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Show PAGE 2 "SShSI?, ffSEV mf" DAILY HERALD Prejudice Bows to Democracy As Jap-Americans Make Good have not come through. The Central Trades Council is interesting interest-ing itself in the matter, and presumably pre-sumably the bakery local is waiting wait-ing for instructions. Even this may prove to be for the best. It has led such persons as the YMCA's industrial secretary, secre-tary, the pastor of Hugh's church, a young lawyer who is counsel for .the Red Cross, and others like them to take an interest in the situation. Hugh is to appear before be-fore the Council. The result may be a more intelligent acceptance of the right of these American citizens to earn an honest living than would have come if the question ques-tion never had been raised. By S. BURTON HEATH NEA Saff Correspondent "KALAMAZOO, Mich., April 6 UE) The last time I saw Hugh Kiino he sat on a plank bench in a mess hall at the Jerome, Ark., relocation re-location center and talked about the plight of our 70,000 Nisei, while his wife, Ruth, threw a farewell fare-well party for the little friends of their 2-year-old son Carl. The Kiinos were leaving Jerome Jer-ome that afternoon to try their luck in a Caucasian, world containing con-taining an undue number of thoughtless persons inclined to feel that "a Jap's a Jap, and I don't care whether he's an American Amer-ican citizens or not." This morning I visited Hugh and Ruth and Carl again, in their home here. Hugh was asleep after a night's work, but Ruth insisted on awakening him. I had come here to get an an-iwer an-iwer to a question I posed last year, after visiting Jerome: "What will happen to Kiino?" This report re-port should be preceded by the reminder re-minder that Hugh is a Nisei who failed to be employed by the F.B. : Twenty applicants for U. S. 1. only because he never troubled citizenship papers from Utah, to learn the Japanese tongue. j Duchesne and Wasatch countlea Six Nisei in Crew i took their final examinations Hugh now is foreman of the j Monday in the district court un-cake un-cake mixing department in a good-J der the direction of Del Sullivan, sized bakery. He has 6ix Japanese-' U. S. naturalization examiner. Americans working under him on J It is planned to present the na-the na-the night shift. Five are members turalization certificates at a of his family his niece and Ruth's special program to be held May father, brother, sister and broth-1 3 in conjunction with "I Am an er-in-law. Ruth's brother has en- American Uay" ceremonies, listed and is waiting to be called ! The applicants who took the ex-into ex-into service. The brother-in-law laminations Monday are Jacob England Has 'Em, Too Naturalization Applicants Take Final Examination Twenty applicants for Despite pices of union heads and government crack-down, crack-down, 135,000 men remain idle in shipyards and coal mine pits 20,000 shipyard enai-rm enai-rm worker strike in Belfast; 25,000 shipbuilding ship-building mm4 engineering engineer-ing apprentices out in Tyneside, Clydeside districts, dis-tricts, Huddersficld and Middlesbrough areos ' z4. . ''-",JM . Mm. i3i JWGttSCM W&Stf crpeprodc- m ELAH has been classified 1-A, and expects ex-pects to be called any day for pre-induction pre-induction physical examination. Hugh majored in political science sci-ence in college and Ruth in bacteriology. bac-teriology. They had no experience Medived, Mary Tido, Rudolph H. Hiller, John Balgrie, Eugene Bernardi, Pauline Binder, John G. Dannenfeld. Helen Johanna Hall, Johan Nystrom, Frank Lietner, Roma Wight Walter, James Ellis The U. S. isn't the only nation that has to contend with strikes in industries vita! to the war ellort, as the above map of British Isles shows. Despite pleas of union officials and a government crackdown, crack-down, some 135 000 men remained idle in England's coal mines and shipyards In a "work or fight" move, government issued notices to report for military draft to 25.000 apprentices striking at northern shipyards. Legislative Delegation From Utah County Sponsors Local Resolutions as domestic servants. iuai io wi. .jna. MLcnaoi, Anna thev did not stay long in their first , Hansen Erickson, and Flora M. nosition in JacKspn, tnougn meir nuuon oi umn ouruy emplover wanted them to stay. Neither did Hugh know anything any-thing about baking. But he caught on fast. r rom v asat.cn County were Martha J. Thorsen and Johanna Watkins; from Duchesne, Anna Nielsen, Stephen Jancie, and An- Before I saw Hugh here. I talk-;drea de Fabrizio, who. on becom- d with two officials of the DaK- ing a citizen, is Americanizing his ery. name to Andrew Defa. Don't Burn Your .'Grass, Leaves! "He's 100 per cent in every WAV. thev told me. "A good work er. He's doing a job for -which j usually we- use somebody withj five or six years of experience." j Talk Hurt Business Hueh's employers had quite tit of trouble awhile ago about their Japanese-American help.'Bv DR T L MARTIN They had discharged two ineffici-; Agriculture Committee, ent workers, who went around chamber of Commerce telling that the bakery was replac- j Many of our people are raking lng Americans with Japanese. A their lawns at the present time number of retail dealers stopped !ancj accumulating a lot of fine buying the bakery's products. 