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Show n artff mk hrfoi iijw it .jiMai i TIIE LOGAN, UTAH, PAGE TWO. The Herald-Journa- HERALD-JOURNA- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER L Tliis Is What Weve Been Waiting For l 7 THOUGHTS B Published every wick day iiftrrmxin by the Car ho Vab ley Newspaper Of) 75 W"t Cc it r Ktiet, Jyigun, Utah Telephone nil depnrtiiMiitx .Ml. ih liv. l by emrier 10 rents I i The month; in advance, thiee months, .$1 75, six monlhs, $.1 Ml; one yeiir, $7 00. tty in.nl outside ol C.nlie Valhy: in months, $1 50; six per mold h, 60 lints, tin months, $.$0o; one year, $o oo t mat r ill the post olfiee at Knlered as secoml-ela.s.- s Isipiin, Itah, under the n t n congress, March 4, 3879 He". pro taint latterly through all ilte land." IjlM-rt- :ii , and iTHINGS Heruld-.loinim- Tile Ill lnstanri th(e if the If w Iln ti nt li BY HAY NELSON -- for any advertisements published in IlH columns. where the paper Is at fault, it will reprint that ill wliieh the lngiuhicul mistake s npnar In .say Ill'll wt Ittive no sin, .lolin I V is not m ns - u- New Responsibilities i'ive oursclvos, .uni ili'i This war is bringing to Cache county and to other communities m the state of Utah a vastly chunged economy. Our citizens are confronted with such problems and responsibilities as they never have faced before. Recent reverberations in our own city, coming from the clash of 'outsiders" with various customs they don't like, have indicated that these changes are imminent, and that there is no use trying to escape them. Overnight Utah has entered a process of industrial development that will not end with the signing of an armistice. The quiet farm life symbolized by Brigham Young and his pioneighborneers, the compact the community hood pattern, is unity this type of culture being invaded by a new era, spurred by wartimes. There are many natives wondering if, at the conclusion of hostilities, they are going to face depression, if ghost towns and ghost factories and unemployment skeletons will dot the honzon. This spirit, at present, is a dangerous poison. Matter of faet, a thoughtful interpretation of facts around us points out that it is false and stupifying llalelul Lt me as are Hit pities ol hell. Is lie who, hiding one thing in his heart, l iters another. Ho lier. Nol liberty alone, not truth alone, bul truth and Liberty with Tiutli, shall yet enlighten the world. BEYOND THE ALPS We make no pretension to being a military authority. And most certainly we feel very uncomfortable ouring cohl wa- ter upon the first real enjoyed for a long time. heart-warmin- the united nations have g Nevertheless, nobody who seeks to help interpret current events would be living up to his obligations if, in appraising what is going on in North Africa, he failed to get out an atlas and consult the physical features of southern Eurojie, which we assume is to constitute the site of the effective second front. This can be done without giving information to the nazis, who know every rock and footpath of those mountainous regions which for our casual purjxises consist of variations in the Ink colors on maps. Look briefly at any good physical map of southern Europe. You will see that there is just one narrow path up from the sea which is not obstructed by mountain ranges. That is through the Rhone Valley. The mouth of the Rhone, the foot of its valley, lies west of Marseilles, France. philosophy. To the west of the Rhone lie the Cevennes mountains, ranging upward to more than a mile in height, but with relatively low foothills and generally good transportation facilities. To the east of the Rhone Valley lie the Alps, heralded by Mont Blanc, almost 16,000 feet high. Italy itself is cut off from the rest of the axis by ranges of the Alps towering upward from 6000 feet, with only one gap until, to the east, the foothills toward the Danube Valley BY PETER EIFSON are reached. Washington reveals that consideration amateur Thus even the most Correspondent the lady reasonably convenient access from the Mediterranean coast The way the WAVES over the Navy to the expanded reich is narrowly limited. The nazis can sailors are taking Department is one of the current concentrate their defenses in a relatively few strong points sensations in Washington It's a which we must assume have been thoroughly prepared regular occurrence now for some f salty, against any such threat as now