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Show '' ,,, ,,,,,,, ..-,- ,,,,V0..,.....,... ...,,,,,,,,,tW,,,, ,.,,.t"411,,ST,Z,P.,,-,! ..,- t .... ,,-- ., ..L17.,,,...:e.,-- - - 4 7 2-B-- EDITORIAL. PAGE --- 1-- THE D.ESERET NEWS , , ,., I . - -- ,, ' - , ,.t - ' '' .' t - , . - - -- of the things thematically - , . , , rt r,-; ,, ' , a -- - - ' - - was-the'fi- - - - 11141. - ' - - V -- 0, t, J 1. 4o .401, it . , ,- 4., Irt-1- ': ( ecfr,:, (V W ' Field'td - - - -t- - . ' LETTERS belt-tighteni- ng . -- '' , - , , , Free World's Cause Can - t- - .' Tor more than ,a year Allied . government leaders have been carrying an extra anxiety 'which has been given little publicitythe declining health of Britain's Foreign Minliter; . ' which allegedly organized a k in Eastern Euspy rope during and immediately after the war. However. anti-- S t a 1 I leftists have since charged that Noel Field. while working for American intelligence agencies, was a key Soviet , . Ernest Bevin. 1 Ill-Spa- Bevin re linist When Bevin retires, while the good wishes of every Allied statesman will go with him 7.- for he is one of the most popular personalities In the international world the munist world will not , find it easy to replace - ' . n- non-Cor- - him Now comes news from England that the ,' Laborite Cabinet Minister's speech at the en- -' Ditik-----d- mual convention-ohis party last week tnayte - " ' his last as a rankings officer of 04- govern- I ment. There were only occasional hashes of ths "fighting" lievin who has been a- tower' of strength in -Allied Council& recording, some btunper crops' I Nevada ' this year, one of which; unfortunately, Is There now seems, little doubt that Bevin mist shortly resign on doctor,' orders though the :1'bumper" crop of those killed or maimed naw ha has carried on despite their, warn- Via automobile bumpers. ' s For the first Mx months of he But the when Ings. goei Emglish speaking division of vital statistics has record of 45 . , mations will have lost a. doughty i champion - -c- onvinced Laborite timer he is' ---in -the , deaths , which occurred as a result of auto .. accidents, Dr. DanielJ. Hurley, that state's light 'against Communism.. ' hialth officertells us. For the same months How respected he Is, even by his ideologi- of '1949 there were 37 such deaths,- - and in cal foes, is shown by a remark Made to Vivian ! Melt by Russia's Molotov himself at a London' 1948, the toll by Jane 30 was 34 deaths. A national study concludes with the preconference to celebrate the first Assembly of i diction that the millionth '1.rnerican auto ' the United Nations. - ni Britain's Bevin and, In ' "Arnerica's- BeMen were out of business," said death will occur late next year or early -- 1952. ' - We seem to know where were going Soviet's the ,. No.; leader, "Soviet Russia -and , - , , ' - -- f - --- - - ' -- ' -i -- an Reckless Drivers' Bumper Croix - - tu .. rme 1950-Nevada- . . ' . '.- - , ' iyerzns." - wouldbs Bevitt was a shirldeeve diplometrst he - said what he had ttilay 1in words,sd ane!' and generally in the blunt idiom of .,.. syllable ' the countryside from which he' rose, the hard , . way to fame. He has never lost his Somer setshire accent,- inbred in him when as a- small boy -- he tended cows at a wage of eight to ten cents a week; nor the foreeful manner, isms which hoisted him to the ranks of the highest brays both in Labor Unionism and the ,: British ' government , HI, personal character is famed LOT its Vgliiinse of integrity and political honesty. It was 1Bevin whom Winston Churthill chose , as leliniSter : Of Labor itt Britains "darkest hour." Ihe-11:- 1 ' - ' ,. - - - - - ' - tified. - , , : - .