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Show .cMl-GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1951 r Orcin-Geneva Times Published every Thuriday at Oiem, Utah - M NEFF SMART. Ediior and Publisher 'j'C E. WEEKS JR.. Associate Ediior 8. 5 cond class matter November 19, 1944 at the Coffee v 0rem Ulah' U"der ,he 8ct of March 3. 1897. P' I E! :SER: Utah State Press Association National Editorial Association Subscription Rates: in advance $3.00 NEVER WAS THERE A BETTER TIME .... K.m-fnforceir.ent, or lukewarm enforcement of rons of the year when the health of our children is 7 apparent jeopardy. (Enforcement requires money, UIWciatajiLi un. uu6v uiu nwi, jjiuviut; lor H.J i difficult to justify a non-enforced health or r.uch non-enforcement is in tho : v. j i. u " " muurc j polio season arm proves 10 ue an immediate and it is difficult to justify a non-enforced health or rce when cuch non-enforcement is in the middle , the polio season an a-nrrent polio hazard. Certainly, during this season, city officials should find l:e money and the fortitude to insist that sewage be jjro?ed of in compliance with the city ordinance. Cer-taitly, Cer-taitly, during this season, all residents of the city should be compelled to comply with garbage regulations. Certainly, Cer-tainly, during these hot days when mothers are panicked panick-ed with polio fears, attention might be given to practices J mir community which jeopardize the life ami limha of our youngsters. An ordinance is in the books. It clearly outlines prac-(i prac-(i which will protect the individual" and collective health of our community. It provides penalties for violation of such practices. Now, if ever; the provisions of the ordinance should be insisted upon. SMEARING A TECHNIQUE H. H. V.". in the Littleton (Colo.) Independent comes jp with some. definitions which would be amusing, if they didn't reflect an extremely dangerous technique currently being used to smear some mighty useful and honorable people. The terms below, according to H. H. W are' a few which are coming into accepted use by those interested in Hisrralitintr everything frnm the cfo0 . - . - o uui.i, uvyai UUCIll to the next door neighbor : 1. "Intellectual"' one who has had at least two years of college and preferably four or more ; one who is incapable of being 'practical' or "businesslike,' who has been so softened bv books and nrofessnrs that, hp is without doubt a fellow traveler or a full-blood Communist; Commun-ist; generally applied to "dreamers in the State Department' rat," "young lawyers in the Interior Department,' or people wno read too many books for their own good." 2. "Dinlnmnt" nhvimislv a anpnlrv fpllnw whn was J - . ..J 1 1 J w.v ,. ..v " - picked for his job by the process of elimination in which it was determined that he could give away more vital secrets to enemv sp-pnts nr hpfrov his nfltinn mnrp times without getting caught than others in the foreign sen ice. 3. "Left Winger" a person who once went to hear Henry Wallace speak in 1936 ; or who dislikes the Chic- i Tribune; or who majored in psychology and social science in school : or who favors government subsidies for other firms besides his own (crazy fool) : or' who wore a red necktie the night Norman Thomas came to town ; or who said. "Franco is as much of a dictator as Stalin, Mao. Tito, Feron and all the rest" ; or who campaigns annst racial prejudice; or who sometimes disagrees flith Taft or McCarthy ; or who does, says and believes cveral thousand other things. 4. "Aflminisf ratinn Snrrinvtor" nnp whn nrlmifi the present Truman administration is often wrong, but who on t aamit it is wrong all of the time. cretiy wishes to turn the U. S. over to the Reds lock, strvl- I 1 ' turn uarrei. j- '"Pacifist"' a person who won't take up arms !'S!n.st anybody including Communists which makes :m since he won't fight Communists, a Communist iffisellY Y SiK'h ond lir enr-li viio v a i'j tVo cmrif At , ' " -J tliiLl lJ V iiUWll IHtClIl.-) 1.7) in OJMl t v i. IN HO MAN'S UP it VVMAT LID THE SCOTCHMAN SAY TO HIS SON? START VOUO ih)ur. AYS EARLY BY SEEING .UNCERTIFIED NOX DEALER FOR Economical, cle an. "tFENDAPLE HEAT American Fork 607 1 co"eet Free Eitimalei I 6 U N T H E R S I I B. 1 Mrs. William Facer and daughters of South Gate, Calif., s visiting here with her parents, President and Mrs. Walter Hold-way Hold-way and family. CARTER'S SAW SEP iCE 371 Wesl 4ih Horlh Across from Silver Star U Dull 'Em I'll Sharpen Saws and Lawnmowers by machine. The aood l' lnv wrn'l so oood of'er all. Compare the minei of today with those f 50 years ago. There! a lot more tools in our mines now - almost $18,000 worth for every nine and smelter worker - all paid for out of Profits and savings. This equipment saves worK - increases production - lowers costs, and Wakes our jobs more secure." id 'J&S M