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Show The Herald-Journa- Savagery at Its Worst From Now On l THOUGHTS a. WJ Logan, Utah. Tuesday Kvcmn;- August 22, llill. Published every week day afternoon by the Cache Vai-t- y Newspaper Co., 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone all department 50. delivered by carrier 75 cents a The Herald-Journmonth: three months, $2 25; six months, $4 50; one year, $0.00. By mail outside of Cache Valley same prices as above. 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 Kntered as second-clas- s 4, 1879. Ogan, Utah, under the act of congiess, March Llla-rtBell. Proclaim through all the land. Cl tfi t -- rr AND - , ft' ':ny US1 ' V - j Organizing the Peace groups have banded to form a Americans Lmtcd for World called national association for a world organization to be cal's Its policy Organization. with established immediately, power to settle internationa in force to use and suppressing aggression and disputes maintaining jx'ace. It might seem that there is little need for such an organization today. For it expresses what obviously is already the a reflected in, the majority opinion of the American people stated policies of both presidential candidates and both party platforms as well as the two houses of Congress. is unaniYet it cannot be said that this majority opinion mous. As everyone knows, there are many Americans w ho oppose any sort of league of nations (upper or lower case) and who think, though bludgeoned by evidence to the conmuch intrary, that we can live aloof in the future, however world. in the justice or aggression may occur elsewhere like-minde- d Among those who think thus are a number of congressmen who, if they are in office when treaties of peace and will of peace organization are negotiated, could nullify the the majority. One announced purjose of the AUWO is to of isolationists. election or Heretofore the forces of isolationism have been better organized and more vocal than the unofficial groups which now form the AUWO. Under a unified leadership, they have been able to make themselves heard even though their doctrines could find no substantial backing from either party. Now at least it seems likely that the other side of the story can be circulated with the same intimacy and informality used so successfully by the isolationists. Of course there is always the possibility that such an association as the AUWO could be perverted to political ends, or used as a cloak for some insidious scheme. Cut the list to banish that fear. of AUWO officers and sponsors tends opr-po- se i ! ) ! I I I ' The list includes, clergymen, educators, writers, lawyers, publishers, editors and business men of both parties. There is a high measure of distinction in their professional records, and their combined history of efforts for international peace is one of unanimous devotion. The AUWO has a decisive opportunity to consolidate public opinion behind the safest, most sensible plan for ending war. and to maintain effective touch with the men who wUl devise that plan. We hope that the founders of the AUWO make the most of that opportunity, and we wish them well. I ! i i i !: t r! Wald The Japs have a new war slogan, selected in a national competition. And from our very rudimentary knowledge of Japanese, we should say its a good one at least from the American standpoint. The slogan, or college yell, is Tki, Waki, Konki, Sookek-ki- . Icky as the Japs propaganda line, wacky as their ideas of conquest, and conked out as they rapidly are becoVning, it seems to sum up the situation pretty well. We arent sure about ?Sookekki, which is probably among the items yet in store fpr the little men. (Actually, the slogan means Spirit, harmony; stamina, in case anyone is interested.) total ajtion, buck-toothe- I ! i d Wrap Them Well u i i h Itslnot going to be a very merry Christmas for anyone concerned if the gifts which youre now so lovingly selecting for your sendee man overseas arrive smashed or not at all. And tnStts whats likely to happen, according to the if they arent wrapped strongly. Pannage mail takes an awful banging between your house and its overseas destination. So keep the package of shoebox size, but make the box of wood, metal, or fiberboard, securely wrapped. And no shoeboxes! 