OCR Text |
Show ii" 11 r. - " - -- . 5i : 7 f ' and - .. y, :r and. its people SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1960 : !r : h ? . j v M Why Ike Is Crusading For Peace AH Over the World v r V : I '. '.. ...i - I . ; . ... .: . '"'.;!:":.'.''.' 'I The. only dcdly newspaper devoted to tne progress advancement of Central Utah : , Eh? it. "Cute, 5 I ; : p By JEDGAIt ANSEL MOWREU "Why Is President Eisenhower crusading for peace all over the world so much more frantically now than during his first term of office?" . (J.A.B., Philadelphia) I think you know the answer as well as I: the danger of war has Increased enormously over the last eight l r i ..-- Outlook for Safe, Solid 1960 but does not seem likely to get out of hand. The same can be said for the inventory-buildin- g plans of the - The total product of the American economy is now running at the rate of the rrjagic figure. In the last three months, output has climbed 10 per cent and still seems on the upgraae. .Thus as 1960 unfolds, the forecasts for an extremely prosperous year appear to tie on their way to coming true. There is not much talk of a real boom. The economic sages prefer a fairly high to say 'we will-finwith the height plateau of activity measure on the in large depending amount of money invested in new plant and equipment. toThis is al(business. ways the great bpur The decline in capital outlays was businessmen. of already translated into reality,, the party politicians-- ever alert to can start economic conditions substituting hard appraisals for broad speculations. Republicans, holding the White House, are pretty certain now to have prosperity, the fact not the word, .working for them in November. The Democrats, already distressed that the GOP has taken out a lien on the peace issue," must begin to wonder what theycan do to persuade 30 or more million voters that a Democratic candi-date- 's presence in the White House is essential to the nation's welfare and safety. Seldom since the booming 1920s have, the Democrats had so difficult a task. They believe they have a strong case. But it just may, be that not even the greatest orator since William Jennings Bryan (if such be around) could sell that case to Americans who see the business curve rising and think the fever chart of. world tension is dropping. -- . d re- Economists and, business leaders evidently are honestly hopeful that the steel wage settlement and subsequent wage agreements will not exert undue . inflationary pressures ;this year; They count on racing production gains to offset such "pressures as do develop. Consumer demand looks solid; . Getting Ready to Begin Starting With a -- month of 1960 behind them, the men in Congress have accomplished practically nothing, fin an ordinary year this would deserve no comment, but this time they must break! in July for" the nqmmating conventions and must campaign in the fall. One would guess that if the lawmakers don't start rolling soon they don't really' plan to rack up much of a record this time. Civil rights, a tough topic in any season, will .perhaps occupy the Senate for a month beginning in That leaves just about 412 months for transaction of all other business. be able Realistic observers-wil-l to tell by early March whether the I960 session1 will make a fair splash or coast in some calm mid-Februar- cold STN-- ets l , Assignment Washington ' sufferers since the develop- i nation which fell because organized snooping made it impossible for mutual trust and confidence to exist.' The New Republic draws a deadly dini at President Eisenhower's much admired optimism. Here are a few of those rosy statements from the past, taken from his eight State of the Union Mes- j sages, -- - , :' she would like to .!' (,. 160,000 census land one of those stronger than even x Just what year was it he and Mr. Dulles announced that massive retaliation and brinksmanship would put an end . taking jobs phoned me in some . indignation to say that she had been informed that this was strictly a patronage job, and appli- cations must dc filed with the Republican Central committee of the county. Since I seem to be unofficial counselor-in-chiforf irate citizens,! T advised her to get- the. facts, and then if the charge is true write a letter to her Democratic senator, and Congressman, at Washington, D. C. It probably won't do any good, but it could be a good talking point for the Democrats in the forthcoming elec-' tion. If we've all got to have our noses counted at least some of the quizzers should be r people of our town political ' - -- - i I : faith. . . - . ". . I, j i After this census taking is over and a million people hundred and seventy-nin- e will "have been made angry by, the quix- zers poking into their private affairs we will know that we have one hundred and eighty million and some thousands, of people