Show Isn't It About Time for a Little Kibitsine? '4A l 1946 by King Features (Copyright By Westbrook Pejler Entered at the at Ogden Utah as e5ond eliii wtttr cc£nn£d to Act or Congress postolce March 8 1879 Member of The Associated Pre Press NEA Service and A B O Subscription price $100 per month tl200 per year Tne Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use fe repubUcatlon ol aU news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to tale paper and also the local news Syndicate) NEW YORK Jan 11—The issue strike of both in the demonstration A F of L arid C I O unions in t FRIDAY EVENING JANUARY 11 194S Groping for Solution Warren of California called the legislature into special 'session to wrestle with the reconversion difficulties the governor carved out a tough job for himself For the governor is required to recommend to the lawmakers what they should do about meeting the difficulties' Well what did Governor Warren have to suggest? In the matter of the housing "scarcity the governor conceded that the shortage can't be eliminated He suggested 'however that it is possible to obtain from the federal government "thousands" of structures that can be adapted to temporary1 use He recommended state financial aid "for local communities to assist them to finance the remodeling and moving of the buildings The governor said legislation is required to assist in achieving full employment' He asked that the state reconcommission be empowered to struction and act as a stimulating agency for business and industry In this same connection he called for an extensive agricultural research service to learn what new things the state may produce Governor Warren rejoiced in the fact the state's unemployment insurance fund amounts to $733000000 Warren reported that California hospitals for the mentally ill are overcrowded and obsolete the correctional inadequate and he argued that the necessary improvements in the state facilities should be made now while the state has the money In the matter of hospitals the governor recommended that preparations be (made so the state may obtain its ful share of federal funds for hospital construction He sug gested that the state! lease and operate an abandoned army hospital at Modesto to relieve congested conditions in state hospitals He recommended a state policy be determined with reference to child care centers and that a commission be named to plan for a state system of airports i The California governor's statements and recommendations reveal that the difficulties of one western state are the difficulties of other states The governor's message re veals that he is groping for 'answers like other governors Warren's attitude is one of seeking what fed Significanteral help is available and using state funds to help local communities as in the matter of supplying emergency ! When-Governo- ' r - :'-- : ? z? — ! ' : - j in-stituti- ' Washington By Drew Pearson WASHINGTON — Some: people : maj flare-u- p lowing aqof : !ai iunv( fol announcement that! demobi- iccu GI mass-meetin- gs - - i i j ' j Federal Recreation Building i : ' AAerry-Go-Rou- ' j ! i J s j i - ! i 1 - Idea Is Nourished so-call- ed i Award all commissions from except in me case 01 specialists in wartime Let every man go in as- a private and let the best men get promoted on the basis of sheer ability not personal drag 3 After an officer gets his commission let further promotions be based on competitive examinations no seniority 4 Give both men and officers the same food served in separate messes and improve housing for enlisted men 5 But above all cut out the selfish favoritism and thoughtlessness practiced by some officers which make enlisted men hate all officers including even the great majority of conscientious officers who look out for their men Army Caste System Cut out for instance the system whereby" the 1268th engineering combat battalion has to move out of a healthy camp site near Manila ana live in filthy buffalo wallow because the officers" club wants to expand its golf course Cut put for instance the system whereby Pvt Karli von Esche is refused admission for his wife to the Moore general hospital in Savannah If C His wife dies Lieut John Bamberger's dog is admitted to the same at about the same time hospital Alsojcut out the system whereby Maj Genj William Ord Ryan uses an army plane to a bale of all the way acrossflyithe Pacifichay to feed his captive kangaroo whereby officers fly to football games while GI s ride on the much more important mission of seeing their wives whereby Colonel Soriano the friend of General and personal representative of Dictator Franco is able to fly three plane-load- s e of tops across the Pacific and whereby the Pentagon generals dispatch one plane to Florida for'pompano another to North Dakota for quail and a third to Texas for avocados and fresh tomatoes for the sole purpose of staging a fancy dinner for a British air marshalAlso cut oat the system whereby football players and baseball players get discharged ahead of hich-poiveterans merely because they - ! even-thoug- : day-coach- beer-bottl- -- ! - nt s -- " - f rrnte I ? 