Show s zxhm OGDEN UTAH WEDNESDAY EVENING GA I i fev 7rTrTv JULY 24 1963 HENRY J T EDITORIALS White House Advisers Deep In British Doghouse Door Tribute to Utah's Proud Heritage But even then the armed forces' floats and other parade units emphasized the with the story Pioneer Days traditions of the Mdrmon'pioneers making their heroic march across the plains to j" their new Zion In 1913 the parade was praised— then as now — as the "greatest in history" The parade 50 years ago was over a mile long and included many of the old wagons that actually had been 1 used for the 1847 trek In that 1913 parade were eight prairie schooners that The Standard-Examine- r files note as showing "marks of rough roads and much traveling" The horses and oxen that drew the schooners along the parade route to old Glenwood Park were not the unusual sight in downtown Ogden that they are today It is interesting to note that one of the floats 50 years ago had among its riders two "prominent Scotch citizens" of Ogden One of them was David 0 McKay now the president of the Church of Jesus ChrisVof Latter-daSaints Celebration of Pioneers Days is the most deeply entrenched tradition in Utah as it well should be Utah completes its observance of Pioneer Days tonight with final perform- ances in the Ogden Rodeo and everyone should agree that the 1963 celebration was one of the best yet The parade today was a thrill to watch The three presentations of "All d Faces West" drew applause The rodeo drew capacity crowds just about every night and performers complimented those who arranged the western show The art exhibits at Municipal Park were well worth viewing All in all Pioneer Days in Ogden area had a satisfactory air — a fitting tribute LONDON — White House ad- - sinister forces at work with the Visers Theodore Sorensen Mc- - deliberate aim of undermining George Bundy Arthur Schlesin-- United States confidence in Eng- ger Jr et al have pried open land" This possibility is receiv- - r' attention here he British doghouse door and ing high-levThat I can assure you And it are in it right up to their " J should j The most charitable thing that Not liking Prime ' Minister Macmillan and his Conservative can be said of the New Fron- party they've poked their arro-- tiersmen is that they simply do trance and innuendo smack into not understand Europe First London's highest political t cir- they apply a mistaken air of incles and are accused by many tellectual superiority to "the statesmen over here that goes here of outright sabotage like a lead balloon over First Labor party leader Har old Wilson's invitation to visit KNOWS FIRST HAND the White House inner circle adviser Presidential not with that group joriginated Bundy is perfectly cap-with Wilson himself The obvi- bus relish with which the White able f telling French Foreign House: received Macmillan's op- - Minister Couve de MurviUe that ponent— very touchy business in he regards President De Gaulle idiplomacy with a friendly pow- - as stupid and reportedly did so er— further strained our rela- - Yet able M de Murville has 4iV 'tionsl with Great Britain mnrp about Eurone But President Kennedy is fnrtpn frcthnnrt thpn Rimdav will ever faced here by the accusation of ave time to learn d rabbit punch— the Moreover if Bundy were Sol- ja subsequent sabotage of Macmil- - omon wnich he is not his tum-- S then-Bisho- p lan by New Frontiersmen in the escent and snap-sna- p directives nunc muusici a jtiuiuiuu-xvcci- to nis foreign peers wno are not er crisis This in part accounts the white House chain of y for Mr Kennedy's return from command at all make it evident England— frostbitten — one day here that Bundy should stay at home early 'WELL — HELLO' DEEP CONCERN Sorensen's Bonn and Rome in- High British government of fi- - vasion accompanying Mr Ken-ciaDillon and ot her financial ad express deep concern re- - nedy yielded similar dismay 1 visers in the Administration garding rumors traced directly This is inevitable as was the g to the White House cabal Not- - lush expedition to India by The Treasury however did where post-Prumo talk that the thur Schlesinger Jr nothing - It claimed the tax of new breachBritish biotics and tetanus toxo d to reduce security