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Show , ' , ITORIALS forh I i t t 'i . i. , .. 1 - - . ' , 3' r , , Set Lake City, Utah - , &' Business Tells Its Story 4 IT IS INTERESTING to note a trend that ', well-writte- n Fo'1 . - '', ' . , , ....ii a i I ,. ', ;t , . i , ' , - :: ,, - , 4 - - , - , , ' , , I ; .. ', ' i ' ,:., ...... , ' 4 .. , 1 ... i.,- . I - ', ., .,, '.. I , ' 11. ,, .... ' . ' . - 1 Gray, that deep Army be mad. in the terms of service of current cktftees 1n the Army, b likely, to be a cause of satisfaction to an lovers of peace and freedom. Young men now in the Army, drafted for 21 months under the terms of the existing law, will be released at the -expiration of one year's service. Economy Is given as the reason for the cut. Economy is admirable. particularly in connection with our overburdened war plant In peacetime. But, economy alone would not Along with it there, must be thjusetittZalizathetiocuS that the nation now does not need the military service called for by the existing draft law, which will expire next , June tmiess renewed. that this b not. the Noteworthy Is the-fa- ct Of the 'proposed draft pro-gam.--LasJanuary the Army ceased 'effete- int its power to call draftees; now it is cutting the term of service, of those already called, ' by nearly halt ., 1rher; seems to be an element of !won. t ..' 1 . -- - ' Some time last summer, in aterbury, Cotm I said that Chester Bowles of Genor that s te ' was in ideas and ' This rilethocts, a , SOCIallit evoked from Hartford edito- chili writer thámment that. and that I was mild, Ind saying a man la a 5OCUIt la unfortunately old 'tuft. of course, old stuff in 184; when Karl Marx started toN, write about it, out like much ' that is continuous age does not affect veracity. Unfortunately the Hartford editor 'was right, and the reason for bis being right is the appalling and frightening ignorance even among the leaden of our people of tiny force of s upon unideas, their impro-sprepared and unformed minds, and the lack of resistance to them by a nation that enjoys I freedom in a world that is rap, 1 ' . ii,u, ' ; I t I . 1 I i ) , idly losing it. I - Anti-Trum- an Catch-A- U : The ADA is a case in point. The organization Americans for Democratic Actionwas organized by those New Dealers who could not go along with Harry Truman when he became president of the United States. They organized a catch-a- ll group of those opposed to Truman, who sought to prevent his nomination in the 1948 Demo- craUc converttioot The core of this group was Ain Roosevelt and her sons; its leaden were Leon Henderson, Chester Bowles and Hubert Humphrey. Leon Hvarenidoeus "mawnageriahaer been in was made its ' movements, chairman, a position which ;- ; ' I 4- - I i , 1 I 1 I t I ' i , t ! t ,, l I 1 1 i i C i I , i , 1 I 1 i i , Eleanor Roosevelt. Chester Bowles., Elmer, Davis, David Dubinsky, Russell Davenport, Mark Ethridge, Bishop Bromley Oxnam, Wilson Wyatt, James B. Carey, Allan - I 1 , 1 I rs , ri 10,4 . 0 d " t , , N. , ,, ' " 0kii ...,. , ;;;;,.' , ' ' s5,Cpit. . e AV! ;ejm-.t 1.6"----;.- t 1,0,(100 . l'Z 4' (1, , , 1 . 'Y.0' 4 6. Om i : A N I E. , coin-petiti- on, ), I A kci . s , ..., 4A .., ." , --- , Iv , I Ian ' -. ' 1 . s rly' p11101411et 1 r 4111111eugmeb, '' ' ..dimy , 1, . a trl STUMP US ., , , 7 ' - t 4 clAss ....1"14144 ,. - ,, sad thigh et is Om United city States soy disease deetineties. Comfy! red pock's. censcisatious bewails, ell limo way. ., L - . , , , Ott , - . Item' 40..r , 41210' ' le . ,. 