OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, - SUNDAY, JUNR 18, -1959 ; Daily Herald lev cry Afternoon (Excepting Batarday) ,nd, Sunday Mornlng- Publsh4 by tb HsraM ' Corporation, 0 Bouth ' Vlrst - Wst. Btrftet, Provo.- Utah. Entered as second ' cUsa matter at tho- postofflcs In ProTO, Utah, under th act of March 3, 1879. . - . Oilman. Nlool & Ktithrnaii, National AdvertUln representatives. New Tork.'San Francisco, Detroit, Boston, Ix8 Anprel, Chicago.' - " .-., .- Memuer United Ires. N. E, A., Servlc Western V Features and the Serippa Ieafrue of Newrpapera.. . Subscription terms by carrier In Utah county, . iO cents the month. 13.00 for six month. In advance; ' $5.75 -the, year In advance; by mall In county. St.OQ; outside county $5.75 the year In advance. , mm Liberty throuarb all th lnd" Th Liberty Bell . The Herald will not asnuine financial responsibility for any errors which may appear-In advertisements published In. Ita columns. col-umns. In those Instances where the paper la at fault, U will ' . reprint that part of the adrertlsenrent In which h typosrapb -teal mistake occurs. - .,,"..,'- , i. 1 i ' 1 r, ;' ... . H'e acknowledge, 0 : Inl, our'vIckedness, ah(l the frilqultyy bf our fathers: for we lune sinned against theeu--Jeremlah 14:20. Sin la, essentially, a departure fromi God.-Luther. . Slow Sul Sure A Progress under a democracy is slow- Changes are hot effected overnight by decree as under- totalitarian regime. But those , who believe in democracy as it js practiced here in the :lnited, States, say "that our .way of accomplishing things finally gets the job done and done right. ;V ; ; . .Such seems to be the case with our Social Security program pro-gram which first started ,tp take form .with , the advent of the New Deal. "The first laws which the administration drove through Congress to set up the program contained plenty of flaws. t But they gave the nation a start on a plan which is high important to every citizen. - ' V - V" But because they weren't perfect, a mighty howl was set up to throw the, entire business out the windows But now, alter an advisory group has had time to study the-system's operation and after the country has had a few years experience experi-ence with it, 6hahges are being made to correct the mistakes. The revision, bill .has passed the house and is headed for favorable action by the senate. The general intent of the changes is. to liberalize the benefits of the act and to lessen the immediate tax burdens uhder' it:" Experts found it was possible to accomplish both Vol these apparently contradictory objectives -because actuarial experience gained since1935 showed that reserves 'i -lit' '-i iL.L It. . I..--" ' Aj.'J were piling up laaier.uian uieyv .1. .L. Contributors, to the old age insurance plan will be saved an estimated $825,000,000 in. the next three years beginning in 1940 because the tax on employers and employes is being held at 1 per cent instead of advancing tti bne and a half. , ' i Benefits now will start in 1940 instead of, 1942 to pensions; pen-sions; aged wives, widows; children and ; aged dependents. This will increase the outgo over a five-year period by an estimated, $1,200,000,000- After these changes have been written into the law, critics doubtless will still be able to pick more flaws in it. And if imperfections do remain, it's a safebet that they will be fixed-f-under our sometimes slow but usually sure democratic procedure. JolisjUidy J t Almost 'anyone of the 155,000 college graduates of 1939 will settle for a $15 per week job and then try to make a future but of it. They're lucky even to get that, because the U. Si Department of Education inree or lour una lmmeuiaie empioyraenu - .- .'