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Show - i it .Wl, rwWMr,,. PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAtt) DAILY -HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1940 SECTION" TWO BtvT Aflaraaoa (Cseaptlag' Satarday ftandar) aaday Harald rbllttrd Sunday Moratn Pabllanad b tha HaraJd Corporation. Mouth rirat' Wwt tttrMt, I'roo, Utah. Bntarad a moal elaaa aaattar tt tht aoatoKloe ia Prora, Utah, andar tha set l Ku t, J. ' CUmaa. Nlool " Rnthmaa. National - Advartlataf rapra-antattvM. rapra-antattvM. N Tork. 8aa Franctaea, Detroit. . Bnatoa. LM AnilM, Chicago. ' .. Member United Praam, If. H. A- Barvtoa, Xdltara a)iahaa, lha 8crliDa Laacua of Ktwipapora aad Audit taraa . a iCl Tlbarty : ClrM tattoo. tru all kM liptlon tarma ta la ad"- B- ovth. ff.tt or alx Ta IMijartT ; aJTanc.j by mall I , tha, yaay la advaaea. Taa Barald wlHaot aaaama financial raaponatbUIty tar any arrara Mr appaar la adTtrtUameote publlanea la IU aalurana. la tfcoaa taataaaaa whara tha parxt la at fault, tt will raprlnt UMt art af ta Mrarttaaaaaat tm vataa taa typographical antataka aacara, u . , . ; Tirade Doors Closing ' ; j Italy has pushed still tighter the' door that is dosing", on "international trade. By7 canceling all permits for importa- tions, and ail permits for acquiring foreign currency to pay ; for imports, she places herself on the barter . basis, which means the death of ree1 international trade. ' . , . : When Norway was invaded, the United States normal r foreicrn trade took another' dron. April f mures; showed a total somewhat above the year before, but far more than thjM I amount of the increase was due to war exports. Normal trade has fallen badly. , The occupation of Ueunumind the Netherlands otxourse , took another fieavy h.ock at normal American foreign trade; : and hovv Italy, even before entering the war, withdraws from t commercial intercourse with j ' It Is true that foreign orders for war material are in- creasing, and if the war should be prolonged, they Will con-l con-l tinue to increase, perhaps even to a point where they might I create the semblance of a boom.' But the important thing to s remember is that normal trade is4 being destroyed. As long as : Norwajr Belgium, Holland, Poland, and Czechoslovakia re-l re-l main under the German thumb, they will ne.yer resume thejr ; place in the international trade picture. This means that, should the Germans win, foreign trade t of the future will wear n different face than it wore in 1929 ? B. B.' (Before Blitzkrieg). There will be less intefcharige of : goods, and. what there is, irfsofar -as the. totalitarians can con- trol it, will be on a barter basis between two countries, instead of on the free basis wherein each country bought with money : what it wanted from anybody. -. , ' , 1 What can be done? First, the most careful effort to cul-: cul-: tivate our trade with such rations as remain free. Our trade ; with South America is increasing, and should be further in- creased by "study of every possibility of profitable import : from those countries so they can receive dollars with which' to buy our excorts. Every possible shock-absorber must be devised to cushion the blow when the war trade collapses, as : it must when the war ends, soon or late.l ,. 2 . And finally preparations must be made to moet t)ie com-: com-: petition or the bilateral or barter trade .system if, after the : war; it threatens to yndermine our, normal intercourse with : friendly neighbors. The day when these trade matters could : bo relied on to adjust themselves is passed. 