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Show ,.60.160.100,010041110.11041EPONS. I' ' I A ' - ' - - 't ' - - .1 , . SALT LAKE CITY, UTA'il- tT -- E ' . , we stand for the Constitution of the United States with its etlfu ttldei:s)arotsTnentitseledf. government as therein setforth, each one MIT , .. , It I - Pessimism Niers I A0.i,i.:::ir;i'.-'$t41.cd-:6-.:,'M.ici..,f0::sop.::..:.0;),i..1..- - . 1 , s , . - I tan Anglo-Irania- I . - 50-5- . Anglo-lrania- --- - Anglo-Irania- Anglo-Iiini- , - en . , - ' i- - ' "" , tut . - 41 - - Anglo-Irania- , Arabian-Amerka- - ''. - ..., , .' . ' . company did better by the native employes than the American concerns 4ve, 'this report gives prominence to Aramco personnel and medical work in Saudi Arabia. As for the question of royalties American oil companies are not greatly worried over their relations with the governments from g whom, they have concessions, but naturally they don't like to see flames spring up anywhere in that part of the world. They needn't have, either, if it had not been for the nivardly laggardness' of the British socialist Labor Government Two years ago tlie ftompany began talking better royalty tenni with Iran, but the argument dragged on and on until the threat of conliscatioretroks out into action: and now the British-ar- e dispouessed of the company and Irsit is a sputtering powder keg. profit-sharin- - n, Angla-kania- - n No Easy Diplomatic Road to Korean Peace 11) Before - the United Nations can make peal with the Conunussists-theare going to have to make peace among themselves. Unless they present a united front they have shall chance of coming out of any negotiations with an honorable battlement of the Korean War. A diplomat in Washington summed it up this we,' to the United Pres ,'We are trying to get our side lined up firmly so we can act promptly when we know y what Malik means." , , South Korea, the nation that has.stiffered most from the current Communisteggression, already has taken its stand. It opposes any kind of settlement that leaves Korea divided by the 38th parallel. It wants the U. N. army to keep fighting until all Communist troops are dispersed or driVen beyond the Yalu Anglo-Iranian-'s ' favorable. 1 - . Sketches , - - 4 7' -1 - , : - ar t 41 ; - r , 1J ;,in Ida .t. , c II Il 1lt it , t4 - - ; JA 'I I . 0."- - -a -- 'ILIAVaV.r1 "ok. , till M. Je 1 I B. INff 1 woo f , 16,, .16 11,-..,,- - . IBM MO - - , , L )'. BIM tt at.. XsUg,t3u,yeapjtrk.rg.etn.dy.". 4 . - i . , -- -" ....-- -- - . A- 7 'ci, "0 i ; 1 t I Ilk 0 81111 . ,s ' ' ....... - '- I v 0qo' .1 t 1i i,,) ir NzitSh.s -, A. ,..a,,,,,,,,;.1. ,,,':-- -- . - -- -- op, s'4'sersir-414 , til 13 11 - 1141 PRida A. ' I , - 4 - i w 10. 2.... I , .. C' ' .N I . ' w. ;- i - i II III .,..---- - r to etc. But we need something more than that. I Irish every person in the United States would take a few minutes each day te say a prayer for us. this is what Believhe me, most. we JEST THE OMB day one of my buddies was fatal), wounded. In the midst of hot action, we stopped and gathered around him to prayer. Before we started he said he would like to lead In the prayer. ' We all felt ashamed when he prayed: because although we had prayed for others, we had prayed mbstly for ourselves. But not this boy. Even though be was about to go over the border into that land from whence nobody turns, he didn't pray for himself. He prayed for all the rest of us. His heart went out in sincee prayer for the fellows gathered,around him, for all the men on the front and for those out on the ocean who were lending aid and for the folks back home. Those were the ones he prayed for. He IRy there looking the Dark Angel in the face and was as calm and unafraid as' any man I have ever seen. He knew he would be all right, for his mom and dad and brothers and sisters back 'home had prayed for him. - ED """ x Liz Tr it ' P ,, AO . , 'a - e - " -- -- - , ER t 4 a OV -,1 pA 7" tt 'I, t'', ,,.N ,,,, -"- ,s, do 1 I 1 'fi" VilK7 ."11. ......06 ,...1--1-- .0 .1-- ...' I de 11411"T. '-'11- 1 " 14. I LETTERS FROM NEWS READERS Although I have traveled treat deal, this is my first visit to America. I find your land very picturesque. Your women are the prettiest and most fascinating I have ever seen, especially the ones here in your city. But like everything else American, they are always "on the tear" (using your own colorful expression.) That, no doubt, is what the foreigner doesn't like about the American woman and rather than admit he can't keep up a --- - WESTBROOK - ry , did, she would catch him for he would be too slow to get away from her. When I am riding with an at the wheel, American I hold on to the 'seat-witone hand and my neck with the other. The driver whole thought is centered on making the green light. And what does he do when he makes it? He rushes on to his death or that of