in this country a fact everybody knows right now and: we shall find out that a baby is born every seven and one- half seconds a fact that Is also well known and the rest of the- information .will be more Immaterial. The annoyance grows worse. We "could stanc It once In ten years I guess, but more and more bureaus are conducting ' their own little annual cnus.. Fanners. to Communist aggression? Take a squint at the Chinese invasion of India's bord--er- s, and the present renewed demand that the Allies get out of Berlin. In 1954 he stated. "The precious intangible, the initiative, is becoming ours." Sure it is, if putting a chip on our shoulder and daring the other fellow to knock it off constitutes the initiative. . In 1955 he called the free nations, Rus-- ! "collectively stronger." Too bad the sians haven't noticed it. In 1956 he said, "Inflation has been; halted." Notice how much further your dollar goes these dW? In 1957 he said that, "The long slide in farm incomes has been h a 1 1 e d." Farmers share of the farm dollar Is the lowest it has ever now less than in been history. He now says the Russians are not ahead of us in space and missile development Anybody want to bet that the Russians won't be. first to be roosting ? , on the moon? But hope springs eternal, and we still believe .all; we need is more of Dr. Eisenhower's pink pills for pale people. : ef - 1953 . ! :.':,.. .' A lady who thought i he stated that he would cut the budget to 69 billion dollars. It is now around 80 billion. In' 1953 he announced that he was unleashing Chiang Kai shek We waited hopefully for Chiang to invade the Chinese mainland and put the Communists . to rout. Chiang still lives in luxury on Formosa, courtesy. American dollars, and the Chinese Beds are In . 37, : ' !' ' !! v' bro-Commun- ist bs and the until somebody keep growing a out small car again with comes You can't win. (Copyright, I960,- - by United Feature Syndicate,' Inc.) ... coin were three of them at my back. Henry, Benson and Bill. Fascinating, these grandsons three of the daddy of the Model T. They came to the capitoJ to study us critjcs studying their a car not even newest creation yet in production. Henry Ford ended up in a corner answering a touchy question. But he came through like a 'true tycoon. I informed him that I'd had a model of one of his company's lines for a year. "How," ' I asked "can I get rid of that rattle in the right front door?" Replied the president, of tihe Ford Motor Company: "Buy, a. '60 model." , The company's Benson Ford, had his own sad story. It seems that his wife has refused to keep jn step with progress and clings to her 1959 Ford. It's a, model with a collapsible top that folds into the trunk, a model discontinued in 1960. Back at Palm Beach, Fla., last week, Mrs. Ford came out of the hairdresser's and stepped into her car and pressed the convertible button. The top wouldn't collapse into the trbnk. Mrs. Ford tugged at the trunk door handle.! It came off in her hand A policeman came by and fooled with the trunk until the top came This creeping presigism will - Happy Times Before Scorning 'Homes' Check Their Potentials . . By MARIE DAERR The other day I climbed a sfeep flight of stairs to a two-rloapartrient in which a woman in her 8's lives alone. Her eyesight is nearly gone, jijet she insists on doing most of her own cooking. She uses a cane io cover even the short distance between stove and sink. She I comm . vice-presiden- t, . , ... down. Did he recognize the young lady? "Thank heavens, jno," replied the vLcepresident, whose side job is chairman of the board that handles Ford Complaints, Youngest j?f this trio of tycoons is William Clay Ford, .vice dent in charge of styling. "I 'imagine." I said, pointing to the new, car christened the Comet, 'that this is as exciting as becoming a father all over again." "Not exactly," he replied dryly. "I'm now working on the '62 models." The Comets, not in mass production yet, won't hit the showrooms until March 17. The three at this press preview were handmade. "What happens to them after ypu show them around?" I asked Henry Ford, sort of hinting that maybe I" could buy one cheap. His reply was shocking. "We scrap them," he said. "There's a regulation that forbids the sale of any car used for test purposes,- even if it's only to test a new kind of fabric. So they junk them," This car is part of an inevitable cycle now upon the American pub- seat-cov- lic. er i v During the recent years, the Joneses cliimtoed into a class all by themselves by driving the tiny foreign cars. Then late last year the moguls of Detroit came out with economy little longer, and a little wider, a little longer, and a little less economical, designed to outclass the foreign car Joneses. , But that wasn't enough. Now we have the middle-clas- s compact i Sorbs By HAL COCHRAN It's foolish td think all of your friends look younger. It just makes ' you feel older. .' ..