- - - - .. - - - - - ', ' ' ' . ' 1 . ! . I - , c : ' 1 - , . - I -- - ..0,0 ..... .. , . I - mE --- i .. - -- ',.311M.rt :' . n e 7, Cif 41 ea ..'..1 '' 'N. , 4.'''''''' L A, IP - ' '"" '.------ r- 4....1 , 44 41,- ' - a.m. -- 0 - .o. , nt4 ....., -t t - THE V 'SOF , FLIGHT , ., . - ,., - ', '. - .,..,,..,.----- -- of his long tenure and his handling of the McCarthy charges of Communism in the State Department In part, also, they stem from a bitter Democratic factional fight over the governorship which is in the process of settlement but will leave scars. FACTIONAL TROCBLES It is his further misfortune to have an able Republican opponent, D. John Butler, so to Prague. the cry that you can't trade -sTWO WOMEN VANISHED omething for nothing is not ' apropos. Polish airport records this diffiA of mitigation showed that he had cleared culty is that Maryland Re' customs and hi; name was publicans' have f a ctionsl mentioned on the Czech airtroubles too. and that Mr. line manifest. However. it Butler was nominated by the ' was- - crossed off when - the county-un- it system but did plane arrived In Prague and not receive a popular major, Czech airline ity. claimed he never got aboard In the primary Senator the plane 91 Warsaw.: carried every ward, in The American embassy and county, in 20 precinct, Warsaw was informed by the out of 23 counties leading the Polish authorities that they ticket over the state-wid- e and -had - not irrested Field and-- - local candidates.-clairined to have no. But his two primary op- they knowledge of h tI s where-,- ; , pbnents were- - nobodies and shouts. still got 70,000 votes, while Noel Pield'S wife.' Hells, the combined vote for thetwo was in Plague at the time candidates for the Demoind had gone to the airport cratic nomination for goverto ,meet her brother-in-lanor was100,000 greater than , Thatwasthe last heardor the combined vote her. These :facts are spurring -Fourth member :' of this ' RepubliCans to make Maryland a battleground,. bearing strange family to disappear w a a . Noel Field's adopted In mind that in 1948 the state went Republican, rejecting daughter. Mn. Robert Val "' vanished President Truman. ." lack She reportedly Senator. Tydings says that midst the ruins of Berlin a , ' ' .nii-xit-i- D! la,matea ago.after.,arriving there frem Parts, presum- able,' in search of, her foster . ., PEITZ CAREFtILLT! parent16 ' ' - - . ''k , ---' - AILAILAI.41 -, - - - ,, , -- - , - .. , , , . . 61 - 4- - -. -- V 'k.;.,..- - , o- - 47,..:,t,'-,.- no, di"- - . '' I, N, ,,, , n 0 0 '''s : -0-0- ,,.......e , ,,,...... .... 1, , ' . - .., tr ' ,-..- . NEWS , ' READERS willingly as his right to freedom of speech as far as those rights are construed by civil government Also I said, and maintain. work odd hours. A police officer can't associate with whom he wishes because of this reason. So it is quite probable that some of them in any city have- a social drink at 1 a.m. or 2 a.m. because their days are turned to night and they can't rush home to the eager arms of their family and play in the garden as most of us do. , And aftet spending the time and money keeping your lawn up for the children of the neighborhood and your own pridi, t would you whad do if a the same thing to it that the dogs do? Why can't we do the same -- 'things to the doge! --J. Richardson thet the police - -- 7. -t- he .latensailvalry-,01-the-lwo- . duses. He detailed plans for - . I ; ', - . . 1- very good first-ai- ! i 1 I,. t, tt 4 I r 1 . - - cabin- d et, a garden hose and a handy tap to attach it to, in less than 30 seconds. ON THAT SCORE it is in keeping with the frenzy and fear of these times, that builder in one of our arn110 vulnerable cities pro- vides .a dungeon dugout or "livable hole in the ground" with each domicile. 