Show THE OGDEN (UTAH) g’tauimrli-t'cnmim- (igiisit I JOSBPh 'r - VfSDNESDAY STANDARD-EXAMINE- R Calamity Howlers We Have With Us Always AIs°p Drew Pearson m M'K'em TheYll tNGtssr Weak Links OP NCfTHlKO1 1 H£-C2&- ' COUM7&Y Grow Weaker Thanks to the encouragement coming from the National Association of Soil Conservation Districts many churches TOKYO — The dull old saw throughout our land will observe Soil Stewardship Sunday on May 15 This will be an occasion upon which men will that a chain is no stronger thanits weakest link is rapidly beto to of cherish remind themselves their obligation pause coming a pungent criticism of American policy in Asia and care for the soil On the one Announcement o: Soil Stewardship Sunday recalls the hand the so called “island wisdom of Dr Walter C Lowdermilk and his development chain strategy” of what has been called an eleventh commandment has been the real I of Dr Lowclermilk jas associate chief of the Soil Conserjustification Asian our policy vation Service was sent in 1939 by the United States Gov from the moment element to learn if possible why the large populations and when President de- Eisenhower flourishing cities of Biblical times had vanished cided to allow The scientist concluded aftir he and his staff had the Chinese Comh munists a made long investigations that thi waste and desolation he cealed in victory encountered kvas a result of mans failure to be a good Korea Alsop steward of God’s giftrtXf productive land For two years our policy makbroadcast Dr in Jerusalem to a have gone on the rule that ers radio make Invited ’ Lowdermilk wondered if Moses hid he viewed the soil de- - they could safely dodge any issue position in "50 YongTs “the struction wofild have written a nevir commandment like one from the Aleutians through Japan and Dr Lowdermilk phrased as follows! “Thou sjialt inherit the Holy fiarth as a faithful stew- “vS°mlyanhddhe In d AlPiM TzilHou latf GSAUPFAIHSES VouTH AMt OIL NtfAdOW -- t ‘ ‘ : ISeaB'iL B5- - $5® jaTTcw evewwrtSRB 1 4 11 con-Josep- Ihat ccnTeavok'iS Just Tue £7Pfry cm see $2 -- 1 SufirtATrtft Suburban KtLLtKd - A& raiwws-i4m- p - eJSaYoNB'LL Of! 5“ lo Vou fOAHK mV jobs vucaps I aid conserving its resources and productivity from genera- - WitH UrtaVttT'i thy herds tiat thy descendants mayyhave abundance for- ever If anyj shall fail in this stewardship of the land thy land chain have been more and in both visibly weakened fields shall become sterile L stony ground and wast- - moreoffensive fruitful 1 and defensive as- its u lhg gullies and thy descendants shall decrease and: live in pects the island chain strategy is in fact ceasing to be a valid pDverty or perish from off the face of tpearth” Thousands of members of Soil Conservation Districts glow including miny hundreds in Utah obey the conservation The pfocess is slow because it precepts in Dr Lowaermilk’s commandment and they urge works! indirectly But it is none tjieif neighbors to do likewise asking tlUt “blessed of the tight-lippe- British Labor Party Gains on Conservatives s mosa and South Korea If peac$ depends upon In' view of Communist China’s complete inability to supply a toes we mu1st acknowledge serious war on two fronts this diffi- - js a will be most disarmament difficult to obtain because g00d theory But in prac- i tice Union to Soviet although the divisions of cult achieve The United States and tie — successfully JS'TSnM’tiiiSSE can taxpayer a lot of money the ! j 1 Electrification of Farms k i£ 7 ioSs Th of all have to make up their minds’ a relieved aof group that may decide the elecany worries about this two-fro- President Eisenhower old the women that Harold Sjtassen was a sort of secretarjy of peace mentioning Stassen 'in connection with iis reference to disarmament Was this a way of suetinghe expecis Stassen to tome forth with a program fori peace Jthat will work? wdk surely the biggest given to tlfe versa- “ tile Stassen jand doubtless far too big for any one mind to deliver until the world is in a far better mood than it is at present nlhe' Conservative Party cut lead and the two parties are run- race in ning a terms of the popular vote as the Eritish election campaign enters the final lap Earlier surveys showed the Conservatives leading Labor by several points Today’s figures show that this lead has been virtually wiped out fif Excluding some neck-and-nec- a jefore the auspices “happy” enough to provide a limate” in which disarmament terms cap be worked out bdnprogreSivdy ’J The survey also