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Show . r , -- 12A- .: ... LIZOOPETT - ' tAi: , r. . Lkl:ILIErYS c'N,Ittr-It- 3 0,4, so It take city. Utah, ' - . , , Jul y 23, 1963 Tu - stley, .,ry-r72- , . . . staV for the Constitution If'e . bcen divinely having Lis ' -, . ;Pi s 1&4t ,142',4 LIA' , -k ' Ili , ' - . - ' t' , - - ,,,.,- ' ''.: :.- - -' ' -- e - , 47 ..,' - 2 ..,,,........---- , -- - 4' I f--- a - - alWita')7 j - ., - ,e. - .,:,,, 0 '.4,111 ''- -1 - - UPPING THE .- By ROSCOE DM:ALMOND , ...., 1,,, .,...,- COULD BE no strike or lockout rulings-during that period, but the-IC' THERE .- on-goi- judgment of several sions, made thousands commis- - fact-findi- - mendous pressure to coine to terms . The bill the President proposes to Con- gress would put unprecedented and irn-mense power into the hands of this gov- erranent agency. The ICC has never be- fore' handled a labor dispute. We take an extremely dim view of this extension of government power. railroad jobs Of - .e.". ,. -- obsolete, 'We have, an immovable object in the operating rail unions that have refused to accept the findings of these COMITASSIOnS and threaten to strike arty railroad lines rules into that put new, irtodernized-wor- kcr feet, BUT WITH TIIE companies and the And we have the undeniable fact that unions on a direct collision course and any such strike for any considerable durawith no sign of either veering off, some tion would be ruinous to the American kind of switch has to be pulled. Congress, economy and cannot be tolerated. --Slittle more -- - Iif -i-t- approvesthe Preqicient'spnaposal, in this should do so only on a strictly temporary than a week left of his grace period, Presi; dent Kennedy has turned to Congress., He basisand will do so, we feel sure, only roresort and a4 a i some Commission for Corrunerce Interstate sign that reason will prevail. ing quire - 'Noe. eclipse-L-wit- damage--- perhaps damn ge. Exposure to sun, in moderation, is wonderfully healthful. The sun's ultra inlet rays activate the skin's cholesterol, which produces vitamin D that preventsrickets and promotes general health. But overexposure- - can wipe out any such benefits and cause long-terdamage. Everyone knows that sunburn is bad, that It causes pain ana itch and sleepless nights,The blistered skin that comes with a bad sunburn is actually the result of a second-degre- e burn, the same kind that comes from fire or scalding liquids Only a foolish or careless person will expose himself to this kind of misery m wisdom . VVhy THE IRISIf SWEEPSTAKE Statek--Wh- y . American press promote this lottery:gtor- It aft-.If) ing,ei,errwinnint pear respectable? Federal statutes rflake it illegal to (1 import or transport in interstate co- ot rnerce any lottery ticket; (2) mail lottery tickets or any inforrnatiotrabout lotteries; and (3) sell lottery tickets without buy- ing a $50 wagering stamp. of promoting the Irish Sweep-- and-Mak- mon Tht in; for wirtitengtfructrstatim-t- ir Non-Aaaressi- Sweeps'-tin'oug- 14,We T4;4 school or 4,11 - f t ,,, . .,"-- ! , , - ,, - s , -- I ' ' ' ' t - s r i Av.....- ,,0 '-'' -- s I - ' , , I 4 , , ' 1 ... - KIIRUSIICREV . would like nothing better than to be able to wave a NATO Pact before the subjugated Eastern Eu- ropea9s t.t.r,d,sayt in effect: 'See, even the West recognizes your sub. jugation and there is no use hoping or workingfor anything differ- - ent" ... Averell Harriman no ties to test ba,n The reason Mr. K. a wants NATO-Warsa- w nonaggression pact is the best reason for not giving it hi tn. Wh e th er fed t o a test ban or separate from it, such a sion pact would be good for the So viets and bad for the peoples of Eastern Europe, and bad for the West The United States by unanimous resolution of Congress and by the declarations of every President since 'DJ is committed to the objective - atseeingpontieaLireedom.ancLza tional restored to the peoples of Eastern Europe. Under the Yalta Agreements the Union once pledged to support governments in East-- - d , 1 I