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Show EDITORIAL PAGE DESERET NEWS . We stand forth. Constitution el the United States with its three departments of government as therein set forth, each one fully Independent in its own field. T. I.INatieé7öf..--Géiiaidl'1".',Ciihfetiké- 'GEORGE al ars-Invite- Bang! A horrifying scream! Someone has fallen out of I window. Some more bangs! Two or three radios are shrieking what are called - : o - - ' And if that hiorda of loosed ii against us. Will planes Ridgy,' a3r be permitted .(as MacArthur was ot) to order out fliers across the border 'to ; destroy them in Manchuria? This was one of the matters discussed to a Conclusion by the rretWis and British for.,, sign ministers and our Secretary of State Dean .'Acheson at their Meeting In Washing- - preceding the NATO CounciLmeeting in Ottawa, and the advice' that reach us is that ' the answer ; wat ' ' Yet. At least Secretary Acheson's provision d- The British and French' ministers continued to insist that they'd strongly prefer consultation before such action, no matter what the provocation. That's in the record they took home for their government's satis- and-pervic- ; s' , , - - Was Yes, ' , inter-allie- The Big Three decision reached for the French and British ministers to take home to their governments was (a) If cease-fir- e efforts fail finallf,,, and fighting lu resumed, the United Nations should continue to try to keep the wu Inside Korea; and thl If the Communists use their mass of Manchurian-base- d warplanes to make a heavy attack on the U. N. tortes there shall be a consultation among the governments concerned before deciding 'whether the Allies under Ridgway's - command should , strike - -- ill-ou- full-sca- le t, But they lodged to formal objection to what Acheson pressed t as this country's emergency projecrparticularly when he stressed the possibility of the,enemy's ing not only a very heavy assault against U. N. ground forces, but also against Ameritan and British warships off Korea's coast. They yielded that in such a case there'd berslim possibility of time for d coesultation;. So it's the emergency "yes" that stands So now we will be asked by many railer that makes good sense now after the Russell Committee hearings or the MarArthur case, wit. didn't it make good sense last Do- . That is eno tho international-politicquestions that the Deseret News cannot an. ewer- - - We expect and hope that from some of our readers will clarify tho point. al fully-inform- ed letters-to-the-edit- or . 4 Intrepid Folk Strong Enough to Escape-MaLose. Much Value as 'Displaced Persons' y -- , , , . Thai Crusade for Freedom's statisticians announced the other day that nearly 20,000 persons a roonth manage.to escape from hind the Iron Curtain Into the Ire. West. Some of the - escape stories are preatty dra- - - : flesh-and-blo- , - Such eseapes have propaganda value for our side In the cold war being fought over Europe's body these days. Still we are forced to wonder whether, in terms of realism, such Ingestious and intrepid folk as .,these escapers might not di freedom's cause more good if they stayed behind the Red border. working In the underground, than they can by adding themselves to the roster ofdispleced persons 'who constitute ono of the greatest problems of Western Europe's struggle for recovery. The saga of the Czech railroad engineer who smashed his train through the border barrier into Western Germany, and so gained sanctuary for himself. and his family and those of his passengers who wished to escape Red bondage, has been told at detailed length: but for sheer thriller value, we like better the tale of, the Czech family that armored In old truck with 11On plates and drove across the border through the rifle fire of Red bor. , der guards., I Not 200 yards inside Germany the truck bogged down in a muddy field. Bullets pep. pered the easy target. But the three adults and four children In the fleeing party leaped out of the vehicle, ran on out of gunshot distance, handsomely cocking their moots at the marksmen they had left behind. , 4 llought fay the Day rom.J. S. Finger , 4 STRICTLY ketche Ity !? RICHTER sr; traltorGns, 'Idle Mind, A At one time In our glorious past the people of this country took up arms against 'taxation without repzesentatlou." i