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Show 4 EDIT.ORIAL PAGE MARTINS. HAYDEN we stand for the,Comititution of the trailed States with its three departments of field. government as tkierein set forth. each one fully independent in its .wn SemiAnnual Conference of the Church of Ti. OM Hundred and Terenty-secon- d Church members are invited. will con. which to Jesus Mist el Latterday Saints, er Lake Salt Tabernacle. Otyi Utak, Friday. Saturday and Sunday.-OctobTent' in the $ and 7. 1951, with genera sessions each day at lra.m. arid 2 p.in. The Gerteral Priesthood meeting will be held In- the Tabernacle on Saturday. Octo-: ' ' I her Vat T We Suggest that iresi meetings be held on the last Sunday in SeptemberSeptember in those stakes in which quarterly conferencet are held on- that date. LI those SOexcept stahen, we ask that Fast meetings be bald on the Sunday following the General once. Cr October 14. , DAVID 0, McKAY STEPHEN L RICHARDS J. REUBDI CLARK, JR. The First Presidency - Bishopnc Call Special Meeting -- Presidirig With the approval of the First Presidency, the Presiding Bishopric will conduct a special meeting in the Tabernacle !Friday. October 3, 10314beginning at 7:00 p.m. The following are requested to be in attendance: Bishops and Counselors; Stake Aaionie Priesthrd Coromitteein Coordinators, Aaronie Priesthood Quorum Advisors, Committees for adult members of the Aaronie Priesthood; Co-and Secretarlein-StakMinters, Group Advisors, and Secretaries for adult members of the Aaronle Priest-book Stake Committees on Ward Teaching and Ward District Supervisors for Ward b' ; : e : : Teaching. Stake Presidencies and High Councilmen ars invited to be in attendance. , will be appreciated if Stake Presidents and Bishops will notify their respective It , leaden mentioned above, urging them to be in attendance at this meeting. - 1 : thief of the United Press foreign news P 1 - , r , ll : , the-Unit- - Seasonable Thouihts Born of Stdtistics,' - , - - poltcy-meke- ts right--ove- one-thir- - - - r t - STRICTLY !catches c .87 illEt4 ISFICZOLGES RICHTER ' ' By Mischa Richter PP onwq11.', erican-French 1 'Love Words' I put my heart on paper when a.. I write my thoughts of you a Put ivir love into the words that say I love Into each Una I you true 1. of joy and write go tears when I exIt tender bliss a a ; plain bow great I feel ...each it time I feel your kiss I try to place my arms around a a your lovelinesi and charm kind in each phrus I try to 'how . : Fn keep you from , all haft a.. 1 walk with you in every and talk with : "Ingle word you . and if you between the tines rny t read love song can be heard - a t but la a larger sense my dear tho word I use esn't say what Les withht my a tout for you a a a words never OSA earre7, A 0.61111111M. , ' 0 r 4 , - , ..101110O.ONNIMPIIMMi. 01) , El V. a ..... ,4 S af : ; I? A . sit -- , ....; - - wifl be a ,cemplele aerprbe. Me treird weal expecting eis to break bite it trick Urination luid Irill applaad Ilk read." , 11101 -- ior titt . - sk - . ' '. - ez 4, , ) , s--: Cr C! '.,, - ,....'t, et"t7::e p PiA I at agreement, taute-naus- 1 n, 1 0.' , 0 ,' t '. A.,, ,, the hundreds, are back after, service at service, schools la America., They ate teaching Italian units to handle the arms arriving in a steady flow. e - ' -- .ui'. ille k4'4N?1,1Ne, TA,1.0.04"-- ,,:4 - ...,1 ,,,r.4Z,. - gm, - .g '''''''''; ....t.77i'4'.1!IL;CeN , ' bringing Italy's forces to the strength allowed. Italian lazy and naval officers. and officers by - . l- 6 4, k .,,, ' --- d., I treaties 0 , : : . 4. vp4 - , ,v ,),,,,, .'1. WhIleawaiting treaty chute, Italian officials are - ir . 3 a- ,,,,,k, ,,,,,:cii, ,, k-- i y t; , 4h...-1 ,...,. ,.!,....,.1, and without Russia's consent. While hailing Secretary of State, Decn Acheson's recent indication that this ultimately would be done, they express regret that the State DePartI scent missed, the chance to precede any formal mention of such action by I 'Protest Russian rearmament , against of her Balkan satellites, without regard to the limiting peace they. too, signed. 411111011no...., , ,, .,,,,,;: ). -.,, 1; - 1, , 1,1.., ,.,c,, 4, ,t. :;:, z ,..'-, :.,:- , 44 itit,117otio4,3 ,,,,LH., -- - , ."