looms. Echoes From Capitals Sounding Board Herald-Journ- wind-bur- This does not mean that the united nations can not march to Berlin from the Mediterranean. It does mean that the current operations are child's play as contrasted with what is to come if this really is preliminary to a second European front. It means that the casualty lists are nearly all in the future. It means that in the light of the most realistic information available from central Europe those who now talk of peace in a twelvemonth must have locked their brains in dead storage before they opened their mouths. we agree with The news is swell. Even the strategists who planned our present course. If it fails, we shall still think they did the proper thing at a good time. But we want to give solemn, heartfelt warning that premature optimism is going to result in unnecessary heartbreak later. For us, this war is just getting ready to begin. second-guessin- $ J g, ed old deck admiral who previously had viewed with horror the idea of women in the Navy (o come around and requisition hundied or a tnousand WAVES for this or that department. One reason the are admirals learning to like the that they are selected with more care and higher quahliculion.s than the girls offered by Civil Service. More important is the fait that the WAVES, being in the Navy, better and night fighter needs 5000 units of vitamin A per day to when they aid his night vision. As much .wwer goes over Niagara Falls daily as is in a day's mining of coal throughout the world.' LEADS U. S. FORCES IN ICELAND Answer to Previous Puzzle W iA D E Array official, OfeCiH'A OjvlAl Maj.-Ge- HORIZONTAL Pioured rT. S. n. Charier H. 9 Disputed. 12 Type of fur 16 17 (pl). Inactive. Note in .nJan.QS nWe!r IF pTjJ.tSjs kELi OA TiEN t - W'StLU IT TI Guidos scale. Incident. hUTOn'I IvjUtiiH 20 Small diamond ?CjME MGiTTo'C 21 Nothing. X' E e Ct!An' FFP 22 In want. 4 English 23 Symbol for 54 Ventilate. 55 Made of oats. statesman. radium. 25 Sensation of 56 He is stationed 5 River duck. 6 Symbol for dryness. 29 Coast. 58 He is in erbium. 7 Improves. 34 Tranquil of the AmerS5 Great Lake. ican forces in 8 Exist. . 9 Obscure. 36 Protozoan. Iceland. 39 Rosefish. 60 Wrappers for 10 Compass point. 1 1 Bengal 40 Out of. documents. quince. 45 Meadow. 48 Chalk. 53 River in Satawak. t 1 VERTICAL Uncovered. Musteline mammals. 3 New England (abbr.). 2 13 Born. 14 Termination. 15 Pig pen. 18 Chinese weight. 24 Near. ' (comb, form). 28 Gypsy gentleman. KrsTTTG 'N 30 She. 31 Native metaL 32 Narrow inlet 33 River in The 19 Indian. Noah (Bib.). NjSj ww re Hm C 41 Siouan I sometimes Preston r, pooh-poohe- d Credit I r Moms Eislibem, editor of the Journal of the Amen-caMedical Association, with one of the neatest slips of the tongue on record. The voluble doctor was! testifying before Senator Claude E. Pepper of Florida, investigating the shoitage of medteal men in war production (enters and the activities of the Procurement and. Service whnh has! Assignment been recruiting dm tors for the armed services Said I'r. Fi.xhbein. I always believe ill obeying the laws and orileis of the t'mlid States government whenever possible. Then he might himself and asked that the bust two wolds be struik fiom the record. n 25 Social occasion 26 Second son of 27 Equal can be bossed around can be disciplined don't obey orders j ien-tis- ts By William THIS CURIOUS WORLD Ferguson Two fives. 52 Too. 57 New 59 version (abbr.). Opus (abbr.). the recommendations which Baruch had made throughout the 1930s when the various Army mobilization plans were being drafted. Baruch straightened out rubber, Baruch's ideas on price control finally came to be adopted, Baruch s ideas are reflected in WPBs new Controlled Materials Plun. If Baruchs ideas on manpower could be put over, some of the present confusion on that subject might be eliminated. Wars hardest hit .spot under the U. S. flag Is Puerto Rico, lipoll on that is the tremendous mirea-W on PA in rolls this island territory, now running nt 2X 000. Only two U. S. states have larger WlA rolls today. New York and Illinois h.i only 24,non In fait, the MPA situation in Puerto Ruo is just exactly oppu-- , lie to the situation on the ni d While the war has steadily dropped W PA rolls in .the statis. they have been steadily im reused on the island La k m shipping to haul Pile! to Kuan exports the1 sugar and rum-t- o mainland and hud mni'lunety and other MI piles in