Show THE OGDEN 6-- A PUBLISHING COMPANY A L GLASMANN EDITOR AND GENERAL MANAGER Associate Editor Leonard G Diehl Associate General Manager Francis Frank I AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published Every Evening and Sunday Morning Without a Muzzle or a Club Marches 1879 as second class matter according to Act of Congress at Entered the at Ogden postoffice " i ' Member of The Associated Press United Press NEA Service and A dispatches credited to The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use lor republication of all news news 'it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also t i SUBSCRIPTION PRICES -be y: Carrier S5c a month $920 a year when paid in advance ByMaU-Must a year $100 AH States Other taemth JSOO in Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming I Standard-Examin- i I : ' aye PdJ"5J ffi The Washington On Teaching the Dignify of Labor Prof 'Harry David Gideonse head of the York says a big Brooklyn college in New Merry-Go-Roun- d ' semester of planned labor camp activity somewhere in the country far from the By Drexo Pearson and Robert 8 Allen would improve normal environment WASHINGTON — No military secret is more closeschool 'the curriculum of almost any ly guarded than a sensational "new robot airplane now tried out secretly by the navy in both There pfooably will be the answer that Hawaiibeing and Laneley Field Va experts have been working for more han athletic activitiesTgive students plenty of 'tenNavy to develoo a reliable "pilotless" plane op years outlet t for their animal spirits and plenty of erated by radio control Observers who have wit exercise' But that would be to miss the idea nessed some of the latest testa pronounce theoffdevice disms near miraculous A robot bomber takes entirely Others wiU'probabiy point out that charges its bombs over a distant targe V returns to : v stu-den- t4 r i : i 'in federal CCCcamps youngmen are already getting plenty of training" But that would be to overlook the point that in CCC camps enrollment is largely restricted to a less privileged group of young men Iir thexnatter touched upon: by Prof essor Gideonse1 the Germans were wise Even in times the" republic instituted labor camps They were not the harsh ones the Nazis have made of them The republic saw in labor camps a chance to further the cause of democracy Just as children of all classes " and creeds are mixeo! up in the public schools so young men from all kinds of homes were mixed up' in the labor camps the boys who The sons of were some day to control industry in Germany were taught by the tired back and the 'calloused hand to get some idea of the role millions of their fellow countrymen perform day by day and week by week in the necessary economy of the nation A man who has labored docs not look down upon labor The labor camps performed another function in' Germany They hardened the youths physically The toughening process so nec- essary in a soldier was largely attended to before the young men were called up This matter happens to be very much in the thought of the officers now charged with training America's peacetime conscript army A considerable number of college profes-- : sors have asked army men whether it is not possible to give the draftees some form of vocational or specialized training The an swer has been a decided negative Col W H Draper Jr of the U S gen eral staff emphasizes the fact that the primary purpose of the draft is to teach Amer-cia- s young men how to be soldiers to train ' an army capable if necessary of meeting at least on equal terms 'the best troops any nation might throw against them Colonel Draper wisely said thaj after the draftees had spent a day partly in drill and marching partly in a classroom getting military instruction and partly in necessary chores such as kitchen police the embryo soldiers would be in no mood to take up further class work So the matter comes back to the Gideonse suggestion Some form of wise labor camp training would help to give American youths healthy bodies The colleges could then seek to give them the healthy trained minds The graduates would be an asset of the United V ) " States : : pre-Na- zi the-wealth- " - - ' 'Petticoats Rule ihe Roost - ' Dover a little community of 700 souls down in North Carolina is going to be a place- - well worth watching And if all goes well it may be a village well worth matching For it has a complete petticoat govern- - ment : - Nqt only is the mayor a woman but the boarci of aldermen is completely female the lone man 'chosen having declined to go on with' the job Now the ladies have a chance to show what they can do all by themselves If they don't balance the budget get a dollar's worth of supplies fdr a dollar expendi- ture run the loafers out of town and keep the streets cleaner than they have ever been before we sadly miss our guess For running a town is just a form of good housekeeping — woman's specialty The Spirit That Wins - In the days bf chivalry when a knight forth to do battle his lady