Show i t 6A THE OGDEN gbm A manifestation of public opinion’s power is seen in Secretary of State Dulles announcement that the United States is willing to talk to Red China about peace in the Formosa region It was only last Saturday the State Department said there would be no talks unless Nationalist China was in- eluded in the Red China proposal to discuss a cease-fire- " agreement Sen Walter F George Democratic chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee however said the Red Chinese offer to talk over matters should be accepted Let us see what the talks will lead to the Senator said in effect The reaction over the nation in favor of having the United States sit down with the Red Chinese to talk about easing tensions was so immediate Secretary Dulles yesterday put the State Department on record as willing to nego tiate directly with the Red Chinese without the Nationalist Chinese also participating The best way to learn whether the Reds are sincere in seeking peace is to discuss peace with them face to face and that is what it seems is about to happen ( Need for Autopsy Law at the University Dr Richard Call of Utah School of Medicine told the Utah Public Health Assn con- vention Utah should have an autopsy law so that every un- explained or questionable death should receive scientific investigation The physician gave a list of reasons for such a law all Of them convincing For as long as some of us can remember movements have been launched in our state from time to time to pro- vide for investigations into unexplained or obscure deaths and each of the movements has had strong support from the general public Yet it has seemed impossible to obtain X CCOmmcndccl legislation The StBtc COntinilGS to 2® 3l0n§ under its old laws pertaining to inquests and the duties of the coroner Meanwhile as the physician pointed out serious public health hazards and even homicides may go pathologist ’ ’ undetected In a day when all of the resources that can be brought to bear upon the exposure of crime and its prevention Utah should have laws providing for scientific inquiry into all unusual deaths Former U S Senator WilUam Benton who has made fortunes In advertising publishing motion pictures and music continues to urge young men to take an active in- terest In politics In a speech on ethics and politics to the Harvard Law School forum he said: “Many of you young men here tonight in this historic hall will find yourselves within a few years deep in politics I say strength to your arms The risks and hazards and pressures of politic we great But the rewards outweigh them all All your capabilities all your experience will be called into play And when other desires and ambitions have been satisfied or blunted by the years your desire to serve the public interest will sustain you” Benton makes the occupation of politi and fascinating He probably has induced many bright young people to seek careers in government By doing this he continues to perform public service although he no longer has a political job For the great need of our nation IS for more dedicated young people to enter the business of government Production and Mass Thrift Institute of Life Insurance reports in a bulletin of economic Information that two powerful forces are working on the side of sound money and the stable purchasing power of the dollar One is mass thrift The other is our unsur- ' passed capacity and ability to produce At a time when the emphasis is on mortgage and other det)t it is refreshlng to be told about the American people’s mass thrift We are apt to forget that for every borrower there must be a saver The American trait of thnftiness is quite real as re- vealed by figures Owners of life insurance number 93 persons' About 70 million persons have savings accounts There are 16 million members or investors in savings and loan associations Total savings of individuals totals 220 billion dollars for our ability to produce there can be no doubt that it is magnificent The institute reports that annual pro- duction per employed member of the labor force in terms of gross national product is $4600 The measurement is in constant (1947) dollars In 1940 it was only $3575 The American economy it would seem is supported by a firm foundation r Prediction: Reds Won't Attack Now and Rod China to Talk STANDARD-EXAMINE- WEDNESDAY EVENING R