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Show TIIE 2 Logan, Utah, Saturday, May 15, 194S HFKALD-JOURNA- Packinghouse Pickets Fight National9 Guardsmen Kissed the Girls Goodbye Paul G. Hoffman: A Businessman Takes Over European Recovery Franklin County 4 Seminary Exercises PRESTON- - "No bet lei example will be found of the theme chosen by the graduates for these exei rises, The Glotj ol God Is Intelligence. than is witnessed heie tonight in song, speech, and music, " stated Dr. Harold Glen Clink. Brigham Young Univeisity extension head, in addtesstng the gathISY PETEK MIMIN' ering at the close of the student NKA Staff Correspondent program Friday evening The greatest gift to come to WASHINGTON'- - (NKA) Some graduates Is not the seminal y pin, of his closest associates say that books, lovely ritess or fltmets, but m the past live or six yeats, Paul the desire in one's heait fot under- Hoffman has devoted almost Gtay knovvlstanding, light, tiuth and half his time for the Committee edge, Dr. Clnrk declared. This de- - lor Economic Development. sire, if fosteied will never be Now the South Bend, Ind auto- quenched and eyes will be opened mobile manufacluier is settling as the riesne guides one thtough down to his new job as European the maize of life's espei lenecs to R(,tow,,y Administrator. It's his the realization and tiiuinph of an'jlI;( gover nment role But 'deal. as a private citizen he has taken a t The graduation exercises were a,(,e anc leading part in by Ernest Eberhaid, Jr.. nient affalIS Hoffman has long that without a sound an I principal of the Franklin County ,eali,-eSeminary of the Church of Jesus heal(hy government behind it, Saints. Heniy business itself cant prosper. Christ of Latter-da- y H. Rawlings, president of the sent' This attitude has had a lot to do inary board, presented ceitificates with his quiet success as piesident of graduation to 125 students, lat g- an(j guiding genius of the C E D. est class of graduates in the since its start in 1942. Holfman got into the C. E. D. years of the institution. Pun includes while a member of the Commerce Seminary faculty cipal Eberhard, Jack A. Cher ring-to- n Department's Business Advisory and Mark Hart. Memhers of Council, to which he was appnint- the seminary board of education ed by Jesse Jones, then Secretary Paul of Commerce. During an ean are President Rawlings, meeting of the Council Wynn, Phenoi Edgley, J. Clilford war-tim- e Forsgren, Karl Cutler and Weldon in Washington, there was discusNash. sion of the need for some private business group to promote post-wplanning and reconversion. After several hours of talk Hoffman left the room, briefly. When he came back he was informed (Continued lrom Page One) that he had been elected to head a make years. These figures the new organization. He accepted civilization which nourished six on the condition that it would not recent a thousand years ago be merely a bullyhoo organizaevent, and they make the twention. He realized some new thinktieth century less than a speck ing was needed. C.E.D. has proin time. vided it with an original approach o on every Important business policy Research such as that being car- confronting the country. Inried on by Chicagos Oriental Hoffman is a great believer in stitute will eventually correct the letting facts govern his decisions. bias with which Western historians The research work of C. E. D. has have for centuries been viewing been outstanding. Its researchers some of the best economists and world history. For a long time it has been generally but mistakenly business brains of the country-ha- ve had full freedom to dig up assumed that civilization a we know it began with the ancient facts and present them ns found. Due largely to the bigo- On the basis of these facts C.E.D. Greeks. try and biases arising out of Chris- has shaped its policies. Some of the C.E.D. views have tian prejudices against oriental been unorthodox. For instance, in paganism, there has been little appreciation of the t re men dous in- presenting a fiscal piogram early fluence exerted by the ancient this year, C.E.D. recommended Orient on the civilizations of the that a balanced U. S. government Mediterranean and