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Show i y : . x i ' r - ' : -- If thepeople of Salt 0rCY . Lake City live by Vjff I V" 5?w , & the ideas set forth If w I A A WJ) AA! Axift- -' . ' VfA Do not fa'l to MT " it ' i if which is the need if-- of the times. f Liberal American Weekly Dial Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Lund, Publishers " ' Second Clgs Matter at lh Posl OHic at Salt Lake City, Ulah. Under the Act ol Congress ol March 3, 1879, )ev t d t Vol. VIII, No. 32. City Addrlss 2HDd lTiCbSRalVati0n CmC thrUgh Spiritual Development" A New System of Thought, A New Feeling Must i ake Hold of People. " Sugarhouse, Salt Lake City, Utah, Friday4ugust 25, 1944 Subscription. $1.50 to 5.00 a vear Cnnirt W.l . pome Very Timely Editorial Thought! mM.4.1i,XlUtmX4J,J,Xi4iJ.iJ,mXX..li,xxlxj.j.J.i.j.j j , . ? Personal Paragraphs Of Interest The noise from motor vehic-les seems to grow worse, espec-ially with motorcycles. They should be controlled and we don't mean maybe. Mr. Maik W. Phrtteplac, 351 Broad St. Providence, R.I. , writes that he wants the paper and is gl id to help a bit. He is an active Kosmon pioneer who kuows truth when he sees it. Through Friend Homer Mc- Carthy we have had placed on our list two good women in Pennsylvania Elizabeth Dole and Ida S. Van Vorhis. We wish Homer had a million We know that he would do differ-ently from what most million-aires do. We now have enough subscribers between New York and San Francisco to swing the U. S. Employment Service offices of the War Manpower Commission in Utah and the Rehabilitation Service of the State Board for Vocational Ed-ucation have completed work-ing plans for putting into op-eration the cooperative agree-ment entered into July 1, of this year, Kenneth B.Johnson, Manager of the United States States Employment Service office at 55 West Broadway, said today. "A representative of the Rehabilitation Service is stationed in the USES office in Salt Lak City on a part time itenerant basis, who will see to the placement of the handicap-ped. J. Bracken Lee, Republican candidate for Governor, has had presidential election provid-ing the vote is very close. When a Friend and the office and does what. Mr John Piesowot-ik- i did the other day it proves that 'the paper is somewhat satisfying and thai the efforts of the publisher are appreciated He is a good citizen whose heart beats right for truth and honor. Mr and Mrs. A. Squires, 2038 Sn. 5th East, have request-ed that the paper come to them his headquarters p aced on our list so as to keep on the best there is in politics. He is waging a strong battle for the governship. Taylor P. Brockbank, educa-tor and candidate for slate se-nator on the Democratic ticket, has joined our brotherhood of good Neighbors. He appears to be very well qualified. He and Mr. Elggren qualified in the primary even though they had no machine to back them regularly. Mr. Squires is one of the city's best ba rbers and baa been at his own stand steadily for 27 years and is still doing well. PENSIONS. An educator is retired on an allowance of $7,5oo the first year and S3, 500 a year after that for life. And similiarly many of the higher ups are retired on pensions of what the poor call fabilous amounts. And then the powers that be in church and business would deny the aged poor of the mite that is given them. A total of 389 men and wom-en are now being trained in post schools at the Ogden Air Service Command for assign nient to the Hawaiian Air Depot STATE FAIR I he Utah State Fair, which, of course, will be the best ever "ill open Sept. 3 and run unti Sept. 9. There will be a varied Program to please everyone at prices that are very reasonable The great Grandstand Revue w 11 be free daily and nightly to all visitors who p ly the small entrance fee. anu nan nau very nine politi-cal experience. George E. Manwaring sends us some very inspirational read ing mat er and so does his son George O. who is at Billings, Montana He had to set. the Patlif nder right and inform it that Brigham Young was born in Vermont not Utah Evan Olsen of Mt. Pleasant, son in law, was in Salt Lake last week purchasing a $1500 machine for his garage and learning to run it. He is doing well. After giving their orders the O P. A.,should look a'.iout a bit. We stood on a corner for five minutes waiting for a bus an counted 42 passing cars which carried only one person the driver. Thus gas anJ tires are wasted in this way as wel is in the countless cases of ple-asure driving. Official, should get out of their easy chairs oc. casionally and look about. The T.V.A. was bitterly opposed by the private electric companies. When one reads the Swindle of the Life Insur-ance rackets, it's proof positive to me the government should do some more business. Beware of the statesmen that is trying to talk down government in business. You will find they have some monopoly on some resource in their state, they want to exploit the people and they want no government interference. R. M. Brandon GOVERNMENT IN BUSINESS The cry is too much government in business. You will find if you investigate most all the private industry howlers against government in business are the first one's to seek help from the government if their private business is in any way