Show WEDNESDAY EVENING MAY 4 1933 ©gten 0tmtbarMbeamim ' Puerto Rican Governpr With Problems Til? ill A i WASHINGTON — Gov Friends of forest conservat: on have been irked for years bcause persons have used ancient mining law to get pos- TOKYO— According to report session of valuable timber The extent of the abuse is discovered upon reading President ipenhower and the Forest Service documents revealing that only 2 per cent of National Security Council have the 84000 unpatented mining claims on national forests ”"d"lmy are producing commercial quantities of ore American relationship The re- Correction of the abuse has been difficult because of examination was overdue in view fears felt in some quarters that legislation to check the of American defense in the Pa- pretended miner might harm legitimate mining activity Recently however all groups concerned qver the use new Ine uld of ancient mining laws 4a grab national forest property got down by the NSC the more glar-together and asreed to work' ait a solution which has now ing follies of ourhe dealings with Japanese been written into Senate and House bills since the signature of the peace Rep William A Dawson bf Utah is the ajithor of the treaty are apparlaw House bill which proposes to rduqe the rash olj mining ently to be corrected abuses by among other things prohibiting use of mining Yet our high claims for any purpose othej: than prospect est policy makers still began their processing arid related activities work by writing of the bill The mining location prohibits down as assumpcommon varieties of sand stone gravel pumice tion number one timthe from barred be would that the removing Mining claimants al- Vison ber on the claims liance could in effect be taken The American Mining Congress the Interior and Agn- - for granted for an indefinite term cultural Departments and the U S Chamber of Commerce of years The American represen- are among the organizations supporting the forward look- - contact with’the hanLon-the-so- t facts protested sharply that tak- ing legislation WaS pr0 The Dawson BiU and the companion measure by Sen Jndiy1 “unwbe 8ranted Clinton Anderson in the Senate should be speedily passed Even so the complacency and onal forests lack of political realism in pres- :'7 -- r e v j A: Japan-Josep-h four-pag- e ad-Yor- k” Kai-she- k e I crUy marriage stenog-penden- Walter Lippmann myWMhalpost tion somewhat more cautiously Syg'myP"alistic therefore assessment the whole American ilfperill musnowregardeds Our strategy is threatened not officials Sen Langer demands that the government restrict the men Of Short Creek to just one wife each but the men say ‘hat their religious beliefs require thejt to be polygamists To deny them polygamy IS to deny freedom of rehg- ion they say They refuse to oW laws antagonistic to plural directly in Japan proper or even AtiaUnfeA the Communist advance in South- east Asia can somehow be halted we are probabIy due t0 wake one day to the unpleasant dis- cover that Tokyo depends on I I CoUnUcU -Puerto News-Eisenhow- Senator Visits Short Creek the sect It the national attention results in some helpful suggestions to Utah and Arizona officials on how to handle the problem the notoriety will have served a purpose But it is doubted that practical solutions will be had Social and legal problems arising from religious fanaticism are amonS the most troublesome Of those faced by law enforcement r ! ese-Americ- ' -- four-pag- e j ent day Washington is such that the National Security Council’s first assumption has only been diluted rather than corrected It cannot have been corrected for a America’s very simple reason “island chain’’ strategy in the Sen William Langer’s visit to Short Creek and his men and women there about the practice of the japaneSe aliiancey And this questioning-er- f polygamy has once more focused national attention upon implied taking Japan for granted Luis Munoz Marin first Puerto Rican ever elected governor of Puerto Rico and the best governor tly Island hajs ever known was conferring with President Eisenhower regarding! various Caribbean problems Among other things he doesn’t want too high a minimum wage fixed for Puerto Rico and pointed out that the present