'AC' , 1, ,, - - - t teen the man And all we thOugbt that apbelonged exclusively Sam tabbed golden arm The human Inaba darts working the moment you wake up in the morning and never stops until you sit down at the office typewriter and start to write t column pity the poor to:venationalist who is not allergic to anything Dees be get a word in edgewise? Well. we're asking you! NEWSBREAK. (From All. sports; Guy Lombardo, the famous bank ieader, will drive the Kaiser craft' Well anyway. he has the money. The fellow who sever minds the winter is the one whose wife is always making It hot for him. TEXT FOR TODAY: nror the Son of Man shall come in the glory of His Father with His angels; and then shall Ha reward every man according to his workarSt. Matthew 16:27. Stamp. Mt-- ) , I tot sc' I'0(11 , . , - ':',4- - -- 'iN x , ' ' - or. '. S Every time you make a eon front your telephone raking a "good you're I Istnr." When you consider how much you et from your tetephone. t-- .k It kk in friendship, convenience., 1 - I good times and security, 4 1- - and how OM' r 0 ,,, . otherin carts, . ynoulttitibloy, 4 ,.. - - you realize That ., i 1. 4 is ono 1- of ioderls biggest borgoins ::''''7.44.;.:,,, ,,, ,. ., - ,, ... -- ,,,,A ,' - ,.. ,, - , -- . 4,'.. ' ,,,,, , , , ..- , ,, - A 1 4 '''., ) iretopftono service r,.. ".:- ...-- -, - - ,. - ' , - , ,, ., . - - .... . - PAILS-172- 1 , ' 011,1,10 VON Von I . ' Th. MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHO and Tolograph Company , , - . Una lees . I hero, has with the the titne pellation to Uncie Yen-pitch- ing series . , . , 40 Jo-- ON - 11. ', '''1) - Awes tar. Sans beim kg Allied then, try looking for 'Stinky' Van Horn- -rat Niro a ticket to reserved for ster -- ,.... ( 4 4 4 Van & Storage Co.: Ea PEE" '"' "."-lh- .1 , ti, ''c , . world volt.s1 io-Ar- tli - Joe Page. New York t MEEIMMEnow 4!4 hIstion with liaise Via Lines ws ass resch leI Is-- ' , ' , Try reached. by Raines fur--. &Ours atavism service. You teal! Tiwarth et. , ,, there in wow and sleet, Combing the Rocxy Mountains Without any meat to eat. Bessie Huffaken NOMNIEnmommuND 4t the i.uId sat Is Ar-UNK- '' . k ' arli. i .. . . , , 110 Ito , 4 tsoGallt40,,,am. TRY AND .I Just think of my poor husband Up , 6r I .., Cane. 41 41... America! aisseed by Harding I THE HUNTERS WITT I can't see why some people Want to Unice ten days each year. To go out on a dees hunt When they nevw get a deer. SIR, crusadeFOR ! , compin'that them out often enough, but few realize that usually Its because the poor guy simply can't afford to date. Unless, of coarse, he can find a girl who will stay home imd play watch television, records, take him to Sunday evening ChurcL or put on a little home party for a few friends. Or maybe if be clattered up to his giq'a houre it a pair of wooden shoes she would get the idea and aces to go Dutch. elation for these things that make up our American heritage. Renewed belief in this heritage, better understanding of how it works, and energetic citizenship will be required We must have a new American 4 I tii1,.. , I Dissension Wilson, another great thinker, declared out of sour: his great democratic "The history of liberty la the history of the limitation of governmental power, not the increase of It When we resist concentration of power we are resisting the process of death. because the concentration of power is alwlys what precedes the destruction of human liberties." We have men this power grow, in our time. At the same time, the propagandists in America have centered their attack upon private system, and upon competition. To accomplish their purposes. they have tried to drive a wedge between employers and employee. They have created .so much dissatisfaction that they have jeopardized our productivity. They have created antagonistic attitudes toward management They have led many honest but unthinldng people to believe that profits are immoral. One Crisis I. Go So well have these attackers laid their plans, it is my firm belief that if now be thrown into a serious national crisiseither another serious war 'Or sny considerable amount of unemployment for any considerable length of timesomebody would then be able to run for president and others for Congress on promises to nationalize our indusfries. These candidates could 'el poem , . promise full employment and high wages and be elected In other words, I think that we are just now one national crisis from the socialistic state, from governmental management and operation of American industry, unless the present psychology is changed In the meantime- - How shall we get back to sanity? We must have a rebirth of appre , REID ED i . 