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Show WWS'ilirjiflffllMt I UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH Low-Co- st For Soviet Assistance Termed Americas Great Mistake By BAUKIIAGE Politics Makes Strange, Etc. By EDWARD EMERINE Newt Analyst and Commentator. pret-gri- m every few minutes of his concrept versation Rusthe word sia. I like to talk about Americas great mistake, he said. "Ger-man- is JUPiRiOR y supp- Whatever one may think of the intricacy of the economic theory behind the OPA, its political implications are a thousandfold more difficult to assess. As congress battled over the tattered remains of the price control law, many a congressman who thorbeoughly detested the whole set-u- p gan to worry a little as to what might happen back home if he were held partially responsible for wrecking the agency. It was all right for the representatives of farm communities. The farmer would reap the reward of higher prices first. By the time he felt the effect of higher prices on the things he had to buy, OPA probably would be forgotten. But congressmen from industrial centers were in quite a different position. These communities are heard from the moment the missus encounters a markup at the corner grocery. That is the reason that a number of Republicans supported the administration stand on OPA. If the Republican party is to capture the house of representatives next November, it will have to pick up votes in the cities. osed to have lost the war by making mistakes; by attacking Russia, by not invading England after Dunkirk, by this and by that 1 contend that Americas great mistake was not staying out of Europe until Germany had licked Russia. I mean staying out in every way. Because without American supplies Russia would have been beaten. I reminded him of the fact that America wanted a short war, that we had opposed Churchills plan for attacking Europe through the Balkans and thereby obtaining possession of the trouble-makinstrip of territory which the Russians now dominate from the northern border of Greece up through Berlin. We wanted to shorten the war by leaving the eastern front to ftussia while the western allies smashed the German power entrenched in Barbers to Boost France, the Low Countries and Vocabulary Too Italy. Thus, millions of American It is probably fitting that along lives would be (and were) saved. with the dollar haircut which has made Its appearance in metropoliChurchill Foresaw barber-shoptan we may find the Balkan Influence barber presenting us four-dollthe Churchill foresaw probably words. Barbers long have been difficulties which would arise with known for the quality of their verba Russia able to expand her inal output and in some cases for the fluence up to the fringes of western as well. Now they may quality Roosevelt believed that have a chance Europe. really to reach the the war must be won quickly and for the leader of a barbers he thought that by giving the Rus- heights, union has offered to enlist the aid sians everything they asked for in of 10,000 barbers in a campaign to the way of military support their get some of the facts of atomic life be would and removed suspicions across to the customer. that they would play ball with the Mrs. Lillian C. Watford, secretary Allies in the peace and after. He e of the Atomic Information believed that Stalin needed peace received this offer. She committee, so badly that he would come around. told us about it at a gathering which General Eisenhower himself we had in Washington in mid-Jul- y didnt achieve any more of a realisin by many nuclear participated tic viewpoint in Tegard to Russia scientists, public men and women than Roosevelt did if we are to be- of lieve his somewhat verbose Boswell, to note, and others who are trying get the public to understand the e Mr. Butcher, in his diary. importance of control of atomic Butcher writes: energy. She took the barbers ofIke said he felt that the fer quite seriously, and I believe, more contact we have with the Russo. I hope that the barsians the more they will understand properly to broadcast the basic us and the greater will be their co- bers learn facts about the atom, not of course, operation. The Russians are blunt from the standpoint of nuclear physand forthright in their dealings and but from the standpoint of the icists, any evasiveness arouses their susman who would like to live average It should be possible to picions. life out in peace, and leave a work with Russia if we follow the his world in which his children can do same pattern of friendly that has resulted in the great the same. accord of allied unity. . , . Roosevelt and the generals were Congress