i,.....,,,..........1 .. . rellinii MR. I - ' err, Europe. WE COULD SIGN A pact with the Soviet - Union-- -if bricktotheuneawroundationof power of his own office curtailed? How is it that every politician wants everybody else's power curtailed own'? excepthis When KIM. w The time came when -- . . - -- - , .., I IS IIARD TO GET them to understand that one earl be a true Iiiend without saying so every half,. tour, without writing long, ehaity letters, uith-ou- t ' iso . - remind me of what Tall3rrand said about Mine,- - de Stael: "She Is such a good friend that she would e all-hacquaintances into the water-for-th-nleasure of fishing them out" Democrats Planned Third Term-- - Fore'FDit?' (Pram Me Dweet News Fitts) - Years Ago July 23v 1938A gentle but per., sistent, rumor came from the New Deal's "inner circle" that President 'Franklin D. Roosevelt 'might be drafted to run for a third term. 75- AND NO DOUBT, we dry, cool personalities are just - as vexing 'and trying to them. We must seem kingularly unresponsive, changeable, unconununicaabout the sacred bond tive, arid frightfully of friendship. They must wonder if we have any "real fedings,, at all. t be a economic good marormay-bopldlosophy; it is certainly the best emotional jilt:Hosophy; Live and let live, each hi his own way, working out his own the only sensible attitudetolake toward those around us; close or not , Dut it is dollishly hard for many 'people to do,. Parents, especially, become -Infuriated if their chi', drew differteinperaments,ity-frOntthemseNes7 thrylook upon it almostas a rejection orrepudiation- -N,vnieti, indeed, in some vases it fluky be. A warm, moist parent tends to breed a cooler and drier child. as an inevltabte LeactiQT1 i o all that steam. .. matters ofthis THERE IS ,NO RIGHT or sort: personalities are asdifferent as fingerprints. And if we are evet going to learn to love our enemies, theibest way to start ili by tolerating our friends a little better, and pot trying to change them. - ily those of. The Deseret blows,. fiZtilMEZZ 50 Years Ago' - '- most responsible for the giant eele bration tomorrow were Joseph J. Cannon, grartd marshal of the pa-- , Stephen I. Richards, executive chairman the Sons and Daughters of 'Utah Pioneer's; And Frank D. Snow, secretary. of theSons and Daughters of UtaltPio. t ' - - ,, celebrating the fraternal acutelhat efery ornissi( seems snub, every under --T - statement Seems a rebuff They Interpret a difference ........,............--- .........,..,..,.........0. end not ne -- - ; --' '4. Opinions eeress. by censewaits end tette. writers on that eat.' ors those ot the outhors off-han- IT i as governor of er - . - aletter g linrpmittingdesirelaprove,theiririendshipthaLthey , ' - I had the receiving-fro- New York he cried to high heaven about federal power and campaigned for president on a, pla4orm of, reduced federal 'power and cost; but made history by grabbing for all the power he could get as soon as he became president. man.'" When IRK. was senator he be. That phrase be quotes is from St. moaned the powers of the president Paul. And it is a good one too for Then, as soun as he became presit gives the essence of the great CLITP ident he started a ' for despondency. A lucky break will our all orgy unprecedented in not lift your spirits for very long. history. Neither will material prosperity or At least Sheldon R. Brewster is a 'change or environment or any us honest about it. He outward thing, for the source of that he plans a grab for planning despondency or joy is deep within we as as soon him make power mayor. Tim ONE WAY TO CHANGE from E.