Show -- - -- - - - - — - ' : ' 6- - v ' AC gait galtelfli t Dy Dalt - - Tribune nit tor is a member of the Associated 'Prom The Associated Oren is exclualvely 'entitled to the reproduction of all Dews dispatches credited to it or not Wheelie credited in this Palm' end also the iocal Dews pubitsbed herein - - - - - 1938 22 Utah Salt Lake City March Tuesday Morning - - 4 - eee ' ' - ' ' ' II i ' " Ii e - i ' ' it 4 I i I ! II ' iI ' : ' : :' t ' -- i ' t - I 1 I - - civic organizations to the pulpits of the long - established Lutheran denomination that has flourishedin Germany for four centuries When sentence was imposed on the accused parson and the fine was paid and the prison term ended he was as colnpletely ex- onerated as if the verdict had been one of the ' te e ' - ' r e a Hitler is not concerned with evidence or decisions with guilt or innocence with right or wrong It merely does the bidding of its master-min- d showing how little' dif- ference there is between nazi and commu?mistic dictatorships I e h' Accord of Knox and Kent - Reference to G O P Policies e Colonel Frew' Knox who Is making to Louse a comatose oppo- heroic I sition toefforts the new deal and rally the scat-tare- d i remnants of his party for another i battle has laid particular emphasis on four 4– points of the political compass—tariff re- -' ' duction social security revision relief reAccord- and labor regulation e - trenchment '- - -ing to Correspondent Frank R- Kent "the- Republican party can play no smarter poli' tics than by adopting the Knox declarations a as the basis for its appeal to the people" I Ir 3 ' ' The former vice presidential candidate 4 addressing the Republican state convention r : In North Carolina "urged his party to take away froraindustryitsmonopolistic pr- ot tection through excessive tariff rates (le3 daring his belief that if once this were done tt both the necessity for farm subsidies would be removed and the demand disappear In i t "' brief he urges a reduced tariff and a simple ' 1t ' policy of soil preservation-an- d farm credit L4withOtitbounties or bonuses or quotas' or crop control" The foregoing is taken from endorsement of Mr Kent who adds: "For nearly five years nowernen in ph'i tics have been afraid to speak out on these matters for fear of alienating the subsidized 1 1I groups Colonel Knox says—and It is true in —that it is ididtic to be mealy-mouthv the hope that these coddled voters can be ' ' I 1 g New - ' By Charles NEW ' I c z 1 ot i 'If t7 - 4 - 1(Ve e -0 7 -- p E etseee 1111 ---e- - - - It I ) 4 4 -- ' ft - - A --z I AS" 0'1!' efe Fa:a e1):eneeeelf1e - e th - 'le' -- -e -- 7- l e illia A':- :- e'We- e lee-- re e e 1doop'W'"'" else i ---n- ' kf: um ":--: r ' es YORK-teller- B Is s - i - ) 1111111116111S1 est' -- 7 "a" - - As tlie above voting endum 40' '' o ' li Ts : e ' 4' '''? -a ': market the alternative to "aye" in the quota refer- seems to be Then there happens to be $130- 000000 due to cotton farmers on "cotton adjustment payments" from last year These payments were based on the difference be- twee'n what the farmer got for his cotton and 12 cents but were lim- ited to 3 cents per pound the money being raised by customs re- m ceipts Now "section 349 (A)" of the new law says no farmer can get his money under this arrangement unless he joins the soil conserve- tion program Thus it may be seen a farmer in this predicament might as well vote for quotas for the other fellow because he is hooked anyway aa Industry slight extent we are now At least we can organize to protect our- selves against unjust discharge overwork or being underpaid We compensa- lion and the "security benefit" The law is that 51 percent of their ideas unemployment Editor Tribune: I will lain to Mr Morrison how the '4workers" can obtain control of all in- - ' ! party vote a president into the White House and sufficient con- gressmen to enable a- - bill to be passed nationalizing all Indus-tire- s The government can pay for these industries with money raised by selling bonds these bonds to be retired by the na- tionalized industries from their profits To obtain the industries! this way is a slow arduous task as the industrialists have control of agement and assume control under their own skilled men as lead- peaceably and possible at present is - el When wealth is lost nothing is lost when health is lost something is lost when character is lost ' all is lost!