Scans proved right when they said Stalin Types of Closing needed peace. But they were wrong It took some time for congress to when they thought he would come make up its mind whether it would around. The state department unadjourn sine die (without date set derstands the situation now and, as for as they usually do the recently concluded meeting of whenreconvening), a session comes to an end, the foreign ministers demonstrates, or whether recess. they would appeasement has been over for When congress merely recesses it some time. We know Russia can't can reassemble without a special fight and doesnt want to. Russia proclamation by the President. knows we cant fight whether we When the President calls want to or not. She is acting ac- into session he has to issuecongress a proccordingly and according to historical lamation. Thats all the Constituprecedent. tion demands. He doesnt have to deliver it. Out of courtesy, howTragic History ever, the White House always teleNo-lsInspires graphs the president of the senate But anyone who studies Russian and the speaker of the house. history knows that the eternal "no But the proclamation is not good which si ems about the only answer unless the Great Seal of the United the Russian statesmen are allowed States is affixed thereunto. Nobody to make, comes from something can do that but the secretary of far deeper than mere stubbornness. state, for he is the keeper of the This is only one of the seal. So along with the proclamamany typical characteristics which tion, the President has to issue a the Soviets have revealed. It has warrant, ordering the secretary of nothing to do with the fact that they state to do the affixing. believe in a theory of political econI might say that the secretary of omy which is opposed to our own. state usually delegates this task, a It is deeply implanted quality which reminds me of a story, which. which is Russian rather than mereI believe, never has been printed. ly Soviet or Communist. When Secretary of State Hull had And so when you read Soviet been in office 12 years, there was a Russia evoked the veto for the sixth little outburst of congratulations. time in security council history. . . President Roosevelt, as they were (maybe the 16th time by the time talking privately, remarked: Coryou read this) . . . remember its dell, you are the sole guardian of the an old Kalmuck custom. Mother great seal, as you know. He Russia has taught her children from paused, and Mr. Hull replied: Yes, the days of the invasion of Ghengis Mr. President. Then the President! Khan, that when a stranger becklooking him straight in the eye! ons, the only answer is no, no, a asked: Where is it? thousand times nol In fact, a It was Hull's turn to pause. "I Russian seldom says no once it dont know, he admitted, Ive Is always net, net, net! never seen it. g s, door. The truck and garden plot, the orchard and the country home are but a step from the gears of industry. In Wisconsin, the neighborliness and friendliness of the small town Is never lost The milk of human kindness is never evaporated in the fiery ovens of a factory. A great industrial state, with more factories and mills than you can count, Wisconsin remains the land of milk cows, cheese, butter, apples and more milk cows! Everything grown in the north temperate zone is produced In Wisconsin in grains, vegetables and fruits. So varied is its agriculture that the state produces corn, wheat, rye, barley, hay, flaxseed, potatoes, sugar beets, tobacco (for cigar wrappers), hops, peas, sorghum and maple syrup. More peas are canned there than in any other state, and more hemp is raised. The state ranks high in cranberry production and also produces apples, cherries, plums and other fruits. Wisconsin remains a leader in the number of dairy cows, in cheese production and in the output of condensed milk products. Industries Are Varied. Made in Wisconsin stamps thousands of articles used all over the world, from the smallest radio S' - ( L.i'L"2:.