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Show SECTION TWO PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAH) DAILY. HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1941 3 a- Saaday "KvrM -' - VaMlahad tar -the ' Wear Btmt. PraTo. Ctah. JEntera M eoond eUai ir at tha pMtttflM a Prwra. Uth, aiitfer tba act ec Marea i. im. - , - :" v' ' '- - ," ; - Gllmaa. Ntool e Retkajea. Natteaal AdrarUaiae Npn-mutiny Npn-mutiny Hw Ml am. ,raaae, etroK. ftmw, Im Ancaloe, Olwifc 1 77 Xrmtxr United Fiw, J. K. A. Barvlee. Cdltora xebaaea. -TBe Seripr .lel-a . Orealatlon. j hharnmlm itrau- fhfaacfe M the." Uad the mpnta tor atx ln'daB; by b tha roar la earn tie. Libert BinM BI M unmt flnruielal e-eere tha paper la at feelt. tt wlU reprint that part af the edrerUeameat jPhteh.the trpoiraphleai mlatak eeeura Si. Blessed Is the man that feareth the Lord, greatly la His commandment. Apprehensions are greater known. Livy. in Burging the Industrial Hatchet Every organized worker, and every man who has a responsible re-sponsible directive position- in industry ought to clip out and paste inhis hat these words from President Roosevelt's "Unlimited National Emergency" speech : "A nation-wide machinery for conciliation and mediation ofc industrial disputes has been set up. That machinery must be used promptly and without stoppage stop-page of work. Collective bargaining will be retained, but the American people expect that impartial recommendations recom-mendations of our government services will be followed fol-lowed both by capital and by labor." There is no disagreement about arming the nation. Isolationists agree that we must be armed to the teeth. So do interventionists. Both agree that it must be done with utmost speed. Unity on this: the job must be pushed relentlessly re-lentlessly forward at increasing speed, without interruption. Unless this job is done, organized labor is finished. Privately owned industry is finished. Both are in the same boat in this emergency, and in that same boat are all the American people and the way of life we have loved. The plainest common sense says: "Don't rock the boat!" Two things the American people are in no mood to tolerate: 1. Strikes run to further political policies formed abroad and strikes called for trivial reasons, or without completely exhausting every effort to adjust reasonable grievances and to align wages justly with changing living conditions without with-out making them a leader, in a rising price spiral. 2. Any effort to use the emergency to smash unions, to block and nullify . genuine collective bargaining or legitimate legiti-mate organizing effort. Let us not deceive ourselves. We are not going to achieve a completely strikeless industrial situation devoid of all labor controversy. Britain has not achieved it, and there is good reason to doubt that Germany and Russia have achieved complete industrial 'concord, even though by force they are able to prohibit actual strikes. Men held to the job by force are not the best or most productive workers. But the number of strikes can be cut below the danger point, far below the two million man days lost through them since Jan. 1. Labor leaders, and every man with a voice in choosing those leaders, must realize that with the right to organize goes the duty to devote the power of that organization to a public cause that may now mean life or death. Industrial leaders must realize that with their right to possess and direct private industry goes the duty .to devote that industry, to the public need in time of crisis. Both will, we are certain, rise to do their duty to the country that has assured them those rights. Commencement Talk 4mw$$ sscrtie class or it w!lMpir ; , j PmJlJtie Bandar Moraine Herald " Corporation. ' Boot iWpBer M Mmrm. carrier la Utah eovnXy. M montha In adrahce: f t.tl tha rear. eoontr. 9: atejde eoanty M.H " reeponelblllty for any arrwa that delighteth Psalms 112:1. proportion as things are un- ' OUT OUR WAY WHAT DO . WOO WANT "TO TTRy QR1LL FORf YOU WOULONPT HAVE TVC NERVE. OR. HEART TO KILL". ANYTHING? IP VOU DIO KNOW-HOW .TO SHOOT av yri arBMICE. HC V t. m. ma u. s. pt. oft. -- Washington Merry-Go-Round '(OontiniMd From Pag Oa) Sam," the president again smilingly smil-ingly replied. "Well, do you mean freedom of the seas as limited by the Neutrality Neu-trality Act, or freedom of the seas as we understood it before combat zone restrictions were set up?" The answer and genial smile were the same as before, "Draw your own conclusions." The one bit of concrete information infor-mation congressional leaders brought away was that the purpose pur-pose of the speech was to unify the nation behind the government in meeting the growing menace oi a Nazi attack. The president laid great emphasis on this danger and the need for unity. 