OCR Text |
Show PAGE TV0 PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1940 ln3 OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS 1 5 Meia oil ys WJ). s4 tie i-Tei. ( f-.t L Curst. V1 W?han. Ntlel AdrflB Tepre-c-.". ., lt, t rtacucs, PtrH iioto. U Xtum l -.4 rr. ? A. Irt, Weeiera riuvH Kr; , ? i-.ie ( Jpi-cr 4 Aadsl erareoa ee tt hj-m lrnt-tr arrrr la eoeofr. II eeate tv K'.a, I) lir j tb re 4ace; -II tee 7-'. t !; r B-.H fj67, lit; eoonij L1e t ta tifM 3 tie Uar I M l.j -rty T Mm14 i 1 tot uvum faaUi i-m;-e,-.t::.;r tor enr error oral 9K r rT tA Mrtr..Fiu ta ti wnail la tkoee IMtaMeo ih Be I t r i , it l.j rir.tl Lb I part ( tie 4wrUumat Im ( WTarefore now W the frar of the I.rd t opon yon; take beed ad do It: for tJvrr i ri l&jqiiitT with the Lord our God. nor r-F""t r-F""t of pTofl, nor taking t RUt II Chronicles 19:7. I: It i.r- :v to rovem the w-rll without Cod. He must be wort tixa an Ir.i.lH that lack faith, ar.d more than wicked that fcaj net fTaUu-e enough to acknowledge hj obligation. Washington Airlines Finally Make Money All of the Iarper airlines in the United States are now making money. It took a Ior. time for them to jret around to this point. Despite continual increases in the number of j-eop'e won over to flying, expensive equipment and safety measures were, for a lonr time, eatir.? large holes in the air-iir.e. air-iir.e. fund-?. i Lat year, l.SCO.000 persons used the air sen-ice. 'In 1920, only lkS.000 persons traveled by air, and the years be-fure, be-fure, ro.ngt-rs totaled 43,000. The traffic last year was about 40 per cent greater than that of 193S. With the remarkable safety record established, transport companies have proved their right to be accepted as a standard stand-ard rueam? of transrortation, As they continue to make money, government subsidies can gradually be reduced. Football Splits Our Defense Abolition f the annual Army and Navy football game waa rrc occur wn by Iprr-tatie Faul V. Sliafer (Krp!, Sikh.) txrtva-, he chargrd, the rivalry among cadets and middle rarrte on aXtr gradoatlcm to th drtriromt of the ervlcw a Jt-nv 4 . EN'SIGN: There's a request here, sir, from General En-geltweet. En-geltweet. He wants a couple of destroyers to back up his troorf?. ADMIRAL : Engeltweet ? here did I hear Oh, yes, I remember. Tell him no. , ENSIGN: But, sir . ADMIRAL (exploding) : ; You heard me. The answer is no. Nary a row boat for Engeltweet. Not after what he did to me in the Army-Navy game of '93. ENSIGN: What happened, if I may ask, sir? ADMIRAL: Well, it was last down, 10 yard z to go for a touchdown, two minuter left to play, and we needed that score to win- I grabbed the ball, cut around end and was three yards from the stripe when Elgeltweet came from the side, butted me in the middle and we lost. I missed a chance to be a hero, and it took me 20 years to get my admiral's com-fciission, com-fciission, ail because of Engeltweet. I send no destroyers to tack cp his anemic land troops. , . - ENSIGN: I quite understand, sir -I -don't Warn you". HI wire hini that the fleet's sick in bed. Silver Linings For Cans Beer cans, along with clouds, may some day have silver linings. Not a great deal ha3 been done along this line yet, but there are indications that silver-plating, about five-millionths of an inch thick, can be developed to replace tin. Scientists are also working on the possibility of using silver sprays to destroy fungi, which annually cause considerable damage. Silver, pure, in alloys and compounds, may also be used for a variety of other purposes. Silver prices, made more favorable by the war, have spurred scientists in their research. re-search. " - ' " ' . . ' - ' Don't bother looking into your empty soup cans yet. Things haven't quite got that forward to. ,Mrai HrI Corporation. II Soyt f"lre -iL r.!r.l xb4 turn Biatter lrs. Ltaa. ,! tee act ot Mirtl far. But it's something to look The fall boom was pretty much 'Mussolini, Meenie, Miney, ( WHY, YOU KAVEM'T Vfe: ' CHAK1GED MUCH "OR. X' t, j TMtaitmT.m THE E.LACK SHEEP ' , ' "ao V