hence on ou" budget was not always necessary. At certain times it should accumown culture. To judge by discoveries being ulate surpluses, and at otheis go financing. For a made, one would be inclined to say in for deficit 100 leading business exof group of 75 ent the that perhapa per to expound such ideas was things which we consider "mod- ecutives considered highly unusual. own are ern and specifically our Personally, Hoffman has never not new at all but wejapown to to take the unpopular men scores of oenturies before the hesitated view if he thought it right. He time of Christ. opposed the old National Recovery blue eagle of depression days beto call kind of this Thoughts 15 fought a btief battle against The Larger View mind the writings of .Arnold J. Toynbees work, which is still in tory has been a best seller in America for a year or more. The whole thing is quite a phenomenon. Tonybees work, which .is still in progress, appeared first in six volumes and made hardly a stir. It probably didnt have more than a few hundred readers in the United States. But last year it was pubcondensalished in a tion and it immediately caught on. This book, which deals in scholarly eritude terms with the rise and fall of civilizations, has been read by scores of thousands,, and its major ideas, through the medium of the popular maeazines, have reached millions in diluted form. one-volu- 9 ' i t ? The widespread interest in a .work like A Study of History must be the reflection of a vast uneasiness. The American people until recently seemed to be blithely indifferent to history. They were congenital optimists and were inclined to believe that the particular political and economic system which had developed in America was somehow fixed in the stars and eternally (mutable. Above all they were firmly convinced of the reality of progress, though they seldom stopped to ask themselves what progress is. Within a single generation the American people have experienced some profound shocks. Wars and depressions have made them uneasy. They have been thrust suddenly onto the world stage. They are troubled and confused. They are searching the past and looking uncertainly into the future. They are no longer quite so certain that civilization has reached its peak in them and that th way of life which they know will go on ) new book by Toynbee is just off the press. It is a book of essays called Civilization on Trial." This book tries to show how the theories advanced in A Study of History" apply to this moment in history and what the implications may be for the future. Here is the essence of Toynbees concrete program: Some twenty civilizations have been killed or fatally crippled by two plagues which Toynbee calls War and Class. Our own civilization, the most powerful one surviving at the moment, has not yet learned how to control these plagues, which are more menacing than ever before because of our technological development. If we do not control them, it is possihle that annihilation will be the fate of our rare. What must we do? Tovnbee MAKE YOUR WIFE HAPPY Install a set of our cant-sa- g clothes line posts. Made of 2D Inch tubing in sing double uprights. ARERSOU) EQUIPMENT CO. Phone 15H-54344 N. Main L In politics, establish a stitutional cooperative system of world government. In economics find working compromises (vaiy-in- g according to the practical requirements of different places and times) between free enterprise and socialism. In the life of the spirit, put the secular superstructure back onto religious foundations. Toynbee urges support of the United Nations as an immediate task. But he does not seem to be very optmistic about the possibility of developing that organization into an effective system of world government. Failing this, he thinks it imperative to maintain some kind of truce between the two systems into which the world is divided, the Russian and the American. This, he says, may win for us the time necessary to work out our ecocon- says: nomic compromise. out the possibility And he holds that the West- ern European powers, though dwarfed by the power of the East and West, might yet serve as a mediating force and play a vital role in the salvation of Western