11 this fellow, probably - first cousin to out friend, at psimist, can go to The Deseret News of Sept. 30 has two car- toons that explain the Korean situation more perfectly than an entire page of printer's ink. Those two cartoons serve a worthy and important purpose to refute the vicious and :damaging bet 'of prominent politicians who charge Presi- dent Truman with starting war. . Intelligent people kndw the efforts made by President, Woodrow Wilson together with many other nations In creation of the League of Nations and how our own people , failed to back him up. The efforts to create the League of Nations 30 years one-ha- lf , ago have resultedin hundred peace-lovinations who have now been success- ful in banding together and are carrying on the noble work of Woodrow Wilson, and this new United Nations is successful 4n calling Joe Stalin's bluff. Let's - hope the Deseret News will carry more cartoons to show the true situation and do you think the ghost of President Woodrow Wilson is present in the meetings of the United Nations and applauds their success? --R-obert Y. Crookston Logan. t 7- , I itieretengthsmaybethe rest of us might just as well put our houses in order. - Do you have a comfortable c or hole ' in the ground! - Anybody know where to find a candle, a shovel.- - a ladder, or a can of pork and beans? And how are MI going to open the can if the can opener isn't in the kitchen any- more, and there is no kit. . - . So maybe the optimist hi CiVilian defense begins at home. Perhaps these things will not be needed in our time, let us hope, but a buck- et, a hose. 'and a con of pork and beans are gooh things to have around. anytime. right ng - .. ' UNSOCIABLE TIPPLER ' - . I deeply regret That the pleasure I get ' . Truism: A shady past dom twinge - -- -- 1 ' sel- - -- - - -- - ---,,,, - -- . e , - ,, . , - - . ' - , , , From being convivial Is somewhat trivial. -I- van J. Collins. - githe,. . , , . ellar , , - i -- - -,- froin-7wntrh:l- - ' OLD FAITHFUL' Senator Tydings is one of 'A bride, belatedly wed' It three senators who ire third in continuous service. In the - 34. confided to her girl friend about her newly-Thun- d happTSenate Since 1927. be now has ness and said, "I wonder if he i the most impressive probably committee assignments on the 'will still love me when my hair has turned gray?' hill: Chairman of armed serv- "What makes you. thin)pla ices. foreign relations - and won't?" inquired -- her comatomic-energyHe had been eipected to become president panion. "Hasn't he stuck with . you through 'brown, black, pro tempore of the Senate red, and blonde?" when Sen. Kenneth McKellar fades tram the scene. , TEXT FOR TODAY: "Thou Washington can hardly ,westhroWnsomewhat., , therekt.-- ookl- -.senate.,without off stride by the fact that hie ,', Senator this year - God; thou - doest well; tho but Tydings, 7111711tettrès-trem------- -kept glancing at It's a ostne,---,,,,- , ble."-Jimi- rr19the editotil while he 'peke. (Relioasod by Zell Syndleata) , ; for Democratic., candidates governor, stood entirely apart,.adeounts - exo- - wen-organiz- ed wel-stock- Readet Says Cartoons Portray Vital Truths ins sides, neither marked his name also. , ' "I lost primary iotes by that." the Senator said. "but I didn't make any enemies, either, so everybody will now be behind me in the election." There are still those 70,000 votes and Senator McCarthy has tried hard .to swell the number.