Show Jjf J fi a e - ' into iirt-- ‘H‘riF5jrEjnfvUmj cu® 'Wtp'tit -- Monday Mornings Established April lMued V every mornln by -- ule lor reproductlon of U nf th new Asuocl&ted La -- Salt t“ - 15 1871 Tribune Pubtuhln ‘° Salt Lake City Utah Monday Morning March ’ pro-gia- Martin arranged by Chaiiman Gail awards confer! ing and will include music have upon two artists whose paintings especial as possessing been designated delivmerit The piinclpal addiess will be on "Selling Bennion S Adam Dr ered by Art as essential Art to the Community” to community culture and an outline of will be the coming centennial celebration Bardiscussed by F P Champ of Logan others and of Helper ney Hyde The Utah State Institute of Fine Arts was established by an act of the legislature in 1899 The "Mother of Utah Art Mrs Alice Merrill Horne a member of that assembly introduced a bill providing for recognition and maintenance of a permanent art collection out of which was evolved the institute mentioned An entire chapter of the Revised Statutes of Utah Is devoted to this branch of education authorizing the creation of a governing board enumerating qualifications for membership outlining the privileges and duties of officers and members of the organization specifying annual exhibitions and detailed reports to the gov- ernor reported for a When the measure vote the committee suggested that articles so assembled should be known as the ‘Alice Art Collection" a compliment Mrs ilorne deserves because of her lifelong devotion to the project As interest increased the scope of study and encouiage-nen- t widened until the legislature of 1937 ave the old “Art Institute” new life and ts present designation State headquarters for the institute of fine arts is a commodious home on State itreet knowm as the "Utah State Art Con-orexhibitions where entertainments and lecture programs contribute generously to the cultural advancement of the commonwealth The “center”' has provided recreational facilities for over 1300 enrolled art students since It was opened Sketching etching painting with various media carving and modeling singing dancing acting and writing are given expert attention Branch centers have been located at Provo Helper and Price with others In contemplation This is not onlv a worthy movement but very timely The old art centers of Europe are in trouble Collections are being stored In bomb proof basements Artists have laid aside their palettes brushes In and chisels for guns and grenades earlier days and older lands encouragement and cultural advantages were confined to a comparatively few persons of exceptional talent The old world masses were not sufficiently impressed so the average mind was easily filled with thoughts of war and adventure Here in America and in Utah thp outlook is different and a strong effort Is being made to keep mentalities free from sinister emotions— to direct thought toward construction rather than destruction to maintain a tranquil attitude when people of other nations are becoming callous and morbid: to make the world better and brighter Instead of gory and gloomy Art supplies a healthy outlet for human energy Impulses and restlessness It adds to the total of worthy achievements which are landmarks set by advancing civilization The Utah State Institute of Fine Arts is doing more for futute generations and the cause of peace than can be realized or appreciated however much one may try s $t- New York Highlights By sTt 5s fV f Charles B Driscoll NEW YORK — Diarv: How many times weve been disappointed In the coming of spring this jear! But with an early Easter just ahead can spring be far behind? 1 m afraid there'll be a crisis of some kind at University of Arizona Letter from Daughter Pat reveals that she and a dormitory friend Just couldn't resist the day-ol- d chicks at the dime store They bought two apiece wrapped them In woolens and kept them warm I presume there's a limit to the number and size of ((lichens that (an be kept In dormitories and somebodv s heart will be bruised when the authorities step in Whatever happened to the biass hooped cedar buckets we used as milk buckets on the farm’ They were somehow supposed to be cleaner than any other utensil when sealded out But they went to staves rapidly when a kicking cow went to work on them Yarn Gets Results Small world Item- - Not long ago I wrote of persons who disappear out of ones life and how one wonders what has happened to them I cited an old friend and schoolmate Chester tarnsworth who simply disappeared 90 years or more ago Today I have a teller sis large pages close! tv pod from Farnsworth He Is In the veterans administration In Sioux Falls S D It seems that this column ln t published In that town but friends of Farnsworth In other cities dipped It and sent it to him He tell me of a most interesting life in a fasrmating part of