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Show fill j" " ' j I ' 1 1 i -1 'Thanks, But What More Could You Offer Me?' Desk Chat, Editorial Column Definitely Derisive Definitions: Undiscovered Wealth EXECUTIVEan individual with' Men have always been lure4 . r " -5 ? 12, 1945 PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, -'- SUNDAY. j AUGUST The Washington Editorial . . . Dearly beloved., avenge not yourselves, but rather give place nut wrath; for it I written. -Vengence Is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. Eonuuu 12:19. Those who plot the destruction of others often fall themselves. Phaedrus. Toward Industrial Pvace ; Now that the long-awaited, long-needed conference of labor, industry and government govern-ment is a definite possibility, it might be well to remember that here, as at the San Francisco conference, no miracles are to be expected. Yet it should also be remembered that the accomplishments at San Francisco were miraculous mi-raculous enough to convince Sen. Arthur Vandenberg that the procedure which work ed so. well for. world peace might also achieve industrial and economic peace at home. And so he proposed to Labor Secretary Schwellenbach, a sympathetic and like-minded like-minded listener, that he. call this domestic peace conference. In his letter to the Secre-tjtrv. Secre-tjtrv. Mr. Vandenbersr wrote : "It was demon strated at San Francisco that men can agree! and informed his brother in, this country that ex- rm fViniKrh thv anoak different lansruazes. They cannot agree unjess there is some common com-mon denominator in their thinking. There must be some measure of mutual confidence in their approach." The impressive thing about Saw Francisco was that 50 nations had come together because be-cause of an undeniably sincere desire for lastincr neace which surmounted the barriers of language. It is true, as the senator pointed jow Jacobson's statement that for 70 years human Vr r . j (life cannot survive in an area struck by an out. that among the strong nations this de-ja f . hrtmh or,H that rniri t.uino that sire was colored oy considerations oi sen-interest sen-interest that at times seemed insurmountable. insurmount-able. But "intimate and friendly consultation" consulta-tion" achieved a "triumph of the council table." . Thus far labor and industry generally have seemed to be more desirous of self-in terest than of peace. It has been emphasized Merry-Go-Rou;nd A Daily Picture of What's I' .fggSl: Going On in National Affairi WASHINGTON" Inside face is that Stalin agreed as far back as the Teheran conference to come into the war against Japan. That was the price he agreed to pay in return for the second front in Normandy. . . . Churchill was opposed I tn thsi AAAnl mn rhiwn erH Vrtkrm hut Qt1ln insisted on it, and FDR threw his weight with Stalin in return for the pledge on Japvii. . . . More recently at Potsdam, Truman took the whole matter up again with Stalin, f, . . . Chief thing the Russians have been working on to prepare for the Jap war is re-laying the trans-Siberian railway. A total of 30,000 miles of track has now been raid, one of the biggest quickest, rail-building rail-building jobs in history. . . In return for Russian Rus-sian entry into the Jap war, it was agreed that Russia would get all Allied military secrets. The atomic bomb at that time was only an idea, and no one knew whether or not it would material" ize. As far as can be ascertained, it was not discussed dis-cussed .with the Russians. Apparently the Germans were thinking about an atomic weapon for a long time. Twenty years ago, Louis Lehman, concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic orchestra, :went to Utah to invest in uranium mines. He had' been tipped off by his brother, a physicist in Germany, who foresaw fore-saw the tremendous' possibilities of pitchblende periments made it advisable to purchase options on uranium deposits. . . The: options are believed be-lieved to have lapsed For some unexplained unex-plained reason, a staff" of publicity men from Ivy Lee's public relations office has been quartered quarter-ed at the highly secret Oak Ridge.