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Show LEIII SUN. LEW. UTAH mmmmmmmmmimmmm aa" , .. i.kj ' " i Time to fill the salt shakers. Only this time make a funnel from the corner of an envelope, cutting oft a small portion of the tip. No spilling. For smooth looking: sheets, iron four thicknesses of sheet at one time; fold in half bringing hem to fold. Iron first on the plain side, then on the hem side. , Tie back curtains can be evened by pulling down window shades to the exact point where they are to be fastened. This is a perfect guide and eliminates a lot of measuring. Clean chromium with soap and water followed by polishing with whiting paste. When baby's quilted pads are well worn, cut the best pieces from them for pot-holder padding. These make extra heavy pot-holders. Sewing machines should be oiled after every five or six hours of use. U. N. Converts Modern War Plant Into Peace Factory By BAUKIIAGE New Analytt and Commentator, iKSiJtf'S TASTY IfCIPfS Yr 3 How Sluggish Folks Get Happy Relief WHEN CONSTIPATION makei you feel punk ts the dickens, bringg on itomach upset, sour taste, gassy discomfort, take Dr. Caldwell's famous medicine to quickly pull the trigger on lazy "innards", "in-nards", and help you feel bright and chipper again. DR. CALDWELL'S Is the wonderful senna sen-na laxative contained in good old Syrup Pepsin to make it so easy to take. MANY DOCTORS use pepsin preparations prepara-tions in prescriptions to make the medicine medi-cine more palatable and agreeable to take. So be sure your laxative is contained con-tained in Syrup Pepsin. INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL'S the favorite fa-vorite of millions for 50 years, and feel that wholesome relief from constipation. constipa-tion. Even finicky children love it CAUTION: Use only as directed. DR. WELL'S SENNA LAXATIVE coHTAINto ,h SYRUP PEPSIN 9 $70? u 'LIIMNtW WILL NOT HARM ANY METAL TT takes so little. Just two table. spoons of XZIT sprinkled in the fire once a week keeps your chimney, stove, and heating unit cleared of soot. Soot can be dangerous, for soot often causes costly chimney fires. Don't take chances. Use XZIT regularly. regu-larly. XZIT sprinkled freely in the fireplace or firebox quickly and effectively effec-tively extinguishes chimney fires. Keep a supply of XZIT on hand. Ask for XZIT SOOT ERADICA-TOR ERADICA-TOR at your grocery, hardware, drug or fuel supply store. 5S00 So. Hoover St., Los Angeles 44, CiHL SOOT ERADICATOR Beautify ,r wIth- XZ,T RAINBOW COLORS available at all stores BEAUTIFUL NOVEL ENCHANTING 7' rVNU Service, 1016 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.-At this writing, committees of the United Nations are still neetlnf In the treat modernistic '( lactory building. low converted nto plant for & he manufacture f international ood wilL A hun-Irerl hun-Irerl committee neetings are be- tl ng held In the V rooms where fc . 4K. tallnat S machinery turn- ing out instru ments of warfare Baukhage nchummed merrily and efficiently. Here delegates to the assembly of the United Nations, split up into (roups, tackle the various subjects illotted to them Just as the committees com-mittees of congress discuss the bills and agree upon their form before they are submitted to the "committee "commit-tee of the whole house" for con-lideration con-lideration and action. The difference is that the assem-sly, assem-sly, unlike congress, cannot pass laws, it can only express the will of the majority. Its value Is to register, before the world, world opinion as ixpressed by the nations which make tip the United Nations. This Is the Irst step toward a world government govern-ment whose chief purpose is to police po-lice the world against war. While the committee meetings were taking place the security council, coun-cil, which compares roughly with the senate, held some of its meetings in the same building, for unlike the as-lembly, as-lembly, which meets only once a fear, the security council is a continuing con-tinuing body. The Council of Foreign Ministers, ahich also is meeting in New York, ts a body entirely separate from the United Nations. Saddle U. S. With U. N. Expenses It was characteristic of the desire to maintain a "realistic" attitude (let us hope) which resulted in the emphasis on fiscal matters, causing newspapers on the first day's com mittee meetings to display a head tike this: 0. S. OPPOSES PAYING HALF OF U. N.'s BILLS ! At the meeting of the budgetary committee, Senator Vandenberg got In a sly dig when he suggested that If the other nations felt the American Amer-ican economic system was so good that it could put up half the money to run the organization perhaps they might adopt a similar system. Capitalist Capi-talist America would pay 49.89 per cent