1 TinhteniniBelt ; j Mexico has been performing some interestinpr laboratory experiments in recent years, and sociiil experimenters on this j side of the Rio Grande could do worse than to study, them, i When the oil interests of the' Americans and British in : Mexico, were expropriated, Mexican oil workers felt festive. : They were sure that there would be no limit to easy work, : hort hours and constantly higher paynow that they them-l them-l selves were toown and run the oil industry, : v ; " , ; So what happened? So just two years later the oil indus-i indus-i try was eurtly instructed by the government to begin to pay its accumulated back taxes and begin to meet its obligations. How? By eliminating unnecessary jobs and creating no more r new ones, by reducing wages of the more highly-paid workers I and eliminating overtime except in emergencies. : : , The Ie.sson ? An industry, must "pay its way," no matter i under what circumstances it is operated, and unless more is z produced, more can not be returned to workers, no matter -what the aim. . ,- . ' -r ' " . ; . y. j.-C . .. st-h, . r& W Hi V..V.r-, ,sA ' ;n J by carrlar ta Otaa county. M aaate Bjontna. ta advanea; fl.Tt taa raar, aoaaOr. . antatda aemty . , a , ,," i - the .world., Different Worlds out 01m WAY SAUSAGES. THRILLERS AMD CIGARS V& C50E7S.TH' MAWS GOT ; HIGH BLOOD WHAT ARE RELATIONS TRYIMOTO KILL 8 THE VasKngton MeiTy-Go-Round (Continued Prom ' Pas Oria) . f -- i . -. Wheeler are busy peddling t his wares. When questioned personally, personal-ly, the Montana, y Senator goes through th6 tnotioiis .of. pooh- poohing' the importance of the vice presidency but ' there is io trace of that in the . way his intimates are booming him for the job. They' are offering bats "that Wheeler would grab the nomination nomina-tion in. a flash if offered him. So would PaurMcNtitt Sena-tor: Sena-tor: Jimmy . Byrnes, House Floor Leader Sam Reyburn, Speaker William Bankhead, Senator : Al-ben Al-ben - Barkley and other , lesser lights. None of them would have to be asked twice and they make no . hones about it; . v I WlIItE HOUSE CHOICE - White House Dreference. how: trver revolves around three men i Attornev General Rob Jackson. Justice Bill Douglas and Gov-' crnor Lloyd : Stark of Missouri, x Big ' obstacle in Jackson's path is geography. He Is : far and away Roosevelt's first choice, but I he comes from New York. There is a constitutional restriction on two candidates from .the same state on the same ticket. Jackson Jack-son might not : be, barred from running, but. the New York electoral elec-toral vote would have to be ' sacrificed sac-rificed if he. did. , ' . That Is, even if the Democrats carried the state, the 'electors would be ytequired by the Constitution Consti-tution to7 vote for at least one non-New Dealer either for Pre3 IdenVor for Vice President. HOW' evei. this would not mean that New York would go to the GOP so lr: Roosevelt thinks he , cou'.d sweep the country he might ri3k klO. Hf'5 PRESSURB.' THEV ? POOR ACCUSED HIMv HE LIKES HAVE VV. L"'. i'' mt BULL Cf TH'. WOODS a default' on the New York vote. While geography - Is Jackson's biggest handicap, it -Is Stark s principal advantage. : The Alld-west Alld-west jmay. te the key to , the election elec-tion and this, plus Stark's background back-ground as an anti-machine crusader, cru-sader, war a veteran . and a famous fa-mous fruit grower may weigh the scales in his favor. ! Douglas offers the geographical geographi-cal compromise,, as he represents both the East and. West and like Jackson is a pet. of Roosevelt. Born and reared in Washington State, Douglas has' Eastern tied through a legal residence in Connecticut Con-necticut established as . a Yale law professor.. Personally iie does not want to leave the- Supreme Court, but if the President asks him tor run . he would resign . to do so. , ' -if ; - "rv I ....roLrncAL ciiafp ', One of Alf Landon's . hardest jobs is scotching booms for himself him-self .- Practically , every day," by long 'distance phone or telegraph, he has to nip the plan of some admirer to start a. drive for him One. of- the highlights of the Montana Democratic 1 convention was a speech by .- Senator Burt Wheeler urging the preservation of democratic, principles ' aft?r which his .7. weU-oUed - machine blocked a roll-call vote vehemently vehement-ly demanded by. Roosevelt . third-termers, third-termers, on a resolution, endorsing Wheeler as the .' "favorite .son" delegate . '. . Joe , Pew,- ad-faced GOP Pennsylvania, boss, is telling Intimates that the Internatio'neJi situation is rapidly . making Hoover Hoov-er a dark horse possibility. 