cew. t-o t tr tyfCt. INC '' " .. , .. - ,i i J . ; : ( : Carnerites Hope to F. D.R. Clash BY BRUCE CATTON Daily Herald Washington Correspondent " WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 (CT.) The Garner strategists went into the Illinois primary with their eyes wide open. They knew when they fned Garner's Gar-ner's name as a candidate, that in a straight Garner-Roosevelt race in Illinois the winner will Just naturally be Roosevelt. It simply can't be figured any other way. Xo candidate ordinarily like to start his campaign by taking tak-ing a licking. Nevertheless, the Gamer people filed after Roosevelt's name had already been put in. They had two reasons. First, it had been announced that Garner would enter . any state contest where any local group Invited him. He got an invite in-vite in Illinois, and he wasn't going go-ing to run out on his first scrap and have it said he was looking for set-ups. , . -Second, the Gamer people have a hunch F. D. R's name may not stay on that ballot. It may get ruled off by the state authorities. on the ground that he did not for- mallv consent - to its entry, or . ... he might Withdraw It. (He has until Feb. 24). Bump Is Forecast; How Hard Is Question Economists in the Commerce Department -figure business Is going to take a sharp bump sometime in the near future. They don't know how far it wiU fall or how soon it will bounce back un: have a hunch that it will come back nretty soon on ac count of war-born expansion of export trade. - MeanwhUe, here's the way they figure it: Sloe ' Dod9e Peppery i ill - 11 J In ll''no.spfWer an inventory boom.. Inventories are still piling up, though new orders are Tailing off. The index of Industrial production is dropping drop-ping fast. Prices of Industrial raw materials, which went up sharply sharp-ly when the war started, have been going down since mid-December. Cessation of inventory accumulation will mean a : stiff business drop. , : NevertheleKS they don't fee -the (.ituation as parallel to 1937, when there was a crash . after an Inventory boom. I, For one thing, . they say, there has not been a general rise in wage- rates, as there was during the .1336-37 boom; on the contrary, con-trary, wage costs per unit have wccimea. Further, the pending drop in government spending wiil probably not be as .heavy as it was in 1937. Lastly, many Indus-dustrialists Indus-dustrialists may carry larger inventories in-ventories in expectation of war demand: de-mand: , ' , ' V. S. riays -Good VU ' Neighbor'' On Canal Job U. S. army engineers are sur veying for a canal across Nica ragua but it's not that big "sec. ond ranaraa ' that nas ' been so much talked-of. Instead, it's for a modest barge canal which the Nicaraguan government "Copes to Half a dozen officers and some, enlisted men have been . at work since last November. Present plans are for a waterway via the San Juan river from the Atlantic to Lake Nicaragua, with possibly a saort ditch from the western side of the lake of the Pacific. When President Somoza of Nicaragua was In Washington a ymr ago he mentioned the projact toi, President Roosevelt Roose-velt and aaked for a lift. Good-neighborly, the , President agreed to have the army do the surveying. It doesn't cost much and, if the U. S. ever does go ahead, -with the Hg canal project (for which treaty rights exist. and for which comprehensive surveys sur-veys were made back in 1931) the barge canal which the Nicaragua Nica-ragua ns are going to build will be helpful. Cranium Crackers PUBLIC SERVANTS " : - . You can't be ' expected to re member all of the 96 persons who represent you In the United States senate. The missing names In tho following sentences, however, ; are those of senators who have attracted at-tracted enough national attention so that it should not bS to, difficult diffi-cult fill in the blanks: ' . 1. Senators Marvel M. Logan and , . represent Kentucky. ; . - 2. Both Senator Harry S. Tru man and nis colleague, . Senator ........... i .. . . . . . of Missouri are Democrats. . : - 3. Pennsylvania la represented by Senators -. . . : . . .". .... and James J. Davis. - 1 4. Senators John E. MUler and ................... come- from Oklahoma. . 