fair was with the familiar apt to give words: "Come back with your shield or on it" Something of the same spirit seems to exist in modern Greece The citizens have been sending packets of prized cigarets to their warriors In one such packet was found a letter from the donor: "Smoke these cigarets and enjoy them If you happen to be my own son do not return at all to your father's house unless you return victorious If you are not my son re- member your father would express the same Went him-farewel- l " " - f wish" i 4 base and lands without being touched by a human hand The distance of the target is calculated in ad- vini anA whon th robot reaches it a device auto matically releases the bombs Naturally the aiming is largely a matter of chance but in the tests a number of direct hits were scored The cruising radius of the robots is limited only by fuel supply and the radio frequency range While most effective at short distances the robot e can be used for bombing in conjunction with piloted planes or by a system of reiay control uiai is Dyraaio stations aiong me - long-rang- so-call- ed lino tt f )itrVf So closely is theinvention guarded that navy of ficers have been warned that any talk about it will be considered a" violation of the espionage act and make them subject to court martial and dismissal Conscientious ObjectorsThe man responsible for the light sentence given the eight divinity college students who refused to riot the New York court register for the draft was but Attorney General-- Robert Jackson The young men who were students of Union Theo logical Seminary were about to receive year sentence But as a result of Jackson's intervention they got a year and a day Jackson polled the Judges in advance of the deci- sion and found they were all in favor off a lorig stiff sentence Partly for humanitarian reasons and want the boys to become partly because martyrs who would arouse wide popular objection to the law Jackson instructed U S Attorney Cahill to ask for a shbrt sentence The students may now get out in even less a year The short sentence makes them eligiblethan for White House reprieve whereas with a Ioneer sent ence the president would not have felt free to in tervene Hoover's Crusade Inside word reaching Washinrton lt that WprWt Hoover has worked himself up into a vertiable fever pitch over his scheme to feed the countries of Europe this winter it The is throwing all his energies and resources into the fight and talks about it as a sort of holy crusade Not in years has he been so wrought up not even in his hatred of the New Deal When he talks on the subject his usual 'stolidity vanishes and he flames like a torch A feature of Hoover's state of mind'is a 'seething bitterness against Britain which opposes his food plan Some friends are of the opinion that an important reason for his Anglophobia is the prominence of British Laborites in the Churchill government which Hoover is said to dislike Whatever the cause !the is thumbs-dow- n on the English and in private conversations holds them responsible for thwarting his scheme Also he makes it clear that he is determined to compel them to back down and allow food to be shipped through their blockade to "" the Nazi-rule- d areas One to whom he truculently announced this determination was Thomas Lamont veteran J P Morgan partner Pacing the room the shouted: "I m going up and down the country with this fight and by God I'll force the British " Hoover went no further abruptly checking himself but his callers got the point Church Campaign At present Hoover is concentrating his crusade on church organizations particularly the powerful Federal Council of Churches He has failed to make any headway with other groups or the public at large At a meeting of council leaders last week Hoover spokesmen spent three hours arguing his side They encountered stiff resistance from Frank Polk Under Secretary of State in the Wilson administration and Dr Henry P Van Dusen dean of the Union Theoloz-ld" v seminary These men challenged Hobver's plan on the ground that (1) it was not a formula to feed hungry people but to blackjack the British into loosening their blockade (2) that Hoover has produced no evidence of the starvation he claims (3) thatproven Germany has given no assurances that food would reach the people for whom it Was intended I addition to the churches Hoover is much effort on college groups particularlyexerting women s schools He already has addressed a number of colleges and his schedule calls for many more such appearances In all his talks he stresses the humanitarian appeal Note — When Jan Paderewski aged pianist and e president of Poland reached the U S recently as a refugee from Nazi aggression Hoover £e!bim t4 endorse the food scheme Paderewski fiatly refused Dutch Princess Inside story of the expected White House visit of Crown Princess Juliana of The Netherlands is that she and Mrs Roosevelt have a correspond-hT- r kept up mc? fa Princess arrived in Canada six ago with her two baby daughters ' t0 