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Show ,' .... , - ..,, ... E , I. 4 r-- I s ril L ,. "n -- II - - . , f: .' . , , -' . O 1: ,illi S: itt.lk 4 - stand for the constitution of the United States with its three ,deporizments of government es therein set forth, each one fully independent rizytt ovedield We . - ihnerot ' 1 Spotlight on Spies -- -- ,e Tina Salt Lake City, Utah News ,S6urday, , I - To. 'SAS istfprit.tteLay,"17-z-;,,,- r; j April 16, 1949 i "THIS I la the story the United States. IS such a thing as There ! system in our country.... N. I Party )tember there are 10 others- , Willi tvit . and able to do the Party's work.-"is meansthat at a time of naponal crisis, spy , bUtWhat States, NN3 I I 1 I I ... . , , 7 ' ' or if . , . II, "31 - : r, I I I thetervice ' , , it I i ll O , , N Henry Stringhom ' The Doctors Come illness-anddeat- e h t , : Nopoleonism 'Unification of the armed fore- es to which the former secretary el defense, James Forrestal , from his bower was presidency Of Columbia Uni- vertity to -preside over the joint chiefs o; staff. But the law whirl brought this body into being gives to each chief of staff precisely the authority which makes the scheme un- workable. In despair. General - Eisen- ed .. .. , ' , - Dangerous Solution .,, Frank Pace Jr., director of the budget, which clears lees.. lotion for the president, has a ablution which is as dangerous as anything ever projected' in . this country. He proposes the appointment by the 'president of the chairman of the joint . chiefs of staff, who shall take precedence over all other oof- Deers of the armed services. In addition, he shall act as the principal 'military advisor to the president and the secretary et ,defense and shall perform .,,,, ' , ' SOKOLSKY .. ' , ES all of the beads Of the threi of enactment to one through whom Information. advice and 4nilltary services who, in turn, would be responsible to carry data are channeled to the secout their advice. retary of defense and the presi"As contemplated in the dent. This proposal has all the amendment, the 'principal mill-thr- ee characteristics of incipient Natry adviser' would bear no responsibility for carrying out poleonism. own advice. If his advice Ferdinand Eberstadt, who his proves wrong and results in prepared the task force report disaster, he can point the fin- on defense for the Hoover comget of responsibility at the mission, faced this issue equarethree services and charge them ly in testifying before a conwith deficiencies of execution. gressional committee. He said: newein turn, In case of failure, ' can lay the blame on the chair- Tremendous Power . man's advice. Military history e a few of the witnesset in full of disasters resulting .. bmire our committee recomfrom such division of respon- mended the Prussian type of sibility" military organization with the The Hoover commission had conventional chief of staff sup- - in Itp report insisted upon control over the armed ported by a general staff, ,, "I need not discuss the sit- - forces. It said: nitiClinCe of the highest senior- Civilian Control ity in the military establish- ment. We all know what that "Throughout its history, the means and what overwhelm- - United States has been fearful . log influences it tarries with it. of military cliques and has thrown up safeguards against The relationship of 'principal military adviser' to our civilian this threat to democratic gov4 commander-in-chi- ef and to his eminent. Under the ConstituPrincipal civilian deputy in tion, we have subordinated the national security matters, the military to civilian control by . secretary of defense, is a fur- - making the president coinmender In chief of the armed ther tremendous power. "I venture 'the opinion that forces, and by installing civil. the :president and the secre- - ' Ian secretaries to - direct the departments..." tary 'would be very hesitant Here is the essence of the about overruling this man's ad- - devoted himself so amiduousli failed. The failure was due to c$use$ 1. An inadequate on the law; 2. of branchel part of the three 3. Unwillingness the services; of the president