OCR Text |
Show I l SALT NEWS DESERE IE LAKE SATURDAY CITY 20 MAY 1939 .., . "'S , I ....jib, . , A , . rt It ,...'" 104.9 PtVgat- ..' "2. us " " . 9 ',,T,.114: 7'. JP : rr-- v , . ',V -- -... - -- , ..... ,rt .,. -- c , ' ,---,,,,...,....,.,,,,,-",,,,,,,,.,,:...,",. .,:00,010p' 1 RESTORATION ANNIVERSARY 01 May 1f,, IP') Jos.eph Smith and Oliver Aaronic o the ordained Cow der:: Priesthood at Harrror Y. Pennylvania. under he hands of an angel. v,ho announced !,Itnaid John the sell as John. the same lhat ELL Twain the in Baptiat been For many years ft:It ,acramental meet eorninemoratr-(- :n z.:1 als-:n quorum meet. irigs and mvre reeet,t11hy the ;T1 planned t,;PtitS pet:;a1 ings and Prrsitithit f acll We kiggest that !he Wsh(-priSI A'ard dessznate f;undal: May 21. Aaroruc Prseathoid 1)3y and that he proand be preps-r(- We ,,.;7, t) , I ,,,,,,,41,1,,,,,,,,,,, EDITOCLIAL PilIGE,' Edwin tn-Te- annt-,ArKe- partit4x,t4 fr C ( a t, tK , -, - i I agirn egee. Itann.,en fcrl:z. processes, tr)1 when our tr.e the 041 World conditions- here ee ment and floe. er; mocracy. They hrT, Ang.,-,,,o.0- 0 4 4 Ti e tiw i laithful joys of - Our God's .InZtr7-7- , 4 I - -- - Mar'irt.--- . ! erv el-ai- sst I ',7trrtretrartereroarr , vale (Itizen tire -- That- , , . "d : I 0.11':"-ma- , , It doly TheAraerican peQpie'possess in this gov. fcw: ,I the challenge.of W.00cirow Wilson for us-tpropoge in this newer generation that from rElw on war by governments shall be changed to peace by peoples,!President Roosevelt.. We must devote ourselves' to keep these tenets of liberty given 13 S by the fathers inviolate in this beloved country of ours. It did not come automatically and it tan be preserved only by tbe untiring and united efforts of the people who enjoy it. It is for Its,, thefl Hying. to See that this "government of the people does not .peri4tt from the If you' have built castles air, our work nerd not he lost: that is where they Should be. Now put the foundation. under in-th- earth." themThoreau. - , , , I I 1 t I 1 tnot I book. Reek 1 - , .., 7 - BY FRANK WINN In an age when the use of inachinerY is In- creasing so rapidly that It actually threatens our economic sYstem by eliminattng the need or opportunity for work, it Is vital that we place in the MinCIS 4 Mt children a .1noisissige that- things are not alo,olutely necessarv to life nor happiness and that even today numerous people exist who hare been 'untouched tee the imentions which both plague and bless the.. more- - aeivalseen.,--- them," .4... , all -Old the Alpha and Omega' the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the Water of tile freely. Ilevelations xxi, 6. i it-i- - , i.g The blame for the danger to world peace Iles not in the taorld'populatiort but in the ther are innattiv capable." 1 i . OMega I 1 - -- l'huswep'ePare . a . ' , ' , , - 'compar'-;-- them. bv son. to adjust metre easily thetr human nature-.- . to the artificial world In which they hare been thais those born. Foe this reason it is fortunate -Centerville' in who produced the ,A i modern community kdt- - so skill- - popr to the bacitward lands and avtUaaae no mooern conYpntenr'L Like the foriner- books of the series. the volume is profusely illustrated with colored photographi.., designs and drawings. It is written in a vocabulary carefully atiected for third grade readers for whose use it is intended. There are a preface and a concluding chapter on "With Machinery for teachers in which the plan and use of the book are explained. The e VIIIUIDO, written by Paul It. Hanna. Gladys Potter and Wiliam g. Gray. is ;rabbit' PI by Scott4 Foretman and Company of Chi raga, It costs 92 cent& 2s8-pag- .'