1 Awxttfr o rrnlouN TcrTLTTTcpTrc A PXaT C O lPb R E PN NAVAL LEADER i Im.e ,n:Ta NTg-- ju 1 n-- 1 - HORIZONTAL 50 Those who 1 Pictured U. S. resolve naviil leader, VERTICAL 2 I ; 8 i ! I ' i : ?! I I t I 1'! II Laughter sound I I i Electrical 9Dra,ws closer 10 Actual being 13 Roof finial 15 Slows down 17 1 JOSEPH djM' gtpy Pa'fickUN. 1Malt drinks : i ? Punlf German city 4 Requirements 23 Youngster 5 Openings 6 Silkworm 25 Femnsula 7 Rupees (ab ) 28 Awaken 11 Street 29 Lease (ab.) 12 14 16 30 Was seated 32 Decigram 34 Corded fabrics 35 36 Writing tool Babylonian deity 38 Sing 40 Baseball players 42 Aii plane part 43 Permit 44 Makes 45 mistakes Hawaiian wreaths 46 Morning (Fr.) 48 Whiilwind 9 Se$ gagi? Symbol for erbium Poker stake 43 New Guinea Kind of thread port 46 Written form Bury Inner of Mister 47 North latitude courtyai d Mistake (ab.) Every 30 Harden Tardy 31 32 33 35 Flsh cESs 18 Symbol for tin 17 Residence 19 Lettuce 20 Window part 20 Cooking 21 Summit utensil 22 Boys 21 Article 22 Deplore 24 Negative 25 Walking stick 26 Upon 27 Pompous show 36 37 Onagers 39 One of triplets 40 Wagers 41 m 71 Have you ever seen a starving or even a child who was hungry and had no icebox to raid? asks Faith Baldwin. I have, she continues. "It is no a pleasant sight. It is shoeking to me to realize how many people seem to feel that when the war is won our responsibility toward our Allies and the liberated nations will be oxer. This i not so. For a long time we shall have to feed the children of Euroie." child master. Iouhours. Money is a good servant, but a poor Not liberty alone, not truth alone, but truth and liberworld. the shall enlighten yet ty, Liberty witn Truth, Six private, ! . -- - As She Sees Our Job Wealth maketh many friends; but the poor is separated from his neighbor. Proverbs 19:1. I' If.) if ALSO BE TWO WEEKS LONG. V - viV fe-fS.'-- eapth AND THE NIGHT WOULD ftv.sN v ic TLjf OH m&- risibility for any The Herald-- , Journal will not assume financial errors Xvhleh may appear In advertisements published In its eoliimns. t at In those instanees where the paper is at fault, It will reprint oeeur. mistake the whleh in typographical of advertisement the part a LEN&TH TO RAY NELSON - 'nf; In 4 7WO WEEKS n-- 'I EACH DAY WOULD BE EQUAL IN BY IJberty I OH THE THINGS 7'' i ... IF WE LIVED The Washington Merry-Go-Rou- nd . Clay ri'vi'iils Briny lack full kin hands. To many, Ierlc's interest in the' record of supplies unit to front;1 PB figure but ad-- 1 outward trappings of diplomacy dispute niits to Senators his oun are seems more important to him than Inaccurate; Berle achieves tri-- 1 the main objective of a construe- in diplomacy, mutches the .live peace. For instance, Berle wine; Nazi war- - recently spent considerable time prisoner waiter refuse t.l serve planning a dinner for I,ord Beaverbrook. Beaverbrook handles neany U. 8. Jewish officer. WASHINGTON General Lucius gotiations for air, and when Berie Clay made a startling admission was in London, his lords.iip gave at last week's secret session of ira dinner. It was done in the Beavers" best, which meant that the Truman (now Mead) Commitcellaf and tee. He admitted that, aside trom he dug into his pre-wabout 100 types of articles, the brought out his rarest vintages. Recently, when Berle returned War Department did not have a record of the quantity of supplies the honors and dined Lord Beaverbrook in Washington, the Assistit had sent to the frorit. i ar publican party. He forwith issued a press release denouncing the Allied Republican Council, at) organization made up h of anti-NeDeal Democrats, New Deal Negroes, and others porting Alf Landon but bitterly opposed Herbert Hoover. ..Note; State Department gossip is that Hull appointed Fletcher as a direct slap at Wendell Willkie, who may succeed Hull if FDR is reelected. , Copyright, 194L by United. Feature Syndicate, Inc.) w anti-ump- Questions and In other words huge quantities ant Secretary of State was wordifof supplies may be piling up at ried. He was up against the "the Beaver's the front without the Army know- ficulty of equaling wine. In the U. S. A., where wines ing how much I in various the- are now scarce, it is not easy to ater. General Clay said that the a vintage wine, especially produce forto was Q What are the main castes of army's policy keep Rhine wine, which no longer can India? warding regular quantities of sup- be from Germany. imported A Brahmins, priests and teachplies at regular intervals, regard-ks- s when not is a However, money of what was already tncre. in ordering dinner, ers; Kshatriyas, warriors; Vaisyas, Senators pointed