to enforce co- - a BY'GEORGE - - dent and the secretary of den ' tense mar direct. In simple language, he makes the chairman of the joint chiefs e! staff, an unelected official, a officers the strongest nun in the country. lie reduces authority of the secretary et defense. He gives the power - -- ...., -. ' -- 0 - . time the did so they would not only be taking huge re. sponsibilitysin a field in which they were not expert, but they would impair his position and ', prestige. This would not be the sage if the- president's nr the , secretary's decisions were for- titled by the advice of some or - and Army. control of the Certainly the evidence is that the "chief of staff' armies have not done so well in history. Look at Germany, Japan. risme& And compare them with the United States and great Britain, which have re-t- he tined civilian control. (CoPYTISht tri Mg PosturtS Bradlostal t - ,.,, . dph1 t .. , rxiSIIV't r- ' A,-"- '' - - : ". - vrt-N,- , ri 4 , I i . i . r..7 -- , r . e i , ----- -. --,,---- ' - -- , ..,, . 0 -- ,...1,;,,, , , i -' - 4- . - Tunny that intelligent women should even consider such an action. They're so sharp on some things and so utterly dull on others. A wealthy widow not so long ago was persuaded by her gentleman friend to draw $5000 from her bank and put it in a shoe box with $5000 of his, as good faith of intention to go into bu$- ness together. He then wrapped the box in paper, sealed it with tape and asked her to keep it until he returned from a trip to make the business arrangements. ' CD 7 vk ,... 1;74 tear? 4 ------. ..., -- 4,,,,,.-- . 11 able cuh,..to ,someone of whom she is particularly fond, or should she dispose of her property by wi1, properly drawn up by a lawyer. Unless the good woman is thinking about giving the stuff to me, I'd say she should hold onto it as long ai she lives. One of the most foolish things foolish old women do, is to give up control of their property to friends, relatives and (believe it or not) to supposed lovers. Such a decision in variably 'results in loss of Independence and an unhappy. thwarted old age, loaded heavily with remorse and regret. Remember old King --- -- . 7 2 .. ... eim,Z,-- - - I , 4, . -. ,..:.- .,0,-- . k, Si' dm , . ,, - '- r , - 0li,V-i- i -- s, t 4 vicl , , t , n,0 ' - - 1)-e- lt ,, Ne' rip - . 117Tir-- u LI , - - 0-- , -- , ..- -- .......:, ; Am....ft ,...- .- THE woman waited and waited and then becoming sus. 4411' picious, she opened the -- box - eoi l-' to find it stuffed with old only newspaper. "There was some. thing about that fellow I Atis Itit. .. was her only explanaliked," .tion. In other words she had been bargain hunting, an overwhelming urge with women. Spcaking of bargains, an MERRYLE S. RUKEYSER Y enterprising retailer recently put a sign in his window If Frank Pace, Jr.,new fed- - conterns whfch had nothing to dents concept-o- f venal budgoffering every woman who bide. For simplification is Ilk. etary policy. eral director of the budget, 'pent a dollar in his store event so the But in the curtains window that the raising can get approval of his conon a certain day, a brand can see and unoutsiders that not does with agree Congress new $1 bill for 89 cents. That cept to prepare in simple lan- - derstand what is going on. the fiscal policy, and if it very day his business took a federal budg- , guage layman's wishes to cut overall expend!. Dollars ind Ratios a drop. The women folks monument should tures X be of billions a, dollars, et, by were so sure there was a The on statism of the impact It must to so along .primitive erected in his honor in the na- - American catch in it, they hesitated to -. mesacannot be scene and unscientific lines. tion's capital. take a chance and stayed in big numbers (dollars) ) ured The effect of such a project Law Change Needed away In droves. takexpenditures, representing to explain in simple arithmetic These were the um metic. themselves. What is more n,by should change the here the federal evenueT. ulous mesdames who sniff the is that since1910 the . Congress 4 revealing to come from, and how they are give It the right ratio of the federal expend!