- English a despondent person to a joyous234 S. 13th East one is to be, as St. Paul says, "strengthened with might by Rs spirit in the inner man." of temperament as a personal affront to their own code of living relationships. ' their Some of thern, indeed, are so excessivein -- ' - in which he wrote, Et is amazing how different our life is now. We used to wake up so terribly depressed in the morning. Now we wake up full of eager pallor'. My wife no longer has those Ardserable fearaabout the boys. She--. puts them confidently in Gods bands, and I can say without exaggeratingthat neither of us has had one discouraged dayor for that matter a sick daysince we saw the need of being 'strengthened with might by Ifiespirit in the inner- - re,ssary For Friontishi, 1,1, , e - LE': :; -- - - olwaya,it-u- t L - UV 'these facade regimes' power-gribbin- - our talk with vigorous and sustained action along the line suggested. And as a result they began to change. In fact they changed so completely that they became two of the most dynamic people I have Kremlin's subjugated, Moscow run European sateflires are Independent nation's? Why should we add one - J. HARRIS ,k t; 7117311-1M7Aft- - TOIVIY SURPRISE they followed up happy-satisfaetion- OUR READERS' . - it-B- ut- 01963 operation and power is all right because it is an increase of city power and not state or national? Why does not someone run for office on the basis that he wants the - ly until they first changed their ways of thinking. I used every argument I could think of to get this basic point across. And I suggested an Initial program of regular churchgoing, daily prayer and the use of simple techniques for thinking positively in everyday situations. wanted why- - should the U.S. or Britain, France or Ger- many, put their names to any treaty which suggests in any way that the MesCOW - ONE NEGATIVE will gen- When you are full of hate you will also devel4 liars. The woman told me that each time she saw the boys off to school she was filled with fear that they would be hit-br- a car and she wotild-nevi- er e ' see them very-Caragain rdive:-"ENI, now," she would say. "Don't get hurt. III be thinking about you." So, of course, she late,cted the boys with her fears. The husband in his cpwn .L7stima- iion was a failure in his business life. Ile was always going from one job to another seemingly more promising; but somehow he never managed to do any lob really well or get romotion- - - for- - which he hoped. There were moments in our interview when it seemed to me that these two people were the most completely negative and despondent hu- man beings I had ever counseled. When they had told their storyI tried to make them see that neither their circumstances nor the way ,...1 e ropean satellites are showing them- selves extremely restless under So- viet rule. Albania is pro-ReCna. manials protesting- - its economie chains. The Communist parties in Czechoslovakia and Poland are hav ing internal troubles. --- , s - n"' -- ,, ,' , . , c-- , I , For Many vmonths both hit& band and wife had '.t If e v r. 'been feeling Very depressed, tired and discouraged. I soon concluded it was not by Work. ing too hard they had grown into this condition. Apparently their way of life included plenty of partying. They went with a crowd that lived it up a lot. ' ' AS we continued talking it came out that these two were 'actually in the habit of going to bed at night so full of dislike and hate for a lot of people that they would Ile there telling relish giving certain persons a piece of their mind and just what they would say.... And in this delightful atmosphere they tried to find rest and repose! erate another: ,, ' - -- , ',4 NOW, : , ) . " 'I, - - ' ,4,. -. - , , - , , ,, s. , educ ati, ci ri whatse- - ; ever. , , ' , il given any reli gious ) IVv, int. Pact on 7 , e h Oleo.Y.6 , . - toward--the-drr-- s w-b- 0 ei 1 1 , - ' Show Is - -- it broadcast any information about lotteries-thstory about the Sweeps (Americans use If the press does not police itselt-lawplural) which the United States postal inspectors call the greatest 'bleeding may be necessary to do heart' racket in the world"? Science Monitor The press should tell the publicthrit , s ' In Other-Viorctthe odds against winning are 430,000 to and that tlii!ealbenefitAariks-otthis.