5. The Texas senators are Morris Sheppard and 4 ........ , Answers on Page Eight ' Provo Youth Now In Marine Corps Ko'Dert Glen MacKenzie. son of Mr. and Mrs. R. G. MacKenzie oT Provo, has enlisted In the United States corps and has been transferred trans-ferred to the corps base at San Diego, according to word received from Captain Con D., Silard of Salt Lake City, head of marine mra recruiting in the Intermoun- tain area. Robert was '"born In Salt Lake City but moved here with his parents in 192S. He is a graduate of Provo high school. His father 4s an ex-marine, having served with that organization during the world war. Tlfl"ME PERKINS Is woozy in IV A the head," opines John L. Lewis. Too much loitering on Bridges. ' . THE New York publisher who JL has become presidential candidate can-didate may regret he be-Gan- nctt. -,'. . ARIZONA grapefruit prices have, squirted up since they squeezed out the frozen Texas and Florida varieUes. -- .-. rIE little town of Candle, near , the Arctic Circle has been burned, but only at one end. ' . . ' rpiIE farm bloc in congress may L abandon Parity Just as Hitler Hit-ler did Unity. GREAT BRITAIN has launched "Scrap week to collect old metal ; for armaments. In this country It's called "Jap week." f - i A3 ITS "storm troopers,? who really know how to. fight,. America presents John Barry-more Barry-more and Elaine. AMBASSADORSHIPS to tvar-ring tvar-ring nations are now only listening posts. - - A RETIRED army officer says the Spanish war prodticefi no new weapon except the loud speaker, which Is only amplified gas warfare. .- .--.' ' . ANEW Roosevelt was born In Pasadena this week, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Roosevelt Jr and others will live to see. . if he can carry his home precinct. pre-cinct. 7 , . -i Ir the frogs start croaking too early, they won't have a leg - to lUnl on. . BY PAT. "During the winter months, no automobile; battery - Is powerful enough to overcome the drag of cold thickened summer oil, and its energy "quickly is exhausted by cranking a sticky engine. THIS CURIOUS WORLD THE OTV OF RESTS ON A buiut By MILLIONS OF VEARS AGO, WHEN THE CxCSEA WAS A ' C4Ma. H av NfcA StRViCE. INC. XriSWER: - Right.; J , L ma o. a pat. orr. MASE MO OI3ESXINE 3 W J U U U I. wow will our women and children fare under IMP? As to their legal rights, no better than the men. Any rights which may be regarded as a hindrance to the operation of IMP are to be shelved during the emer gency. , : , In the war labor adminis tration there's a bureau women and minors. It consists con-sists of three divisions, with two advisory agencies. There are, a woman wage-earner's wage-earner's division, a social and economic welfare division and a minors' division. Advisory agencies are a legal council and a council of housing and transportation. . Explaining this council's func tion, the 1936 IMP pamphlet says: "For several reasons (the 1933 pamphlet reads "economic "eco-nomic reasons"), the statutes of the various states prescribe certain restrictions In the hour and conditions of employment of women and minors In du-dustry. du-dustry. "Other restrictions are brought about : thru regula- . tions Issued by various authorized author-ized federal and state agen-cles, agen-cles, by agreements with trade rnions, and In other ways. . "Many of these regulations , and restrictions are. expedient -rather than necessary to the well-being of either the nation , or the workers! ; . , "In a national emergency - much of this expediency is lost . and the operation of Home of these regulations and restrictions restric-tions may well be suspended, v "This division has the dou- -ble function of recommending -in appropriate cases the suspension sus-pension In whole or in part of such restrictions and, with the . co-operation of the division of , public ' relations, of securing . the approval of public opinion to the action taken. And by means . of - well-oiled propaganda machines and federal controls oter the press and radio, the "approval of public opinion" will be obtained. -r 0 " --.