a at California Stale Teachers Col-i lege.

Mrs. Gloria Trovaioli De PHO! lia, 23, of 193 South Becson avenue, has received an assignment to tench art in the senior high! U. S. Scientists To Study Wildlife In Asia's Big-Game Land of Nepal SMILING Dorothy Beck ol Chicago might easily bo called the girl ol the century as she leaves her plane at school and i La Guardia Field, after corn- School at $1.1.1,1.. per day.

a pieUng 100 crossings thVAtlaritici Stale College, a West Virginia" "University." Long forbidden Nepal--home of such Alice-in-Wonderland crea- lures as ihe llowor mouse and the red-headed laughing Ihruslv--is opening ils borders to a scientific which will delve the lore of one of the richest I regions on earth. This little-known in the shadow of the'high'Himalayas between northern India and Tibet, has been significant chiefly as Ihe source of the British Empire's fighting Gurkhas. Only lately has it entered into diplomatic and. direct trade relations i the United Slates, The program of the forthcoming expedition was announced by J. Briggs, chairman of the Research CornmHoe of the National Geographic Society, following receipt of personal 'approval for the undertaking from" the new.ma- haraja--Prime Sir Mohan Shum Shere Jung Bahadur Rana, ruler of Nepal.

The expedition will sail from Seattle, Washington, September 35, and expects" to start its.work in Nepal, about mid-November. Dillon Ripleyy 'Associate'-''Curator Kaxor Blade Diet "Appeals, CARACAS, Venezuela, Aug. .10. --Police said Ines del Carmen Garcia was in serious condition after take her i by chewing nnd swallowing safely razor blades. It was the llth time, police said, she tried to take her life the same method.

She js known as the razor blade queen. like to meet the boss." brings Mrs. Truman out nnd introduces tier, then "somebody Rtisincss has been the best in who likes to henpeck me, loo," it mny backache, rhuumtitlc pninu, Ics piuiw. loan oC IH-II nml cncrtry, Kut- tlnc up niRlila, nwi-IHiiK, pulUncMi under tho eyes, licr.clu'hc« and diazim'Ssi. I'Vraiieitt OB pniisnKCii with nnmctlng nnil bunilnsr Bomctlvncn shown there isi oomutlilnR wrong with your kidneys or bliuldor.

Don't wnlt I Ask your driiKKfal for DOIUI nils, utiinuliint diuretic, uaoil mieecHntully by millions tor over 50 ycni'fl. Bonn's Klvc hnpiiy rrllcf nnd will hull' the- IB mllvs oC kidney tutien (lush out poisono your blood. Gut Donn'a rillo. Hie histoi-y of the country. There is more money on deposit in the bunks, and the banks are not going to blow up in your (ace like they used to." On the rear platform ot his train, the President starts out with a little homily about how "it looks like all tho people in the stale are here." Then he says "1 know you would RETREAD Passenger and Truck Tires NOW! --because if you allow your tires to wear into the cord body, it will be too late! SCHMITZ TIRE SERVICE Mil Sth Sired Phone 603 "Tlic i Shop." his daughter, who invariably gels a big hand.

decided on the Democratic campaign strategy stroke in calling Congress inlo special session?) by air. The airline hostess first overseas, 1 1946, from Cairo, (International-) 5 Watch Calorics, Says Expertfig CHAMPAIGN, .11.1,, Aug. cause of being overweiglvLis always too many calories, according to Miss Harriet Barto, associate professor of diatetics at the i i of Illinois, She said it is now believed that people grow stouter i increasing age because they have more leisure lime and eat extra, richer food. West Virginia Lends. Coal production in 1947 in West Virginia was 100,000,000 Ions, the greatest ever reached in the Nation's major coal slate.

It was an increase of: 13,000,000 1946. FLY BLOOD PLASMA TO ISRAEL aiid. Lecturer in Zoology at Yale heads, the. "esli ma teslipwil 1 'sp'en abou five studied. Nepal's famed gams includes elephant, tiger, wild ox' or gnur, and Hie great one-horned rhinoceros.

Special arranged by the government for visiting royalty and viceroys of India have cost $100,000. The performance for King George in 1911 used 600 elephants, trained in hunters' tricks of trapping man-eating tigers nnd other animals in a circle of flesh and guns. The Terai holds bufl'nloos, wild- cats, wolves, jackals, and deor. i Giant fruit bats abound, and rbe- monkeys chatter above croco- i diles, snakes nnd lizards. Among rodents, the highland flower mouse is an Asiatic vole thnt lives in grass nesls in the hollows of decayed trees.

