Show MPFSIVICUPOZWZ SIVKWIIV"WIRW IMPAgetnIVIVAPOMr - 44 '7741"V3 - P2MWI'''faiW144044 46te444VVIT444414404W'41P44 401Zetittrattgag4011111alliteKKOMRPROVWPaVVIMMIRMOVKWVOIRMIrlym - f rbt calt Cikc Ztibunt Thursday Morning 1912 13 Wpril 2 - 1 Air Power - 4 1 ' I ' 1 matter p Subsea be bombed to 'Japan must feat" 1 We know the de- 1 I i I 3 ' 1 ' or the other' turning the flank of the enemy Those were wars that were fought on the horizontal level But by this time the average man woman and child knows that no land or sea force can move successfully until the air over the combat zone is controlled The other forces necessa' ry warships are vitally and no one in his right senses ever claimed they were not No land or sea force can move successfially untit its own air force controls the air over the combat zone That air control "vertical flank" about is t h which airmen have been preachthg There's another end of that vertical flank which is also of Importance in this modern war That's the flank covered by the bmarines The upper end of I i is the air vertical flank and the under side is the Strange indeed that VIank in the deadly weapons working these two mediums — air and sea—are essentially weapons Neither can take much punishment They depend upon stealth surprise and concealment: and generally in warfare AU of these factors constitute tactics Attention Urges To Submarines Submarines get into and out of sea areas that surface craft Smart don't dare to navigate sub commanders have outwitted sMart a i r commanders penetrating areas which were turnedover to the surveillance and pa- 1 ' i 4 ' -1 ' - - Isu - 1 hit-and-r- I i ”hit-and-ru- i i 1 1 I 4 - - t 1 a -- ' -- - 2 1I SLIPPING 0 5 DENTAL 1 111 PLATES suqe from loose dental piotest Get MOY new alkaline holdmis pow der thot forms soft tronsporent suction cts‘ion taong 4 to 12 hours longed tough sneeze cough without fear of ernbarrossment MOrs olsosoot Flosor Iselps combat "denture-breat- I SIORIS SELL vrirountoituGGISTA 1 1 :t 7- - - molcisco sAm -- -' - ' tog ggg t : I PA 11111 eltWo 1 '1 - it 4 A 1 4"- - ' 1 11 Let ' J - -- ?up - k p- I':k''' k-'- - -- -- 176At t :410 ' '- - ' v — -- 1C ' A ft31041 76 AL - aS- e- ' ' 17- er w---- t- - -re--0 " -- - i :- -' ' 4 - t---- 1 - t 1 V4' ''' ' 2- - '' - ' "a'- 1 ax' 41 ':15 - s' A 'P 4 (IP mr (4) r :qr t P - -- - il)) 'Ve r--lr!:---- ---- i z i el t41 - 1 ' r'd Al t 1 I N : p 5 1 - A - ' y iIti '' Ai V ' 4 II:- Ite 11 ) 1 'r- - 4d - - setzk--'w- : 1 tit1-- ' - - I 1 1 is - convenient i 41 - ef-'- 4 DIESELINERS 1 ' --- - FfNEST BUSES OW AMERICA'S HIGHWAYS - ' 1 I BURLINGTON TRAILWAYS DEPOT PAUL S HAHN - MONEY 61 surmuntgit 1 1 I East South Second Phone: Agent - Street- 33921 H South Main T- H t k 40'2 a :4'i‘ '':PO ' 9 464 J -- k 11e - MEMBER j - ' k monnolnimi r fer‘ iii3 etc ' i 1 VI : ill gtitivi '' ' '- 1- '4'i :'-- --- ‘ - ) Z7 - 4 tStoot lit - ao:tohCidirci kat hp:itotot dn soicratbtheei ( t 1 '1 ) cnaa ui stpeun ttthsieusysior t ! Q) it4 t i i i i t t Ili Ftt t in milk or cream 7 t Th Plus added VITAMIN 111 Albert Pressiam Coaspons in stet 'class ' t 0 ow MN 117' ' - w : le s i !' ' ' I I Atsit ers but more to the realists— those who thought and dealt with real things—rather than ke Berkeley Fichte cheiling and Hegel who denied the existence of matter and held that matter existed only in the mind Visionary people whose minds are filled with and hear unusual fancy who see come to a tragic things often end and in many cases are unreliable To the realist is due the great mechanical inventions: they worked with real material obcomTheir imagination jects bined and recombined material things into actual machines and devices for the comfort and use of civilized man They are men who believe in the world and work to make it a better place All great religions are due i I 4r il '' ' ' ' t 25 30 $35 I Single or double breasted with vests or vestless there's a model fabric and color to Et your figure 1111't ' - 1 i c ' t eA I 2 I i Al a A i1 IT CLEANS WOVEN - A 11 ill '$ 34) FABRICS ‘ - ' Coats - BUY IT AT '185c) $iç SLACKS $850 rugs etc iin our Bitsernent Floor All ion ' 4: 4: '' - - 1 ---- 4- ' 5-j- : - s N 4 f1'' 7:: T CP- '''-'3- -- ' 7 s i i l' Z 1 $1050 All wool—new Aindow pane pattern— ' whipstitched pockets and collar ' '' e - : - 4 )14671 ‘ A : ' ' I :::' 21'1 t t a ! tIA $ Shirt 295 Sport The Westerner Sanforized—vat dyed— whipstitched- -2 inside bellows pockets (Icss that) 170 shrinkage) -I - -‘ ' ttISIt Of - Ward suaset st South at Main Salt Lake City lertfts 30-6C)- 1 - t - ' 1 - ilontgomery 1 & $10 Loafer Jacket $795 '''' PI 1- SPUN RAYON See the specjatclemonstra- - it : All wool Sport Coats in Shetlands cheviots and tweeds All wool Slacks inBedford cord Gaberdine or Coverteer They'll match many a garment in your present' wardrobe WARDS :TODAY t ' lit (: ' If A t 'f l''8'1 1:i' '41 I ALL i - ''' ill :Ig::S4'7':' l' 1 IPOOSOft"01fteftoste D is I c t 1 L ! This Week - i I MOTIIPROOFS AS I v-i- ril !topm E 1 L i C i MEMBER SYSTEM RESERVE FEDERAL FEDERAL CORPORATION DEPOSIT INSURANCE F A : UPHOLSTERY AND CARPET I - i '' '"l' - t NI ' 1:' -- i I :1 $ I FOAM : : 1 I 3 f ' t - Mew' i4 i' rN t ' ' cn - Iti - 1 - ' !2 - ''''"' - SU ITS I s – g eet T ' earning ''''I'''4 -- 1 $ I 1 - A 1 1 All Wool - - : ' ' 11 i 4 I LOW PRICED! fir 1 A -- " 4 - S "410 )- -- ' A 11 - r 4 t 1 i -"tt - — - : 1' ?