Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE 'rUESDAY MORNING bett gukt Established April Behind the Scenes of Current News VR111110- -1 15 1871 every morning by Balt I eke Tribune Publishing Company Issued The Tribune is a member of the Associated Press - The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the lIse for reproduction of all news dispatches credited- to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein Salt Lake City Utah Tuesday Morning November I One of the most ingenious plans yet devised by the nazi government for stripping Jews of their last penny has just been adopted in Berlin Having looted the shops and homes of German Jews taken from their persons all visible jewelry and apparel of evident value and left the men women and children destitute and hungry nazi mobsters evidently suspect that gems and heirlooms may be hidden away where they cannot be found So a national pawn shop has been estOlisbed ostensibly "to help hard pressed Jews" to raise the P100- 000000 fine Hitler levied against them for an assassination of which they obviously knew nothing To plunder a population of fellw natives impoverish the last family of a persecuted 'sect and then fine those 'people $400000000 for perpetration of a crime a thousand miles away by an unknown boy from a still more distant and alien country has been regarded by civilized inhabitants of the earth as the lowest level to which a rabid fanatic could possibly descend But the fiendish pretense of "a glorified pawn brokerage business" to induce Jewish mothers to produce their precious heirlooms and wedding rings upon which to secure loans nôt cash given to them for their starving infants but amounts credited to their race on the Vorn Rath extortion penalty is very cruel and crafty Not one of these pledges will ever be redeemed as the Jews of Germany are not permitted to work practice a profession or even search garbage for rejected morsels of food or rags of clothing How can they redeem the articles pawned when they are not allowed to earn a mark? Even so the trinkets would continue to be held indefinitely as it will take centuries and generations to escape the bondage of Hitler as it did for their ancestors to flee the taskmasters of Pharoah Should the significance of that Bible story dawn upon der fuehrer one need not be surprised to hear of him issuing an edict fdrthe slaughter of all male children with every patch of bulrushes to be carefully combed At the time the government authorized a measure the opening of this pawn-tra- p was enacted by Hitler's hirelings to punish Indigent Jews for soliciting alms or seeking aid from public welfare agencies It would seem that having robbed abused humiliated and tortured these men Women' and children of German birth the dictator would allow them to leave the country But no They are to be "held as hostages" according to Goebbels so that for every eye lost by a German in an encounter with a Jew in any land a thousand Jewish eyes may be gouged out in Germany This is "kultur" proclaimed by Hitler Indorsed by Mussolini and offered to all the world on the point of a dripping bayonet ' I Destructive Elements tie With Man's Inhumanity ' In their sinister sport of making mankind miserable thtee destructive elements Of nature have been tilting in a tournament that covers the earth From every zone and continent reports indicate that floods and fires hurricanes and seismic disturbances have driven people from their homes or marooned them in dangerous localities From far away Japan froin European sea coasts from polar and tropic regions the temperamental trio have sent their gruesome greetings to mortal sojourners on this sphere Disastrous fires denuding the watersheds of southern California driving people from their homes and animals from their coverts burning forests orchards and build ings devastating an area just wavering from a disastrous deluge indicate a force difficult to reconcile with men's ingenuity for Throughout the east severe storms have blockaded traffic isolated villages interrupted communication and taken many lives The chilling blasts of a premature winter have sent the mercury to a point that means discomfort and suffering The "sunny south" is shivering in a temperature for which it is ill prepared The damage done by recent fires on the western coast of the United States is incalIn Topango culable and almost irreparable canyon 22000 acres of watershed have been denuded increasing the menace of future floods in San Diego? San Bernardino Riverside and other counties and localities a hundred thousand tree covered acres have been transformed into a blackened desert of 'charred turf and smoking stumps If 'the aim of this demonstration be to show mankind how to wreak random vengeance and increase human misery it is lost effort for there are localities even bounties where the elements could obtain pointers in merciless malevolence i ! 4 rJ 5 4 1 !!' 