S JSsNcS J&?i- J -RjN The Senator Reports To The People V Senator Arthur V. Watkini i There are some inside facts not generally known which should be of peculiar interest to Utahns. While Congress quibbles about the Western reclamation reclamat-ion program, and while the President announces a policy which bans new reclamation construction, neither the Congress, Con-gress, the President nor the people generally exhibit very much concern over our foreign aid program. While your government has stopped any new reclamation reclama-tion development in the West, it is spending millons and millions mil-lions of dollars all over the world for reclamation, power, roaas ana oiner aeveiupmeiiis. tiKtfiiiiiilr.HiiiitiitiitiKiitKUilniiiifiiiitiitiiMiiimmiiiiiiitiiilitiiiiiniiii VETERINARIAN DR. J. A. THOMAS, 395 West 10 Nor.h, Provo. Veterinary service for large and small animals. Telephone 2928 R. A17 ltllllllllltll4IIHHIIIIUIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIII!lHlllinillllNIIII)llillllfllUlllttill For instance, in the overseas territories of the United Kingdom, King-dom, France, The Netherlands, Belguim and Portugal alone we spent as of June 30, 1951 a total of $63,791,000. This money was spent for such things as water and power projects in the Belguim Congo; in British colonies it was spent for locust control in the Middle East, road development in Kenya Ken-ya and Malaya; Borneo lumber project; North Borneo roads, anri Hold Coast railroad and ment. This would mean that the $280,000 contained in the Department's De-partment's $4,600,000 fund for general investigations will be reduced in the same proportion as the overall fund. The $4,-600,000 $4,-600,000 approved in the Senate bill was cut $100,000 or one fortv-sixth. Therefore, the funds for Weber Basin will be reduced reduc-ed just a little over $6,000. The 8144,000 increase approved approv-ed bv the Senate for the Inter- mountain Indian school was re tained in the conference report, drainaee and irrigation in Brit-1 and the S2. 748. 000 needed to ish Guiana. complete the Duchesne tunnel For French territories it in- of the Deer Creek project -also ni,jj cmi-. itom! as road con-lwill be available to the Depart- tiLitH-v d"i-" " , . -i i; Woe Afrina nnrl ! ment of Reclamation under the Cameroons; coal and water; terms of the conference agree- development in Morocco; a pow-l ment. er project . in Casablanca; a wa-1 Synthelics va. Wool ter supply for Moroccan coast-: 1 al i.u.; lor petroleum pipeline More and more of. the details and )cf r.ery, a cellulose plant, cf yle government program for walkers' housing, project and -L .uancing the production of syn-scvcial syn-scvcial irrigation projects all in aietic wool are coming out into Mcnocco. 'In French Algeria t,e open. It is now official that s:n;i!ar projec's were financed. jt,e NPA has issued tax amort- Another 554,262,000 was jzat:on certificate in the amount spent on industrial projects in 0f $25,800,000 to the Chem-Bu:ma, Chem-Bu:ma, Formosa, Indo China 'strand Corporation to help fin-Inacnes.an fin-Inacnes.an Republic, Phillipines, ' ance the building of a plant to Tha land and Korea- ! ueg.n large-scale manufacture All of this is only part of the ; cf the synthetic fiber. This act-cct act-cct which American taxpayers; on was taken under authority mus- meet in imancing uui , contained in xne ueiense rro- wcrld-wide development pro-: duction Act. It authorizes tax gram. Yet the Western reclamation states, such as Utah, are pre cluded by order of the President nf the United States and by ar'inn nf a majority of Congress from starting any new projects even when they are related to defense. The Weber Basin pro ject is an example. Inferior Appropriations At trip Dresent time it looks like Utah items in the Interior Appropriations bill will be re tained, except lor weDer uasm where a percentage reduction will be made in line with an agreement between the conferees confer-ees of the House and Senate. The Senate-House conference agreed to split the difference in the House and Senate appropriations approp-riations for the Interior Depart- amortization for building and plant expansion undertaken in the name of National Defense. The issuance of the $25,800,000 tax exemption plum was officially offic-ially admitted and confirmed as a consequence of the furore which has been raised in the sheep and wool industry by published pub-lished reports that the Government Govern-ment plans a huge mass production produc-tion program involving an investment in-vestment of close to $500,000,-000. $500,000,-000. The Government assistance programs under the Defense Production Act can include not only tax amortization privileges, privil-eges, but also special priorities for the acquisition of scarce raw materials, Government loans, and special allocations of hard-to-get machine tools and other