0n e- Powerand MIME" - l' BY GEORGE S. BENSON 1 arlo a college boys date life isn't his own any more. No longer does he merely latch his lashes on a cute little Alpha Chi and make his bid, but instead he has to 'sit down and work out his budget so he won't have to sell his best. sport shirt or varsity sweater to one of his fraternity brothers. By that time some wealthy campus playboy r715717VvVIN--- , 11,, 4. ' . i YES - unem plo3rment compensation and old ago. assistance. the Brannan farm plan and TEPC. ADA is the middle group, be- n the Republican-Dixitweet Amikb I Woodrow Co-ia- , 7- i- - ,,t4 decay. I - N 4f- and greater dependence upon the federal treasury are really more dangerous to our form of government than any external threat that can possibly be arrayed against us." He is exactly right, for that is how the American system can be brought to Testlfr J. Edgar Hoover la better qualified than anybody else in America to speak on this sub-Pi- ct He has said.: One of the two major problems facing this nation is the subversive propaganda aimed at the destruction of our way of life." General Marshall has summarized it this way: .11.1 are faced with the the actual disappearuanger." ance of Western civilization upon which our government and our way of life are based." Aaather great American, President Eisenhower of University, wrote last June: "I fimily believe that the army of persons who urge greater and greater centralization of authority and greater a cs -- Inert' : eziZ- 04;aurgot There are eeemies of our American heritage. Some men have been working for a generation to destroy the produc-tive ability that America has built. Communism hates freedom of opoortunit'S. hates hates private min.! &gement, bates the idea of private investment in tools. Propagandists of this sort started working bard In our country right after World War I. and they were bent upon the destruction of all these things, ono way or another. Expert iy., directed, these propagandists did not start out by telling people they should be Communists, nor did they tell people to overthrow the American way of life. But they did begin, very shrewdly, to lay a foundation that they hoped would bring things within a generation to the point where they could publicly advocate the overthrow of our way of life. They have desperately near succeeded. The threat is serious. , tcll' . Goates hti time with the has beaten damsel. t 4,111 c:;ciz,.. 11k' - .. 1 f,,,I:let),e - otk . 1 4c.-sri Gspyill...c4 A Crusade For America SOKOLSKI' All Reverts to Marx ' Also, personal factors are inSocial Democrats volved.rhe ' S. Haywood. seek to accontplish their ends et Part? 'Regardless without losing their respectaThis organization' is sa1djo bility; the Communists set up have 25,000 members. Wind- - a dictatorship and care nothing Int Governor Bowles of Con- - for public .opinion- - "Alin, the . Social Democrats are usually t, Senator Humphrey esots. Herbert Lehr. of , loyal to their country, while the Communists are loyal only &data for the UnitMin, to In New York, ' to their Ideal and to Soviet ed States and Newbo t Morris, candid Russia' as the bead -of' a eta.. ' , New York,. venal movement. date for mayor ' Yet, it all reverts It avoids a direct ir with to Karlultimately Marx . and the se. am.. any party, but suppo .4' ceptance of the proposition didates "regardless of that the means of Production which makes it easy for a outside group to bargain for N and distribution. and exchange, tiNt tubction Of the state. And its Influence on voters. This tter how this comes ,:no antigroup was violently about , d what means are in 1943. preferiing Wallace ' General Eisenhower or :in- : used, and at what speedthe end is e socialism and the sa,.1 for tim William O. Douglai individ- the enslavement au the presidency. Neither of ual to the Mate. them bit. After Truman was CoP7110 1,41, 111111 1;a gist nominated, the ADA group opportunistically support,. OFF THE RECORD ad him, Senator Hubert IL vilely'. was made , Humphrey man to succeed Leon Henderson who is now engaged In private enterprise. , . On July 10 of this year:ADA ' adopted as Its program, high- er wages, lower prices, more ci - - L-- -- pQ. tavm, It 171"24""1. . sge,-..y.,..,..