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Show PAGE TWO' PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 14. 1940 Iff t.lberte throned all me land" Th l.ii..rty n.u IWery Afternoon (Fxrptln Saturday and Sunday) Sunday Herald Published ftundajr Mornlnt Fubllehed by tha Herald Corporation, South Ft ret Weet street, Frovo. Utah, Entered at errond claee matter ' at lha poatofflca in Froro, ft ah, under tha act of March t, 117. , ' . " Oilman, ma Ruthman, National Advertlain repre-aenteilvea. repre-aenteilvea. New York, fan Vranclaeo, Detroit. tiaaton, loa Anaalra. Chirac;. Mambtr United Pra, N. K. A. Service, Ed It or Kxchante, tha srriiipa leue el Mawauasara and Audit Hureaa at Circulation, , , , SuWiiptlott tarma bf carrier in Utah count, It cents tha rethi U tor als month In adane; 4.7 tha year, tit aitvenrei mall la county, ff.00 autilda county li.tl tha year lit a dm nee. . . .... . Tha Herald trill not aeeuma financial reaponetblllty for any errora which enev appear In adverttenmeaia puMih-d In Ha column. In tboea tnataacea where tha paper la at fault, tt will reprint that part af tba advertlaemeot la which tha typographical mlataha aecuta. Knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the name thall lie receive of tha Lord, whether lie be bond or free. Ephe.lana 6:8. Blessings ever wait on virtuous sure reward succeeds. Congreve. deeds, and though a late, a Fellow Travelers, Attcntionl Nobody has ever laid down a better rule of guidance on Communist "fellow traveler" organizations than Assistant Secretary of State A. A. Berle In resigning from the National Lawyers' Guild. . , - . "It is now obvious," said he, "that the present management manage-ment of the National Lawyers' Guild is not prepared to take - any stand which conflicts with the Communist party line. . . , So Berle resigned. He has laid down a fair test. Many people of liberal and progressive mind have joined organiza-' organiza-' .' ' tions which . professed certain objectives with which i they were in sympathy;. The 'organizations were for "peace" or . "democracy" or "civil libertfes," or what not. all .perfectly . laudable objectives. J !: - r j : ' Then, in one test after another, these members found the . organisations committed time after time to courses which s happened to coincide exactly with the Communist party program. pro-gram. In short, the Communists followed the "democratic line' as' long as it attracted liberal members, but never when it conflicted with Moscow's direction. I When lioeral members of such groups become convinced, as Berle did, that the organization Is such lhat it will never : take a stand contrary to Moscow dictates, then the'thlng to do Is to get out, as Berle did. For when that is the case, It ; matters little whether- direct Communist control can be . mathematically; shown. The organization's possible useful-, nes3 to democracy and to the American republic has ended. t About My Operationl '. Science is wonderful..- It is also just a little disconcerting v, At .times. ..... . . y , ' ' . Latest scientific achievement is to take color photo- f graphs of those parts of a person's innards which have gotten out if kilter. They just drop a tube down your, throat and j shoot it's all done with mirrors. No privacy any more, not even in the depths of the gizzard. , , , But that isn't the worst. Color movies are next. And then, the person who today insists ori telling you "all about i my operation" will be able to pinion you in a chair In his liv- Ing room and show both disease and operation in full natural rolor. ' . "t y Comenbw, science, is nothing sacred? Streamlined Merchantmen t In 40 shipyards the' hammers ring, and 27C. trim new hulls' rest in the stocks America's new merchant marine. Led by the beautiful new America, the finest ship ever built in the western world, this new fleet will soon be taking to the waves. - ' See what 22 years has done in the shipping world : Admiral Ad-miral Emory S. Land, chairman of the maritime commission, reports that orie: of the new 6-2 cargo ships Ief t, on the trun to India, practically a full month after one of ihe old Hog Island-: Island-: built World war freighters started on the same voyage. The ships returned to New York