OCR Text |
Show (he I 5 Sideglances They Seod a Boy to Do a Mans Work Herald-- J ourria Logan, Utah, Thursday Evening, April 26, 1915. Uunlished every week day afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co., 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone all departments 50. The Herald-Journdelivered by carrier 75 cents a month; three months, $2.25; six months, $4 50; one yeai, 00. $9 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. Entered as second-clas- s matter in the post office at Logan. Utah, under the act of congress, Match 4, 1879. "Proclaim liberty through all the land." liberty Belt The Herald-Journill not assume financial responsibility for any errors which may appear in advertisements published in Its columns. In those instances where the paper is at fault, it will reprint that art of the advertisement In which the t,vMigraphleal mistake occurs. EN Am led. gre te, r ful Some Fateful Questions Answered President Truman's first address to Congress and to the people as their new Chief Executive answered many questions which had disturbed the minds of his countrymen in the four preceding days. And when he had given the answers the great majority of those countrymen must have found their minds eased and their fears quieted. Earlier Mr. Truman had pledged vigorous prosecution of the war to victory, the conference at San Francisco as scheduled, and the carrying out of President Roosevelt's programs and policies. But this last was only relatively sible, since the program was now seen through different eyes, and future decisions to match constantly changing events would have to be those of Harry S. Truman. Would there be a change in the high command? This direction (of the war) must and will remain unthe now Commander-in-Chie- f changed and unhampered, promised. Would there be any backing away from this countrys full commitment to an international organization for peace? tragedy that is war. . . A couple weeks after the wife and daughter arrived, the three were chatting happily in his room, making plans for the future Daddy got his new legs, and the family could be' reunited, and there would be m Job and 'a cottage. . . when is futile to seek safety beyond geographic barriers, the President said. Real security will be found only in law and justice. . . We have learned to fight with other nations in common defense of our freedom. We must now learn to live with other nations for our mutual good. . . To destroy greedy tyrants with plans of world domination we cannot continue in successive generations to sacrifice our finest youth. In the name of human decency and civilization, a' more rational method of deciding national differences must and will be found. What approach would the new President bring to the occasionally difficult position of the United States in the Big Three, and to its relations with its great Allies? Nothing is more essential to the future peace of the world, said Mr. Truman, than continued of SAN FRANCISCO Last fall it the nations which had to muster the force necessary to ieuked out that there was a drastdefeat . . . the Fascist powers. . . The responsibility of the ic difference of opinion between department and the treasgreat states is to serve and not dominate the peoples of the the state world. . . America has become one of the most powerful ury over soft peace for Germany, and after several weeks of discus-soforces for good on earth. We must keep it so. President Roosevelt definitely n, Merry-Go-RouBy DREW mans. "I feel as though I'd like to waij until the Hitler sonsof-gun- s are all asleep some night, then set fire to their tents, and burn the whole bunch, "I hate them! nd PEARSON Yesterday, Drew Pearson gave the backstage lectors behind Russo-Angl- o can difficulties - Ameri- which dered negotiations hin- at Son insight -- nt ns , Typical of how the disease of hatred L,. thrived during the war. Intense hatreds, built higher Another factor making the Rus- and higher as more people get hurt sians suspicious la the British de- . . . Emotional hatreds which mand that food which the Russian cannot be erased by going to army finds In Germany be used to church and hearing of brotherly feed the German people rather love But most of us never stop to than to feed starving Poles and Russian slave laborers. Shortly be- ask: ")Vhat should we do with the fore he left London, both Foreign conquered peoples even though Minister Eden and Sir ' Janies they have been rata? "Should we machinegun them Grigg, British war minister, took the position, in secret talks with all? Should we burn them all in U. S. officials, that food found in an incinerator, giving them some Germany must be used to feed the of the ' medicine that they have Germany, not Polish and Russian dished out to their slave laborers? civilians. The British argument is "Should we make them slaves, that if German food is diverted to thereby becoming exactly what we the Poles and Russians, the1 allies are fighting against? i will have to Import more to the What should we do? Interesting blue-stocki- - ng -- i 1 riddle 34 Gives ear to 38 Small fish 39 Consumes food 40 Forest creature Grafted (her.) 44 45 Symbol for W selenium i 46 Reply 148 Doctor (fcb.) 49 Ireland 51 Symbol for tellurium 52 Handle 51 Guiding which Churchill was once sympathetic) to stir up war between