Show — m - r v T- -’ -- 4 f i THE OGDEN (UTAH) 6A " This'll Kill 'Im" asop ($g ton §ianbarto1Examtttgr U S Is Just Paper Tiger Red China and United Nations JosePb Public opinion in favor of admitting Red China to the United Nations must be stronger than some of us suspect We say this after reading a full page advertisement inserted in New York Times by the Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to United Nations The plainly believes that the situation calls for a vigorous appeal to Americans to reaffirm their opposition to the admission of Red China The Committee of One Million is bound to wield great influence taking into account the large number of prestige names in! the organization Warren R Austin for example is the honorary chairman Sen Paul H Douglas is chairman of the steering committee Republicans and Democrats are united in the large membership roll The committee presents the situation in these words: “1037000 Americans signedHhe petition against the ad- mission of Communist China to the United Nations “Millions more indorsed the petition through the official action of all major national fraternal civic women’s and labor organizations “The Congress has passed four unanimous resolutions opposing the admission of Red China to the U N “Yet many leaders of public opinion still call for a seat for the Red aggressors in the United Nations or preach the ‘inevitability of Red victory” It would seem that the committee’s appeal to all Ameri- cans who have not committed themselves on the question to fake a stand in opposition to Red China’s admission is timely and desirable Vs! f From the moment the war ended the United States Britain and France tried to get the Soviet Union to agree upon terms of a peace treaty with Austria The Western Allies wished to "formally end the state of war with the little country provide for the return of war prisoners held by the Russians and start Austria off on a new era The Russians through the years stubbornly resisted '' Now however in an effort to keep Austria out of a m These are the “inactive” files of the Veterans Administration s dealing with the medical chest of every man who ever served in the Army or Navy They have been shipped from Washington to Philadelphia to Columbus in order to save money Now another move has been ordered — again for economy’s sake — to Kansas City tour Taking this are millions of old records which total a staggering 500 §00 cubic feet The pile includes all induction and separation papers clinical reports and GI benefit records over 10 years old Even the applications of World War I vets who is that the Chi- nese Communist leaders a 1 m o st certainly believe jec-ord- X-ra- America really is a “paper t i g e r” a theory squarely founded on the facts of the recent record In January rather 1953 - America' of cross-countr- y the Joseph ison was tired Korean War but" China' was ut- terly exhausted by it Since August of the year before half' the Cabinet of the Chinese Communist government had been in Moscow to plead for more generous aid which was not forthcoming In December the Chi- nefe had even made an ent peace bid through the In- dianSt oniy t0 be siapped down hard by the old tyrant Stalin X-ra- ys borrowed on their bonuses are still theVhiLTwcreLMy ‘hanging The winter when President Eisenhower took office was the ideal noment to mobilize America’s resources and go in to win in Korea Breathing Space A real victory in Korea would have given the free world at least 10 years breathing space in the Far East But instead after long hesitations the administration on the ropes f7e wL?bo' h fnTHheK rean strain on their regime and challenged and predominant mill tary power in Asia The Korean truce led directly inevitably and naturally to the next year’s crisis in Indochina As though astonished by this perfectly foreseeable consequence of their own decision about Ko- Western defense organization the Russians' have suddenly rea the Washington policy at first resolved that a yielded on most points and consented to enter into a treaty maker! surrender in Indochina “could on terms pleasing to the Austrians not be permitted” But in the The situation bears all the earmarks of a good deed outcome the big bold talk being done for a wrong reason It isn’t love of justice that is back of the action It is fear that Austria will become a part of Western defense just as Germany has become an ally If the Russians had a sense of justice they would not be holding the Austrian prisoners of war for whose return their loved ones have yearned for 10 years United States France and Britain must agree to the terms of any treaty affecting Austrian relations with