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Show If We Had State Plates, We Could Drive It tl PRO VP, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, THE CHOPPING BLOCK American Diplomacy Appears Out of Date SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 1957 By FRANK C. ROBERTSON negotiate with the Russians on th Let no man say that I am too matter inwhile at the same time more diplomatic words proud to admit that I am wrong. saying "You are a liar, and na than these. I Enlightenment Needed On Super Road The projected interstate highway seems to have hit a stalemate, as far as Utah County is concerned, and people here are pretty much in the dark as to exactly where the highway is going and when. A meeting with key State Road Commission personnel, requested by the Utah County interstate highway committee, has been delayed. Meantime, reports are drifting about that instead of building first sections of the superroad in. congested areas, such as the central part of Utah County, the commission may be planning to program Salt Lake City first and move gradually south. If this is true, Utah County wouldn't benefit for a long time. There would be no immediate relief from the Highway 91 congestion in this county and it would begin to look like the powers that be are more interested in satisfying Salt Lake interests than getting at the crucial problems in the most direct manner. We realize that the Utah State Road Commission has a big program and that it is especially busy because of the recent reorganization. Nevertheless we feel the people of Utah County are entitled to know: (1) The route the road will take through the county; (2) on which section of the route the purchase of rights-of-waand construction will begin first; and (3) about when action can be anticipated. As it is, people know the road is coming but they don't know just where or when. Property owners anywhere in the general area considered for the road, dare not go ahead with new uses for their land like subdivisions, new homes, or industrial enbecause they don't want to terprises start something that will be interrupted by the road. Likewise, the county commission is at a loss, now, to know where to grant building permits and where not to, and what zoning restrictions should be made and where. The tentative route charted for the road is relatively free of obstructions in the nature of homes and industrial plants. It would seem wise to get the route definitely announced so future obstructions that y would mount costs and delay be could the project, prevented. When the Utah County interstate road committee consisting of city and county representatives and headed by County Commissioner Sterling Jones gets its audience with the road commission, we y right-of-wa- have always preached that there are more people trying to interfere with the private lives of others in Utah than in any other place. Now I find that there are others puilty; at least in one small town named. Pella. Iowa, where they are trying understand it will urge that construction be pressed as soon as possible acVosshrnost congested area of Utah County frohrSpanish Fork to where the present lone American Fork thoroughfare, Highway 91, has gotten ex- ceedingly crowded. F. W. Smith, division engineer of the Bureau of Public Roads at Ogden, was quoted this week as saying, in his opinion, are-ple- nty 4 Activities Hearing Ends Un-Americ- an four-da- tion. of Communism in Northern CaliWith one or two very minor exceptions, fornia professional circles Friday, Utah County people are agreed on the but about all it learned was that the witnesses were quite familiar highway route. Programming of this area with various amendments of the could move forward immediately, whereas we understand work at. Salt Lake City Constitution. of the 30 witnesses Twenty-eigh- t cannot proceed far until 40 or so homes called knew the Amendment are moved and that may take at least word for word Fifth however, if they two years. knew anything else, they didn't It is hoped the state road officials will tell the congressmen. act speedily on this road and that in the The came to San a list of 50 with a Francisco armed very near future statement will be made so Utah County people will know what to prospective witnesses, but it adthat it would be expect. We think they are entitled to mitted Friday to finish what had been impossible know. sub-commit- tee his suburban home has --seenjjess ner. He has to show them the Ainsiie Town.. When he travels, customers has become of him. Since Mr. He has to take customer to din- - take him to -- dinner and show him his firm' assistant sales manager, the town. Lately, his wife has begun to enviously compare his RUTH MILLETT SAYS roaming freedom to her confinement to maternal duties. And to develop a good deal of resentment at it. Her feeling has especially affected her son. During business hours women should forget they are women, She fusses over him. Every aftera successful career