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Show 3S2i"32g2-2;i--Q Blackout rotit PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH. SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1947 Editoria Hopeful Signs Russia's adamant insistence on the right to veto proposed punishment for atomic warfare war-fare violators could lead to the horrible absurdity ab-surdity of one member's being able to block all United Nations attempts to prevent atomic world war. Yet there are a few hopeful signs that this outcome is not inevitable. in-evitable. The first and most apparent sign is the Soviet Union's unwillingness to continue discussions. dis-cussions. Another is the ! rather overlooked fact that, four weeks before Mr. Gromyko addressed the Atomic Energy Commission, Mr. Molotov told the general assembly that Russia would not insist on a veto over arms inspection. In his statement to the atomic energy group, Mr. Gromyko made no reference to his superior's recent departure from the usual Russian policy. In fact, his words seemed an emphatic reaffirmation of the Soviet dictum that everything must be done according to "established principles" and "under the condition of unanimity." Yet the fact remains that Russia has not considered the UN's "established principles" too inflexible to prevent her making or changing the rules as discussions proceeded. Nor is one of those principles, that of "unanimity" "un-animity" (the favorite Russian term in referring re-ferring to the veto), too sacred to be aban doned by Russia, and on the very important point of armament inspection. Further, there is the point that Russia's whole attitude toward atomic energy control con-trol seems contrary to present reality. The United States apparently has the world's only stockpile of atomic bombs. Yet the United States, holding most of the knowledge knowl-edge and facilities for atomic bomb construction, con-struction, wants to assure the punishment of any violator of an atomic disarmament treaty. Russia professes to distrust this country, its monopoly of information on atomic bomb construction, and its continued production of the missiles themselves. Yet Russia wants to give this country the right to prevent its own punishment- if it violates any future atomic control agreement. The sinister possibility must be considered consid-ered that the Russian government might The Washington . Merry-Go- Round By Drew Pearson A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs WASHINGTON There will be one Important Import-ant difference between President Truman's relations rela-tions with his new secretary of state George Marshall Mar-shall and those with his retiring secretary, Jimmie Byrnes. - With Byrnes, Truman was always a little uncomfortable. un-comfortable. He respected Jimmie, had confidence in him, but resented the fact that Byrnes operated as a one-man team. The president had almost nothing to say about foreign policy. Byrnes had been a senior senator and later supreme court justice when Truman was a very insignificant junior senator. Also, Jimmie had the habit of playing diplomacy by ear. A master musician, he didn't worry about accompanists, seldom sent the White House reports from, Paris or London, didn't always tell the president about his future plans. At. one time, Truman objected to this so vigorously that he almost fired his secretary of state. The incident occurred just after Byrnes returned from Moscow one year ago and announced even before he cabled a full report to the president, that he would give a radio report to the American people. Trumar. was furiouy. Summoning Byrnes to come aboard the presidential yacht immediately, the president was all set for a showdown. The showdown never developed. Though Byrnes received re-ceived some caustic criticism from Admiral Leahy for yielding to the Russians, Truman finally fell for Jimmie's plausible explanation and agreed to let him go ahead. PLANNED TO FIRE BYRNES fonllv Vinr tr virklato a "flltlir flcrPPItlPTlt while trusting the United States and other! JfSj KS2l,1 countries to uve up 10 ju jdui mat, woum be an extremely hazardous undertaking, even in the unlikely event that Russia would violate her pledge, given to the UN delegates, dele-gates, to waive a veto of arms inspection. Any discovery of a use of atomic energy by Russia in violation of a treaty, with a consequent veto of proposed punishment, would undoubtedly lead to similar activities in other countries, and to war. However ardent the Soviet government's desire may be to communize and control the world, it is incredible to think that it would risk another war to fulfill it. Russia is suffering even now from the effects of a victorious war. Her leaders surely know what they stand to lose in an atomic conflict. If Russia's immediate goal is peace, secur. ity and recovery, the rest of the world may hope that its attainment will prevail over the present Russian insistence upon the strict formalities of a procedure which points the way toward potential disaster. Cynical Contradiction Brig.