—Anon Shortly after I had read about the defalcations and disgrace of a 1 ' Notes on the Cuff Department My friend C Watt Brandon editor and publisher of the Kemmerer Gazette called while I was out When I returned I found a note in my file which said: "So What Brandon called He's at the Newhouse hotel" A man stopped me on the street and sale "Now that you're back I'll start reading froneHollywood your coluinn again" "Didn't you read it while I was down there" I asked replied---'- ? knew you wo"uNkIrntkbee mentioning anybody I knew" H'm five-tim- one-thi- - !t rd - ee" ed ear-muf- fs good-looki- ar World-Telegra- m aa ff - ' - By ' Clown—What happened to the ventriloquist you used to have? Circus Manager—Oh he found he could make more money by selling parrots—Hartford Courant 1I rd iivoters 1i '1 top-flig- ht 4 S e yr i 7 1 'tt I -- 1 i- "gaint ' t '1 1 tf 1 I - dek—this 1 - - - ' -- " I 3 t 0 I E 1 c tg - Hunting Season "Sorry sir but rm all out of wild ducks I could let yeu have a fine end of tam!!----i me How cbuld I go "gton't kid home and say-- I shot an end ot a ha?"—Santa Fe magailne b ie 1 a V p ' 3 ti e a a 10 - e e b - " jI ' fi a k t 1 1 t a I'llsTell You ' 1 BURNS - I lived - " a 4 4 I II off than our 'i forefathers were as tar as real happi- - a 21 nen is concerned I knew an old fella who named his child Carol because she was born on Christ- - -' 2 ' oftell bear people talk about how dread- tut it is to live insthis modern age with the scientific conveniences but sometimes I think we ain't any better Hee-- Joe Haw—She? I thought a carol was a hymn—Providence Journal - BOOB - es In I ' The - I d -------- WELL—- "But I'm ' a Composer of Jj azz music" "Well you can go on with that Rail - mas e 'e i i British ' tenectual work" Cross-Purpos- i vceot enlsytaknnt the-san- : in should rest from all )!Xou el I Careful to Avoid Appearance of Liehon i Even in the far east where our interests are identical ' and our purposes parallel and where naval cooperation is a necessity the ofinoat care has to be taken to avoid an appearance of understanding and there are prompt denials when the charge is made that one exists Our diplomats abroad have to be especially cautious as the mere suggestion of an intention to cooperate brings howls of pro- test from senate isolationists and the ex- tremely articulate element which holds that any form of international cooperation is wicked—an element which with its head buried in believes that nothing that happens in Europe can possibly hurt us if "only we refuse to "mix in their affairs11- The thing does not make- - sense : -- ' 1 - Btriiiitisshi-mde- Better Business ' 1 Do what I am up again: $1 for taxei $5 for plates $1 for transfer 50 tents inspection 25 cents for driver's license and $160 for gas and oil To my amazement I find in addition there is a $25 license fee to peddle and buy the junk that is cluttering up our fair city I guess Phad better junk the old automobile and both of- us I jump in the lake My father had to go to war to help free the colored slaves Sand now it looks like his son will have to go to war to help free the white slaves Charles Collins 2029 Richards street Akar e to be oentiao Flee of rlodi I tefforts harping the to us pull the f itroe' nrhdauvpi other haeyrs i jubdeoi an antii 7English phraes hpossible a population nearly half of which Is scent o(1:'f politiciana of the Bill Thompson type for years have taken full ad vantage It has been promoted by a certain number of sincere men in the senate and outside It is an exaggerated prejudice but sufficient to keep those charged with form- ing and enforcing a national foreign policy' from being openly realistic 1whae silreus tt fmoyedc-11e0- Now I have an old 1926 automobile which was given to me six months ago I have not run it because 1 had no license plates but now after the cut I thought I would crank up the old lizzY and do a little peddling knd gather a little junk to make a little on the' side But here is - a other? There would seem little doubt indeed Yet such is the force of the "no entangling alliance" appeal so potent is the power of the "mind our own business" cry so plausible the argument that we were unnecessarily dragged into the last war and so gullible are people generally that it has been easy