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The Daily Sentinel from Grand Junction, Colorado • 4

Location:
Grand Junction, Colorado
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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4 ft 1 W' a "ip rit 4PP 'ftrk Vis- f''r wvt fl ft A' 1lW.A---'?'J -V 'v-' 11 v. AtSrt 4 CL PAGE FOUR THE DAILY SENTINEL. GRAND JUNCTIONCOLORADO FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 4, 1956. YOUR MONEY'S WORTH From WASHINGTON CALLING THE DAILY SENTINEL Xah11hd Novemb 20 18J Tint StSnxrL iUBUbHI.NG AND PRINTING (Incorporated) LettersS TOTHEFDITOR Uttars SMMrias to 161 SprtaMt ml 4u wlU k)Kt at nml Other (St. Louis -Editors Post Dispatch) Harry Truman Seen Now Leaning Toward Harriman MEtoBEif Or The audit bureau or circulations CARRIER DELIVERY RATE 30 CENTS PER WEEK Mall rata 1 jear $13 00 6 montha $7 30.

month $3 7 3. Mam bar ei the American Newspaper Publisher Aaaodation The Intend Daily Preaa Association Published each weekday afternoon and published each Sunday morning 81 PER CENT OF US A startling fact is reported b4 Business Week; A dangerous at Grand Junction, Colorado Entered at the Post Olfies Second Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to tha use fo republication of all local news printed In this newspaper, as well aa all AP news dispatches. NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES. WEST HOLIDAY COMPANY. INC New York, 271 Madison Ave Chicago 360 Michigan Ave Denver, 1304 Cherokee St Los Angeles 520 Seventh St.

San Francisco, 615 Market St Portland. 320 Sixth Seattle, 603 Stewart St, Detroit, 1214 Penobecot Bldg dorseraent unless he has decided well In advance that this la the couse he wished to pursue. In his role as tha Sage of Independence, the former President has in recent weeks talked freely with all comers about the Democratic race. But they come away with distinctly different Impressions. It is a little like reading tea leaves, and the visitor tends to take out of the ex-Prealdent's often-salty talk what happens to be favorable for the candidate In whom he-U Interested.

One theme running through these talks Is that the Democratic party hai a plentitude of able candidates, any one of whom could be late, Truman appears to have left Stevenson out of this fact. A tragic fact. A fact that should bo changed, swiftly and drastically, but probably will not be, except slowly and by degrees. This fact la that 81 per cent of the American public are not reading books. Popular governments are literally built on books, and kept alive by books.

Not only do books yield information, they also generate ideas, and without an ever-fresh generation of ideal a society stagnates, just as a personrloes. it Is a matter fdr genuine concern that only 19 per cent of Americans are reading That is only one out of and in a country run by majority rifle it Is imperative that at least three out of five should be well-informed people with ideas. Business Week thinks the spate of hundreds of new books a month intimidates many readers. Perhaps so. but to reduce that unmanageable flood, to a manageable trickle la precisely the purpose of book review sections and pages.

Anyone can fora the good habit of reading books, selectively, to that they enhance the vividness and meaning of the very life one Is living. And as a people we ought not to be satisfied until well more than a majority of us are doing so. WALTER WALKFR-PRESTON WALKER- ESTELLE WALKER REESE- Member Colorado Press Association FUTURE FARMERS WITHOUT FARMS? While the young people on the farms are, as they join 4-H dubs and become members of Future Farmers of America, demonstrating their love of farm life and their hope of staying on the farm, present conditfons are breeding a bit of pessimism among some of them. A Future who was beingcongratulated on his years Washington Merry-Go-Round achievements which has won him severaL awards, commented There is only one thing wrong. lor many of us Sr DREW PEARSON DREW PEARSON SAYS: SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WILSON REFUSED TO BELIEVE RUSSIANS FORGING AftKAD IN AIR POWER; IN 11 SHORT YEARS RUSSIA CAUGHT UP WITH US IN AIR DESIGN; MOSCOW LOCKS ITS AIRPLANE BUILDERS INSIDE FACTORY UNTIL THEY FINISH PLANE.

there is no future on the farm. Dad is not ready to retire and the place is not big enough to support, the two of us. All near-by is solidly in other hands and there is no for me to buy with prices as they are. So where do we go from here? Much as I love the farm, I have to look tor a job in the city Future Fanner thougn 1 am supposed to be. The man to whom thai farm youth expressed his fears Rev.