the island In bit'll the cuUjC ol its iiununin Our desperate efforts to get this thing over in a hurry will be vitalized and made moie meaningful if we realize that on the day that peace is signed, this state will enter the door of permanent industrial progress. Youve certainly got the iuVa, girls! plant has started its night shift, your doubled! The lch)ites to Allies problems; Fighting French wonder what kind of deal theyll get; OHl retains personnel in ilavas News agency; McNutt and Gen. MNherry squabble over Harry Desertion of poses new pro-$ic- Bridges. WASHINGTON Wendell but when publicized, Willkie talked with Gen. DeGaullt in the Near East, the Fighting French leader spent a good part of his time complaining about his treatment at the hands of the British and Americans. He also said that he would not be surprised if the American and British governments gave the plums to Vichy after the war, ignoring the -- foui-sta- anti-Fasci- st BARBS Now the government has us all back studying our A B Cs so we can get the gasoline we're entitled to. e establishing the European underground, etc., are going to be after the war, or recognized whether some of the old fascist rgimes will go back into power, perhaps with the tacit support of the United Slates and Great Britain. Wrong Michigan City About 10 years ago when Senator Prentiss Brown of Michigan v.as a member of the House of Representatives, he steered an appropriation through Congress to pay the over-du- e salaries of Chicago school teachers. Shortly after this, Brown was a guest at a banquet in Washington attended by Chicago's Democratic boss, Ed Kelly. Kelly thanks Me Michigan legislator profusely. 'Some day I'm going to return the favor, Kelly told We Chicagoans owe you a lot." Shinliy before the lad. election, -- Another healthy thing about breathing through the nose is that it helps you keep your mouth shut. Pinn-sylvani- a. 9 THE TERMS LGHr A ND USED IN DESCRIBING CRUISERS, REFER TO WHAT pim-eirall- y ANSWER. The terms not weight. - l light and heavy J refer to armament, NEXT: Building with skeletons. fjp Wit JJIWP ) P a It all depends on how Mussolini plays his lards whether Hitler raises the Dace. Successful people have the most children, says an author To the vu tors bethe long spoilel of wives give their husbands hut hi tic lit ar btlow. A lot has A in which Brow a uy , deftatel, : two men met again at a lunch in the Capital, and KeLv assur the Michigan Sen tier that art hadnt forgottm a w hia A r Stt xl premise "I want you to know that are doing all we can to help v It was never in your campaign,' sa.d : pro-All- CONTINUES TO GROW AFTER IT IS CUT AND ON ITS WAY ID MARKET. war BY DREW PEARSON The question that is important and one which many of us have been pushing around in our heads Free French. of late in, what are the new obDeGaulle was more prophetic ligations and responsibilitlew of us than he knew, 'that issue Das us Have Utahns? Of Loganites? It is the issue ot we ecifie assignments to per- already arisen. the exile governments by standing form? who stood with the British and Many thousands of new resi- American Governments when the dents are coming into this area. going was tough, or of snitching Many of them are substantial per- to more prominent leaders now sons who will invest in Utah and that the break has come. remain here permanently. Others Gen. DeGaulle, for instance, is will remain varying lengths of reported to be irued over the time, but when they leave and fact that Gen. Giraud has sudwherever they go they will be denly emerged as the French traveling ambassadors of good or commander in North Africa. Deevil so far as each cummunVy is Gaulle bore the brunt of the work concerned, and depending on the when the job of organizing degree of good will our citizens Frenchmen w'as difficult, and he them. create to able are among to be their military expected These people who have come to leader. Now when the task is kmk uplive among us will either easier, Gen. Giraud steps into the on us as simple, coneeited, smug, picture. eompbu'ent, unprogressive, However, it remains a fact that and h.vpoeritieal, or they DeGaulle has no great prestige in will barn to esteem us us demo- France, is only a brigadic r gei cratic, tolerant, progressive, friendr erai, while Giraud is a full, . ly, Christian and with high and very popular general, Their opinions depend on the with French troops. Also the treatment we