-Gen. Robert W. Johnson, former WPB vice chairman, has urged that new factories vital to the national defense or welfare be dispersed, and that at least some of them be built underground. It is difficult diffi-cult to argue with General Johnson's contention con-tention that we should be alert and prepared now rather than, as in the past, after catastrophe catas-trophe has struck. At the same time there is an appalling air of pessimism and cynicism about this practical prac-tical suggestion. Nor is it the only situation which today calls forth a depressing reaction. reac-tion. Bernard Baruch says that we should keep on manufacturing atomic bombs until an international agreement on conti'ol is reached. The government says, or implies, that the increasingly unpopular presence of our troops in China must continue lest. that country be taken over by the Russian Communists. Com-munists. And so on. Nevertheless, it was immediately after his flare-up over the Moscow agreement that Truman sent a cable to General Marshall asking him to be secretary of state. This was in February. Significantly, Sig-nificantly, Truman sent the cable through the war department's secret code, not the state department's, depart-ment's, and Byrnes never knew about the mes sages until some weeks later when a friend in thel war department showed him the messages. That! may have been the reason for Byrnes's first letter! of resignation dated April 16. General Marshall, at the time he was ap proached last February, was lukewarm. He had no desire to become secretary of state. Simul taneously, a premature press leak caused Truman Tru-man to pull in his horns temporarily. And during dur-ing the year that has followed he and Jimmie have been getting along better. Basically, however. Truman never changed his ideas about Marshall, and those who have seen the two together can easily understand why he picked him as secretary of state. Entirely aside from Marshall's broad experience experi-ence and ability (which will be discussed later), he has a personal magnetism which won Truman even in the days when the president was conducting con-ducting a hard-boiled senate probe of war department de-partment inefficiency. UnHke some others. Mar- mistakes, and even tempered in his senate testimony Later, when Truman become president, Marshall Mar-shall showed the respectful difference which military mili-tary rank always shows to superior authority. Instead In-stead of ignoring Truman, as did some cabinet members, Marshall went out of his way to sell him on all military plans. Truman, who had served as a field artillery captain in the first world war, has always been partial to the army, and being on the inside of military strategy made a great hit. In addition, he felt sorry for Marshall when the latter was cited by' an army board as partly responsible for Pearl Harbor. He also felt that Marshall got a raw deal when Churchill blocked his appointment as commander of the 2nd front. Net result of all this was that long before the went to China, Marshall and Truman not only were warm friends, but enjoyed a most warm and intimate relationship. Probably the most glowing speech Truman has ever made was at the reserve offcers' dinner little over a year ago when he announced the military conscription policy Marshall Mar-shall had sold him and, simultaneously, set his friend up on the same military pedestal with Hannibal. Napoleon, and Genghis Khan. "Early in the war," . Truman also revealed in very serious vein "I went to General Marshall Mar-shall and offered my services. But General Marshall Mar-shall wisely turned me down." V ' -A&it ' I 7 ' " i WW i nS'n- v 41 a- V& ; Ut. a W r - . X u II ty y sJ f& HI vrt- . t Block iMinutia Once News Now H istory 30 Years Afro From the File Of THE PROVO HERALD OF Jan. 12, 1117 J. C. Deal was elected president presi-dent of the Provo Commercial club with W. P. Whiteheed, vice president and the following directors: di-rectors: T. F. Pierpont, J. D. Dixon. Dix-on. Alva Nelson, J. M. Harmon, J. T. Farrer, S. H. Belmont and A. O. Smoot. Henry Nuttall was the secretary. The report showed total receipts during the year of 4.778.03. - A farewell social was nounced in honor of Elder Gor don La r sen of Vineyard who was leaving for the Southern States mission. 