average wage a in the island — 58 cents an hour — is higher than the minimum wage v 'v in England France and Italy jMV ' He also urged President Eisenhower to help set up a Caribbean commission including every Brit- against passive neutral Hindu j ish Dutch and French posses- India Anyway he told Mohammed sion in the Caribbean as well as acc°r(hng to the Puerto Rico and the Virgin sent Dulles that Red Islands in order to secure better cable wants hina the two offshore cultural and economic coopera- islands of Quemoy and Matsu as tion in that area in the The President was sympathetic th price for a cease-firFormosa Strait to both ideas p Ali also reported he was conDuring the con vinced Red China really wants to ference they got ? to talking about 4 end the Formosa crisis He said Chou complained the allied blockthe Puerto Rican ade of China is keeing his counNationalists who had attempted to try from buying strategic ma- v terials and he indicated that this assassinate Presiban would have to be lifted be- dent Truman and he agreed to a cease-fir- e f°re had shot several v j I was It after the receipt of this congressmen cable from Premier I H “I was! driving J Mohammed JX Ali that Dulles I— — New through remarked Drew Pearson vised Ike that the original Eisen-th- e President “when a friend bower policy of insisting that sit in on any Chiang pointed out a building which he cease-firbe talks reversed— said w'as the headquarters of the of of ire Sen Know-the Rican Nationalists” gardless of California lnd must have “That been the jail” replied Gov Munoz “because all Newsweek’s Circulation I know are in jail” it’s good business when you “I don t know why they should can get it though most maga want to shoot me continued rines can’t get it However jokingly “I have an- - week Magazine sUnchly pronounced that I was for mdepend- - Eisenhower got the benefit of ence if Puerto Rico wants inde- - Agriculture Department You’re the man they who wcre ordered to ad- raphcrs shoot not me dress publicity post cards to per-re- - gong on the Theyve already tried mailing list of the plied the governor a little rue-- Agricultural Research Service fully doubtless having in mind telling them to read Newsweek the occasion when the Na- The cards called attention to a tionalists stormed his home about Newsweeks article dealing with a Ter 1°' Council for Agricultural and Note— Gov Munoz Mann is get-- Chemurgic Research whose presi-tm- g excellent cooperation from dent Henry McKnight just h President Eisenhower and pens to be secretary of Ike’s of the Interior McKay tional Agricultural Advisory Com-involved if war cannot be pre- handling Puerto Rican prob-- mission vented ems The council’s board chairman The reason that Moscow and Behind Formosa also happens to be Wheeler STrttchX pre‘anandhav'ndthien pub- the inside story of Row Millan another big that they have adapted their Die State Department issued a ather °fof the Farm Journal and Secretary diplomacy to the facts of life in statement one day that the United Benson’s Agriculture ad- relations public would states discus not 'ceasem he ge of nuclear weapons this there re So’ the ta?payerended Chiang Kai shek- boos? Newsweek- - up pay -- 1 wjj Drew Pearson lice Helps Talcing Japan For Granted Is a Mistalce To Protect Our Forokts 4 A Star to Steer By JosePb As?p er ce hap-bot- Na-Secreta- ry When as in the affair of the two differing replies to Chou’s statement about Formosa a mis- tak' kas b'en mada’ haS beena mihed and has been the ordinary and sporting thing t0 do s t0 forget it But both iB Europe and in Asia wc are being d int v t and intrieate dip This danger was clearly recog- nlzed by the National Securit tvo complicated and they are very much interrelated They demand coherent and consistent direction £rara from ‘he President Eisenhower is not a Roosevelt or a Wilson who means to bc bis own secretarjr of tate Under Eisenhower and in the Elobn -- -0100 t "’ashing- - m ! Mc-Here- ja“L'y ’s Ike-ma- n talC to to laUon cease-firbe left vacant most fense and have also the stance - hek depth and the space to surof the time There has to be some- nuclear AinTsLt’X highest author offence -fofficial Nor was it en- and steady command