'
. J I: '
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! Makeup Sometimes Simple
J.f i
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1 . v.
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SOME . Touch looking boy. this
for the part in the new Italian
The film makeup men seem tovhave had a fjeig aaj. bus wait a
minute. At tight is Anthony Quinn, Academy Award winner. Nice
j looking boy, isn't he? Look again.
; tough if he Jiad to. The maieop
; and Presto!- s -
i West Colorado
Vast. Rockbound Oil Reserves
! By JOSEPH R. MARSHALL
INS Staff Correspondent
j RIFLE, Coio. (INS) Engi
neers toiling in a sandstone old
of western Colorado bills have
unlocked vast; rockbound oil re
serves to supplement America's
fuel supply. J j j J
War tomorrow, or an economic
change the day after tomorrow,
could make America's weapons
and your can depend in part on
gasoline and fuel oil taken from
.60 million-year-old rock.
Heads of the Rifle, Colo., Ex
perimental Oil-Shale Plant are
''show me" Missouri-type men.
They have parlayed eight years
of sweat and more than 10 mil
lion dollars into an economical
way to get oil from richest oil
shale deposit in the world.
After testing a pilot 72-foot
, dry, gas retort thi4 summer, they
' say indications are an oil-shale
plant might now profitably com
pete with, petroleum from, the
ground. ; I
Chief Boyd Guthrie of the
plant says an estimated trillion
barrels of oil are locked in the
16,000-square-milejColorado-Utah-tland
' Wyoming - denosit. In the mere
' thousand-square-mile tested, Colo
rado deposits are about 500 bil
lion barrels. That's more than
seven times the 70 billion barrels
.'America has produced and can
pump from proven petroleum re
serves. , -'
The most economical sice 250,-
000 barrel-a-day plant to produce
oil from shale would also produce
a number of by-products am
monia, sulphur, tar acids and
1 bases, cokes and others. Some of
them are not derivable in similar
; abundance and others not at all
from some petroleums.
The one plant .would generate
: , enough excess gas to create half
'.' the electric power produced by
; Boulder Dam.
r Near Uranium
- Curiously, , the fabulous oil-
. shale deposit is only a few miles
from America's richest known
. store of uranium ore, the Colo
' rado Plateau. Together, the min-
!; ing of uranium and (he oil-bear-
: ing magnesium mansion e
promise an unprecedented future
for the barren western slope of I
; Colorado's Continental Divide. "
Vice President A. C.'Rubel of j
I the Union Oil Company predicts I
--; full scale commercial use of oil
' shale will come "within five or
j 10 years." And the Paley report
! to President Truman predicts a
well developed industry turning
out two million I barrels of crude
: by 1975. j
j Engineers agree with the fore-
i casts. So do residents of the little
1 mile-high town of Rifle, which al-
. ready calls itself, "The Oil Shale
I Capital of The World."
The engineers say soon l the
) Colorado River; Valley will be
spotted with oil-producing plants.
Companies Active f
, Oil companies' are playing shale
oil poker with cards close to their
i chests. They j arent revealing
plans for plants. But they are
I keeping abreast of research,' and
many are doing their own ex
! perimental work. . i -
! More indicative, perhaps, thev
have backed their hands with
, hard cash. Oil companies now own
; outright 50 per cent of the rich-
est deposits.
' : There is no question among oil
: men, professional seers and hard-
, boiled financiers that shale-oil
; will someday supplement petrol
1 eum. And never in the past have
prophets of the oil industry over
estimated future demands.' The
' ; development mvst come r simply
because demand is increasing
t rapidly in the; United States and
leaping ahead: in the world.
' . Experts see: plants set up in
the area to use by-product elee
trical power,! like the power
hungry aluminum industry. One
expert has predicted the oil-shale
Industry will eventually i provide
electricity for, the west coast
Contributing to the "powerhouse'
, will be perhaps chemical plants
using other by-products, the al
1 ready large mining of uranium
ore from , the nearby Colorado
Plateau and the mining of coal.