- tunate of states in transportation facilities. Steamboats ply the Mississippi and other rivers. Lake ships dock at Superior, Green Bay, Milwaukee, Racine and other points, and Great Lakes traffic is considerable. Fast, modem railroads speed across the state. Truck traf fic from city to city, and from Wis- - J C .1 A i, V 'v A 5VJ- BARBS The moment the lid went off and the long green was waved under their noses, the steaks and chops, the roasts and the bashful filets came romping out of their hiding places. Hired hands are going to work shorter houis on the farm, we hear, rrubnhly the cows will move milking time up a little to be obliging. by Baukhage s v. & v&t ' 'X x ' 5 ' . a-- t x. i IVYS A I'tVtS',- 1 A ' J&a w rr e A TWO CANOES . . . Wisconsins lakes and forests are never ending, and are always a source of pleasure for those who love the outdoors. g to the greatest machinery. The state has miscel- consin to the rest of the United States, Is increasing steadily. laneous mining and quarrying, sawLived Like Badgers. mills and lumbering, paper mills The pioneers found Wisconsin a and wood products factories, breweries and flour mills, cheese fac- vast wilderness. They cleared it, tories and creameries. Manufac- broke it, and built upon it. They tured goods include sheet metal- dug deep into lead mines and often lived in holes in the ground like work, foundry products, farm masome said. (That is why badgers, electrical chinery, goods, engines and pumps, plumbing supplies, it is often called the Badger State.) tools and hardware, automobiles But the people of Wisconsin, for all and tractors, refrigerators, preci- their industry, always have loved to play, to enjoy life, and to find resion Instruments and countless other articles. During World War II freshment in the states great playits hundreds of factories produced grounds. The northern half of Wisconsin is tools of war for the army and navy, a S. U. great forest, smelling of pine evon men backing fighting pitch and brush fires. Rivers thunery. front. Wisconsin is one of the most for- - der over trap-roc- k ledges or flow quietly on clean sand beds. There are hidden ponds, many swamps and uncounted lakes. A third of the northern boundary juts out into Lake Superior, and the entire eastern length of the state is washed by the waters of Lake Michigan. In the southwest sprawls the coulee country, often steep and irregular, veined by streams and rivers, tributaries of the Mississippi. Apple orchards smother the ridges with their pink and white blossoms while the slopes are covered with sugar bush and abandoned gingseng beds. Wisconsin has 8,500 counted lakes, 10,000 miles of trout streams, 500 miles of Great Lakes shoreline, innumerable rivers and springs. It has lakes for swimming, boating, fishing and all water sports Lake Winnebago, Lake Geneva, and the lakes around Madison, to name a few. On the Great Lakes, trim sailing craft course out to the horizon, while outboards and racing boats split the water near the shores. Jean Nicolet was the first l ISIH.V . . . Two Great Lakes, man known to have set footwhile on Superior and Michigan, and hunWisconsin soil. He came to the dreds of small ones lure fisherGreen Bay area in 1634 and visited men to Wisconsin. the Winnebago Indians who lived part earth-movin- Editor Credited with Major Role la Dairy Promotion agricultural of campus Each morning as I carefully University of Wisconsin at Madispread a thin film of butter son is a bust of William Dempster on my undersized, toast, I Hoard. A glance at Wisconsin hisdutifully remind myself that Amrr-ic- a is eating more than it ever did tory discloses that he was governor of the state from 1333 to 1891. But before. the story of Hoard and his service to Wisconsin ami the world goes If a cloik put strawberry cream back a seme of years before he in your chocolate soda and then gut was governor. you to pay fur it anyhow, would you In the town of Fort Atkinsay he was neither deft nor dumb? son about little 1370 there was an eiitor torn awkey, us ool. calm i the 1 in crisis, xiy )' ,ervous as U, hot stov 7 earn has si ign of the ut Owner as.l He ap Ai'ant belie tils dream Chance of e As a bigl Xry way ai Vja!l,: winnii .A" 'iant becan ssions ye. a barriei who noted the results of many wheat crops. He believed that in time there would be no good farms unless farmers turned from w heat grow mg to raising of livestock. He argued that Wisconsin ho longer could depend upon grains and that the future prosperity of the state lay in diirying. At flist he devoted a column to his campaign, ttien a page and later a separate section. Eventually he g ... '4 - It 1 esti is i-- wner has or the exc 'ng in fron .onsiderabl iant drear -- days ahead Jghtmare. and uD RIGHTER your chairs, footstools . 