- - Considerable conversation to the effect that. Senator Tydings investigated McCarthy- - and not Communism was rep o r ted from MarYland during the summer; reporters who cotered the recent McCarthy meetings there assert he did not draw much of a crowd. For those who did attend.. the Tydings camp had a small gift ,consisting. of reprints of edia blazing torigl from the Capitol Times of Madison, Wis. In it a home-stat- e editor scathingly reviewed McCarthy', career, introucluding his income-ta- x bles, his $10,000 fee from Lustron Housing which had a ts huge RIC loan, and the about his conduct as a judge. NONE THROWN AWAY were- - handed-t-o peo ple who entered a McCarthy The Tydings man, meeting. ' agers aver-- - thatear e f ulsearches afterwards , never turned up any copies thrown away, that people apparently took them home and perused them. They also profess to have noticed that Senator Mc- -' - , , , le - corn-plain- . their , Adequate preparation for everything that might happen is utterly impossible, argued the pessimist He ventured that few American cities are prepared for earthquakes, the impact of large meteorites and an epidemic of the nu. It was his opinion that a community that is - ready for everything is afraid of everything. He hinted that while the average householder car- ries fire insurance he hasn't got as much as a water bucket with which to put the fire out. THE CONVERSATION, switihed to our national defense and how come we haven't got any, in view of the 28 billion appropriated for that burpose. The pessimist endeavored to show that a full-scaprogram of civilian defense would mean more of same. but nobody paid any attention to the insinuation. It is a rule of the Grabeteria Gang that nobody Orders mud pies to throw around. . ' Most ofthe members assembled were disposed to take sides' with the opti- mist. They wondered nevertheless, if orderly arrangements would work, --when safety and survival become strictly a personal matter... No doubt about it, when the house catches fire, it is a good thing to know where to find a water bucket. Our civilian defense work- en in the Grabeteria confab put out one thought that is worthy of contemplation. hHe would like to know many homes in the average American community have available such useful accessories as a water bucket, a . t -- 1 . ' fire prevention, traffic control, first aid and the- feedteless. ing of the , .. , - THE VERSATILE OLD HEN anti-McCart- , , - . A - , -- - - . kir. - - . - 4 anti-Tydin- , ' ,,,,Ampporbed! . -- - - - )., (r;,----.,,k-z- ., ' ti, 1 :41,4.3ti , , N. t - .0 ' - - : n , DANGER-LIELAHEA- ,. 1'' - . OVT 4 - - et To ILIVOCIL -- , - - ,0-' ' ,e;,,,,,0"..''''S '' '''.- - ' - -- Z;i:..a- - - i ---:--- for the 100,000 primary votes he didn't get. NO ENEMIES It is an old Baltimore custom, fie explained to send out marked sample ballots to guide the voters in their choice and both the rival as- spirants for governor did so. - -- -! ''''''''''0;0""!!"1.1a te. .4,-- - --- -- . ',..,Ii. , - "'''' , , ' - e .C 11;.-"- " .- 1 , -- --- . - - ...... , .:- age:tir .1 ' A , ' -- - , --- -- 1 - l';'---- 4 ,X :.,,, . Senator Millard Tydings. who waltzed home from an attempted Roosevelt purge in 1938 and haA always seemed like terrapin and Henry L. Menckenan indelible aspect of the Free State of Maryland, is having to fight for re- -. election this year. -- , The Senator's troubles are Ty-din- gs , ' - '11'--'-''.- -- ' - IL , ; .,16.43(e.040nnse) AC.17,1N ,,,,,, '' - 41 I - - ' 7 Z- - ,0041.10. ,I., --41 e ,. - , .4.--.. , 3 , -- - -, t 1 I 't . , A- tri ev 5:,i' .N , - a): S'edl-,'):- 4At - - - '1,0 ki,...,iterle - 3 . ,:i , ' ". For'Election in Maryland officials. ' T raeorimna'n' '4,,, ,,,ri- 1;,,J 4, 11 ',;rt 4 (c" ., ', (s) ...:4,a ' - -- - - --- ..444, - - ---- . -- , ' 7' 4 lu ding - - c' -- t. 1 - S CQ.1.4,1.41 , - ''''.7--1.