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Show PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 4,1941 , I tsraoc mM ta UnJ" LtbrtT AftMi Kxeetfs? latwitar aa fcoixlajrl nnday HeraJ4 Pltah4 Bandar Moraln Pwbttahad by tM Haral' Corporation, aa Boata" Mt W.t Street. ProTO, Utah. Entered aa acond claaa mattar at tha poatofflca la Itoth, Uta-h, under tha act of alarc a. H7. Gllmaa. Ktcol Rothman. rllonal Adrartlaliia rpra-aanta'ivea, rpra-aanta'ivea, Nw York, fsaa fra.ncl.Q, Detroit. Boatoa, IM AnielM, Chlrato. Member United Praam. r. K. A. ervlea, Editors Kichaara, tha Sc-rtppa Uaru f Ntwtptjen and Audit Wtaraaa Circulation. Subacrlptloa ttrml by carrier rn Utah eermty. M aaata the montn. fl 0 tor all inontha. m advance; i.7 tha year, ra ad ranee; by mall la aounty. !.; oataid aouaty l.U tha year In adresee. Tfca EeraJd will not misiii financial raaponaiblllty tar aey arrara whtea asaty appear la adrertlaementa published 1 Ha colamna. la thoae Inatanoaa raara tb papar la at fault, tt will reprint tajU part af ta aayartlaaaMB la raaatt tfca tTo-rapaial aaiataka occur. And Jesus went forth, and saw a great multitude, and was moved with compa&sion toward them, and he healed their sick. Matthew 14:14. We do pray for mercy; and that same prayer doth teach us all to render the deed3 of mercy. Merchant of Venice. The Fight is Between Force and Reason Cold chills and cold feet would be simultaneously justified justi-fied if the United States were now undertaking the task of forcing every country in the world to become a democratic republic like our own government. That is not American policy. When we talk of aid-to-democracies, we talk in pretty general terms. What we really, mean is aid-to-victims-of-aggression. The American people and the government of the United States believe in "live and let live." We believe in the right of all peoples to set up the kind of government that suits them best. We did not interfere when Paissia, Italy and Germany set up governments which were repulsive to us. It was only when they began imposing those forms on other countries that we began to worry. The President has spoken of Four Freedoms freedom of speech and expression, freedom to worship God according to conscience, freedom from want, freedom from fear. He added, however, that all are not immediately attainable throughout the world. He has no illusion that they can be imposed by force on any people, and the United States has no such intention. What we stand for is that all countries and all peoples shall have the right to choose their own institutions; that when they have so chosen, other peoples shall not by force or threat compel them to change, or to yield precious indciend-ence indciend-ence and freedom. That is the key to the whole matter. That is what unites, in spirit and purpose such otherwise diverse people as the British, the Greeks, the Turks, the free sections that remain of Holland, Belgium, Norway, France, and the rest 'of the dozen overrun countries. Should Hitler be defeated tomorrow, it is certainly unlikely un-likely that all these people would form governments and institutions in-stitutions on the same model even on our model. We would not try to make them do so. The goal and the hope is that they will agree on an international order in which reason and peaceful settlement of controversies will take the place of a perpetual motion arms race, the bullying of the weak by the strong, and force as the sole arbiter of events. That is democracy as applied to the international field a plain rule of "live and let live." Democracy in the long run means simply the willingness to respect others' rights as equal to one's own. It is to achieve this kind of a peaceful and reasonable order in the world that we have thrown our weight into the scale, not to insist that every country must have a senate and a house of representatives and quadrennial elections. OUT OUR WAY by Williams T THEM c3CA'M I KIT lUSPECTOiSS, 5-KttM, AM OTHER. OFPICIAL.3 DONlT HBlP MUCH X THIMK THEV CLOW DOWM PRODUCTION! , BV BEIM' 1SJ TH' WAV J VOU GOT TO WATCH YOU DOM'T BEAM OR. BUMP 'EM I I VEH, AM IF VOLi VXD CRACK OME ON TH' CROCK VOU'D BE JAILED PER t3ABOTASE - I AM' A COCO MAM m OFF PRODUCTION! MW9t frVt 9Fm i t. m. Rca u. s. pt. orr. With Local Writers Each week this column will feature the activities and achievements of the Provo Chapter of the League of Anita Browne, founder-organizer of Poetry Week, national poetry center, "Radio City," New York, announces a preface to poetry week the fourth week in May a $5-a-line poetry contest. The only drawback to such a contest con-test is that the lines are always limited. This time and how! Only four. A quatrain. But four lines are easier to write than forty, which is some compensation. And