1 ' I I i 1 l I Young Cattle Raisers Command Fancy Stock Prices k and Achievements of youngsters in Future Farmers' clubs of the United States are both astounding and admirable Two girls by the name of Brown—"not sisters no relation"—took the principal prizes at the international livestock exposition held in Chicago last week Irene Brown of Mi- nois a school girl was awarded the grand championship for the best hand 4-- H -- 714 - Ir 0 b Knuckles in cham- - Vandenberg congressional inwill vestigation of undoubtedly lead to submission of legislation proposing some in- centive tax exemptions for em- -' such plans ployers who hay runt might (For instance for exempt income It is far too early yet to'judge how the recommendation will be received by congress Hearings have failed to get extensive attention in or out of conThe new deal is not in- gress terested for one thing and probably will resist the tax exemption profit-sharin- g' )1 profit-sharin- g) suggestion If nothing else is done Senator Vandenberg will count the move a success as a collection of the 200 I g different types of now practised by 2000 employers (about half of them good) "Scrutiny" will be the watchword of the coming congress Every action every line of the Roosevelt program seems likely to be analyzed slowly as never before You can discern this prospect In comments by returning leaders profit-sharin- Instead of predicting congress One of theJ reasons why New York is so constantly entertaining is that there is always a possibility of finding an enormous industry dealing in some tiny specialty I venture to Imagine that somewhere in New York you can find a suspender center from which go galluses to all the earth Free Passes The hunger of the average man for a free pass is well known But I heard of a case the other day that deserves embalming A well to do New Yorker wanted a pass to- - a He knew a man who could football game get it for him After two weeks of negotiations a pass was produced The New Yorker saw the game from a seat that would have cost $165 In appreciation he sent the pass-getta case of Scotch that cost $76 er will do 'this or that as they have been accustomed to the leaders are only saying that everything will be "scrutinized" Cabinet Nifty A cabinet officer was making comments about the presidential Newsmen prospects of others broke in asked: "How about your chances for 1940?" The cabineteer sadly wagged his head: "Only one person is backing me" "Who is that? Your wife?" "Nope She has too much sense" Two of Signs of the times: Ohio's leaders at the Farley Democratic meeting in New York attributed the failure of the party in that state which mothers prem dentt (but not lately) to the new deal attitude toward business Coming antimonopoly hearAngs may be the best publicity since the J P Morgan show To date 63 newsmen have reserved McNutt-for-194- 0 headseats quarters will be set up in IndianPhilippine apolis in February commissioner's chances look no One of better than formerly conthese incoming freshmen gressmen is taking his job seriously He called a senator-frien- d from porno to aSic what clothes he should bring what parties he would be expected to attend how he should choose' a secretary where he should live etc Happiest man at the election outcome was William Tyler Page minority clerk of the house He conducts a school for freshmen congressRepublican men has had no pupils previously Mildness for many a year of Republican claims from the election probably are due to an order issued by National Chairman John Hamilton the day after "No the result were counted: long-distan- gloating" Copyright i 1938 for The Tribune One Good Thing Scene: Top deck of crowded tramcar Irish conductor busily taking fares Passenger—You are working hard Pat Pat-- 01 am It's a kiln' job but thank goodness it's constant! —Atlanta Constitution Thi Way to Fortune British Guide (showing places interest)—It was in this room '104t Lord Wellington received his first commission American Tourist (suddenly interested)—How Montreal Star v much was IL?— Pr : ' t 4 f K '91 74fr 4 1 -- cl At EN 0 p 01 t - II f A'Al 7 I ki dtt 4 a"' I4n 4 A 1 Alik A 4 - - " ao 43' I L -e1kit !- 0--- - 4 Ai I " - ' '''' ' 4 I "s 1 : -- pot i 71:ikv$V - !Or 1111"5° -- - 40a - 4 0 f — '''''NN r 'f''' 't ' "8 N :—11 - - 1 ) t: '1'' A NNS?-Z4- - 1 k s N9':' z:‘:th w economic breakdown of the past decade who live on a far lower scale than these victims 'of the Hitler anti- Semitic policy World-wid- e ‘ o 'k A : v 1 i f refugee committees are not f being organized to help these people find a national homeland Malnutrition ex- posure and disease dog Jay Franklin them deputy sheriffs and vigilance committees watch them as though they were herds of dangerous animals I see by the newspapers that the W P A Is discharging thousands of relief workers course is attributed to an This heart-rendieffort to make the relief funds last although it is hoped that the increase in private employment will 'take up the slack And Irecollect the statement attributed to a conservative candidate for election in Michigan who was asked what he would do for the The gentleman's alleged answer unemployed was that he would put a chicken dinner on the top of a flagpole and then grease the pole - 4 - 3: try migratory workers cast adrift by the social and Fr - 1 -- - 4' : 0- S ore4 " "17ZArrft - 4r---- P eob m1 -- - - rare' 0041"40 I 'e21 fl V qt t 4‘ Atofp r I F - A 1 t -- 0 h kNIV ' ' ii 16 "' fiN TN tAt ' - 1: J o s — Rapped