asked voters the Jollowink question: ul S leAt wn ' 55 19 26 Here are the six nrincinal reasons given by those who think the conservatives will win: 1 2 sions 3 Building of homes Increasing in old-ag- e k Government has done well 4 Abolishing of 5 Work for everyone 6 Labor Party split because of food-rationin- g Bevan And here 'are the principal reasons given by those who think Labor will win: 1 Looks after poor people un-wh- $ y Peter Edson Kfto But Will Reds Keep Promises? - r U M i mi O Cm4 0 § told a kid to go to tne devil and the teacher sent me- - to i 4 Qjy QUft WAY By J R Williams English Lesson back-dow- chS - ’ relate recite recount describe tell P WORD STUDY “Use a wod it isyoursT LetusTncrease vocabulary by mastering word each day Today’s word: o IMPELUNG (adjective) driving or urging forward “A sense of duty was the impelling force that on-the-sp- ot I iAA h i Japanese are not overtly on side "hen Japan’s F1! Jn?"?y’s The people of 'Georgia white an4 co orprl are Hpfpr- - industrial 0 potential is fully avail- iminea to pfeserve segregation in tne SCnooIs — Gov Herman able to the Communists when the island chain has and been Talmadge broken for good and all by Ja- pan’s neutralism If they try to fire him (Arthur Godfrey) I’ll try to sign Such are the developments that now loom ahead in the short and him up tdo — Ed Sullivan long run in the Far East V ’Cl 10 Years Ago 20 Years Ago demonstration in “Ogden is well located It is dovvntownspecial windows and a stof® the catewav citv to the geology m the Ogden Taber- Pr0Srani of Utah It is the hub of the In- - nacle the Beehive Girls of the : termountain territory Geologic- - LDS Weber North l eber Ogden ally Ogden is sitting on top” a?d 21st anniversary said Georee H Hansen head of celehrating the of Beehlve work °f the founding the BYU geology department in Endorsement of the public safe- his talk at lhe RoUry club- ty campaign started by the We-Engineers and representatives ber County Safety Council was of the National Board of Fire given by Police Chief Rial C and Moore who called attention to Ffren'd the number of automobile acci- me cuaru ul of the Pacific were pleased with dents injuries and fatalities of the l progress ’made in moderniz- - the past year as shown by police 0gden City Fire Depart- - records mint Peter Gropdel William Reedf Lawrence Collins and Cas- per Van DeGraff employes of the Continental Baking Co who tallied 13 years of continuous driving without a chargeable ac- cident were presented awards by the National Safety Council Oft & l 50 Years Ago Weber County was being con- as the site for the new Cetrai Horticultural Station it was said A omnr of onnntv and J5JLrcsf!?Lyei’PT-1?5site near the County d as an ideal location Kai-she- k £fcd te ur lnnd- P°i"'Reoect for (undamcnta hu man ftes7cl nghts and for the 'purposes Ogden A good number of rooters as- sembled at the bowling aUey to witness the second double-heade- r in the Commercial League series and in which the Shupe-William- s the Toggery teams suffered a whitewash at the hands of the and the Boyle 2 Respect for the sovereignty Dee-Stanfo- rd Sr - Ogden and Denver met shook hands with a real old Western grip patted each other on the back said to one another: “You’re a good fellow and anything we can do for you just let us know” when members of the Denver Business Men’s League visited in Railroad tonnage measured by cars handled in the Ogden yards continued to do a little better than hold its own last month Al- though the gain was not impres- sive it was important because it showed that the increases re- corded last year were being sus- Hardware aggregations tained n ft Bri-Narra- like the Yalta agreement If the Russian Communists had lived up to their Yalta promises Chiang might still head the Chi- nese mainland government And if the Red Chinese do not live up to their Bandung com- Rfrainin-on- e Hutments the communique is just ‘ another scran o paper Recognize Rights eECe 0£ any country Some of the idealism of the Once again—Korea Tibet and United Nations charter was writ- - Indochina ten into this communique It 8 Settlement of international - disputes by peaceful meansfreeon declarations incorporates dom economic in conformity with the U N and cultural development and the charterThe test of this will be on the recognition of basic human rights ' for the individual Formosa issue Communist China has never 9 Promotion of mutual interest such in the and recognized orinciples cooperation Taken literally