'I think this speech will unite the country," he declared. 1 WHITE HOUSE MAIL I The tons of mail poured into the White House by isolationist organizations plus bundist-left-wing allies had little effect on the president. For two reasons: First, it was so patently an organized deluge. Second, a considerable portion of the letters and cards were anonymous anony-mous and of a disgusting nature. When the flood first started Roosevelt was impressed. But as the mail was analyzed it became apparent that only a small percentage per-centage was spontaneous and sincere; sin-cere; the rest was inspired. The propaganda mail is easily spotted. Vvnen the White House receives 1,000 letters in a single day, aU using the same language, they are worthless as an indication indica-tion of true public sentiment. Thej AREN'T THERE SOLDIERS WEARlNie MEDALS' FOR SHOOTIMO VVORK 1H QUARTERMASTER'S AND OTHER MENTS OF T AfWV.WHO. NEVER. FIRE; A. SHOT . AOAANST" THS ENEMY? ft Ml THE MONEY INSTINCT are obviously part of an organized organ-ized drive. Mail sent to individuals by different dif-ferent isolationist organizations is often found to be addressed by the same addressing machines another indication of a central source. More propaganda mail is coming com-ing from the America First committee com-mittee than from any other group. In contrast, there are no propaganda propa-ganda letters in the president's iavor. All mail supporting his foreign policy comes from persons who write individual letters, following fol-lowing no pattern. 87,000 LETTERS The ordinary day's mail on regular reg-ular government subjects (social security, WPA, farm problems, etc.)" numbers from 3 to 4 thousand. thou-sand. The war issue vastly increased in-creased the mail. A high ligure of recent weeks was 37,0u0 letters in a single day. Uv But the all-time record of White House mail was established when there was ho controversy involved. involv-ed. This was on the president's birthday, January 30, lt37, when the march of dimes brought the astounding total of 158,000 letters let-ters in one day. About three-fourths of the ordinary or-dinary mail coming to the White House is answereu. Mail that is obviously propaganda receives no answer at all. - t GO EASY ON TIKES Those flossy, white-walled fires on the family car may soon become be-come a rarity, together with tire mileage guarantees, high speed driving, and week end motor trips. These are some of the measures under serious consideration by defense chiefs to conserve the nation's na-tion's rubber supply. How soon drastic curbs will have to be imposed depends on what happens in the far east and upon the increasingly tight shipping ship-ping situation. The United States .s entirely dependent on rubber .ransported from the East Indies and Malaya. At present there is a six to eight months reserve on hand, with new shipments arriving fairly fair-ly regularly. But no one can pre-jict pre-jict how long they will continue-Last continue-Last year U. S. rubber consumption con-sumption totaled 648,500 tons, of which about 500,000 tons' went into tires and tubes. Due to heavy defense requirements and increased car sales, present consumption con-sumption is estimated at the rate of 800,000 tons, an increase which worries army officials. 