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Show if in ft The Herald-Journa- Hey, Ma! Yuli Seen Anything of My Willkie Button? l SIDEGLANCES THOUGHTS AND Monday Kvcmcx. N'nvi piber 4, 1CM3. Published every week day afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co., 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Teh phone all departments 50. del.vered by carrier 75 cent a The Herald-Journmonth; three months, $2 25; six months, $4.50; one year, $9 00. By mail outside of Cache Valley same prices as ibove. By mail in Cache Valley 75 cents a month; three months $2 00; six months. $3 75; one year, $7.00. matter in the post office at Entered as second-clasLogan, Utah, under the art of congress, March 4, 1879. Procluim Liberty through all the land. Liberty Bell. 'fWi THINGS if i i ') BT s RAT NELSON will not aasiinie financial responsibility for any The Ilerald-Jnuiii.errors which may appear In advertisements published In Its columns. In those instances when the paper is at fault. It will reprint that part of the advertisement hi wlihh the ly pographicuj mistake occurs. il Browsing In Library Have you recently snooped- along the shelves. of a library, opening several books, aabbing yor attenand there, just as a tion he housewife samples the cake batter to see whether it is sweet enough? As you pry into first one volume, then another and another, you are reminded of Bacons immortal observation which has always been obvious; Some bonks are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and sonic few to be chewed and digested. Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life. James 1:12. -- Let a man he but :? earnest in praying against a as the tempter is m pressing it. and he needs not by a sure: measure. Bishop South. Not liberty alone, not truth alone, but truth and Liberty with Truth, shall yet enlighten the world. CIVIL AIR CONTROL The House Interstate and Foreign Commerce committee, civil aviation problem for nine after studying the post-wa- r and drafted months, has presented three bills. Two of them are in substantial agreement on the need for federal control; the minority bill would safeguard state sovereignty by leaving domestic aviation control in the hands of the various states. Now state sovereignty is a precious heritage that is being increasingly threatened, and that needs safeguarding. But Merry-Go-Roun- d here, it would seem, is a case where state control might easily lead to 4S different brands of confusion. ,BY DREW PEARSON aviation develops as it promises to and ought If post-wa- r trafmatters hs be such to in will need there to, uniformity medical ask us to open up Ialln In Germany, the Ethyl Corpora- oil company fic regulation, safety, standards of installation and equip- British America to .their .commerce; tion had set up Ethyl GMBH in monopoly: Associated Press; Ethyl commercial ment, and ownership responsibility. Long flights seeking further concessions in partnership with I. G. Farbenm-dustri- gasoline. Private Bob Nathan who e new will be faster and more frequent, traversing come states in And in 1935, American saved the millions by negotiations; Justice Department unearths a new Ethyl proposed letting its Ger- his economic planning job for a matter of minutes. Intrastate air travel will be greatly Earbenindustrie affair; Du Ponta man counterpart have its high oc- WIB will soon be discharged from expanded. lead pat- tane gasoline patent. the army. Nathan was always getopposed giving The Washington price-fixin- g e. lend-leas- tax-pay- pre-w- ar Unless both tyjtes of travel recognize the. same traffic laws, real danger as well as countless mixups would develop. For safetys sake, too, dear understanding will be necessary in the matter of control, dispatching, zoning and airport facilities, for emergencies as well as regular runs. The war probably will leave us with a great many planes on hand, as well as production facilities for turning out many new ones. Some sort of strong regulation is going to be needed to see that these planes, if they are offered for sale, are in safe condition for commercial operation, and to protect the public from irresponsible operators who are certain to be attracted by new aviation possibilities. Another esssen-tia- l will be a fair set of standard trade and labor laws, if postwar aviation is to develop normally. ( ents to Germany. WASHINGTON Du Ponts, however, protested. They pointed out that Germany wanted the patent for military purposes, that Germany was becoming a dangerous military power. They also pointed out that the U. S. Government frowned on sending these patents abroad. So the Ethyl Corporation