America and of his four children 3 heir mother died several rars ago The man who hv reason of his wife death becomes father and mother to his children and carries through the Job ha a stern task But It Is my observation that he usually reaps a unique reward An extra n share of the love and gratitude of the Is his and the job Itself confers upon him a certain dignity that Is beyond description 3 he measure of respect paid him bv his fellow workers and frlengs is a natural tribute to an unconquered spirit Settling With Stolen Oil Investor Abandoning Mexico i 1910 Recent press dispatches from Mexico City indicate that a settlement is about to be made by Mexican officials with the Sinclair oil Inlet ests It seems that the American company has agreed to aciept 9000 (XX) barrels of oil as full Indemnity for seizures of Its piopeitles made by government authoiltles under President Lazaro Cardenas' confiscation decree upheld by the supieme court of Mexico whose bench might be cleaied at a nod from the chief executive It Is possible that other companies concerned likewise will endeavor to ex trlcate themselves fiom a nasty situation Into which they had been luted by piom-lsand guarantees from Mexican ad This business of robbing ministrations a firm and buvlng Immunllv with a fi actional part of the stolen goods Is new and alluring in Its possibilities In a roun try where it can be adopted as a business policy and upheld by the government the plunder game ought to become both pnpu lar and remunet alive enabling ultimate beneficiaries to take It easy while aliens exhaust their money and energy In tultl vatlng plum trees ftom which the owner pit k no fruit According to the authentic record the oil Mexican government exproptialed wells oil fields machinery buildings and bank accounts amounting to mote than 5 100 000 (XX) Under Mexican supervision these wells have been npciated (luting the two years producing an exiess over put inooOOOUQ barrels of oil Such pmper-tiehad turn explotrd located leased bought and paid for with foteign money They were developed with alien rntrrprlxe energy and intelligence lor the past two years these wells hav chll-dre- Midwevt'i Chronicler Hamlin Garland who passed over at the age of 71 lately was until a few veart ago a fairly fnmil ar figure In New Yoik literary clrde lie was one of the first American to discover that the world could he Just as nun h Interested In life in the prairie states as In life In New York and cafes 7 heir was a professor of ( ngllsh at tha University of Minnesota when 1 was spending spate time there who used to dose evetv led ure bv saving “And do not forget to read 'Main Traveled Roads by Hamlin Garland" 17 in Copyright licsl Fiqur MiNaught Syndicate Inc of Today that tha typical figure of our lime not a dictator or one of his blackguards but on of ttie thousand of young men you see In western 1 urope or America with hi girt lolling by his side both of them rather light after an idiotic evening In sum roadhouse in a car a miracle of delicate engine q Ing and power that Is tearing through the night at 70 miles an hour he engine is wondc i fill the human being who only partly rontrol It l second rate the purpose for which H I being used Is probably conlemplihlp ami the danger Imminent and dreadful 3 hat Is our age — J B Priestley in the News Chronicle London It seems to me Is 1 s iv 3J£&t fi" tK 'V5 tt rt !? ? 4L - An lssue By March’ 18 1910 Democrats Face Manning Scenes of Current News Dilemma in Relief Program By Paul Mallon By Ernest In this column $1000000000 will not be enough for W P A next year unless the economic k changes miraculously With an appropriation almost 50 per cent larger W P A this year has been unable to provide jobs for more than 1000000 workers In need of relief These are apart from the "unemployables’ who are on relief If W P A is given only $1000000000 for the next fiscal year It will have to drop about 1400000 workers from Us rolls by the end of the summer of 1940 There is not In sight an economic pick-u- p sufficient to provide jobs for this army of 2400000 workers Some will get private work But In getting it they must compete with millions of unemployed workers who are not on W P A or local relief work-relief The program of the Roosevelt administration inaugurated in 1935 has never taken care of all the d unemployed workers who needed relief But for five years it has taken care of a If W P A Is cut to $1000000000 it majority probably will be able to take care of less than half of them Averaged over the entire year $1000000000 would provide 1350000 W P A jobs Including the backlog there are now at least 3300000 workers on W P A Jobs or eligible for them out-loo- American experienced Latin trade expert up until 1030 a m Tuesday His association as such with the Bayuk Cigar company the American Machine and Foundry company and