- Tenn., site of the atomic bomb plant for several months. . . . Ivy Lee is the man who largely reversed American Amer-ican antipathy for the ejder John D. Rockefeller. . . . . What he was doing for the army remains to be seen There is something awfully funny fun-ny about the sudden retraction of Scientist Har- : : , 1 : ; : ence than he has himself. RADICAL a chap who sees only one side COMMITTEE a group of people who require week to do what one good man . could accomplish in one hour. EMINENT AUTHORITY-H per son in whom you would have, no confidence if you were next-door neighbors and he called you 'Bill.' PROGRESS; In every man or woman : There's room for 'Good to grow in wealth. Drake and Columbus. Cortes - and the Conquistsdorcs Were all. attracteApto.the New World .byK the (.temptation of vast "wealth. -Yet, wealth usually evaded them only a very few were success- ful in the search for El ,Doradd. For. every successful seeker of gold in California in 1849, ' in Australia in J851, in South Africa In .1855, in the Klondike in 1898--hundreds, even , thousands, lost their lives before they arrived at the gold fields and many more hundreds failed to find gold after they arrived. And the few who did find gold? No heart doth beat without it! Well, most of, them lost it or were Hdwever much some doubt it Though some even try to; flout it So each of us has His or her chance To grow better day by day. The bright, if immature-minded ideaologists down in Washington used to urge us to bring back prosperity by spending more . . . and then Some more. Now, they are -urging us to save more in order to prevent the ruinous spiral of inflation. It is getting so a fellow doesn't know which is the best policy any more. We are still puzzled about how to interpret a vacation "post card we just received in this morning's mail. It reads: "Wish you were here. Going to leave in the morning." will poison neighboring areas wOn carried away in streams The army's haste to deny the story, coupled with an army statement that Dr. Jacobson was bound to secrecy under the' espionage espion-age act made a lot of people examine facts twice. The army was obviously worried about public reaction. ? FDR PUSHED BOMB with discouraging frequency that too many; developing tne new atomic bomb, one man stood leaders on both sides have been more eager i above them ail as the .greatest single factor in its f ua folth onH development Franklin D. Roosevelt. ,w ",u u.,u .V- oa; . , T I Only a few people know the details of howj WTOng-doing than for mutual trust. Roosevelt approached this greatest and most fan- An exception J.0 that Statement is the la- tastic weapon of international warfare. However.! .m.n.MMt ,-Viayo- nf finmA mnnths : when he finally decided to podr $2,000,000,000 of The Chopping Block By Frank C. Robertson My brother, used to say, "I'd j ism. Revolution and war was the rather be a sucker than a wise guy." What he meant was "that he would rather admit being wrong once in a while, or confess con-fess to not knowing all the answers, than to be one of those cocksure people who are never in doubt about anything. inevitable outcome. We can end exploitation and ; slavery here by using the democracy we have, and still retain a measure of individual individ-ual free enterprise. We can keep our freedom. To blame every social . ill to capitalism is as absurd as at- I feel the same way. I would . tributing all the disease in a com rather be taken for a few dol-imunity to a witch. It's just too lars thrn to lay awake nights thinking up sharp practices. And I r rather be what I am, an en- Once News Now History Thirty Years Ago The man with whom we have no overpowering desire to become acquainted is the musician who pasted his mother-in-law'j picture pic-ture on his bas drum! Perhaps we shall have peace when the world discovers; that it lis more, expensive to lose a war than towin it. But, as-long as the loser has a I reasonable right to expect the winner to feed, clothe and shelter him. we shall never have univer sal peace. FAITH fostered by fear, foments fo-ments rebellion. cheated or robbed of what they did find. When one considers the. hard- . ship, suffering and discouragement discourage-ment that has been part of every gold rush or; every conquest for undiscovered wealth, we are inv pressed with. the thought that one martyr, one; pioneer in medical research one poet or one man of letters has left more to- humanity than all the thousands who trekked trek-ked across the plains, deserts and mountains to the Sacramento River, succumbed o fever in 4be-Australian 4be-Australian bush or froze to death in the ice and snow of the Yukon., LoOo "- v Resort Reflections ... . . . the bathing girl is spotted by the freckles he wears. . . . the more ' we see of girls, the more we believe in clothes. ...a little moonlight now and. then will marry off the best of men. . . . some beach girls not only get burned by the sun but roasted by the gossips as well. . . . the smaller the beach girl's costume, the larger her coat of tan. - Wouldn't it .be marvelous? But. would it be nice? ' If I forgot to write This -ending rhyme Maybe once, or even twice? The flying spider of Australia cannot fly. . but has parachute sails, which spread out as the spider leaps, through space. quixer cr be aftef From the Files 'of I The Provo Herald I Of Aug. 11, 1915 Three thousand people thronged the Geneva resort grounds on the occasion of the annual retail simple. clerk s outing and It was reported In my opinion there are a lot!"1" "ovo ? P"1?" of us who see clearly the evils truth, than thej0f oUr economic system, yet we ago, but even that laudable document did not receive unanimous support. And elsewhere there has been little real opportunity for government-owned factories certain to consume the energies of half a million critically; need ed yorkers at the peak of trie war. ns was i i j ;igamDiing, noi oniv me nations resources, duii inumave ami inenui wnsuimuun, OII"-c his own name in historv. v 'a genuine urge for .peaceful solution was1 Had the project failed. Roosevelt would have! lacking jbeen the goat. The vast plants in Tennessee andj Still, the trend toward industrial Peacei: IS hopeful. FUDI1C and Congressional sentl- ponents could have used it to keep the Democratic ment are leading the wav, and industry and party out of power for a decade. . labor, while not in the van seem ready to . Roosevelt, however, never -flinched. .' ... ; Nor is it generally known that the man who, IOIIOW. prodded Roosavelt hardest to undertake the' It may be hoped that the coming confer- atomic project was another "star-gazing"' of-1 Mice will include not onlv the labor-manage-ificial former Vice President Henry Wallace. Wal-- t u '"P; T.-;,-" !lace was the missionary for the project, one of ment equivalent of the Big lie powers.:. fw t.v in Bfl:;(,rnm(,n, whnJ ,ir,jB. ' but also representatives from small business 'the theorv of the atom and who. as a friend of and the small, independent unions. th world's greatest scientist sDurred General And it may be hoped that the conference will Jieed Mr. Schwellenbach's advice that, Marshall and war agency heads into speedier ac tion. Note-Incidcntnlly. it was Wall?ce's dreamy- 'without asking either side to abandon its'"'cd experimentation with a new type of corn self-interest. ... we must insist that our'""1 K,v.e i?e4wor'd onnno.?no. more bushel .... . , ,, ,,. . , .of corn to feed the hungry this year. So par-self par-self -interest shall serve the public inteersts haps the "carck-oot professors? and the "starry-, and the common good." , eyed dreamers" Roosevelt brought to Washington - twere worth while after all. ; I Spreading Starvation troian s kc office . j President Truman s friends in Kansas City When an American party sailed out to "efnTgr omi.1. MiisTl!n.gK00? , . , "ail- . . , before he comes out to Missouri again: because if inspect a jap nospnai snip ,e acuaunj? ine,he tries to work in his Kansas City office, it will emaciated enemy garrison - from Wake joe hot. Island, the reeking odor of starvation assail- L Irman i-toomJe th.?4'sith oor of j t, ' u- !!,. nuAA v,:-the Fcdsral building at: Kan?as City happens to ed them long before they reached the ship.;be one of two offices which can't be ir-con- NoW that odor is hanging over the