for those who abhor any form of international cooperation to create a sentiment which makes those in power afraid to advocate openly the sort of crik ' :1 Can anyone doubt that the weight and power of the forces whose supreme desire is to avoid a conflict would be vastly enhanced? Can any sensible man doubt that: there is a better chance for peace this way than any - one-four- th 1 1 Can Any Man Doubt Benefits? Editor Tribune: The Lord says that when one man has more than another it is not to be so Now here In our beloved state others is enough for everyone to have plenty to eat wear add a good home in which to live Then why are there so many underfed underclothed and underhoused? I was told I was too old to work so 1 was given- $35 per month with which to support my wife and myself which included of this month i - Protests at High Cost of Junkman's License t —By Ham Park V - There has been much criteelematthelleke— and force upon the part of Great Britain in dealing with the crisis Can any-t- o one doubt that if it were known that this na- te tion saw eye to eye with Great 3ritain1 that in the event of a war sure to affect us this I would be found fighting with Great nation Britain as before—can anyone doubt that this would immensely strengthen the British b voice and promote a peace almost as vital to us as to her? Mr Morrison's assumption that beginningi hymen-of-eintel- li eiefees:counteyeeseekr gence and vision" who gained boas We have industrial spies to watch the workers police to mas- - their wealth from unscrupulous exploitation of the natural re- sacre demonstrating workers vigilantes paid by industrialists to sources of this country by means of bribery deceit and astual theft terrorize them To take back these industries Until Franklin Roosevelt backed by the unions and the un- ' built by the sweat of the work- ers from their own natural re- organized masses became president we were not even free to the sources is hardly seizure e enator From Sand p A - it with Rose-Dyk- - the-loa- - And I do wih Mr Morrison would investigate the historiesof the industries built from small im- pi - Will B1 in Sooner or Later 4(economic N ' by Our Readers the facilities of edudating the people thus leaving them in ignorance of their exploitation The other way would be for the S might escape active participation concede would be no escape for us from consequences of a collapsed Europe and that the effect here would be devastating This being the case—and few deny it—clearly it is vital to do what we can to prevent the smash from comIng over there Perhaps nothing we can do will avert it but it seems incredibly unintelligent not to make the effort It is too plain to argue that the one effective contribution we can make toward this end is through cooperation with the nations—Great Britain and France—whose purposes parallel our own and with whom in the event of war we are certain to be allied It is too plain to argue that the prospects of peace would be enhanced by joining with them letting it be known to the world at large and to the ag- greaser nations in particular that should war come the United States will promptly enter on their side It is plain that that knowledge would reduce the chances of aggressive action from the dictator nations because it would reduce the chances of their getting away ' 7 ' ' e However the overwhelming opinion is that once the war begins soon or late our active involvment is certain But even those who cling to the conviction that somehow we lit ' Here's How Workers Can alahriee loanaearaemade l'e I U ' THE PUBLIC FORUM referendum medicine as directed a postcard dated t 1 e e corn wheat or ricb farmdtrs unless they decide to take their quota- - Driscoll "That McCann star was a suggestion I had sent him for an item about Alfred W McCann Friends send such suggestions leads and tips to columnists daily and material piles up It is good to have but the writer doesn't always' get around to any given item right away Exactly one month after sending M put down his pen me that pard forever So I will give you "that McCann stuff as I gave it to Odd iii- N ( "eeeeetialt Richard Whitney eastern social- e ite and president of the New 'York Stock exchange I came It Work Made of the Altied W leldearinis a fine across the following article in a In case these clubs happened to