Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE to JeHmcHhe Scenes ofCurrent News r— EstablisheiApril 151871- Issued TI7 mornl&i by lut Uii - frlbuns Publishing Company ! a member of the Associated Free- - The Associated Press I etclueltely 'entitled to the toe reproduction of ell oeve dupe tehee credited to It or not otherwise credited In thle peper end elee the local newt publtabed herein fha Tribune be Salt Lake Clty UUi Saturd ay Morning September To Be Enjoyed In the midst of our own controversy regarding social medicine and in view of "'the efforts of American doctors and social -- workers to evolve for extending medical care to those now denied it it is interesting Jo consider a report just pub' lished by the British Medical association Outlining a general medical service for Great Britain ' In a fifty-pag- e pamphlet entitled "A General Medical Service for the Nation" the British Medical association outlines a comprehensive plan proposed by the doc--tothemselves for extending medical service to the British people The pro posed plan would Insure “for all who need It" every kind of treatment available for cure of the sick and prevention of disease —and would utilize for this purpose every class of medical practitioner The' underlying 'principles of this program proposed by the British Medical association are four in number: I That tha system of medical service hall ba directed to the achievement of positive health and the prevention of disease no less than to the relief of sickness J That there ehould be provided for every individual the services of a general practitioner or a family doctor of his own rs choice — 3 That consultants and specialists' lab oratory services together! tiUnatitutional — provision when required should be avail able for the individual patient normally through the agency of the family doctor 4 That the eeveral parts of the complete medical service ehould be closely coordinated and developed by the application of a planned national health policy Chief among the concrete proposals of the British Medical association is an ex tension of the existing national health system to Include the dependants of all present Insured persons A further proposal would provide “auxiliary services pf lay persona such as pharmacists -- mas aeurs and biophysical assistants" necessary for the treatment of the insured clientele under the responsibility of their general practitioner dental and ophthalmic treatment are also recommended with consultant service similar to that now available to private patients finally a complete national maternity service is proposed for “all who need it" ' Great Britain has traveled far along the road of social medicine Whether condition are similar or not there is much to be gained by a consideration of British ex- perience andthpresent proposals ' What is especially encouraging about the present proposal is that it(ema- nates from the medical profession Itself By this happy circumstance Great Britain hag been spared the spectacle of a community divided against itself on a vital Issue ef paramount domestic Importance ce Regional Convention Of American Alumni Council The American Alumni council Is holdits regionalconvention' in SalFXake" City The purpose of this organization as expressed in the opening address of it president at the Hotel Utah yesterday is to inspire undergraduate loyalty to the -various institutions represented to awaken interest In colleges and universities attended in the past to'iJcure cooperation Tf graduates lrt creating coIIegiate atmos phere in every community Over 40a colleges and universiUrshol4 ‘"'membershipTn tlie council and 21 western states are said to have delegates in this convention Besides stimulating interest in higher education the association will study the problem of providing employment for the army of graduates turned out by colleges and universities annually The out-plsrconstantly increasing while opportunities for work-hav- e been diminishing During the depression only one college man In 20 could find employment although they accepted any sort of work from window washing to ghost writing The chances have improved slowly but the collegiate crop has outgrown its fields Last year there were 1300000 students in 500 Amer- ‘ Jean universities and colleges Those who go forth every summer with diplomas have not been accorded the reception they expected or even deserved They are proud of their records and glad they completed the courses prescribed but many of them have been wondering what it has brought them besides personal satisfaction and art Improved vocabulary If the Alumni council can encourage these undergraduates to continue with their classes and lectures and examinations to the day “commencement” they will accomplish a great deal for the multitude of institutions in which they are ' enrolled but something else will be necessary to justify compliance with such urging President E K Hibshman of the national alumni council calls attention to this aim of the organization saying: "One of out