Show fr i 16 Sundaj Morning- - rfljc fait I morning bj Salt Lake Tribune ever Tha Tribune la a mrmber of the AxsoetMed Press Use for reproduction of all news dispatches ciedlled news tpe local Knit Lttl c City Link Of Unreturning Pilgrims Dm mil the fust hilf of the pirsent month a number Of well known residents Of Utah answered the final summons for which all moitak air wailing Among the the nonogonai ians who have ust iraihecl lod thorn beyond tho end of a joinhirv that of i Sundstrom Mis hot 1om uete Jolunn Sprung Cit who had passrrl tho TSth milo lohn Stott Vrtnul stone last September lion a foimot dniggist and businoss man of Salt Lake Citv diod in Long Hr n h at tho ago of 'll Ru haul Snage a stork man of oath tins dud in Sdt Ltko City Mis Snah Dali W oooh in his doth voir an o to nil pionor r diod In Arizona tho othoi dav aftor sho had observed hoi noth animoisaiv Joigtn Cluistiui Nk Non of Tiovo has just passod on at tho ago of 07 Tho following or togonu urns lino also Joinod tho passing raiavtn dining tho samo pound Tohn ithan But Kiev of Ptovo ST v oars old Tamos Blake afoimoi Utahn but irerntlv of Idaho was SI whon hp diod or r losiastioal a rnie and John Stokoi loadoi in Tinvo passod his Slid birthday annivptsan bofoio his rioalh David liar mnn Rirard was 81 whon ho diod in Bonn 1 if ul Mis Sai ah Loo Fowlor Broadbont believed to havo boon tho last suiviving oolonist spnt fiom I’tah to sottlo Idaho diod in Salt Lako Citv at tho ago of S7 Mis Thrum S Wonllot daughtor of Bio noor Chailos C Rirh diod within sight of hor Sfith annivorsary Mis Rohocoa Clarke a pionoor rosldont of Coalville was SI whon sho passod awav Mrs Pollv Ann Taylor diod In Ogdon at tho ago of 82 Mis Lena Thoroson White at tho ago of ST Mrs Elytis Tulwoll Met till at tho ago og 81 and Michael Niolson a pionoor rain notmakor at 80 John Josiah Cl uk of Og don at 82 and Mrs Emma MrOnmott Bithol at 84 and now rornrs an annonnro mont of tho doath of Ebonooi N Child at tho ago of 87 Thoso pooplo woro hmldrrs of romrmmi tips and promotrrs of industry aocording In tho scope of thoir abilities and tho extent of their opportunities They played impor tant patts In the diama of development that made Utah a respected and influon lial member of tho sistoihoorl of states Other boloyod and yalued residents of Salt Lako Citv and Utah not so far ad vanced in years hut equally deserving of romrmbranoo have taken thoir dopaituio In the same yyay during tho past foyv days Dr Horace Cook Holbrook a well known physician and former missionary of the Mormon church Paul H Nunn president of the Tellurida Power comphny and a noted electrical engineer Mrs Ruth FI dredge Meakin a daughter of pioneer parents and a talented actress passed away at her Hollywood home A very popular matron of thp transition petiod of Utah's history was Mrs Lillie May Pfout? Harris whose husband was a celebrated orator and booster for the new commonwealth Fisher Harris fust geeretary of the commercial club and oi igl nator of the slogan “See Amcnca Fust" She was a yyoman of ihaim and Intellect yyho taught languages and histoiv for 20 years in local high schools dining hor wul 5- r ow hood Sister Ann Patnoo supr t intondont of tho IIolv Cioss hospital and a nationally known loader in nursing education passed aw av tho other eyrmng aftoi an aotiyo and useful career being chan man of the state boaid of examinots for legisteied muses at tho time of hot death Junius Young a son of the oldest son of Riigham Young a biolhoi of Eugene Young the eminent metiopolitan journal 1st who died this yeai long known to most "old timers” still hying was an exceptional character— at tistic spintual sympathetic loyal and loyable He chert on the eve of the 70th anmyersarv of his hath “On this side and on that" some poet taid “we see our fi lends diop off like leayes in the autumn " l - si 23 Publishing Company I be Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also published heieln Nmrmbcr Sunday Momma An Ever Passing Caravan it 15 1871 Established April Lvsufd Distorts the Bill s-- Iihoi tv 1 r$$ - t ?M I w I I VI i £ V f I ' i - !!' I I I i H : p!iu less hoi urge of nil i iiilux mhI animate cieatui tuie has given lihitiv tven to dumb animals” Rut with man as with uthoi m habitants