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Show - , . . . , , . -- . EDITORIAL PAGE - Wo . I- - stand for tho COnstitutiOn of the United States with' its, three departments government as therein set forth, each one fully independent in its 'own Did& - Of , , .,. , 1. - I üeretit Flood .Menace. Survey 'o''''". :include Plans For Future Should t ' 1' ', , ' ,, - ,- - ,,.'0 , - . - - -- . , , -. . . . - ' s . .1' - , w .'t---- , . ',. , Union Movement Seen GainingAn England 5 . . I i - . -- , - t .7"- - havoc-spreadi- hystetia, - - - ,, , ItPlit , 4 law-abidi- ....- -i it r 1 , I . --1 -- , - - . ) , , s -- ,',, - -,--- - , - . , - . '!.'N'' L. .,,..- . - -- ; - .-- '';'.------,'"- 4igata , . -- - '4' - -- -- , -- - . - 1 in . y -- - t, -- - . --.- -- -- -- - - -- -- -1 , T.---- -- - .....---.....-- ! eg0" --- - wpOr . . tem ratT-Wil- -- - , 1, ' ood -- - - '''. , , - Must Bt Sothething Jnile Ab - 1034 u , '. ,1,- 7 , the-dam- - - -- L- - .. - ' - the-ol- - - , f. -.- . .. - -, , 1- - - -- - - ... - age ' - -w- 4, .. : '' 4D;:. . 0,0.. -- , lly-for- ' the--flo- od- ,, - - - n.1 . - are-pe- ers - here - .-, ; , Go LES b de-ha- ve - -- ' - N get. Commenting on a particularb, difficult domestic relations case, a wiso judge the other day told the.squabbling couple,L. "A poor memory has eased Much trouble; but too much memory has caused infinitely ., The J o e s on Us It's been a long tough winter, and re ,,. Sr. potential floods, summer radio-T, ' and election national ahea a f placements, subcommittee's report that the but still there's plenty to smile abou let 43.000 13unds of smoked ; . :For one thing, while half the worl s ham spoil in a San bego supply depot re- . 1 population and a big slice of its land su minds us of an ancient, and ', the Vanished face Iron behind have Curtai vaudeville skit.--- - In our rehembered version ' since the war, there are still a good man one . of the characters sees 14 friend run Million free, happy Peopleincluding us in through with 1Iong' and curveaNsbre. So- Vie USAwho are free to do and say what licitously be asks; "Does it burt?'N t.L.. ; ihex think - and to smile broadly at anything "Only iliinj laugh," the victim- holies. 1 I or anyone.- And that's worth smiling about! : , curtain.) . t Smile National Week so isn't Which Perhaps ; brings us back to the story that OA, , ! ',I;Adly timed after aft If we could generate lvy $23,000 worth of ham spoil. This : i I ! V -- ---- , -- -- It is a difficult thing to forget a bitter 'experience.: It persists 1.1 will never wash it away. A WELLMEANDIG urged his neighbor to take steps to avenge a wrong done The good man who bad been hurt replied, "I see no percentage in keeping this trouble in the brew even though it is the greatest sadness that has ever come into: my life. It belongs in the family friend 1111811111141 of the pleasant : ,- , , it , w e tempted to laugh. the cold wat, record breaking income taxes, Except that we are in L position of the man with the sword And monumental national problems. Then etir morale-a-s a natimilsn't so bad at -' - thro h his middle:- - It hurts when we laugh. At least, we'll wager that Joe Stalin use in this instance, the joke isn't wouldn't dare to 'suggest a National Smile- -- on the ivy. It's on the taxpayer and the Week in his land of the The bus- houses, And $23,000 worth otspolled ham Sian people wouldn't smile - they'd leggh,in isn't our Aç a of a joke when we're helping his face! 'Par for -- 1 -- --- - .0.04.:..604......3..0.4.....INs.Ft.'..A6iiidl thé.iWorld The world news balance sheet cast up 217. S. Its.an nnawill be suspended from f)ds week by substituting' for 'helium balloon floated to a height of POO Newson, linited Press foreign editor., feet.