that would past It is doubtful if it will do so now mean lowering of the Iron and It is In the Declaratioa of Bamboo Curtains which no one Promotion of World Peace’ and expects to happen Cooneration that the' greatest 10 Respect for justice and in- to Communist doctrines ternational cjjanenge obligations is foimd: This is In ‘the seventh No Communist country has in anj fjnai section of the Bandung the past ever shown such respect communique It is stated in 10 cither inside the UN or out - i Hawaii but that "seems to be only an excuse The real the American embLsyPherer-as reason for opposition prolb 3bly is that politicians in both bluntly warned Wash- parties are afraid statehood for Alaska and Hawaii could lnf!-°u- n bring about political condi ions that migljt upset poliUcal complete reversal ofaamance“but by the Japanese of a applecarts The politician want more time in which to neutraDst policy But it brace themselves against c ianges sma11 'consolation that thi1 $ - de-o- n newer Communist colonialism 4 Abstention from intervention or Interference in the internal affairs of another country Again look at the Red record in Korea and Indochina 5 Respect for the right of each nation to defend itself singly or collectively In conformity with the UJN charter This would seem to sanction collective defense arrangements like SEATO— the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization But this is limited in part by the next section 6 Abstention from the use of collective arrangements to serve thc interests of a big power or to exert pressure on another country Exerted Pressure If SEATO could be charged Wlth serving the interests of France a®d the United States it would be open to cen- s“r® hand the Rus- 5"“? other S a alliance certainly pressure against Ko-o- expected victory for the West 1 Electricity has assuredly increased the charm that long JfpaWUhr iTnot' ?o gLwtTllt ias been associated with country life in America Its chief progressive loss of defensive val- island chain enefit however is to enable fewer perions'on the farms and economically Ja- Militarily to provide increasingmimbers away from pan is the most essential of all the links in the island chain With the farms Blow tp Hawaii and Alaska ter part applies equally to ' the na-you- i” i this link gone Okinawa will be Formosa virtually untenable will be meaningless We shall be thrown back'-tthe position in the Pacific that we held at the When the American people have an opportunity to ex- - time of Pearl Harbor Yet no realistic observer of the as in polls they facts of the situation vote m favor of statehood for Hawaii and Alaska in Asia can now take Japan for to the national convention Of fS?i5d w'va) tlieA!nerican Delegates r the Republican 1 7 nd Democratic Parties do likewise They put statehood granted Japan’s economic forr the twq territories into the party decorations of inten- - p®ndenc? °n the United states the surviving Japanese belief that the United States wins in the But w ieh members of Congress con font the issue a end are the present mainstays Japa"ese'American alii the members votes against stal ehood or at least o£ majority ance Both both those mainstays must be expected to snap if presthey vote to delay action on the issue in Asia continue Yesterday the House vkted 218 to 170 to send back to entThetrends Japanese-Americaalliance committee a bill to admit both Hawaii md Alaska the cannot be expected to survive a Democratic as well as Re publican leaders in the House chain reaction of further Com- munist triumphs in Southeast r at this time Opposing passage Asia such as seems likely to be- V One lawmaker raised the issue of Communism in s°uth Viet J Nam ina 1956 fPLfti The first part of that may be aimed at the white nations and at the old colonial powers The lat- - This is now giving way to a soWORDS OFTEN MISUSED look The three words “hence” ber second seen now is It thence” and “whence” all in- that it will take I —v a clude the idea of “from” and it d is incorrect therefore to use the completely chang-e1 way of life word “from” with any of them awful lot and an OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED J f v of good deeds for Danseuse (woman ballet danc- the Chinese Com a as in munists to live er) Pronounce dan-su- z ah u as in fur accent second up to the pious resolutions they syllable Edson OFTEN MISSPELLED agreed to at Ban- - Peter Loathe observe the e Loath- dung In this respect the Bandung some no e following the th communiaue may