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Show " Create Abundance. Why not? DAVmKE1TH BU)G' DIAL4764' Jews ra tHWWWUy gVSyMWMSrTU fltalsaasd tar Wfrtwi nwmm 1 n-- er, and had pleaiure al picking up many wounded. Jervie Bay went to the bottom of One to Greece the ocean wib her gallant any long-Mf- ti m Km little doubt over who had one arm ahot Itavictory Cm away the engagement during comp nearly lia, bu bee Over Bagtand, German bombera JOHN L. LEWS eo - my action could bewere ualng a new technique, making Mr. Grata Velisctf. Ikiv-- Faaetat forces act are more difficult (till be talk of antirtf feeing from Koritxa, The American Federation of Laaircraft fire and be work of fight In this, their to auppllee bor quarrel with tec C. L O. was over By They the In attack. central country laiM bait of the wavea, traveling alngle flu, which rapidly reaching its climactic stage itorki that only 363 man with the President of the United Indiana diacovcred centuries .ykd hi the campaign hardly was a good defensive formation.ago States announcing that tha achieving Tith (7Mitneia reporta by of a First raider bomba, and aid topermanent labor peace n an -uj. eorreapondenta of two succeeding ihlpadrops aitsview tha defense program would of In get scene the bodiea bo one of the first agenda of his y fcnlt plica of below in the of exthe flrat glare IrffeaPindiia mountain paaaea and sea better when end administration'! third term. (onemtratlon campa filled plosions 01 Bahaa William Green, collecting tha spotto where let go. Flying la done at priaonera of war who as a result of hia championship 30,000 to 35,000 feet light ,11 widely ofquoted. attitude In many cases, however, British of tha Roosevelt candidacy, immedt-- ! Italian hk report! responded that he waa willing f fee war ao encouraged Ztag--I report bombing is done on "time ately tables when them are cloud forma- to maka a peace sans Lewis. of dealp fta opportunity da tions, tha bombera flying certain John L. Lewis waa given a roar- mathematical distances from flying tag demonstration as the C. L O. un-- . fields and ben letting their cargoes ionlsts gathered for their third ango without any aim whatever. nual convention in Atlantic City. At That Britain is generally feeling the opening of the meeting he told the pinch wee seen by report! of delegates he was "stepping down as further restrictions in rationing. their leader and he urged a new However, notalng aa drastic was re- unity for tee organization. Lewis ported as the apparently authentic had declared he would resign if Presdispatch from Berlin that dog meat ident Roosevelt were waa made legal human fodder. An commentators agreed, however, teat tabor peace would bo a DIPLOMATS: very good thing if as and when it L- METAXAS Ftak going for Italy. Diplomats, bob domestic and foreign, came into their own as far as the spotlight was concerned. In Berlin they buzzed about tha capital like flies; Molotoff, (for whan bombs have been named) arriving wib 33 guardi end associates; lesser lights from Italy and be Balkans hovering about the outskirts of tha main talks, wib even a sprinkling of Japanese lurking about where they wouldn't have to rub elbows too closely wib the hat- SABOTAGE: And Mr. Dies Hitler-Moloto- inwhinj blow to Faedat mo-- r tat tee lent big bomber aquad-- i H Taranto and amaahed a dl part of Italy's fleet bk doled much could be achieved. ff ed Russians. It damage except wee another ease of the moun- tain laboring and bringing forth a mouse at least u far as the dispatches went though there may be. dip, ao Brltiah cent ever ntoa ptanes, took pictures, I reported the details. Two cap-hip- e apparently permanently other small- - ad el action, four cf be Greek r fit Italian forces further were bj the tone of Italian denta and dispatches, telling of eunhiUon" of the Italian : oppoin tment of n new comp alio the Greek reporta of Inaide Albanian territory, MU lor be Greek victory wee out to aeveral of the factora: Greek terrain; enterprlae banda; akill with the Mft bmilla dot I and aurpriae machine-gu- n artillery attacka on enemy col- to difficult mountain paaaea. edden onalaughta of bad dir; alio Premier John Metax-- n baa watching fellow-dictatW to aome time. tbu itorlea from priaonera 1 or M bad no heart for the war jd been ptomlaed a relatively tavaiion, and one got to pood picture of tha opening wRoinin f wtra no aurfaee eigne wo quitting, that but ahead for a more Blows V Mb become more WM, wib Germany dl and probably la a lot under tee sur-fac- bitter heavily attacka on cities, London and lndua-JJ1- 0 Jtotottba on like Coventry. ground) promises various powers that If they are good, they will get something. EuGermany