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Show , - , , - - PAGE , - -We stand for the Constitution of the flatted States' With its three departments of government as therein set forth, each one fully independent in its own field. Alb JP Fresh Evidence Punctures the Myth F Freedom. in Red Lands Of Religious , g l i I -I Similar deportationsIncreasing ly in mass since last May and distinguished from those from the USSR itself chiefly by are being conducted in gijeiTer brutality e the satellite countries behind the Ircin tam, particularly Rumania and Hungary, the violent-Communi- Cur-th- forthcoming Yearbook will say,, Many of these unfortunates are sent to the slave-labo- r camps,within the Soviet Union. Other victims are being used on 'No' proj,ecis within the satellites. 'Thousands were herded together in Rumania to help build' the Danube-Blac- k Sea Canal. Many otbers have been "resettled" in northeast Hungary; forced 4. to work in the grain fields. Their quarters are bivouac camps in the open fields and meadows. Not all of these deportees are,Jews. Per- ns of 'all ages and conditions who are susof tendencies, pected of which religious practice or sympathy is one of the most dangerous in the Communist gov- ernments eyes, are gathered up in weekly and shipped away drives by the from their homes on 24 hours notice, the Yearbook study says. as memBut Jews are doubly suspect "religious bers of a mid-A- s community" and as sympathizers with capitalism. "Private reports indicate," the AJC study middle-clas- s says, "that among other local Jewish population of elements," the entire was Debrozen of the (Hungarian) city area rural eastern some distant to ported borin the vicinity of the Hungarian-Sovider." Of the tens of thousands of Hungarian citizens who have been arrested and deported on the Communist grounds of political or social "unreliability," more than a third are Jews. Former "Arrow Crdss" Nazis, now Communists," are used, to round them Ifor 1 - - scriptures: This has been open knowledge for all the - years that Russia has been under Red rule, for all who would take the'trouble to gather , despite up the evidence and face the facts, activities by the relaxation of the Stalinists (for whatei',er propaganda value Kremlin with Russia's military allies have been able to gain from that) during . , , anti-religio- World War .:. Considering the Jews within the Soviet Union and its satellites a ieligious group, the gene- Stalinists now have added Nazi-typ- e treat'cide to religious intolerance ,ment of the unhappy People they lump together as "Zionists" whether the individual members of the Jewish 'community are sub- Scribers to orthodox Jociaism or not. for that synonyms for "Zionism" or religious beliefs Matter, any the Reds use the labels abstract scholas- ticism" or "reactionary ideology." Whatever Kremlin calls the practice of religion or itoward the worship of God, either one is a major crime in the Communists' hook. Charged with that crime, many thousands orthe i estimated 2,000,00 Jews still alive in the Soviet Union are now being .worked to death in Soviet internment and slave labor camps, the statisticians of the AJC's Library of Jewish Information say. They have gleaned their figures from reports of foreign diplomats and journalists stationed in Rus-sia, from testimony of refugees, international of Soviet slave labor, reports , Investigations trained sifters of evidence in all of the Nntelligence" listening posts in Europe and the Near last,Amd Irom analytic study of ' Soviet sources.. . . These studies also disclosed that there have been repeated mass deportations of JeW3 Red-polic- 1 their 1 -- dle-cla- ss et . 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' - ' :: ,,, ::--c''--d- ,,,:: , I ' CAREFUL, WE'RE GOING TO BLOW A FUSE LETTERS FROM NEWS READERS readers their to...express opin- - ions or contribute information on topics of current on topics of current interest. Letters must be signed, thould be brief (not ocer 20(1 words preferred). and must not rinlate accepted canons if 9"d taste. 