OCR Text |
Show itor ' t 8 2YL !11--Dala- - . , , Salt Lek City, Utah. Tuesday, Febrimary IL 1957 t , America'saw an evidence of the political eQue of integrity and common sense this ,, Four years ago when Secretary of Agri- culture. Benson started campaigning for lower support prices on farm commodities, one would have thought the sky was fall. ing. The political uproar threatened to Secretary Benson right out of Wash- ington---anmight have, too, if the Presi- dent bad been less solidly behind him. But this week, after operating on flex- ibie price supports for two years, the De- partment of Agriculture made some im- pressive slashes in the level of supports the political reaction was mild and not 'particularly unfavorable. The difference in the two reactions rep-the tremendous respect in which Secretary Benson is personally held, and the remarkable success be has had in edu- eating the nation's farmers to his point of "dew., ;There are some rather impressive sta- tistical facts behind that milder reaction, as well. on. is the recently announced figure of four billion dollars that farm price sup-)3orts have cost the taxpayer since 1933. That cost, together with the huge market. depressing surpluses piled up under the stimulus of government twice supports, can leave no doubt in any reasonable mind that high fixed supports are not good for the. country. Another fact is the tremendous job the Eisenhower administration has done in dis- posing of the surpluses. Since 1953, Secretary Benson Ms , ; '.4 77. 3 , 4 - 70. 65. )- k. worked..steadily..almostheroically,Jo tiodrnaking. constructive uses for the mountains of farm way. flax-resen- necessary? For 20 years, Americans have been voluntarilyscontributing millions of dollars annually in the fervent hope that somehow, sometime, the dread killer and crippler, polio, could be whipped. The nation reacted with delighted excitement when it learned, within the past three years, that at last the victory had been won. The Salk vaccine,. was the answer to years of hoping and praying. And yet, after two years of inoculations, only seven million of 60 million Americans under 20 years of age have had the full three shots. And only a small fraction of Americans over 20 years old have even begun the immunization series. This is an astounding paradox. It might be explained Tartly by the fact that the shots cost money and partly by the brief scare over the serum's safety. But Boys. Having made the request she then made certain of the coverage by promptly putting her foot in her mouth. She said she would not permit boys she called "Mexicans" to carry the American flag. She insisted that only "American boys" carry the flag. The publicity, certainly, must have sur parent-teache- There a , is something lacking from e. ' ' ' . , - -- - wage-earn- - Lin- dirmers of the Republican Party. this beelection-wising an What's more, few the at dinners guests that are being held are not hearing about Lincoln's famous "points on government." ' Until recently a Lincoln, Day dinner just wasn't complete without a speaker quoting these "Five Points" from Lineolri: "You cannot help the poor by the rich." "You cannot streilgthen the weak by weakening the strong." ': '"You cannot lift the by .,. 'Ptilling.ck)wn the , "You cannot establish sound security On borrowed mo : tty "You cannot help men by baying . the government tax them to do for theta- off-ye- I - . passed her wildest dreams. It brought, among other things, first, her apology and, second, her dismissal from her position. And there is a lesson here for all of us. If nothing else comes of Mrs. Rush'i remarks, they certainly focus attention on an event starting Feb. 17 that many of us might otherwise have brushed lightly past. That is the day national Brotherhood Week begins. And where does such a week mean more than in America! What is America. but a great melting pot in which peoples of all nationsincluding a great number of Mexicanshave blended their best racial and national qualities into a' nation of strength, justice and freedom? That we are making strides toward such , a goal is emphasized by the public reaction to Mrs. Rush's remarks. But we have much ground to cover still. One way to cover it is to make certain that boys of any ancestry may carry the American flag. That should not need stating. That is simply our way of life. Lincoln Didn't Say It coln Birthday observances this year. For one thing, there are lower Lincoln Day wage-payer- ." ."