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Show - - , , ,.. . . , - Page - . t . , .i.i. Mid ' "gala- - :, -,, --- , , . ....,.,-e- ' .'31,,,,t,,.. . silp i'd- :1.; --- 1,, .- I.. -- - 9 ,,,w. r,- , . ,, , . : . , . AIM' ,,fff'e99...'"'Irs ....i14,-0- : ,. , . .. ' ( - : - ' . , t iDESErIET ' : ... : - ' ,.' ' , 40. ' :?4: --4,t - . ' , ' , ;:; "..:.:::.,1,(::::::,;:-,- ,in ' , .. ... ,..):: .....:;:i . ,..... -- 1000 ,.,;fill11:1-,-;, 54 1 4 , ''''' ''' ,:, 1 s'''' - - PAGE - EDITOEILIAL- - 11WEVIS . II - 1 C ,.':'': . ' : : ,...,:, it ,,,. . .. . , ...''' I ,,.. . , .,..541. -4,- ' , , 0.4,,E7,--- minnomPIPIIIIIIM'e., , old, . ii, ."'.. v1.1".1w. - ' - , - --- - - -- -- Of Government As Therein Set Forth, Each Departments One Fully Independent In Its Own Field - , - ..'..---, - ',:N.--,,,,--,,,,,,,-.., . - .,- "., : ' . . '' ... .: ).:..., , ' . , ." .,,,, ,,,,-----..- - ',. ''. ..?:.:::',':!':' ,,.;;,, ... : --, 5.1.";',, :::;': , :1',f,,,:' - . . ,, .. , r't' Ampt .:,...,. ' .,', ',.';..:.:-,1- : . . . . --- , -- Edwin C. Hill , ,, , . - - , Nazi Mines Salvaged - . -world ' 1 ' .. , - ' '' . 41 , TODAY throughout the length and breadth I of this i Human The country tens of thousands of men , .0 p, . , , 4 ,,,, in lab. 1 and women are working patiently 1 . . Side Of The News . oratories and elsewhere to conquer disease, I I ,t , 4 . ' ,' 1,,p,-,-,,erect barriers against famine and make the s ' N BY DAVID LAWRENCE ',40'Ak ',i 1 a safer and happier place in which to loss of British, French and 'neutral il'Ae. I THE I' 11 , , Ilt, ,,, ,, I I , vii".17.10ionit INGTOiy-Dec- a n set live and work. We are all familiar with these submarines and mines still --- -- - nations-fro- m 13,A amazing ' IA ors WASH I t t i....... . i ----mt 1933. King Features I workers whose achievements are celebrated nf disclosures has come from the first 4 (Copyright. WE. GOM "tt. goes on. Dispatches from London report that i Inc.) Syndicate etk4 udoQt I in drama, story and history. ' six vessels were added Monday to the ever-before the special House corn 4 day's testimony ; looT t1 are not so familiar with the:L I growing 1Lt of A Hied vessels sent,. ta the bot.1 litt " fAmM110.V.....''j mittee, beaded by Representative' Howard. I - Mr. in sea warfare.- - This is undoubtedly the work of the 'business man who battles other Hyrnie Augen, sage of Red Hook, the .1 yin t ' v.ip -Smith of Democrat "rii' Virginia, questions had Many 4 1nmind t bustwhich Hitler of secret dealer Hester street ever had, a the stuss best of mankind. The fight weapon I will be asked as a consequence of the revela.eivo.., i when he spoke of a device which Germany 1 . and ness man and the economist is against critic I authority on the sanded deck, rec44A tions of the investigators who went through .' '1, e t at 4 was planning-temploy against the British e m ploymen t,-- depression and a long list of war, business and politics, discovers reation, the National Labor board's files and found ' econotnic Ws that plague a people and hinder a few current contradietionsand confusions. 'navy. 7'W memoranda which were presented by Ed., ,.,, ., ,.... sea these recentfy have of mines I progress. 'Several , ''Ever since I became an author," said mund Toland, general counsel for the combeen salvageda most delicate task in view 1 ',?1 The banker is an excellent example of Mr. Augen, "my head has been buzzing like mittee. These are: vr ' character-a- nd of their sensitive experts bVtactif.) this latter class of worker, although we do ,11 of squirrels. You take an ordinary a cageful 1. Do the labor unions feel that they own t A ...:: have had the opporttitfity to examine them .,A,not often think of him in the role of a reevery-dageek, whejher he is a grifter or . -the labor board beciuse they made campaign in detail,. It appears that these mystery search specialist, But if he is a capable r. just a working stiff: he knows pretty well to Mines.have no buoyancy. Inasmuch as they banker, be must be as keen and analytical ,tt ' contributions the present administration? where he's at. If he gets in a little trouble, 2. Was testimony taken by trial examindo not have to float they can carry a great , hi his field as is the biochemist