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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH CLASSIFIED iim lit DEPARTMENT U. N. Converts Modern War AUTOS, TRUCKS Plant Into Peace Factory . 1 V, By B m 1816 I ftNU Servlie, Millington, LAKE SULCUS. e 1) W., C. -- At this writing, corrrnitttfs of the United are still j mns In the r eding jeat moderr c '.ntory build ng low converted -t j to a plant for e 1 if manufacture interr a 1 on a food will A him-lu- 1 d committie juetings are be-n- g held in the rooms where nce the delicate Tldl ig lients of warfare incehummed siernly and efliciently Here delegates to the assembly of Jie United Nations, split up into roups, tackle the various subjects Hotted to them Just as the committees of congress discuss the bills md agree upon their form before they are submitted to the committee of the whole house for and action The difference Is that the assembly. unlike congress, cannot pass laws, It can only express the will of die majority Its value Is to register, before the world, world opinion as txpressed by the nations which make This Is the up the United Nations Drst step toward a world government whose chief purpose is to police' the world against war. While the committee meetings were taking place the security council, which compares roughly with the senate, held some of its meetings In the same building, for unlike the assembly, which meets only once a year, the security council Is a continuing body. The Council of Foreign Ministers, Which also Is meeting In New York, la a body entirely separate from the United Nations. Saddle U S. With U. N. Expense s It was characteristic of the desire to maintain a realistic" attitude (let us hope) which resulted In the imphasls on fiscal matters, causing newspapers on the first days committee meetings to display a head like this i). s. opposes ' PAYING HALF OF U. N.s Itll.I S At the meeting of the budgetary committee. Senator Vandenberg got In a sly dig when he suggested that If the other nations felt the Amer-lia- n 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 America would pay 49 89 per cent of U N 'i bills while Communist Russia, although much greater In size and population, would provide J per cent In the plan submitted Of course, any amount balanced against the price of war Is 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 the pursestrings of the whole organization, the committees likewise supervise the several important subsidiary agencies, some of which will become extremely powerful when and if they carry out the duties planned for them. For Instance, the many plans for improving living standards and social relations throughout the world, which is the purpose of the economic and social council, and the projected trustei ship 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 with talk among the smaller courtries for amending provisions governing the power of the veto in security council Russians Vie to Last Minute Early in the meetings of the general comifiittee (the steering committee) and in the assembly itself, it became evident that the Russians were following a genet al plan of which was not unlike that which had appeared and still is appearing in all the controversies The B A H B S ;; v 'e . . V - v- -r. 4 ' - . i. !?,J C- 'v MMI t.alni Vie do not live, but only violently a poinl and then, when they see that they are beaten, yield Sometimes this looks like pure obstructionism sometimes it seems merely an effort to display strength and cornhdtiveness, sometimes it is only a patent move to keep Russia in the foiefiont of the negotiations as a f rce with which to he reckoned There is also the language barrier Probably there are no more competent peiformers among the various typis of experts than the translators at these inti rnatlonal gatherings Much has been written of their remarkable ability to translate without taking a single note, long paragraphs of some speakers who get so deep In their subjeits that they forget that the translator Is waiting patiently to translate one segment hi fore the speaker goes on to the next Prize of them all is Pavlov, the lean and srholarly looking young man who apt ears to wrap himself about Molotov or Vishinsky and with his lips close to the listeners ear pours In the words so rapidly that it would appear they synchronize with the movement of the speaker' lips But even a perfect translation may different meaning, just produce as the same word may mean two different things in the same language to two different pairs of ears. You may recall the famous Molotov outburst at the opening of the assembly, the speech In which the Russian delegate demanded disarmament, objected to the Baruch atomic energy plan and went right down the line walloping everything In alght. Ai I remarked earlier, there was more smoke than fire In that tirade and American Delegate Austin, suspecting as muih, made the terse comment on the speech, smart hut tough When the translations came back fmm the report in the Russian press Austin's winds became "smart but sharp " Now It may be that tough" Is a too her word tn Russian than It Is in rnglish because the Russians' ordinary conduct in such and some other matters, all the way from dancing to bre ikf.isting on vodka, may he what we would consider tougher than the Anglo Saxon approach. It was doubly ways hard. hard in Kansas where the pio- neers had to endure border