of U.N.'s bills while Communist Russia, although much greater in size and population, would provide i per cent in the plan submitted. Of course, any amount balanced against the price of war ts small. . Powerful Committees Are in the Making The work of the committees of the assembly covers a wide scope, since besides offering the sounding board for world opinion and controlling con-trolling the pursestrings of the whole organization, the committees like wise supervise the several impor tant subsidiary agencies, some of which will become extremely powerful pow-erful when and if they carry out the duties planned for them. For Instance, the many plans for Improving Im-proving living standards and social relations throughout the world. which is the purpose of the economic econom-ic and social council, and the projected project-ed trusteeship council which will oversee the relationship between the dependent countries and the nations held responsible for their control and welfare. Another important function of the assembly Is initiating amendments to the charter, and this session bristled bris-tled with talk among the smaller countries for amending provisions governing the power of the veto in security council. Russians Vie to Last Minute Early in the meetings of the general gen-eral committee (the steering committee) com-mittee) and In the assembly itself. It became evident that the Russians were following a general plan of procedure pro-cedure which whs not unlike that which had appeared and still Is ap pearing In all the controversies. The The Writers' Corner Russian delegates frequently oppose violently a point and then, when they see that they are beaten, yield. Sometimes this looks like pure obstructionism; ob-structionism; sometimes it seems merely an effort to display strength and combativeness, sometimes it is only a patent move to keep Russia in the forefront of the negotiations as a force with which to be reckoned. There is also the language barrier. Probably there are no more competent com-petent performers among the various vari-ous types of experts than the translators trans-lators at these international gatherings. gather-ings. Much has been written of their remarkable ability to translate, without with-out taking a single note, long paragraphs para-graphs of some speakers who get so deep in their subjects that they forget for-get that the translator is waiting patiently to translate one segment before the speaker goes on to the next. Prize of them all is Pavlov, the lean and scholarly looking young man who appears to wrap himself about Molotov or Vishinsky and with his lips close to the listener's ear pours In the words so rapidly that it would appear they synchronize with the movement of the speaker's lips. 'But even a perfect translation may produce a different meaning, just as the same word may mean two different things In the same lan- I guage to two different pairs of ears, i You may recall the famous Molotov Molo-tov outburst at the opening of the assembly, the speech In which the Russian delegate demanded disarm ament, objected to the Baruch atomic atom-ic energy plan and went right down the line walloping everything in sight As I remarked earlier, there was more smoke than fire in that tirade and American Delegate Austin, Aus-tin, suspecting as much, made the terse comment on the speech, "smart but tough." When the translations came back from the report in the Russian press Austin's words became "smart but sharp." Now it may be that "tough" is a tougher word in Russian than it is in English because the Russians' ordinary or-dinary conduct in such and some other oth-er matters, all the way from dancing danc-ing to breakfasting on vodka, may be what we would consider tougher than the Anglo-Saxon approach. Americans Conscious Of Foreign Policy Most Americans do not realize how far this nation has gone in the establishment of a foreign policy built on popular desire. In the past, the foreign policy of the United States always had been a rather vague thing -to people in general, something evolved behind a screen of formal phrases in the ancient high-ceilinged offices of the old state department building, where they still have marble fireplaces that really work in some of the rooms. In the early days the subject was kept out of domestic politics simply because the politicians knew that the people knew as little as they did as to what it was all about and didn't care any more. Then came the famous fa-mous Wilson versus Lodge fight over the League of Nations, which was really something far deeper than that, a fight of two powerful person alities and two different concepts of government not world government but domestic government Lodge and Wilson became so definitely committed to their