some one etge. General MacArthur was so right (he generally is) when he said that the destiny of the whole world rests on the United States of America. So save your necks Americans, we need you. I like you people and your country very much. But your pace is far too lively for me. Why not admit it. Martin Case, Liverpool, England. Ths Deseret News invites readers to express their opin- ions or contribute inform& tions. on topics of current interest. Letters must be signed, should be brief (not over 200 words preferred), and must not violate accepted canons of good taste Address: The Editor, Let- ters to the News,.P. O. Box 1257. Salt Lake City 10, Utah. - with her, he concocts criticisms that have neither truth nor reason in them, such as "she chases him." "You may be very sure that this isn't true for if she, i:IGLER Analyzing the Factors That Make Divorce Bad Judge Robert S. Tulkar, of the Pima County Superior Court, sitting in Tucson, Ariz.. with recently deniPd-adivoran opinion which revived principles so long forgotten that they seemed to 'express a new concept .if the obligations of parents to children aril to society.- The judge. a young man who wu put to bed loran illness which lasted' several years following his graduation from Lafayette College, in Pennsylvania, in 1935, was appointed .only tecently by the new Republican governor. Howard Pyle He is tall, thin snd delicate, a forthright Republican in his personal politics a Protestant the father'elf two chil-- then, and in the present moral climate, a cruel reactionary It young husband had petitioned for a divorce. The wife had filed a cross-bil- l. DUTY'SOCIETY'. Judge Tuner hPld that the buiband had a du,y to society to remain at the bead of his little family. He had enjoyed benefits from society, now be could not shirk his duty to society --hy dumping his children as if It wer a litte. of kittens beside a oesert gad And Judge Totter told theytufig wife to tidy up her grammar and "make yourself attractive and desirable " She was to try to find few minutes each day to improve her mind and her speech. There was no corespondent. lathough Judge Toiler did refer to a young school teacher of whom the husband was "fond." But if he mar-h-er h judge wrote the family which he would ban-- don woted haunt him every lay of Mb life The simple, earnest wisdom of this young judee in Is first expression on a subject which will often be before him may , bt classical. "Although she is only 22 years old. It& defendant wife ernes?, older " Ttdlar began. "The physics( str,sin of bear-In- v and rearing three chi'- dred; plus the mental strain, of attempting , to keep her family together with an un- willing husband, has told on her. MILLSTONE OR MEDAL She no longer makes the most of her appearance, due to the strain, the rush of her domestic affairs and the shortage of money. Tne fact that her formal education was cut , short is readily apparent It for is obvious that her been intellectual purstda e. negligible since her She has not tureenidly been able to compete with attractive, single, roung university girls who have none of her burdens or respomibilities. 'Thehusband is two years older but, for another five yeaes, he wiL continue to be young, eigorous. nandsome and attractivt to women. "His education nu exceed- ed his wile's He finds better better groomed, informed, more attractive girls on the campus who are 'willing to make themselves attractive to ; him. "Ms wife and the children hang like a millstone around his neck. Ile is still too much of a child to accept his responsibilities or to realize that the millstone is, in fact a medal to be worn with pride and n pleasure. He cannot ,rtnouwnerec-ihis good having a healthy loving wife arc' children "Tor the fleeting enjoyment that be thinks the next few years might bring him as a single man he is willing to destroy the home and family life of four other people and to set three infant children on the road of life without the love, happiness, and security which they so desperI ately need. TOO 'LATE "Perhaps lull contemplates He la tootoc inexmarriage. realperienced and stupid ize that it is too lkte for him to find happiness in that direction. If he thought to take his three children with him into this new marriageprovided his second wife would accept ,themho would nevertheleu find that their mother would ' tit at table with them at every meal. $ Ho I , - , - . . -- - ,- -- If You ue an you can remember when was an apartment address. old-tim- er B-1- 11 1 "OUSTED LEADER l'ASatE tiates 'With PWC's--- lines. tEd. Note: ICU, Interpreted means, tinsecurity little resulting from , . which give TEXT FOR TODAY: "Yea, e Syndicate) Negohead- , It Is not good for a man to keep - too much to himself, says , a psychiatrist That's the - way the inconn tax pee-ple- figure, also money. Time will both-- , I'Give