- - t ':st - I 1 ' ' ''''' (t ' Spring suit sport coats and slacks Smart new shirts hats and other accessories await your selection Look at our window displays - t e'? - : ti New bright colorful apparel is ready for your Easter outfit at Furmbilt's A new '- ' ! i -4 1 I (ago i I- fl y j' tw 1 (fii : 11 tI ' - 4‘ : - New! onlyfn - C1 it 111 Lt71S 4101 t40-00- I t ' 4 - - The idealist is a visionary living in fancy and imagination tic fanatical l unrealistic It is true that the world owes much to the dream- r tr - 1 17- greatest idealist" ' 4 eO'11 Il' e"11 17:110) Efficient! ' ' 61 the Puerto Rican department was announced Wednesday by Major GeneraIN&mes L Collins co mander Phillips who succeeds Colonel William Livesay is a native of Black River Falls Wis Ile is author of "roots of strategy" and of-- magazine-articleand manuals Editor Tribune: Sylvester Earl makes a pretty broad assertion when he claims that: "All of the great men who ever lived on And the earth were idealists greatest of them all was the ' "SuIlD I' I I ' ntnruturtmuntuum:raunsu:munuttrau:::::::11111 t ' I 4F0:4711)&-7- ?' 1 - 1 - 'Lli ' 230 ' SOUTH MAIN STREET SALT L:::IE CITY I 1 - e 1 '°f t- ' '7r- -- ' AI -- — " s Extra-vAla- wow' - - - if us i 07 - Golden-frow- n because they're nude from the finest white corn that's been toasted just long enough 1' t - Days Fresher because they're made right here in theWest and rushed days quicker to your grocer MpleSsaled in the famous Albers package that guards their fine flavor and extra crispness - - ‘ ( A t SAN JUAN Puerto Rico April 1 (IP)—Appointment of Colonel Phillips writer on military affairs as chief of staff of Praises Realists ! - SO CRISP $O GOOD! ini - - - r 0 i - Organized in'1884 10 Serve the Public A 41 - 1- ' TASTE SO FREISII ' i'f ( - Military Writer Gets Puerto Rico Post Extend the principle enunciated by Lincoln to all the world to make men free and the only way to put an That'sfight end to the continual round of imperialist wars and bring lasting peace to the world E A Mitchell IA: i! Traaj nr rtl 1Jitt rust Co t 151 - t i - ' right ' tifigkatiatIO SAVED bort 1 Wars of liberation peoples' wars are right The people should fight them Two conditions are necessary to win this war: 1—Make it a war of liberation a peoples' war: have a peoples' army: navy and air force Such would produce a united peoples' support and high morale at the front and behind the lines 2— Declare (the united nations) for the individual liberty and national independence of all colonial enslaved and conquered peoples and nations and fight with them to win their just rights Lincoln in his first inaugural address: said: "This country to with its institutions belongs 4f4 the people who inhabit it—" All real Americans and all lovers of liberty everywhere agree with Lincoln They know he was - r- :tiliitIS t' i to the idealists those with visionary and prophetic minds whose eyes turned toward a paradise of which they knew It was they who innothing vented the gods and devils They sought to save men's souls by scourging the body The realists said: "Save the body and we will take a chance on the soul" A E Edwards Myton Utah (Continued from Preceding Page) s' - i'-- CORN FLARES By Our Readersi The Forum -4 - A savings account it offers comfortable WHY t t zAseassomsswitstas except 3Ioney in the Bank 4 1 ) ' ' paigir ' 1 t- - -- BSA NU" THE ' r ---- - highway economical modern ed day after Mr Jones issued his report Mr Arthur Krock' writing in "The New York Times" said that "the most inaspect teresting and revealing of the report is that iit was the president after Mr Jones is as good as I 1 i1111n7 tinT "Dllar : Burlington Trailways transcontinental bus system —with its trained personnel and modem equipment— is shouldering its share of the transportation program in defense of thisrereat and glorious country of ours More and more people each month are using our buses thereby helping conserve the nation's tires and private automobiles In addition we are engaged in special wartime assignments — transporting troops lnd their relatives and friends moving civilian workers and men on furloughs Burlington Trailways travel ' - NOthillg S a ' ' :lazi - li fen t 0-- - IJ ' Question Concerns Real Responsibility Mr Jones told the committee