equipment- Meantime reports as to world Don't Buy a Mattress! UnlU You See OVERMAN'S New Mattresses, beautiful and sturdy. Trade in your old Mattress. Easy Terms. OVERMAN'S A Better Mattress for Less Money 35 NORTH 3rd WEST PROVO PHONE 717 W W ATKINS A A GRADE FLY SPRAY 6 Ways BETTER It KILLS flies quick! m Tt BrrFLS fi; durino the milking period. it will nui lAinj milk. It leaves stock CLEAN It takes LESS to do the job. It has NO DISAGREE-ABLE DISAGREE-ABLE ODOR. Joe Taylor "THE W ATKINS MAN" 115 East 10th South Orem Phone 0556 J5 Harold R. Baker returned home Saturday from Utah Valley Vall-ey hosp:'al where he has been since his injury in an automobile accident July 4. He will have to remain in bed for some time. wool supply conditions seem to indicate that there is enough natural wool being produced at home and abroad to meet current curr-ent demands, and wool prices have declined substantially reflecting re-flecting an end to wild speculation specula-tion which came as a result of ;he Korean war. Speculators are now trying to unload. Here is an idea to think about: Wouldn't it be better to sptnd 3300,000,000 on increasing our sheep population rather than spend it on a poor wool substitute substit-ute which if it were used generally gener-ally would go a long way to destroy the sheep industry? This'N That Etbyl Nielsen Hail TRY A PHILOSOPHY THAT FITS YOUR PERSONALITY Hi, Folks, Perhaps you've never thought of it and I rarely do but every person needs a philosophy that fits his own personality. I have a little philosophy that comes in handy when things go dead wrong: "Laugh and the world laughs with you weep and you weep alone." Stiil, this one doesn't cover the whole of living, one needs an iron clad way of life so as not to slip and get out of line when temptation might get the best of us. I have oiten said "Life beats he hell out of us if we'll let it". We can fight back or we can accept it or we can make something of it. Any way you figure it, a person needs a phil- s phy that fits their personally. personal-ly. Here is one man's philosophy, .', v, .10 knew him real well, can say in all truth that he lived it lived it wonderfully well and found happiness because of it. I shall pass it along to you. In the event you think you have a bet'er philosophy, I dare you to send it along to this column o that I can pass it along to my readers. MY PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE By J. A Owens "Man is that he might have joy." That quotation from an ancient Nephite prophet places a certain responsibility on mankind man-kind to work to the end that he might have joy. It is my belief that any individual in-dividual that has failed to achieve a reasonable degree of happiness has failed to achieve the purpose of his creation. I also believe that nothing a man does is wrong if it brings him happiness and does not interfere inter-fere with the happisess of anyone any-one else. In this case happiness is co-incident with freedom. Freedom is the right to do as one pleases so long as it does not interfere with the rights, or freedom of another. Carried beyond that point it becomes aggression and tyranny, and likewise becomes a crime (or wrong) in that it injures, or in- mterferes with the happiness of another. Nor must freedom become confused with license. License is the taking advantage of another an-other and thus license becomes crime. ... . Much has been said about pre-testination. pre-testination. I am -a believer in predestination to a limited degree. de-gree. To me predestination means that certain opportunities will come to one; that certain board avenues of travel will be available, but the providing of opportunity on the part of des-viny des-viny maVks the end of the predestination pre-destination and the human element el-ement of free agency determines events within the scope of predestined pre-destined opportunity, Pre-dest-;na'ion in its final analysis is opportunity. Work is a necessary factor in the development of man and an essential thing for true happiness. happi-ness. No man can be truly happy without work. To achieve hap piness with work, one mus! find joy in it and achieve, happiness happi-ness in accomplishment. The idle man is a parasite who interferes inter-feres with the rights (happiness) of others and thus commits crime. Voluntary idleness is crime. Distinction must be made between the man who is idle by choice and the man who is idle through circumstances over which he has no control. The latter is unfortunate and, while not a sinner, is ncver-the-less a 'failure to the degree of his un-happiness- The idler from choice is a wastrel, and a sinner in that he never achieves genuine hap- To Shed Light on the World This Week THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SA : "There is good cause to be concerned about .subversive influences