| Show Al3 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Sunday March 28 1918 OFFER NO SOLUTION Recall to Arms Columnists Agree It's Time For Showdown With Russ War talk was the kind of talk the Colurnmsta were reluctantly tbadtrig out even as Pres Harry S bla Tru-na- ti n ges-0- adtrisa to mated Sovlet arrrrasion and 0-- t ekedofenartthe European pro-gra- and training reenacunent of serv- let-Li-ve tee N A1 mitr! Marshall time for a showdown be- Its twe-ethe U S and the t 8 S It could ears David that vie will go to war liapen over Italy say Joseph and Stewart Aleop Ths countr7 should a stiff summoni to send Rues-a conference for peace says mutt 'We R well-conceiv- g h 1 the Ruzalars Lascrenrt mainly because he believes Russia is too weak te) go to war and Ave could fight if we had to thinks that a showdown with Russia through diplomatic channels w'ould probabty result In a Russian backdow-n He is gainst any kind cf poblic u1rnatum We should make It both easy and honorable for the Sorisq Usalon to retreat says Lawrence -- ed lend-leas- Alters ea Italy Abope see three posit- In-- the Italian electiona of bttes rhea first Is that the Arral 18 ezrnmunurts will get less than -- of the vote: they could then be excluded from the government and this could lead either to order with Marshall lan help or to civil war fought pt!' 0 1 -- T 10 S !y t' —t lin —"''7-'4gt-:- vi I - lo MARK 1 I - 7 k 0 XtritittorK1 in) (ilitorf) wile (f$12(4) ' 4 - 0 r - NVzis '''' 7 N bli 06 WHAT AM I SAYING By FRANK MORGAN Oh for the spirit of '76 and the prices of '36! Nowadays the money prices are so high doesn't talk—it whispers Which to conclude that should get what's profiteers coming to them instead of what's coming to us N Y Pont me Copyright is like nothing so much as a slice of St Petersburg Fla ast adrift Her passengers are apt to be creaky as a rule and the decks are lined with rocking chairs On the long trip down the Mississippi from Cincinnati the ancient river-fareit and rock play bridge for points and turn in early No Mississippi gamblers ride Ma Greene's craft and there is no carousing on a run that used to be a ripsnorter Capt Greene sells no bard licker on her boat because ighe says her husband used to tell her that no man can be his own boss and sell whisky There's No Hurry The S S Gordon Greene takes Its own sweet time getting down from Cincinnati and back again It splashe s! along at a speedy 15 knots downstream and struggles mightily to make eight on the long haul back She burns oil instead of lightwood knots and she has electricity and an orchestra but they still call her upper deck the Texas and imagine the shade of Mark Twain could find his way around rs 40th-ofa-ce- nt her with little trouble Practically everybody above decks is a captain on Ma Greene's old churner The master carries the title of of course and so does captain the mate There are two Ohio river pilots each a captain two Mississippi river pilots each a captain and Mrs Greene is Just as good a captain she says as any of them She got her Ohio river pilot's license a good bit back when she and her husband were both ning separate ships The male Captain Greene took over a vessel that was losing money and shoved his bride aboard lier Ofilliftt(l --- trt? ": Made $5 First Vc'eek "We made five dollars profit the first week" says Mrs Greene proudly "and never made less than $50 clear after that My husband said he d steamboatin' needed a S fig-tire- 1 - WOrtlEtreil f Alf a EXTRA Three Rea' sons for - vc A EI rip 11 Better Diamond Values - Perfectly Matched Set in Yellow Gold—Magnificent Daynes Quality are somewhat curtailed if viewed alongside the absolutism g of a She cannot for instanceskipper a marry while her vessel is undercouple way but she can clap an unruly hand or passenger in the brig She has never fretted very much about not being able to weld a n couple since all she has to do is work the ship over to the nearest cypress stump and holler for a preacher to come Blue-Whi- te Diamonds $17503 N touch" Capt Green skippered her ship for 18 years thereafter taking occasional time out to have a baby and the livelier progeny to securing the stanch-- ions with a rope when she had a difficult piece of piloting to do She ran and still runs I believe what is called a taut ship Her powers of life and death over the passengers and crew a A Dainty sea-goin- S I —86 years' experience buying diamonds moon-smitte- 2—For many years we have imported DIRECT from foreign cutters doing away with