Show ! THE OGDEM (UTAH) The Lending Shelf (Whqt Others Say A Now Task for Advertising A move most advantageous to the Western Allies is the private decision to use the power of newspaper advertising for the public purpose of instructing the peoples of " Europe in the meaning of the North Atlantic Treaty Organ-ization The United Aircraft Corp has scheduled a come appeals for collective defense prehensive sefies of cold-wa- r development European newspapers This is a T that i& as useful as it is new and interesting The first of the Ignited Aircraft acls is making its ap- pearance this week Written in 12 languages these straight' messages should help convince readers that American industry and the progress it exemplifies depend on freedom jThere will be six of these novel warnings that there’s no time to lose in girding free Europe against Soviet subversion They will be carried by each of '25 leading daily newspapers in 13 countries1 This bespeaksr initiative painstaking work and an imaginative approach to defense against the threat to the free world Advertising is the giant lever upon which American depends at home to lift its enormous production 'of goods and services Why has it not been employed before how in Europe? The answer involves many factors besides cost Foremost has bepn the concern that it could often be in conflict! with United" States foreign policy because of rapidly changing political situations in the several countries But when Gen Alfred M Gruenther supreme commander ‘ full-pag- r from-the-should- er nr i j i - STANDARD-EXAMINE- SATURDAY R "Boy! Sure Looks Good!" ' r New Books At Carnegie ' eprvirpc ''i ’ ’ ‘ ill 1 I Free Library i 1 culation at the Carnegie Free Li-j-n brary are as follows: “Gertrude Lawrence and Mr A” by Richard Stoddard Aldrich An intlmate story °f tbe lovc aiJd two of vivid marriage liesthe adorei star otpthe Eng lishand American theater and a distinguished theatrical producer “The Susquehanna” by Carl Carmer The 48th volume in the Rivers ot America series’ in which £ way and as the faraway dream river of eighteenth-centur- y rope “I’m Owen Harrison Harding” comsionnoufa'aitical ld “Buckskin and Satin” by schel C Logan The true and dramatic tale of Texas Jack (J B Omohundro) of the Old West and his celebrated wife Mile Mor- premiere danseuse and in originator of the Can-can Aljhe 3 Gallup Poll r ' 1 Is Phenomenal j g 7 g ’ Today’s table adds to day’s report deals with the public’s views on - the relative? importance of the three-branches of the Armed Forces in the event of another world wrar) r ' ’ - i ! i - Mistaken Machines Dr Otto H Schmitt of the University of Minnesota' ' cenlly suggested at ajNew York symposium on “Designot Machines to Simulate the Behavior of the Human-Brain- ’ that creating machines that can’t make mistakes isn’t j want to make a machine like the If the sbientists really ' human brain they’ve got to figure out one that will make errors just like men ‘make Some machines can tell in a minute how much money a man has and how much he owes if someone feeds it enough information! But until the scienj device in the machine only tists build a (decision-makinman can decide Avhethgr the chances of standing! off the off the! grocer for' another month are better’ than putting1 ' g butcher I i Now a lot of people thought therealready was that sort of Univac last November made some predictions about the election (hat turned out to be so humanly inaccurate as( to be uncanny The explanation of course is that" Univac failed because it was basing its predictions of how people would vote this time on the way they voted in - 952 $ £ ative genius for the sixteenth- - 'chm“"'iye‘ohta°nnWT tian’s grandson “The Four Winds” by David Beaty A love story highlighted by the dramatic operations of a great overseas airline “The Emotional Problems of Children: A Guide for Parents”' by Harry Joseph MD and Gor- don Zem A practical guide to theyocuV0 and to direct the parent teacher orcf1o be a Successful Ager” by William C Ti-enoug- h Menninger D a JSSSiby Anita Leslie The voyages of the ketch ihe ®Jzer aounu !!?e ?alay of the West Indies by islands author of “Train to Nowhere” “Our American weather” by Dr George H T Kimble Ans-th- e wers to hundreds of ques- tions always being asked about that most fascinating and controversial of subjects f SYNONYMS If the free wrld maintains an alert Puzzle ( verb ) ' perplex bewilder" distract nonplus confound dumfound defense1 for a lim- WORD STUDY ited number of years there is reason to expect a great im provement in the conditions for stable peace — Dr Arthur '1 - “Use a word three times and is yours” Let us increase our i vocabulary by mastering one word each- day Today’s word: — MALFEASANCE misconduct in of ?ome' In all matters of foreign relations the President is FS® “The council ac- wrong tb?oing necessanly the head and the organ of government and he cused the director of malmust indicate a willingness to participate in such a confer- feasance ence (with Russia)— --Sen Walter George (D Ga) Compton atom scientist ! ' ! I personally think we’re on the greatest threshold of s one of the greatest periods of prosperity 4his country has ever seen— Benjamin Fairless president of U S Steel -- )!' r- I ) ’7 ' ' V & - Raining Fish? In 1952 a fish 7 inches long was reported to have fallen from the sky after being picked up