- ., .1111111111:01" 7... 1,-- Apo, 44 t'q'c- - b- - I t . id . ,14,' N - 1 'C'eed-- I 1 , i it t .,, ,,4; ;,...t,43,,s.pz -- . , ,, diw.4:664,..514.41;;R ''':7' N--G, ON:014f11:r s 7k ,00,00.............".1 1 ', i.4111 11 .......-.1''- '' 1 , r - , to0.4 nit.5 givnult 1 ,110111( fr. t 4 I ".01-- ' .016 -- 7 1, By Les HIGH COST OF DATING OF THZ boys in the ONE seat riding to the univetsity said he figured he would have to pass up the gay social life of the fraternities and sororities on account of the high cost of dating. The other young man replied, 'You and me, too. I can't afford to fall in love at these pricet So girls, this may be the reason why the boy friend had to quit dating you, Just about the time he was beginning to get As the fellow said, starry-eye- d. "Before romance begins to hit its stride, the cash runs out and somebody else holds her hand while you hold an empty wallet." date, it Any. kind of seems, runs into real folding money, at least to a college boy. The least expentive evinings, counting tickets, gasoline and the snack bar after the show, costs around $4.00, unless Dad supplies the gas along with the car. When. comes the prom or fraternity formal, a boy can expect to pay around $25.00, even if he does not have to rent a tuxedo. In order to date a college girl in the manner to which she is accustomed, a fellow without an allowance from home has to work after school and Saturdays which cuts a big gash in the study schedule. And the fellow who draws a little expense money from the folks ofttimes finds it inadequate to supply entertainment for two..., 0 IA i - v 01,' t ,..- .- - ,.. '" 4 I - 4d. , 41 , , gjo4ola 04 , r e , ' 1 ".41s ,... ..,kz".1 is - capitalists and the Marx. Communists. In every country, In Europe, in which he , held until last Deoem,' the Communists ultimately achieved contro it was pre-ben The ADA group delcisely this middle group that but initely is ' obvimudy from its character- - paved the way for left wing mastery. They destroyed the istics and from the activities resistance to Communism. te.. of its members, gives the dfeation of tending toward , For, no matter how bitterly the Social Democrats hate the s. Fabian Socialisma Welfare Communists, their basic dif- - - , social State political and are not very great. Thterences..., complex now being practiced. naadowaliscalliThrt .,,, srith sociallAmersticangol4br:Lesi Or 'weltsFete:a, oithaeyt boys,,, the be achieved by slow ' 'should Great Britain. stages within the "democratic" in, - framework of the existing so.; I ., A meeting announced December Mt. Washington eiety. In a word, theirs is a I 190, ;shows the following as process. The Corn- 1 e Mrs. nmnist. In effect, says, "Let's 81,1174 participants: - .' , .."- t--1- - s4,, 4, , I .. Let's do the job fast and complete ettp-by-st- - ...k '' get the torture over with. - Ii 1i -, a , , 1 4, b',)tk .71 I ' BY GEORGE The A. D. Al .,.....,.,......... Nj ; , i , tt , . - -' i . ,. 4 '' C:7 11 ,.1fPn.?-i ..."rec-N- I ,. Iv 1' ,,...',?.- -' ..t." cp 0,,a4'tt;,gf' ".,.., sistency in Secretary Gray's plea that the draft law be renewed for next June, and continued in force- - even though it is abandoned in operation. Why is this necessary? There are always volunteers for Army service, or for training in the National Guardvolunteers who have some interest in military matters, and who will benefit more by tary training than can a disinterested man compelled to serve. Only a definite threat to national safety should justify a peacetime draft in the United States. Nothing short of an urgent need for service should justify the federal government In snatching a boy away from his school and his home and his church and subfecting him to an enforced year or two of military drill. A call to arms is a different matter; to suth. Americans have always responded. But a peacetime compulsory draft law is a relic of the Prussianism from which, we