Schlesinger arrived on our taxmarwould upset the investment false— some es— $6me true orig- payers' payroll with all the ket chances of infection Undersecretary of the in Washington they state plop of Mme Divina Zacchini Treasury Robert V Roosa did theses beganin an is hook a fish But the human bulletress emerging fun Fishing talk to key members of the 27—two from her circus cannon on June tematized way Ways and Means Committee through the hand can spoil any holiday vis- European statesmen know which writes the taxes and later daysi before Mr Kennedy'sBirch With care such injuries can be avoided at Macmillan with it this is the WTiite House that reported that the committee was Grove night shift that cooks up the aliunenthusiastic out For example the Associated bis that the day shift tosses CONTINUED DRAINS Prpss hpra was DromDtlv told to our friends abroad Seasoned WASHINGTON — There ws Patman the Texarkana Tex Meanwhile the drain on the bv such a source "If anyone European statesmen are ap-who heads the House dollar continued met the eye behiftd Democrat Chrysler sent were interested in emoarrassing paiiea Dy men- wmstuiis Who ever has been hoi ding the title more than i" ana JFK's sudden recommendation among Ito corn- - London and Washington they free confidence t0 $10Q mmion France smacking of ourrencyjmm of the "world's meanest thi ef ' can move of a US tax on the foreign tee and is a nettler for small f g ana s tho --r Uh9 crew-cutlmage-maianbetcould hardly have chosen a a talk with rstocK union neea tne 01a iirm business floated bond issues and stock VPfl" During Jin vorw "Hh to elders ie over to make room for a new champion this country In taking the step Just now tne more White rAa t he ran counter to his own secre- warned of the disastrous eiiect nnH hnM rffifnr Tanart j from Ogden Wnnsp advisprs who stav home j the if Federal on the of economy the rkiuolnnmonf Douglas treasury Bank $21700000! rials suggest "there may be a the better The new "meanest" titleholder is the tary F Dillon Who once was head of Rpuorvp rnitspH intprpst rates in of Japan! $208001 stinker who stole the crutches and leg one of the biggest Wall Street order to check the gold outflow qqq City 0£ Milan $9700000 Blaine Jack-ma-n investment firms which floats ins eaa raiman urgea a lax uu government bf Norway $12 brace owned by duu uuiiu million Da Nippon Printing coin ipreign moc foreign securities There was no fight Co $5 mil ion Nippon Tele over the tax Secretary Dillon on American direct investments graph and "Telephone j$20 milBlaine had polio a while back though a Republican is a loyal by US business firms m lion: Austrian Investment Fi he's and of the Kennedy team! eign countries perseverance courage Through 50 YEARS AGO nance Co $5 million 20 YEARS AGO Kennedy asked Patman to learned to walk again Part of the time Nevertheless the tax on foreign! There were various lother is was proposed four mon hs! write him a letter on the subject sues Greatest parade in Ogden's WTall Brig Gen Ralph Talbot Jr other handled he needs crutches and thejleg brace but issuesand by the with so was and impressed ago nothing happened rangin from commanding officer of Utah history was stagea lor noneei to! letter that he had it mimeo- - Street houses occasionally — for a period of a few for $300 Army Service Forces Depot led Day celebration which ended ai ua k nfln" wrikt1 rranVpH anH cont -it tn Spprptrv Quebec Hyao-klectn- c muiion to the Republic of days — he can get along jwithout them itOTMrade alone crowded Glenwood Park with pioneen When he got a call 'asking him to mc Washington Boulevard 'More the center of attraction at Chauulim RALPH DE TOLEDANO milUon to the City of Montreal than 30000 Pioneer Days fans tauqua exercises The parade bring the brace and crutches to the Eighj for $25 million were on hand to witness the was over a mile long and in- teenth Ward so they could! be used briefThe great! majority of these procession A second section of eluded not only pioneers but alsc ly in a play Blaine responded — alissues were to Canadian Mex- 4 parade was led by George many old wagons that crossed though the caller never identified himican or othe friendly allies and s Eccles associate