the Soviet Union They are likely to accept the terms provided they are fair to' Austria and do not give the Russians ad- vantages not enjoyed by others Even a peace treaty agreed to for a wrong reason is better than no treaty WASHINGTON— There’s a lot of talk about Washington Red Tape but few people realize how expensive red tapfe is For instance in the name of economy the Veterans Administration has been shipping a mountain of paper files around the country in cardboard boxesi at a cost of aboif half a million dollars And the sad truth that Ssingcni? City Hall NOtQDOOK Officials Pleased By LOU GLADWELL City Hall Reporter The city experienced a happy hour last week when it succeeded in placing in private hands the ski lift operation in Snow Basin This needs a little explaining City officials had not regarded white ele- - £bAm: XAnTcontrarytv assented to many skiers had Munich at not overlooked Geneva Chou i enjoyed a the vast potential international triumph 0f the b a s i n’ s grandiose fate of Indochina waf cluster of slopes ican administration Far Eastern En-la- g"adledhe SThe' - Moving Voluminous VA Files Is Costly Business for U S t0 undea'nd°ihTFomosa cris£ we must try t see ourselves as others see APRIt 17 1955 Drew Pearson To Red China ‘ 1 SUNDAY MORNING STANDARD-EXAMINE- E at Deal on Snow The city’s smiles were not oc- casioned by the simple disposal act In the deal it had picked up an undisputed expert at running ski projects as City Manager E J Allison and others nriost concerned from a municipal view pointed out This expert Sam Huntington is a recognized ski resort man throughout the West His Ber- thoud Pass in Colorado of which he is manager and part owner is regarded by many a ski fan as a model of good ski resort management Already there is a new surge of enthusiasm for the future of Snow Basin Fans are looking around now hoping to interest somebody whb will build and shelter and operate a serve hot dinners And if the county or state can find money to build a new en- trance into the Basin via Wheel er Canyon that will help too A roadway there would clip off five miles from the basin trip Basin of private signs from the public parking the space between curb and building front ' Drew Pearson kept At the end of World War II these conglomerate files were scattered around Washington in two garages on I Street also in Veterans Hospital at nearby Perry Point Md and in assort- ed warehouses Finally they were gathered to- gether and shipped to Phildel- phia This first move cost the over $200000 saved them next to nothing By 1949 government econo- decided it would be cheaper to store this past paper- work in Columbus Ohio Once again they packed thei files in cardboard boxes and shipped them Cost of buying cardboard alone was boxes for the The total shipping bill $5000 ran over $300000 Next stop for the files as soon as they cattbe crat- X-ra- much-travele- d ritv rnunrii S rs tZ sion-restrictin- g ronce started - under the Truman administration and that Secretary Mitchell was taking credit for what was begun under his predecessor However George Lodge son of the U S ambassador tol the If N and alert public relations officer of the Labor Department stepped in and overruled the censorship of solicitor Rothmin He came clean with the facts and the facts show an excellent record for Secretary Mitchell and the Eisenhower administraV tion Out of 27 companies blacklisted by the Labor Department in 1954 for violating the Act' 1? involved complaints received before Eisenhower and 15 Avere pew complaints received under durEisenhower Furthermore n ing the 18 years that the Act had been on the statute books under both Truman and Roosevelt only eight contractors had been blacklisted In other words the Eisenhower adminis e tration has been faithfully law the forcing Furthermore full scrutiny of the records as finally made avail- t j Davis-Baco- n Davis-Baco- rpppntlv had proposed an ordinance that would ed will be Kansas City Aft- prohibit display of such signs er again the transportation costs paying But a storm of objections burst Administration will Veterans the from the sign company and store-owneand this slowed down the efforts And since initial city’s Genera Serv ka hme many of the most vi ices Administration displays have Maybe the taxpayers will then been removed from the parkings Tho that the crackdowns had been ri a Rn u L reiui uoes nui doubt the honesty of officers who the parking metet blocks apatrol youth bureau officer he is m charge of bicycles To save the city the cost of a car for his work he uses his 0wn family car The other day be drove over to a curb near an alley got out apd headed for a