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Show STM looey Program SAME, PROGRESSIVE, - eveiy- gubieriptioB IIONEST POLITICS Income Leisure (or Agt Opportunity for Youth Conservation of Human Resources Published Weekly by C. N.Lund Time lo let prince ol The SOUL of the Dove of Peace and the Peace info our counsels, the world needs a Resurre&ion ( rmiL. EDITORIALS WORTH READING NEWS Congress Speeds U. S. Defense: Okay Army BUI , Plan Big Ships By Joseph W. La Bine XDITOrS The "Lord's To, curb the flaming sword? When free to man his holy love Responds beyond the seas, On wings of hope and faithful dove Goes forth with urgent pleas. PROGNOSTICATION Justice can and will reap its enormous harvest through strengthening defense against war. mnsend Clubs Not ith Workers Aliance '"-"-'D- RECIPES DEMONSTRATED World- - Poultry Congress kaoutrations and lectures on how to best use poultry tots successfully in the diet will be stressed at The Vs Poultry Congress, Geveland, July 28 to August Although it may be newt to some people, the egg ! perfect food. How to use it best will be ea reft brought out The proper preparation and serving of mats of all kinds will be another feature of the Ww program. Everyone who attends will have the to secure new recipes and will see these W demonstrated. There will be something for everyone Congress including the housewife. I. aat On January 1, IMS, Japan naval treaty with scrapped her the U. 8. and Britain. Subsequently an anna race started on both land and sea, precipitated each time Der Fuehrer or H Duce made an step. In the U. S., even were congressmen loathe to think of defense in terms of actual Invasion until Germany swiped and MemeL Two weeks later congress got down to talking eases, passing an unprecedented gSM.lSO,-00- 0 army appropriations bill in jig time after war talk like this in tha senate: OMahsma's Tkoatas: Every nation must be ready every moment to defend itself. Utah's King: The only possible danger ia from Japan, and . . . Japan la beating her head against a atone wall in China. Evan if Ger-loud-mouth- Czecho-Slo-vak- Storehouse la ... Transportation This was the first paper in the United States to come forth with a definite plan for economic recovery. It was the N. D. A. And with that plan we secured for it a hearing, through the paper, in every state in the union and in some foreign countri-cs.Th- e plan was originated by Benjamin B. Stringham,and was d manthe daddy of them all. It failed because of less mors followed or was patternagement. Everything that ed after it. In publicising that Plan we might have made some real money, as others have done from less worthy efforts. But we did not think of the matter in terms of money and never dreamed of exploiting the poor and unfortunate. Our only thought was for human welfare. Among other things, U. 8. railroads Mama high taxes, bad business and unfair competition from other madia far their present plight Labor Mamas tha railroads themselves. Most people Marne a mixture of geographical, economic and political factors, in which everybodys hands are partially soiled. When railroading reached a crisis last autumn and congressional aid became imperative, a flock of panacea! arose ranging from the Hastings "postallilng" plan to tha substantial bills of Montana's Burton K.' Wheeler and California'! Clarence F. Lea. Both management and labor pressed their particular eases and after two months of haggling the issue seamed little nearer a so- crack-braine- SENATOR LUNDEEN Ha seertrf If Altar lachdgnn many should defeat England, havent the slightest idea that would lution. endanger us." Tha latest voice Is that of Joseph Indiana's Minton: 'Germany B. Eastman, interstate commerce of or part might obtain Bermuda commissioner, who told the house Canada. Interstate commerce committee that Minamata's Landean: Then let the government must at least asthe United States seise Bermuda sume leadership and apply some and Britain's West Indian posses- form of compulsion." Whether Mr. sions to force payment of her .war Eastman's wUl be tha guiding hand debts. Andrew Jackson set a prece- remains to be seen, but his comdent in collecting a debt from ments were at least clarifying. After France by threatening to seise French territory in this hemisphere. That would Indianas Mintan: be adopting tha technique of Hit- Armaments Don't Bring Peace When men arrive at a state of development where they can exercise true brotherly love toward each other they will have laws. Surely the race is lost if no further need for there does uot come a day when men will so love their fellows, their country, their race, that the necessity of having laws will be largely eliminated. Love generates love and friendship generates friendship; hate generates hate and distrust generates distrust. Armies and navies and all the ghastly machinery made for destruction can never bring peace. They attract their kind bejmuse like begets like. If a nation thinks war, talks and acts war, plans and prepares for war, it is sure to get it as the sun is to rise. On the other hand if a nation bedrocks itself on brotherly love, thinks it, talks it, plans and expects it, it will get brotherly love. Because men do not love their fellows the word is an armed camp; a third of its population goes to bed hungry every night and millions on millions never in their lives have enough to eat The doctrine of brotherly love is mure practical and sensible than any other that men live by. From Plato to Einstein there has been no science of living offered to men that is so true, so natural, so grand as the social philosophy of Jesus. de Get Interested (2) Caftan. Another rejected amendment called for $80,000,000 to develop domestic markets and subsidize foreign exports. This obviously referred to the plan President BooMvdt broached a few hours earlier: To spend $15,000,000 between now and August 1 by paying producers $1.25 a bale (on 5,000,000 bales) for releasing their government-held loan cotton for sale on tha world market. Though tha 18M crop will otherwise swell government-held surpluses to 12,000,000 bales, congressional economy apparently won. Said Virginia's Bap. Clifton Woodrum: We might as writ repeal tha budget and the account-lu- g act, and let pandemonium and ehaoa reign." Meanwhile, far in tha future, southern eotton farmers saw relief la the revolutionary cottonless" eotton developed at Texas A. h M. college's experimental college, laid oil-rito produce ea over-larg- e, aoed without detracting from tha grade of the Unt, the new preduet made fanners wonder if