chief concerns at present is the formation of placement bureaus We feel-th- at ‘in cases institutions could of many graduates well keep in touch with their former schools in order to -- avail themselves of ' graduating talent that would fit into poToo often sitions in their organizations now they look far afield to fill these posts" —A This is a practical step toward a desirable objective Education ought to mean something to a collegiate besides a sheepskin and supplemental initials to a signature It should give entree not only to social circles but tp commercial and in duitri! opportunities as welL ing -- ut -- ’ 4 ’ By Paul 3 1938 and Renumbered Progressive prosperous Price Carbon county’s capital revels in a “Robbers’ Roost Round-Up- " to which thousands of westerners Lave been drawnby the broadcast invitations of Mayor J Brack-fe- p Lee and Matt Warner a survivor of the lawless era that made southeastern Utah a rendezvous for desperate characters 40 ’ years ago The last stand of 'bold bad men who IQde front Itate to state robbing bapks and windstealing livestock the swept sandstone flats southeast of Price form a region still unconquered by civjlized invaders From the Bad Land cliffs on the north to the Water Pocket fold on the right bank of the Colorado it is a land of mystery loneliness and Ridden water hole Here Matt Wamef now a reformed and respected resident of Price held forth with Butch Cassidy Bill Rose Tom McCarty Elza Leigh and other bandits who furnished -- Zane Grey with plots and the inhabitants of five states With excitement Price is well worth seeing and revisiting It has' t scenic setting a spirit of enterprise ja record of industrial development a lingering atmosphere of the old west an hospitality and a municipal lure that in an actress would be called “It" tour-ists-a- nd sun-bak- ed open-heart- Proud Paysoo Parades A Savory Source of Strength Payson people "know their onions” and want everybody else to know them Today and Monday with an intervening day for recharging local atmosphere with mountain ozone the residents of that hospitable southern ternpinal of Utah’s Interurban railway system will welcome former neighbors and entertain all comers with a comprehensive program Parades are scheduled for both days with 75 floats eight bands marching maidens expert horsemen cyclers and pedestrians in lines of march enlivened with the Pay-sonantics o£ clowns and merrymakers onion celebration and homecoming season are annual events to which the public look forward with pleasurable antici-patio- n and observes with a blend of smiles and tears —smiles for the guests and tears for the onions ’s New York Highlights By Charles B Driscoll first Protestant EpisNEW YORK-T- he copal bishop in America was the Right Rev Samuel Seabury They paid him special honor in Aberdeen Scotland his home town the other day A memorial chapel in hia honor was begun at the Aberdeen cathedral bur American ambassador to tha Court of St James J P Kennedy was scheduled to lay the flratr atone This la all very Interesting to anyone who has looked into the past and present of New York Blshep Seaburywho was called bishop of Connecticut was before he became bishop pastor of St Andrew's church Staten Island That was in 1784 Judge Samuel Seabury tha cold dignified unemotional dignitary who presided over the Seabury investigation of political corruption few years ago is a Tha Seaburys have of Bishop Seabury been important and influential fighters for clean govommcirt iff1 New-'- ortr: I went out to visit St Andrew’s church called the oldest church in New York City I don’t want to go on record as claiming that there Isn't an older one I only quote the records and claims of St Andrew’s When I quoted plaques and pamphlets about the Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow naming it the oldest American church having had continuous services I had letters from all parts of the country disputing tha claim It Isn’t my claim it’s tha claim of the Old Dutch church Its services date from 1697 it So Is The church of St Andrew according to the records and a bronze plaque on the gatepost was founded in 1708 the first church edifice was built in 1712 Queen Anne atill honored by a inscription erected two hundred years later gave the church its charter in 1713 She also presented a chalice and paten of gold A few years ago a man who was employed as grave digger In the adjacent cemetery broke Into the church at night stole tha Queen Anne altar vessels and was making off with them when he was captured He was tried convicted sentenced The pastor interceded for him he was set free But the golden vessel are kept In a bank vault in Manhattan now loyal-soundi- kind-heart- The church doesn’t look especially ancient from without Yet although it was burped down in 1867 and again in 1872 we are assured that the walla art those of the original struc ture The property has heenwell cared for and properly maintained and a few centuries don’t matter much to ft atone building If it has' reasonabla care Tha walls art