16116(1 sofas deserve them, too! fankees. fun making slipcovers with In 4116 bsed t Wl batch arent gifted with directions. also st Capitol Hill now is burdened with But the too many demagogues. along the shore (and whose descendants still live in Wisconsin). Territory Organized. In April, 1836, over 200 years after Nicolets visit, the Territory of Wiskonsan was organized to include what is now Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota and parts of the Dakotas and Illinois. The townsite of Madison, the capital, was surveyed and platted that year. Gradually, however, the territory shrunk in size after long and bitter boundary quarrels. To give Illinois an outlet on the Great Lakes, the boundary was moved northward and Chicago was lost. The northern peninsula, a region rich in copper and Iron, was given to Michigan to replace territory taken from Michigan by Ohio. Other boundary adjustments followed as the drive for statehood was accelerated. On May 29, 1848, Wisconsin became a state. The years following Wisconsins admission as a state brought a great influx of German and Scandinavian immigrants. Population doubled and trebled each decade. Railroads opened rich interior of the state to farmers and lumbermen. Wheat became a basic commodity, with flour and grist mills springing up everywhere. Introduction of livestock brought about Wisconsins noted dairy industry. By I860 many towns were offering inducements to industry, and manufacturing was begun. Paper and pulp mills began operating, and meat packing was Introduced. Shoes and leather products followed naturally. The metal industry, now one of Wisconsins greatest, grew rapidly because of the states location halfway between Minnesota's iron ore deposits and coal fields In Illinois and Indiana. The land of green woods and cool waters continues to grow and progress. Its Industry, agriculture and good homes make life better. Wisconsin is a serene and balanced land. e S 'iVYS S'" On the off-col- v - v ... no-is- ' M.11 .V-- . a Tri-Stat- m iV SS X & iarefrei what The swindlers became rich and powerful railroad owners without own investing a penny of their money! V ' 'V'V ' , key, owi Sox, after si ,nd waiting pennant, jow be L $27,000,0001 The Tweed Ring was the most corrupt gang that ever afflicted New York. Boss Tweed filched millions via bribery and legalistic hocus-pocu- s until he was finally put behind bars. But Tweed beat the rap many times. After one grand jury failed to dig up enough evidence to indict Tweed, an editorialist wrote that it reminded him of the man who had been discovered dead and the jury was puzzled as to what caused his death The jury finally issued this report: It was an act of God under very suspicious circumstances. woul roJ Peculiar deals involving congressional war profiteering revive similar shenanigans by legislators in the past. About a century ago a group of business men borrowed $200,000 and incorporated the Central Pacific railroad. Then they used the 200Gs to bribe congressmen to steal railroad franchises. The 200Gs eventu9,000,-00- 0 ally secured land grants for acres and a federal loan of WNU Feature. balance has been struck Of course, Ghengis Khan didn't WSV Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Which where the hapWisconsin answer. in no an for take Washington, D. C. of the rest the ceurse is the of farm and about combination a from long piest An army officer, back world can follow if it can. Lets found! been has tour of duty in Germany, called on factory as me the other hope the process won't be The state is rural in appearwaa He day. its industry so wideance, about situation in OP A Battle Has spread that it is never far into from a dairy barn to a factory and Political Side Europe A " Protectl Your Fumii current le Huey Long's evil talent. He was A reporter once Easy, upholstery prc'roDin a wily rat. 841 has .verage bi saw a page from a Huey Long ad- Instructions txons for slipcovers for 6 chairs, were a and couch. stools dress. Various instructions Due to an unusually large derainaIIl6er penciled in the margins. Such as current conditions, slightly more t While it fist use and angry pause here, required In filling orders for a ieit.ff popular pattern numbers. gesture, etc.' Send your, order to: !d. the At the end of one long paragraph, rere also In scribbled was capithe following Drure' Sewing Circle Needlecralt tal letters: Argument weak here. 564 W. Randolph St. Chicago 8t dagglO, Yell like hell! 20 cents J ... low-co- step-bv-st- I for Patter.Ienrich, Enclose One machine in the East' doesnt g trick. The boss miss a sends toys to children of voters. He uses expensive chauffeured cars to bring voters to the polls. And on Election day he sends nurses to take care of tots while mothers vote. vote-gettin- No one ever has estimated how much money grafting officials have filched. But the sum reaches astronomical figures. One fact will give you a faint idea of the rooking that the public has taken and still is taking. When Tammany was riding high its take during one year was $75,000,000. inuffy Ctten, Name. "handler Address. jrfjnse. Thierous. Gas on Stomaifany i Relieved in 5 minutes or double your mo , Wbn excess stomach tcui caasee p&mfai. c . 