when the stipulation is that it must be humorous we welcome the restricted number of lines. "One of the most constructive forces in 'trying time," says Miss Browne in her announcement, "is keeping cheerfull Economic stress and other problems of the world may be lubricated by a sense of humor, which often bridges the gap to better times." Thomas Carlyle .comments on humor in one of his essays, thus: "Humor has justly been regarded as the finest perfection of poetic genius,"' gen-ius,"' and, "True humor springs not more from the head than from the heart." We add that unless Tt springs first from the heart it is probably not going to be humor at all, but wit. Ami there's quite a difference. Professor Pro-fessor Quivey discussed this at length in Dorothy Oakley Rea's Tribune story of last month. He paid the lady the compliment of being a natural heart-humorist. So everybody! Five dollars a line for four lines of humorous That's the Way It Is With Timetables, Adolf ,kvA V , -A V ft ' T v A-UVV Avl ag& verse. Sent to national poetry center, 'Radio City," 30 Rockefeller Rocke-feller Plaza, New York, addressed to Anita Browne, The award will culminate the activities of the 15th anniversary celebration of Poetry Week. Any- . i r i .. i i i f . mis ctifurauun aiiu oi poetry appreciation efforts may send contributions to the same address, Miss Browne announces. Another poetry contest, that sponsored by the UtaTi Clubwoman, Club-woman, magazine of the Federated Feder-ated clubs of the state, closes April 6th. All entries are to be sent to Vesta Pierce Crawford, 1076 E. 5th South, Salt .Lake City, Utah. The subject is to be "Peace." No length limit. There will be a cash award, but the prize is not stipulated. Announcements Announce-ments to be made at, the state convention the latter part of April, and awards made. Honoring the late Professor Harrison R. Merrill. Editor Harry B. Miller of The Utah magazine is offering scholarships of 525 each to the three secondary school seniors who excel in a state-wide contest in story writing, tions of the competition: - 1. Any Utah high school senior who will graduate in 1941 may enter. "! 2. Entries must have a western west-ern theme or setting. 3. Length from 1500 to 3000 words. 4. Entries must be original and unpublished. 5. Entries must be typewritten, double-spaced. . ( 6. Entries submitted to Dr. Carlton Culmsee, journalism department, de-partment, Brigham Young university, uni-versity, by July 1, 1941. With these scholarships, the university makes five awards to encourage the development of a sound western fiction. "It is Important," Im-portant," Dr. Culmsee emphasizes, "for prospective entrants not to interpret 'western story' as meaning mean-ing slam-bang pulp fiction, nor to jump to the other extreme of morose, formless, over-ripe real- Ism. What we are seeking is fiction fic-tion that faithfully presents well-rounded well-rounded human beings, people who possess touches of distinctive character given by this western culture and physical setting." Tn a bulletin to members of the League of Utah Writers, Frank C. Robertson calls attention to a western book that is 'literature,' much to the breaking of all ascribed precedent. It is "The Ox Bow Incident," by Van Telbury Clark. Entrants to this interesting contest would do well to procure this book and study it carefully. FORUM 'n Agin 'Ema Favors Deportation of Anti-Americans Cranium Crackers SECRET CODES In wartime, and in peacetime, too, governments turn to codes for the transmission of important messages to keep them secret from anyone who might intercept them. Here are some secret mes sages, employing three separate codes, for you to decipher. 1. GSRH MZGRLM RH HKV-MWRMT HKV-MWRMT YROORLMH ULI WV-UVMHV. WV-UVMHV. (Que: try S for H. Q for J, E for V. etc.) 2. TP SGBS MPS PMF DFMS XJKK AF OBJC EPQ SQJAVSF. (Watch out; a different code i3 used this time.) 3. FIRST ALL GIVE THIS THANKS AND THEN HEAVEN WILL TOO. (Answer is a movie title.) (Answers on Page4, Sec. 2) Editor Herald: I think that definitely Anti-American Anti-American individuals should be deported to the country that they would like to support and do support sup-port as far as they dare to do so. I think that wherever any manufacturing manu-facturing companies or organized labor groups are responsible ' for checking or hindering the production pro-duction now being asked for by the War department and the Navy department should be required re-quired to have all production machinery ma-chinery working. I think the government and labor leaders should settle all differences dif-ferences between labor and capital capi-tal but combine to produce while the employers and employes are Condi- WOI'king out a settlement just as equnaoie as wnue me men are idle during the