bicycle somebody had discarded While he was gone the cop patrolling meters stuck a violation citation under his windshield Pettit was trying to decide Sign Proposal Out? feel at Ltweek’s end whether to pay the Tbose close to the situation or will fine explain the situation to reasonably sure that the city his removal to force superiors drop its efforts Lil en-th- able by Mr Lodge shows that the Truman administration was slow in cracking down on lators of the Act Mr Lodge states that this was not the fault of the Labor partment under Triiman because the Labor Department was then swamped with enforcing wartime wage-hou- r controls However the present record looks good for Secretary Mitchell And perhaps more cabinet mem’ bers will find that being frank With the public pays in the long run instead of acting as if the press and public were their ene- vio-taxpay- Davis-Baco- n rs De-mize- ' mies Surprising Alf Landon Harry Truman who’s back for the Sam Rayburn dinner feeling PePPier than ever could have been knocked over with a feather when ReDublican elder states- man Alf Landon made a nice reference to him The of Kansas who ran against Roose- 1?36j PoinJ:ed to some of useiess fjies though the govern- is for’ e(f rtain laws m(t othefwise un mental achievements can t0 hang on t0 m propernpAripri ronrdc ly be attributed to the policy first ensorsnip iwcn’t ray put forward by former President Wilson of Defense Harry Truman — his Secretary Secretary Xwhe" Jfig Xt” miles censor who’s problems of State James F Byrnes and having -u- wew the big bold talk is to be put outside the city L“u learn something from- his British Prime Minister Winston might to the test on of Labor Churchill” short is when it paved Secretary colleague jirnits Mitchell who’s also had censor Landon went on to take issue streets parks cops libraries Strength Weakened basic with certain Eisenhower’ policies troubles with his The Chinese Communist lead- - motor equipment and other solicitor Stuart Rothman though he was careful not to tan ers might be less confident of municipal needs When this column asked Roth- gle with the President personally This represents the opinion the result if the evidence of the man for the dates when the La- - Regarding a Big Four conference two previous tests of will were not only of those on the job but ‘down through s bor Department had first begun which Ike has been against Lan-- ' A new and brighter era for Ogden’s nearby Snow Basin not confirmed by the evidence of defense cracking down on construction don said: “I have long advocated years with but few excepis assured it seems to us by the City Council's acceptance iVufortunately ! however Seci'ucms firms for violating the Davis- - that we should tnect with other e Bacon Act he acted as if this powers — including Russia — at of the offer from S S Huntington winter rctary of Defense Charles Wiiwas a more carefully guarded every opportunity to discuss resort operator from Colorado shave left" tlement of the disputed points than the the uXTsutes0wito Act requires We must never "abandon that The) What our wonderful winter playground has needed less strength in the Pacific than Companies having contracts with goal” from the moment of its first development is vigorous opera- - at any tin?e since Pearl Harbor the government to follow pre- In simple terms of men guns Discreetly opposing Ike’s plan - of cutting the Army the GOP tion and promotion by private enterprise recscales and the we and the wage vailing power ships 'planes ords in these cases are supposed solon said “a large and effective Our municipal government has done' the best it could can bring to bear in tbe Far East to be open to the public just as military establishment cannot be taking into account the fact that many of the taxpayers re- - d?r YeYng6 weakery0Sfwarth” n a court record disintegrated without permanent set his house CLIFF THOMPSON to refused however mained uninterested in winter sports and opposed to ex- - on the dark day when the Korean Rothman dinger either to our democratic mbSshgras? tootffy the'S they wouldn’t cases the when dates the process br to America’s basic con give WThiro5lfrUf affaire ie oivn County Reporter Beginning June 1 a sure partment penditure Of tax money for their promotion to the can’t charge tinuing leading requirements” originated “In fire prevention you We believe this attitude is wrong considering the ad- - rsher lurid importance more- Since he rubbish be tOo cautious” cX keep is talking about one of his pet bei“ vantages that flow into a community with excellent winter an Spots sports facilities and resources Nevertheless the attitude Khrushchev - Bulganin - Mikoyan subjects — fire prevention x eye on it and help keep it from Tremblor Brightflaws showed several Although exists and it had to be taken into account as the City planned ftw ‘m2? da’y iXo tilgaroSnd in thingthouglf last offiS Friday’s “operation up its operations and expenditures - f p®?