others In executive capacities attracted last August the Interest of the commerce department looking for advice on good neighbor trade matters At government bidding Mr Wood then left his lucrative private positions and started his public career as special Latin trade adviser to Commerce Secretary Hopkins He Didn't Know But Mr Wood apparently dift not know that all established government policies are already good enough and that the thing he had been employed to do did hot Include any cogitations about them He went searching for truth and after six months he turned up some things which seemed uncontradictorv He discovered for Instance that if the treasury continues to buy all the gold and silver In the world at much more than the natural price Us acquisitions will cause other nations to cease use of the metals for monetary purposes and they mav become relatively worthless He also reached the conclusion that most nations have bad credit standing due to previous defaults are extremely nationalistic have expropriated foreign properties and exert exchange controls like European dictators— some of which any citizen could confirm from the His conclusion was newspapers that not much trade could be gained there for some time able-bodie- G O THE PUBLIC FORUM Claim It destroyers No nation can continue to exist that pays out most of Its gold to those who debauch Its citizens In 1979 we of the U S paid for religion $350000 000 and for gambling liquor cigarets and This cosmetics $14 000000 000 does not Include the millions spent by the government for crime We do not force the juvenile to drown in delinquency but w do compel them to swim In it If he sinks we put him behind bars away from all the beauties and pleasures of nature without which it is Impossible to serve God Reader Aail County Squables men to take over the county government who can devote their time to something better than daily quarrels? It is unfortunate that Utah does not have a recall system or I am sure the taxpayers of this county would very see to it that the quickly incumbents would have time to engage in their arguments at their own expense Instead of providing a spectacle for the people of the Intermountain country to laugh at as their antics are repotted by the press Jay Ach Zee Contributor Lauds Tribune Editorial Editor Tribune: I have often wanted to write and congratulate the editors of The Salt Lake Tribune for their splendid editorials on various subjects and especially In reference to the present war in Europe Your parable In a current Issue about "A brigand leading a band of arsonists and killers driving people from their domiciles burning their homes etc” Is no exaggeration of facts as we have these facts from American correspondents of unimYou refer peachable character to professed Christians in this very community who Justify the nans for teaching their little ones to believe in der fuehrer rather than in the Christianity 7'hese views amaze a good many people in this com- munity After reading your editorials I have often said to my friends: ‘Thank God we have a newspaper like The Tribune that doesn't need to pander to a small number of our citizenrv who look on Hitler as a god ” I live In a new and growing district of Salt Lake Cily where many new residents are coming to make their homos Incidentally whenever a new resident questions me about our local newspapers I invariably replv: "By their editorials ye shall know them " I have quite a staik of above filed away for reference and It doesn t Senator From Sandpit- VIRGINIA CITY Nev — Berthed precariously on the side of a mountain it seemed that riper i opera house might any moment slide down the canvon when the walls of the ancient Earlier demonstrations of the liquid oxygen bomh In this country were not enllrelv successful effectiveness minute and therefore It would have fo he filled by bombing planes in flight Murmuts that Joe Kennedy Is getting tired of It all In London ate fceshlv heard among the diplomatic upper crust If Kennedy deride to retuin In a few weeks War Secretary Woodtlng would undoubtedly get the post Distributed by King Features Syndliate Ine 'Thrift' Ta -B- enjamin PHILADELPHIA Franklin didn t klwav prac- tlce the thrift he preacheet It hnwn by William fulton wa Kurtz pi esident of the Pennsylvania companv In turning over the records of the Bank of North America tohlesl hanking Institution In the rountrv to the H torli at Society of Pennsv Iv ania acA study of the old bank count showed that franklin "was overdiawn at the hank at out of every least three dav week" — Newsweek New York -- as VanBrunt Portland Ore A Editor Tribune: In view of the fact that the three Salt Lake commissioners cannot county carry on the duties of their office because of their constant squabbles and bickering would it be out of place to suggest that they all resign and permit