Miss Liberty's Kid Brother Siowart aIsop 3!anbarfr-iExmut- or 1 U S (UTAH) s 'XT- - JTiXil-- ' Dulles Tried to Woo N Y Paper With Data on Yalta? WASHINGTON— Karl Bickel former president of the United Press Assn who did more to sell unbiased American news around the world than any one man has some pungent things to say about the way the Eisenhower administration is trying to influence the ( press “The State Department” he says referring specifically to n Under White House rules gift of the Yalta docu- - erty was right A correspondent tbe NeX 0S T-for political services is not eSt old "vicious mLw°f£ingito supposed to be accredited to press EuroF!e conferences SSSSl? fhanclnesx?f Napoleonic - Miss Payne bf course was paid SrntlCe 1 wh® n a labor union In contrast let’s steam presses roll paper etc be- - by see What has happened to a wide- imak thc press a great ly syndicated columnist who wV P°wer- on the side by the National Then every government in Eu- - paid Association of Manufacturers and rope began controlling the press penUblic Steel by controlling the He is George Sokolsky paid d $2959947 by the two business big groups plus $340936 for expenses through a camouflaged arrangement with s the firm of Hill and Knowltort whereby no one knew of jthe payments Thus while Sokolsky was writing a newspaper column giving lectures and appearing on the radio the American public did not ’ know that his was how Drew Peanra on h abor t the kept press of Europe finally ac(s pl shop in i937 worked into the great European infiuencedP' bi£ businCs Press Assn consortium dominated he tune of $2Mgfc47 ' l( the publiCi didn't know ani whirh’ liireefv twmieh'nhoft y ’ of events projection oV'cours6 deadwrongU Hag-Dulle- s’ might rL'i awCrir Stewart AIsop nese will not now attack the offshore above-name- i“h” hlvl Th“ufnl$" he jng made an ostensibly peaceful n Chou festue En-lai- public-relation- care- - ’ fully imprecise offer to negotiate on Formosa straits crisis the Chinese Communists could hardly turn right round and kick off a Wl ra bad turn out to w wry myindeed course of guess The ‘h' abated Yet it is being rather con- perhaps much too con- fjdently— — fluently assumed that the Com- munists will not soon attack Instead what is now believed J 'u‘tn ?t? — "Pressure by' favoritism been a threat to American Tngi negotiating— very Department ni'lion dollars worth Kefauver Favored rather PRTxrrirTov v t wi v Over Nixon in Trial Heat 7-- 5 - the nomination ‘under any cir ’ cumstances” Republicans and Democratic lead uLdecided ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 12 ers on sPcculatin unpossible presi 12 Many Undecided! course could be a bad cuess too Eliminating the per cent ntial candidates in 1956 if their — will resist It is interesting to note that certainly Chiang and with excellent reason especi- among Independents — the group whose votes may well determine ! ! ! ! i ! ! I 'i ! ! ! ! ! iS S the 1956 outcome —there is a emissaries make No°n2 relatively high undecided vote of fefauveT' and Warren Favored 26 per cent in today’s match beSi! £vn°rite of Democrats shows the As reported earIier Supreme tween Nixon and Kefauver ‘venuaU)l 10 ay noldlng edeeenal0r agree simply because he has no Court Justice Earl Warren w as Among those Independents ex- iternative— just as eventually favored by the largest number pressing a choice the Tennessee representa 0f Korean President Syngman Rhee vJ1 voters for the nomina- - senator holds a convincing mar- n of voters was tjonqqp President Eisenhower gin of 62 to 38 per cent In the agreed under pressure to accept asked jf by InstiKorean truce would not take it himself War- - following table the first column tute reporters: ren was the choice of 25 per includes the undecideds the Tn4e°f Dover burned “Suppose the to the be jn )f Republican voters ques- - ond column excludes them: Communists on certain condi- - presidential electioned and Nixon was the runner- - Vote of Independents tion were being 19 per cent Kefauver 46 62 with up c”smSrsu iTllakVsomfson held today If 28 38 The former governor of Illi- - Nixon President of vague promise not to attack nois Adlai Stevenson wras fav- - Undecided 26 x n 0 Formosa at least for the present l"0m!nee by Analysis of the trial heat were the Republi-- c any ques' suits shows that Kefauver’s lead a n candidiate that the°UoLmunists