strike periods. I am Wondering if the government govern-ment has the power to draft our men, and set their wages for national na-tional defense, why the same government gov-ernment agencies should not act in cooperation with chosen labor leaders to demand no strikes or walk-outs at this critical time when we need war materials to maintain and perpetuate our democratic way of life. I think that employers and em ployees should give and take in the proper division of profits without stopping the machines of production. "What we need at this stage of the game is some action." I also think that the decentralization decentrali-zation in industrial production has not functioned a3 efficiently as it should have done. I think production managers and labor leaders should eliminate elimin-ate all excuses and conditions which slow down defense materials. mater-ials. I think there are places such as Duluth, Minn, that can be utilized for shipbuilding because there is a combination of machinery machin-ery and raw materials there that may be used to produce war necessities. ne-cessities. Other places in the middle mid-dle west and west may be utilized for the production of defense necessities. ne-cessities. I think that every idle youth should take advantage of the vocational courses now standing stand-ing under the vocational director of Utah county. See Mr. H. E. Johnson located at the Provo high school for information about sheet metal and other defense courses. r W. DYCHES BEEKEEPERS TO MEET Problems pertinent to beekeepers beekeep-ers will be discussed by a guest speaker from the east as well as local speakers at a meeting of Utah beekeepers Saturday at 2 p. m. at Hotel Newhouse in Salt Lake City, according to J. F. Wakefield of Provo, state bee inspector. in-spector. All bee men are invited. BLAZE DESTROYS 1'OCATEIXO HANGAR POCATELLO, Ida., April 4 iCV.t Fire investigators today sought to determine origin of a blaze which destroyed the hangar and five privately-owned planes at the Pocatello municipal airport. Damage was estimated at about $50,000. OREL! CIIALIBER HEARS REPORTS Satisfactory progress is being made on the Orem chamber of commerce membership drive, R.ulon West, chairman of the drive, reported at a meeting of the board of directors Thursday night. An especially good response is being received from out-of-town members, Mr. West indicated. indi-cated. President Wesley D. Soulier presided pre-sided at the meeting. The directors direc-tors made a budget study, dis cussing the amounts that can be spent for various projects. George Rohbock, Orem florist, met with the board. As a means cf boosting Orem," he will provide pro-vide hints on beautificatidh to anyone wishing such information, he said. Next meeting will be held at Twin Pines April 12 at 8 p. m. for the directors and their wives. The three states reporting the largest annual consumption of sugar in food manufactures, census records show, are New York. 757.427,292 pounds; Illinois, 607.901,373 pounds, and Pennsylvania, Pennsyl-vania, 469,170,604 pounds. WORK RESIDED I ROAD JOB Work is being speeded on the Point of the Mountain road improvement im-provement project, following a winter layoff, according to W. D. Hammond, chairman of the state road commission. The project includes widening of highway 91 to a four-lane road approximately four miles, eliminating elimin-ating 14 curves of the present highway. Moving of the gravel point around which the old highway was routed, excavation of a cut on the south side of the point to a depth of 50 feet, and the building of a huge syphon to carry canal water under the highway is part of the project. The present contract, now about 77 per cent complete, calls for completion of the project except hard surfacing the road. It is expected that bids will be called for soon for surfacing this part of the highway. Another important project on which work has been resumed is the road from Utah county line to Charleston now being graded and graveled preparatory to being be-ing hard surfaced. This project, about half completed, is more than seven mUes long, about half the distance being through solid rock. Tentative plans call for surfacing sur-facing this part of the road early next fall. Bids are under consideration for thj widening Main street in American Amer-ican Fork, surfacing of the Redwood Red-wood road from Bluffdale to Camp Williams, and grading of a portion of road between Leamington Leam-ington and Nephi. . Coast Guard Seeks New Recruit Quota The U. S. Coast Guard recruiting re-cruiting office, located at 518 J?"elt Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, has been authorized an unlimited quota of enlistments, and an ex-tention ex-tention of the maximum age limit from 25 years to 28 years, according