OCR Text |
Show is Gods v ,AX Mans Last of mankind-- World IVcent f Yes, its possible to build a new orde Make to uB.ice 4No.3UOUNa432) 217 KEITH BLDG. Phone 4 WaahlBKtm Mie ika tknUmn 7641 NEWS ofthe WORLD news analysis By Roger Shaw gast Great Stand Up For America long aa our eyes shall behold tha things of earth may we not bo suffered to see our country betrtayed into the hands of internal or external enemies If any act or word of ours had contributed to such an eventuality we would feel that all of our life efforts had been worthless. Are there dangers? Yes, there are many dangers. While most people go about wholly unconcered the fifth column and its helpers and spokesmen go about undermining faith in the government, obstructing plane for defense, encouraging sabotage, race hatred and revolution. Would that all Americans would be as bold and courageous in talking for America as these enemies are in talk ing against it. From the outside the danger of actual invasion is real and may come at any moment. Stand up for America! Britains Southeast Coast; Seeks Greek Naval Bases; Push English Out of Shanghai Mussolini "onorl NOTK-Wf- U mMmi an iifTHHl fat tkcM eoluuu. mint i act aaeasuril, 1 tfeu era saw tkn ed . The Alan at the Nerve Center It means something these days to pilot a hat the the nation and must deal from minute to minute with every it develops. Grave dangers lurk within and without and the fifth columnists and politicians who are doing every thing they eau to break down instead of building up must beware lest they destroy the government and the democracy they have. If they succeed in striking it down then all would be lost. crisis as icven-year-ol- ref-nge- et Drift Toward Spiritual .jslues that we are in a c cle of fast moving piritual vibration which will eventually result in the establishment of the real Brotherhood of Man, but so long aa we have a system which permits those with money to exploit their fellovmen and to build fortunes for personal gain at the ex pease of the producers and those who labor for them, we shall continue to have wars. The only possible way lo live in the Spiritual Age which is gaining momentum and speed will be to live the spiritual life and to radiate Peace and Love and Good will toward our fellowmen. San Juan Record. M iny writers predict aa THE VAR: CAMPAIGN: Mg Range Squabbles? German guna, poated kftaoct along the channel chore, tnftd way at England, not ao any mile away. Theae were the Big Berthea of Bong and day, but they failed at first to prove They (hot at ah ip convoys, Utbcir bore wore out quickly, and hy mra ehunay and expensive, b to hit war, the famoua German ftofi fun" waa a waate of time, aitoMpromiaed to be the aame. Ur objective, of course, waa to tfienn the channel, and close it tot u a drum. This maneuver hM to worry the increasingly betid British. h heir first air attack on Berlin, Hid bombers swooped out of n tot &y directly over the heart of fc city, were driven off by anti-n- lt fire and dropped their log-nag- e ex-U- ra on the U citys outskirts. German aerial losses had bn terrific, well over 1,000 planes, noybe many more of them. had invasloo threat appeared b lo for dicta tora cannot ho chance of a bloody setback toilto especially one of so spee-to- u a nature, it ceemed that out11 fitock-actln- g Mi bit puzzled Germans were about what to do Ibey continued to tighten Uoekade of the Britiah Iales v bad and sea and air. Sc British I . banged back, by Messer-tot-t Heinkel, Junkers' and Dornier and the Zeppelin works tk M Constance, where tha fa-t- o air motors are JgtotowA Other big lnduatrlal "to" tte Germanics, "got" it tojto German nerves (like those Americans) nowhere near W u itolid lr Brltannle niunt- began to lode like a much to wr, which did not help W1B-nefor the presidency fiBUda-Bon- z ei klics Willkie found that his ardent supporters consisted of two groups: the independent Willkie clubs, and tha Hia dissident Willkie Democrats. less ardent supporters were a good deal more basic. They consisted ef Hid Republican party regulars, in and out of congresa. The regulars were grumbling like Napoleon's Old Guard before Moacow. Willkie himself is an and very independent of tha regulars in his ways and habits. He ia disinclined to lean on the Old Guard, although the Old Guard begs to be leaned against Old Guardisti emu-- , plained that the candidate was too casual about consulting and obeying them. Then again, many of while the O. G. are Isolation-mindethe independents and Democratic refugees are inclined, like Willkie himself, to be interventionists. Despite all the Hoosier getup, Willkie definitely, they said, has an eastern outlook (and maybe he hai). Some of the regulars, too, thought that "their man Willkie was too New Delilah. He did not denounce many of the Roosevelt reforms, but He adopted them in principle. merely promised to "improve the administration of what the regulars thought eras a racket In fact the New Dealers said that Willkie was, toa