4 on - Take My Word :j —by Colby j Add to Your Vocabulary Here is a graceful and vafnaM from- the Latin com- - "toeeth- - t5u - somehow was not accepted by the English possibly because their tongues could Jnot manage the French pronunciation pa (n) which has the flat "a' and the nasal sound r f My Forms- of Address pamphlet shows the proper way to address government officials foreign ambassadors cabinet members the clergy etc It also gives trie rules of precedence as observed in Washington For a free copy 'send a stamped self addressed h envelope to Frank Colby 3221 Huntington Place Houston Texas (Copyright The Bell Syndicate Anglo- -Saxon 7 1946 New (Copyrightr?'Ji'-- in Dune Inc) i York The problem of controlling atomic weapons is largely a problem of controllings fear The worst kind of far ic 'r of the! unknown If you know th dimensions and character of a danger you can at least estimate vn chance of resisting or avoiding it You are much less subject to panic and to the hasty decisions to which panic may give birth At: Present we find all snrts people making guesses as to how long it wll take the Russians or somebody f else tol make atomic bombs and as to yarious methods by whichi these bombs mieht bp delivered Ion American targets — including Reaving them on the parcel room of the Grand Central station We are not thinking so much about what we'mayi do with such bombs yet we are the only people who haveg any We! know we are not going to start an atomic war But doi others know iit? Are rjeve not in factby excessive secrecy1 building upa "fear of the unknown"1 In the jminds of other peoples especially the suspicious Russians which may result in the very thing we are trying so desperately to avoid — an atomic armaments race? Bombs Being Made? There is certainly a very definite impression to be gathered from reading official statements evidence at congressional hearings and talks by scientists and gov- - j t ms bread' therefore word for your vocabulary: Crite- a JSS?hPr food) Aether rion The word is from the Greek miliar word from the knterion "a test a means of judg- - LaVi 5! pantry Orieinallv a Pce where t In English criterion expresses bread is m?nated the idjea of a standard by means of bread tonV -- ?Aore?- - Later "c wienaea which anvf hinc mnv ha An general" as "our judged or evaluated Pronounce one's it: The plural is IV( criteria- pronounced: to bfeak bread ' to use it A man's deeds How came to have its present mian are the criteria of his character try The speaker's opinion is interest- foodstuffs or dishes and glasIwSe Inc 1946) TVfCE a MANY TWICE e GOOD ing but I cannot accept it as a criterion Truth is the sole crite- enOUEtt tho wtnigciyrion of knowledge of the Analo-Saxn- n meaning ££3 LOOKS A3E DECEIYttG I Will you please discuss for Q BUT KEVER IS QUALITY our English class the origin of the -w e t no i yJL word companion? One of the girls man occupation jLtixiiis? All aspirin may look alike bo it pays to most food words be eure and be guided by this comes from the it word says check 1) High quality (2) Fast action' "bread" How can that be?— ol French origin as soup B E A D E S D B Always demand St fricassee beef pork mutton v£3 (3) Real eronomyworld's seller toei SINGH loot at ooutit Aepirin Joseph largest Answer: The word docs not de- venison poultry etc TV V?& 10c Save even more on 100 tablet size I0for25 5 for 19 rive from the English word bread French" "wu lor cread pain" for 35c m you get nearly 3 tablota for lc Sold By All Live Dealers i i fI rnwi mean-d?iv°£vJ°- kry-TEER-ee-- un - ' kry-TEER-ce-- uh 2d - i J j -- i : I — £S v rr-!- - rvr 3-w-ay law-abidi- wire-pullin- ng s low-poi- nt mnr ? -- i stirring this up except certain offi cers themselves These officers have it within their power to change this overnight They need no legislation They also have it within their power to revamp our antiquated system and build one of the! best armie in the world But conscrin tion or no conscription they won't have a strong 6rmy unless favoritism personal political pull and the caste system are made as defunct as certain types of War fare ! Capital Chaff Senator Oweri Brewster Ma in a Republican and a member of the xvieaa committee held out to the end for Hugh Fulton as counsel of the Pearl Hfcrbor investigating committee Fulton was counsel for the Truman committee resigned when Truman became dential candidate and wt th i roiMs u with Michigan Renublican who site — - actual fact his duty was to use the police to prevent the Tloters from breaking the skuUs of flaw abiding citizens and this he re fused to