. John A West Jr., a Harvard senior with a nautical twist of mind, Jcnew those facts when he dispatched an SOS in 81 bottles to various eastern employers. His appeal: iilfi 'Stranded on ah island in Cambridge, Mass. A ; cbllege graduate-to-be in June. Will work like hell for passage into port. Gold stored here with me (training in arts, sciences, business, including mar keting and advertising- Past experience in newspaper news-paper office, summer theater, steel mill. Best references.):- You're getting ahead -and I'm going your , . way. Have you room in th$ hold for a man who can ; . prove he's worth his salt ?'N . , ' ,Of GO concerns which answered, West sighed on with the crew of a Philadelphia advertising agency. To John West and other college , graduates who are lucky enough to land jobs, the world wishes many happy crossings. To those who don't succeed at first, remember that a good mariner npvpArnns from .1 stiff wind. N (X' H Ltt- y&iif A'"-tri-st? lis i ; 3 w'J ' I H V M-V ' Ji were nceueu. .1. says that only one in every! Nov That S tarts Again! OUT OUR WAY 0- f AT. ONE .TIME X MAP THAT I MlOHT BE RAISIMC? A PUTURE PRESIDENT IN THIS FAMILV BUT NOW X SEE THE. LI6HT-- HE'S GOING TO EE A MAGICIANS I'VE SEEM A MAGICIAN -LITTER UP A STAGE WITH STUFF FRCM A; SILK HAT UT IVE NEVER SEEN A MAGICIAN PUT ; rr pack! : Gem J 4. . ' !l Opportunity tp ? s : l . ' i i - t SlB - ' ilV BIIUCE CATTON Prpvo Herald Washington ' Oorrespondeoat; i WASHINGTONr.t June ' 17 For just about the first time since the government started spattering ig concrete dams all pver the far west, some real price-cutting, competition com-petition has .developed in tne cement ce-ment industry. .. As ; . a , result;, the government -stands to save better than, $1,500,000 in; the building M Shasta: Dam, in California, . (anc looks forward to similar-savings on other jobs. . -,t..-f . , The immediate reason rofthe CompetiUon Is the fact, that Henry J. K4ser, l3 going into-the cement- making business.; Kaiser, heads i a Dig west; cdast, construction., com-r pany bearingvhis name; he helped organize ana for a time was presi dent oi arx vjompanies, uie construction con-struction firm which built Boulder Dam. But up to now he has been a user ox" cemenr? not a maker of it. '' His appearance on the scene has broken up , a picture which has been drawing . periodic jfotesta from Secretary of the interior ickes tor years, rliiree years ago Ickes appeared before tne. Senate Interstate . Commerce. Committee to complain that he was getting a vast, number of identical or practically prac-tically identical bfda lot buuding materials, citing cement in particular, par-ticular, and, reniarking that , ."I haven't any "doiibt but-that this practice has cost the people milr lions of dollars." " ' icitns is x ELATED Hence Ickes and his Bureau of Reclamation are elated over the . fact that' Comptroller" General Fred H. Brown has given approval to the award of the Shasta Dam -esswwsswisieawisii 1 J iiiMMMssijssMssssssww'essw"'"se Competitiye n r. " ' - : , I" T- I ehf Bidding Gives Goverhment bay.e Dpi ai;s on cement contract to Kaiser's com pany, which underbd the' other companies by more-than $1,500,- 000. ' i ' : , f ' 'Shasia bam is a unit in the. htig $l70,OpO,000 Central Valley Project tori the Sacramento arid San Joaquin . rivers in ' Calif drhla. It" will take 5,800,000; barrels of ement to bullet- the dam. Kaiser's compariSr, . Permanente ' Corpora-tidn, Corpora-tidn, offered aMiet "delivered -price fdr this - Quantity of cernent, -of $ll,t)25,B92.80. i. ' .. i 'a tBut the . six ' losing '. companies protestecLTh'ey argued that. Fer-e marierite Is not, a qualified bidder Since it was neither a. dealer; in cemehtor; a manufacturer of jce-meht jce-meht when , the bids , were made. They cited various Vtechrtfcal. ir-rgularitiese ir-rgularitiese to . Fermanente's bid. And they objected, . vehemently to k delay-iri-delivery clause, which Permanehte'S " bid contained. i : ',"" : Br6wri has now ruled', that"-his 6ffice"Win Jiot question .the jawartf, and the- green bght is on.