that "it would seem we have rubber enough to run us at least one and a half years if we were cut off tomorrow from a supply of natural rubber and that would give us about the time required to build synthetic rubber plants" After quoting this testimony of his to the senate committee Mr Jones adds in his recent report dated March 21 1942 that "the problem of synthetic rubber was generally discussed in the com- mittee and it was the concensus that limited operations should Kroek's Statement Called Debatable Mr Lawrence's comment is downr iight misrepresentation and a great disservice to' the cause of sound journalism Mr Lawrence states flatly that the "refused to allow" Mr - president Jones to do what Mr Jones himself says he did not wish AO do If the president "concurred" in the Jones program is it fair to make it appear that Mr Jones wanted to do something better and that the president "refused to allow" him to do it? 34r Krock's interpretation though it seems to me seriously misleading turns on a more debatable matter It is whether coTurhse 4x 1101 : 4 kI '°44 E t ! Ifga plained" - I r va i - ? 1 'art r - so ‘ --- - A 4 - t ouKt ti 'avoltr" 1 -- eA 1 D I 4 cm? AbbialtIS 1 r Pork rence carried the passing of the buck further: "Just why the president refused to allow the reconstruction finance corporation to appropriate sufficient either for government-owne- d or government-sponsore- d plants is not yet officially ex- I damental principle of good administration Because he is unclear about it he is excessively tolerant of weakness in his subordinates and inordinately willing to carry On his own shoulders itshi-oa- that the president "concurred" Mr Krock reports that the president "made the 1941 decision" Six days later Mr David Law- i lie To YolIkretmetwa been necessary" We have hire the beginning of a legend Mr Jones having said fundamentmoney' - I GOOD DRUG ALL ' - h T therefore agreements May were made by Mr Jones with business corporations to do what Mr Stettinius had advised him to do seven or eight months earlier—namely to build synthetic plants with a 100000-to- n capacity This is the record and the most important point which it raises now that the milk has is whether the re'eponsibility rests upon the president or upon his secretary of commerce The point is of very great importance because it involves the non absolutely vital to the successful conduct of the War of the president's relation to his cabinet and the heads of the great agencies Reports Put Blame On Mr Roosevelt In order to understand- tha question it must first eie stated accurately Mr Jones speaking officially in his own behalf says that his recommendations in regard to rubber were "approved" by the president and that i"the president concurred in this 18 a 1 1 i I since Mr Jones was charged with the responsibility for our rubber supply the president can be said to have "made" the crucial decision when he concurred in Mr Jones's recommendation For if the president "made the c 1941 "t h epreI'sie must is suppose supposed to know more about rubber and the technology of making synthetic rubber than the cabinet officer whose prime duty it was to take care of the rubber supply President Must Trust Ills Aids It is impossible I submit to conduct a great government and especially in time of war If the president is to be held responsible or if he is willing to be held responsible for highly technical decisions of this character My view iis that the president is responsible for Mr Jones but that Mr Jones was responsible for the rubber supply responsible for giving the right advice and responsible for taking the right action Until the president was convinced that Mr Jones was not the right man to take charge of rubber It was necessary for the president to concur in what Mr Jones recommended about rubber Many of the president's troubles come as they have in this case from the fact that he himself is so unclear about this fun- - had gone over the rubber situ- ation with him who made the 1941 decision not to go into the manufacture of the synthetic product on the scale which subsequent events proved to have The president be undertaken concurred in this course"Il On trol of air forces vital and essential necessity for building greater and greater air forces and greater and more efseem ficient aircraft It strange at southwestern Pacific—the prian airman urging this point but since the air is concerned with mary responsibility for safe- guarding our supplies of rubberonly one end of the vertical rested upon the state departflank isn't it but natural that ment It was the business of the he should also appreciate the department to judge whether a necessity for building greater and more efficient machinery to Japanese attack was probable ' or even possible and to warn operate in the subsea zones? the