1257. Salt Lake City 10, Utah. Address: The Editor, Letters to the News, P. O. fox n Man's disposition to short-man- y weigh was recognized centuries ago. Lev. 19:36: "Just balances, just weights . . . shall you have." Deut. 25:15: "You shall have a perfect and just weight, a perfect and just measure." Prey. 20:23: "Divers weights are an abomination unto the Lord and a false balance is not good." Micah 6:11: "Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and with the bag of deceitful weights?" peDuring the four-weeriod prior to December 8, purchases at stores that were made and showed that at 90 per cent of the stores there was some Of the merchandise the average under-weigwas 4.55 per cent. The maximum short-weigwas 13.5 per cent. There short-weighin- g. short-weighe- short-weighin- g. d, short-weighi- ht ht FLEESON Can Judge Murphy- Remain - tnaitieetdtSheatnets.fica e.7 President Truman apparently has chosen to direct the of his corruption clean-u- p administration the man of whom he Bas.said repeatedly with great "He looks like Cleveland and he is like Cleveland. He has ti future ahead of , him." great Judge Thomas F. Murphy of New York is the federal prosecutor who secured the Alger Hiss perjury conviction, later becoming New almost claim patent rights on the old "Love me, love my dog," aphorism. Judge Murphy can also thank for his new eminence the fact that he has no New Deal ties or "liberal,", as apart from "Truman-liberal,- " record within the party. A TRUMAN MAN He will stand out as wholly a Truman manelevated to the bench by the president and then given the important er, and is now a Truman-appointe- d federal judge. who doesn't work at it and be will as a fresh and picwelcomed figure on the weary Washington scene. Not all Democrats are happy over his selection, how, , ,ever . ALL TO DE SAVED They feel that Judge Mur, phy, goes with Alger Hiss' like so ': - ' cmoipleechitoarhoy; Flilbniolet way, do t sir " ,i ( -- 4, aa . el- -1- '4 ; -- ; , e tdherefor legal. s The president clearly thinks be has put one over on his critics and the Kefauvers, Tulbrightts, and Kings, not to mention the newspapers who assumed the right to investi. His matt .11 no creation gate. :s aabbagt: e keep alive in the public mind the recreant State Depart- ment theist who did such Incalculable damage to the administration. anrrld opflayiellatel. ..?" P ' IV- '...w;:;;e. - --.- I, " , .7. .., few ' . ' ,,, ' ' 'were all here Whes I gams , ,:- ,,wl. 144 fe' - Met - . - bectes. They lir . , grow fames's. and charge for speeches; some permit their names to be used as authors of magazine articles which they have not had the time to write. But the essence of the situ- -' ation is that Americans do hot like their officials to practice the Chinese art of., "squeeze." It goes against the:national grain, ,..particularly when , it comes down to swindling on taxes, because, apart from the morals, it means'. that each one of us has to pay more to - Make up, for what the. , crook took out of the till. ..,....e.ome ' . , .. , . wwtitlhl ce been wholly outside WashIngton. he has not been in conflict, direct or Indirect, spoken or Implied, with the Immediate Truman circle. Members of that, group, whose pain111 inadequacies., have been spread 'upon so many public records, are now, it, seems, all to be saved. It would be difficult to. l alight upon any outstanding ptiblic figure in Washington who could not be shmin ,tó have been at least impatient with General Vaughan, Donald Dawson, and the others-An- d President Truman can much-criticiz- ' - , ,S, ,, .'f, ) obeli Of S ,,, A 4,, - . "But them PeoPle are - 11 A, eat , - )...e ... 6i ' . - ' ,,;(4.4,, --4. - ' V-- '' ... , ,. - ".i., ,1",,i;i14:'' 's":,' . s, ,,ft de' .. ing I. - . ;". '14 tee 1 t, , ....,.s 4. "" via laically as well as actually ' - undoubtawn edly other jobs that pay bettera headwaiter in a select for. instance. Threstaurant, man likes - t -- t cithilechkeinfoti , , ate squarely in the limelight. Trua,Hiss, whom geasent to Sail, was once in the administration, But Hiss was. not a Truman man; be was im..1pheritance from the Roosevelt regime. So he dorsn't count at the White Housi as a Mur- - theirs. ' Too, he seems to rely on the happy coincidence that a phys- a great lesprriabk Sins Postern allattimile) , guished for honor and probity. He has before now calltd it to peoples attention am be is doing again. HAPPY LIKENTIESS , Of course, when Judge Murphy gets down to busi-' . nese. he conceivably may find that he cannot maintain an Olympian detachment from Mr. Truman's friends. Meanwhile Democrats have already begun to suggest that he may be New York's next Democratic governoror a candidate for the Senate seat which Republican Irving Ives must defend next fall litekessed ef the MU linetiester -- ed ' - distin- ' , - Those Navy recruiting officers sure do run the gamut. they sign up the boys. Tn Richmond Va., the other