| Show i v r 16 t A - Sunday Morning- f Ijc gait -- Jake illum- e- Behind the Scenes of bait Lake Tribune Publishing Company Current News Established April Issued every morning Salt Jake urilnmc- - UJjc by vn-'-- 1871- - 15 r 01 -- S Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the or not otherwise credited in thla paper and also the local news published herein The Is a member of the Associated PreM of all news dispatches credited to Use for reproduction The Tribune Salt Lake City Utah Sunday Morning June you away with hooks and your posterity with fish hooks " This quotation is less noteworthy as a threat than as a chronicle of fishing with hooks in primeval days of nets and spears at least eight centuries before the dawn of the Christian era Fislyng is one of the railiest recorded spoits of man From among the fishermen of Galhlte came a few of the fir'd duuples of Christianity Some profound plulosopheis have b"en celcbiated anglcis and scveial eminent politieians have qualified as "fishers of men" This outdoor sport is an occupation that combines business with pleasure yielding food as well as fun Even when fish refuse to rise to the temptation of a feathered fly or fail to find satisfaction in playing with a bobbing cork or grow suspicious of a wriggling worm the pastime has certain advantages not found in other forms of diversion — An unlucky fisheiman may thrill with poetic anticipation which is often more inspiring than prosy leahzation he forms a habit of concentration which may prove useful in playing contract bridge he develops traits of patience and persistence that otherwise seem to be waning in this age of haste he acquires the knack of meditating something he may lack on most oilier occasions Taking all these avenues of escape fiom intellectual ineitia into consideration it would seem that more people should fish mote Under the laws governing such matters m Utah some stteams are excepted and by the law of averages some fishermen will be disappointed “But the benefits of such outings may be balanced against the catch in any instance with odds m favor of the sport Winning Foreign Trade Calls for Local Trade Methods A S" G Jr V I r accord our good Our Momoo our guaranty of policy neighbor in confidence our sublime protection constancy our complacent attitude of sccuuty combine to make it comparatively easy for totalitai lan tradesmen to steal most of the maikcts m this wiG-ei- n hcmisphcic Mexico has been selling confiseatcd'oil to Italy and trading it to Gcimanv for manufactured articles— many of which cannot be turned into cash or labor Bolivia has tjust concluded a bargain with Germany whereby minerals hides and petroleum ere to be taken from South Ameiica in exchange for four billions of maiks worth cf nazi factory products The raw materials for winch Hitler and tJlussolini aie baitonng mscvcial Latin republics aie essentials of war and might bo acquired and hoaided advantageously in the United States as a vital item in the While there is no preparedness progiani Ladway to pievcnt these countries fiom no situaand whom with please they ing tion existing that would justify remonstrance on the ground of aiding potential foes it is cleaily evident that something y should be done We cannot undeiscll because her factories aie manned by conscripted woikmen who accept wages no laborer in the United States would consider Besides in this western demociaey there is an atmosphere of dissension discoid and disaffection which creates an unfavoiable impiession on visiting leaders from Almost every governments courtesy shown them is criticised in congress or communications every commercial agreement favored by one faction m this country is condemned by the other as a result our "good ncighbcjLs’’ turn to the totalitarian powers whose representatives show them every consideration express no displeasure in their presence and offer them bai gains that cannot be met in this country No distinguished guest has been received or entei tamed by the United States since the World war without overhearweling hisses and sneeis as well as this is a Of course and cheers comes demonstration of freedom in thought speech end conduct but it does not make fi lends win confidence or draw trade Nobody has to be rude or insolent to show independence Those persons aie most worthy of liberty who know how to value it treat it exercise it If this country expects to gain or retain n commercial relations with countries it will have to study the characteristics of their people or the methods cf those who are gradually elbowing us out of all the markets of both hemispheies Gci-man- Jbj- Lntin-Americ- Jijli 1 alk I'P ft ' i Parade of Patriotic Pupils Marching Into the Future One Brilliant Young Men Of Genius and Erudition Three and a half centuries ago a young Scotchman bv the name of James Cnchton was the most popular piodigv m Eut ope Educated at St Andiews in bifeslure mar Dundee he traveled on the