and Italy win rule rope- . Russia will get expansion roan aa it wr frank In admitting anywhere she want! as long situInterfere wib European doesn't Coventry in ruins, took this to mein data and wounded. Lon ation!. Diplomat of India and also ge waa aald to be ter-- at least a part of Turperhaps Iran and portion misbehave. if she 1 aea ere staggering, and key at of w cn tha loose Japan wiU get the rest Asia,and in southeastern part the leeet at leaat one Urge urged to get ""man flrat announced Russia and Japan are the reat of it jj' about once at ytotovey sunk, along with together two diplomatic In this country armored merchantman, and But an auxiliary cruie-p- j names stood out Kennedy jv? My, by wr protecting other Utt The termer waa surrounded rea halo of rumor bat ha would out of tarn UiU claim waa made sign following hia talk much bat " 808 dgnala were In Boston. While denying conben newi of convoy eud-- ? was in the Globe interview, he But Brltiah finally tinued to preach atenf Ws ret wttb the newa that acme general Unci, omitting of democracy death the to tfc2.u Wer ml,ln- - M erencea national socialism rtold to wSr ihowed up. Jdbn . be commander and the advent of In the United States. hero wna rg Bay which boldly met her etronger I i star-eye- d No country can honestly call itself rich, or powerful, civilised or Christian so long as it has the streets of its cities full of undernourished children. The mute appeal of poor these unfortunates is a witness against it. Let us not wait for a leveler or an equaliser like that which is working ia Europe where the diaposseeaed chil. Iren of. kings and queens and mil- -, lionairrs are fleeing and suffering along ride of the children of the laborers, where crowns and scepters are laid beside shovels and picks and hammers and saws. Three explosions battered pow- - j der plants in one hour; a crane fen over in a shipyard; a bridge fen apart on tee West coast; lire attacked other plants, and tee cry of sabotage" waa raised in the land. The private end public detectives and Dies committee Investigators hav been running around at ten speed trying to make miniature Black Toms out id each of bese, or trying Just as hard to disprove that they had anything to do wib foreign agencies. n Mr. Dies, however, asking a dollars of government money for a fidl probing of the situation, said ha was going to publish a white paper" giving names, addresses and full details of aU be foreign consular agents, Russian, Japanese, German and XtaUan who are engaged In subversive activities, and whom he blames by implication ter tha chain of occurences of damage and disaster to industry. Be recalls other events, like tha war department fire which nearly destroyed the U. S. code books, and smoke promises that he'll follow the and find the fire. Friends of the Dies committee of pointed to tha logical character hia hypobesis, that be Axis powers and partners would be very glad if dedisaster should overtake U. S. fense preparation, seeing that Mr. Roosevelt has promised Britain a share in be whole Job. y d, n, that it ia wise for ohurches to engage in partisan politics, one of our reasons being that it tends to creWe do not believe ate confutiiin and bitterness and is likely to lead to division in the ranks of the faithful. On ee upon a time when local leaden were not, as now, of one mind politically, a president of s stake asked the late Pres. F. M. Lyman how it was that the "Brethren were eo divided on polities. Pres. Lyman replied "Brother , there is no inspiration in politics. An evening paper devoted to religion, was quite partisan during the campaign and has kept it up ever since the election. Long and "heavy editorials appear from tme to time which prove the extreme partiaanism of the writer and the paper in face of the fact that the vast majority of Utah people have a different political viewpoint. There can be little or none of true inspiration in these editorials because they contain a thinly veiled bitterness, even touches of venom against the leaders so overwhelmingly chosen by majority rule. And if majority rule is not what is desirable in this country, then, we ask, in the name of liberty, what do they want? Dictatorship? The field of partisan politicals not the field for the church as such, but it must leave members free to vote their convictions. field of The field of thu churches is the great and world-widn because and faith which today lies barren and too mech attention ha been paid to the things of Cesser needs world the of How God. too little attention to the things of faih! How mankind needs the personal, comrad-lik- e a touch of men of faith, sincerity, sympathy and compasand sion; men