middlemen's profits 3—We ore housed in our own cutting the cost of doing business four-stor- NW building— go Write to I UTAH'S OLDEST JEWELERS Ji Ln y No Union For Captains Steadfastly Capt Greene has avoided the paternal assistance of seamen's unions The only union represented on the good ship Gordon C Greene is run by Master James Caesar Petrillo who watches over the health and happiness of her orchestra There evidently is small demand for unionization on a ithip where everybody but the purser and the junior hostess seem to answer to the title of a'esptain" Life on the Mississippi while overly sedate is still pleasing to Capt Greene but'after 58 years she is beginning to get restless She says she 'tire would like to take a boat on that ocean some- 4 Ilett : Relative to Investing in a Diamond 1 - 1 - $ ' I Op posi t ion CAM ti nue The moment the bill was called up however it was apperent that opposition elements by no means had been appeased Seri! J Howard McGrath of Rhode' Island chairman of the Demotratic national committee took the lead in opposing consideration of the bill even though both the 1014 platform of his party and rresident Tru man had asked for its enact- ' time just for laughs Truman Foes OF THE RECORD By H Were Once Big Boosters And what did Turkey do in which warrants a loan of "new arms" now ? As we remember it the Turk was the relief hurler who warmed up for nine innings in the bullpen After it was proved that planes couldn't go faster than sound they went ahead and did anyway And they call an 'Alabama governor impossible but there he Is A statistic now circulating has the typical American miss And buying 43 hats a year what could be cuter for the 1943-4- 5 By THOMAS L STOKES WASHINGTON—It is somewhat ironic that the forces in the Democratic p a y now spearheading the movement to ditch Harry Truman as the party's presidential nominee bear so striking a resemblance to those largely responsible for his nomination as vice president and thus for his being in the White House rt today It was a combination of big7 city bosses and the south that prevented renomination of Henry Wallace as vice presidential candidate in 1944 and put over nomination of the then Senator Harry S Truman from Missouri A alliance of such similar diverse interests is strangely dent Truman developing today to unseat Presillosoies Made Plea 1944 conven- Just before the y tion the bosses—Ed Flynn of the Bronx Frank Hague of Jersey City Ed Kelly of Chicago and Bob Hannegan of St Louts—went to the late President Franklin D Roosevelt in a secret White House conference with a plea to drop Henry Wallace As running mate They that the latter's presence argued on the ticket would alienate many votes—they had their estimates—among conserve tive Democrats in their bailiwicks Including business interests Political bosses are always susceptible to the wishes of business interests in their communities however much they may beat their breasts about the "common people" and they have profitable alliance with them as y machines any student of knows The powers-that-b- e in the south also did not like Henry Wallace because he stood for lots of things—as did Mr Roosebig-cit- i the south So they raised this against him publicly to sidetrack him Harry Truman was- - regarded as "safe" But after he succeeded to the presidency he espoused the Roosevelt social economic program however little he has got done about it and more recently he went all the way too on civil rights The president has become vulnerable because of various ineptitudes and his lack of the force and political finesse of his predecessor Temporarily st least he is down and it looks as if he cannot be reelected Tracks Are Plain So out front now you hear a great uproar about emotional issues ready at hand But make no mistake encouraging this disboss turbance of the big-cisouthern revolt from behind the e scenes are the interests that fought Franklin D Roosevelt so bitterly The weakness of their position becomes clearer daily its a matter of practical politics and a matter of principle ty self-sam- As the nauseous bilge boils out of the south and as the bosses contrive their devious maneuvers Harry Truman by contrast looks better and better every day He is fighting back and the public respects a fighter especially one with the right on his side city-slick- aspirant for president is further accentuated by the fact that the bulk of bexteflt under this measure would go te the Democratic south Twenty eight states all in the