be a good bit SYNONYMS n 20-yea- r) WASHINGTON — It may be weeks before Washington knows the real answers on what hap- pene(j aj e Bandung Indonesia conference of 29 Afro-Asla- n tiens Experts are now combing the record of speeches and the communique looking for holes First reaction was that this conference was a great and un- By W L GORDON tv V k so-calle- d tion the latest In Korea the enemy is mcreas popular vote fig- - ir Galiup ingly protected by American dis- - ures are: armament by his own fantastic “In the general election how working class 2 Looks after old people fortifications and by his own air do you intend to vote?” 3 Work for everyone 47 4 Fair shares for all Conservative or 5 47 Labor Housing program is now on the order of 6 6 Good record when in office Liberal other one in avor o£ the Com munists with the air backup outPopular Vote 100 ide Korea also balanced in their It must be remembered that favor Anyone who saw the Ko Conservatives to Win today’s survey figures apply only rean fighting knows that an atAn interesting sidelight is that to the popular vote not to seats tack on the deep tunneled Com- - apart from how they intend to in Parliament History shows rouHist entrenchments can not vote themselves the British pub- - that a close election in terms of for an instant lie is pretty much convinced that popular votes can sometimes re- while the enemy has air superi- - the Conservatives will win suit in a substantial majority of waTr- - Adams asked 1956 “At Stanford and Cornell” seats in Parliament for the winBill “Where did you live at Cor- Right-to-Worning party In Philadelphia where about nell?” the Labor Party Normally 50 labor leaders met with Knight Phi Delta At the Alpha lead in the bouse must have a two-poiat the Warwick Hotel Gov to vote win enough seats - Knight was noncommittal about popular Caliof thc governor GradualIy control parliament and select ornja to be more ac- - Nixon But he was emphatic in appeared the prime minister of his opposition to the Right-to-Th- e to the ceptable continis British Institute New Hampshire who now runs Work bill in California “If they manage to get the bill the White House Ying Jis sutys 0£ eiect10nf which w0 “How did you get such a big on the ballot under that deceptive takcs p'lace May 26 majority when you ran in Cali- - name” he promised “I will fornia?” Adams asked stump the stage against it” laHe referred to the fact that the of endorsement “I the got JOSEPHINE “right-to-Worbill 1j to on went tell and bor” Knight how the top labor leaders not actually aimed at preventing a only endorsed him but raised union shop The governor was also eramoney for his campaign He in- o dicated that other Republicans phatic in favoring increased SCHOOL and wanted to win might well employment compensation Principal modification o&i the California follow his example Jurisdictional Act which recog-g- o not however did Gov Knight into detail regarding his high- - nii phony unions He was also ly significant labor conferences for" rigorous enforcement of the Act in Washington If he had Adams’ Walsh-Healnt The results for all British vot- - Conservative Labor Don’t know XnV nt The news thatl all but 5 per cent of the nation’s farms onItn Formosa meanwhile the Ire connected witlj electric power lines J calls attention to new two China policy may leave ne the inost dl?matic revolutions thft has occurred in (he history lof agriculture Twenty years ago only 11 per continue to be counted in the of Staff’s paper ent of the Jfarms lad electric power Progress has seldom Toint chiefs (fonipc PVPD JlTiPI een!madeo rapidly Public and private power enterprises in the Formos“strait But after the demoralization such (nd the farmers deserve the congratulations that are being by ttfempt To' “f" the' government-spon-jstended tq markjthe end of a Nationalist divisions offensively $orea program to increase rural electrification It was jnteresting to read in the new$ from Washington of1 gamble m°St hare'brained kind hat the farm demand for electric power continues to grow Defensive Loss Worse One electric appliance leads to the purchase of another and This in brief is what has been - d -- American position in the Pacific One of the two reasons for the vast efforts of the second World War was to safeguard and strengthen the Pacific position The fruits of the great victory of ecretary of State Dulles and his fellow foreign 1945 are now the stakes upon the inisters were inviting the Soviet Union W join in a top a strategy