Martin Schroeder, a United Lutheran minister has beeir prompted to offer this lad and all other Future Farmers encouragement and comfort through the columns of the Christian Century. Rev. Schroeder reminds that throughout history, land-controlled dictatorship has proved as transitory as political dictatorship. All-commanding it may be for a time, but then comes collapse. Violations of the natural law in the treatment of human values carries the ingredients for the penalty.

To this penalty the over-ambitious on the land-are exposing themselves. When corporations get out of hand, the law provides for their reduction into smaller units. There is no guarantee that the hand of the law will not fall upon those who now imagine themselves safe in the monopoly of the land. (But since there is no evidence of the law taking that direction today as small farms are being absorbed by the large ones, we fear that the minister's predictions will not offer any great degree of comfort to those Future Farmers who see no future for themselves in fanning. Loving the land as they do, we doubt that it will be easy for them to find happiness in the city.

But happiness is a condition that does not figure when efficiency is the yardstick by which All things are being measured.) Swl AX Ittun nii at earn Sou Mutar aa apart! a atraat ar rural rout aaS Saa aumSar, aililraaa. Cam naaloauou paStaS Sale to aa aacaaaarUp Mlad IS aaalMlaatS 1 TSa bally SaaUaal. Denver, Colo. May 1, 1956 Walter Walker, Publisher The Daily Sentinel Grand Junction, Colo. Dear Mr, Walker: It was my privilege to enjoy the airborne flying classroom tour of conservation and natural resources on April 29.

The magnificent scenery will continue to thrill me and the unusual formations to remind of potential development not yet dreamed of for the Colorado Dolores junction area. Personally, I should like to commend the many whose coordinated efforts made the tours possible. As one interested' In education on a state level, 1 especially appreciate the recognition of Mesa County teachers. In recognizing teachers as the builders of future conservationists, your civic-minded groups paid them a well-deserved tribute. Their re-vltalized Interest will Inspire conservation of resources far Into the future.

A tribute to you. Very truly yours, ANNA C. PETTEYS, Chairman Colorado Board of Education. JUST FOLKS By EDGAR A. GUEST PIGEONS When I was young oh, long ago Of pigeons I was given a pair.

And In the barn, the eaves below, I built a coop for them to share. The friend said: la a week or two Tbey'll be content to stay with you. I fed them always twice a day. 1 watched tha nest that I had made, In any school boy's curious way, To see If any were laid. My hope was through the passing days flock of pigeons I could raise.

Then came the day I set them free. Believing round the bam they stay. They soared their homeword way to see. Then speedily they flew away. And being homers," this I learned: To him whe gave them theyd returned.

(CaprrUM U3S, tin QpwO Conferees Agree On Bill for-Small WASHINGTON (I) Senate and House conferees hsve agreed on a bill to permit local, state and federal cooperation in building small Irrigation projects. Sen. Barrett (R-Wyo). one of the conferees said Friday he is hopeful the bill will be sent to the President this year. The measure would authorize loans of up to five million dollars for construction of (injects in western states.

Loans for projects In the East and South would be authorized wider a proposed amendment to the watershed protection and flood prevention law. By MARQUIS CHILDS (Coprisht IP. Vail'd FMtarM imhcAUt lm 1 WASHINGTON Governor Aver-ell Hardman of New York next week will receive the annual Four Freedoms Award. If it were not for certain very iseclal clrcum- staacea this Would be just another one oi those trophies I. a line added In Whos Who-p resen ted at a echmaking banquet.

But It happens that the award will be presented by former President Truman. And this comes at the moment when Harriman and his mentor. Carmine Desaplo, chief of Tammany Hall, are beginning openly to push tha Pi overnors claim to the ial nomination. The objective, carefully planned, is to make this appear as a Truman endorsement of the Harriman candidacy. Many of the ex-Presi-denta friends and former associates have long suspected that he is privately for Harriman and he would have to go only a little farther in his speech of presentation to confirm this impression.