out that this was consideration merchants, landowners, do wonders. can In this case, herdsmen, you in contract to General Pershings retc.; Sudras,- - descendants of orig- Mr. Berle Mrs. and scoured policy in the last war of keeping wine cellars of several conqueror8 of ancient Indian. cities, fin- Pariahs, those outside of castes. check on alt materiel. to a ally produced vintage equal There are many subdivisions. plays admission came out dur- Beaverbrook's. ing a Senatorial inquiry into Very produly, when the big night wbethbr the army had enough supand Beaverbrook and GenQ How does the disease death plies to 'perihlt' some civilian pro- came, eral Harold George of the Air rate of our tropics-fightin- g Army duction. , One controversial point was Transport Command arrived for compare with the peacetime Army death rate?, whether the Army now has suffi- dinner, Berle held up the wine disease A Lower than in any of the light. cient small arms on hand to last for to thewas last 10 years. a real triumph for It five 'years, as contended by VVIB diplomacy, experts V. Lewis Hassle and IrvNA.f PRISONERS AND JEWS Q What is the ing Kaplan, who resigned when Spatari Radio their report on war supplies was Observers at Fort Knox, Ky, Code? have been shocked at the way Nazi A A universal language withsuppressed. General Clay contended that the prisoners have carried their Fueh- out grammar or vocabulary; based estimate of five years' supply of rer's racial theories into the heart on the musical scale. small arms was erroneous. of America. A group of prisoners We have small arms on hand is assigned to the officers restauQ What are the Land Forces to last between 19 months and rant at Fort Knox, and make eftwo years, he countered ficient waiters. But whenever a of the Adriatic? A The Allies, new commando asked alert Senator Jewish officer enters, they refuse "General, force for harassing the enemy m does to serve him. Kilgore' of West Virginia, "We will not serve people of the Balkans. that take into consideration the small arms at the front? that nationality, they say. "We also have enough for about U. S officers have of inflation, what Q ldO days at the front, General taken no steps to change the ideas is thoSpeaking price of bread in Paris? of these young Nazis, are inclined Clay replied. A Black bread you wouln't And how much do you have In to treat the matter as a joke. like It costs $1 40 a loaf, black . HULLS NEW GOP AIDE transit? asked Senator Kilgore market General Clay said he did not Henry P. Fletcher, newly apknow. pointed special assistant to SecreQ How old are the Army Air "And how much have you stor- tary of State Cordell Hull, was Forces? ed at advanced bases? asked tbe chairman of the Republican NaA -- They were constituted in Senator from West Virginia. tional committee in 1936. At the June 1941; the Air Corps had been in cxistchcc since August 1907. Again General Clay confessed time he remarked: 1 wish we could trademark he did not know. the concluded word 'Republican' so other out"In other words, percentage of the Senator Kilgore, "your estimate fits could not use it We cannot do world's land does the British Emof 19 months to two years sup- it under the law, but we can re- pire cover? that ply of small arms is based solely pudiate any organization 13,707,084 on what you have in the arsenals trades under the name of the Re- - square miles. can of this country. How you say, then, that the conclusions of the War Production Board are not Answers the', Non-Jewi- hat one-fourt- correct. General Clay had no come-bacNote: Word has some to the Mead Committee that the Army Air Forces have stored up immense quantities of supplies, partly because they refused to take supplies ordered by the Quartermaster Corps and insisted on orIts reported dering their own. the Air Forces have one whole warehouse of toilet paper, another warehouse full of brooms and mop handles, and at one time had so niuth lumber that the Army had to buy more land on which to store it. The Senate committee plans to probe deeper into proposals to put disposal of all surplus property into the hands of one man with big business affiliations. DHMI.MATIC SOCIAL TRIUMPH One of the most powerful State original Roosevelt brain-truster- ji.i.tlj THAT BXN6 EO&rH YOOM& T. M. SCO. U. AAVB. S. CAT. OFT. ANSWER: VVYT 8 SfaKs- --r, THK 2 2-- - Where'S Elmer P La Paz, capital of Bolivia. Ovlm on (he whole she)! WASHINGTON COLUMN BACKGROUND OF PEACE