wars over slavery, bad men, drouths, grasshoppers, blizzards and dust storms, in addition to the ordinary hardships of a new country. But they stuck it out. d early years that steeled and the Kansas spirit which conquered the prairies They stuck it out, rose above the trials of the hour and developed that rare sense of humor which enables Kansas people to laugh at themselves and the foibles of mankind Despite Coronado and other Spanish explorers, and French traders, Kansas remained Indian and buffalo country for two centuries after BREAD B4SKET OF THE WORLD . . . Kansas is the No. 1 wheat English colonists settled in New England and Virginia. producing state of the nation, yielding almost a fourth of the entire U. S. crop. Slow in Settlement. It was not until the Kansas NeWhether for or against slavery, Kansas is ideally situated for braska bill was passed in 1854 that In log huts, agriculture, but it took a plow to the land was opened to settlement. Kansas settlers lived s shake houses, sod shanties, break the sod Where William F. At that time the entire white popuand other humble shelters, usused to hunt buffalo are the Cody lation of Kansas consisted of about ing grass, brush and buffalo chips greatest wheat lands in the world 700 soldiers, based at Forts Leavenworth and Riley and Walnut Creek for fuel. The sod crop" was corn Kansas produces more wheat than and corn they ate! Corn bread, any other state in the union almost of the entire United parched corn, hominy, corn meal mush they boiled corn, fried it, States crop It is first In milling baked it, stewed It Fortunately, and wheat storage. Corn, alfalfa, they had beef, pork and milk to go hay, sorghum, broom corn, Sudan with it, and a coffee substitute, grass, potatoes, sugar beets, barley, made of dried sweet potatoes, dried flax, rye, soybeans, vegetables, green okra and parched wheat fruits, truck crops Kansas produces almost everything that is ground together and boiled. Would Kansas be slave or free grown on a farm. territory? On its first election day Rich in Resources. in 1855, hundieds of Missourians ' finds riches below as well Kansas with rifles on their shoulders, as above the surface of her rolling, a liberal their belts and in fertile acres. Kansas is one of the supply of whiskey in their wag- leaders in oil production, with its the border and voted ons" crossed 1WWW natural gas Lead and All of the candidates companion, zinc are mined extensively. Coal except one were elected1 And when is produced in most parts of the the "bogus legislature" met tn July, state. Under Kansas is enough was the law the Missouri slave code to last 500 000 years! Volcanic salt of Kansas. ash, gypsum, limestone, clays and to the Civil The curtain-raise- r other resources are mined in Kanwar was fought in Kansas. Men sas. It is an important source were murdered in cold blood. of helium gas Border rulhans ravaged As the geological center of the settlements. John Brown United States, Kansas was and and his sons took up the chalis the land of trails. Those who lenge and took after the slaveholders. Bleeding Kansas" was CHIEF EXECUTIVE , . . Gov. sought land in Oregon, gold in no misnomer during the next Andrew F. Sc hocppcl is a native California or Colorado, trade few years. But gradually the with the Mexicans in Santa Fe, Kansan, born In Claflin In Barton forces won and county. A former lawyer and vetor cattle from Texas, used KanKansas became a free state. eran of World War I, he was a sas as a highway. two in slaves were listed member of the Kansas CorporaOnly The Santa Fe Trail, the California the census of I860. tion rommission until he was and Oregon Trails, the Butterfield Kanthe notables trod have elected governor in 1947. Many sas stage. Heading the list is Gen. Trail, the Smoky Hill Route, Overland Trails, Pony Express Route, post office on the Sante Fe Trail, Dwight D Eisenhower, great miliand an equal number of civilians at tary leader of World War IL Jim Lane Trail and the cattle trails from Texas, including the Chisholm, Indian missions, stage stations and Frontier Personages. Old Shawnee, Ellsworth and Westtrading posts The history of the Old West is repThe question of slavery Imresented by such Kansas personages ern Trails, all used Kansas for a as Wild Bill" Hickock, the mar- right-o- f way mediately plunged Kansas into hluodshed. Even before the Kansas today bears some of the shal of Abilene, and Buffalo Bill, bill was signed, the scout. Carrie Nation and her scars of long ago ruts made by saloon-bustinMissourians who favored slavhatchet also brought thousands of covered wagons and hooves of cattle among them. Loneery slipped across the border the state into the limelight and founded Leavenworth and In Statuary hall in the nation's ly graves still may be found, and AU hison. capitol is the figure of John J. In- bridle bits, parts of wagons and othBut Eli Thayer found 29 men in galls, senator, oiator, essayist, poet. er mute reminders of the past are New England who weie willing to Ed Howe, the sage of Potato Hill, picked up occasionally by grandchilemigrate to Kansas, settle on the and his contemporaries, Walt Ma- dren of the pioneers. Kansas is great, not only as one prairie, be neighbors to Indians and son and William Allen White of the fight slaveholders Dr Charles RobEmporia Gazette, were Kansas of the food producing states of the folks. inson brought a second party