-, .'.'i'v A gv of a- million and a' half between cement bids is practically imprecederited,' ai.. far as the Bureau, Bu-reau, of Reclamation is. jconcerned. Officials : there, are .delighted they point.j out,:. tdo that j they v will be iuying. much -more -cements. fox-west fox-west coast .dims in ther.fiear future. fu-ture. Another ' unit jof . the; Central Valley Project,.;. Fxiant Dam.'Js,ta be built shortly, and various other dams are going to : be buying cement ce-ment in the next fewt.years. : VVPA .... HEADACHE , , The recent fracas between Lieut, CbL Brehon-. Somervell., WpA lad-ministrator, lad-ministrator, for -New. York. and, a Workers' KAlHanqer grievance.com-mittee grievance.com-mittee chairman,, does ; not mean that x capital . gossip , concerning an impending break between WPA management .r and- the Alliance is correct. .It does, however, hlgfe light one 6f ; WFAs.: worst head- acnes. . . -f..- Somervell went to the mat with the ;Wprkers ; Alliance and... the. Teachers'. Union after an Alliance grievance . - committee jchairmah had threatened, a WPA .official's secretary over the phone and ' a Union official had written a letter demanding that all WPA project SCIENCE NEWS Keeping Up to Date Relief, for bandsmen who havi to : play; outdoors in winter, parades is 'provided ' in a special muff invented by.Duane Rupert of J Cloversyille,.. Y.V. .Te muff, which, is the. shape ".of ?.a bag.; hti , over, a trumpet . or H&ther 4Winci instrument,-.' etend ing from the mouthpiece to.tb , belL . It has finger, holes tntc which the, fingers of the play. . er are inserted.; ' . . i. ; No more . burned- fingers bj matches that burn too far I .Wll Uanv Bell of Tenafly N, J.,- haj designed a match -which is fire proofed .on.; the porti6n of the stem held in the fingers. When the f ire reaches a certain Way along the stem, it automaticall j 'goes.ouL i,,- t i, - 5. V A. Chicago lnvmtor, ."Ann Kinnucan, has designed a : paii of three-duty garters for men, , The garters, bf course, liave th if primary function of -keeping th 'man's socks up. But ; beside this, they attach to the man 'a tip pockets, " keeping his pocket down and .his. shirt in. v- f : t. The latest thing in the way oi home drapery . is a convertible window shade invented- by George ;Brent, . resident of Pitts? burgh, Pa. The shade, designed with a . tipper running .full 4 .iengtn ; tnru . the middle.- can ct divided to "form grapes kat eacJi Side of the windowl ... '.."". WILLIAMS Raro Rr6ects supervisors' give rexcellent" ratings, rat-ings, to . everyone imder, them. ' . . When' Somef veil announced that any further, communications .from the Alliance of ficial , would toe, disregarded dis-regarded gossip c here i . began . to havej .4t k that; the., administration was going to cold-shoulder. the Alliance henceforth on the .ground that.. its aeitists tendencies wotdd be..a heavy ; liability in -the 140 campaign. "V'.i" , iThat -gossip, is wrong. Official WPA, attitude is that. any organization organi-zation representing "any employes may' negotiate for them; Workers.' Alliance Js still in good standing. ana no, .cnange; is contempiaiea. a. Frivately, however, . WPA. "...people "...peo-ple 'iie?e. admit that thlrigs haVe been tbiigh , , in . New York 2 for , a long, long .tfme They blame left-nger left-nger , sinV' the Alliance; t say they have been constantly . kicking Vp ftisses, especially on the iVwhite dollar" projects, - and .have r.sud-fce'eded r.sud-fce'eded sln:;givirigjC4iuch-vproject3 .M black reye all r. oyer the country., t.