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The Spokesman-Review from Spokane, Washington • 2

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Spokane, Washington
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2
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POPE TO MARK 82D BIRTHDAY Mystery Search Ends but Navy Keeps Mum The Spokesman-Review March 2, 1058. I 2 The Spokesman-Review March 2, 1058. 1 ..0 ry I 1 TAtitivri i oi Al lAkUy I ikA LA! ki: BREAK AT LAST FOR TAXPAYERS CIIICAGO, March I. 01--Taxpay ers required by a new rule to keep track of their expense accounts may be in for a lighter load of bookkeeping. Russell C.

Harrington, commiisioner of internal revenue, said yes. terday a new regulation is in the works. It is aimed at obtaining the Information on 1958 tax forms without requiring excessive record keeping by taxpayers. keeping by taxpayers. IHb 'axpay keep nt; d9 lid yes.

In the ing the 8 with record. was clearly visible on the surfaced craft. In Washington a navy spokesman said, "We have no official knowledge of the matter." However, the Boston Daily Record quoted an air force spokesman who was queried about missiles being blown up by sub signals as saying, "We know what's causing the difficulty. We know it is not a submarine." I 11. 1.10 'MOW "'9, VOW.

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1 '40 4: :1. i I 1 (4. PRESIDENT a K. AFTER STROKE He said the change will be anJ. nounced today or Monday.

The regulation deals with a new line on the form 1040 income tax returnsthe line marked 6 (A7. The line was added for reporting expense accounts received in 1957. Widespread complaints about the short notice succeeded in forcing the federal collectors to drop the requirement for the 1957 tax. But the accounting must be made tor 1958. 1958.

be an-'. a new ne tax 6 (At. porting 1957. out the forcing the ix. BLit ide for NEWPORT, R.

March 1. A squadron of destroyer escorts returned today from investigating "unidentified contacts" in the western Atlantic. A public information officer at Atlantic fleet destroyer. force headquarters declined to say what the vessels found. The squadron, normally consisting of eight ships, left Newport Tuesday.

The antisubmarine carrier Leyte and other craft from Norfolk, joined the search about the same time. Missile Destroyed? Navy headquarters in Washington Thursday night said vessels "sailed from east coasf ports to Investigate a reported contact in the Atlantic. It is a standard procedure to investigate such reports from any source." There were reports that rocket experts believed it possible that American ballistic missiles from Cape Carnaveral, had been destroyed by submarine radio signals. The Jacksonville, Journal said a navy plane from the Jacksonville air station recently sighted a Russian submarine on the surface off the coast of Florida. According to the Jacksonville Journal, the hammer and sickle No Hope for Elevation of "Lobster Trick" Quite a few people who work or have worked the "lobster trick" have been waiting for me to come up with a complimentary derivation of the title.

Friends, our hopes have been dashed. There was one bright moment when Bob Meister, scratching back of one ear, said he seemed to remember something about it; that it stemmed from the Lillian Russell-Tony Pastor era in New York, when Pastor's restaurant featured lobster suppers at and after midnight (the "lobster trick," on a newspaper or elsewhere, generally starts anywhere from midnight to 2 a. m. and winds up anywhere from 8 a. m.

to 10 a. This information was forwarded, hopefully, to Meyer Berger. Meyer Berger is a columnist for the New York Times and, more than that, a columnist who specializes in writing about his city. If there had been anything to that legend about the lobster suppers, he would have knownalthough the odds were against it, since from time immemorial newspaper men have been known for many things, but not particularly for partaking of sumptuous (hence costly) repasts after midnight, or any other time. The answer from the Times' Mr.

Berger is to hand. There is little consolation in it for lobster tricker; past, present or even future. Qt trick tar)' dash back it; In pers PaN to 2 mon his lobst agai been ing othe T1 little futu Water, Please! Encrusted with snow from a two-day blizzard, this cow waits patiently for someone to break the ice in a water tank near North Platte, so she can have a drink. Less fortunate cattle on the Nebraska ranges went unfed for two days while the storm raged. (AP wirephoto.) Harrington said the new regulg tion is designed to obtain expense account information without excessive record keeping by the tax- payer.

He declined to talk about the nature of the change In a speech to the executives club, but said "We intend no undue harrasiment of taxpayers such as demanding that expense accounts be Item-, ized to the last penny." regulg. excel. te titx- lut the speech said: WASHINGTON, March 1. 111 President Eisenhower was pronounced completely recovered today from the mild stroke he suffered November 25. Three specialists made their official report after Eisenhower underwent "a thorough neurological examination," including brain wave examinations, at Walter Reed army hospital.