the plaintiff a yearpr so after, his graduation to establish himself to his profession. If then, either party finds it necessary to refile this action, I might look with synipathy upon their grievance& lint not now. They have made their bed; let them Log restans RAPS 'I upr bccum, it" . - should be $200 Per 'Month- "All the troubles of the parties have been brought on b their immaturity and by (Oamie 1. unafraid. The reason I am irriting . this is because I have seen this grim drama happen time : and time again I have been In the midst of Inn and bole who know not prayer. They were full of fear when death hit all around them. but those who know God and prayer. were never afraid-4- 1 am asking you to print this letter so others may better under-stand what ottr boys In Korea really need the most.- - t R. A. EBELINZ AAUSN parties cannot afford 10,e1 luxury of divorce. His income is $120 a month. If a divorce were granted the minimum- which this court should order him to pay the defendant wife for the support of herself and the children lie in I NEW that God was with him and would se- cept him and all there who fight the battles of righteousness. Ho said: "I believe in Him who suffered himself to be slain for us all and I shall not really die for by this faith I am saved. Others of our buddies have not this nor have they any desire to live so they may re-eeive this great blessing. Some of these will soon be coming along with tie. That Is why I pray for them, so they may be permitted to join me in God's kingdom." He died just a minute or two after he had said this. Wo are aU aware of the - fact that we may be next However, we have no fear, because those who ere saved, and know they mire saved, have the- - assurance that our Heavenly. Father is with us. There are many In this outfit that are triad of death. They are the ones who need your prayers, more than we who go forth would find her the third party In the marriage bed, seemingly as real as though she were there in person. "Perhaps he contemplates only a return to single bliss, the freedom of flirtation with many females. "Again, he seeks the will o' the wisp. Before long, he will cease to be the handsome young menace to womanhood he now is. Signs of the recession of his fraivoemni his torches' are already evident II. leans toward adiposity. He will soon become flabby and superficially uninteresting, like the rest of us. "He should accept the fact that he, himself, cut his own youth and 'fun short by his early marriage and seek to relive that youth in his children. "It was inevitable for the wife to be jealous. Women are j ealous of even the most pitiable of us. CHILDREN'S INTEREST 1)' "The interests of the children are now far more impor- -' tent than those of the parents.- "Even if it means continued unhappiness to the husband andthe wife for them to go back together, still they have their chance. If they have .wrecbad their own lives they still must not be permitted to wreck the lives of their chil- dren. i EX 'at - t 1 say. PRESERVING OUR HISTORIC BATTLEFIELDS English Thoughts , On SLC Ways 11'. ptboys, scarcely. old enoura to shave. are battling side by side to preserve freedom and liberty so people can live and believe as they please. You, folks back home are .doing a grand job keeping Ill supplied with the little extra things a soldier on the front needs, like reading material, letters, candy .bars, 1.'...'; , . . OF OUR fine young men, fighting in Korea. sends along- a plea for a little help froth- us folks hire at home, a kind of support we ..can all render without any sacrifice at all on our parts, certainly not anything like the sacrifice be and his buddies are. making. , Ile , writes: Things over here are getting rougher all the time, so it seems. Men reece ,(4. .nd -- 44 , .o. - 'to: ,CCNIROt. --' '...''' - Ilg 1.'' gob a if. - 1 AD FLED? II.1 , 1 I tA-et-o 7.,..- .- - I cs,, 0 0 - , , -- . 0 . . tsr)edt1 - . , , rit , ,.... ..... . t- I A .. , 40 ' ,,... , - , T4S WHERE EVERYONE. TURNED APOUND PS ,7 in, .... se -- 4 - ar. .. ,,, ' 1 )4) I .- Aktik - . - ,'- At izsGe - I 'el -- i s fikrrLE 11-l- e ) : - i - ONZ 4114ERE WE LOST 'p t HERE ---Ant .' Prayer in Korea 1 - Io... IS- ....1 '.... eat.", ,' monetary or benefits, It is something to think about. PISSDUST TRUMAN And that heals ons to tho , Lsrli,lk , . Goates by Les -- , .; ,.. , . WHO LEAD Ci m, in .6 i SPECIAL - Stalin, like all Marxists., is an optimist in the serum that be believes that his success, is inevitable and therefore he can afford to take 1:dg chances. The initial slogan of Ham-is'you have ntt)aktg to lose but your chains, Is a wonderfully hopeful statement because if there is nothing ti; lose, everything is a gain: It is like when I go broke paying taxes, , I still feel cheerful because I am not as poor as my lather was either -- .. . , . t Actually