of all the grandiose pacts floating on the partraent stite cannot at e DeXmMt a Mass Civil disobedience always presents difficulties in vva enforcement law a democratic order but we inspect that th£p4de Short Creek group be- - year For a while it was the offi- will eventually an?yth J1 involveLnt x a Vietminh vi loci rinema Public of was aw use of the alleged juvenile girls p" in Indochina could not be —was very fee island state who originated the first of aiA the situation like t that doesn has f been such a because aspect dragging the permitted victory opinion in- say that he wished the disturbing would of South whl( open the gates O the secretary’s P°JeIs deed For it Pne or athadleastnavar all I"cJaPan Asia to the Communists and bethe little bor- - Gettysburg talked to fif KIf hean in- tw the £ — jet Runway for L Hill Field non-atomi- 5ented cause the loss of South Asia would in turn involve Japan and India This “domino chain” theory was later abandoned and even scornfully condemned when" the consequence the From Hill Air Force Bass comes the news hat construciDepartment had been instruct- Xinot a be will tion of the new f ed and runway $3458285 project did not j under way next week Col L L Kunish saysjthat the new Eisenhower administration found know what was in the secretary’s runway to be 13500 feet Ion ? and 200 feet wide h°Ws the c n expedient to duck thePgrim mind Lippmann to say diplomacy Needless Unof ase This IS of Hill Air Force BienBl®n'Ebu to challenge further expansion key cannot be efficient if the State T there is jet-ag- e DAnflrtmPnt and is the firm wflich constructedj the first large building at Hill The mam reason is only too ob-When the outbreak Of World War II set Off a frantic military I1JajPanst ustnessmln exception regards South- building boom in the area as Japan s most prom- ®ast “sia The constructing firm was here at the opening of Hill Air Force and it is fitting mnet Fipld’s nrsteram service to “v live And two the company should build project that is to he the tonnages of rice tocountnes Tbal key to even greater service unnn n 3USt unaer SL n Nature Defies Weather Mari p at t 1 I f a ! i t is I i i i lack of cooperation” Without further1 ado Nature is bringing the trees into leaf the lilacs into bud and the Darwin tulips into bloom Ulu Weath’pr must he fit to be tied to observe how well Nature can get along without hlS cooperation Dealers in plants have’ put tneirnaot annuals on display and some CUStomer$ already have placed the seedlings in beds the gardeners reporting that this is good JaiAeAWlntr weatherIpr transplanting Little Wilting IS noted So seasonal progress is taking place despite spring’s backward behavior buta l!ot Of gardening remains to be done and there is not a great deal of time in which to do it I ? - j - ( i — j Great Day for Navaho Graduates j 4 Via fnrAi rrn earn the secretary’s purposes and poli- - cjes der states and others too-i-nto middIe Position “d The character f the problems a hope a chance have where they which we shall now be dealing involved m an n?4 becoming with requires a deep reappraisal war atomic in Washington of some of the basic conceptions of our postwar Have Initiative Moscow and Peiping now have diplomacy We are being drawn into momentous negotiations and the initiative because” they have it is only too painfully obvious made their own and are using for that both in Flimnp ntlH in Aia fhpir nwn intprpefe tVo nnlirv trv are cleverer than we are? Not in policy which is to expect every or my' book They are certainly not are-- be to it line nation nist by up with us in fwe srongerJthn of war and of ulti- - a posture of defiance is incom- the mate military power or by the patible with the realities of nu- peacetime standard of human clear weapons Jt has become a welfare And when we remember diplomacy of Col Blimp and it is what Stalin and Molotov contrib- - in trouble all around the great uted by their mistakes to making circle from Japan to Germany the Marshall Plan a success and I know how far removed are to making NATO a going concern these ideas from those which are we need not think that they are current in this country today infallible or preterna t u r a 1 1 y from those which