OCR Text |
Show ) - THE Salt Lake City, Utah , , 11 , - ; Established Jane ; 15., 1850 .. AnotheiTiont . Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation and of the Associated Press Published after noons except Sunday. , , . , ,Goveraor Blood Passes - - -1 ; , ' ' ' - - -- -'- s , I! t supported (- ) - I ' tillo k , ..- , ',. . (N. d , - - i "-, , , - - -' h .' fly . I .- ,.. - , N''... N) - t 01 , ol - , .. . . . MN 0 . ps 64)1944v 7 ; - - .,, ' I ( I I , 14" --- -I-1- - - - -- ---- - N 1 times, would be a form of slavery. But ers certainly should be discouraged from the prevalent practice of jumping around from job to job When they have noth ing more than a flimsy hope of bettering their position. And in the war:vital dustries, the stabilizing of labor supply should be given vedy consideration. -- all-ou- - - , ' . - ' ..,, - - BIBLE VERSE He sent front above, he took pe, he drew me out Of many NV atersPs. Gas for Congressmen ' Denial of unlimited .ga, to congres men 110 Want it to grt around their drztrick', for speeche:; would prohahly find plenty of suppoet ;itnong they lut have to depend aspiring opponent,; A ci'tizensraltow'ances. ordinary up(m low with an old nag hitched to a on the other hand. ought to make a hit campaigning - again-4- one of the privileged boys who speed around telling the glisoline salesmen to "fill 'er ' Angeles Times: Vk - sOrne of ' ,. -- c- ci 14 A - to thauField-- ' - jusiments. COMPANIES: Hard hit by elimination of consumers goods and restrictions on 'credit. Post-wa- r outlook favorable. 'FIRE again for Congress among his neighbors. He wants to rim on the Republican ticket. That is the business of Ham Fish, is Tom and his :neighbors among-whoDev:Tv who owns a farm in the district. If the Republicans in his districk object to'him, they can refuse to nominate him. If his party nominates him and his constituency objects to him, they can derieat him. That is elementary. If I lived .in Hamilton Fish's district, I might even vote for him as a protest against a clique of New Yorkers who are trying to dominate the whole country, if not the entire world. Now I see in thenewspapers that Mrs. Kenneth Simpson published an advertisement chastising Tom Dewey, in effect, telling the citizens that she isn't for Dewey for governor. Well, anybody can write an advertisement and if it ConfOrms to the general rules of decency sta and TrifIsn't libelous and do-eahnoy the FTC, it can be printed. , The particular falsehood which Mr. Dewey's opponents, - Mr. Willkie, the Freedom House gentlemen and now Mrs. Simpson, want the public' to believe is Dewey n an appeaser. ffierefore Ipso-NaYet on Feb. 12 ofthis yearbeforeMr.1 heard Dewey Rooz;eveit attacked therm deliver an address, vvhich was broadcast nationally, attaCking 'all appeasers and ' particularly a group whom he designated the merivilnitiveden Set, a term whidy I think the record 'will show :qr., Dewry toied first in this summer. I did not like. r his naine-calling than. I like any - m I- basic necessity. Not materially affected by wars, booms or depressions. Conservatively managed. Excellent dividend record. GOLD MINING: Suffering from government control of mone, high taxes and operating costs. Immediate outlOok clouded; but should come back with after-wa- r inflation. GROCERY CHAINS: Excellent management. Very stable. Acting well .marketwise. Nomgreat growth ahead but the industry well balanced to meet problems of war or peace. MACHINERY: A real "war ha. by'. Record outputs and'. earnings. One of the first to benefit from war; but one of the Iftst to deflate with peace. MAIL ORDER: : Sharply deflat- ed due to war. Financial position strong. Long term outlook exc'et lent. - PACKING: LATEST OS RUBBER Readers will remember that In I told of exprevious columns ' periments which 'were being made on tires to apply some asphalt gum or other mixture which required no rubber., (This natite,vhiling.