----- . , - er ' ; Ti i,' 40 r;;.-- ,.:, k i; , 44,- - what they can and should do for themselves." Now the Library of Congress has spoiled all that by tracing these quotatinns- back to a Rev. William John Henry Bnetcker, who published them. with others. in 1916. There is no record of their having been printed or otherwise recorded before that time. No one, certainly, has traced them to Lincoln. So Abraham Lincoln, the most misquoted of all Presidents, will have to depend for his place in history on such statements and acts as he undeniably said and did. And the "Five Points" will have to stand on their own merits without leaning on the great man. Come to think of it, though, this needn't prove disa trous. Both the man and these particula rrinciples he was supposed to have said Jut didn't are strong enough to ' - stand by themselves. -- - - 4- ''1., f. , ,,,,,i t'l'. 1,44 : 441 , oLk . . -r- , -- ' ,44,-- .4 ":::;.: ' i i . , ;',,i"'--ri- Vt4.72,,thr"."-T 2.,",laws....,-ill, f. ,,1, "vd"r7 .''17,41--' - ' l': 16;2'.7rIS ,t,t, 1' ' ,....,";.! , ,t- - -- 4 a ---- l'' ' A ,'It ", A k, .,, . .doet , ,-,- , ,, 0 , 4;4 ,o,t, 't 4, J.,,....1We.."," , c........ 'ES041-111Ssi- .,,, . , '''- : , - .A: -S ' , - I- '., .. k .. x.. 1; 0 0:0- ,- ...4.,:., , ! - A .,,,,, . ,g 74 ...., - 411;z A- - .. .,,,j41. .. . y,..,;(,:ri,Alf.,:z.. -- t .41,eir, tlIS A "Allo , - it ' - ; 'V-I- ' "r ,tz-, 7 p:t:Tillor-4444.- gr. 0 . ifr 44 a4,z i ,1r-...r, itrk, fellow-traveler- ' Ittl,i1R.ielt , fi ,,,,,,a:4,7,,..,t,,,,,..4.. .';',-;- . V Arr..,,;, '.7-4,'- ' ;14,...,4.. N ''' ..:44.411, ,.. ey 4 1 4 ;,L4, '4e; 1" s 11. PALER .1. , WASHINGTONOn every Feb. lets on the sides, or some look at the paintings of Emancipation and Re Union by Jules Guerin. On Lincoln's birthday, a Negro woman with cottony hair whisping under her rusty bonnet, laboriously climbed the steps. One of the attendants thoughtfully helped her. While she stood before the statue, she dabbed her eyes with a handkerchief. To her this was a pilgrimage. The crowds respectfully walked around her as if she had a special right to a place here before the Great Emancipator of her race. ment in a huge mirror of water. THIRTY-SI- Congress presented the Lincoln Memorial in Washington to the nation, there are many anniversary wreaths, speeches, and ceremonies there. Sometimes the President of the United States takes part. In 1954, "something new was added" to the ceremonies, which undoubtedly would have pleased Mr. Lincoln. At that time, John M. Virden, the first representative of the Sons of Confederate Veterans to take part in Lincoln Day commemorative rites, shook hands with Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant III, the local legion commander. The magnificent floral piece placed before the huge Lincoln statue in the memorial by the Sons of the Confederate Veterans had a Confederate flag among the flowers. SENATOR BENNETTMade speech t5 Senate praising opera. tions of Sugar Act; asked Senate Appropriations Commit- to continue minerals purchasing program; bill approving Bear River compact; i before Public Works Committee On with Basin Flood government officials on beef cattle pur- program in Utah: attended meetings of . ,', Finance and Banking awl Currency Committees; cosponsored bill revising immigration quotas; attended meet . ing of Senatorial Minority Policy Committee. Ftee