Washington might have come sooner ft PnncS P"t it off because she didn't relish a J6 VSSa enterUinment She wants to extfavagant med and wined while her own people fmaa domination' are living on ra- tioned food withhcr two children has been living I?Prnh?i 1iS h0USre in °ttawa- - Her husband Prince ndon as to Queen a Germingconcentrationbrother is rePorted to be camp has not entertained has and playing tennis She 5£t 1 & f°T two days' beginning December 18 Defense 'Influence' a hi(?den hrickbat in that warni ing issued by Assistant War Secretary sharp Robert terson that no one has an ""inside track" in Patthe awarding of army defense' contracts What the formef U S circuit court judge didn't say was that he is planning to insert a little clause in every army contract requiring contractors to swear they paid no commissions or any other fees to obtain the order for doing so is cancellation of the contract Penalty Under the law Patterson Is legally responsible for the entire industrial mobilization program and passes on every large army contract The boasts of certain lobbyists and promoters that they can get army orders through "inside influence" are therefor a direct reflection on him He doesn't like it one bit and has no intention of putting up with it Some of the "influence" operators" have even told officials of cities they could deliver defense projects which had already been located elsewhere by the war department for strategic reasons (Copyright 1940 by United Feature Syndicate Inc) - he-did- - Nazi-occupi- ed - !' - : - al i one-tim- w JlfjiL2 inrpntol3' aide-de-ca- amSsSL11153 mild-manner- high-pressu- ed re er Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON Dec can Communists may have laid up new troubles for themselves when they cut the formal ties bindinz them to the Comintern They did it chiefly to get out from under the Voorhis act which will go into effect in January and will require any political organiza tion subject to foreign control to register with the attorney general What they may have done however was put 'themselves right iri unaer xne act in a oig way That at any rate is the belfef of the law's author Congressman Jerry Voorhis of California Voorhis points out that the law is a double-edge- d weapon" A political organization subject to foreigm control is obliged to give the department of justice the names and addresses of all its branches all its officers and all its members or active supporters Theory is tthat if the Communist n party or- - the bund should' comply with that law the exposure would practically end T t$ effectiveness The other edge is this: f an outfit which is suspected s& having foreign ties refuses to register the department of justice will then have authority to investigate it from top to bottom to see whether those foreign ties do in fact exist The department has not before had that power' It could neyer do much In the way of: investigating the Communist party simply because the party was perfectly legaL It'll still be legal after the Voorhis act goes into effect— but it'll also be legal-fothe FBI to look into 1-- AmeH the-loc- al - DECEMBER i?40 ! So Pardon Us If Wq Aren't Impressed ' —mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm' ' i i T! j J I wo-fcdg- ed By BRUCE CATTON - 5 SUNDAY MORNING R Moscow Split Mav Not Solve Troubles of American Reds Law Provides Trap r- - — x 4 STANDARD-EXAMINE- - German-America- - v ? r things to see if the party's claim that it is independent of Moscow's control is justified "If they don't register the de partment of justice certainly ought to go into it very carefully to see if there aren't other aspects of foreign control aside from direct affiliation" says Voorhis Others to Feel Law Incidentally the Voorhis bill also gives the FBI a good chance to eo through the Bund with a comb or to look into the affairs of such outfits as the Silver Shirts ' Political organization? BuiopK tn jforeign control are not the only ones required to register by the fine-tooth law Also involved are "evrv or ganization which- engages "both in civilian military activity and in no litical' activity" and any organiza tion which having some degree of foreign control engages in military activity Definition of "military activity" contained in the bill is very broad uruis or parades of a military character even if held without arms' are Included Definition of what constitutes foreign control is equally broad - Admit It Now Amusing part about the whole thing— as Voorhis points out— is that the Communists have always denied steadfastly that acts or pol icies of the American branch of the party are in any way 'influ enced by what Moscow may want Best efforts of the Dies committee to wring ah admission of foreign" control fromleaders of the 'Amer ican party have always failed "It's something" said Voorhis "to see them admittingit now by indirection that they did take or ders from Moscow in the past" DOROTHY PORTER'S o I True Pioneer Stories memories rthe one which is out- standing among them is the