of tho raith unn stinted liboitv loads to eneroar hment iisiu p ition oppios non and invauahly insults m a bunny of might Under sur h conditions tho attong will always impose on the weak until continuous stnfo climmitrs the vu turs of mcirv lustice and liiothoihond Civilization is founded on rules th it limit the rxnciso of individual liboitv If people weie prifert theie would he no need of laws hut evoiv statute cnicterl since time began has cut tailed some as As Chatlos Kingsley ex sorted fieedom “There aie two kinds of free plained dom— the false whole one K fur1 to do whatever he likes the tine wluie a mm Is free to do what ox pit nine and wisdom have shown that ho ought to do" Whon an advoc do of absolute fieedom for every individur! to do whit ho dei ms to himself expedient or advantageous bases his argument on the Bill of Hi 'Ills In the Annuli in constitution he lonstiues liberty’ to ho liionse and would tuin a s tfe guard of patriots into a rc fuoe for ti utois When the fits) umpiiss of tins nptiblK dm mg its fn sf m is mu at Ni w link ( itv In September of 1780 ailoplol and suhimt li d 1o the people of the forhiated mmninli wealths a Bill of Rights no one lontoni plated the coming of treat In ions nrisan os rs S! Is a Spokesman of Rights 7s 1 and new jurisdic- and AFL is now small and thnl it is safe to wait until time bi mgs full accord More Difficult Problem the AFL count il dominated bv the old line lahot hueautrats who would be most damaged hv dot not no igt i a CIO-AFfully back up the AFL peue In Ho ir repoi t to the t on lei e s AFL convent um and in th ir mnvent ion at ion thev gave the CIO lendi is giounds for railing Miss l’likms optimism foolish Riobnbtv from and misleading Miss IT a pimtoal standpoint is ton eit in supposing that the A F I could be made to stand L But ns John I I ewis is fond of pointing nut with some four that does not dispose of the more difficult problem of what to do A F L hureau-rrat- s nhout the old-lin- e he ret ent ronv entinn the violent anti new dealer big Bill Hutcheson 1o execulhe tive countil membership hackhnne of the AFL is composed of the building trades unions now furious with the administration because of Assistant Attorney (uncial Thurman V Arnolds anlilnist proset lit ions And besides the building Hades theie aie the nth r tolint il mem-l- a is with snnll unions like tom of the t nited t mm lit Ru K Wmkiis wtiu would tine to la peisu )di d to sli p a ole la foie the CIO i ould tome 111 Suggested Considerations Of mill sc he hid the advanat that tun lie slmlid life m a tage of many of us lug tow n But his fin nils had sml to him 'Wait till to Louis' give him smh a build up on tlie ntighhnting town t h it when he min igt tl to go over tlnic for a hnef lie expiiled holiday he was realty flouted In see f ihvlon and it seemect to him that lie was si ring it 'Niver again did I expetirme slunk or flight or dismav on pnteung fnt the In q time a strange anil Inigo cits mvs Bill uint to Omagn and winked theie lhen paid no attention to those who said to me 1 ‘But wait till vou see New York' was t iking It bv easy stages ' W hen I stepped out of the st ition III New 7 ot k I tint the fet tin" of having leuliid homt ntlir a long pit) i image I fill tlmt I w is one of those Inn n to lie a Ni w 7 oi ki I Mv own xpi ru ni e vv is like tint of Mi 7 nine W In n I fii st xt t vi s on I! tbv Imi tint n t fnl that this w is mv home Noliodv li me al the th pot he si ition Use If ilnln t fi hi n me mm II hi an e the si ns i v i i W e Si mi'll to tile t a e of the sit u tt mil li ul a n 'i tow u job w In n lie lainli f iiiuh U il In- - v iv x an to ha In t a U to fill niifi h III and imh ns all gel mil till h a mil d IT w in inn in d at t III to W ni hi hmliTni in uk urn minis v 1 ’ 1 i -- i I I I i 111 i meeting with lewis the nth is that lewis and his advisers fel (hey mo doing pirttv well unde? lliie pH sent set up and aie n d piepared In mike 111V gieit siciifues I I it I I s y light l'1 Mi ioiiiiis so on s no tin amt Naiinht a i p w inn i P l n s joe in v l now In piling I lint pm y mlu ate Inc i1- i iblv f f ' !i I i t n t h A’linm mu I be IT will bring w fnigive n In d mg double chinned a ed a ii wunnti hut n d lnl contribution Poetual sit-do- slow-dow- not