10 Years Ago From the Files Of Jan. 12, 1937 The dead body of 10-year-old Charles Mattson, kidnaped two weeks ago from his Tacoma, Wash, home, was found in the wods six miles south of Everett-by Everett-by a boy hunting rabbits. The Utah Wholesale Grocen . The 22nd session of the Utah Co. increased its capital stock! state legislature was convened at The Chopping By FRANK C. ROBERTSON i f ire outside the furnace. We find As a rule I am impervious to;the nozzle clogged and boil up structure from $200,000 to $500, 000 and announced the moving of the business to Salt 'Lake City where the Henderson Grocery Co. will be taken over. 0 O A marriage license was issued to J. Ross Anthon of Springville and Sarah E. Sterling of Span ish Fork. o Jacob Evans, Provo attorney, is transferring to Salt Lake City to join the law firm of Evans. Evans & Folland. M. R. Straw of Springville Spring-ville will have charge of the Provo Pro-vo offices of the firm. 20 Years Ago From the Files Of Jan. 12, 1927 Governor George H. Dern assailed as-sailed the threatened federal invasion in-vasion o' state's rights in the matter of Colorado river development. develop-ment. He pointed out that the Swing-Johnson bill now pending pend-ing before Congress provides for the construction of a huge dam and power plant in Boulder canyon can-yon to cost $125,000,000 to serve only the state of California. $ t The movie fortune of Charles Chaplin, estimated at $10,000,000 I was tied up by an injunction, pending settlement of the divorce suit brought by LIU Grey Chap lin, his wife, based on sensational ! charges. the state capitol with Dr. Herbert B. Maw president of the senate and Joseph W. Jensen speaker of the bouse. The Democrats were, in control of both houses. Several hundred unemployed filled the city court room in a meeting protesting the cut in WPA rolls. Speakers were Mayor Mark Anderson, Mrs. Lenorc Walton case directors, and W. H. Callahan, county welfare manager. World's highest officially-recorded temperature is 136 degrees, de-grees, at Azizia, Libya, North Africa, Af-rica, in 1922. HI Mi m ro All IADI0 LISTENERS Ooo i say you weren't warned about "Those Websters"! Tune in and bear bow George Webster and his lovable family bve and laugh , Brought to you direct from Hollywood Holly-wood every week by delicioui Quaker uats. 'THOSf WeOSTCKS" KOVO-4:00 P. M. TODAY AND tVEKY SUNDAY MARSHALL AND LATINS While Secretary of State Marshall will enjoy the most cordial relations with the president of the United States, his relations with three major parts of the world will be more varied. They are: Great Britain, Russia, and Latin America. In regard to the latter, Marshall made a spe cial air trip to Brazil simultaneously with his appointment ap-pointment as chief of staff, which helped in cementing ce-menting U. S.-Brazilian military relations. At the start of the war, however, the general came near undoing this goodwill by proposing that we take over strategic Brazilian bases whether the Brazilians Bra-zilians liked it or not. Had we been hasty, we would have alienated all Latin America Fortunately, howevered, Marshall was blocked by Sumner Welles, and a few days later Brazil voluntarily offered us the bases. It was with the British that General Marshall Mar-shall had most friction though most neutral observers felt that he was right. Many of his arguments were over the 2nd front which the American and Russian commands wanted, but which the British opposed. One difference was over the invasion through "the soft underbelly of the Axis," which Marshall did not consider "soft" at all. And while he yielded yield-ed to Churchill when it canie to the invasion of Italy, he flatly refused to jump from Italy over propaganda, especially the com mercial kind. 1 know too much about the printed kind, and the honey dripping voices of the radio announcers send mc flying to turn off the dial when they begin extolling ex-tolling the virtue of some product which anyone knows is no better than any other product of its kind. But when one of my friends takes me by the hand, and says, "Now look here, Frank, I'm not selling you anything, and I'm only telling you for your own goo