Show " T“ fc J' orrrcr v W 6A THE OGDEN ©gfon irntbarfr-feanrot- Good Women Organized We observe from reading the Utah Federation of Women’s Clubs program for the annual convention beginning today in Ogden that the federation is interested in promoting educational televisipn in Utah Dr Lynn Bennion of Salt Lake City is scheduled to discuss the subject at to-afternoon’s session Friends of educational tele- vision can afford to take heart over the women’s clubs sup-port because there are 6000 women in the Utah federation and they have a record of getting things done Both the Utah Federation and the General Federation of Women’s Clubs with which the Utah organization is affiliated have a splendid record of promoting and supporting institutions agencies and movements which improve the public welfare Federated club women worked for the eight-hou- r day federal child labor laws prison reforms and legislation for pure foods and drugs The Children’s Bureau the Women’s Bureau the Forest Service the National Park Service and the United States Public Health Service have always had strong support from the club women of our state and nation libraries over the land have no better friends than the members of wompn't Clubs Lmerson defined civilization as the power of good the federated club women amend the statement io reaa tnat civilization is the power of organized good women Those who attend the convention sessions will learn again about good things obtained and good things to be ob- tained through the strength of organized good women The Bandung Gesture uke av£’y e ar employes Anger Over Ducks Resulted In Sen Briclcer's Amendment °Butl043-morrow sharehold- - and friends at Medinah Temple Vvery bared his wn inadequacy 'or the job fellow directors can no onger afford to etain him as :hief executive ifficer out of riendship or loy-It- y Ti!lc Hrhlc-a80‘'Avaer- v Aus-Publ- ic - Eisenhower and Babson Debate rj an interesting coincidence this newspaper yesterday Rabs°n Roer debating the p'andtij)dned ‘j?ed fisenhowernd pitced problem of the farmer Eisenhower on the front it loccthor is what he said: “There are several changes page and Babson on the editorial page Pr“ldcnt Eise"h0wrS Pr°fram f°r low"'ncome farm-er- s calls for more guidance and credit to “open the doors of opportunity’ to 1500000 farm families Air Hanson however declares in effect no program can stop the trend toward large mechanized farms which luA11 bound 10 drivo the mar2inal farmer out Of the Ibusiness farming The President’s Dropram of rnurcp aka note Of the iact mat some land is SO poor that farming it is a hopeless struggle Families would be taken from such land and the members trained for other occupations Mr Babson doubt- less will approve of such a plan The Eisenhower picture of families being assisted to remain on the land and live the kind of wholesome lives that we think of when we mention rural living is more pleasant than the picture Mr Babson calls up His picture is of a great tract so completely mechanized it is really a great food production factory Efficiency and wealth-pro- duction on a large scale will be the rule Bankers and en- gineers will point to such farms with great pride but no poet will be Inspired to write about the shade of the old apple InterosfinaH Economic Predictions e Only 3500000 unemployed principally moving be tween jobs The Staff of 25 experts who spent five years making the I about in the eajiy days I would say that the difficulty came about two years before 1932-- rwhich was the time that chains were Winning There was a de velopmerit of time payments Mr Krider The situation jwas about brought by the deterxnina- tion that these st°res had diffi- culty in handling the mail order' business We had to make a cor- - re2jjn with 60 million Sou" in the hands stored U ld Walter Lippmann Formal Conference on Chou's New Proposal Would Be Diplomatic Blunder Who's to Go? ajMHowcverthis should !” Then PeoPIe' 10 exercise their sovereign Taiwan we went out and got what stores 1 int0 )ie nfede' Yhen wascame extreme there We went out to get difficulty the buildings There was great were-needed- b PUt “The people that selected them f edTo t heU s toresu std geo mif-- nunciation of the lion dollars put a number of use of force that stores on the wrong sites The would meet the n ? situation has carried on to this day from the purchase of these stores “We’re still handling a num- ber of these stores We’re re- ducing them We have about 80 an are workin under