.:,' :lhlym.40h will mak0 known his .feelings. or maybe he will say nothing at all and leave it to the r 4t Dernocratie party to decide whether wants iscst-- dtt 11.1x,iaiLlsoigspAt'erreettftemrreclia or somebody else votes. xvho can't get, as many If the Democratic 'arty situation next' ,year is very ha& the "draft RoOsevelt" idea will .td to become stronger. on the theory that he alone can stand on 'the record made and defend- - it most vigorously. Meantime. the presidential candidates of the other Dem. mats roust suffer, ighich perhaps causes Mr.. Roosevelt to losing' sleep anyway. -- - -- - :- :. , i pres-Cinci- , as put he's ,, t. i v. ,,, lloriee-eeeleere-e- , : poasihl.v object. It is not simply astute strategy. however. which the most ardent New Dealer cannot most loyal kind of doctrine, something to which prompts the postmaster general to put himself on the shelf, so to speak. till Mr. Roosevelt announces his plans for lit10, common sense. Clearly, if Mr. RcK)seyeit wants to net on, his own record, who in the party could deny him the chance merely on the third Term issue? Every Democrat knowsthat tradition or unwritten interpretations of the Constitution have been thrirkt aside by the New Deal exponents as hardly a safe ide in troublous terms of national PrtIPT. gency, and hence there is nothing about the third term tradition which could possihly he objectionable. for in,Jance. to those crats. including :IT. Farley. by the way, who :itood staunchly hy the Prei,Ment when the uiztices to the Sit later wanted n add preme Court he( ause of a dislike of the de-cti4lothc:- of a rratorlty of ;he members of the then existing Supreme Cur. Ato tvh-r,- t 1),,itibn would t leav, candidkte kcho wanted to ite the i)enefitiary of the Roosevelt strength if he ailowed him..;elf to he 1.1(1. Pri ns agmn, a third ;erm for Mr. FarleYs strategv naturallv presidents? must be to defend the Roosevelt aciministrationthe 'fflo.rhent h. rflircii,44,41. floes diet he Inuit concede thee wnenever he man m.ho ;s !he edministrouon makes ep me !reed ,0 ask for a thrrd term to fulfill his progrem. !here an 'oe iin coneuleing ole:ection offered oy a .nyel party '..eader agamst such a dceision lt will be noted !het Mr Petlev eel net makine ativ eig pointedly ',.hat he gestions to the other possilee eandidates fer the Demiecratic presicienteal acitlin1,;1 Ixt them butt their heads egainst the third tcrn tradition openly or otherwise irICI let te,,eri become known as ,tandioates. and then. Mr Farley optnee, :hese candidates Aill diecever :he nOnlin;1110n has neen made impossible for heen It neert7 cel- l- n be recalled that he ege-olrule has been abolished reyw la Dernceeatie (en- ventions throligh the Innu encl.. end ben( e '.t !akee 5i per (Um of the of delegetes i 0 bee k a ii,,ininition :: I n t as ;is NI ot be !he Mr. per, Roosevelt ;111,.; hIS followere ,an block a itom- mation eesily. N11'. Farley lies ,ervfel th,, Preselent If Mr, Rooeevelt does not Intend faithfully. to run. the postmaster general 'wants idential support. The stones that Vice Pres- ident Garner and Postmaster General Fence, are Ailed would 'not seem to be logical though it is not improbable that they have some sort of understanding, Mr. Garner for so me time past has fleen represented as not altogether in agreementAwith Poose,'elt poi- Icies ancras intoned to lve a litt more con- F4Tvative than Mr. Roosevelt. It Ls not known whet Mr: Partv's---vtot'Aare. On Vital' a Sale he would public questione. but be As radkil ft,: .thp indeed: indeed. thev are in the habit rtf him to the indtpendent- ronservative Democrats, . It has been contended in these dispatches that Mr. Roosevelt has suffient strength in hi fi own party to gete-nththeirdmctmeimior3normlf ihnaistion. Nobody. not pert,onal or f if ficiit I fatinly, know his plans. lt, 0.,.......,,... he aimed qtat the, prefdeh. 