recolBrig-halection of my friendship with ' ' ' Young" Thi3 statement was made by Isaac Morris 81 of 2595 Wall' who treasures as one of his most valued possessions a picture of Brigham Young as a young man which was given him while he was on an L D S mission in Wales 'England "My parents died when J was very young and I made my home with Bishop Ellas Moore in Salt ' Lake City He was assisting with the building of the I D S temple I secured a job driving a team and it was here that I met brigham Young and came to love and admire him more than any other man I have ever met He was of the finest character and I have known no one who? is his equal I didn't go see the picture of his life because I always want to remember him as I knew him and not' as other people saw him" the oldster said his eyes mirroring the Intensity of his feeling Mr Morris fulfilled a mission in England during the years from 1902 to 1904 President Heber J Grant was t mission president at that time He stayed at the same house Brigham Young did when he was serving as a missionary in that ' was his landlady and it country who gave him the treasured picture Weaker and Wiser' Born August 23 1859 in Salt Lake City Mr Morris was engaged in farming most of his life later dabbling a bit in real estate He married Sarah Emma Stewart January 9 1890 She died in 1913 They had "no children Mr Morris smiled engagingly when asked what he thought of the modern youth He said he was probably asking for something by passing his opinion but that 'he thought they were "weaker and wiser" than his generation "Young boys and girls know too Inuch nowadays" he declared "I'm not exactly enthused over the way they are going But then you can't blame them With life as easy --as it is they have to find something' to spend their energy on If they don't have to spend it on work they spend it tearing around living just as fast a life "as they v ' -' j ' -- possibly can" The pioneer said that when he was a boy about the only recreation he had time for was dancing Wild About Dancing V "And I have to admit I was wild about it" he' grinned "I would go to every such affair for miles around I usually acted as floor manager or caller The dancing which is so popular now doesn't appeal to me however" According to Mr Morris of the many inventions and improvements he has seen during his life the one which struck him most forcefully was the airplane "I was in Wales England when the Wright brothers were experimenting with their first airship" he said "I often scoffed at their efforts thinking how silly it was to expect all that steel and other heavy material to float through space No more though "In this day and age it doesn't pay to laugh at anything" o London: 1940 m - BOAKfe CARTER'S Sidelights of "I think hat of air my childhood Clippings - from Lord Beavrrbrook's - LONDON DAILY EXPRESS There is considerably irony inAcivilian passenger who may be the spectacle of the army's effort obliged to relinquish his seat! FROniECY WAS WRONG No greater or more potent- sounded at to choke off any further constructThe air y a cinema' in Sussex A few people ion" of- commercial air transports argument could be made to aub went out and the audience settled To cover the army's own inabil stantiate the position of the airdown to see the7 next film The ' ity to agree on types of ships and plane manufacturers and the com- title was "One Hour to Live" equipment that it wants a barrage mercial air transport companies is being laid down by that they need not only to replace' of Twin-bill- s at London's movies: the publicity and from war department i'Grapes of Wrath" and "The Body army and navy members on thet their present equipment' but need Was jWell Nourished The Case aviation committee' of the priori- to expand to meet the demands of thi Frightened Lady' and "Let ties board here belittling the im- of the public and the national deGeorge Do It" trans- fense J requirementsof commercialair portance And it Js ' I ' port none other than the army which A resident of southeast England The irony lies in the fact that makes it! ' was- "rooting around" the ruins of one of the fundamentals taught the when Therefore army plans a his bombed home: He picked up at the army war college is that to demand its personnel be given book from the midst of a shattered commercial air transport is one of the right to throw out the civili tool chest It's title was: "Minor the most ISAAC NORRIS Important sinews of a traveling public and £ become - the — House' Repairs and How to Effect nation Treasure! friend's photo engaged in a national de- major patron of the air transport Them" —Photo by Raba fense effort It is important the industry one looks with consider HISTORY REPEATS? teuches its officers because able askance at the same army James Agate Daily Express writ- army of the for rapid transport importantly demanding that er tells of stopping at a pub and And thisneed the army adds can only airline ships be seeing a print of "John Bull stand- be achieved through a net work