by a waterspout Ross — “If we were to come right out aid tell you that you we would be violating weren’t th( Haywocd-PattersonJA- and ct it would be against the law So it’s like'I tqld you a few minutes ago if a man can’t cooperate with the company his record is deter mined unsatisfactory and he’s t tf m he whether sories) equipment needed or wi representatii plained about his purchases Hor-juton testified adding: “They said they had a TBA quota to me t and that they were going to get it one way or st other” Maj Thomas Nial usL5erve Months in Woman Shocked Over Race Prejudice Here Before Going Dear Sir: (The Ogden US Standard-Examine- r The recent problem dealing with recreation coupled with race prejudice was published in your paper I along withimany others I’m sure was shocked to discover that our society still nourishes people and concerns iwho feel that one segment of the human family should be kept apart and below the rest! ’N I thought anthropologists had proven scientifically that we be- long to the same family namely “homo-sapiens”- ! Known World Over Letters to Editor from its readers should be reasonably brief must clearly identify sender Anonymous letters not acceptable) welcomes the All and the are Mothers of Ogden we cannot allow this condition to continue! sl0P A wlcIow must have beennar- We can heln mold to the vet beforc Dcc 14’ l aractSrand we also can good 6351 10 l'ears It is too bad that we haven’t be guilty of contributing to their nrinr t 0 hi°rfih 15 aeain realized that the universe was delinquency by the complacent not created for just one type of acceptance of these injustices From Mrs JWB of Oakland Let us do something about it Calif: “My husband an Tjrmy people! The greatest injustice however Yours truly sergeant returned from thFFar is that we who pride ourselves c'S in DecemMrs Lee Fouts f to be‘ mature intelligent civilized 1247 Washington Blvd ber after serving j Death Toll Down and blind- Tag man’s buff are1 children’s games vhich are known all over the world says ‘(he National Geo- graphic Society miles of auto travel the lowest in the world and 50 per cent lower that it was 15 years ago Boston's Namesake 319000 Are hide-and-see- k America’s WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Do not say “He slipped and fel1 down to the grodnd” Omit right?” j Horton — “Well what’s wrong with allthat?” Agent Ross — “It just doesn’t o Howell (another Standard Oil of Kentucky agent) came by here and saw all that Prestone in the window and he politely cussed me not dissatisfied I’m just damn tired of somebody telling me what I can buy and what I can’t buy and making un- criticisms” Ross — “You’ve got to move that Prestone out of the window'” Horton —“What I buy is my Letters to the Editor Boston is after a town in England English Lesson “Well ge it (the Prestone) out of that window this afternoon” H6rton —‘ In other words I’m not supposed to buy anything but Standard Gil products Is that acces-Horton-j-“I’- i A book whose aim is to ease the strain bf teen years which in many ways are lifes hardest and make them years of M freeze” ' it it and dissatisfied with this sta- - Horton tc Id the subcommittee tion why don’t you just theck that Standa rd used to ship him out apd get it over with?” TBA (tire batteries and - ?£ on Oct 23 1952: Agent Ross — “The last time vvas I here you promised me you weren’t going to buy that Hender- son tire changer and when I come back I find the Henderson chang- er installed and in use and your display case full of Prestone nti- - oul tant - £ For an Alert Defense Whether this irfpa is cnnnd frnm the military point of view is a matter which only experts can determine But there is little1 ad- doubt about thp miration the American people e’ feel for the air arm of our de By Education fenses an and diplomacy at first hand by “America and (he the author of “The Power and the overwhelming! majority of Amer‘he Reaers icans picture the next world war Diges'tEMkoSb0' when it comes as being fought “Masterpieces of Religious in a way quite- different from anything man1 has known so far Most of those holding this view believe the next war will be one matter poets arranged by subject thermo-nuclea- r in which weapons progressive in religious thought would be used extensively re- fSsfnneand topical1 indexes “The Bach Family” by- K a r 1 All the same it would be useful if the scientists could come up With a machine so human as to make decisionsj “d°0''EN MISPR0N0UNCED 'fv even Jf now and again they are had opes If the margin of Ephemerai (5hortiived) Pro-error was not too high people could safely turn over much'nounce all e’s as in ' of their set accent on second thinking to the machines And if the error margin ? OFTEN MISSPELLED ‘a us at all the j was not too low they could be sent to represent Censor (to examine) Censure foreign conferences —Wali Street Journal (to criticize) V- more than 100 per cent because some persons named two branches which they said would be equal- ly important Obviously the vote does not mean that only 4 per cent think the Army is important or that only 5 per cent think the Navy is important The question simply brings out the individual American’s im- pression informed or uninformed as to the relative contribution of the three services if this coun- try becomes involved in another world wrar The greaf popular appeal