£je keep fires away from buildings temblor” as expected observers mosa plan was coordinated with much work to do don’t Start them nod R L The natural facilities at Snow Basin are splendid as the present leaders of Russia the Dr Draper and his comwinter sports enthusiasts acknowledge The mechanical fa- - fXTtnheachSrthattthcyVXSd" on mittee of eight doctors-ve- re conThe 20 minutes vention is within the cilities need to be improved Mr Huntington will provide not worry about America using job cerned nurses and nurses’ aides were x The suggestion to invite a group of Rusfarm” that’s age n a Eastern FjRINCETON N J Far the improvements to' attract new enthusiasts war”- weapons Another thing the chief em- at their stations within a mat- sian farmers to come to this count y to learn the latest methods just what we’d Because of the rising popularity of winter sports and je doing” Chief phasizes is the prompt reporting ter of minutes There were obviously two the approval of a majority of believes of all fires no matter how insigj Ray Clawson civil defense di- lensep rethe advertising df Utah’s winter sports advantages by the strons arguments behind this One of the nificant they may appear rector had his crews on hand to Amerjcans Utah Tourist and Publicity Council it seems safe to say Fifty-five st i b :hief’s gg per cent of those “Just last week we made a run handle communications and act atomic of Russian farmers come Several casualties leadaches this to Slaterville When we got there as simulated Snow Basin’s future is unlimited v eapons in Korea but instead paquestioned in a nationwide poll group to is of this out radio amateur But ime the fire had been put country to learn the meth-useyear 0jk conducted by the American Insti- tiently suffered the Chinese interthe to off call caused their waited if the had time regular jobs by people by our farmers Do vention there tute of Public Opinion think it Ulf burn- - us until they saw they couldn’t assist improper Thompson is a good idea or this think Depends on Bases The of rubbish around farm build control it the odds would have earthquake would be a good idea while 37 you ing On the other hand our present jngS and the burning of grass and been greater that we couldn’t pointed out to the people here per cent say it would be a poor a poor idea?” defense depends very dry brush along ditches and save the house that they will be taken care of idea and 8 per cent express no une Ot- tile reasons for the popularity Of do it yourself heavily ondesign Th? vote: the overseas airbases roads “Later in the week a man in in case of disaster opinion 55 Command Gdod Air tbe idea The State Department acting Strategic As one observer opined “It products according to the National Association of Prpdit"0 “Every year two or three build- North Ogden called to tell us "j VAvuilt For all out atomic war we need 37 by a rubbish the wind was blowing sparks from points out what a bunch of free on th£ suggestion first advanced pqor idea Men is the increasing number of elderly retired people in those bases No one can be sure jngs are destroyed got out of control” he a burning stump toward his individuals can do as a team in by the Des Moines (Iowa) Regis- - jL opjni0n 8 our land The senior citizens find in the do it yourself pro- - that the use of atomic bombs in says house We went out and put the times of emergency even if there ter is now at Wl11 ot lead are flaws in the plans put down work on plans to !hr Eorm°sa More than three out of every Although it isn’t required yet stump fire out to Keep DUsyana Iispfnl grams splendid Wavs out war who Our ’ rys to all allies on have would wouid the like the fire chief “Maybe anyone sparks bring a delega paper” ’ four persons who attended colthus we learn anew how social adjustments produce control our overseas bases will tion of Soviet lege or 77 per cent think the farmers-hereconomic effects- - Just as the social progress in the way of rilk ltrafr idea is a good one while a maT he paid vacations opened up new fields of business opportun- - of using atomic bombs to defend stemmed from a jority of 54 per cent pf those who talk recent! by Pe°Ple °nh0lidaySS° ‘he eXpanded greater' than sthTriS £ attended ony grade school beKhrushNikita roster of retired citizens providing a market for new things rea lieve it is a poor one uhen we did not use them chev new Soviet The