1 probably dhesn't know 'them himself. lie does know that in politics It is most unwise 0 Ms e any commitments for too tong a time I- two-thirci- i t.,e,en-- - t - I 'Roundup. .4m1 , e I 4 - : i i - . . Election -- have a Currier and Ives print. In with sprouting which a young gentleman Albert coat and Dureireenee and a Princ-skinAient trousers is kneeling before a ,.lam, eel :n heopskirte making an Impassioned supplication- with one hand on his heart, i a eoinewhat The passing of this stereotype preignant remi nder hat' we have pued t ht age of innocence otigh the of the .tnarital into a More reatietie--.eiestate. following somewhat the trend of older co'intriee. In these older civilizatione, mernege is i a busineeelike affair. arranged by the fam dies. and the bride must bring a dot. Won fled thociologists, noting the postponement and delars in marriage. fôr economic reasons, have been urging that this might well be- come an American custom, i No statietics are offered to show just i -Wv the.evole'e --- - 'I re--- -ahead of The dete. ' in- marrying Younger men. but it is to be noted i that 'hi e happens when the shifting of the i ' preponderance of wealth into the hands of 1. women S a' standing story. 41- 1 R:n g Geolge ettendNi a peC l esson he Canadian Parliament and gave the -- - - driving the earelleallereheerailetreatywaeleat only unnoletely .validated without the royal trt l'ffert'Invi-frPi'kh- e It ,e'.7 eratlifg2Thtthe Way ft iswith most of the a Bntb- aiII g'ha$ tc) 6: Il'ill-S- 4 symbol with no more real power. and lot's less freedom and fun, than an ordinary pri- - i I - nf 1 i sre 11; g the i WO ' . Royal A ssen t ' Canada and the United States. - and nere2r.s must e4olated farms or - . of llike letting a child .1ti,q a geNture, ti!s- hands on a eteering wheel and pretend of. his; time. We wonder at the Vi14011 and Nkistki-ithe men' who- - gave- us the organic' iaw and ncip4..--s ipail tivitttchour goVernment e diMnITTXTrertrzrr.tvr--4--------AUVIIt Is fourniNi speay. of it as ihe "American spirit." the "Arnentan way:. the "Amerivan 'dream:. Adams refers ,o It as "A social order in Nchlrh. each rra:415 and. iach woman shall. be able To attain The fullest sititure of which of a Times-Star- nnati - sat inthtpendence .1 muite !hem-selve- muntty Of Thtermts pl Innoted arfeetiturtYt fra. tenuty ark the eigencies of tilt ArlyT'e of sociit equal., w, favorect , he prime; we - Whenthat 'those who la- bor in the earth are the chosen 'people of tifill.The WaS glorifying the ordinary Amert- can citizen of the age and extolling the pond- de- people there ere of ourse. 'Aide differences In cireumstances. drnendier ,,netn habits of lndustry and the ace:dews of fortune gen- hut inlhe time of ..leffer,-.othere wag marked measnie of equality. Thi5 equality of condition. founded on uniemititng toil. yrration and slim:40,1y of living:fostered the Irmyrth nrthe. epirit of democracy: Com I are free. ee John 11 :ther on -- -- onotection,--Th- will find more than the eye of things we do not have to buy. Let's itop and think: lefsknow and feel That: fhings like the!eare truly real, Yes, think how very rich are we When all the hest of thlogs ate free -- .enr..fitect p1)rtlm,;n. f 4 loyalty, - . P , are free.