d, well. I'm a sucker every time. It was a smooth talking insura n c e salesman, one of my very good neighbors, who last fall convinced me that my coal furnace was a has-been, and that the salvation salva-tion of the rural dweller was oil. to a well " I f n " I All of this represents eminently loeical i to Greece and Jugoslavia thinkimr. We must remain strong, kpeti! Churchill, of course, foresaw the danger of armea, guard our atomic secrets, prepare for emergency even as we talk of disarmament disarma-ment and the pooling of atomic information. Other governments are also sleeping with their weapons at their sides. It would be folly for our government to ignore it. But what is all this doing to the prospects for peace ? How can statesmen resolve the cynical contradiction in their own minds? We don't know the answers. We can only hope and pray that they are high-minded and great-minded enough to pursue their world-saving tasks undisturbed by the clamorous clam-orous distraction of mutual suspicions. Russia's getting into the Balkans and staying there. Marshall was interested not in the future political map of Europe as he now will be as secretary of state. He was interested in winning victories. And in one memorable conference he reminded Churchill that there were submarines in the Aegean and Adriatic, snow on the Balkan mountains, and he was not going to risk the lives of American troops in such a gamble. BRITISH DISLIKED MARSHALL I have met rudeness and lack of control here (in a Pueblo school) more than anywhere any-where else in the world. Miss Alice Elliot, exchange teacherfrom England at Pueblo, Colo. It was these arguments, of course, which led to Churchill's refusal to accept Marshall as allied commander of the 2nd front. The most vitriolic debate came at the Quebec conference when Marshall Mar-shall was pushing for the reopening of the Burma road. At Quebec it was finally decided that Lord ! Louis Mountbatten, cousin of the king, would cummaiia me maian meaire ana me uurrna roaa. Following this, Marshall called the Chinese military mili-tary ' attache to Quebec, informed him of the momentous decision, and asked him to take a special plane to Chungking to Inform Chiang Kai-Shek. Kai-Shek. He did not want him to entrust the news to cable. Little Jias been printed Or said about the fact that a great many young (service) men in their teens and early twenties at first showed marked timidity or fear toward exertinc themselves. Dr. Ell wood Craig Davis, U. of Louisville I you don,t annunce your plans to the i Robertson He referred me established firm in Spanish Fork who had done a great job for him. so I went to see about converting my furnace to oil. I was assured that it could be done. There was a conversion unit on hand, and the firm's heating heat-ing engineer surveyed my plant and told me it would be a cinch. "All you'll have to do, said the engineer, Is press a button, and forget about your heating prob lems until spring." Oh, yeah? Months passed before my people even got around to installing the thing. Then they discovered that the unit I had bought was too small. More delay while they got another. They installed this one. and the only trouble is it throws out no heat. As I write this we are in the fag end of a cold wave that has lasted a week. By shutting off all heat to the upstairs rooms, building build-ing a roaring fire in the fireplace, keeping an electric heater going on the other side of the room, abetted by the monster in the basement which joyfully consumes con-sumes thirty gallons of oil every twenty-four hours we have been able to keep the living room a sizzling sixty-five degrees. The trouble, I am told, is that the "barrel" is still too short. My deafer assures me another has been shipped from the factory weeks ago. For a time my dealer would send a man over to answer my. frantic cries for help. Now the silence is deafening. I can't blame them much. One of the men confessed in a confidential tone, "We really know very little about these conversion jobs as yet." Now he tells me! The argument that sold me on oil was its cleanliness and lack of trouble. No more carrying out dirty ashes and all that. When we get a small white flame we get no heat. When we get a big red one we get a little heat, but the odor of burning oil and smoke pervades the premises, and the! surrounding grounds become black with soot. Then, just when we do get the heat up where it is livable off goes the furnace, and it won't go on again until I go down