3 pew ia close to Hoover, and should , be decide to . back the ex-President the latter might get the nomination nomina-tion . . . Latest, aspirant to enter the congressional . arena is squat Louis B. Ward, editor of Father Coughlin's Social Justice. ' This Is. Ward's second try. In 1936 he ran for a Democratic senatorial nomination -without success. J - 1 AID THE ALLIES . ; . h Administration leaders are amazed at the speed with which pro-Allied sentiment is sweeping the country. Some . of them privately pri-vately say that they think the country is ahead of the President. Presi-dent. . -1 ' . One Indication. Is the tremerj-; dous t response received bv . Wil-' Ham Allen White's Committee to Defend " America by t Aiding J the Allies. In Baltimore, for instance, an Insignificant notice , of . the establishment of .'.a . branch , was published, in one . paper . and brought 10,000 replies. Although contributions were not requested, the first mail brought $1,050. Outside Baltimore the response to the movement', to Defend America Am-erica by Aiding the Allies has been so overwhelming that -many branches of the committee in dif ferent cities can hardly handle the avalanche .of. support. , '. : 1 MERRY-GO-ROUND Y : : .it-Bernard .it-Bernard Baruch says . the 'i last war cost the u. . Dimon dollars more than It should .have, due to lack of price controls ; i ; U. S. Ambassador Steinhart looks In vain for a day of ,. rest in Moscow. Mos-cow. The Soviets have outlawed Sunday; they take one day of rest every six days. But it usual ly coincides with a week-day in Washington when me Biaie ue partment is at work - and its cables keen Stelnhart at . work, i ' . . SEC ' Commissioner 'Leon PETECTlVE ; THE -PEDESTRIANS' PRIMER No. 3 Cross on the Proper Signal " f i mm l rtftifMEtii- ri. u r V.L t.-t t : - - By Williams A RIG SHOP BOSS. AMD TH MEM CAKl'T GIVE HIM WHAT HE LIKES, WHEM HE CAM HAVE IT POC FEARLOP BEIMG OP TOADY IMO SO THEV HAVE TO GIVfc. rllNA WHAT WHEM HE CAM t IT - 3' County Audiior:;r Report Is Filed Utah county expenditures for the -first five .' months of 1940 were $245,346.51 compared with $212,405.84 for the corresponding period in 1939, it. was reported by Milton H. Harrison, depuwy county auditor, today. - ' : The increase, he said. Is mainly due to an outlay of $12,842.68 as the county's portion of purchase and remodeling of the old post office, building now used by Provo city,, and-$11,332.94 spent for improvements im-provements at the county infirmary, in-firmary, i, -. j .Guneral : fund expenditures, which Include operation of the various departments such as treasurer's, treas-urer's, assessor's, 'clerk's, recorder's, record-er's, sheriff's, etc., total $64,-569.66 $64,-569.66 to $63,007.37' last year, t ' In . the highways fund, this year's spending to date totals $35,-678.65 $35,-678.65 to $33,148.39 for the same period In ; 1939. In other .fimds, a comparison of the two years follows,, fol-lows,, the 1940 figure betng. listed firtjQ,each case: . -lA "S Memoriai fund (for c4d post office of-fice building) $12,842.68, none last year; exhibition and" advertising, $1,487, $2,471.05; pubUc welfare, $48,357.97, $26,309.03 ; ' poor and Indigent fund, $8,259.82, $23,165.-03; $23,165.-03; county infirmary. $17,560.73, $6,364.99; Interest on bonds, $2,- 590, $3,940; bond sinking, $54,000, same Cranium Crackers FAMOUS FIRST LINES . . .From what f famous paans. are these first lines taken? You should know the authors also. Name all five. -4 ! 1. "There, little girl, don't cry! They - have broken your doll, . I know." -: 2. "Ay, tear her tattered ensign down! ;v: - Long has it waved on high. ." 3.'Sunset, ahd evening star, - And one clear call for me!"