little booklet Clyde Early gave me famous man's son who makes good The elder I am going to run it for the benefit lack sufficient inducement there McCann also Alfred W was a reporter on of those of us who seem to lack is another The new law permits Globe He covered some the Old Evening a noncooperating farmer to obtain the ability or the opportunity to accumulate money It is called food scandal stories and became interested loans on only 60 per cent of what -cooperating farmers get The ef- -n -- in pure food He began a daily column on The Best Estatefeet dehy KIM adulterations and—frauds—He-deviloped No father need regret that he I privileges of conformist& Into a crusader heckled and badgered by But even with all this the refer- - cannot leave to his son a big es- and profiteers in misbranded goods He went out endum conductors took as few tate made up of lands stocks for on hie own established laboratories for analyn James Aloysius Walton the chances as possible As a matter bonds and money in the bank barber-sho- p his to can sic of foods and took to the air with daily any father bequeath porter doesn't care of fact the question was settled children infinitean estate for either the safety razor or the worth broadcasts to housewives That was when before the vote The law had ally More than all of these—one for electric He says they're no use crystal-se- t listeners were just hobbyists ready put cotton quotas into ef- - which they may well rise up and at a dance McCann continued broadcasting until he "unless fect automatically —dropped-dea- d day- after his broadcast- orthe farmers" voted them callHe himcanblessed Not so very long ago the Demo- leave an honorable about six years ago Young Al was 21 in down so the question officially so name a good reputation the rectchreeytspu submitted: "Do you favor marcollege He came home and took his father's t a lot of "sacrificial goats" ord of a righteous and useful life 1938?" in cotton He has for on at the mike carried since quotas place keting And to their He can teach his son to have a on their tickets was erroneously worded It should without a break He has built up the busiamazement and discomfiture they for facts a deep profound respect apbetter have "Hadn't read: He ness to ite all-timeyou small is a high (Note to Repubreverence for character a thirst were elected! ticulous young man with that exactness of prove what has licans: History quite often refor wisdom a willingness to work is Mr sayWallace As always speech that comes from ad libbing' by the peats Itself) and to find his keenest joy in creas ing what he is trying to"do is to tive labor hour on the air His mother is the censor who it work" apmake 'with the weather and that What democracy goes over every script before it is broadcast 1' this: man all If has any young converted" pears that in this instance he he will He is married ' and is building a home In inventory tax ' being a not greatly need any monthly The danger of made it work—just like a dictamerchant must be mighty discour- Yonkers willed be to him that money may once the backbone of the torship Sunday afternoon we put ‘ Series who were If he does not have this no money aging on our and galoshes Investigation also will absolve party is something to be ignored 'says Mr fWhite-Haire- d Much left Beauty him him will do good Mr Wallace fromlAame for the and journeyed down to see the Kent who believes with Colonel Knox that This is an estate any man can Okla-hom- e white-haire- d and Add of Texas ladies: recalcitrance of display spring styles in the relief should be turned back to the cities leave to his children Those southwest growers Anne Hirst heart-thro- b writer for the New We- - didn't mind Shop windows and counties that all subsidies should be J and Helen Worden York Post snow so much The things of every day are all the million-dolltopnotch - have large areas of uncultivated discontinued and that the social security act land and Want to expand while but when the wind started blowwriter of the -Z- oe Beckso sweet: should be rewritten along lines practiced southeastern states have little ley who does syndicated heart-thro- b The morning meadows wet with ing mail storage boxes at us live talksjs 0 It was in in Great Britain room for expansion : a lively woman with sympathetic charm that gave up and wentback home dew? the