| Show e--- 4 ' i -- - --- -- - -- - -- - 2 - - ' -- : -- -- ': 1 - t 0 10 A41 - I ' - Ar !1' ! — ' Raft litlif End otBig Wars? i Ztibtrizt - Saturday Morning September 4 e "' What Congress does relative to federilly-lands is of unusual significance— s of all to Utah because nearly the land in Utah is owned by the United States government And two actions taken by the last Congress affecting the public domain are of particular importance to Utah because of the recent oil and urani- s um developments in our state One action concerned school lands given to Utah by the government at the time it was admitted to the Union These lands— certain sections' in each township—cannot be turned over to the state until they are surveyed however and the surveying has been done very slowly Furthermore federal' lawi provided that if before were completed any mineral leases had been filed on a section designated for Utah the state had to take another section Instead The 83rd Congress changed this law to provide that the designated sections went to the state regardless of the oil gas owned three-fourth- : eys Mi-11rv- - ' Real Test Is to Come A United Fund Appeal in Salt Lake County can be the solution to the 'growing multiplicity of charity health and other drives for funds The Tribune endorses the action of civic business and labor representatives who took i i i I steps camThursday to organize a "one-shot- " fall this in the county Starting paign The federation plan is logical It is time initial — g e tried-and-tru- fund-gatherin- g - 11)111 ) orouoi Fpit ME— uranium or other valuable resources which Might have been found there Also the Congress appropriated additional funds to speed up the public lands survey If those appropriations are continued by future congressional aetion according to Utah's Representative William A Dawson who piloted these measures through the lower House the surveying will be com' pleted in four or five years The two pronged action will he told the Salt Lake Kiwanis Club in a talk Thursday mean millions of dollars of additional incotne for Utah schools in the future Second important action affecting public lands was a law making possible uranium or other mineral filing on lands leased for oil and gas exploration aril vice versa This law which clarified the status of 90 per cent of the uranium claims In Utah according to Congressman Dawson Will open up some 60 million acres in Utah and elsewhere in the West to prospecting and development These two matters affecting use of federally owned lands in the state mean much to Utah There are In addition two other matters involving pulalic lands which are unfinished congressional business Action is needed on them the congressman declared for Utah's future welfare One is to review federal land withdraw als over a period of some 40 years for a variety of purposes many of which no longer are justified The other is renewed- effortto get congressional approval of the Upper Colorado River Project which means so much to Utah's future growth Ad progress The record of the last Congress on the—public- domain ba3 been generally good particularly so for Utah We think the Congress deserves praise in this respect It la well for Utahns to remember how ever that action affecting the public domain will always be unfinished cpn'gressional business as far as this state is concerned With Uncle Sam by longs odds Utah's biggest landlord we must be constantly alert to see that proper congressional action is taken to insure the wise utilization protection and development of federally owned lands in out state VOU'LL RAVE-tCARRY ON o i 9610- - r as 't s L — see ( 7czi ::0Pikses '' OAP"- ' k i ' i ssP am - They Come Out Alive ' – Some people have criticized speed runs such as the National Speed Trials now under way out on the Bonneville Salt Flats as a worthless waste of time and money and a needless risk of life and 'limb De fenders of such speed tests counter that they help greatly in the development of The Public Forum - ' e' ' Who Dislikes School? - be — - tic ' -- - - to-w- 1 ork all-da- y ' 4 cornplained becoming-depopulat- double-parkin- g have-eaids- - :-- -- - - ed --- it - - - -- ss---- - -- -s- ' - c ' - I st 'II ) I i ' i - 1 i ) s i 1 i‘ - - Gnoycii Z sa H iseorv need the issue The Aug 30 edi- toil a l and other previous j the Aiken- - - had so much to do with fram--- ing our great Constituti9nI 0: Christensen - llorepti Utah would open s' '70 Is: is1 ss 70'''' 74:o - iss' Mr Shelley door or at s - ---- - a step toward it range h i which It r - 1 A - 1 i - - k i are:' None awwcatglictfeeilrngreshed the issini s ed in reduction portion permits cannot be made solely transfer —is -- being one person to' an- other (3)" Permits access to the cotirts in case One of the provlsjons of the present law relative to use of public' lands is the fact that the- - whole responsibi4ty for range improvement falls upon the Forest Service and Taylor Grazing Service These agen' cies have conscientiously tried to d9 a goodrnanagernent job The fact lethat they-ar- e s -- from n( s s ss i t s s - - - i - s c --- 4-- - 2 leegft dhio ' Irel