and fiddle with some little buttons on the "automatic" controls. Oil seeps 'out of the fire pot onto the floor, and once or twice we have had a merry little oil another one and change it. We have to adjust the ajr the thing consumes. I spend hours each day down there combatting the monster, and each time I come up I look like a blackface comedian. com-edian. Sometimes we get it so it will burn nicely for a couple of days at a time, guzzling its thirty gallons a day and even emitting a little heat. Then the thing balks. A Springville business man says it serves me right for trading with those foreigners over in Spanish. There is considerable rivalry between the two hamlets While one is a little more arty the other is a little more earthy They are exactly the same distance dis-tance from where I live, and as for Springville I ve never found out yet whether they "claim me disown me, or merely ignore me No doubt, when the warm balmy spring days arrive my dealer will come over with the new "barrel," and a shining face but by that time if we haven t frozen to death I will unquestionably unquestion-ably be too broke from buying oil to pay for the thing. There is a friendly woodpecker lives in the attic just over the ceiling of our bedroom. From the way he tramps around on the joists in the middle of the njght I know he must be suffering from cold feet, poor devil. He and I have got a lot in common BARBS Ringing out the old and ring ing in the new reminds us that Father Time must wear rubber heels he sneaks up so quietly. Heavy snowdrifts will at least keep some of our wreckless drivers from going slaying. Only 43,000 skunk pelts were taken in Missouri during the 1945-46 season, a drop .of almost 5 per cent. Must have been more hunters who wouldn t trust their aim. . Speaking of good luck, there is only one Friday the the 13th in 1947 on which to have bad luck. The morning of January 1 is when a lot of people wish all of the swallows had gone south. Santaquin After taking these precautions. Marshall was umazea io noie mat news of Mountbatten s ap-'ed to be poimmeni naa oeen given to the press by the ! (Editor's Note Tom orrow British minister of information. iDrew Pearson wil reveal General t me next meeung of the chiefs of staff, General Marshall said in brief: ueniiemen, when you agree on militarv Dean. At a meeting of the Ladies Literary club held Wednesda evening at the home of Mrs. Reuben Peterson the members voted to sponsor a junior literary club, the first meeting to be held st the home of Mrs. Reed Chad-wick Chad-wick on Wednesday, Jan. 22 at 8 p. m. President Clara Lemenar was in charge. Following business the club enjoyed en-joyed a review of the book "Mormon "Mor-mon Country," by Walter Stegner given by Mrs. Grant Gardner oi Payson. Luncheon was served by the hostess assisted by Mrs. Don Ferre. Mrs. Frank Harding wan a special guest. Twenty-two! members were present. The DUP held their regular monthly social at the recreation I 11 PPL. I Ai . staff, bridled at this. He said: ls?fn J to which General Marshall re-L,," hnM haiV P"ea- . imeetine Mondav at 10 a. m. ai And that, sir, is what I intend-jtne Second ward re.reation hall Other business will include thei nomination of a board of direc tors for the coming year, By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE I promised I would let you in on some of my letter to Life fan mail, so here we go. First,: though, I want to thank every one who sent me encouraging letters through the holidays. Many, of you I don't know, which makes it all the more interesting. One fan has sorta played hide and seek with me for years, but never got a glimpse of me. I wrote her a special invitation to our open house, but she had a son home from the navy and couldn't come, so we still haven't met. She says she made dressings at the hospital while I was working there, and never saw me. She attended a pre-Timpanogos hike program because I was going to play for some- dancing (that would be the year Jack Reinhard appeared on the program) and tnen sne found that tne piano was off stage so she didn t see me. Well, it goes on like that. One would think she would just come and see me, but she hasn't yet. I am still hoping BUT, to get on with the .silly business. I received a letter from New York, one from Missouri, and two from Tennessee, from men who wanted my picture! Now I ask you, why? It would serve them right if I sent them one, so help me. What goes on in a head that picks a name out of a magazine, writes