woman claims. noon she bundles the two younger That is a piece of advice that has been handed to women before. children into the car and picks But it never, has made sense and it never will. A woman can be Ted at school. She gets upset up intelligent, competent, responsible, and ambitious and still be when he's baffled over homework. every inch a woman and conscious of it. Last when his father suggestHer very consciousness of her own femininity doesn't detract ed it night was time to him from her capabilities. It only enhances them. for summer camp, she became On the other hand, the woman who tries to forget she is a woman and to make others forget it because she wants to be treated like extremely agitated. said hotly, "I don't want him "one of the boys" during her working day develops all kinds of to She to go camp this year! He's had unbecoming characteristics. two colds this spring. I'm simply She is usually brusque, bossy and belligerent. N ei th errr ptt - nor not going to have him sent into women feel comfortable around her. those woods to rough it again this And, of course, in trying to cover up her femininity she is denyyear." ing herself all the advantages that being a woman gives her. After a moment, her husband MEN SHOW MANLINESS holy cats!" Men never try to hide their masculinity. They practically wallow muttered, "Women and drove downtown for some cigin it. The bigger and stronger and tougher a man is the better. So why shouldn't women make the most of their femininity arettes. It made his wife angrier than instead of trying to deny it? Just because men once had the business world to themselves ever. Yet his failure to understand her was no more '.nkind than her doern't mean it is still a man's world. to understand herself. For a long time it has been a world in which women are not ,i. but needed. e'ccne If we let it, resentment can only So they don't have to sneak around pretending they aren't play its malevolent tricks on us, women in order to get ahead. regardless of our sex. Were Mr. Ainslie resentful of his wife, he might reproach her by pv GALBRAITH flinging himself into intense business activity or a violent flirtation re with a neighbor's wife. a ese male form of reproach are not available to Mrs. Ainslie. So she's turned to the one that is her fussing over Ted that tells his father what a grand, conscientious mother she is. Where Mr. Ainslie' s flirtation would cry reproachfully, "See what a desirable male I am!" her maternal fussings cry, "See what a good parent I am compared to what a neglectful one you are! See how I devote myself to your son's welfare while you devote yourself to your disgusting customer by showing them the town and goodness knows what else!" Naturally, as Ted has become such a useful instrument for indirect approach, she doesn't want to lose him to camp this summer. Overprotecting a child is what weitioth.ers often turn to when we dare not reproach his father openly. Don't Hide Femininity ld re-regist- er r (R-Ohi- o) (R-Mich- " B M M, - 1 1 You should write cowboy novels in your spare time. Marge aU the plots you'd need are acted right The opinions expressed by Herald columnists and forum iters are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of this newspaper. i , .) HAPPY TIMES Wrap Your Own Package For Retirement Years BEULAH ST OWE "Retirement is the only time in life when you can wrap your own package," said Mr. M. R. Lock-ridgBy e. Every man lives in a "package," he explains, though most people don't plan what goes into that package. "You don't get to look at all the possible packages of life lined up on a shelf so that you can choose the one you like best," he says. It's mostly chance. "When I was 59 I began looking over my own life, and figuring Daily Herald Correspondents Hera ar Herald staff correspondent out how I could wrap up the sort of package I really wanted when I retired. My wife and I began to spend our weekends touring around our state of Wisconsin and looking for a town that would match our dreams. "Anybody else could do the same thing. View-Vineya- rd 5-3- 9-4- W 5-1- 25 9-4- such as going to picture shows and playing baseball are strictly for bidden. The difference between Pella, Iowa, and here, seems to be that .a there the right- - Mr. Robertson eous are in a majority, and able to enforce their will. Judging from the remarks of the mayor of that town as represented in the press I assume that the city fathers there confidently expect that when the Savior descends again to earth in all His glory that Pelia. Iowa, is the place where he will alight. until the Russians revolt and go back to capitalism is as cold poti-toe- s as is theirs that they can keep the pressure on us until we embrace Communism. There are signs that our heads are slowly' coming out of the sand, even though we are considerably slower ahxMit it than our allies. A United States senator has suggested that permission to carry mail and passengers into Com-- m arris China, by air be