of built incommercial this country! ing on the cliffs of Dover straddle-legge- d aircommercial It is quite obvious that air with his hands ibehind him lines' is a critical necessity in transport invafor viewing the preparations to this national defense The significance deepest It emergencies sion on the French coast "and saywar may college teaching army nonsense destrucis and — wickedly ing: 'You may all be d 'd!' The be found in the fact that the Ger- tive policy to attempt suddenly October 13 1803 or mans relied almost print is dated entirely on to hamstring its growth two years ' before Trafalgar Do their commercial airlines and airWithout the 'necessary! equipwe have to wait two years?'' line personnel- - to transport troops ment the airlines cannot deliver and ' light artillery equipment If they- - do not delivery the gov-- v DUTCH RECEIVE FINDS THIS INDEED A GOOD across the Skagerrak from Den- ernment and the public complain § DEATH TIHIEAT mark and Germany to Norway The inevitable result is: that the PLACE TO LIVE The nazi commander in chief for because of the ineptigovernment In Holland Collier's) the army of occupation in (Walter Davenport were not tude of some of its own departAs if the foregoing -- ILi issued an ultimatum a few hours the war department and ments is obliged to nationalize the The election gone we have after a British plane had landed in enough ' of war might find the secretary as it temporarily turned over' to Donlap' Zapfelwitz a Holland village and all 12 occu- it interesting and instructive to industryjust achieved state of affairs a similar had got away: files of their own de- by commandeering the railroads In the search a' large bale of campaign litera pants "Anyone who conceals an enemy partment to discover the origin of the last war ture Mr Zapfelwitz took it away soldier v or offers him shelter will the 'commercial air transport inIt mightnot be amiss ' to rein three loads By now the ex be punished according to German dustry in the United States mind theT readers of this column hortations are" safely cremated al- penal Jaw which involves capital 'The industry was started by the that there are plenty of influences in certain cases"' The United States army in 1918! A — domestic and foreign — which though Mr Zapfelwkz i had7 his punishment commander also said if such acts transport service was established long have been intensely jealous doubts about the combustibility of should recur "a number of hostages in that year between New: York of the rapid 'progress made by some of them Mr Zapfelwitz Is will be taken" and Washington when this nation American air transportation v Polish born now a valuable Am was again in the midst of a giganJ to kill the About thi best way erican citizen "It is a great thing' NOT' MUCH OF war effort Its function was to tic us war Liic niuuoii iioil tui ina AN ADVERTISEMENT" said jvir apieiwitz "to live provide quick delivery for impor- department to obtain a' ruling from country where all this talk is go : Maj Gen A Carton de Wiart tant papers between the two cities the board barring the deing on free" Mr Zapfelwitz told V C who led the allied forces in It also was to provide quick trans liverypriorities four'en-gine- d of the us about Mr Zymbella Norway told young men at a re port for officers to embarkation on more order for transports in ' Mr Zembella is a cop One evening cruiting meeting1 Ballymena points in New York City a than year Mr Zembella was assigned to pre near Antrim' North Ireland that " Later In the same year a group In a statement the newsserve order at a street corner he f "did hot think he was much of of private individuals approached papers Mr Donald to of the Douglas a for 'advertisements aii recruiting the government with an offer to political meeting The orator on that company bearing occasion was being heckled by ta campaign" The general lost an transport mail along the same manufacturing his name declared that the DC-- 4 wars in an arm and eye past officials went route Postoffice very tough and persistent fellow He said that at the end of World deeply into the proposal The day is now more than 90 per cent enand was 'having trouble making gineered This means only very I he thought the German was of the report of the false armistice little himself heard So Mr Zembella got War a fine soldier "But in Poland I United States government authori into stands in the way of going ' a kitchen chair placed it 'on the saw production and "delivering the German from another ties were in various states markrj these vehicles to the air transport opposite corner and told the heck camseen had that If out landing fields with r a view industry to keep it ahead ler to mount it "Now" said Police angle of you ing of the 1 paign New 1 brutality you would not to developingthis man Zymbella "you both talk and be and world the service the provide to able man of understand any run into a transcon- government and public want and see (who wins the crowd I'm seeing not joining up" tinental route to it