conferred , Testified before House REPRFSENTATIVE DAWSON Armed Services Committee against Department of Defense , proposal to increase active duty training of L National Guardsmen tn 5iX months: voted fnr ai41 bill to livestackmen in drouzht ,areas: par. , ticPated in Interior Committee hearings on bill land withdrawals to 5.000 acres to limitili .7.. unless Congress approves; addressed House on need to continue government purchase program for domestically produced tungsten; votedlor bill permitting the sale of idle government owned synthetic rubber plants ttz, - 4 ,i., c....1-r-'- 2', I'', Communist-dominate- d general Confederation of Labor tried to call a mass strike under the slogan of "Great Day of Unity and Action Against Fascism." More than 83 per cent of France's miners re- s at work. Only mained 3,200 of metal workers In Paris struck for half an hour. At the Renault plant, an old C.G.T. stronghold, only 253 out of 39,- 000 obeyed the strike call. In Italyhere dissidence and defection were highly placed. Pietro Nenni, head of the power600,000 tree-bordere- DORIC columns d LES GOATES by rying your two shoes on your feet across the street. Just that little bit of strength, into smiles, kind converted word's and expressions of grati- I tude, and a lot of people are go- Ing to feel glad they're alive and that this old world of ours isn't such a bad place to live in aft. er all! A LETTER FROM A UTE FAN AFTER ROUGH DAY "What a day this has been! First I lose my job, then my wallet. My kids get the measles and the missus sprains her ankle. Then, as if all this wasn't our Utes lose to the enough. .. I'll they come from behind tie it up in two minutes then lose by four points, all on foul pitches . . : and cheereven optimism. How low can a fellow get in one it for our best If were possible minds to explore the many in- - day, anyway?" fluences in this complex human MODERN LITERATURE life, undoubtedly those we care- - who, the FBI itt,e, ep e crone as "sentimental." lessly classify Snme asothor ouths agoother bock; would shine forth like the' min it th, t plot gi may rpm's, it on a bright spring morning. May become the bert ,,h,,,1, ( From Irloo D I Npws Ftles) . - THE SPLENDID THING about 23 Years Ago ' these precious gifts is that TEXT FOR TODAY: 'Buy 12. 193'').- -- Salt Lake Chief they 'cost the giver nary a sou. A the truth and sell it not; also of Police W. L. Payne ot them require less wisdom and instruction, and unnounced that beginning Monday 23;23. -- - than is expanded in all members of the Public energy Excercise Bug Bit S.I. Police? Cougars sa. toHereHeartbreaking, the last . . , ,.., i Safety Department includingi policemen, firemen and mem- - Assignment: America bers of the health department would be put through an intensive and rigorous course of ex- But .ercises to decrease the waist-line and improve the wind. By PHYLLIS BATTELLE BCs.'NY"Well, I guess it is kind of more or less classic. you SO Years Ago NEW YORK (INS) Talking: Feb.. 12, 1907The Chinese, with Benny Goodman is, might say. I like to think that, of Salt Lake started their oblike reciting a mn" lanYwagYr."ns. " i servance of New Year at dam roughly Popular mustc delogue to a warm but shy kid. Ile' ds On written. yesterday. The popping of fire can pull off the most intricate pen crackers, smell of punk. and the musical maneuvers by putting You take a score like 'My Fair fragrance of the Chinese feasts his tongue to a clarinet. But LadY : and there you are. It were signs of the event. somehow his torgue doesn't makes it own rhythm, at least 73 Years Ago curve very comfortably around I think so. Basically. if music is good it doesn't take too much Feb. 12, Pin A series of art- words. So the conversation is likely changirg. but somebody else vertisements on "St. Jacob's comes along-wi- th a good thing (Oil." were being run. These to go something like this: started out s e e m n g I y as youWhen you formed