- Normally there are about 10 million women and girls ver 16 years of age emploj'ed i 'industry, commerce and ;c professions, according to c pamphlet The specific ' - .v OREL! TIMPANOGOS WARD SHARON WARD Mrs. Merrill CrandaJI Reporter Phone 026-K-S . A group of friends met at the home of Mrs. Walter, Fyne on Valentine day for the purpose of organizing a ; sewing, club. - Mrs. Walter Pyne was selected as presi dent and . Mrs. Edward I. Pyne, secretary. The club's name is to be chosen later. A delicious Val entine luncheon was served to the following: Mrs. Victor. Christen-sen, Christen-sen, Mrs. Henry Campbell, Mrs Robert J. Thorne, Mrs. Orson P. Vernon, Mrs. Max Pederson, Mrs, Edward L. Pyne and Mrs. Walter Pyne. , Mrs. Loy , Doss entertained at her home Saturday afternoon for the Puplic Health nurses of Utah county and - the volunteer assist ants of the Sharon stake child health conference. " A delicious luncheon was served after which progressive games were played. Miss Jeanette Roscnstock of Frovo I won the first, prize and Mrs 1 By William Ferguson -TErvITT IS OF Th-iTB WORLDS . Thgy are bloodsuckert. h mission of the woman wage-earner's wage-earner's division is "to divert the greatest possible number of these, particularly, those engaged in mechanical and correlated scientific work, to munitions and essential civil ian industries." This division also must be prepared to recruit women "to fill vacancies caused, by withdrawal of men to the colors col-ors and to provide for the of i i a d o r expansion or many essential industries." Continuing, the pamphlet says: "The work of the division will be divided among three sections : . 1 Section of women labor employed In commercial and routine office occupations. This section recommends methods to meet the needs of war and essential civilian Industries In-dustries for trained women. This includes the transfer of women factory workers from plants of lesser to those of greater essentiality. 2"-Sectin ' highly trained . , women labor ' employed la administrative, professional and scientific research positions'. posi-tions'. ; This section ' recommends recom-mends methods to meet the needs of essential industries for women of exceptional training in highly specialized fields. o Section of , woman labor : required for service with troops. This section Is charged with locating women who comply with the occupational specifications of the war and navy departments, and aiding any agencies of these departments depart-ments which may be estab-, lished for the purpose of recruiting re-cruiting women of such classi fications for duty with the armed forces." The .1936 revision' of the plan omitted a fourth section, as follows: "Section of woman labor required for munitions factories, fac-tories, whether operated by the government or industry. This s e c t i o n recommends methods to secure the transfer trans-fer of women factory workers work-ers from plants of lesser to those of greater essentiality." . , s. I Adelle Fielding received the consolation con-solation award. The truest list In- eluded, .Mrs. Eva Gillespie, Mrs. Barbara E be ostein, Mrs. - Fern Laudie, Mrs. Adelle Fielding all of Orem, Mrs, Bernice Christensen of Pleasant Grove, Miss Jeanette Rosenstock, Mjss Carroll Raille of Provo, Mrs. Clara Sumsion, JJrs. Leona Curtis of SprtngviUe, Miss Lena Keesig of ; Payson and " Miss Bertha Becker of Lehi, Miss Becker Beck-er assisted Mrs. Doss in entertaining entertain-ing An Interesting event of the week end was the banquet given by Timpanogos Boy Scouts., troon 33, Friday evening at the wara amusement hall for their parents. Charles Bobbins was In charge of the program and Ivan Burr acted as toastmaster. The . delicious chicken banquet was served ; by a group of Beehive girls. The tables were lovely with potted primroses. During the banquet the following program was given; talks by Guy Oordner