substantially, "their man, This made the regulars the O. G- huffier than ever. d, People began to wonder whether Russia might eventually enter tha war on the British imperial side. Critics thought it may be likely, if the war dragged on long enough and it might Stalin fears Hitler and Mussolini In the Balkans, and wants to keep his rich Ukrainian province, the No. I Russian federal state. But if the Soviets helped England, whither America? It became4 a moot question. For strong American business groups hated the communism of Russia, while even stronger groups hated the Soviet atheism. Would these people with an England that boasted a red, red ally. That was tha point Or, if Russia became an English ally, would we start to pamper the American Communists, who would also be the allies of Mr. Churchill? j j Then again it appeared extremely probable that General Francos Spain might go in on the German aide. What then? Franco is the idol of the ruling class in Spanish America becauae he saved the Spanish church and crushed the Spanish reds. If our state department started to razs Franco, the ally of Hitler, the South Americana would be infuriated. Then, what would happen to Secretary Hull's "good neighbor policy? Franco is also a speIf cial favorite of the Vatican. Franco Joined the Germans, what effect would that have on the American faithful? Would they not beIsolationist? come Increasingly would still dislike Hitler, of They D. Bonaparte but they could hardly help found course, D. Roosevelt-Bonipart- e but admire the great Spanish cruNaas same himself ia tha position sader of 193M8 the conqueror ol poleon, in tha decisive year MIS. The whole Bonaparte proper had then served subject waa worth detailed Amertwo terms, and ha wanted a third ican pondering: From Washington one. Hia first term had lasted for to Wala Walt and Yonkers. His Elba. came 14 years. Then second term lasted 100 days. Then POLAND: earns Waterloo. But the point waa Gils: Tyranny There waa more German tyranny Bonaparte dike Roosevelt) deaa In conquered Poland. Tha iron milpended on the proletariat, against tha economic royalists and Bour- itary heel was crushing down old bons. Tha French proletariat hated Polish customs and ways of cam a new decree of an unthe Napoleonic conscription like poiIt rocked the son, and many American proletari- heard of nature. ans dislike the prospect of conscripteppes, the towns, the metropoIL tion, too. But regardless of their It was this: in Warsaw attitude, the French Every taxicab driver beand Cracow, Polands No. 1 and No. plebs rallied round Napoleon, cause they feared the Bourbons fi cities, must shave at least every would repeal all the Napoleonic so- other day. Tha edict declared that cial reforms. The American plebi, it was just aa Important for to curry themselves aa for against conscription though they cabbies to curry and groom may be, have tha same attitude. the good old dobbins. Here waa an They fear that if the Bourbons even example of the usual combination: Bouse, White the recapture German oppression and German ttmngh they would scrap conscription, they might also scrap tha cleanliness. Roosevelt reformation- - Hence, the man in the street is for Roosevelt-Bonapart- BIG: F. r. Moacow-in-Barceloo- a. life-Them Italian, continued to bully the quest of Greek naval against England in aUT? Mtoiterraneaii. Greece to Turkey, Russia, and . toons way or another, and ttlem Pressed w Would tha war r? J at y. Ulher, the critics Greec turn into an Menwhlle. the d Somaliland on tha iL? ,n ort to cut the ocean England and her won-hfc'v- ui ' IU1-Be- bm jJJ1 to India. The Brit-touTn? ? ,wljr br M1 to at Nar-ilwJ!ad don end elsewhere. They Wh n,noler Anmorel victory" had tohlT,fn' waaEngland soma South jjlwmeliUnd corps . lod can,ei kto partly nd a aection U,to ttbuitoua royal air force. 11 usual gave a good ctbi, eU. Hot ao, the cant kr ij-ofito- The Italian-lo-Afri- ca Btoto either, iL-- L k k although fighting and mak WI noise (ao tha crit-e-o b masse). berlain M. on the way hn!rlaln were Duff meto Propaganda as vu? Wood, Sw, to toe the budget Herbert tojoobneyblgzhoL b h, Mor-ono,n- (Lloyd n the last war, waa 'O' they said.) Lord Chamberlain partner, tha torelgn minlater, was 'I'. nd the Uborite Hugh KhcduIed hta Joh Four Horsemen and Four Other The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are on the mi rch W r, Death, Famine, and Pestilence. Two thirds of the people in the world are at war. But coming before these old destroyers of mankind are five new Horsemen. The new cavalry are: Imperialism, the destroyer of the the destroyer of personal liberty; Atheminorities; State-ism- , ism, the destroyer of faith; Hate, the destroyer of the unity of mankind. .These are .the HPIwmeu.ofiheadvanca,prer panng the way for War and Death. After War and Death sweep Famine and Pestilence. And their camp follower is Revolution. Herbert Hoover, reli-glo- ua Spain, Too rs Bomber The biggest airplane ever built la DEAD: finished. It win be