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Show 1 n n r ttxlit PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, JUNE 30, 1946 Editorial ... -. Hoosier Psychiatry Maj-Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, who runs Selective Service, thinks the present generation genera-tion suffers from its parents' desire to see their kids have an easier childhood than Pa and Ma did. He also thinks the juvenile job of keeping the woodbox filled might have helped many of the 2,000,000 men rejected for mental instability to make a proper adjustment ad-justment to life. General Hershey is a Hoosier, and maybe that's Hoosier psychiatry. But maybe it would work. Daily chores, prescribed in moderation, are fine for disabusing the young mind of any notion that life is a tour nament of roses however much the young mind may resent them. they're fine for the young body, too. And their gradual develop ment of the sense of responsibility necessary to any normal adult is probably as beneficial as the sense of sportsmanship developed in games. And yet no one should know better than General Hershey how hard it is to talk some people out of the idea of pampering and sheltering the young. Hasn't he testified before congressional committees on extension exten-sion of the draft law? The Newspaper Carrier . Probably one of the best ways for boys to obtain a basic education in understanding the value of money and in learning how to get along successfully with people in a business busi-ness way, is to take over a newspaper route. Under the "little merchant" plan of operation, op-eration, the boy is set up in his own independent inde-pendent business. He has his own route, delivers his papers daily to his own customers custom-ers and collects once a month for the paper. A newspaper route teaches boys and girls to become practical thinkers, for they begin to use their arithmetic in a concrete manner as they buy their papers at wholesale. Then they learn the valuable psychological lessons involved in merchandising their product. Salesmanship is acquired as they try to hold a customer who wishes to shift to another an-other paper, or when they endeavor to win a new subscriber. Moreover they learn the problems of the credit manager, too, for they do their own collecting. They must balance their books and compute their profits. Even our colleges do little more than deal in theories when they teach economics. But newspapers take a new crop of teen agers each year to give them a thorough grounding in how to operate a business. A few boys lack the fundamental qualities needed and drop out. Many of the carrier boys later go to college col-lege with the money they have earned. They invariably make the very best type of student, stu-dent, too, having acquired a practical course in running a business. The Washington Mrry - Co - Round A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By Drew Pwim iCoL Robert S Allan oa t v duty) WASHINGTON The secret sessions of sen ate and house conferees on extension of price con trol were highlighted by the voting acrobatics of two senators Radcliffe of Maryland and Tobey of New Hampshire. Chief acrobat was namby-pamby Democrat George L. Radcliffe, FDR's old banking partner who has been drifting further and further from new deal policies ever since Roosevelt's death. He prolonged the conferences two days and almost caused a hopeless deadlock by bolting his Demo cratic colleagues and voting with the Republicans to remove price controls on meat, poultry, and dairy products. It was New Hampshire's usually liberal Senator Charles YV. Tobey. a Republican, wbo finally broke the deadlock and saved whatever what-ever was left of OPA by voting to continue meat-poultry -dairy price ceilings. Originally be had voted to abolish them. Tobey's switch-vote at the last minute made the score of the senate conferees 4-2 in favor of OPA extension. For, by that time, Radcliffe was absent in Maryland, listening to primary election elec-tion tellers announce the end of his 12-year career in the senate. One big stumbling block to OPA continuation contin-uation was the proposed three-man board, with power to lift or remove price ceilings. Inside fact is that the house conferees were bitterly opposed op-posed to this board. However, with both sides deadlocked, Democratic Demo-cratic Representative William B. Barry of New York, a strong battler for price control, moved that his house brethren back down and agree to the de-control board provided the senate con ferees, in turn, backed down on their demands for abolishing ceilings on meat, poultry, and dairy products BARKLEY GETS MAD Tiring of the Same Old Tune Five members of the Washington staff of New York's soraewhat-left-of-center newspaper, news-paper, PM, and three editors of the new veterans' vet-erans' magazine, Salute, have resigned. Objection Ob-jection to hewing to the Communist party line is indicated as the reason behind the departures. Maybe the domestic Communists will come to suspect that, to some of their more literate liter-ate targets, boring from within is beginning to be merely boring. At Least It's Quick Now they're making a radio-clock which will waken the owner in the morning by turning on the set to a pre-determined pi'o-gram. pi'o-gram. What with all the programs of supercharged super-charged good cheer and frantically enthusiastic enthusi-astic gossip sessions between husband and wife which seem to fill the air around get-ting-up time, it wouldn't surprise us if a lot of potential customers would suck to me soothing, fire-house jangle of the old alarm clock. The house members voted overwhelmingly for this compromise, but