to go with them the first mile and the last mile Lincoln emulate who could who, men all the miles in between; while sitting beside a dying soldier, held his hand md saw n and him through! Betrayed, despoiled, poverty-strickemere not by humanity may be ealvaged and saved, but intellectual processes, or by basinese and finance, but by great and messages emanating from churches like unto the one Lincoln wanted to find before he would join any of them. "Of all things beaulifui and good, The kingliest is Brotherhood ." j . . ene-- I 'Iraider,i fir. , hermit eonvoy to acatter. ,TvUa aklpper In eonvoy mrrtd by euch bravery that rT? to flee to any great die-t-o Beene houra tat-- aignelly ruBullitt wae being asauccc.wr.AU mored aa Kennedy'! he would say was that StaSa, apeak and m WBa Urn Phrygia, .Jto'miUcd suicide" by ecu-u- ? B aurrender to war vessels. She grjjv outside Tampico when other three were said 1. beck and to be lurk- harbor bar. to'th n intj Prcrtdcm to pubue remain to him had asked considering wee he Ufa, end that erf that taa the matter. Foreign Jottings to hul Wacla. heavily load-froi.H Tampico, Mexico, Porte. Only one waa WAR OF THE WEEK: Siam vs. Indochina Vichy announced Siam (Thailand) had gone to wer wib which brought to a new front a miniature war which nevertheless will destrucbring a very reel deeb and countion to tee populations id the Involved. tries The Siamese, a dark brown raea of small sUture. art of Japanese and totalitarian leanings. The larger end of one of the orphans at the Battle France. outThe war la another diplomatic of Japan growth of tha movement In southeastern Asia, and brings Just one step nearer to tee Philippine! the Tripartite Powers. i eerl-a- l The Brltiah used tee veueto in alrtetag torpedoes they of be Italian fleet at T.r.nto, The planea fly tow to the XT-to-p hc torpedoes pointing 3.000-poun- d at the ahlpa- - If occuAmericana returning from gseon bribery. pied France reporttee xllnc bootlegging end In forblack bourse for dealing eign exchange- e drouth-stricke- e, F80'- " re-bir- th AMERICAN SCENE: In Brief credC The United States has freed its for Martinique, French posseswill allow sion in the Indies, end $50,000, mostly to be purchase of move is tee first in foodstuffs. The a a scries by the U. S. to create to Insure relationship, better hold of U. against the Nazta getting beach there. S. built plane on the m Signs of difference of opinion in on national defense high circle continu-anc-s were noted. There was of the controversy over the Garand vs. tee Johnson automatic the rifle. Knudsen aid he thought itself into auto industry might throw with speed end plane manufacture auto men leading Sane efficiency. in disagreeing maker jffinpl plane with him sharply-of British move to get extension war purchases for credit U g. wite were started In this country, the event evidence that of tee ad- meet with the approval n heart-warmi- soul-stirri- ng war-ridde- ng -- Windsor, to flrat of Adela Roger St with 14 Interview to tell the gf John, purporting tee hla tove his abdication and Wilson Preaidml blame duchess, that a tor the present wer, laying cannot compete country rulerof Wilson, he with foreign diplomat. attended the Hid. should not have Versal'to part making of th jSJdlE'of THE WONOMIAN We are a wise and intelligent people but not half so wise and smart as we pretend. Asa whole we know very little abou a true and saving national economy because we have not, and folwe cannot solve the problem of so much squalid poverty seems too lowing in the wake of our wealth and progress. That difficult a problem. But if our nation ia to continue to exist in peace and plenty we must speedily find a solution. , SOCIO-ECONOMI- Money To RurH SET-U- P C A New Social Order DR. GEO. A. WILSON By Chapter IV The State Judiciary follows a simitar pattern. Tha heads of the district groups, tha District Judiciary Supervisors, form tha State Judiciary, whose function ia to regulate aU legal matters of the state and decide all legal panto appealed from the district courts. They have their secrechairman, who is the State Judiciary Supervisor, tary and other officers and committees as may be needed; and their member to the National Judicial group; aU elected in the usual manner each two years. And, when matters are to be heard in court, they appoint the necessary (seven) judges, prosecutor and defenders, as desired and agreed upon by both aides. In tha district, the judiciary ia slightly different From among thorn qualified, through legal training and experience, who have first served aa clerks (sea Merit System, Chapter VI) in the legal groups of the district ' state or nation, shall be elected (along