- i - i , litring,These I nome-trakm- ty Theheart he Old wae iead !tir.' rocn--),,- n e been i The more we look, the more we see How many precious things are free. 0:33h estimate of '2rr,es ,o,a1 poteeiation ef.. liousand 'nearly !v. i and the sea, friertdirihipi14--i.wmpathy- ii :oving :;ervice, f l'nWeis, .e 1 'hat the hv f hehfft trm t1 'he i. to !he hotiegs :n Washington he admit '2o Pcsi refugee children outz,icie quotas vill be- To awiLken 7he :11S Of the -people to 'the fact hat the At:migration iaw is in serious danger. According 10 a rerent Fortune poll s:1 , per cent of Americans are against weakening the Immigration law. This great majority is entirely unorganized and until.regently had no idea that any important campaign against the qttr3ta system WaS under way. At he same time. a minority which wants either to chip off parts of :11r. immigration law (Jr to break it down ,ltogetlicr s highly organIt :s sending Teakers to Washingion, ized, ter s ,,, senator F ,Inri congressmen. ..cr'enig etc. It is .Oeiet iire. .hat those ,.cho liclipve fl' IThe immig,ration ;aW woke up. Let the law be broken and a flood of oppressed people from central and eastein tarope will comé in. ;treat 'enoe.eh o. change the whole character of America 'eethin a few yea.rs. These people ere having .a desperate time in Eurone. Americans sympathize with their suffering, but every nation should. and prac. e ll nations do. Iqrk to their own futures first. Orlte we ?e, the bars down :t will not '.e a matter of 10.1Xe0 children. hut of fie preleaps ten; imilion newoomers from the overleepulated eountriee of the (4d world. before tthe mini- elet.ion ,ornmittqe of the Senate on Satilre ',. err; T)orn't'lly ThOmpeen arid Herbert TIOover. ,m one side and theArneriCan Legion On the other. The ehoice between them is a s tnatter frr ottr reade,rs to decide for As for us, we prefer he Legion. Wadnes, heauty,these are free. Srd s The Immigration Lair In Danger - unst-tin- l home-makin- thought for you and me. oest of things in life are free!' yt-,4- ., yesteryear a home isn't so easy to 'come by. The advantage lies with the woman experienced in and that is quite apt the art of to he the xvidow. Moon and June songs probaby will go on forever, but gone and forgotten is the old Victorian song refrain, TDon t everlet a widow get tnto your dingie-liell.- " It isn't true iha t modern housekeeping devices Make' efficient merelya business of ore,Fsing buttons t,r turning ,w1trhes. w!th moq of the (Ly frPe, and no 11,7)t I( C;161P demands on he brides :ntelligence. During some light banter at a dinner company the other night, I heard one young married chap say, ...Alice knocked me Over with- her 4011a1Mae'. iiate. I waa, free until Il fell fnr that," I. didn't think of it then, but 'eae reminded when I read the above statietics that Nike ',vas a widow A hen he inarrteri Jerry five years her jutror. The truth is that modern living ',Pin- niques, !ri house decoretion. in our much Yider range of improvised cuisine and in all the new eide to both convemence- and comfort leeli demand more intelligence.ami yi eld tire returne ;r1 clornestic sattefaction than did !he .ittiple requirements of an , eanier day. Editorial Comment 1'940 desire. It tat,. in some.rest;&ts the only state- 44 the',Demta.talk...tialt;n1- .ment al committee could make and remain in his present post New Dealers hereaOouts whohave leard hat M r. F arley cher:,Thed ambiLions for the presidency arid wz.s touri ng the country to advante hi s own poli.Lai fortimes have hinted that he ought to giv e up the chairmanship. Mr. Farley counters with the - a . I Marriage isn't the casual affair it once was..0. wage or salary sufficient to maintain The Answer o,,, , (en-'ra- Arr. we need not ;z1conly 3i6w Iminy hings there are to Intv! fry.