prevail in Con- clever gress But the reappraisal of our anti-Communi- st As Mr- - Dulles conceives thc office of secretary of state such a lack 0£ understanding is al- most unavoidable He treats him- self not as the top executive of a trouWe! fOTCln anairs no even his wehavVneverdapteTuiVgrelt for weik ag0 ?aturday nA p c was his policy about the negotia- tion of a cease fire and about whkh Tave fonowedS SUCh negotia- Sovkt Unlon’s acevemcnt of S5ialga part in nuclear weapons One basic con- 2reat majority of Japanese Too Inefficient ception of our foreign policy— in "have This will that it envisages a containing Peoi hero been lulled operating procedure Communist like people in America by the become impossibly inefficient in military ring of 1)01(1 Promises °f SEATO Then the period of intense diplomatic states— is out of date The con- Japanese are intensely activity which is now opening ception was worked out under preoccupied with their own in- - We are about to be engaged in Truman and Acheson before 1949 ternal problems and since the critical diplomatic encounters and that is to say before we knew have h’d means f negotiations at all the key points that the Soviet Union was break- learning about the outside world on the borderland of the Com- - ing our monopoly of the atomic And above all the Japanese con- - rnunist orbit— in that gret semi- - bomb viction that America is a sure circle which runs frorn Japan Since that lime it has been the winner in any world struggle has and South Korea ihrough For- - inexorable logic of atomic arma- not yet been reallyi shaken rnosa Viet Nam 'and Southeast ments that the borderland nations But this conviction born of Asia through the Middle East to must and that they will seek se- Japan’s own defeat by America Austria and Germany curity and survival in policies to will surely not survive a shatter- ing series of free world defeats in the area of Asia that is most Umm tlOn Of OUT "ered w 10 pan' If Southeast Asia is lost to imp°ita"‘ c k our foreign affairs but as the operator His relations with the President his relations with Con- £ress and bis meetings with for- eign ministers take up so much of bis time and energy that he rafharYlJlS4?oTrLCfuayTar’ JapanS cannot Pay anything like suffi- KaaSi wlTwlcikAIluai rice import cient attention to the administra Policv o t' — - — Mother Nathre to that is finally said iifPPnd Searignifictnce suspect past few days to the Weather Man lm ompletely tired of waiting for S5 the favorable auspices I am entitled to expect from you at this time Of’year and have decided to gqahead despite your£V A -- 5 non-Comm- dent about an hour on the phone Later two things happened First Sen George of Georgia got a tremendous ovation when he told the American Society of Jhoultalk 'thReChinese to about peace nuWu?flie£ whaMhe CmberS ZlVt SeiTSltlVC 8yS tO coiuiuenuai cablegram from Premier Moham- d n£yFUst yeir' a good nend oi the U I All vs Nehru At the Bandung Conference lout-pag- e ieiT1'leu S Red China’s Pre-th- tough-talkin- g “Ae fofu f’js will not have ns hope pt SllSt “ En-la- lead-tnnnivin- Nhru “wa'i w a are closer to the North Pole than Africa s southermost tip is to the Imoeachment Justice apwnh Nehru MS'tS'tSS at this momenta but that U wiU d°"bv candid lucid and from the top leaicrsbip Pole Proximities Towns of northermost Ala- bama Georgia and Mississippi South Pole EnglishW Lesson L GORDON By WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Do not say “He’s an Say “He’s an all-arou- all-roun- d non-commun- ist OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED Diseur (professional reciter) Pronounce r e as in me un stressed u as in fur accent sec end syllable de-zu- OFTEN MISSPELLED Psychic though pronounced sigh-kic- k SYNONYMS Serene calm peaceful placid tranquil unruffled WORD STUDY Prenutr Nehnl lnaUi let‘ “e “Use a word three times and Chou conference peeved and dis- - it is yours” Let us increase by 0 s nval Premier word each day Today’s word: of Pakistan Chou POLITIC (adjective) Mohammed All The Constitution requires that sagacious the chief justice of the United J'as more cooperative Perhaps in promoting a policy shrewd States shall preside at impeach- - be was