extend, on the way British have never liked DeGaulle, we behave, on our ability to coe found him very difficult to work with new situations, accept new- with, dont consider him a real comers and provide a place in oUr leader. ways of living for them. But rneiinwhile, Gen. Giraud nmy also be irked at the way Admual Arguments during the past Darland has emerged and begun couple of weeks emphasize the issuing orders to tile French in fact that our citizens have a North Africa Thus the bandwagon new responsibility and a secific rush to rule the American tide ol assignment. viitory may hurt some feelings; We must create cmifidenee nevertheless, the prestige of Adund good will among those who miral Darlan is extremely impoit-an- t. come to our Mate, to our nine y this must lie done in nmnity Frenchmen Lose order for uh natives" to reThe issue also arises in civilian and tain our leadership mailers. The Office of War Information is now taking over the 'e have a duty in actively American offices of the famous French news agency, Havas, in assisting in the proper orientainof all strangers coming tion doing so, it is hiring the Havas to or through this area. In that personnel which stayed on and way the highest type of citizenplayed ball with Vichy, ignoring y the intensely Frenchmen ship is developed. W'e may not have asked for who resigned from Havas immedithis change in our destiny. ately the Vichy regime began to y play ball with Hitler. These Many may resent an intrusion . on the quiet life. Frenchmen are now out in U wever, we are face to face the cold, and the y French newsmen wih operate in cushy with reality, and to a large extent we are, from now on, cap- berths under OWT. The problems may be insoluble tains of our fate. when it comes to such men as We do not have to compromise our ideals. We do not have to lose Admiral . Darlan and Gen. De sight of our pioneer hentage, our Gaulle. Yet it remains extremely customs. important. For it affects the other exile governments, parBut the thousands who have recently entered our gates should be ticularly the Czechs, Poles, and invited to sit around the fire and Greeks, plus various other peobecome one of us in fine citizenples, such as the Italians .They are beginning to ship, democratic feeling and Chriswonder whether their efforts at tian ideals. sASPARAGUS - MERRY-GO-ROUN- D pro-All- y Smu- that e. output Washington Anti-Vich- AltOlT B4RKII Netherlands. Most encouraging development 37 Beekeeper. of the week on the manpower 38 Cutting tool. situation is the fait that Bernard 39 Suit. M. Baruih is working on it for the 41 Kimono sash. 4zBaghke part. President. For a short time 43 Area measure. Baruih had an office along the 44 Gust. "parlor, bedroom and bath" row of War Produetion Board head45 Watercourse. 46 East Indies quarters. But it was too public, he moved out and is again op(abbr.). 47Aiched (comb erating principally from Ins hotel room. form). Gradually the administration of 49 Male sheep war production has been shitting (pl). into line with more and moie of 50 Greek letter. 51 In the words of one person: "Even our humble individual efforts in the cause of the war will be made more vital and effective if we realize that after the emergency we will face greater opportunities for happy and successful living than we ever have known before. these frogs came down British Information Service in in rainstorms. wrote the ArThat's what Washington was faced with a kansas woman, they anyway, and they a when pretty problem recently United woman from Arkansas wrote ii hope it will help keep the united. Nations rained it sometimes for proof that frogs in heavy thundershowers. It seems that this woman had adopted two British children for Furnishes the duruMon. Riding home in the ran family car one evening, they into an unusually heavy rainstorm, Osden with clouds blacker than they had ever seen and water coming down Then a few little in buckets. Ranks of week end workers to white objrets began to pelt the ear They thought they must be Ogden from the Preston area are hailstones, but when they looked to clo-eit developed there were gradually swelling, according Spils-bur- y frogs pouring out of the ski. It Then Pettorborg and E. R. was wonderful, anil Amenta sure who are working in a cowas a great country. operative effort to enlist as many Next day in s hool the British recruits as possible. c hildren, all excited, told about Mr. Petterborg