- , continues to be on the gloomy side. , .NEWS , - GOOD NEWS (1) France's deepened, de--, (1) Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower visited laying and jeopardis g the European defense Plans approved by th North Atlantic Treaty Turkey and Greece to lay the groundwork for bringing their 40 divisions into his North , ccderence in Lisbon 1 week, Former Pre. Atlantic Treaty, forePs.' He said he had re. mier Paul Reynaucl trie and failed to form ceived a 'satisfactory impression" of Tur"government of natio 1 unity" to save of from economic ban , Oil!' and poll." key's 30 divisions- and was r ' will Ilea! chaos. Greecess 10 divisions. rhe,twe Mediterranean Communist the 42) eutern against guard the Korean , negotiator armistice-talk- s insisted that Commtmist expansion. , inspectors (2) 'rho U. S. took a tentative first step Including "neua1i Russia, vaitta, iñdPö1iñd.ihoüld hLye to examine secret allied, weapons an. nist Czechoslovakia to obtain the release N.Newsman William The United Nations refused' ant, anment. American Imprisoned , other truce issue seemed headed for sf4e,..Ostia. I , mate. (3) President Truman dedicated the Coast East West deteriorated Guard Cutter Courier as a float1ng:17okt' of relations ht (3) Berlin. ,Communist East .Germany cut oft America radio transmitter to carry the some of Western. Berlin's electric power. message of freedom to Communist-oppresse- d Western Berlin retaliated by plunging part tations from vantage points on the ,high tiansmitter On the Courier.. is - of he Soviet tone supplied by its power sell , The 041es esPowerfaliur any station in pleat into darknets, .. - -- . - s 'cal-crisi- - - - 4, th jfre. dil4tt4t Iroltiviv4 tXi te but as Salt Lake Sal$ Lske City ketches TqE:t4EIGHBORS-:- By George -- - Clark AmdPbo I hope that the sane and contecitizens of Utah will see that a law is enacted by WittiOlit a Someone' fly ke, d' Shows Just 82 Billion Really Is LI. Hov-rMil- President Truman asks -- , fog eighty two billions of dollars to run the government for one year, but ,few ,people comprehend the meaning of a "billion" dollars. Suppose we start a business today with a billion dollars capital stock, fully paid. The business is unfortunate and loses. 21000 per day (24 hours) --for a thou- s the year- 22524. there would still be left about six. hundred and thirty-fiv- e million dollen of the original caPital If and-year- t:-n - 4529 A.D. , , aasiesuladadocso h;bild,rget I th,1 o-- - - a do... I forget 61, are thfagrthe; - - --- Le ' DOING THE JOB No'matter if the day is dark Or if the sky is high and 'ue , Whether the earth is brown, - Without ' someone , me AO" to help Ina, bear the load ; I this world would, be a ton, and king would be place ; A without a hand to my path would go guide Ma yes. would dwell in stray 1'4 know-a, darkness and without eyes Sunny day filled with lovelight or a I tong to trear7-m- y so votdd be a dreary ono full of doubt and fear. and tills no heart to cling to my that's joys would be so few . lrhY peed a JOILIOCCI 2,78 4- : someone just hke you. ' . et 1- .Item)--"Theyac- ' -, prisoners. U.N. ,-- - -,1 ' MAY GIVE WAY U: N. military officials at Panon munjom have been is known that many thou- sands of enemy soldiers cap- - It ''"1 beleg-reterse- .- d-te d . eepted by toe Allies. command , - - - Atherton -- - I , - ' .. '1 - - . policy-maker- '' patriation. The U. N. ' ' ' -- - - - ---- " - : . 77 :7:7; . rliiiii",.01,:?1,,,, 7:7 Korean r'Chinese diers at the expense oft freviom for U. & prisoners of war.-- kore -than 3000 Americana are held: captive out of a total of more than 11,000 U. N. troops captured. The second problem was posed this way by a high American official: "If we were to insist on voltm- - tary repatriation of enemy prin.' oners, the Communists would say to us that many of our Men had been converted to Communism - during their imprisonment and rtow- - refuse to be repatriated. How could you prove that Pvt. Joe Smith is or isn't being forced to remain in Communist territot77 We could insistt on neu- . Kr: ''''' t :. , - - -- - i- ' tral investigation commissions ,but the Reds wouldn't budge so our men would be condemned to We are coo. a life sentence. - - . . . - -- -- -- ---- . - cerned with getting our nien back bicause for us itt is á hu- . ss manitarian question. No ASSURANCE . "The American people have aa . Imhappy choice to maketo loss , our owitPOWS over the repatrja-- ! ' tion issue or to give up the ene- my soldiers we now hold to probable . death and imprisonment and weakening our entire psychological warfare program." other issues are tactic-, witn portint to the Commu-- nista, the State Department and 'the joint chiefs of staff are 'con- vinced that unless , the U. N. waives its itand