whole :ditioned. The building's air conditioning' system shrinking area of Jap holdings and over the;canlce up to these two offices. home islands as well i, , Hwc?cr one otr office agachment, hitherto, nome isianas as wen. lacking, has now been remedied a telephone. The Japanese living Standard is low. and ; throughout all his career as senator, 'frugal' the avearge Jap xliet would not keep an i Ha""y Truman never had a telephone in his off iceJ-American iceJ-American alive and healthy. But even though T&'l$Sffijit many Japs can exist on rice and fish, they: John caskie Collet. :: must have them in sufficient quantitv. Nowi Although nothing can be done abbut the1 their country, never self-sufficient, is almost I flSi0". l?,cph,on! has bee,nttKta11. I , , , i j u . 'n the Kansas office of the pre$ident of the Unitd ' completely isolated by an air-sown mindstates. ! blockade. Clearly they are not getting a'ARMY HOARIs G 1s J sufficient quantity in their diet without dip- some of the reasons behind the war depart- ' ping into reserve stocks. And those reserve ment s insistence on keeping a tremendous two-Stocks two-Stocks Will not last indefinitelv. 1 front army to fight a one-fron war. also behind , The Japs have already felt the weight iSLm. of militarj' might that the Allies turned upon' Brass-hat insistence on keeping veterans busy' Germany. But they are also feeling the pinch ; Picking up cigarette butts when they have ample1 of hunger more acutely, it may be presumed, !hT V Ar1' ; nas oeen puzzim mem- u. vL n AiA wVii tt. v '!er? .f ingress. Also, it's not .generally realized mai tne army and navy together plan to reduce re-duce their sire by only 10 per cent during the coming year, aespue tne new --atomic bomb, de- by the Big Three at Potsdam must begin tojtnat it 1. aysimposain fiLSS tinuing war which the Japs' leaders still , The June strength of the rmy. immediately I frt-o. ,,nnn tViom I after V-J day. was 8.300,000 men. Between June r j 1845 and June 1946. the army brass hatsplan to : discharge approximately 1.300.000 men. But, mean- fpimi ih AimitinKl iwhile. General Hershey has announced that the - ,yx, uW iiwlC army plans lo continue drafting men at the rateJ T.Vi t ,,ffofr ; aa -j u OI 1UU UUU Pr monin. wjnen. 1 1 iz months, mean! 1 hough tne Luftwaffe is dead and the an additional 1.200,000 men. Japanese air force fast dying, .New York! Tnis is something the army has not explained. has had a taste of aerial warfare thi-ono. JFor. unless this. policy is changed, the army by tram and fantastic rr-irW inexl.ne. bs about the same s.ize & day-1 mil , 7 7 , , . ah uus is wny senators; and congressmen lie. crasn OI an- Army bomber into the' have been blowing off steamt in recent' weeks. Empire State building brought Sudden death lEn sta"nch Democrats are beginning admit painful injury,shock.terror. panic and rr.9 r 9 ------ . a r w Vk were right. ' i. U. S. ARMV IN GERMANY : Meanwhile, one secret commitment made bv i pened to L.onaon, Berlin, Rotterdam, Stalin-A,resiacni 3evsit at Yalta has now leaked out. grad and dozens of other irreat cities i 18 ,ne1rea'on wfty the war department is vrvS v 1 1 p j- . , so anxlus to. rush a peacetime conscription act Ptewiora Mayor LaGuardia called the, through congress even before the war is over. accident more terrible because it could have At Yalta- Roosevelt gave a .promise that the been avoided. The nations of the world canlli" ftnwo?.d ee? an artny SMtf" ,, k' :i , '-""tin Germany for four to five years. Half million say the same thing about aerial warfare, and i men is a tremendous force to. keep overseas in do their Utmost to ,see that it doesn't hap-iP6861'01 especially when the executive power to Tien acain. I maintain such an army automatically ends: shortly pen again. I after hostiltties cease. author of pontifical statements It has been a habit of mine to try to examine ex-amine all sides of every question. ques-tion. Take the quest ion of conscr i p t i o n which I discussed dis-cussed in this corner some week,, ago. I am against it. but -I admitted there might be something t o say for the other oth-er side. I find myself taken to task by a fellow fel-low traveler as a confusionist because I at tempt to put I. Ml.