in his. Ills dyaq he knows how to put in a little fix if he has I -ers in the field distorted to produce AP, community, the --people weight.of explosive. The shape of the 'mine ' Nikrtft,c4 laboratory to. And if he is not a dope, he learns how and the way in which the weight is dis4 whose industries and employment depend in "findings of fact?'' e 4.1r f 1 11 to get his percentage, and keep out-o- f jail, T .. IV Z.t''T, ,".' I a large measure upon the banker for the tributed, is such that it comes to rest on the Since new member the 4 etc. He knows his own business, if he is appointed by 4 . bottom of the sea with its firing mechanism financial equipment to keep the economic li;,1 M. President ..,..31 W. Roosevelt, namely Leiserson, smart. 'Illii'' ' ' otowl e blood stream flowing.healthy. The banker, ', ' uppermost. has testified to the authenticity of memoran- ott "But an author is always laying awake 41q If he is a wise man, also works for a fuller, The actuating device is a short, soft iron he wrote to other members of the ,.,,A..' Air nights trying to figure somebody else's busimore prosperous life, for his city and state. bar wound with wire. It is this which is board charging that he "could not trust" the ii ttiz ness. He must be a man of foresight, capable of ' affected by the magnetic field created when "findings of fact" in certain cases because of , ftlyo' 4111to "What I mean is things like this: A coucalm and accurate reasoning in order that a steel ship passes overhead. Every steel 114161114P'11 "irregularities" in the office of the secretary 3..4,2.ple a years ago I read in the newspapers be may adequately serve the people who of the labor board, there is bound to be furship is, in effect, a huge permanent magnet. - N., , that England had reached down in the kick entrust their money to his care. ep". -The new mines are planted in comparatively ther searching of these cases to get at the ,s, A., ...,...ttut 44fe to buy plenty new fighting for $7,500,000,000 tiplyr shallow water, and when a steel ship passes The banker or any other business man trite facts. it .it :- So That tools and would have thousands of They ambitionclose enough overhead, the magnetic field may may fail to achieve his the courts have ruled that the Thus, new fighting planes as fast as they kick them which is thrown off excites a small electric some other scientist fail, but in the final sum-- . "findings of fact" of the labor board are conA You Can Dime?" out at their factories or buy them over here 'Brother, Spare current in the coils of wire surrounding the ming up, individual failures are submerged clusive if based on "substantial evidence," - or in Canada WhenChamberlain guessecI if beber,--Tresult-is-sthisbar that InAhe tide of progressSlowly and surely, oft, jron 'but-the evidence Is distorted, no court of about which little shell ? wrong discomes electric which a war the trial and error, magnet To Their Ship temporary against through review can tell what is surmise and what is Loyal was Czechoslovakia under, England was pretease wins on many fronts. And, in spite operates the firing device.. proof. Lately there have been signs that I read this in the paper, which I sore and ty of occasional setbacks, so does the war To the tragic story of the submarine To make the mines safe to handle until New Dealers want to do away with judicial cut out and carried in my pocket, because I against unemployment, human want and review altogether, and only last week some they are deposited in the sea, they are Squalus, which sank last May with a loss of think it is time somebody measured this Hit- - - equipped with what is knowii as a "salaM26 lives, is now added an amazing sequel. despair. of the justices of the Supreme Court of the : ler for the old We would do well to think less of demoniac button,'t composed of ammonium United States engaged in a colloquy on the Standing beside the vessel In dock at Ports" is diligently expanding 'Great Britain chloride which dissolves slowly in sea water, pression these days, and more of the admiramouth, N. H., the 33 survivors expressed a Importance of judicial review, with Justices man to the new bombers and her air force, ble advancement that