cotton couldn't be raised exclusively for oil, whose price is fairly constant ch of them All ttldy man-ma- EW Sw mmi Defense visit to the Salt Lake county Welfare Department at Sugarhouse was somewhat of a revelation to the writer. The director, Sharon Hatch, waa very courteous and showed us through every department. We came out wondering if the Store Houseof the Lord hadn't slipped away from the churches and was being kept by the government. In the supply division were tens of thousands of tons of commodities, the best that government money can buy. butter, beans, grapefruit, oranges, prunes, raisins, flour ete. These are distributed as needed to the 10 branch store houses in the city and sent to all welfare units throughout the state. One hundred employees come under the efficient management of Mr. Hatch, and forty-fiv- e of these are the case workers. Everything is perfectly arranged and the many details are carried out about as well as possible. Similar institutions exist in every one of the forty eight states, and this gives an idea sa to the magnitude of Uncle Sams great system of distributing relief. ' I. only one way to pay off the government loans on which they have pledged 81,000,000 bushels of wheat. The way: To default making the U. & the world's largest wheat fimlum Wiscon-Jut-wi- A On Eafter Day should we betray The presence of our Lord, When pointing out the only way to Wtta Medical consumers in the etalea of Minnesota and ll get hospital care for two cents a day and will join together to provide medical eare on a cooperative basis in community groups, according to announcements by Group Health Mutual and the Group Health Association. 1 he unique statewide plan for group hospital care differs from usual hospital service plans in that the members of the plan, launched early this year, will own and control the organisations insuring the hospital and medical service rather than merely being subscribers to a service. May M. Geiaer. The above waa drawn from the writer'a own vision of Peace and ia her contribution to the great cause. NOTS-W-tea ito n,ml af tit mmn aaafrat, an ftaaa mn Wonderful Plan for Hospitalization INSPIRATION FOR PEACE PARADE IN PICTURES Weekly News Analysis Common people! The enemy is united; you are not. The enemy is organized; you are divided. The enemy is prepared to spend a hundred million to defeat any Progressive in 1940! Better wake up folks! ' $1.60 PER YEAR ler." Having boosted army funds $52,- over the current years appropriation, congress had next to consider navy news from the White House. Admitting Japans secret naval program waa one reason. President Roosevelt approved taro to 43,000-tosuper cost $05,000,000 each, bigger than any yet conceived and capable of squeezing through the Panama canal with two feet to spare on either aide. One good reason: By showing that the U. S. la able to out-arany other nation. Japan might be forced back into a limitation treaty. Present U. S. strength includes IS capital ship (one nearing obsolescence) ranging from 17,000 to 53. 000 tons. Six more are authorised. Britain has IS capital ship In the same category, plus the Hood and nine other boats Last Japanese report underway. (in 1880) showed 10 capital ships, none over 33.000 tons, and three under construction. Vague rumors ;sip 087.000 , n X 0 .Vtv'JT " super-battleshi- s Technocracy Incorporated See. 11110 of Salt Lake will have AnRaye Clendinning, a lady authorised speaker of the Los geles region here the week of April 10. Salt Mon.Lake.Bingham and Ogden sections have public meeting arrangements and two appearances are already sponsored in Logan.one being the Parent Teachers' Association and the other being the High School social relation study group, two other dates are still for Provo. pen but it is expected that one will be reserved The following is very pertinent: What happened in the days of NoahT Why did the Saviour say: As it was in the days of Does Noah, so it Bhall be at the coming of the Son of man? the all see prophesies the generation spoken of which should fulfilled, end in 1940? Are we living in the last days as seen by the prophets. Are the days of the beast and the little kingdom and the little horn, the soothsayers, the arch deceiver and those that preach in a strange language? is a real and scientiTay attention to TECHNOCRACY. It Ad. fic Social Security. since then Indicate about live new super dreadnaughts of excessive ton- nage. Agriculture Though the house approved an $818,313,000 agriculture appropriations bill ($499,500,000 of which is for : soil conservation benefit payments) the measure was far more significant for two exclusions: (1) Parity. Not included in the President's original budget but tossed in anyway, was a $250,000,000 grant for parity payments. But no financing was provided, and the bouse seemed economy bent Rather than resort to unpopular processing taxes the house voted against parity, winning disfavor of the potent farm bloc and a victory for the who insists President, needs must be met with definite taxation. Agriculture leaders hoped tha senate would restore parity; even so, an embarrassing situation apparently lay ahead. With no money, glum dirt farmers saw extra-budgeta- ry i , V. f Sim? ICC '8 COMMISSIONER A - . V $ m and Attend. RESULT STARTLING. The net profit of industry (during the last three years) has has averaged 3.3 per cent on net worth! This startling result been accomplished during a period when interest rates have been the lovest in all history, when the volume of idle capital has been the greatest in all history. $ Ir , EASTMAN guiding hand? attacking the apparent reluctance to as "wasteconsolidate or ful practices. and after refusing to recognize any benefits from greater freedom to increase rates, the ICC member outlined a few high points for rail recovery: (II The government should give concessions in taxation and relief in connection with grade crossing elimination and reconstruction of bridges over navigable waters. (2) Elimination of rata concessions to the government would save about $7,000,000 a year. (Si- All important forms of transportation should receive equal and impartial regulation. preferably under ICC direction. While tha house sped passage of a bill to facilitate voluntary rail reorganizations, Mr. Eastman pointed out that creation of a new reorganization court would delay rather facilitate matters. His alternative: Give ICC charge of reorganization duties. - People Deuglaa Fairbanks, has been ordered to return refunded by the U. S. on payments In star, la 1927-2S-2- $72, 1M tax . . |