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Show PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1946 Editorial... Four-Lane Highway Needed The four-lane superhighway project through Utah county, from Brigham City to Santaquin is the one road project which should have the immediate concern of our state and federal planners. No other road project is needed as desperately as this one. The present two-lane bottlenecks on the main north-and-south highway through the state should be eliminated without any further fur-ther delay. There are no worse traffic hazards haz-ards in existence at the present time, because be-cause they seriously slow down the flow of through traffic along the main highway ar- terv of the state. On days when traffic is heavy along highway high-way 91. the two-lane bottlenecks create a serious hazard and many fatalities along this highway can be traced directly to this menace. Many tourists who pass through the state get their main impression of Utah from this highway which probably accounts for some of the bad advertising the state has had in the past. The Animal Kingdom Tpt us not be too skeptical or scornful when we read of Ben. the talking dog of! Royston. England, or of the Gazelle Boy of Trans-Jordan. For it may be that evolution evolu-tion is creeping up on us. and that Ben and the Gazelle Boy have been sent to warn us to redouble our efforts to curb high-powered human ingenuity before it's too late. In case you missed the stories on these two phenomenal characters, Ben is a terrier who was visited by Reporter Robert Musel. When Mr. Musel began munching on a chocolate bar. Ben said: "I want one." The Gazelle Boy, reportedly captured by hunters, IS said) why the Williamsburg is usually kept in Chesa- to be a teen-age lad was reare a ----- The Washington Merry-Go - Round A Daily Picture of What's PnVSSt Goine On in National Affairs s. Alien en active duty) WASHINGTON Admiral Cheater Nimitz, hero of the Pacific and one of the most efficient leaders of the navy, has indicated to friends that he will retire as chief of naval operations after about one year of his four-year appointment. Backstage reason is that Nimitz finds his job chiefly requires lobbying naval appropriations through congress, and he would much rather be at sea than playing politics. Furthermore, Wash ington society is running him ragged. Mrs. Nimits doesn't feel the same way at all about Washington society which perhaps Is one reason why the admiral wants to ret out of the capital. He hates dinners, loathes cocktail parties, and feels ill-at-ease at receptions. recep-tions. But Mrs. Nimits loves them and Insists In-sists on dragging her husband along when she makes the rounds. The rigors of war in the Pacific have now be gun to look like heaven in contrast with social Washington and when the right time comes next year, the admiral plans 'quietly to pull out. Note Grandson of Texas hotel-keeper. Ad miral Nimitz hopes to retire to Texas or the Cali fornia coast. PRESIDENTIAL SEASICKNESS Dove-of-Peoce Hunting Expedition NO, MO! YtXJ DCNT I eem To uwdes7amp THE BI6 IDEA I TO 1 BRN61HE BIRD I BACK ALIVE J , Those who suffer from stomach maladjustments maladjust-ments when they travel by sea or air will be glad to know that President Truman not only sympathizes with them but has found a fairly good remedy for seasicknesses. The cure is not 100 per cent efficient, however, and that is one reason the president's yacht turned south. Mr. Truman has a bottle of seasickness pills with him on his present cruise a remedy concocted con-cocted by the Canadian army for use by its troops when they crossed the Atlantic or went ashore in tank landing barges. It is supposed to be the best thing so far developed to cure seasickness. The president always carries a bottle with him when afloat and eat the pellets almost as if they were randy. On his first Important sea trip aboard the cruiser Augusta to Potsdam one year ago. he took this medicine along and apparently avoided seasickness. However. Mr. Truman, born and raised on the midwest prairies, doesn't get the same kick out of the sea as did F. D. R. and that is one reason week. REFORMS BEGINS AT HOME herd of gazelles, can run 50 miles an hour, lives on a diet of grass, and acts and cries .w t j. jat. i tt i i. How much the U. S. A. has room to put its (It should be added that Mr. Husel is not;own hoil5.e in order whie wc criticize Russia about onlv a veteran and veracious reporter but international cooperation is illustrated by an off- m tne also, we are assured, a strict teetotaler.) You may call these stories fantastic. But there was once a time when humans couldn't say "I want one." and when they most certainly cer-tainly were a lot faster on their feet than they are today. In the course