do The men whoS want ed to enter the plant were threat The threats ening no nerson came only from the wicket tine It was to protect the citizens in their persons and their rights that Gov ifernor Baldwin belatedly sent state Police to Stamford surjetseriing Mayor Moore's local nolice to clear a nath and keen order The stte police arrested a few nickets Or The law was der was restored made clear And the mass demon called as a protes juration was law1 This was ar against the ranged bv the executive power of the union bosses and intimidation vas present in th action ot many fe who loted the rally I pmau merchts of Stamford not imeresiea in me issues but with in ine mainienRnce f 5iaKewere peace given xneir iirst rea of the brown shirt or om" Ku Klux terror Thev wer- - asked ' pre-ato- m j i viep-nrs- i- cj rntiv hJ i"r "Jrfrtf"fu2t Rrrct mi:rV:iK"w':tVV:t 1 1 i m mm i iw Y wg tgwvtcg inc T m see u s pat ©rr "George has been overweight for years hut ie glories in it and keeps saying he could - admire some curves in meP eo I I " T t g More Looms New Technique Planned Trust-bustin- reter By Standard-Examin- Edson pose of sicking more on ami-trucases however is to take advantage of the network of field offices which FBI has established - Correspondent ± WASHINGTON Jan 11— Slight- throughout the country keeping the lawyers in thle department of justice for the courthouse "work It is now understood! that such a setup will be asked fot in new budget requests of the department Clark was criticised for not putting up more of a : fight against the Bulwinklebill recently passed by the house This highly controversial piece of legislation would exempt railroad rate fixing agreements from the anti-trulaws The attorney general may be counted on to make his fight against the Bulwinkle it is considered by the senate Still another point of criticism has been that thb series of reports to congress required by the surplus property law and begun on a monthly- - basis by Biddle has not been continued by ciarK ims is again in line with Clark's policy of trying to argue his cases only before the courts In g the ays of Thurman Arnold there was a lot more whoop-de-do- o but the business of g the cases in the newspapers before the courts got a whack at them was one of the causes for loudest complaint from those under investigation for allaw violations leged anti-truStiffer Enforcement In carrying oit his policy of fighting his cases in the courthouses instead of before the bar of public opinion Attorney Gen eral Clark says he intends to go after more actual divestitures and give the practice of entering into so many consent decrees This will tend toward a much stiffer enforcement A consent idecree is hard to police and eventually ways are found to evade it When an actual divestiture is obtained as in the recent Hartf prd empire Allied Van Lines and Air Conditioning cases then the menopoly holdings are dissolved Prime reason for the apparent slowing-dow- n of the anti-truprogram has of course been the war But of the 25 cases which were suspended m March 1942 the majority are (again being preGeneral pared for prosecution Electric and Carboloy cases will be among the first to be resumed End of the war is also seeing the release of many of the young antitrust lawyers from the armed services- As fast as they return to the department of justice they are being assigned to cases So there' is every indication that under Assistant Attorney General Wendell" Berge in charge (of the division ac there will be more anti-trutivity in 1946 What has irked some of the more! rabid anti-m- o nopolists is the delay in getting 's going on cases vbegun under regime and known to have been ready for 'prosecution for months past ly different techniques in the hancases are being dling of anti-truinaugurated by Attorney General Tom C Clark In brief they amount to more of an effort to try cases in the courts rather than in the newspapers and before the congressional investigating committes on Capitol Hill Because of this new approach there has been some criticism that the anti-truprogram was being scuttled or being allowed to die a natural death Clark says flatly this isn't so Several things have contributed to a belief by some of the more ardent liberals that efforts to go after the monopolies were on the decline A drop in the amount of needling publicity is one factor Also Attorney General Clark has laid a restraining hand on the free and unlimited appearance of his bright young men before congressional committees lark wants to know what they're going to say before they say it so they won't give conflicting testimony and cross him up Clark likes to be his own liaison man with congress He is on more intimate terms with most of the politicos than was Attorney General Francis Biddle Clark speajks the congressional lingo with a strong Texas accent