a group of Iron 1 Andrew Commission Another Typ But government reports do not Indicate the new bomb as built by the Germans was used experimentally one dav In the Spanish civil war at Barcelona at claimed 7 hat experimental weapon was a light TNT bomb covered with corrugated cast £& Own Freedom The citizens are at fault in thi matter We pauperize ourselves by patronizing the commodities Jhat ruin our Inborn desire to think each an an individual and thereby enrich our the invention Franklin' Stifle paper 1 In 20 or 30 Pres Editor Tribune: The world would be a dull place in which to live if mankind did not express their own views of conditions The main proof that the U S form of government is nearer right than that of any other country is the fact that we are allowed the right of free speech and our own individual ideas of religion The press Is no longer free It doesn’t print half the news for fear that the tobacco and whisky manufacturers and will boycott the Unfortunately this was not the kind of a trade build-u- p report wanted Mr Woods job was transferred out from under him to another department and he was released of anv connection with it When his findings reached the public eve In the enrly afternoon editions last Tuesday Commerce Undersecretary Edward J Noble Issued a public repudiation of his report had Laudatory biographies heen issued at the commerce publicity department last August but Inquirers since Tuesday have heen met by explanations that Mr Wood was not an excellent adviser to put it with extreme mildness It mav teach all thinkers employed by the government to think the way ley are hired to think— If they d d not know that before Bomb Inventor Barlow was not spoofing the senate military affairs committee when he pictured his new liquid air bomb as potentially the most destructive explosive ever conceived War research men of the government have long considered the liquid air bomb as a terrifying and superior agent of death but are reluctant to believe that either Hitler or Barlow has yet harnessed the explosive force of the bomb sufficiently to make It practicable Not that they would not like to have the secret It seems some trouble exists between Barlow and the war department over a claim for use of his inventions in the last war Barlow won a Judgment In Initial legal skirmishes but the war department has opposed and thus prevented passage of legislation authorizing payment bv the court of claims Their bickering with Barlow for the new bomh has centered around payment of the old claim which is a price they are unwilling to pay for Its Plan able-bodi- Job because P Presents Here is where the Republicans come In with their plans for abolishing W P A and putting relief entirely under the states and localities with a federal grant in aid The Glenn Frank report makes a point of the inequality and unfairness of the present relief system Some people get W P A jobs while others have to scrape along on the meager dole of direct relief The same point was made by Landon in 1936 It has been stressed by Vandenberg Taft and other Republican leaders Thd Republican plan is not to even up by providing enough money to make room for everv needy unemployed person on W P A It is to equalize toward the still lower local relief standards Senator Taft has asserted he could finance a relief program better than the Roosevelt administration by giving the states and localities $750000000 of federal money This would mean less money in the pockets of the needy unemployed W P A costs the federal government about $62 per month per worker Onlv $2 of that is for administration About $54 is for wages to project workers and the rest for materials Latin-Americ- Lose Lindley For reasons pointed out recently WASHINGTON -- What happens to government adviser who do not advise what papa wants to do is presented in the current case of Mr Dudley P K Wood Mr Wood was an exceptionally 4H - 4 irt rt fuji Salt £akt $Vibune- d ” - 18 ‘M “ PtP" been pumping oil Into tanks built with conveyed to tankers foreign capital through pipelines constructed by foreign capital loaded by machinery bought and erected by foreign capital shipped or sold to potential or actual enemies of the lawful owners of that oil while this Is the first offer the Mexican government has made by way of settlement The record shows how the supreme court of Mexico decided that constitutional safeguards for the prompt payment of property expropriated have no relation to the oil companies because their property was so vast that Mexico could not make prompt payment! In other words a peon could be punished for stealing a loaf of bread but to steal $100000000 Is legal because It is too big to be returned Petty larceny is a serious offense but grand larceny is a virtue and a national policy In a communication to the Mexican “The government Secretarysdlull said