expanding southwest thereCorrespondent Walter Lippmann agrees attaches to most successful writers of this The dance of daisies in the moon But it's emit! wind etc The fore Mr Wallace lost most of his with Mr Kent that unless reactionary sys- kind of copy She worked on the Evening blue the shock of seeing your wife in her 8 dissenting per cent m a S Van Mail during the daysof hills where twilight Of far-otems are renounced and progressive policies new Easter bonnet will be postlie shadows was no reDine then Willard (who be there will Is Huntington Woe noteworthy adopted Borktey poned a few days The night with all its tender- - mysVival of the Republican party—not even' Wright) Rube Goldberg Harry Tuthill Fred been act the has terY V just V Although Knowles McNutt and L StoDemoRoy A Schonlan editor of the coalition Henry with disgruntled through on the books a month a correctAnd silence and Ood's starry a Vintah Basin Record thinks that' ddardDorothy Dix (whose name is Elizaores has I sky! ing amendment already farmers should teach their wives beth Meriwether Gilmer) is a genes whites Oh life—the whole life—is far too more about machinery A woman passed 1the house haired woman who despite her phenomenal automatic fleet The law authorized last fall success has known much sadness I found ' narrowly escaped New Legislative Districts The things of every day are all when her apron injury for burley tobacco if rein caug'ht got her full of good witty conversation when I 'quotas so sweet!: serve supplies' get above approxthe corn shredder while her husworked in the press box next to her at the Give (General Representation unless band was down town playing pool imately 985000000 pounds Chica g o convention that nominated Harding one-thiof the farmers oppose The cotemon things of life are all Fannie Hurst was on the other side of me United States senators ard elected by the 10el within so clear It stems supplies are Saturday night the girls of the and the three of us ?Men forgot about the con- of their respective states without The waking in the warm hilt-- East high school took the boys to 000000 of that figure now' and the in our vention about trade a to gossip dance The girls borrowed the gloom reference agriculturists fear large spring population or congressional ev -- To find again the old familiar family cars' and called for their kaubdivisions' Representatives are apporplantings And heretlit: ftoh::xteeer Fannie Hurst is the Most systematic of ' room leader Mr Barkley boy friends The car that called tioned according to population arid states the novelists When she has her 'The scents and slghts and forHam Jr had three couples in tion 1in a hard contest in the burley ' ' are divided into districts for election per- - - notes for 'a new book and the general scheme It already I think it Was a school sounds that never tire country of Kentucky Under the ' new primary system of it in her mind she comes back to her home poses bus administration The homely work the plans the but I'm not sure He picked The proposed adopted in Utah a similar- plan is to be fol' 'in West 67th street and goes to work Usual-sh- e our prize begonia tor a boutonlilt of baby's laugh amendment which is about to be lowed While each county will have at least Ideas her a Would by niere save ly fire ripens The crackle of the open preliminary long (when he takes 'them to a passed in congress cruise or a trip to Europe But when she one representative the more populous counThe waiting' then the footsteps both Mr Barkley and the farmers hop I usually have to cough up for starts writing she is incommunicado for six a corsage of gardenias) but they ties will be cut into legislative districts the trouble of a referendum It coming tear hours a day There is no phone in her work- made him check it at the hat and The opening doori the handclasp authorizes - quotas to go into eJ-- Commissioners in the seven larger coun- halliree herfor any tea: room coat stand ' Just before hi left and the kiss— ' once set acfeet the ties are now maps voting revising hie mother- - asked me for some s Is Heaven not after all the Now son are strict Lunch is brought in That too Me Wallace is mang Here : l 19 will t Lake have Salt cordinglyI soth schedule'Tontinues untill the last ahapter is and Here? time with change She said she didnl—wint districts