tea s t t timber-i- n ' i comes :itteian t from wildlife seriously cut i: less funds improvement bl s- 4 ' I - - ' s - - 8oaper-Siyt- - --- - ' -- ' - - for examples - ean- ' ' - beve—as much fun bitting her brothers 7' with a plain boardIf"as with -ase expensive baseball baL V - ' '7- - - s I ' ' i Simple toys for the child aresaid-t- o 'be best—The - - - (' ': ' fr ' s''' --- -- ' '' 'S c - - - Ve--------- t 1 i s WE ARE CERTAIN It Is be cause of these important facts that the Forest Service and responsible wildlife associations approved the AikenThye Bill We feel lure that It is in the best interest of our watersheds—that this or a— similar measure be passed Certainly our western economy is so closely associated with-thuse of ranges- and witcrsheds as to make it imperative that full considers- tion he given to consequences' if sortiC vigorous action is not taken soon - ' ' 7 - restricted in personnel funds that it Is a pract- ical impossibliiiitO2do thi ' 'job of range improvement so badly needed: If the users of 'the ranges ' 't -- - f:ahctpthfr outnhy e - so :'- $ d edeterioration b1 " for (2) That - ' S s (1) reimbursed a 4 is the understanding that made s ties - il' restrictions become neces- sary bethre value has been re-ceived that stockmen be lu because i f g etc - Permit private users to spend money on range Improvements with tilt : - r t come from grazing and IOU AR k no doubt aware the three principal prothe bill - - sr srewh that of !! changes- a turn sisfoairmt tit some such action is taken' visions 4 i s l would help inoitret yec is hs astti r pt nocondition a rsh percentage abuse in most instances i mpro v e m en t will not be possibliiin-- - watershed ) 1 - to law the Aiken-Thy- e proposal would be a definite step toward a real conservation program for the ranges and watersheds would be 1 1 Bill RESISTANCE apparent that ' t "q — least place a "foot in the door" toward greater abuse of the ranges We are certain that if an objective study is made of this proposal it would be readily Jefferotr--Adam- Paine Billthe Thye brutality and tragedy of the thousand years of theocracy known as the Dark Ages the framers of the Constitution had the good sense to declare for totall separation of chute-ifanstate The President is sworn to uphold and support that Constitution instead he substitutes his on religious beliefs for the religious free- dom guaranteed by the Con- stitutions Both as a matter of constitution& guarantee and ordinary common sense matters of church and of state should be kept separate and distinct and I deeply resent the practice of the President to thrust his own religioueles Aids down the thrpets of those who prefer to have nothing whatever to do with religion who-a- ' ones indicate a feeling that that after the unspeakable s--'and of appraisal on —among' whom were Tribune editorials Recent '! f could be given a fair chance to use facilities which they are willing to provide and pay for the restilt would most assuredly be greaTil carrying capacity and far better watershed conditions The situation is similar to a renter who has no assurance whatever that he will be permitted to use the property from one year to the next Under conditions of this kind it is only natural that every device will be used to get everything possible out of the propertyYou can be Assured that as long as this condition exists the situation will not be corrected- - - on the subject of the grazing bill including the one on ' ' '' ' Aug 30 indicate we feel s for the more careful Iss - that-matte- raj ' f — will have moved far enough toward the GOP camp to become a vice presidential running mate with Mr Eisenhower or whoever else may be the next Republican presidential nominee Aiken-Thy- e - f 7J - Shelley ! es — COULD BE also that in another twit Years Shivers PULSE Secretary Utah State Farm Bureau Federation nfgol n a prayer would it not be absurd to assume that He would do less in the absence of that prayer? If the denial of a prayer is in accordance with r God's will on is not also the answer to a prayer in accordance with his will? And if the will of God prevails whether the prayer is made or not and whether the prayer is answered or what possible purpose n expect to accomplish by nrayer7However my to the President's approach to problems of state is not that prayer is or is not effectual I object on the grounds - Frank G ! 