continent delivering orations in the language of any land m which he happened to be challengon any topic ing all scholars to deputations cf history literature or government defying swordsmen to meet him m combat essays and poems writing biographies which were published in Latin Fiench and English He was killed by a rival the son of the duke of Savoy closing the most brilliant career of record at the age of 25 vears He was universally known as the “Admirable Crichton" and many volumes' weie written about him Thomas Chattcrton was another roniit youth who wrote some of the most beautiful poems of the 17th centuiy including tle How ley collection Conceal ng bis need while mingling with the great people of London he staived until he coul no longer suppress his sensitive pride taking poison which ended his life at the age of 18 But his only gift was liteiaiy 1 pic-coci- ty t to These pel sonalities weie Tnind ytHudjv while looking at a news picture of Louis Harvey Roddis Jr of St Faui who has jmi graduated fiom the naval academy at Annapolis with an anav of awards that makes the ucipiint look like an intellectual monopolist Among the prizes he won during his attendance were included a sword (or gunnery a pistol for engmeei mg a telescope fox seamanship an electiual engineering award binoculars for rule piofuuncy binoculars for scholarship a sextant for navigation a watch for scholarship and a watch for steam engineering He cleaned up on about everything available One cinnot he lp w ond i mg k h it sort cf a figure such a bulhant youth is to cut in after life Sometimes it apoilst a hoy and it has been known ti It h to he piesage pnmatuie decline hoped this young Minnesotan will live long end diffuse his bright ght over the md eles-tin- 1 1 Trouting Begins in Utah All Fishermen Are Lucky Trout fuhing begins toelay n Utah Time was when fulling on Sunel iv was taboo but king In foie enaitment of me "blue laws" Amos the mythical lienl man of Tikoa dee land an open se i on on f ‘Lei the days themselves stung - aha’l conic upon you that the Lend w ill take ‘3 of the most impressive laudable and auspicious parades that ever passed along the principal sheets of Salt Lake City was witnessed yesterday as hundreds of school children with diums and bugles and banners and flags inarched from the city and county building to the interurban railway station to embark on special cars for a day’s outing at the Lagoon Sponsored by The Salt Lake Tribune-Telegracooperating with the United Spanish War Veterans the Bamberger Electnc Transportation company the Lagoon Amusement association and the Salt Lake City police depaitment the youngsters had a holidav made to order with everything free and satisfactory Included with the dium and bugle corps of the several schools weie the junior traffic police as special guests while instructor acted as chaperones and city policemen as a guard of honor and protec -With a blaie of trumpets and a rattion tle of drums blown or beaten by boys and gills some of them so small thev had to run pait of the time to keep up with the procession this armv of peace promise and patriotism went and returned with beaming faces anji happv hcaits radiating the loyalty hope and reliance of the nation Moie ornate pageants moie martial mien or beaung moie precise and stately stepping and moie imposing columns or foimatmns have been witnessed in Salt Lake City but no paiadt? that represented the pndc and the purpose of this democ-iac- v as faithfully as did that long procession of childien bloving their bugles and beating their drums keeping step and pace with both the tempo and the times New York Highlights Charles B Driscoll NEW YORK -- One of the most interesting men I have met nt the worlds fair is Mess-mor- e Kendall Raising along a highway through the nimisunent sector with riding den i s and friok shows cm either hand I wns struik bv the beautv of a white colonial house exteriority complete but vacant Workmen were finishing up some of the Interior dei oration Ifntering to Inquire whv such a beautiful bit of arihitciture had been plunked down in the midst of the hula dancers and snake He charmers I met Mr I rank Murdock is a good looking middle aged gentleman of Scottish cast of eounti nance though 1 learned liter that he Is a descendant of Revolutionary Americans Noting mv interest In the house Mr Mur-do- c k sat down and tattled He represented Mr Mcssmore Kind ill who was putting up monev for construction of this house ns a shrine for Americans who revere the memory The Sons of the of (iroige Washington Amciunn Revolution of vchich Mr Lend ill is president general is sponsoring the project By An Old Friend of Odd's Immediately I expressed great Interest In the whole Idea M my and many a time Odd McIntyre had told me about his old friend He used to sav ‘Some Mcssmore Kendill evening wtun we drop around to pu k you up and take you for a little ride well delve on out to Mcssmore