Another odd is the somersiiuH-turninK rate), or honey badger. In bird life, too, the expedition find Nepal good i ground, with dozens of familiar- sounding varieties, and such descriptively named characters the while-faced wagtail, the bluc- benrded bee cater, and the noisy a i of laughing thrushes. Besides working in ihe Terai, expedition" members will visit Katmandu, capital of the thickly settled- central valley that eludes most oC Nepal's estimated 7,000,000 people. Dotted i an- cicnt c'llies, temples, mid piilaces 'flunked'" by monuments to strange hnimal gods, this valley is mecca for Hindus'and Buddhists. By contrast, this country In which it is still a cnpitnl crime to! kill a cow hns been taking steps! to introduce certain Western 1C' Sponsored .15 National Geo- with Yale the de vote considerable time to natural Jiistory study and specimen" collecting in Nepal's southern.

"-lowlands, the Terni area of sinister repute, "Like i a all of. the country," Dr. Ripioy points out, "the Terai is 'terra incognita' (unknown land) for the scientist and geographer. This makes the expedition definitely a 'scientific It is the malaria-carrying 'mosquitoes bred in the marshy tropical' soil of Terai gives this spot its bad reputation. Only the native Tharus tribesman seem to be relatively i from the bile, and finally by Tibetan pony changes into its government and economics, One such is the projected "TVA of India," the hydroelectric site in the Kosi! valley east of Katmandu.

Travel in Nepal is a fantastic combination of new and old transport. To reach the capital, the way is first by rail, then auloino- Country Meat Mkt AT PENNSVILLE, PA. Just Off of Route 1 19 VHOM: asi" A Boot 1 STEAKS lirrsM'd ROASTING CHICKENS 70c IMvsM'ii FRYING CHICKENS 75c I'lirc lUMidorctl LARD "27c BEEF TONGUE 35c tons over mortal known there as "awal." Except during ihe safer cool, dry season belween Oclober and March, travelers are permit- led no overnight slops. Vegetation in Ihis fertile plains region on the stairsleps road to the icy peaks of Mount Everest and other gianls is a i a i a In the high grass, and the leak and sal jungles, lives a Noah's Ark assortmenl of beasts and numbers of which have been scientifically or sedan chair borne by coolies. Accompanying Dr.

Ripioy on the long journey across sea and land, i will be Edward C. Migdalski of i Yale's Peabody Museum, New Ha-! ven, Connecticut, and two assistant; mammalogists, Howard C. Weaver Richard S. Mack, Frt'donia, N. and Del Monte, i The party also will include Volkrnar of the National Geographic Society sUifT; Indian i -taxidermists, and housekeeping! personnel to be recruited after STORE HOURS; Monday Thru Thursday 8 A.

M. to 6 P. M. Friday Thru Saturday 8 A. M.

to 8:30 P. M. Try Fresh Home Orossed Pork, Beef and Veal- KIADT 10 I A wiin tr.e nrm smpmeat 01 DIOOQ piasma tor israers wounded fighters, the air freighter, ''Lifeline to Israel" is shown at the Teterboro, K. airport The life-saving cargo, which also includes gas gangrene anti-toxin and tetanus anti-toxin serum, is sponsored the Red Mogen Dovid for Palestine, Israel's equivalent to. the Red Cross.

Congressman Emanuel Celler (D-N. is at right (International') WANT TO IMPROVE OR ENLARGE YOUR HOME? Let a National Bank loan help you finance remodeling and repairs to your home. See us a you have your contractor's price. A National Bank loan car. cover the complete cos: of the job.

NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Member Fe-ders! Deposit Insurance Corporation THEY'RE THE BERRIES Every of our i.empung berry pie is a. taste i Some folks go as far as to say they're almost as good as Mom's! We know they're baked of the finest, most wholesome ingredients packed of juicy, just-picked berries and done to a golden brown, perfection. For "company i or family, supper, there's no finer dessert. Try one! STORE HOURS: Monday Thru Thursday--9 A. 31.

to P. 31. Friclar and Saturday--9 A. M. to 9 P.

3f. The SCOTTDALE BAKERY 230 Street, Scottdale, SCOTTDALE 770. A 2.49 4,99 to UTTl.i: Long Wearing OXFORDS Shoos a Can Id 1 (u I.nraro 'Moco. I i i i i i Tips i (It'S BOYS' HEAVY FIELD SHOES -Soli's i 'raps Solo A1 ('loaf Hods 's 10 (o A (i. 3.69 A Boys' Dress Hi-Shoes SIZES 10 TO LARGE 6,..

3.99 Misses' and Children's Sturdy, Dressy Oxfords A No Straps mid A Lin-ire Soloofloii of Stylos The All-American Boy Needs Wil'h ti 1 i Hoy--n A 1 fo it TO Black Brown 2.99 5.99 A Large Selection of Growing Girls' SPORT OXFORDS LOAFERS School. to i i Slioo for lsx For or lo Women's Camp Moccasins 99c Young Men's A A i nnd Slux- lo i A i i i MIHI. Ifi I.nrva 11. s3.99 up Wedgies for School or Dress Dozens of Styles, Colors I'rFrH Froin $1.00 to $5-99 I to a fl McKENNA'S SHOE im. PHONE 1260 Frl'MJilly 4.

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About The Daily Courier Archive

Pages Available:
290,588
Years Available:
1902-1977