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Show SECTION -TWO PAGE TWO OUT OUR WAY by Williams The Axis Has Its Troubles, Too PRO VP (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRILJ)11941 ftw-asoa vBdar HaraJd JJtlabed Bandar Moralas PvbKabad by tba H Braid OorTrtloa. M Booth Ftrat Waat Street. pre?, Utah. Entered a ee-ond etaan matter at tr poatofrioa la Fra-ra. Uta. andar tha act March a, ii7i. Gllmaa. rTleol Rothman. hlonal ArtrMtTi rapra-eotatlTta, rapra-eotatlTta, New Tor. S Fraocia-o, D'.ro1t, Boatoa. La Anaretea. Chlraco. Member United Praaa, K. m. A, Berrlea. Kdttorr Raehaae- the Sortppa Lcafu of Newgpapera and adit iraaa aa Circulation. BubacripUon term by carrier la Utah eoonty. It e t til month. 1 0 for all aaontha. to advance; .7I the year, fa advance; by mall tm onnty. $ mtnida aountjr tha year 1 advance. IWm(H al TW Bat-aM Ut not unmt financial ta a d Dear la ad vertisemea ta publlahed Were the peper fca at faort. It wUl rr print tut art ea th M taw ijaaaiaahtaaa aniatalta eoura. A Stab of Light Into the Dim Future A mere million dollars is nothing in the vortex of billions bil-lions -whirling- about in .Washington today. Yet the million dollars spent by the Temporary National Economic Committee Com-mittee during the past three years in getting together 20,000 pages of testimony from more than 500 industrial leaders may turn out to be the most productive million of them all. The committee set itself a crushing task nothing less than to find out the answers to the questions everyone has been asking for 10 years: Vh3r want amid plenty? What's wrong with our economic system? Now, in 37 volumes, the report is made. It should be the greatest mine of information that exists on our economy and how it works, and why it doesn't work. Everybody is concerned about what will happen after the war emergency is over. Will it mean another depression depres-sion worse than the last one? It is certainly possible unless the greatest possible foresight is used, beginning now. The recommendations of the TNEC are aimed, apparently, at this post-war period rather than at the period of the defense effort, ef-fort, which is r.o time to rock boats. Many and many a su!-study, and many a recommendation recommenda-tion for new laws will come out of the vast body of what the TNEC has learned about our economy. Only the general lines are clear, but - they are interesting as a questing searchlight beam poked toward the future. First, the committee is sold on free enterprise. It feels that the only way in which America will eventually be gotten back at peacetime work is by reopening the opportunities for new enterprise. Those avenues .are now increasingly blocked on one hand by the increasing size of a few vast corporations, and by increasing government regulation. Thus the committee suggests: subjecting national corporations cor-porations to national charter and control; loosening the grip of patent rights; abolition of basing-point systems for calculating calcu-lating prices; repeal of the Miller-Tydings type of price-maintenance laws; government restriction of new mergers; legal and tax policies which will foster and protect new enterprises, and thus encourage them. - That is a bare hint of the line of thought that has come to the majority of the TNEC after hearing all this testimony. The crux of the matter is here: as long as American business continues to gravitate into larger and fewer units, an equal centralization and expansion of government is inevitable. As free enterprise is restricted, free government is endangered; political freedom is impossible without economic freedom. When .the present emergency is passed, it is clear that the United States is going to have to do some fast stepping. Cvery bit of light that can be thrown novTofPiTie besl dTrec-tion dTrec-tion of those steps, light such as the TNEC report is now shedding, is a guarantee of future safety and progress. Did You Pay Your $109? If you're an average American, $109 was your share of the $14..,00,000,000 paid in taxes in the year ended June CO, 1940. If you paid more, the chances are that it was because you received more benefits than the average; certainly it means that under the conditions maintained by our institutions, in-stitutions, you have prospered beyond the average. Americans never paid taxes more cheerfully than they pay them this year. Never before has it been quite so clear that what we get for our tax money, namely, support of those institutions which make the American way of life possible, is precious beyond price. r i .. - - - h T y ".' , '-' ..C H JX" f sA ivL i , , i rr., 'TS? ,: - -vV.