civilization. points out that the giant armored reptiles dominated the eaith for some 80 million vears. Mans domination has last only 100,000 years or so and it Toynbee conceivable that it too could come to an end. But let us end this on a note of optimism. Toynbee thinks it possible that, if we should go on an atom bomb spree, the Pygmies of Central Africa may salvage some fraction of (he ja o-- "Theie is no excuse for either violent booms oi busts," says Heilman "Tbe iiolion that thr aie inevitable or unavoidable should fc re (!' ed ullerlj," Holfman sees the Euiopeun 1iogiam as a need to iaise the Eumpean sinndaid of living by at least a tlmd. He lias given his ideas on that fully in testimony befoie ine Senate Foieign Relations Committee. IP, is lor the program, with these detinib l eijuo eiuents for success: Western Europe must he do-- ! vploped as a whole. Western Get There many must be included. admini- musl bo a business-lik- e st i,at ion. Loans and gifts must be clem lv divided and take into count Europes ability to repay ,i , v ell as Amenta's willingness ii The aid must not be receive. used to finance aequisit.on oi v - N ' ' i.e, i SERVICE PHONE Alunj; - Hollywood Lana Turners' le Reception Marked e, Simple Dignity et Turner-Tonping-Arli- undoc-writte- Janes Honored At Rites "V ggV' behind-the-scen- er Cits. T hj.,," n i .. small line of pickets. All was quiet at nearby Newport, scene of bloody fighting yestPrdav between a band of 200 men and workers at the Cudahy Packing Co. plant. North Cache Alumni ,0 enme 3 Draft Horses one ton or over Middleweight Draft Horses 1500 lbs. or over 8 year old Pinto Celdittg Show Horse old Quarterhorse This boe selection ol farm puion hep cimp horvt tP4 he nupnutl il I K M th Lr A Is HK4 tKo i xi on elen t0 'T3''! Win- - contest senior, and 1 Griffin, sophomore. medals were pre- Scholarship sented to: Helen Funk, Georgia Hansen. LaRue Funk. Bonnie Milligan and Sybil Talbot. Scholarship certificates were awarded fo: Ardis Anderson, Barbara Baldwin, Donna Daines. Marilyn Geddes Richard Hendricks. Janice Johnson, Bonnie Jessop, Shirley Monson Bonnie Nelson. Joddie Noble, Cleone Pitcfier, Joyce Parson, and Lorna Shumway. . Thain, or phone fl) South 'feet! t Nr s jih I on Lit to IAmi (rah fume WO or further information 302 file 'One Sfop Building Service" 349 North Main Street LUMBER CHARTER SERVICE 360 $0. WtST TfcMPLE ...any where. ..anytime SAIT LAKI CITY, UTAH PHONE BUILDING PLUMBING MATERIALS HEATING of iunt e Indu ban 1 0 those itenlioi ,f whit i what riVai d. p of th' and "i tcacning ' otology "he, ,it 1"' the I'niverah been afraic to nr Prior to that fmm 1935 when receive:) his humps from ,,ie ISAC. to l)T9. he attending and te, llris at ,h veisity of Cali!. ji in,, He gl anted a dmloiae deg, in 193ti and then spent the ne seven years at Saunas Junior col. lege in Caluonna He ,s mam to Helen Richards :n t1Hy ear1 of n jrmv, iqrared plies fo Ihreatem watcher 'octed NNilon (Sox) Slocking whose diama eaieer at Utah State will be long remembered, write from Nampa, Idaho, where he is sunervising the LDS church that he is enjoving his new a er. sr.ee far ban; read wain m ,ed 'Iwind II u as as a a nu tX'CI IS. IWI, M.i.i i ihe i Soil'll ji ent table a - rp ie Ihe eu wm Vol. tit deal citue ,s ably emerge work very much. Since leaving college Neldon has spent most of his tin speech, muse teaching school coaching, etc. He sends his be regards to all his college friends and classmates. Mis. Slocking the former Sarah Heath. They have two boys. Jan Robin anil Von Kay, age 5 and 2 years, is Now visiting with his father and Senior athletic awards were mother in Logan is Dr. Georg" made as follows: Basketball: gold medal to Mr. Haskins '46, from Chicago. George is the son of Dr. and Mrs. dart Webb; silver medal to Dick HendE. Haskins and " he brought hu ricks. Baseball: Bronze medals to Ron- - wife, the former Katherine Km' home for a!d ,RUI7an,l.a1nd Ir Wet)b; silver raid, and son, Clark, first and only vacation. This is the to Dick Hodges. Track: Mr. Webb, three year grandson in tbp Haskins family a stir in the letterman; Dave Seeholzer, first and is causing quite received ius household. George year at North