consulted the U. S. Army Air Corps, telling the army that the patent was not secret. Ethyl also ' said that even if the patent was secret, an equal compelling reason was the widespread property interest the company had in Germany and On top of sena- torial revelations regarding British e use of goods, a secret negotiation regarding further concessions, to the British has just leaked out. These concessions, now under consideration by the State Department, would permit the British to invade Latin America commercially, the one area so far exempted where they cannot benefit directly or indirectLend-Leas- ly from lend lease. The British would also secure a pledge from the United States not to infringe on British areas of competition during the war, and if so, to surrender that trade after tl e war. Finally the negotiations would e be disprovide that ail that making this patent available in Germany would help the Ethyl Corporation. So the Army said OK. By all the rules of efficiency, these and similar consideraNoL. One important point was tions should be the federal governments responsibility. There that du Pont, which developed the will still be plenty for the states to do. Air traffic and com- tributed through the most expe- patent, apparently considered it so merce within the state surely would come within their prov- ditious channels, but not interfere secret that it should not be given the established channels of to Germany. But the Ethyl Corince, subject to general regulations. And tha same could with trade. (The British control most of poration told the army it was' not be said for such things as airport construction, maintenance the established channels of trade.) secret. Du Pont has a (urge inand operation. But not much of a case can be made out for To understand the full story it terest in General Motors, so was is necessary to go back to Sept. consulted. restrictions upward to any proposal to extend state-lin- e 10. Win-alend-leas- when Ambassador and Foreign Minister Eden e drew up a White Paper, which provided, in brief, that Britain would not export Come mercially goods or other materials released because of Louis Bromfield, the eminent novelist and practical farmexcept under certain er, has turned reuspaper columnist. The other day he wrote circumstances, such as if the goods a piece about Unde Joe, which explored and explained were needed overseas and not obfrom the USA. the glowing popularity of Premier Joseph Stalin with the tainable Almost immediately thereafter, s American. ordinary, cross-roadthis agreement was It It was a good piece. But along in the middle, Squire Brom- was then provided suspended. that exports were to be surveyed case by case, field says this: And Unde Joe hasnt gotten into a muddle that the British were free like the one in north Africa and the one in Italy. He hasnt also, to export their own goods, some of played ball with Daiians and Badoglios. He has always had them released because of Lendl a policy ready when the emergency arrived. Lease, to any part of the British Lets see, wasnt it Uncle Joe who played a little ball Empire or to Allied countries in Hemisphere. with his nazi neighbors while France fell and England rocked theIn Eastern orother words this under the blitzkrieg? And didnt Uncle Joe have a handy dinary British exportspermitted to Canada, with those same Australia. India and other parts policy of friendship and nazi neighbors? And didn't the policy look a little ineffectual of the Empire, plus virtually all countries in the Old World. when the neighbors moved in, almost to the gates of Moscow Churchill also secured an agreeand Ixningrad? ment from the president that Britain should distribute Lend-Leas- e Or was that two other guys named Joe? In Turkey, and as a result American airplanes now have the isbel "Curtiss-Wright- " I pasted over BRITISH SEA LORD the label "Britain Delivers the 1941, nt Lend-Leas- UNCLE JOE lend-leas- Lend-Leas- e - HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured English sea lord, Operatic solo American university 15 In bed 16 Mexican peasant 17 Prepare for publication 18 Decays 19 Five and five 21 United States of America 13 14 (abbr.) 22 Dined Unusual Metal 30 Musical term 32 Rhode Island (abbr.) 33 Observe 34 24 hours 35 Hence 38 Rough lava 24 27 40 Arrive (abbr.) 42 Female deer 43 Sum up 44 Dance step 45 Manuscripts (abbr.) Cartograph Flow out 51 Head coverings 55 Tidy 68 Fatal mischief 59 On the ocean 60 Story 6 1 He is a noted 47 49 VERTICAL 1 Tree fluid 2 ' 3 - ...Id Answer to Previous Puzzle fe5tABMORT51 JP.IlJat'e FPiOV AT'e -- t E.1 Spy IN AVErjG Id P:TTJm CE0A N A N A R'E.Cf HA D A f P A'TDl IT R:I Io Ta Dr 'T lo N Enp I? O Pi 5T!e e EtPAnE tHsIaj M I ATT I n r'esHste N'EpPD! III IV?! N N I manHAj ARABr (JO net'si S N A'S disturbance Danish descent 5 Color 10 4 Of 6 Boy 7 Biblical 8 9 prophet Still Rowing implements He has helped in fighting the menace of Seine Doctor of Dentistry (abbr.) 20 Negative . 