! -, 4. "Break, break, break, . On thy cold, gray stones, O Sea!", 5. VSweet and low, sweet - and ' V lOW," ''. -: - - Wind of-the western sea. . (Answers 6n rag Two, Sec, Two) TEA CANNING STARTS SPANISH FORK Canning - Of early June peas - was commenced Wednesday by the local plant of the California Packing Corporation. Corpora-tion. Superintendent E. E. Anderson Ander-son stated that the plant was running run-ning at about 1-3 capacity at present and employing only about one third the number of employes employed .at, the height of - the season. He says that the outlook out-look seems favorable for a vfine crap and the psas are of very-fine quality. Tha crop will occupy the plant until about . the middle of July, It was said. . . ; Henderson went back to his class reunion , at " Swarthmore College, f where 20 years ago they called him "Dub." The class parade was headed by a. sign reading, "Wall Street Dont Be Afraid of Henderson Hen-derson We Knew Him When He ,Was 'Dub'." : (Copyright 1940. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) tn ill arc tor at Motor. I efoMinf etry on k'" poet motor- nt willing Itavclera Safety Scrrlct Nation's Schools Urged As Defense Training Centers BY BRUCE CATTON .Dally Herald Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 7 Before Be-fore President Hoosevelt gets action ac-tion on his program to train a new supply of skilled -labor for the rearmament program, he will have to settle what apparently Is going to be a sTiarp scrap between be-tween two Important branches of the federal government, i These are the National Youth Administration, , headed by Aubrey Au-brey Williams, and the Office of Education, headed by J. W. Stude-baker. Stude-baker. Each group Is eager to sei its own plan adopted. Betting at the moment la that Williams is Ukely to win out, since he is supposed to be closer to the administration. Studebakers ace card, on ' the other hand, is that his plan 13 ml set up, ready to go, with greater speed and at less expense. . Back of the argument is a ba-i!c disagreement over- whether this traininjr program is primarily a youth program or an educational program. - - -COULD TURN OUT 150,000 MEN BY FALL Studebaker's office points out that the nation already has a billion dollar plant ready to do all the training or .re-training that may be needed the technical techni-cal high schools and other voca tional-training schools of the reg O SERIAL STORY ; . AN EYE FOR TESTERDAVi Wir4krCora Hani lo.ke rsrrfal ol what he anya akoat the Telllvara, Hour Morn in, ! irw home la aaaallr comfortnhle. Juty drlifchlf al. and openly fi by the. hill bay. lloaay awakea day to hear a aarill voire intra. It la hla aweetbeart. Man-k Man-k tikridrr, eoaae lrom tha hllta CHAPTEn III , T OSSY McAFEE, listening ; to ; his sweetheart from the vantage van-tage of the dark head ol the stairs, wanted to laugh and swear at the same. time. He was shocked at sight of Hannah Shrider; he had never before thought of her as uncouth. Dr. Tollivar and Judy listened , politely. V , , ' "Well, of course," Dr. Tollivar was saying, In his quiet way, you no doubt can do as well as Bossy. But T ... : ' "I know, " father! Judy cried. "Mrs. Patterson; said, just this afternoon, that the Kingslcy . girl who waited table lftJihe dining ' hall had not come yet, and she heard indirectly she was married and wouldn't come back to school. Judy turned to Hannah. You could wait table, couldn't you? You could then have the other girl's room and place. Otherwise I'm afraid we're filled. - "Can't I see Bossy McAfee?" . . "I don't think he's come In yet. IU tell him you're here and send him over j to see you when he comes? ' , - . . T? OSSY, ; still shocked, and ashamed because he felt this way, slipped back along the halL Instead of going Into his room, he crept down the back stairs and out into the yard. He saw Dr. Tollivar . and Hannah, two dark figures, going through the dusk of the campus. Then, as if coming in from ' the ' gym, he entered, the -front door. Judy, reading under the lamp, smiled at him. "You had a caller.' ."Who?" ; "You'd never guess. Some one very dear to you." "Maw?" "Guess again." "Cousin Steve Hogg?" " -"Cold, cold as ice." . Bossy shook his head. "Couldn't guess then. Tell me." "Your own sweetheart, Hannah Shrider, and she's pretty, too; and I'll bet she's smart as anything. She's coming to ' college. Dad's just taken her . to , the girls' cottage. cot-tage. Right after supper you're to go there and sc6 her. "Land sakes!" Bossy said, feign in g -surprise . the best he . could. "What tin von tnnur ntvuil that'" TR. TOLLIVAR, returning in a quarter of an hour, said Han nah -was fixed up, and then sat down ; to supper. , As soon , a f ter-Ward ter-Ward : as possible Bossy , walked through, the- dark to the cottage Which housed the maids and WaiU resses. Hannah was waiting anxiously anx-iously in the little parlor, and when Bossy entered she flung her arms around his neck and almost choked him vrith kisses. . "Rossy! I just had to cornel I had to. I sold my calves and Bhotes and heifers and taken my -canning club prize money, and here I am. If you can come to college, I can come too. All right say something nasty, and I'll snack your ears back!" "My heavens, Hannah!" Rossy said helplessly, and dropped on the Couch.He examined Hannah. She had got out of her baggy coat and into a nice dress, and she looked comely enough. Her hair was honey, like taffy made with honey and thick maple syrup. She had the gaunt fashion of all hill folk the spare body, the tempered tem-pered muscles, of those who work. "You ought not to of come here, Hannah. I mean, without first looking after a room and board and thingswhy; they might not even let you in college after you ot here!" ular school system uvcr the country. coun-try. They are equipped with exactly ex-actly the ort of tools and machines ma-chines needed to prepare men tor work in airplane factor!, auto factories or machine shops. Furthermore, for the paat 10 years the Office of Education has fostered epoeial courses to trim craftsmen in th technique ft teaching. There are thousand cf these teachers on can. Moet ol them are men now working s regular eight-hour day In Industry Indus-try and could put In a four-fce-jr teaching shift easily afterward. By. manning all of these schools and running them at capacity, the Studebaker office flgurea. the nation could turn out 150.0UO single-skilled men, ready for factory fac-tory Jobs, ty the end of this summer. sum-mer. By one year from now it could turn out 750.000 skilled men. In addition to the 500.000 regular reg-ular students- hi the schools. To do all this, it is estimated, would cost J53.6OO,0O0. Point that Is emphasized is that this could start immediately, immediate-ly, and that no costly and time-delaying time-delaying purchases of new machinery ma-chinery or acquisition of new buildings would be needed. f NTA ARGUES 'YOUTHS v CAN'T " AFFORD SCHOOL National Youth Administration counters that this wouldn't ab- sorb the younz men. who are an - xious to get training for Jobs in the "mobilized" Industries b - i ii . 5 A GAL ' . I t ' ' t 4 j X " fi ' j ; f ; . ... ; - : --, ..' '. - lUoilralcd fcjf Carol JohniocL Hannah threw her arms around his neck, almost choked him with kisses. . . . "I had to come to college. Rossjl If you can get educated, 1 can tool" "Who's to keep me out. Bossy McAfee?" " "W-well, there's rules and regulations" regu-lations" i . "If they didn't keep you out, they wouldn't me. I know what's ailing you. You dont want me here. You're ashamed, of me already." al-ready." , . - "Now, Hannarj ( " "Yah," she sneered, "I done heerd about you! I got it straight You came on ahead of time. Put up at the big gun's place. With that Tollivcr. Yes, I bcerd all about it. They set you up among the high-and-mightics. - They said that girl was good-looking, and she is. They said you'd be took in by their mealy-mouthed ways, and here it's less than a -Week and they, were right " Already warm with anger, Bossy Bos-sy demanded, "Who's they? How come all this here palaver Is already being toted back upto Hell'n-Damnation?" He was mystified, mys-tified, wondering how news of this sort could travel so far and bo quickly. . "Yah!" his . sweetheart sneered. "Wouldn't you like to know!" " "I ; think you've been in here snooping and telling lies to yourself. your-self. All right, you're here. You're a graduate of the same high school as me, ahd they'll take you in. But you've got to study here. I've found that out, talking with the seniors, xou ve got to nx yourself your-self up,- to, if you aim to stay " "How come I ain't