granted, as a prelude to limited trade. Our boycott of such trade has been ridiculous ifor a long time, and our allies hate finally crossed th picket lirae and announced that they will trade with the Chinese Communists. They, particularly Great Britain and Japan, have to have trade in order to live, and they are no longer willing to refuse to do business with their This should lead to some lively action here, beginning with an effort to again revive our Sunday potentially best customer because Closing Law. we insist m the foolish fiction that Kai-she- k is the real ruler So far at I can recall Mr. Hugh Chiang of China. Gaitskeli, the British Labor party Mr. Dulles has tried to maintain leader, is the first major states- our world leadership by areaim man of the West to suggest that we at our mg allie. no, you even's Russian accept the proposal for a do that!": It la "No, time for a litfle ban on atomic bomb tests. In con- more posiiUve leadership if we are trast with President Eisenhower's not to be forced back Into going; weak proposal that such a ban be isolation. first tried out in the Arctic refions, which the Russian leaders proToday, my daughtr-in4aVer. nounce "comical," with considerbacte goes able reason, the Russians seem to California i to her home aod Job In The piace k going to agree to a general inspection. seem dull aod dr awfiuMy lor a Is it not better, asks Mr. GaitAs I think it over I realist while. skeli, to assume for once that the we had a single argument, Russians are not lying, and trying Verahavens to slipping. or one I, for an agreement instead of going on toward some unavoidable Some weeks back I reported ha catastrophe? ing attended a public meeting; one Mr. Gaitskeli make sense. For of mich occur anc that years we have been pretending to I thoughtinfrequent jit worthy of mention. Ui fotrtunateity, I negec4 to mentsoa what meeting it wat. and ttv dm. pl ki change bavw oomptained. now rectify the error. It wm the Public Affairs Forum, which meet twice monthly, I believe, in th$. City and; County Building, to d4 cms attain of pubNc moment t I do believe, though I hesitate admit then people are quite ouC to mention It here, that either or of date, as they are otiM using the both of these emergency measEmployed by tfe Pilgrim, ures will stave off or relieve many methods ift the old Town Fathers Meeting, a pain in the tropical zone which but wkfc sdeee. jane they people may or may not indicate heart w, IX- "We bought a piece of property on a lake, not far from our city apartment home. It had a three-roocottage and a house. We devoted weekends and vacations fixing up the cottage, then rented it and moved our own spare time housekeeping and my power saw into the house to start fixing it up. "Our apartment began to be less like 'home,' and the lake property began to be the place where our m hearts were." trouble: 1. Four or fcve inflations of the bellows. 2. A cerin. tablet or two of nitrogly- I Barbs By HAL COCHRAN When you enjoy doing H, H takes a lot of the hard out of hard work. The rel feminine txmcih, that' what dad's gonna get from monC for all the shrubs she wants to i put in. wj, The Irtciians used to bite the dust and now everybody does it each time there's a windstorm. With some women, young is in oM habit as a good one. So staying well, a They Say T The consideration shown GI William Oirard is the equivalentof the throwing of maidens into the fire at the height of the r - pagan progress. Mayor Paul Egan of Aurora 111. f I I I I I slightest threat of distress where in the tropical zone? Once News Now History Years Ago 4-3-333 n that we can carry on the cold war heart m 4-0- ryings-o- 1 In Volumette XXIII of the pocket Cyclopedia, How to Breathe, you will learn how and why one should inflate the bellows. In Volumette H you will learn how and why and under what circumstances one should carry in pocket or pocketbook a half dozen matter of Vol-- 1 or dozen nitroglycerin tablets for umette n of the emergency use. And why one Pocket Cyclo should sit down or lie down and 3 pedia, the book plop a tablet into the mouth from let tided CVD.II time to time to determine whether that i cardio-32?- s. it is still potent. vascular degen-i- ? 5 . One man who said he is subject eration, to angina pectoris rejected the and artery trou- Dr. Brady suggestion of inflating the belbles. But I'd rather go to jail than lows. He toW me that if I ever do that. So I'll just lower my have angina pectoris I'll underguard and say I have never sug- stand why a man squeezed in a pills are vise simply can't inflate his belgested that for "heart pains." lows. Believe it or not, for once good . I had no rejoinder. Anyway, I had I not argue with such a man. Signed letters not more rather than one page or 100 words I Remember what an illustrious i long, pertaining to personal subject of heart muscle anoxia, health an? hygiene, not t John Hunter, 18th century anatodisease, diagnosis or treat j mist and surgeon, said that his ' ment, will be answered by j life was in the hands of any Dr. Brady if a stamped self-- 1 i rascal who chose to annoy and addressed envelope is en-closed. Addresi such corre-- I tease him. to Dr. William I All right, then. Shall we settle spondence The Daily Herald, j for a few inflations and a tablet Brady co Prove, Utah. or two of glyceryl trinitrate (nitroglycerin) immediately upon the In the vanout communities 01 Utah Mr. Lockridge retired two years Contact them If you have County. news. Diitrict circulation agents are ago he is now 67 and receives listed also They stand ready to help a e monthly pension. He can rent Twenty-Fivyou with problems concerning deto a unilivery of the paper Phone the cottage in winter, Name Community Taken from the Files and his student A Fork Mac Buckwalter (spts.)15J versity graduate 100W American Fork Oena Grant well as in summer, to A Fk. Jennie Gilbert (cir.) P.G. 2694 wife, as The Provo Herald 0119R3 the tourist trade. He keeps the Benjamin Mrs. J. R. Pey Fdaemont. Tana Richards T& 297 Eureka, Marajrret Lucas Goshen. Elbert Marguerite Waterbury Highland Cressie Greenland 089 J 1 Lake Shore. 0410-J- 1 Karel Ann Anderson Lake AC Mrs. Kent A. Prue 71W L,ehi J" ephine Zimmerman 101W Lehi. Paul Willis (cir.) 3128 Lindon. Patricia Alton Doris Rowberry HU Mapleton. Nephi Mrs Grace H. Judd 471-- 21 Nephi Lee Bailey Orem. Margaret Whitwood AC Orem. Irene Keith (cir.) AC 0311R3 Shirlene Ottesen "almyra Madoline Dixon 223J Pay son Amber Jackman (cir.) 327J Payson. PI. Grove Beulah G. Bradley 2551 PI. Grove. Guy Hillman (sports) 4382 PL Grove Jennie Gilbert tclr.) 2694 PL View, Yvonne Perry FR4-030107R1 Salem. Marrrette Taylor 0902 Santaauin. Estella PeteisuB 326J So. Fork Frank G Kin So Fork VirrU Evans (society) 297 Sp Fork. B Davis Evans (dr.) 297 Spring Lake. Hortense Butler Sprinrville Evelyn Bover HU Sprineville. Marie Whitinr HU WwtUtt. Mrs. Brm liatoe UUI practically ail other sinful car Pains In the Tropical Zone ob-vi- 12 I gardener-playwright- -actor, cross-countr- By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE nine-year-o- vise the hearings. The humor was supplied by witHe added, however, he felt the new restraint was not an undue ness George Hitchcock, a who strode to one "if it is reasonably applied." 30 two the with of witness witnesses stand the his hands Only to in a boxhis subcomhead above the clasped proved friendly Pater's salute. mittee. These were Dr. Jack When asked his occupation, ten, a former San Francisco colHitchcock replied : lege professor and admitted "I'm a gardener... I do underand Mrs. Dorothy Jeffers, a social worker, who told ground work ... with plants." the congressmen she joined the party in the early 1940s at the request of the Federal Bureau of DR. BRADY'S COLUMN the operation of the committee." Investigation. Both testified freely about Communist infiltration into San Franstarted. cisco Area professional The group, headed by Rep. Bay c was Francis E. Walter groups, including doctor, lawyers, By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. ly hamstrung from the at art teachers, newspapermen and ar"Enclosed please lind 36c and by onday'i Supreme Court rul- chitects. The hearings produced tragedy, stamped envelope bearing my ading with dismissed contempt proy clash between con- dress," writes a New Jersey readceedings against John T. Watkins, a over and er, "for a copy of Volumette XVI Illinois labor leader. television, gressmen some comedy. of of the Pocket Cyclopedia Relevancy Unclear 7 to The Vite." "The Health. Keys Witness Suicide pills help a lot for heart It ruled that the committee, in The tragedy came when a pro- pains. What a difference in price a 1954 Chicago hearing, failed to of make clear the "relevancy" spective witness, William K. Sher- from the $10 vitamin capsules prewood, committed suicide two days scribed by my specialist." questions put to the witnesses. In order to understand the above Walter departed for his home before he was scheduled to testify. state Thursday night, leaving Sherwood, a brilliant Stanford Uni- reader's allusion to heart pains Reps. Gordon Scherer versity research scientist, said in I'd have to take time out from the a preposterous a farewell note that he feared bowling green and Robert J. Macintosh idea! and read carefully and to wind up the session Fri- "assassination by publicity." The television dispute came critically the day. entire sub ject (iD-Pa- .) Mrs. Ainslie's Reproach: Overprotecting Son fer, even if it is a complete agreeto hold a special election for per- ment to our terms, on the grounfl mission of the people to swim on that they can't be trusted? Seems to me it is about time p Sunday between the hours of two . fi ve . become a little realistic, and asIf and sume that the Russians don't wish swimmingr, h t' 0 , annihilation for themselves any been prohibited V' more rthan we do. Our assumption assume cnai l m . the biggest bottleneck in the state is right here in Utah County. Th ere of