letlers mm ba barred for ohwous misstatements of fait or for statements whuh are not in ac cort with fair plav and pood taste 7 The front m is not an acher tis R medium aid annot be used for ad7 rtish R turposes 8 Writers must sign true names letters will anl addresses in n k over assumed i ame if be carried in all cases writer so requests true name and address hmeer must be atu he to comniunh atton ha frorum cannot consider 9 more than one leiter from Ui aama writer at one time Ihe TribtMie cannot acrent 10 teM-r- s f r th ition whi h hear libe n is or a t oi able remarl s entail in r joint legal responsibility fi the bigger neighbors absorbing it European precedents mav have influenced many afraid I dil or Tnbune Cooperation between titles is as difficult to obtain as it is between individuals I hr smaller city is usually of of these feaix The fact remains however that in nine cases out of ten a citv tan benefit bv joining its neighbor in a joint sewer system a Joint water program a joint street system joint zoning and joint economic planning This wav of cooperation must be embodied in the original plan and must not he a matter of one city s using the already overloaded trunk svstom of another S R DeBoer city Denv er Colo Senator From Sandpit-- 8 Town Board Poll Editor Tribune I read in vour Forum a letter written bv Henry Hauser clerk of the Trenton town board saying we would have no election in Trenton this year as everyone was satisfied with the Trenton board Don t you think we are coming to a pretty pass when we are not allowed to vote or have our free agency9 I don t jenow who all the Trenton town board are but I for one am not entuely satisfied and feel that there are many others who feel thp same as I do Can t something he dune to Ham Park Tastuies gieen THE REPORTER A reporter discontented9 Not on vour life' He mav have been hungiv and told and financially slant hut those small inion-- v mt lues wn simply the pine he paid for Hit giiatcst joy a man t m have mating a thing and tilling the tuts of a thing hive lint fi e enhance tp the set ret councils of lie high and mighty I have seen evuv v kind of mm and jov and makes up life I have vv ritti n ev i i v kind of si ui v fi mu an obit to maugutalnms and I would not exchange those thrills fm anv w lm Ii mav he felt bv one who finds himself a millionaire ov r night 1 would not ec hange the hair nil a dngwatih of even a imm-liweekly foi Ihe pirvidrnls I vv ould i it hri get a st u k on t lie front page of Ihe bulldog thin an invitation In join the cabinet lie la Her of t v pi w i it i s the measured click of linotype machines and the whirr of big presses niRkes the sweetest music in the world to me compared to wlmh the Cunmnili symphony orchestra is a (omtumi-Im- n of Ji vv s liar ps I value an assigimn nt fiom the t ilv ih sk iiicin Hum would a iimimissiim to the t out t of St 1 See how he soothes The fevered one Brings hope unto the dying He holds their hands until 'lhev rench the lonely Bar r untie of deaths black door He has believed that faith Must tome from God And so he walketh 11 inti in hand w illi T bee - Ruth fniiand Salt Lake City let us An Ante c c v 1 c 1 Jmps an s l Don t ' ' st i I OR in ity In I him w il a In him Ik Ik ii sNUM is a n in -hv lm mg km h v is Ills a sc (i In w t cil t ilk mo 8a nl s mill pi Holy Hardly a day passes that I tlon meet someone yc ho tells I11P that he too has never retried a qui stumnure front Dr Gallup and doesn t know anyone who has I of the taxes assessed in Itah with those of Idaho and Nevada should remind us thtt the cost of government is unique In the fact that the less it is worth the more it costs Things ate belter than they to be in some tases Nowadays w In n a hole is found in the lug it isn t a question as to lit? win In r it wax i ausetl hv Hint fiom the latho or tie cocktails use d I vone who is honest ngrec-i v In Ill should do a full dcvswoik Now Ihe only Hung v i that st oi k In i m m Ii r v x s i vc c h II In do is full dux t wink find out w liar a is X I x I ninmg mil pi pin w tii who livis mil m ihe i ouri-- I p! i nt d mid hi i v si i d ai 1 me a imp cf pi units as Hie xoulh ever j I mimed r The State of The Nation By The ferimal government has had two voxels in the Gulf