own respective views that they couldn't afford to compromise. After that, each party considered it fair game to rip the other up the back when it came to a discussion on foreign affairs and the fine old tradition tradi-tion (which was really a negative thing) "foreign affairs ends at the shore line," was split wide open. And then the bloody conflict of World War II made people realize that Democratic and Republican blood when it flowed on the battle field was the same color and caused the same gaping wounds at home. The campaign which we have just witnessed, while it was character ized with the same old fuss and fury of the past omitted the question of foreign policy except when it was raised by persons already discredit ed by both major parties. That is the hope, as I see it, for American dominance, for the dominance domi-nance of the American idea of ha man freedom. We have learned that when it comes to facing the world. we meet it shoulder to shoulder as Americans and nothing else. r t the Corner are all original writings of local Contributions to , the f iution to all who wish to write, or people. We extend a cordial nv poetry XTot youngsters as well. KEEP THAT STAR SHINING If, from the filth and muck of War's dank soil, The fragile, flame-white flow, of Peace should spring ( To spread its fragrance oer the wild turmoil Of greed and hate and battle; if, awing, , The gentle dove of Peace should one day rise From heaps of blood and bones and suffering, And with the hard-won olive i , Drancn, as prize, To all humanity make offering; BARBS by Baukhage One of the problems of the United Nations is to find out whether the Russians prefer to export caviar or Communism. Did you ever think when your mother made you use an atomizer to clear your head of a cold that "atomizers" might lay a million people cold? Is this progress? The difference between a Communist Com-munist and a fellow-traveler is tha one knows where he wants to go ana the other is being taken for a ride Paul Scott Mowrer says that Rjs-sia Rjs-sia has solved the problems of the economic cycles (the booms and busts of capitalism) by achieving a permanent depression. Then from a vast relief and gratitude. "This war was justified," the world "For lo! with Peace enthroned strife once stood, "A beauteous thing has grown from fnnl WaV." A ereat America! a world at war, in trmir nnnns. tne laie w- fcJCCO J ' ' freedom's star. Published by Exposition Press in 1939 under title "Peace is not Born oi war" in worms Anthology. When we travel down the old familiar street ., The weeping willow seems almost Thrdainrbranches, blowing to ThaVs why down the street we like to go. The weeping willow, the birch and Like a mother, each has a task Guard the little saplings that grow so fast, . . , . To make beauty that will last. When we travel down that lane in an auto so fast, The real beauty we cannot grasp. To look or think of choose between Life's mad confusion or beauty serene. We like to think of the good old horse and buggy rides With our family at our side, Jw. a (Zeal 014- JaJltbHed stock your pantry shelves now with choice groceries from r.t trio birds. And counting the cattle in herds. That good old horse that wag M tame, To be hooked up to the surre, was her game, ' With a nice harness and a surre, so bright, ' We would have a nice buggy T every night. We took time to visit, Bing L play , The recreation we needed after hard day. Happy memories will never be the same Until we go down that lane, the horse and buggy again, Nellie Davis. FOUNDATIONS FOR FORTUNES Are right here in the tdvertii.nl columns of this paper. If what you're selling hat merit ADVERTISE IT. An ad. will tell it for you. IT'S TIME TO CHANGE your summer oil to a lighter grade for easier winter starting. , COME IN TODAY Dans Service HOME OF FAMOUS WASATCH PRODUCTS CORNER CENTER & MAIN WIN Q wism O mm :4 ooo IV 11 OR UP utss THAH ix CENT PER POUNO StEEL MILLS are working day and night. Steel production is setting peacetime peace-time records. This is good news for you. In one way or another steel help3 make almost everything you use -cars, washing machines, refrigerators and countless other things. By pushing its production to record-breaking record-breaking volume, the steel industry is helping hundreds of other industries get going. However, the mills are not yet able to supply the full demand for steel. This is largely due to the loss of 12,000,000 tons of steel production this year from strikes in steel, coal and other industries. The mills are trying hard to make up the lost output. If the present production produc-tion pace can be continued, there should be enough steel f0r normal needs before many months are past. American Iron and Scel Institute 350 FUth , York , A. Y. L: |