the senators split 3-3. Radcliffe, who was absent, was then summoned by phone to cast the deciding vote. It was assumed as-sumed the Marylander would go along with his fellow Democrats and vote "yes on the Barry motion. However, when he rushed into the meeting meet-ing room at the last minute, he threw the conference confer-ence into a turmoil by. voting "no." The Democrats gasped and moaned. Rad-cliffe's Rad-cliffe's vote signaled an almost certain deadlock, with no OPA bill at all being reported. For the three Republicans who voted "no" with Radcliffe Tobey, Robert Taft of Ohio, and Eugene Milli-kin Milli-kin of Colorado showed no signs of yielding. "What's bothering you?" pleaded Barry, looking squarely at the Senator from Maryland. Mary-land. "If you are worried about price ceilings beinr retained on Maryland tobacco or petroleum, petro-leum, we should be able to reach an understanding under-standing on that. I am informed that petroleum petro-leum and its products will be de -controlled soon by OPA." Radcliffe mumbled something about the "black market" in beef. He added that meat would be kept from consumers as long as price ceilings were retained on it. "Your vote surprises me very much," snapped usually mild-mannered Senator Barkley of Kentucky. Ken-tucky. "You're not following your party. It's the first time something like this has happened here and it makes things rather difficult." The Marylander flushed under the jab, but stuck doggedly to his stand against meat controls. con-trols. Actually, Radcliffe's main target was beef ceilings. This happened also to be the main concern con-cern of Ohio's Taft, who. however, fought right down the line to scuttle OPA. Note Word that Radcliffe, a Democrat, was voting with the Republicans leaked out to Maryland Mary-land voters and contributed to his defeat. REPUBLICANS' SECRET CAUCUS So They Say Liberty is on the bargain tables all over America today at a discount and exchange prices. We are trading it away for all kinds of social experiments, fathered by those who would change our form of government. Potter N. Emerson, presidcent Kiwanis In ternational. When they (government employes) get 52 Sundays and 52 Saturdays off, a month's vacation plus a lot of sick leave, they only work about half the 365 days of the year. Rep. Earl Wilson (R) of Indiana. We intend to secure- a drastic improvement improve-ment in living conditions all over the world and in every way. Trygve Lie, UN Secretary Secre-tary General. Physical punishment in their (Eskimo's) education is almost completely unknown, and as a result the average individual among them is better adjusted and more balanced than among us. Dr. Margaret Lantis, Arctic Arc-tic Institute, Montreal, Canada. The United States must fear Communism because it is a foreign-controlled totalitarian movement whose leaders in the past have openly proclaimed that it advocates revolution. revolu-tion. House Committee on Un-American Activities report. Senator Taft received the overwhelming approval ap-proval of most Republican colleagues at the secret GOP caucus next day, though he also got some advice he didn't like from California's outspoken Senator William F. Knowland. "You're going too far in your fight against OPA." the senator from tbe golden gate bluntly warned Taft. "It seems to me that the three Republican Re-publican conferees are thinking too much about the producers. I am against the drastic de-controls you want and I think it is unwise from a political standpoint for us to be sticking our necks out so far." Nebraska's Wherry also got in some hot licks about the de-control board proposal, but on the other side of the fence. He contended the senate itself should decide what price ceilings should be lifted and not leave it up to a board which, he said, would do the bidding of President Truman. Later, Millikin of Colorado echoed Wherry's argument in an impassioned plea against the board plan when the senate and house conferees met in their final session. However, when the Barry compromise motion on OPA extension was again put to a vote, this time it was Republicans Taft and Millikin, not the Democrats, who gasped and moaned. For New Hampshire's Tobey. after wrestling with his convictions for two days, bolted to the Democrats and voted for the de-control board as well as to retain ceilings on meat, poultry, and dairy products. "I do not like to desert my Republican colleagues," col-leagues," Tobey declared, "But on the other hand I am not ashamed of changing my position. I think I am doing the right thing, because the welfare of my country comes first with me. I want you all to know that I have done a lot of praying on this issue in the last two days." Tobey spoke with intense feeling, but he wasn't able to convert canvas-skinned Taft and Millikin. Both angrily refused to sign the report on the compromise bill, giving no reasons except that it was against their principles. This was how legislation affecting every housewife and consumer in the USA was horse-traded horse-traded into final form. NEW ARGENTINE AMBASSADOR Argentine President Juan D. Peron's choice as new ambassador to Washington is Dr. Oscar Evanessivich, his personal physician. Evanessivich has frequently attended medical conventions in the United States and knows this country well. A native Argentine of Yugoslav descent, Dr. Evanessivich is considered his country's foremost nose and throat specialist. But nobody ever heard of him before as a diplomatic expert. Several years ago, during a physician's and surgeons' conference con-ference in Los Angeles, he was elected to honor ary membership in the Los Angeles County Med ical