north and west would get only a minimum annual allowance of $5 for each child of school age The other 20 states mostly in the south would draw variously from $310 per child in Minnesota to $2350 per child in Mississippi Whatever the senate may do with this measure the house is said to be all set to kill it "Masters of the I DELICIOUS MELLOW RICH Coffee-Blendin- Art" g We Ship Everywhere T21 SOUTH COOK 35 WEST 1ST C017:2::24 CO Zii SALT LAKE CITY IHeadquartnrs &s 1 't 4 to I r 0 V vow dolP 411:11050" Ill tinr 40111i i "WESTERN DUDS FOR YOUNG DUDES" Sanforized blue WESTERN JEANS — denim Copper riveted pockets Double stitched cuffs seams long 8198 Sizes 1 to 6 8219 Sizes 8 to 1G nce (1LA1 au- bosses had an issue at hand which is always good in the south—an emotional issue which they could exploit as a camouflage for their real aims This was Henry Wallace's advocacy of extension of civil rights to aidto-edu- cation (p velt himself—that vested inter- estis in the south did not like such as the Wagner act wage-hou- r thority and public power development and so :on Use Emotional Issue That of course is not a good issue with the public because so many people have benefited from those things But the southern A motion to make the bill the pending business passed 53 to 21 but with several senators who voted "aye" indicating that they would vote against the bill finally unless it is materially amended South Would Benefit The question as to how much sponsorship of the present bill will enhance the prospect of a Republican It's worth a trial for you can always smile in th morning after a cup of Cook's Ankara Coffee Easter parade than that 3 number with a flower or two attached After a couple of tough identification mysteries on the Ralph Edwards show how about a breather? Like who's the running man ? Answer—MacArthur An eastern library reports finding bookmarks 'Mat range from lettuce to a strip of bacon Evidently leftovers from the reading that maketh a full man big-cit- law Tennessee Valley WADE V ment to stir up this legislative hornet's nest just when his bid for th Republican presidential nomination is at a most crucial stage but he has changed sides on the education issue It was on his motion in 1943 that a bill essentially the same as the present one was recommitted to committee by a vote of 53 to 26 That bill actually was doomed earlier by adoption 49 to 37 of an amendment by Sen William Langer (11 N DJ prescribing that there be "no account of discrimination—on race creed or color" Sen Taft nas sought to remove the racial and religious controversy by two provisions The Ohio Republican's bill directly recognizes the southern policy of racial segregation by providing that "in states where separate public schools are 014::'ekimtviallsztaidist brings NEW ORLEANS — Girl and Captain Mary Greene has been steaming up and down the river since 1893 but she's never been to sea yet More sthan that she raised three young-unon a paddle wheel steamboat and in 'L8 years of chugging up and down she never lost a youngun or a passenger Capt Greene a little gnarled old lady who has a corner on a dying mode of transportation the sternwheeler modestly lists herself as hostess aboard the S S Gordon C Greene which she owns Together with her three sons Capt Greene owns involving five paddlewheelers an investment of well over a million dollars The Delta Queen her son Toms boat runs in the summertime The other three are tied up The S S Cordon Greene over which the lady skipper ?resides woman- - "My mIssus took one look at these 'ere peace plans then started cleaning me old home guard uniform" Sternwheeler By ROBERT C I : OP Ma Greene Still Bosses 111 11"9a14 rcei 4et12r) 44 o-- zz - I - 71‘ OA - s 4 0 r - r - I Ever since it i was first pro- s Aaib Taft posed by the late Sen Pat Harrison (DMiss) in 1937 this measure has been a subject of bitter antagonism mainly on religious and racial grounds This atmosphere is more than ordinarily in evidence right now — due first to the sectional controversy aroused by Prem Harry $ Truman's civil rights program: and second to two recent decisions of the supreme court governing religious teaching in public schools Taft Changes Stand Mr Taft not only has chosen 1 - - bill r 11-E- 1411- current senate consid- eration at Ms of insistence the federal aid- to - education for minority the distribution of federal grants shall be on the same proportionate basis as was practiced In the allotment of state and local funds during 1947 To meet the fear