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Show THE 2 In Defense Secretary Forrestal's report on the National Military EstaDli&hment there are a couple of statements that set forth an obvious truth and at the same time pose a difficult problem: The rapacity for making war is not separable from economics anv more than it is from diplomacy. . . . The nation demands security to demand also that it but it has alightworth. get its moneys Those words might serve as a motto for the President, his advisers and the new Congress as they set to work on a budget for the next fiscal year. For they are words that really ask these questions: What is more imminent and dangerous, war or inflation? How much can we build up our defenses without weakening our economy? Our government must strike an accurate balance if the world is to live in safety. But there are not too many definite figures to help it in arriving at a total. We know that our goal is peace, not aggression. We know that Soviet Russia, no matter how devious and hypocritical its tactics, has never really abandoned its course toward world revolution. We know that our weakness, economic or military, will spur Russian efforts toward that revolution. After that come uncertainties. Our government Is not agreed on whether our military strength is yet at a minimum level of safety. The joint chiefs of staff want about .$4,000,000,000 more for the 1950 military budget than Mr. Truman is willing to recommend. But in reaching a final figure it will have to be remembered that the capacity for making war is not separable from economics." It is clear that a severe business recession or sudden deflation would do more than upset our domestic economy. It would vindicate Soviet predictions and give Communist propagandists in democratic Eur The Washington PRACTICE DIFWIMACY AT GARE D'ORSAY; 10, 000 GIFTS ARRIVE TODAY ON "MERCI TRAIN; TRUMAN MADE , CHANGES IN LABOR BILL. WASHINGTON. One of the famous names of Franca Is "Qual DOrsay which actually means fDock of Orsay," but which has become to mean Jttia French foreign office, because of Its location Blongslde the dock ef Orsay. FRENCH PEOPLE E Almost unknown Is a railroad station alongside foreign office called "Gars DOrsay. It is little-use- d it ation. No Important persona ever arBut Just a month ago thie station there. rive most Important to tha American people. J Just a stone's throw from It at the Qual DOrsay, d the gentlemen In the pants continued Jusy at their professional task of maintaining the proper relations between countries. But at the Clare D'Orsay a new kind of foreign relations was faking shape a project In amateur diplomacy straight from the hearts of the French people, i For on the platform of the Gere D'Orsay were tled thousands of gifts for the Merd train, which arrives In New York harbor today, as Frances gesture of gratitude to the American people. At Christmas time the deadline for gifts to he Merd train the Gars D'Orsay was by all odds Ahe busiest place In France. More than anything lse It resembled a ehild'a notion of Santa Claus's orkshop. ! Yhe be-ca- gray-stripe- a Merd America i a J There were dolls end dishes, historical docu- Rodin statue so precious It should Jiave been In a museum. There were busts of benjamin Franklin and busts of Franklin Roose velt; paintings by the French masters, Lacework ments, and a Jind fancy silk dresses; and battle-tor- n flags from emcient wars. There were gifts from high personages and gifts from school children. There was a Aiapoleonic coach and the first motorcycle ever Jtuilt; the flag that flew from the Eiffel tower Vhen General Patton entered in 1944 and the flag that flew over Verdun In 1918. J And all of them said, In words or In spirit, EMerci, America." A Paris business firm, carrying out this spirit Vf friendship, undertook to crate the gifts, without charge. It little dreamed what It bargained Jor. Gifts poured in from all corners of France, literally by the thousands every day. Last estimate 5s that the gifts ranging from a tiny spoon to a JJgiant bronze school bell total 100,000. The Gare D'Orsay. before the train's depnrtute Jvas packed and jammed. Crates were everywhere. Jn the walls of the station were signs Alabama. aArizona. Arkansas and so on around the Jvall of the station to "West Virginia and Wyoming. Piled up by state were the gifts which the French committee .believed most appropriate for ... bench. Finally they were all loaded into