Kendalls house In Ikibbs p errv Just a up the river from Yonkers Its a Colonial house where George Washington made his headquarters at one Tills fellow Kendall Is our kind of a time guv and hts wife is a dandy woman Like so many fine plans wc mortals make this came to naught I' or one reason or another Odd or I podponed that little ride up the river I rilated all of this to Murdock as the dusk g ithered tide klv our the like which comes lip to within a few yards of the terrace at the rear of the house Will Mr and Mrs Kendill will he along tic re anv minute" he sild ‘Why dim t you stav and meat them''" You louldnt have pulled me iiwnv from Utere with wild horses and hi subs a'l ttie tiuru til the I timid tuno hop-ski- & WASHINGTON— A curious and really basic fact about the Roosevelt administration is that while within the Roosevelt circle of counselors there is always a conservative WASHINGTON What Mr Farley whispered to Mr Roosevelt after his cross country inspection can now be heard in at! the elegant salons here— but not from Mr Farley A lot of people rlarm to have direct Information None has The only trustworthy indication is an opinion the national chairman gave a New York newspaper friend He sard he thought F D R could get the nomination if he wanted it The new deal cocktail news have heard fanciful suqgcs ions tint Sunnv Jim said the preu-dewas the only man with whom the Democrats could wun These probably grew grossly out of a conference press remark dropped by Mr Roosevelt When asked about Farley’s report he broke Into laughter that drowned out the last words of the question When asked if the report was favorable he Indicated It was very This caused the T T pleasant D A (third term drafting agency) workers to conclude the termillennium had arrived as tiary they could imagine nothing pleasant otherwise Vi iM 'A'nU 11 hM I'P vnfU element and a radical element and while the struggle between them never ceases it is invariably the J radicals who win ? As to the truth of this statement every detached' observer will agree It has been true from the start off the new deal and it probably will continue true until the What makes it sti anger still is that the radical White House victories are generally won after the initial position of the president has been taken on the conservative side That has happened again I’ran“ and again— so often in fact that It has be come almost recognized routine Even a casual review of the record will substantiate this statement What happens is this— his conversatlve and extremely loyal aids first sell the president what they regard as a sound idea He appears receptive and even enthusiastic He permits publicity and there is a warm reWord goes out that a "'breathing sponse spell” is to be had or that no more experiments are to be made or that the president is- -’ turning right" or that tax revision so as to remove business handicaps is approved For some time the conservatives are elated Reform is to give place to recovery as the prime administration objective rr finish Farley Behind 8 Ball To a closei but innocent bystander Mr Farley seems to be in a very small corner behind a very dark ball numbered 8 Some w'bo have talked with him have concluded he is in as much of a political quandary as all the other Between his lovalty to leaders the president and his instinct for he is virtually specc hless But not entirely Certain state leaders claim privately to have heard from him an excellent word favoring Cordell Hull the state secretary In one state for instance a Hull movement was started upon receipt of that inti-- They Cool Him m at ion If this Is significant it would appear so only from the standpoint that the Hull movement is movemen’ partly an A common impartial view here is that Mr Roosevelt is facing the greatest task of his career to get the nomination in an acceptable way He could no doubt wrest it from the convention by the sheer power of his position but if he did it would not be worth having He would have to thwack too many Democratic skulls and the injured ones would be able no doubt to rub their sore spots to his disadvantage in the election He cannot get it on a platter because too many others are opeti-- j !v seeking it Then too his hands are tied by tradition If he openly seeks delegates he would seem to justify the wort charges of his adversaries that he is trvmg to perpetuate his regime in dictatorial fishion If he does not the others will run nwav with it because poli’u al leaders out in the states cannot afford en masse to tie themselves candidate up to an indefinite whose intentions are only evident of his through the activities fi lends p ’ Lose Government Jos The common sense of the situation is being obscured bv th inning of third term talk bv the T T D A whose members know they will lose their government jobs unltss the nnn who is regave them pinminencc elected Note— Another possibility very live nist at the moment is 'hat the