Show -- C THE OGDEN (UTAH) 4A STANDARD-EXAMINE- Dead Come to Life Again in Our Hearts Memorial Day Is Different: It Has Many Varying Meanings By HAL BOYLE — NEW YOR& On (AP) Memorial Day our buried dead come’ to life again in final pastures bloom with that flags I i But Memorial Day differs from all our other holidays because it holds so many varying meanings To a child it is only a day off from school and a feeling of bewilderment and awe The strange trip to the cemetery the subdued conversation of the grownups about people he has never known — these things confuse him He is too new to the mystery of life to have even a groping realization of the mystery of death and flowers They live and walk and talk again as they did in days before and the earth is bright again with their rememMemorial Day to most young bered presence We see them is only a day off from adults once more in our hearts as we work a brief vacation from the knew them in mortal prime of Death if they duty grind have known it at all has touched them but distantly and their memories of it are dim and vague Clean Well Kept Their sense of loss is often small Brick Home What you don’t remember well rarely stirs you to emotion To the elderly Memorial Day is largely just another day Every om FOR SALE Hr it a home with everything! Kvinj room with fireplace dining ream and twe bedrooms all ll with carpeting Cheery lovely wall-to-wa- with kitchen nice cabinet! doable tink Full basement hat and knot- ty pine bedroom storage dotett gat 1100 furnace and water heater square feet of good living space Double garage with full cement drive See anytime at Only 2186 Lincoln Avenue $10000 PLANTS Perennial and Annual Panslas - 25 Variatias Petunias Salvia - Marigolds - Snaps Bogonias - Dahlias - Others Pappars - Egg Plant - Tomatoes Phone 2-50- 14 SHAW'S GREENHOUSE North Ogden OPEN day is Memorial Day when you’re old It is middle-age- d people — or those of any age freshly struck with grief —who are most likely to be affected deeply by Memorial Day who can be hurt or helped by it They have the dead of three generations to re- this way do they truly live again as the people they really were full-stature- j ht j i self-perpetrat- ed Residential and A I FREE Double Eggs ESTIMATES k ROOF CO "HOME-OWNE- 3030 Wash Blvd Hopes Raised For Averting Auto Strike LOS ANGELES (UP)— The ld Western trucking strike (UP) — A softening of demands by both Ford Motor Co and the CIO United Auto Workers raised hopes today that some way still might be found to avert crippling strikes in the automobile industry this year The union watered down Its guaranteed annual wage demands considerably in a bargaining talk yesterday while Ford eliminated one of the provisions it had included in its e to set up severance pay for workers permanently laid off The two actions were the first signs yet in nearly two months of negotiations that the two sides were starting to explore “the middle ground” between the union’s and the company positions DETROIT today idled the big Chrysler Corp assembly plant putting 4800 employes out of work Dan Ringis plant manager said employes were instructed not to report for work until the strike had ended Ringis said 2000 new cars jammed all storage space with no trucks available to haul them to dealers It was the second auto plant idled The Studebaker-Packarassembly plant employing 650 was shut down for the same reason last W'eek Meanwhile Frank Brewster president of the Western Conference of AFL Teamsters said a new proposal by the California reached after Trucking Assn three days of negotiations last week will be submitted to a vote of union members tomorrow or Wednesday Brewster who said he was not recommending the proposal estimated results of the vote would not be known until Thursday at the earliest He indicated the stumbling block was the union demand for a pension clause which was not included in the d Ph 6862 e Talks Resume Today Negotiations resumed again today in an attempt to reach a settlement before Thursday when the union has said it will call 135000 Ford workers out on a strike if necessary to enforce its demands If a strike develops it would be the first 'crippling walkout in the industry since ! 1950 Visit WASHINGTON (UP)— Sen H Alexander Smith ranking publican member of the Senate Labor Committee thinks Congress will provide Salk vaccine shots free to all children That would mean ditching President Eisenhower’s request for 28 million dollars to provide free vaccine shots only for the children j unable to pay for them Asked on a television program forts to win committee approval yesterday (NBC’s “Meet the of his bill when the necessary Press”) whether children might majority failed to appear Only die of polio before they could be one Republican attended each given a “means test” to see if they could afford to pay for the meeting shots Smith replied: Hill has called another meet“W’e’re not going to have a ing tomorrow Although Smith inmeans test We’re going to give it to every' child of the age pre dicated he favors free shots to all scribed We’re not going to deter - children he did not imply that mine whether they can pay or Republicans favor the Hill meas not All children probably will ure get it free before we get through with it” ) chair- Delayed Check Sen Lister Hill man of the Senate Labor CommitMEAD Neb (UP) --r The tee has introduced a bill to set up standby controls and to give payroll department of the Nebrasthe vaccine free to all children ka Ordnance Plant was somewhat Hill failed twice last week in ef- puzzled when it received a canceled payroll check one year after it was issued Joan Winship said she didn’t remember not having cashed the check until j she found it at home a year after she received it Re-!"