daY, ,8-y- , , Richard Sours Charles Sweet. short-weighin- g far. The draft board cannot make you fight, but it can send you to where the fighting is, and let you use your own judgment. C. N. Woods Consumers' League Ogden NEW EMPLOYEE WasWashington -- AND SO IT GOES She tells them Santa is an elf. Because she thought so once, herself'. Seated at an Oriental rug loom, 3 boys were tying knots. A reader called the pattern. Payroll was Be for the reader, le daily:-- 5c The rug was ft', each boy. already sold thrice over at $500. The maker had 160 profit A Bombay Parse. had resold It at $1000. His purchaser was an Armenian, who ran a factory in the USA for 'antiques?' "He added 175 " $9000 to its years to price! .. Risr print -- . . ahihh cannot detract from its dignity, as they sometimes do n a school is 'named wiolef a person. course there is already an Olympus Junior High School down Holladay way, but this new one would and should be "Olympus High, to ibatmenxrteretmhaenlyptroabu. It -- 0 Sc for an orresrnteachild lsa al can the vast iyyifi overseas' and ours. Small wonder, . some not hesitate to lmmigrants'do e commit-erimto enter USA. Washington, April 1777, wrote to Colonel Spostwood: "I want to form a company for my guard. In doing this, Itiowuiash - NAM! FOR NEW SCHOOL The Granite School Board is casting about for a name for its beautiful new high school midway betweeen East Mill Creek and Holladay on Twenty - third East Street. Naturally, the name should be "Olympus High School." The reasons: This beautiful new edifice nestles at the foot of Mt. Olympus, which is America's closest answer to the Swiss Alps. "Olympus High School" is euphonious and looks good in i. .1c a type. - know- heane-tth- To sit around and gripe! Asking For a Mohawk? . - the course of iteatmapt,aigin my baggage, papers, and other matters of great public import, may be committed to the sole care of these men. You will there- - new high Lake will not be abbe to have anymore, HI e ll. and men of some property, if you have them." Let us tot forget Tokyo Rose. She was born in America; educated in our She then public schools. showed her gratitude for all this, which prac r parents little, if anythint In taxes, by doing everything possible, through her radio broadcasts, to break down morale of our homesiat Gra In Asiatic waters. Edwin Grant San Francisco f tw ilirune 'Illtht em1 after. We have West. East and South and now we are to have Southeast. Then when dbecirecause" we get North, Northeast, Northwest and Southwest, we'll have to quit building...- ' - COMMERCIAL COVPLET When employes must go it'e a cinch. are first to feel Girl thewpinch. ' . They're having a mild Working Women Can Also Stand win- rt. ter back In Washington, ports Don Shannon, our bu. , ' reeu man back there. All of which is a good thing since quite a kick out of the people who say ."chivalry is they've run out of mink mats. ' 1-- dead." , Last week, coming home after work I had a seat, and . the bus was getting crowded when a couple of women older than myself got on. I gave the one woman my seat and then she started, talking to another woman there about bow tired she was; because she , bad worked so hard on piece work In seven hours .m day.$14.82 I work two full days to make that much. So if women can work so darn hard to make so much money, they can stand on the bus when riding to and from '.. work, the same as me. , TURN-I- . It , . OFT T 's ' Chit -41 . . - Peter1:4, ' . . - TEXT FOR TODAY: "God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to hell. and delivered them into thaina of darkness,. to be reserved unto judgment" ' mTired disturbi-inflady- ' ne. ease When I turn on nu:eerie& - -- , - Fear mere days left to do your Christmas shopping ee early, In the morning. "LONZ POINT DECIDED IN TRUCE, TALKS"--beadliWhatt this, the Rode a loan, too? want . ' . , , .. - . , - ., ' - ' m ' . I - S. W. Dewhurst , ,,, 1 Just hotc high is up! . , I For what I sip and sup, pockets by short- - weighing may not be considerably more than the amount felons take from merchants' tills. Are the Utah Retail Grocers' Association and the local grocers' associations taking any worthwhile action to cheating? Prosecutions, penalties and publicity should be stepped up until becomes less common by is demand that the felons who annually take many thousands of dollars from the merchant? tills be caught and jailed. Many merchants and their employes, In violation of moral and secular laws, have been taking money from