1 , They would like to see immediate immedi-ate restrictive measures imposed, but so far have not been able to sell the idea to OPM chiefs. " The OPM holds that the 20 per cent cut in new auto output, likely' to be curtailed more in a few months, will make a big dent in rubber consumption. Also, they are counting strongly on the new synthetic rubber plants belatedly approved by Jesse Jones. How much they will produce is still conjectural. It curbs are put on the use of rubber, first hit will be tires and tubes, because between 72 and 77 per cent of crude rubber imports go for this purpose. White-walied tires will be banned ban-ned because it takes as much as 20 per cent more rubber than the ordinary casing to obtain a perfect per-fect white finish. Driving speeds and week-end pleasure trips will be cut down, and mileage guarantees guar-antees eliminated in order to force more, careful use of tires, particularly on trucks. (Copyright, 1941, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) ITALIANS INTERNED MISSOULA, Mont.,' June 4 L'.K) Ninety Italian officers and 162 teamen settled down to the rou tine of the Fort Missoula detention deten-tion camp today, joining some 840 others who preceded them. The new arrivals, like , the others, were taken from Italian ships interned at various United States ports. J by Williams ATZ INSTINCT IN HERC PA--SHE'S GOT HER EYE ON TH' NICKELS SOME OF TH' BEST SHOTS GET MAfcKSMANS PAY AN' then err A JOB WHERE THERE5 iO SHOOTIN7 THAT'S HER A PAV PAV SOLDIER 1 U Back From Africa Nobody should kick because Dr. Mary Cushman, above, is going to take it easy. In the first place she's 70, and in the second place her medical practice for the last 11 years has been in Portuguese West Africa. She just returned to U. S. on the S. S. Siboney. Aged Man Killed In Idaho Crash BLA CK FOOT, Ida., June 4 UJI Death of 85-year-old J. W. Tanner Tan-ner of Thomas in an auto collision col-lision today brought Idaho's 1941 traffic fatality toll to 47. Officers reported Tanner died of injuries suffered when thrown from his car by the impact of a headon collision. Tanner was makine a turn on the highway near Thomas wHen he reportedly struck an auto driven ty Lavere Wareing, 16, Blackfoot. SOVIET WITHDRAWS GREECE RECOGNITION MOSCOW, June 4 (U.H) The Soviet government today withdrew with-drew its diplomatic recognition of Greece. A communique by the foreign commissariat advised the Greek legation '4 that Russia no -longer considers diplomatic relations valid in view of the "loss of Greek sovereignty" and the fact that Russia norlonger has diplomatic representatives in Greece. 4- AUNT HET By ROBERT QUILLEN The way Mary sacrifices herself don't seem like a virtue to me. Sacrlficin your life ain't noble unless what you're sacrlficin for in worth It." Christian Science Church The . Christian Science, lesson sermon Jar Sunday was on the subject: "Ancient and Modern Necromancy, Ne-cromancy, alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounced." Among the scriptural references refer-ences are: "Blessed are the unde-filed unde-filed in the way, who walk in the law of the Lord." (Ps. 119:1). "God hath spoken once; twice have I heard this; that power belongeth unto God." (Ps. 62:11). "Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication suppli-cation with thanksgiving let your requests be "made known unto God. And the peace of God, which; passeth all understanaing, snau keep your nearts ana minas through Christ Jesus." (Phil. 4:6, 7). The following excerpts are taken from Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy: "Christian Science Sci-ence goes to the bottom of mental action, and reveals the theodicy which indicates the rightness of all divine action, as the emanation eman-ation of divine Mind, and the consequent con-sequent wrongness. of the opposite oppo-site so-called action, evil, occultism, occult-ism, necromancy, mesmerism, animal magnetism, hypnotism." (p. 104:13-18). "As adherents ,of Truth, we take the inspired Word of the Bible as our sufficient guide to eternal Life. And we solemnly sol-emnly promise to watch, and pray for that Mind to be in us which was also in Christ Jesus; to do unto others as we would have them do unto us; and to be merciful, merci-ful, just, and pure." (p. 407:3, 4, 24-27). Junior Stock Show Opens Today SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, June 4 (ILE) The fifth annual Inter-mountain Inter-mountain Junior Fat Stock show opened here Tuesday with 300 boys and girls from five western states showing off their prize livestock. More than $3000 cash and merchandise mer-chandise will be awarded prize winners, while sale of the stock was expected to bring the youthful youth-ful farmers about $37,000. Jury Selected To Try Slayer FAROWAN, Utah, June 4 (UJ! Selection of a jury to try Donald Don-ald L. Condit on charges of murdering mur-dering Harold A. Thorne, Salt Lake City grocery salesman, continued