Show 1101 - 1 -- - ' I ' A glit)Dalt faktigtibunt Common Causes ' 4- October 17 1952 Friday Morning - r - DAID it LAWRENCE e Out on Tour Leaving Work in Capital Truranan-Go- fitwithin — 2stab1Inbal April irti-- bawd wary Inaralag by The Salt Lake Tribune Publlahing Is- - Salt Lata City INA Co " 4 'Mr Republican' Attacks Democrat Record - - "Mr Republican" came to Utah Wednesday and unloosed a Series of stinging blows to answer the man who can best be described as Mr Democrat" and who preceded him in campaigning througl Utah by about a week President Truman as "Mr Democrat" has taken upon himself the burden of defending the record of the Democratic administrations of the past 20 years and persuading people ' i1 t -- I 4 i i ! - ' 76i Y ' tion mistakes and bad judgment the Com-munists today control all of China and we are fighting a costly and seemingly never-endin- g war in Korea Senator Taft linked this 'Asiatic failure to Alger Hiss and the Communists and fellow travelers who infiltrated our State Department and other branches of the government - r y " :: 47 4(k V'e' 1' 4 and requires what-have-y- that the ' ' - ' ' Senator Taft has assumed the principal role as "Mr Republican" of attacking the Roosevelt-TrumaDemocratic record tzt :ale: t(fective fashion In of The effectiveness Utah Wednesday course depends upon the individual's political point of view But just as Mr Truman hit some of the Republican weak points Ix) did Mr Tafthit the Democratic weak points Particularly telling was his criticism of the Democratic administrations for falling into the Communist trap in Asia Democrats may try to explain away the utter failure of the Roosevelt4ruman-Achesoforeign policy relativs to China and Korea they may say that hindsight being better than foresight It is easy now to see past mistakes But the fact remains thatpartly as a result of administra- n :Jitdic:sn :: : : ' ! i ' ' ' ' '2 ' o - i A Diabolical Drama ' ' - ' n " - --- 1- vulnerable crack in the Democratic armor Taft made a telling point also in attacking corruption in government when he accused the Democrats of seeming "to shrug it off as of iittle consequence!: Thstle said is ilrmittgthiñg ibiSur thOs graft: bribery and' favoritism which has At various points in at Logan and Ogden as City—the man who came ing this year'S Republican presidential nominee assailed Democratic spending and resultant inflation the effort to establish unlimited power for the chief executive and the Democratic philosophy of big government which threatens liberties and leads toward socialism -- -- - — or communism- -- -no is 'better one qualified to atCertainly tack the Democratic record of the past 20 years than the man who as a United States senator and three-tim- e aspirant for the Itepublican presidential nomination has firmly established' his position as Republican congressional leader His attackgof eoursds will not convince any' Democratic stalwarts—any more than Mr Truman's speeches persuaded any Republican stalwarts But the appearances of both "Mr Democrat" andi"Mr Republican" may help many independents make up their minds— and as Al Smith used to say to look at the record the 'record Of the Democratic adFor it ministrations of the past 20 years which is the real issue of this campaign—a record both good and bads and a record both good and bad which the party in power and its nominee ' must stand on And as the Democrats praise and claim re:sponsibilityfor the good in that record they must expect the opposition Id attack and to pin on them responsibility for the bad ' - LIVE:0 4 1 ‘:! II CI -- - - T - revolutionaries Iollowczarist ' I : ent S t- r - ‘ " - 9-i- - "'— ' 4 - I d't -e tr- t - Ifit N k 4‘-4- 1i 1 v- ' 4 - Callst Live to him--Jo- After a guy gits tt be a sergeant all be wants is that th' war should go AU a urge has t' do any- will is t' kid along th' second looeys an' then tell th' corporal t' take a detail an' do th' work rh' thing that's vk ong with OP war t'day is there's too damned many corporals!" Who's 4oring Whom? id dinner parties it's my chore To sit beside some awfurbore current politics and Billings sh Columaing A question often asked me by students of 'journalism is °How do you get to be a colum-1 nist?" t- we e a s y enough to be a colum- - - 1 ' j 1t ' nisi The hard '''''i ! ‘" part is getting 44 paid for it If t : 4 you just