-, , i are hot willing ; to give up the freedom enjoyed under our system sys-tem of government. So long as we have political democracy we have- a chance to remedy the evils that vex us, What the communists com-munists and . fascists ask is that we surrender this weapon, this power to change things ourselves and in return they will give us economic security. The peop ' y Mr. Robertson serted during the day. A special tram was run over the D. & R. u. for the celebration. 0 Eddie Child of Springville was shof and dangerously wounded at his father's home, early in the morning by an armed prowler who had entered the house. The bullet was found imbedded in the muscles of his back under the right shoulder blade any form of totalitarian state the American people are quite likely to stick to capitaalism. Least' of all are we going to give up our democracy, which, te something ouite separate from capitalism although al-though the fact is . not generally recognized. Democracy is the thing which gives us the right to criticize and chanee both kov- both sides of the matter into full eminent and business. To say. view instead o f ri : a T rt:..l. 1 . - . did that in Germany and it didn t . V work, out so well . ! junlo? AAU high ' jump cham- Just so long as the choice re-,pIonship at San Francisco, defeat-mains defeat-mains between what we have and in- Aima Richards of Ttoavr What's On The Air Today SUNDAY. AUGUST 12 KOVO 1240 KDYL 1S20 KUTA 570- KSL 1160 I :ISI :4J' I Son if St-rvice (In Old Vienna iWoodshcdders INew I ' -Orean Fantasies 'Southland Sinjs ICoYfc CcuiccrU The Jubflaires :nendezvous ' ' 'Bennett Slaters 1:00 Church of Air .Rendezvous ITreaaury Salute 'News ' . 7:151 Story to Order .On Bus e. Power- Blgga 7:30iNew and Music 'Newa . I New Voices 7:45 Sunday Varieties iMelody I I 8:00!Bible Clasa S:ISI 8:30 News S:43! Music IBible Highlights Melodies I I Words. Music iSouthcrnaircs ) 1 I Church of AJr 1 ICaxnp Mcetia' S:00Rev B Zoller 9:151 t30Volce of Prophecy 9:45 iNews Church of Air (Master Sinrers iLes Paul Trio .Prophecy ome ' Woithip 'News 'Nsval Choir Ttelieious Service INews 10:00 Pilgrim Hour lrisi 10:30 Lutheran Hour 10:451 iCarveth Wells ISundav Songs itt's WalU 'Serenade !Ncwj 1 Ha wsli Calls iCorresoondents iSweet Swing iTa bernacJe Choir 1 . . t iTransatlanfJe former Olympic high jump cham pion, also a B Y U student. Larson Lar-son also won second place in the senior competition. Prof. John C. Swenson has left for San Francisco to attend the convention of the American Economics Eco-nomics association. to 11:00 Revival Hour ri:13 11:30! 11:451 INews IMost from Life lRound Table I iJ-n Kfnnmiey Encyclopedia 'Sammy Kaye (Leland Stowe 'Church of Air I ' ' News 'Melody Picture 12:00 Chaplain Jim 12:151 1?:30R Cunningham 12:45;Crooked Square ,'The Show ! INews and Music I Stradivari Richard Tucker .Wake Up I I News Olin Downs 1:00 20th Air Force 1:151 l:30Son Sty lines l:45;Melxly Cascades I I World Parade IPreview (Symphony I 1 Ask Washington i !1 Man's Family IStory I I I -T William ICnnrf:rn whfl fias; displaying 'abolish capitalism and it will end 'been studying vocal and theory, at! only the narrow edge of dogma. ! all war and povery. and social I the New England Conservatory of 1 don t take the matter too disease and unrest." is an ut-:music jn Boston.! for three vears. : , I , . . ,. : . . m I . ' " ' seriously Because 1 am accusiuni-1 icriy unwgrraniea prediction. 1 o 1 has returned home. ed to these single-track humor less gentlemen who believe all the complexities of life and civilization civil-ization are due to a single cause. It u?ed to be all evil in the without fighting back world who attributed to a devil ; How little freedom is prized bv Of SOme kind, and WOe tO thejn,ir mmmunist frinrl has V.n will inevitablv breed violence, forJ man never has and never willj submit to force and brutality! Twenty Years Ago From the Files of - August 11. 