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Show , T PAULALECIER ylvjga!NA4FIK , Recurring periods of strain between the occupation authorities and the West' German government, often the subject of in German much ,.ionunent 0 - - - " newspapers, would be eased by As the week closes, the main only make the situation worse. crisis still remains. The Iran There have been grave errors dispute which has now been of judgementeven wrongdothrown onto 'IND lap of the ing-o- n both sides. Security Cotmcil of the United ONZ vrrAL RESOURCE Nations by the British govern- For ment , the Security Council Quite frankly this is a futile merelyI to ask the two dispugesture. For more than one rea- tants to settle the matter beson it must fail. The Russians tween themselves (as it bave already. indicated their in almost certainly do) Will not tention of blocking action if, in- help since both sides have redeed. the Security Council was peatedly failed to reach a setcompetent under the United tlement already. The only anNations charter to deal with swer as far as this is concerned the case al introduced' by Mr. is to try and reach a settlement Attlee's government by International agreement and NO COMMON VIEW this seems hardly possible in Quite apart from the improb- the circumstances. ability of the Security Council Against this is the realistic ever being permitted. to come view that the Western. powers to a constructive decision as cannot staid idly by and watch long as Russia remains one of Persia slip into ruin or fall the "Big Five, ' it seems on the -- hands. Communist into face of the evidence produced Somehow, therefore, a- sally.so far that the British handling even at of the crisis, which is still real tion MUST be found the cost of risking further enough and close enough-t- o lead to World War Ill, con- trouble with the Communist tinues to be almost incredibly bloc, Somehow, too, the oil inmaladroit. dustry in Iran, which is PerThe truth is that unless Bri- sia's one vital means of self-heltain and the United States can will have to be started reach a common view On what again, while at the same time still needs Io be done, and done reasserting the principle of lequickly, even the whole United gality in international conduct. Nations organization will be This occasion will be a real 71,owerless to deal test for- - the United Nations problem. and on its handling, may well More, the British 'should not depend the future existence of blame the United States for re- the organization when the real fusing - to support in advance a debate on its affairs-begint-ilium- of action On which the British government itself viz- - Paris in November. STORY.ibly hesitated to embark. There ItMELANCHOLY is all the more tragic, has been a tendency in England to do thispartly election poll-- when 'considering the volution of this crisis to its present tics. though! What can be don. nowthat state of International tension, to have to place almost all the Is the only question at issue. Mutual recriminations could blame at the door of the La ' - -- ' p, in fuller' and discus- more-op- en sion, according to Federal Vice Chancellor Franz Bluecher, admit that some obStacles to complete understanding on this plane may be inherent in our own German character,' the vke chancellor saidgin his offices in Bad Godesberg, when this writer commented on the newspaper articles she has been seeing in Germany. "They. ars an expression of o u r possible oversensitivity, and in our urge to see rights we consider abstrecuy due us turned into concrete realities at possibly likonventons momenta. "Yet I deplore the tendency of some occupation officials and observers to regard as as ingrates a n d obstructionists whenever we raise a question as policy. "In sometimes decrying our I think 'I -- is that aftet - Sy EDWARD , bay- Itiowspapor Antaane) Our course is due west, the Pironido Islands have disappeared astern, the sea has flattened out and the fog has moved away toward the horizon In all directions. Our - marlin outrigging are holding- the lines daintily away from. the ship and far behind, thl two flying fish we have rigged for bait are skipping along the surface. We are hoping that a marlin will see them and not the lines, move In and with a flash of his sword and fin gulp one of them down. But although we saw a couple of marlin fins rutting-throu- gh the water off the port bow awhile ago, nothing has bap' pened and we are continuing to cruise along at about $ knots. Far ahead we can tee a school - - 'era FOR THIS ACHIEVEMENT THE COMPANY SALAITES of integrity and courage who, because of their conviction in life insurance andits: benefits have ,worked late into the night helping fathers plan their family's. future. They have traveled into sparsely settled country in all kinds of weather to assist husbands and wives in planning for their retirement years. They have continually added to their knowledge of life insurance that they might more effectively f 40 V 0 0111046 IIIP - .41 - I. f Seasoned Turkish Soldiers Are of Rissian Threat Contemptuous Net': The truck writer, Washington correspondent of the Detroit News, b on a throe-wee- k tone of the NATO