on repatriation, the war in Korea will continue. --,- - , -7- -- - , .. '. ; - ---- has stated Upon this immovable - s, object-th- e irresistible forte clash rests the T, future of truce negotiations. - - - -" Mirka& Newspaper Linens') (North President Trtunin irant Conservaten chairman eight-tw- o billions for one year's AND Paul Atidubok society; expenses. That rnpflrT nearly ByHaskin QUESTiQNS1 .? seven billions for each month. . hat state; havithe lrekest Wants Surptut speclid. When it is tanned the a meAd:t. 7:14111ssiosurvi bt Cr about two hundred and - Q. trews Clli.jity.f:easesr4:1 debts? e canning process makes it safer.: letsreleDel twenty-fivmillions per - day; Vd, highest per .. capita Spent on Library larees. IMP ITS ST. D. W. Wash,. L 71 the horsemeat is federally in-over nine and a third mMions MCO. , , onions three see I read the article by Dorothy tor trete1 A: As reported for the fiscal rootage. every hour, day and night; , spected it is stamped. d Anderson on our public abut one hundred fifty-si- t thou- year 1951. Nebraska had the low-- an including 'd 1 convicts. ;Pauper library, and I heartily endorse sand 4011ars total debt per capita$0,6a the life span of the Q. llas Ils,tdi or every to sinteneed do' minute; - - cosiricis were every word of Delaware t h - highest twat-T01 hundred dollars every in the United States Negroes ' I . , In ' Within the last year orsà, arrival on and ,::, portation mak means $2600 every $268.79. to any extent' in ' several million dollars have been second. --- - !... ' Ainerica , were - indented 11111eSS. erepanim time the clock ticks. P.B.A.years? bousres in Utah for field spent Q. plastic dishes require they had personal tands to main.7 Now A. ItTatt cbah alb"k'etIthetbfedat up? It increased by seven years for recreation for college stu special care in dishwashing? T.I.. bin themselve , Seven And years between 1937 and 1947. The av- dents. Thia is all very good, our A. Thiy should not be left br The Amok, coon. boiling water for too long a time will, a common. term for such erage length of life of American youths need wholesome, healthy government. ' Negroes ' is greater than that of , recreational facilities, but the ties, cities, end towns mut also or subjected to extreme temper-- service. have their turn at your notket white persons in most Central -people of all ages need the blewAbrasives ature should changes. -- ' book. What can we ordinary tit., Q.-- h it safe for human beings and Eastern European countries. ----trigs of a good library. not be used to clean them. Plat. the mitterbss been -- Jens )about it? There are two - tic dishes are easili scratched.- -- to eat hor3emeatl--,13:-- CL How large is the stadium at - 7 . . brought up- before the commis-liner- s things we can do. We can write , A. Authorities say that It is a' '4, of- Salt-La- ke , Q. 0 It e r Helsinki; Finland, where tha City, we our representatives in Congress convicts tncludedV hazard to eat urdnspected horse-amohave heard the old StOrt: PO about it, and vte can vote next the indentured servants meet.. 'Where the meat has been 1. mimmer Olympic Games are te November in a' way that will sent to the . American. colonies funds for a new library. LTA federally Inspected, this hazard bat held? ' doubt ea-t- o how ws feel itteducett,---Therpointis According to recent news-lentthat all eapteitT ' L. increased to 70,000. a large surplus in the there Robert L Burton in , A.. There were several classes ptorsemsat is not federally , uy - - .. publicly that it will not abandon the principle of voluntary . re- -- - - ht TEXT FOR TODAY: the Lord, all ye meek of the earth, which have. wrought Its judgment: seek righteousness, seek meekness; it may, be ye shall be hid in Me day of .Lord's 'auger." Zephaniah 2:3. . Ryndicati) moekt the are unwilling and fear, struggle TYPOGRAPHICAL 11111- Err: their fulof iNew Orleans terri;lomel In' Commimist-helis not a luxurious graft, tor& The enemy truce team has scarcely more than 100 feet - insistod that no truce is possible . Well, anyway yacht:unless mass repatriation, regardlong." less of itelividual desire, is ac-', ing IS clean. , -e -- - against mass repatriation. FIN, I tion of war prisoners, an. issue which has .been under formal discussiotr since lasts December, A few months earlier, State De- partment . apokesmen, bad in- formed the Allies that there was indiscriminate re- no thought--of turn of North Korean or Chinese ; . - they believe that American pub. lie oRinion would be against say. -- the yardstick, but by the Gulden RuleEdith Starke. - - straining tea To our the Is. sue is complicated beyond measure, and theycandidlyadmit that they did not foresee The consequences of their: position -- 1 by -- - expressions - - II' - a tt:14 In-r- ut , -- tp, , Ito road. s - , ri fki -- 4!: . , - - - I -- iI " &.