TALKS These youngsters of torn lands who have somehow survived bombings an disease, these little children with bellies swollen from malnutrition and the drawn, age-ol- d faces, these must be fed," Miss Baldwin continues. This is important. This is vital. Not only from a humanitarian but from a selfish standpoint. The children in Europe are the future citizens of the world just as our children are. Only normal children those who have a roof over their heads and enough clothing and sufficient food and medical care only these can grow into responsible citizens. "Children who are d may not die. But they mature warped Both mentally and physi- 1'EIER EIISON ashiiigton t'orres; undent .This is the background for the preliminary Ame planning of an international organization to maintain world BY llerald-Journ- ereign equality of nil pi ,o states, irrespective of size and strength, as partners m a future system of general security, will be the foundation stone upon which the future international organization will be constructed. Representatives oi the smaller nations have criticized the apparent domination by the larger powers and Secretary Hull in hu Xi April 9 address on U. S foreign . policy sought to overcome these by explaining that there IT , suspicions could be no enduring peace unless V. the United States, Great Britain, Rus-siand China first agreed to act together. In other words, anything agreed on by the technical experts in the Dumbarton and later ratified by the four governments, will then be submitted to the more than 30 Llnjted Nations, large and small, for full and equal participation. peace, in conferences opening Aug. 21 a. Dum-- 1 barton Oaks.l Harvard Uni- -. versity's Byban-tine research," center in Wash-i- t ington. Study of postwar problems in the U. S. Department of State cally. Are these the men and women actually began in 1939, as soon as who are to control our future world . . . and our world is all war broke out in or it, not just the U. S. A. If Europe and bethey are, then their starvation fore this country was actually in will sow the seeds of another the fighting. war a war which our children and grandchildren must By June, 1942, Secretary Hull was able to give the first hint of fight. conclusions reached in all this They are Miss Baldwin's con- study when he declared, "It is that some international tentions . . . plain How do you feel about this busi-ne- agency must be created whiih of America's having to feed can by force if necessary keep the peace among nations in the tbe world? future. Hull repeated this determination to employ force and IGNOMINIOUS END to keep Since Gen. Montgomery predict- international ed yesterday that the end of the the peace in a speech delivered European war is in sight, it prob- in September, 1943, two months ably is not amis3 to reveal the fate before his Moscow conference with of Hitler as described by the three British, Russian and Chinese foryoung Clough brothers of New- eign ministers. What is perhaps not generally burgh, N. Y. Following a serious study of an- appreciated is that the Declarcient Indias Yogo astral signs, ation of Moscow itself was first Savi, Gari and Franzi Clough, age drafted in Washington and taken 10 to 14 years, claimed that all to the conference by Secretary signs forecast a double death for Hull for adoption almost without the Nazi leader. change. It will be a dual end by suicide CLAUSE 4 OPENS MEMBERSHIP TO ALL and murder on Sept 121 Savi explained: "Probably Hit- PEACEFl L NATIONS The important part of the Mosler will jump from a high window to suicide, and on his way to earth cow declaration, bearing on the he will be shot by a revolutionary Dumbarton Oaks conference, is German officer anxious to end the Clause 4 in which the four large nations jointly declare: war. "Tha they recognize the neces. . . Dyou believe in signs of the stars? sity of establishing at the earliest practicable date a general international organization, based on TU BITS Six out of every 10 Americans the sovereign equal. ty of all believe that Germany should be states, and open to memmade to pay our cost of the wur, bership bg all such states, large according to the National Opinion and small, for the mainten wire of Research Center, University of international poure and security. While the Dumbu-to- n Denver. Oaks conBut an almost equal majority ferences will be between reprelielieve thut Germany will la un- sentatives of he American, Britable