. Five Per Cent
i- Colorado State Mine Inspector
I Thomas Allen has estimated Colo-J
. .rado has five per cent. of the
. world's coal reservoir. And petro-
leflm experts ire already looking
forward to the day when oil will
. have tn be taken from coal
" The initial investment for the
v - aiost economical" full, size i shale
' plant-group the size profit-
T 1 ; t ; 'l 1
a. J , ' ! '
Attila! At left, he is all made op
film,' -Attila, Scourge of God."
Yon can see he could be pretty
man jusi aoaea a lew loucnei
. .
Hills Divulge
seeking capital i would have; to
shoot for is enormous. The Na
tional Petroleum Council esti
mates an investment of more
than a billion dollars to cover; the
most economical, size 250,000 bar-
rel-a-day plant. Of course, engi
neers believe the development
probably will come with smaller,
perhaps 50,000 barrel-a-day
plants. Water is another prob
lem, although at least one water
board expert says there is enough
water to fulfill all needs, j
Economy Problem
.Although there- are shale de
posits on all continents and in
most countries, no two are alike.
So far as is known, none of the
-existing foreign industries f can
compete on equal ground with
petroleum. The Bureau of Mines'
problem was to devise a process
for American shale so shale-oil
would be economical before
America depended in war; and
peace too heavily on foreign pe
troleum. ; .
Engineers worked and. are
working with a stone formed 60
million years ago by a huge in
lake. Actually, the stone is
neither shale nor oil. It is a "mag
nesium
marlstone" containing
solid
organic material which
under heat yields kerogeni The
keroeen is broken down into oil.
gas, and other substances.
Geologists say high life! con-
tent of the lake settled in the I
mud bottom eventually forming i
layers of ahale. The tested, I Colo-1
rado deposit of a thousand scraare
miles shows shale of a thickness
from 70 to 110 feet running SO
gallons of oil to the ton of: rock,
and a 500-foot section assaying
15 gallons to the ton. I
Engineers have cut the mining,
crushing and conveying cost fig-
ure well below 50 cents a ton.
They are still cutting the figure.
All experts agree that someday
soon your car may runj yourjlerent strains 01 dysentery,
house may be heated, a jet plane
fly and trains run on oil and
gasoline taken from rock. (One
diesel train already made test
runs on shale fuel oil from the
Rifle Plant) !
Taxes Imperil
Liquor Sellers
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (INS)'
Thomas J. Donovan, vice presi
dent Licensed Beverage : Indus
tries, Inc., warns the nation's
14,000 tavern owners face fa very
real danger of extinction" be
cause 88 per cent of the wage
earners of America are being
breed out of the legal liquor
market by tax-inflated prices.
In an address at the National
Licensed Beverage Association
convention he said "Zane Greys'-
vanishing American could easily
be the tax-ridden tavern owner
of today." i
Donovan said the tavern owner
depends for his livelihood on the
average person who is among the
88 per cent of city wage; earners
making less .than $5,000 a year.
Donovan quoted Bureau of Labor
statistics showing that this cate
gory of consumer is spending
three per cent more than -his
earnings and added:
"In other words, under today a
lax burden, he's digging into his TEXAS A lone and nungrr cow surveya her unappetizing trar
bank account, or going into debt fundings this summer in tie droughUtrickea West Texas range.
He cant do that for long and
when he stops, the tavern man
will be the first to feel it'
Wisconsin Honors
Worker Confined
To Wheelchair
I
MADISON. Wis. VP) A man
who has been operating his busi-
ness from a wheelchair has been
recognized for a special citation
by the governor's committee on
the physically handicapped. i
Robert Stevens, 29, of Wausau,
Wis- oDerates a Dhvaicians' "serv-
ice bureau, a bookkeeping service ne oeveiopmenu nrougni com
ahd also sells insurance and ma- plaints from farmers. Some Quar
- -. - . .
gazine subscriptions. ;
The committee said Stevena had
overcome handicaps from birth
and from polio to earn a degree! A major' cause of the setback.
at' the University of Wisconsin
and work as an assistant eas plant
superintendent i U
Total assets and premium col -
lections of Connecticut insurance
companies rose to $1,899,350,269
in ivu, more . man aounie intimore.
amount of 1942.
i i " i
Pope Warns
ainst
VATICAN CITY (fl - Pope Pius
XII warned television Saturday not
to send fate the home the picture of
pleasure, passion and evil he
said too often appears on the mo
vie screen. 1
He called television "both a pre
cious and dangerous instrument
because of the deep reaction it is
destined to exert on public and
private we. . .