adminis- - the plains in the early days j self trator in war savings staff It Thousands witnessede parade When the church front door was the money market morfe featured a colorful vriet of When I was new to the writ ther Jack have asked Congress making cuff rodeo- - performers tion and beehive and state flow- icult for jthem horsemen locked the left the walking aids on the ing business I had an editor to increase the White House heli- On July Ip however with thp covered All parts of Weber Counts who said: "Put it in terms! of copter fleet (all wag0ns nurses' aide er steps and went to a rear! door Returnon me 10 doiiar two to drain The from the were conunuing f1naf Abe it nffiais eight money and people will get jobs) represented and veteran ing to the front he found the leg brace nmnti wpii win fw? finW npw whirlv hirds will cost the the! joint economic was master of cere- - firemen were out in force and crutches gone over the great mass of mater Treasury $12 million each The tee under the chairmanship of Lefton monies Henry Reuss that passes over this dtjskj President's request went by al- - Rep If the theft was simply a prank its ial Dillon called Rebitter I keep running into interesting most unnoticed though Secretary Leaders of the Pioneer Da) mistakeTreal the of Pioneer in the "The palittle committee was how on Sections statistics at the watching humor past Days publicans completely attempt were T E offs and landings on the White has recommended that we make rade were devoted to Bushnell procession its money Tn sury spends Z were crutches and brace If the placed VL i auumat ha$ House lawn compiam mac toreign access to ouri 'new lS- Rep Earl Wilson Hill Field the lliaioliai Hnffli stolen by some one in need the thief spent occaJohn Hotchins Hyrum Goodale suesmarke m Wall Street more years digging up hanky- - President Eisenhower's should get in touch with jsgt Tim Dyer panky in federal military pror sional jaunts to Burning Tree difficult and more expensive aid Eight band representing the Veteran Firenews taxfront bileither once made how shown page by screening j orby bJ men and John V Nelson repre&ye£ at the Ogden Police Department youth curementnd senting the UAR Ail wen bureau so Blaine Jackman can get his affecting the efficiency of the '' istration has rejected this rec- mounted Behind them came the jf( 0- - ommenoation wnat are tne — w6 to tew services means found very attention back pay supand of the buses" appliances "The singing Ogden A F and M band Ther Ad-- that most of the money is spent reasons?" Area The rnwbovs Tndians and Redevelopment — — — xc- ply help to the needy person ministration was given a fourr in the United States so it isn't with hritlina hparric i think I exnrpsspd the ran flrniv oerviuer ZuT But if they were take as loot a prison year appropriation but after really hurting But the Citizens reasons rather ful W reeardirig less than two years the difficulties of exchange co Was 6r sentence would be too good for the thief mmioa n Fiht nrairie schooners wer sun in tne Kiuyp--Wf it out that mighty littie 01 our ior-- trols" replied Dillon dori't mated "I ot retersen by Liia featured in Pioneer Day parade luiiiiun muic any ugu am cApciiuituica wuuiv- - uaon uimK i can add mucn to tnat Logan who was awarded a cer- They showed marks of rougt Petersen roads and much traveling In and other them were woman i i ert —Lf 1 prepares from and children looking T' nistruction 1962 10 per cent: and in iyo mnn and Rpn pai rincriQC n one hind torn and ragged covers Since then the conference has and equipment" No equipment an estimated the program and goes cent When Vi T7 7nt ihl 177 per been a garrison post from which was available for recourse But a Dult0 anoiner 8ung sessions The schooners were drawn by foreign aid appropriation or subcommittees the tab noted $38682 for the non- W3y horses and oxen On one of the reaches the Hill Sale twftax have made daring raids on a existent equipment floats were two prominent Pt however the figure most often 1?? i®nl number of rather complacent Wil- - Scotch citizens 90 son of is Mrs William Beltz aJi Brock of the to Bishop David lull used Repl legislators Larry (R) Democratic positions Tennessee informs his const!