Want to write a eolr limn as an no let for golf ox A x pression a it ' Ham Park you have to do is get a lot of ideas and write them up Banish all thought of remuneration prom your mind and the ideas will flow freely Think of money and they stop natmusresaYor itth'se ttheew eoefonoomy or something A ---1111- ' lesaYietn' Another strange thing is that Inall of the ideas you 2EL are too orginal and can't be used So to play ute you roust tints the habit of only taming ideas that are not con' t troversial Or you can quote-wha- - else itia ts saysAike example a monologue I overheard in a beer joint: "So I sex him say who do 11011115 $11 fret Yil big burn! I les ittke often tfieni tvici— stripes on yet arm an I'll bust ya one! Effen there's anything I hate it's a corporal Ita take a good tuck private an' let him rise an' th' first git th' he's a bloody-thing ya Tow if ya ain't care- corporal ' ful he's a second looey—or a dictator Hist'ry proves it NaMussolini an' Hitler poleoli win all corporals Any guy that gits to be a corporal has it in acid-tongue- d i 1 i' "1" partner -- - not -- i ' a Notes en the Department Crhfl Sometimes they do to you on the radio is p caution Tuesday :night Gov Adlai Stevenson finished his speech litre right on the dot and the applause had lordly started when the station switched from the tabernacle to the studio for the next program—an oil company's Then came the an- nouncer's voice: "It's time to :!ltsop that ?J!Ioill'1 Mcihsignor Patrick Maguire once said that when you- can tell the age of a horse by the length' of its tall youtan judge the goodness of a man by the s length of hia prayers - Women I'm told have gone in for bowling I knew a girl once who wai a champion bowler hut she had a stratfge phobia:She'd faint at the sight of a broom statisticians world asas crowded -- 4k :Neli: '4' A ) eA At "-- st 4 r' t'llt e'i 1r J end-to-en- d double-an- d-triple Navigating a simple that - 'leafs's-11- - ' e Republican to the traffic lights saving a few seconds and courting death —and for what? Autumn is the best time we havein the city The air seems cleaner and sharperv--- like a fresh bite into a good firm apple The girls are certainly prettier in their new fall clothes' with their stockings back on and the slipshod sum-ne- e frocks tucked away again - r California-typ- zoos seem to provide the one exception They are more crowded than usual not so much with kids as with adults The grownups spend an awful lot of time in front of the slothful lions the sedate tie phants the ruminative ante lopes --There are no) vehicles to speak of inside the zoos— ho stink of gas fumes no ca cophony of :gawking horns no I taxi bumber-to-bump- jams And in zoos people regain some vestige of politeness out of defirrence to the animals Some Tension Eases I conclude that the snap pursed lips and the frowning brows and the fierce concentration on bustle eomes from nye crowding more than intern& tional tension or the raucous nerve-edgin- g clamor of an election year Some of the ten lion seems to ease a little on ' the week ends with a portion -- - - of Folk avin But whatever the cause of the irritation I hope the world thinks twice before it pro gresses to the present congest tion of the Island of Manhat tan: The prospect of one big at 42nd or rf inugnhdt at 57th is too a ifreits—fli-deniiiiii 4 far Thi side- - talent for broken-fiel- d walking that' ought to earn any New Yorker a job with a professional football team But :walking is simpler than riding tabs in midtown Manhattan In a taxi today you simply cannot get there from here no matter where ' there or here is Resembles Fire Sale Everywhere I go 'seems to resemble a fire sale People rush and push and' scuttle and scurry They jam the last saa- sage into the elevators They throng4 the lobbies They surge - holiday warm-u- p parties have already begun N Smiling Men I But have ridden and walked several hundred blocks since the first of October looking for a smiling man a happy woman Haven't seen any so walk around the rush 'hours calls for - in the moth belle The excite ment of the series is over The new shows are opening and the -- It could be my imagination: or maybe an encroaching ill temper but it seems to me the city has been swelling at its seams in a more marked manner every day for the last four years There are more cars on' the crowded