The pontiff made the observa
tions in a statement i to Italian
Roman Catholic bishops on the eve
of the first regular broadcasts by
Italy's government-controlled tele-
Vision network. Programs will go
on i the air Sunday from Milan,
Rome and Turin.
Experimental broadcasts have
been made irregularly for two
years. There are estimated to be
only about 15,000 TV sets in the
country.
'We recognize fully this new
conquest of science," the Pope
said. "It is not difficult to under
stand the innumerable , advantages
of television and the many services
it can provide man for his perfec
tion." He added: ;
"In these days the cinema,
sports and the hard necessities of
daily work tend to keep family
members away from home more
and more of the time and to upset
the natural development of family
life. . .television can serve to bring
the family together again in the
home and to keep .them from the
dangers of undesirable companions
and unhealthy places." .
The pontiff said television a so
could exert a "beneficial influence
in relation to the culture and popu
lar education of the people" and
for spreading religions teachings.
Movie'g Title
te
OTTAWA, Kan. Wl Reading
from notes, Jack Davis, student
council president, faltered while
attempting to announce the name
of a color movie about to be
shown at a high school assembly.
Principal Leroy Hood helped
Davis decipher the' notes, then
explained to the, student body
that the writing was that of a
member of the junior high fac
ulty. : The movie's title? "The Legi
bility of Handwriting."
TT t R,,,,,
-a
hif l?rrli Tef
iiaKI38 lOilCIl J. Col
TYLER, Tex. (INS) The Tex
as State Health Department is
conducting "Operation Cock
roach to determine If the insect
is a disease-earner.
in an experiment being con-
ducted at Tyler, cockroaches are
cornered in sewers, where the
health department Says they live
breed and die, and marked with
green phosphorescent paint
The wanderings of the pesky
little creatures are then traced.
Already it has been determined
that they carry at least nine dif-
Evils 0
f Movies
Approprta
High Output, Lower Prices, Drought Plague
Farmers, Bring
A
wnere eniy tne Bpanisn dagger punt grows, severe drought in
.widespread areas xurtner complicated the farm situation.
By OVID A. MARTIN
WASHINGTON (ff) Despite
government efforts to hold things
on an even keeL the farmer in
1 1053 had his financial troubles.
Although production's total vol
ume was close to the record set
I in 1933, farm prices declined
nearly 8 per cent and farm in-
come dropped 7 per cent f
I As a result less farm machin-
ery, equipment and - other non;
farm products were purchased,
Farm land values declined and
farm debta Increased. I
Farmers. Complain - .
I m,. a . . '
I ten even predicted a new agr
cultural depression w a s Just
rouna the corner.
I which began in 1952, was a sharp
I reduction in exports of aaricui-
Itural commodities. Foreign sales
declined nearly 30 per cent re-
1 fleeting increased .production
abroad and a dollar shortage in
1 countries that would like to buy
Supplies which otherwise would
Cordon io Talk VMH
Oke Shortly on Dssue
Of O&C Land Funds
fKDITOR MOTS: Tkla la tint tea
erics mt articles a U .Issaes -vital I
t Orcc which confront Con cress
as It reconvenes next Wtdacs4ay.)
By A. ROBERT SMTTII ;
. Statesmaa Correspendent '
WASHINGTON President Eis
enhower and Sen. Guy Cordon
(R-Ore.) will confer shortly on
the controverted O It C land is
sue, which is the question before
Congress in 1954 with the most
direct bearing; on Western Ore
gon. j I
Its settlement could mean early
distribution to Oregon counties of
over $7,000,000 now frozen in the
treasury. The shares of Marion
and Polk counties, respectively,
are estimated to be about $135
000 and $200,000.:
Will Seek Endorsement !