---1,--N-iniplycal- teption I In the recprd , . - . , - ,.. by I Itit)0- t ' ' , - ANti.e".. . it, 1,1"stikoll,, - ,: I' - SUNSHINE WOODWORK, WALL, AND FLOOR CLEANER does literally make your walls, woodwork and floors sparkle. , , ' It's easy to use. No hard rubbing or bing, no rinsing -off after using. . s az- , .,-'4,. - .1.:,. ':: iir.::i scrub- '11., 4t4kti. .,. 1.. 2-2-- E, :iii,,. U;y; - ..- - S flp- ... b :..,. :.:E. . 4,-- 44'..',-- 1 ,1 k LI: , - ,:.q .4,...::::::iON.,:i:',,..:t-:::.-:- lat.i.,:::$gii!d:-,;':iRiat:Ni;;;,-- i- .:..- '.:! 14 ....- .-, itreIre'i Woodwork,Wall .:::1' Alck".4'",RHURNA"r ::" 0 , , ps,. a ;',' your WALL WOODWORK, FLOOR CLEANER. A N D :4; At .i,i,i,,, ':.f:': - .:ft.- -- . , , ., r SUGAR:, Pacific War Plus shipping shortages 'have tempo rankBeet helped earnings. companies should have,best for many years. Strict price .1. eoflftol ,mav.he bullish post-wa- r - sea-'so- I Recommended- - and sold by all-- leading Furniture,. Paint, Hard- wive, Department mid Grocer stesrai. Buy a Bottle.. Todya. " -- - Af t 'I - ..k. .'.::...t SAFE .:::,1 :,i. - - . '. NON npLosive NON INIZAMNABLE :,-- - ,:i '''''''' 604 ,:.:::: - .,,1 g s:. PAINT d HANDS ,,.1 ':., , - ' - '' 4 .:,;--- ,-, f: i .: 1 w I - peare by witr ,,, e ,.,t 1 ..,7,, f 4.4nfil it ions-- eunings repllad ,... - ; - To bright- - . - - ,.,7-L',-7 , Putput greater than ever.. EarnValues ings always erratic.-Boo- k to decline as new government financed pltnts are written off: time - LABEL ,SUNSHINE CLEANER is safe,- , 01::::::,, LOOK FOR THIS It's EASY to keep your wood-- , work, walls, and floors clean and 'bright as SUNSHINE. : ra;le 1 HOUSEKEEPING MADE EASIER , R ' . IP BUILDING: Submarine menace booming. calls for sharply higher tonnage. STEEL: 1Vats key industry. t - iiii lily: promising. -: 0 li I 4 i . proving financialI position. Cur-- I cut favorable position will not last. '''T"E"X.1.11-10- , i ',, , Eiceiteredftoa,bighlayes, factor. 11 .. . Helped by war. low li:weteltafter-wa- I i. t , - CannOt . i Industry. Research minded Management. Taxes of .little conse ouence. term outlook ex- Jogimmediate outlook cellent but uncertain, I i , . . , . :, side. Doubtful if demand in future can match recent requirements. PETROLEUM: Inflation ,type I the 11 ,. ' 1 0 !Woad Opposite tho Poet Main . MOTION PICTURES:: High wages Increase attendance. Producing companies in good shape.Near term and future outlook okeh. PAPER: Prosperous due to war. Has been aided by high demand and low imports of pulp. S :Comes First Security Trust Co. k - Sharply' S RT Ask FIRST at differentfro717retcementing camel-bacon to an old tire.) Thiokol accomplishes exactly what I have in mind. The cost should he $i3 to S8 per lire- with a mileage of from 3,500 to 5,000 miles at a reading : RAILROAD EQUIPMENT: Earnings. satisfactory clueto rail. 'Alai and armament boom. No great tax burdens Large export business may he ahead. RAYON: ,Unhampered by, re. strictions but hurt more than i. by- - war, - Tax situatiol at, helped now bad. Development of new and. denounce a products may falsehoo(i. In the ad ert.isement Mrs. Simpson objects .to what, Tont DeWey ilas: to say about Itam Yish, beeause Dewey ;did not say it her way. I ha.ve .not.seep her com7 Vi"t trMareantrtrio;- - he ments-president of the International Labor Defense, de. Scribed by Mr. Biddle 'as a CommuniA Front Organization,. w ho also threatens to run for Congress On the Republican About that she is silent. Yet, as lickctr between Ilam Fish. and Marcantonlo, no American can ehoose a man who changes his mind N'hen a foreign government and 'a foreign controlled political party ' ... change their minds. . . t WHATEVER YOUR LOAN REQUIREMENTS -- RAILROADS:. To- uying higher demands reflect-w higher inprofits. Stable earnings.