Show 6A Red Apostles Look-Petr- ol! eur v 1:1 j For Peace Rally Europe Entwad at the poetolflce at Ogden DUh as March 8 1879 Member of The to Act o( Coi ted Press United NEA Service end A B C 1135 per month 11300 per ysatj SuMcrlptton price Hfc Aeeociated Press is exclusively entitled to tne use for republication Of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la tale paper and also the local news By Joseph Alsop SUNDAY MORNING JUNE 11 1950 PARIS — The Partisans of Peace are a communist-fron- t organizahard-worki- ng Increase in the cattle population is taking place more rapidly in southern states than in the familiar cattle country indeed cattle population is decreasing in California Oregon Montana Wyoming North Dakota South Dakota Colorado and New Mexico Utah made a small gain in 1950 Idaho showed no increase The south therefore boasts that it Will be the cattle country of the future because it is learning fast how to grow year around pastures and raise the grains required to finish critters to the tastes of the consuming centers This can happen as recent magazine articles on tne growth of the livestock business in southern states reveal Furthermore the south's agricultural advisers are telling the farmers they have a good chance of picking up the declining western sheep business and running away with it ' Well let the south go to it With prices of meat what they are today the main meat producing areas ought to be able to stand some competition corn-Infor- m Amtm v anti-commun- ist armament Keds Lose Strength All this is happening moreover w a time wnen the French com murust party is losing political strength in the formal democratic sense Even the communist trades ry lib 1 -- Birthday of Reclamation To Be Suitably Observed On June 17 1902 President Theodore Roosevelt with a proud flourish signed the bill establishing the federal reclamation service an event of great significance to the west 'Father of Year' Vetoes Plans for Any Pictures c 1 j On June if 1950 the 48 years of the sendee will be commemorated (by dedicatory exercises mafking completion of Shasta the world's second largest and tallest dam The dam stores about four million acre feet of water produces about 5000000 kwh daily of eleptric power creates a 30000-acr- e lake and controls the flsw of the Sacra mento river President Teddy Roosevelt was a man? with vision He was courageous in undertaking public works as the record in the Panama canal reveals but it is to be doubted that even the imagination of the Rough Rider envisioned 48 years ago dams of the size and cost of Hoover Grand Coulee and Shasta We had optimists in the United States half a century ago as we have them today but few in Teddy Roosevelt's day dreamed we would find use fort dams as big as those we are accustomed to or the resources with which to H pay for them f The lesson of the half century is that taking into account the magnificent engineering accomplishments already achieved we should not be timid in calling lip visions of the nation's future! j Utah Leads States in Election Day Turnout Guilty of Murder! co-oper-ate ly 70-gro- up mak-vvould- 48-gro- up "i?e six-sto- two-thir- three-quarte- au-d- P0?'" ry ds rs one-tim- - -- two-mon- th nara-arinkin- - c- The National Grange is a farmer's fraternity Its leader is Albert S Gross whose title is national master Mr Gross recently took pen in hand and turned out an editorial for the Grange publication in which he scolder all and sundry for their poor voting records As part of the editorial he published a table showing the percentage cf eligible voters who went to the polls in the 1948 election And lo Utah leads that list with 746 per cent meaning that Utahns voted at the rate of nearly 75 out of each 100 eligible to vote Colorado was second with 714 Delaware third with 709 and Montana next with 703 The national f average was 52 per cent which means that slightly less than one out of every two Americans eligible to vote on election day didn't do so It is interesting to note that the French Italian and German people turn out in greater numbers even than the Utah registered voters Perhaps we wouldj show more interest if we were deprived for a few years of our rights Anyway Utahns are challenged We lead the list of states at the moment We ought to bestir obrselves so that we remain at the top and also record such a high percentage that we shall establish a grand example- - f We Shouldn't Scold June folr Behaving About as Usual People have been grumbling about thi June weather we have had thus far They have scolded June of 1950 for its behavior overlooking the fact that the present June is scarcely more delinquent than the run of the mill Junes Remember how in years past the outings lor the old folk have had to be postponed because June weather wouldn't grow so warm as we wished National guardsmen surely remember the storms they endured in pasf June encampments Certainly the among resort employes and managers recall