and he doesn't like the idea of having his congressional cronies asking him about some testimony that one of his subordinates may have given with out his To Use FBI Offices ' s wane announcement ot a cou pie of months ago that investiga tive work for the anti-trudi vision would hereafter be done by field offices of the FBI has so far gone unimplemented This was viewed in some quarters as chop ping down the anti-truprobers and turning their work over to less experienced legal hands Real pur st j st st bill-whe- "anti-monopo- trust-bustin- pre-tryin- - st - ge st " - st st te?rJ°tSiel — i drnn W 4 i "un-unionli- anti-fcm- st ke V v i "K"fceJn r-- i ! tt st ? i Bid-die- -- nt j n j " fore-knowled- G-m- en st Washington er mittee candidacy although he did not od dows sympathizing "With the riot 4 i One common pose it ' impulse ©us force of red army! soldiers and Amrienn If they refused they would be GI's is their fondness for leaving black-listeand union members names wnerever taey go wouldd be forbidden i:arveav to trade with GI's in Berlin have to hand it to the them under threat of punishment U Sd8 nnwS coriductf f?r ivllw ized thuggery as a method of ad wer comnlied inviting they they m v i ii ii ii iiiri ri iiorn Similar disorders- atrtheir own justing disputes ""!UJJ' u This was only one of many such doors lter and condoning prgan- of the same time At episodes dress of a Russian— all the N J there was no pre Kearny we to time store the far the dome The Yanks can't j up being until tense the that of the figure out how the Russians man- - Sce now the negotiations for the electrical workerspicketing was to intended to write their names on the Control of atomic weapons get be aged went The peaceful pickets along From the date of this note to the ceiling and domeJ armed with clubs of Copyright 19461 by The Bell Syn-- I we will not make any morel until uniformlines size Sedentary elderly further notice Our purpose is to citizens who dicate Inc) tried to go to their eliminate atomic weapons from na desics under no suspicion of want tional armaments altogether: if we take over the abandoned can get general agreement io do jng to of the rioters were knocked so and if that agreement can be jobs to tne pavement and beaten up We believe properly safeguarded that we should make this prelim- No Right to Riot There is no leeal rieht tn rint inary statement so that you will not feel that we are going ahead even for pickets The Hht tn with a vast secret atomic arma-roe- picket is a right onlv to address official that the United while negotiating the public by speech or States is going right ahead with for theprogram' abolition of atomic weap- tions sucn as pamphlet publica or placthe extensive manufacture of ons" I r ard Under the Roosevelt Govern atomic bombss and with the manu ment however the unioneers were That at least would facture and storage of fissionable the cards on ithe table beuaying encouraged to terrorize neiehhnr- material Sit would tend to eliminate s'lear hoods and cities Local officials It has even been said that some of the unknown" from the obsta- - such as Mayor Moore of Sta of these bombs are "1000 times as cles to future agreement on atomic illegally permitted them to do so Strictly speaking even strikepowerful" as the bombs- - which controls j breakers have a right to go to all erased the cities of Hiroshima and Could Not Endanger Us such vacated Nagasaki from the map of Japan jobs unmolested fThpr(i spnis no nossible wav in Moore's e oath Mayor conditions it is reauirps him any statement tould which such frank UnS rthfseother people get a lit- - endanger our security Indeed it tou protect even them The right sinne is oniy a ngnt to quit rittnerY°usL If Te continue to° seems a necessary cornerstone for work It is not a right to nrevpnt bombs continue and khVZ? edifice of agreement r someone else from doing se- - ariy d m that work the whole inquestion no we have know that rrl w°ul jWe Most city ordinances forbid all any wonder if tention of other rations fll Russians bent°e every attacking effort to- - with atomic bombs or witht any- - persons to block or obstruct any jne public place or any approach to us both in with catching up ing else We do not believe that any ne development place of business with intent of atomic energy anv snteiition other nation has ?ny io and in the manufacture of atomic of attacking imenere witn tne free passage us We have created of any person bound on lawful weapons? ' a united nations organization which business The Stamford Asks Frank Statement Ordinanrp is! founded on the principle that so so the mass demand provides it! of all onstration in Stamford was a nrn is to be eternal interest Wouldn't "it be better to say to keep the test now to all our as- the great powers frankly right organized against law and gov- J sociates in the United nations: peace in iavor oi noting aswiuaeni we nave made so and so many That principle can ce unaer sault andana anarchy of of these things the fear—fear t We intend to use mined only by so and so We increase that fear many of them for ex- - unknown Perimental purposes to determine and its consequences by - continuing their effect on shipping Those to manufacture and stock-pil- e inpene-an- d experiments will be held at such atomic bombs behind anEliminate of veil Intrable secrecy such a time and are Vited to send observersyou We' wont tHat fear and there Is no possible m show you how we do "it but we niaterial cause for a major-wawill show you the results The the world as it is constituted forest-of i the bombs we will keep in day Cut a Calavo into circles cutdng against the eed twist lightly to Eliot Believes U S Policy On Atom Invites Suspicion i j es Mac-Arth- ur j me nd f me2 ce "vifww - i lization would be delayed Certainly however the general staff in Washington should not have been surprised ' Anyone reading the servicemen's newspapers anyone sampling the thousands of letters whichi pour in housing aid on congressmen and commentators A trend seems to be developing states looking to the knew that for weeks GI resentwas near boiling point Nofederal government and local communities and school dis ment It had been body stirred it up tricts looking to the state brewing for months Most surprising fact however is that despite this ilongbrewing condition the general $taff in Washington has done nothing to correct a basic situation inside the The time is coming when the USO will terminate its army which goes much 'deeper ( than delayed demobiliza For much of the GI resent program at the USO club in the federal recreation building tion merely ment springs from a sense of injus On Twenty-fourt- h street What then will he' the disposition tice and frustration of the property? And if we are to have a big ' army the bigger it is We put! this question to W H Cheney division man peacetime the more necessary it is to mend permanently ager of the? Federal Works agency The FWA remodeled morale borne congressmen are convinced as a result of hints dropped ' around the Pentagon building — Mr Cheney said the procedure followed in other in- that the war deliberstances when the USO has terminated programs in govern- ately slowed updepartment demobilization in ordar to put the heat on for con ment buildings is to examine offers for the property If the scription Pressure from? the offers are reasonable the property is disposed of pursuant overseas would then be such boys that would congress pass! conscription to FWA regulations In the event reasonable offers are not immediately thus supplying re forthcoming 'the property will probably be placed in the placement troops Censorship Covered Up of the public buildings bureau of the FWA custody However wn conscripted or ' For many months Commissioner Welch and his recrea- - not no army ether is efficient unless is high The conscripted tion department have had their eyes on this building and morale drench army proved this in 1940 have conferred with the federal people with reference to its Therefore whether drafted or voluntary what both the American acquisition- Mr Cheney's information about procedures public and the war department are reveals that it won't be let go for a mere song since the of Basically interested in is art armv men not torn by a sense of ingovernment has an investment of probably $7000Q in the justice and resentment Most people don't realize iit but structure and groundsduring the war the American pub ic was shielded from many things that took place inside the! army But the men inside the army knew IBjg what was going on though they could not write home: about it So An idea was born It was the now with censorship over they are Central Utah not water and power project Now it is proposed to nourish only 'writing home but to their service papers and generally blowpent-u- p steam jand develop the idea to see if something can be made of it ing off have They fought! aiwar to save The Salt Lake county commissioners the democratic system at home and encouraged by now Senator Abe Murdock have agreed to call the they would like to see a little comcounty more democracy right inside their imissioners of ten central Utah counties and of the Uintah own army If we did not have so intelligent an army" there would basin counties into a conference The of the not be this outburst purpose But the is to organize an association that will American is the most army today the promote we ever have assembled intelligent " ' ' accomplishment of the proposed project in fact the most intelligent in the i This proposal is marked world — bar none itsize and u by imagengineering Intelligent men make the best ination It contemplates that 600000 acre feet of Colorado fighters but also