government to take necesWhy can't someone get busy sary measures building some extraordinary subsea craft? Though nothing has been published about what the state de- Here's what one correspond- ent says: partment did there is every reason to believe that its record "Almost daily enemy submahere has been not only good but rines attack and sink our surface vessels The attacking subImpressively good CertairHy as marine remains in hiding until early as the summer of 1940 when Japan began to move in the opportune times Arrives to the direction of the rubber attack mostly In the dark of countries the government knew night Why don't we construct vemaelfi which—at least during from the state department that the risks of war were real most oftheir voyage—can re inain in hiding and still fill their enough to call for extraordinary measures to assure our supplies purposes ? of rubber and other strategic Submarine Suggests materials Authority and money Cargo Carriers was given by congress to Secretary Jesse Jones "Why don't we build 'submarine cargo carriers instead of Jones Finds Trouble vessels which are such surface In Getting Plants ' Submavulnerable targets? The second level of responsirine cargo carriers would furwith the earliest an- -bility was nish valuable data for other ' cestor of Mr Nelson's war production board—the national deuses of the submarine idea data fense council Its business was for as submarine invasion fleet to advise the government as to to we began "Only recently how much rubber would be rebe cannot war realize that this quired for the arms program measwon by merely defensive and for civilian use Mr Stetures that it can only be won by tinius foreseeing the likelihood total attack The fight must be or our being cut off from the — brought to the enemy shores far eastern supply of natural and fought on enemy soil rubber advised the administra"An attack of foreign shores tion to build plants sufficient to unsurface vessels by means manufacture 100000 tons of der the protection of aircraft is rubber a year This synthetic demonhas possible—as Japan in was fall of 1940 and the loss strated—but involves great while the amo9nt recommended in material and man power We was by no means sufficient would hesitate to expose our by our present needs judged good soldiers to such reckless what Mr Stettinius advised was slaughter as the Japanese did becertainly a substantial "Although the submarine is would have and ginning Geran American invention the mans began using them first 1 laid the foundation of an inl dustry which could have been in the llast war and extensively expanded as experience was they even by 1918 had produced gained a transatlantic submarine of apHaving been warned by the proximately 5000 tons We have state department and given the of been building capable always right advice by Mr Stettinius things better and bigger — and and the national defense councounmore efficient—than other cil the responsibility for action tries rested upon Secretary Jones "Why is it imnossiblp to build subject to the approval of the or submarines president Just what happened even 20 0000tons?" between the fall of 1940 and the Distributed by United Feature spring of 1941 is not too clear from the public record except Syndicate Inc that Mr Jones did with the president's approval decide to spend To Neck WIG $25000000 on synthetic rubber OMAHA CHICAGO and that he made little headway because' as he reports it he --could persuade "neither the rubber company nor the oil comKANSAS WV Meat panies owning the patents to spend any of their own money in manufacturing synthetic rubber" Secretary Jones on the t other handdid not wish to spend much government money And so we arrive at the month 1 of May 1941 and Mr- Jones 1 testifying before the banking dk More people are thinking in term! of the under side of the vertical flank of this war Other wars have been won by one side I Concerning the rubber short- of great interest to every one there is no use milk But there is every use in trying hard to see clearly the true lessons For by understanding our mistakes we are much less likely to repeat them Since about all the natural rubber in the world comes from abroad — from British and A Lippmann By - I By Major Al Williams kama 4 I - spilt sspilled '‘' 1 Rubber Shprtage Casts Light on Cabinet Responsibility Walter 1 'Vertical Flank' Warfare Stresses I burdens that a sound administrator would fix firmly and squarely on their shoulders The effect is to protect weak men in his official family men who lean absurdly too much on the president the effect also is to weaken strong men in his official family by diluting that sense of resp'ons'ibility without which there is no iniative and no enterprise Copyright 1942 New York Tribune Inc -- 1 r !i 1 A - I ‘ A - t e- ' I p I - r t i ' |