of the Ar Force affects all walks of - sJt - or w Moon t sup-cla- ir Public Faith in Air Force Leaders of Their People cl - U- Macmillan dustry heard witness after witness testify about the ruthless trade practices of the big oil companies in forcing their products on gas of the 200000 operators who (lease sta- stations Result: tion from the oil companies sell out each year M& Ethel B Powell told howl she and her husband lost not only no iso’t' their filling station leased from l —“Do you mean Horton Sinclair Oil but their savings and $175 pius one jm payjng home in Fitzgerald' Ga Describ- - eighth of one cent a gallon a ing the “pressure” of Sinclair month rent and what I buy isn’t agents she testified: my business?” "They did not want us to sell Ross —“That’s right” candy cigarettes No! No Prestone! or chewing gum i During a later visit Horton The only drinks testified that Standard Oil agent we could sell Ross again badgered him about w e rle Prestone Here is the tesusing T h ely did not timony: want us to handle sAgent Ross—“I’ve done all I oil from any othknow to do for you I’ve helped er company even you in every way that I possibly though there was can to get you the things that very little of this you asked for and I was about to just for special suggest that your station needed a erstdmers who let’s get your not use Drew Pearson coat of paint-r- so would to mov Sinclair oifbuTdid use’ Sinclair I50? that prestonc in the- back room’i gas Horton— “Do you mean to say The Powells were also pres- I can’t sell Prestone pr even sured to get rid of all tires and tubes which Sinclair did not display it?” RPss— No I can t tell you that sponsor ' “We were selling more Sin- - y°u can’t sell h We aren’t or gas and oil than had ever posed to tell you what you can co-if sell but can dont you been sold at that station before since” testified Mrs Powell °Perate with us things can be rough for you So if you “We tripled the stock and equip- ment of the station and raised are dissatisfied 1 11 be back don the number of employes from one here next week and you can give me your answer to three” an of kind “What Norton Nonetheless Sinclair canceled J answer?” the Powells’ lease last Jan 31 Ross — “As to whetheryou want' The Powells had to sell out and to stay herej or not Ed let's get leave town to faqts I’m going to give down Standard Oil Crackdown ’If Mr them to you straight Another gas dealer Ed Horton Graves or the man out of the of Manchester Ga gave the sub- - Louisville office were to come by committee a graphic account of here and sep that Prestone in the h°w he was “canceled out” by window they wouldn’t do a thing Standard Oil of Kentucky in Jan- - but go tn the Atlanta office and uary 1953 Reading from notes glance at your record and call me Horton testified that the following and tell me to check you out— that conversation had taken place with your record was unsatisfactory Paul Ross a Standard Oil agent and that would be all there is to Coca-Col- a Eu-enterpr- ise i I ' j to-tel- -! World Gazet-aneteer and Geographical Diction- ary” edited by T C Collocott and J O Thorne A reference book which locates identifies and PRINCETON N J — If andescribes every place which is likely to have significance for other world war comes the avEnglish-speakininhabitants of erage American today has one idea fixed firmly in his mind: Had Walter While1 with his1 aggressive tactical ap- - ueVobe The U S Air Force would play "the in American uish’nc? to Hi' the leadership Negro give proach essayed Aga Khan a much faore important part in it by than either the Army or the Booker T Washington’s day is seems certain he would have An autobiography with a preface which Navy ' Somerset Maugham been overwhelmed Attitudes as yet en but partially con-- by More than sev-' Washout of every en Booker Had leader of millions ditioned to the idea of Negro progress spirituai 10 persons or 71 ington lived to carry his vision' of racial relations mto the per cent questnot or whether his served White ioned in the latWalter people era when South Africa ” est Institute sur“Hi-Fis4 i Handbook by william a question on which much he would have done better think the-Aion vey U advice Kendall A book of J Can be said on DOtn Sloes wopfd be planning your home music sys- - Force - tem most con1 the in important best should compo-the men be choosing The careers of both judged compared to 5 and text of th'eir times' Booker Washingtonborn aislave per cent who say South of the the “reconstruction when Navy and 4 to manhood self just coming cent who c A per Arthur tended must have sensed that what was heeded then was a “Earthiight” by think the Army Dr GalluP eth°e I platform on which both whites and Negroes could stand as nfUctfng3 daimTof would be most important About one person' in five or ' science and patriotism and a pon- free men 19 per cent believes all three branches will In 1929 some 14 years after Booker Washington’s ' - - One-thir- Her- - passing Walter White came into the executivesecretaryship' of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored! People Both as a matter of duty and of conviction he under-- ( took the task first' of (all of removing legal sanctions that! still buttressed racial discriminations and of erecting legal protection around Negro rights He pursued these objec-- j lives with persistence and at times