many a June in which bad weather stifled j early June patronage "Aren't we ever going to have summer?" people complain forgetting that spring doesn't end until June 21 when the summer solstice arrives By that time it is quite likely June will turn into summer if it doesn't do so much sooner Doubtless the grumblers of the past ten days will be the first to ask "Is it hot enough for you?" iBut we uphold their right to do this for what is the use of having weather if you can't talk about it or even scold it1? In dealing with the corrimunists you cannot assume the othr-- man has the same moral standards that you have Lewis Strauss retired member of the Atomic Energy Comr j a reporter ' cover- - to tie state department used io be critical of Joe Grew He was diffident hard to understand and of course it wasn't at hard for cou mm iui fiume since iy mm am nan a slice of the J F Morgan millions behind him In retrospect however I am convinced that some of my criticism of Joe Grew was wrong Certainly ha was right and I was wrong about! the emperor of Japan who he felt would be a healthy influence jfirst toward surrender second toward making Japan a democratic nation after surrender Important Job Now Despite the high posts he has held ih the past however the most u'" Jod woe ure v is doing hviw is s a private citizen He has sparked the National Committee for Free Europe a group of private citizens who are trying to get behind the iron curtain to the satellite countries ' Working with the many foreign ministers and premiers diplomats fr°rn Ppland Bulgaria Czechoslovakia Hungary who have fled to the UTS A the committee has a room in the library of Congress basement set aside for them where the exiles read and translate eVery newspaper published in the satellite countries and use that material to guide the Voice of America On tjop of this the committee for free Europe is setting up its own radio station in Europe to broad-"J- rt tq Poland Czechoslovakia Buuarlia Rumania Hungary They wiir not compete with the Voice mFrIc8 but supplement it All this takes a lot of money a lot of: energy and a lot of planning —Which considering the fact that Grew is now 70 years old and entitled to some leisure Is an indication of what one man can do to bring hope in this age of fear Nuts At the Capitol Young Representative Tom Steed Of Oklahoma rUXhari hraah lessly into the house oiner qay oarely in time to answer a quorum cau thereby sustaining ma cAueni recoro "What held you up?" asked friendl 'Tt's those educated squirrels replied Steed ! Sil9 ui iu iiic wr manpower commission and interi°r department He has 8 philosphy that cracy as exciting as a cru- sade He Savs: Hraiwe ana aoimy ro burn'Wp in government but they are held back by red tape and lack of daring What wa need is administrators to clear away the debris and kick out timidity A big factor is for the little fellow down the line to feel his ideas and efforts to make government better won't be pigeonholed or tossed aside Thafs why we're so lucky in interior to have Oscar Chapman as secretary" In his new spot Northrop will n be a Hoover mmmlalnn He will reorganize the administra- tion to save dollars and brains and utilize wasted effort He Is First "Intern" Assistant Doty is the first "intern'Secretary of the interior deEleven years partment the National Institute of Publicago Affairs persuaded the Indian bureau to take on a bright college graduate for training That was how Doty got his start "Our job" he aays "is to develop American resources to the fullest for an expanding economy— to create more wealth and more jobs We must conserve our lands and find new minerals We've a terrific problem right now in our 300000000 acres of public grazh of the lands ing lands is eaten away with erosion" About his job the new assistant secretary comments: "The reason I like the'fnterior department is that it's always building toward something" McCarthy and the Lady While the lady from Maine gracious Margaret Chase Smith was waiting on the senate floor to make her historic speech Senator McCarthy sidled up to her "I fiear you're going to speak this afternoon" McCarthy said uneasily "What's it about? "It's a subject on which I feel very strongly" replied Mrs Smith "Are you going to speak about me?" demanded McCarthy "Yes you and others" the senator from Maine replied "but I will not refer to you by name" "Well" said McCarthy g "I may "T1!8?0 y°u nn--educa- ted have to ask you some very pointsquirrels ''Well it's like this" explained ed questions the Oklahoman "On my way to Actually McCarthy left the senwithout quizzing the lady: wic i always stop to feed ate the squirrels on the lawn across waited until the next afternoon the plaza However I guess I went when his ghost writers --turned out a reply speech aboqt it the wrong way The since I started Diplomatic Pouch feeding j'Ever them Oklahoma pecans which are British submarines have now the biggest the meatiest and the stayed under water