fixed up all right? I'm fixed up as good as you. You ain't much else than a pop-up foul ball, at that" "Ah, is that so?" . " 'Steve Hogg told 'me you was uppity and bigoted, and he was right to" - . "So it was Steve Hogg that told you all this! How come Steve knows so much?" "He's been here, If you've got to know!" - "Steve Hogg been here? And didn't see me? How come? What's the idea? Is is that hillbilly trying try-ing to spy on me? Coming down here and looking thing3 over and going right back and stuffing your ear full! The low-down " ."You can call your blood kin low-down If you want, but you shore ain't paying a high compli ment to your own self, Ilos?y Mc Afee:" i cau-e the bulk of th-e yout&j can t afford to to tchocl. NVA U already en-.plorir.g 12. your.jr rr.tn who are gt-ttir.g tr-a'n-Ir.g cf the typ r-eoded tn r8- If as much as f I00.000.CCO of the quarter-billion' earrr.arkeJ fcr & yaulh-trai-n.ir,g j re gram couU be allotted for lie Jots, .S'TA figures it could expar.d its t r lr.g facilitUa to l.-.cluie 4M,CJ youths. Program culdn't tart lrr.rr.e dliUIy. :.-.ce NY A ha r.tilttr the piar.t ncr the tools to aowr.-tnodate aowr.-tnodate more tj?rx:..:cta thir. it is alreaJy tratr.L-g. But' NYA points out that local g-Tf rr.rr.f .-.V and indu.trie are flerirg to lam over -to it urtu.ed buiid.r.ri To all cf th:s. the O.T.ce cf Education retorts thst t jyi.-g i..e needed r-.ach:r.ery would t:r. ; :y add to the already-exl5lirg t' t-tleneck t-tleneck In the machine tool tusr rtas, and that it Isnt li-tpT youth that rieedj the trairare. On the contrary, it saya, tt.tro are many thousands of sKUit-d workers whose ekllis hye fTe rusty through idlenes; trief "refresher courses. It is argued would restore tins men to the;r o'ul corapetenoe. UNION ILVNDED BACK ITS CHARTER NEW YORK. June 7 rjn The International Ladies Garment Workers union, was handed tack its charter in the American Fe-i-eration of Labor, today by William Wil-liam Green, AFL president, who took the occasion to question the wisdom of a proposal that the AFL executive council be -given the power to remove bbjectionatle - union .officials. - 1 -- iI BY HARRY HARRISON KR0LL Ma A aMVICC IHO. Dont say 'shore and dont eay ainTi" . ' ' . . , , TTANNAII gulped. Her face lock licn beet color. ."Well, cf all thines! Of all the bieoted wars! Listen here, Ro?sy McAfee! I'm on to you. It's a Rood thing somebody's some-body's looking after you, even if it's Cousin Steve, and youni't like him. "Yes, he was down here. He come the next day after you got here.. He looked around and seen . saw and then he burnt the wind back up in HcU'n-Damnation and told me and your maw what he'd seen!" "And that was plenty more than plenty!" . "I'll say It was more than plenty! How you was rooming in the big house with this here Dr. Tollivar. Good and well you know he was the man that killed your paw! Good and well you know this ain't isn't nothing but a put-up job on you. Give you a scholarship here make you sweep up like a girl put you through college to play ball " "Sh-hhhh!" Rossy cautioned?. "Mrs. Patterson" will hear you--stop your durncd yelling " "I'll yell all I want to, fool:' Hannah cried. . "Cousin . Stevo Hogg has got sense even if you haven't, and he saw through it in half a minute. This here Dr. Tollivar is the same breed of dogs. He left but right after that ball game. Nobody never seen saw him again. He Icit tha country. Stayed gone. "Now here he is, running this school come back to the edga of the hills but not in the hills, because he's a coward and a killer, kill-er, and he knows it! - And you stay in his house. Eat at his table. Make eyes at his gal " "Ah-hah, so that's it your jealous " "It's a lie. A dirty lie. I ain't jealous. I'm mad. I co-me down here to save you, that's what. You swore when you was a Lr.Ie boy that day you'd have an eye for en eye, and a tooth for a tooth, and all the eye you have r.ow ij for that Judy Tollivar and all the tooth you have is for her cooking. Rossy McAfee, I hate you! I derpise you!" She spit at Kirn, end suddenly she slapped him rprawjin. (To &e Cenliauedj i I |