adds-up-- 10 , ' , un , II. s, IP ., ras , . t , . , , i i ,.1; , , . ipt, ' also was a pituimist and thPzel21 at Tegave away the gams : heran and Yalta. ", An optinalst holds his cards close to his waist-lin- o ha the hope that a pair of jacks, if properly concealed emotionally, might, in the long run, win a hand. And it sometimes if the does, particularly -ottihr players are pessimists. Roosevelt threw his band down when Stalin had noth1ing to show. At Tehean and Yalta, and later at Potsdam, where Harry Truman sat in, Stalin walked off with all the ; chips. Some say that Stalin was bluffing then and is bluffirig now. They say that all his threats and hot and cold wars are just bluffs. But it got him an 1100.00004 population and rich Unita from the Elbe to the Pacific.' OPTIMIST STALIN ist Socony-Vacut- - :- d. o fig' . He assumed that the' American peopla were so dumb that they would fall for an'y fallacy, if competently Pick-ageHarry Hopkins died and I bayoneted that only I. the incurable optimist, ever recall his name, , TEHEDAN AND YALTA In , , . t , LES'GO' I It 'W , 01'2'.'" N . - tk4-45- (AR k3:4 - , not do any particular harm to an already kteicable situation. The late Harry Hopkins was a philosopher of pessimism, a sort of New Deal Schopenhauer.--- - - - - e, ' - River; If the Allies went Into a conference with the Communists ,Canying a proposition of ,Triman administration. that kind with-ee- l; the parley wild last Harry Trimian bra pessi. as long as it takes Jacob Malik to say mist and you ow see it on his "net, which is Russian for .!'no" and one of his faface; even when he laughs. the globe. vorite words. Re just cannot believe that be American oilmen have been in the Mid- The prime difficulty is that each of the is actually president of the die East since 1928. That was when Standard coalinations, making up Abe United States.' tooil of New Jersey and tion has its own ideu about the form, That explains the curious any gether bought a 24 per cent share -in the Korean settlement ahould take. Each one of of the firing of Genepisode Iraq Petroleum Co. them' is going to push its own views to the eral MacArthur. You can read This was the old Turkish Tetroleum limit because there is a general awareness an the millions of words of which Shell (Dutch and British), Anglothat the settlement Is going tà determine testimony ancithe5e is not a Iranian, and a French company bad started , events in Asia for a long time to come. isual:We sttity as to ' why on a concession obtained by CI S. Gulbenkian What tlds all . as the U. P.'s MacArthur fired at the from the Turkish government before the first K Harry Ferguson reports, an indication that precise moment and la such world war.' The Germans bad barged in but a lasting peace is not golig to" be declared a cruel manner, no matter they were thrown out as the war's result, and In Korea immediately. A cease-fir- e possibly how faithful servitors try to their share went to the Americana. It is might come reasonably soon, but the fact that cover the master's whimsical. such items of history as that which' make the guns fall silent won't mean that the U. N. thI British shudder at the thought of Amer his finished its job. AtTROIUTT , THE NEIGHBORS Actually, nobody was cluesBy George. Clark Trumans legal and tAoning 1 IL 1.gtiegi s constitutional authority beBy BEN BrItROVG113: cause no one could. The 'A Writer's Prayer' president may, in all his , Cod might remove any general guide my mind and I icr V - '14 7, I II ;4,1 k-- L lar.'1'71Awor Can write vrhat's I 1 U 1' admiral or cabinet officer, At ft band so I I -!,?7, 'I at will. Tilt MacArthur in In ray heart dear God I ail:7A above Instil In zne cident was one of many the ' hibitions of pessbnism. hope that I hnpart pleas. The bilprobaownbilimuti ,4?1 , , nake ea bve with high ideals I (LIP ileau.thuarryat ' Ii' so I mai tell the world' Truman would have remained about the blessed things I I II ie an optimist, believing that a I life-I tiV.1 . II of XII and of true love 'deal made over a poker table unfurled 1 must produce favorable re-giant me 'the I wow S : x sults if the players abide by and ,,deepest sympathy Hoyle. more w less. cause my heart to yearn ilib..111kMailr 11 Jr I ifIlL .But in the curious play of I can I write of how I feel .0 " 1 'I " Tt- - Mie historic events. Marry 1 h-11 man finds forces at work di.. so ether hearts can learn II 11 1'1 I k It 7dir.LVJ 4. 1 b On me great tenbestow which ' base ror in; I ', ..ar ,..ltiallow I "It ". ti t II 11 'It Pit A' ha does not seem to ' stance, derness ; and character of I I ft 't 4 know the history of Mansoul so when I meet Ton I AwebLA churia or even Russia, face to ace ;root the DUI We WWI WI a lovely 190E4 sear, In. Wit SOW 7 paid the way be acts. a t priceless toll. I. tcwrnea sue rostare-- asailisaw , , ' , , '- A pessimist is a person who II sure that the world to the dogs anyhow and that a bit of lying, cheating. graft.' u - the protectorató in the Persian Gull just Saudi Arabian coast, and Vivian Meik has been noting for Deseret News readers that Iran is making pretensions toward claim- . situation, particularly bg it .