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Show Thursday, November 15, 1951 THE LEADER, Tremonton, Utah MLIBAIDEia SERVING THE RIVER BEAR VALLElf Published by the LEADER PUBLISHING COMPANY, Inc. on Thursday afternoon, for Friday Distribution $3.00 per year SUBSCRIPTION RATES (in advance) Entered at the post office at Trenonton, Utah as Second Class matter October 15, 1925 under act of March 3, 1879. A. N. RYTTING, Editor-Publish- THE VICTIMS NEED "CARE" . If the family next door were burned out of their to home by fire, neighbors would rush to help offer what ever was needed. It is hard to realize the effects of a fire when the flames were 10,000 miles away. In South Korea, millions of helpless civilians many of them children have suffered the conflagrations of war. Homes have been destroyed, all possessions lost, normal means of livelihood wiped out. At least five million persons are homeless refugees. The various governments have pledged supplies to U. N. relief pools, but supplemental, individual aid is still necessary to meet the desperate need for clothing, for blankets, for food. The General Federation of Women's Clubs, through the local organization is sponsoring a Thanksgiving-season campaign here in Tremonton to send CARE food and textile packages from Americans to Korean War victims. Funds are being solicited by Civic Club members in this city. The help CARE packages bring to the people in many countries of Europe and Asia is well known. Nowhere is CARE more needed than in Korea today. No time could be more appropriate to extend that aid than now, as Americans prepare to give thanks for the abundance we enjoy an abundance beyond the wildest dreams of the hungry and cold men, women and children in South Korea. Americans on the scene members of the U. S. armed forces had the compassion, in the midst of their fighting, to try to ease the misery they saw. Stories have been told : How men of the Navy's USS St. Paul provided food and clothing for an orphanage outside Inchon harbor. How the Fifth Air Force established an orphanage on Cheju Island for 100 children they flew from Seoul. How GIs have shared what they could with Koreans along the road. But this is a job for civilians to bear. A "Thanksgiving" contribution to the General Federation's CARE - FOR - KOREA campaign means that Americans, safe at home can help save the lives of the Korean people, whose tragedy it was to be caught in the blaze that threatens the free world. LOOJOTO AHEAD m GEORGE "1 5. BENSON PttiUtitMtrtlif CiLUf Suttf. jtritnut Hungry People Never in Britain's history have the people had to submit to rationing for six years in peace time as they have had to do under Socialism. At the end of six years they find themselves ever- there isn't1 lastinelv hunerv: w Uenough to eat, nor enough money to buy what foodstuff there Is available. The government; planners have bungled everywhere. Churchill is pledged to return to private ownership the steel II i industry wnicn was aciuany jusi-- i socializ-in the process of being j ed. That may be possible. But! he says government ownership: will have to continue in the in- dustries, long socialized, such as railways, coal, utilities, banks, the professions, and in fact through the whole commerce. And the costly "Welfare State" handout programs are to be continued. The socialized industries couWn't be returned to private ownership now. Socialism has taxed out of existence the once considerable private wealth of Great Britain. There isn't sufficient private capital to buy back and put into operation Mrs. Roy Thompson of Both-- ! England's plight, brought on by Mr. and Mrs. Basil Adams the acceptance of the subsidy well spent Wednesday afternoon j were in Layton Friday to idea, should frighten Americans, Mrs. Robert Allen in ob- - tend funeral services for a idea, should frighten Americans, in of Mr. Adams. of her birthday. small doses of the same poison. at-wi- j cous-servan- j tr England's Sorry Plight There is an irony in the re-su- ls of the British elections that should not be overlooked in the world, America. Before Eng- land has tried out Socialism for six years and now has stamped it a failure by electing a Con servative Party government. But England hasn't voted out Social ism. The irony is that England cannot rid herself of Socialism by the ballot. In six short years the decay has spread too far. And this is a fact upon which many nations especially our U. S. A. should think long and seriously. Once Socialism has been well established and permitted for a few years to take its toll In pro duction and progress, once it has been allowed to eat away at the heart and body and moral fibre of a nation, it cannot be suddenly replaced with private capitalism. You cannot press a button or mark a ballot and transform a bankrupt Socialist nation into something better. Like Quicksand But there is more than Irony in England's present predicament. The nation has come face to face with the truth about Socialism; it is like quicksand; once you put both feet in it you are caught fast. Evidently, the reason the English didn't vote Conservatives in by a larger margin was that not even Churchill, who had opposed every step of the Socialist program, could promise to reverse it. Realizing this, England still registered a condemnation of Socialism as a mode of government and way of life. England's Conservative Party now falls heir to a nation strategically and critically weak. There is serious doubt that England's once fine spiriS can ever again be aroused even by such a heroic figure as Winston Churchill. In a recent Readers Digest article, an Englishman is quoted as preferring to knuckle under to Communism rather than stand up against it. "I'll stand a better chance of survivin a Siberian labor camp a 'VISITS PARENTS five week's for que special ing in an than atomic raid on LonCaptain and Mrs. Donald Ad- training course. , don," this Englisman said. This Mrs. Adams is remaining; In kind of submissive ams and son visited with their attitude, creparents recently, while Captain the valley while her husband is ated under Socialism, bodes no Adams was enroute to Albuquer In New Mexico. good, if widespread. ... 1 VILAC PENNEY'S ED NOW opEN! HEY! KIDS! I FREE CANDY CANES j at PENNEY'S BIG TOYLAND OPENING Friday, Nov. Write your letter to Santa and mail it in Santa's mail Labor-Socila- anti-Americ- an box at Penney's Store. Farm Animals, DOLL HOUSE with these huge and expensive enter- prises. And certainly private in vestors here in America would think a long time before making an investment in a bankniDt Socialist nation. The Radical Left There are also grave questions concerning England's political st future. Clement Atlee's Party, as such, was defeated. But Aneurin Bevan, radg ical, Socialist, gained political strength. Some observers expect the political struggle in the years ahead to be dominated by a fading Churchill and a rising strong man Bevan. Bevan's brand of Socialism is very much like that of Marx, Lenin and Stalin. In a chaotic Britain he might develop into a spellbinder with magnetic appeal to weary, weakened people. That's one way despots have come to power. If England's 50 million people would pitch in and go to work, forgetting full employment, fair shares, free medicine, their doles and their phony "security," the nation in time could become strong again, master of its own destiny. But it si doubtful that the Conservative Party could survive such an exacting demand upon the people. Instead, the report is that Churchill soon will be journeying to America. His purpose: To abtain a new U. S. loan to keep weakened England alive. 17 41 Implements pieces of Furniture Complete Set, Only 53.98 54.98 Complete with 41 pieces of plastic furniture! Colonial style doll house of colorful metal, with attached garage and patio. Hurry to Penney 's! Buy for Christmas. Two-sto- You get a big 13 in. x 9 x 9 barn, plus 16 sections of fence. ry 21 farm animals including plastic goats, cows, chicks and so on! Lots of equipment, too a harrow, wagon, scoop even a scarecrow and five farm people! A wonderful Christmas gift for your youngsters hurry! Left-win- Folding CARRIAGE 54.98 Sturdy, with work-week- s, collapsible carriage simulated leather body and hood . . it's now, in Penney's Toyland! 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