Resenting Adlai Stevenson's determination to set the tone of his own campaign, Truman has found Harriman far more receptive to his give em hell, advice. Harrimans inactive candidacy and Harriman himself has had trouble defining just what that means has caused a big upheaval In tjie Democratic party. In the Stevenson camp, the suspicion has grown that Harriman money was being used to promote Senator Estes Kefauver in the conviction that if the two killed each other off In the rough and tumble of the primaries, then the way would be open Nor the New York governor to step in. Harriman firmly denies that he or anyone connected with him has put money behind Kefauver, but that report persists nevertheless. On one thing everybody agrees, and that is that Harriman has about as severe a case of presidential virus as has been seen In a long time.

Although the bug bit late in life, it has taken a him tenacious hold. Four years ago when he was 61 and before be had been elected to any public office, the governor came dowa with the disease. At the Democratic convention in Chicago, he opened headquarters in the Arizona suite at the Palmer House. The suite was decorated In ranch-ljouse style with a big patio where candidate Harriman received delegates and reporters before an artificial fire in an artificial fireplace, although the whole place was comfortably air-conditioned. This setting somewhat accentuated the artificial nature of the Harriman candidacy.

But the virus today is far more virulent. Hamman is 65 and this la his last chance. He won the governorship by a hairbreath margin when it had been freely predicted that he would be swamped by his Republican opponent, Senator Irving Ives. With the concentration of effort that has characterized every phase of his career in business and government, Harriman threw himself into the new task. Harriman is deeply resentful of the strong Stevenson-for-President committee at work in New York.

This committee recently organized a $100 a plate dinner for Stevenson attended by 1,100 persQns at which Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Senator Herbert Lehman of New York gave all-out tributes for the candidate from Illinois. If he could get Truman's open approval on the eve of the former Presidents departure for Europe, it would give him a fine springboard for the series of speeches be will shortly make in a half dozen Western states. But as a veteran player, Truman is not likely to be jockeyed into an en- Own an In Grand Junction, Colorado, aa Class Matter -Publlsher -General Manager -Chief Editorial Writer Full Associated Press Leased Wire ignore the fate of suspected, believed Rrofessor Galindea Trujillo agents. Old and New Along the Way, Some Front Soma Fran Pena of Later Days.

4 ANOTHER POLICY REVERSAL When President Eisenhower announced his own decision to run again he said he could not properly endorse a running mate until he himself had been nominated. But how quickly he deviated from that principle after Mr. Nixon announced he is available for the vice-presidential nomination. At least the Presidents expressed delight at the announcement is being interpreted by his party as full preconvention endorsement of Nixon, a move thai presumably shuts out any other hopefuls for second place on the Republican ticket. Stock Swindler Us, Big Fraud By SYLVIA PORTER (Copyrlfbl IMS.

TS Ril 6jrat be The nations biggest dealer in penny stocks has just been indicted in an alleged $15 million uranium stock fraud. The Federal Indictment accuses him of defrauding 50,000 stockholders in a deal In whiclrbe was able to buy a company's stock at prices as low as one cent a share and sell It to the public at 1 as high as $1.87 a share. Roughly four out of five of the companies which have found uranium in Utah won't make a dime jfrom It. This is now the startling estimate of Mil-ton Love, Utah's Securities Commission Director, who adds, "That means 80 per cent of the funds raised has gone down the flume. Of the $55 million put In Colorado uranium stock issues in the last year, 95 per cent already has been lost to Investors.

A Congressional Hearings Monday On Toll -Tunnel To Speed Session DENVER Committees of the Colorado House of Representatives and, Senate will hold a joint public hearing In Denver at 2 p.m. Monday on bills proposing a highway toll tunnel through the Continental Divide. Sen. Frank L. "Ted" Gill (R-Hillrosc), president pro tern of the Senate, announced Friday the hearing will be held to speed up the special session of the Legislature opening Monday.

He made the announcement on behalf of Rep. Walter btalker iR-Klrk), chairman of the House Highways Committee, and Sen. Fay Do-Berard (R-Krcmmling), chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee. Gill again urged Gov Johnson Friday to amend his call for a special session of the legislature to permit consideration of bread and butter pay raise for approximately 7,000 state employes. Gill said he -left a letter on the salary question on the governors desk for his return from Washington late Friday.