- - per cent ma Betz 364 W- - 17th' was saved McKay and William Moyes' The tuents that though their indivi- - n Ward had a long Viking nincr tn mt hil- ic TELLING BLOWS dual float of A Glenn share and the Harris J fedeVal Everett national debt bearing Norwegian ship ThP HnSmPr rcalifj subcom- p budget women men and rrent Hammerbudget (to of this date) administrathe sums BoaTd nit Because magnitude mittee — has " Reserve — —— T3al1 u $6933 ut fpdpral annom - the rpunt r mean UUie uic iuui lion some- leUK- uiowa uu ThrPP davs had Martin ivep hpfnrp -— — ment is stendinff $17 5AA nn ctu i ii oi ueLecLmu orrereaj some swusuw hp r: — i i tt i — i r t? om i rvi i TTiaiEer t:: ° re-tol- d Og-den- 's well-earne- to Utah's proud pioneer heritage el " s a5l and 1913 Twenty years ago the United States was in the middle of World War II so the observance had predominantly military I 1 j v overtones The 1943 parade had sections from Bushnell General Hospital Hill Field he Utah Army Service Forces Depot Clearfield Naval Supply Depot and Ogden Arsenal 1 i mm L i k Mc-Geor- ge ill V: Fishing Safety Tips I i j ls I V DREW I PEA j So many Utahns enjoy fishing on sum- ftS two-fiste- Ar-in- ! i of RSON ted - mer days like thesej that a collection of health and safety tips for fishermen from the American Medical Association is most timely The AMA agrees that fishing is one of the best forms of therapy available to get out in the fresh air and sunshine clear the cobwebs from the mind and recoup ifrom a hard veek on the job But on the accident side there are dangers that can be avoided with a little attention to safety The most common fishing mishap is a barbed hook caught in a finger hand or leg when the hook is left unprotected on a dock or in the bottom of a boat or while it is being baited The AMA says) the wise fisherman guards against hook accidents by shielding the hook with a small cork stuck over the barb Lures should be left in the tackle box until needed carried carefully in the band of a hat and then returned to the box when through for the day Fly or bait casters are responsible for many hook accidents to fellow fishermen ' More Than Meets the Eye To JFK Foreign Stock Tax Meanest Thief : all-but-sy- s- j : -- - —- -ii 1 zr 1 j r- 1 - if j ' 11-year-o- ld cat-and-d- og for-memb- er j — ojil t ttii Mrirs tr ! Serendipity Inc Has t Contract Need Funnyman dSSnW I - Particularly dangerous are the "sidewinders' who cast with a side arm motion rather than overhead Train yourself to look before each cast to make sure no one is in the way In removing a hook from a fish hold the catch firmly under the gills so its head can't flop or wiggle Get a firm grip before dislodging the hook so you won't be caught along with the trout If a hook does snag you do NOT try to pull it out if it! is imbedded deeply Your physician will snip off the shank and push it through thus causing less further damage to torn flesh A doctor also will if necessary administer anti- - SSdtJ j !10-passen- sub-com- D-Wi- j sf ! j J j jK' mm' L A bi-oc- als j And that's the way it's been for years For proof read on this page— under the "Yesterday" heading — how Pioneer Days went 20 and 50 years ago in 1943 B AY L OR (R-In- d) oZot fSfi Offden-Arsena- - :Ir 1 F°& ' HOLM ES ALEXANDER rfi:Tr ":rVurvr: 'JSSJS sun-bonnet- — — be-fro- m S i Ford-appoint- £ ld i-- a- ed — iSiS n: jf - nucicai isj? VYUllll -I- ! tnf ' - ' pS!iS DiiSS5"pn?miPSr :n: : Ford of Michigan Would Be Credit to GOP Ticket un il tt -- t u:Cuj otot-icrir- --i MS?: ?LltJT 31tSa 1" &re b"K!J!a ¥SMfm4n ft" i —- °i65 2m mSnbSp man flprnld Fnrd nf Mirhiffan on— 11 U O AC m A tft ' i n J rinfrsHa i 3uuiiUiiumbbUb tuLiiuiiic — m geograpny ana anu gaming wue tne land "Behavior aetermmmg Christ's birth he ?A""ACU V and attention at slumbering J?5 HJS ofabout in politics gets ing governorships senators and a0w£e of the Wandering' Al- P?4 a brake P Ecology monf ' on IJesident since the frequent mention for tne Ureai uepreifiU"of A buiion dollars would buy behavior Pocial under Gubsr of California is ton 1 — mid-contine- nt mid-conservati- ve SSrS thep iSruS? tial liVplihnnd " n abryould Goldwater for Barry ne ronrpiv- - Nelson Gen or H?would do credit