imitiB g available — and I in- record time of seven the weeks I clude the Louisiana pecan in that News stories about America's new statement —those blamed squirrels atomic artillery shells and — won t eat anything else missiles are a Jift'e prematureguided by "They're? educated They want about two or three years Truth is Oklahoma only pecans I reckon General Joe Collins' recent speech there jvasn't a squirrel within about new atomic weapons was mile 6f the Capitol that didn't purposely vague The- - weapons gather around me today be ready for some time won't They climbed on each other's backs Four million dollars worth of rat!?ree and our deep demanding dio equipment has arrived in Iran Oklahoma pecans from the U S A to help blast a "I don't expect any of my Louhole in the Russian isiana colleagues to believe this propaganda iron curtain includes new debecause naturally they are envi- vices speciallyIt designed offset ous" concluded Steed "but those Russian jamming of the to Of Voice squirrels wouldn't let me go un- America til the bag was empty and they searched my pockets That's why I was late'r Guard Unit Leaves Modern Bureaucrats EVANSTON Wyo June 10 — Two new shiny name in Officers and enlisted men of comthe interior department plates are the pany A 141st tank battalion Wybiggest boost to the merit system oming national guard left Evanston since postman Jess Donaldson today to attend a k trainwas named postmaster general ing camp program at Camp Carson Thesi plates read "Vernon D Colo ! - fast-movi- one-ma- One-fourt- "anti-smea- r" half-jokin- half-threateni- oesi-iasun- two-wee- long-rang- ex-wi- fe 7p-gro- up elim-inatin- 70-gro- up t Davis Announces Landslide Toll Assistant Agent May Reach 48-gro- pooh-pooh- ed thirty-se- cond "non-aggressio- n" Building Boom— How High Will It Go? f isignteen are missing A $m f 1939 ' ' 1949 MMBB First Quorter of Year W?l UrtJ"1 taof " IMS- -a fr nl'trfLffK £?l?£l?£J? w" 1?rt"comparat ve year'W93l 1950 fo boose-buUdi- ng i!L has WVWLUl already 1950 IT I FR" F00s KEEP THEM safely 2!BB!S even a Batter deeper See it— get rt—NOW! V t d2l Enfey it TODAY for only a few cents a day f" Down per Wcclc Was 23495 T°tal for Year 1 "Oo Insured" COMPANY Mea waa Know fMraae" 319 24th St Phone 2-75- 01 I Dial 5781 1 21 MaMMBBaBgBBBl BLACKBURN-JONE- S of " SUtes daring the first four months of year when an all-tihigh of 1000000 homes were first quarter and total yearly figures for the "normal lemr toUJ "mainlng anybody's guess This year's tremendous resulted in rising costs and higher prices for finished homes ne " foOfftlAarhl iyvi yVall amounts g reaching America has become liability- conscious and every accident is iooKea upon as an to collect damages opportunity Your liability insurance pays all costs of investigating and defending any suit brought against you and pays judgments up to uc uou oi your policy ri 1 INSURED" For Carefree Driving For Peace of Mind For Protection of Ail You Own Claims for injuries to persons or damage to property of others are breath-takin- Tea IMS I II during the war were rescued frnm tha persons Ki - m tion 100 miles northwest of here "60 m mm$ Twenty-on- e ? old-time- rs mission l Coasi Jury Rules Cattle Baron cross-countr- ma-erial- - ti ucu W- Northrop administrative aaristttt sistant secretary" Chief fact about them is that both came up the hard way without cronies or politicos me pain wnuuij Northrop a whizz on government management started out 27 year ago as a lowly clerk in the house of climbed the ladder representatives in the commerce de partment became a craek trouble- ihOOter" for the fnrW! T£ cmcigeiu-jLI riZ "' unions nave suffered serious decline of membership The communist party proper is indeed being rather transformed into a simplenakedly instrument ui ooviet woria power This puzzling communist propa sanaa success at a moment of communist political decline deserves careful study in the United States On balance at the moment mere noes not seem to be any' thing solid behind all the sound and fury But this does not mean that there will be nothing solid in the future if American aoes not walk along a nicelypolicy calculated razor s edge III vi cnurt One danger is that in the — of effort to build a serious defense of the western world we shall ask the French to contribute too heavily The political and economic recovery of France noted in this SDace nnw already at makes it possible for France to act as a full partner in the Atlantic community But this recovery is as yet incomplete A patient just fin- By Peter Edson plenty of embarrassment and it ishing a long and terrible illness WASHINGTON (NEA) — Su disrupted unification y As original espouser of the 70-- g cwnnoi ao runs preme Court Justice William O Hence the French eontrihiition roup plan Secretary Finletter is seem to Douglas didn't while it should represent a now on an obvious spot with the SAN JOSE Calif June 10 (UpJ increased investment of very well after being named "Fath- air force generals who are nat- Thomas P TaMe wealthy New men ana resources must also be er of the Year" by the National urally all for the plan limited for the time being The Father's day committee He he'll have trouble inside the air Mexico cattle baron was convicted rrench recovery must not be wouldn't give out any family pic- force If he doesn't he may have of murdering his second wife tochecked Here as in Britain we tures He wouldn't give out any trouble with the president and Sec day but a jury of six men and are in the position of a man who recent pictures of his two young retary Johnson Best hunch now six women recommended leniency one investment— the Eters who were away at school He is that he'll announce he's iMarshall J"raeplan— The first degree murder verdict allow himself to be oho- ina a new evaluation and mm uri with great success saved Talle and is therefore sorely from the lethal gas with Mrs at with to tographed both to Douglas acceptable - and home around the family fireside the 70-something mlk all funds from thetempted chamber but carried an automatic esplans newly tablished company in order to start Dou5- - McCarthy Gets Cold Shoulder """t1 sentence of life in prison Ha will "another concern— the Atlantic de be eligible for rarole consideration Sen— 15 years fense program for which canital Supreme Court building It would in as well is also heeded If we are sensible have made a nice homey little V? The cattleman the 18 we shall recognize the folly of this background— a marble palace with Asp eer peIore two fired from jury agreed slugs the Press Catholic Association at e procedure In the period just ahead dozens of steps Half a block wide Rochester A number of the edi a big 44 caliber western-typreand the United States will th pillars But Mrs tors were displeased volver into wife his last Marge by Senator Dec 23 have to provide between Douglas vetoed that idea So no McCarthy's the patio of their new being asked to speak mansion in and in the Saratoga hills The of the additional new pictures were made at alL at Rev all Rt Michael Ilia J unense iunns mat are needed claimed Talie's motive Always Room for To u Senator Ready bishop of Columbus and prosecution was the hone of "getting rid" of May Lack Vision Sen Millard Tydings of Mary- Episcopal chairman of the National the e Denver waitress so he We may lack this kind of fore land is planning a real blowout for Catholic Welfare Council didn't reiurn to his tirst wife Marv Sight and entanele Fnn in Am his daughter's debut next Decem- even attend the evening meeting couia Talle of Santa Fe N Mex tense outlays that will set back ber He lists her in the Congres- at which the senator spoke the trial inroughout French recovery The political con sional Directory as Eleanor Tyd- For a Rainy Day? defense to its story that the stuck His wife's first name is Jr g fluences nere win then be ex ings of $1000000 a day in tne pudgy New Mexgrave With a return of Eleanor and she is the daughter of theSavings iremeiy national defense are ican "blacked out" from a compost-wa- r neurosis the French peo- - Ambassador and Mrs Joe Davies now claimed by Defensebudget Secretary bination of alcohol andoncold tablets when Mrs Tydings Anyway fm iiiaj- even reiuse to make any the night atrophine went to the Mayflower hotel re- Louis Johnson's management ad- containing effort whatever to defend themhis wife was slain The committee committee visory to make selves On the ether hand— and this cently reservations for her is now Talle himself said on the witshooting towards savings of ness 13 why the razor's so nar- daughter's coming out part3 she $2000000 is stand he remembered nothing edge a It day ultimately hopes was amazed to find that the place to reach a row — the political about his wife's death His first consequences of goal $3000000 saving here will certainly be still more was booked solid for a year in ad- a wife a pretty brunette took the day stand and blamed the dead woman appamng if a solid western de vance with conventions Few peowas This committee set last up i realize is it but Washington is jiui ouiii witnin a rea- ple under a contract with Rob for breaking up her marriage sonable time rapidly becoming the number one August Although she had stood by her Heller ert Associates of Clevetown of the country land who and One has only to turn to the convention since the trial began had done similar work ciencn communist press to see But when the hotel management for the air force They now report and testified in his behalf Mary what the danger is The immeriiatp heard about the Tydings debut to Gen she had plans to reT McNarney ad Talle denied him and purpose of the "peace" propaganda plans it cancelled one of the con- viser to Joseph marry Secretary Johnson Heller take him back" "I never would is obviously to impede the rearm- ventions to make room estimates it will take another year poker-face- d ament of the Atlantic Air Force in a Quandary throughout