over Nixon is relatively uniform and Sen Estes iuJ take nomination Kefauver m all Kefauver were population groups with was named their favorite candi- two notable Democratic exceptions the date by 48 per cent of Democrats A of older voters ainount to abandonment of chi'-- candidate — which majority While President Eisenhower Forto claims nese Communist 5d!!!Kiy09 remained completely silent or Demo- - has sGov age group line up behind the mosa and if anything is clear it about Wb intentio is clear that the Communists will crjjic? ® Stevenson reportedly is “unde- - Y1C President On the other 6‘ not abandon these claims cided” about his plans for 1956 ?ei rm5a°riavor Ke’ uver VvJe” What is now hoped for instead Ni°n vs Kefauver chief justice Warren recently g JS gome g0rt of for-- Kefauver 51 insisted that he would not accept Kefauver Leads mula The face to be saved is of Among major occupation course that of the United States groups Kefauver leads Nixon in business and professional simply because the United States OUT OUR WAY R Williams By rnnot easily agree to abandon whitecollar and manual worker the offshore Islands to the Comgroups while Nixon holds a slim munists without receiving anyedge over Kefauver amongthe But a nation’s farmers thing whatsoever in return "chou EnTaf statement by vague Today’s trial heat is the fifth promising to seek a peaceful so- lution of the Formosa question or gomething of that sort will prob- ably suffice t- This? ! ! dF "3 jft Ing generations 1 lem&s a7-toe-- 5 cross-sectio- sec-ce- JUe "fKFn face-savin- ) British commitment kdno‘fhr'iy 'otmtont Formosa recently forecast in this Pace- - For British domestic politi- cal reasons no such commitment can b made before the May 26 n elections But after that a the dS by which 1 “J llcliy' Hagerty Pressures Mr Bickel who helped break me into the columning business would be interested in another type of “favoritism” — in reverse as practiced today by White House press secretary James Hag- erty when he summoned Ethel Payne reporter for the widely Negro newspaper the and threatened Defender Chicago loss of her White House her with credentials Miss Payne had been asking on segregation at White House press conferences which seemed to irritate the President Certainly Hagerty made it clear they irritated him For he had done a thorough investigation of Miss Payne which apparently in- returns eluded her income-ta“I see here that you were paid by the CIO at the same time you serving as an accredited news correspondent at the White House” Hagerty said looking at a statement of Miss Payne’s in- come “We can’t have that It’s against regulations The is a political organization and I’ll have to report this to the stand- ing committee of correspondents” Miss Payne explained that she had done some temporary work editing material for the during the 1952 campaign cor- “However I am a the Chicago De- respondent for she fender” explained “It says here that you were paid by the CIO on Sept 10 1954' continued Hagerty read- ing the report before him “Are you still on the CIO payroll?” "Absolutely not” replied the Negro correspondent “It is cor- rect that I received a payment from the CIO on Sept 10 but that was the last payment I received I only edited cam- material I had nothing to do with making policy” Hagerty said he would look into matter further and advise Miss Payne of his decision nt lowed a pattern he had previously set of taking money from non- newspaper sources Twice before according to official undisputed records he had done this First he was a paid propa-gandist for the' Japanese at the same timehe was "writing from the Far East for American news papers His official title was tor of the Far Eastern Review a completely subsidized Japanese government publication Sokolsky had married a Chinese girl and had been rabid in attacking anese imperialism in China But overnight he accepted a job from the Japanese and switched his writing completely Following this he switched again He went back to work for the Chinese — this time for the of Soong family brothers-in-laAgain a Senate Chiang e of the record (pages 2338-3ate Munitions Committee) shows that Sokolsky “sclnt a cable in his private code on behalf of the Remington Arms to T V Soong asking if he was interested in obtaining supplies of 79 cart — edi-circulati- ng CIO-PA- ns Jap-questio- x