°u-ld SMITH ELECTRICS ' j j I CLOSEOUT i SALE A T 366 24th St 5 Biggest Bargains Ever Mich of-f- GLENVIL Neb (UP) — Mrs Kenneth Motley has a hen that works overtime In a three-weeperiod the hen laid two eggs measuring eight inches in circumference Each of the king-size- d eggs contained another comegg plete normal-sizlatest CTA offer NO DOWN PAYMENT 3 YEARS TO PAY I INTERMOUNTAIN SUNDAYS AND EVENINGS Strike Idles Chrysler's L A Plant d Don’t Hold Them Alone No one owned them alone when they were alive and no one should try to hold them alone in his memory now they’re gone We do the dead a disservice if member — parents friends broth- we individually seek to keep ers and sisters and perhaps lost them as merely part of our own children of their own mental real estate the pale pris But Memorial Day is hard on oners of a single mind This anyone who remains half-taugshows not that we love them but by anguish unreconciled to death j that we are still trying selfishly and clings stubbornly and alone to possess them even beyond to the memory of one he mourns the grave For him Memorial Day holds no Would the dead be cheered by pleasure only the misery of a this attitude? Do they want to torture be recalled in sorrow and alone? All Memorial Day observances The best way to remember our should be family neighbor or dead on Memorial Day is around community gatherings The mem- the kindling bonfire of many ories of all who knew the loved memories shared with as many dead should be shared Only in friends as possible ‘‘Do you remember when he — “Oh sure and how about that time he — ” Then indeed does our vanished one rise and walk among us glad as he once was and alive as we are now Commercial MONDAY EVENING MAY 30 1955 R The union softened its guaranteed annual wage demand by cutting down the size of the payments it wants for workers when they are laid off The union has been seeking a payment that be the same size as a Af’vesUrdai Session the' ISon agreed it would consider a pay- ment giving a worker 80 per cent of his normal pay before taxes high enough A union spokesman said this would mean the average worker would receive 115 per cent less than normal take home pay when he was laid off Provision Eliminated The severance pay was one of the features of a company offer presented Thursday to the onion As originally proposed a worker permanently laid off would have ' !lad t0 Sxe pension rights if he accepted severance pay The company eliminated this (D-Ala- provision yesterday-company spokesman said Ford had intended such a provision in the first place and had acted yesterday to clear up any misunderstanding VjjU 'll' emu Mv ir - mass©Czi'assailsu SSiqgrsr -- enjoy outdoor picnics at home BANISH the tiresome ordeal of walking and waiting in line to pay your bills Open a checking account with First Security Bank Then all you do does the rest is time-wastin- g You Save 807 Now at Sears on Redwood yrite and mail the checks The postmah rECMY - © - D2iroi§) b First Security Bank does the bookkeeping for you Your can- celled checks are legal receipts proving payment of bills easier Powerful suction cleaning! Turns ’round on base — lets d merry-go-roun- you dean in all directions Telescopic tubes lock at desired y length Cord winds up on cord reel Hands never 7AS Was $9995 NOW ONLY whirl-a-wa- touch dirt — famous FIRST SECURITY OFFERS YOU A CHECKING ACCOUNT Bag Toss-Away- This 3-Pie- ce Soft (o) (o) 6 feet long (o)(o) Regular 3295 2J0 DOWN bolts and rivets Extremely attractive and durable Table and two benches Seats 10 persons Set is oil dipped and air dried to prevent cracking and splitting Save now at Searsl Knotty rustic redwood with rigid base braces zinc-plate- d ® CofflfltM wHi Attack tailored to your individual needs It costs you nothing extra Come in — Xtj us give you complete details you cam si SURE w if it's Wfcstingjhouse '‘W t in Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 24th at Itfesel k Sling Chair New Steel Chairs Made of Hardwood Drain Feature In Seat Regular first Security Bank of Idaho National Association First Security Bank of Utah National Association First Security Bank of Rock Springs Wyoming X Phone 6646 Adkvi 398 198 Adjwttt entity ta throe petition! Gay striped cover of durable cotton drill Buy Mvoral at tbit low price Sturdy tbool mote! teat and bock curved to Fit your body Enomolod white tubing fra mo Throe color ccnnc esjfoa s&Kty 6zc£m 4:95 Only wLTIHJ 2231 Wash Blvd Dial 3-53- 31 |