It is high time we rise up to the full extent of out Constitutional Means against slaxation without limitation." - Mischa Richter AFonw,mminmo - An Idle mind hi like ear that broke and full of rust for whea a brain Si la only gathering Idle It It's like a stagnant dust :4001,thatztands,........n1atut day. after (say acctunulating kind that only filth breeds decay a mind that only sits and dreams...with. , out ths will to work is harmful to the world at large and other minds that perk for when the brain Is fast the body tires toe asitep and soon become. lazy one , 's that will not 'work so Use your brain for you to best avail and you will that you will surely find be much happier and know real peee of mind. - By t 1.11,,Tk r 0 :p 1 0 A. I 10. wanaszatairsinsmomano 0 ' t '"4-- 1 , , .' i 1 ern r , . " , AND NOAH SENT FORTH A DOVE , LETTERS FROM NEWS READERS Senator Watkins tint Hails Miss America "If Is, of course, quite doubtful if the Prophets Joseph Smith and Brigham Mormon ever to win the Apropos of the winning of the Miss America title by Col.leen Kay Hutchins, Senator George Aiken of Vermont has handed me a dipping from the Brattleboro (Vermont) Daily Reformer which should prove of interest to Utah people.. It reads: "Although Vermont's representative in the Miss Amerka contest at Atlantic City didn't cop the cup, the Green Mountain state can be said to have a little reflective glory In the Utah girl who did win the title. "The new Miss America, from Salt Lake City, is the ever Young would have dreamed of pmphetying that a descendant of thkir austere told pious band would some day emerge from the glitter of Atlantic City as the most glamorous gal in the country.- But through those two Vermonters of yesteryear this little state can today at least stake out a small claim to Miss America of 1951'6 Incidentally. Senator Aiken's personal comment was highly complimentary to Miss Hutchins and the hits of Utah. The Utah congressional DORIS FLEESON daft America Holpiqg Greece Build Military Strength The sun shines for America here in Greece. The U. S. military mission? it le , . ten ceded in Athens about Greek rmity. despite the appearance of a small Comrtnunist vote in the 'recent election. The bard core of Reds are known and under control. it Is claimed, and do not menace the defense efforts. ' All these are ' Important credits. and make life considerably more relaxing for Americans at work in Greece than In various other coimAries nt the West. - But there Problem. la ono very large Miss Hutchins has been invited to visit the nation's capital and she will receive a warm welcome not only by Utahns here, but by the public and Washington officialdom generally. Arthur V. Watkins, , U. S. Senator, Utah The only really bountiful crop yielded by the marbled soil of the Grecian Wes is politicians. The result is a constant struggle to get the 'people enough to eat, and a frequently frustrating gle to find responsible officials to - deal with. It is true that most leeding candidates for office in alGreece are terms with Mr. George Sokolsky, whose articles appear In your newspaper, who writes for the King Features Syndicate, and who lives in New 'York. I have written a long letter and .B.CA ,dministrator Roger Lapham saluting the Greek king and prime minister. Fortunately, both the ,ambassador., a former assistant secretary of state, ant Lap ham, a former mayor of San Prancisdo, are astute and experienced, and can dodge the kiss of death as well as' snY politico. we gets a little complicated when even the admirable monarchy shows Kilns of making like clubhouse pollIn the recent election, Xing Paul went so far as to suggest, in an ' interview with an American corr.