streets more buses trailing like elephants more people parkin g and snore pressing crowds every-wher- e repeal of the lien law let us hope that 100 per cent of the people will vote for repeal If we must have a lien we should have one similar to California's This law provides that iged people can have property with an assessed valuation up to $3000 Property with this valuation would sell for $9000 or $10000 If we have to have higher taxes to give the old folk a pension let's do itIpaid taxes for 80 years and Would be veryr" glad to have my taxes raised to pay pensions for the old folks If lien repeal would cost $4 or $3 million dollars that is a very small amount' Nobody would miss it Uncle Sam pays halt The old folk would-have that much more to spend and the help to businessmen would more than offset the higher taxes ' I it again by fire or flood or famine All they need to make the old globe sorry It went and done it wrong is to keep that- population ex- - Uncle Sam Payalialf Editor Tribunly(4The sales Now ' er 4 - ' to theeontrary lay we are to vote on - completely-Satleted'I'aft--- New York b t4 It will not tiv:''il Mr Ruark be necessary to punish a sinful world by regardless of folk) what some Forum writers may ' 11'12' :111:11111t a tell us we will see the entire Jcx was voledi into law by the people ofUtah to give the Old Instead It 'semi tab my lot To sit beside a poor crack-po- t Whose politics are hot like mine! —Rosa Lee Lloyd a disgrace someone brilliant - te rate just ?" hope so any- how for that is the year the - And almost curl my spine would bk once Means ment They know the salary of their position before they accept it or campaign for 'it:- - If they cannot resist the tempts-Whos- e tion to live above their mewls they should be accorded the same treatment given to the common people Hugh 7 O'Neil Ogden Utah ebews of enter-benefi- i views ilowd gr panditig until it hits the present peak we enjoy 0 in this peighbors Isn't it about time we apmetropolis "of ease grace and plied the same standards to our - cultUre 4 representatives in the govern Swelling at Seams Are idterspersed 'kith what be -- L IMY YORK—I ant feeling pretty chipper today because it looks like a solid cinch that I'll be dead in 0 I 315 years their government salaries One wonder( if Henry Adams was correct in writing in 1879 that is the govern"democracy ment of the people by the peo- pie for the benefit of Senators" We have many millionaires in the U S Senate and also in most every city of any size in the nation Those common peopie in the cities who endeavor to supplement their earnings by unlawful or unethical means so they can vie with the mil-i- n lionaire in standard of living are soon imprisoned or at least shunned by their better-clas- s a dictator AIL - Future Looks Just Horrible apeciar fund :to supplement ' - ill '' causing as much criticism as the fact that he leaves the national capital at a time when there are important things happening in the world The United Nations Assembly is meetVig in New York and there are heartbreaking developments in the fighting in Korea Mr Truman is the cornmander-in-chief of our armed services and is supposedly re- Ow safety and sporNible-f- or well being of the boys who have been drafted into the military service Maybe if he can't save their lives he can at least go to New York and do something it the' assemblY mekting te per-suede the other member countries of the United Nations they ought to bear a rightful share of the manpower burden in -- Korea riled to Help Him Out The Republicans are of course glad to have Mr Treman out campaigning They appreciate the points he is makwhich now ing in his speeches -' have supporters that Gen Eisen-bowisn't any "stooge" of Mr Truman as preconvention goesip had it But there are other persons who don't much care about how politicians approfessional praise these things—they just don't like to see the President of the United States going up and down the country while there are important tasks to be done in Washington And if th'ere are no such tasks then the presidential office isn't the important cog in the nation's machinery of government that it has been cracked up to be Clarifies Issue By emphasizing that a vote for Stevenson is a votc to up hold the Truman record the President certainly has dui-fle- d the issue for "Independ ents" as well as regulars who are fed up with the scandals of the administration Maybe if Mr Truman had spent more time watching his appointees and had insisted on the resignations of the bad ones when first reports reached him he wouldn't have to go out now to defend his administration even with taxpayers' money ROBERT'C ROARK - The Senator From Sandpit By Ram Park ed Editor- Tribune: We have heard much in recent weeks about the ethics of U S senators in accepting gifts and -- - r be il traffic when people were caught in the middle of the street when the light changed I believe this matter should be brought to the people's attention arid also the chief of police of Salt Lake City and we the citizens should see that situations like this do not occur again After all it is the 'people whose best interests they should look after and If some of our officers are so "hard boiled" that they can't extend to the citizens the common courtesies particularly to elderly people then we should get men who will o- i - some-stopp- 85-9- dm ' - Unbetoming Conduct Editor Tribune: While in Salt Lake City recently I happened to witness what I would call conduct unbecoming to an officer On Main Streetand Soutti Temple Just south of the Temple Square a man and woman approximately of the age of 0 were crossing the street They were in the middle when he light changed: The traffic officer 'motioned the cars-tcome on and kept blowing his whistle at this elderly couple who couldn't move because of When a man kums to me for advice I find out the kind of advice he wants and I give it 4 the traffic coming from both directions The woman fainted and 'several citizens voiced theirfeelings in this matter to the officer and all he stated will "well I had to do - ts t T were himself might he for allowing up with campaign trips and speeches but since he is not a candidate the question arises as to why he is not on the job in in Washington instead of using the taxpayers' money for politics Two Months Salary - -TruCertain expenses of Mr of man's train are borne course by the Democratic national committee and are said to amount to about $21000 Two months of Mr Truman's timehowever as President amounts to about $25000 in4a1ary and that's more money than was raised by Gov' Stevenson from his friends to supplement the salaries of state officials in Illinois or by Dana Smith to pay expenses for Sen Nixon on the President's train are government employes whose salaries are paid by the taxpayers and not by the Democratic national committee The private car in which Mr Truman rides was presented for gift by the 'Ai- sociation of American Railroads but it was given presumably for the use of the President of theUnited States and not of the stump speaker of a political party When Gen Eisenhower travels by train he has to pay rental for any private car he user IL N Assembly Meets The taxpayers' money being spent to subsidize the President's campaign trips is not By Our Readers fact that the Democratic Party is shot through with corruption is notoriously wasteful is endangering the economy of the nation is unable to weed COMMUnigril out of government and b incapable of successfully concluding the Korean War When Dr Fuller and his disciples realize that good government is more important than their selfish desires that there Is a limit to the amount of taxes people can pay and that all of government must be supported from tax revenues then education will be out of the woods Observant of 1 - lScliMulle'rottleYtarer'leleP:rtivrin-- ftwommEIP poppycock Moreover he would have school people ignore the ' 4 Mr Lawrence with the fact that the Amerl- can people are paying him p ill " '1(r)i ly two - campligning ot : A 4 t:t 'de months s:k (o-- - a uverj man reconciles - -- I - ' 4 o his J l'N'Im— 11e nzatinigo -- i PrYesai cscm :' 4friii 1 p '' e - - i ' - --- 4N --- I t d 6 ' 1 '4- - --4- -- Nt - ':' we spread curios- - - 4- At - Ns (91-142- at: '— ut) p 1j A 47 1 - presidential campaign let-ter received from citizens in all parts of 41 9) y - Lee and Education Tribune: It was neither an accident nor a surprise that Dr Edgar Fuller an educator from Washington D C was imported into Utah to make a political attack on Gov J Bracken Lee The talk was pitched at an emotional rather than a factual level Contrary to Dr Fuller's remarks there probably has been no