pt F Asp" ''Vi ' n g Very Serious This is a very serious situation For the ‘'': '' Z:4 victims of foreign persecution we rightly t: W:::S 01A have warm sympathy and for their oppressors deep indignation America itself- has Lz':: been settled by waves of people fleeing from Common political and economic hardships humanity would forbid us to remain indifferC::tRFt ent to the manifestations of what we regard' as arbitrary tyranny Yet I notice that all we are offering to the central European Jews is symapthy A fund is being raised for the legal defense of the Jewish youth whose assassination of a German diplomat in Paris By Ernest Lindley unleashed this wave of terrorism But I do not notice that any of our amateur Demosterpreted as meaning that electhenes are urging that we set aside our quota tions can be won merely by putlaws and admit the German Jews as we once on the govting a lot of people admitted the German liberals after the revo Mr ernment payrolls then Hoplution of 1848 or the Irish after the potato kins—if he ever said anything nil– famine ''k ' - P1ttS wrong White Pepper The most astonishing thing I learned is that white pepper is just black pepper with the hull removed Celery salt is made from seeds of wild celery and ordinary salt Allspice comes from the pimento tree which I've often seen blooming brIghtly on the island of Jamaica There were in one of the warehouses I visited probably a hundred Iage each as heavy as a strong man could lift filled with marjoram used widely in flavoring sausages The most expensive spice is saffron used In curry powder But I went away with this thought: Where on earth can enough people be found to con- sale these tons of pepper a little shake at a time? And are there enough people in the world to eat these truckloads of nutmegs a trifle grated on top of an eggnogg? ' V a Since Atsistant War Secretary Louis Johnson had his knuckles lightly' tapped all war department experts run if asked anything about the Roosevelt rearm- Estimates on the number of new planes are getting into print daily each one larger than the other When the latest got up to 13000 additional Lieutenant planes Colonel Alexander D Surles ablest public relations 'man the war department ever had urged newsmen to don parachutes Roosevelt is saving this thunder for his congressional message but Johnson's guess of its volume is as good as any so far' I 1 - qa 4 ament program The White House fertile touched Johnson when he guessed the Increased war department expediture might run halt a billion dollars At a later press conference F D R said the guess was - It I one-ma- NEW YORK—A tour of the spice district along Franklin street and parts adjacent gave me a great lift and a sore nose I have always believed I couldn't get too much pepper and from childhood have used enough of various kinds to shock my family Two hours among the pepper mills and sifting machines where red pepper fills a fiery dust bowl gave me a big plenty for one day I was ashamed of myself for 'sneezing and dusting the spices out of my eyes Mrs Lily Track fresh as a daisy and healthy as health told me she had been working in that atmosphere for 20 years or more and had never had a bad cold No she doesn't even notice the pepper in the air Other employes covered from head to foot with spice dust were similarly happy One of the largest "bulk houses" under the name of Van Loan has occupied the same quarters for 30 years The walls are impregnated with spices floors soaked with them You can actually smell the building two blocks away when the wind is right Here I sa‘r and strolled among thousands of ton9 of 25 different spices imported from all part1 of the earth India Spain Hungary and the East and West Indies had their labels on most of the 'big packages But Louisiana Florida California Georgia North Carolina and South Carolina were points mentioned on the shipping labels too i'?''' LLT Franklin Jay WASHING'r011—Last night I saw pictures of Jewish refugees from the nazi terror at a motion picture theater They- were pitiful folk camped out in make- shift huddlements between Pt ‘ the Czech and German '"--xa Ci lines My gorge rose—and then— There are untold num- bers of people in this coun- - 4427 - A few weeks ago they might have gone as far as recommendn administrator ing a Some members of the investigating committee still favor this course but are doubtful that a majority will agree A less sympathetic analysis will be presented by the two Republican committeemen who are minority members All will be ready In about six weeks Driscoll By ? ft Idle Drum Beating For Jews Stirs Franklin's Wrath colso 41pTt Is f Ott By I a lo bers New York Highlights 12 1 4 r y I I1 ' 4 Pl - gators are now talking Yesterday marked the beginning of "book week" for Utah authors of volumes of history fiction philosophy pedagogy poetry or biography Book sections of leading and locally owned department stores and the Deseret Book store are cooperating With the two literary leagues of the state Books produced within the past decade are specially featured and autographed copies will be placed on sale Lopl chapters of the League of Western Writers and the National League of American Penwomen are sponsoring the