- enondent, that, in his view, a leading eandidate tot minister, Field Marshal Alexander l'apagos, was a good soldier, and should be in the Army. This was reprinted exclusively In an Tim 5 en rattlealli Vasa Woven at lee, throws away her eye glasses, says news Item. Probably figured she had seen everything.. - Tor all these reasons Iluive urged upon Mr. Sokolski' (and also Mr. Westbrook Peg- ler) that , Salt , Lake City, would make a much better end safer capital for the United States than would Washington. D. C. I hope thole two journalists take my ProPosaltA IttlriouslY. for their articles i. appear in leading all g overt the newspapers country, including, of course, the Deseret News. Harold Green ' New York City , - - - - ' e 'AMERICANS URGED- TO LET LOOSE or PENNIES. Take carelef the pennies and the government will take are of the dollars. - - s' - tNS01.11,,nr.D Though confidence Is very At times, ttwould be our bes't ' - advice, When stormy b the path and steep To take a look before you leap! , . an enough bad habits of their own Without from the borrowing smoking Women The tenon pad of the country has a number of factions, none of which, can be strictly depended upon for Its loyaltyto 1 The shortage of pennies it attributed to sales .taxes, nickels to parking meters and dimes to telephone calls. And so ft goes all the way up to . ;10.3 bills. defend Israel. - taideased Vlsi mountain water right at band. 'Tbe natives of Salt Lake City are not only loyal to the United States, but they have the deepest political and spiritual- devotion to Deseret, which they would defend as fanatically as the Jews would GOOD SOLDIER, The king had some prove; cation. In announcing his candidacy, Papagos had appeared to hist that the crown , approved his ambition. But it would, for example. rather Marti the British on. till eve of a general election If their constitutional Monarch, King George VI, should ten a reporter that Winston Churchill was an admirable first lord of the admiralty. and should be back with the British Naky. Ma neck! s to Sokolsky, expressing enthusiasm for your city, and seriously recommending that Salt Lake City would make a better location for the nation's capital than would Washington, D. C The grandeur of Salt Lake would City's surroundings befit the capital of the world's greatest nation. An attacking Or invading enemy could penetrate to Salt Lake City only with the greatest difficulty. An enemy could not cut off the water supply, as 'with most large cities, for Salt Lake City has plenty of pure PROVERB who talks of saving face, Amid his country's wreck, Ought to find s hiding place And save, perhaps t-- I am on rather Intimate d, - S CHINESE Nation's Capital most embarrassingly so: The Greeks have developed a American-styl- e humor about It; an April Fool's Day cartoon still behtg displayed around Athens shows Antbassador John C. Peurifoy. - MT tRLEND, the poultry man how ciltne I have never had any chickens in ,my modernistic, stream-line- d. cinder-bric- k chicken coop in all the three years I have had now it SO I It coda more to feed a hell for a year, than her owner can get for the eggs and it's no wonder after keeping them that long. This is hard to understand unless it could be that somebody is trying to feather his nest on chicken feed and that is not intended as a yolk. Still none of mil. neighborhood hen holders are clamoring for government control of eggs. That would be a double yolk. The poultry man says hens are good to have around because they are hard workers, as you can tell by watching any old cluck. Re also laments the fact that we have only nine per cent more hens than 25 years ago but they are laying al per cent more eggs which is something to cackle about. IT HAS ALWAYS been customary for hens to lay eggs during the spring, and summer seasons but the slick chicks they have nowadays, keep it up during the winter as well. The part-tim- e producer in any flock is dubbed a dead duck but in the light of modern chicken culture such duds are scarcer than hen's teeth. Better housed and better fed than her predecessors In the profession. the chicken lives in a hen house equipped with heat and lights which gives her , a longer day in which to scratch out an existence. People owe a lot to thickens, says the poultry fellow, and I can see just what he means. Why, we can scarcely carry on a conversation without mentioning them. WE SAT OM neighbor is "a good egg" and maybe you heard somebody call his wife "an old hen." The farmer, we hear, gets up with the thickens and if it's a hot day he calls it a "broiler." If he falls to make his flock pay off he's a dumb cluck. Even history is influenced by chickens. We read that the pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock and that the administration is counting its chickens before they are hatched, so as not to make Rhode Island Red, an of which is a joke so old we scarcely dared to pullet