-;-.; . (Umtlu Barardar aad nndj reaponalbtllty fe any arrora wbleh la lta eolumna. la thoae tnataneaa "Congratulations, Pal!" 'H'!,r;lH;';!:!;s!U'i;! jl4 : " i '3 - ...who was caught '" ' ' THE pgAFTy T. M. Rea O. 6. PAT. Off OPR. 1l BY NEA SggvIC, IWC. London's New Envoy to Canada Leaps "Son-of-Famous-Father" Hurdle to Win Empire's Esteem i V. Malcolm Macllonald, newly aj-xliited aj-xliited British High ConuiusKlon-er ConuiusKlon-er to Canada and on of the late BritUh Irine Minister, pictured a he arrived from England at "a Canadian port." INDIAN WAR VET PASSES AWAY PHILIPSBURG. Mont., April 8 U'.I!i Funeral services were to be held here late today for Charles H. Carpp, 88. Granite county pioneer pio-neer and one-time Indian fighter and buffalo hunter. Carpp's career included that1 of hunter and prospector in most of the western states, and he took part in the famous Indian battle of Adobe Wall in Texas before moving north to Montana. - ( WHY MCTHETSS (SET GKAtf -s- Bv NEA - Service " OTTAWA, April man who outlived 8 . Young heavy the handicap of being son of a famous father that's Malcolm MacDonald, who has arrived in Canada in his vital war-time role as British Hierh Commissioner to hia Dominion. Dom-inion. When Ramsay MacDonald was Premier, at the head of the first coalition government, called a National Government, his son was made Parliamentary Undersecretary Undersecre-tary for the Dominions. When Stanley Baldwin succeeded to the Premiership in 1935, he made Malcolm Mal-colm MacDonald Secretary for the Colonies. It was an appointment that was sharply criticized. As. was perhaps natural. It was openly paid the young man of ,35r who had hardly won his spurs, had been made a cabineter solely be cause of his father. But, by reason of his hard work in the job and his ability for factual presenta-tion presenta-tion of affairs in House (of Com mons speeches, Malcolm "soon began be-gan to earn a genuine respect for his own native ability. Whn Baldwin was succeeded In the Premiership in 1937 by the late Neville Chamberlain, the vounger MacDonald was -made Minister for the Dominions. This was a more severe test than hi former post, because now he had to deal with the great eelf-gov-ernlng dominions. h could not boss them as he could colonies. i-ie naa to walk on eggshells in ms relations with governments which were very jealous of their own dignity, power and authority and he duly walked. Also he broke no eggshells. Last spring, when Winston Churchill became Premier, he transferred MacDonald to the Ministry of Health. DOES NOT RESEMBLE HIS FAMOUS FATHER His newest post as High Commissioner Com-missioner to Canada is equivalent equival-ent to that of a British ambassador ambas-sador to a foreign country. With Canada's immense increasing war effort, the great dominion is of prime Importance to Britain. Hence, in many ways MacDon-ald's MacDon-ald's present job is a promotion. Special provision has been made so that he will continue to hold his feat In the House of Commons, Com-mons, representing the Ross and Cromarty division of Scotland. In hardly any way does Malcolm Mal-colm MacDonald rrpemble his famous father. He lacks "Ramsay Mac's tall, well-built flpure and nobly shaped head with its great shock of sculpturesque hair. He has not got the fluent elo quence of his late father, nor the rich Scotch burr. Malcolm speaks more like a toothy Englishman. In fact, his treth are prominent like those of Anthony Eden. But he Is democratic and friendly and London has gambled that he will get on swell with the Canadians. Cranium Crackers Questions on Page Two 1. For a right turn: left hand held upraised at about a 45 de-grre de-grre angle with window level; for loft turn; hand held horizontally hori-zontally out the window; for stop: hand held down at 45 degrees angle with window level, palm back. 2. An octagonal highway sign indicate" a stop is required!' 3. Red indicates etop; yellow, caution, or walk; green, go ahead. 