The chief executive has been la the nations capitol pressing for a new interstate highway for Colorado. Gill, president pro tem of the Senate, is urging a flat, across-the-board pay boost for all state employes in the classified services of $20 month. He claims support from most of tbf GOP Senate leaders. Coed Among 7 To Scale Hotel CASPER, Wyo. Ml A 19-year-old co-ed and seven other students at Casper Junior College will test their mountain climbing skill Saturday down the face of Wyomings tallest building.

Mary Murane, a Casper freshman, and her companions wUl descend the nine-story Gladstone Hotel. Their demonstration is designed to publicize the 50th anniversary of the nation's first national monument, Devils Tower. This natural landmark in northeast Wyoming was declared national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. (As Pictured) For 'loH MM I i 1 I.UUDER Slill With Reveals committee that appalling statistic when it held hearings In the West few months ago. Bo there (t Is another brutal confirmation that still flourishing in our land is the vicious stock swindler.

And still around to be plucked by the rat-bold salesmen of phony stock issues erg countless number! of innocent but mdney-greedy wage-earners and housewives. And that highlights the unpleasant but unquestionable fact that none of the so-called safeguards erected against stock swindlers in recent years was able to avert the individual financial tragedies la herent in the above figures. The Securities Exchange Com. mission the Federal Govern menti key financial policing agency didnt stop the fiood worthless or near-worthless uranium stock Issues In 1951-55. Even though under todays law, the SEC would have found It tough or perhaps Impossible to halt the promotions, the point Is it DID NOT even begin to make noises about the scandals until a short while ago.

Now after most of the damage has been done SEC officials are raising their voices. A bit late. The Senate Banking Committee, which held a full-scale investigation of the stock market ia early 1955. virtually by-passed the sub ject of penny stock frauds. During the hearings, I myself suggested to the committee members that they call the man just indicated WaltCT-FTeliler.

head of the Jer- sey City firm bearing his name to get the story of penny uranium stock promotion from 'the Telliert wasn't summoned. When Tellier did testify before a House subcommittee in New York last November, he seized the opportunity to denounce the phonies whe have been talking about fraud as a little bit left or pink or something and he actually ridiculed the SEC as 100 per cent overstaffed, The various state securities authorities clearly weren't able to do the job that should have been done. The uranium mining boom Is fading now. But other opportunities for penny stock promotions will appear maybe In some new metal or In earth satellites or in trips to the moon. .1 dont know, but you use your wildest Imagination, youll probably bit 1L Nothing can be done to restore the savings of the suckers caught in the uranium promotion, but maybe such pleas as I'm making here will help protect thekuckers-to-be.

Specificallyt DONT fall for the get-jich-quick appeal In cheap stocks. If you. want to speculate in some new invention or discovery via stocks, buy the securities of responsible. established companies moving Into the field. DONT deal with an unknown securities firm.

If, however, you feel you must, take the time to check carefully the reputation of the firm with a local bank. Better Business Bureau, state- commission. If there is no securities firm is your area you trust, deal with your bank. DONT kid yourself that youre investing when you buy a penny stock for a quick turn. Youre not investing.

Attest, youre speculating. And more likely, youre gambling against odds you wouldn't dream of accepting at a bone race or ia a card game. And DON'T ever forget that there Is no law that can protect ou from your own greed or fool-'mess. There Is no policing agency which can wipe out swindlers or suckers. There is no magie that can bring back your hard-earned aestegg after youve lost ft ia a wild venture.

There never will be this law, agency or magic. i Per Only 1Q5.20 COTIPAIIY WASHINGTON It wu on May Day, two years ago this week, that the United States got its first shock indicating that 'Russia was on the way to forging ahead of us in air power. A American and allied military attaches itood reviewing the usual May Day exhibition of Russian military might, a giant jet thundered over Moscow housetops at an altitude of only 250 feet. The bomber wu ao tremendous that its shadow literally apanned the great Red square as it flashed through the morning sunlight American observers quickly noted that its four intake vents seemed larger than any they had seen at home, that the heavy plane easily kept np with swift jet fighter squadrons. Messages of shocked reaction immediately burned the cabin to Washington.