-- As'z ,11.- tho wit Aria , tomtit "Terry's,-' arithmetic." ida - to- - help -- toad , ,s,ve . -- ng s . , 4MkANI.M.Eft. -- : . 164I.Mbodiabdi.la -' .- 'rho protracted negotiations for.a truce in Horea may be ap., proaching an end but at a price which, while saving the lives of several thousand Unite. Nations soldiers pow prisoners of war, may seriously jeopardize the gloteSiSt4Oce to,,Cornmunislia; , beside rose iati haninsisdstinwg voluntary hue soldiers in U. N. ' stark-the Communists bavs pressed for ,Or bright b16118T1 peepconclu- mass repatriation-upo- n - sng threnqh; ' of a truce. lion We need not heed the winds officials of several govHigh ' that blow, ' ernments involved in the negoThe mills. or censure of the !'"" tistions havtinformed the writer mob, the U. N. is preparing to ,that when the twWghg comes, way on this Communist de- give we know I mand as the only means of end, We've done our lob! - . ing the Korean war and of say- Les, Go Serapbook,:1932. U. N, soldiers from berma-- - ing ;... nent Communist Inprisonment.'- Thirstier -- (Copyright. ILng eleatures - not measured is '; ---- i era. VI., ptrinarweasicyir.for haieticeds "This one thing ' - on Repatriation HoldsKey to, Korean Truce out-date- 1... : I legislature ame hog. - - can't our city accountants get busy and figure out bow Inuch of this surplus can be credited to telt Lake and then let our city esmmissioners get busy and set sable a SUM tO at least get started on new library? s Every visitor to this eiy who has inspected our public Is shocked that a psogressive city like Salt-Lashould put up with this medieval, another thousand years at the same rate of loss;-- theri Would placing still be left of the capital nearly mourning doves on the yearevmd protected-lis- t. Any hunter $270,000,000. ft would require tvhotannot be satisfied with the nearly seven hubdred year rich variety and plenty of game' More, at the tame rats of loss, available him in Utah without to coniume the entire- - capital. the doves0A aptly dubbed a 'That mild, be 'about the,:year ' ' --- Pointing Why rvation-minded next '':- - . :'- By BEN BURROUGHS . " -- them glad-hander- - : Sea' so Utah Iona has been known as a state where the value of .,birds was deeply :appreciated. The lesson that impioneers got saved pressed them when-gultheir, crops from' a plague of crickets.. , It is a suprise, therefore, to note that Utah last fell joined some of her vandalistic neighbors in opening i hunting season on mourning doves. These doves ,are too small to be of any conbiderable value as , game; but they are a mighty big help to the farmer and gardener and rancher in the control of weeds. More than.9,000 weed seeds have been found in the crop of one dove shot by a biologist of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The great mistake the people of Utah have made in this matter was leaving the welfare of the doves in the hands of profesatonal game managers. These s would be willing to put hummingbirds on the shoot- ing list if the hunters demanded the - the ,great preacher to -Gentiles, gave away the out the formula. things that are praiseworthy, '"'' )L'IsiLi he went on to explain bow the everyone knows, 'City pays the lion's share of ugly things will then dim out -- IS, 106k ls , ;,.)''(-T----:-.-- 1. Ires Conservottorust half-fre- e. ' -Utah Tulestaz-Itul- d for 1951, also a. surplus in the tiquor ' tax fund. UtaVsbove all,---- : tbe Nome Nemo lovhob eoesomouto from Ito readers on booboo ral mo. tolloorat. Loiters misseNbe TO simile be boblio4 ',wools or and of forgivenels."