22 Performed 11 12 23 Toward 25 Wood nymph 26 The gods 28 Id est (abbr.) 29 Approaches 31 Exciten.ent 36 International language 37 Zodiacal constellation 39 Paid notice 40 Seem 41 Egyptian god 43 Like 46 Let stand 48 Against 49 Recede 50 Spoil 51 Possesses 52 Tree 53 Beverage 54 Sorrowful sun Goods. This also meant that the only area where the British agreed to stay out was Latin America. Recently, however, the British have sent a memo to the State Department proposing as stated above to (1) waive the White would Paper altogether, which open up Latin America; (2 agree that the United States not infringe on established British- areas of trade, or if so, to relinquish them after the war; (3) send Lend-Leas- e through most expeditious channels, but not interfere with established channels of trade. Note; Many Senators, though strong supporters of permanent British cooperation, believe that recent revelations In the Senate came just in time to stiffen the y State Departments pol- icy. They believe that this policy. carried too far would have caused ting in the hair of army brass hats who didn't care for his economic planning So he was drafted . . . He had a serious spinal ailment, but that made no difference. In the army he has spent most of his time in the hospital, through no fault of his own, wasting the taxpayers' money which for years he tried to save . . . Newsman James Young, author of "Behind the Rising Sun," has written Martin Dies suggesting that Americans use vigilante tactics to break up a Philadelphia meeting this week of "Peace Now. Dies, though vigorously opposed to any appeasement peaci, says: "What are we fighting for if not the right of free speech. Those people will be forgotten unless you advertise em by trying to break 'em up." (Copyright, 1943 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) ... price-depressi- MERRY-GO-ROUN- ' J f w "TT1 . ; t COW1M1 Nr j SERVICE. INC T M RFC S U PAT OFF M told em if they raked up the yard wed prelend it the burning of Frankfurt they sav it's more fun tW football I r BLACK RADIO BEAMS NAZI to The ridiculous extremes which the radio propaganda word battles of this war have now gone are best revealed by the perversion of the clandestine" LIE 'over was the idea that tin might cost that many casual For other (ountries, Um j radio does gymnasios. equally XI.F.S radio agile & JOB stations To Soviet Russia, a into what is now identifying itself ar Lenin!n known becoming Guard." (aiming to be ma as "the U.S..S.R., broadeasts advoct radio. the overthrow of Stalls is there return to Bolshevism. Actually, is no such thing station, to be the i as a secret radio of the Mclaiming litant Union o! station, becau s e Nationalists, tr.es to sell ftf its too easy to cause of the White Russia:! locate transmitNewest of the "clandestM' ters by radio di- Pons is Radio SWIT, rection finders. Polish means "dawn" It There were real other German phony, octr "u n d e rground anti-Nabut really trying it radio stations six and eight years vnee th" poor Poles tha : new. when war was the ago worst enemy is the Soviet In few a brave patriots Then, For French Austria and the first Germans run a consurnptio. Germany. station du countries overrun by the Nazis to be in Algiers actually bi actually did put transmitters in near Vichy. This station take trucks and move about the coun- prize for fast (hangeaofte tryside, changing location from claims to be Gaulle, a night to night, operating makes the Fighting Frank or freedom stations noxious by overstating tV to keep alive resistance to the Gaulle position, in that m oppressors. But gradually every doing what de Caulk one of these underground stations himself. just It gets over its prH has been run down and put out 1'ne by admitting events ttnif of business, so that, according to able to the United Nsticsi the U. S. ' and British Foreign building up the thought thi black s t zi TU rs Broadcast Intelligence Services, a job of listening in on everything on the air, there are no clandestine broadcasters left. Instead, there are only the phony clandestine stations, operated by the Nazis and falsely representing themselves as being a part of the underground. Germany operates some 20 of these programs today. which do U. and S. Gtraud are t de Gaulle and G s double-cros- Britain. The Germans beam (our b radio stations to