But Secretary of Defense Wilson refused to be alarmed. Ho dismissed the new bomber as a single, hand-built prototype assembled by the Russians to scare the Western world into more defense spending. He noted that the plane had only four engines and pronounced it an underpowered showpiece. Air Force generals disagreed, but Wilson overruled them. Real shock came a year later 1955 when the Rusiians Hew their prize bomber across the Moscow skyline again.

By that time the lone giant of the previous May Day had company 18 more big battle-planes. Of these, 13 bore routine Red Air Force markings. Six, with no markings, apparently. -were so fresh from the factory they hadnt been assigned to combat units. Each-supported a new underbelly bulge, an ominous modification that experts identified as extra room for the H-bomb.

Elevea Short Years Our intelligence agencies (went to work eompltng technical data. All available facta on the monster bomber were secretly supplied to our own manufacturers. They were asked to figure how long It took the Russians to produce such a plane. The whole Soviet air buildup was re-examined, and the fantastic truth emerged. In 11 short years, the Russians had not only caught up with us In design, but outstripped ns in production of jet planes.

Numerically, the Soviet Union today has the world's largest air force. She has more combat planes than this country, and her lactones are producing them faster. She has accomplished this so secretly that our intelligence has repeatedly been caught napping. Our technical intelligence has made detailed examinations of 14 Soviet planes since 1945. These airplanes autopsies showed that Soviet technology lagged behind us from 1945 until 1952.

Since 1952, the Russians have equaled our best efforts In air weapons. In some eategones, we are slightly Ui'Wim i flifflE ACROSS 1. Get sway, slang 6. Pronoun i 13, Negligent 14, Beam 15. Sweetheart 16.

Stir up 18. Salutation 19. Is possible 2L Piece of ground 21 Title of a Cossack genersl 24. Courage 27. Spirit of hostility- 29.

Gaelic sen god 30. Party 33. Convened 34. Fruit 35. Have debts 36.

Chaff 38r Refusal 40. Ran oft to wed 44. Unit of weight 45. Exist 48. Beverage -47.

Stinging insect 50. Polite 82. Purpose 63. Graceful tree 84. Exchange 85.

Tiny 86. Period of light 87. Mathematical ratios DOWN 1. Liturgical word RETIRING IS NOT FADING AWAY 4 Who said old generals just fade away? We have just read a list of retired military leaders, numbering no less than 24, who are now all on the rosters of big corporations. And the majority of those firms are currently doing ness, directly or indirectly, with the Defense Department.

Naturally these retired generals and admirals all receive annual government pensions (ranging from $6,000 to $19,531 for five star generals) in addition to the five or six figure salaries they get from the businesses or industries they now serve. My Day By Eleanor Roosevelt Country Lost Valuable Public Servanf When Alben Barkley Died NEW YORK. May Just as was going out to dinner Monday night my telephone rang and 1 was given the sad news of Senator Adbea Barkleys death. At 78, he was serving In the Senate and living a very active life and i ken was while making a speech at Wash ington and Lee University. He had a warm, colorful 7 personality and he will be much 'missed by all hls friends and associates.

The country has lost a valuable public servant. For him, it was undoubtedly a good way to go still at work, still active, still part of the important thifigs going, on In the world. Sunday afternoon I went out to Bayside, Long Island to see a small group of Cub Scouts given their charter and their flag. This little pack is named after John Golden, who helped to start it because of his great sympathy for retarded children who never before had an opportunity to join in Scouting. It is a pilot project but It seems to be working out very welL It was a touching ceremony and one, I hope, that might be repeated for Hie many handicapped youngsters in other communities.

1 I attended a mental health forum at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel for two hours Monday morning at which Dr. Margaret Mead presided. While I was there international tensions were discussed and Senator Mike Mansfield and Representative Walter Judd both made excellent speeches. In essence, they emphasised the fact that we must leant to live with tensions and to welcome them for they mean that we are aware of the need for action in various fields of endeavor and we must prepare to make that action' useful to ourselves and to the world. We cannot expect that the difficulties of a changing world will disappear for a long time, they said, so we must live with them and not permit them to destroy us.