Their checkups required a little more than an hour. Then the chief executive returned, smiling, to the White House in time for lunch. He resumed his official routine with a midafternoon conference with Secretary of State Dulles on the latest moves by Soviet Russia looking toward a summit conference. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty told reporters at the hospital the doctors' report means the President has now been given a medical discharge as far as the neurologists are concerned.

Navy Frogmen to Search for Bus, Bodies in River Date Marks 19th Year as Head of Church VATICAN CITY; March 1. (RI-Gold and white Vatican banners, are flying in honor of Pope Pius' 82nd birthday tomorrow and the 19th anniversary of his election to the throne of St. Peter. For the frail but still vigorous spiritual ruler of nearly 500,000,000 Roman Catholics the birthday called for a schedule much like other days. The year just ended for the pope the 19th of a pontificate that is considered here to be one of the most burdensome in the 2000-year history of the churchhas been busy as in past year, the pontiff received hundreds of thousands of people in audiences and spoke to them upon subjects that ranged from fashions to the morality of administering anesthetics.

Throughout the year, the pontiff had no serious ailment and he faces the 20th year of his administration with what his private physician, Prof. Riccardo Galeazzillsi, describes as "good health, considering his now advanced years." During the year, the pope surprised many of his visitors with the sharpness of his mind and firmness of his step. Visits by Notables Of many important events that studded the pontiff's calendar, two were historically outstanding. These were the visits of French President Rene Coty on May 13, and of President Theodor Heuss of West Germany on November 27. Coty's visit was the first formal visit here of a French head of state since Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in the year 800.

Reuss' visit, underscoring tremendous improvement in Vatican-German relations since the days of Adolf Hitler's nazis, was without precedent. No Protestant German head of state had formally visited a pontiff in years. A recognition that was said here to have particularly pleased the pontiff was the gold award of the George Washington Carver Memorial institute for "outstanding contribution to the betterment of race relations and human welfare." The award was presented by United States Ambassador to Italy James D. Zellerbach on February 22. The pontiff smiled with pleasure as he received the medal that had been given a year earlier to' President Eisenhower.

Attention I JOE JOE A Talking King Supreme will ammo you! Hear him repeat his name, address, Me. Has a reeebulary et seer Wit words. Let him teach your parakeet to talk. His record now ea sale Made Res. Crescent More, Mail Orders Filled.

le Melt a Lot talk. of dropping. Skies remained overcast but there was no rain. Mundy said a second barge is being rigged like a giant comb. Holes are being bored through its deck and steel piping pushed down through the holes.

This barge will join boats in dragging the river. Governor A. B. Chandler arrived at the scene and immediately arranged for a meeting with townspeople. HEARING NEWS Anybody Stuck on Late Shift Was a Patsy "I am inclined to think," Meyer Berger writes, "that 'lobster trick' had its original in the '80s or '90s, when the term lobster' meant a fall guy.

Certainly the newspaper man who found himself stuck on the lobster trick in any town was apt to be a patsy. I am only guessing on this, but I am fairly certain that's the way it would work out. "And while I'm at it, there was a burning argument here in the office about five years ago of the term 'bulldog I have tried every posible source on that one and never got a sensible answer. I remember that I even called Mencken in. Baltimore, only to have him fail us, too." That's the way these things go.

Tou barely get out of one puzzle, and you're fresh into another one. But one thing at a time. The research as to the origin of "lobster trick" didn't end with Mr. Berger. Editor and Publisher, which is the newspaper trade's own magazine, replied that it never had been able to track down the origin but offered two definitions: "Regular assignment out of publishing hours," or "any late or early shift or routine assignment." The Maine State library (Maine being the state that comes tip with the world's best lobsters) could get no farther than a definition from the "Dictionary of Americanism," which defines 'lobster" as "of or pertaining to newspaper workers who go on duty after the morning paper has gone to press and remain until the day staff ster lobs foun to bo tamn the have TI sens puzz 13i 'lob lishe that fere( hour T1 tip defir fines go znair PRESTONSBURG, March 1.