- - farrn-ein- , ,to,or,t - ',1-7,.- ,' ,,,,,: . By DAVID LAWRENCE 1 of ( ,'V - , "IS".11P. ' ...... "goomemer.,,, t WASHINGTON. May 20.Postmaster Farley has cleared up the 1940 sitso relates to the Democratic far as uation rrresidentialnommation Ile ha:; not said so explicitly, Nit his statement in Arizona that it was futile to talk of his,own candidacy for president until President Roosevelt had declared himself as to a third term was tantaM. mount to an announcement that, Roosevelt wants !o be renominated, the Dem tvratie chieftains will tipport him i n that t maidens , al Hill fumble-foote- Nt, - 4,,,,,;,,i, sot....114- --- L','- - Farle y And sup-pore- ,te',;4 Tone:-- ; , lnk.5plrit of v ,,,, , , 1 I cion't get their man the way they ',Iseci to, as the actuaries will prove to you if you IDOic d over their figures. That old biscuit gag whole Amerkan the pretty nearly Press Humorists Association, two or three decades ago. .but you couldn't get a dime a dozen for such ,okes now. r 1 .4o. -- , The IN These Thing' s'Are Free - 2 -- "' Change wt-in- l'entenately ln V4 vAix UTUNZE. fifn'eir.11- - e L 'Fog s t4E's qo PosTI 0,it, len from 'nInd ideal .1 adivente!e It will be 'recar,ed.:-of WS.shinirtree. under w'rich '',en World. 'wanted ..,,i ,001; 1,' . t ..".....".",- - elee,v of Z-"- - lowied world is full of grim news. so it's fun to read about the lad of 13 who went fishng in a brook near Chafee. N. Y.. and snagged his line on the jawbone of a mastodon. It wag the right half of the lower jawbone of a mastodon. to he exact, and the Buffalo Museum nf Sdenr:e vouches for it. would have been mtn'h more fun for the fisher lad to have hooked a sunfih. Who ot us would feel compensated tnr a fiAtiess wetk-enif we netted nothing more than trie ,f,f of a diplOdocus7 Ail of these fi,h and animal storics Are fun, and t's astne sign of spring to find them on the front page. There's the tale of the "Iiiingaroos in the Prospect Park Zoo in New York. for instance. The Government seized a shipment of 40. on which customs duties hadn't 'paid and sent them to r Wrinkly-itfosatekeeMng Yming roils. the kangaroos ninuied the fence and began hopping about Flathush. The authori- !les, with keen wit, put up a higher fence Then there's the rather hat ming bit about the ifeiress Presumptive to the Throne of England. who. as a special !mat during her parentab,ence abroad, went riding on art.elephant and was allowed to rvm Pinda. the panda at !he London Zoo. The elephant grabbr-- a hag of hung and two I371113.;rI ti ht,t .ii) trt.4 (An. ,7.--- tirttrid-fler0 dcyne ...woo" THE re '" gi ite A ,,,. ' -- 41Nbt t.,.,,:, nir I( , Ate .ii; surance - actuaries., wutinuai:ofexploring a wilderness of human activi- ties. have come across an oddment: it's the widows and the divorcees who marry . he' who are younger men, and not the debt-nequest fora just stepping out on the age-olI it'sil and and a home. ...The old .loke itbouithe bride's hiscUlts and her amusing ineptness in housekeeping might seem non sequitur here. but it isn't. I antl-ZIo- Fun For ,,, I. ; TO compiehend Airican (kilization and necessary for American riemoraey t onp to understand Ice ideas that lie back of them, for Ideas have from the beginning, in the words of Comte. the French sociologist, it into the world or t hrown "rtilM chaos." Speaking of otir Constitution Mr. Gladstone said that it was the greatest doctime by ument ever struck cxff :4 t the brain and purpose of man. The statement ls quite trie of the immortal document itself, but, the !dna and the pirit at the root of it came a5 the heritage of the ages, through the slow proces,es of progress. experience