-,- . - , " AtZ11161... - - - ttil;d1r,... ' . ' - - ' - Suburban commu-citiessaid he, are being readied to extend hospitalugees rolling ity. to the outward from any,scene of, like anti on one of disaster - s. attack. - gq41Gir, 4, ' e Aft. "'Ail,,,.., , et. .,t, i 1) - Sen. Tydings in Battle - - - ' - ys - - Ger- - - An official of a leadincautomobile inanufacturing concern recently told Los Angeles audience that if the nation would invest heava marked reduction in ily in atito accidents could be effected. This view does not seem to tie in at all with Nevada's experience. A reckless driver, or even a tired driver can come to grief on the worlds finest highway. : The 'optimist mentioned the plans anudproposals for tr cities and elscuating ! towns In case of an atomic S. . . super-highwa- - - -- i ' - e - f - Many states hesitate to enact drastic penalties for drunken driving because-therare about 60 pathological conditions' which can be mistaken for a state of Intoxication. , Other states, however, have adopted such legislation; arid have'estabts.lied careful tests by which intoxication can be positivelyiden- ,q1 V4,. ese - -- Ackermann. who is a state secretary in the East German foreign ministry. Jules 'Humbert - Droz, a former Communist who Is now secretary' of the Swiss Socialist Party. has publicly Stated that he knew Field well and that the latter was member of the Swiss a secret -Mst u t; o ntm-Parry. Field's brother, Herman, an architect from Cleveland. ' Ohio. disappeared in Poland the latter part of August. He had been visiting Polish friends in Warsaw and studyof the , ing the reconstruction city. According to an announcement by State ' Department spokesman Michael McDermott in. Washington, Herman, Field disappeared after golig to the airport to take a plane . ' ationsmwmiuthnisltse.ach,ng 4- I ' -- ci, DORIS--FLEESON'--- Walter Frisch, still a ranking member of the East German Communist Party, and Anton , . - - The Trotskyite bulletin also claimed that Field, had close , , , - ruPs y. --, 13 the same time, of course, as is consistent with our way of democracy, he must hurt no , one else. we would all be, Probably better oft with no liquor, but people decided we should have it. Consequently I am in accord with those wishes and will defend a mans right to drink as us ' ii -- - of course a Police officer works no longer, nor harder , ,than many other people. I have never said anything of the sort was right Yet P. Morris of San Francisco hi hi, way implies that I made such a statement. sP3r- then says he is. not an old SECRET ,CO5L3IUNIST? woman. To have misconA bulletin of the "Bureau - strued statement as he my of Political, Economic arid, Social Studies," organ of one' did he certainly- has the outlook of one. , of the dissident Trotskyite I did and do maintain if in Paris, charged that any man wants that type of had once worked for recreation it is bieright At the late General Walter net-wor- , ,i . man." . -- , settled ,,,....041 .2''",--1- ' The Deseret News invites readers to express their opinions or contribute informa- Non on topics of current Interest. Letters must be signed, should be brief (not over 200 words preferred), and must not violate accepted canons of good -taste. Address: The Editor, Letters to the News, P. O. Box 1257, Salt Lake City 10, Utah. Of course, no one condones N. 1., .'4';,..10'-- , ,.,- .- ,. tork, ,,,.- ô II) l'''''t FROM a, "liquor guzzling - police- , ..-- -, , it - ' 4tis.:4'1 - - -,-:, - - - ,...,....k,,,--1 1 , ,- te ,i 7, icy te-,- - 4-10- ' . e.,, " Policemen Entitled To Their Legal Rights . ;A , - , - , - ,t - - - i .er -- . 011'''' -- , v.,t . ,..,,,v.,..-,,,,- . .: '1, ' ' '"k ' ' .0a. . '' fc-- - if e , :( , - - .11- ,, , . , 4, , 't:1141 ,,,..,, -- 4,EDS' ,i --.,- ,,- - al -- .- .o"111P..., itla iiit ':-- ,,- 1 ,1 a.;.