- - a dangerous no longer able to prosince the British-ar- e tect anything in that region. The field there Is worked by the Bahrein Petroleum Co, which is owned by Standard and the, Texas Company. Altogether the Middle East presently produces about 15 per cent of the world's oil and is supposed to have 40 per cent of the world' reserves. . The British have been in Iran the longest f of any-othe Middle operations, their Is the and greatest theytan least rbvestment fiord to lose what they have invested there, and they claim now that they have done het- ter by their native employes than have any of the later corners. The Persians do not believe that. n And Ithe Co. has not paid the leasing country the most royalty, nor even the going Middle Eastern rate, which was what produced the explosion. in Saudi Arabia, was the first:in the Middle East to raise the royalty rate to 50 per cent of the profits. Two of the state' Th the region, Iraq and ituwalt,- hove recently been asking for bigger splits. They are stopping far short of demanding the whole ball of waxios the Iranians have done, ' but they seem to think that since everybody else this side, of the Iron Curtidn is getting Irmo and more from the Americans. they might as well. too. It's pretty certain that the Iranian govemment expects a cut of the same pie: in this instance by a supply of American techniciam to operate the Iranian fields and refinery. These would be private individuals working under contract with the nationalized Iranian Oil Co. which has seized the properties, of course: but they couldn't take the jobs without our government's blessing, and the British ar desperately afraid, according to the London Economist, that that apprtmd will forthcome. Sim" ever7body ht this cotmtry MOMS to want more from the American government, too," Mr. Love ruses, "the feeling about Good Uncle Handout must be univerthe one unifying thing on sal, world-widOff -- believes that if you live right and think straight and cut no corners. the results will be ' world.. , Bahrein, likewise a sheikdom, is a British , 3011951 t ,, , optImt Is a personwho . was shut off and the line had to be cut over to the port of Tripoli in Lebanon. Saudi Arabia began to be developed for oil in a big way after 1933, when the Arabian. American Oil Co., owned by the Texas Co. and Standard of California, went into production there, mostly in the area just west, of the Persian Gull. Standard of New Jersey and Socony-Vacuu- m bought interests of 30 and 10 per cent in this enterprise about two , years ago. This l'Aramcon recently published another of its reports to the Saudi Arabian govern-ric- k a beautifully-printe- d job in English and Arabic, with the Arabic text starting in what we think of the back of the book so that it meets the English text halfway, over- laps it in the middle. Someway that seems symbolic of why the American companies' oil operations don't run into trouble over there as the British has. Countering Anglo. Iranian claims that that British Government-controlle- d ' Opti An ' firstof the long the built Petroleum Iraq pipelines, the one from the Kirkuk field to the Mediterranean at Haifa.. It amounted to a relief project for American workers became the pipe was rolled in Ohiq and Pennsylvania during the long depressioli. In the troubles oilmen in. Iran. - E t SATURDAYIJU i, , ,------- , I PO.?6!10;:.4.4t..,.i.:....P.O.tei4s:.:..th.'0.'..:,0...iiti..h,'''' American interest in the commotion in Iran is by no means concerned with the oil In thatrountry, and the international politics involved, John A' Love has pointed out ma survey of the petrpleum operations in the Middle East, 4' In the countries to Iran's west Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Bahrein . tan companies participate in even larger n Oil Co. production than the :. . realized in Persia. Kuwait; a sheikdom nelit4he Iranian border, has the Burgan pool, probably the greatest in the world. It is operated 0 by n and a subsidiary of Gulf Oil of Pittsburgh. Since Sir William Truer Is n chairman of both and the' Ku3, has corns wait company; and to such spectacular grief in Iran, the American participants are understandably nervous, ' although royalties paid Kutralt give its sheik the highest income of any man !IOW, In the .., . ";', . -- ' ' - I , s . - NEWS- ,:'11-1'.E7-bESERE- T i GEORGE E. SOKOLSKI' . tI . . - 2:13,EDIfORIAL-PAG- - - , ' thJugh I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; tot- art with me; thy rod and thy staff,- - they comfort me." Psalm 13:4. 4 , T ' 0,4? - , |