ERNavy frogmen from Norfolk, will fly to join search operations in the muddy depths of a swollen mountain stream hiding a school bus with possibly 26 students and the driver aboard. U. John Mundy, coast guard officer directing the search, said the frogmen were due sometime tomorrow if the bus isn't found. He said the search for the bus in the Levisa fork of the Big Sandy river would continue into the night if necessary. Two civilian divers, Carlton Hanley and Jack North of Huntington, W.

already have been on the bottom but have been unable to locate the bus which plunged into the river early yesterday after hitting a wrecker truck and an automobile. Boats were used upstream to direct floating debris around the divers. The river showed no signs Red Film Fans Applaud Leo March MGM lion gets spontaneous applause from audiences in red-ruled Poland, writes the movie critic of the Warsaw newspaper Zolnierz Wolosci. He claims he doesn't know why but it happened at a film festival showing of "friendly Persuasion" by Leo's Hollywood masters. The critic deadpanned a tag line: "Dear people, dear people, just wait a bit and we will also applaud American automobiles driving through our Look Better, Hear Better with flew Maico Hearing Glosses OLDEST TWINS AKKRUM, The Netherlands, March 1.

oldest twins will celebrate their 92d birthday in this Frision village next Tuesday. They are J. S. de Vries and his sister, Mrs. A.

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ilea ea the Now Make Millie Glasses. Please $imi Informaties. "JAME ADDIMa Be sure to see "MUGS FOR TOMORROW" a RUBBER STAMPS Why Write it? YOUR NAME. Address, City State. MOO Cash or Money Order.

Mali to: B. B. B. STAMP SERVICE w. tlQ rirst, Pipoltene MA iosin Real Bulldog Started Bulldog Edition The antecedents appear to have been established, and also the application.

Nowsurprise, surprisethis corner is prepared to give Mr. Berger, in exchange, a possible source for the term "bulldog edition," the bulldog being the edition that hits the street first. The reference source for this one is a sheet put out by the General Features corporation, whose purpose was to explain a few commonly used newspaper terms and phrases to the general public. "A bulldog to a newspaper man is not only a special breed of dog but also the first edition of a newspaper," runs this little item. "The term is supposed to have originated half a century ago when one of the Hearst newspapers, to identify its early edition, started printing a picture of one of owner William Randolph Hearst's favorite bulldogs." If you'd like to stay in newspaper terminology for the rest of the way, this picture in all probability appeared in the news-paper's ear.

You didn't know a newspaper had an ear? Certainly it has, and some have two. This newspaper has one, and If you'll turn back to page one you'll see itthe top left-hand corner, occupied in this instance by the summarized weather forecast About Thirty or 30, and a 2-Dash On many newspapers it is the custom to denote the end of a story or dispatch with the figure That stems from the days, apparently, when most newspaper dispatches were sent In Morse code, and the operators took to sending 3-0 to signifyl the end. On this paper, on the other hand, we use the figure the sufficiently logical reason that what is known as a 2-dash appears at the end of each story. A 2-dash means a dash that almost closes off a column of type, and is considerably wider, therefore, than a 3-dash, as follows: Th the pare( the hits Th, Gene a fev, eral "A of do tie it tury early liam If of pape tainl If yc corm On a sto days, In Mo the a 2-d dash ably VATICAN CITY, March I. Cardinal Stritch, archbishop of Chicago, today became the first American member of the Roman curia, central government of the Roman Catholic church.

His appointment is regarded as formal recognition of the great growth of American influence in the Catholic church in recent years. It bestows on the American clergy the right to a seat in the highest council of the church. 1 "This is the nearest thing we have ever had to an American commented one prelate tonight. Pope Pius XII called on the 70- year-old Stritch to become pro-prefect of the congregation of propaganda fide, the organization responsible for Catholic missions throughout the world. He will assist Cardinal Pietro Fumasoni Biondi, prefect of propagapda lidde, who is 85 and nearly blind.

1 Optical maims cm Make Hearing Gismos availablo only through tho optical A Special Report on the Air Terminal Bond Issue l(HQ-TV Ancient Greek Play Launches No Love-Making OXFORD, England, March 1. (A'Some co-eds with an an-dent Greek idea have ruled out love-making until their boy friends join a ban-the-Hbomb campaign. Most of the Oxford male undergraduates, noting a lack of unity in the female ranks, don't seem too worried. Janett Dawson, a pretty 19- year-old London girl, said the embargo on love-making started a week ago at a party. She said the idea came from Aristophanes' comedy, "Lysistrata," written in 411 B.