an-- - and that gets popular, too." sfraight news stories, only to thee band. much like the great BENNY GOODMAN is not al- end in a blurb for the cure-alband you had In the 1930s, it ways an easy man to compre. An item in this issue Pointed .,, caused a sensat'on, lhend. immediately out that the editor could tell! Do you he's directing' the Its when played. you ahywhere 'what a reader liked by watch- - think that's because people felt 1937 version of his band of two m g his face. As he started nostalgic about your music. or decades ago that you can't miss read "a glow of satisfaction would you say ifs Just plain bet:: interpreting him correctly. This illumines the countenance, .to bel ter music than the popular stuff ' is "swing." the bounce of perfec- ' followed by a sickly hue as he we hear to day ? ition that he is king of; and when reaches 'St. Jarobs Oil.' " n don't know, that's' he returns to theordinanly-stai. gENNY-----100 Years Ago hard to say'. What. do you !trapire Rome of the Waldorf Feb, 12, 1857An item di s- - think?" AsipriA on Feb. 23,.there once Y d think nostalgia is a ,agiin will be headlines cussed last fall s elections in to the New York City. "A more part of it. but that yours effect that good, precise, dariee--- I ly contested city election is basically better, almost time- - able "swirl g" wll replace rock tasi never been known. l'n't61 less., , r Benny Goodman Warm, 1 Shy -- th's . i 4 , - ' 1 ' . l. - , : l DIXON- -- Attended daily, hearingS rtif e A ' BIG, one-roo- 1 11,, Hungary. THE f4IMILMit SENATOR IVATKINSIntroduced bill to grant Congressional consent to Bear River Compact; spoke in Senate for na tional food allotment program; of bill y to grant certain veterans national life insurance; ' attended sessions of Joint Economic Committee I to hear Treasnry Secretary George Humphrey, and Federal Reserve Board Chairman W. McChesney Martin on fiscal and monetary policy; . attended Interior and Insular Affairs Committee on oil Middle East supply. meeting with Judiciary Committee 1 Rolland, Claude Roy, Roger Valliant and Claude Morgan, editor of the Communist weekly "Lettres Francaises," vigorously rejected the Kremlin line on GO What They Did Last Week I g Beauvoir, Francois Mauriac protested similarly, and such leading Communists as Jaques , Wohns In Congress - left-win- tI bumper to bumper inching their way around the drive. Even more people than usual climb the marble steps, and standing in awe before the statue and the floral tributes. Some read the Gettysburg Address or the Seeond Inaugural Address on the two tab. t- French intellectualsSimone De Some Priceless Intangibles That Make Enjoyable EVERY DAY of the year, the Lincoln Memorial has its share of visitors, but on Lincoln's birthday, there is Sn actual parade of cars, often "Hou:sel ship Society. Other leading form a classic colonnade. Each column represents a State of the Union at the time of Lincoln's passing. This magnificent memorial Is more than a building of classical perfection. It is a reminder to all Americans that in this country humble beginnings are no handicap to greatness of character and achievement. LES It is a reminder that Abraham Lincoln traveled a long road from a log cabin near Hodgenville, Hardin County, Kentucky, where THE COLOSSAL STATUE of he was born. to the White Lincoln shows him seated. located near his meHouse The expression is thoughtful. Life morial. tourtell Sightseeing guides Lincoln's' overcoming of ists that no matter where they can give UNDER THE STRESS of many obstacles stand in the hall of the Meto new visitheart those petition the scientist's of the morial, the eyes appear to foling the shrine in humility and various ,nations have gone in low them, which is fact. but grateful remembrance. Per- overwhelmingly for precision in. is also true of many other haps the reason why the Lin- struments. These will measure statues. This figure is the Memorial