with the mayor and aldermen) From become District nine who of members the shall a group Judiciary. among their mambas they shell elect their usual officers, tha chairman being the District Judiciary Supervisor. And theirs shall be the work of protecting the citizens in their rights, and deciding aU legal matters within their district, as weU as performing the functions of the district attorney. When matters for the court come up, the District Judiciary members shall appoint (from among their members) five judges to hear th case, render tha decision, and appoint, likewise, the prosecutor and defenders, aa requested and desired by both aides, subject to their . approval. NO POLITICAL PARTIES Under th Wonomtan system, there ia no place nor need for political parties or organisations along political lines. All campaigning is carried out by campaign dubs, organised only for a brief campaign period, such Blank for Mayor Club, or Blank for as Blank for President Club, State Coordinator Club," eta The control of the government is in tha hands of the people, where it is to remain. Therefore, any undue political activity, no matter in what direction, will be viewed with suspicion and, if continued, subject to an investigation by the law enforcement officers and disbandment proceedings before tha District Judiciary. of a strong political party, whether tha Dictatorship, the dictatorial power is in tha hands of on man or n group of men in out of the government, is the very antipathies of the Wonomtan system of government.' Instead of the ruling power being in the hands of a dictator or any organised group, it ia in tha hands of the people. It ta the rule of the people, for the people, hr the people; th beet assurance against totalitarianism, toward which ao many nations are drifting if not having already adopted its ideology. out-grow-th a ORIGIN OF GOVERNMENT Partisan Politics Not (or the Churches mQ-lio- Indo-Chl- pledges: axis Germany (wib her Italian backpartner somewhat in tha wain" Heavy Talk eel al Boat Out of it all has come to the public eye only the broadest platitudinous however, dw iteamtag "hod AMBASSADOR a of war. boo been said that science is the saviour of man But today we must add that it is also the destroyer of man and all his works. What science has done for the world is something to marvel, at. What it is doing now to bring about destruction and death is something to weep over. What a strange being is man. He struggles painfully through long years of effort to build a civilisation and theu sets about to destroy all that he has built. What unhallowed hand is it that has turned science into the channels of destruction and death? It is the hand of the profiteer, the hand of greed! Profit and greed are the reasons for science bringing such messages of despair. llfty-fift- KENNEDY Destroyer It has often j PER YEAB (CONTINUED) Science Turned ( $1.50 A Plan For Economic Security f r, Home and Abroad BY C. N. Lund Be Remembered Yes, Chamberlain will be remembered. He went to make peace for our tiine, but waa betrayed jusi as the Master himself would have been had He gone on the same errand. A fellow editor writes as follows: Chamberlain represented the deposed, discredited, but not dishonored' cause of appeasement, of idealistic dealing with brutal, arbitrary force. Throughout history he will be remembered as the man who tried to reason with violence, who tried to compromise with powers which had no sense of honor. It is not to Chamberlains dishonor that his ideals were too high for the world in which he found himself. His intentions can not be impugned. Further than that, there will come a day when the tactics of the gentle Chamberlain will destroy the ramparts of outrage just as the tender English ivy in the long processes of time pulls down the mightiest masonry 85 hurvlvora, DKTATOB lvxd Thougli facing apparently hopeless odds, the Greek people e their forbears at Thermopylae, are again enlisted in a battle or reedom. For the fate of Britain is tied to the ability of the Greek Army to hold the Fascists in check a few weeks onger. If Britain emerges a final victor over the axis, her victory will strike the shackles from the enslaved nations of the Continent The outcome in Greece may determine, therefore, the future of Europe. Chamberlain Will can-Ode- ir. ' PUBLISHED 1871 i ' . 1 Greek Victory Would Mean Much Naval Raiders Harass British Kir and Hold Off Italian Invasion; Kj Greeks Soviet Talks Yield Little News; Funds for Sabotage Probe jjes Asks m 82. 