has been made in betwish that when she shall have been repaired Frankfurter and Black rather indicating that requiring from eight to ten hours. Thus which e it is rapidly building life We of the the planes, pursuit asaverage person. tering the mine is rendered safe until the planting and recomniissioned-theyadmay again be they did not feel judicial review A for the war ofor should also bear in mind that this progress, spokesman acquiring. her to vessel has done its work and gone away. crew. ministrative tribunals was as necessary as signed of highly number said fice the that like most signal scientific advancement, has today - Chief Jitstice An ordinary person would think that he This type of mine is not new. It was Hughes did. was far in available trained been made under a system of free enterprise already pilots utilized during the last war, but it is believed had seen quite enough of that unlucky craft If the disclosures before the House corexcess of any possible demand due to the which permits free men and free women to nminesis-differethat the method of laying the and would wish to avoid all association with realmittee, telling-ho"findings of fact-'-arIncreased number of planes. Any war work out their undertakings to the from the ordinary Procedure of dropher henceforth. How account for the are further in made, ly analyzed subsequent will find the air personnel more their capabilities. This freedom of American emergency feient viewpoint of the men who once sailed ping them overboard from surface hearings, it may well be that the case for workers' is a priceless possession. than ample-vessels. It is thonghtthatthemajoron her and but narrowly escaped the fate of comprehensive judicial review will be "That looked like something you could , their comrades? work is done by specially pelled by an aroused public opinion which a book on and I felt pretty good about make s will not tolerate "irregularities" in boards equipped submarines. It is in fact a viewpoint that would be I think these Nazis aren't acting right as ,t it, of commissions. Mines lighter and of a different charactaken by almost any sailor as a matter of and would rob their own trunk if there was rôlniENDABLE efforts to reduce the Deter from the magnetic mines are probably course. In the first place, they are men of The House committee is apparently no country to snatch in their regular worknacember traffic toll throughout the iron nerve, which probably makes them more planted by the use of airplanes. These are about to do a thorough job of investigation, tion' are being made this year by the Naing hours.. Old England is heeled with plenused to SCIPPlement the or less indifferent to the hazards suggestas the House resolution requires, of both the operaty of planes and aviators. That's jake with tional Safety Council which should receive as the ed by the past performance of their floating tions, magnetic mine is difficult to operations of the board and the law. It 3vilL - aupport-- - of vessercan hardl3r risk rehome. sweep 'up aridrun up against a good deal of evidence of "Then they had to fan me awake when I every citizen who has reached the years of to waters. turning the nature of innuendo, and it will be an But the matter goes deeper than that. It ' read the paper last week. England used accountability. Adopting the slogan. "Stop - ironical commentary on the habits of some Is a sailor's article of faith that their ship can the Christmas Carnage," the Council has aplawyers and stock brokers for of the trial examiners in baiting attorneys do no wrong. Their loyalty is such that ship Comes aviators to fight off the German planes from pealed to4he drivers and pedestrians of the and employer wtinesses when now surmises and crew are welded into one body and one the Firth of Forth, near which was their country to assist in this campaign, which is and inferences based on testimony given will On his is and the the place, only spirit. ship not only filmed at the blight on Christmas IT has been observectthat "life Insurance navy yard and being hit there would be the produce impressions unfriendly to the board place, where a sailor belongs; he 'feels his offers a man the only way whereby be worst sock in