21711 Ingfras, aour stomach and heartburn dooter djrai medicines kk'v prtMenbe the fastest-actin- g dUU symptomatic relief medicine like thoeemDirc Tablets. No laxative. Beii-an- e brings eomft TeX 1 double vour money back on retain c juiyor to ua. 25c at ail druggists. ut the j 4es, Just ..wiw.wutside of stand, Saraso orida, t tave been om The influence of corrupt political bosses on national affairs cannot be overestimated. Many lawmakers are merely errand boys for local ward heelers. A 'reporter recently snapped: This is truly a mechanical age. Even public officials are frequently machine made. - opponents once persuaded a grocer named George Norris to enter the primary against the U. S. senator. The Big Idea was to confuse voters by having similar names on the ballots. But the scheme was called off when it was spotlighted by the press. Mark Twain used his pungent pen to attae he shady schemes of Tammany. The death of a Tammany leader inspired one of Twains famed quips: I refused to attend his funeral. But 1 wrote a very nice letter explaining that 1 approved of it! York , ,gooi (n. r,'iny predii pr )IYvADO $ .Vove anyb Now pa flcCA';V,!Tl'lub. yu rte'gITvdfl:ey at let de F r0 deep, 1 In base! s attend Moes, with itar team ifonnected e able t( indiscreto round tl DUE TO ofdietary drinking w in tl water audden changes in weather tank re here quickly relieved by Wakefei 0j j. Blackberry Balsam. Sold at alld'- -y omc stores. Be sure to ask for genc-ei'"sr4heerf ul ne of th 28 ews Alison Boston k 'ears to vc md Tern )uffy, Bi Side-Sho- Mussolinis daughter, Edda, who has been amnestied by Italy, has applied for entry Into Argentina because theres no spot in Italy where she would be welcome. But the passport hasnt been okayed yet. Belgian monarchists are perturbed over the crown prince of Belgium, who would prefer entering a monastery to assuming the throne, if the king (as expected) abdicates. , . . The most quoted gag (in the foreign bars in Shanghai) goes this way: The Russians will probably obtain the atomic bomb in the Shanghai market. . . . Los Angeles, they say, is being flooded with phony ten spots. Mrs. M. Falkenburg (Jinxs mother) wilj follow in her daughters footsteps and become a Conover model! . . Irving Berlin has two songs on tne Hit Parade at once! Doris Duke shoves off for Honolulu shortly, accompanied by a boogie-woogi- e teacher. She Will spurn the offer of a fashion mag post in Paree. A famed photo mag is dropping 20 p. c. of its roster, as is a big N. Y. ayem paper. A mobster who tells tiie underworld the mayor crossed him, threatens to erase him when he gets out. ... ft C: Vood, Jeorgie S 914. Boston lurly fell ... that circulated'widely, even today. He supplemented his writing by touring the state and speaking until he hammered his gospel into the consciousness of the people. But the farmers of 1870 were inclined to resent being tied to a cow. After a while Hoard convinced a group of German farmers to go into dairying, and many Scandinavians were to follow. Wheat production began to drop as the dairy output increased. loi (oimvith fun Duffy) for a Streeter nearly a year ago. Under the impression his emHe ployer was wealthy. practiced forging the boss signature . . . After 10 months or so he tried passing a check ith the employers signed name to see if it worked. . . . He wrote it out for only $50. . . . It came back marked Insufficient Funds! mag-azin- e h ""nYs year. All is fair in love, war and politics. Sen. George Norris political New founded Hoard's Dairyman, a : le looking started working LIFELONG RESIDENT . . . Walter S. Goodland, governor of Wisconsin, is a native son, born in Sharon December 22, 1862. lie has been a lifelong resident of his native state, having been engaged successively as a school teacher, lawyer, newspaper publisher, mayor of Racine, farmer and lieutenant governor before becoming the states chief executive. lie took the oath as governor January 4, 1912, ,nd ha9 served continuously since. Stir Jo Ytuth and t razee si 'he Yank that ame Rt lpugan, nany nv THE Made with a face cream base. Yofl nough. is actually toothing to normal !yithout No harsh chemicals or irrita1 vould ha b. salts. Wont harm skin or A Stays soft and creamy, never rie. grainy. TVy gentle Yodora Jed the worn)' difference! yt If Tom of the Re 3ostt n "'T Guaranteed 3 ame thr & Yanl ,av hep cloli-Jiu- t i, yf 4" by'-- -- ,m - r;ihe 'mar test Pown fc.Re AtoJtnur .u WHEN YOU WANT THAT NEXT JOB OF oth -- 'iave add ew mill is sho eai.s tc Harry j baseball PBirmff at lei 'em Yai av dami npossib Let Us Sho W arough What We Cofl nrs. j wh sta city If you jP over prefer, smg-dclorder by mail oihkees, it to the office a 1 |