....7,1 "side-paymen- n, Ies t who falsify. Until now, Income taxation has been a matter of negotiation between the taxpayer and the collector, with a t" to the bureaucrat regarded as a 611lood" bargaining point- - Because In. come taxation has failed to ' produce, sales and other "indirect" taxes have been the chief source of governmental revenue. "This," said an embassy aide, "hits hardest the low. Income population of a nation where the average income is only $250 a year. We want Italy to do more for herself, but whether she can do it through stew taxes against the people now paying them Is doubtful." Complicating the rearmament problem is the fact that Italy, by the treaty signed at the end of World War II, is forbidden to rearm. That treaty limits her to a total armed force of 233,000 men, 153,000' of them in the Army. and 25,000 each in the Navy and Air Force. TRUTT CHANGES Since !Runt wilt permit no formal revision, officials In Italy for months have urged treaty change by AngloAm- , - , 1 .,,.., t ., , ,., . :. .4 .1 -- (E ,,r ,A v. ' i 4 -1LP-4- .1""-.-- " 1 , ' ..:.:1',. ,,,,, , .A, .,. vip4. . 0 , ,i4.4. -- . - 6. , .w,, le) mo, p . ,.... it A .. -.- .,,.., ,t,, - 1 . ;I, 6, a. 2,,k11--fr;..- - 1, ',' d.' THE HAMMER AND THE CHISEL? FROM NEWS READERS News invites readers to express their opin- ,ions or contribute informs. Ilion on topics of CUTTIfit in. tette. Letters must be signed, Should bo 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. Bos l257, Salt Lake City 10, Utah. The Deseret University Savant Clarifies a Point With respect to your editorial appearing in ths eret News Tuesday evening. Sept. 23, 1931, and the question it raised, may I offer the following scraps of information: Under the Treaty toncluded at Moscow between Dec. 16, 1949 and Feb. lg. 1950, between Mao g and the Soviet government, the Soviet Union is bound to undertake, with the Chinese People's Repub. lie, any necessary measures Sino-Russi- prevent any aggression which might directly or indirectly involve Japan in acts of aggression. 'This, I take it, means (under the Soviet's interpretation) Tse-tun- JOHN BARDEN Highlights of the Columns About National Affairs The most fiscinating story for the coltunnists continues to be the one they can't get the one about Eisenhower running for president In a shrewd look at the sitDORIS FIZESON uation. finds Eisenhower' cheerfully using his power, as the man who might easily become, 'preildent of the United States. to get things done in r Europe. 1 EVERYBODY The Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers in Eubeyond rope gets The call of duty from 'notes,' Allies and even U. S. senators. LEESON says, because almost nobody wants to to cross up a potential president, of the most Powerful country in the world. The tllhower miracle seems to work with particular effectiveness On senators of both Democratic and Republican persuasion. accord--lo-- g to maw PEARSON., A delegation led by- - Sen. Homer P. Ferguson unTss (R.-Mic- heard without a murmur an Eisenhower lecture on bow the people and Congresa of the United Statest must not "let down :on the Atlantic Pact program, says PEAR-SOand not one senator dared. spring on- Ike the big question ' about running for the presidency. ' Some of the most ardent Eisenhower supporters among Republiian politician; says MARQUIS CHILDS, have ' explained to Ike carefully -the risks they- are takhug--in:- , cninbing the grass roots for Eisenhower delegates to the GOP convention without even a nod from their man. ' Ike remains', unmoved by these touching sacrifice; 'reN, - - P.- EISENROWElt SrFFORY - adds that the Eisenhower political support- .ortrAPQ- - ..i , , ''. TN, S n'; --- .i.' i L - - Si' , - ' '1..;NIP.1 LEMS 1 ..th. -,. '- ism , 4Lik.' . 14. t.:.,,, - ?.. ll , , .A...,,,..e..c: A 7.,-;r - nzEio i ... ."'-'-' o, A. . - ..4 .)'",...--,- 11$ , 1? - z A cl,:5,kitt-i',...,,,- . et ,,ef-w- , i,,, ers are not entirely selfless and will therefore dprebably. persist in their &oils desgite the incalculable burdens of the general's silence. There are the 'Mermaids- -, dist Republicans like Senator that if the forces of General bomb a Ridgway Manchurian basesaid Manchurian base litieing within the territory recognized by the Soviet Union as part of the Republie of Chinathen this would constitute an act of war against the Chinese People's Republic which the Soviet Union by its treaty of 1949-5- 0 would be allowed or permitted (o intervene in general war by way of legal rewere to taliation. This means that such an American or U. N. act of bombing a Manchurian base could be readily interpreted and "sold" to the peoples of China and Asia generally, as well as the Soviet Union, and that the Soviets and Red Chinese were joining forces to repel an "act of auession." Their peoples would not ever or necessarily be told about the provocation of such an act. Therefore, It would seem that the current order to General Ridgway to take necessary action following a well Identifiable' aortic from a oManchurian base is calculated to offset such a propaganda reaction. The general restraint