the Arab txvo to India, using 10 4a) for the l itter. Azad Hind "the voice of free India. (k ing to be in India but knoi bo on the outskirts of Brti had as one of ita btoaix 'tubhas Chandra Bose, just head of the new ANYTHING GOES The propaganda line of the Provisional Government el black radio stations gets prety India, set up in Singapore. complicated. They pretend that The Nazi propagandists per theyre and pro-Franti-Na- zi n, and and or French, anti-Vich- v, or or und or or and but and and pro-Briti- ot pro-Scot- clandes'ine black radio their in German to deceive or disgruntled populace, buthsipci operation their or a fakecagiest Italian underground n purporting to be"reluctan'-J really to admit M ni pro-Poli- anti-Stali- n, anti-Britis- h, s of the weaknesses United lt. D law-shi- THIS CURIOUS WORLD effect, the thoughtful man. O One of the most beautiful love pronouncements ever uttered was that of Juliet to Romeo after he had leaped over the walls guarding her home, and defied the danger of her kinsmen in order to see her. "With love's light wings did I h these walls, for stony limits cannot hold love out, and what love ran do, that dares loije t tempt. says Romeo. Therefore thy kinsmen are no stop to me.' She replies wth the most beautiful kind of simplicity; "Thou know'st the mask of night is on my face, else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek for that which thou hast heard me speak tonight. Fain would I dwell oh form, fain deny what I have o'er-pcrc- 56WingUke part a revulsion of American opinion 57 Telegram and permanently hurt British co(abbr.) operation for peace after the war. However it now looks as If the British would propose wholesale e in order to reciprocal offset current unfavorable public lend-lens- opinion. The l O If you are defamed, let time v'ndirate you alienee is a thousand times bette- - than explanation. Explanations do not explain. Let your life be its own excuse for being cease all explanations and all apologies, and just live your Hold Everything and-read- give-awa- -l O 'Build today, then, strong and sure, With a firm and ample base; And ascending and secure Shall tomorrow find its place! Do you recognize Longfellow in those lines? It's he, all right. life. By minding your owfn business you give others an opportunity to mind theirs;, and depend upon it, Average human heart beats the great souls will appreciate more than 2,250,000,000 times In you for this very thing. I am not sure that absolute, perfect justice a lifetime of 60 years. conies to everybody in this world; CAPITAL CHAFF hut 1 do know that the best way y Buford JesRough- to get justice is not to be too ter, Texas railroad commissioner, anxious shout it. caucus a of the recently regaled Thats kindly, harmless Elbert Texas Congressional delegation Hubbard whose scrapbooks and u with the story of how he allegednotebooks are among the most ly had torn SECommissioner Sumfamous in the world. over ner Pike to shreds the quesHere's another of his statetion of increasing the price .of. oil. ments: Pike, however, still seems to have man is one "A hundred-poin- t a lot of influence who is true to every trust: who with Economic Stabilizer Vinson keeps his word; who is loyal . . . Vice President Wallace is about U the firm that employs him; to publish a Satevepost article on who does not listen for insults Small Business, titled The Little nor look for slights; who carries Man with the Big Idea. It will a civil tongue in his head: who be the most intelligent boost for Is polite to strangers without besmall business from any Adminising fresh; who is considerate totration spokesman . . . The pubward servants: who is moderate in lic forgets easily but chalk up Ills eating and drinking; who is a score for comely Congresswoman Claire Luce as the first to wi'i.ng to learn; who is cautious ana yet courageous. sound off regarding U. S. air rights O on Allied bases after the war.- - She "These delights if thou canst sounded the warning nine months before the Flying Senators gave give. Mirth, with thee I mean to live. . . birth to the same thing . . These pleasures. Melancholy, thee will Department of Justice lawyer give, and I with I hear they're gonna disconnow chalked uu choose tc live." John Lewin has tinue this bus the government . . .They a big league record of the folarc the last lines eays its a luxury line!" t of two of Milton's great poems; victories: lowing major L'Allegro and II Penseroso. In (he first, Milton contends that the best kind of happinesa is that which is merry, sociable. In the latter, he plugs for the quiet, meditative kind of happiness. L'Allegro means "the merry man." II