tha propnearly R. . P. to the army air corps. The erty They died like flies, the bigshota Douglas air factory, near Santa did. Sir Oliver Lodge of England Monica, Calif., has been at work was one to them. He wss the great on it for four years. The whole scientist, mental telepathist, and project la aatouiahlng. much spiritualist Ha was 88, and counThis giant plane can fly from New beloved by everybody in all York to Europe, back to New York tries. Then then was Leon Trotsky, again, and then out to California or Comrade Bra unate in. He waa the aU R will have four 8.000 tha brilorganiser of the Rad army,of Stalin, horsepower engines, a wing spread liant author, the mortal fos of 212 feet, and 112 feet long. Hitler, Churchill, end others. Ha was pickaxed by a good SHOES: Every-bod- y friend, down Mexico way. la France Wa In and Stalin on blamed it La France nationalized all tha was this but It was dread secret Gestapo, the republique. was shoes in rereally rather unlikely. Trotsky to done this way: out oul. The no longer of enough importance r. publique standardized and stream-line- d or It Its totalitarian footwear. pester, and Stalin is no fool to be a standard shoe, manuwas There was also the notable Max factured in eight sizes, and It will Steuer that died. He was New York be the only one permitted on the n lawyer though market This will cut Induatrial city's d legalist Senator nroduction coats, lower retail prices, not Its indicated that It will cut Wagner of New York and gad speed up production. a la ha was such a philanthropist tha out all humanitarian, but many people of yeatar-yaaheads. their shook non-sto- p. time-waste- beat-knowbest-love- Pari-aienn- a, r. Editor, Progressive Opinion. Every humane plan for the underprivileged in oqeration today has been bitterly opposed by those than know not the hell of seeking employment or going without the means to purchase the necessary things of life. The pension bill by Herbert B. Maw waa bitterly opposed and ia ridiculed by some of the candidates that now aspire to the big pay. Some of the calamity howlera of today, not so long ago had their hands into the Federal treasure up to their elbows and dont forget if you take heed to their cry and give them the power to govern all plana for the underprivileged will soon be knocked into a cocked hat. R. M. Brandon Some Confession On the 21st day of February 1935, Mr. Wilkie, speaking before the Economic Club of New York, made a confession: No duty has ever come to me in my life, even that in the service of my country, which has eo appealed to my sense of social obligation, patriotism and love of mankind ae this, my obligation to say and do what I can for the preservation of public utilities, privately owned. The sentence ia very revealing and helps one to understand how he could express admiration for Ineul. Not Afraid to Warn People There waa a prophet who lived some 760 years before the Christian Era, and his name waa Amoa. Accordingto him the And society of hie day waa much like the society of today. needed him unto like is one that believe who there are many now. He was eo strong in hie demands for social juatice that his words almost struck fire. He told the rich how they were fees oppressing the poor, how they were exacting exorbitant indehomes behaving stealing and taxes, corrupting justice, enjoying luxuries, eating cently, living in elaborate houses, the beet food while many poor were denied; drinking wine from golden bowls, and bavins no concern whatever for the unfortunate. The message of Amos is needed today when even of the sufferings and many Christian people go on unmindful of those privations of the poor, and many seek the destruction and welfare human to won been have who in high place (Continued or pace four) Parley W. Hale Perfect Economic System Like Townsendism Big Meeting and Good Speaker Establishment ofa strong economic system in the United States, as a part of the national defense program, is fully as important at the present time as the military program, in the opinion of Robert Z. Adams, prominent Los Angeles businessman, who will speak here in the Tribune-TelegraAuditorium next Saturday night, September 7th, at 7:30 p.m. Mr. Adams is brought here under the sponsorship of the local Townsend organization. The title of his address will be A Strong Economic Defense at Home An Essential of m The meeting, which will be attended by several hundred Townsend Club members from this section of the state, is open to anyone who wishes to attend, according to Emma Ecton, President of Townsend Club No. 1. Adams for a number of years was president of the Los Angeles firm which developed the now famous Los Angeles Harbor, rated today as the busiest shipping port on the Pacific coast. lie has long been an advocate of the Townsend national retirement program. Having been in Washington, D. C., during most of the Congressional session now drawing to a close, during which he was in constant touch with a great many members of