Luciul I Clay to any ticket Just turned 50 a balding one- time blond football star and boxing coach Gerry Ford in the role of a national candidate would represent a trend that beganinl960 Three years ago both parties lett tne Old presidential suppiy sources which for years had been the governorships and mili- tary shrines and reached intothe Senate Kennedy was pref erred to Stevenson Nixon to Rockefeller' The Democrats did by fielding two the incredible senators Kennedy and Johnson desoite the fracture of prece- dent Today' with the Senate gone heavily liberal most of the close party battles are fought in ry w 1 Sri W oaoioc rora came iu iiaiuii6tuii from Grand Rapids in 1948 when Harry Truman was scut- tling Republican majorities m both chambers and in the Gal- lup poUs A Yale Law School graduate and a Navy veteran Ford took th slow way upward by inconspicuous work on the appropriations subcommittee for defense spending the oppo-site number of Democrat George Mahon whom he greatly ad- j Ford was nearly alwavs with the GOP leadership in votes but not entirely in lock step witn tne plodding of the Old Guardsmen He was part of the youth movement in 1959 which overthrew Joe Martin and in- stalled Charlie Halleck as the Republican leader Then this year Ford himself rode the surge for a New Breed of party leadership He unhorsed the el- derly Hoeven of Iowa a Halleck r imuuii DuuruuuwLc Anad hoc sicommittee headed The RepubUcan Congressional by Poff of Virginia is reporting Committee notes that disafma- on ways to improve the work of ment Is becoming a big busi- the conference itself neSs The Institute of Defense By marshalling these and Analysis a Pentagon "boondog- other youngish House members gle" happily pays its president Ford has become something twice what a congressman very admired on both sides and makes It receives $8 million m both parties of Capitol Hill from your uncle and mine and a politician's politician His" has 234 employes A gaggle of rise is not dissimilar to the as-- companies have contracts which cendency a f ew years ago of cost the taxpayer anywhere oen iynuon jonnson aiuiuugu uum iuuuu 19 uuuuu eacn In Los Angeles Serendipity without LBi's flamboyant and Inc publicity-corisciohas been awarded a $23- style 326 contract to find put if each Ford's economic conservatism would Daiance a nocKeieiier unit in tne armed lorces should ticket and bolster a Goldwater have a "wit'? or funnyman j If the report fromj Serendipi- ticket but A ty Inc is positive each unit will of the war "House post product beginto clamor for its own com- Ford is on4 bf many Republi- - ic Can you imagine! what put- cans who are willing to march ting Shelley Berman! and Jona- but not to stampede toward the than Winters on tho Pentagon betterment of his country and payroll will cost? The Kennedys through Bro- party en 1 7 us j go-slo- go-forwa- rd : p° - iu uumpci uum to Ogden Utah But if money speaks it must have laryngitis these days Ev- economy The ad- erybody ministration complains that it has cut the budget to' the bone and is holding down on new ex- penditures Commerce Secretary Luther Hodges tells Congress that his department could be cut down 25 per cent then adds 10 per cent to the payroll Loes anyDOdy care: ur aic those who clamor for fiscal san-ity and a dollar's worth of fed eral activity for a dollar of tax money simply out ot step wnnthe times Obviously the administration believes that the public doesn't really mind—just so long as there is enough serendipity to go around Rememberserendipity? It means (according to Webster) an aptitude for having nice things happen to c 1 w "ua-wuui- - you gglJ JJg® gthe gto gr Hell "? latter f i oSin tostoo theforp? or a forejn T tnn argued in favor Tof secretarv Dillon at 'agreed I Note--Secr- e- nion 6a man nfhiph y " m£" yt IJtin pnnflirt of in g mS ll0"-1"- e In- - &- - U"L fnS he entered public service in 1953 mt 1 NOW YOU KNOW! United Press International 1962 Americans wrote 15 billion checks according to jthe American Forest Products Industries Pulpwood required to pro duce the paper necessary to write the checks would make a stack four feet wide eight feet long and 25 miles high i In ft v n I $ -j r k 3 Z el '-'- I |