jeopardized. They want the state to withdraw from the government. They say, let the state handle its own afairs. You will find most all of those calamity howlers are sironsoring some resource in their state, they have the control of.it to such an extent they can exploit the people, consequently they do not want any government interfer-ence Ever since the inception of the Constitution the gov-ernment has been going into business. Where would we be today if we had depended on private schools for our education? What about out postal system? The parcel post system was bitterly opposed by the private express com-nani- es Where would all the beneficial projects be today if we had left it to private industry to develop and finish? ....u , ' vm.i. ) Politics. "Let's have a clean campaign" says the Tribune editor Instead it will be the dirtiest ever. It'll be like the Lincoln campaign of '64 in uhieli the great presid- - ent was all but assasinated. They tried to recall hisnomina-- tion. They called him dictator- - bureaucracy builder, destroyer of constitution and democracy, spendthrift, traitor, murderer of soldier boys, half-bake-etc. And he was cartoon-ed like vicious papers are car-tooning the president today. Lincoln's great heart broke and liis world almost sank from un-der him when the papers pict-ured Columbia demanding that he give back the 500 000 bovp he had killed. It is the same today, atid now as then, the at-- tacking papers will be remera- - bered only for their infamy. UTAH is placed in the Dem-ocratic cofumn. Good. But there are powerful forces work-ing to make it otherwise. And believe us, ther are making headway. TO the GOVERNMENT: You better not sell or destroy your !! war supplies or bin dings just yet. fatore them, save them. ii You will need them. Your main trouble has hardly begun. Do ' not, we plead, destroy or sell! THIS IS IN U. S., not in . Russia. There have sprung up all over America, student orga- - nizations called by such names as "Damned Souls," 'Society of the Godless," "Legion of the Damned," "Sons of Satan,' "God's Black Sheep." "Circle of the Damned," etc The New Challenger. IT SHALL NOT IT CANNOT BE AGAIN! First Streaks of Rainbow Promise Coming to View Let the valleys of the world begin to sing ; let the moun-tains start shouting for joy, and let the people lift their eyes to see the first streaks of the rainbow promise that war shall not come again after the present struggle is over. Dimly we behold the first faint gleams of universal and everlasting peace. If only the powers that be would invite the right Man to their conferences. The magazine Destiny asks the question: "Must the present boys five and six face another war worse than the present one?" And then it answers its own question somewhat as follows: "No! They shall not! They are not being raised for cannon fodder." The truth is that this generation is to finish this war and mop up the aftermath. And this generation shall not pass until the prophesies of Jesus and others have come to pass. Noah warned the people to repent and preached 120 years. Then came the deluge. Now another 120 years of warning and preaching have passed and for not listening humanity is reaping the whirlwind. We mourn for those "Who see the world's great anguish and its wrong, and dare n6t speak." The vision of the prophets rises over all the checkered and blood-staine- d years of nearly thirty centuries with the promise that wars shall cease, and that men shall no longer hurt or destroy, that peace shall envelop the earth, that man shall be lifted up to the high stature God intended. - HANSEN PRAISES RED CROSS The American Red Cross is neither wet nor dry, neither Democrat nor Republican, Socialist, Prohibitionist, or It knows no color lines. It is bound by no social strata. It stands ready to help flood sufferers, people whose homes have been ravaged by fire and storms. It binds up the wounds of those that have been ravaged by war or disease, by famine or calamity. Its angels of mercy hover over our wounded boys on foreign battle fields and they cool the fevered brow of loved ones back here at home. It helps white an dblack, Jew and Gentile, Protestant and Catholic, believer and infidel. When holocaust comes or calamity falls and help is needed the Red Cross will go into the home of a drunkard as quickly as into the home of a preacher; it will extend a helping hand to the wayward girl or prodigal boy the same as it will to an honored citi-zen. It must be kept forever free from politics. It must never become the tool or slave of petty, selfish, greedy interests. The Story of Garfield i f If t Before blister copper goes to the refinery It is subjected to several treatments of reduction at Garfield. Here a stream of blister is being taken from the converters. (Editor's Note : This is the seventh of a series of eight arlcles titled "The Story of Garfield.") In this article we go to the re-finery, but it is still the story of Garfield, as the latter plant produces so much of the copper that is re-fined in the United States. Copper refining is an electro-chemical process in which the crude copper is cast into blocks called anodes and submerged in an acid solution of copper sulphate. Anodes are spaced eight or ten inches apart in solution tanks 15 to 20 feet