the House and Senate, Air. Adams is well acquainted with all maj'or legislative measures which have been before Congress. He is expected to urge continued public support for social and economic legislation, despite the preparedness fever, on the premise that no nation has ever defended itself successfully which was not first economically and socially strong. The speaker will advocate adoption of the Townsend program, he said, because he believes the retirement of elderly people from industry and commerce will furnish milmen and lions of jobs for skilled young and middle-age- d women who are now either unemployed or working on costly federal works projects. Paid advertising. Andrew L. Larsen Democratic Candidate (or The State Senate An avowed' defender of the' Townsend Gen- -' eral Welfare Bill, H. R. 8264, a proposed amendment to the present Social Security Act. The Congressional delegations of 17 states have eigned the petition of discharge for the bill. Youth for work Old Age for Respectability, New Industries and a gteater payrolls The Sales Tax ha proved a prolific source of revenue. A change to the 2 per cent "Gross Income or Transaction tax will make it more effective, in scope and fairness, and will tesultin greater returns, and the elimination of the tokens without increasing the load of the average citisen. For particulars of Mr. Larsen's candidacy see next Sunday's Tribune. A FIRM FOUNDATION College work of the right kind helps lay a deep foundation for security and progress, both spiritual and material. It should have two chief elements: 1 Practical training for earning a living. 2 Character-buildin- g spiritual development. TION RFLIABLE INSTRU leading to competency in one hundred fifty occupations is offered at Brigham Young University Largest intermountain private institution of higher learning, B. Y. U. has five colleges which give 1688 courses of nationally accredited work. INCREASE OF FACILITIES includes the construction his year of a splendid religion and social center with spacious auditorium, classrooms, banquet and recreation rooms. Paralleling this development is the expansion of the former Religious Education Department into a Division of Religion with four departments. AUTUMN QUARTER REGISTRATION September 20, 21, and 23 For Information Addtm the President BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE weU- - produce what$ needed 3UT Candidate fx COMMISSIONER ear A WB ALL KI&MTI. MUST HAVE COOPTATION, Term CAN'T JO ST APPROPRIATE A TANK Oft PLANE, IT "tAKBS TIME 1b RETOOL AND. BUILD fOR NATIONAL PRODUCTION f ybvj FRIEND VOTERS: Finding it impossible to meet would like you all personally, I into take this opportunity to troduce myself and ask your for support for my candi lady operate Hale grocery, 511 So Commission Lake Salt County 5th East and am President of Term). er, the Salt Lake County Butcher! I am a Democrat, and have ind Grocers' Association I sound Lib- have made no ties or alliance always stood for the eral policies of the Democratic with any groups and can devote of the myself to the best interests of Party. Ae a member all i he people. 1937 Utah Legislature, I sponsUnder the Direct primary ored our Fair Trades Laws to Law the voters select their canman a didates. It is your patriotir give the little business sup- duty to vote September 3rd and actively fair chance Old believe it a good idea to select ported the direct Primary, your men and women before Teachers von start to the polls. ge Aaiistance, Progressive Labor Yours for a Business Admin istration, with fairness to all. measures and etc. and own Parley IV. Hale. I tax a payer. I am .1 ar 1 $1.50 PER YEAR National Defense. ia left in world of democracy through all the shouts and quicksands of world affaire. The chief executive stands at the nerve center of Thete d twin from Brussels, Belgium, Johannet and Francitcu De Boat Doleman, tit and survey the future after landing at Jersey from the child refuCity, N. gee ship the S. S. Exeter. Thar trip from Europe was only the first leg of their journey as they expect to continue on to Java in the Dutch East Indies. Many refnetand abort la tha United States representation on (ha Joint Defense Board now meeting in Ottawa and working out ugee children from Europe are homes in the United pdataary itepo in planning hemisphere defenao meaaarea. This photo finding m hkca ao tha board met with Frealdent Boaaerelt before proceeding States. kCuida. Members of the groap (reading left to right) are: (Back ad toft Harry W. Hill, Lleat Cat. Jooeph T. KcNarney, Capt Forrest y.Btnaaa, Uent Gen. Stanley D. Embick. John D. Hickeraon. (Front) : WHAT THEN? gw FiareUe H. La Gnardia ef New York City, chairman of the board, If and How nttaUent Roosevelt, aeated. fine N0TJAVE1T? LVMI Ag Guns and Bombers tygi LonS WHY opinion editorials r I, Doleful Duo Published Weekly by C. N.Lund 2, 1878 PROGRESSIVE o. a New America! Ikiuui rn. IJJUDAY, AUG 30. 1940 UtaA andar the Act of March omeeetgelt Japs ir American |