Sen. Cordon; is going to the
White House to Seek the presi
dent's endorsement of the bill
which be and Rep. Harris Ells
worth (Rr Ore ) introduced last
June to settle the controverted
lands question. It would effect a
comnromise settlement of the
long dispute agreeably to both
the Forest Service and the Bureau
of, Land Management who for
over 10 years have each asserted
jurisdiction over the same 462,731
acres ' of forest land along the
fringes of the original O & C land
grants but also within the borders
of several national forests. -
Uader the bill, the Forest Serv
ice would administer the lands
but revenues from timber cutting
would be distributed according to
the O&C formula 75 per cent to
the 18 western Oregon counties.
25 per cent to the Treasury.
Supported by 17 Counties
The cordon-Ellsworth measure
has the support of 17 of the
counties, Clackamas County ex
cluded. Clackamas, through its
special counsel, A. W. Lafferty,
has contended the bill would not
have the desired affect of freeing
for distribution the impounded
revenues which the counties
want and so Clackamas has sued
the Secretaries of Interior and
Agriculture in an effort to get
the money. The suit was dis
missed by the U. S. District Court
Rehabilitation
Saves Money
i
HARTFORD, Conn. The
Connecticut Health Department
says that the rehabilitation 0
handicapped persons "is a good
investment." 6
In one recent year, it reports
$400,000 was spent to train 1,100
physically impaired persons in
useful occupations. Prior to re
habilitation, these persons had a
total annual income of about
$120,000. i
Following training their in
come was in excess of two mil
lion dollars annually.
LAURA WHEELER (820)
Crochet fashion's newest! It's
the blouse , with the removable
dickey high neckline for days
low neckline for dates. Blouse is
v-ctitch; contrast trim is loop
stitch; dickey is slipper stitch,
Crochet Pattern S20: directions
for Sizes 32-34; 36-38 all included
Fortk Financial Difficulties
have moved overseas became sur
pluses that pushed prices down.
Most of the surplus was stored
under government price support
programs. -
Drought Severe
By the year s end, the govern
ment had about four billion dol
lars invested in . these supplies
and the amount was expected to
climb to. more than five billion
dollars before the 1934 crops were
harvested.- , j? :
A severe drought complicated
the situation. Many farmers , in
parts ox tne Midwest Southwest
South and Far. West because of
poor pastures and feed grain
crops were forced to dump beef
animals on the market This fur
ther depressed cattle prices.
h-: The government moved in to
help by offering stocks of its sur
plus feeds to distressed cattlemen
at cut-rate prices. It also bought
a large quantity of beef, process
ed from .lower quality cattle
forced ox drought areas, in
move to bolster prices, j
Self-help" Urged -I
The weak cattle market brought
for the District of Columbia last
May but is now in the U. S. Court
of Appeals here, with decision
expected within a month or two.
Cordon's trip- to the White
House on the O&C matter' ia in
tended to speed up congressional
action on the compromise-bill,
possibly to get it enacted before
the Court of Appeals acta on the
Clackamas suit The senator feels
the court decision, in that 'event,
would i be moot, for the; issue
would ; nave been settled by act
of Congress. j
Would Leap Roadblock 1 -
But Cordon's appeal directly to
Eisenhower is more designed to
leapfrog over a roadblock; which
the senator worked mightily, but
unsuccessfully, to shovel aside
during the past year. That obsta
cle is an unfavorable attitude on
the part of the Budget Bureau,
where administration policy is
oftenformuIated and usually co
ordinated, toward the fact that
Oregon counties get 75 per cent
of the revenue from the O&C
lands, a federal holding, whereas
elsewhere counties get 25 per
from national forests.