other state administration that has done as much for education as Gov Lee's It was as a result of his earnest efforts to economize in government that ample funds became available to launch the greatest building program among institutions of higher learning the state has ever known Gov Lee reco rnmended tbe emergency school building program the amendments to school financing laws inter-stat- e in higher education and the present publie schools survey-Whilit was Dr Fuller s attack on the governor that caught the headlines his other statements should- - not be ignored He made an outright appeal for sahool people to support the Democratic Party on the grounds it is favorable to education and the Republican Party is not This is sheer the other day there hive been good fall flows of honey in a number of areas in the nation- particularly the Middle West and the NewEng- " ' land states t With all the vitriol being poured out by I this fairs campaigning hatchet men we're as- tonished that the bees can produce any honey —much Tess record batches of it orators haven't Or maybe the : visiting the Middle West ?rid New Eng- - - 1' t Pet Ai Tri OM ' t r orAkri6liftife—i:- - ibeen tr4TY ' Editor Vitriol and floney -- - te GIVII:G Iran ita 1 it 111110r for- - e ' 1444 ii i 44"- l''' f- The'Public Forum The Salt take County Community Chest campaign is now a little more than a third ht the way toward its goal of $366943- - We sii pose that that is about par for the second re-- port meeting of the drive and certainly othe workers are to be congratulated for their- efforts But we also mbst remember e distance to :that- therelcitire-considerablP'underaislig—timpaigns usually' sprint go at the start and drag toward the close No one an challenge the merits—or the i ecessity—of the Community Chest Through its 21 member agencies which carry out char- ROI welfare and social undertakings it fills a very important part in the community And that's how the Chest should Si regarded—as an undertaking in which all can participate Contributing to the Chest is not mechanical charity It is an act of sharing which the recipient and should pay spirit ual dividends to the donor were persuaded of grave dangers of aggresThen they sion from imperialistic nations were lured into arrangements with Russia to maintain "peace and liberation" Russian emissaries were permitted in the weaker countries to insure their security internally and externally The emissaries turned out to bi executioners who engaged in the kind of purkes that later made Stalin famous Stalin promised that Russia will support Communist parties all over the world in their light for "liblration and preservation of peace" In the semantics of the Russians that means complete Soviet' domination of thought 'and action as the record so clearly shows Truth is so alien to Joe Stalin and his interns- tional cutthroat alliance that the ternc!'peace" 'Miens' "wart--4-italof confused— world peace friOtened tension under which ' I utterly impossible : is ' The doubie7talked czars of 'old their way intole conquest The reactionary successors 'to ' - - A" - 4 ' -- dictator who still claims 'rho to represent the revolutionary workers used the words of Russia's former czars bent on or he has followed their pattern of gression as -Firstthei little 'neighbors of Russia conquest do ' ' - c te-- : ' 1 An Act of Sharing ' patterns in k thousand ways The aging gen- eralissimo bas picled his crown prince and the Soviets will tighten the chains on the slave states they have "liberated" New purges Triay be expected to insure that everybody is Soviet tyranny that is !'s - Oil Proutess Week "Czar" Stalin's pontifical speech to the 19th Communist Party COngreu in Moscow this week would have had a bitterly hollow sound to delegates of satellite states if they knew ob their history and possessed ' vik - li s ' — - 1 U 1111TED I 'f 4t Doubletalk : - - - 1 (10 yL poi-Id- - ' 7 - q ' i 61 - -- jectivitY - — Speaking "special funds" and the proprieties or ethics - in this WASHINGTON of WE HEARTILY AGREE ON!! I 4 Supreme Courts refusal to review the conviction and death sentence of 'Julius and Ethel Rosenberg two American atomic spies is aignificant because it affirms the heinousness of their crime The Rosenbergs as far as available records show are the first persons to receive the death penalty in an