disadvan- tage We’re tearing down It’s a difficult situation We prob- !av? something like 80 We have little stores m bad places That is our difficulty That is th reason That is the change We are keeping the better stores abandoning those that are unsatisfactory JTn the mesmtime what do you think of the performance of 24 years? A good modern store is available with 700 million dollars and no doubt! In the war 20000 were taken from us That affected our organization at a f hen we had the benefit oi taking on the kind of thing tnat mail order boys had to select a store and the merchandising V lf all Hava Of j t!!Lh!S'1TeS‘ Wev ''!lh0“t I ni im e d i ate re- Quirements of the and Mr Lippmann situation would be no necessity that there can see I for anybody either on the Republic of China’s side or the Communist side to renounce what they might call their legal pretentions their legal claims” These two statements of positions are so close together that there may be no difference be- tween them d Five weeks have elapsed tween the Dulles statement and be-an- maOc JSi"gr frhichbpreaSm: Londwi an Moscow New Delhi and Karachi had a hand Proposed By Eden The renunciation of force with- out renouncing claims was first proposed publicly by Sir Anthony Eden on March 8 in a statement t0 the House of Commons As a maller’ of fact Secretary Dulles’s statement was in reply to a ques- - week day as now in a ’ We need hardly to be reminded that the United States rmningWolfAn) tells us what has the strongestand most productive economic system in he will do He hasn’t been in Ias history but we should be interested in what the experts say It® youve listened to my is the cause: Heavy capital investment in productive facil- stumbling remarks you know we ities and lavish use of mechanical power one seven-hou- r 40-ho- ur College Debating Popular Fine New York Times education tI editor re- Benjamin ports that debating enjoys great popularity on American campuscs This is really not news to those in Ogden who have observed the growth Of the eber College debate tournaments held here annually Nevertheless the news that debating is a popular subject among college students pleases those who know of its value in graduate life There is general agreement that debating provides the student with solid information on current issues trains him to think clearly teaches him to be tolerant of the other fellow’s views and trains him in the art of public speaking Debating provides useful experience for future lawyers teachers salesmen and others whose duties require them to College debaters are already using their debating ex- - ain and the other governments have been playing a role of intermediary a proposal to work with in Peiping And presumably also the medi- ators had achieved their first success in Peiping some time be- the Bandung Conference For the Chinese ambassador in Wash- aD0Ul inau7 out the Dr Koo a have here ington before the spoke confer- njght Bandung igiiestdoesnt know what he’s ence met and made an elaborate Iking about Whtn nd how do you get 700 million dollars? y°u have n® debt whatso- the very best that w?ve°ever had! nervous ®ve more we may guess that Chou’s Ulty 0£ “ancmn2 TnAttir acceptance of the formula rather these the buildup of Red Chinese Avery!” ae Ave'answered: is common i I 1 Lesson English W L GORDON By Bandung conference is at a WORDS OFTEN MISUSED mum a public commitment not Do not say “Apples are rare to use force in the Formosa exSay “Apples the Straits until diplomatic ” “Tjie scarce beis rare atmosphere changes which have already correct is further carried gun to have been OFTEN MISSPELLED Let us hope that the State on not will go Pursuit pur Persuade per fumbling partment as it did on Saturday morning SYNONYMS after Chou’s first statement Let elevation altitude Height us hope that the department will loftiness eminence not turn back what can be mini-whic- h De-fo- re WORD STUDY “Use a word three times and it is yours” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day Today’s word: why with the President in Gettys- - RETENTIVE having the power burg and the secretary of state to retain “A retentive memory is on an island in upper New York a requisite of wisdom” “My 50 Years Ago 20 Years Ago If I’m un- - 9uarters n Ogden ’131UU L"u g te -- jgd Yalta-Go-Roun- d Maj Thomas Nial - - — Vets Who Need Free Hospital Care Should Apply to VA Some of you veterans seem re- or examination disVets with service-connecte- d luctant to apply to the Veterans