currently o, crating both in and out of government. gov-ernment. Testimony t. ken by the committee at closed sessions convinces me that Congress and the whole country will do well to be constantly vigilant regarding this whole matter of subversives." Sen. ARTHUR V. W ATKINS, to reporters in Washington. "It is disturbing that so many Americans appear to be more interested in disparaging and discrediting Mr. Trumtin than in licking communism." Sen. IRVING M. IVES, Republican of New York before Colgate Univ. conference on foreign policy. "Whatever happens in Korea, we must take into account acc-ount what is happening in Iran, on the borders of Yugoslavia, in Indo-China and most of all, what we know to be going on inside the Soviet Union itself. . . . the military build-up of the Soviet Union . . . has no other purpose than to blackmail the free world into submission." HARRY S. TRUMAN. "We have already proved that Negro students are entitled to facilities equal in every respect to those provided pro-vided white students. When we press this advantage and the taxpayers find out how much it is going to cost them to set up a Ne.rro school system equal to that now available to white students, thev will sav, 'Let's all go to school together.' " HAROLD FLOWERS, Arkansas NTogro attorney. "We must understand that in final analysis the mounting cost of preparation for war is in many ways as materi illy destructive as war itself. We must find the means to avoid this great sapping of human energy ener-gy and resource. This requires leadership of the highest order a spiritual and moral lo dership " DOUGLAS MacArthur in Doston. "The basic philosophy of the administration is fallacious falla-cious in fighting communism in that it overemphasizes social reform as an antidote to Russian aggression." CLARENCE J. BROWN, R, Ohio, in House. "We are now in the third year of the Television Age. And our people are becoming less literate by the minute. min-ute. Along with the old patterns of existence, television is destroying the old standards of culture. As old habits decline, such as reading books and thinking thoughts, TV will absorb their time." HARRIET VAN HOHNE, World-Telegram and Sun critic. "My chief aim in life now is to keep my party on the straight road to internationalism ... I feel that some of the leaders of my party are thinking along the lines of the isolationists. That thinking must be discarded if e5i,ISa.n Pmrty is ever t0 rise to Power." THOMAS E. DEWEY n Tokyo. ". . . . teachers hesitate to teach their students how to choose among opinions and hesitate themselves to choose. They are reluctant to be explicit on questions of value .... One cannot postpone . . . decision indefinitely. indefinite-ly. I suggest that there is whit might be called an 'art of decision.' " Harvard Philosopher RALPH BARTON PERRY, professor emeritus in current Alumni Bulletin. Mr. and Mrs. Tommy and Karen Alfredo Vaz, Remo Victor Bell attended come home for Miss who has returned months in Braz 1 as ary. The welcome held Sunday evenin man. C. I. Moon, Beth Moon, Roselli and the wel-' Deon Crane after 28 a mission-' home was g at Herri- Visitor.? at the S. T. Lamb residence last week were Mrs. Marguerite Jackson and Mr. ami Mrs. Arthur Jackson of Delta, and Mr, and Mrs. Clairmont Griffiths of Fredonia, Arizona. pinoss nor gives it. Thus, he is a deliberate failure, forqrdained to eternal unhappiness because of his fa lure to take advantage , of his pre-deslined opportunity for happiness. Love genuine and true love is the (jrealt'st thing in the world. It is the paramount factor ' in bringing complete happ.nes o the individual. Without it there cannot be complete happiness. hap-piness. Friendship, desire, uns'ab'e eniot.on and sympathy are somet.mes mistaken for love. Next to love, friendship is the greatest human emotion and producer of happiness and contentment. con-tentment. He who is fortunate to have a haven of friendship as a place to go in prosperity and adversity, is fortunate to the greatest degree. A true! friend is a jewel beyond price. Mr. and Mrj. Kay Roblnj had as their weekend guests Mr. Robins' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Robins of Ogden. ,tn!K:tnK::it:t;n!:::iK:tiMR!ni:!::K:::Bn::n.i!aw FOR SALE Pulle's s;x, eight and ten weeks. Available now. 80c 90c and $1,00. J. V. Johnaon, lCtiO North State St., Orem tf. O. K. FOLKS! Good assort men) of 17, 18, 1. '20, 21 inch truck fires uv passenger tires. Export Tire Rocaniiinir OK Kubl er Winders 8lh South end Stata Street Orem, Utah mm Yt. 'father fc-t't Regardless of Cost .... Every Service is Complete Every family wants the final tribute to be the finest possible. We desire to be of the greatest service in rendering render-ing a truly beautiful memorial service regardless of cost. 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