1 i's - (1 IT run- Ireeuttes d i - fold ' i I -- Johnson is a natural for vice president or even perhaps for top places off previously had been nominated hopes of the Democrat Cashed rison will inif - - tional 1 Accordingly nescsofucliu is quite as sive proof of the futility of prayer as is that Of Mr Har-- - - 1 - in 1956 IS for a ticket that will return the South and especially Texas to its tradi- Shivers He squeaked through with a plurality of 668913 votes as against 645994 for Ralph Yarborough and 36320 for two also-ran- s Based on the fact that no gubernatorial Need for I I ' Missouri of Symington THE - FIRST primary in Texas last July looked bad for Shotdd Be Separate Editor Trtbune: In commenting on Mr Harrison's conclusion that prayer is a total failure "Successful" ad- mitls that prayer sometimes but that is because "the will of God and the wants of men are not always the same" - - s Earl Clements of Kentucky and Clinton Anderson of New Mexico' If the Democratic search et easily THE PUBLIC 1 - - president Johnson works hand in glove with Democratic senators along the Southern borders such as Stuart in Virginia the orof Sen Harry S Byrd who came out against Stevenson and Sparkman in 1952 nominated its state tick- An Observer ress -- - be- into a $ T Robinson of Arkansas was the vice presidential running mate of—Al -- Smith --in 1928— and John N Garner of Texas served eight years as vice However ganization forced s -- IN THE 1952 Democratic embroglio Johnson sat firmly on the fence — so much so that he was accepted by senators from North and South alike for minority floor leadership of the Senate And in that job he has continued to stand mainly in the middle between divergent Democratic elements Of three other Far North Democratic floor leaders in the Senate over the past half century Oscar Underwood of Alabama was a prominent candidate for presidential nomination in 1924 Joseph tion incumbent ' - - terived s Democrats in 1952 won reIn nomination handsomely North Carolina liberals 'triumphed for both gubernatorial and senatorial nomina- had who s ' the of t ype RoOsevelt-Truma- n trouble companieng their pay checks It's a good thing to work for a company that makes money They are usual ly progressive and a paycheck isn't much good unless it can -- - It's Real of Tennessee attacked cause they flirted with -- some ' Sens John Sparkman of Alabama and Estes Kefauver Union As she says Mine-Mi- ll - - this primaries year encouraged the notion that the South this time as and 1948 was re- einhlt9a28t fairness depends on what you compare it with I did a little research and found that so far this year 210 companies have reached settlinvolving with no their unions wage increase at all Also I found out that 188 companies settled for 1 through 3c increase per hour and another 927 settled for 4 through 6c This makes Kennecott's offer of a 7c settlement pretty fair She also points out that Kennecott makes a good profit I have known employes of Y' red-face- d Earlier Dunne's't More than being traitors to your own sex—you are guilty of very shallow thinking To begin wall we've had two world wars in one generation caused by the lust and greed of men Costs of livios spiraled—inflation set ani- nwhat was to happen - of us would have lost our homes etc if we hadn't pitched in and gone to work t deny there was need of women workers during the war can you? Well by the same token—women had need of work after the holocaust ended The cost of living mounted and kept on— who was to absorb it? The men do two jobs? Oh no—the women Now why are some women hired in preference to men? Not just because they do a good job but because they'll work for half what a man will Who hires them anyway -- - ' Z--J Some Comparisons Editor Tribune: Lois J letter does not show a very fair attitude on her own part regarding Kennecott Copper's proposal to the Editor Tribune: Memo to R Streeter and Agnes rs iMu equip well-protecte- d i d Men So if you want to place blame think again The men could stop—this—anytime by paying women equal wages We're equal all right—but not to that extent Senator From Sandpit whole-hearte- d - SMALL no politician returns Outstanding examples were Sens Purnifold Simmons of North Carolina and Tom Hefli lin of Alabama overwhelmingly defeated for renomination after they supported Herbert Hoover for President against Al Smith in 1928s which :11 By Our Readers' -' the-athle- 4 - ' - IN dor-- s! rs have taken pains and not Skily each other but their attitude has been different mainDemo- THE PAST such outright bolters have been consigned to the limbo from 1 In home politics Johnson Southern H M A better engines tires 'and 'other mechanical parts of automobiles by determining how various designs stand up under the stress of high speeds Be that as it may the speed runs this ' year have already 'moved one thing—that zcars can be so constructed and drivers so protected the drivers can come out alive in a crash which demolishes the vehicle One car blew a tire after being clocked at 222 miles per hour It skidded a thou- sand feet the engine being torn out and sent hurtling through the air and the vehicle was demolished But the driver though By Ham Park Injured and hospitalized came out alive Another tar went into a spin at a speed of By medicine life may be about it It was called the 160 miles per hour and was wrecked—but prolonged yet death willseize the driver walked away with only a few cuts Caduceus and from it modthe doctor too—Cymbeline ern physicians get the insigne and abrasions of their profession All of which is not a recommendation A Mythological Medical Memo to the ordinary motorist to or mythhot rod crash helmet with a plus went ahead with his work ology if my memory serves and studies It is said that be and safety belt and let everything go on me right Apollo was the god so he the highway But it