Penseroso means, in - PATENTS TO GERMANY has Justice Department just unearthed a new and unique case of selling U. S. patents to before Pearl Harbor. Germany In this instance, however, one important U. S. firm, the du Ponts, strongly opposed giving the patent to Germany, while two other firms, General Motors and Standard Oil of New Jersey favored it. In the end du Pont lost out. The patent in question was for lead for manufacturing tatra-ethv- ! high octane gasoline and was own-ehv the Fth'-- fornnrat ion This company in turn is owned by Here are some of the notes I jotted down during a recent visit to a library: . . .By pestilence, long famine and wars, and more still by inundations, the world 'shall be diminished, and its population so reduced that there will hardly be enough to attend to agriculture, and the lands will he. left as long without culture as they have keen under tillage. . . And a thousand other accidents shall come by waters and continual rain, as I have more fully and at large set forth in my other prophecies." That's our friend, Michael Nostradamus, speaking. He was born in France in 1503 and died in 1566. He made some famous prophecies about wars and world happenings which have since been interpreted as having come true. Some students Of his writings have even worked out a forecast from Nostradamus pen to the effect that Russia will beat the pants- - off Germany. His ability to cry doom, as depicted in the above paragraph, would qualify him as . a church speaker of no mean rank. Nest ce pas? PUT A TELEPHONE AV) THEN TEST CHARLES IRVIN&, I p-re- n xr, TOiSSjfS x) SO - been disclosed. Joe lets on to be a veteran of the last war. His show is full ol scoops, flashes and inside done, all dished out to cater to tne gullible public which believes th t gossip and rumors are more important than news. One of the black radios neatest tricks was to report it had conducted a public opinion poll in the United States, in which it was learned that a majority of Americans would rather die in battle than in an automobile accident. so a loss of 5,000,000 lives would mean rothing to this country. What was subtly being put tree when he noticed Juliet standing on her balcony, and he had heard the lady talking aloud, into the night. That's when she said: O Romeo. Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo? Tis but thev name that is my enemy. . . What's in name? That which we rail a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. So Romeo would, v ere he not Romeo called, retain that dear perfection which he owes without that title. Romeo, doff thy name, and for thy name, take all myself." Just at that moment, Romeo comes out of the darkness an 4 sivs. "Mv name, dear saint, it hateful to myself, because it is an enemv to thee.") spoke. . . "Dost thou love me? I know thou wilt say 'Ay', and I will take thy word. . . O gentle Romeo, if thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully: or if thou think'st I am too quickly won. I'll frown anil be perverse, and say hee nay, so thou wilt woo. But irust me. gentleman, Hi prove more true than those that to be more running hine I should strange and hard-wohave been more strange, I must but that thou over confess, hcard'st, ere I was aware, my Otrue passing.? We ot stalled, browsing along (I should have explained thnt tjVii'K-pn few minnien Pnmeo when we . ,1 erfleJ himself behind a i no to rhakes-'care- ! ' La YOU The black radio station beamed THEY SAY at America is station Debunk. It went off the air last August but is now back on the job, repreEvents have proved bepwi, underan ns itself being shadow of a doubt that senting the of the Lnst ground station located tn United States. Actually, of course, depends upon the stability it's in Germany and is 100 per world. cent hokum. Debunk's announcer - Gov. Leverett Salton-.jji i? one Joe Scanlon, whose accent Massachusetts. ' the J is pretty genuine l)Lt whose real identity has never Even though war, inx-e'- s -- m-lj- pr t' s plague of the abolished, people , are their fears vhirh ing to their spirifml r. of the fear all fear is impossible"ole - Rev. Franklin P York' , ... . ur moment The ' ceases to respect G"d to respect your valu dividual. The momM val tc respect your t0 dividual, it ccises racy. - Secretary Curran of J State of ' ' things Three good h music, out of Germany: and Marlene Dietrich. " Adml. Sir Ei'rd - Evans, R- - fads The , , are There just isn't m enough a ,lHl n'.d gasoline more, and it 's make enough so tn men in service can that we want. - rptrolcum L. & Admtni. w & tlff Ickes. The pupils of blue more in light tha dark eves. The moon -- c, nd rp fltive Ml |