of Mexico foi a year and will keep them theie all winter in Its effoit to find out wheie a vhnmp goes when it gets 1 year old — Press dispatch The government has too much curiosity for the taxpayers good It wonders too many things Not long ago a governmental tun rau got 1o wondering how rmn h air a row breathes in a dav and spent a wad of the tiivpnviis mom v finding tti it 27u pounds of air is tin avitage qumlity i lie tuxpavi i Is doing some g Ins n tune own when he in spite it mil at lux own expense lie Is woiuIm ng how mm h loiu’i t he Is going to lx aide to support a government that doe x so many foul Hungs 81 II l( mu unm am hoik 1 list r tbl(( lm k ns xay Min J nil titan tilings ' T? V iJSv-A- Off' the Record Flinor Glvn the torch novelist of other days is now 73 years old Flinor gave us oomph when it was it which was some years before S A There was a big scene the other dav in parliament I lend George discovered that the new war isn t being earned on according to Of all (things the war develops a ease of bad plumbing Rain that was to stop the nazi drive in Poland turns up in the Siegfried line basement If only the opposition could get started some think it could sweep the rcich with one of those ham and egg proposals Aheady it appears that the war broke out because a nazi genera! fell for a blonde Usually this is lett fur Hollywood to discover 30 years after w Mr Winston Churchill In a late pep talk savs the Balk ms must not fall under ' the ( icrman hec " he lal er is not named openly but we think we understand I 1 I Who now renumbers the ginde of paper once vised lit H rains that wasnt woith the sign Buies written on it ’ offur censor Is aKo never intentionally 'Wake me tip" s ml (he f digued reach r of west front conmuinirim's 'wlmn someone gels the hall hey ond a stupe i plohilnteel out wav Coffee In Budapest is now up to 53 83 the pound Much to lus regret the Hungarian pmhimlht will have to put the slug on for a dull ii A Noiwegitn fish rninn Is home witti a tali of Ik ing in the midst of a gicut s a battle raging om mill one half horns Kind friends as usual will hi Ip with the disci ilmig With one w ir or another raging across om the p ist t hi e years Uoin still P 't' Bucks a collide i atluk is an episode In a b u n n b ise me nt We aie hole ft It a lnl to deny i fwiport that the leooin has tee i n si 7 n ill Mill m llislv v i s he d mg a nn pi "1 ‘ u e e sv ii munriuins plant track into a plow t lm t t ) krs l bought Ki h a si d by if sift' v ” In Alabama government engine is have built an expei miental house of rottnn Now to tell the children to button the door on the W ley sejuiie Ii lluies Repi ml ue t Km si ru 4 J- Register and Tribune Sunriuitf Of remise the war gig man though funny Oiin Miller loo-o- a hai-bo- a i f Course No 3 is favored bv manv nf the president s new deal supporters in the administration and apparently outside The motive of some of them is really to facilitate a third term movement Ihe motive nt others is merely to conserve the presidents influence lhev believe that his bargaining position will be weakened the moment he closes the door against a third term Course No 4 is a variation of No 3 But the emphasis would be different The president would renounce publicly every intention of seeking a third nomination But he would avow again his determination to see that the party is kept on the course along which he has steered It He would avoid a pledge not to accept renominatiun under anv circumstances If suitably phrased course No 4 would leave the impression that Mr Roosevelt no ambition to run again but it would not forhid a 'draff movement A man In Indiana hopes to find a wife who is 27 a good looker a fine rook and woilh -- hiHio and probably will be trampled on in the rush c 1 s IK z for the politician who knows how to speed lip the production of and slow down the production of legislation I I all tins sound like I would hi e In li uq e mv ft ’ f’ Hie ' in of ( mi inn ill Ri nil is ai Imbue gnat future lus ahead Ihe ronipanson Itah Ticnton NO ITS ON THU Cl'bF HI PAR 1 MI N 1 A an elec turn9 man Citizen h ive I Movement Third-Ter- his memoirs Resident Wants Trenton Grasp his hand firmly Christ And lead him through Thy Contentment is natural wealth luxury is