of Catholics and other religious sects that the federal government might seek to regulate their parochial schools the no present bill stipulates thatexerfederal functionary "shall cise any direction supervision or control" over any school public or''' private affected by the act I the - T7 0 1 USSR as Napoleon did as Hitler did Drew Pearson says the Red army has 2450000 men in Russia alone Is stacking up armored divisions in Germany has special Yugoslavia combat troops near Italy has 100000 guided missiles and has three yesrs supply of wheat The Alsops say the Soviets have 14000 combat planes This equals the combined strength of the rest of the world in the air they produced 7051 of the worlds combat planes last year the U S coming in a poor second with 14' $ee V S Emergency Facts like these arid the Soviet strategy of placing obstacles between US and them have convinced LippInann that we are up against a national emergency We are greatly overextended in political commitments all over the world heaaya The situation says Lippmann calls for rearmament the draft wartime controls over industry reenactment of na-e and declaration of a Moreover tional emergency our commitments all the way around the vast periphery of the Soviet Union are probably too large even for our potential military power he asserts: those commitments should be reduced concentrated and backed up The coming showdown Lippmann declares will reveal the true balance of power We must get busy if there is to be any balance at all 21 k - RUbSIS e--eat : li 0 V S Vs re- says Walter Lippnriann The people are over lobrielmingly for army navy and air force expansion and ars g to pay taxea for it says George Gallup According to Drew Pearson Secy' of Stat George C Marshall told a group of senators that though b belleve Russians wanted war could break a tght Gut at ary time Offers Only Hope Yet It is clear that no columriat offer anything much more For coruitructive than hope Instance Elenor Roosevelt takes SVater IVinchcli to task for a ppeech on the radio people to get ready for warning a return to war rondltiona She etotrictTwronts to an the diatribe-icrris diworriforta starvation and death 'which war brinzt but the is unable to suggext any th-rmore than unity and strengthat on our aide and another the conference table siege G HAYDEN By WASHINGTON—Sen Robert A Taft's penchant for pressissues at ing ticklish political seemingly in- opportune moments is again i illustrated i n f - ' ::)J k Walter Lippmann is now quite clear that Soviet policy since the end of the war has been dominated by military strategy In anticipation of war Seizure of effective control in Crecho alovakia and Finland can have no other explanation be &syn Tbe strategy says Lippmann is to expand so far that any enemy will exhaust himself trying to get to the heart of a ' - ' ! ::: i Iv- Italy n Taft Tackles 'Hornets Ne3t1 In Pushing Education Aid race JAY maintained would be confronted S tarnuel Grafton arm immediately — "-1- th U In with it very tough choice any case there is a possibility of civil strife In 'tit ly Mark Sullivan advises that we be prepared in advance to deal with a Communist coup in nt rnary Il I ll-- e- gevry sa ' r rnent - city strongholds If they get more than 35(:t but less than of the vote over the will take either they goerrment in the Czechoslovakian manner or there will be Civil war If the Com munists get a majority of the votes they get the government and if there were then a civil war I exto- - corgi-es- ' 1! :':41141 iht - from their by the Communists THE BEE KEEPER By Giles roll-'em-- (gcri J4) e '41i ) : 4 1 fljL i m t) ( c'-- : Matching Western Jmnperss17es 1 to s 8219 Kid authentic western cut SIIIM'S—Billy the In blue red and tan 8225 to $495 11 ESTE1IN PANTS—Billy the Kid real western pants Sanforized Will adjustable waist and zip-$195 per fly Pink color Sizes 6 to 12 HATS—San Fran Western shape fine felt Trimmed with piping L 1 up : Ai r-- LI VI S103 Bound edge Tan and black :Th----- 4:04' : -- -- T 11 BOOTS real fancy tops AU leather earl Guaranteed long cowboy style 8 195 Sizes 4 to 8 8715 Sizes 812 to 11 8795 Sizes 11V2 to 3 Sizes 3V2 to 6 $1195 WESTERN HAND MADE REAL RIDING HOOT —Fancy Inlaid top Brown or black$1095 to $1295 CHAPS and VEST or SKIRTS and VEST—Two tone In real leather $095 Two-ton- e 0 1 1 I yr I gbvonnommo N'7! er z azt1441e r DEPARTMENT STORE 246 - SOUTH :- STATE ST A is Orderfor by Mailsizes - ship at once iineloed (Add 2 ‘ for Sales Tax in Utah) (Add Postage) |