-spe- nt legal setup apples, pinch the grapefruit, to return an executive budget maul over all the potatoes, and why, could be electric to total national Income tures 71ai to the director of the budget, taste the ham baloney and on public opinion. 1,1-risen from Vs per cent to to- bring et the- - euteen4LePeter--- 20 back'feet tniliry goods. They s and bear toward squandermania is a expenditures were added and an alternate budget coming simply adore bargains! within the assumedly lower , direct result of the complex- - if duplications- - in the national Wes and technicalities of the income are omitted, it now ap- : ceiling for total expenditures TODAY'S HEALTH HINT: official budget, whose meaning 'feelpears that government is talc.... set by the Congress. It should To avoid that run-donot be necessary for an econ- hits not been. grasped by the ing one third of the total earn-ma- n go CCCCross Crossings ing, to on the street. Congress subject ings of the people. Two decades itself to logrolling and detailed .Carefully! e e e Unless intellectual tools are ago it took only One sixth. application of the fiscal policy provided for simplifying the In the last decade, budgetary Give some men a little au- -which it has set great complexities of modern on a basis changes per capita If the director of the budget the have been spectacular. Outlays government, the boss voteris going to be hard put per citizen for national defense became an independent officer, to perform his task of super- - rose from $8 in 1939 to $98; subject to call by the Congress I of the public servants. ternational expenditures from for such work, the proposed After Taxes 15 cents to $46; veteran pay- - setup could contribute notably 11 Streamlined Reports . to improvement of federal ad. ments from $4 to $38; and business firms most than fifteen years ago terest from Crto $37; and gen- - ministration and to the Imp's- m hove records to store-an- d this colultin pioneered In urg- $49 per government-fromenling of economy. Modern often no conveniing the corporation to citizen to $88. . (ac41 by intarbauonat NOWS illTiC1) streamline and simplify its dolPartial offsets ent place to store Mostly About Food accounting and its reports to lar figures should be set up h And that's m. t stockholders. to allow for inflation, on the Egypt expects a bumper Such advice was formulated of the Redwhere one one hand, and a rise of 14,000- ,- 1948-4- 9 rice crop to help solve to adjust private enterprise to 000 in population, on the other. Hi food problem man services comes In. the changing economic and so- In view of the magnitude of They are always both there has federal expenditures, it seems dal climate.-Alreadtime frees, some over SOO been marked improvement In to me that the legal setup for years old, in the famous avesafe and accessible in streamlining and dramatizing the director of the budget is nue of Trinity College in Cama modern Redman corporate data, and the next already obsolete. bridge, England, are to be repository. As now constituted, the placed by young trees. step should be to merchandise II securities to working- - rector of the budget is an aide By official decree, Egypt has men and farmers, who in the to the president. fixed the percentage of profits in a of This leaves gap light aggregate receive such a huge for manufacturers, dealers and e. slice of the pie of national in- - the responsibWty of the importers of certain foodstuffs. gress to control the purseIn recommending the short strings. Th. report that "tons of On the executive side, the form of simplified accounting sugar are wasted annually in I to private executives, this writdirector systematically relates the bottom of cups" should as er conceded that the technique the various departmental cause a stir, a commentator in suitable only for decent quests for funds to the presid. Johannesburg, South Africa, -- Van & Storage Co. remarks. cre71"4' ' MO - ,,,,,,,a ,st .. " ,,,. , ' ,, --B- omy-mind- ed - Pkt virry . P1111C - iv ED REED , . L. A! No! - He's not a bad guy, And nicer than such Blustering rowdies as Hail, Sleet and Snow Except when he happens To pluve