Rooseveltites might be able to jockey the convention into a sialcmate between Garner Hull and the other candidates whereupon a somewhat unanimous third term invitation might he arranged Rut this method would proclaim the inability of the party tn furnish another man and would nard-l- y he encouraging to pnrty moral0 Enthusiasm of the office holders w as nev cr higher th in nt this moment however Thev have convinced themselves the president cm win if he can only get the nomination They count the smith the west ami New York stete ns meat for him conceding the Re publicans onlv New Eng-mil the other Atlantic and central states But thev say nothing about the r unfavorable and firm situations or lmw thev can get the smith when most o' the snutn-er- n renrese ntativ es in congress or openly tire either prvilclv against a third term un-de- rf 1 split-liho- Ono-Tcr- Suggestion The Vuidrnbcrg one term suggestion ionic's out of the hi Inf among ni env Re public in politi-ner- s (hit if a Republic m wins next tune he will require the full four veus to clean up the mess and he will make hunsHf so unpopular doing it that a sci mid term would be impossible Michigan congressmen hav heard their favorite 'on express th it verv idei ni mv times in priIf Vandenbirg vate gets the minima! ion be will unquestionable h indie it ns a ‘sacrifice’ assignmc nt Ficmwnv appirently is only prattle id bv statesmen on things After all Mr thev are against Roosevelt his slid about congress exceeding tils budget in the farm bill bis Interior heerctarv likes slipped into a secret session of t ho house appropriation committee and approved the Start es bill Kl proposing JWP Oi oof) more for public works The committeemen did not unde rsland learlv win'll-r- r the ptcsidi nt ha nnsented In likes’ appcarimc but ics siviril of them rerru mix red it R ke s ml he appeared ’without objection1 from the pi evident c c King hi ctji ly min ate Inc Distribute bv J 1939 By Frank R Kent 4MWSSBPI — by Our Readers - - - THE PUBLIC FORUM anti-Garn- m Latin-Amerira- bi ought 4 1939 By Paul Mallon 4 Radicals Triumph In Roosevelt Circle Kent Says By Orr Unkept Graves June Reader Defends Zoo Administration Editor Tribune: I can’t resist Once again the perennial crop of wolves Is hollering about our 700 Sure its rotten Conditions are terrible But with the constant improvements of the past three years on a very limited budget they are not nearly as bad this year as they have been ever since the menagerie was moved to Hogle Gardens As soon as the heat is on usually each year about this time the zoological end humane societies conduct an extensive investigation Following this extensive investigation extensive recommendations are made and the buck is again passed in typical fashion to the commissioner of parks and public property Bravo’ Yes many things could be done and I quote "the money can be secured from somewhere ’ Id like to get mine easily short time ago an editorial with about as much foresight os Sait Lake City had in establishing a zoo appeared on this page criticising Commissioner Goggin A I for one commend Commissioner Goggin for moving elk to a greener pasture at a time when inquisitive people will not be hurt and that type of person who does not go to rodeos because livestock is roped and ’strangled" will not be offended Yet because the newsboys had to hunt for their story a typical sorehead editorial forced the Danes to perform slave labor’ Did the foreigners use the whip on the Danes like the south- appears in the name of the people Baloney To the citizens of Salt Lake Let’s quit confusing issues Either a zoo or no zoo and the former means either put up or shut up Walter S Key 551 Elizabeth ern gentlemen did on the negroes? M ting Street Questions Statement On Danish 'Freedom1 Editor Tribune- In The Tribune of May 23 there appeared a news item under the captioi “Danes of Tntermountain Area to Celebrate Freedom Dav " The item states that "the Danish lung on June 5 1849 granted the citizenry freedom Previously they (the Danish citizens I presume) had been forced to work for the landholders" The article conveys the idea that in 1849 there were two classes of people in Denmark the citizens and the landholders The landholders obviously were not citizens Having gone to school in Den-irk for seven years and there read hlstoiy books of that country it is news to me that tne Danish soil ever had been owned - foreigners by Another question puzzles me How could the Danish king liberate the Danish people from foreign ownership’ Was it not the foreign landlords who gave the Danish citizenry its freedom’ Would the writer of the news Item be so kind as to inform me through the forum what nationality those landholders were who Senator From Sandpit-- B Never acknowledge failure until f you have made your last attempt And never make your list attempt until you have succeeded — Anon Obstacles Along lour Fath Out of difficulties grow miracles