customers' purses by The state', checks and estimates on published in June. 1950, raise the question whether the amount merchants take from purchasers' - I can't help bid wonder , The Deseret News ',kites Short Weights And Morality 1 egST OF EriTING Erery time I pay - . president (to s ,,, '4 'ks . II '' '-- '' 1 l - 1 1 . ' 11 ' , , 1 S ' ''' 1 N. 17 'ssie-A- . ' ' ' 't,, """ ' .NO ; - - I e' S ' - . , I ,,IL rd., ' '1 INI;t10104 , , ,, RN t 7. . ' ' VI 1.'1.1e, . i . . ' 4 - ' - .,,, one a prosecuting attorney or any rITZ ''''''' ' , ty ' . '' iLii,: i' aTit'"',a ', totbeo p I -7 , Ye George- Clark :.; . ' - By i 4i g se . SikHt, 3 ItIi0-11- ,,., !.... -- - .... llill nik);t6e ' I .- .- L, A - , cA - i 3.' ilk, . L k 51- - 11;; PIiril... API. 1 I Ai; , 4 N b., .,- . YORK women's de-signing firm recently cnn ducted a survey to determine what type Of women wear certain types of hats, where they wear them and where and when they go hatless, and you'll be surprised at the resultsthat is, if you can be surprised at .anything assoImen's hats. dated with Anyway, here are somamipt the results of the sUrVer,N. .Women who make it a habit towear hats are of 'greater Intelligence than those wno wear no hat at all. No doubt this discovery pleased the designers greatly. Here's how this conclusion was reached: When a highly Intellect. ual film, a classic 'concert or an educatioul drama is shown at a therr, 80 per cent of the women present were found wearing hats. When a show, concert or entertainment of the lighter, type was shown. 62 per cent of the w omen attending brought with them. no hat. A similiar check was made on women reading in public conveyances. More than twice as many women wearing hats read book and magazines en route to and from work, as those without hats. The survey also disclosed that the fair femme' with hats read a better grade of literature. So, if you want to appear in tellectual, ladies, be - sure to bring along a hat! A NEW , 1 . ,),..ttl 6,,,,, It' I 1 hi 4(11; 11Y-.- 11 .... 1 1 't I 1,4itiff 4r.it'. Eamo.,,,,.emolk Under Women's Hats T' I ..1 ' ....A..' , Goates Les by 7 - - I ., CA q I. -.- II itik - ,,,,, , aR E ,A,,,, . H 1' ,,,.,- 1.1 ,, , t. . , 11,- - w ' . with. one's private In fact, in - these days of high taxes and the high cost of living, official salaries are frighteningly low and certainly do not encourage such expenditures as a public man" has to make to keep up face. - to William' Feather, perhaps the most eminent American epigrammatist currently practicing that difficult trade "The privilege of boasting to her friends is worth more to a woman than the girt" ., , .. 31 1 - ...,, ' litCootomigertaringeotoevtisonooiffictihael According -- ... the ed. - , - ... I ' .-- ...- ... , tut lionenoufidthneollt ' ' - (r .e - Ifs bard to figure out just why you happened to be there ,t - ..., ..,t 1 - lit Cit4. C. 'The Great Director' IOU - . - THE NEIGH1,3011S ' By BEN BURROUGHS , -- , iii tk without taking Or .and this is our thought, not hers was it my view that I might take an oath to get power, and maybe the president was looking at Mrs. Fleesort and remembering that she started ,break the oath in using the , pcover.. ; her newspaper career within smelling dia. "I did understand., howPenderKansas stance of City during Boss ever, that my oath to preto the lushest Oonstitution r lisst's days. serve the best of my ability imposed The public is the final Judge in these duty ol.fapperneaaseg- matters. So,the public may judge, we record e n;r1 bye'e without- comment the president's statement Taetaionns',U:;twhich that seemed to him to bring "a look of skepthat Consti- Mrs. Fleeson's face. was the organic ticism.to thuw,n. ." Ntr. Truman had just said this: that his ' administration had always taken drastic ac- HARD SOMETIMES . . "Sketclies - I ' s ' , tectmy and defend wearing. position to appreciate the Hobbesien descrip-tion of hfetru "the truth seen too rate," that the president paused in and ' ' w M - notably he, - . -- . abilityi'preserve; pro- -the Consti- ape-Push- ed , .. ' Therefore, President Truman has failed to have men of stature in his administration. The few already there The Missouri gang tmeostvgednedi'n and now we have "squeeze" as an American institution. once Lincoln Abraham wrote a letter to H. C. Hodges,' of Frankfort, Kentucky, which contains a few phrases that are pertinent today. Ha said: ". . . it was in the oath I took that I would, to the best demanded what Mrs. Fleeson was "looking at me like that