CIO-PA- th°e w Kai-she- ! Sen-wer- 9 C f k ridges” The public which reads Sokol sky’s ardent championship of the dynasty today however does not know that he was once paid by them Brash brilliant intelligent So-kolsky does an effective job Doubtless he earned all that was paid him in the past But the chief difference between him and Miss Payne Negro correspondent of the Chicago Defender is that he wapaid far more she worked for labor and he for big business and he had followed a pattern of being paid previously Yet so far as is known no gov ernment official has challenged Sokolsky Nor have many paper publishers In fact he mains a close friend and adviser of Herbert Hoover And hi? radio broadcasts have been more wide-th- e ly circulated than ever through the American Broadcasting Co Kai-she- k Soong-Chian- g C full-tim- e -- ' i- - j re news-Furthermo- gn re-pai- care-millio- Non-Progressi- Mme0?1? U S ve Farmer Being Forced Out of Business is attacked by the communists re-A- Mass — The small farmer is Is of out forced business toward The trend gradually being large mechanized farms I forecast that this trend will continue The BABSON PARK Kai-she- k Sighted Land yS A Jf?WlUVM5 10 aUewt there wi5b eInothtr rei over—unless the Pentagon grossly UIB OC¥CUlIi Years Ago Marilyn Combe in the world in which the lines £!i‘fTVnJSSthM!S2 rtosnfrom's 20 Years Ago daughter of very class at Weber High School g v VAfc e the Giri!s’ ZviciJ?lyjSevietw aj Shepherd officers s follows: Joan hTd thVt (hi f th tUement sSll be another big D - shdle- - president Carol Ann retreat in the face of Communist ra?r The extraordinary twist- - lcia arr ®“eiary Aienet retr®asureri Madeline Hogg Fngs and turnings of American Porter: Beverley Behm assist- policy in the last six months rCPOrter frt tin Tentative plans for housing 50 Years Ago ap- - Ogden Sugar Co directors had dMided °Ede" l° in"e“e the f“tory m temporary quar- - capacity from 350 tons of beets 1 eonstrUetion of to 700 tons The cost was i neT'Jotl house were estimated at $350000 and the cussed by Weber County Board factory would be one of the 0f Education The old building lar2est in the vest was to be razed to obtain mate- Dr Joseph Kingsbury presi- rials for 1116 new buildlng' sPent the °aY at Ogden wlph Mcrwm Thompson general school said he was highly pleased chairman of Plain City Dairy with the work being done at the sch°o1 Day’ sald a11 breeis of dairy cat' tle will be exhibited an) a gen- rbe Taylor Coal Co’s business eral program of interest to all together with the lease on the dairymen was being prepared yard °Rice on Wall Avenue had to he held on May The even r’wfo woufi 1U conduct the business under the Lorenzo Richards manager for name °f Ogden Coal Co the Boyle Furniture Co attnb- uted the company’s success to A man who stole an auto in s"‘ ”e °d'" !s‘nE' : Ohio was caught in Tennessee we dont and said he did it as a joke ‘We are going That's carrying a joke too far know there is a depression” S SZanSe ETT''- cease f jre Wni be imposed in the brightly colored ginghams and linen would again take over the Formosa Straits and a cease-firCh°o1 campus ba?: be1" ?? of the crisis Records of history show that Rodrigo de Triana a sailor was the first of Columbus’ men to report the sight of land at two o’clock in the morning of day of discovery non-progressi- stubborn farme simply cannot compete over the long term with the low-comethods of the modern mechanized farm He har not sufficient land and will not buy theT necessary equipment Farm income has declined on in much the' same manner lion average about 8 per cent since 1951 This decline has been felt as the discount houses are cur-by all farmers rently overthrowing the Fair but particularly Trade laws by the smaller Farming operators whose the day of u Although costs are high farms is still in the Some have had to close up shop distant future some amazing deThose in the Dust vices have been developed and Bowl area were are now in use The farmer can dealt another senow push a button to grind mix vere blow recentand serve feed to a barnful of ly when federal V cows insurance Pushing another button crop Babson Roger changes the feed formula and-iwps discontinued Withdrawal the machine serves the hogs sections certain felt be will insurance of this pushing a third button prepares serves feed to the chickens