forbidding U. N. Commanders MacArthür and 'Ridgway to bomb Manchuslan bases is obviously to prevent the Soviet Union or the Chinese People's Republic from having acceptable legal eicuse, from the standpoint of their treity arrangement, to involve Is in a general war which they could effectively advertise to their people as bting a war "not of their owq choosing." The Soviet Union has many' legal treaty rights valid In intemational law in Manchu- Lodge of Massachusetts. Senator Duff of Pennsylvania and Governor Dewey of New York who believe, says TLEESON, that Senator Taft Is basically an isolationist whose election to the presidency is highly unlikely and certainly insufferable. They are joined, says FLEE-SOby some Democrats and uncounted Republicans who of object to the President Truman. not so much because of Truman but because of the company of influence peddlers he keeps. The idea that only Eisenhower can beat Truman or anybody he names will keep the Eisenhower supporters sweating it out, she says. THE DETRACTORS Some Republican groups centering around Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy ad Democratic adherents' of Sen. .) Patrick McCarran appear to be preparing a vast ria itself., This ;also compliand detailed smear of Eisencates the matter exceedingly hower, says CHILDS, just in for General Ridgway, the case the general one day anU. N., and the United States nounces that he will run. - ' Government. Th general, idea, says This ;nay be helpful in CHILDS, is to make Ike look the question which like the htyou posed in your editorial. norant dipe unaware of the Romer Durham, , implications pr Director, Institute of of his life activities. Government UniverTo fit this shoe' to Eisen? sity of Utah. tower's foot will require a good. deal - of slime, says since the United Naalums, and the slime is be politics tions was formed in,San Traitthg prepared by experts. cisco in 1945. THOMAS STOKES has nee' The North Atlantic er liked the Eisenhower-fo- r Treaty President' campaign and pre" Orgapization, and iti counterever dicta disaster if Ike part in the nations that signed ' the Japanese Treaty, says gives it a nod. Ultimately,' says- STOKES, SULLIVAN, have resulted in Eisenhower will run into the a kind of Free United Na American tradition in favor of strictly civilian government, This sew tL N4 veruPulolis widely and deeply ' revered to leave the door open to the among the people. RUSSian bloc but refusing to , STOKES believes that that yield to the Krehnin's will, reason tradition Is sound for should within a year,:, SULnever, letting a military proLIVAN-, thinks, be strong fessional 'get into the White' enough to make Russian's' ag- -, ' e house.' '.gression anywhere a hopelesi Eisenhower's organki'ation enterprise... Ile therefore be.an European defense army lieves the danger of an all-ohas been'a factor in what Soviet attack this year Is very MARK SULLIVAN views as an historical shift In world Ita&) (R.-Wi- s.) (D.-Nev- good-nature- d, ut g?ef. Goates The Moral Sag de ci 4 Acp y 5.,' Z c,,,t :litt.4111 atio , - ; o . 4,-,-it lo.,.....,. ,.. , ....... I overnight This year Italy inaugurated, for the first time, the American Idea of morn individual income-ta- x returns, and a jail penalty for Wee , 4 ,t - -- - ...,s.-:- The captain, American officials here said is, not just a sorehead: many ''ist Italy's rich, and Much of her governmental bureaucracy, are unwitting saboteurs of the democracy on which their livet mity depend., NEGOTIATED TAXES "rhe Di Gasper' govemment," Dunn said, "is honest, sincere, and bard' working, but it faces unfortunate facts of life that it cannot change , .5e,"-- , -,ei, in Argentina." van-!shi- - t ill-pa- id ed - ' .it Les by -- , ,,,,,, -- .91-- - ' reau, as man obvious attempt to train Red pilots wbo will have an even chance to win control of the Korean skies." They will have that chance, that is, if Itheir Manchurian bases remain inviohtte. As we pointed out in our editorial which elicited Dr. Durham's letter. our government this month made clear to the British and French that if Deeds must be to protect his forces, Ridgway will be permitted to carry acir reprisal across the Yalu. And that raises this serious question : Is ,,,,,.-4 - . 