movement the purpose of which is to push reticent writers into the limelight and stimulate an interest in literature that often languishes in the presence of arts making more instant appeals to the livelier sensas of sight and hearing The season is peculiarly appropriate for cultural associations to call attention to authors who are apt to be overlooked as prophets are said to be in their own lands With the advent of zero weather an urge to sit in the cozy corner of a warm room and read even the literary products of neighbors is more potmt than at any other time of the year Public libraries arekso well stocked and so efficiently conductet these days it is a wonder that any books are sold to individuals But there is a certain satisfaction in having a few books for company or consultation when the mood is on and private libraries are the result 'Sri - 9 ta °‘ A bookkeeping methods seems likely to be the darkest accusation to be made if you may judge accurately by the way the investi- League of Western Writers 1 sympathitic criticism of T V A Book Week in Utah B : 4 ing 4-- H Charles Ar 1 444 0 e Paul Mallon -- Mae Brown of raised steer shown Ohio won the grand reserve championship stock Both steers were of Aberdeen-Angu- s In this connection the purse won by Yeti Anderson of Tremonton Utah in the great western livestock show held in Los Angeles the other day should not be overlooked His well kept steer commanded a price of 86 cents a pound in the auction of prize winners at the conclusion of the exhibition Young Anderson has won prizes before but his reward of 6670 in the recent competition represents a profit that should prove an incentive for other cattle raisers to "raise them right" The day has apparently gone when buyers for the table are satisfied with any reaf sonable offerin-rothe market They are becoming more discriminating and exacting all the time They want the best and bid for it taking In turn the various rades available But the common range Ln mals are no longer sought so they bring low prices when sold Agricultural colleges dekartmen I bulletins and annual expositions are f fering instructions object lessons and ments for the improvement of llv raised for meat Future Farmers o Amer ica and girls and boys are s tting a pace that almost takes the breat of old time cattlemen By e WASHINGTON Cale imine will be the ink used for the T V A report And the house Investigators may go heavy bn the whit 29 1938 (' Edna Nazi Pawn Brokers Now Seeking Hidden Heirlooms By Beginn mg of Our Next 411:- - 19313 NOVEMBER 29 Y Presidential Trial Heats ASHINGTON Harry Hopt kihs has flatly denied twice that he ever said what at least three newspaper columnists have quoted him as having said to an acquaintance at a race track: "We'll spend and spend and tax and tax and elect and elect" Why he should be eager to disown that quotation is somewhat If he had been quoted puzzling as saying "we'll socialize and socialize etc" or "we'll reform and reform etc" he might have occasion for worry The statement attributed to him definitely places him as a friend of the system of private enterprise in its present form It implies that he is interested chiefly in economic pros 7 4 perity Tpe vital relation of gov ernment tipending to economic recovery has been pretty well established by the first recovery the second recession—when expenditures were curtailed — and the second recovery—when eApenditu'res were increased again Finally the quotation attributed to Harry Hopkins fixes him as a thorough democrat He believes In elections and expects them to continue indefinitely The quotation given may imply a trace of cynicism concerning the readiness of voters to respond to inducements But when hasn't general economic well being been the best asset of the party in power? If the supposed statement is in Who's News Today s NEW YORK—Japan's "ginger triumphs with the new ascendancy of the fiery little General Count Juicht Terauchi and his ally Major General Kenyo Dolhara Champions of "Pan- Asia" they have insisted that Japan must swallow China all at gulp instead of just nibbling and according to current) news dispatches that's the ticket today as they set up a new Peiping government under their privately owned war lord old General Wu Pei Fu When Count Terauchi clipped Kunimatsu Hamad leader of the Selyukal party in January 1937 he dropped the last of the power- ful liberals who were trying to square Japan's new adventure with the modern world That was g the end 'of a engage- raent and from there Count TerauChi moved on down the old back road into the feudal cen- tunes which formed his genius He is a- - thoroughly unrecon- structed seventeenth century feu- day warrior articulate only with sword inept and hesitant in any issue which he can't translate into Immediate and usually drastic action Since his graduation from the National Military college he has been as isolated from the twentieth century world as was "Typhoid Mary" on her East river island When he became war minister two years ago he shook up the high command and sent all the moderates to the fog belt some- where in Manchuria or Korea Politicians outsmarted him and always got in the last word but group" somehow n he always