of field atone roughly cut from some quarry not far distant The edifice Is low and has that rambling quality that proves so attractive In many Episcopal churches especially in tha country Heavy growth of Ivy covers some of the walls The neighborhood Is semirural with sprawling villages here and there rolling hills heavy-grow- th of timber good grass and plenty of flowers It Is of courstf all within the limits of Richmond borough New York City In skirmishes between Ameri-ca- n patriots and British forces were fought around the church through the hills and vales in its vicinity and over the surrounding graves The church was badly damaged dur Ing the fighting Copyright 1938 for The Tribune 1776 eeveral f Mellon WASHINGTON— Inf flammable words are being tossed nto the political excelsior these days but some of them seem to be slightly damp After the failure of the senatorial cleansing In 'South Carolina aoma of Mr Roosevelt’s working purgers whispered that these primary result are only the beginning They say Mr Roosevelt lntends liext to go"1n and break up the state machines in South Carolina Maryland and Virginia (these three states were a Garner stuff against the president fair investigation of the dark political corners here fails to reveal any evidence of anything like that — Basis of the purge defense ap- pears to be highly individualized so far with no liaison work no help no money crossing state lines It would naturally be that way because only a few individuals so far have been selected by the president to carry the weight of his wrath Each is individually What financing his campaign -- bappenedloTope inJdahtvta the purgers in South Carolina to McAdoo in California were three different things Involving nothing tangibly in common' About Shirley Tempi Popular misconception seems to be spreading about what was really said about Shirley Temple Inbefore the Dies committee terior Secretary Ickea Mr Roosevelt and thereafter Labor Secret tary Perkins dropped comments' which are being misconstrded as implying that Shirley was pictured as a communist or at least a knowing kid Only mention of her name before the committee was the testimony of one witness who said: ‘The communist party relies heavily upon the carelessness or of Indifference of thousands prominent citizens- - In lending their names for its propaganda purposes For example the French newspaper Ce Soir which is owned outfight by the communist party recently featured hearty greetings from Clark Gable Rob-e- ft Taylor James Cagney and even Shirley Temple” Out of Tun ’ ' - 'Mishandling of the purge campaign continues to be evident 4n-si- - which of the changed the entire situation at the last moment Doubts that these primary failures have blemished Mr Roosevelt’s popularity to any extent are being expressed by the wisest old political heads One of tha best of authorities (he Is opposed ti Roosevelt too) believes the president could be elected today for a third term Copyright 1938 for The Tribune vr s 1 ' enator MeCarran oOTevada and the judgment of observers is that ha will ba renominated on Tuesday of next week So that there remain but two that Mr Roosevelt has any THE PUBLIC FORUM Reflects on People1 Calm in U S A Editor Tribune: Your editorial them to awaken from : Forum Rules of August 15 entitled “Web Over Washington Spies Bums Traitors Exposed” furnishes food for thought But' who Is thinking of anything but money? I find as I travel over the state' visiting haunts ofed” long ago that most TieoTSle'are-not-concernabout spies within our borders They say the good old U S A is her to 'stay they show chapter and verst" in hofy writ and prove' to their satisfaction that there Is no cause for alarm They- - close the good' book theyclose their ears to further argument they are loyal to the flag trtfe'to their church honest with their neigh- hors They axe content and happy Jews and Catholics are not sleeping Jews are fearful that persecution will follow them to America Catholics are awake Bishop Hunt in his radio talks keeps the fires burning Protestants and Mormons fear not and should a Paul Revere sound the alarm and tell - their1 Letter inti column pperinthe inviewe do not txpress of The Tribune They are the opinion of contributor with which fh Tribune may or nv not agree The follow lug rule govrn contribution 1 Letter limited to 3U0 word Preference given to ehort commu3 nication Write leglbiy end clearly on ene aloe of the paper only 3 Reiicinu and facie! diarus'tnne barred Partisan or personal political comment cannot be printed 4 Per 3 Poonai aspersion prohibited & etical contribution not wanted Letters may be barred tor obvious mlatatements ot fact or for ctate-menwhich are not in accord with 7 fair play and good taste lh Forum is not an advertising medium 8 Writers must algo tru names Letters will and addreii in ink earned over assumed name it in all caeca writer so requests however tru name and address must be attached to communicaThe Forum cannot con9 tion sider more than one letter from the earns writer at one