- ' The mOSt TOrceful proof litiai. crinii---''charitable" lottery are not the Irish' hos- - , is nals not their physi- want Caught pitals but rather the two individuals who of' the .crime LScene to Irish the the return the cal run privately (which- is rare), but 'their psychological lif)spitals' Trust, Ltd, return, which takes two- forms indiscre- , .105,eph "Big Joe" McGrath4 a promi- nnt horse racing figure and former poll- - tion in talkingtabout it or indiscretion in tician, and his partner, Spencer Freeman:if spending the gain from it, either of which eventually traps most criminals. are now among the wealthiest men in -- rt i 1cGrath- - UNITED STATES Congress has ready found it necessary to make oesrrrthr-rrtss-tet-the-yeat---mqhat vn -- ' chafed or let down by the dry, Pool people. And, the dry cool people always feel embarrassed by the warm, moist people; , - , I have a friend in the 'l ra4 who is a 'fine person, but warm and moict. Heis full of feelings, very big on Friendship,on Letters, on Photos of the family, He ,goes "Real Human Deings." , for - va' .. ! My own temperament ' -, - tends nitre, . ) , and coot I write no letters, 7 no find ..,... any photos. carly i effusiveness rather- - sticky. - 1 ,'''' do 'W1th 4 ' 4, 1 . l' ! I my feelings, only with My r ,' l' latay of expressing them. This bothers the warm, , ' moist people. They feel that ' ' , their friendship is not ade- Sytt flat-Il- i ; -I 64 to be as demonsteative as. they are. Their Moat of ' .Tind-e, hold- g' '1laylulds1"in' "1:, ciireit;, and singing old songs,- . E -. - n. rrtHE w,Arod, moist people and Mr,. Free4tnan always has been how 10 evade the national laws of the many countries in which they sell tickets. Now is the time for the press to ex- oper- pose rather than promote the Mega . ations of tne Sweeps TII-- 410; By SYDNEY 111- .- 't - .....1,. vP - - r t, - pricea--no- MiMAE-ANILTHEX001.1-PEOP- and. l -- 1 - 4 He said he is "appalled by the spiraling ox.,t and power of state and national governments?' Ile then an nounced one of his major objectives as mayor of Salt Lake would be to "formulate a master plan for development of the city...." Maybe he would like to explain how the power of government can be curtailed while at the same time community master plans are being projected before thepublic?Or, is it that this increase in government dollars since 1929 1)11:st-PrQblen- -- : , s of h et Europe from their take of the Sweeps, hag 1, .. ' Brewster, in his of intention to run for mayor of Salt Lake City made two statements that do not seem to be consistent with each Glorify. :The Sweeps' 500 : ..,,,c---- - MSHELDON and moderation In pursuit of Jaro4ght-imbetween400- 11,p'' - BEFORE AND AFTER ELECTION: the is illegal In them does-the- -- -- 17 ,.,:el the husband WITH ANOTHER MAJOR holiday just ahead and with the long, warm, fun:. filled days of August still to follow, now more subtle kind of damage that comes avoi d avoid eve!r to those who ars . -- l-glands, -- e t - C an Candi &ate Bretlyster Clarity Position? Too-mu- -- - -,, . -- , - aggression pact, not among the sig natories of the test ban but between NATO and Eastern Europe . TIIIS IS A TYPICAL Communist negotiating tactic. The tactic rests On the beliefAtal tAhe West is-- so eager to reach an agreement with the Soviets on anything that they . 7,siduousty citltivate h, the crisis of the sun's reports indicate, a minimum of eye Americans are sufficiently alerted that they might protect their bodies as well as their eyes from sun 1 , - ,..,,' , i). ' ,-- , '1- g"' - - SCITIS-w- price.-T- he - actual sunburn but who carefully and asthe deep tan that is so popular at beaches and around swimming pools. This kind of tan may not produce blis. ters or pain, but it actually represents sunburn-lustthe same.' It is the Tesult-o- f ultraviolet rays being absorbed by the ch cells of the skim, exposure kills the cells. The. result may be skin cancer showing up many years later, Inevitably this kind of tanning prematurely ages the skin to some exten- t- Deep tanning, year after year, wrinkles and shrivels the skin, causes it to lose its elasticity, dries Oka and dangerously-dilutes the blood V ess els on the skin's surface. Now THAT THE NATION is safely past . s- he 1 , ,.1,, -- much earlier than usual (for them) and drove a the way hi New 'York to attend a service at Marble Col--; Iegiate Church. They bmught their two children, a boy of 12 and a boy of10. After the service we had op portunity- for a visit ,together. I learned from them that this was the first time they 0,:.,..,,,,,,,.,,,,,-- , ,,.. 