Administration for free hospitali- abilities who request transfer to zation because you’ve heard a VA hoshospital from non-Vthere’s a long waiting list bewhere currently they’re Don’t let this information fool pitals treated you There is a long waiting list ingVets who are being treated at —some 22000 veterans But it’s VA hospitals for nonservice conlargely made up of vets seeking nected disabilities and who want care for tubercu- '''1 to be transferred from one VA losis or mental hospital to another for medical d i s o rders Vets reasons with such ill-to Vets with service-connectenesses have disabilities who need hospitalizaA I V d wait for special facilities to open up Vets with other ailm ents don’t have to wait too long if at all d j ( nonserv- to be treated! Here’s distion for nonservice-corinectey abilities Wartime vets and certain yets retired for physical disabilities vvho need hospitalization for ice-connected disabilities Certain nonvets whose hospitalization has bepn requested by authorized officials Vets pow hospitalized who want to transfer to another VA hospital for personal reasons The general policy is that a person in any of these groups won’t be scheduled for admission if vets in higher priorities are awaiting for bed space For example no vet in priority two may be scheduled for admission if there are vets in priority one for whom — the vacant bed can be used When you need hospitalization you shquld go to the nearest VA office and fill out a hospital care form This form will be sent on to the nearest VA hospital If you request treatment for a disability the hospital will write and ask you when you want to get in If you need care -- for other disabilities except in an emergency your name will be put on a waiting list and you’ll be told the approximate date you can expect to get in If you need emergency care you should be taken to the nearest t VA hospital Ihow your chance of getting treatment stand: Free VA care is available im mediately for wartime vets who need emergency treatment and for any vet who was disabled in service It’s available but not always immediately for any wartime vet who wants treatment eft any ailment which has no connection with his Service In the latter case you must sign a statement saying you can’t afford private care at youn own expense System Set Up To make jsure that vets are given a fair Chance at vacant bed space the VA has set up a priority system The system divides eligible vets into nine groups and in general provides for admittance to hospitals for treatment in this order: Wartime vets who" need hospitalization for disabilities connected with their service Peacetime vets needing hospitalization for disabilities jr Vets who request observation d OUT OUR WAY f service-connecte- d By J R Williams j The Eagles of local Aerie 118 of1 S3 clu?e'd I cant for the life Mrs W Burford Cook retiring it would be his policy to stress flight was a ball held in the -lt down I won’t lose on 25th Street Ogden citizens scholarship and to expand the lodge quarters 11115 Sltua- - president 100 were present About Dr and Eagles fine of carefully college slowly have been the recipients EprmkImg oI youag ° ! Th ‘ IrUsu'live’bMn' Utah'peopi ?” But these Due to Ubor shorts Odeo were cheers of sadness not the exuberant cheerful cheers which Avery when he we etiM would ww resolve wakfd onto The zreaieit the gtagc Then hg that we ifcall face eremiet 6f America in :a With the was a champion Now he was omeb°dy everyone even hi 11 Lvndon Johnson Yp farerf ffc rfesrenfon— taire nd dmlrcrs realizcd We)( cs Franklin Rooirelf had to go i pVe-perso- ns duck-shootm- physical self Ire the free world in discouraging all attempts at aggression— rf t (D-Tc- xj r'- difficulty through a medical at-iaye'ar Unw rmhf oodalth M- - M- - Lesher had been ap-- Teams of the A and B divisions In less than an hour a crew and my head i?1 no better Uian - of the Weber County Fish and of 100 men had completed the before pointed to a new railroad posi- Game Assn will swing into ac-- connection of the Rio Grande “This is not a guess I have Hnn fhf nf tronpral u Deri n tend- Oregon na- - °f rMt licly For in spite nist propaganda diplomatic contact with Chou has not been broken since the Hammarskjold mission And always in these exploratory discussions there had been only one conceivable line of immediate progress — to seek an arrangement probably tacit rather than explicit by which the two Chinese governments while renouncing nothing would