- . They say that time cures everything and we hope that applies .to . delinquent youths. A health expert says Americans should eat less. If Junior does, mother may have a nervous break' ' i , -- . An.poiLraffd - jj for: voliunteerittg, h "chores." "Several of the women held clear the tables after meals," she said. "One) makes the flower arrange ments tor our panors. '$SQ-a-week- I Income groups. This is unfair. Management has combined with labor to get aU it could, regardless of the Unorganized and the widows and orphans. And most of us have-pu- t private ahead of public affairs. If ot trouble gets worse it will be bur. collective, fault, as reader Hansen implies, not that of ; any single group. ; . serVe as a storage place for food. For days before a camel starts, out on a journey, its master forces it to eat and drink. It eats so much that a hump of fat, perhaps 100 pounds in weight, rises on its " David Coons, Schenectady, N.Y. At one time, before automobiles and airplanes were invented, there was only one possible way to travel across the deserts of Asia and Africa. That way was by camel. That's why the camel has been called "the ship of the with cpm- - r " desert." In any case, don't underrate the advantages of a home (for, the aged. Such a home may be the best sOlu- tion to your special living prbblem. It's worth investigating. While there are 'many things about the camel that makes him especially suited for living and traveling in the desert, the most important of these ' fs the hump on his back. V When that, hump is empty, it loses Its firm shape and flops to one side in flabby, folds There i3 no bone in the hump, it is made of fat and muscle. The purpose of the hump is to I am a widow who would like to move to Europe. ' Can I collect my Social Security there?i4 Mrs. K. T. "f depends on the country The Treasury wall notrsend money to some countries. Wheth jyou are an American citizen is another factor involved. Check your Social Security office. Q An attorney made out my will a few year,s ago; If I want to make a new will, am I und(b obli- gation to go to the same attqrney It Q's and A's j ; it correct to desccribe qIs Earl Warren as' "The Chief Jus- - Uce of the UVS. Supreme Court" A No, his title is "The Chief , You may have 100 different made out by 100 different at- torneys Your only obligation is to pay the attorneys ffor their serv- - . wiMs Justice of the United States." -- What kind of sound does an ostrich make? d A The bird gives a roar, like that of a lion or ox, with a strange hissing sound. Q ices. back. This fat can nourish the camel for several days if It is unable to find food on the journey. The camel also takes jits own water supply along. The camel driver forces the camel tof drink about 15 gallons of water. It does this by giving him salt to make j him more thirsty. stomachs. three The camel has He uses the first 'one to store food while he is grazing and to form it into a cud. In the second stomach are the digestive Juice's., and in! the third stomach the chewed cud is digested. jln the walls of the first twp stomachs there are pockets for storing water. Muscle holds these pockets closed when they are filled. Whenever the camel needs sW wator, these muscles open and close to let out as much as ' it needs.' j "I; withHow long can a camel go out water? As you can see; it fs not really without, water. )In fact, men who have been dying of thirst, have, sometimes killed a camel to obtain Its precious water. If a camel travels slowly and with a light Joad, that water in its stomach can last from six to ten days!. V . of land on the Atlantic Coast north of Rio de Janeirp, Brazil? A Cadillac Mountain on Mount Some Questions Men Can't, Women Won't, Answer and have three daughters, but there are still tome things j don't understand about women,' one of my meq readers confesses. "Why does a woman have to telephone several friends to find out 'if they are going t?j wear hats before she decides whether; or not to wear one to stome special affair? "Why does a woman love senti- mei tal gifts before she is married (liko a dozen red roses), and pre--, fer something practical after she has been married a few years?, "Why is a woman so secretive about her age once she has passed 25, and so secretive about' her weight on re it has passed 12534 ) "Why does it infuriate a woman j . ' FUN TIME The Chuckle Box & Father: How did that window get broken? Son: Honest, Dad, I was clean ing my slingshot and it went off I ..' !, PICTURE SECRET Desert Island, Maine. type of a fish. is a Q-Wh-at scalldp? are. really shellfish. two The big muscle that holds-thshells together Is the only part of the animal that is eaten. e ' j - .VISO? Mexico. ; . "Why can't a woman order a meal In a restaurant without