reports that this truly greut experience they about 65 persons, including stuhmi been through. But ii stead of dents and employes of various being heroes, the poor British business houses who do not have youngsters got nothing but the Saturday or Sunday schedules, are razzberry. Yea hers and their at present working in Ogden on choolmalis all such those two days each week. nonsense. A private bus leaves 1 Yes ton at The Bntixh children came home 5:45 a. m. both Saturday and to their adopted piother in tears Sunday mornings, returning each That's what started the Arkansas evening after work. Five private woman to writing letters to Ua.h-1igo- n cara, containing six passengers to see if something eouldn t each, also leave Preston at apbe done to resloie her ehaiges' proximately the same time. We are still interested in adspirits B I S. called up some si ditional workers for the week end in t und sure project," Mr. Petterborg said, and iislnngtoii enough, they did find si lentiflc if an.v person who is free either ploof til it sometimes when the or both of the days are w lcome sun was su king up water real to join our ranks. We are trying hard, it did sink some shallow at present to get enough woikers And to justify the using of another ponds drv, frogs and all they imild piove, they s..nl, taut bus FROGS FROM 1IE.WE.N Workers For aver-- al A 1 rv). will not assume finaiieial responsibility Herald-Journ- rnirH winch may part I sei M fr mayor of Chicago Ge "We've got Mu higin City i iSe organized behind you Senator," tt explained. Brown inn-t- s Kelly v The joking, but others at the lumhe sad say the Chicago boss didn't knt 3!I that Michigan City is in IniW erti not in Mich gan. if n and Harry Bridges x the Trunan Coxait' v issued its blistering report out 0! War Manpower Comnnss.on, e k out one part of the story. TI Tt pertained to a hot row brt(t to Mi k Nutt and Chairman Paul director ,of operations. Brig Gt I Frank McSherry ovir the question of Harry Bridge west coast labor leader. Truman Committee investigalo-learned that relations between & and General MeSherry xt" iy labor in manpower was import so strained at one time oier It Australian "communist i 4 MeSherry thriatened to r'Srt esign and "tell my story to U world." Mi Sherry had rtn ommendcdW liam K. Hopkins a- - West Coa. regional direttor for ilanpoirt but eouldn t get approval fro McNutt. Finally, he karned fro Fowler Harper, M irjaiwer oepu director, that Harry Bndtai jected to Hopkins amt Uiat why his appointment was delaje Harper went on to explain MeSherry that Bridges was doing a great job of organizing West Coast Maritime worker and that the cooperation o' ant. But Gen Mi.Sherry doin' wait to listen. He roared cut ot the office, announcing Jhat k was going to have a showdoirr or Ik with McNutt oil w "Harry Bridges was running da Manpower Commission" Showdown was not an unde statement. MiSh rry, aciordingi reports, almost blew McNutt k of his chair. After a worthy overture obo wBridges alleged C mimunistic f neetions, and the fact that was ordered deported by the' torney General. MeSherry down this ultimatum: If the Hopkins appointing isnt approved, I will resit on n tell my story to the world steps of the Capital. Hopkins was approved -- .Manposn-Whe- -- l i U t1 NOTE: Because of Hs" war cooperation, tosidt are betting that he will court fight to set aside the JuM" warrW Department's deportation Furthermore, the job Bridges doing for the War Departmer in organizing Longshore U Battalions" for a Second Front Europe, has already altered Sherry's opinion of him. Bridges D Capital I haft Mrs. Roosevelt, looking no stru' airplane on the new marble ture known as the JefW I du Memorial, remarked, Jefferson would have hkedto v money spent that way. iAot be staled by laik of ffatf' one sightseeing company m ington has hired and rcP4ir e an old ;ves around wagon, which Sightsee as Victory Capital the . . . .Warning that partment will dispense j10 commissions, no cellophane r tary Stimson says it docs0PPfa' for applicants to write letters to him, whnh the catch phrase, "I kne a busy man you are. hut j Some people write to Stiuv Per'0"J his home, expecting , Ej fa tention. . . .There arc alreS'd fw filo on 0O0 applications missions from civilian !,fe n(J sPe Except for a few rare coni0 the only route to a tlif A" nowadays is to get into a as a private, then atl'ia flier Candidate School. two-hors- -- ' Ll 7 t |