- i-.' i. . . .', PLEA S A tl T GROVE . '; nss ' viola west , Correspondent Phone 28-VV ; r ; Scouters from. Pleasant Grove Who took the Utah lake boat trip fcof Bird, Island Monday :, evening ,were Mr. and Mrs. ' M. S.. Christiansen, Chris-tiansen, Mr, and Mrs.' H.; S. Valker, Mr. ahd Mrs. Thomas Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Walker, Mjniand Mrs. F. -D. At-wood At-wood and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shoell. . ( 9 Mrs. Lerena Nielsen and Mrs, Delilah ; Fugal : accompanied Le-landXirii Le-landXirii and Mlss;Delilah Fugal 'or) a trip to Timpanogbs cave Sunday.. , ' v . ;m Mr, ... and Mrs. Lowell - Richlns and baby Son, Phillip; -returned from Independence, Mo., Wednesday Wednes-day after .visiting with Mrs. Richlns Rich-lns people the past six ,' weeks. Miss Jean; Beckett, sister of Mrs. Richins came home with them for an extended visit. ; '. ''. , ' Mr. and Mrs. A. P. VVarnick are in Chicago on a business trip, they will drive a new car back. ". Leland Swensen, 18, and MIss Duana Day, i 17; were married at Provo Wednesday, "June- 14 by County Assessor; Lawrence. M.' At- Mrs. Owen Cullimore arid little daughter , of. New York City, are sending: the summer months With her parents t Mr; and Mrs. Isaac Sund berg. Mr; Cullimore .will come here in JV.ugust for his vacation. . . M)r.. and Mrs. Vilce Radmall, Mr. , and Mrs S. ' W. Hilton . and daughter Frances and son Floyd spent Thursday afternoon and Fri-jiay Fri-jiay on .a . ishing . trip' in Wayne county. . -, . , ,.Mr. and Mrs.- Kenneth Adams and Scouts Paul Adams,. Eld-redge Eld-redge Warnick. Bud and Bert Swensen Tof Manila returned this week f rom. a ten day trip to Oak-lahcC Oak-lahcC the . San .Francisco .fair, Los Arigeles;and. , other parts ; of .California. .Cali-fornia. ,;' V ',.--, i Miss Anna Beth Nelson bf Lynn-dyl Lynn-dyl is visiting rwith Miss Elizabeth Told;.f Mr.: and ilrs'." Joseph W.' Larsen left Friday morning for a trip to southern Utah and a visit to the Bryce and Zions canyons. s 'i he Timpanogos stake genea-loerlcal genea-loerlcal board . ; members had a iveiner roast and , general good time ' in-', the orchard at the home of George Monson in Manila Wednesday, Wed-nesday, evening, .' - ... . v; Mr.;' and -Mrs. J. Clarence Hilton and family and Miss Jean Beckett1 ol t Independence,.. Mo., lefti Satur-; day for . a week's visit at , Jackson Hole, Wyo. , , . : " : ..In-, some sections of the Ita-Avaiian Ita-Avaiian Islands, wild raspberries jjyrow- as "large, as golf balls. s By Breaking of Engagement Is No Disgrace; Delrer vo Make Sure Before Marriaqe J ; ' '" - - ' ' ,; - ; ' . : This one of a series of articles on the relationship : of men and - women In modern marriage, .".prepared -and published ander the direction of Norman S. Ilayner, professor of sociology at the. . Uniiersity of Washington, and outstanding authority on the family.. t . . 4. , . . 20 BEING ENGAGED.. Announcement, of the engagement engage-ment of a young couple used to be a, part of the marriage contract. con-tract. It was, in effect, the first legal step in the marriage. The modern . engagement is . considered consid-ered .rather in the light of a transition period between first -courtship and life together. It has become a method of making a young .roan .and , woman acquainted ac-quainted with each other under calm and unhurried circustances. v When young men and women first meet and develop an interest inter-est they find the fear of rivalry, ' the '.fear that the other. Js. not -. 'serious," they fear many things and experience many things that Create an artificial, tense atmosphere."1...-, ,., . ,r .... : . ' They can't learn to know each other intimately under these circumstances. cir-cumstances. So they , become engaged, and having settled all thefirst fears and . tensions of tlerry-Gb-Hcimd (Continued From Page One)-' k ; , , . that v "during - the past : summer, lj938, for a period of approximate ly two months, at the : instruction of ' George Caldwell" , ( construction superintendent); he "was ordered to proceed to Covington and build a barn: and a log house for-Richard W. Leche (governor of Louisiana), Louisi-ana), on his privately owned property. prop-erty. Later, for. a period of approximately ap-proximately six weeks, he was ordered or-dered to again report to the Leche estate for work, where voe converted con-verted his old stable ; into a - com barn. '. . j . t "We were-transferred to a private pri-vate construction ;of a building located on (Louisiana State) University Uni-versity ' .property- belonging . .to Goode Smith: ' (Thirty or forty xiegrops .were-' assigned to .