Weber 5 Utah 5 'Cache 3 Box " The common things of life are him to go without Ms "mad" finished D a " large Elder 2 Carbon 2 and Sanpete 2 --On each all so dear! when I was e money - Now ticket but one candidate for representative —Author Unknown to Mo Copyright 1938 tor Me Tribune Copyright 1938 for The Tribune young 1I I 4 ' 1141—s-c----1"- ft : t I lit ' -- OP feF1-&- ' 2 ''' GERtitAtte1 : 4 ' -policy prevents it from ac- t quiring stability substance —or a clear sense of direction If this were not true'—if our policy were logical and forceful if it were not twisted by the politicians out of all semblance to an Frank IL Kent effective instrument the chances of another great war- - Would be lessened the hope for peace strengthened It is customary for our governmental and legislative leaders to ignore these facts but there are few thoughtful men among them who do not privately concede their truth For example there is general agreement that in the event of another European conflict ultimately the United States will be drawn into it and just 'as surely as in the last war on the side -of Great Britain and Francs There not are of course some persons—though many—who believe we can preserve- so complete a y and achieve such foolproof isolation thatallt whole of Europe might go leave us untouched up in flames - ' sirgia gritymft At i " - emee 0-- "Imles s i veeee - e iimyzeess othpeolAitmicserwicahnichtopreatrag- A' 1 oetty6 egl Wiark arkIS 1 t n- e rk k seal - -- -- - — I ' - N I (4 i ' e 7 XV - -- -- A' 'e WED ) ) 4 — -- ---70- ': RING' MEE — i ' - !' vA' AN k-- W eteere eesst '-' i Si zzet)Ite ' - e - 4 - -- ont--7---- situation In Europe considerable extent it overshadows almost everything else Certainly the threat to civiliza- - Th tion of another general con- flict is such as to make die- ItLe cussion of domestic political ' events seem more or less it trivial Nevertheless the cold "c ""-'r7' fact remains that it is do- - - e4--- - -- N "4 'ea - -nee ' - Frank R K WASHINGTON—The is so menacing that to mit — i'illibt j eereee e i ee a 4"-- - eeettee 1 III Moll' nsistUll ' ' re --- 9 sBy - ‘ : - eat 1' fl0- : 2 - - --- - i I el V7 ' ' At: ) ' - 0 - Messrs Duggan and Bledsoe gave the farmers sound advice A small "paragraph G section e Averting e - ( pr00A ' j ' elev failed army :POlititidei:§:1:Thxkiärt i A - impose stacts in earnest y Orr U:5-:--Hppep1:--:j:::- - the time it was passed a month such Unexpected in Texas and Olt- I W Duggan southern division publicity general Samuel Bledsoe took a train and rushed to the scene They spent nearly a week touring and speaking before farm noups urg- trig compulsory quotas and painting a dire picture of the plight of the farmers if the referendum -- - ''' claim-jumpin- 13 and this in red ink is the message:: That McCann stuff is dandy I'm saving it forp dull day ihortly Spike Hunt sent me his book Its packed with good e O 0m stuff Thanks acquittalrBet-the-Oestaper--answerrin-- - e motorcycle corps of Mussolini's -ha-January - ":' when B fr d4 Catholic ely - ' - - ' s ': Cotton Referendum Hitler won his last election with about 98 per cent of the vote That other great disciple of Democracy Comrade Stalin Won his by approximately 100 per cent Therefore when Mr Wallace polled only 92 per cent in the recent cotton referendum it may have seemed that either Mr Wallace was slipping or something was wrong with his great democratic machine The referendum was supposed to provide a free choice to cotton farmers whether they wanted restrictive production quotas but such strings were attached to the proposition it seems to be that 8 per city It seems that the right of way Is frequently disputed with canine scavengers causing occasional spills that disturb the slumbering ease of the human population However ae Constantinople lathe gateway between two continents and will be needed to complete the shoreline of the Latin lake announced the seizure of Niemoeller by the ' Gestapo and his transportation to the Sach- ' concentration camp near Berlin This treatment of the foremost Protestant champion of religious freedom in Germany - was-mera part-o- f which 'began with persecution of the Jews and f o l- sen-Haus- ' i tly- ere were a few things in that w farm law which no one knew Jerusalem ' I ' ' ael hi ' I s - V ma above his allotment Whereupon a newsman seems