1940 Utah, under the Act of March PROGRESSIVE OPINION EDITORIALS LABOR: Green 'Collecting Edward C. Wayne By wunieillgilt LiktCltf. world of the rWEWS ANALYSIS HUMaCnoV I - No nation should boast too much of a civilisation that cheat ia is its children of food and clothes and joy and life. IIow terrible something that leaders cannot see and understand the The children? politiciof of the out starving eyes stares that their about and go heedlessly ans tun aside from the problem war strife and of their "principles ittleaffaira, maintaining can no and be can religion secure, and foot. No civihsation the on childhood its crucifies while it have divine sanction Master To the and war great poverty. crosses of greed and little children were the very essence of heaven. The history at government end it ta from government that aU politics has sprang reveals its purpose to be two fold, primarily: (1) th protection of the people, which ia the main reason for any government's existence; and (2) maintaining the rights of the people something that has seldom been complstey carried oet. Tha first ruler was fha head of a family. Lata, ha was tha head of a dan (made up of his descendants and those whom they married), and then tha head of a group of dans, through conquest. The group of dans became the city, then tha nation. What was at first a benign rule for the good of the people, even though they had but little to say in the ruling affairs, later was changed to autocracy and despotism, in too many instance. The two types of government were exemplified in the reign of the kings and judges in ancient brad and the contemporary despotic rulers of Egypt One type of government was the beginning of a demoo-racthe other, of totalitarianism. From that time to th present different phases of these forma of government have been in control. Tha tide from one to the other has ebbed, then flowed. But from it all, has oome an idea for the establishment of the ideal form of government One which makes th voice of the people supreme and their best interest paramount the real democracy. Such ate the principles on which the Wonomtan system ta baaed, and such ia the form of democratic government all Wonomtan Societies will work to establish. No higher ideal of government ta possible, unless it be a Theocracy. But tha world ia not ready to let God be its ruler. ' y; THE WONOMIAN EDUCATIONAL SET-U-P Chapter V FAILURES OF THE PRESENT SYSTEM HISTORY OF EDUCATION THE REASONS FOR FAILURES WHAT IS "EDUCATION T THE HOW IT WILL WONOMIAN SYSTEM OF EDUCATION TESTS WORK-APTIT- UDE When we join a society, a political party; or become an electrician, mechanic, forma or a builder; become an accountant, lawyer or doctor, we accept a plan of thinking and a set of principles. They become th bases of our thought and a guide for our thinking on that particular subject Each trade, profession or businea has come from the development As the idea was developed it became etyaUlised into a plan of thinking. And as the thoughts in each system expended, of thinking became known ee a school of thought Thus we have schools of thought involving the automobile, airplane, radio, chent-tatrjurisprudence, politics, together with those of many other fields of endeavor. an idea. or a system that system of y, As each school of thought became bigger and more important it divided into different points of view. One group contending that certain method of procedure, construction or production were more effective and . produced better results; the other, taking tha opposite view, stood for different ideas entirely. So we have different maka of automobiles, different types of airplanes end radios, different chemical formulas and many political parties. What was one school of thought now became several; as each group branched out from the parent idea and developed its own ideas into another school of thought To illustrate: civil government wee first but a single idea and a simple system. Now we have many M of government involving many systems, and have many political parties. Of governments, we have democracies, kingdoms and totalitarian nations. While in our nation alone, speaking of political parties, we have democrats, republicans, socialists and communists. Each representing a different school of political thought its political ideology, and each endeavoring to build a government along the lines of its theories. And soma of these political groups, not being contented with their efforts to remake their own governments, have set out to force th whole world to conform to their pattern, by hook or crook, whether th other nations want it or not. But wa are now concerned with education, not with political ideologies or other schools of thought, oily aa they emphasise the fact that each business, profession, science or trade has its own school of thought (CONTINUED) |