harbor within 15 minutes of each, ' other; and the new one was carrying 1000 tons more cargo. ,.. What trade conditions may be after the war, we cannot .. tell. But whatever they are. we hiay be sure that a fine mer- chant lieet will help us to meet and cope with them. OUT OUR WAY Bv Williams THEM COLLGC5E Kip 13 TAJ4.IM MECKAKJICAL EKJGINJEERIM' WHEM I WAS A KIO A COLLEGE GUV WAS A gar.it y WHEM WE REALLY 'EM BUT MOW, WHEM EVE&VTHIMG IS FIXED SO IT COKl'T TAKE MUCH THIMkllM', THEY'RE TURWIM EM OUT BY TH' THOUSANDS EVERY YEAR NOWTHIS LL KAACHIME IS 7 I I A I iaoct rimnriv -- AUTONAATIC YOU l - I POM'T HAVE TO ,J "DO VERY MUCH M BUT JUST KEEP h T -7 t . WV- Y ) 17A- ' hi- V) OUST TH SAME AS GAS STATIOMS EC CHICKEN4 FARMS IFOME GUY IS mak.im' a livim', pretty soom everybody goes 1mto it them ;mobody makes A LIVIM OWE (3 OOP UVIMG . MAKES ATHOLISAK1 X POOR. OKIES PCv r y-s-ryi; t my i THE THIMWW3 MACHIMB i I v..Ma..iMT.orr, ' 3R.WiLUMjs Mysterious Strike Solved; Too Much Holiday Fun-Having BY BRUCE CATTOX - Dally Herald Washington ' CorreKpondent . WASHINGTON, June' 14 No- bedv was ever sorer . over that New Jersey shipyard strike which tied up warship construction than was the C. I. O. command here in Washington. - f Real story, it now aevelops, is this : The union met- to consider tbo negotiating committee's proposals pro-posals on f Memorial Day night. Quite a few of the boys were fuU of holiday cheer. One member made a Tblast the bosses" speech, everybody whooped and hollered, and a strike vote got passed. ' In the' cold gray dawn nobody knew just how.it happened. The appalled Washington C I. O. crowd sent word the whole outfit out-fit would be disowned unless the thing was called off-rand settlement settle-ment was easy. f ; . . - . - . llany AlJLea In Aiuerlcaa Crews One of the fifth column possi- bilitles -Drhichr has worried -nuni ber of people here has to do with the presence of a large number of aliens in the crews of American merchant ships. The Big Push-'Em-Up Some fairly fantastic stories are in circulalon. ..- One. is that the Communists have worked out i courier system for the transmis sion of orders, reports and what not all over the new world by frieans of caref uUy planted sea men on American ships. Another holds that guns and agitators have been smuggled into Latin-Ameri can countries by the same means in' recent months. Still, another hints at plans for sabotaging the defense -program by fomenting J ( ' . . ' " ' : " - ' " - , 1 ' ' . - ji i. . J. V.'; . .v.- jg: : , . - . : .....A ... i:, -., ..:..,, .'"7: ....;'. v- - ; "' ' . . .' '. ' " . V. m. i I mm. In e - ( mTmm mmmm ,mmm """ mmmm "mmm "mmm" "Tmm " . "T1" " " ..".. ; , ' . ' - ..... i . . -- - mm mmmmm. mm - i -p- 1 '. ( . - , , , ZZZHZZZIZZZZZZZZZZZIi--IZZ - " i ' - : . . , .. " ; ' ' r' ' '.!" .'.... ,r. . . ' . I I 1 1 I LJaL : - ----llw'-- k T ( T ' - t , , MA Same lea atrikefl on certain essential trade routes. ' The government alma to head off any possible trouble, and FDR has asked Congress to give, the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation $236,000 for the job - j laliy Wants Defease Fort . " It's an open secret that retired Admiral William D. Leahy, governor gov-ernor of Puerto Rico, woujd be happy to give up his job for some spot in the national defense program. ..... Lahy set out to aa a real joo on the island and got disillusioned. FPR promised him 100 per cent support, wiux in at, ana nis own past guccess in getting thiJigs through Congress when he was running the ileet, Leahy had high hopes. lie asked for a big boost in the island's 'sugar quota and change in the wage-hour law. Ad ministration" support vanished, and Leahy found that getting1 congress men to give things to the navy was one thing anf getting them to bucBrther-lobbiea-'fop-the sake of " a far-away, voteless , territory was another. ' " All he got, finally, was some extra WPA rooney-and ' a lot of headaches. ' - -. ... J FORUM 'n Acin 'Em Nations To Watch ; 1 - The navy's dispatch of a second "good will' cruiser to South Am erica .is simply visible evidence of ' the profound concern felt in high government circles over the prpspecLs for Nazi outbreaks, of one kind or another. . One man who. is close to the pic ture