000,000 people already crowd. lug this country." Mother basic weakness was emphasized. less formally, by a shiny Cadillac limousine, with a chauffeur, and a Swiss license plate, that pulled up before Rome's swank Excel-"'o- r Hotel. An Italian army to eat captain, too in a Roman restaurant, spat in disgust as a distinguished gentleman left the car. "One of our leading citizens," be indicated sarcastically. "To avoid the auto tax, be lists his tar as Swiss. To duck the income tax, he 'bribes the tax collector. While American dollar' keep us alive, he bides his money bu- glorious weekends 'as Utah weather provides at this time of year. with Most of Western Europe is 'military training nutneuvers, with the ground and air forces of eight NATO nations pest. : tiring battle tactics and briagehead defenses under General Eisenhower's over-a4 eye, , Tha oil vitas in Iran has corm so close to physical clash that the British government is detrperately asking the United Nations Sob eurity Coumil to Intervene, since the good. . trYbilf Tntice Rid& Statns,arobasse-,.that what hfoscow - - , office efforts of iCtilY to do? Is that the device by which dors have failed. Hope for successful cease-fir- e negotiations - Static would like to trap us into "starting", a 4 rt general wart in Korea appear to have waned to the whet In the hearts of those point. even -thought seriously through the summer that 4 their hopes for a truce could be In connection with the last Item 4 4, to draw partictdar attention tithe letter front 1Dr. G. Homer Durham director of the tint. Pleasures of golden autumnholiday exersity Of Utah's Institute of Government, cursions, football week ends bunting, gut which is irbtted on this page today. ,, matzo scenic r Dr. a1to;d4 Durham facts cites The grandeur of changing foliageshould clear comet why both 0. N, and Washing. be tempered by caution because of the seahave been extremely , sonal rbe In fatal, motor vehicle and firearm a. ton's t of ,r3ileashing our accident; warn the life Insurance company chary about warplanes to bomb Red air bases In what statliticlant About :8 per cent of all motor vehicle faGeneral bfacArthitr tails the Manchurian occur daring the three autumn talities to us, e sanctuary. pertinent postscript a an fl out such Durham that Dr. higher proportion than in summer, mpnths, hu pointed 4 ' 4 action should make us 'legally aggressors although the volume of travel drops off. Fewer hours of daylight,poor weather, and against Russia and Chins (under their In' wet autumn leaves on the highways are Dr. Durham that of the treaty terpretation blamed. their world. serve not would that only cites) d The coneentrstion In autumn of e wide propaganda purposev, ' 4 deaths reflects annual firearm of the ,the inIt, would also (under their Interpretation) ' accord-A in crease hunting, large proportion of such give Russia the 'legal the statisticians observe, are preventon deaths, the them the 'fortes to Reds, "legal z Int These ' able. circumstances are cited: Into West. war the duty--- to general carry Some of the fatal iccidents result from ern Europe to "punish tha foe (meaning us ' hunters accidentally shooting themselves and an of our NATO allies) who had shat. others through careless gun handling all too tered world peace by our violation." That Is bow the Communists reason,- and , often a bunter will climb over or through a the curious devices of the Communist mind fence with his gun carried in a dangerous poroust he taken Into account Certainly the sition. Each year a number of hunters are "legal, situation, which' Dr. Durham has killed when the gunsf their companions are sketched out can make no easier the con- - accidentally discharged while being loaded or ' are caught ift the underbrush,' Many buntelusions being reached by Catnerals Ridgway and tradley and Charles Bohlen (our State ers are fatally wounded when they are mis' Department); expert on Russia and the , taken for game, approac'h "With mode. In of their of autumn, the stathe Kremlin's thinking) palesItisticians declare, "people should be made '. tent striders tutting hi Tokyo. ' For not only ire thedlteds playing fresh aware of the special hazards of that seasonlt changes on their pattern of bed faith in the . At the UTM time, they should be reminded negotiations which were - that accidents are a serious menace to his ; conduct of ceas-fi, ' ' In Moscow's at all seasons. and that the best IISSUraTiCt Instánce. started of persmal safety is the development of a Tho Communists have, 'stepped up their 4 aerial warfare In Korea In what looks to - safe way of living that will carry throughout , Ithe : ' - such a canny observer as Harry Ferguson, year." - - - ill!' "Italy has more Communists than any nation except Russia. "She also has 2,000.000 unemployed; resulting from excess popuistions. lack of farm land, expett difficulties, and a birth rate that every year adds a half million to the 47,-- Red Foe is Up to SomeiTrick am; Question Is, Just What? 