too much! Rod Maclean. - ' - , BPI NO GENIUS BABIES do, T SAYS her in th,:s paper that Dr. Lewis M. Terman, psychologist of Stanford University, Wants society to take better care of its geniuses, tspecially those who display ex- -in intelligence traordmary - 4 childhood. The good professor has been - "S1 studying child prodigies for many years. His 1450 subjects tested in their early youth, scored intelligence ratings of between 135 to 200. The average for .youngsters their age is 100. He found that at the age of 35 these bright people were healthier, were earning, more money, generally free from enslaving habits like tobacco and liquor and rated higher in the professions, especially in the military service. But in one thing they lagged far behind. These brilliant folk were parents of only 1500 children. scarcely more than one per family. The only answer to that is that these highly -- intelligent people are not doing much to pass along their gifts to posterity. , , ' The assists now elaint they Invented television. Keep tuned folks, maybe they'll tell us how we ca'n get better reception. Quote and Unquote: "Search thy own hea;t; what painoth thee in other in thyself may be.".1. G. Whittier. Baering Down on News By Arthur "Bugs" Baer t Let in buzz you some details about the nations on the wrong side of the Atlantic. After the last war Europe paid eft by Inflating currency. After this war Europe is paying off by inflating diploma. I know Tm a crackpot. But it takes one to know one. And get a t my chipped china. aftofI What I'm trying to tell you iI we are being all along the line.. There hasn't been a time in the last Div- enteen years that we havn't given two tens, for a five. , ed I, Paste this on your windshield. And I don't mean en She outside during the rain season. , PAINT 'SALE Give your hamo "that New Look" et iow cost with "Nitre. '01" Outside White. Made by ono Of America's loading point - factories, "Nitrosol" Is a high grade Titanium point with good covering eapecity; use it on wood, brick Of stone, for inside or outside work, it dries to en namel-lik- e finisin A good bey Rabin us to Nor 300 gel. Ions at a special price. 3 fn li.. GALLON INS. Fn iing GALLON - IN 27 re-w- OFF THE RECORD , - Jiipiter' Nil WV's ity Check ever ell your mods In paints, brushes, ets., end shop hero on your way homeno perking problem, and you son end tent our sondes without lugging them a block. While bore look ever the Color Cora on the mow Mired' finish for lath-rooand kitchens: It's "KIEM GLON for wells end soot evem end dries to a lustrous finishlooks and washes like baked enamel. 2.3 9 Qt.. rs wood-worko- ne , 11 ' ,d, 7 i f I ' 41i'l i ,- - l I' I , , 711f ' ,' t i: I' ir l' i A ,, ii'25 l '', Ii Mrdr tiLerf t , i . ,.... , ! , u fl il:,,..'',,vt ,' ' I .' i I '11 Atill 'yak I .1 Er) Zer2) "Well, " i 11 Ar -- "1-1 so. , , 11 I 04 , - III , , . N., CLOSE-OU- I ''' r Zion's . ., ' , . -- - ' s - ' -- Mit stock to provide more implies, so spools for buildiol ' devro so tite prises! of close-o- ut rs "ClemiOn" De Like 33.95 0:coUnspoNunlA slirenttai 16 In I- -, I I It - LIU RUNE ' - t enefiilding Soole!y, LI:LDES A SAVINGS Ilr 2.0,kiti ASSOCIATION 1I 2 West on 1st South St., Salt Lake City , 38 Vint ' i 91 polonc 1, cv t . b 1r gra c -: , , , 51:7;LY C2 So. 8alt tika a'rs4:2 OCtiAll , , 10 - 21.75.15.85 ' nnually ' ' 24 95 , - ' . - T "American" , , - We wont to - ' h YR r .er mo.rit. ,- ' sot Ill, didn't expect you talks in this weather: . . - I $1 - i , draw your money If you need It Start, on account , ' Ilium 6 ii LAWN-MOWER- S and every dollar you soya earns at 3 where there Is no limitation on size of deposit or total amiuntsaved.' And rememberyou can always' with. - 11 41I 79$ will titwhere --- todoywith il- -t 1 6111 wellwe SUE! help you carry 'out I savings program that will one &ay mak posseuion it roalization. Thrift money grows fast at lion's Ben. - II li , (111i1111fr:I'''Er 11 FOR . , You havo the Isdreamef and 1, 1 ,, 1,C;414110.1"144tkobv4,4110 Pl. i , 1 .1 r 1 1101.1E , I ,',' .; ' ' DIEM A fi ' . - thia , 1L,r.