not prosecute their claims by waging war Favorable Development The choice of the Bandung con- ference as the place to make pub- lie Chou’s acceptance of the for- mula is a most favorable develop- ment For it means that under fden’s leadership there has been found a formula which is ac-ceptable to Peiping and to Wash- ington and has the approval of tjie uncommitted nations of Asia and of Africa The Bandung conference was course overwhelmingly op- - mosa? posed to a war by Chiang backed jn meeting these are - insoluble “ ”"i‘ed issues capable only of was touching off throw the Red rcgme explosions of belli- no less opposed to Red China’s cose rhetoric They are insoluble "liberation” of Formosa by force issues and yet that no reason what n wsnted was what irst or havng ar in "rd t0 Eden then Dulles and finally tend to solve them The best way Chou were able to propose: an t0 deai with these issues is to arrangement which would avoid ijve with them and in the course a war that might engulf the 0f me to outlive them That is what a modus vivendi greater part of Asia If the State Department knows without a settlement would per-what it is doing and it the makers m(t us u to do of our policy can manage to col- - knowledge on rat7bee”havin” during ton111 trt As a matter of fact the main the State Department needed to form an opinion and to express it publicly a few hours after Chou’s statement was received What do these people think they are doing? Trying to make a dead- line for the next edition of the newspapers or conducting the for eign policy of the United States? Nor is it necessary or desirable and wise to jump to the conclusion that the next steps should be concessions by Peiping in order that we may then agree to participate in a formal conference The last thing we ought to want now is a formal conference What we should want is to say just enough to encourage the mediators to continue the exchanges of views — and in the meantime without the beating of all the drums to bring about a sporadic danJP®nS dow1 ° hostilities which are now taking Place in the Formosa area There is no hope in a formal conference For at a formal con- ference there would arise like a swarm of angry hornets issues that are really serious only if the negotiations have to be done in public Who for example shall attend the conference? Chiang says be will not attend it and we have said that we will not attend1 without him Are there two Chinas or only one China? What is the juridical status of For-o- f service-connecte- for more and more Thanfa t° Uie student attitude censorship of that ture is not likely to be widely practiced treaty-makin- g on On Sunday at Bandung Pre- - air power on the coast was what En-la- i mier proposed that took Secretary Dulles down to see ”nd President in August just as the united States the china Adm Radford was cancelling his 8hould tdown and enter into trjp to Europe in order to rush Dr is it sheer riegotiations to settle the ques- - off to Formosa coincidence these that tion of relaxing and eliminating pieces- of 1 21w?’we"0 ?pa5ded!° es el this m°sa) 4 ‘ The Twentieth Century Fund was founded and en- dowed by the late Edward A Filene Its chief work is to Help solve our most pressing economic problems by making scientific surveys Of the facts underlying the problems and Using these facts as a basis for suggested programs Of ac tion So what the agency and its director J Frederick Dew- hurst say deserves to to be heard with respect With the foregoing as an introduction let us examine some predictions the Twentieth Century Fund has just made for 1960 An average family income of $6000 a year For 1954 the average was $5330 A work week oL37V£ hours Sixty-ninmillion employed or in the armed forces Com-supersed- - I ’ -- Avery brought on his own unA st°ckholder asked him: dojn- ‘ s I es cenTdrop WarVeamings since 1950?” Edmund A Krider pres- ident- jumped up and said “HI answer that” He explained that retailing had enjoyed a “bonanza" immediately after the war Then competition set in Avery w’ouid not let well enough alone WASHINGTON —Just how Sen 'John Bricker of Ohio happened to introduce his famous constitutional amendment limiting the treaty' making powers of the President has now become clear The original cause of it all was ducks The Bricker amendment which tied up the Senate for several weeks of debate last year and will repeat again this year was borri of the senator’s avid passion for duel and his vehement dis- like for federal game