tlma slumber they would whisper "Tush tush it’s propaganda" It’ up to you Mr Editor you and your clan to keep hammering on the thick skulls of this trusting people until they awaken and do as you say Keep jhe watch and notify the law when suspicious characters linger in the shadows' - J Heber Stallings Senator FromSandpit±±iii by Our Readers German Diplomat1 by Writer Stanch-Criticise- d Editor Tribune: For some 'reason or other it seems that a day celebration In Utah is not complete unless some Hitler representative can make a speech Of course this is none of my business especially if this Hitler emissary doesn't observe common decency either In interview or speechm&king 'According fo Tribune”" report of August 16 he said in an interview “Aims of the bund are primarily anticommunistic and both objectives are good for America" This is the greatest Insult to our respected loyal citizens of Jewish faith in Utah that I ever heard an insult to some of our departed builders of Utah like Governor Bamberger whom I had the honor of calling a friend I am not a member of the Jewish faith and would protest such an insult If directed against members of any other faith of our loyal Utah citizenry And then for this "Hitlerite" to say he wants naturalized Germans to be good American citizens but to "preserve their German cul- i anti-Jewi- sh had to go through one of the fac- - ture" tories You went into a room German culture! What a joke! where they took off your clothes Why Germany since Hitler's rise and stamped your social security is not even classified any longer number on the soles of your feet under civilized nations! I hope —the place they would be least ‘America will never adopt any of J Hitler’s culture likely to operate Then they put The Bridge Club Meets you on one of those “endless’ tettlTJike lrfcanneries7 don’t apologize for “His they have —Waling or 'automobile factories and startMaster’s Voice” Insulting one of tors holding a convention and tha ed you off to the cutting rooms our loyal and respected class of papers being full of it land me get- If you were young end had never citizens and the organizations ting a flock of their bills I’ve been to a doctor they took out which sponsored this "German-Americabeen doing some thinking about your appendix tonsils gall bladday don’t either peothis socialization of medicine der adenoids teeth and whatever ple of Utah must conclude they so about much they’re talking else might later cause you trouG F Bushman approve it Something’s got to be done ynd ble and cost the government 671 North Tenth West street that’a a certainty Taka our poIf you were old and' had sition for'example My budget for' money lost all those N J Men Scores things and already annual an a family of four with didn’t waste were still ailing they Income of $2400 and a fairly good Wagner Act any more time— they just sent social position allows $5 a month to the lethal gas chamber A you Editor Tribune: To my mind for the doctor and the dentist there I go again What gets me down is trying to heart specialist— the Wagner act is a pitiful confesmean one bid heart I I girls! divide’ tha $5 between the sursion of the weakness of the orthe heart specialist the geon Sunset the ganization that is trying to form the urologist gynecologist The sun our leading actor gone a labor union monopoly in this dermatologist the oculist the Hia scenery shifters carry on the noseologist the They drop a curtain fold on fold earologist country If the men who aremak-in- g throatologist the specialist To mask the empty' stage with such &’ desperate effort to inand the different dentists whose —Olive McHugh gold crease the membership of labor s practices are limited to extraction unions had a fair proposition tr Notes on the Cuff Department filling cleaning or straightening d offer it would not be necessary of tseth I’ve tried the European Sally Sheets waa for congress to pass such shamemethod of acknowledging each asked by her- - grandmother jf when aha grew up she were going ful legislation as the Wagner act debt with a token payment but It ' to helf them along to smoke cigarets doesn't work I can't say that I blame them for complaining be"Why of course grandma” reCapital managementWnd workers are natural partnerljn induscause 1 feel kinds silly myself plied Sally “It would look funny to see a woman smoking a cigar try and business and fiamwork when 1 receive a receipt saying “Received S mills on account" or a pipe" key to successThis is My husband Isn’t sold on governrecognized in this coungenerally Note to “Ann”: A few years ago try and is the reason that V great ment regulation and control hf I ran items similar to yours under majority of employers andWork-e- r medicine He says that things are the heading of “Silhouettes” and had enough as they are but they'd prefer to manage the! A own “Hobbies" ' Judging by the rebe a lot worse with the politicians affairs without the interference think the didn’t people In charge of outside labor leaders Imagine he says the' sponse idea so hot clinics