of time homo sapiens slowed down to a walk and learned to talk a great deal. He became progressively accomplished. accomplish-ed. He learned to live in houses. He trained train-ed his neighbors of field and forest to do a lot of his work. He devised increasingly re-: the-reeord play-by-play which occurred closing days of congress. The incident goes to the very heart of whether the U. S. A. really means to deal in words of deeds when it comes to winning the peace through world cooperation. Some time ago hard-hitting Senator Wayne Morese of Oregon introduced a resolution calling !for the submission of disputes involving the United States to the world court. Senator Morse is a Republican. Re-publican. As such he remembered how the Republican Re-publican party undermined the world court, the League of Nations and all international cooperation cooper-ation after world war I. thus hastening world war II. His resolution sought to atone for the former G. O. P. policy which many Republicans NX 0?& Once News Now History The Chopping Block Desk Chat fined and devastating ways to kill his fellow have lived to reret man. Eventually he came up with the ultimate weapon, potentially capable of wiping himself him-self off the face of the earth. And just at that time there appeared a dog that could When it came time for sincere Senator Elbert Thomas of Utah to move immediate passage of the resolution, however, he came t' Morse in the senate cloakroom and whispered that he would have to bow out. Thomas, a Democrat, explained that Scnatori talk and a human that Could outrun almost !Conn,Uv nother Democrat and chairman of the anything on two or four legs. One theory has it that man gained mastery mast-ery of the earth through his possession of a thumb. So maybe nature is fixing to pass the power of speech along to a creature who has no thumb for making atomic bombs, and to give him the chance to grow up to be the boss of a more peaceful world. The Gazelle Boy? Well, perhaps evolu tionary intuition figures that the final inrrss gallT- copies of the speech he intended to afnm.V hlnu-iin mio-Vit leave a few hiimgns'livr urging full U. S. coonerption with the ' (' . -v. - V"l,..nrM oM,t H,,t Ko unstx fpaHorc a era net foreign relations committee, together with Senator George of Georgia, supposed to be a great follower follow-er of Woodrow Wilson, had urged him not to propose passage of the world court resolution. In addition, two Republicans, Vandenberg of Michigan, Michi-gan, who has been preaching international cooperation co-operation from the housetops, and Austin of Vermont, Ver-mont, selected by President Truman to practice international cooperation as. U. S. delegate to the United Nations, also asked Thomas to lay off. The Utah senator actually had sent to the as well as a few dogs on earth. The humans hu-mans would have to yield the floor to the talking dogs, but at least they'd be able to outrun their canine overlords. him. be told his G. O. P collcace from Oregon that he would have to withdraw his speech ' GHOSTS ONEN ATE FLOOR however. Rrntihliran Morse, however. detrrmineH to We heartily advise the Statesmen charged go ahead anywav. At this point. Connally. Van- with solving the problems of atomic energvMeribere. Austin. Rarklcv nd George came to , .,i- tu;. .iot;n nA I him privatelv and begged Morse to sidetrack his control to ponder this speculation and then LcsoIution B,rklev is the nniv one who said do something about it. Otherwise, that oldne wa; fOF world court cooperation, but said it was phrase about the world going to the dogs a bar! time to debate it. The others said they may come to sound ominously prophetic. thought it was a mistake to adopt the resolution "Don't you remember." replied Morse. "That at San Francisco the United Nations adopted a resolution that all its members should accept the obligatory jurisdiction of the world court? " The United States concurred In that resolution." reso-lution." he continued. "And Senators Connally and Vandenberg were present. Now what are. we t oing to do walk out on our obligations? Are we going to put ourselves in the same position as the Russians whom we criticize? "I can see the isolationist ghosts of 1920 stalking stalk-ing the floor of the United States senate today," More told his colleagues. " The ghosts which sabotaged world peace after the last war. And I. for one, think the American public is entitled to I 1 . 