4. In making a sudden stop, remove re-move foot from gas and apply it to brake, leaving car in gear to keep it in better control nd to help slowing down. ' 5. Except where traffic lanes are marked, it is generally unlawful un-lawful to pass on the right, and cannct s:e you as well, may cut risky because driver of other car cannot see 5-ou as well, may cut in to the curb. LAKE VIEW BEES. SADIE SHAW Importer Phone 018-R-3 Rex Jacobsen. son of May Ja- cobsen, left for Spokane, Wash., where he will be employed in the finance department after spend ing eight months at Salt Lake where he was working at the same position. He spent four days with his mother and other relatives rela-tives and friends in Lake View. Mrs. Homer Joyce (Lola Jacob-sen) Jacob-sen) and two children of Pasadena, Pasa-dena, Calif., are. visiting with her mother Mrs. Lars Jacobsen and other relatives and friends ' in Lake View and other Utah cities. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Bunnell and son Elvin, motored to Tremonton Sunday where they visited with their son and family Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Bunnell and children. Mrs. Clayton Slaymaker entertained enter-tained at her home Saturday afternoon aft-ernoon in honor of her son George's sixth birthday. Games were played and a delicious luncheon lunch-eon was served to the following: Venita and Wayne Taylor, Sally and Billie Goodridge, Ella Mae Smith, Pejrgy Ann Scott, Dale Duhnell, " 'Marylin " Nuttall, Karl Ward, Grant Williams,' Mrs. Ada Ward, Mrs. Vivian Scott and Mrs. Thelma Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Brown (Cleo Jorgensen) and son Donnie left for Stockston, Calif., where Mr. Brown is employed. They formerly former-ly lived in Salt Lake before going to Butte, -Montana. They visited here with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Alma Jorgensen. The Daughters of Utah Pioneers Camp Tamarack will meet at th home of Mrs. Alice Thacker at Vineyard Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Clara Taylor will give the lesson and a good attendance is requested. All members and those eligible are invited. For First Lady's Easter Afternoon r- 0- i.Jlt Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt went shopping on Fifth avenue, New York, for her Easter wear this year and selected this new "dropped shoulder" cape en-sem-. Lie for afternoon. It is of aqua wool, with pleated skirt and aqua baku straw hat. OREM TIMF YN OGOS H ARD SHAKON WARD Kir. tlerrl'J Crtuid&d Exporter Phone OiG-IV-3 Mrs. J. D. Pyne will be hostess to members of the Orem Literary club at her home Thurday afternoon. after-noon. All members are cordially invited to attend. Miss Dorothy Stratton of Sharon Shar-on ward was successful in winning win-ning first place for extemporaneous extemporane-ous speaking in the B. Y. U. annual an-nual speech tournament. Mrs. Matilda Vance visited with relatives in Salt Lake City last week. Mrs. Nina Stratton and Mrs. Emma Stratton joined her in atteneding conference sessions on Friday and Saturday. Mrs. Gertrude Weaver left Sunday Sun-day for an extended visit with her mother, Mrs. Rider, in Colorado. Colo-rado. The Sharon" stake M. I. A. sponsored spon-sored a splendid musical program presented at the Lincoln high school auditorium Sunday evening eve-ning by the vocal department of that school with E. B. Terry directing. di-recting. The Easter cantata, "Victory," "Vic-tory," by B. Cecil Gates was given with Miss Virginia Fronk and Miss Nanalee Johnson singing sing-ing the soprano leads. L. L. Terry was the reader. Choruses were by the Ladies' and Men's Glee clubs of Lincoln with several mixed numbers. Mrs. Winnie Graff of the stake M. I. A. board presided. There was a splendid attendance. Howard Downs of Los Angeles, Calif, is spending the Easter vacation va-cation with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Downs. Mr. Downs is employed in an airplane factory. fac-tory. . Mr. and Mrs. Adelle Fielding were in attenedance at conference Saturday. They also visited with her brother, Wilford Hallam of Sacramento, Calif. Mr. Hallam who is bishop of the Sutter ward at Sacramento had come to Salt Lake City for conference. Stanley Finch, Maston Wentz, Kenneth McEwan, Rudolf Wolf-gram Wolf-gram and LaVar Kocherhans of Sharon ward attended the priesthood priest-hood session at L. D. S. conference in Salt Lake City Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C. Lucius Laudie, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bradshaw and Mrs. J. D. Pyne were also among the conference visitors. Herman Hill, who has been cook at Twin Pines since its opening open-ing left Monday for Ogden where he will visit relatives prior to his departure for Yellowstone park where he will be employed this summer. His daughter, Katherine, who had made her home with Mrs. C. L. Laudie accompanied him. O SERIAL STORY BY EDITH ELLINGTON TESTER DA Vt lire rrnllare that work hoe rknngrd her