for." Maybe, the president went on to needle her, Mi. Fleeson had one of those sob stories hers in mind, and he didn't think any sob itories were needed. The columnist, speech-DORI- S lin at the time, said later she was not aware she was looking at Mr. Truman in any cial way and thought perhaps his attention had been attracted by the new hat she was . tevit vacat'ion to clean house in Washington have been most ,. , ' It was at a Washington press conference last week, undotibiedly after Mr. Truman had read Mrs. ITleeson's piece about his being in a 11 , ' 1 i o, gry out- int.toward the bursts of President Harry S Truman. After what wits Ill, he is very, very human, and pub-o- f in Korea, growing hopes peace dimming lie 'Opposition to policies, and now the tax scandal things have been ' these days. mighty tough too far, a man Is likely to talk haelt, whether it be in 'delense of the way be's running a nation or of the way his a her A. daughter, : However, tolerance notwithstanding, we seem to detect a certain lack of gallantry in big lareirrun-i- n with the press. He publicly called Our own 'Doris Fleeson a sob sister, which is too unkind is cut at a reporter of her caliber to go unchallenged. Readers of this page know what kind of is lMrs. Fleeson.:-- She his won the respect of the whole Washingtoifiews corps, as a factual, honest craftsman who works closet to the .news and without partisan bias. Err eceritpleces concerning Inan's hurried return from his Key spend-to-get-ric- J;;Vee'..17.7,10676 -,"..-.-. ,o' le; - 1'- Kt' ," ,,,- rip:: anti-Semit- ic in- - be too ',Perhaps the nation shouldn't . up. , Thiis again has collapsed not only 'the Communist myth of freedom of worship under Soviet rule, but the companion myth that the Soviets have extinguished racial m tolerance, particularly , The fact is, the AJC researchers show, that outrages approaching in viodays are lence the pogroms of czarist-Russia- n Union. Soviet the in Communism rampant and intolerance are inseparable. ,.., . , "god To Protest Unkind Cut at.Our Doris! IRise i e 1 LES GO -- 00 le racially-distinguishab- - , st 1 Emoloomomonsumomonmaint ,N--- In this "mink" era, public officials engage in private enterprise bx selling special pri vilegei, When I lived in China, this was known as "squeeze," an honorable activity in which all official gentlemen engaged,'as a matter of custom, tradition and habit There is a proverb to the 'effect- - that whoever sits at the table eats. Translated into the languate of Washington, it means that to the victors be- -. long the spoils. The really important mit' take that Harry Truman made dollars for was to get tax-fre- e himself-A.00,0worth which no One else in the country could have. This encouraged some of his subordinates to ask, "If the boss can, why can't I!" His subordinates tried to keep up with him and to buy their wives mink coats at wholesale. MISSED THE BEST Harry Truman made another mistake,' Knowing what politics is he should never have built his administration on professional politicians. That may sound funny, but It is not as funny as it sounds. He needed help when he took office and everybody was kindly disposed toward him, because it was generally o felt that it was a raw deal-tthe into project him just when his predecessor had to die. Few could believe that he was fitted for the presidency and the emotional response was to give Min a hand. So, at that moment, Harry have h sdt mTroil int eannmepeo ut el dn tipe. t the right citizens of the country,at of either party or none all, in his administration. But really big men never take orders in the sense that why some efylotain their inn; erals sciences. Men of stature cannot be servile. 'MISSOURI SOUEEZIE' from the Soviet Unions western territories to eastern areas since the close of the war. 'Fresh. evidence that the' Soviet govern- inept is implacably bent on crushing every religious group in any, country under the yoke, despite the pious "guaran- tee" of freedem of worship falsely included In the Soviet Union's paper constitution, has been compiled for the 53rd annual edition of American Jewish Yearbook, scheduled publication jointly by the American Jew- Committee and the Jewish Publication i on New Year's Day: Communism is the only "religioe" the Red oveilords are willing to let live; and the works Of lMarx, Lenin, and Stalip the only E. SOKOLSKY Chinese Had A Word For Mink Scandal I 1951 sWEDNESDAVDECEMBER.19,1 - I 11..7CLJKLat ) - SALT CAKE CITY, UTAH DESERET NEWS , . - , |