1 " ! miuw wiu uicv aitr. Morse stuck to his point and won out. His resolution was finally passed, though only after Senator Millikin of Colorado. Republican isolationist, isola-tionist, had attached a criopling amendment by which the U. S. government reserves the right to exempt a large bloc of disputes from submission to the world court. Note One of the best speeches against this amendment was made by Senator Pepper of Florida. Flor-ida. Most other Democrats, however, ran out on the principles of Woodrow Wilson and voted with G. O. P. isolationist Millikin. I feci it my duty to draw the attention of the leaders of the United Nations again to the consequences which must inevitably arise if the ground which has been so laboriously gained by UNRRA over the past years is lost. Herbert H. Lehman, former UNRRA Director. The task of peace makers is to observe the interests of peoples, not of nations. Ralph E. Flanders. West Virginia Repub-i lican senatorial candidate. By FRANK C. ROBERTSON Lincoln's statement that the' nation could not endure half! slave and half free is being much used today to prove that thej world cannot endure under two; rival systems of economy. Theyj say cither Capitalism or Com-! munism must go. If that is true then we facei a world war far more vicious than anything the world has yet known. Neither system is going! to voluntarily submit to the other.! In a struggle so vast and so significant sig-nificant it would seem that people' would take the trouble to find out! what the other system stands for. Unfortunately, the people who live under Communism live! under a system of controlled! news and opinion, and have very! little conception of the outside world. It is equally true that what the average citizen thinks about Communism is as ignorant and distorted as what a Russian Rus-sian worker thinks about C a p i t a 1 i sm. Each is familiar fam-iliar with the weak points of the other that are vulnerable to criticism and completely in ignorance of the fact that millions upon millions of people live under each system and are convinced that it is good. We cannot escape the fact thati the world is lining up in the two camps. As yet wc don't know, what will come of that line-up war, an armed truce, or cooperative co-operative understanding. Wc are plainly at a disadvantage. We want to preserve something thati is old. Our opponents want to! expand something that is young.! When we are strong we are very strong. When our freedom' is threatened we are valiant in its defence. Nobody ran beat us.' But when we settle back in the' ways of peace wc interpret freedom free-dom as the right to pilfer and plunder each other. Essentially, freedom to most of us means the right to make money. True, there are a "hundred other freedoms which we say mean more to us than anything: freedom of speech, freedom to quit a job, freedom to worship or not to worship but there is not one of these freedoms free-doms which could not be enjoyed under Communism except the freedom to make money, if the people so willed. This is not to say that these other freedoms are enjoyed in Russia. Most of them are not. But assume for a moment that we had Communism here, meaning common ownership of everything for the common good. Is there i Curious Cynic Cants i i i any sound reason why we should give up any freedom we now enjoy except that of accumulating property Unfortunately the Communist party holds to the belief that any means is justifiable to attain an end. To gain and hold power it has, and will resort to violent repression of the freedom of the individual. It fights underhanded-ly underhanded-ly and with singleness of purpose'. It demands that its adherents, whatever their citizenship, bestow be-stow their first loyalty to the Communist Party and Mother Russia; It is the party, rather than the thing itself, which arouses our antagonism. But we should face the fact that we are losing ground, not only internationally, but here inside our own country. I would not join the screech-ers screech-ers like Dies and Bilbo and Tal-madge Tal-madge who howl that Communists Commun-ists are trying to take over the country, and are about to do it; the woman who does not read good books has no advantage over the woman who cannot read. the gold-diggers of '49 found pay dirt; the modern ones find that dirt pays. ' the modern Miss is so sophisticated sophisti-cated that the altar does not alter her. far too many married couples who are nice to each other before 'company' seem to for get that 'two is company'. Thirty Years Ago From the Files mt THE PROVO HERALD Of Aug. 24, 1916 The Provo Commercial club members discussed the matter of permanent, hard-surfaced highway high-way thorugh Utah county. William Wil-liam M. Wilson proposed the erection erec-tion of an electric fountain at the intersection of University avenue and Center street. The members also favored a highway through Provo canyon. A number of obstacles ob-stacles to the project were discussed dis-cussed including the matter of a new bridge under the D&RGW tracks. Members of the Provo city school board were Owen Smoot, Evan Wride. Arthur N. Tavlor T. E. Eggertsen, superintendent