to have summed up thenew program fully in a sentence He told Mr Wallace it was like the great Democratic freedom in the army during the war when the watchword was: "They caret make you do it but make you they wish you had" - i — V Outsiders have' not been ago able to make much out of the text and it now develops that not even the insiders who wrote the law fully understood all of it themselves No I arrangd: Agriculture Secretary Wallace for instance was somewhat surprised to learn in a press conference the other day that a farmer cooperating in the wheat program would be fined 96 cents per bushel for mistakes may be voted for wherefore minorities will have a better opportunity to be heard in legislative balls than heretofore -For example when Salt Lake county I I Above the courts and constitution might have been carried by a bare majority of 100 votes' the successful party would against the demands of justice facing a obtain 19 spokesmen in the assembly while frowning world and flouting the protests of the losing side almost as strong possibly civilization the Gestapo of Germany tramnumerically stronger but not so well orples the rights of people stifles their speech interferes in their domestic affairs and de- ganized would have no voice in the mak- nies them the consolation of religion ing of laws' By the new method both sides When Rev Martin Niemoeller was armay obtain representation in the same rested dragged from his pulpit thrown into ' for "violating pulpit regulations" or county Inasmuch as the progressive wing of the prison Democratic party elected all 19 representaadvocating the worship of divinity accord- ing to the teachings of mothers and the clic- - ' tives from Salt Lake county two years ago and controlled the lower house the passage tates of conscience he was finally arraigned of this measure was manifestly a concession before a nazi court and sentenced to seven difficult to reconcile with the working of month& confinement with a fine of $600 the sum was promptly paid and the judge practical politics They made it virtually declared that the sentence had been served impossible to retain their advantage or for the trial any pending political organization to obtain over' whelming majorities in the house of repreOwing the state no further obligation sentatives the minister stepped out of the courtroom The county commissioners of seven couna free man only to be taken into custody ties will have a little more work and eximmediately by the Gestapo who announced their intention to hold him until he signed pense but the minority elements wilLgain a contract to refrain from discussing public recognition under the new system or political topics in private conversation or pulpit preaching It is not believed likely Riding Tests for Cyclists that he will consent to be entirely muzzled which means that the secret police will di- Required in Constantinople rect his movements and control his utterances henceforth It was the Roman historian Tacitus ' Life in a concentration camp where the who i n the first century wrote that "in all commandant has the power to things there is a law of cycles" And Alfred era flogged at his discretion is no joke even Tennyson some 18 centuries later declared disto nazi standards' press According by that he considered 50 years of Europe "bet- patches "new arrivals such as Niemoeller ter than a' cycle of Cathay" usually do the menial work of the camp Cycling in the Mohammedan city of Is - ' Paul Mallon WASHINGTON----Apparen- - Tyranny UnclerTwo Flags Persecution of All Religionists - ' By ' - - - - - '' : " '' The Llillork ' - ' MARCH 22 1938 TUESDAY MORNING 1: CelitN6 t f -- - Sc600-'7'öf-- tAto attbona rubnaniny Company t Use THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Béh1:17i0-tth- 111101 Established April 15 1871 Wood every morning 0 4 - - - - - - 's- - the not e It ' - fr ' ' ': s 1' e lv " It E II far ' - e mountains and he wai only the happiest man I ever" saw but the healthiest e t Not long ago one of his sons sent him 'a radio and he 'se4e been poutint ever since e Be says them announcers on those mediclne shows make the medicine sound' so attractive he feels like -he's missin' somethink out of life! ' ' " -- ' a at 'men 7:71 ' i - t ' e d d I e t A vi e ca e B a ti - ' PI Copyright 4934 for The TribunS B - ' - ' — 'moon InElon 4 |