- the Work ) . Work . progressed ' on r this property until it was rumored that one of the. WPA, inspectors was enrouterto make an inspection trip, whereupon . the- - workers, . negroes, and "those assigned ; to this -work Wiho were jn: reality WPA workers. Were forced 4 to flee, and t6 hide in;, fear Ihdt they would-be seen by the-WPA inspector. ; "Jimmy Marshall, who was the WPA. foreman, instructed these men to Vet the r 1 away from this building' and .beat It back to the Coliseum,- you black ' , the inspectors' -iare? krnlrig7fid dont let them see you.? - MORE PRIVATE JOBS .w Another, affidavit- signed -, by Robert L. O'Neal on June .4, states that for two years he was concrete foreman Vwith the Louisiana. State University, and that "during , the spring jot K 1937 two nouses were fabricated inside the Coliseum . that.jabbr for this work was fur-nishedjbyi fur-nishedjbyi WPA ... . arid. that to his. full knowledge all of the material ma-terial was purchased by the WPA. -jrTbat when the said two houses were completely; constructed v. they : -were loaded , ; on Louisiana State .University .trucks ..by,, WPA labor? that thev -were transDOrted b.v .the ,said" ; trucks ,to the farm, of Richard -. W. Leche, privately own? ed near Covington, ,La and that there' the ywere unloaded, . , . .u "That this was..done iWith. the full - knowledge and approval .of the, engmeer, ,; Air JULongeii, ,em ployed by the WPA. . . .. , - '-x "That he - is k familiar with - the construction of the; home of ,E.,N. Jackson business v manager of Sfdries Fly Tear . .V w v. V TbirLren strik rs "and peace officers'- were injured - at the Allis-Chalmers plant, West AUis, Yu., when talkers talk-ers attempted to blockade office workers entering the plant. Above,, strikers flee a tear gas baro. up r ; i : I j n 1 1 f r -v iinii m t . l!lnll!ll!i!!!n il'L I .their relationship, they set about seriously finding out about each, other, ;. - - . " - It is the intelligent use of this period that makes for happy marriage.. It is at thi3 time that a community ofv Interest and a glad sense of tolerance must be established. - -. ; Thus it is that the breaking of Father's Day Today I'm thinking of the times You lifted me upon your knee, And helped .me put 'my . clothes . on straight, . - V Or sangl.a funny, song . to me. ..v.. t - You- kept- your : troubles to yourself your-self '. , I : didn't realise that then, ' You- -held ,. me- it ..your warm, " strong arms,' ' " ' ; " And told me - bravely we. were men. " -. And as I grew up, by your ide. You had such confidence, in me It ' made my try," through all the years. To be the man you'd have me be. - '-' ' , rm.sorry.that 1 did some things, That, may have, : caused you to feel-bad . . v.- .- ' - I'd have you know, this Father's Day, - . - . - . - That X appre6iated t you? dad. By Althea . Kimball Birthdays Monday, June 19 LAWRENCE CASSITY PARLEY L. LARSEN. K OSCAR W. CARLSON Louisiana State Unlversity, in that I, personally, was employed on his house for some two or three weeks, and that -all of the' said: workers ahd carpenters were paid from the same -funds. .... - . '- r , "That to my knowledge and belief, be-lief, quite a bit of. material such as fiand, gravel, cement, -lumber, and some two or ' three hundred feet of concrete storm sewer pipe were used in building of the said house which" said materials belonged be-longed