with militancy But no! on'e could fairly say that he did not give his all nor gave that ' all in vain It is symbolic in a way that on the day of Walter( White’s passing the annual campaign for the United Negm College Fund should get underway Symbolic we would say! in that through Negro education particularly through the college trained the good thatAVilter White strove for and all that Booker Washington Teadership stood for will be carried forward on a broad and enlightened front — Chris- tian Science Monitor ' man-handle- d 1920’s The task IS Of heroic proportions if as we are told 75 to’85 per cent: of the population in the! 14 member nations trying to of NATO do not know what NATOls or what-it- s do But Americans have great faith in advertising They know what it has accomplished United Aircraft is blazing trail and perchance is shaping history— Hartford (Conn) Courarit ' WASHINGTON — Congressman Jimmy Roosevelt of California uncovered shocking evidence this week of how gasoline stations are being by monopoly Roosevelt’s Small Business Subcommittee probing the oil in- io’s ” I 2 1935 Filling Stations Told sVyhat To Sell by Oil Companies? year in the life of a boxhe1ianthfrofmSVFeYaSb?” by Sarah Lockwood The story of the growth of America’s giant steel ry and the rise of one Steve Bradway with it — from the in masses the must-iopening of Minnesota’s some way influence Europe peace we cht0 toward acceptance of cooperative defense arrangements the waU strelt in the path was cleared for (American industry to volunteer its APRIL Drew Pearson n ' EVENING I OUT OUI? WAY named The US traffic death toll is- 73 deaths per hundred millions Blind There are 319000 blind Amerjeans nBy Um - n lillllime Williams ttm two years there He!woyld like to know if he can v o 1 u n t e e r for duty in Europe or must he serve a specific length BURROUGHS of time in the To those with Sweethearts far United States be- from home I write this little? fore he can go in effort to bring overseas again?” rhyme Under normal Jhat will pusn circumstances consolation he must serve at the time there isn’t too much least six months in the United to ease an aching states before he can volunteer I can say but still and’ all I’ll do to return overseas ' heart for those who are my best From CHC of Winchester the only sure way to apart some joy you cannot K’-- : “During World War II 1 derive bad National Service Life Insur-is through the age-olshirk medium known to us all as ance offered by the government for occupation forcibly I have continued to pay on this insurance since Now I would diverts a worried mind by keeping busy time will fly like to know how I can convertand greater joy you’ll find this insurance to a more permamix this with faith and sin- - nent type Also is there any cere prayer ‘and somehow Hme limit on converting?” You may get all the ’informa-on- e until the you’ll pull through and tion you need about converting you love is home once again with you perhaps your insurance from any repu-it’- s hard but then again table insurance man If you would what have you got to lose prefer you may write to the this adyice and you will find fice to which you send your sweet smiles swill chase the premiums and ask for informa ues tion There is no time limit on converting your insurance You may do so at any time as long as the insurance is in force Yet to be Explored From Mrs FJ La Crosse Ind: Although Panama is the site of the first Spanish colony on the “My son was drafted in the Army mainland of the New World in September 1953 Will he be some of its' territory has not yet eligible for a discharge in 21 months?” been explored Under normal circumstances 'he iwill have to serve a full 24 months He might be eligible for 5laves an teariier discharge if he quali- pescendants Most of the present residents fies under onof the early re of Haiti are- descendants of the lease programs These include slaves imported from Africa by getting out early to attend col-earlyv French settlers lege d J of-ta- ’ It - - acf10n onjhis claim He didn t show up for his physical- - exami- nation’ and dn’t contact the VA?r this late date could h$ still follow through on same claim? Va u clai abandoned ooesn t act on the VA s requests for evidence- or an examination within one year after the request are made Your friend will have to file a new application If he is awarded compensation as of the date of the new ap- it’ll-be-gi- plication' From n ' L GBj of Bedford Mass: “Does the Veterans Administra-- ' tion make direct GI loans to help veterafts stara business?” No Direct CJ jl loans may be made by the fA only for the pur- pose of buying or building home or farlnhouse nd tt only in certa1 loans through not available F - (You mayAvrite Maj Nial about your servicejconnected problem! Please ’enclojse a stamped k addressed envelope and 20 cents in coin) Write Maj Thomas M Nial The Associated Press 330 star Building 1101 Pennsylvania Ave Washington D C self-wor- ke t Answers Q— Are tibns worn on the right orIeft breast? A —Generally on the left The custom is traced to the practice ®f the Crusaders in wearing the badge of their order near the heart Q— Is the number of dogs In- - creasing in this country? A—Yes the U S dog popula- tion now stands at 225 million an high Q— How many timetables are issued by the railroads in the course of a year? all-tim- e 1 |