taking of propel tyAjivlthout compensation is not expropriation It is confiscation It is no less confiscation because there may be an expressed Intent to pay at some time in the future” There may be apologists for this sort of thing In the United States but they do not represent American Ideals of justice Those who excuse it expose their utter Inability to pass upon questions of right and wrong Confiscation Is taking private property by a show of legal authority but without compensation under a claim that it Is needed for public welfare According to international law It denotes the taking of any property public or private ftont an alien enemy Civilized governments do not deptive individual subjects or citizens of their belongings except where they consist of contraband goods stolen articles unlawful possessions or chattels of tax evaders These oil companies acquired their titles under Mexican laws had them by the Mexican government employ ed Mexican labor paid the highest wages In Mexico and contributed heavily to the Mexican treasury Yet President Laaro Cardenas took all their properties by force of an executive mandate backed by an army and a legislature supported Now he proby an obedient tribunal poses to settle with his victims at 10 cents on the dollar by ladling out a few barrels of the stolen oil Anniversary Observed by Utah Institute of Fine Arts in Salt Tonight at the Newhouse hotel Lake City the Utah State Institute of Fine Arts will celebiate its forty first anniverA sary with a membership dinner sil3 Company Tha Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the Pres Tljc )gy Behind the rfljc palt £ake gfibtme- -i ‘ tFn f k ts Tf shrine of art echoed to the voices of Errol Elvnn Hobart Bosworth Alan Hale Mav Robson Humphrey Bogart Bill Boyd Patricia fllii and mnv other Hollywood stars Dav light could be seen through holes In the roof and the floor boards buikled befeet but It seemed neath one that over 11 there hovered the a ghostly spirits of Patti Booth and other luminaries of yestervesr gently chiding any unseemly levity In reviving the colorful mining ramp the citizens assisted by Warner Brothers brought back Old times mmh of Its dignity were renewed without making fun of them (rover (lies representing Governor Blood headed the Utah contingent William F Gordon Warner Brother Salt arLake I tty representative ranged for the reception and entertainment of our crowd and h best of we were accorded W met on wei everything nur arrival by Perry and Walt Hull of I Iv Nev and later greeted hv Ralph Bywclle Judge H W Edwards "Death Valiev" Scott v Governor E P Orville for mo r (over nor Morley (rls-wnl- d Mavor Frohllch Sheriff and Mr Ray Root and more of Mod-jesk- p other celebrities local and na- tional Beautiful weather favored the district and we ate our him heon Cilv al fresco Opposite me sat Errol Flynn and Jeffrey Lynn Miriam Hopkina didn t ahow up because of illness but the presence of so many stars made the absence of one In Virginia arrely noticeable Hobart Bosworth asked to he remembered to George Pvppr and May Bobson said that she always had a soft spot for our town because her grandson was born there After the luncheon and preview we boarded the buses and returned to Reno where the grand ball which climaxed the sc held Considerable amusement was caused by Nevadans mistaking (race Gh-so- n France Keller Beryl Whittaker Maud Aypn and Cecil GorBecause I don for movie lar happened to he talking to Reginald Owen at th tim lever asked for mv autograph behave 1 It or not probably thing th most attractive lady at th 1 met was costum ball that Mis Kathleen Barrett of New York Sh was with the Morley Griswolds and I met her at dinner I II Just bet that he mad the movie star look to Iheir Rav Hendry laurel (Mare Woods Bill Borac k Dav and Char!! Hulsh look everything in their stride occ asion w a tht take long to convince people w'ho are lovers of truth and justice that The Tribune is a paper to be depended on How any one who professes to believe in the btaz-enl- y teachings of Christ can so come out on the side of Hitler is more than many people In the stale of Utah can understand Their claims to be members of a Christian church are simply a mockery Lover of Truth Reader Give Going Info Debt Where the localities are willing to put up enough additional money for materials and supervision they usually get more w6rth-whil- e projects Most localities probably are putting up all they can for W P A and for direct relief to families not cared for bv W P A Some are going still further Into debt to meet these demands With rare exceptions the Republicans plan to return relief to the states and localities with a federal grant in aid half the size of the present W P A appropriation would mean substituting the cash dole for work relief 1'he cash dole for sitting in idleness might he larger