the old but Jtow freshly painted boxcars labeled 40 llommes, Chevaux, which American soldiers knew so 5' ell in World War I. Then, after a journey to TIavre, they weie hoisted aboaid the SS Magellan. which today steams up New York harbor to salute Jhe Statue of Liberty the only similar gift of friendship from the people of any nation to the (people of the United States. J Truman On Injunctions t Only the palace guaid know it. hut the administration's new labor bill was held up at the last i i i unoDo anBisiui iBJiqdejSod.fj am qjiq.w u ;uduiasija.pB am jo jaed jBqj juudea i;.vv I 'Ilf's; jb si uadnd am ajaqav saouBisu) asoqj u suuinioo S4! u; paifsnqnd sjuauiasii.ia.vpB ui .tBaddB Xbuu qjiq.w sjojjb Cub joj Xjniqisuodsaj lepuBuij autwssB jou iijav iBUjnof-pBJaaqx H T 'ssa inuoo jo j.ib Japun ubSo-- j jb e.njjo jsod aqj ui jaiiBiu ssbj puo.ias sb pa.iaiuyj 00 (ItS JBaX auo '(KVC'S sqtuoiu xts 'oq-f'sqjunu aajqi Xbuba aqosj u paui Xq'la.voqB sb aoud auiBS iCenBA aqjBj epjsjno pBiu Xq Iqiuoiu b 00'tS jbjaibo iCq paja.vtfap fBujnof-p8Ja- u aqj, T-i- i SOUND qo-iei- pi- His Opinion and Concerning Sun Tans ope a talking point of damaging effectiveness. Such a possibility might be of more immediate concern than the possibility of By RAY NELSON war. Then how shall our government pro- ceed? We think that Mr. Forrestal has INSTABILITY pointed the way. capacity,) The follyvvinj advk, e to patents economics and diplomacy must be consid-- ' iwas Riven by Dr. Adolph Weinzirl, ered as equal components of national of the Unl o 0re. And the government must see that, on medical icy. . school. It was rennnt i its citizens get their moneys worth if,Pd in the Ulah Stale lot Health bulletin: disaster is to be avoided. One hopeful step toward those goals' Adolescence is naturally a per- THINGS By IIENRl -- !) j ideai-eig- ' mat-te- te - o O Im a redhead, and I well-adjuste- at Red Bluff Bull iSale Is This Week j ASTHMA Den t let eouhin( wheeling, recurring at Bronchial Asthma SU! that Olir chlldlPtl aie well dent .al Asa, slant John R. Steelman. tacks ruin sleep and energy without trying UENDACO. which works thru the blood to reach bronchial tubes and lungs Usually helps nature quickly remote thick, itlckr mucus Thus alleviates Piesi- coughing and Sid freer breathing and belter I " RED BLUFF, Feb. 1. If noth ing else, lt certainly la raining bulls here. They are rolling in from all points of the compass as this hub of the northern California winter range country braces itself for the further onslaught of more This than 1000 cattlemen expected to I tried the hard way. I took a car.l kim In attend the annual Red Bluff of Bakers cocoa from the pantrf I I F.ange Bull Sale Thursday, Fri- shelf, retired to my room, am'l world, day and Saturday. coated myself with It. Then bid fo and Charles went out to play. Nobody was fool-- Slates ,J. T, McKerras in ed either before I went in thil ilthou Luther, sale committeemen chaige of consignments report sale water or after I did. Before I go l ind h, animals have been coming In by in th water I smelled like a ct; 1 C train and truck in of hot chocolate. After I came accept numbers over the past weekend. I looked like one. All I needed wa own t We expect to receive 424 head a marshmallow on top of my hea: many of cattle before were through, and would you could have drunk me. McKerras said. This includes 333 attem In here Now, Florida during 13 Hereford bulls, shorthoim bulls Lon deal a the I winter, great spend and 76 bred Hereford Heifers. If holdin of time for cold, my praying we are ever going to have enough concei bulls to go around, this should be rainy days. I must offset the offens of half the Chamber of prayers the year. warin the According to Roy Owens, com- Commerce secretaries in lead mitteeman in charge of the March State. Because if we have a cold, which of Dimes bull to be auctioned off rainy winter no one will be ab.e for the benefit of the national to get a tan and everjone will preiei Eut 1 polio fund, a last minute special look just as pale and sickly as ir.dice do. feature has been added to the proJustil O gram. General Mark Clark has Houst sent word Master Sergeant Frank Indeed, my idea of the perfec! had Grubbs of Fort Winfield Scott attire for the beach is a menti will be available to auction off suit, a topcoat, a derb.'l meet can one bull a on no and benefit the scarf. Then Saturday. hat at u former Gvubbs, a professional tell what I look like underneath. ao pi Master of