Before Congress adjourned last
summer, the House opened hear
ings on the Ellsworth bill but
they were never concluded be
cause the Budget Bureau failed
to send up a favorable report on
the legislation. Budget officials
thought Congress should! review
tne matter 01 payments to tne
counties with a view to increas
ing the federal share and reduc
ing the counties' share, i
Stayed in Washington j
Cordon stayed on in Washing
ton after Congress adjourned to
try and dissuade budget pfficiale
from this attitude, even, passing
up a trip to Africa with the Atom
ic Energy Committee in order to
present a full case for his bill
from the long legal history of the
u&C lands.
But as Congress returns to
convene for the 1954 session, the
bureau s attitude is unchanged,
Hence Cordon's appointment with
the President .1 1
If President Eisenhower re
jects Cordon's appeal and backs
up the Budget Bureau, Congress
is not likely to approve Cc-don's
bill without also taking a long
look: at the O&C act of 1937 un
der which the counties get their
75 per cent share. Such action
would probably be delayed an
other year or more due to the
crowded calendar of vital na
tional legislation facing; this ses
sion of Congress. j
Controlling Factor
But if Eisenhower backs Cor
don, the Budget Bureau can be
counted upon to send Congress
a favorable report on the Ells
worth bill now in the House,
which in all probability would
pass the measure. Cordon can
immediately schedule hearings in
the Senate Interior Committee of
which he is a senior member.
In short, President Eisenhow
er's answer to Cordon's appeal
appears now the controlling fac
tor in whether the controverted
O&C lands issue is settled in
1954 by Congress or brushed
aside once again for future con
sideration. (NEXT Which Direction en
Timber Access Roads?)
demands from some farm groups
that Ezra Taft Benson, the new
Republican administration a sec
retary of agriculture, aet up price
supports for cattle. Until then,
organized cattlemen had voiced
sharp opposition to supports. Ben
son turned down the demands,
saying there was no practical way
of supporting mean animal prices.
When the new administration
took over this yearj Secretary
Benson told farmers that existing
federal farm programs would
eventually put producers under
complete government control.
He said the programs, particu
larly price support I' measures,
tended to price farm products out
of foreign and domestic markets.
create surpluses and bring on un
desirable production controls. He
urged farmers to develop "self-
help" programs that would reduce
the role of government,
Some farm leaders and Con
gressmen, including a few mem
bers of his own party, bitterly
criticized Benson's ideas and de
manded that he resign. President
Eisenhower stood by his farm
chiex.
New Program Drifted
The level of farm price aunoorts
was the basic point of controver
sy. Bensofl said they were too
high. He favored a flexible sys
tem under which supports would
be high in times of shortages to
encourage production and low in
time of surpluses to discourage
production. , i
With President Eisenhower's
backing and with the help of an
18-member agricultural advisory
commission of farm educators and
leaders, Benson drafted a . new
farm program to present to Con
gress early in 1954. ; , - ;
The House Agriculture Commit
tee, meantime, made what it
called "grass roots" tours through
farming areas to get views on
farm programs. . r
Farmers as a whole opposed
Benson's- ideas of lowering price
supports, committee; members re
ported, . j , : ' '
The year ended with orosnects
of sharp debate over farm legisla
tion during Congf ess' 1954 ses
sion. The results may have far-
rescuing influence on Republican
efforts to win enough seats in
the vital 1954 elections to
eon-
tinue control of Congress.
ffighBridg
QaimDisputed
. DENVER tfC-So West Virginia
thinks it baa the world's highest
bridge. j '
"A peanut-growing state deal
ing in peanut figures," said Colo
rado Gov. Dan Thornton recently
of a ; claim attributed to the
World Almanac that a turnpike
bridge across ; the Bluestone
River near Princeton, W. Va- is
the world's highest over water.
The bridge is 255 feet above
the river. 7
Apparently they, never heard
of the Royal Gorge Bridge over
the Arkansas at Canon City
Thornton said. He sent an assist
ant scurrying out to check the
height of the southern Colorado
bridge.Officially, it is 1.053 feet
above the churning Arkansas
River.