We do our best woik in the flee of seemingly insurmountable obstacles — just as a regiment puts up Its best fight when cut off from all retreat No songs have been written no orations delivered about a regiment that w on an easy victory Heroic deeds — truly greit achicv ments-a- re ac complished by fighters w ho battle against desperate odds That is a good thing to remember when obstacles along your path challenge your utmost powers to conquer them Difficulties obstacles troubles misfortunes— these are sent to make us fight to develop our untried powers and strength About sixteen hundred years no there lived and taught at Rome a crippled Greek slave whose name was Epictetus Rush was tho wisdom of this man that the great and humble alike from the emperor to the poorest citizen sat nt his feet to hear his savings ) ou have probably rued and mulcted at the wisdom of many of them that are quoted to (tils d iv Among the swings of this old philosopher that rv e to be treasured in the memory of every man woman and child is this one In particular are things that ’Difficulties show what men are In case of anv difficulty remember that God like a gymnastic trainer his pitted you Hgunst a rough antagonist For whit end’ That you nmv he an Olympic conquer and the cannot he without tod' — Clyde Early a ‘Scrap Boole” cle-- m I ic u n ut Sartorial the prnginn as ra n he Dirssrd in h s dinner clothes Consider lies smart i irniaiiudij -- You never can tell W hen y ou sec him about If hes late coming in Or just going out' Dale Fisher Notes on the Cuff Department We ve been keeping a secret for about a week anci we re certainly glad that its all over with and isn t a secret any more You see F J Ream and Alvtn B Lowe gave a dinner for their employes Saturday night That wasu t any secret but the fact that they were going to present their star s ilpsman Raul R Ches-le- v with a gold watch in recognition of If) yiais loyal service wax Mr Ream told me and I told mv wife because Mrs Ches-le- y Is her sister But we didn t tell mamma because mamma can t keep a secret And Its been an awful strain on us hoeause Dorothy— that s Mrs Cheslcy — has been going around pew mg the air say mg she wmildn t go ’cause she had nothing to wear But she got something and went and a good time was had by all 1 hope verv long ngo Gordon ggel md took Rarnell Bl u k out to plav a game of golf It Was At the 1’arneLs first offcive fust Ic c he outdrove Gordon about fit) yards IIis initial success imbued him with the gambling spirit 'W baddy e s ly we play for something’’’ tie said to Gordon 'Okoh with me” replied Gordon 'How much shall we play for’ N ime your figure ' ’Well” said Rurnill ‘lets not make it too steep Ilow about 10 c ents a hundred Not c Mayhe you've noticed It too — do the most vigthe orous kic king OvrihiHrd on the bus ‘Shea pre t v in a way but too natural ' dooking 'll S REP RAINS PROM OP-I KING NEW I RAl E I’LAN H a lime qi e i trru puj Now that a ruwsl well-heele- d 1 u Peterson Finds Regimentation Here and Now Editor Tribune The aphorism the bet"The less government ter” has been quoted m many forms by many people Most oT us agree with it m theory However actual American practice la the direct opposite Added to the necessary and unnecessary supervision to get the day's work done are the thousands of political adnun'atrations mulgreit and small with theirboards tiplicity of commissions and bureaus Added to these (for millions of us) are churches unions lodges and countless other orgamza'ions with innumerable rules regulatiora and restrictions on our daily lives and demands for our time and substance Thorugh it all permeates the fog of traditions customs and folkways the of'icials In P’urthermore the above institutions hove to apThe and ‘efficient" pear bu-- y e isiest way for them to make is to keep as this impression many other people busy as possible most of them creating more Interference in our lives No wonder we hear about democracy bogging down under tho sheer weight of its own compliand the apathy and cations weiriness and d sillusionment of the latter its citizens being termed 'lack of confidence'1 No wonder our rrime insanity illness and death rites are appalling' No wonder foreign dictators sneer that our democracy rant solve its own economic We hear vague warnproblems 'Regimentation will get ings you if you don t watch out'” It on the grandest aheady has si ale ever known to man The only social design yet evolved to reduce rather than increase these in’erferemes with Americ in life liberty and pursuit of hippinesu is technocracy It is well woith serious inves'i-gitio- n H B Higgins The State of The Nation In opening New York's fur cud this President Roosivelt countrys wagon is still hitched He didn t say whether or the star Is in its ascendancy if it h id passed the meridian Nor did he say anything about whit old John Q Taxpiyer is to a fitar hitched to hut it looks sus pc a treadmill from here