folks i this area who will agree with Mr. Smith. In some parts of the county there is only one route to carry all the traffic which funnels in, out, and through the county each day. Unless the new road is built within the next few years the congestion is going to get much worse, with the number of automobiles and trucks steadily shooting upward and tourist and local traffic mounting. Actually the big thing that makes the congestion so great in the central area is that clo.se to 90 per cent of the traffic originates right here in the county, with Proyoas the pivotal city. To bulTalTe-f&tsectio- ns of the interstate road in the more congested regions NEA Service, first, and fill in the more rural sections later would. seem the course which would bring the quickest relief to motorists. If the route decided on for Utah County follows the general course of tentative Subcommittee Learns Little routes discussed, the superroad will cross Highway 91 between Lehi and American Un-American Fork and come within a few hundred feet of the same Tnhvvuat Spanish Fork. Thus, interchange points could be estabNeither congressman would of- when Chairman Walter refused to By VERNON BAKER lished without too much difficulty and Staff United Press Correspondent fer any opinion as to the success order a halt to television coverage expense for use of a stretch of the superSAN FRANCISCO (UP) The or failure of the hearing, but Mac- of the proceedings. House Speaker road built between these two points as the House Sub- intosh remarked that the Watkins Sam Rayburn in Washington said first unit of the Central Utah construc- committee ended a Activities y probe decision "obviously doesn't help it was against House rules to tele- THE MATURE PARENT matter what you propose or promise we won't believe you." What is the sense in negotjatmjj if we say in advance that we wiM reject anything our opponents of- of month of August at the cottage for 1832 his own family and there's a re- June 23. to carry into pracInitial steps union which takes both houses to tical life the ""recomcommunity hold. mendations of the last Utah White Newest projoct is a pegboard toy House conference on cfaHd health rack in a drugstore near their and were taken at a home. On the board are cellopha- mass protectionin the City and Counmeeting ne-wrapped toys which they ty Building . . . Otto Birk, Provo purchase from toy manufacturers. chief of police, was elected first The store gets a share of the vice president of the Utah Peace profits. Officers Association in an election e held at the convention in Price Q "All my savings are in gov- . . . R was still winter at the head ernment bonds. Is this a good in- of die Provo river according to vestment?" E.R.C. members of a party which made A It is a good investment, but an inspection of the lakes and other things would pay you more reservoirs . . . Provo writers and interest. Consult your banker or composers were featured at the a reputable investment firm. meeting in the stake tabernacle (All rights reserved, sponsored by &e Utah Stake Relief NEA Servioe, Inc.) Sod?. any- I would certainly like to chall- enge them (Soviet "leaders) to allow us to go to the crossroads in the towns and villages and preach the Gospel of Christ. EvaSngelist Billy Graham. ' -- If we lose (elections), we cant blame the Democrats, we can only blame ourselves. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Vice President Nixon. Aspirin Your almost violent opposition They knew better but to the use of large doses of aspirin were Just young boys and they ad--; in treating rheumatism amazes venturous. me. Every doctor I have conW. D. jHair of North Augusta, sulted recommended aspirin. It S. C, of bis son and another may not cure but it alleviates boy who were detained behind r Iron Curtain on student tour. ; pain . . . (K.B.H.) Ans. Aspirin is the least obwe have. jectionable pain-killWhen a doctor recommends large doses of aspirin for the patient with chronic joint disability, you may be sure the doctor doesn't Q Is the Wuefin tuna a fast know' what ails the patient. Arth- swimmer? A Yes, tuna have been clocked ritis? Rheumatism? Tantamount at to what I'm trying to tell you. speeds of more than 40 miles en- per hour. Send stamped, They can apparently of about nine miles rates maintain Mid Calcium for velope pamphlet er Qsand As self-address- ed ! per hour indefiniately. Rheumatiz. (Copyright 1957, John F. Dille Co.) REPEAT PERFORMANCE MIAMI (UP) Jerry Mullinix, 16, his left leg out of a cast only a week, set out on a bicycle ride Friday night to see if the fracture bad healed. While attempting to turn a corner, he lost control of the bicycle, Ml cod broke fcbe seme leg atfaia. given up drinking liquor said to I be "on the wagon? A The! expression started with the old U.S. Army. The wagon 1 referred !to' is the water wagon! which Accompanied troops oat march. jSomeone, who was being disciplined for drunkenness was , ordered jto stay oa the water J vatfoa. ; , |