Amerkan civilian court for espionage They may yet be ' ' The upremt Court may reconsider ' or the President may commute their sent ' tences butthe principle that those who ent danger the nation can expeCt the most ---vc - -punishment bar been upheld - 'rho Rosenbergs stole atomic secrets for Russia Their crime could result in horrible ' ' death for millions of Americans andthe de of this eoUntry But the Rosenbergs were ‘ alone not They were just two actors in a diabolical drama which had many others Two of their immediate associates—David Green- t glass and Morton Sobe ll - are behind bars 1 ' is also in prison Marry Gold the So la Dr Allan Nunn May the Canadian who Highlight of Oil Progreu Week in Salt was among the first to be trapped So is Dr ' bandwho take Briton City wu a Chamber of Commerce apnaturalized the Klaus Fuchs predation luncheon Wednesday noon at the ed the Russians their most important prizes '' Hotel Utah at which S E Skinner vice presiDr Bruno Pontecorvo another alien in Eng dent of General Motors was the speaker land has vanished behind the Iron Curtain Tributes were paid to the oil industry of with his vast store of nuclear knowledge the nation and of Utah by Mr Skinner and - Why peons of such varied backgrounds Howard Price chamber president and capabilities chose betrayal is a question who anyone answered Particularly significant locally in th'e cannot he by which servance of Oil Progress Week is the tremen---- loves his country or his fellow men Treason as Russians dous progreu our owl state hat made in re---The did not make them wealthy cent years Today with crude oil wells in our far as the evidence shows are not generous a number of refineries storage facill could state Nor with their dupes in other lands crude and finished product pipe is and a ties since an been ekpionage urge glory' have lines- - we have in Utah a multimillion-dolla- r secret business' But there is no teed to try new industry which provides employment for find:out why Americans or Canadians or ) siveral thousand peoples British subjects have made themselves the tools of an evil conspiracy The fact is that Nationally the industry is of crucial im- -' ' As Mr Skinner pointed out because sodo And others have portance may they ' Those found guilty must be punished as - -- - oft- - and its products are absolutely essential I: to either a peace or a war economy The inseverely as possible under the law The atomic age has made the dangers of treason dustry Mr? Skinner said did a magnificent job In the last war particularly in producing high terrible beyond comprehension But pttnish- ment will not deter others from committing quality aviation gasoline which helped give us ' our margin of victory in the air He said we the crime' Safeguards must be maintained so cases atomic The increased can be sure it will do an equally good job in spy vigilance far uncovered developed during the period any future emergency provided we adopt which encourage the oil and all other inbefore Russia was clearly recognized as an without a to keep ahead ip the international are Communists the dustries but enemy And and doubt just as active scientific race for today technological and producinquisitive ' live achievement there aii other- Plias and Golds Ind Rosen bergs ready la take advantage of any lapse Progress in the oil industry means far In security more than profits for individual companies s It means new wealth and new payrolls for Utah more comfort in time of peace and fCzie-Stalift'- s more security in time of war for the nation — CWE ISSUE E n21ITED 911:1 tbs-reall- n - THERE'S THE e ' crabs be continued indefinitely' in office t - ' y " : x- -- 40 7 44( 1 7J i - - ': 7 ' -- -- 7 ''' fr''''':' 24'' i' "b-- '' c t - - - A 71' v III A I '' I - eAnBivnreognaudt imagine The Shepherd LOYALTY "We know that thou art true" 'Matt 22:18 Says one of Life's unchanging to a cause Is measured by bow close he's wed To it when he quits as its head So many persons strut and shout They bang the gavel and 4-Their club and brag about all that it has meant Till they retire as president then both their :dues and interest lapse Could that apply to 'you perhaps? 1I Julien C HYer 4 1 t 14 TAWC—"7A-Ifflies—aviri- 1 I I ' ' 1 1 1 - I ' - i - ' d goonoivomwasmottoolsfswhalpes:ompok611:0140e-oossa0- 0 - - i t4104Amamoilha s Sft's smAlemalo10 i |