Cache letter; Denzil Northwestern from medical degree Clark, two years: Gerald in March and is no one year; Dave Baker, twoGodfrey, years; university Robert Downs, one year; Richard interning at St. Josephs hospital in Chicago. Hansen, one year; Kenneth Monson, two years. Football: Mr. Webb, Dick PcV? Krusi, Kelly Litz. David Hodges, Clair Cantwell, Norval Robert Valentine, Richat: Jones, Howard Hyer, Lynn Spark- Hansen. Bob Perkes, George Than man, Gaylord Leavitt, David Baker, Denzi) Wiser, and Richard Jensen mon ever e e hile I churcl mrth :,.nd 'owasmi g ilunteer raiders possib I? out 'lneau, and 5 centy torses minute In 'he lute els nr w j to fo artn v pursui ol of t horse , into it they i hike ci Tl we n hereto 'ires. 1 them ere t ma rai o i we f und i bru l the led t lefiles to l 'n do Jurim 1 ;e That sounds like Co. Hansen-Niederhaus- er .alley feme. m. I'ache are purposely made: to give the longest and most satisfactory wear. Mare with Foal lunHe SjhIAiC't ter m1 es and ,te bid uist it the s ( QUALITY MATERIALS, keep prices in line. f and f , is not accidental; it is established by a constant effort to properly fill the requirements of customers. are the result of experienced employees, working efficiently to cooperate with ar definite policy to the susta .j 1 K of H. Mar 9 GOOD SERVICE Colts 3 year old Registered Quarterhorse Pral',t r ( cf"3 t lined i, ' DON T TRUST TO LUCK REASONABLE PRICES Lightweight Draft Horses about 1450 lbs. 5 from Puge f)ne) ilesented to Geiald Goilliey by II, let line inlet. . ,, Pairing, the Futuie Farmets of America 7; Donald, 5 ye,s, and Kctu i for leadership and scholarship. The yeais old. Plant awaid, given to the best alhlete of the year, went to Mr. Another vixitoi Webb. Van Coleman teoeived the wu.x Mrs. ( h.irlotl.- il,- js pas( Ilmriud Uei feet attendance uwaid, and lin '44, who vvn- - on dtama awards weie piesented to for a shoi t call on thehercampis sister Dixie Rawdins, Marge Nielson and Ruth. Charlotte was maniedlast Martin Pond. summer to Robert V Edlin and Debating honors went to: Maurthey aie making their home at ice Roskeliey, Blair 400 So. Rancho Road. San Been Funk," Bonn'iT Miriigan,"' sTbri rnardino, Cal. Mr Edlin is an aTalbot, Gaylon Ashcroft, Karlene dvertising account executive ar,d Hyer, LaRue Stevens, Reta Thomp- travels considerablv. son, Martin Pond, and Lois Hyer. The Richmond Lions presented (Continued c' poss.0 endant , . m ,ei s u;,s m soemtion aie cuiiin home-hudd- Heavy , s a ,i , j g jvihza I K n, LEWiS QRQS. FARM ANNOUNCES SALE of 25 HORSES S,j. m m the s a sp of Co-- j The former heavyweight boxing champion, now a wrestler, had not seen them m two years. I Plena. ed urn!.., ,h, u Prol I. Walter W. ( hristiunscii. i ,,( r,' luuotploaxo ur srq cast with which io4.LSU0(l ar everything point, " performance. Tin ' trial 1)101' is cordially irniur an end . trom settle ou yet, deal he t . f Logan Woman ctiil-dic- t bans h r day. May bd at Logan tabein, lal musical f,. bch ed . . sacied uralon.i Thiee pickets were anested. Soldiers with rifles and pistols escorted the through the picket l:nes to the boos and jeers of onlookers. Sullen pickets joined in the taunts, but made no attempt to interfere after the lig'riing. Guardsmen also were stationed at the smaller Armour and Co. plant. There was no violence at were that plant but not going through the lines despite presence of guardsmen behind a In No Holds Barred Benjamin t atiead fot lh mish. s full-tim- Continued IR' p is work. He likewise o i posed success, since a d pro-th- e Pi esident s I.abot Managegram is likely to be woise than reace ment confeience at the end useless." of the vvur. The idea foi tins j,ow- Finally, Hoffman says,, the (Vfc J telephoto) was Senator Aitbm Vandeji- - ropt mi countues must Carry oui Governor James E ("Kiss'll Jim") FuLom of Alabama sits with lil bergs. Bui Hulltnan reliiseii lombe commitments they made at bride, foinicr J.imelle Moore. In her apartment alter their marriage have anything to do with it Ins ause the Pans confer once, Mine it' i., m Rockfoid, Ala., beforr leaving lor a Florida honeymoon. The he was convinced nothing would; the Emopean people who in the bade was fomiPriy a secretary