offers thl3 Up: don't be sur prised at anything that may hap pen in any of the following coun tries Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama, Pana-ma, Ecuador, Brazil and Peru. ; . Cameramen , Walk Oat on j John Lewis John L. Lewis ran into a walk out when the C. I. O. executive committee met here . . . a walk out of cameramen. . ; " The lads with cameras walked in to photograph Lewis and' other C- I. O. leaders in Lewis' office. One of them asked that the group get closer together so the cameras could get everybody. Lewis said something about the boys taking it as was or not at all. '. - ' ' It was not at all. They marched out. . ...-- Cranium Crackers SAME NAME BUT WHERE? . Following are given the names of five American cities. : Locate five European citlea with the same names. , 1. Aberdeen, Washington. ' 2. Dover, Delaware. 3. Florence, Alabama. 4. Todelo, Ohio. - - . ' 5. Manchester, New Hampshire. Answers on Page JSJght ALIENS CHECKED t L NEW YORK, June 14 UJi) Im migration officials are taking the nationality papers and fingerprints of all alien seamen arriving here, it was disclosed today. ' i ', . The new system reportedly was instituted at the order of Presi dent Roosevelt and is effective at all United States ports. ' U. S. People Should 1 V Keep TKeir Heads Editor Herald: . We need to keep cur brads in these critical hours when so much is happening to change the face of the earth. , We can give all possible help in the form or material resources to the Allies but we can't do It without being eventually drawn actively into the present European conflagration. If the last war hasn't taught us that it hasn't taught -1 us anything. Norman Thomas and Bertram Wolfe put it this way in their book "Keep America Out of War," "You can't enter into economic warfare without with-out eventually entering into military mili-tary warfare: you can't go part way into a war without being dragged In altogether" . . . They go on to say that you can't jump off a cliff and stop yourself half way down, in the -initial jump forces are unleashed which carry one to the very bottom. EDGEMONT JC1S. EVA GILLE3PE3 Importer Phooe 0-lO-J-I Mrs. Nellie Ludlum of Salt Lake 13 spending tho week .with Mrs. Lydia Hogan. Mr. and Mrs. Don Elliott and three children of Ogden and Miss Ida Lee Jensen of Salt Lake are vacationing at the Robert L. El liott home. Diana Stubfca, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verl Ktubbs, underwent un-derwent a mastoid operation at the Utah Valley hospital Tuesday morning. . Reports are that she is getting along nicely. Mrs. .Thomas Farnsworth has spent the past week with her father, Ole Ernston, at Loa. She was accompanied on Wednesday by her sister, Mrs. - Frank Man- will. The following members of the ward attended the Sharon stake old folks party held at the Glrl3 Home In North Fork in Provo canyon Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. W. Ferguson, Mrs. Josephine Thomas, Mrs. Martha Davis, Mr. Thcmas Farnsworth . and Mr. Charles Peterson. The committee in charge of the affair were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Smith, and Mr. and Mrs. Jas. E. Pinegar. Miss Deone Hawkes gave a number ' on the program for Edgemont. Mrs. John Yeates and son, Dal las, attended the trousseau tea given for her neice, in Hetoer City Wednesday afternoon. Honoring their mothers birth day anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Fae Williamson and daughter and their families of Salt Lake, met at the family home at Olmsted on Sunday. A lovely dinner -was en-Joyed en-Joyed by the group. Dick Arbuckle of Salt La ice is spending his vacation at the Sharp Gillespie home.' ' There will be no evening meet ing Sunday in the ward owing to quarterly conference. Sunday school for the children - will be held. The Priesthood meeting wui be held In the; Timpanogos ward chapel Saturday - evening at 8 o'clock and the Sunday sessions of conference will be h:ld in Uw Vineyard ward chapeL . - Friends of Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert Rob-ert Me Id rum of Levan, former residents of 1 Edgemont will be pleased to learn of the safe arrival of fine baby boy, born Thursday at the Utah Valley hospital. . The new arrival has one