Ceremonies, has appear-an- d I can stroll around in perfec. ed at many large civic functions.oomfort. Mi throughout California In the past But as I said, this winter ha dnpai year through. the courtesy of the been well nigh perfect, and I hav that Army. He is reputed to be a com- had a devil of a time. Next year. gardi plete variety show wrapped up in Mother Nature doesnt come to tiai one person. rescue and give I'lorida a lot of aouli storms and sleet and hail. Im off tha t Th to the Aleutians, which I undeCRUISER FOUND rstand have the sort of weatherl hu t TARPON SPRINGS. Fla., Feb. that discourages any lighter attire) soul for 2 U.P A crippled cabin than a fur parka. cruiser was towed Into Anclote tame today with all persons aboard It reported in good condition, climaxYOUR the search spurred ing a night-lon- g 1 nn SOS signals picked up by come installations from Miami to New of tl Orleans. James L. Pippin, light- Secu house keeper at the key which oat. lives 3 miles off shore here, sard Without Calomel And Towll Jump Oat l Ruse Go to Bed the ia Rem Morwinj the boat, Mary III, full of clusi J folks. but that all were safe. He Th lirer should pour out about 2 pints bilo juice into your bowel every dev. It ths the that was motor boats reported bile ia flowing freely, your food mey p imp out of order and rescue operations digest. not It may just decay in the bowel. Tni If, cowere carried on in "rough seas. gae bloat up your stomach. You getwon nee nstipated. You feel tour, sunk and the d Mrs. refused. But the recent downfall WASHINGTON. (NEA1 Cornelia Bryce Pinchot. widow of of his cabinet is proof of his n great Progressive! tention that the coalition the governor and conserva- - ment would not work unlessmore tionist, has just returned from her prime minister were given second trip through Greece with a power, report that things there have gone, NEW CABINET MIGHT WORK BETTER from bad to worse. She does not minimize the facts Sophoulis has again been perthat docks have been repaired, suaded to remain as prim? minister roads built, fields fertilized, nul-'a- t the head of a new cabinev. aria swamps sprayed, people fedj Maybe his new collection will tssrk Communist seizure of the govern- - better than the last one. ment staved off, the Russians keptj if the new Sophoulis govern-fropossible occupation of the! menf fais, the next step r.ow being Suez Canal. considered is the creation of a non- Where the Greek experiment! parliamentary government. This has bogged down, the probaoly means letting the king and vigorous Mrs. Pinchot declares, !SPnd parliament home, then apis politically. She holds American 'pointing a small super- - or partly responsible. parliamentary group to do the law-Th- e Interference here is plain.! making. The danger here is that American enginers, doctors, and the men appointed to this group relief workers know their jobs and! would become a violently repres- are doing them. American pohticallsive government, advisers do not have the same de-- 1 What Greece needs most are (free of competence In their field tain basic reforms of good govern- the technical people have in ment, says Mrs. Pinchot. It needs not a Communist revolution but theirs. AMERICANS TRIED a P.oosevelt Nevy Deal kind of revNOT TO INTERFERE olution that will take care of the American political and military, needs of the Greek common people, many fine young advisers sent to Greece wiirnolThfre doubt maintain that they have Creeks with real ability to carry !h?ue reforms Mrs. Pinchot leaned over backwards in trying' ?ut fact that these reforms not to interfere with the Greekl foun(1bein carrie1 ou ' "bat ni,t ,r.n!aie insisted government. They . rommand in t he field is lendinK many democratically'Greeks ,0 1he hills in opposition d held elections in 1946. These elec- - 0 the Athens government. A Puta. lt MJ,S' Pn?chot tions were supervised by United T. as no" mvested n Nations observation teams '10,( 00,000 in Greece. But in mak-were pronouned free and fair. ,h's investment, the United parliamentary government wis elected and set up. But under the tates jas n,ot ,al"a's backed thf Greek constitution, as under thebpT Ift'cnl elements. In missions American constitution, members of a'' t smart enough to give the cabinet do not have to be elect-If;- ? people the new,deal ed members of the thpy tipse,ve- ,hp S400.000.000 branch of government. And in pick-i,hdown lnves,ed wl11 ing the Greek cabinet end many th ey,ha.ve