--11- '1 'lit ,, . lit , , 1 rmi '1yc.',' I , '''' , ' - , ' 1 , d . i 11 ill1 - f 1 - i 114ll pq Ilikt 11111114r 44111111:'171 111LAPtA aii I r 1I Afftl it, 1 I Bpi"' Ar!'I NAJ,,,,,,4 7(7117 f' IR - I isTIr , 7,9zi,-1- viiii-priit,,,,,,,,,a,,- , I B...4w...a.1 f ' , o , I ' Jt 11 '1'1I I I II. Iii . . ;y11,. ("thzy''11 7 f l. 1 -- .. ...,Qu.nrrs! with. .. Con-com- zr, RAW! LET in-M- y v , - Interpreting Squancfermania I thority and Immediately they began to grow or lust swell up. oft-tim- es ' , 1 ....-- ; 4--- ,,,,...--;...,......--- --- ----- tut , 1 , lf.,c,f 4' IV VI tt-n- ri , - It.4--..-.,. - , - ...........---- ,,,;,.1 s ,Is - - '444,7"r4 "V - ewe,- - 4 k,, ' .. ---, , s- ! I 1 a - :et ' --------- il - ,.-- ,, 1.. 1 q, OA )11z. i ' Ill 1.,,' s , , , I lay-out- - ' - . I- , ' i 117",;;;;Tiri ..100 , . , ') - t-- I r,,Mt -- .11 - P415.'N . ' t- - ', rifirVL'L . - ...... N - - r , -i - - -- 74-1-, - p Z.., , rt. - "' A40 - - lone- less and, obviously some, wonders if she is 3ti5tifled in giving away ,her - 1 - - , ' -- ' - - - Vat I 421re:1' ra,06, I De,A. - ....0". A AtsA Lei1(Goates By REMEMBER KING LEAR? A N elderly wiaow, child- - - - e vitt- A ...-"'- , I " , - N Noo-,-,;0,- Les Go I leislônirlridlUZIIng-:-'entilider--r- - "A .1:1 -, L Nok ' 0 I , - 40 ' -- . e , - A I 1117 'b , - k- r,, IFIte6' 1 , ' 4P 'w . ' , . A - g K 1 . . fL,1 ' 1 I All .7: b ..16 g Z... 1 xrv-aN;ef 1 1 I I , "The inforniatiOn we are setting before you ,the United States would have nearly 825,000 :Is.based on testimony by witnesses, some persons ,who are either spies, traitors, or saW of them former spies for the Soviet Union In oteurs working against us from within. "Can the United States. our country," the committee queries, "afford 2 . "It Is the right and duty of every,Amrican . this?" facts." to know these Soviet agents want to know everything ., about the United States, but chiefly the produSuch are among the Introductory sttements Ac- ction-secrets of the-- atom bomb. Some of of the House Conunittee on tivities in its latest release entitled "Spsitlight- , 'these theyhave already trained, "but just how I On Spies." Then follows, intustomary clues- - ( much of the entire formula of the bomb is I tion and answer form, an,antazing accountof, , unknown." Their chief concern at this time I Communist spyingintrigue and treachery in , is in those, plants and facilities important 0 from a war angle. In addition to atomic plants America that puts Meta Hari, , Captain Mid- And this these shame. include: aviation companies, submarine to spyand moviet the .night, companies, munitions works, transportation, ing is NOW goingon. steel firms:maritime industries, chemical and.is a person employed that' a They institutions, communications, , by or in and oil and mining industries, either withor without pay, to secure informa- tion considered vital to the waging of a shootFurtherthe,Russians have been permitted to buy "practically EVERY American patent ing or economic war against another country. Such German agents operated in this country dealing with industrial, chemical, and Millthese were tary inventions which, have been released- to during both world wars. Many of1922 the Rus- the public." These run into the hundreds of taught and convicted. And since thousands. By way of comparisonRussia has sian government, seeking to pave the way forrefused to give. gut a single one of her patents has had a maze of inter- . a eviet America, here. since 1927. . lot,.hing spy rings that the war, at our Invitation, Russians committee reports the During Specifically, visited our country and its defense industries. "former ringleaders have confessed there are x, They have since published a book showing thousands of Russian agents, as.well its many with pictures, words, and maps, the location MOTS thousands of Americans, who are selling s and of our nation's large power dams us down the river. In fact, we are the NUMand power plants, aircraft and auto factories, BER ONE target of Russia's spy effort" plants dealing with metals, bridges,' railroads, Along this same line, FBI head J. Edgar and important communications. - Hoover has said that "The Communist Party ' What a marvelous