appear. anre, that Toby and Vera really do dot reroarniae her. lint ahe know that the happineaa ahe hna found la Jlailaret Kaealon anuet end today. She plana to help each of her frienda. A man ronu to uprrvlar rrmodcllnr the dpart aent. Anthony tella her that the mrrrknidlar aunnatcrr hna atolan their 11 lK Idea, la lining it aa hla owa. BEE DEMANDS A SHOWDOWN CHAPTER XXVII '"yjfHAT do you mean, Arihony? I don't understand." I difis't understand at first, either!" he said bitterly. "But it's very simple. He laughed me out of his office. You and I worked and dreamed and got the samples together and and after he kicked me out, he stole my idea!" "But he can't get away with that!" "Can't he?" Anthony asked hollowly. hol-lowly. "You see the men measuring meas-uring for carpet, don't you? I'm still section manager. Nothing else. "Miss Dane's been telling me what a wonderful merchandising Idea it is, and how he explained it all to her at a special meeting last night. New accessories counters coun-ters have been ordered. Plans are laid out but nobody said a word to me. I suppose I ought to be thankful he hasn't fired me!" The savage anger she had experienced ex-perienced once before in this department de-partment came back to Beatrice. "Are you going to stand there and let him do it? If you are, An thony, I'm not! I worked on those ensembles, too! That's hall my idea! That dirty, double-crossing--" - She hadn't known she knew such words, and Anthony hadn't known either, for he stared at her. The shock in his brown face stopped her. "I'm sorry. I I have a bad temper. But, Anthony, you can't let him get away with this!" She stamped her foot. "Do something! Go right up to his office now end tell him. Go to Bruce Sheldrake! Come on, I'm going, too." "I thought of that, but we can't prove anything." "Yes, we can! We bought those hats and handbags and belts ourselves, our-selves, didn't we? You signed the slips for those dresses out of stock, didn't you? What's the matter with you?" ANTHONY picked up a sale's- IX. k. He snapped the rubber He opened and closed the band, book. -?: r-ftJr,., SWEDEN "JJ&m ? e &rj SOVIET P. US SI A SaiSa jj WCJvOi RUMANIA i . , ,. c .r,rrVt T TURKEY. Mediterranean Sea (x r,t v$ ATI is not pact-signing pleasantries for the Axis in Europe these days, with troubles for Germany and Italy popping up all over the map. Up in Norway and the Netherlands (1) there is sabotage and rioting by oppressed peoples; in Germany (2) British bombers are blasting shipyards and factories; in Yugoslavia (3) Axis pact got cold shoulder before agreement, excluding froop passage, was reported finally ready to be signed; in Russia (4) massed troops and frowning Soviet oflcials threaten German expansion in the southeast; in Albania (5) Greeks sent visitor Mussolini home without a victory; and Greek, British empire and Turkish troops (6) are ready for any attack by Germans from Rumania. Bulparia. Room Mothers Plan P.-T. Entertainment AMERICAN FORK --The room mothers of the American Fork Parent-Teacher association met Monday afternoon and made plans for the annual spring entertainment entertain-ment sponsored by this group, instead in-stead of an afternoon formal tea, the affair will consist of an informal in-formal social in the evening, the fir it Thursday in May. Mrs. Myrtle Houston room mother chairman, will act as general gen-eral chairman of the affair. The following committees were named Monday: program and entertainment, entertain-ment, Mrs. Delia Buckwalter, Mrs. Stella Taylor, Mrs. Thelma Pulley, and Mrs. June Carter; reception committee, Mrs. Edna Boley, chairman, Mrs. Nan 'Peck, Mrs. Florence Moss and Mrs. Benjamin Buckwalter; refreshment committee, commit-tee, Mrs. Alta Chipman, Mrs. Leah Wright, Mrs. Myrtle Mercer, DOLLARS TO DOUGHNUTS At last he said, "The fact is, Bee, I'm realizing now what a bad mistake mis-take I mad. I should have listened to the old man. He wanted me tJ take a job in a bank. I I've been thinking I'll go around there at lunch time and toil him I'vts thrown up the sponge." His lips twisted. "Banks are more ethical than stores, perhaps, per-haps, and if I get a world-shaking banking idea ..." "But, Anthony j-ou belong here! You're valuable to this stoe! The very fact that he thought your idea good enough to steal why, he must be slipping so badly he's got to steal ideas somewhere! If he were any good, it hi3 job were secure, he wouldn't do such things!" She grabbed his arm. "You're not leaving, you're going right up with me to that crook's