asking for at least one substitution? j "Why do women of all ages refer to themselves as 'girls'?" j . - v MMinaH' Toj C'JJ (oT WojP Vifcl ( I "! I' AA clause introduced by David Wilmot as an amendment to a bill in 184$. It provided for prohibition of slavery in all territory to be acquired from . ' What was the Wilmot Pro- - Q ; j is the highest point Where! Q for her husband to make suggestions that would niakeii ho.jsehold chores easier, more efficient? "Why does an otherwise honest woman feel no compunctionj about telling her closest friend igossip she has promised 'not ...to tell a soul'? "Whv does a woman ask her husband for an honest opinion on whether or not he likes ho ,new hairdo, her new hat, or the ;way she has rearranged, the (living room, and then ge annoyed if he is less than enthusiastic? "Why is a .woman sure that she understands men perfectly but is convinced that nc in an ever understands a woman? ' woman does a "Why buyj things she knows she is going to return? : swer: What will the United States do if Castro asks the Soviets for arms and demands that the United States with- - .. draw our big naval base from Guantanamo on Cuban soil?, I shall publish what I consider the best answer two weeks after the question appears. (Copyright 1060. General Features Corp.) ner is: ' "Ive been married for 20 years . "This week's question, which I am asking readers to an- home. Send your questions, name, age, address to "Tell Me Why!' care of this paper. Today's win- so far as entering is concerned. Ruth Millett ..( ' Send your questions on world affairs, signed, with either your full; name or your initials? to Edgar Ansel Mowrer In care of "this h newspaper. me for older people, you will wan i to take advantage of this. No only Will you have a valuable priority, A the ("numerous and the depressed farm industry" and, I would add, to the fixed Win the Britannlca Junior encyclopedia for school and always dropping into my room to say hello." If you are a member of a church denomination, a fraternal group or a union which sponsors a hcbie ML. . - Camels Conserve Water "I'm contented here People are) You will be among peop. whom you have something t mon. . Tell Me Why ficial flowers. "I sell these," she told me. "One of the nurses' alides hoWed me how to make them A-- .."'.! George Hansen of Cream Ridge, jy. J., goes further, than I do in making our present pursuit of personal profit responsible for our international plightHe writes:. "Yout said Americans need a 'national purpose.'' Americans have a nationar purpose: get as many dollars as you can a easy as you can." He5 condemns organied labor's Indifference' to . 'Three of the men who are handy at fixing things help us lout when we need a faucet washer or a frayed iron cord replaced. Other residents take shifts at the switch- board. 'Our people are happier this way." In a church home I saw a woman who is blind and whb has both legs amputated making arti- - Q : deep-tone- , i down. plained bitterly 'attJBhe pain her arthritis gives her. . "I wish very much that she would go into a home for the aged, '' but she won't listen to me," her o ily relative, a granddaughter, told me. granddaughter works, so can't have the old lady in her home. She comes to the apartment everj other day, to bring food, do chores. j To many odder people a suggestion hat they enter a home is like a condemnation to Siberia. Yet in many cases "independent" living is a iiazard for them, and a jworry for t lose who love them. Hov many of you have actually visited the homes for the aged in your area? I know one litle old lady who calls the home for the aijed in whicti she lives 'the best hme I ever had." For years this woman worked as a housekeeper! She lived in other people's houses a few years at a time. 'iHere I have a pleasant ijoom," she told me. "I've even bought a few little things of my own. teome and go as I pleasf The only rule I must follow is to et the home know how long I'll be gone!" Skilled in sewing, this woman al ters clothes for other residents of the home. Here the wise director "How can you believe in the sincerity and integrity of Ike? He Is just one of the men who have brought about world conditions as they are now." (E. E. Williams, Waco, Tex.X Mr. Williams bases his distrust upon the fact th$t like so many other American during World War II, Ike more or less trusted the Russians, recommended letting them take Berlin when Hodges' army could have got there first, permitted the Soviets to carry off about 2,000 German scientists and did not cooperate Vith Senator McCarthy. He also believes that FDR was a "traitor." How else account for our allowing Communist Russia to grow until it threatens the world? This is the conspiracy theory of international affairs. Doubtless there have been some Americans ready to help communism against their own country