artificial poverty — Socrates I nnn ltet Writer Urges Cities To Join in Planning n 1m i mu ut at ms 2 Write itRibK sod nearly on one site of the taper onl I Religious ami ra lal discus sinus of a dernRatorv or sectarian nature are barred Partisan or per sonal political comment cannot ba printed 4 Personal aspersions prohib of peace and make lesolves to do alt in our power to piomot® and maintain peace For more than thutv centimes humanity has yirtually been in a stale of war either on battlefields or in thp field of economics and it will takesuperhuman efforts to overcome it he money system is the root of all war and all poverty and TO per cent of alt rnme he lemecly lies in our ability to create a new heait and a new spirit in men and nations and lead them to accept the one and only possible solution the ad of the divine system of economics introduced by Moses and reinforced bv Jesus to socialize and equally distribute the wealth of the wot Id to ereate right rebetween man and lationships man and nation and nation and to prove that social justice and social righteousness will work e have armed at a stage of history where no system tan possibly sucreed that does not bedim k itself on the principles of Man is proposing divine law main plans but all will fail if we do not take tod into our C N Lund sot ml relations n t f l "i for the A F I it Is ilium position that lewis broke up the last peace toiifc rentes and that he is roadv to resume whenever lewis is Behind lieen however are the tbor bun am nits sc t on ke ping t In ir obs ri i tiding I ew is as Ihe anti t rnniv and tint nun h f nidi l of the If the pi salt lit pi i snhnt Hud to linposp p ue In would h ive to b ive room fur tin in iij Hie labor movemi n! and a pi u e m w Inc h lus in mo s d gnat Influent e w ould not In vi v And nppt ilmp to him As Bleeps I i v oit n peat e whose political a is laigelv i J i il Mill i on mil I Imik things f ir w m k on Mmol for Vernon D Fdilor Tnbune deJones The Tribune in nounces the Dies committee in its expose of communism calling its findings ' lies” praises Haywood Broun because he supports labor organizations Many people support labor organizations when they are right but n strikes or strikes are not right They are the extremes attempts to foue the ideas of one Syria of an issue against the ideas of the other side There is another wav to settle such corytroveisies and if the law isn t right take it to the legislature and fix it after a thorough discussion Hey wood Broun claims to be a socialist If he really is then he is a communist because a real socialist is always a eommunixt They work clandestinely under cover and by false ptetenses insinuate themselves into labor organizations such as the League of Peace and the CIO and other organiRussia is for socialism zations and communism and a dictatorship which all such governments necessarily must be The object is to stir up trouble and make a plausible case of chaos against capitalism and seize the government by rev olution in a dav Let Mr Jones open his eyes Marlin Dies and his committee are riox ing a great work for America! and deserve the most generous applause of all true Americans L A Hollenbeck sur-to(- All these t (insult rut ions wre when stigK st et! to Ihe piesident tie lasualh hut hnpefutlv mentioned lahor peue in his retent I I tentative agieement Hie bv sis I nfoitunatelv icttein appeamg in this filumn not exim the view of Ihe ’lhev ate the opmi on ft rot ir li if or with vhi h he I rib k may or mav not aciee The follow In r rules poern ontnhuUtn titers limited to 2 0 words anl preftrence ptven to short com Tribute 1 tions almost Intact Therefore Miss Perkins argues to the president that the difference between Forum Rules Stirs Writer's Ire to I moderate teamsteis' rhieftain Dan Tobin A F I representatives piomised that the ten original C I O unions w ould he taken back to the AFL with their new banc volt see St Blast at Dies Probe Fdilor Tnbune With baibar- ous wars raging in Europe and Asia and rumois of war heard in every land it is natuial that we turn our minds to thougnls CIO xas' ( Reader Urges Moves Obtain Peace To ton-lor- s iv s tie nev er h id sue eng xpei lie hid nlvv ivs plumed to go to New V In n lie got t III I e lie w is