is so appealing coln of Daniel work Chester is that many people know accurately the distance and French. more about Lincoln and have speed of an airplane approaching The exterior of the memolearned many of his words in our shores, the velocity of a but rial is classic. It is a reclet, the tremor of the earth and school. tangular structure of white else within the realm everything set marble, effectively among THE MOsT FIT. of mass, force and motion. But PERHAN trees on the banks of the PoTING birthday gift that all science is stymied, frustrated tomac River. at the western those visiting the memorial in and nonplussed when it attempts end of the Mall. Back of it is person or in spirit could give to evaluate the worth of a smile, the Arlington Bridge connectto the memory of Abraham a kind word or an expression of ing Virginia to the district. Lincoln would be a pledge in gratitude. The approach of broad steps words which close his Second Where is there a man or and ample terraces are reflectwoman who has not acknowl- Speech: Inaugural ed in the pool which repro"To do all which may edged at one time or another, duces both the Lincoln achieve and cherish a just and the pricelessness of such inand Washington Monu tangibles? In millions of lives lasting piece among ourselves and with all nations." the help and encouragement (From tho "Christian Selene. Monitor") of a friend has turned sorrow and discouragement into hope 12, since 1922, when In Louisville, Ky. , REPRESENTATIVE Jean-Pau- fellow-traveler- s 4 Spotlighting The Lincoln Memorial By ESTHER MILLER FRANCEThe Kremlin's crushing of the Hungarian workers brought dissention and protest from intellectual and labor elements in The party. The trend of protest wat highlighted by the resignation of the promil nent writer Sartre Friendfrom the Franco-Sovie- t IN ful Partito Socialista Italian declared in the Chamber of Deputies that he could not stomach the Communist line on Hungary. For the first time in the life of his 10-"Pact of Unity" with year-olSIX MEMBERS of the staff of the Communists, Nenni dared to the "Daily Worker" resigned oppose Togliatti, his Red men. in protest against the Soviet in- tor. tervention in Hungary, and 12 In Denmark Horror over ranking members of five differ- Hungary swept Denmark. The ent trade unions resigned from carried daily reports of the Communist Party, as did press membership resignations and a number of others outside the protests by Communist and Labor movement. fringe groups. These criticisms and resigna- THE COMMUZ;IST parties in tions did not stern solely from Western Europe remain usethe Hungarian situation, rather ful tools of Moscow but the Hungarian rebellion touched have been wounded and they off the growing dissension within the party. (Copyright. 1957 ) riivot;4 pi, 111 This is America 1," - .1. ,i-- M. ::lt,:: '::71,1e. ' ) N. ,,c?r,7 . ..,., ,$:,,c '.. - ;0171AZI '!., ,'I':14i ' 14,4 '''' (,,,4 40. ,f!: ,C.4: a i....' . 7 fg; 'I'll. i ts: TA 11:-- ,,,,N,,,:.,..,: , ' 404 ..4 , fl,' .s4'f, - ( t 4') 4041 , ;21,..,Jor. -- '' ' ...,111,1";5;;,;:--A.;,,1- le:T..- - A - ' - .:....5'r- INA.''.. ,.. .s. C'''1',0 .;140.: ,i,,,' Á t 44, ..P.117. 7.4 le,' ' 4V 4r '41.:lata: ,:,.!1...1.-,..-;,,i, -' , tr ! Airoeltok.ke...., ',,P! .,,,..0,,,11- ..! N - ' :;;;;701. 11,'""112,0-1T- . , t ' Crikr rie lit 4 . x''' Iv -- --. 