the bests gripers river water shall be brought into central Utah areas to when they think they have been i:t f wronged lmrrqtp 2fln nnn Based thousands GI letof upon ana cusi Deiween' $zuuuuuuuu and talking to many men here $300000000 The long waterway would include 90 miles of ters are some ideas which this columntunnels through mountains ist belie'vesi might improve! morale and efficiency inside the army ' Between the source of the and Revise West Point its destination there is a drop of 2900 feet Thi supply r 1 Abolish political- appoint- ments to West Point and base them iUW &° Power production is included in the on merit There is no pntirdy projproposed ect and viewed as the reason we should follow why principal source of income to fi- the antiquated idea thatstill each connance ltj gressman is entitled to appoint boys to West Point as a means of aidWe are advised to dream dreams ®This is one ing his own great The army But dreaming is not enough 'if Utah' is to obtain its should be above politics Instead Jet West Pointers be chosen from share ofjthe water in the upper reaches of the Colorado! ' L the ranks of enlisted men as a re ward for efficiency- and: devotion to duty j t i "° J ? j f wax ic hi- Z55 ent qon-jferen- Stamford Conn was law or anarchy j During a strike of eight weeks" machinists demanded a closed shop and pickets illegally blockaded the doors to the Yale & Towne factory Governor Raymond M Baldwin then sent a detail of State rin- lice to clear the way for citizens on lawiui erranas to enter the plantwithCharges E ofMoore the mayor plenty police at his command had refused to employ them for this purpose although they could have preserved the peace against disorders committed and threatened by the union The union executives incluriin some from other cities had power -'to prevent cusoraer Dy instructing — the their pickets to laws ) i assault and disor against rioting derly conduct inese are offenses clearly defined by laws which almost all citizens willingly obey at all times This the union executives refused to do and the fnayor placed himself on the side of rebellion against government ' No Labor Issue No labor issue was involved The labor issues had receded into the distance land were matters for negotiation me question of mob action was not negotiable The isstie now was solelv whpth er the mayor would obey his oath ana maintain order and orotect the legal rights of those who wanted to enter the plant These citizens were tnreatened with injury or death by a blockade of organized mugs a numoer of communists conspicuously a traitorous loca lawyer had been busy in the back ground Some of the workers after: eicht payless paydays and a bleak holiday season were sick of the strike and wanted their jobs back These faceless figures in the strife! were required however to report on time and stand watches oh I the picket lines They were on Warning that if they refused to picket they might be excelled for "un- unionlike conduct" And if they insisted on their rieht to co to their jobs they might be slugged with iron bars or steel chains or clubs and paralyzed or killed g have work friends iii the Thus normally war aepartment: and the svstem ers were compelled to become whereby General MacArthur gives riotous force and potential-killera special airplane ride 8000 miles" Dy orders of an Irresponsible au home to the son of Gen ithority claiming to represent them as voluntary member but with Finally cut out the system where- - the admission that if they weren't by enlisted men at times were giv- - coerced by the company they en one helmet of water Deri dav l might not remain or become1 mem lor oatning drinking and laundry oers but see the hosef running all day Mayor Refused to Act w wdw wuren gardens M Th i u of the iverv me u iu whs tuuiudiiv (uai living cfP(rt u i tojuiij w li v jiicii uuu l want i it ui )" : j : SIDE GLANCES pair Enough I If t : iir m ' TRUCK CHAINS We Have Just Secured A Few Sets of "Weed" Extra Heavy Duty Tire Chains— Sues Pre-W- ar 825x20 for Dual Wheels 10:00x20 for Dual Wheels Darfloti" Motor Co 2234 Washington Blvd "UTAH'S FINEST EQUIPPED SHOP" Enjoy it tonight loosen from seed Cut circles into halves Remove skin Sprinkle with grapefruit or lime juice and salt Arrange alternately with grapefruit sections free of all white membrane separately (TM Reg) Serve dressing Insist on Calavo for California j avocados j Tor Free Recipe Folder i ii it it if It i J as well as all other" days serving regular meals r at - p n if il nii to 8:30 P M 7:00 A M fir reasonable f prices J I ' 1 : Salad ? i - i i & v fr-"f ' I li Saturday— AWfnl: Grapefruit ! j Is Now Open Ir r j? m COFFEE SHOP r r tr j 1 Hotel Ben Lomond m 1 I KNO? li j 'it J - DO YOU M M x ' - y - S A - i :j v y V - ' finest i Write Dept 116B CAUY0 Grewirs ef California TerninsI tanex PO Box 35 Los Ar! 54 I ly |