'grass and partially decomposed! "Hugh was very broadminded Heaves. This Is being piled intoj about it," the manager told me. j garbage can and being caried, "He said if things got worse they jaway as garbage or being burned.: would slip out quietly. He didn't, This is the very stuff that should want to jeopardize our business, be put on our victory gardens.! He said he did have faith enough Put on manure, leaves, and grass In the sportsmanship of the Amer-! rakings into the soil to improve! j i- t tiiat. if thev its physical condition, and your. J vein yvuyic ,v wT-ww - w , . - the facts, thev would give: victory gardens will be much bet-i It is noticeabl, too. that many our citizens are putting on their lawns large quantities of manure. This is a great mistake. Manuring lawns this way is not a good thing .It smothers the. oener peopie. 'J Vrass temnorarilv. weed seeds can, and Hughs group, oraauauy xne. pt startff1 nnd it js unsi(rhtlv. j whispering campaign died down. Beoause of 8llch experiences "a Its one unfortunate result was statement as: -Manure for lawns that Julia Dekuzaku, Kutn s sis- jg not a Rood thing." Is probably ter, who had been on the day shift, true. If manures are used rightly had to be let go. "The other girls on the lawns, thoro is not anv-all anv-all bawled when we had to let thing on parth hotter. All that Julia go." the manager told me. a person needs for an ordinary! She now has been re-hired on the sized lawn is two gunny sacks full! night shift. !of dried, powdered cow or shepi There still is at least some anti- manure. In thit powdered state Japanese-American feeling here. I 'sprinklo it on the lawn in such heard it expresse : by two taxi- small amounts that it can not be cab drivers, one who "took me to easily after it has been ap- the bakery and one who took me plied. Such manure fertilizers will to Hugh's house. But it is directed ?ivp a strength to the lawn that q etoca against norenns can not he obtained anv other yv f J t" o noco ovtrontinn o n H rtrSt W R era i not thpRp inri i vidua r tiliZPF tt,s-,.k,. ooe,oH thaf. this manurr n,- 1,, isn't necessary, however. If this folks went out of tneir wav to oe , v, . , - . , . Ul 1 ' ( 1 1 i tl 1 : LI I f USfU III LllfOC the Japanese-Americans fair and ter, i i. of The bakery stood by Its guns. The local ministerial and teachers' teach-ers' associations, and many of the better people, backed the bakery The house and senate delegation delega-tion from Utah county who at tended the special session which ended Saturday, went all out for two resolutions of special significance sig-nificance for this region The j Geneva steel plant and the Central Cen-tral Utah Vocational school. Both 'resolutions were passed by botn ! houses and signed by the gover-jnor. gover-jnor. ! The Geneva resolution was in ef fect a memorial, directed to congress, con-gress, from the people of the state of Utah, asking that no effort ef-fort be spared by government agencies to insure, not only completion com-pletion of the plan, including the structural mill, but continued op-eration op-eration after the war to serve western markets. The resolution was sponsored by Senator Emil K. Nielsen of Provo in the senate. The Vocational school resolution was sponsored by five Utah county coun-ty legislators in the lower house. Roberts, Elliott Grotegut, Anderson Ander-son and Loveridge. It provided for the appointing of a legislative committee to investigate in-vestigate Find ascertain facts of the operation of the school and the advisability of making it a part of the Utah educational school system. The text follows : BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF UTAH: WHEREAS. The Central Voca tional School located at Provo, jUtah, has beeni instrumental in i educating and training thousnds of Utah's young men and women with specilized trades and vocations, voca-tions, and ! WHERAS, said school has been principally maintained from funds of the federal government, said school is well supplied with valuable val-uable equipment which would be 'an asset to the 'state school system, sys-tem, and j WHEREAS, should the present .finance and maintenance of said O r Vl .". 