to my us cither In money ish, and Russian governments, China joining later. Secretary Hull or goods. If the Russians have their way, has taken great pains to make Germany will be a pretty destitute clear that any international peace organization agreed upon shall country after this war. consist of both large and small Our cities are occupied but our nations. Reporting to a joint seshearts are free. We will win this sion of Congress after his return from Moscow, the secretary dewar even if it lasts 10 years. So pdophcsied Miss Tsai Kwci, clared that The principle of sov head of the Chinese YWCA, who is now visiting this country. Hope the war doesn't last 100 years! Rev. John P. Bodger of New Guinea, who was in Salt Lake Sunday, predicted the Pacific war will end within another 12 months. half-starve- ... si peace-lovin- g a HULL ILVS BOTH LEGISLATIVE AND EXECUTIVE BACKLNG In preparing the Amer tan proposals, Secretary Hull has been careful to see that they had the backing of both the legislative and executive branches of the govern-- , ment, and,, .that the legislative branch should approach the question as a issue. To remove the subject completely from politics, the U. S. proposals were drawn up. in conferences with eight senators of the Foreign Relations Committee, four Democrats and four Republicans. Their work was completed May 29, at which time Hull sent copies of the American plan to British. Russian and Chinese governments with invitations to attend the Dumbarton Oaks conferences in Washington. On June 15 President Roosevelt gave the only official statement so far made public on (he general nature of the American proposals They include; 1. An international g organization of all nations in a fully representative A body of broad responsibilities. 2. annualgoverning council, elected to include the four large ly, nations and a suitable number of other nations. 3. An international court of justice. I. Maintenance of adequate forces for joint action when necessary, to prevent future war. It is on this b.isis that the Dumbarton Oaks conference will goto , non-partis- peace-lovin- work. I DISTANCES By United Press The shortest distances to Berlin from advanced allied lines today: Northern France 520 miles (gam of 75 miles in week). Southern miles (gain of three miles in week). Russia 328 miles 602 (unchanged for week). Italy miles (gain of two miles m week.) France 628 Lt.-Gc- Unless ample, equitable distribution of work is provided between the discharged war workers and the demobilized veterans, there is great danger of irritation, friction and serious trouble between these two groups. Mayor LaGuardia of New York. s. ( I'" EGGS, BUT THERE ARE A FEW EXCEPTIONAL SPECIES Hell, this is more of a rat race than a battle. George S. Patton Jr., 3rd Army commander in France. Assistant Secretary of State, Berle has been in charge of vitally important negotiations with Britain, Russia, et al., regarding the worlds future air lanes. Entering Harvard when he was nly in knee breeches, now married to a wealthy wife, Berle is a brilliant conversationalist, knows all the tricks of diplomacy. However, those who sit across the table foAhim wonder whether he is not too touch the sparring, Jockeying diplomat; whether It" fully realizes tbe fact that the of several mll'lin hoys or the next 5 perulmi rest In MOST INSECTS So They Say Department negotiators for postwar peace plans is shrewd, agile Adolf Berle, one of the few remaining V Ik. Miss Baldwin's views come at a time when representatives of the Big Three United States, Russia and Britain are meeting in Washington D. C. to consider some of world organization that can produce peace and "plenty" following the war. Secretary of State' Cordell Hull called the conference, and even his bitter critics admit that he is sincere in an attempt to arrive at some sort of international sanity after the crazy shooting stops. By DRhW PEARSON i cii. ... Lois of people say slicd be a success in opera, but her dont know any people in that business to lieij) her yd siUrtc I! father and The substantial territorial losses we have sustained during the past two years have, of course, influenced our food situation We must produce on our own native soil most of what the people need for food. Goebbels. The 1 rinnot ' word and honor of Japan he trusted. i'lc-- i lent Roosevelt, j i Its a special d hammer to sock the slto ulwajb wants to vlumyo scuts in a c;nwe! ' radio-controlle- f1.1 |