managed to the last wallop He is of an ancient line of fighting men His father was the late Premier Field Marshal Masakata Terauchi get-i- Bankers' New Mood "Watch and pray" seems to be the mood of the bankers as they seek counsel from a scientist and a bishop At the Houston conven- tion of theAmerican State Bank- era' association Dr Karl T1Comp- ton reads the lesson the "Tech- nological Lag" and the Right Rev James E Freeman that on the "Moral Lag" Dr Compton is president of Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology Bishop Free- man rules the Episcopalian dio- cese of Washington D C For several years Dr Compton one of the nation's greatest-scien- tists has explored the no man's land between an expanding gov- ernment and an expanding tech- nology He thinks they ought to get together but he is no ildvo- sate of bureaucracy or extreme federalization He doesn't like the Idea of the government getting on anybody's neck He thinks the government with its vast re- sources might be an invdluable collaborafor with science and shoUld be in fact but he advances this idea warily as he finds cre- ativeness and social progress in the old American free-for-a- u without elaborate governmental trimmings He never climbed an ivory tow- - By Lemuel F Parton er and sees the problem in its simple social components of jobs a rising standard of living social progress and security He notes the potentialities of job-killi- the machine in certain individual instances and assesses industrial with finding acorrmanagement ' — ective I( Sharp Contrast This qualified admission is in sharp contrast to the view of Dr Robert Andrews Millikan another distinguished scientist who has wrestled with the same problem Dr Millikan is for 01nm:tying the throttle wide oiren with the certainty that machines ultimately will make more jobs than they destroy Both however prescribe as a cure for our technological ills more of the hair of the 'dog that bit us The difference in view is that Dr Compton urges certain collective rationalizations a n d controls by judicious Industry and management Dr Compton's own private cosmos takes in much less territory For many years he has been blasting at the inner citadel of the atom to seize there the hidden golden key of unlimited power which haS long been the "pie in the sky" of the great physicists He batters down a rampart now and then and in the long view of the scientists thinks that we may some day tap reservoirs of energy so vast that all our present ills will be easily soluble therein He has headed M I T since 1930 Now rounding 50 he is young vigorous and insatiably curious about atoms and human society and all that lies between He was head of the department of physics at Princeton before 1930 one of the most richly garlanded men of his profession in honors and records of achieve- F1 it—would have to be convicted of victimized so much of the preelection oppoSition to the Roosevelt administration For what he is accused of having said is what many Republicans and right wing Democrats had been saying in trembling voices for several years thksame error which WPA Not Popular The 1938 election may not have proved that nobody Will vote against Santa Claus More than 80 successful Republican candidates for the senate and house are reported to have Indorsed or spoken indulgently of the Townsend old age pension plan Most of them promised to take good care of the unemployed But the election at least indicated that many of the voters who favor Santa Claus don't care whether he is a Democrat or a Republican And as the and returns have come into Washington and been analyzed by the new dealers the evidence has mounted that except possibly among the people who benefit from it directly W P A is not an especially popular state-by-sta- county-by-coun- te ty form of largesse If the formula for political suecess attributed to Harry Hopkins were generally regarded as valid you would expect the practical politicians in the Democratic party to hail him as their prophet Instead the eastern and southern leaders of the party who have been conferring with James A Farley are reported to have concluded that Mr Hopkins won't do as a presidential candidate in 1940 Nor if the spending tag had victory at the polls inscribed on it would Mr Hopkins' friend be so keenly interested in bringing about his transfer to secretary of commerce or some other cabinet post Nor would the critics of the Roosevelt administration be so exercised at the thought that Mr Hopkins may have a chance to prove his ability in some other field than spending public money The explanation of all these phenomena is simple Mr Hopkins has been identified as a potential presidential candidate He is credited with being President Roosevelt's first choice Potentially Strong If Harry Hopkins obviously would make an exceptionally strong candidate for the presidency the old line Democrats would not be so eager to head ment him off If he obviously would Some of the early new deal promake a weak candidate the Refessors stroked political boils with publican opposition would not be b A new congressa curry-comso eager to knock him off now man T V Smith of Illinois proi instead it would encourage the fessor