Butter Preserved
At High temperature
WINNIPEG, Man. (SV They
opened a two-year-old can of but
ter at. the University of Manito
ba the other day and it was in
fine condition. It had been kept
in a locker without refrigeration
in temperatures ranging up to 90
degrees. ,
All yeu need, says Dr. J. M.
Nesbitt is to take ordinary but
ter, sterilize it and make sure no
oxygen is present to make it keen
indefinitely in an airtight can.
School pupils Perform
In Downtown Store
WAYNOKA, Okla. UV-School
Supt Charles J. Page arranged
to have the 24 pupils in the
primary grade go through their
lessons in a downtown depart
ment store in full view of passes-
by. ;
"We decided to take the school
to the patrons," Page said. "We
knew from past experience that
many of them would not -attend
regular visiting periods at thi
school. s
POPULARITY IS HANDICAP
NAUGATUCK, Conn. (Ed
ward Lord Isn't happy about the
popularity of his gasoline station.
During the 16 years he has owned
it, the station has been broken
into 14 times.
Premier Sunday Xypss-Wrd Puzzle
519 i I ! s
1 z I5 14 ils lb I1 1 h fii iw i,z r i14 r3,s i I11 1,
51 S ST - 777, tehi 2r r
'ml.
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ti 7v zio ptth T&Z? r
ijiijniniqiti!:niiii
r i W - I
too dioi vol 555
I I &rrr- - J? -
a in noj M, I w
-r m M L Zfr -
w. !1 Z Ii ZMl Z Z 1 !1 z z z
nORXZONTAI
52 Meaning
53 Delicate
54 Head
covering .
55 Oon-
, cealera
SS Girl's
name
59 Japanese
states-
man
40 Farina-
eeoua
food
Male
child -62
Steep
4 Force
65 Support
ing garment
67 Ddg
70 Genuine
72 Be aiclt
73 Jacob's '
' brother
74 Exclama-
tion
despair ,
"75 Sense "
organ
77 Gossips
80 Tracks
82 Verb
' forma
85 High
priest
Of
Israel
88 Drun
ards
88 Conclude
89 Rear ap
i. pendage
81 Exist
1-rRude
buUdinff
S) HomtiC
epic
10 Weapon
15 Restrains
19 Ripped "
20 Intrepid
ity 21 American
writer
25 Mental
image
23 Leave out
24 Delimita
tion 2 Hindu
garment'
27 Spanish
coin
IS Feminine
name
29 Swiss
rler
30 Made
beloved
32 HaC
shelled
A-fruita
34 Buffoon
3 ish
37 Staid
40 Salt
41 Sink
Id the
middle '
43 Cere
mooy: 47 Sharp
mountain
ridge
48 Heavenly
Joy
Bo Incline
the
(Answers
Slcrtetmem, Salem, Ortw Stmderf Jem. 9, 1SSI Qc. 90
Teenage Bullfighter
j ar
iu
I ii nir-"h
MEXICO CITY --In tie ring Georgians Knowles shows skCl and
grace. Later, she killed this bull with a lance.
Bull Rings in
Mexico Fill
To Watch Girl
i
By JACK RUTLEDGE
MEXICO CITY (fP) A teen-age
Texas i girl and Tony, her Palo
mino iorse, are packing 'em in
Mexico's bullrings these days.
She's Georgians Knowles, 19,
once a ticket seller at an El Paso
theater. Her home was on a near
by ranch. f
She's . appeared twice in the
Plaza Mexico, the world's largest
bullring, and her success as a
bullfighter-on-horseback seems
assured. I!