-- f, ir). rkt ,, - --.... TEE DAILY GABFEST of the Grabeteria Gang developed into a discussion,of the public defense. An apprelenisive pessimist rgued on one side of the table and a cheer-th- e other. Of ful optimist on course nothing was decided since it is one of the rules of - the group that nothing la ever I '. '' ,-- ''',7 vI' - 7,e tik, i AO n.".4-- . 'c - ,, ..... , ,4, J.,,te . 'ckfno '44 .. -i i.,11--,,fl- f . ''., , It' 1,1:: t.,.. .answe se - t.'" P ' .8-- r .,. ,t,; - 4:, ..'''z' ' 1 ,1(,.;.....,r - - . t',;.;-:-- Bombs Buckets'Aid - - '' ' - - - . . ' ',,,,,- - . -' a- '' 4 ..f'- A ,;e7:z : , - ' : 'atp.,,, '40 i . ' 4: d -- :e'?-- - , - . f - , ' , 1950 9- - --- : , ty''' ir , , ,tr I --- - ...... n- ----- This - . , - . . ,' t''' ' .peen ' 2 - ,; . t AO 490, ","' , , - - ,--- - , , - ,- ''e'-'-.'- -'-' jai mostly-pee-C- No le. t . 4.74 1 en ;-- - o ...x,,. sti ,. . - N:I ,. '' A ' 04 1 1. ,?-, 1r Ili I g, - - t . ' . 1-- , li i! ,,,,i: - ; I '?itr I $ '' i-- , ' no , . . - 7 ,I , - ,r1-- 4- . Olt P 1,4,, ; i ,,,14),,--. .3 ' '' - ..t,,,,,s 1.;- .1',,,,- - - '- ; 1. . s' i, .,,f 4: ' , ti S A 3 ,.i. -- : , 11 4 . .1C ,a, 41101--t- 4elifrr I ,. t4 ,,,,, - ' I . In- , - il -- " ..,1F.; :, ..,,;:.-- , , - A . A- , q 1,.. -- 4,,.-..' ,-- 41'1- ' : , s: ,f.s. - .0,00,,, .itt,14 li..'il 1! , A -- - -- - zi.P.-7 i iV, ' ' e ' . ise gt OV 61c, ip , qt...,,,,,t . ,- i 4, -- ' -- Ilth'Ill. ' y t, - , - .N.,rAi. rst ,N '1,- ,, - . th.- f je raft!" ' k4,--'s!- 1,,. ...'...... . ". ' - 414'' ! ,, -. .I 1, . - i ,,,:.,. ;:: ;.,., :,i : , a, (Zit I " 1 1 C tk 4"4 - -- . ,. ' , t ' 1 -- ' .7' .11';) , , OCTOBER - ,-- ' , "A,. .4,,; ifv-- , 1 --- i 1 - tt's't , ' - ....V.,,4 ',Nt , 4kkl. ' !R ..--- 4NC4''''''''Ai -- - - . ,!,-- '',"' , u , - -- Li' 4.'1') just-name- - ! I t,, - 1 ' - kals,--eier'?".-- : '---------;- -- , , - v- ,- - -, , t I f - T" ...T - t'" . - f -,'I-s.- )--N,, ' '''";:t' i ?.--- , : ,..: -- -.:- .jj:"C" : 4.'''''- tNi. -- -- J. 40 .'"- military under civilian control ': The. pOlicy, has been breached (we are ioid, and we hope, for this one time only) by a - special Act of Congress which prmits pen- eral Marshall now to bead the Defense De. ' partment; and a frequent 'criticism of Mr; rmson's laudable energy - on patriotism's will come out of civilian goods. -- .,..2:Metal! is that it sometimes tends to make him cial,Noel Yield more military than the military men them- - The country will tighten its belt to fit to disappear. He faded from ' ' sight behind the Iron curtain z. that one if it is really necessary. Copper, ,selvas . In May,- 1949; checking Metals. But are aluminum brass, strategic Whatever the reason, the men out of a hotel in Prague preask-- in some observers other ,,,,,.. who last. ,sveetlippeared top military join likeito sumably en route to Budapest. i Depart. ing just- one question: , ment spokesmen before the Vinson REQUESTS IGNORED group not Has any defense order been turned down only were uncommonly frank about the mili- ...Repeated requests were because these, materials are lacking? - tary's plan to "build strong armed forces and made by the U. S. State De. Ienot what excuse can, there be for wrap- - partment to the governments for many years to come -- - . maintain them nIS in- i partly-wa- r of Poland. Czechoslovakia and a still ping , .. .. maybe a generation. They seemed to dem.. ' Hungary for information conbureaucratic red machine dustrial in' tape onstrate a if tendency, quite unleashed, to go - - the whereabouts of ' before there is demonstrated need? Or has cerning iField and other missing membetwia Mr . Harrison, though ilimcelf a civilian and bers of his family. country needs strong military forces. , an industrialist, been