emu- bias under speosorship of the Departanest of Defense. This b his second article on Tarkey. or on the soles marches himself, Como halfway around the of his feet world to the land of Mohammed , This Turkish soldier, la paid Ism conqueror., and visit An. kers,. this new capital that 65 Aurus (21 cenb) a month, Kemal Ataturk built. and you but the economy-mindedTufimd an army ready and ish army keeps the finance officseveral miles from the camps, eifing to fight Russia under es Sen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's eo he often ekilni the pay, and leaves the money , international command. in the treasYet, ironically, Turkey's 19 urYliviilions-An advocate of the theme the strongest army of any nation in that -- America Is getting a dolEurope or the Middle Eastare lar's reue for every dime yet officially enrolled on vested here,' Ma). Gen. William disenhower's troop list. H. Arnold, chief of the American Equipped during the last four Military Mission to Turkey, led :Tears with $500,000,006- - worth a tour to prove it. of American arms, Turkey waits y A 211th Infantry Division as a separete anti-Corbat command was waiting in siumist "island. while western the pastures outside Ankara. Zurorbe's diplomats go about the its men wear the fiat helmets slow busineu of her halation of the 1911 yanks in France. Into the North Atlantic Treaty Every loot soldier is a human 'Organization. mule, loaded with rations, A TURKS AXE TOUGH bedding roll,- and e To a of rifle or- auto- ,- group of Amen- - a heavy-issutan newsmen- who listened for matic weapon ammuniti a. two weeks to "expert" opinion Four-leggmules carry heavy II to whether rearmed French- - machine guns. INFANTRY SUPPORT wen and Italians will fight Com- 11111111114 and as to , whether Backing up the infantry were' western termini willagree to Detriot-mad- e light and heavy rearm. it was something (new tanks.-- - American radio jeeps, to arrive in Turkey and find a and light Willy' pickup troths little nation , conteMpuous of with great spools of gnat wire. There was an artillery Moscow, and ready for a "go" .any time Stalin wautsio ring talon with American howitzer; the bell. A day with be Turkish army In tho field. and In its fixed installations, would show a visitor that "toughness is the Tttrk's creed. and "preparedness" his rk ist in-p- ot - corn-toda- n- one-blan- 7 ed -- I uniform - Ora - P etyl - , , ' that comes II OICE ' ro0 . k d1,7t1 for body-bruisi- jujitsu. Theft. each man unwound from his waist a length tit rope. Simplegarroting from the rear I, too easy; the Turks have a variation where a man dives, enmares an "enemils" ankles, and, in an instant, has him on his stomach; and trussed with a choking line that pulls his heels against the back of his head. "Our men fight with what "they have," said the general., -knives, ropes, bayonets. It they have no ammunition, they use their rifles as clubs." ' alma) oisseDericrrr , t 4,,, .......V.V il i,"TR: 1101 , ,)''''. ,,,,,,t1 - 3.. Nevadd, Oregon, -- J. !t!6;i3 la . NOW' SOLDIERS!. 1111AT , He sports none of the flashy badges dear ut other soldiers' I hearts. He's in bad trouble if! be fails to salute an officer, but, because shoe polish costs money,: his officers don't require that shined- - Re gets two pairs ! bis ef shoes a year, and, if they wear I Out too soon, he patches them ONLY. DESERET-44 EAST SOUTH TIMM t t 11 84NIMSAI bit 't . . $ EN IFICI- SolMAKI . a Proud of its record of the Past, and looking for. ward to the future with .confidence, theleneficial Life Insurance Company, through its field force,' extends its services to all who desire a financially secure future for themselves and loved ones. - -- 161 1I ' i , ASvituct 410 dill O ; - 1."1 4 0 r . Or ot your lead bookstore' ' I 1 SAKE - - vm EST" Boot( SALT Wash. ; 5 . Utah- D II ,11114 - angton, and Wyoming.- - The company counts its growth not alone in policies or dollars, but its the service it can render. ' be fi 2H - with fieldloffices located in Arizona, Cotiforrdo, -, 4 ' - ' leadership, the company has grown consistently since its organization in 1905, and is today recog. nized as one of the safest and strongest life in. surance coMpanies in America. It has become one of the large financial institutions of the West t N ' - - able and farsighted ITS MANAGEMENT at OF ,V es them himsel!, with any odd material remnant be can find. -- , this book e great history of dm Mountain West's first newspapor, but It is col--, orfully written description of the vonts during tho sottlmont of His West.tinstirpassod histork dotail and- - intorost. onjoy it cover to coved ,sT s en nd ' combat is "hut." "We like and need your modem equipment," said Akcakocas "but the bayonet--a- h, that is the weapon. "We must be careful, however. VI keep our men ten feet apart in this drill; thet get excited with the bayonet, and, If too close -- together, they have what you call 'incidents.' The bayoneted rifies put aside, the paired troops went in 'self, and when necessary, patch- - thinks brigade hand-to-ha- - serve their clients., who Men and wom-have planned foi the future, believing in the basic American principles of individual initiative and thrift. Who, by craeating an insurance estate, loved ones they will not want have assured their -, for food, shelter- and clothing, and thaitheil.iiill be Money for college training. Wise men and 'women who are building ' new source of Ins ' 'come for the time when old age comes. -- N ot only Is - In three sizes large, medium aIL He gets two tml- and forma a year, washes them him- - - - 1- ! fard-colore- d ,.00"4 4o4 :ouki.::;i:,.44,! 