1' ,77-44- ,,, 4', ,,,,,. ; .4 - Western Europe We are just beginning to get a fuller picture of the extent to which the Hungarian uprising and especially its bloody suppression by Soviet intervention military have brought waves of disaffection and defection to the ranks of Communists and fellow. travelers in western Europe. These events are quite evidently raising grave difficulties for the leadership of the Communist parties and are disrupting their functioning. Here is a survey of some of the principal consequences: In Great Britainafter a brief moment of wavering in its attitude'toward the Hungarian rebellion, the London 'Tally Worker" firmly embraced the Moscow line and termed the rebellion "the effort of counterrevolutionary forces financed and' supported by the U.S. and other imperialists and fascists." Several leading British Communists and publicly criticized the Communist Party, among them F. Cadogan, a member of the Communist Executive who said: "I am ashamed of the Russian action In Hungary and also of the attitude of the executive of the British Communists." There were 15 other prominent Communists or who Joined in a staterment to the "New Statesman and Nation" in criticizing the British Communist Party for its attitude. :t .':'' je , i. by ROSCai cRumm9ND WASHINGTON - , ,.I ' t .,- I - ..,..01.1 ''''' .4' y,vy ,, , - . ,,,o'.., s-- ............0400titor6 '''IL., , Yee' - : ', '', 1: ,''. I--,iel:0, ,0;4. ,.. i f ,f, st ...i k :: .... -- 4 . , , : 4 4ki , 'Af --4,1 r tk, ,.' ,,, i 1,,, , ' ' ' z,,, .....41. '.1- ;1 Atto - .. ;:::;;:. , ,,.,,..,-,..-- . II .,,.,,,.,..4,. . le5Cil bt , r'Ste. ?.,..:!...,1: '66 pqa.- t V 'In'..' .... ',,,- . ; 4644 , t,- P. . .i, . '1,. i-,- ...-- -' 11.C.A; 4411714 4..vo ifeg.- ,... SM.- ,.......01 1 ; I:( .:.."'- - ..,... - 41P-002-"."- ' , -, - 1 . 40......L-...- , ,40''' enIA..-t.-.- . - : t .! AZ' .....1.-.- .. i4.41.. 1 ii - 1.11V-.172.- 0.k 1),1. 11 - ... :, 744:g. V- dr ,we',- r, t.....,:17.1.-7,--:-,,- y,..r 1ile t::',2:.$14 , ....,.1. "' -gs ,''''Tw;.. ..'"."- ' ,..,4', --e i'' .......41 :i'''''''- ''1", ...' ;1- 5...c..;;:7- !n -, y,..-- , ,:v,,,1 I) ' 0, ,,-- -- ;,-', t ,v , ; .,, - Noted 4 1.4 - it '.,,..i ' ,!,',- 10. It,, ;', ; r- - !,, ti,-- '1 ,,.C! , 34,'' -' ;';'-,'- ''''si , s ' t,, je i ': 4 i .1A- ;I ,0J Defection Among Reds !t f :71 Ng.. 1 I,,,,et.-,,,,"0,,,,,:- I ' it ' ''':'.:. r , , ,,, ,0 7 ,:vkt t.7 1... "A t "iik ; lel.. ! Irt,' .k';:-.t- 7A."',.. .. ; ,,, ,,). - :.,:'';-.'-- ,, i'?":,I i.,.. , To" 7. '.:;:,:k04,' , ' ,t '1. -,. ft, , - ':.-'-,'- ' -, ,,,,,,,.,ti, , ' zt,,,l'- ,1 , i'''''.7.: t 7.. :.,,s'V,' .71,-',-7 ,'4r IN WASHINGTON ,o.1..,,,..;.:;,.., 4.,..i: ,4 L , I. V 1, : I ..e.1, ,, ......, - ;s,,, -it - rof,.71r, 4 ',.---'.---n . ; ),f ItT:i2 :t, , '' 4' I - '' .': ,'....,7- .,,,,..:.,.....1,,, 't,:L,,-- r .4 ... 41)Sii, VI l'.. ' At It ,, , 4,-- , op, ' ,;- , '''.0 . - 441 '4,- 14 e t k,'," V. - - . - ', vet 11.'64 4 ", olil:...:' S?',..g-- , f:t,..' , 4', , A4 '.. 4 - Z , ',' t,, '''''''. 4.,...c;,.t...., .1.1111445- , ',-- If NVI''r.s., ,r,1,,,,,,, : p 7' 1., .4 ..,"---- .:'1e.c, I t; 't.-- - 47'1 e.,,,, ' , l A ,t VT' . v ., r',.n7-;a,?- - t ;,44,1 v f ''t ,P l' .t:' ..., ''....!.4 tt4.. - 11 ,, - .17:115,71r. ..;q1 -- - -- '.:!'. ''''''' :I. ,.... t.,:, ' n' v - :4'; W.,.. : !o, Z' p- - - i-- , le, t.' 'leer .An ' ' 1 . A 1 .titlit'' 1.1 :. 7 t, I 4 - ' f.,'" i rti Tit ' (' 4 :' .' ...6.41:4-hk.,- '''.: - ''''a - , 7 7' ; Nit,,-..- ,, I Or :,: . - . it Who Should Carry The Flag? last, weekend a nonentity to most Americans, became a celebrity of sorts overnight by joining an organization known colloquially as the "foot in mouth club." She joins there some famous names Ilarry Truman, Charles Wilson, John Foster Dulles,' among them. Mrs. Rush, an official of the Denver chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, started by asking a Denver Post reporter to give her front page coverage on the DAR's scheduled patriotism program at the State Industrial School for D ' ' '.:,,- :s. " 1 t k , i fr enough, the ptiblic is gradually it known that believes the Same $10 to $12 for the full series is the chap- est form 444nsuranceas - anyone who has beeh close to the expense- Ind heartbreak of a case of polio can testify. As for safety, not a single death from polio has been diagnosed in the entire nation of a child who had received the full three-sho- t series. No, the real answer is plain public apathy, which is astounding but, we suppose, typically