Germany and Russia while England sftt on the sidelines. The Russians also know ail too well the conversation type, of that goes on at the home of Mrs Hope Diamond' Svalyn Walsh McLean, when she entertains the elite of Washington society at her famous dinners at what is some times called the headquarters of the American Cliveden set. The Russians knew in advance, for instance, that the Douglas Aircraft Company had sold the plans for its DC-- 7 to Japan for $1,000,000 before Pearl Hatbor Ami tluy l.i. bun especially anti-Russi- I If ir fi up! ed one it v the If I can just el you hack on your fort and tin- (lnjr m won't back together before my husband conics in, have lo hear his slorv of wlial an honor il is lo luce chair collapse under nil' - A patient In an American army hospital waa so elated because he had just got some artificial arms. They sen hooks; but he eras se glad far them. "Look I can even hold and light my cigaret! he said, with a good deal of pride. Til soon be able to do anything with these hooks. Hooks where both arms used to be. And his face showed scars of buAns or a shell blast. But his Joy at simple achievements made him so handsome. A young man prisoner of returned to Cache valley after having been Japanese. Through many months of harrowing experiences he had He had escaped, and was sur-rive- d. now home. At a public dinner, he whispered to his host: It seems funny to sit down to a table to eat. And I've about forgotten how to eat with knives and forkes. We never used such things in the ' prison camp. ts wonderful being home where there are tablecloths and water glasses and china dishes. And you dont have to scoop the food up with your fingers! A footsoldier in one day to read home. ere i E led nr ;er Germany paused a paper from scientists' journal warned that too much leisure may wreck civiA lization. "A good dose of hard work would cure many persons who use leisure time unwisely and depend on peychiatry for guidance," the article said: Leisure may eventually do more harm to our civilisation, if its dose is too high or if we are incapable of using it P id! Pressure Groups at Frisco SAN FRANCISCO, April 28. Looking under the bed to see who might be binding there to disturb the sweet dreams of peace being envisaged for San Francisco, the first thing that greets the eye is & scary spectacle so frightening it makes you want to dive for the pillows and pull the covers up over your head tight. It Is the prospect of representatives from 42 U. S. clubs, societies and pressure groups who have been invited by the State Department to send to San Francisco spokesmen who will serve as consultants to the official, U. S. delegation. The 46 United Nations may have their difficulties in agreeing Mbw they wiU lie In the same bed of security, but their peaceful slumbers will not be disturbed nearly so much by a Soviet Russian with a secret vote plan, a temperamental De Gaulle Frenchman with a : collection of trick amendments, two quarreling Polish factions, nor British dominions a scheming quietly to rule the world, aa they may be bothered by this fringe i of 42 lobbyists. . Included in the 42 are four big business groups, two associations of lawyers, three labor organizations, four veterans' organizations, four farm groups, five women societies, two Catholic, two Jewish arid two Protestant auxiliaries, six four businesssocieties,, peace men's luncheon clubs, three educational societies and the National Association for the Advancement ' of Colored People. eight-memb- er half-doz- ed 33 Form of DCS Washington Col umn work. Local people who have lost sons over there wont feel Gerso kindly toward those Hnt-m- an .r an ed ill Peter Edson's A man was talking in a local grocery store. They're going to bring in Nazi prisoners to help with farm Francisco. Today he gives threw his weight with the treasury further regarding What approach would the new President take in achieving in favor of a hard peace. whet causes Russian suspiinwar Top department officials, these ends? ' cion of the westorn allies. fluenced by the atrocities comTo the members of Congress he said, Only with your help mitted against American and allied can I hope to complete one of the greatest tasks ever assigned prisoners, finally agreed with the interested In the war department' to a public servant. president, and even the state de- survey of the damage done to partment reluctantly swung into war plants by U. 8. planes, a In theat and other answers to the fateful questions raised line. to be undertaken by a group by the sudden passing of Mr. Roosevelt, President Truman , For a long time it has been no survey of bankers and top insurance revealed himself as a man concerned but hopeful, humble secret that a group inaide the state executives, G but not diffident, frankly in need of help but unhesitating department favored a soft peace Alexander, including: Henry of J. P. Germans. for Germany with a view to mak- Morgan; Fred Searles Jr, presiand unafraid. SUSPECT OSS And in doing 80 he revealed himself as a pilot who, though ing her a bulwark against Russia dent of several J. P. Morgan mine Finally, the Russians are probwar. But as long as companies; Franklin D'OUer, presthe after Dew and untried and wholly different from his predecessor, Roosevelt was In the White House, ident of the Prudential life Insur- ably