and tic velopment ina,ses In the early centuries the of people had no liberties or freedom of thought or action exc e pt those which Were granted them by the kinge and the ruling classes, but the conception of the fundamental equality. brotherhood and nvirat worth of all Men was innate in Than and as :fie sense of class coneciousnese and pour grew and developed the peotile gradually began to claim for thcmselve5 theli oWn rights and privileges. It was the growth of this spirit and determination which impelled the Anglo-Saxopeople to ivrest from old King Sohn at Rtintryttede the Magna Cartathegreat charter of liberty, And after having wrested from the kingiv authority the rights which belonged to the 1eOp1e ag a who:e our fathers brought these ideas over to 'his country and determined to establish a nnVernment quite different from what they had known in the Old World. The founding fathers' conception of government was one in which the people hcnid rine, !he stated in the organic !aw. of the Ifmteri St.aleF. ordain and oai-tri-this Constitution." But the Idea hak of this )1ad been in the minds and hearts of meu from the beIt took root ln ',lie life of f ree ginning. Athens and republican Rome: t wa, expressed in the ethical teaching of Christianity and in all the great liberating and humanizing movements of the modern are !t was the epirit of libery :Kitt dominated the Renaissance. the Reformation. the Reinertenment and the Engiin and Frernh reeo'iiltipa.--Tcwax the ;Owen, that caesed rePudiation of feudal in,titutions, the the middle ease'. the awakening of 're working men, the emancipation of omen. the advance of seienre end the of faith In the hurnan Underrg every great change r,t1 ativancl :rt lnro? t1.1; ince ways ctl'nving ernarenpalion of the indiv!,1:;:,1 The prmc:ple:n th,n, r).;r ,orne. government is f7,rx,ieri the ,e , , mompor,,,,zeo, - T.lik., .1 .. ne-o- Our Precious Heritage of ,A, itt33. Ring Features Syndicate inc.) mon 7 F:rrt, Presidency. age , ' (COPYright. Arabs-----whic- rich-herit- ' , ' ..P.,.- Side Of The News etolf , ---.. ,,d,. The flu man 14" I. - Prieethood: C. ' , .,.:. t: - J117trTIM: CLARK. :Tn. DA'.'11) 4) McKAY, 4 ple Stand For The Constitution Of The United States With Its Three DepartmentsOf Government As Therein Set Forth, Each One Fully Independent in Its Own Field to give the 'Arabs practic-a- l control of the Holy Land, In the rioting Friday .V.v iv in protest Is.'ainst England's plan to freeze thepoptriatton- - at the ratioof two, Arabs to every Jew, hundred"; of people were Injured. The United States is protesting the action of England 'in the control of Palestine. ,i,n,-4..., Ato.erLi.,au, prcttet,t ,ii,,,,41.Louis Ti. Brandeis, America has four .I..cws. a million more than are found n arIV ; other country of the .world. The order lestriVi-sJewish immigration 10 stringently PalWine and decrees racial partition of at country between jeWS and the present population is more than two '0 - 411f in- Arabs, D.uring the present royal tour the king and queen will be made aware of the feel- in America over the publication of the "White Paper," It is unfortunate that its publication should haveiome at thi' :ime as ;t lx, likely to canse embarras, tnent to the royal couple. - ,. SEWS throughout Palestine have ;aunched J EWS a determined passive resistance to 'British t I ,,,, , t, England's Palestine Plan event.--i-ic-- ;11:TIF:11 ,I; 4,,,,f f ir. 1;14',. , 4, , gramlready ,,,, DESErLET 4...,...--,,,,A- ,,, - 1 I f ii( ,,,,,0,6,..w..44omowAvx.,,,wommt.0,006,4:02t. , it I I. VI I 0,7 9,,,, , a, .1'...,,...1.1,4""ffi,""Y,Y,P)71WAF16.5:11,A,.A;Wo0:4454. ; t ' rr ' |