and .ugene Jones, secretary. New teachers approved at a meetinc of the board included Nellie Col-vin, Col-vin, Mildred Mattson. Daisy Chamberlain. Resignations were filed by Samuel F. Biddulph, Jane Beef Edna Southwick. A suggestion sug-gestion was made to get Parlev Jepperson as an art teacher on nan-ume basis. The Provo Building & Loan has matured series No. 4 containing 512 shares of stock matured to $51,200. This sum with the exception ex-ception of $12,000 loaned to stockholders stock-holders who have redeemed their notes and mortgages in that Amount hue hMn naM in ..1, The company organized in 1904 wim a capital stock of $500,000 which was raised to $1,000,000 in 1911. James A. Loveless Jr. of Provo Pro-vo Bench announced himself as a ranHIHatjs fftr thit ntvi in -.t inn f I -. w nit i 1 1 ti ir .it'll county assessor on the Democratic Demo-cratic ticket. A sacred concert was scheduled sched-uled at the Second ward honoring honor-ing Miss Alene Cluff who is leaving leav-ing for New York in the near future to continue her musical education. The Rev. J. D. Nutting of the sheep wagon missionaries was in Twenty Years Ago ' From tht Herald Filet Of August 25, 192S A crowd of 500 which gathered in front of the undertaking establishment estab-lishment in New York where the body of Rudolph Valentino lay, got beyond control of three policemen and rushed the doors. After a struggle, the policemen managed to get the doors closed and sent a call for reinforcements. reinforce-ments. The great screen lover died following an operation. George Ullman. his manager, said the body probably would be taken to Hollywood for burial. Pallbearers named included such notables as Mayor James J. Walker and Adolph Zukor. AJO-jJound baby girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Slack. Synthetic Stuff Highly Useful CHAMPAIGN, 111. 0J.R1 Synthetic Syn-thetic building materials are the most useful of the new construction construc-tion products now being talked about, according to D. G. Carter, professor of farm structures at the University of Illinois. Carter says that most of the entirely en-tirely new materials such as glass blocks and plate-covered plywood, are still to expensive to displace old materials for farm use. He points out that synthetic materials are becoming increasingly increas-ingly useful. In the useful list he includes cement-asbestos, asphalt products, fibreboard, and insulating insulat-ing materials. While many building innovations innova-tions are not-immediately practical practi-cal for farm use, Carter nevertheless neverthe-less believes that farmers should consider new methods of construction con-struction along with the old before be-fore making final plans. Provo with seven association preachers, traveling south. Services Serv-ices were held nightly at the Academy avenue - Center street intersection. What's On The Air Today SUNDAY, AUGUST 25 KOVO 1240 KDYL 1320 KUTA 570 ESL 1160 11. and and The average man speaks 000.000 words in a year, 5.500,000 are "I", "me", "mine." oOo AFTERGLOW What we do for others Throughout the passing year. Remains, and becomes immortal After we leave this sphere. What we do for ourselves, On this we can rely but the party, active as an ant-jIt.s vajue bccorncs u every keyThe mil, s entrenched in industry and it can and docs make trouble. It feeds upon discontent. dis-content. Eacli time we have a' boom and bust cycle Communism' moment that we die May Weight Johnson Overheard in divorce court: .T ; l ii v i nn i v i rip Kin n ni man wnn win grow ime we giant wno in-(would ?how morc intercst in and ...vo.u .wo """-' affection for his wife if it were every ume ne was Knoc-Kca down, forbidden." "What." the Communist asks men. oocs your ireeoom to manei THE HIGH OF LIFE money amount to when you arc,p;-., rhair High school Robertson Droke: under Communism your economic security is assured. You need never be jobless, and what you produce is yours." Communists and Socialists from Karl Marx down have argued that Capitalism docs not need to be overthrown that it must of High stool . . . High finance . . . High hat . . . Hi . . . Warden oOo Spectacles are hot always AlfiMAc i h I nn n I I n rt If necessity collapse lrom its own thru sometimes by looking thru accs- I glass windows, people see spec If we have anything we think tacles. worth preserving we must savci it now. Every tima we have what' used to be called a panic, then aj depression, and now a boom and bust we prove Karl Marx a true prophet. Not the Communists, but the people who insist upon exercising their freedom to make money, or if we arc going to be painstakingly painstak-ingly accurate, TAKE money from somebody else, are the real threat to the freedoms wc want to preserve. If business as a whole could be satisfied with