and hospitals being run It hurts all"partles concerned like the patronage ' system is! to have outsiders drive the wedge mainever have Philosophers You’d have to have your ward of envy hatred and ' malice be tained that the curve id more tween employer and tha wageA district city county and' state line beautiful the than straight earner It ia adding insult to tn- chairman okay your record as a Yet my do at people laugh my ‘ loyal member of the party before jury for a board acting under embonpoint? the Wagner act to assume that they’d let you Into a hospital was even though your appendix James "Aloysius” Walcott tha tha employer alone can be guilty about to burst or you were on the and put a gag In his mouth so barbershop porter asked his parrt that' he cannot have a vergq of having a baby And If son to pray for his sins Addresstalk with hia own men Tha you happened to be a Republican ing tha congregation the parson well just use your imagination said: “Brudder Walcott has asked Wagner act should be repealed Girls I got to thinking so much When the working men throughus to pray fo him 'case he’s a about this socialization thing that out the country recognize that an’ throws his money spen’thrif when I went to bed last might 1 aroun’ reckless like Therefo’ you-a- ll their employers are their best had th funniest dream But I'm friends they will negotiate with will jins with me in prayer jist not going to a psychologist or' after th’ collection them directly either as individhas been uals or collectively and stop depsychiatrist about it though I took” dreamed that they had turned the ducting millions of dollars from There is still hope for good their earnings to pay professional hospitals Into “health factories" manners when the drug store labor organizers With all the latest machinery like clerk sells you a stamp and says James Emery Brooks conveyor belts and everything Tha law required that everyone "Thank you” Glen Rldga NJ A specialist is one who has his patients trained to become 111 only A general in his office hours practitioner is likely to be called off the golf course at any time— Kaneaa City Star n” X-r- Eight-year-ol- - Aside from Mr Roosevelt’s own personal handling of the baton the' boys in the band are frequently getting off key (Corcoran Hopkins et als) and sometimes are playing from the wrong sheet of music Latest instance: In South Carolina they had no advance notice Brown-withdraw- accc Thera remain three Of the three one la Gossip (It is nothing- - more) around the capttol suggests Vice President Garner may come back on the national scene after the primaries ar over- Those wjio h&VS' talked to him most recently believe he does not Intend to return before ' congress starts in However a friend or January two will bet you even money Mr G is wearing a large sleeve with ' something in it Dark hints have been dropped that the Rpoaevelt primary opposition is a highly organized hidden board of directors putting its feet under some table somewhere and plotting the national A ’ “ Three Left dling agriculture legislation in the' senate for Mr R next session) It is evident that those who are being purged coupled with other aenatora who know they may ba next will be able to form a very close and cooperative group to defend themselves Impartial observers believe the state --machine might be overthrown eventually by theseand other means but certainly not in time for 1940 The best that most In the political trade will give him is a stalemate with tha senate and congress on appointees and legislation and a complete split of his party deep ana accurate minded person ease The watchman would ba obliged to say "Sire not o good" But maybe the person who serve the Whit House ae watchman of the political weather ia Courtier Tommy Corcoran — And maybe 'Courtier Corcoranhas learned that courtiers should never be bearers of bad tidings Maybe Mr Corcoran has learned the foxy courtier device of cryptic equivocation Maybe he says' “Sire South Carolina haa gone against us but in Maryland the Tydlngs are good” — 'Way of putting It can truthfully describe the purge as other than badly going In the beginning there were nine Democratic senators to be purged They were the nine who opposed Mr Roosevelt’s court pro- posal and who come up for renomination this year Of these nine “no” senators four are now formally renominated—Van Nuya of Indiana Gillette of Iowa dark of Missouri Smith of South Carolina Two more while not yet formally renominated are certain to be Adams of Colorado in a primary some weeks ago carried all but a handful of the delegates to the state fmventiw-wh4ch-- nw September 13 will renominate him And this week a primary in Connecticut gave Senator Lonergan something like a thousand out of the roughly eleven hundred delegates to the state convention which on September 13 will renominate Mr Lonergan The fundamental basis of state machinea- -1 -- patronage Mr R could do some housecleanlng of appointees but he would also have to wait until the terms of a lot of incumbents expire More important any future appointees in South Carolina for Instance would have to go through the senate where will eit Senator Smith (Not only that but Purges Smith will be han- Mr n —the answer can hardly be such ns to tend Mr Roosevelt back to bed with a mind at mentioned In particular but the area of operations was pictured as being the whole south) The pugees seem to hs unexcited about the threat They do not think It can ba carried out Ae a matter of fact in thefr own realistio way they count it as a threat made only for present political effect on tha primaries How Things Stand Enter ByMarl-Sulliva- WASHINGTON— If President Roosevelt after the medieval manner leans 'from hia window at midnight and asks “Watchman what of tha purge?"