have tried to free the world. The present law is rooted In postmar hysteria, and the latest develop. Inents have proved Its needlessness., a solid satisfactiOn in Then la, therefor seeing It fail. by Sttretary of the THE ANNOUNCEMENT Gordon cut will a ',' .1. -. Put ;' the Vratt ' .. ; Utt Shutting '' , II - 114 , , '. ! B'yo'uttccmuv-mt.7;1-7- ::: - -- THE. has to be! Consequently, big business can meet big payrolls, and big payrolls Mean more customers. Big bu.siness may actually be creative. Take an instance near home: Utah Copper Company, by big business methods of small profits on large volumes, developed what in its time was the greatest copper mine in the world, operating on ore that would not have paid to mine by small business methods. Demagogues have thundered: "The production belongs to the worker." test: Let the Utah Copper workers carry home the ore they have dug, in lieu of a pay check, and see how far they get Or. take a new substance whose name has a household wordnylon. Nylon bee of the most versatile plastics in the is ' whole field of new and surprising plastics. Best known as the material for ladies' fine hosiery, it has a hundred th ienvention Nyand Ilon is not a' discovery, but an Inventing and developing it, development creating equipment for making it and machinery for fabricatinr it, cost $27,000,000 before it could be marketed. ,Small business could not have .financed such a project The man who buys his wife a gift of fine pylons and then damns big businesswithout which there could have been no nylonis simply 'damning himself for his inconsistency. - In its early days,- advertising was largely ballyhoo; today, it is more and more factual, and factual advertising presenting truths such as those outlined above, and hundred others like them, is coming into larger use. Quoting again from "Editor and Publisher": - "With )1, newspaper going into every liter. ate home, there is no excuse for misunderstanding of the high aims and purposes or the belittling Of thECtremendous accomplishments of Industry." - t7 i riSe' CRttqr , . ta developing in connection with advert'sA. ., ins in national magazines and to a lesser degree in newspapers. Corporations are buy. trig advertising space and instead of using it - to the praises of their products are fill. '' Inssing it with fairly presented factual information regarding the company Itself, its problems, its structure, its business relations, and its profits; Such actldn has been made necessary in 1I some cases, and highly desirable in others, by the fact that the companies concerned have been subject to misrepresentation, ' 1 either ignorant or malicious, and are using the'means of the advertising pages to correct that have been made regsrd i,, misstatements ing them. "Editor and Publisher," outstand- ing journal of the printing industry, went so far, as to say: "MASS MISINFORMATION, we continue to repeat, is alone responsible for most of the suspicron- of and hostility to BIG BUSINESS." . Much "mass mishiformation" has been peddled by imeans of false slogans. "Big Business" and "Profits" have been used as "scare words" without stopping to think. A moment's thought will show, however, that an enterprise run is not a business, but a philanthropy or something of the 0 sortthe distinction is recognized even in the income tax laws Also, can you name any "Big Business" that is anything more or less, than a little business, for a group or them) that 1has , been more successful than the average? There is nothing properly disa business making big prof-- creditable in nobigfraud is Involved. Usually, - Itsprovided though, big business succeeds not on account I of large profits as such, but rather the sum . of a large number of small profits. Big business as a rule is relatively efficientit , COMA 27, 1949 Thursday, October The Deseret News I . Tio. Moat You wr zwro mt. Les Go 1 g ' We stand for the constitution of the United States with its three departments of one fully Independent in iits own field. government as therein set - 1 t SOUND INVESTMENT IA t , - , . -- , - , |