1 had been to church in 'years. And they .t s had not sent their It, , kids to Sunday t......, - I :J.1 ,Th ..., .. . Geneva , In Moscow and in New t York. Now, at the last moment of negotiation, after each side has publicly committed itseirto the same kind .of test ban (everything except un . derground) the Soviets propose a new item for the agenda and want -- Ta n Can Be Bad, Too- 1 , ,,,,..., , E2MM - li,..-To Be Able Not Get May My Rig Moving Again" . ' It ; ------- - . asking-the-sovi- -- -- risis-and-with - .,...,, .. , , ts-. . BUT IN THE RAILS dispute we have Irresistible force in the - , mt. 'V' c., ifj ,,p,, -- Lord Hai !sham A TREATY &NDING nuclear test . ili the::aimosPheret ut outer alerted to Soviet trick space and under water is either de. sirable in itself or it Isn't desirable. can exact an extra dividend from Such a treaty either serves the-- naus. tional interests of both sides or it A test ban will be welcome and come into being. We to isn't going are hot to f. pay desit able. but let's riot make the-misome additional price to sign, and we of "buying" it from Moscow if the Kremlin doesn't want it for its are not going to accept a side deal . own sake. to get them to sign. There is no reason to criticize SeeondlY, this is no way to ne- Mr. Khrushchev for trying. The So- gotiate prudently or successfully with the Communists. For at least vies could use a NATO-Warsapact to very good eight years now the Eisenhower and Beth the non- Kennedy administrations have been advantage right and the Corn- peoples discussing disarmament and a 'test Communist -- rules. President Kennedy emphasizes that this is not compulsory arbitrationthat any ICC rules can be set side by agree- merits reached between the companies and unions. This is an important distinc- ton But, practically speaking, it-- is ob-vious that an ICC decision favoring one iSeun;I:tytmheomrnsienhgesa ,Pohuiltadoeflpbehida , - n ar to ...- ,.--,-- .1,03 INCENT PEALE the s pur of the moment met BY IN01131AN 00upN , - C I ft- 4, , :i of i , ' - extra diplomatic price for signing a nuclear test ban, You will recall that in his Fast Eertin sPeeell Mr; Ktrushchey said that "simultaneous with" a test ban agreement theFe, should be a nonaggression pact between NATO and the Warsaw countries; that is, with the Soviet Union andthe Eastern European satellites, ender- Aierell liarrimsin and Britain's Lord Nallsham went to Moscow with instructions not to Jet anything be tied to the test-batalks are these: , could be imposed. Both sides . would be bound by such , rules during a two-yeperiod or until they conk! hammer out ments which would then replace the ICC the-cour- . I ,. 1, If - :4,-- , t ),i1 .', 8 - - --- WASILINGI'ON, D.C.There' are ,1Y good rPasonswhy the unitedStatf,s and Britain intend to give the Icy glint to Premier Khrushchev's . could-be--appea- led - , . - t ,.... '11-!- 'No Deat1 On A approval before any railroad work rules i - BAN PRICE: TEST ASIDE HATE: 80i6 Cure For Despondency , ' - sec17:::r:ttSthetartr - r--.7- ' --.- r riir .. - Sad ,b,, , .4, . - , v,,,, , , r.,,. . , . - -,,' ;. 1 i , , , I -, ,,,,b; , , -, ,- -t . A , - - 0 "lh' , - ,, . e., ' A- , - - -' 1 I )7 sq '- 1 ' , . o .. ,,,,-,.- i ,7 4oP ,, 1, . "- -. 4041 Could Se Disastrous- - - , .4.-- -, --- 1, 4,-- ,.; '' )?..1 4 -- - 0 i 11, ' , '. ' '1'51 , j I ...- - 7'.-- - 0......... ,,..4 r ';4 1 -I., ' I -- ,,,' 1C144' c; - V- , . - ,0 , ,, - .. ,.,.14f. 1 1 '''' ,ti t,- ,, , 1 r- , ...00,1111-- ... ',-- k 1."''