Anyway, in view of the troubles of the chicken growers, I shall continue to pay the good woman down the street SO cents per dos. for her eggs and let her worry about the problems of the cluck's clan. Nominates SIC to Be strug- rather-hard-boile- -- - Egg-Spla- in up-to-d- delegation and the Utah colony In Washington were greatly elated at the success of Miss Hutchins. They were particularly proud of the fact that the dominant fact in her achievement apparently s.as her mental and spiritual attainments, even though she possessed physical attributes of great beauty and charm. The emphasis on an impressive personality and mental ability seems to have set a new and higher standard for this contest than has ordinarily prevailed. Many Utahns residing here In Washington recall with pleasure Miss Hutchins' sister, Mrs. Ruth Killian, also a blonde with a striking personality, the wit of George W. Killian, a former member of my Washington secretarial farctous beauty contest. rile ll ls . I m... VAR v it gun-mol- LP v -- "t, 01b F The Greeks say our saviors!" U. S. heavy bomber bases In Crete, so handy to the Black Sea ports of Communist Russia? Our pleasure. (They art under way.) A Greek contribution to the common defense? Note, please, that 47 per cent of the Greek budget is for military 'sperms. that Greek troops are in Korea, that a tough army, large in proportion to Greece's 7,500,000 populalion. Is in being, and. with the Greek people, has the will to fight Trro's STRBNGTH Nor will Greece, it is said, be in the least sticky about as he has Marshal Tito parent, even if the hinted, he reall3' does want noise is distressing. The child to make some kind of securInsists: "AU the kids listen to ity arrangements with Greece this " and Turkey. was over Tito's borders , Unfortunately, the listening cannot be limited to the din., 'La the bad old days that many drain. The shrill scream tends guerrillas came whe, but tor the Trinnan Doctrine, would the air, the zevolver shots are heard through open probably have reduced war. lows. Murder! Murder! ravaged Greece to another satellite. But, so tNNECESSAIT IL.11,11ASIS States United Does America listen to ,..wngenisota, Tito alliance, Greece nothing but murder? Is murwilt too. der the voice of America? There is considerable cauHave we no way of being tion manifested in Greece, (as am6led but by murders? Do elsewhere. Incidentally) in an our children have to grow up assessments of Tito's In this atmosphere of eternal , He hi felt to be strength. stronger . Murdes? . militarily . than politically in Of course, they ea n also kis Balkan state; the question listen to '1The Greatest Story raised ill whether he can hold Ever Told." They can hear ft together if war comes. -- ! t121:?Volle - , recorded do.s and often brilliitntly et--; by a person like Da-plied vid Randolph.- I am not say-int that there are not excellent programs ors the air. ' -- I am empty asking about this - emphasis on' inurders, and pri gangsters. , .' vats eyes. Is it riecessary? Is it good for our children? Why its programs so popular? ' Or ist it an unimaginative 'airiness whigh keeps these ton the air? ' progriuns nos nisreres aracomor towns:sub ill z 9 OP;t! pc ..40.,,,Zwm0 - . - .sa A t Godes egg-splai- rt. 1'11 3 g Bad Men. 'LINGUA DODGER' This radio dialect is strictly synthetic and no cop would lock up anyone who sounded Off with such prolessibnal toughness, even as a vagrant Good night! What was that scream? I The gun-mo- ll is po- kingler Boger into the eye of or some such pleasantry. Die child is doing her homework and seems unabashed. It is an excellent , way to become proficient in Algebra. It is not so lonely and nothing is said that is controvirsiat except that somewhere before justice triumphs, the child is told how to care a headache or to remove a dozen or so body. odors. What an inspiring thought for a Sunday afternoon! Then there is the taxi driver who talks a dialect that would not be tolerated even in Brooklyn where the local intelligentsia blur jo boas off at Lingua Dodger an invention' to , stimulate local pride. ' It is difficult to he se heavy-hand- ed cember?' 0 c 1 by Les --won- ders 4ATItlqi ?.. ,kt. p 'G'0 - ts-..