On Television
Maybe you've seen her on tele
vision one fight here; was filmed
and shown widely in the United
States. It wasn't her 1 best fight
but it gave an idea of the dangers
the graceful girl and her horse
face. j. S
Georgiana is one of several
American girls who have become
fascinated by bull fights and who
are trying to make the grade in
the major leagues, f
She's the only one, however,
who I has chosen to!! become' a
rejoneadora, or fighter from
horseback. One of the bull ring's
greatest women fighters, Peru
vian Conchita Cintron, also did
tt-Landhekl
! abao
I" lutely
94-Withdraw
from
union
96 EnglUh
Quaker
97 Sluggish
98 Spanish
tiUe
100 Hastened
101 Linger ,
103 Throb
bin of the
! arteries
104 Follows
106 Free
j from
108 Peruse
109 -Murderer ,
110 Edible '
i: aeed
112 Tricked
114 Play-
things
115 Colder
119 Decay
120 Kxclama
i tion
121 Freezes
125 Protuber-
ance of
S i thecal
126 Tenant ,
128 Wide-
mouthed
1 pot-
130 Single
I a thing '
131 Borders
132 Din
133 Claw
134 Elizabeth
135 Tint era
136 Diner ' -
137 Expee
I torated
i 1-Halt
i 2 Dwelling:
i' 3 Goddess
Of
discord
! 4 Explode
6 Write
I 6 Borough
in
England
: 7 Feminine
name
8 Topaz
9 Runs off
the track
10 Portions
11 Caressing
atroke
12 One of
the
Great
Lakes
13 Expiate
14 Translate
15 Calamity
16 Hebrew
month
llpnly
IS Declared
25 Moving
part
31 Ancient
! country
: '.lot,, v
Greece
33 Indian
84 Servant
35 Beach
37 Char-
acterizinr
aTeu-
tonic law
38 Muse Of .
lyric
poetry -
to today's rvxzIUrt on Page 1
j much of her fighting that way.
j Long: Way to Go
Georgians has a long way to
go before equaling the great Con
chita but her! backers are confi
dent she'll make the grade.
One of them is Dr. Alfonso
Gaona, empresario of Plaza
Mexico. '
The trim, green-eyed girl wn
her first bullfight in Ciudad
Juarez, across from El Paso. She
became fired by a desire to enter
the ring. j
She appeared in several festi
vals cutting four ears a sort ol
bullying Oscar for top perform
ance. A once-famous fighter nick
named Tabaquito saw her,' and
decided she has what it takes.
He became her trainer.
i i
She trains almost daily with her
hordes. Her favorite is Tony, the
paldmino. I
"Sure rmiscared,'" Georgian
admits frankly. "But I'm not near
ly -as scared of the bulls as I am
of the Plaza Mexico and the fans
in the stands;
The fans have been kind ta
the girl on horseback. Once when
it took her almost 45 minutes to
do I away with a ' bull which
wouldn't charge properly, the
audience was patient and ap
plauded in the right places.
In other fights, where she had
better bulls and did a better job,,
the! applause was all that any
girt could dream of.
ii
immrat.
39 Badges
I of honor
140 Single- ,
I masted
I vessels
42 Departs
44 Gener-
I uy
45 Moving-
t7-Kark
from a
wound
90 Some
9S Close
fitting : garments
5 Ttnny.
soman
heroine
6 Goad
97 Acta of
con
. about
46 Rent
48 Morass
49 Furnished
shoes
51 Waste
matter
54 Head
vincing
99 Lively
dance
102 Volatile
liquid
103 Work
t with
, steadiness
105 Em
barked 107 Compu
akxi ,
109 Flier
111 Poor
111 Exclamav
I tion
11-The ones
indicated
115 Society
116 - Sharpen
a razor
covering
56 Intrusted
I 60 Barters
I 61 Produced
f fermen
i tation
I 63 Make
I obeisance
I 66 Pose
68 cereal
grass
69 Cloth
. measure
71 Tin
container
73 Chernjcal
compound 117 Wading
75 Back- - ' bird
ward 118 Storm ,
77 Harass ' 120 Mine
73 Radio , entraAce
comedlaa 122 Applaud
79 Dawn , 123 Charles
coddeae - Lamb
1 81 DiU
124 Condi,
tnent
127 Weight
- tnlndin
125 African
worm
f 82 Metal
83 Uneven, -aa
if eaten
away '
84 Conduit
1 Section 20
.
aamJSSa.iitSii m alfciurs"