-Lovested capital. Immediate outlook goo(L - 0 . MEAT , through and make them go through should get r; outthe relative - . Members to sympathetic strikes and the crossing of picket obey orders shduld he suspended or expelled. The 'lines. Sometimes we are inclined to think that International will,' in my judgment, be called, up: on in the very near future to forward to the many of our members haven't the backbone to cross what we recognize as illegal picket lines.' ,federal authorities a list of the officers in any dis:Yes, I knOW many of our 6timiona..baye - trict whozcause a- stoppage of work without the clause in their contracts Nvirich reads that it. Shall , , sanctionof the International Unkm., In other not be eonsidered a violation of the agreement, words, the government may demand' Infottnation to refuse to deliver goods where there is labor as to what is going On in trouble. Let me say now, unless the 'internaresponsible. tional union orders yott The officials of your International' will not refuse be set aside during the peto compl.Nr. .. 'The teamsters are considered just riod of the war. plain suckers by 4nany of those phony organizers "If you can't comply With our international who get 50 .cents per head for new members and orders, which.are founded on necessity and on orthe teamsters do their dirty work for them by ders from our government, then the best thing being so weak as to refuse to,observe their own to do is to notify the International Union. Then laws and thereby recognize the loafers' profes- we will protect ourselves. 'We know howl Some sional picket line -- members have to haves bOmbshell Brother Dan1 took ,many of those thoughts dropped on the office of some local union in order to make them right out of these dispatches. boom. Normally suffers from but the production can readilv speed of 40 miles per hour. The material is made from caustic be increased. No adhesive ma,Outlook 4.inceovercapacity. soda. chlorine, ethylene, and sulrlain. Good mktagement essenterial is needed or no natural or tial. phur. Caustic soda comes from reclaimed rubber will be required. The plan is identical with ethylene from corn, wheat. UTILITIES: Go V ern rnent salt; or any agricultural waste; while break-umy original forecast anti should orders are hamstringa surplus of sulphur. Texas has permit 1.000,000 tires a month ing the holding companies. Op Chlorine Is now being allocated, being treated. Prating units In better position. Both hurt by war taxes. VARIETY CHAINS: Better situated than most retail outlets. 711I difExpected to weather post-wa- r ficulties. Sales and profits hould he well maintained. At the moment the four Industries which- are prospering most are shipbuilding. meat packing. sugar, and paper while the four for that are least prosperolis are utilities, gold .mining, finance companies, and building. One is 111 taking more or less of a risk to Invest In any of the above eight groups at the present time. Rather, he should consider one of the average groups, such as Good home properties are 'available In Salt take lire insurance,- - dairy product,- city and the Sart Lake area. If you want Is grocery chains, and hanks. Certainly, it would - be wiser to buy one, we can provide the money on ono of our take those that- have suffere,1 own convenient loam pirmsor an F. H. A. Loam. most, rather than those that have skiffered least. Con In and Discuss It With Us be-tte- these men are well train"! crafts 1. The war. prosecuted with all haste 'and the most important Jobs ilone,first at Jiny cost. But it must be remembered that the rate of producing keep pace 'strategic raw materials-m,u,-zt with the outpu4 of ships, planes,,tanks and guns.. .and tbat there is a right and a wrong way even to be in a hurry.- - . : - STORE S: - FINANCE . . and puce freezing large consumer demands. Immediate outlook poor. Peace would reverse pictuir. -- - 1 stoppege...has-ocetirretraTtd-WW- e ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT: Sales highs Earnings good hut subject to heavy excess profit s taxation. Capitalization increasing. Renewal of appliance business and post-warexports will hy,),,p cushion after-wa- r act: ,., a-- - orgovernment and Lend-Leasders. Noted for stability, Income and increasing volume. Post-wa- r exports uncertain. DEPARTMENT Shortages, rationing, -, ople: NOTEWORTHY CONCLUSIONS "Our organizer notified the general president and the. generea- - president .