nobody interferes with either military age expect That's what the army thought of you" And Mr Zapfelwitz wheel There have been strange" of commercial airline operation in whispers lately — many for about a Ing away the last batch of cam- EXTENSION ASKED ! war days The army's posi- month now — of undercover atpaign literature repeated that this FOR TUNNEL LAW past tion today belittling the same in- tempts to be made to destroy the was indeeed a swell place to live United States --air transport industry as of minor importance in and that anybody desiring to make is defense national — the SLAKE picture CITY (AP) E A dustry by tactics which would cut anything out of it can call on him "SALT Hodges state metal mine inspector somewhat amusing to say the of further tevelopment of their equipment under the convenient hopes the scope of Utah s "collar- - least cry of "National Defense" working day law will be LAND PLANNING However to complete the eviI do not accuse the army of tryextended to qover all underground dence against the army's incon- ing to do this I am quite certain CONFAB MONDAY labor including tunnel builders! The law which provides that the sistency one must add two more the army would be horrified if it eight-horeally understood what a dangerday shall be gauged tq points In the early summer of 1919 ous position to its own interests LOGAN— Utah's land use plan- begin with the time the worker a flight to it is taking enters the shaft or bore and to end the navy sponsored boats ning committee will meet Monday known flying But using it Europe looks however colthat on the Utah State Agricultural with his emergence therefrom as NC The mosts famous somebody somewhere has sbid type a lege campus Dr Dilworth Walker presently applies emly to miners NC-4 course was the state representative of the bureau The state supreme court in a re one of Commander Tower now "bill of goods" to some one in the war department causing ft to go piloted by of agricultural economics and sec- cent test case held that the statute Admiral Tower anas presently written could not be Those famous ships were origi- offFor had it not been for the reretary of the' Utah committee so construed-ato cover labor en nounced built by the United States search of the air transport' in12 in water tun- nally members of farm gaged constructing Composed government with the intention ' of dustry neither the United States V1: and about 18 representatives of nels' mail to France! transporting army nor the British'1 would have federal agencies the committee is Hodges whose recommendation any flying fortresses to send to headed by Chairman William Pet- is contained in his biennial report The most satirical commentary England — all of whih were de-- : i erson director of the extension remarked that tunnel digging is however on the army's attitude — on American the signs pioneered to in character ' service Included in the federal rep- similar mining and toward commercial air transport commercial airways ' resentatives are members of the that in either case the hazard to today may be found in a complaint Syndicate Ledger of the health the workman the to is and the service the experiment army extension being) prepared by same i board and later to the station priorities ' Under consideration for discusCOMEDIAN PASSES airlines themselves CHILDREN BORN sion at this meeting will be agriculThe army complains against the NEW YORK Nov 30 (UP) — hSKltitlAM JIT i — A son was necessity of putting up with sevtural program building and other Frank to in obtaining space Tinney 53 once one of the subjects related to the economic born Thursday of Mr and Mrs eral days delay highest-pai- d blackface com'Sthe of on ' airlines B the Harold rural the Felt stage's and social welfare pf Brigham City reservation ' edians died in a Long in to an seek poverty a born was is It state the planned of daughter Wednesday country people Some of the delegates wih re- to Mr and Mr3 Robert Molgard order forcing the airlines to give Island hospital Friday Tinney began his career in vaudeville and main on the campus to participate of Willard and a son to Mr and army officers immediate space on reached apBroadway in 1S10 in activities of the Adult Leader- Mrs Elmer) Mortensen of Bear short notice at any time requested "Follies" in j the of to the 3 13 even any to Dec River pearing displacement school City ship Training raid-warnin- g - : - ': - Opinions well-establish- was 10574 i e ed : " of the Press ° - ' ' v j - v 5 m - - long-await- ed his-frien- " " : 4 t ' York-Washingt- on to-coll- ar" i " ur - ' s : " ' SALT LAKE CITY (AP)— Utah will have a larger quota from the federal works administration in December than for this month Darrell J Greenwell state administrator of the work projects administration said the state had been allotted 10500 men in December compared with 9500 in November and 8500 during the period from June through October The December quota last year - no-mor- -- UTAH WPA QUOTA UP FOR DECEMBER NEWS COMMENTS A half-cock- ed Jf |