office!" "Bee, if we do that, you'll lose your job. It's all right about me. As I told you, I I have a chance at romcthing else." He looked down at her. miser ably. "I didn't want to use any influence I might have I mean. the influence of friends. . . . I've always thought pull was a shabby way to get ahead. But now that I hare you, I I've got to make more money. And I'll do anything any-thing to get a better job. But it'll take time. And meanwhile, if you iose your Job" "The devil with my job. An thony, tome up there with me this minute!" Ehe dragged him to the elevator. "I think you should be ashamed of. yourself, not standing up for your rights! Where's your pride, Ajouiz..v That merchandise manager man-ager has stolen from you. And you'd take it! You'd walk out and let him get the credit for something some-thing you worked hard to create!" The elevator operator turned around and stared. Beatrice paid no attention. rN the sixth floor, Anthony drew Beatrice into the corner near the fire exit. His face was very sober. He put his hands on her shoulders, looked squarely into her eyes. "I don't want you to do this just for me, Bee," he said. "I'm all for it, and I'm mad clear through, and I can get another job anyway. But it'll make trouble for you. Are you sure you want to?" "Of course, I'm sure!" She patted his lean cheek. "Don't worry about me. I can take care of myself. You'd better start worrying wor-rying about that merchandise manager. I'm going to kill him!" "Bee, listen," His arms tight Mrs. Lucile Ellison, and Mrs. j Eileen Loveridge, invitation and publicity commttee, Mrs. Maurice i Davies, Mrs. Reuben Adams, Mrs. ; John Varney and Mrs. Kenneth ; Singleton. PRLMAKY TO MEET PLEASANT GROVE Officers Of-ficers and teachers of the Timpan-ogos Timpan-ogos stake Primary association will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. in the Third ward chapel in monthly union meeting. Mrs. Rose Radmall, stake board president, urges all ward workers to be present, as plans for the summer activities are to be made in the departmental sessions. Final instructions for ward Primary conferences will also be given. Total philatelic value of all stamps in possession of dealers and collectors of the world is estimated es-timated at $900,000,000. COPYRIGHT. 14t. NEA SERVICE. INC ened. "I'll go in by myself. That way, he can't blame yo'i." "I wouldn't miss it for the world!" But she wras toucned at Anthony's concern for her. He said, "All right, if that's the way you want it." His smile flashed. "I might as well tell you the truth. I was intending to come up here and wipe the floor up with him, just for luck, even if I couldn't prove anything. But I didn't want you mixed up in it in any way." There was a stenographer out side the merchandise manager's office. "I don't know if Mr. Fletcher can see you now," she said doubtfully. "What is it about?" Beatrice walked right past her and opened the door. In the imposing im-posing office, a small paunchy man sat at a large desk. He looked up in surprise. When he saw Anthony, An-thony, his face hardened. "YyilAT do you want?" he rapped. "I want en explanation of that co-ordinated clothes idea that was so rotten when I walked in here with it," Anthony answered grimly. "I want to know how it got so good, after I left, that you're going to try it out. I want to know why you didn't play square with me. And I want to know if you think I'm going to let you get away with that!" "Why, you you " "Save your breath!" advised Beatrice coldly. "I happened to work out some of the details of that plan with Mr. Bradley. Those samples he brought up wcr things I'd selected. We have ttu sales slips for everything but the dresses." Mr. Fletcher got up. He walked out from behind the big desk. His eyes were steelly. "An employe of this store walked in hero with an idea," he said. "He worked on it. The store likes the idea and is using it. What of it?" His voice was a bark. "What do you expect ex-pect now? Flowers?" "But you took the credit for it!" Beatrice cried. "You didn't even see that he got a rake that his good work was acknowledged you can't stand there end tell me this is the way such things are usually handled." "Get out of my office!" Mr. Fletcher turned back to his desk. "Maybe you'd l;ke to see the general gen-eral superintendent about this terrible injustice," he flung over his shoulder. "That is exactly what we'll do. Beatrice reached for the tele phone. "What's more, we'll see him right here in thi3 office." (To Be Continued) |