in Ins state highway department. come of it. long run must achieve their own Hoffman is Republican, but con- - teroveiy. siaers himself neither a libeial nor It's on this basis that Hoffman a conservative. He to judge ta kies (os new lob with an by whether he c onsidei , mount of energy Unit has had to them sound. Perhaps the best be almost boundless to cai rv on statement of his peisonal pluloso- - all his side activities, in addition phy was given when he appeal c to running the Studebaker Coi p. before Senator Tafts Joint Coin-- , from bankruptcy into the black, home last Constance Bennett mittee on the Economic Krpor,, probably will have to give built, she planned the living room last summer. up the Studebaker presidency, for around the furniture. In order to "We should remember that there the European recovery adminis-ar- e four-ai- e too many people vv hose im ones ti alum will be a arrange it as she wanted, she low, whose opportunities arc year task. Ills other business had to eliminate a window. The bout-- ', said Hoffman. "We .should tere.ds, however, include By auhdect screamed that a blank also remember that the ultimate i halt manship of an auto sales firm wall would ruin the outside and test of any econo. me svxieni is and an auto pans company, plu , BY KKskIM; JOHNSON Connie sci earned that a window ol seven other what it produces tor the awing big diioctorxhips NEA Staff ( orrespondent would ruin the inside. The result man. Theieiore, our answers to cot p (nations. was a compromise the archtect Hoffman attended ex-the critics of capitalism should no' i, Though HOLLYWOOD -t- NEAi-I had his window on the outside ho'cL one he for Uge past accompliSimients, year, only acted Lana Tuineis wedding re, d Connie bad her blank wall on but should take the fonn of a honorary degrees from 10 colleges ception would be the biggest the inside, The window was a Hur. plan of action for improving th and is a trustee of two. "Ben since production effectiveness of our system so th' c he won the American Education but for once Hollywood decided phony. it will yield ever-measing oppoi- - Award on simple dignity and stuck to it. tunities for more and mine of our After all those V. bile The Farad, ne Case .. was people. Judge headlires, everyone in was the whose World fust Tiie greatest strength War I, m New York, David O. n showing job had to lie the agreed script American system is its dviiani c as purler for a Chicago auto dealer. zmi.x was sitting in a projec- and underplayed. With the room in Hollywood recutting tion of a of hors plate exception res with three live goldfish the picture, trying to make it i A. swimming around a dish in the better. It reminded me of the time they middle, it was. There weie only a handful of were making "Duel in the Sun, guests and Lana and Bob greeted and Joe Cotten and Greg Peck them in the parior with sui pris- played one scene at least 40 times. Finally, Cotten turned to ing (for Hollywood, decorum. 1 Funeral services far Benjamin Theie were no hordes of movie Selznick and said: What's the matter, Dave, isnt A. Janes, resident of Providence, fans. The address was not given it ' enough yet to he cut out were conducted Tuesday at the out. The reception started at 5:30 of good the picture? and InstPd only two hours. p.m. chao-el, Kenneth Lindquist mortuary There was a under direction ol" tne Provi- battle between studio press agents Bioadway producer Max Gordence Second ward bishopric wilh and photographeis over photo- don would like to have Bogart graphing thq reception, but even and Bacall take over "Born YesEldon Janes officiating. terday, the New York hit, during that was ironed out smoothly. the months. But its Speakeis were Fishop L. D. HEDGE OF GARDENIAS only wishful Prize zillinger of the Pi evidence First decoration: thinking the BoGardenias, ward. C. M. Hammond and Jan es thousands of them, growing on garts will be sailing off the CaliHogan. Mrs. Luella Jensen sang an ivy hedge. They weie wired on fornia coast, as usual, on the two numbers, "Sometime Well by the prop department. Undet stand" and , Sometime. Pnze dialog: Lana, are you E". Peter Lind Hayes has dropped and Somevvheie. Somehow J. w. wealing something