.. L -- ,,,, A.5,,, -- ., - 4r s'I, ir,'- ILli' I ,,,, 0 ---- -- ',,s'l ' .41- . ', ', , ,.., IN . - It' ' 3 It' Qii0 s .1.'71 ,,, - ,..,..,,,L 1 t, ' 4 ' '' ' i . C A Th.,, 1, .1 I. .:. ' 1 '1.1h, - ; - : I', .. t--- -- ... - ss..;?:-..,.-e- - A ,Ift - 1k, , .,,y - ,,,, , - A Ls-- I q,:., - I ,4123 ' ' t , al.. PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S MESSAGE to Congress Monday on the worsening railroad labOr crisis dramatically illus . trated the danger of an irresistible force meeting an Unmovable object with the'nation's economy involved. The only way out seems to be for goverranent to step in, and that is exactly the President recommended. - NG one wants compulsory arbitration or other forms-o- f rancid- - intervott. tion. The lar safer way is for reasonable men to sit down and hammer out solutions in the free marketplace of economics and public opinion. - -- k. "..' ,'-' , I 1 (.4 r-:71- 1., .4:1 -, 1 --- At 4 i the-pion- , akrwhy . .1 - ., ,..c.,- de '''It , "'. opeoasoo. eers , -- 7 -'- ', , , , c..3 1." w , ,1 .... ., ' -- - - c-- .11. 4p- "L"..'N - goo ; 4 k elk . tC-- - - f rI ,, pioneers in the Great Sait Lake Valley, we should pause to recall, the type of loyalty which made up part,of the character of their leader, Ile took no credit that belonged to othersand, as a matter of fact, little that beonged to him. What was best for the Kingdom, that he dieThere was' no ' hesitancy on his part in making personal saCrifices. He was ,devoted; he was true. e TIIE PIONEERS, by e'rondating Bdgham's example in loyalty and devotion, became a group of superior people. By their sacrifices, devotion, and loyalty, they laid the foundation for a great common- wealth. Bound by ties of loyalty and brotherand guided by Christian ideals, they hood BRIGILYM YOUNG, ith ail his amazing learned to live and work together with- as loyal through accomplishments, out suppressing individualism, without and through, not only to his people but to depreciating the efforts of others. his predecessor, Joseph Smith, Never did We who now enjoy the benefits of the ito he urge his -s- acrifices of and the noble 01.111Se1 of followers to heed and inspiring teachings of their leader, Joseph. have our own frontiers to face, We too, Whilel we give all due credit this week have conquests tomake-n- ot by trudging to Brigham Young for leading the pioever the almost trackless plains, lighting neers to the Valley..oLIhe Great Salt de-hunger-bu- tby Indians.siclmess,fand rthe himself.--- lie ourselves voting gave the credit to Joseph Smith and the perfecting ourselves and serv ing our fel- Lord. Ile taught that Joseph had first Iowmen i envisioned the journey and the gathering THIS 111 A CONQUEST we- - can make of the Church in the Rocky Mountains. It was all Joseph's plan, as Brigham through loyal, devoted, selfless service, as did Brigham Young and his fellovv publically announced many times. ' As we celebrate the settlement of the pioneers. . overloglk-ani,opportunity- - , 112, , , , - Jo ' , IT HAS OFTEN BEEN SAID that one , of the great qualities of a good leader Is that be must be a good follower. Such an attitude demands deep loyalty. Brigham Young the great pioneerprophet-coloplzer, whom we honor this week with all our other, pioneers, had that kind of loyalty-- alike to the cause he represented, to those he served and to those lic followed. Too often we sce,men in position of leadership who forget they would not be where they are, except for those whom they are appointed to serve. Others depreciate the efforts and even the names of their predecessors. They fail to realize thatzobodycanbuild himself up by dragother fellow down. ging the - i t , . 't' , - t - Qualities That Build Pioneers . 'I sel, 47 . !)1 ''.-(',.5 , . . s -,- ;..4-0 1-11-4 United Stilt cs ,of 'the ) 1 ''''''- 1 : rulzri , '11( c, 1,(N VII. - - --- - 100 Year Ago July 2a. 1863----lengthy report e reunioo of ,IdormOrt Battalion people and their families bit July 1,6 In commemoration of the orgarthation of that military unit on the banks of the ATissourt River In 1846:1 - lliscw,sed-th- - |