than some of the families on direct relief are now receiving But unquestionably it would be substantially less than W P A workers are now getting In w View On Nazi Aim Editor Tribune: Mr comment on Britain was very interesting hardly agree with all Renfrew' war debt but I can his other argument In reference to seizure of IJ S mail on the high seas I would like to know how Mr Renfrew would feel If Germany was behaving in the same manner as ages Register and Tribune Syndicate England Furthermore what al proof have we about Germany’s plot with Mexico against the U S? As to Germany starting the last war I would like to remind the public that It was Austria who started the war Christopher Billopp Says: Receipt When a receipt for a purchase is given it is customary to sav to the person responsible for the receipt "Now be sure not to lose it " People who wish to be absolutely sure not to lose their receipts place them in a desk drawer 7'hen when a bill comes along you inquire "Has this been paid for?" And the person Involved replies "Y'es I am sure its been paid for" And you say: "Where Is the receipt?" And the reply is "It must be In the desk drawer” So you go to the desk drawer piled high with receipts over a long period of year And you take a receipt off the top but it ln t the right one ami a receipt off the bottom which isn t the right one And you sav "I don t ee it” And the reply is "All the receipts are there” You av "It s too bad they are not filed In order" And the reply Is "Ive been meaning auDr Du Vail a nation-wid- e thority on International trouhles and Mr Upton Close of the U S service agree on Intelligence the fact that Germany today as well as yesterday went to war against England or rather England went to war against Germany because it was threatening Its economic supremacy As long as England was unchallenged on the high seas which was for 100 years all was well but a soon as other countries challenged that supremacy It meant war United States was first of those countries that had to fight many hard and bitter battles to make itself recognized as a country of trade and comthe only merce Germany since then that has county made a vain attempt to become a country of commerce the cause of As to Germany every war Colonel House who was on a mission to Europe In I to straighten them out" So there is nothing to do but examine the receipts one by one And you wonder how the person who sold you something could have known that this particular one should be lost You suspect he it a mind reader You could refuse to pay the hill and go to couit But the Judge would sav "Where the receipt? and he wouldnt be satisfied when you reply "It ought to be In the desk drawer" And you would go to Jail which might he restful hut Inconvenient and embarrassing to your family and friend So you Just make out a check for th amount asking yourself what is the us of cluttering up a desk drawer with all th receipts you have collected over several years save for the one receipt that you most particularly need Christopher Billopp the summer of 1914 In the Interest of preserving peace wrote to President Wilson on May 29 that whenever England consents France and Russia will close In on Germany and Austria With facts such s these one can hardly place all the blame All the on anv one country more reason to stay out of war Gunter Neumann State 0 The Nation The By Off the Record Otin Miller a change from Karloff and cither film of th macabre wa had thought diplomat Hollywood might ign a with no face A exponents "Miss Katharine Wheatley mversity of leva aulhonty on there simply pronunciation s is no such thing 'typicsl Southern drscvl'"— Pies report 1 Tell It to Hollywood Kath- arine (ell It to Hollywood W had thought motion picture had don their worst wilh ‘Southern dialect" when they presented Georg Brent and hi "Yellow In mush - mouthing Jack" hut we were mistaken A young ladv hit plsver In ‘Broad-waMelody f 1710' exuded con‘flat a geometrical sonant so liquid they In tone plan She thought she wa (hipped drawling but actually h wa dt oollng "I h Squire Petkina avs my terlous double If anv man ever sui prised a woman" v Dislt Ihuled by Enquire fesluces Inc Reproduction strictly prohibited Jpani Finns buying a 50 pound piece of Ink Ice next summer will hv to be cereful to brush th Russian off It God hies America where the wont thet happen to minorities is hsvlng the post offices tsken away from them are disappointed In our eld dtlnk-et- s to date ha reported a marine monster with a neutral flag painted on tt V Nun Sides Latest lllusttatlon of man punlnes in the face of nature Is th showing of Jo Malms Inexorable legions verus the third h age A spokesman for the NLRB opines thit free speech "is not sn shmlute but a qualified right" Said ilk a tiu bureaucrat and married n an Released by N'octh Anierlran Newspaper Alllame Inc |