accord-ing to the Recruiting Officer, L. J. Kirk.stine, chief boatswain. This unlimited quota offers a sp'lendid opportunity for young men between the ages of 18 and 28 years, of good character, fair education, not less than 66 inches in height, single, and in good physical condition. Enlistments in the Coast Guard are for three years. The cowbird, an American species, spe-cies, is a relative of orioles, bobolinks, bobo-links, and blackbirds, j t America's Men of Science Dr. Frank B. Jewett - Wraps Telephone Around the World This Is the eleventh of a series of 12 articles introducing you to America's foremost scient- ists. BY WATSON DAVIS Director, Science Service Written for NEA Service Behind the telephone in your living room or on your desk there is one of the most efficient and streamlined research organizations organiza-tions in the world. The man who for more than two decades has headed that great cradle of industry in-dustry the Belle Telephone Laboratories Lab-oratories is Dr. Franklin Baldwin Bald-win Jewett. With the assistance of a thousand thou-sand and more physicists and engineers, en-gineers, Dr. Jewett has literally placed our ears in any far corner of th? globe whenever we call the number. Alexander Graham Bell's telephone has" metamorphosed into in-to an instrument that gives a connection con-nection at the twirling of a dial. It spans continents and oceans. Dial Phone Has "Brains" The dial telephone, product of Dr. Jewett's research "factory," has been described by him as coming closer to stimulating the operation of an intelligent human being than any other structure created by man. KlKr Sane?.' K&ff 111 KlM v- v wx y t s Keeps your telephone ringing:. phone have not been the only products of the Bell Telephone LaboraTories. Dr. Jewett's associates asso-ciates have developed and given the world such important inventions inven-tions as talking motion pictures, the modern electrical phonograph, of high quality, transmission of pictures for long distances over telephone wires, and the highspeed high-speed cable. Xzr Mobilize I'"or Defense- As president of the National Academy of Sciences, which is the highest ' elective office that American scientists can give a Improvements upon the tele-1 colleague Dr. Jewett presides y i over the Senate of American sci ence. Since the days of the first World War he has assisted the government Th its application of science and research to the general gen-eral welfare and defense. He is now a member of the National Research D'ef ense Committee. At 61, Dr. Jewett is a leading and active exponent of organized research on a large scale, .which is the modern equivalent of the lone inventor in the garret of a generation or two ago. Scienco developments that have remade so many Industries in recent years would be impossible without with-out teamwork in research such as is carried on in the laboratories of great industrial concerns. This method of research has direct application to our defense effort, Dr. Jewett believes. While, the modern war machine may not be as complex as the dial telephone, tele-phone, the same methods of research re-search mobilization and coordination coordina-tion can be used to create it. If a potential enemy nation marshals mar-shals its forces by using carefully care-fully built schedules like an efficient ef-ficient factory, Dr. Jewett feels strongly that our nation must match such efforts by even more effective research and production. i 1, . . 1 Dr. Frank B. Jewett Next: Machines with brains , ;STORRS BRO U u u u D) I f r inn r 8a!orno Cookie: Pound Cello Bag NUT TWIRL . . CELLO BOATS 3!z Dozen Cookies .. COnn FLAKES okf;-: 3p!(gs.25o FLOOR ir -0l&s.1.23!gS8T fl8-lhs.93c SUGAR AWf"!' 25 lbs. 1.47- m lbs. 5Cs OLEOr.mRGAP.IIIE Sg?i west Lb- IGo SODA CRACKERS .... . 2-Sb.phg.15c Butter a',k,MJr. D. 5Sg Pcrit 8 Beans l&Er. J 25c Hatches f Carton of 6 Boxes, . He L i-kluk-1 Lunch Meat ..Can 23c BH0 0113 5ty Each Cz TUIIA EISII arte.2 cans 33c HOODIES Mr 2fcr 25c Salad Dressing, Qt. 10c Qnalily cats a.... lie . Af a Dee! Ooast shoukw iPGrI ElCaSat Shoulder PGTlk !llC3 L'ln hllA. ilWia shoulder Sliced Daccn D. IZz Bacon Ssnarcs ... Ib. iCz Ground Beef . ..2 lbs. 33c Fresh Fruits and Vegetables ORANGES n P -I 252 Size. 2 Dozen ' LEMON'S 360 Size. Dozen. . . . UILU'U-Utll, ou wiC c-i t A t it n7on f LETTUCE Large Heads. Ea-h 25c 5c AVOCADOS. 35 size, f. 8 for aW-r POTATOES. No. 2, Idaho 6Cc Russets 100 Pounds W BUNCH VEGETABLES All Kinds 4 for ASPARAGUS. Long, 1 green. ns. FEAIIUT BUTTER .. 2-D. far 2: 2 l.J.i.LiU XZt.iii:-J Ginger Glials mvl Fin Cars, lb. ICs T0:iATO JUIS0, cans 15c II9IIEY Ft'aT. .....10-D. call 5?c CLSAIISIIIG TIOBUE 'ygu ....23c CO-HIED BEEF ..-..12-oz. can Ipc f Medium rrw- iOJJ Grade "B" LJ-wl IJW a C c CATSUP 3 tcj 2Zz V |