con-tinued in the Fifth district court today with attorneys indicating O SERIAL STORY r FOOTSTEPS IN THE BY ELINORE COWAN STONE YESTERDAY Deborah Stephaa apeaA a happy apriaar, taiaar. daarlair. Bat there la o aaeatloa of Ioto, ao klsaea. Aaa-ela coatlaaea her waralaKa. Thea oae alarfct ahe eoamea hone from the atoviea, tella Dehorah ahe aaw aewareela of a reeeat Band eetlaa; which raM la a riot. MAaa who do yoa aappoae waa thoref" GOODBY TO DREAMS CHAPTER IV "JT was nobody in the world," Angela announced triumphantly, triumph-antly, "but your beautiful, golden-haired golden-haired Stephan." The cold cream jar slipped from Deborah's fingers and shattered against the leg of a chair. In a moment, however, she was able to say with an almost convincing con-vincing laugh, "Not really? . . , I'll never doubt again that you have second-sight, Angie. . . . Well, did he get arrested?" "I don't know. The news flash didn't last that long." Angie spoke with heart-felt ret gret. Then as she looked from the gobs of cold cream that spattered the floor to Deborah, her face suddenly puckered like that of a child who knows that he has been naughty, and her voice went flat "I just thought you ought to know," she blurted. . "I mean oh, Deb, I'm so sorry!" a "RUT after the lights were out, Deborah did not sleep. Instead, In-stead, she lay rigid, following with wide eyes the rippling pattern cast upon the ceiling by the headlights of passing cars. "Angie," she said suddenly into the darkness, "I've been trying to remember what was that jingle the Portuguese fishermen on the Cape used to sing about the fog?" When . Angela only murmured in drowsy protest, she insisted, "But of course you remember. . . . Something about the fog always claiming its own, wasn't it?" "Oh that?" Angle yawned. "Just . some superstitious nonsense. non-sense. . . . Let's see translated very freely, it goes something like this: '"'111 fated is that which comes otit of the fog, for' just a momentfor mo-mentfor always in the .end, it must return whence It came. ;And never there's some more, but I . can't recall it- at the moment." - "I wonder what it means if anything" "'It anything is rig?t For Heaven's sake, . go to sleet!" But then, all of a sudden, Angie was wide awake, too, i "What made you a.4 that, Debby?" she demanded, 'i THIS CURIOUS WORLD 'AMON& BEGAN WITH PREHISTORIC WILD SPECIES VS S&AAJLS TO OTME. , vANCMER. WHILE HUNITIrsIG. - COP. t91 AY MA 6EJiICfcC CXPECTATfON WAS FRCW ANSWER: Front view Driver Attacked By Hitch-Hiker MISSOULA, Mont., June 4 ttlH Frank E. Martz, Jr., of Missoula, was found dying of a fractured skull on the highway near St. Ignatius today, presumably the victim of a hitch hiker who slugged slug-ged and robbed him. Martz died en route to a hospital hos-pital in St. Ignatius. County authorities here said they believed young Martz picked up a hitch hiker while driving to St. Ignatius, was hit over the head and thrown from his car, in which his assailant drove away. that taking of testimony probably would start tomorrow morning. An additional panel of 50 prospective pros-pective jurymen was summoned today by Judge Will L. Hoyt to supplement the original panel of 80. "Oh why," just something I'd been reading, I suppose," Deborah improvised lamely. a a TVEXT day was the last meeting of the Shakespeare seminar. . . . And next day, Stephan did not come to class at all. He had not made any engagement with her for that evening. All the next day, while Deborah was packing to go home, she listened for -the telephone, tele-phone, thinking that he would call at least to say, "Goodby!" But he did not Not that it mattered, she kept telling herself. Except that all along, knowing Stephan had been like reading a fascinating tale, which led. you on and on without really telling you much, but which you followed eagerly from chapter to chapter because of its implied promise of exciting revelations reve-lations to come. . . . Well, now the story had simply stopped without even a "To Be Continued." That Stephan was German, she had always taken for granted, although al-though he had never said so in so many words. But that he could possibly be all those other things that Angie believed of him had been just funny until that evening eve-ning when Angie had come home from the theater with her monstrous mon-strous story. . . . From