American. "It can't happen to me" is a philosophy so deeply ingrained In Americans that it keeps great numbers of them even from benefiting from a medical feat for which they themselves long prayed and unselfishly contributed. Perhaps the community clinics the State Medical Association recommends will help overcome that apathy and complete the conquest of polio. The Deseret News hopes r associations and civic clubs, other such groups will respond to the challenge and take the lead in sponsoring such clinics. We hope and trust the public will Then respond to the opportunity of getting the shots conveniently and at greatly reduced cost. Dr. Jonas Salk. developer of the vaccine, now urges that all adults up to 50 be inoculated, since a fourth of all cases in the nationand substantially higher than that In Utah, we suspectare hitting persons from 20 to 50 years of age. This is a challenge to the good sense and public spiritedness of Utahns. We cannot believe they will fail to meet it fully. The strange, contradictory nature of man is nowhere better illustrated than in the fact that state medical officials are having to urge a mass polio inoculation program for Utahns. The State Medical Association has suggested that Feb. 18 to March 18 be desig- nated "Polo Immunization Month" and. that community neighborhood clinics be set up to do the job on a mass basis. The Salt Lake County Medical Society is offering to set up a pool of doctors to give the, shots. It is an excellent idea and should be put into practice. But who could have thought it would be . - ts Let's Get The Shots Charlotte C. Rush of Denver, until le pressures. But he has shown himself to be a man who believes that the right thing is more important than the easy thing. And, curiously if '1 ""0"44',."10'7ArY4.71. 76...11.Y.: OP OS ' - .$'..,' i It I; i Cot-an- , 4 - Re-wee- - 7 .1, commodities pilMg up in government warhouses under the old support system. cently, the government reported that more than 60 of the cornmodities disposed of in the past four years have been for cash, and that the percentage has gone up to 71 during the past six months. Moreover, surpluses of butter, cotton-swee- p seed oil, linseed oil, seeds and dry edible beans have been completely eliminated and market prices are firm and reasonable on those commodities. This is the background behind the announcement that another $200 4111lion is d to be Cut from crop support payments. ton supports are being cut from 82.5 of Soybeans are going from party to 75 down to Cottonseed and seed from 70 to Supports on oats, rye, barley and milk used for industrial purposes all are being cut. And this is the background behind the move now taking shape in the Department of Agriculture to broaden support prices limits. If flexible beyond the 75 to 90 are fixed supports better than supports which they have proven to bethen even more flexible supports under broader limits ought to be better still. All this does not represent the easy road for the Department of Agriculture to take. Having established the flexible principle, the easy thing would be for Secretary Benson to sit tight and invite no more po- d 4, -- e i 1; a . "!:, ''- - F 7e,' ' ..,.., ..,:? ir ,,,,v t. ij ,sej .1- 'IP.7 i More Farm Comnyn Sense - f 7 .,..,g'g 4r . di having been divinely inspired. - .;.4 'At 0.0 0,..e .- 't 4,.d,r::'..,....,,.', .... ,lor, we stand for the Constitution of go United States - 1; qa.:....4 ,- - . re, mrlittthee sttoa stnodry Afgruritchuelrtuthre gprroicutrtamure; Corn- - mittee on bill to expand poultry inspection; at tended daily hearings- - of Education Committee on school constTuction bill; spoke in flose in be. half of .Veber River Floocl Cantrfil Bill: met with ,,Clarence Andersondirector,of I:tan-Farm'- , for restoration of to puiThise- tungsten as a strategic mineral atkook,foLilik-A1601,"Iskir- k i ,' ' d ' , , , warm-Isma- , worked - -- il )7r , , - 014,411t - . |