adviAmerican lesser officials, the U. S. plans and specifications for sers have interferred plenty. Mrs. K,oodLov W. Henderson then direr- - . P ,ne'v nchotU months '"ba tor of the State Department bpe" .'Iej'a1,.?ns ,hey ha' Office of Near Eastern Affairs. went to Greece in 1917 and personally selected the aged Themis-tocle- s Potatoes kept in a closed bin Sophonlis as prime minister with some ripe apples l not to head a coalition government. Homes in sprout: : seemen m De me oesi man Furriers sell sheep skins under ablp. 70 different names. rob lefused several the Sophoulis (,376111 times. His reason was that he did. not think th coalition wculd work CARBONDALE, Pa., Feb 1 UPi because as prime minis; er he wv.s,A nilne caxe.in caused a surface to be given responsibility without subsidence in Carbondale and the execulve power to enforce his firsl reports said that today about 12 decisions. That power was left tn ,hohres vvei e damaged. t he other ministries of the cabinet.! Police said the cave-i- n occurred And men chosen 1o b minis-iu- j a Hudson Coal company mine fmters of forPjTn ffairs, interior, below the surface of Kane street, infa,i(in alld lahor Th.ee persons were said to have were all -- ightisf reactionaries injured. v liberal reform. Police said the subsidence posed to ev-- ry finally took no job he- - ered a whole city block. Some cause be was led to believe that if parts of the affected area dropped he did not, American ai l might before than 20 feet, they said. govern-Republica- m able-mind- supra-interferen- cer-othe- rs - A double-breaste- m.-- j 38-fo- Key-earl- - af WAKE UP i LIVER BIL- E- s - ,s-- - Damaged fjp0 looks punk. It takes those mild, gentle Carter Little Liver Pills to get these 2 pint of blip now ing freely to make you feet up and upGet a packaga today. Effective in mkinf bile flow freely. Ak for Carter Little U' Pills, S3 at any drugstore. For Ladies Specialty Shop Excellent Selling Ability j 1 Required caus the ww Fan il, e mat, L regi Ukt MANAGER te local ime tout Elat B tht OCCi seei rar ;i she wit hav V cttEgf-m- w msmsss ? k world-shakin- This sort of torture hm ber I going on for a long time. I No member when I was a kid, and vel had come to Florida for the firs (O time, how' I tried to overcome th i unwillingness of my skin to Stalin get to look like the other k;dJ when we swam and fished In th sin drive. Manatee River. re-- So They Say belly-laugh- allows me to sneak in without I former being seen. The few times I hav racial braved a daylight dip have been Jely t torment. As soon as I ap. pure flcltli on the beach, with men and I While pear gals the color of ted on hatracks all around, I get stares Gen. which say much better than I the coi words, Mercy, who let him out ixpecti of his jar? and There's a fresh Utiy ' tourist for you he hasn't been hut die here ten minutes. ' In view of the extent to which the entire juvenile delinquency problem seems to develop in the presence of such symptoms, it Is easy to jump to the conclusion that these symptoms and these along constitute the underlying any other labor leader who ataged a atrike en- cause. This may lead to the condangering tha national health and welfaie. siderable confusion and give rise to the conviction that the causes Thia was stricken out at the last mlnuta. Also, the cooling-of- f period for a threatened or delinquency are so complex and eo numerous that no effec20 to 30 days. was raised from atrike tive remedies can be applied. Heres the inside story of how the changes came This confusion and the attendant about: feeling of hopelessness can be resolved to a considerable extent by Backlit ag a Conference a frank recognition of the basic disease for what it is family dis- Ona, hour befora Secretary of Labor Maurice integration. Tobin was scheduled to appear before the senate To the child, the family constilabor committee on Friday morning, Charlea Murthe most important part of tutes phy, tha white house legislative representative, re- the world. If the child is to grow was still disagreement safely into adolescence and later ported to Truman that there d into on the strike Injunction clausa. adulthood, it Truman Immediately Instructed Secretary Tobin must be able to feel a deep sense of and satisfaction within to cancel his appearance befora tha aenate com- thissecurity little family mittee and to meet at tha white house at 3 p.m. world. It is obviously Impossible to proFriday. At the ensuing conference were: the President himself, Tobin, Murphy, Attorney General vide the child with this feeling and perhaps Tom Clark, Assistant John Steelman and Clark when the parents in the same household are Clifford. divided into opposing camps by mu-ththe tually antagonistic emotions, hopes Ensued a pitched battle over phy injunctlon ban on atrikes endangering public or interests, and by differingconvicseal and mental capacities, health and welfara. . tions and actions. Clifford and justice department lawyer except Such a family situation it bewilin contended the for Attorney General Clark dering to the child because of thejunction clause should be left In the bill. Steel- confusion and uncertainties it enman end Tobin wanted It out, argued that It was genders. It gives rise to fears and divided a gratuitous prejudgment of labor. allegiances in the child. It raises Weve got to assume that labor has grow up questions which seemingly have no and will carry Its responsibilities, asserted Steel- - answers. It make, the child won- whether that which is under man. I'1, stood to he right really is right. What is the child to think when labor should be given a chance to cooperate vol- the oldster in the family talk one untarily with the government In preventing crip- way and act another? pling strikes with no legal club over its head. The child Is tossed about on a As the argument continued, the President, who sea of uncertainty, in such a situoriginally favored Injunctions, finally agreed that ation. It doesnt know just where It might arouse too much labor resentment, do is stands or, for that matter, where anyone else stands. more harm than good. So it is obvious that to such a Clark Clifford disagreed. child neither precept of disciplinSome of these labor leaders have a complex ary section has any meaning. about Injunctions." he declared. But the great They may, on the contrary, only majority of labor won't be affected by this provi- add to the child's sense of bewiand dission. And weve got to protect the government lderment, uncertainty satisfaction. and the people against production shutdowns in o these very critical times. With the coming of adolescence, the child makes the startling dis- Finally Truman settled it. If vou knew- the history of injunctions and theorery mat me lamuy worm nas smaller, while the hardships they caused labor as I do, he said. In world Jutfcwde has enormously ex- effect, you would take a different slant on the pando( The adolescent child will subject. I realize at much at anybody that it is inevitably and quite naturally outside satisfaction to use the injunction at time and I Kn ,0 tbp Vlrdc: have used it on several occasions mvself in serious normal and desirable. The emrrgencies but I don t blame labor leaders foriadius,ed family, recognizing this jvvill endeavor to assist with skill protesting against the practice. In the old days, continued the President, in and good judgment in bringing, rdual emancipation from effect, before labor's rights were recognized by ahou annV(,lsaft u!n7shmUd'Vbe the new deal, the injunction was used too often ro1at,ly a weapon of discrimination against labor, instevi complete by the time adulthood is of for the public good. reached. But. in the case of the adolescent who is bewildered and gieatly dissatisfied by a divided family and the inconsistencies in the restraints is imposes, this process of pation ia apt to become a revolt. Most persons on the verge of cracking up need And the revolt may be against sos at their own ciety as a whole. gome good, is not mistakes, and the realization Ihat a STRIKE PARLEY g a event in their lives. When 1 get SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 1 (UP' A chance was seen here today my patients to laugh at their own mistakes, they that minor phases of a strike-en- d are a long way tow aid solving their problems. would be agreed upon Dr. C. Charles Burlingame, eminent psychiatrist ing proposal by Kennecott Copper corporation and president of the Institute of Living. officials and representative of the Brothei hood of Locomotive Fiie- men. Basic issues of the stiike were The Republican Parly is a long way fionr he-- , undpr discussion yesterday, coming extinct. It will continue to be a force in ' Congtfsj and in the nation.