may provide a few ideas of healing He rits able ts rcaei: futhethat dead to as how autonibbile to they manufgturers s fell in love s' course was going ' can build cars to be more safe or some with Coronis entlist'elyol too far—so Zeus accurate an to get If it were possible tips to the more cautious motorists as to the daughter tossed another thunderbolt crosssection of 'juvenile opinion On the how they can equip their own cars so they of a Thessa- - psiA eoht killing the old fellow instantwe 407' will have a better chance to walk away Ionian prince pros and cons of returning to school ) ly But the spirit of the grand 11 Ntlisi 7 She bore him would heartily favor such a poll from a wreck old god of medicine who bea son seeks who sew-Though it is contrary to a tradition that gave up his immortality to became known come a man and a servant of some editorial writers reportert- and caras the father his suffering fellows still toonists are battling to keep alive we Procfe of medicine lives And his have a suspicion that most youngsters daughter His name was Hygeia now known as HyPark Mull really rather like school It the hidden feelParking meter receipts during the Aesculapius the science of prevenmonth of August first full Month the Aesculapius lived with the gienemedicine ings of most young people were probed we tive and preservauneovs would be feminine meter patrol has been functionsuspect little foreboding gods until his great human tion of health still goes about thP from his- teaching lalkshowto keep newsysiemis liYing Up tO heart ingindicate It is human to regard regimented hours expectations August receipts Were $2739s mother induced him to givewell Panacea patented her up the delights of Olympus and responsibility with some dread but more than in the sameMonth last year formulas and went into busiand go down among men and most summer enjoyments become diluted ness but not for h her health although actually fewei meters were in practice thd e tmedical skill his by repetition this time of year Summer operation Plainly theconsistent patrolling father him and Notes on the Cuff Department - work often becomes tiresome and for those Miter stalls that it has convinced usersof morso was which neededby John A Belden has seta- without jobs the hours' drag under the pays to pay tals back in Cape Cod the School offers tivestiving Of course the increased revenue is weight of inactivity Aesculapius went about The other day when that friends with emto That together of the again get chance story justifies only part healing the sick aided by his and it presents challenges in classwork and two daughters- Panacea and wcindy virago Hurricane ployment of the women meter watcher BeSides there oarot hit the atre" their activities who have eeplaced regular police officers extracurricular Hygeia Panacea helped her was ine her Shortly now assigned to more important downtown —father in his work by gatheriare the recesses and physical education after the "blow!' a telegram contests the parties ng berbs and minerals and sent by a member of John's traffic duties such as checking doubleperiods preparing his medicines for family was received here by -- - andasserhbly hours parkers enforcing fringe area parking him Ilygeia realizing that would heiltite to telt a ! traffic—in children Most and otherwise limits' Mrs Belden It- said:- "House regulating s school'si re- the business Section But the chief gain is' most of the sickness and suf safe Tide to Music Hall" She pollster they looked forward to caused tbrough norancewas better utilization of Metered parking stalls telephoned her husband and opening but most grownups grumble ig set about teaching ' 'asidi been from read him She wire "I wonder Yet The about having to go parker§ have generally people how to avoid getting - economic considerations the latter are why they tied it to the Music forced out Turnover has been speeded up sick She almost ruined her he said ' Hall?' a have is when don't office solated The casual result that the they 'clad's shopper usually practice The trio was lItte a to them occupied visitor or person having quick errand Constructive A reader phoned and said: job to do can usually find a parking stall In the useful or needed—is even "Senator in Wednesday's colactivity was in danger of to the peace of mind of block where he wants to go This availabilumn you quoted your friend s More necessary Zeus reasoned Sam Latino assaying 'A faint in turn to cut the urge to loaf or the than' us most of space helps ity ofparking ' that there was no sense heart neves won a fair lady' and snailpaced down on call of wild' a perfectly good Hadei - He may but I The tir pretense of disliking school cruising of- drivers hunting a parking ‘ were filled up ao doubt its for I kriow 'Sam unless it -' our 77: out in to fade spotgeneration )tint likely he hurled a thunderbolt at '' Anyway Cervantes in his ' but-wIt ill adds uP"16 real- progress in down1doul?tthatdinylody is being --fooled s s the old Don Quixote beat him to its Aentliaplusi 1ów-fi i strsIffregulationsse-sfers--sWniett:Ane-s- man'in that-h- ecrippling 7J:1777 :abeam