association. Those who know him say the god doctor !s an able and charming man. He may have full need of such qualities in this hot spot, which is not only his initial diplomatic post but his first political appointment of any kind. (Copyrigh, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) The Real Test at Bikini v, a mm mail XiNtV atomic I VI V Once News Now History Minutia By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE Went to the Old Folks outing at Canyon Glen-ah, I know I'm a mite feeble for that crowd, but they let me in, bless them. All the way up in Clark Newell's car, all I could do was mutter about the things they've done to my canyon. Ceasar s ghost! It doesn't even resemble my can yon any more. Why I can remember re-member when there were trees and flowers and a river growing in that canyon, now there s nothing noth-ing but cobble rocks and dust. It's a fine thing. Isn't there any way on earth to save our can yons? The time may come when they will be the only place we can run and hide, and they won't be there. Used to be, when you turned into those great rock gates that guard each side of Provo canyon, you were in fairyland. The woods closed in about you. The cottonwoods were as fragrant as flowers in those days. There was plenty of chaparral around too, kennykenick, and squaw bush. It was marshy, and the lush vegetation that always loves wetness wet-ness flourished. The sun came through with a sort of green light. as if we were under water. How beautiful it was! The same afternoon, late, my Uncle Ray came to see me. I was nursing a twenty-four hour head-ach, head-ach, but we got to talking over the old road that went up to the bench (Orem to you) and it cured my headache. Uncle Ray says that the first time he even went up there, was with grandmother, to have a look at a farm grandfath er had bought. Sage brush, and sand-and you could call it a road if you wanted to. He says the dust was so fine, that it ran like water. It made a little wave in front of the wagon wheel, and then filled in again behind. He says when the horses stepped. it splashed and it did. too, I can remember watching somewhere. sometime, a big footed horse step into lust such sand. The sand splashed, alright, and the little drops falling back, made a little pattern of dots as we went along. Uncle Ray says that when the men irrigated out there in those early days, the surplus water ran to the lowest spot, and that was the road, so, it was an up and down business, over the dry hump, into the mudhole, and and there was no end to it. Pretty Pret-ty soon, someone would drive out into the sagebrush to avoid a mudhole, and the road would be wider in that spot. After this had happened enough times, they had the widest country road in these or any other parts and they still have. Anyhow, that's Uncle Ray's explanation of Orem's wide highway. Then we got to talking talk-ing about the road we had before be-fore the first road was built, the road that preceeded the road that is now abandoned to cut through Riverside Park. The old road is over under the hill. Before that road was built, there was a dug-way dug-way there that was a hair-raiser. At the bottom, before we started the climb, we had to 'drive through that stream there by Nuttalls, as there was no bridge. The Chopping Block r By FRANK C. ROBERTSON In my bindle-stiff days my re sentment against the vagrancy laws was great, not that I suffered suffer-ed from them personally to any great extent, and on the credit side of the ledger had it not been for them I never would have become a writer be that good or bad. It was a vicious attack on myself and other unemployed workingmen like me in the pages of a small country newspaper, which called upon the town officials of-ficials to give us jail terms or floaters, when our only offense was that we were looking for work, that inspired me to write my first "piece" for a paper. I took it personally person-ally to that editor and the hot words that were spoken on both sides would not stand repeating in print. Needless to say that paper did not publish my piece, and I have had a certain dislike for country newspapers to this day. because I have also found ninety-nine per cent of them to be more hide-bound and prejudice-ridden than even the most conservative city newspaper. However, the piece was published by a "radical" newspaper, and my career of literary crime was definitely defi-nitely under way. But to return to the vagrancy laws, the city of Idaho Falls still owes me several hours of perfectly per-fectly good unused daylight from the time when the city judge gave me from one o'clock until sundown to get out of town. That was my one personal experience with the vagrancy laws, and I bear neither the town nor the judge any malice. I could have avoided that by simply paying the $5 fine which the Payson, Utah boy I was travelling with had incurred, in-curred, but I preferred to keep the $5 and take the floater. Since wages were $2 a day then. I figured I was being paid at the rate of $10 a day, so I was happy. Anyway, I got a job picking potatoes po-tatoes that same evening, and ten days later I went back to Idaho Falls and nothing happened. During those years I saw enough of the vagrancy laws in action, and skirted so close to them many times, to make me feel that they belong back in the middle ages rather than in a civilized community. I was a migratory worker, which meant doing seasonal work We'd stop to let the horse rest, and drink, before the climb and we'd stay long enough to give the buggy wheels a good soaking too, so the rim wouldn't come off! So long folks. wherever it could be obtained. I was