C. In the play, the women bolt their doors and forbid love-making until their husbands stop war-making. An unworried male student said confidently: "There will still be plenty of women who never even heard of the H-bomb." A dissenter among Oxford's co-ads dealt the modern Lysistratas this crusher. "Some of the girls who support the strike probably are not the type to receive many Invitations anyway." 3:30 Today 4 I' Ti, 1. 'MUMEMOMENEM 1NIMIMMM COLOIIIAL, DISCOUNT PRICES SAVE YOU TEM TO HUUDREDS OF DOLLARS! Let's look at so-called discount prices Colonial has shopped every store.

If we can't save you money we don't want your business! Store Store Colonial's LOOK! Dretcaell Big litillecoeunt you THE JUNME LEAGUE OF SPOKANE HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS KXLY (920 KC) EVERY SUNDAY 10:15 A. M. "Overcoming Anxiety About Our Children" March 2 ci rl TELECOURSE on FREEDOM TODAY KREM-TV 2:30 P. M. Freedom la the Eennomie Order Rev.

From is Conklin, S. J. ilketruetor in Phl loonohr Mount St. Michael's "Overcoming Fear of Failure" March II glogolMignmisminemniEnniimp ADVERTISING ADVERTISING ADVERTISING (This is a 2-dash) (This is a 3-dash) The word "lead" is used very frequently, and it has two primary meanings. Pronounced "leed," it mew the first paragraph or several paragraphs of a story, the that tells the prime essentials.

Pronounced "led," it means pieces of metal (a lead-zinc alloy, actually) of varying degres of which are dropped between lines of type to space out a story which does not fit perfectly into the space for which it is designated. If you have any old Western Union-type friends, they may sign off their letters to you with simple This means they are sending you best regards. It was part of a code the old Morse operators worked out, a telegraphic shorthand in which (I have it on the authority of the telegraph company's Joe Hamlin) an operator could send the symbols for just three letters and have it mean, in the right combination, three full words That's all we have space for today. Class dismissed, and 73s. Tt mar, grap the meti ress stor desil If sign the) old whi Joe letto wor I' ,111141611 FREEZER 499.95 SUPER DE LUXE DOUBLE OVEN RANGES 549.95 COMBINATION 499.9,5 GIANT SIZE II FT.

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Tea Pangaea 30- Lone Ranger Trail" 30-Maverick 30- Ada Scott Nand 9 00- aid 9 30-Mon Asked tot tt 10 Prison Oh." firhannel 4CM) Afternoon 2:00 Spokane Radio 1111Q I Today It IA' No doubt you like many other people are bewildered with basic questions and problems related to the consideration of an organ for your home, like some of the following: 1. Are there some simple methods available that will enable me to play the Conn Organ for my own pleasure and relaxation? 2. I wonder how this organ would sound in our living room? 3. How would it look in our living room, would it take much room? How about styles and finishes? 4. After I own a Conn Organ, what kind of maintenance costs can I expect? 5.

I have played the piano for years, are there any methods available to enable me to play the organ with equal ease? 6, Why the definite importance of two keyboards in. stead of the piano type keyboard? 7. I would like to know about your pre-purchase lesson plan and how it works on a rental arrangement, and still does not obligate me to buy until I'm convinced of my ability to play? 8. What are some of the easy financing plans available for the purchasing of an organ, and how much do the various models cost? We of the Guertin Ross Music Company are convinced there is only one way to settle these questions and curiosities once and forever, that is, just let us help you. It's as easy as picking up your telephone and dialing RI 74044 writing or stopping by at 908 W.

Sprague. Naturally, that's our number and the Guertin Ross Music Company will be very happy to arrange an evening of fun and music, with a Conn Organ In your own living room. I'm sure you will thrill to its rich, pure. organ tones and terrific versatility as you hear It played. We are quite sure before the evening is over that most of your questions and doubts will be settled.

It is understood that the organ will come out of your home that same evening. Absolutely no cost or obligation, no canned sales presentation, our only desire is to acquaint you with the unlimited thrills with organ music in your own home, providing many years of pleasure and relaxation for the whole family. Why don't you do it todayinvite your neighborthis could be one of the most rewarding experiences of your life. Bp Smarts-Shop and Compare-Look at Colonial Prices? 10195 Super De Luxe Water Heaters 1111111 69.95 199,95 Big Oven 30Inch Ranges ..139.95 249.95 Upright 9 cu. ft.

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