1925 Mrs. Frank W. Deming of Provo was elected vice president of the department of Utah, American Legion auxiliary, with Mrs. L. R. Edwards, named state historian. person who expressed doubt of rather laughably shown in the the existence of devils. Hhen Wall; few kees by the way they street became the personal devil jnave abandoned; "opportunism." responsible for most of our mis- and returned to old line 'Marx-eries. 'Marx-eries. But since it has been riis- ;. t ;!. i . covered that evil is world-wide. Uj . l Grading has been completed on Cap talism must account for the since th eorder repudiated BrtwJTSi Z??n worlds ills . der. and Browder was the hi S,SiJS; Any constant reader of this cockalorem of communism in the P11?," J?TZuZ?Z"V Pi" column Knows tnai i am no as-nitcd States the inevitable con- " rrw"V7n. Z fender of capitalism or socalled nu,,inn i. m nra and Gardner. Grading is also un- iree enterprise, as a system Hjfrom hieher source ou'tside 2:00Tour America 2:151 2:3T4rne for Crime 2:43 Harvey Harding 37ooMike McNaily 3:30 Nick Carter 3:451 , I Army Hour iDarts for Dougb iTommy Oorsey 'Summer Show 1 I 'Electric Hour. ' iSummer Program Symphony .Small Revue I C, Greenwood i Family Hour I 1 'Wm. Shirer 4:00 Abbott Mysteries rNews ISummer-Hour Onie-Harrlet 4:15' - t Albert Shephard : 4:30 Merry Go Round iGolf Tourney Sunday Party Report to NaUem 4:45 Judy Lang ( . I 5:00 Opinion Requested iWayne King Drew Pearson 5:13) I iDon Gardiner 5:30 Ken Carson Show 'Bandwagon iQuik Kid. 5:431 f I Men of Vision i Blondie I :00'MediaUon Board :I5I 6:30' C:45 Gabriel Heatler ! Frances Lingf ord jNews I I (Battlefront iTommy Dorsey IFighting AAF I War Town Crisis Vesper Sertfict) War Heroes . . . 7:00 Steel Horizons 7:l5t iMerry Co Round Summer Edition Radio Digest 7:30 Double or Nothing r American Album .Mystery Time i , 1 iStar Theater 7:45! Uimmie rtdler I in than the Germans did while the European fighting continued. So the stern peace outlined for Germany was a natural outgrowth of econ omic evolution. In its young and lusty years it accomplished great deeds and sowed a crop of wild oats which we are reaping now in the form of wars and depres- - j t, i 1 l siuiis. 11 in lung mr Ji ii 1 . . . . 1 A of life and tottering visibly to- "m"-1 "nfX ward its grave like an old and SjPff" CmI? Jf!f L h! senile man It will bs succeeded1 J88 fji1?"! bv vouncer and more nro-ressivc '1 work, but it is hard to respect forces progressive Arnerican variety which dis- tjj.e .4toii-m ..,a- ; m Plays the collar g? lis of Moscow Sua ww Z TJ" Proudly as ever did any lick-ways lick-ways wild and lawless, and its - ;,u is no reason why all freedom should be abolished. That is what communism, fascims, and nazism tried to do. In Europe they had a spurious democracy which failed utterly to control the abuses of capitalism and imperial- ineIThird and Sixth South streets. S:00 Brownstone Show ! Hour of Charm iQuix . S:15! I I 8:30 Name the Song Meet Me IFrcSJdie 8:45! I I iTake or Leave it MarUn Show I United States The wav the communist lead- Miss Ruth Lindsay, Heher ers humilitate themselves by so- school teacher, has returned from called self-criticism is reminis- Hawaii, where she has taught for vein ui a oBCK-suuer nnung me the past 14 months 11 I. K 1 1. i 1 r USU- LU Lite IIIUUIIICI a Blonde Smuggled Away in Suitcase B:00 Melody Highway SentimenUl Trip IChes Pare Jos. r Merrill 0:15 Central Utah (Headlines Story :Vera Massey Truth Seeker :3tiramlliar Music iStrange News Comments News :45!Guy Lombardo lUtah Man . iNelghborhood I Classics 10:00INews !0:l5iConcert Hour 10:30! 10:451 INews (Great Operas (Catholic Hour I iRevival..Hour iString Ensemble 1 ' Temple Square 11:00 Swingshift Music Newt 11:131 11:30 Music 11:451 lOrgan IMary A Mercer Music You Want I IPaciiio Story 1 I lOrcnestra ( Symphony Q's and A's Q Are new dimes bearing the likness of the late President terial loss. Multiply that accident bv thou sands, multiply, the single incident by 'days ana weens, and you get an idea of what hap- ities. So unless a conscription act 1 Roosevelt to be minted? is passed or some new power; A--Yes: they are expected to given the" White House an Amer-;be in circulation late this year, ican army of occupation in Ger-j many would be illegal. ( i Q When was the USS Consti- President Truman, however, is