small and the marginal especially by I forecast that women will u farmer Jin running certain men have heretofore which Banks persede been willing tp make loans to farms I forecast the future is bright marginal farmers with crop in- surance protection are now for farmers who have neither willing nor able to risk farms and will adopt the new their depositors funds equipment and for( the makers Government acreage control of this new farm equipment: but has helped the small farmer com- - I fear the days of many stub-pet- e against his bigger brother born small marginal farmers are to the extent that the large numbered Fortunately the operator has been pact of mechanization will be forced to restrict his output This gradual but' this is a4 problem however is only a stopgap meas- - which should be recognized and ure and is unfair to the mass- - planned for now by the farmer Government production farmer because he and his children cannot- make full use of his fa- - should get together with industry cilities This reduces his effi- - and try to make this transition ciency and ups his costs Some as easy as possible Farm workday mechanized farmers will re- - ers especially should face up to volt against this artificial restric- - the situation realistically st mass-productio- 3°° N°rth - 1 sb0TSd"S Push-Butto- n holly-mechanize- ’ well-locate- -- - A 'A i rn f- i A l n 1 City Commissioner W’illiam D Wood reported that work would tion probably get under way within Rails Beat ft few days on the drilling of two Telegraph First transcontinenUl telegraph wells at the Ogden Municipal We are happy Sir Winston will remain among US He line was completed on October Airport to supplement the City’s yean be- - water supply The wells would will remain the dominating personality of this chamber 241861 nearly eight fore the continent was crossed by do much to supply pressure at ’ West Ogden (Parliament) —Sir Anthony Eden raiL A ti--- Roger Babson There is only so much land and the increasing popula 15? tion is making increased demands upon it In such a situa- tion it is folly to permit greed to bring about soil destruc- ger than in fact it is I Ilf of pub- - ' embarrassed b u t nevertheless eventually effective effort will probably be made to persuade fhhJan0ff ’Li orani7pd TtaestheMu!!' ’paperind"! bou? the United Nations to negotiate a truce in the Korean War The feeling-ou- t period is believed to continue for months likely larm a"d eXCUr ma”y a h U the mis- monious 1gentleman in the State they were concealed and °f °PPosln tries to seduce the wX?Vn Malik made his famous offer in persuade chiang White it is going on has dem- - r0atarsSandtlOnnow£Othi5hesanPcUt slvUt°lmbSadoJ ea wolidd beeomrwPUSf nd was Um tiating about at-Th- at rootin-tootin- Should Stop Abuse of Soil farmer whose home on the land Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson discovered in his tour of the drought belt that the pubUc generally doesn’t like the “suitcase farmer” holding him in part re- blow away sponsible for dust storms Soil is more likely In dry periods after the soil is “mined rather than con- served by approved culture methods The situation in the dust bowl suggests once more that persons should not be permitted to abuse the soil even L though they have full legal title to it A man should not be allowed to neglect the land If the neglect results in harm to the neighbors and the succeed- - i ’ defense of Formosa if the island is more probable than possible As s one British spokesman has marked “it looks as though we’d thC Fonnosa act somehow”1 int° The purpose would not be to — - who Pleas chiang would not be pleased at all—but rather to put the best possible face on the kind of settlement outlined above The British com- mitment would make it possible to argue that a reasonable deal had been made since British support would be worth more toFormosa than the small and exA “suitcase farmer” is one who buys up land from a po- - ofhore islands it h°uld be hastily distressed farmer who had been living on the land and uses an“A11 3iner nervously repeated is the land for speculative farming operations The “suitcase iv a guessing game But if do work out this way at things not as does of care as soil farmer” usually take good the the 1 27 1955 Drew Pearson WASHINGTON — For those who enjoy guessing games the following APRIL d d n |