any one but Angie, the story would have been ' incredible; but whatever might be Angie's faults curiosity, curios-ity, impertinence, even sometimes some-times malicious mischief she would not lie. a a a rfHE next morning Deborah and Angela started back to Cape Cod in the little car they had driven to California. The old Lovett house sat just across the street 'from the water front. The opposite lot running down to the shore, had been kept as an open parkway, so that the early, seafaring Lovetts might always have an unimpeded view of the ocean they loved. M . The house had been built in the golden days when Yankee clippers sailed the Seven Seas, and fleets of fishing fish-ing smacks still kept the shipyards ship-yards and wharves of the old town busy. The structure was of white frame with green shutters. Originally Orig-inally a modest two-story building, build-ing, after repeated additions by generations of Lovetts, it now rambled through unpredictable passageways and ells, up and down steps from one level to another. an-other. Above the fanlight over the hospitable front door, the winged figure-head from Great-great-great-grandfather Abner Lovett's I I FEEL. UKE ) AH OLDMJV4 By William Ferguson ' Dovtxj 1 WHAT - THIS FJ6URE1 r. m. mc. u s. mt. err. of a Spanish mackereL Cranium Cracker SUMMER FLOWERS April showers brought & flowers, but June and July h their share of summer blooms well. Blossom forth with knov edge about gardens and try y luck on this colorful quiz. 1. What are the four commc colors of roses. 2. Are gladiolus, dahlias am begonias planted from bulbs t. seeds ? 3. What is the difference be tween perennial -and annu. flowers ? 4. If you planted some sterr bergia lutea and convallaria 2j your flower garden, what wou" come up? 5. What European country wt famous for its tulips, and wh.v city in Michigan is one of Anici ica's tulip centers? Answers on page Answers on Page Five, Sec. T Andorra is a tiny country 1 in the Pyrenees mountains tween France and Spain. ; ,a FOG COPYRIGHT. 141. NEA SERVICE. INC. almost legendary clipper, Bonnie May, still stood guard wreath in one hand, a gild Ax. t trumpet in the other, peering I - ' A. M a. on Beii -consciously, u naa aiway. When you wished to enter th i house, you announced your ar rival with a ringing peal on the old ship's bell over the doorway. On the upper floor, outside the "Master's room," where Lovett snippers naq siepi xor genera- f t. ' 44- . a. i . a uuns, was wie iapiain s want, i semi-circular glassed-in porch overlooking the harbor. Hpt. 1 Deborah's grandfather, Admira Benjamin Lovett, U. S. N., retiree" had stood his last lonely watch. The long living room, panele with mahogany from the cabin another Lovett ship, occupied tL front wing of the street floor. 1 was a quaint, shabbily charmin room, from tne carved xeakwo screen and table from Singapc? J the Chinese rugs and Japan. -7 prints, the models of Lovett c1 j pers, the Oriental tapestries, ' ' ship's clock, the old bronzes. mc massive uiv-uuga uiai guaj, ; the hearth to Great-Aunt . v borah's samplers and hook mats, the room had chanced t? tk. . .' . J IL.i v I a : . : 1 1 ;il i v- t . ! 1 uiuuiicsixiuuijr wiuun jeooraj memory. T")EBORAH drove up to the f $f just in time for lunch. " Bridget Lanahan welcomed ' if from the stoop with a flirt of apron. She was a stout, wea. beaten woman of 55, blustery Cape Cod gale, with an equal pacity for high-handed bull and loyalty. : , 1 "Well, God be praised!" paconed above the roar of s. tl motor. "Mind the petuny's, Mii mi 1 Debby. Tis within an eyelash thim yer wheels are. . . . Lave car where she stands, and come i luncn aiore me. sounue s sat en tirely." " At Deborah's plate was a hea ui iiictu. sue xmiea mrouEn 1 her heart hesitated then leaped i . . . Half-way down was an c-. j velope addressed in - Stephan 4 bold hand. 4 It was a short letter. He ha ', been unhappy, Stephan wrote, no to have seen her again. He ha-been ha-been called away so suddenly tlu. he had not even had time to te1 ; 1 phone her. He had hoped, wb he came East, to call on her as - v had been good enough to sugges4 1 but circumstances had aris which made it Impossible for hJ to foresee his movements far -' advance. ." . . She had been A ceptionally kind to him 4 Kind! Deborah. , thought h Stephant . . ' ; ! (To Be Continued). & i MM |