In the evening I was taken by a friend to see My Fair Lady Shaws -Pygmalion has been made Into a delightful musical comedy, starring Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews. Moss Hart staged the production and I wonder bow he managed to make it ao nostalgic to those of us who think back with joy to Gertrude Lawrence In The King and I and to South Pacific. Consolidated Moonbeams. to the old he once had arilyn Monroe at a charity ball. Now be brags, guess who I sat next to on the subway this morning -the chairman of the board Cosmic Glue, Inc.

The in-and-outer this Is the office gambler. He puts bis whole wad on International Popcorn, Ltd. when it falls after a week to declare a SO per cent dividend, he pulls out his money, grumbling, I went some real action. I can do bettento-toe ptitiies, The insider Ive got a tip from my cousin who works for Laminated Steels that their stock will go up 10 points day after tomorrow, He whispers to every-get to one who will listen. Better gel it today.

Two days later Lami nated Steel falls four points, and the insider becomes an outsider to everyone to the office wbo acted on his tip. The lermlTcraB he boldslls stock close to bis chert, wont talk about the market at aQ. He even beds to a separate room from his wife for fear that during his sleep he will give away his Investing secrets. The dreamer be puts bis last $500 to Skyblue Uranium unlimited (two shares for a penny) and goes around the office to a daze, murmuring, 'one million two million three million. 1 Of course, there Is the ordinary Investor, too, the fellow who puts the money he can afford into the best stocks be can find and then sensibly sits back and waits for his Investment to mature.

Driver Pbds Gsilly GLENWOOD SPRINGS A plea of guilty wag entered to District Court her Wednesday by Fred C. AWbury, charged with driving under the influence of alcohol. 7tie case w-s continued for f'lrtherlitpotiijnM ToeMsy, I May 13, before Judge H. Der-i ahead in others, they are superior. American manufacturers concluded from their secret study that Russias giant let Bison completed the cyele from drawing board to military aervice in four yean compared frith the eight years which the U.

S. spent developing the B-52. The first Bison appeared over Moscow two years before our intelligence thought it could be possible. When the Russians flew 19 in formation a year later, the U. S.

had only two complete B-52s. Sealed la Factories American agents report tha Kremlin sealed engineers, technicians, and workers into plant 23 in Moscow and refused to let them out until they had built the Bison. The imprisoned personnel, working around the clock, set an astonishing production record. The Soviets are now turning out the Bison at plant 23 at the rate of five every month. They are using unskilled labor wherever po-sible, taking short cuts and holding down design changes.

Soon, says Air Force intelligence, plant 23 should be making 10 Bisons per month. Russia already has 20 jet- powered Bisons assigned to combat unit units. Our total of B-52s ready i both for combat Is only three. (In countries, of course, many more of the big Jets art Bear completion.) 1 On top of all this, Kremlin Czar Nikita Khrushchev has now boasted that Russia will also develop the first intercontinental guided missile with a hydrogen warhead. This missile will be capable of hitting anywhere in the world with a destructive force measured in millions of tons of TNXDur experts say Khrushchev would not risk losing face by making this open boast unless he was sure of himself.

Note: The Eisenhower administrations economy program, more than anything else, has cost us a i superiority. Administration spokesmen excuse this on the grounds thkt peace prospects are better, hence theqe is less need for a big air force. Air generals warn, however, that wa must gear our strength to Russian capabilities, not guesswork on Russian intentions. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs.

Floyd Decker, 550 20ft Road, are parents of an 8-pound 7-ounce girl born at 2 38 m. Thursday in SL Marys Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Unrein, 2754 Bft Road, are parents of a 6-pound 4-ounce boy born at 2.04 -pm.

Thursday In SL Marys Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Adolphus Moore, Naturita, are parents of a 7-pound llft-ounca boy born at 1 01 pm. Thursday in SL-Marys Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. John Foster, 1357 Orchard Avenue, are parents of a 6-pound 14-ounce girl born at 9-18 a m. Thursday In SL Marys Hospital uKuai Mil KIL Rt E1R, -OInTUgieIrI EjRiEli Solution of Yostordayo Fuzxls 2. Spice I.