hit tervilies --by -- - City Commission particularly Public Safety - thereafter—with -Xt was one of those things- -‘ block it's Police Nicholes Commissioner the A Mother down the Departfigures I 'wrete i "Ai faint START" commonly represented' carry- ment and last but not least the mmeteri 'school ete but it iiidn't come out n1y:240 screen door slams until Mg this staff with a tierlPent ' ' starts the symbol of wisdora 60110 I that wiy tam- - ' i maidaw themselves deserve tommendatiliGI I "one-shot- f : mary 1952 91epublIcan" and still tain his standing as a crat Not Equal' In Pay big-wig- s ‘- - 1 that a Southern politician can openly support a candidate running under the hated name - 6"80118 proved that They're scared of the maverick too Barbara Marstella ings ! : prime significance of the Texas voting is its proof - - ee en t—letter PrisTseey's--- r t ‘‘' s s Clegg's account so at least are the Democrats Grant M been smarting lately under the Rue Clegg whiplash can take solace for Clegg's own GOP is "not with out sin" in this business of political pussyfooting Clegg ought to know this better than anyone for he has been often spanked enough by the Republican s fo! daring to be out spoken As a reward to Clegg for sponsoringsone of our soundest pieces of legislation—the — the Republicans lien lanptly ran for cover and proi threw Clegg to what they thought were the wolves by denying him a place on their ticket two years ago How- when the showdown ceaver the voting public backed Clegg's lien law with a thumping majority Now the Republican stalwarts have finally weakened to the point where 'they have gingerly accorded Mr Clegg a modest place on the fortheoming primary ballot But the Old Guard is probably scared to death that their maverick might win Oh well! One thing's for sure: If the Republican bigon wigs are all ‘ f 001 and 1948 s os 00 s V s 1v '' The N94 t‘ltrivI t '' '' 1' ' ' I tf -- - - s Scared Too Editor Tribune: Democrats AN s 1 11 1:tFrk cltiAsp k eSes ) ' - 7 1 alVjal - : - - a et who have e Ai ess dential candi-'t ' ' date more ac-Igot f ceptable to the s South than Adlai Steven- ' Mr Hayden son or face an other bolt in' the pattern of el 0 ' ' se r AtI - ' Cf""" certainly that the Democrats in 1956 must find a prese - te:ZPel t ilt"41 'Vo6 -- 4-v- 4: :or' - - 5 1 '4 ‘4'C' - -' )' AILF-f"F iNI s j g 1 ' 441teXt?‘SA - er 11 I runoff means almost 4 - S 'III I r- : 1s 1 rose appreciably But in the showdown the Shivers vote roset to 773690 more than 100000 above his previous total whereas Yar- borough's 681284 representeda gain of less than 36000 The rise hi Shivers' vote was ill the more significant In that it came mainly from large cities Looking to 1956 Shivers' most formidable rival may be another Texan Sen Lyndon Johnson an easy victor for renomination in the July pri- s Allan Shivers in the prim ary ' lb '' r '' t 0 4 '1111 cCe si:w' s v ' '011t-- ‘ 17 I )( s s‘ - I i I tr A 1k - I Gov Texas tt ars 'Ehe victory of third-ter- sweeping ' i I HINGTON WAS X1 I ----- - - - Ai) AP 1 e I I I Ii I - — 11 I II I PAPA! 'FOR 1 - It is ultimately essenand i a breakdown in charity appeals is tial if to be avoided But the test of the pudding is in the eating The really difeult laek - lies aheadto Taise- - in One grand campaign money- for all the varied national and local charitable organizations A heavy responsibility rests upon the special committee headed by John M Wallace One obstacle will no doubt be cleared next Thursday when the Community Chest board meets to take official action on the plan which has such hearty support among the business community It is proposed to organization use the Chest's facilities for the united and appeal so there must be cooperation by this central organization which finances 21 health and welfare groups whose programs and funds are handled principally at home Certainly these groups which have already cut budgets to the bone must not suffer from the drive expansion The Community Chest actually paved the way to the united appeal in June when it accepted for the first time since the end of the war the Unitedt Defense Fund for the 1955 campaign Previously repeated failure to reach the Chest goal deterred the Chest from including outside agencies exIrrespective of their merits Ogden's a united appeal is ample in establishing another factor in the Salt Lake decision There Is questiOn whether other national de- organizations will accept the one drive cision The Utah Heart Association Cancer Society and Infantile Paralysis Foundation' have rejectell the idea and the Red 5röss However if contyibutors is to' supnotably large corporations refuse - insist on a Andcampaigns separate — port " drive most wörthy organiza- will tions eventually be" forced to join a united appeal The success of the move depends on the cooperation as wellAts the understanding and generosity of cpntributors The total amount raised must be adequate or the one united drive idea will not be successful money-savin- ' roo i Texas Vote Shows Bolters Can Survive in Dixie I -- HE'S HAYDEN JAY G MO Finished and Unfinished US Land Btisiness 1 - - ' - -- -- t ' - |