to set up permanent management theTalle court The less obvious but farcommunity room ordeal long showed more imHottest controls asked for the armed services question being no e as emotion verdict the portant was purpose is to about Tom Finletter new secretary Money saved is not returned to the read His mother Mrs Elsie Talle frighten people into fits and thus ot tne air forces is how he 11 an treasury Money saved merely proto prepare them for appeasement nounce himself on Heynom and his both the controver vides that much more national de- wept the court clerk said "guiland submission sial air force problem As fense Savings are made by clos- ty of as murder" Scare Stories Ont chairman of the Dresldent's air ing down unnecessary bases g Jurors said they stood 10 to 2 orScare stories about the British policy commission Finletter was duplication reducing for conviction with no recomof the plan This ders for supplies By good man- mendation for leniency most of government having already decid- father a was of main this recommendation of the agement kind savings of the 11 ed to evacuate 6000000 children hours they debated Two from the cities about the destruc- commission's report "Survival in from $700000000 to $1000000000 women jurors held out for acquitare hoped for this year and next tal They finally compromised tion of harvests with radioactive the Air Age on President Truman and Secretarv elements and about 36000000 the guilty verdict with leniency deaths resulting from a single Johnson later scaled down the 70- bombing raid are' the warp and group plan to the present woof of the communist "peace" plan in order to cut the budget During this period however Air propaganda The emphasis on atomic warfare Foce Secretary Stuart Svmincton is immense- neverthebacktracked on his requests formerly 50 bigger program At times FARMINGTON June 10 — Aply significant For of course the for Soviets now have an atom bomb this caused Secretarv Johnson pointment of Bert JS June 10 (UP) — Rescue Despain as tukyotoday too and are rapidly building bomb workers recovered the assistant Davis was county agent stocks and strategic bombers If instead of forged Then France announced bodv from a lanrfslirf today Europe still has no air defense might well leave believed to have buried 50 personwf the Atlantic com when Soviet war preparations are munity Despain came to Davis county aiive at a sign from railway staEvanston where Wyo he complete the scare stories will thus pact with Moscow and surrender was tion yesterday in extension have deadly effects service Two hundred rescuers including to attack Such is the crit work engaged for seven years He is a Then the neutrality theorists like icalavoid Of rne u dithe uiuis decisions import that of University of Wyom- vision ot braved therirst cavalry Gilson and Beuve-Mer- y will ac- must now be taken in Washington graduate of redanger and also has U attended S A ing the great followings they do about the defense problem quire newed landslides from the mounC Logan He his wife and three tain not now have Then the side weakened by last year's 1950 New York copyngnt children to make their home plan on "peace" petitions will signature typhoons-anbe real Herald Tribune Inc) excessive timber-cuttin- g here' para-milita- iL ziea joe Grew has spent a lifetime working for his country He began as a young career diplomat many years ago worked his way up to be ambassador to Turkey undersecretary of state ambassador to Japai There were times during those j well-know- or J tion which the has recently caused to spring into being all over Europe Under the leadership of Professor Joliot-Curi- e they have been cira petition embodying the culating Headlines iri the newspapers tell us that dollar-a-poun- d resolutions of the cominform-or-ganize- d peace rally steak is back in the nation's meat markets The supply of They claimStockholm 20000000 signatures at the moment for this demand for beef cattle is one reason for the condition Another reason "absolute suppression of atomic ' pons" is to be found in the fact that many more Americans have wetThe French communist press found it possible in recent years to earn enough money to helps on the drive for the tion with huge advertisements peti carmore demeat than formerly Low supply and high buy rying such headlines as "PaTrls London New York and Moscow mand spell high prices Transformed into Smoke Clouds From 35000 Feet" Meanwhile cerAn article in Congressional Record reports that the tain n number of cattle in the United States amounts to 53 critters trench intellectuals like Beuve-Mer- y the editor of MLe Monde" for each 100 of population In 1928 we pad 48 cattle for and Gilson the Catholic phieach hundred of population In 1944 the number was 62 losopher are agitating for a European "neutrality" which seems to cattle mean nothing much more than dis- Dixie Ambitious to Become Nation's Livestock Empire Joe Grew Had Most Important Job Ex-Ambassad- 2245 Wash Blvd |