the brisket- old England could happiness but Is a last, desperate fight to itself. Thus, when a memorandum says that destiny to be inseparable from hers, and can make his will before he makes his get. It was right there in the paper, the way prevent traffic fatalities this year from sethe head of a major union telephoned an ofwould prefer a strong risk of going down it had been handed out by the Ministry of money." xceeding last year's total. Statistics disclose ficial of the board and said in complaint with her to the assurance of complete safety There's nothing more tragic In the world , that traffic deaths this year are about even Information, as they call their mouthpiece about an adverse decision, "that's not what anywhere else. than the spectacle of a man who once had a over there. TWith 1938; the margin of difference being we pay our money for," it will be improperly True, these survivors have no fear that so slight that this month will decide whether good job and a sizable bank account reach"This piece bragged about their boys doassumed in some quarters that this means if will misbehave the but a Squalus the nation will reduce its traffic toll for the again, so well and said only a few weeks bethey ing penniless. dependent old age. And it is ing the use of money in directly influencing the did their conduct would probably be the a pathetically common spe'clacle. The great second consecutive year, or whether it wil1 . fore etc. There they had been board's decisions when, actually, the author same. They couldn't do otherwise and be saillose part of the gain made last year. majority of people after reaching 65, must wasn't a word about that $7,500,000,000 to get of comment the mind had the in undoubtedly ors. Their action not only portrays their own - in ringside form two years ago, or about dll exist, on the bounty of friends, relatives or Appalling is the story disclosed by the huge CIO and other union contributions to character but explains much in the characfigures compiled by the National Safety Councharity. It's an unpleasant thoughtbut it those trained aviators they had: the administration's campaign fund in 1936. ter of sailors generally, which for a landlubwill he much more unpleasant In the future cil. Last year 3,430 persons died in Decem"I haven't sben any other authors try to This introduction' of the subject of poIf we dodgeibe Issue today. ber Is difficult to understand. ber traffic mishaps, and experience shows this and I give it up. And that's just figure litical contributions may open up a line of inLife insurance's prime purpose is to Detroit News. that the December death rate on a mileage one a lot of funny things you see in the of as to whether the federal corrupt pracquiry basis is 'you wItli a definite income in your dehigher than the average for papers. They got tices contriwhich now forbids act, campaign , for all the,month.s. In other words, the Cause me to hear thy lovingkindness in clining years, and to guarantee anestate in over in and here Hngland they've got butions by corporatio-nsshould not be the event of your death.- Then, when you month when joy and happiness should reign the morning; for in thee do I trust; cause an aviator and a all the dealing to contriamended exclude also all campaign make your will, you know there'll be someme to know the way wherein I should walk; supreme, untouched by tragedy and sorrow, deep stuff about whether we are neutral or butions labor from unions. that month is more than one and f thing to leave. 'for I lift up my soul unto thee.Ps. 143:8. , . not, or ought to be. Lindbergh- says a couple The Smith committee has had a sensatimes hazardous as Junethe safest of pieces on the radio and then, up in Bostional beginning and there are rumors of month. And probably 90 per cent or more of ton, Gene Tunney jumps Lindbergh for havstill further revelations. At least the public these accidents could havebeen avoided had ing the crust to tell us Americans how we will hear ,a side of the labor controversy greater care been observed by someone. situa- should think and ordering Canada out of the crime we the 600,000 to read for the told, fight following: Discusses Perils the inside operations of the board and the Three things are blamed by the Coun"There are many dangers upon tion in this country. British Empire and then Gene tells us his has hitherto unionswhich from cil for the increase In traffic deaths dur- the waters, and more especially beenkept ,It ,seems to me that there is Of Present Condition ownself what to do. Maybe they'll have me how-to take hereafter.