iou-lik- e rate of progress being made he hid been thinking the country wad hitched to a snail and a tory stink his head up and voiced the opinion tint it Is hitched to a And there are millions who think it should be unhitched from whn'ever it's hitched to at least long rnougll for lies to find out w here we are Kqu re Perkins mvs 'If you don t want yo' enemies to know what vou re doin' cion t tell yo' friends " bv Esquire Features Reproduction strictly prohibited Distributed Inc reactions Resents Business Men For one thing Mr Roosevelt is distinctly resentful toward business men generally Ha thinks— and with truth— that most of them have been against him since the first g effort of RU2 H13 real feeling was revealed in that extraordinary New York 1936 speech in which tn effect he said that in his first term business men had "met their match” but in his second they would ’meet their master” In the second place he has a strong personal dislike for a number of business me?n whom ho regards in much the same way he regards those Democratic senators like Bvrd and Bailey George and Glass Tyd-inand King who dissent from the new deal policies and attack new deal spending It is very difficult for him to bring himself to do anything that could be construed as a pump-primin- concession to these business men He abhors the thought that he could be put in position of admitting that he was wrong and tticv right This is a human and understandable feeling but it is none the less unfortunate m the head of a great nation Unquestionably 1' is the thing that gives the little radical group its big advantage The "intellectual liberals" as thev like to be called play on it with great skill They point out that his motives will be misrepresented and his ’‘liberal" friends will feel that he has surrendered to the "forces of reaction ” Copyright 1939 hv The Baltimore Sun Off the Record Children says a psychologist shouldn’t perform on the radio So many it seems grow up and beeome adults who shouldn t either A New York twin brought up under th best scientific precepts is far outstripped by the brother who runs wild It is rs clear an analysis of Europe as we have heard In Chile a soprano was pushed from a hotel window and fill on a dentist Yet police heads keep tilling us there are no I'c rfoct crimes With encirclement well nigh complete there is a hiatus In the depredations of the new Caesars— wljnt the poets describe as a rift in the loot "You don t feel menaced do you’" asks the genial fuehrer of the small neighbors as he dusts a few crumbs of off the vest Czecho-Slovaki- leiding consirvative that considering the slow A And then the bright young men of the radical group go into action In a very short while they succeed not only in cooling the president off on the conservative proposals but turning him in the other direction Instance after instance can be recalled This year for example there was first the swing away from the widely advertised “business appeasement” campaign of Mr Hopkins and second the scuttling of the Morgenthau-Hane- s tax revision plan saved only by the assertiveness of Senator Harrison and the fact that for the president to continue hostile meant the passage of a bill which however much he disliked it ho would bo compelled to sign anyway There has been considerable speculation as to whv in every contest of this kind the left wing White House advisers always triumph in the end It is difficult to explain Certainly it is not because Mr Roosevelt is congenitally a radical Actually his first personal inclination is generally toward the conservative side and in private conversation his conservative friends in and out of the administration often find him in agreement — or at least think they do Yet when the time for action comes he invariably swings toward the radical side There are two W’ays to account for this— both of them based on emotional rather than reasoning presidential Goods worth IViOnoOOOO were sold on the installment plan in Great III il airi during ft recent twelve months' period a People sing the songs of yesterday and the great New York fair plays up the world of tomorrow Anything to forget today and the evil thereof On behalf of a local hen an Inch ma village lays claim to the largest egg laid In 1918 not counting Munich Always it Is a relief when proponents of a new firm finance pi in point out that it Is We keep thinking It is us revolving In the beginning the waters covered tho Then gradually land face of the earth emerged and with It the European problem More' Noun from the Latin signifying a sheet nf water Abo an adjective describing the common cold if not your own War Is n slot machine kept running by a hollow Miperslitmn that every 20 years or so nriolhi r juc lipnt is ripe Blc ls d Is the pc in maker w ho is w n e as Inrge ami tough as the parlies tn tie jmc died Ccqyiight 111' N A N A iuc I J'rofit ible ml wills nrg being bi ought 111 at Kis Glint ib 1 gypt M |