sister. The question that we must de cide is this: Do we want to enter this war? If it is a war to save civilization, if it ia a holy war of course we want to enter and we want to give everything we have for it. . . Certainly we do not want to aave our own skins if by losing them we can save civiiiza tion. . . , But this war will not save civili zatlon. No war will save civlllza tion. This war is destroying tu rope. And we can help not by joining in and extending the con fiagration but by staying out and limiting the conflagration. This war isn't saving anything. This war like all war thrtxign etigeno- er.ng hatred, bitterness and vin dicUVeness. only plants the seds wf more.terribie wars In the future. It is rather self evident that it the totalitarian powers are tri umphant 'lt will not be a very pleasant world in which to live for oiose of us ac least who believe in iberty .and Justice and tolerance But 1 am not so sure that It will oe a very lovely wona if the Allies win. That would depend perhaps on how. much they nave learned irom the past war with its after math, tout if they haven t learned more than f we have apparently learned men they haven t learned very much. ' ' ne totalitarian spirit wherever it is found and it is lound in other continents except Europe and in other countries except Germany and Italy cannot be defeated by armoied tanks and 'diving bombers, bomb-ers, ."wenty-three years ago we went over and helped to uefeat Imperial .Germany but we bred Hiuerism. One wonders what we might breed if we went over and helped to defeat Hitlerism. while we were fighting Hitler- Ism we might forget the totalitar ian- spirit " here ac home but it would still be here for us to meet when the "holy" war was finished and it would be here in an accen tuated form. w Our job is to build up our own nation give our own sharecroppers sharecrop-pers and negroes a chance to live. If we would give our own under-priviliged under-priviliged a stake in our national life we would be doing more to de fend our country than all the THE PEDESTRIANS' PRIMER No. S-yBe Doubly Alert During the First Few Steps- rjyfftEE out of four pedetrina In- I accKfrntt enr nn(r. i n J I r y I mmm Taf MM LXhMt the CnX (ew . . j s. on of the principal M.nMIim ctuseS of eecWent Xtavclara Sally Srvlo Educators Meet In Salt Lake City SALT LAKE CITY, June 13 (UTJ Utah educational administrators met today in a general session to hear Dr. L. John Nuttall, Jr., city school superintendent, discuss problems of administration. The three-day conference of school executives was to end tonight. to-night. Dr. Howard W. Otlum. director of the Institute for social science research at the University of North Carolina, told members of the conference yesterday that hard work and unlimited patriotism t" needed to reestablish democracy in a war torn world. With Local Writers Each week this rolumn will feature the ativltle and ax hi e tern te-rn en U of the Provo Chapter of the League of Utah Sritera, Sao;-rd iNinner f a nation Signaling on land and ta. To a blHiing world In anguish; It's subjecU fctlll are trv Ktrp jour lofty plswe. Old Glory IJejond the din of raging war, Where Me all mav, cat h the me-sajje Of eah trlte and nhininr atar. f. if. The r.:me "Old Glor'" was given to our flag by William Driver, of Salem, of the brig Charles Dog- gett, on August 10, 1S31. The first Flag Day was observed at Hartford. Conn., on June 14, 1SG1, and for IS years we have celebrated this important national holiday which has become so dear to all Americans-It Americans-It is not definita-ly definita-ly known just where and how the first flag w.u made, but the story of how George Washing ton, Robert Morris and Ueorge Ross visited the tent-making est ablishment of Betsy Ross of Phila delphia and commissioned her to make the first flag is generally accented. We do know that the Continental Congress on June 14, 1778, authorized the making of a national flag. It Is believed war. the design for the flag was taken from the Washington family coat cf arms. The resolution stated that the flag should have thirteen stripes, alternate red and whit;. and a blue field on which tmrteen white stars formed a circle. It was this flag that Inspired Francis Scott Key to