of antination, but as a great family of But the unknown soldier, the slavery emigrants, including four people who retain much of the piounhonored hero, of Kansas is the neer spirit. They stuck it out a few musicians, fiom Boston to settle at Lawrence man who introduced the plow. Congress had decreed generations ago. And Kansans are that Kansas would decide the quesHe was not a glamorous figure, still sticking it out" for freedom tion of slavery for itself. And Kanand his hands were gnarled and of thought and of action, and for the sans set out to do it in their own blistered and bent to the shape right to progress by their own efof a plow handle. way . forts tem-jare- dug-out- one-fourt- h x y anti-slave- ry 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 offices of the old state department building, where they anti-slave- d 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 Wilson versus Lodge fight over the League of Nations, which was really something far deeper than that, a fight of two powerful personalities 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 tradi tion (which was really a negative thingl 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 g , X TT . 1 blood when it flowed on the battlefield was the same color and caused the same gaping wounds at home The campaign which we have just witnessed, while it was characterized with the same old fuss and fury of the past, omitted the question of foreign policy except when it was raised by persons already discredited by both major parties That Is the hope, as 1 see it, for American dominance, for the donn nance of the American idea of human freid im We have learned that . ,, r J -- ylZy" - B!i t, - A cuv- J'ijl - 'll when it comes to f icing the woild. we meet it shoulder to shoulder as Amernans and nothing else. One of the problems of the United Nations is to find out whether the Russians prefer to export caviar or Communism. The different e between a Com mumst and a fellow traveler is tha' one knows where he wants to go anC the other is being taken for a rioe 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 Is .h s progress? pec pie cold Paul Stott Mowier sas that R tx sia has solved the problems of the economic cycles 'the booms and I busts of capita by achieving a permanent di pi es n n Xn 5vfLri WICHITA Wild Cow Towns Hold Spotlight of Frontier One of the mos, romantic roles in Kansas history was played bv the s cattle trails and the wild frontier towns which became shipping points for the herds. It was Joseph G. McCoy who first decided to do something about a market for Texas cattle. Ihere were mil'ions of the cattle, and they were more valuable than the buffalo which roan ei tl e Kansas prairies At first, Kansas towns weren't Texas-Kansa- m I interested in Texas cattle, at least most of them weren't. But Abilene was, although it was bnly a small dead place consisting of about a dozen log huts " As soon as McCoy s'arted building his depot at Abilene, the village awahued and teemed with activity By 1870 there were 4 hotels. 10 board ng houses. 9 or 10 sa'oons ard ot.ier business paccs One of the first build ngs. of course, was SOLD PAST YEAR IN fe fatey HOMES ON WHEELS New and Used Home Trailers 20 Factory Built Models to Choose From 25 Late Model Used MORGAN Cars MOTOR & FINANCE CO. 714 South Main Salt Lako City, Utah Phono 47701 MISCELLANEOUS copy. HE BUT AND SELL Office Furniture, Files, Typewriters, Addr lag Machines Safes Cash Registers. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE S6 Hest Broadway, Salt Lako City. Utah, New York Novelette: She had been his woman for years. . . . too. She had him . . . Frixample: If she felt he was neglecting her (not phoning or seeing her often enough), she well-traine- PLASTICS Make Novel Gifts At Home. got immediate action with her system. . . . She'd dial his number wait for the phone to ring once, then hang up. . . . Thus saving her pride by not "actually calling him. . . . He knew what the One Ring meant, and be would call right back. . . . This system, however, was her undoing. . . . When she started him, some of his pals heard about it but didnt want to wound him by informing him directly. . . . Soooooo one 2 a. m., one of them dialed his number let It ring once and hung up. . . . Our Hero ImmeA mans diately phoned her. verce answered. . . . And That (as Confucius used to say) Was That. 95 Kits for beginners $1 95 $3 window in plexigias Plexiglas sheets, rods, dyes, glues, etc. Instruction book 50c Catalog free. 5 PLASTIC PRODUCTS Box 1415 bail Lake Cur (I) WANTED TO BUY WANTED: sedan. 53 two-timi- E. Brand new Chevrolet 4 door pav full ceiling price, in cash. A. A, BHOOKS Monroe St. Phoenix, Aril. VVUI To Have and to Hold! The Best Investment U. S. Savings Bonds ... boom for Conant of (as the ideal Republican-didate- ) has brought many favorIn China Patrick able replies. Hurley is supposed to have told Stilwell: Yoii have four stars and I have only two, hut when I get back to Washington it will be either Stilwell returned a you or me! broken man and so was his heart. . . . Insiders hear that rent controls will be scuttled by the new congress, whether it Is Repub or Dem. . . Whisky interests on De cember 1 will up the price on straight Bourbon $22 to $25 more per case Raises on others have not been decided yet. A BOUGHT newsmags Harvard ... Bway Wiseguy: We know a kid whose mother thinks hell