trying to send home from $40 to $50 each month for the support of my family and part of that time keeping my father on a mission for the L D S church Naturally, I never could keep more than a few dollars on my person. When a job ended I had to go to another town to look for another one. Sometimes I had to wait around for several days before anything turned up. I, and the others like me, stretched our dollars as far as they could go Either we slept out, or in 25 cent flophouses. We washed our own clothes in the creeks, and ate mulligans cooked in tin cans, or boarded at the cheapest greasy spoon restaurants in town. And always we were haunted by the vagrancy laws, ready to hand us a thirty-day jail sentence the instant our money was gone. In the eyes of the officers of the law we were "vags," or "bindle-stiffs. They knew we were not criminals, and few of us were beggars even when our money was gone. In a number of years on the road I can state truthfully that I never once mooched a meal. Any officer knows the difference between hoboes and "yeggs." The latter class are out and out criminals and they don't wear overalls. No good purpose is served by throwing a working man or woman wom-an in jail because they are broke and can't get a job. When the sentence has been served they are still on the town. Nothing remains but to give them a floater, and as they leave in one direction some other vag will come in from the next town where he has received a floater. It doesn't help the town, and it inclines the embittered hobo to crime. What started all this was an interview I had he other evening with a fifty-year-old woman whose calloused hands showed that she was no stranger to hard work.. She had, she told me, just received one of these floaters. The night before she had asked the police to let her sleep in the jail until she could obtain a job. This was refused. She had to commit a misdemeanor to enjoy that hospitality. She had slept in the park, and been arrested. Having Hav-ing no money and no job there was nothing for the judge to do except give her the floater twenty-four hours to get out of town. This woman taid. "I have covered 1500 miles in the last two weeks. I arrive in a town broke and hungry and dirty. How am I ever going to get a job if I m not allowed to stay any place more than one day, and never get a chance to clean up?" To me that seems a perfectly logical question, and one which our smug society which always refuses to recognize realities, will continue to dodge. Twenty Years Ago From the Herald Files Of Jane 30, 1926 The streets of Provo were scheduled to be decorated for the Fourth of July celebration as they had never before been attired. Reed Boshard was in charge of arrangements for the street decorations. Funds for the new "Theater of the Pines" at Aspen Grove continued con-tinued to roll in. E. L. Roberts was in charge of the building of seats and a new platform stage at the amphitheater. Charles W. Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Mitchell, returned home after a two year mission in the eastern states. The Association against the Prohibition Amendment had raised about half a million dollars a year to agitate repeal of the Volstead act, William H. Stayton, founder of the wet organization told a senate primary investigation investiga-tion committee. Earthquake tremors extending from eastern Europe through South Africa and to California were reported. The shocks began in light tremors in the Mediterranean Mediter-ranean area, then spread. Shocks were reported from Cairo; Salisbury, Salis-bury, Rhodesia: Amsterdam and Tbe Hague in Holland; and from several California cities. All of the quakes were comparitively light except the one reported at Cologne, Germany. Little damage was reported anywhere throughout through-out the quake-shaken area. SALT LAKE MAN HEADS THE UCT COLUMBUS, O.. June 29 (U.R) Ray Penrose, Salt Lake City, was elected supreme counselor of the United commercial travellers at the group's convention here today. to-day. Penrose, president and manager of the Associated Loan Co., succeeds suc-ceeds J. E. Lair, Champaign, 111. Thirty Years Ago From the Herald Files Of Jane 30, J916 Captain Freeman Bassett, army recruiter in this area, reported that Utah county had 63 volunteers volun-teers for the cavalry now enlisted, : and accused the youth of being less patriotic than their fathers. A big sports, program, featuring a big handicap bicycle race was lined up for the Fourth of July-celebration. July-celebration. . Utah volunteer cavalry companies com-panies bound for the Mexican border were to have fresh vegetables vege-tables and other camp food delicacies deli-cacies not usually included on army bill of fare, A fund which will supply these luxuries was" being raised by patriotic citizens of the state. BARBS BY HAL COCHRAN Here's something the kids CAN take with a smile: Employes in a Jersey City castor oil plant went on strike. It's strange how there often seems to be more room for laughter in a small home than a large one. Uncle Sam says it will be a year or more" before there is an WHITE I ,i abundant supply of. men's white snirts. sorry, teen-age gals, but you'll just have to wait! Women's clothes are almost as funny as men's would be if men had as much nerve. The U. S. army used 6.000,000 pounds-of soap a year during the war. And sent the enemy to the cleaners. What's On The Air Today SUNDAY. JUNE 30 KOVO 1240 KDYL 1320 KUTA 570 KSL 1160 I SEE BY THE HERALD By BILL RUBLE 1?ECOCDM6$ MADE 7r S V practice: Van fA 0ttijrSGMt& a mc S:00Churcb of Air Musical ' Clock Top 'o Morning News :15 C P. 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