and human freedom. But the theory is basically-absurd for the real damage . - neighbors' children in the teeth? The possibilities are unlimited, but we are getting around to them rapidly. Future historians may well write: "America, a great and once flourishing LlivJ ' car to satisfy the hunger of the prestige hunters. The next step: an economy- Cadillac or Lin By ED KOTERBA WASHINGTON There may be no Ford in my future, but there Why don't they have one asking if you beat your wife, if you are raising a crop of juvenile delinquents, and if so, why, and do you poison dogs and kick the . ' Three Ford Grandsons Help Unveil New Model e. These are now the two highest paid professions in the country. This union will certainly guarantee that they Mt Robertson will continue to be so. Of course the fiction will be maintained that it is better to serve the public. "In the future we will take the hide off you in an even more merciful fashion than we have in the past." As a farmer who has been accused of belonging to the worst handout-seekin- g outfit In the country I now call upon the fanners toj associate themselves with ' the National Society of Hobos in order that we may elevate the art of pan--' handling tola greater dignity, and thus prove that we are only trying to better serve the public. - ; , : for instance, are now required to account for every grain of wheat, every blade of grass, every gallon of milk and every egg that Is raised on the farms, and enough more nonsensical trivia that fills about four large pages of a question-air- ' : I) NEA" . m , Some Unions We Could Do Without .just read where the American Bar Association and the American Medical Assc ciation are getting together to promote their mutual aims. With that common aim it shouldn't be too hard to guess. A free translation of the fancy language involved might read someMl "You like this: it ' thing we'll and tie him up, go through his pock- 1 - The Chopping Block By FRANK C. ROBERTSON Heaven. help a poor sailor and everybody elseon a day like .this!- - I have In v ' i Mr. Mowrer Since then the Soviets have forged ahead of us In the development of guided missiles, making sputniks while we concentrated on achieving more consumer goods. As a result; unless the President can reach some sort of disarmament agreement with the Russians, we are going to have to settle down to a much more costly armament race. Such a race, according ,to the President and his advisers, may compel us to put a ceiling upon wages and prices,, thus modifying the private initiative system, at least temporarily. Moreover, the President has always been a man of peace and nourishes the noble ambition of taking the first real step toward it while still in office. 1. - v. Jilt f L- -t . ment of disposable tissue. , Sniffling must go on for at least a year,1 however, to establish with certainty the nature of the virus. Significant is how the breakthrough occurred: at researcher himself caught cold and, largely through an accident, a virus from his body was found growing in a laboratory experiment. That's 'how we catch 'em, too. Largely through accident. y. 1953, means of deliv ering them. Announcement that a British medical research unit has succeeded in isolating what is believed to be the common cold virus, and has grown a culture in the laboratory, could be the best news for f j USSR Gesundheit i y when Mr. Elsen- I hower took office, the United States was still far ahead of the source inflationary danger may ' not be too troublesome. With a month of the new year , " the main factor an the 1958 cession. years. ..In Hence another was done by those millions of honest patriotic Americans, some of them In high; plates, who have since World War II been ready to believe in the Soviets' good intentions, Vchingi1 and readiness to "make? peace." There are still plenty of such people and recent- ly, thanks to the Khrushchev visit, their number has probabTy .Increased. In my judgment the real trouble lies .with the , wishful thinking of so, many' of us, our insatiable greed for more of everything Vand almost frantic desire to get out of our present fix with a mini-muof effort and inconvenience. Without such a prevailing mood no conspirators could have done our country much harm. President Eisenhower is a great patriot inspired by f a dream- - of peace which he still hopes he can realize. I say this" because I know him personally and because I have studied his conduct closely over many years. ' rights reserved, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) CAU Add and subtract the letters in the names of the things shown. Due: its what nobody wants to happen. Answer to yesterday's "Puzzle Box": 600 tickets. Win the Britannlca World Atlas or Yearbook of EventsSend your riddles, jokes, tricks to 'Tell Me Why!" Today's winner Is; Thomas Parmon, 12, Wa, Tex. |