- - Rep, Cheil e Hal-- ' Ipck, ' R r of Indiana. itatio 1 liefs. minute hy President Truman himself so that three major changes could b made. On was a strong Injunction clausa to enable the government to crack down on John L. Lewis or th A My house is right on the beach, but I seldom use the ocean savi miThe under the cover of darkness that rmtrol The doctor points out that the more prominent indications of family instability are readily recognizable and, when present, are likely to attract immediate attention. Some of the more obvious of these are: divorce, desertion, pov-- j erty, mothers compelled by cumstanceg to earn their own livings, alcoholism and crime. Some of the less obvious indlca- uonSof family instability are: rmo- tional immaturity of one or both parents, health handicaps, physical disabilities; discrepancies In mental capacties, in cultural backgrounds and in attitudes or religious be- Merry-Go-Roun- d o afraid vmi mg tu.. me loose in equatorial Afnra for, teplace year, wearing nothing but a berp I r.ain st and Id come back looking like t Comn bowl of cream, save for a In l(emtic highly unattractive freckles across llit nev my nose and shouldeis. Daily I parents make the home of her childhood something she can believe in, so that the home of her hopes can be something to have faitli In, for naught con be counted on for certain, save her feeling for these things. Next thing may be talking checks as further protection against tampering, says the magazine Science Illustrated. A sound track would carry the writers voice beneath his writing. When the check goes through a banks sorting machine the voice would speak the identifying words. Additional words would be spoken if the check were altered. That would be interesting, but not entirely new. We know of a lot of checkbooks right now that are yelling Ouch! as the Christmas bills come in. 1 i of emotionally reinforced n President Trumans order that our be economic and programs military XVlunSe;, m by the State Department in l0Uls with something m which they a single, uniform policy. Another is Mr; can believe. The one thing that ban be Forrestals apparent determination to push believed-in, all else, is the real unification of the armed forces. A home, and isabove doesn't have be third is the Hoover Commissiond recom- a wealthy one, or artistic,to or mendations of ways to save billions through even a cultured one for that r unless culture is defined as more efficient government operations. as primarily to fineness Even with these promised helps the joo of referring feeling and to habitually will be hard. It will take a lot of high attitudes. The home in which the adoiesthinking and high statesmanship, and a minimum of prejudice and partisan politics, irfatdaugh,er ba8 been reared con-tdraft a budget whose arithmetic bound to be a major influence in the ques- - forward to creating constitutes her every hope for future. Let her tion of peace or war. SOUND FINANCES 1 Another w inlet The c ,, ,, having now, and ftstionaU change my residence to iiinPle 8 tian Islands. Along A sizzling theiniui.i.c, a Moved sun and cloudless ing aie juth the for me. jjrotru 8 These three fotm tic conjr uck th ation which inspires too get out and get tanncU tie coi Along of a concert piano. All (,er State, people are on the beach it troof 40 stretched out in deck V ,)la, ing golf and tennis in shot bouncing around in bo,vs ptatu locked ally naked. To me. the whole pet,'usance .1 One c thh fop sickening. The idea of !? people spending half ,.f iheir'lia',jl bronze color! Whj, thiVre like' bunch of heathen Nuts! I might as well b honos IsecT ' about this thing. 8 ta? a!r1 Im flirepres ran ihat ; forked jealous of those would like to tan then m pinned with a buggy whip. I igency. . for-iIO- fl pElP1; t.rnun ;;!uns c j McLEMuhe is or is 'nid Is sest M P81 War-makin- g - sjuautjjBdap qB auoqdaiax 'qatn 'ubSo'j taams lejuao tsa.w gi jaclBds.waM .anB. aqjBj aqj Xq uoouaaijt Asp xea.w Xua.va paqsipjOtj "We Don't Play That Way Any More!" THOUGHTS ON WAR AND ECONOMICS ADVICE LAST-MINUT- GIVES REPORT FORRESTAL Logan, Utah, Wednesday, February 2, 1&19 HERALD-JOURNA- Quick relief with MENTHOLATUM Dont let coughing wrack his chest rub on d Mentholutum. See how quickly Mentholatums famous combination of menthol, camphor and other ingredients help lessen congestion without burning tender skin. Its soothing time-prove- vapors comfort inflamed bronchial passages, ease coughing spasms. 354 and 75. Attractive Salary and ) has trq Commission Arrangement For One Qualified oi flee Wa f ed fro APPLY IN PERSON Ate tu by NO PHONE CALLS P. EDWARDS Eccles Hotel Friday 9 A.M. to 6 P. M. A |