of the island chain lfevel conference President Eisenhower W$s talking about is most immediately endangered on its offensive side In theory teace to a meeting of Republican women He said he as officially explained by Secre- Dulles thought the prospecls for permanent peaceUvere improved ' tary of state J?hn poster Asian on the enemy aggression but he felt here could be no teal peace without disarma- - continent is to be met with atwo pronged attack based on Forrtient ' harmoniously for a long time we feel L Ik - ill have to r O L - II ' 0 bland complacency they there was no dan-assumed have tion to generation Thou shalt safeguard thy fields from to this officially established r soil erosion thy living waters from drying up thy forests ger American defense line in the from desolation and1 protect thy hills from overgrazing by Pacific i X leaders in the capital then went to Philadelphia for a meeting with the labor leaders of Pennsylvania New Jersey and Deleware - Furthermore he wowed ’em ” Remarked Dick Grey head of t the Building and Construction £!end’ £Cvfent another might Trades Union: “Here’s a man that have had a fit could well run for President” Beck to Schnitxler While Grey has For Knight had dinner with supported Re'pub- - t secretary-treasure- r Bill Schnitxler licans in the past of the Federation American — though dead 2 of No man Labor to Presithe st Eisen- again dent also He George Meany how er — other ‘ McDevitt breakfasted with Jim lifelong Demo- head of the AFL Labor League cratic labor lead for Political Rights And he drove ers seemed high to Philadelphia in the car cf Jim iV ly impressed with J Suffridge secretary of the ReI th e Republican tail Clerks Finally he had an I governor of Calihour’s conference with Dave fornia Among L i XA £— Beck head of the Teamsters’ rew Pearson them was Joe Me- Union in the latter’s shiny new Comb of the Retail Clerks Local office 'in“ the' Team'tera-'lleam-136of Camden N J also di- - mg marble Taj Mahal built right 'under the nose of Congress rector of the combined AFL-CIThe Washington lunch with Political League for New Jersey was attended by about 20 we some have can’t Knight good “Why Republicans like this?” he re-- of the top AFL brass One question labor leaders marked And he fingered his rosary while having his picture were emphatic about was that taken with the governor hoping they would not have any part bf he said that it was not just a the Republican ticket if Nixon was on it either as president or dream vice president The one heart-bea- t White House Luncheon separating the vice president in tha vek’ fnv from the President they said was wHhCh chili1 too uncertain especially when the House is over 60 Adams looks President Sherman Adams was suprisingly Gov Knight dow n his nose at m°st people jcws on Nixon dur- jn who don’t come from New Eng- the Washington luncheon He ing me top Cli "? leaders share la- t° political ernor who is a great story teller or were a sort of Republican A1 Jol Nixon would not control a single son from California vote California in the delegation “Where did you study law?” at the Republican convention in TUT T£Nei2S H The BSSAt? ' - WASHINGTON —Gov Goodwin - Knight of California Republican once a darling of California big business did an interesting thing while in the East for the Governors Conference last week He spent his time in not kowtowing to the White House or to various senators or to other governors He spent a good part of his time making friends where the Republicans badly need friends— with labor He had a breakfast a dinner and a lunch with top labor neywwguep ZVeCfeiCiT' 6 doiWG A IDT OF aLFIElP ’ ’ HAULER : s i Gov Knight of California Woos Wows Labor Leaders ALTlte &UAU ou7 Ecvtf Trtfcwl mve In Pacific An Eleventh Commandment 1 1955 v I I MAY 11 EVENING - Rodents Eat Antlers Jn( principles of the U N charter Buck deer shed their antlers Bed China has never recog- every year The antlers seldom nized such nehts even for its own are the woeds because f defied sman oun(i 0perdy rodents rapidly eat them heT6 N° authority and territorial integrity of all na-tions Red China has not respected this in Korea Tibet nor Indo- china It does not recognize sov- ereignty for Formosa 3 Recognition of the equality of all races and the equality of all nations large and small for their high mineral content' M -- Changed Date i Actual date of George Wash- ington’s birth was Feb 11 1732 but his birthday now falls' on Feb 22 because of the calendar -- revision |