Those Soviet satellite gov- caught by military There is no doubt of it- If anyone had doubted ernments either replied that fever? it, Korea has made the point clear. Similarly nothing about the This is n9 criticism' of the military high they knew or just ignored the re. Commartist 'action and threat and general Fields, brass j.eself. Any professional military, man for information. : pressure seem to indicate plainly enough that worth his salt is a perfectionist He wants quests , This correspondent heard the a need. take MI it generation-tmay span ,, , everything he thinks that circumstances may Noel But there is a 'decency of reasonable re: need; he wants not only full .. prominently during the Budaequipment but- pest - which -- the trial last October of for--- -hingli-bermd etrele- t- 11 he wants manpower enough to cope mer " Hungarian Communist 4 threshold set up by the law of diminishing with any eventuality: If the eventuality be Interior and Foreign Minister na;.the business of Laszlo Rajk and several other t,,:- returns is reached, and war, be wants the warts be won- fast and with . -N- OT to try to hold ' who were contonal cost of blood. a mini-Mu- Hungarians for allegedly to demned of While debt the national ti deitath expansion is un.. But he is rarely an economist' Yugoslavian plotting defense needs are met, Which would be wise; common if a general or an admiral has as Marshal Tito to 'overthrow the but rather to forestall every military appre- . much as half an eye for the national economy Communist Hungarian 'Itension.T'HAT can go too far. regime. as a whole. Field was described by the Our national defense needs a sound and goParticulatly it goes too far if uncriticized ' accused and witnesses at this :demands of the military tend to panic other,' ing economy quite as much as it neecilsound trial as one of the leaders of excess. We are beginning, we force. , an American espionage unit agencies,into military ' - , ,,i,-4 . ' ' ' , . i . - MONDAY I s . - - ,I - -- o , ' ', ''''' iltT.-..----..- ders ---Rea- ' . a' P ' k -- - --- 1 fear, to, 'see evidences of just - that. For ex- - ery of thedisappearance hi'ample: of the Noel Field Europe noticed totisiness one news have of ' family. another after - manufacturing company Four members of this fain-- orders: tng that it is prepared 'Just give us the contracts," they say, "and the end of the war. The lam- ily's central figure. Noel Field, We'll fill them.' .4 ..,,,--has been accused of being a d HarriSon, Now William Henry II double agent, working for , National Production Authority chief, is Soviet RUISta as well as being-a- n intelligence age,nt.for the promising mandatory allocation of copper, States. biass, and aluminum within three or four United An American citizen and Rationed manufacturing - supplies months. former State Departmentoffi- - demon- - strated by last week's hearing held by Rep- resentative rmion's (House) Armed Services Committee is how Important it,,is that .this - ,,, . - z One ' - . , , fi .: 7,7--- ' ...,... ., - Western intelligence reports analyzed by Kingsbury Smith, International News Service ' a European general Manager. Indicate that some light may soon be thrown on the mys-t- - , . - , , - , ' : K.E.:Ci.T.Y1HLUTAW-::- 7, ' fr Disappears - . . Family ' Economic Needs,- Not War Hysteria, Guide Military Procurement. ,,, .,. - '4-- - - ' t Au -,.. .., , . - N 0 e I ' ,.., riel 7- otia-full- --..- SALT 74 - . , ' : GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY - we stand for the Constitutioa of the United Statei with its three departments of Independent Inits own- teltt---;--u therein aetforthreach , . j--' - ... M.imMcnit, 'WNW. - .. 4",. - - - -- - ---- - 0 .:- , |