ördered Mit to order his members to go through that picket line, as it was nothing but a racket to compel the team stets. to organize into a union individuals who never were in the union and didrit, want to be- long to the union. . . , BuSiness agents who are . interns-trove-office- competition. BY GEORGE: ' -- BUILDING: Slump in reside,m to convert to war work have caused severe inflation. Should boom - , at wars end. CHEMICALS: Vulnerable to excess profits tix. Industry in growth period aided by research. Has inflation merit. Subject- - to . . - erninent holdings make earnings moderate. Prices low in relation4 to book values. - -, understand that our country is in danger. . . . Even in every means with- in, your 'power should be used before you stop work, But the picket line, since the pasw 'sage of the Wagner .Act, in many instances can be honestly called an Organizing racket. that isn't founded on legitiMate trade unionism.' , "In a certain city in the Middle West within the last, few months one of theorganizations, al- filleted with the AFL. threw- - a picket line in front of a busineSs establishment. They .tu;ked the . teamsters not to deliver. anythilig to that build-- , ink An investigation proved ,tat Out Of 25 per-- . sons inside the plant, only four of them were in the unon and they had been,in the union only a couple of weeks. , The, place had never been Ill. -ganized, and the local business agent requested the teamsters to refuse to haul any kind of prod, net nto that building. In other Ivords, asked vs to 11(iolate at lea,s t four contracts with four- - dif, fere t sets of employers v'hose employps, our members, were going into that building. An or-- . genhation that never conSulted us before they threw the picket line around the place; an organ. ization that didn't have but four persons In the building, wanted us to destroy four existing contracts and throw out of work 15 or 20 of our pe- BROTHER- TOBIN SPEAKS . No matter 'what I say through the colomns of this journal," he Writes, "or what I say In pri; letters- a rittinber-:of local unions that refuse to obeY the , ); .., . boom after the war. BANKS: Asseta approaching new highs. Low rates and goy- pro-Naz- 1 , It ts Transportation--uni- i around when he pertnitted- a of his facilities use office, the group to 'but 1 cannot seriously condemn his patriotism because he differed in opinion from other Americans on any question. That'is his right and privilege as much as it is the right and privilege,- under the Constitution, for Herbert Agar and Rex Stout of Freedom House to disagree vvith' I lamilton, Fish. When ,anyone attempts to put down the individual right of an American'to think and to express his 'thoughts, then I brand the suppressor as a Nazi in thought and technique. Now. Hamilton Fish wants to run Must be new-employ- . I , able-bodie- d - - Iloard has 'anTh o nounced that all liquor distillery plant S Nvill be converted eventually to the productioti of alcohol for military needs. The liquor industry pi es its Nth o eh ea rt ed approval to the announcement, for which the general public interested in win141g the war might have rtason for unqualified. gratification if it had not also been anamneed that liquor manufacturers already had built up' a supply of liquor of all kinds. There is something terribly drearY in this, in spite' of the fact that the liquor industry works years ahead and walways has a big supply in the process of aging. We have built up no three-to-fiyyear supply of rubber, although OTC ...war wag 1414711-6-tin WeTh AA (T MM u p no supply of magnesium, oftin, of scrap iron, of tungsten carbide., even tt., militti6, alcohol., Building up Stockpiles Of this nature :was the Nazi game. Our boys built up a one1." supply of , s . - News-Rept-011- k 19-1- - - r atleast-20--per-Ten- - - ' produc- - . - - - .4eots nn r - Profit LSi ' -es- DAIRY PRODUCTS: Aided by , St0.1ore Liquor ''' mat gin down. Taxes up. War. end outlook fa- - E.SOKOLSKY 