-.,wit there is the Bad Man who shoots his way through life, surrounded by stooges, dopes, morons, who speak a dialect of English Invented 1)y an idiot a lath. course of a varied eareir, over many years, I have known some bad mei. I knew such characters as Kid. Twist and Gyp the Blood of another generation. I once worked in a chicken market In New Jersey where Paul Kelly. an Italian heavy, was the straw boss, yelling an over the place. But be never talked like any of these radio , , IN en factions - tx L.ETS Let Me VIKE ed , 'Russian-furnishe- MittiS CSASE 4 IONGER- 3- LITTLE , The language may be Eng- -. lish, but of a variety ; and vintage that is more familiar to the children who listen to It than to any dictionary. There is always a "private eye" who gets bit and knocked down and stomped upo- n- Generally some very beautiful girl is hia assistant. SYNTHETIC DIALECTS How a girl with so frail a voice can do an the things these girls do Is beyond credulity. The little girla these fighting females have something to emulate, for if emulationsis not the purpose of all this, what is? Then there is the tough woman with the sexy voice. I have often wondered why such a voice is called "sexy." I have heard great actresses play Juliet, beginning with Jura Marlowe, but I never heard one speak those rich lines of love in such a vocalization as radio regards as sexy. In fact, it strikes me that If soy woman spoke that way In real life, everybody would regard it as a form of hall-Th- back from the air against Manchurian bases Whether or not ceasefire negotiations are and supply lines. resumed in Korea by tho time this sees print, , and if they are, whether of tot the Reds de-- it was just such a consultation which resulted In MacArthur's 'being denied permiseide after months- of equivocation to carry sion to bomb those lases and lines when he them on In good faith the combat news from wanted to do it. the unhappy peninsula continues to be rough. SO this time, Acheson attached a rider to In the 10,11 is stepping up. The Beds ' the agreement, have had the cruet to drop a couple of bombs 'He granted (our reports tell us) that at On Sertut- and Intelligence from behind the this time RidivsY like MacArthur before ' lines thousand or more a enemy reports bin lacks authority to bomb anything in massed over' Korean the border a it plates base, with Caucasian 'technicians to entice , Manchuria. macie clear to his French and BUT---toPposite numbersIF a really strong Spurred by such news, many of our read. from across the line. Red attack air emerges ens are asking us again what thousands asked stands United then States the prepared to roMaelast winter and during thn height of the on vise orders its own. and tell ' Ridgway's Arthur controversy: Why don't we bomb the counter-attac- k him as to strongly as he sees Manchurian base? BAcK METO MO STALL A 764: "mysteries." ' - ) 4.! relax. , .i:t.h.e..':.ki'1',.S.-,,.Ridél.,.-Th.a- V one stretches out in comfort to read and browse and to ' 1:.:This..:706.i.,...i'.:.,P.i4.Thi;0.,Pql:lo-n--..Is ..Coitrit--- Do 'NttYWANT It is Sunday afternoon and -- ' if. The. Voice Of America?,, Conference of the alurch of , the fine III,Ladred andlwenty-secon- d Latter-da- y nrill conto members all Saints which of Church Christ lean vene in the fahernIcie. Salt Lake Oty. Utah, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Octobet 5. , I and 7, 1931, with generid sesslow) each day at 10 a.m. and 2.p.m. "" The General Priesthood meeting will be held in the Tibenlacla on Saturday, Octo. ' ber 8, t p.m. the ' We suggest that Fast meetings be held on last Sunday in SeptemberSeptember . 30except in those stakes in which quarterly conferences are held on that date. In those atakes, we aak that Fast meetings be held on the Sunday followirg the General Confer- ' ' ' ' , ence. or October 14. DAVID 0.'littICAY STEPHEN L RICHARDS J. REM:MN CLARK. JR. The First Presidency Semi-Annu- SOKOLSKI' E. Is Murder l TUEeSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25';'1951 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH , men. 41HAVIe-YOI-- - T . SEEN trws-,- -, 1.ArtISSCE orlacmanz--- CONEESSIONS7' Usement. I hope sot ver. .41 lit vowel .serbs. yes I, mar' TYPOGRAPHICAL: (Prom a typed menu in S. L. taurant) oTaday's Special.. Dreaded Veal Cutlets"! TELT FON TODAY: Ter- -' verily, I say unto you if a man keep my saying.. he shall never see death."Joha , nye 11.5L , |