- - you come to realize that for one person who has hurt you, a thou. sand have been kind and , help. - , N - -- - kitchen. A few days ago, the railway :-memunions frankly urged their to bound and otherwise as persecute all thorigh they were brutes Without" ' rights, intelligence or even Per.. ' sonal identity. The Daily Mail gave birth to a Utter of porcupines over this terrible advocation of! normal and may- - have started a revulsion. The Italian workman, on the other band, is a marvel. He rev-dobis in hard wozi and best on bread, garlic, and tome- toes. He gets very little meat Millions of the Italian workers idolized Mussolini, the Bum of Bums, and if be bad bad the sense to keep. his foreign policy within bounds he might have gone down as one of the greatest , of all Italians. I, believe they will put up mon. uments to him yet, when the brooding developments now on the horizon of our Western world have spent their fury and the pieces are collected in the new , ARNOLD-BEICHMA- IT IS A HAPPY experience to thrust :tOUVR'EADErkS.V.1 EWS1 illPaul, ',, spectacle of a half dozen street laborers or teamsters standing around with mo The-si- lly ll -11- 1 , grudges and injured feelings. These things are spiritually deadening. Let them go, and lift from your heart the ugli- ness of and let in the self-pit- y . , -- , - ; agencies. . es , ..-.- - - . . r - - , - this burn put in practically all of his time brewing tea on her stove.. ith-bet gas 44 foulingupber : unicer-testiality- . , 7 , however,- - : . - , -- -,.- - - at ---- I 1 the walls lot the first time in ten years, they "mate," bad an apprentice, whose theoreticid job was- to mix. the goo, and in time, by studious art observation, learn the subtle '' of sloshing it on.,- - - -, , APPRENTICE SERVES Au English friend toldI me that when r two fumbling, workers came at. last to her little apart---me- -- -.- ' ' d . - -- ' -- -- --I - ' - b ----- throughL,Old Bill mustaches on the- - street while the Russian drives his slaves IS hours- - a day on carp soup and turnips ,is al. most unbelievable at 'first glimpse. They are, as Nancy said, for. ,' ever at their confounded tea, and whatever ledoes to their tripes and tubing in the course , of years, the 'waste orman-hour- s and money on. this idiotic obses- -, eon is obvious and appalling. : 2 The impression prevailing in the United States that the unioti 'movement in Great Britain is a ex- -, decent, genteel, ercise of the right of collective bargaining by voluntary members does not survive close inspection or regular perusal of the English papers over a length of time. n racket went The British-uniointo a steep decline 'after the insurrectionary general 'strike of ' 1926.7Tite- - open hop became a shining institution symbolic of the Englishman's righr to raise whiskers on his cheek bones, go - red . - , - . . ' ' ,. . ' ' , I Into the hundreds of thousands of dollart i . Are we going to have serious, damaging . et I li ,101 In 1922 the Salt ttt..7'1' L) this year? That - That's .what happened In 'floods In the Mountain.West , Lake area. Northern Utah residents recall a ' 1 .qUestinn Ihas 'brought an assortment ez an- - 2 the efei floods of 19t7. Weber -i6 a little' letg il'. SOVIET iwera. It's -. Lip. can look at 1950 and find more dam. County Al - ...... 4AMmING , 14 , - i eetinn and a lot of talk. ---age than the residents care to think about Jat -' ' The question comes :6p for examination On the other hand-- many experts pre. ' : ,! bad the of dieted officials state floods winter 194849, after in this time by . ,.,,again Monday. . a meeting called by Gov. J.' Bracken Lee. Happily, the danger didn't materialize. .. tJ:r"4-' -- The 1952 danger is real. Now is the tfme -, No One. of course has the answtr to whether ,' ' ''S .."''d.'.---. ...g......CSOIL '''... flosods Bui state worstfacia to the for come. : the will or not the a. City; county, toV ' prepare 1. ' ' - , ..., AS.r tillittAILsieleasc officialtNivtshown a, there's menacirigprqbablitty.---7,..:,..a- - nd 1129 liarefoeLwear I 'de. the ' keen awarenesi Of the problem and drawers over shie'lrouserit;', . - ..... The moisture content of enoWs- is far , ". lawftd , his -otherwise or indulge come. do sire to be ready If the floods .frebni,e normalas much ai 235 pet cent -of x --- - .1 - ' However,- - Ill- ,whims. -- ' - - n, - ..