't - a - 4VOtItaso, 0,4 4; e and a company riding tho General Motors 5 by C that was the allied 'workhorse of World War IL Brig; Gen. Midhat Akcakoca ealled on a company for a bayonet demonstration. Al a captain barked each order to parry or thrust,- - 100 voices Toared back "urrah" legendary in Kor Turkish ea, where a 5,000-ma-n :,Iopp;.,c-:--:.- Tbe 'Turks have bad univer- sal military training for SOO years. Today, every bible foe three h years' Initial training, and subsequent service calls, continuing until he is 45. The military budget takes1 45 cents out of every tax dollar squeezed from a desperately poor people. In an army without "frills," all the money goes for men, gumr and bullets. The Turkish soldier is a rugged youngster in a baggy. mu,- - 51' co6Att David O. McKa President : Salt Late City, Utah CITY, , - z2ho rs get., - - ITS FIELD FORCE MARTIN S. HAYDEN -- - -- f IA - a mponsibility. should make one of the significant chapters of scenes history and also If we can study the moral of the story, of great use in our own future foreign policy decisions especially in the ' Middle East. - - -- A This most behind prove, 1951.43 5, - WifRrt.t? in a series of handouts telling their side of the story, that it has always acted according to law and the best interests of all concerned. The truth ,is, as Mr. Churchill says: "a melancholy story of inadvertence, incompetence. indecision and final collapse." If Mr. Churchill is returned to powers he promises to unfold the whole story and expose the October from hauled in two rock eid from 'fsterboard tide the outrigger and the reel sings the bottom of the cove and these as our flying fish disappears. constituted our catch for the I grab the pole but the line day. We kept trying until dark, T. ALTIN continues to spin out and my but nary a nibble from then on. strongest turn on the reel fails These fish learn quickly. After dinner the. inevitable of porpoise cavorting in the wa- to have the slightest effect The ter and we head in that direc- Capitan stopa:the ship and be- canasta game started, but last tion because sometimes they in- gins backing up. Turns out we night's wakefulness. combined dicate a school of tuna, upon snagged large slump of sea- With the quiet of our anchor. weed. The bait Is uninjured and age and day at 'sea brought on which they feed. I threw out feather jig directly aster n. Lased back into the water and a lethargy that made cards un. , 4 hoping that some tuna would now, a few minutes later, well tnterestng Just as we were turning in grab it If there were tuna there are on course. I am wide awake though, they ignored our invi- and cannot make a thing out of couple of men came over front the fringe of fog on the hori- a fishing boat anchored nearby --tation to come aboard. Here in the middle of the aft- zon, except fog, and after awhile and wanted some spare parts for their engine.- They were-- ernoon we have settled down to it begins rolling toward us. The Capitan, who wants no headed for Cedros !eland, far to a quiet cruise. The wives are below playing canasta and I am more of the rolling we did last the aouth, and had broken down. They got the part chatted gazing astern watching the fog night than the rest of us, orders bank on the horizon play tricks the marlin gear stowed away awhile and rowed back to their on my eyes. One moment there and we head for the cove, which Sohere It is II p.m., appears to bi-grove of trees. we expect to reach- in about two one else is asleep and the slap ' the next moment the same spot hours. We reached the cove a few slap, slap of water along the appears to be Jammed with tall side of the hull as we ride at buildings. It is flinch like a mi- hundred yards ahead of the fog, anchor is a lullaby that no singanchored and dropped a pair of er can rage on Ian& match. Then suddenly the line on the lines over the side. In awhile 401115711011. Oemorel Postures Oen") 'PASSING PARADE ing lavished far too much. con, fidence on a very bad government (Hitler's). and been completely disillusioned by it. the German people have developed far too much scepticism and distrust of their own judgment to give full approval to even an honestly elected and truly representative German governmentor to the occupation powers. "This doubles the difficulty of achieving complete Gertnan national unity in even the most essential matters. It Ainortean FriT se snaps-loo- the occupying powers may fail to discern two basic- - ctirrent !actors here, one psyehic aim one material," Bluectter continued. 'The first - NEWS, Solt Loke City,- ()tab, DESERET , West German Government Cannot Furnish Figures INTERPRETING THE NEWS Persian Oil Imbroglio .1legistrs A Significant Chaptets in History - montw,rt. |