pli tsi Il k and h tt is a i ai e i xp i icni c and f It at Inline He oi ding to nn obsoi v it unis Bill be was hit tai hauler hv t tie shot k of I lie it v w Ion lie In st s iw st I inns He was living and winking m Kansas City 1 - of ( onnnei ce I Ini t v L Hopas tough coadiutois she blinked the move Peaie she d savs must he founded on not on the exhaustion of men who have hern lot ked in a loom together and bidden nit to come out until thev could agiee Mot cover slip believes that peace is neaier than it seems to most other infomied poisons John L lewis negotiations for a I nited Mine Wotkers' contract interrupted the last peace talks but before lewis left what looked like tentative agreement was secretlv reached on one important point Urged on bv the C I THE PUBLIC FORUM- - - - by Our Readers kins I Course No 2 is favored of course hv those who want neither a third term nor a ntrolled convention and a Roosevelt-picke- d ticket But it has gamed favor also among true friends of the president and loval supporters of his policies— those who believe that the third-teicontroversy only serves to divide the paitv and injure its chances of victory I hey believe that Roosevelts prestige is great enough to prevent the nomination of any ticket that is unsatisfactory to him without resoit to a third-terthnat lhev are confident that he does not want a thud term and would not accept If so thev argue whv not say so9 If he removes himself irrevocably thev argue the paity can then move harmoniously through the winter and spring Roosevelt-co- al people going9 W hv did they never smile9 W hv duln t somebody notice the newcomer and hid him welcome9 He stui k it out hut what a timp bi tween the at nv at and the tune w hi n he w as w illmg it even if he had the fate to st iv m the 111 declare rl unfriendls that dashed his enthusiasm thinks the magazine man as he looks bam I his vasn t like on that first dav in the City San Antonio at all' Whore were all these o No Important Backing Course No 1 nn longer has anv important hacking It never did have much except from politicians who were trying to force Ihe presidents hand hv saving he could have a third term if he wanted it and would so Fust thorp is the piesident s person il situation Secretary of 1 nbor Fiances Perkins is still the piesident s pi mupnl adv iser on labor problems She is not good at strong-arwork and has no confidence in it During the last peace effoit when it was to give her Attorney Gen-erKiank Muiphv and Seue-tu- v it b u k cratic party The next Jackson dav celebration will be for the Democratic campaign the kick-of- f of 1940 It comers before the election of dele- gates to the national convention has begun It therefore seems altogether logical that the president should use this occasion to tell the leaders and rank and file of his party about his plans for thpm and himself Four different courses ae being or have been urged upon thp president No 1 is to announce that he is a candidate for a third trim No 2 is to remove himself irrevocably from consideration for a third term No 3 is to remain sphinxlike No 4 is to declare that he is not a candidate for a third tetm hut to leave the door slightly ajar for a draft movement Personal Situation Must of the Now Yorkers who ronre fuun Out there admit that they yyoio si mod had to death on thoir fust arrival in tho big idv That is espei in!l true if they tame not to visit and then use up the return tuket but mine to stay and find a job At the table at the Paik lane hotel the ot h i das at him h I ssns talking about eailv Impressions of Ness 7 ork with Bill I engi literals agent and lames Young of Collier 8 Toting a young man of consult Magazine sang fund came to New Tmk fiom Sail Mai i os lexas San Marios wasnt vshat would he i a lit il a big tossn at alt But young Mr Young had been to San Antonio and line figured tie knevs all about tug plai es lie tint! not felt altogethir at home in sen h a swill as taught him up in San Antonio hut he was nitlimated lie wasnt afiaid to tnikle New Tmk Nos Mr Young admits that his fust con-tawith Manhattan took Ins hioith awav and made him dreadfully homosuk for lexas It must have been the eseilasting stream so of humans so dotai hod so disinterested Politicians Await Definite