Fastener 4 Corroded Fabled -marine creature IKill childishly 10. Dine -41. Cereal grass 17. Little child 20. Beast 23.

Entangle 24 Speak undez the breath 25. Meadow 26. Sut 28. Grown hoy 30. Turf 31.

Sheep 32. Fr. eoia 34 Golf instructor 38. Slammed 37. Chooses by vote 39.

Electrified particle 4L Stately old dance 41 Omit pronouncing 43. Cancels -45. Hart 47. Carpenter's tool 43. Drsw game 49.

Guidos no'e SL E.bLica charade 7. Ugly old woman SHOULD WORK FOR ALL Our government took quick action to rid the nation of the two Russian delegates to the UN who allegedly put pressure on and helped a group of Russian Bailors decide to return to the Soviet. And with equal speed and justification the government warned Russia that we will not permit it to interfere in the lives of any other refugees in our land and we have assured those sailors who chose to stay in America full protection of our laws and see that they are not again bothered by Red agents --S'- A I Dream You Can Touch Boyle Lists Types of Most Pesky Stock Market DabblersrTipsfers 0 .1 i ii i But what about political refugees from other lands the Dominican Republic, for instance? On March 12, Dr. Jesus de Galindez, a professor at Columbia, originally refugee from Franco Spain and more recently from Trujillos Dominican Republic, disappeared as he was on his way home from his classes. The New York police have been unable to find any trace of him.

So his friends and many organizations have been trying to get the FBI to enter the case and determine, if possible, whether or not Dr. Galindez is the victim of a political crime arranged by the agents of the Trujillo government, an expose of which the professor had just finished writing. Up-to-date the U. S. Justice Department and the FRI have shown Inclination to take up" the case.

It is hardly logical tewneera ourselves-With the Vic- tuns of one dictatorship and victims of another one. It is may have been kidnapped by Sentiment Things Worth While picked Pena Long Ago Laid Down. Up By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK Ml There are nearly eight million Americans in Che stock market now. A stockholder Is known as a partner in industry," and when you meet a guy who owns a share in the same company yon do, you give him the greeting cry of the Old West howdy, pard' ner. The New York Stock Exchange Jtopefully e-dlets that eventually there will be between 40 and 50 million stockholders In this country.

The prediction may well come Air true. Already buying stock is Important for other reasons than possible financial gain, its becoming a matter of social prestige. In tome circlet If you dont own -least -n-few shares of stock youre regarded as one of civilizations wallflowers. They think maybe you still ride to work on bicycle and that your ides of fun is to read the poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow aloud to mixed company. The average business office today from boss to shipping elerk has more stock market investors thaa It did horse player lOears ago.

ley break down iato several common types, and you probably can recognize some of the follow ing to your own office: 17 the wandering investor a- like ao Impatient prospector, he always is looking for gold over the next hill. Today he buys Du Pont, tomorrow be sells and goes to for General Motors the next day he is browsing to T. T. The form sheet player he spends $30 month buying stock market advisory services on how he can best place the $15 a month he can actually tovesL The big operator this follow hints mysteriously of his tremendous ventures. But at least once a week borrow Jrrl mnney from you, explaining, lm short of mrf tart up to th hut to For UWILG YEARS Or Complete ben I consider Life and Its few years A wisp of foi betwixt us and fie sun; A call to battle, and the battle done I re the last echo dies within our ears: A clicked In the grass; en hour of fears; 7 gusts that past a darkening shore do beat; The of music down an onLrtenlng street I wij- ter at the Idleness of tears.

Ter cJ de'd, and ye of yesternight. In your dreams and pirns had you ever once thought you could make YOUR kitchen Into the sbowplsce of your bom for so little cost? Come to today for ideu on remodeling YOUR kitchen into this time-saving and step saving beauty! and bards, and keepers of the sheep ct of sorrow that you bad, 'mu tears, nd make me see aright tn what once be sta-red to weep; arid his little lad! 1 i 1 i 1 ff 1 -Lire la Woodv'ort Bme. Phono 14 Ter Friendly Serv'te.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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