1 1 nnaca If lYIllf hit aVn-iflATl( 'and proper that said school continue con-tinue to exist and operate as a part of tHe schools of the State ;of Utah. ! BE IT THEREFORE R E-SOLVED, E-SOLVED, that a legislative com-jmittee com-jmittee be appointed, consisting of six members, three to be appointed ap-pointed by the speaker of the iUtah House ofxs Representatives jfrom the house -membership, and I three to be appointed by the (president of the Utah State Sen-ate Sen-ate from the membership of that (body, whose duties shall be t j ... . loli6uh, ci'il UILVI11UI1C L1IC : actual facts of 'operation of the Central Utah Vocational School located at Provo, Utah, and ! whether or not it would be proper and expedient for the legislature of 1945 to make said institution a part of the educational school ! system of the State of Utah. Redecorate in ALMOST NO TME AT ALL WITH fj ma ci col m : Jura-Ions RES. U. S. PAT. OFF COST ONLY $26PR ROOM The ammoniam sulfate fer- is good and may be vised of desired. Tt nice to Hugh and Ruth and Carl. emnll Dmnnnte thn nt.llAm "Whave been accepted in every ;thf linsiKhtljnesSi and the expense place and under every situation," :prohlpm will bf. neutralized' Let Ruth summarized it. us havp victorv gardens and fine Ruth attends the First Method- lawns this summer jn proVo, ist Church. "Everybody is cordial ; and friendly." she said. "They .go out of their way to invite me to functions and group meetings, and come in their cars to get me. One lady invited me to help the Red Cross, and I go once a week and help make surgical dressings. I go to meetings of the Nautilus Club, a social organization for young married people, once a month. Everybody is fine."' Will Haw Hearing There is one fly in the ointment. Hugh is a member of the Bakery and C'onfectionarv Workers Inter-1 national Union of America. A.F. of L. Most of his fellow workers have applied. But their cards ur to hi ip eusiisi thoh- eucMiT do ts Minions oo Average jnom: JO (jkS -, T,i,nml' I, .tii,. ui vi . . m sSV---- " s' L goe on quickly, easily! t uno coat covers mosi I ev Sr.; ., . I i One coat covers most urfa:r . . . evn cement, bricks! Dries in one hour : : : no unpleasant paint odor. Tb rpst: 4S00 s'rr'. lv m-jr itcnS- b.nc trur! unthr oi.'Aoeo vcisht. S 1 .- i Paint A : , remamj DURA-TONt: , remains io mrrt (toemmenf rsquirtmenrj, n rcr-mix-d paint mutt pss thu test and rrtjm r ler 5( rt niijfuna paint Mm. Wc rrued DI :R A TONt against four lead-ins lead-ins runis of Similar tvr. Here are tire tigures on "paint iilm tetniining." Point 015 I! It' tragic bow wme girls Ioe their frirotU and ruin their dresse because of pert-piralion odor and Mains. And there" no cxcupc for it! It's easy to ve drcM-6, it's easy to eave friends. Uee Arrid, the Dcwcrfam deodorant that helps keep your armpits dry end remove the odor from rwTt-piration. Arrid is safe and dependable for these S rcabons : 1. Does not irritate pLin. Does not rot dresc or men's shirts. . Pm'ESS i'Wiw ,t 11. At .: f. ''," tC;Vr ' V I nur.tr. i:.'.. ,re r -n r. 4 nies I ' f i mirh ' Al-r. fr,.m E T K'fran t'ruE Co I A,if - ""'" o' i 7 " ""9 7 Fashionable flat finish.;: ' '.1 :f rf! SrwT V eh ncl free from glare! Mt n Vv. I .V .... 60- V I SMART COIORS-PIUS WHITC V c At LU 5 I vc LT AT v y THE FRIENDLY STORES f if Maiicol Dura -Ton i a T?jrr-M ri?r ownri by Uambie Stor, lac. DURA-TON 1-95 OW TO RUIN DRESSES AND LOSE FRIENDS 2. TYrvrnM tindfT-arm rxlor Hop pcrfniration safelv. 3. A pure white, antiseptic, Mai crran. 4. No tvaiiing to dr-. Can be used right afler chavinp. 5. AwardcdApiH-oval ScahWAnirrtcan Institute of LaundcHn - harm-Ie?s harm-Ie?s to faLrir. LVe Arrid regularly. rrid in the largc-t Helling dcotlorant. Sold t all fnrfs(iplins toilet goods -10c, 3)c and 5'V a jar. fm mm em -ns " LK S Her Easter Mm Dress Is Here See the stinhin brigade! Heaps 'n' heaps of daisy-fresh cottons tops with tiny, maids, with mummy, too! Dirndls, pinafores, pina-fores, basque-waisted pret'ties! Gay florals, candy stripes, dots, checks many with spanking-white trims. All so lovable, tubbable ... all thriftily low prices. Sizes 1 to 6 7 to 14 Downstairs LEWIS LADIE'S STORE It's Smart To Be Thritfy" Provo, Utah to 22.50 2.98 VWm&m hr j EASTER Fashion Hea'dlimers! Spring's fashion-hit hats budget priced! Wonderful chance to have that "extra" hat you need! Choose from beguiling baby flattops, flat-tops, Tiny Sailors, berets, postillions smooth cloche brims! Felts, straws, fabrics. We specialize in large and matron head sizes. Bags to Match . Gloves to Match . . . . . 2.98 to 7.98 . 1.00 to 3.98 LEWIS LADIE'S STORE IVs Smart To Be Thrifty Provo, Utah |