to the WPA, and that on one occasion, George : Caldwell (c o n struction superintendent) came "down to the said house. . f . while I was setting and laying the sewer- pipe, 'and exclaimed to. me, 'For God's sake, O'Neal, hurry up and get that pipe covered up, before be-fore Jackson has a fit about all this stealing : ...... . : , - An : affidavit by Hicks Batts, a truck driver,, tells how he. moved a playhouse with 20 WPA workers for David Ellison, attorney general gener-al of Louisiana. -. ' . Various,:, other affidavits, ' too numerous tq detail; tell of materials mater-ials hauled to. the private properties proper-ties of Governor Leche and members mem-bers of his political machine. ,i (Copyright, 1939,. by United " Feature Syndicate, Inc.) . Gas. Rolls; 13' Hurt in Strike Riot an engagement, once considered a sort of disgrace, now means only that calm consideration nas shown the folly of mating. The law recognizes this change of attitude, at-titude, and now it is difficult for a 'woman to collect money on & breach of promise charge. Most women! consider a long engagement (say, more than a year) unfair because it takes them "out of circulation." yet does- not guarantee that; the wedding, will take place, Yet too short engagements do not give time for the serious considerations consid-erations that should precede marriage. , i .. .. .Long engagements tend to build up a physical tension that often leads tp premature sex relationship. re-lationship. Yet too. short engagements en-gagements do not give the contracting con-tracting parties, time in. Which to learn whether . or not : their mutual attraction .13 .physical, and thus transitory Intharacter. SPANISH FORK SOCIETY Mr. and Mrs. Harold Miller and little daughter, Joaruv. left during the week to spend their-vacation-They were accompanied by . Cliff Newitt. They will visit with Mr. . and Mrs. Earl. J. Frei at Sari Diego - and Vexpect to visit; places . of Interest ; before returning home. . t Members , of the Icelandic aso-elation aso-elation T met recently, at the Fifth ward chapel to elect officers for the coming -year and plan for the annual Icelandic- outing, to be held as usual on August 2. All officers of last year were reelected with ' John , K. Johnson, president; Eleanor Elea-nor Bearnson. Jarvis,. vice president presi-dent and Mrs. Lola. Argyle. " publicity pub-licity chairman ; Members of the . various; committees and . the " place for the .annual celebration, will be announced later. The, next, meeting meet-ing of the association. will be held , Friday, June 23, at the Fifth ward church. 1; Alt? committee members and officers are jurged , to , ; be" pTesent. -' ..; , . .; , . .. ' ' Mrs. Helga Jones, of this ' city Is in California visiting with - her -scri-iri-law and daughter Mr and ... Mrs. Wendall Hammer: of Elcen-tro, Elcen-tro, who are happy over, the birth of a son " " . r. ' v Mrsi . Grace Hitchings of June Lake, California,.! has returned hbrne after, a visit, with relatives' bere. " ;;j ' Mrs. Dora Johns "is visiting with relatives In California . for several weeks, .while she Is convalescing frtom an, injury; . -; -. ;. Mrs. M. M. Thomas . and Mr. Annie Gull vLsitel In Salt Lae Wednesday with Mrs. P. F. Clifford. Clif-ford. v ... " . 1 Mary Alice Bullen is visiting her aunt, Mrs: ; Dora Jensen at Sugar City,. Idaho. ;. WIITTNG REUNION SPRINGVILLE " Descendants bf Edwin Whiting, pioneer of this vicinity, will hold a family reunion the later, part -of July, at the Maple canyon park, . site of the first farm land taken up by, the Edwin Whiting family. In charge of arrangements for the reunion are: -Mr. and? Mrs: Elmer. Bird, JlrX and" .Mrs; Howard- Whiting of Mapleton and Mr. and Mrs.' Elmer Bird, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Vhiting 'of Mapleton and Mr. and Mrs. Wayrie "Johnson of Sprir.g-Vllle Sprir.g-Vllle " " ' " - |