old? his President Truman impersonaBob Topping: "Thats me!" Spuhler sang "Abide With Me" and tion from his act. Too many played the postlude. Prelude music was played by Mrs. Pearl Stirland. is telling friends! plaints. But there are no com- June Chi is Stirland offered the mvo-c- that shell marry I)r. John Duzik plaints about his great movie star on. Ivan Hogafi pionouneed the iust ns soon as her divorce from caricatures. "I non't mean them benediction, and Eldon Janes dedi- Jimmy Zito is filial.. . . John t0 be offensive. They just turn cated the giave. Burial was in the i ay ne and Gloria De Haven will ou tba'' " ay," Pete says, do summer stock in Maine. Theyll Providence cemeteiv. leave the kids with a governess. MRTIL LAW Clink Gable is dining around C ARID, 14 (UD Th May tovn in uni of those imported Egyptian government today pro- it automobiles. Dnt midget funny claimed martial law effective one Continued Horn Page Orel Ihal kids di cam ahoul some day minute after midnight tonight the and longest biggest This was taken as confirming ter of Della Kappa Gamma and owning can car when hoy. Then, earlier repoits that they has been piesident of that ehapt. Egyptian they get in h. they squeeze into Hoops would invade Palestine at two yeais. roadsleis. that moment. The British mandate Primo Camera giccts his Another Beta chapter member.! tiny in Palestine officially Jane Marie, 5, and UmMiss Tilda loulsen, instructor at expires at s: On the midnight. Tip I, berto, H, upon their uinval in South Cache high school. was New Yoik by air Hum Italv. name I stale in the elec-- I Housecleaning FOR PICKUP AND DELIVERY guar-Nnen- would 10 Have a sparkle of newness restored to your drapes and curtains. ' "ik Amerann property abroad. Othei Paul G. Huffman: lie believes n areas ol the world must not be letting faets govern derisions. neglected. Enough funds should be provided over a long enougn cause he did not believe NR period' to make the program a t SALT LAKE CITY, May 15 (UP) Utah meat packers will be able to ship their meat easi starting this fall at considerably less cost than in the past, the interstate commerce commission ruled today. The ICC, after nearly two years of argument and legal battle, has ordered a substantial rate reduction on ment from Ogden, Utah to the eastern ii JSr'O' Rc-m- secretary lions Saturday. Other newly elected state otliceis are: Grace Tohill, Salt Lake City, first vice piesido-- t; present heritage of mankind. Im ' Kathiyn Andrews. Provo second sure that makes us all feel better. The birds nest used by the vice president: Edna Pedersen. Chinese in making soup are about Ogden, recording secret aiy; end the size of an oyster shell. Thuty- - Marie Davis, Salt Lake City, pai LESS COST of them weigti a pound. anientui ian. Ne-gri- PT nomic mx:b,lity. "During the pas Km yeais theie have been no lea, than -- 0 depu sxions." he points out. The VO quest ion IS to get a pi ini that will piovide dynamo-sti.hilil- -i News Of Aggie national guardsmen today as they defied an ordpr to let into the Swift and Company packing plant here. broke out and last- ed several minutes befoie the militia rushed in t enforcements with fixed bayonets to hold bait an angry crowd that was shouting its support ot the defiant pickets. Strikers flailed away at some m the guardsmen. The troops warded off the blows, but did not strike back with rifle butts. There was no shooting. The pickets cursed and jeered the The pickets finally stepped acide enter the and let the ulant. No one was injured in the skir- g pr ndir t.v eness. Hoffman finds II sn s our gioulfxt weakness is eco- govern-conduct- Nun heavily-a- rmed And It Must be Run Like Business, Says Aid Chief, Who As a Citizen Has Vorked Hard for Government full-tim- e SOUTH ST. PAUL, Mum., May (U.Pi CIO packinghouse pickets LC reasonable request in this instance. Another case where brevity is appreciated is on telephone party lines. Well add more equipment just as fast as we can get it, to make room for more individual lines. Meanwhile, however, when you can avoid long conversations it helps keep the party line open for other calls.. The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company, a dro A |