--fo'too 'muchtalk on have view, and Congress will have a lot more ining the Christmas monthbad weather, more in church before this is over. care in Mine anger. many of criminals, rather, than to decreed preaching Deseret Editor, News formation than it has had before concernhours of darkness and the holiday rush. The destructions upon the waters, About two thousand years ago. prevent people becoming involvGene Tunney and Colonel Lindbergh are my need the for of amendment the 'excitement, conviviality and general hustle ing the Lord, in the beginning bles4- - ed in crime. Wagner the Apostle Paul. wrote the folfavorite fighter ad aviator." ed the waters. but in the last Ten years ago, at the beginAct. and bustle of the Yuletide season, are inlowing- vOrds to Timothy, whom were Serof the there the mouth of he days. called My his by ning son: depression, beloved This clined to result in a relaxation of that Niel(Reproduction Rights Reserved.) vant John, I cursed the waters: less than 300 inmates in the Princeton University Press of Princeton,- N. 'know .also, that in the last days lance which is so necessary if thesefatali-- perilous vherefore the days will come ,Utah 'State Pennitentiary, while Y., publish the volume for SI come. For now there is a roster of 415. Durthat no flesh shall be safe upon men shall be lovi,rs of ties are to be averted. Added to this ins. their Book Rccrk , I ,vwl 1 ,', ,,:::::,:.:;;;,:: ...,.. 1,car A ', I- --- -- .."'-- . , ''.... '.., ' ---- ::...., . 4 ,1 -- , :: ,,, - 7:, Nfr , For' The Constitution Of The .United States With Its Three' We Stand . , ' i.ip, - '' ,4 : . - - 0- ,. .' - . - I '''''' i" . - , . , 3Vdnesday, December 13, 1939. . t , , ...:;.: :. .. 1 - -, .' , , - , - The Deseret News, Salt Lake :City, Utah -- -- 71Into , : ::"Er." ii11" 1 est I : 7,7i. - ,.. Of Science - -- t"cM 1 ..'"ftlf1 111 . 1 .,.,- - .4......, . 1 . ..,,,r;. ' - " o,t,d'..3.N , . . . . , . , , . e . 1 i. IMMOSM e ,, Labor Is Searched , , 1 I 1 . - - -- . ' - .1 1 1 - 1 i un--- k ,,,,- , o -- v ' , - ,i 4fl . -- - 14' vq.-a- . I . 4 --- r . y 1 - is-- , lis -- - his l''' - . , 7,- - :... . h 41' , , I , v.,- -,. - ; - he ich , - - one-two- of-th- - - nt mine-layin-g - Reduce December 1 mine-layin- Toll - , - mine-plantin- - -- -- g d Later The Aloney - sheep-herder- - - - - , , sheep-herder- - ..a - ,k- proT-V- one-thir- sheep-herder- s s war-flier- -- - . ide d - - prize-fighte- one-hal- , r - aE-1- WHAT READERS THINK " - - r - I -- times-shal- creased carelessness and general 'on the part of everyone, is the fact that the streets are.-in- - a more - hazardous and dangerous condition than for than' months past, and both drivers and pedestrians apparently have failed to come to a full realization of that fact. Consequently, deaths. sudden and sorrowful, bring Mental anguish and suffer- ing to many homes Where the coming of Christmas had been anticipated with rejoic-- , ing. So this year, let Utah lead the nation . In the reduction of traffic fatalities during Decembe'r. Let every man, Woman and child . becomg cognizant of the responsibility which Is his, or hers, in this regard, and let each . exercise every precaution .possible, that no' set of carelessness may resurt in radiant hap-- '' ' piness .being supplanted by- - sorrow.--- and despair in any home of the Beehive State. n . . ' . , . . , . - , I........... , . - -- own selves, Covetous, boasters, proud. blasphemers. disobedient to parents, unthankful. unholy. ithout natural affection, trucebleakers, false accusers, inconti- nent, fierce, despisers of those that are. good, traitors. heady. lovers of: pleasure more than lovers of God'. Thinking over the foregoing. It appears that it corresponds much with the conditions In ':try ' l won the today. And he tells us that in the "last days perilous -' times is when th9 Things he mentions should. occur.' 