- - -, . Planning now shouldn't he: the average in sortie Utah areas. While Aids r-VOLUNTARY ILICK-I: floods when the do conic what we On will 1'....;r. drouth-ridden , 'southern 1 is good news for I I --should be .steps taken prevent1fieright not to contribute to Utah, It can be a problem for other trees.. ,,There ' ' ' the V i. campaign funds of the Labor ordered - The water levels of Great Salt Lake and '., floods. Already. f'....:,... officials have .-, --, 77r Party cleanedbe and canals to t , Mali We- are higher than they have been deepened ' which made the unioneers come , ,aA C AV to each man or woman indiyld. lot jtomq,..timetTheJLS. Weather Bureau Memoir depths are being lowered. Tempo. u..", voluntary-gift- ,are of the Jordan. 4d1cts there may be flooding ,1:2.., . the When unions took over the. , beirrt planned. But what tbout diverting 'Fork, Provo, Weber, and ' ' Bek the Spanish S'7g this '17.,01b.e. they. goverttnient, . where land to overfilw waters d ...c.....N. ..... ., form whereby the back to t Tqieeri. will hi thought been ' ' individual has to take the initia-situation. of course ' depends on .4 e -- the weak -- the: vroblem?-- - Co-,,,'J sf uliiii of ,,4,,,,,...z given ant record mean rivers , may 11 I Illuven ... abstain. This is much less comtainlY, there's- waste land where theovere !III break , banks. with damage running '' fortable to the worker than the ,, , - flow could be channeled so that residential '11.111monot i a other way. and could b.:protected. 7 ',....2 9 ' . 77:6.40 The coercive intent of the un- . '''........ Iilli.'... .apom. You, as SA Individual citizen, can help. ion racketeers in charge, some of --- -- You can make certain i that you and members and actuallY- - whom of various 7W-6- 1 C....M......, o f your family are Immunized against ty. knights degrees, while .e. ' ........1' a ' vo..,............i1..T.e.So - 7 .."141S1 , publicly denied, is privately ac: 0" phoid and other diseases. You taa,..eis . !r:, Somehow it seems 11,, e ddi ng In.sultIn imowledged with a smirk. -0-- 1t14k preparing-- to- - meet ar:LTO this scheduling ..- at on... .., m e 'between their unioneers and ours Y.- - Injury; at... last week before . i . Week e Income; tax Nnrcat,--tInder. the . can help Individual as an all, you 111DE AND'SEEK :9N THE PROPAGANDA FRONT, WskinORST ' i Ides of March, tCURSE T : .by avoiding two things: Hysteria and ilidif'' for ference I , Also, it might be a little ' si icut weeks A few ago, Nancy Astor, ,- , many of us to generate a mirthii smirk ' An' d when the poten,.v al emergency has Much Memory who is much mor e intelligent Y Los Goates i after getting over the twin hurdles u than the dolts to whom she had eloped'ot passed you Can do yourself and Not So Good - to appeal for votes by pretty Christmas bills and automobile taxes. officials state yo a service by encouraging , clowning and repartee, hauled But this is Smile Week all right. vo to t a second look at the problem to EMBARRASSING moments oft. as a fact no matter bow hard cemetery and not in the family off end said that, although shs - - times result from the propenr t. it on the good authority of a brochutt termifti if our long range plans are adequate. was an ardent ,d0, shs had to you ,try to wipe it out of 'your. arena. aimThe more a admit that tea, more than gin, ward had the to But recollection. faces bishop and names, you published by the U. S. Department of Corn. -- Piens ally forget floods combat shouldn't always booze or beer, was the curse of ilar attitude. Said be: "Let merce, backed by a couple of free pulolicity have to ijnad e on an emergency basis. IS dates. It is a splendid talent to live it over.in your mind, the Britain. be able to remember,- - but is a more vivid this unpleasantness bygones be bygones. Stop nurs1 releases distributed by alert ,advArtising enough beit done for future protection? : far nobler trait to be able to tor. becomes. Certainly the tears d She was right. ing and cherishing grievances, ,6, , PEGLER - , ' - SUNDAY, MARCHu9 1 - 1952 ' , , - -- - WESTBROOK- - . -- - , - SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH- - - - - - , . '7- DESERET NEWS' - .,. - . - . -- - - , 1P,M111.1116 ' , '' - , . - - ' I ..- - , , , ' ,i .. ' |