'nut International news has too dour a east, as this is written. to be fitting for such -- 1-- xxczas ?DEVIATION te AUggiell 1 ., , mutual defense assistance program in Rome believe that, given time... Italians can be made ready and willing - to fight, but they admit, also, that 2,000,000 Communists, who want to fight on the other side, plus poverty, and corruption, and a .treaty that must be junked, make it an uphill fight to get them ready. nlad it not been for U. S. aid," said Ambassader James C. Dunn,- - "there is no doubt that Italy would be Communist today." But we must also admit that we were a little overconfident in our essumPtiona a few years ago, that our economic aid could materially-defeCommunism. 9 ,,,,,,,-,-- I it: , , Eisenhower's miasion to Europe may depend on whether Italians, who flopped in two world wen,- will light in a ' third. Americans the directing - ' ,- - ultimate success or fail--- - ' :V4INCIr ,, , .,., ,,o . - :' - we of General Dwight D. - ; ' Morale In Italy . LES GO ' . ,.e 7."1";".':; , Improving Noticei.of General Conference it , , - 4' SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30; 1951 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH DE$ERET NEWS - SALT LAKE'S revived war on hoodlumism and vice reveals telling signs of the dangerous malady infecting the whole country The symptoms .are unmistakable. They may be gummed up in two words: MORAL SAG! Newspaper reports, public Indignation meetings, and the polka records paint an ugly These are quits picture. enough to convince even an unbeliever that the prophecy of a great pioneer prophet is now being fulfilled, wherein he stated that Salt Lake City ww.ild some day be regarded as one of the wicked cities of the world. a But dark as it has been shown, the black it paints must be measured along with the light, which is so often ignored. There is faith here, as well as filth. There is virtue as well as vice. There is splendor as' well as shame. Goodness, here as elsewhere, is hardly ever heralded like evil. "Only evil wnispers on dark Corners and hides from the light of day.' THIS IS NO attempt to whitewash Salt Lake. It is far from a Utopia of righteous.. nes& Naturally, more is expected of "The Great Mormon Capital" than of other cities. Its rich and colorful tradition, plus the lofty idealism of its founders make this a community apart. Td focus exclusively on our hoodlums, "foul cesspools and catacombs of corruption," if any, is to libel not only our city but the great people to whom It belongs. The Apostle Paul could have written a sensational newspaper serial bn vice in the cities he visited. From the catalog of what he knew be penned some vivid pictures like We: "the thieve; drunkards, extortionists, fornicators, those who have reprobate minds filled with all manner of unrighteousness; envy, murder, deceit, inventors of evil things, whose work deceit and under whose lips is the poison of asps." Nevertheless, Paul, after he had penned this repulsive picture said, "There are saints even in Caesarte flouse- tongues hold." ELIJAH, THE PROPHET, disgusted because the people were defiled and debased, got down on his knees under a juniper tree and prayed for death. But he was not as solitary in righteousness as he Imagined. To his amazement he was shown the homes of numerous devout, folks. Of these the Lord said, "I have yet left me 7000 In Israel whose knees have not yet bowed unto BaaL" Likewise, our city, MN state and our nation are deeidely and definitely on the side of righteousness and the higher aim, moral sag or no moral sag. Parents in our rural communities, do not hesitate to permit your boys and girls to come here to school or to work. When you send them to the city send them also to the churches which wajt here to receive them. Send them with a prayer in your heart and a prayer ffi their hearts, too ' Mayor Earl 3, Glade, a God-fearo- ld fiery enthusiast for Salt Lake City and Utah, in one of his eloquent discourses delivered on the steps of the State Can- -itol at sunset, uttered this beautiful prayer. "God, make us ell worthy, of Vtahand our America, AT - THEIR BEST!" - IRON CETRI'AIN, NZTVS Some Russians Moscow thinks it odd- -l Say they still Believe in God! --- D. ; Abbott Whets Bill Cannes, the barber, asked a customer the other day if he wanted At .-sham-pothe patron repliedi'm no "Sham, nothing. cheapskate. rn take a genu' ine poner nothing." o, - A 'family Sr eight was dia.; covered by welfare workers, living in an attic. It used, to be that only poeti and musi clans lived in attics.- TOAATt 111r1 Ilk sod Savo Pits TICX7N pss Ilse as Ise( so Ts Ise liks as less ss , , ti POI TODAY: "I have said 31 are gods and all of you are children, of this Most High."Paalma 1124. , |