wardens who police the plush duck marshes established by his friends along the shores of Lake Erie These have been developed at a cost of around $100000 per marsh and Seri Bricker just sees during the election campaign The red when after all this invest— riease was held up only because ment his friends from Cleveland 1 and Toledo can’t enjoy their ldcumnjS wcren jca4lmo without interference JPjjfJli J shooting which also called for re- from federal game wardens lease of the Potsdam papers last However game January the Teheran files this wardens operate spring and the Cairo papers this under a treaty — summer Neither the Yalta nor in this case the ? Pjotsdam papers were ready for migratory bird release on time However the between treaty tsdam Teheran and Cairo docu-ent- s the United States are now ready and await-iri- g and Canada And Dulles’ okay this it develops The Yalta release caused such is what got the ap uproar'however that the secsenator fighting retary of state is worried He mad against the may hold up release of the others treaty making Drew Pearson indefinitely of the powers President and tied up the Sen Aloha Statehood? ate in so many weeks of debate House champions for statehood For under the Constitution as fdr Hawaii and Alaska are plan written by the founding fathers nJng to use a1 secret weapon a a treaty supersedes any state law filibuster to force the statehood thus the treaty on migratory birds bill out of the House Rules any law of duck njittee Democratic Congressman of California has dug shooting passed by the state of clair-EngOhio House rule which a up to be Sen Bricker used gov gives privileged status to stateernor of Ohio and feels that his hood bills and also authorizes state has some rights regarding eIch 0f the 435 House members ducks— also that his business 0Ie bour of debate — or a totaLof friends have a right to shoot 435 hours of unlimited debate ducks— even if a little bait is Ilf Engel lises this strategy to found in the vicinity-af- ter they force a vote on the Hawaii and to duck fix over $100000 spent Alaska bills It will be the first marshes tiime in history that a filibuster — 48 Duck Laws fairly comipon in the Senate- Therefore he wants to set his ever 5een employed in the ' aside the powers of H!ouse Politics His amendment the President would permit each of the 48 politics is rife in the Pentagon different states to have 48 dif- - a£ain Assistant Secretary' of th§ ferent laws on Navy James Smith has been lead Thus near Toledo where Bricker irg a force 0f naVal officers likes to sit behind a duck blind aiound Capitol Hill waylaying in knee boots and leather jacket congressmen who are against the state law might permit him to sperCarrier entice ducks within gunshot with Gen Gurt Le May strategic bait while in Michigan a few ar commander made a crack be- miles away bait might be vetoed jjjnd ciose(j doors that could start —all according to how the duck- Navy-Ai- r force feud all over state lobbies £te at a secret persuaded shooting May was vote to legislatures Ijouse appropriations meeting how helpful aircraft carriers air war He reDespite denials Secretary of would be in an carriers would that state Dulles did plan to release jMedJriuntly a the Yalta papers last September contribute only 'y’puny amount i Has Trouble With Speech” ti" c- - Wehrwein wrote in the “Insofar as it Chicago was possible t0 understand Avery he seemed to be telling again his Sun-Tim- '' -- You had to be there to under- - ®Jand JJhy- - ’1 i Av-:ry- ’s Livingston AflWJ tSU 1955 EVENING Drew ' Pearson Louis E Wolfson didn’t year-ol- d L-- vj THURSDAY whe according to who’s who’ gomeryWar? ACo i ' V ed Avery Lost But Wolfson Didn't Do It EDITORIALS tree thereon i STANDARD-EXAMINE- R ?l i:A-Livi?9- 5t er (UTAH) ' City’ spring cleanup had ere- ated rather a serious condition City Commissioner William D rted He said that to offset the condition permission had obtained from the Fire Prevenli"n Bureau for individu- al to burn certain rubbish 1 to"rit“h“uidv”of °W£ W- - 10 EiglM?11”1 m Mayor Harman W Peery who had decided to grow whiskers to help advertise Ogden Pioneer Days said he didn’t know what to do with a shaving mug left at his office by Miss Rita Albers 3226 Kiesel Ave i -- clBo A E educator who spoke a at meeting of Ogden public school teachers said he would never lose an opportunity to re- buke any man who was seeking to belittle the advantage of edu- cation by making false and groundless statements well-know- n V ( 1 |