tution launched and where is she known to have a lot of new ideas! now? on this subject. At Potsdam, he A Launched in 1797; now in arranged for the withdrawal of Boston Navy Yard as a permanent most of the American army from ' exhibit. Italy. He also proposed that al 12:001 13:15! SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 11 (U.R) ! jV.JSi An Australian army sergeant I " packed a five-foot blonde into a suitcase in an attempt to smuggle her home from England, radio Melbuorne related today. The anonymous sergeant and his mate have now arrived in Sydney with the latest contingent of repatriated Australian war prisoners, the tJroadcast heard by United Press in San Francisco said. IMusic in Night I i lOrchestra 'News I Goodnight MONDAY, AUGUST 13 AH of the reports indicate that coal is go-!146- That act permits the president to deploy ing to be mighty short this coming winter oops overseas without congressional authority .JTa f.iolintr untal 8ix nwntha after Ihe war. The fitst war ana no iueuns. powers act also expires six months after hostil- Allied troops et out of Ihe oc cupied countries as soon as possible pos-sible with the exception of Germany. Ger-many. Germany, of course, is in a different dif-ferent category. However, the American zone of occupation is small, and, military men admit that it could bs controlled by 100,000 men rather than the tremendous tre-mendous army of half a million. This is one of the most important import-ant problems new facing Truman Those who know him well think he will be against manpower hoarding by the brass hats and will favor the national guard- ROTC system of military training train-ing rather than the European (Copyright, 1845, by the Syndicate, Inc.) Q i.What are the extreme east-west east-west and north-south distances in the East Indies? : A East -west approximately 3500 ; miles; north-south, 1300 miles. .am m Q How many patients are admitted ad-mitted annually to American hospitals hos-pitals for treatment? A The total for 1943 as compiled com-piled by the American Medical Association was 12,546,610. o QWhen did point rationing of food go into effect in the U. S.? A-rMarch 1, $943. Legion Rejection Of Jap Held Up SPOKANE, Wash. Aug 11 (U.R) Spokane Post 51 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars today postponed for 30 days further action on its recent rejection for membership made by two Japanese-American war veterans. i Frank W. Funkhouser, chair man of a special comrhittee named to study the widespread indignation resulting from the post's anti-Nisei policy, said it i nrmiM maiiim 9A-i4avi in n,11 th policies of others VFW posts with similar problems. So essential was the yew tree system, of peacetime conscriptionifefor making bow-staves that early Bell (English laws made the planting of these trees compulsory Amami O Shrma, where Yank planes have- been blasting Japan-! ese installations for weeks, is second sec-ond in size to Okinawa, among the 140 isles and islets of the Ryukyu chain. It is 140 miles closer than, Okinawa to the Jap southern home island of Kyushu, says the National Georgraphic Society. :! (Rise ! and Shine (Martin AcronskJ INews S:15 Farm Tips - ITUne n Tunes IFour Clubmen :30iMorning Serenade (News t Toffee Club :45!Treasury Salute Morning Revue (News ' (Fairfield Four run iand Folly, (Breakfast Club 7:00 Frailer Hunt 7:15 Weather Report 7:30 News 7:45 Shady Valley (Song Parade (News (Roundup S:00Rhythm 'Roundup Robert St. John News j S:15l ILora ) Liwtoit iCorn-r PoDDin' I :3iFun with Music Road of tife Abbe Observes (News 8:451 ' Joycs Jordan (One tjplnlon (News . . IHsr-rv, Clsrk.': ISun Up Tune .News '" Arthur Codfiy' 9:00 Arthur Gaeth 9:l5!Serenade 9:30iWomans Pace :4i;ciiff Edwards FTedi Waring . jTom Brenncman iFashion Housa IMusiir Shop I VsKant Lady - "Variety Store OMI Marfn ILight of World IDavtd Itarum .fTed Malone 'Aunt Jenny 10:08! William Lang (Milady Melodies Glamour Manor (Kate Smith 10:15Morton Downey (Larrr Smith iBig Sister ' :30Coast Guard Band (Personality (Correspondents I Helen Trent 10:451 (New l Betty Lane Our Gal Sunday 1:00 R. A. 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