credit men through their Monthly Business Review This reasoning is all too persua-suggeGreatest sentiment in favor of boss in which he told jRussian the proposal shows up in the Far that every Industry should test itself to learn how it TO that farmers they West and in the agricultural Midcan fit into the trend Judging by the number of do it your- - bombs they must consequently weren’t growing table shows: self products on the market it is evident that a great many Miss Grace Harris librarian at enough grain and fodder to “pro- west as the following Measurements taken by ObThe thesis with eight years of vide a base for a mighty increase enterprisers have seen the opportunities in the field punity Even if we fight back preparation and two years of server Arie'Van de Graaff showed the new Carnegie Free Libary in livestock produce” needed to The manufacturing business it is plain in these davs cur greaty depleted convention- - actual writing which won a that Ogden had received so far reported that the chief patrons offset jRussia’s food shortage s the al Pacific in tor-power military the from University this month 185 inches of mois- - were school children and the Population Up Est degree of lively competit on has never a dull moment is almost surely insufficient to Orson Whitney for of Midugan Russia’s popula- Midwest $ince 1928 hold the virtually indetensible was more than the young men and women and there ture which 60 life of the million tion has increased by science Formosa Strait Young head I ne people desire not peace at any price but peace with rocks ina the done of deal amount a was livestock received while reading the good normally during had country’s Chinese determined of division Weber College against honor The roadfto appeasement is not the road to peace assault hogs sheep — has de- The nation’s farmers concen- been published in the magazine the entire month The present in the library by older folks cattle head 6 million creased by is lhe P°sltlon practlcal trlited largely in the Midwest and but to surrender on the installment plan Sen William as sjjchmost be American Microscopical storm brought 103 inches and the There were 5000 volumes availTheRegister proposed that the inf the South ’ divide as follows: probably appears in ° Knowland farmer delegation come to Inwa Peiping’s eyes Hence the tactic Society r js a g00d idea gay previous fall in April totalled 82 able heart land of American agncul- is of “keeping them guessing” cent say poor idea while per an incb teams from the 42 de- about the worst we could adopt Winning 9 We have reached the point in Asia where we can’t yield for the Chinese are most likely Judge A B Patton had been Irod’uction’of gTvenTor teams the Region 1 bating of the juvenile pigs Many Iowa farms are among of the suggesti0n was that it down forensic tournament' at" Weber Ogden City commissioners without losing the whole thing— Rep Walter H Judd (R-- ‘® judge appointed lhf'‘rck again as we did help t0 bring the peoples Minn ) were: Ronald Ross and dorsed Proposal presented by a COUrt at a salary of $300 a year To determine if public onfon might o£ the twQ countnes closer to- Bob Lowder Ogden High Haynes Rotary Club committee to have The board also decided that Judge would back the proposal trained getber Fuller and Junior Bates Weber El Monte Municipal Golf course Patton be appointed park and section Exploited by Russia a a1 18 holes‘ to salary High Darrel Kelky and Fred enlarged £rom nine lol15ef1®n mess we are now in stems entirely from the destruction of to 2 (Kxfsparks Sinutfin The principal reaL the country and representing °jof also be and were committee Marmembers Joan $250 Crookstonand Garrett: aU walks of lie xhe survey ques- posing it was that such an Rotary the League Of Nations— James M' Cox ’ Ohio ewspaper degree temperature and wlS as a of rangement wpud $50 year tion: stan(j eXpi0Sive pressure as high guerite Smith Dean Larson' and Dr S W Wherry C N Woods an emolument Russia for propaganda purposes a that publisher j officer truant as 500 pounds to the square inch Blair Lowe South Cache M and Frank Driggs A fc i i fat tv in turn pitch huf’nude led directly inevitably and nat-- for skiing Formosa0 the cfuldnM fed bold talk rjght about lav- first reaction was big Geneva Munich st£it“ta“Si“ Snow Basin's Bright Future office-holder- lease-purchas- first-clas- s - tight-lippe- d set-secr- et H-bo- Davis-Baco- n EjeXena ?£ Lme Gallup Poll i lerbd“hom Ask Russian Farmers Here? Mbst Think It's Good Idea -- i- -- - onhlnTdfdnorus e d ‘ make-believ- e 7 i HceV" e idea & st Years Ago 50 Years Ago 20 Years Ago ‘ t (R-Ca- lj cohogsnS en-Colle- ge " t K £jtr2Et ! |