1 have never met Hamilton Fish..1. have never spoken to him. 1 do not live ill his district and have never voted for ,him. I thought that he did badly all . district, and then 'Will a in rally at the 'University' of appear There In the evening. Stadium Utah of some their exploits they will recount in addresses to the assemblage. Salt' Lake, with the rest of the nation, will have an opportunity in thiR event, to express some of the apprfciation we as citizens feel toward these men who have risked so much for the of the rest of us. Admission will be free, but all entering the gates to the' Stadium will be required to display a newly obtained war stamp book specially designated :and containing one dollar's worth- of stamps. full ThPse ber8es-- atte- giving-the- ir titni--to, the sneeessfulprosecution of the war. This will be one opportunity for us to help thrm fight our eneMieS, and at the same time say "thanks" for their lwroism in battle. Let's say it with war stamps, Tuesday. Nobody questions an employe's right to change his job and to go to better opportunity wherever he finds it. To be chained to one certain job, in normal t, 1 Dewey And Fish In the business - , Mr.- - Babson AVIATION: Outlook for mano o T-.tifarturi ng cmnpanies----- p Planes will,,be "i dime a dozen".. These Days Tuesday Salt Lake will be host of the World's outstand- ing heroes of the present war. They will be seen in a mammoth parade to be held. '.;!;, ',, - vorahle. VZ4ibidi - .NExT ly affected.. Itinerancy and a combination of other circumstances, , for instance, have deprived Utah's underground metal mines t of neededto do an efficient job of getting out the lead, zinc. and copper so necest war effort., And the sary to the turnover is so high that those left in the mines don't stay. long enough to lpai'n -how-to-- do the work' well. Ii becoming disiOrous and the war effort. At the ing industry e, etTlYerit---ratlead, zinc, production copper and other metals from Utah unNvill be actuallY derground mines in was it last less.than year and far below the output in .191n. And the mining industry is not in this boat; alone. Several fundamental injustices have , contributed and. are still contributing to the. laix)r shortagft- and to I he -- workers'-present "flea jumping" tendencies. One is the practice of operating some war basis plants and iindustries on a'cost-pluwith the government footing the bills While others must try and get by somehow. on their own with the prices of their productsunder rigid ceilings and -- their... taxes and costs at the highest levels in .history. Metal prices, for ekaMple': are fixed at about war levels. Another injustice is the .age deadline of about 55 years set by. the government. and emplOyers Nvorklog. "rectly for the gOVernMfrIt. Reports indi- cat. that there are thousands of men on Wrk roles in Utah who are not far over the age deadline,' and ' Welcome The Hero es war-vita- l and essential industries are feeling the acute pinch of the labor shortagea shortage that I s being. made- more severe by the - erancrand wandering-proclivities-- of tile workers who are available. It is reliably reported that the underground metal miner who stays long enough these days to draw a full months pay is a veteran. And- in some jobs at large Salt Lake hotels- the averaze span of employment is three days. All nesses hich have been able to 'survive wartletnands and priorities- are similar, , lii 1 - Practi- - W a "1111111111 ....,..,;,,, --- - di M 0- - entirely to converted ... Forth, Each One Fully In depep ; times-work- . i ''4 -- 0 0 TIVE: caily We Stand For The Constitution 01 The United States With4 Its Three Departments 01 Government As Therein Set pvEN. Utah's farfrontnormal - 1 - ..... '''' (,) 6 - 1 oto.:;-.........