handbook this must blo of the United States is a fifth column if there for prospective bombing and sabotage! ever was one." He also said there are 74,000 . . Communist Party members in the United - Communists have been coddled, acclaimed. and humored entirely too long in this court-try. It is time we exposed and clamped down , on their activities.! Tougher penalties are needed for relaying secret information for Russia or anyone else. Laws which would end son of a pioneer ha, ANOTHER pioneer 'and creditable a long help stamp out the present spy network are earthly needed. career. , Henry Stringham died last WednesWe can't take chances in an atomic age. 84. of the at age day four some Lake years Born in Salt City before the coming of the railroad, Henry Stringham was the son of Briant Stringham, , a member of the original Mormon pioneer from all over Utah gained valu- D ocroRs company that had first entered Salt Lake Valable instruction spending bus fields of medicinefrom specialists in vettley some 18 years previously. After this week during the related and pure in ranching his early youth annual of American Academy convention the Academy suits, he attended Brigham Young of General Practice of Utah. at Provo, where he was educated for the General practitioners throughout the state, business career that occupied his later life. especially in isolated rural areas, are called commercial interests Henry Stringham's on for exacting medical treatment in ex were largely bound up with Utah, and mostly cess of their original medical fa; schooling. texand Utah clothing with with supplying Medicine is one of the fastest changing fields tiles. .Except for some Davis County in'ter- - of science, and new trends and discoveries ests in home enterprises such as canning are announced almost daily. and building, he specialized in the dry goods one way for doctors to keep abreast of the business as salesman, wholesaler, jobbing newest in medicine would be to take lengthy so- often to schools. and univeragent, and manufacturer. Ills early training every trips In both wholesale and retail fields qualified sities where discoveries are explained. Obhim to act as manufacturer's agent for a viously, communities cannot do without their this holding house butafter large eastern to the field position for 17 years, he returned Since many doctors cannot leave their pracor home manufacturing in 1924, when he and . tices for instruction, they have to gain it his sons bought an interest in the Utah Woolotherwise. The two means they use,are suben Mills., sctibing to books and magazines Which exMr. Stringham had bad earlier manufacturplain new trends and also attendance at medof the Knight can take advantical conventions where ing experience as manager finished the last age of lectures by somethey of the foremost men Woolen Mills at Provo, and ' in their field. 21 years of his life as president of the Utah For the experts that leave their schools Woolen Mills.' and practices to speak at medical seminaries Mr. Stringham never lost touch with the and conventions we give our heartfelt thanks. school and church interests of his youth. Utah has a reputation for being a healthy He was a member of the BYI.1 emeritus club, state on the basis of comparative a long-timSunday School worker in Libertya tables of its citizens. Doctors have long Stake, and bishop of Liberty Ward for since learned it is just as important to keep period of seven years. a persort well as to minister to him whtn The Deseret News joins a host of Henry extendin he is Ill. Conventions, such as this one by associates and Iriends Stringham's with the American Academy of General Practice ing sympathy to his bereaved family, the comforting awareness, however4 that the - of Utah, help a physician keep abreast of his job. Thanks again to those who participate. long life just ended has been well lived. ' , I a Soviet . ,11,1 .a me . itio- M. IF, Itt, '''j is important is the claim Of the CoMmunists themselves that. for every - of Communist spying IA - I - I I J: tra 44. , . If tiVil iN , , ..,. YOU CAN'T GET AWAY FROM THEM . t , , . ... .. i . 22..77 ,, 4 I |