—and if the watchman la A-lo- tof -- Price' Putting On a Program British Doctors' Proposal For English Social Medicine Sullivan Asserts Roosevelt’s Purge Has Failed heart-to-hea- serious chance of purging— George of Georgia who also comes up next Tuesday and Tydings of Maryland who comes up September 13 Much good judgment says that George Will win If he does then Mr Roosevelt will he reduced to one chance his last He will find himself during the last week of the year’s' primaries fighting a rear guard battle to make his purge stick in just one of the nine cases It would be a desperate rear guard action and ft rather forlorn one for everybody would know that even if he won the last battle he would nevertheless have lost the war Even in the practically impossible case of the purging of all three of the senators yet to go before primaries Mr Roosevelt would still have lost the war For the issue the picture of ’the situation has always been as it waa stated in a dispatch I wrote on July 6 last "If all nine or an important portion of th nine such as five or six or seven are successfully purged that would mean that the Democratic party is to be in the hands of the president and his friends— it would mean that the Democratic party would' be the new -- deal party On the other hand if the nine' or a large majority of the nine are renominated It will mean the DenoCrStic party remains within the Democratic tradition The outcome of success of the nine or most of them would be that the Democratic national convention in 1940 would be controlled by Democrats of the older type Democrats symbolized by for example Vice President Gar- ner” Small Addendum It is true Mr Roosevelt personally had not put the purge issue in the terms in which it is put here' He never directly and publicly attempted to purge more than three ef the nine —Smith of South Carolina George of Georgia' and Tydings of Maryland And Mr Roosevelt included in his direct and public attempt one member of the house O’Connor of New York' But the inclusion of Mr O’Connor was more or less an accident— his naihe was mentioned in a newspaper editorial advocating purge which Mr Roosevelts indorsed And if confined his public attempt at purge to three of the senators there were reasons As to one Gillette of Iowa a covert attempt at purge by Mr Roosevelt’s close associates-ha- d failed As to the other five Mr Roosevelt refrained from attempting purge because it was plain tharpurging Was impossible “ “ There is a small addendum The man who first proposed the purge— or at least first announced it publicly— is Senator Guffay-- of Pennsylvania Just after the court fight on August 2 1937 Mr Guffey made a' radio address in which he excoriated the Demoratlc senators who had opposed the court measue accused them of party treason said they must he defeated in Democratic primaries? must be retired from public life None of them has as yet been retired But the only reason Mr Guffey remains in public life is that his term in the senate extends until 1940 In his state he has been deprived of leadership of his party cast out by the other party leaders almost with violence Copyright O 1938 for The Tribune the Record Ilf Seeking more money for the railroad In Alaska Ickes calls congress a lot of “nickel nursers” All we know about congress ia what we read in the papers It is very conscientious of the office to ' seek the man in this weather A tribe of pygmies found in the wiMs of New Guinea are unabli to count over six Thus endeth the long search for the ideal caddie What makes a parent feel his middle years like the query from a high school daughter “Say who's Pearl White?” Copyright VACII VYLLL 1938 I'll I II for The Tribune I 611 V— T OU By Efob Burnt I've always been pretty much of a dreamer both during my sleepln1 'and'wakin’ hours So here lately I been readln’ up on the subject of dreams but I find most authors on tha aubject use such big words I can’t gef head nor tails what they’re talkin’ about One au-- " thor said that dreams are related to tha subconscious mind and have nothin’ to do with daily activities But the other day I played golf while my wife went down town to an auction sale That night in my sleep I hollered “Fore!” My wife sat up in bed and hollered “Four and a quarter !” Copyright 1938 for Tha Tribua |