Third Term Word Among politicians close to the White House January 8 is marked as the dav on which the president mav he expected to clarify his attitude toward a thud term Th s expectation is not based on anv definite word from the president but on the fact that Jack-so- n dav the anniversary of the capture of New Orleans is traditionally a dav on which Democrats get together to talk politics On Jackson day 10'6 Roosevelt struck the keynote of his campaign for rdclectron At the Jackson dav dinners of IT !8 and IT J he again charted his couise for the Demo- The labor situation Is a complex of conflicting personalities and inteiests John L lewis detests William Breen and dislikes the piesident The president disti usts the AFL leadership and would not think of going to sleep with his fingei in the CIOs mouth Poor (rern loathes Lewis and is badgered hv conservative A F L moguls Who hate the new deal Among the cross currents however several impotlant facts stand out Driscoll November 19 1939 By Ernest Lindley bt memberships B By Manning’ WASHING'! ON— It s generally conceded that if the pi evident will only use stiongarm methods he can impose peace on the warring CIO and AFL Since the leaders of the two factions have returned from their conventions to confer with the pfesi-deand his lieutenants rumors have gone abroad of another peace effort Rumors are always started by such conferences at which it is as conventional to discuss labor peace as to talk about the weather at an Fnglish law n patty Sooner or later of course the need to have united labor as a political allv will probably persuade the president to make a determined tiv for peaee For thp present however the rumors mav probably be ignored as usual New York Highlights Charley T er mites Joseph Alsop and Robert Kmtner tin opes who might try to make that guaranty an Inst i u men t foi its own destruction ‘Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech or of tho press or the lights of to jiooplc pear oablj to as somblo and to phlitrnn tho goyeinmont for a redress of gnovanros” As someone has said t hor c s a power in this country higher than congress high ei than tho chief exerutiyp higher than the constitution Itself — the soyrreign peoThev constitute the supieme ple body of the United States They aie the eouit ot last resort Thev are the supreme power behind the (poveinment The Ament an pooplo will neyer permit the Bill of Piphts to ho misinterpreted its moaning distoitorl or its purpose perverted for establishment of annuity or the glot i firation of sorlitionists whether the plotters are nais communists or imperialists Whon Roger NT Btldwm director of tho “Ameiiran Cry il Liboity Union” an organization listed by a congressional com mittoo inyestigating tin Anicuran activities as an auxiliary of communism made a talk in Salt Lake Citv yesterday on “Tho Fight for tho Bill of Rights” one could not help recalling some of his uttcianccs in past campaigns ho has waged against logil restrictions on misuse of liboitv As a member of tho "oyci seers’ com mittoo in tho economics riepattment” of II ri y aid n nix et srty his y lews wci e pi interl on pages Tt and 77 of tho Fish iopoit found In answer to cor in public document 22‘)0 tain questions Roger N Baldwin stated that his organization upholds the right of an alien or a cition "to advocate murder” "Do you uphold tho light of an alien to ady orate tho oyer throw of tho govern-men- t bv foico and violence9” asked the t h m man ‘bate ceitalnly that Is a healthy ever rise of the light of floe spoor h" leplml l)nc t or Baldwin of tho Americtn Civil Iihritios Union Tho fact that this man is permitted to express such sentiments is an evidence of tolerance in this country tti it almost always encouiagos abuse of pi ivilcgM In tho Halyard class year hook of 1377 Roger N Baldwin is quoted as saying "I seek tho social ownership of piopcttv tho abolition of tho propel tied rlass and sole rontiol ot those who produce wealth com muntsm is the goal ” If that is good Americanism so is the Stclin subordination of farmcis and the soviet purges in Russia By -- By J979 1 9 I Civil Liberties Miss Perkins Sees Labor Peace Hope falie ffibuuc- -i £akt tribune £l)c Salt -- jn A N A lire lion-do- ll (m-to- i |