and Billie Burr, Clark Nielson on "What It Means to Me to Be a Scout"; talk by Ray E. Loveless, representing the fathers; duet by Emil and Gordon Hansen with Mrs. Ruth Hansen as accom-panist; accom-panist; talks were given by Chester Ches-ter Graff; Orrcl De Lange, and by Bishop Roy Gappmayer. Covers were laid for 78 pwple. Mr! and Mrs. Taul Vincent and daughter, Angenette, of Mercur, visited with relatives in Orem Sunday. They were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Fielding. - The Lincoln high school chorus furnished musical numbers for the Sunday evening services In Timpanogos Tim-panogos ward. - Mr. Victor Anderson Ander-son was in charge. Talks were g?ven by Jena V. Hansen, Mary Jean Skinner and Mr. Anderson. - : Mfi and Mrs. Wilford Burr and Mr. Erwin Burr of Burrville and Mrs. Chloe Furguson and Mrs. Viola Hanset of Salina visited with relatives in Orem over the week end. ' -.- - Elder George Blake of Vineyard, who has recently returned, from a mission in Germany was the speaker in Sharon Ward Sunday evening services. Mr. R. S. Pyne sang a solo and Mr. Howard Downs played a trumpet solo. POn de Raile club members were guests of Mrs. Velva Maag at her home Friday evening. Sewing was folowed by a tasty luncheon. Members present were Mrs. Lucy Rowley, Mrs. Gurney Anderson Mrs.' Hilda Stone, Mrs. La Preal Louder, Mrs .Thelma Kockerhans, Mrs. La Verl Manwell, Mrs. Carrol Morgan, Mrs. Lucile Richardson and Miss. Beth Carter.' JJAV15 THIS COUPOli Standard American Encyclopedia 15 Great Coupon No. 2 Modem Volumes t of thea coupon ich differently numbered, plu tb peeiaJ lft-pr1ce at thU orter, title yon to one Toiume ot im i- volome fttndiM Amerie tncyn. pedla. Booke my be obtained t tho Imiii Herald. Provo. M-DAY That day when the nation, mobilizes Its forces for warfave. A carefully - prepared national na-tional plan. IMP The Industrial riol.Illa-tlon riol.Illa-tlon plan formulated l.v the army and navy departments de-partments for bringing all resources of the coun-. coun-. . try , to the point where J ' they may best aid In winning win-ning X9 war If and when congress declares war or rstabiiubes a war emergency. - This Is the seventh of a series of articles by Clark Squires telling tell-ing what will happen to YOU when M-DAY comes. The minors' division i3"a new one in the 11)36 revision. The pamphlet states: "While the employment of children under the age of 16 years in industry or agriculture agricul-ture will be avoided wherever possible, it must be recognized recog-nized from the beginning that the nature of the emergency may require such employment m its later stages . . The safeguarding of the morals and the physical health of such employed minors is the subject of the particular study of this division ; . V Omitted from the 1936 re vision is the reserve woman ; power division, consisting ot three sections. One . is for trained but unemployed wo men,, another is for training and volunteer service of women wo-men with civilian auxiliary organizations and the third is for training of leisure women. But remember, once IMl is authorized by congress, any portion of the plan which now may be submerged can be yanked to the surface. Tne n our leisure wo men must abandon their clubs, their teas, their studies for training under direction of thelMPers. , (More Later) Real Valentine r Susanne Ilarrls, 19, Detroit debutante debu-tante and film aspirant, and Edward H. Fowler, New York millionaire Picked Valentine's Day to elope U Las Vegas, Nev. ARE you at the mercy of nifP.v, yVsuepyy. smothery heart rrjldf Why endure so much misery? A little Moutholatum opplicd In each nostril nos-tril will soothe the Irritated nasal membranes, ch:lc the nerzlri, relieve re-lieve the Btullluc',.1. aud help you to brrathe more easily. Also rub MenlholaUim vlijorotmly Oil Iho chest and baclc to Improve the local blood circulation, and thu gain extra help in relieving cohl din-comforts. din-comforts. Hub it on the forehead and U-mplen to allay headache and tieurulvtiu clue to cuius. y 7 7 i i |