become president, but his father hopes he'U amount to somescandal bigger than the Gars-socase is brewing Somebody took was a powder after a big is to hit An made the market soon. It should make fight arenas and night spots breathable. . . . The Tass agency (the Russians) and a Chicago gazette's offices at Lake Success are the only press staffs with locks on their doors . . . Pat O'Brien, the star, tells chums "no more producing Learned his lesson with Crackup . . . When the chaplain at Lake-hurnaval station (hes a red-ho- t southpaw hurler) joined the officers bowling team there, they promptly changed the name of the team from Barflies to "Holy Rollers Since the N Y. recreation committee closed, they report that it is impossible to get theater seats for Vets well enough to leave vets hospital beds for relaxation Showmen oughta be ashamed! n ... STOMACH TROUBLES AWAY Why toss and turn and lose precious sleep over acid indigestion, gassiness and upset stomach? Do as thousands of men and women do sleep such simple stomach troubles away! Just take swift-actinStuart Tablets before you retire and wake up feeling relaxed and rarin' to go! Easy to take no messy mixing, no bottle. Praised by thousands, used for years. Ask your druggist for genuine Stuart Tablets. In three convenient sizes 25c, 60c or $1.20 on makers positive money-bacguarantee. Get them today. . use them tonight . . . be O K. g thing. A YOUR pay-offo- k tomorrow! st Beware Coughs from common colds ... Quotation Marksmanship: G De Maupassant: She wept like a gutter on a rainy day. . . . Sinclair Lewis: A smile like an airy pat on the arm. . . . J. K. Jerome: Idleness and kisses, to be sweet, must be stolen. . . . . O. Wilde: Women are meant to be loved, not to be nnderstood. . . . L. Montgomery: Man doesn't see all the facts, but just the portion that comes through the filter of hi II. Youngman: prejudice. She was an old maid, waiting for someone to happen. . . . James Whitcomb Riley: Good ideas are great warriors. That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly because It goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. Inflamed bronchial mucous mem- branes. Tell your druggist to sell you of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. a bottle CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis WNU W 4745 ... x:xL.--- J by lla n Ii hap.e Russian delegate are privately stating that if the veto power of the Big 4 is cancelled. Russia will take It will it on the lam for home be denied, but the British foreign office Is using heavy pressure (politically) on American delegates to play ball with British policy . Those who have sufor else fered from Bilbos cussedness will be overjoyed to learn that he is in agony Cant, we hear, ever again filibuster Might kill him if he tries. Can hardly whisper, too, without something like a stiletto cutting his A guy on the coast who throat does a column called Pikes Peek" is threatening to sue Earl Wilson for titling his comical book that way Thats what comes from writAnd why write ing bonks. . . books? They invariably show up in Broadway drug store windows (on sale for 19c) a few months later A certain syndicate is letting column-raider- s take all they want for their alleged books. . . . Then, next year, demand an accounting and royalties from their publishers at $1 per ... They stuck it out and sticking it out. until the battle is won is still a characteristic of Kansas people Iethaps it was the crucible of those 1 woo cm Man About Town: ... stay, And are too poor to get away. Life on the frontier is al- Russian deli gates frequently oppose ACCESS. "EARLY x By LDVIAKD LMLKINE 4wjviI and Commentator htreil.N Y N UKIIAGE - ' & the jail. Sidewalks were of wood and soon trembled and clattered as boot heels clomped on them Kansas cow towns held the spotThere wefe light of the frontier Ellsworth. Newton. Wichita (larger and noisier than most) and finally Dodge City ttoi ghest of them all) For 10 years Dodge City was the wickedest town in the country. But it fought hard to ga.n that Liquor distillers hear that all federal restrictions (concerning grain allotments, etc.) may be lifted within 45 days One of the biggest state department execs wants to quit because he really thinks Great Britain will eventually rii out on us and team up with Russia. . . . Against whom Nicaragua9 . . Tarrpa will have rac ing this winter for the first time in ages Instead of thorohreds thev will race Texas quarter steeds (These t are small hor-.e- s run quarter mile sprints) th-i- For You To Feel Well 24 hour Tory day. T day every Vttk, sever stopping, toe kidney filUtr Vast matter from the blood. If more people were aware of how the kidney must conatently remove urplus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that cannot stav in the blood without injury to health, there would be better understanding of why the whole rvsteoa la upset wnen kidneys faO to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent orina-tlo-n sometimes warns that something is wrong You may sufTer nagping back-ach- e, headaches, dizziness, rheumatic getting up at nights, swelling wfD paint, H hy not trv Doan PiU? You be using a medicine recommended the eountnr over Doan $ stimulate the function of the k dneys and help them to flush out poisonous waste from the blood They eontam nothng hamfuL Get Doan t today. Lse wub confluence. At all drug stores. MM |