write "The Star Spangled Banner." The star is an anc'.ent symbol of India, Persia and Egypt, sym bolizing dominion and sovereignty and lofty aspirations. In America's flag it was to represent a new constellation In the heaven XjI na tions. if to represent the thirte n colonies, and it was des.gr.el that a new stnpe and star would be abided for each new atate as they entered th union. It w&s soon n tMat this procedure would produce a national na-tional flag of unwieldy tize. Vermont Ver-mont and Kentucky were rtiiy for admittance and other states soon would have to be added. Hy the end of 1S17 Tennessee. Indiana, Ohio. Louisiana and M.asppi had been a d Jed, - So on ApiU 4, 1818. Congre&s definitely established establish-ed the form of the United States Flag, as thirteen stripes, alternate alter-nate red and white, and a quare field of b!ue on which was to appear ap-pear a star for each state of the JL'hion, each new star to be added on July 4. following the admission admis-sion of the new state Into the Union. Tha 4ath and last star was added for Arizona. It took its position posi-tion on July 4, 1912. The colors of ths flag are f significant: sig-nificant: red for courage, white, in the language of Washington, "Shall go down to posterity representing repre-senting liberty"; blue for loyalty; taken together they represent trie union of states welded together by common interest, duties, privileges, and . responsibilities a sovereign nation of many sovereign states, a perfect union under the national banner. Old Glory. Flag Day should mean more to the American people than ever, with the world In the tumult t-at it is today. Remember Its signifi cance. Remember the flae and all for which it stands Remember Remem-ber to thank God for freedom and observe the day with solemnity. gRACE M. CANDLAND. MIXING MAN DIES WALLACE, Ida.. June 14 vn Harry Erook Kingsbury, 4S. prominent Wallace broker and mining man, died here yesterday after a long lllne-sa, He wai The thirteen stars and thir- president and manager of the teen etrip3 of the first flag were Clayton silver mines. A new substance, compounded from graphite, that, when- applied like paint, ia reported to make a plane invisible after It has passed an altitude of 100 feet Quite a heat Give Him a 'DAY -JUNE 1G Gift He Can Wear NOW SPORT SHIRTS BY YOUR FAVORITE SH1RTMAICER ARROW ii ii n l H n t n n - ; ii ti Attimm Km iiJrt n. tt ja. $i Arrvmt TauIorW SAirta IL P It's well known that the Marine Corps is no place for the effete. And when Recruiting Serglant William F. Black, above, lands, the situation is well in hand plus. Those size 12 F"s he's displaying in his Philadelphia office, are the largest allowed in the Cusps many billions we are now prepar ing to pour into our armed . defenses. EDWIN F. IRWIN GOfJGTIPATED! Gas Groivdc Eleart. "For Tears I had eeeuioaal co&itgpaboa. beadachea and paw In tha back. Aa-jul u bio our eaaraea to crovd mi keart. A6Jerc& ai helped right aver. Ho I eat lauM-r. panaaaa. pie, aartiunc I vast aad ae-eer xete betler." Mil. Alabai Sciimt. 1 o ttn.-u-a happen Uen you are constipated. FIHr.1': Ac-rumulatl waslf-e awrli up txmtie ard vr-rm on nervea in tht diurjitiva tract. PLC- OND: Partly diitd food atarla to d'-rty (orminjf GAS, oUa bnngiug on our atonavda, iudiEPtiua, and b.-anburn, Lluatm( you xip utd j-ou iotm timea rP brpiith. Adiema fives dnubla rrlid ilk L)l tuu ACIIUA. lALANt'KD AdU.nka contaioimc thr Illa tive aod bva erniiiiaurrlttx're S'l'OM ACil CIAS alnoat at once. It tu-n rlrara bowi la in U-m tfaaa two buura. Ha siipma. ua aitec cdecta, joet i)uick rcauiLa. City Drug Co. (adv.) I-10i"s.lAJrTNE5S and comfort in the jrcat outdoors, you'll want a nice aortxuetit of Arrow Sport Shirts: pullover, inor-oulcrt, even a long-alorve Sport Shirt. "Tc hsve a Lig variety to clvoow; rom erery hirt talloreJ with the same perfection anl tt j Ic-rij !itnra that has made Arrow Shirts an J Collar worU-famouA. . Other GIFTS for Fathers Slack Suit. $1.95 to $3,50 Sport Shirts $1 and up Neckwear ..... 50c, $1, $1.50 Sport Coat $12.50 and up Sport Suits $19.75 Slack $5.95 and up Ensemb!e Sets Shirts Ties Hose Smartly Matched Neatly Boxed All GifU Specially Wrapped SI-IRSVER'S Style Leadership a a hi a ft ft o if a a " I r |