to the name, 'and asks for a picture? I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it myself. Some of the letters were very nicely written, and one of those from Tennessee came from a policeman who LOVES Utah. The other Tennessee letter was so illiterate, that "it could hardly be read, and went into detail about the writer s looks. Tall, dark and handsome, he is so he says, and twenty-five years old. Has been in the army four years, and my reaction to that is, heaven help tae country! Well, he wants my "prictchure". That's what he said, "prictchure". Any-j one wanting to correspond with this specimen has my permission.! Then I got a post card, un signed, which started out with, and I quote, God have mercy on us, and I say "Amen to that. Then it went on to say that if I did not send -the message on the! card to What's On The Air Today SUNDAY, JANUARY 12 KOVO 1240 COO :15 C:S0 :4SI 7:00;Younf People 7:15: 7:30New I:;Muic Hour S:00!Bible 8:15! 8:30 Porphecy 8:45i KDYL 1320 On the Range Wildwood Church Newt Quartet :00'Bible Institute :15 9:38 Our Duty :45jChristian Science 10:00iPUarin 10:151 10:301Lutheran 10:451 Hour Hour U:0OMusic 11:151 11:30 Varieties 11:451 12:00 ! 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I took this last to mean the 20th day, so the calendar and waited for doom, I counted it off, and ringed uVon sorta like Ajax defying the lightening. light-ening. I have forgotten how Ajax came out, but I got away with it. Nothing hit me on the 20th day that was any worse than hits me everyday. Yoii know, I thought there was a law against chain letters or something. Such jack assery i wasn't all latest one was more than sillv.i S:45iWake Up Time j The Old Corral so I sent it on to the F.B.I, in Salt Lake. News Memory News Lane Revival Hour News Music Vou Want Music You Want! Chick Floyd ! To Dreamland i I Sam Spade Vesper Service News Hildegarde Eddie Bracken Take or Leave It Musical Show ' Church Speaker News Catholic Hour Tabernacle Choir String Ensemble Temple Square Concert Hour N News MONDAY, JANUARY 13 n'SirthaL-rdUol jTnat ft!" ( . I still get letters. The! s:30News iNews More. fun. So long, folks. INDIANS IN BOLIVIA STAGE REBELLION LA PAX, Bolivia, Jan. 11 (U.R) Minister of the interior Roberto Bilbao La Vieja announced early 7:00!Farra Journal 7:15iShady valley 7:30jNews 7:45:Utah Play boys S:00 News 8:15 Musical Clock 8:30 Say With Music 8:45! News Reveille S:00 9:30 Cecil- Brown :15!Tell Neighbor Serenade 9:45!Music J 10.15 Jumpin "CDe,'ea 10:30 Woman's Page today that Indians in the Lake!!:??i?in .Cro?by Titicaca region have against the government, He said the government dis patched tr&ops to quell the uprising up-rising and that Bolivian air force planes were keeping the area unr der observation. Jacks 10:45iVincent Lopes ll:00IEditor's Diary 11:15 Novatime Trio ll:3t Jackie Hill 11:45 Jamboree Top of Morning Nelson Olmsted Road of Life Joyce Jordan Juke Box News Juke Box News James Abbe Breakfast Club News Three Trays Farm Roundup News Harry Clarke Potluck Party News Fred Waring Jack Berch Lora Lawton - Tom Brenneman Galen Drake Ted Malone Sing and Smile Glamour Manor Kenny - Baker For the Ladies General Sir Alan Btoke, British chief of Syndicate, Inc.) raarMwus previous rewuuus wiui Airs. JJeiDert rioughton wai ttussia, m anotner pacKgrouna pleasantly surprised on Monday column on me new secretary on afternoon by the Birthdav club state.) I Miss Betty Peterson has re- ( Copyright, 1947, by the Bell turned home after spending the 'past three months 'at Provo. Camera Fans Tune In KOVO 12:45 TODAY For Camera Club OF THE AIR "Visit STANDARD SUPPLY For Photographic Supplies 'Over Counter (Take It Easy wisning weu News 12:00jCedric Foster 12:15 Smile Tim l2:30 Queen for Day iz:45i l:00News Man on Street - Musical Comedy 1:15 1:30 1:45 3:00 Erskine Johnson 2:13 Johnson Family Z:30Music 2:45Hollywood 3:0!Afternoon Revue 3:151 3:3o!swlng Club S:45f 4:00! 4:1S . 4:30!Merry Go Round 4:43!Buck Rogers 5:00 Hop Harrigan 5:15 Superman 5:30 Ridin' the Range :ism mix Today's Children Woman in Whit Masquerade Light of World Life Can Be Ma Perkins Pepper Young ttappmes Kenny Baker Club Tune Betty Lane Vera Keen Charm School My True Story Church Hymns Baukhace Songs of Day i Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenzo Young Widder Brown Girl Marries Portia Faces Life Just Plain BiU Front Farrell Time on Hands NtWS Aunt Mary -Dr. Paul Woman's Secret News fH. V. 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