7 So from this we conclude that those days are here. now. If Paul was alive now. he could not Nvrit e it more complete in. detail.- - than he. did' at that time.. One more think that ais very Is. the Outstanding at present, sinking- ofin the present Avorld crisis. It apfore-- . pears that it .., too 17 has been - - 284-pag- e l the waters," Further more. we read: "In that day be shall heard of wars, and rumors, of wars.-anthe whole earth shall he in commotion. and men's d hearts-sha- ll them." Have these quotations any significance to them? Are. they in any way corresponding to the the great events of present day? It appears so. WWII and behold their fulfillment! fail, C. V. HÁNSEN. Sees Employment As Way To hit Crime waf present at meeting the other night, vhere the discussion was based tipón "What kind of penitentiary for- Utah.' discussion, Dr. During that-Monson. secretary Tr-- st a t the Ptatement that It cost the American. government $50,000.- a - ing this ten years when people' have been literally fighting for an existence, crime has,Increased thirty per cent. Correspondingly; the amount to fight crime has increased. Do we have to employ mathameticians to see this point or is it greed of those who create and hold jobs of crime prevention.? The solution is very simple. If would only the government spend thirty per cent of the aforesaid $50,000,000,000 each year to create Jobs at wages, crime would be cut at least one third, and American chi. ,zens would be repatriated, instead of becoming hardened criminals. But here is the big question? -Are we ,interested more in taking care of our unemployed, or are we more interested (in dollars and cents) to fight crime bigger ons to house a starving public? .ki.,Ne and--bett- . , GEO. G g EATOREX. - , By FRANK WINN Humanism, the movement which attempts to substitute a would-bscientific and ethical interpretation ofhuman nature for religion, is explained in it fullness by one who knows and sympathizes with his subject in "Man the Measure," by Arthur Hazard Dakin. Dr. Dakin was graduated from Princeton University with bership in the Phi Beta Kappa and highest honors in philosophy, and since has attained emmence for his writings on religious and philosophical .mattersHis book contends that Humanism finds Its greatest following in the middle west and is gaining rapidly on the American continent, but the work is explanatory, and while treated- - with sympathy, does not attempt to indoctrinate. It sets forth the contentions of the Humanists as fixed in the Manifesto of 1933. takes up each point and analyzes it in the light of religion and Modern1cience. The book is strictly scholarly and intended for those who seriously seek Information and will not particularly appeal to the man on the street. It is worked out in logical detail and is --worthy the library any student. e , Dear Editor: I The I - ' a , , , . . 4 - - . t . . .., ' . - If the birthrate in, the United States continues to decline at the speed recorded since the turn of the century, by 1975 there will be no babes at ailthis is the startling revelation with which Henry Pratt Fairchild opens his book "People," a scholarly discussion of the cause of the condition and what it means to the future of the nation. The volume is a treatise on population and its relation to the economic and so-cial conditions of a nation or the world. It goes into the rules of biological increae, of cultural development and the possibilities of maintaining or advancing the standard of living In the face of a changing number of people for a given area of land. It traces the effects of altering density of people on the welfare of the individual and studies eugenics, food supplies and pressure for land resulting from expanding num hers. The book answers the question of those who view a declining population with alarm and also gives the arguments of those Who are fear- ful of an increase. Sinc.e.,it deals with a. prob- lem which is actually before us it is destined to gain a wide reading. Henry Holt and Company of New York publishes the. volume, which covers 315 pages and carries photographic illustrations. The price la ati , - , -- , Ist - ' , ' - - ,,it , ' , -- a ,.' . . , |