- -- -- , Itinerant Labor 11 ' ' Has Brother Tobin gon., 7 Ira,' nuts then? , It No, Brother Tobin has no He has just ac gonetiuts knowledged, titter all these years during which many of his own unions used Picket lines as the instrument of- a:racket, that many a racket has been put over on the American ,peo- ple by this device. Brother Tobin's editorial reveals no inter- - ; Mr. Pricier t-411 the people's case, of course. He was just wrought up because his teamsters had been used by other unioneers whose only motive was to gather in their, graft at the tate of so much per head for men and women unWillingly forced. into other unions. t. listen to Brother 'Tobin: :f ' A If T allb 1 .$1: Itkl11 . he.- - 12 , 'II ; , - - Ntill union- , :. - I wrote that? lines! labor-baitin- Well chum,' dust off a spot on the floor and of the go Into your swoon because that is leading editorial of the June issue of the monthly Puma' of the Teamsters' Union and an official command to thesmembership from Brother Dan Tobin, the president, who is al so a member of the executiv ; council Or cabinet Of the MI , Co throu0 those picket lines, says , - , ' rat of a g the-titl- 8- - , , ---- ' 11111.111 V -. - , --- -- ; ' . ' , strike-breakin- -buster a year I like to give readers a brief resume of some of the various leading indtistries. I an Arranging these, however, alphabetically rather than in accordance .with their immediate importance as they are changing their relative position each month. Following are my rondensed analyses: AGRICULTURAL E Q iI IP An essential industry. VENT: ,. Profits sati .:::. divi- ,, factory, 5 I, dends liberal. ..,;c, Farm prosper- il should ity ,, ,; ,, ,. .. maintain post- - It, IT' e, war sales. -- - YORKGo through those picket NEW What e YORKOnce NEW -"- N Pegier By -- ,- ''''' - -1, - , , 'le . Fr9nt'Bro. Dan Surprising 1Vords Westbrook Groups, Not Extremes, Writer Advises , , 1PV- . Buy In Average , , 4::a s- . - t 'al' ) f ,, ,i I - d .., , ' - , Says Babson . ht s 4 ' . , sands Who Ihad admired and him were shocked: Many were not apprised of the fact that he had been ill. Others, knowing of his illness, had not realized,. it was serious. Today all join totogether in sincere .regret at his pasing. Governor Blood vvas a natural and, great leader of men. lie saw his way clearly, and possessed the courage an,d integrity to do what was required. His administration in the office of governor, as was the case in his- earlier public duties, was a credit to the state, as viell as 'to himself as a citizen. His friends were ;lumbered. among those of lxith leading political faiths. The governor's IlleAk as not all ponticat It was well rounded, and ,tempered sctillty, in manyfields of ,,eyieavor,, It touched not only those in high posi- and Aloft, but the7h-timblwhom he was friendly and sympathetic.-- many' other,prominent citizens of Lthe West, Governor Blood, was active religiously. Faith in the Almighty and His purposes has marked the careers of most great men. It has been one of the iources of their true greatness, an evi-dence of power. Governor Blood was aminister for, the Christ, and occupied positions of trust in the Church throughout his life. ' Beginning as a bov common to most Latter-daSaint, young people:As he advanced in life he grew into more responsible positions, until he was chosen aa stakepresident,- a mark of rare dis, tinction,- an evidence of achievement in the Church. He continued to occupy this position for a time, even while carrying responsibilities in the state government. And when his terms of public office were concluded, he 'accepted still another call from his Churchthat of Mission President. Governor Blood will go to the beyond to a great reward, and he will go too with the knowledge that he will live on in the hearts of the people of this state. The Desetet News offers its sincere sympathy to those who are bereaved. - .. ---, . H. Henry yesterday that Blo.od had passed'away, the i ; ' 1?-krio- - Fair , ., FOOD ,' Vatch-Toiii-7.Inv-estwent- WAltriME . Of Utah .today mourns the loss of one of its distinguished sons. 'When word Went out from Salt Lake 1 - ... - T.11, State HitletiL ' . ,. ' - That Frightens . . , Saturday, Atte 20, 1,942 b F Mtelat ENSIkTixclu' 5 - NE,s,s;. DESERET , . , . - . NV" 0 I |