most Auspicious of the mysterhas taken the helm in steady and capable hands. the state department appeasers ance Co.; and Robert P. Russell, ious U. S. eapionagq organisation kept quiet president of Standard Oil Develop- called OSS. The OSS, or office of strategic services, has, strangely, on the day after his ment Co. However, Relics distributed tome of the most powConsidering the manner in which erful body waa buried, a meeting of the bankers representatives in colNew Oil of Standard was German Jersey committee reparations U.S.A. at key points where they 'American soldiers in Germany have come upon some in- held In the office of Assistant Sec- laborated with Hitlers carteld even the Influence U. S. policy in occuteresting old relics of a bygone time, living in comfortable retary Will Clayton at which both after the war broke in Europe, and can seclusion until disturbed by the advancing invaders. the state and war departments considering bow the J. P. Morgan pied Germany. The roster of OSS men who have collaborated One of them was the Princess Hermine, widow of Kaiser suddenly reversed Roosevelts pol- branch bank in Paris with the nazis even after Pearl been or are operating in Europe Wilhelm. He was a poor old man with the wrong sort of icy af a hard peace. Rua-siareade like a list of they argued Harbor, you can't blame the Specifically, for wondering whether .this the first sixty families. It includes: children, she said of him. He loved Germany. the removal of nazl facagainst Marshal tories, machine, tools, plant equip- survey actually Isn't for the pur- Paul Mellon, son of Andrew MelAnother was the ancient, massive, iron-visagand Henry Morgan von Mackensen, idol of two generations of Prussian Junker3 ment or goods out of Germany. pose of getting a line on German ton;theJunius House of Morgan, Alfred and building it up after pf the The have industry Russians proposed and perfect symbol of German militarism. "Cant you do removal of German war plants to ' the war. Du Pont, Lester Armour of the something to stop the Russians from killing my chickens?" help build up the hundreds of AMERICAN INDUSTRY WANTS Chicago Armours, Gordon Auchin-cloa- a, John Auchincloas, Warwick was- his complaint to his American captors. Rusaian factories destroyed by IN Potter, Harold Coolidge, William Germany. But the state and war state There were others, tck, including a few fatuous, Naxi-lov-ithe Already, department Van Allen of the Astor family, and maintained that no Hohenbollems. But these two are enough to provide an- departments American Allan Dullea, attorney for various such German equipment could be ia being bombarded by other compelling reason for unconditional surrender and the removed from Germany without industrialists who owned factoriea international bankers with previthe unanimous consent of the in Germany before the war and ous connections in Germany. pursuit and punishment of war criminals. Some of these may not deserve want to get back to start operating commission. Naturalold to reparations should Heaven forbid that Adolf Hitler grow escape this means that either the them. Among the leading pressure the suspicion focused upon them. in half forgotten, half forgiven exile and one day be called a ly But others more than make up for Ui ited States or Great Britain boys is Graeme Howard, of General Motors in charge it. And anyone listening for 90 poor old man who loved Germany, or that Himmler or could block such removal since In Europe (and Ger- minutes to their conversation any other top Nazi should live to complain, at 96, that the both sit on the commission. Secre- of operations At this meeting. Assistant many). Howard helped organise about the next war and building citizens of a country scourged by his own countrys mass as a partner In that tary of State Clayton argued that Franco's truck transport service up Germany murderers were actually killing his chickens. American policy should favor leav- during the Spanish civil war, has war, can understand why the Rusing factory equipment and machin- a personal interest in the open auto sians wrongly accused us of a deal lunri I frrlM 1aml ery in Germany so she can get works in Germany, and haa been to permit the American army to back on a sound economic basis busy as a hound dog around the enter Berlin first. Former President This is the kind of underlying He oven mentioned the fact that state department wanting to pt suspicion which must be killed imGermany would need to import cot- back to Germany. ton to manufacture . clothes and VERTICAL HORIZONTAL Naturally they cant have a hard mediately and permanently if the should be permitted to have enough pear if they are to build up Ger- machinery of San Francisco is to 1 Month 1 Pictured (ab.) many, so they don't want German bring about permanent peace. W exports to pay for the imported former U. S. 2 Vulgar fellow 194$, by The Bell cotton. (Clayton is the biggest cot- factories and machine tools carted (Copyright, president, 3 Kaffir in the world and did off to Russia. Inc.) ton Syndicate, exporter William wai nors a heavy business with the nazis 7 Canoe before the war ) 4 Require I 8 Myself RUSSIANS REMEMBER 5 Conclusion 10 Bird's home 41 Royal Italian cloth Unfortunately the Russians are Drawing Cards 6 Thee ilJArmy order all too familiar with the attitude family name 24 Czars ) (ab.) 7 Peels of the state and war departments 42 Pitcher 25 Natives of 14 Rely toward them. Unfortunately, also, 8 Wanders 43 Music note Morocco ll7Channet some observers believe this distrust 46 Emmet 30 Her Islands (ab.) 11 Frighten of the U. S. state t department is. 47 Sped 31 Irritate 12 Giant 18 British one reason why the Russians deone 50 He 32 Diner 15 Exclamation I account Pomand a strong, AssassU the of 34 Distorts I 16 Compass point money (pi.) land. nated U. S. 35 Extreme 18 Harem room 20 Conceal However, no matter how efficient 36 Sainte (ab.) presidents 19 Besiegeis 2 1 Satiate the peace machinery devised at San 53 40 Debit note Norwegian 21 Peerless 23 Abdicate Francisco, it will not work If the 22 Measures of (ab) (ab) 25 On a wall two strongest powers supposed to 26 Onageis keep the peace already have begun 27 Uncldes Jorkeying against each other. 28 Georgia (ab.) The Russians cannot forget 29 Either among other things the strategy of 30 Western cattle the Cliveden set in England (with -- pic ma' The individual Washington 'if? the ets m It : f o! etc This is war. . . Several weeks ago, a youAg man at Bushnell worried how his wife and daughters would react when they saw him with both legs missing. Im afraid they'll be so discouraged,' he mused. "Wonder how I ought to tell my daughter. I have three girls, you know. The oldest one is coming here with her mother as soon as transportation can be arranged. "Maybe ther won't want me now that I have no legs. No! liberty alone, not truth alone, but truth and liberty, Liberty with Truth, shall yet enlighten the world. iM . Changes . DIFFERENT PEWS. DIFFERENT VIEWS If the object of San Francisco is to establish peace and keep the peace, why dont a lot of these people etay home? The fact that more than one of each of the pressure groups are invited to San Francisco is in itself evidence that in normal times they can't agree with each other on the same thing On the eve of departure for San Francisco, a great dread grows that the good old American love of a show, with political convention Brothers torchlights, Ringling Barnum & Bailey and Hollywood touches thrown in, may so scare the delegates from the other 45 United Nations that they will revolt. They may rise In unison and say; "If this be the price of peace, give us war. If this be the higher standard of living to which you Americans wish to raise the rest of the world, lead us back into slavery; if this be democracy In action, give us dictatorship. If this lai what we have been fighting to good by." ITS ALL PUKE AMKIilt t Loving this country and nc wishing any other, it n possil to enjoy the corn relish at Itp k deliberate noon of Lions, Rotanans and Kiwang to view with reachment the bickerings of A. F. and L , C L0 u N. A. M.; to argue religious 4! ferences with tolerance, and a get some genuinely hearty every now and then out of tk women, God bless 'em, who ri join clubs. All these things arts American as apple pie. and u cream and we understand them. Why Secretary of State Stettm ious invited them to San Francua is understandable. Why they vrs to be there is understandable Theyre all tremendously interest ed and they want to contnbuti their two cents worth. Wbo is kmfe-and-for- doesnt? As a demonstration of Amencti public opinion expressing itself k insisting that the statesmen get together anr form an organuatM that will stop war, this greater combined lobby of s can exert a wholesome But if the boys and girb get the idea that they are gouy to San Francisco to put over pt projects, to insist on patents panaceas of their own to stage demonstrations ul raise holy Ned if their pnvtU picayunish perfectionism is Ml followed to the last detail In the name of peace, swed peace, they ought to stay borne prepnn-tion- Barbs War Secretary Stimson tin says American aodliers will do full duty if they find Hitl.r. we make a suggestion? Mif Despite his ranting .id raring Gocbbels is having a tough time putting up a good front Just like the German soldiers. Thus far the investigations into I the Black Market in meat bw I resulted in the discovery tint there's a shortage. . War Ration Book Number i already is being prepared don't get any funny ideas about what will happen after Germany folds up. To a lot of youngsters, the first n bunch of spinach will be a surplus crop. home-giow- soft The footsoldier said: Well, listen to this, will you. Too much leisure. Wish to hell I eeuld get Into a game of softball. Or take my girl to the picture show. . . , Walk into the movie, sit down in a comfortably seat, and hold her hand. Then get a hamburger afterwards. "Wish I could go to a good, old school dance once more!" DEMO CONFAB "Best defensive lighter I've ever had. Practically dares em lay a glove on him. to j that I advantageously. loo many are talking of retiring at an early age to jfcnjoy life, little realizing that only a healthy mind in a sound body can preserve us from ennui. Lacking physical labor, many will suffer mental degeneration. "Idleness will add tp the fatty degeneration of mind and body. T'o much leasiure will make us SALT LAKE CITY, April 25 (l'.Pi Seven states will be represented at a conference of Young Democratic clube here May 3 and 4, arrangements Chairman Marhellus K. Snow announced t'xiny. , The gunner insists on making it more of a personal fight I" j |