of phkosophy at the UniDemocrats to nominate him versity of Chicago is naturally At the moment Mr Hopkins philosophical and also politically standing alone would not make is He tactful and experienced an exceptionally strong candiexpected to step out in front as date But potentially he is a one of as the congress opens candidate He has intelli strong of new deal this recruits prize gence ability energy and a broad adall session and judging from understanding of the problems vance notices will head in from a confronting the nation Most imfast running start he enjoys the confidence portant The and diligent Dr of the president Smith is a native of Blanket Whether he is the president's Texas a town of 300 in the Brown first choice as his successor nocounty cotton belt and has both body but the president knows the southerner's drawl and the Mr Roosevelt has spoken approvsoutherner's fluency in argument ingly of him to various visitors IlliA debate senator in the and He has spoken approvingly also nois legislature he began'pluggin of two or three other member a of for a legislative council to pull his administration No One knows together a lot of loose ends and yet whether he will push out two ravelings in state administration or three or only one candidate— Although he had the precedent of or none—for a trial run during a 'similar device which was' the coming nine or 10 months It's highly successful in Kansas he an excellent bet though that Mr was spoofed and badgered a lot Roosevelt Will not be deterred by 'by newspapers all over the state any comment either Harry HopHe kept on trying Last year with kins or anyone else is quoted as three downs and 40 yards to gain made in an afternoon off having he put his plan over this time at a race track with the backing of most of the Illinois newspapers Copyright 1938 for The Tribune 'Pretty Shabby' Anti-nasentiment seems to ma to be pretty shabby and insincere unless it is accompanied by a willingness to do something real for the victims of the terror in central Europe Granted that our own institutions are so much at fault that we have all we can do to take care of our own folk it would be better to set our own house in order and to open its doors to our unhappy neighbors than whip up angry emotionalism against-thconsciou?ly directed terror abroad while doing little to mitigate our own unconscious zi economic terror at home Ip this connection I quote a letter from a Jiwish friend in New York "The other day (he writes) I was told of the comments on the election of the senior partner of one of the greatest Jewish banking houses in America and I was astounded This gentleman by the way furnished most of the money to elect Taft in Ohio and part of the It's bad enough money to back Tydings when wealthy non-Jeare more interested in defeating Roosevelt than in saving AmerIca--but when Jews actively fork up money to back such an attitude They want to save themselves but they don't want to save to what you and I want save' 1938 Copyright off the for The Tribune Record Solemn: Adjective: Commonly applied to iome such agreements as that of Germany and Britain not to go to the war they are preparing for We wouldn't know an ideology if we fell over it but it isn't nice and our political adversary has one "An dash by Zontint" says the word from South Bend "featured the Irish triumph" Not one of the old Tipperary Zon- tinis? An authority in matters musical says tone deafness is inherent that there is no cure The sufferer can only go on at composing torch songs "Let's see" mused the nazi rioter studying over a field order for the night's operations against Jews "At 9:05 sharp we get out of hand" Divorce items in a theatrical weekly recount the failure of a circus bride who married a contortionist to straighten him out A deer in the Berkshires leaped through the window of a bank and into a Customer's lap It is believed to have been after some doe Massachusetts joins the long list of commonwealths that outlaw heart balm The campaign to remove cupid from cupidity marches on A radio comic suggests we begin the day with a laugh Aren't things tough enough without frightening the wife? before-breakfa- st For centuries there had been no money in nightmares Then a milliner realized their commercial It possibilities d poets in the rain who have sung the glories of the fallen leaves as they never lost a golf ball under same is long-haire- Copyright WELL 1938 I'll for The Tribune Tell You red-head- k By Bob Burns There are so many writers who know so mucil more about international affairs than I do that I'm kinda ashamed to even touch on the subject but I've jest got to put in a word in favor of this new alliance with Canada they're talking about now In case of an invasion I think we'd work mighty well together Durin' the early part of the last war some of our boys went over with the Canadians and you couldn't hardly tell lem apart One old French storekeeper said the only way he could tell an American soldier from a Canadian was to see 'em comin' into his store He said "The Canadian boys walked Into the store as if they owned it butclhe American walked in as though he didn'Ogive a darn who owned It!" Copyright 1938 for The Tribune |