reasonable profits we would have no booms and no busts. If we had no millionaires mil-lionaires we would have few paupers. If we will keep our machinery of production operating operat-ing at even moderate capacity we need have no fear of Communism at all. It's not the loud-mouths from Shanty Row who are making Communists, but the well-groomed well-groomed gentry from Snob Hill. Your Gl Rights Q If you send your discharge papers with your terminal-leave applications, will they be re turned later? A All the services plan to re turn the discharge papers, " but losses will inevitably occur. It would be smart to have your discharge dis-charge photostated before mailing mail-ing it. Q What government agency should be sent the application for terminal-leave pay? A Send it to the paying office of the service you served with. The address of the nearest office will be printed on the back of the application blank, according to present plans. Q Where can I get a form with which to apply for the certificate I need in lieu of my lost discharge-papers? Boilers of railroad locomotives! A The Army has this form use aluminum foil as an insula-lavailable at any one of its re tion. cruiting stations. The atmosphere was-entirely different (in 1919). We were gay and it was not just be cause we were younjrer then that we were gayer, but because there was a tremendous surge of hope in that conference which this one does not seem to capture. Jefferson Caffery, U. S. Ambassador to France, Peace Conference delegate who was present at World War I Peace Conference. The structure of permanent peace will grow from the United Nations. Sen, Alben Barkley (D) of Kentucky. The world can't stand another war. But we must face realities. No country which values liberty and independence can neglect its security and defenses until a world organization or-ganization can take over the job of preserving preserv-ing world peace. General Eisenhower. ELDER STATESMAN BARUCII Kindly elder statesman Bernie Baruch has made a private proposition to the state depart ment that he be allowed to read its secret cables from diplomatic posts throughout the world. These are a gold mine of information for which any businessman or banker would give his eye-teeth. Mr. Bafuch informed Herschel Johnson, acting act-ing head of the American delegation to the United Nations, that, as head of the atomic committee, he was not getting enough diplomatic diplo-matic Information: that the Russian delegation at the United Nations was much better Informed.. In-formed.. Baruch promised, a little naivelv. that if he was given the daily secret intelligence summary of world affairs, he would only show them to his two investment-banker assistants. Fred Eber-stadt Eber-stadt and Lehman Brothers' John Hancock, sometimes some-times called the barefoot boys of Wall street. Note The state department's secret cables are seen only by the president of the United States and the ten top executives in the department. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I SEE BY THE HERALD By BILL RUBLE GIRLS, AS MEN, WORK FOR FOOD WASHINGTON, D. not forth thrill of because they 1 mPJfclrl f? mm mm wmw v. a i! 'Wfr rife? A PAY IN THE UFE OF AN OFTlCg 6IRL, 1Z3JVl :M!Cbureb ISI 30 Music :5' of Air Musical Clock ITop 'o Morning I Song Service INewt B P Biggs 'Choir PracAie :0 Bible :1S 30 Tone :45l 00 Prophecy 151 30 American 45 Christian Hour 'Ridin' the Range 'Treasury Satute 'News Voice of Army xapesu-iea Radio Pulpit iNfwi I ICrouroada I Church of Air I Eternal Ught Legion Science Master Sinjrrrs iPUgrim Hour Southern aires Over Jordan I Choir 00 Pilgrim 30 Lutheran 451 Hour Hour 'Church of Remember Variations Air IThe Funnies I PHome Worship INewa 'Religious ! 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AUGUST 26 .OOFrarier Hunt :15iSun-Up Frolic 30! :4S Shady Valley lOld Corral INews iOld Corral (Agriculture 'News lYawn Patrol INews I Danny OTfietl IFarm Roundup 1:00 1 Wake-Up Time 7: J 5 Farm Show 7:30'News 7:45 Musical Clock Roundup INews INews ITop of Morning Yawn Patrol 'Harry Clarke News 'ews 'Gus Farney Uoyce Jordan 'Sons of Pioneers "News X:00'CeH Brown S:lSlTell Neighbor S:30 Lorenro Fuller S:45 Victor Llndlahr :00!George Putnam :1SiSerenade t:30 1 Woman's Page S:45!Mediation Music (Fred Waring l Breakfast Club Breakfast Call I 'Lora Law ton 'David Harum I INews Tic Toe Time ISing and Smile Road of Life 'l-one joume For the Ladies Tom Brenneman I 'Gil Martyn iTed Malone Xate Smith 'Aunt Jenny IHelen Trent I Our Gal Sunday 10:00 Listen to Bing 10:13'Lunch with Lopes 10:301 1 0:45 1 John J Anthony I 'Kenny Baker (Wishing Well !G Fletcher .Glamour Manor Big Sister 'Ma Perkins IJamea Abbe Dr Malone IBettv Lane IRead of life ll:00'Cedric Foster . 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