deliberately wooing the (Accent first syllable) ‘This poli- tic selection brought the good ment proceedings against a Pres- - more belligerent more pro-Ame- r- ican Moslem nation playing it off fortune intended” OUT OUR WAY By J R Williams five-yea- defense L 4 W tion trainin of those reoetvmg the education and traming Tflere 15 no J°ubt ‘hat the school he faculty the students and the community deserve the compliments paid them at the graduation ceremonies A splendid work is £ being done at the Iqtermountain School its influence Will be broad and enduring ‘ w”8 ba£" e tha Parifir sh islnd eheyin rvln “i" ‘7 will broken Nightmare Come Tm j IWm tjie sam great Pacific nightmare of the American Chiefs of Staff will come true indnqtHai rZ It is a new low in American diplomacy when we have tential Will Janan’t automaticaRyecome to beg for the release of ou boys or depend on Si U N mis- - available to Communist China PhiJ Jcfo a?d rVber James- Van Fleet sion to bring them home-i-G- en and iron I JSS Vhoai “S“ine i ’ - i f I i ’ uS SuCl‘ A11 the oth®r The area of mental diseaseus one Of the largest by far mhino J001! and desperately in need of quantitative measures that will build herself rapidiynupeto Sthe aine i ii scae a tell US what were dealing with — Dr Jonas Salk military - v ’ " I t men with Henry Shank formed a Chamber of Commerce bo oi dothtalTwhich w7 sent 2lst strecu it such to Denver for oversees shipment would be legal n ction ?la‘cth The Ogden LDS Tabernacle Ogden City commissioner bed assisted oy ward choral choir S Paul accepted the bid of Earl to construct a five-stor- y enclosed organizations was planning to r !ire dri11 tower at a ?ost of 5'563' present an performance d was to of “The Creation” by Joseph v1 property belocatf between 3rd and 4th streets Haydn early this summer It was nd Ogden avenues anticipated that 300 singers WashinSton would ParticiPate- Request by the Ogden Police ?enelit Assn for the city to al- - L W Nims was elected presi- low each officer $10 per month dent of the Rotary Club to sue- David S Romney George t0r the purchase and upkeep hla uniform was referred toThorstensen was made vice presi- - lnlerest thfr' wa! plen ‘“hout the Ogden cojrtoxhibitof was held at "J1 the Carnegie Library attracted hundreds of visitors and was said to be a credit to the schools Es- pecially noteworthy was the work in designing by some of the low- er grades The finance committe of the Ogden City Board of Education submitted a report to the board showing the estimate of expenses for the next school year July 1 Gle" secretary w isos to June 30 1906 would recmmend?SneThi0cort of H Loose ad reelected treasurer Two total $113500 It was estimated each Officer’s uniform and equip- - new directors were Francis A that $71500 would-braised by ment averaged $20975 Child and L A Herdtl local taxes out-doo- of-cee- -- j d e I I I V A J 1 o J d 'Sed tUr” ‘flop-Nehr- to be the peacemaker of Asia it got Though Nehru wanted the Red Chinese leader to guarantee the neutrality of all Viet Nam Chou would guaran- ® only the smll snd unimpor-tant states of Laos and Cambodia Implication was the Redsvwould penetrate the rest of Indochina — namely the much richer more powerful Viet Nam now under- going revolt cold-shouldere- ' The exprtion' "Mad as a hatter has nothing to do with peopta who make “hats It started as reference to a snake which was first the word atter and than (as It is today) an adder The snake for its ©dd living habits was looked upon as being mad or crary Thus the expression Mad as an adder (hatter)” arose at mier Chou i had two con- ferences with the two rival ers of what was once British In-dia now are Pakistan and India According to the secret cabled reports of U S diplomats Chou’s ideas however agonizing talk com- - - In Brigham City last night 189 Navaho youths were likelihood!' tte had Intermountain School after they anese will abandon! the American graduated from the r combined academic and vocational nince and move into a strictly completed the course-- f the first group to dd so since the school was started seTfwm ww There is no doubt that this was a significant event in Of the current official American business t tllan In l '’'“untrM a |