long, and in between each two anodes is a thin sheet of pure copper called a starting sheet. Electrical current enters the tank through the anode and passes through the solution and to the starting sheet or cathode. In doing this it takes the copper from the anode and deposits it on the cathode. Foreign material other than cop-per, is not so transferred and even-tually settles to the bottom of the tank as a slime. The pure cathodes are then removed, melted, and cast into various shapes for final fabrica-tion. Wire bars are made to be eventually drawn into copper wire of various sizes. Long.cylindrical shapes are produced to be used in making copper pipe and tubing. Ingots are made to be used in the brass industry. These various shapes produced at the refinery are the raw material for the fabricating industry. All of them must be subjected to varied and numerous manufacturing pro-cesses before the finished copper material Is ready for the market. (The eighth and last of this series will be published later in these columns.) ALL HEADING TOWARD THE ONE DIVINE EVENT If You Do Not Believe Now You Will Be Awakened Dwight Eisenhower, commander of the Allied armies, is a descendant of a Field Marshal under William the Con-queror, who is said to have led the last of the Ten Tribes into England in 1066. The Field Marshal's name was Iron-hewe- r, which came to be pronounced in English. Eisen-hower. From him descended the present General Eisen-hower who came through a Saxon and Swiss lineage. He led the invasion of France over the same sandv beaches that the Normans had traversed in coming to England near-ly 900 years ago. When his mother heard of his appoint-ment she showed some spiritual vision in remarking: "I feel sad when I realize that the" responsibility was delegated to my son Dwight on the eve of the coming of Christ." Gen. Eisenhower, as well as the other leaders, were raised up for the work they are doing. Through them but after them The Almighty intends to establish his moral and economic order to replace the Pagan order under which we live. The divine destiny that has attended Israel from the days of Abraham is attending Israel today and everything is working out according to program. Roosevelt, extracted through a - long Dutch Israel lineage, Churchill, coming through the lineage of Israel, and Eisenhower coming through that long line of Israel English blood, are in very deed the raised up sons and leaders of Destinv to prepare for that great coming of which the mother of Eisenhower speaks. Plenty of proof for this, and plenty of prophesies that lead to this end. ONE WHO KNOWS TALKS ABOUT FUTURE WAR Shout This From the Housetops If we do not make the peace this time, here is what will come to pass. "The destructive power of electronics, the lethal re-sources of modern chemistry, have scarcely been tapped. Within a decade or less they will be ready to visit horror on man in new and almost unimagined forms. The splitting of the atom, already achieved in the laboratory, will release colossal energy to further enhance wholesale annihilation. War will become a gigantic clash of mighty technological monsters, striking from the heart of one nation directly at the heart of another, perhaps half way around the world, with a fnrv and destructiveness that will make all Dast con-- flicts including World War II seem trivial by contrast. The aim will be total annihilation. Therefore I say that we simply cannot aford to be lazy or cynical about peace plans if we want to survive if we want our children to survive." ,Et. Personal j; First, Lt John H. Tennant of Sandy, Utah has been award-ed the Oak Leaf Cluster to the Air Medal for ii eritorious ser-- vice in aerial rombat He is a sou of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Tennant of Sandy. Clyde Larsen and sister Vir- - ginia hve recently concluded a trip to Boise, Idaho, to visit : their brother Lee who is in the service there. UTAH DAILIES VERY UNFAIR TO READERS All three of the Utah daily papers have, in a way, gone back on the one-ha- lf of the people who support them. At least half of Utah citizens are Democrats who now have no standing with the three publications. The News has been Republican for years. The Tribune has just lately come out against the president and of course the Telegram follows suit. This is very unfair to at least one-ha- lf of their read-ers. And yet it may prove to be a good thing. The more of the reactionary press that is against the president the more likely he is to win and the more secure will be his fame. Such was the case with Washington, Lincoln and others. ml' Can Find For Not mJm UppingYour ;i TOvgf-- y Bond Buying Will :J fffiwmm Please Hitler ii The New .ii !! TOWNSEND PLAN BILL In Congress PROVIDES ii Pensions and Benefits as Follows j! A All unemployed citizen, over 60 years of age, men and women, j i not convicted of crime All Americans. , A fmm makin8 '! '! B Allci,;Zen,betweenl8,nd60whore disable crippled, deaf, blind or permanently j! alivingbyillne,, being gets benefits after 6 months disability- under 8, civillians ? I C All mothers who are sole support of children good home. S and service men. This will give all children a 8 p.m.Rm Meetings City & Co. Bldg.TsdayEven.ng. This Plan We Vote for Those Who Support (Paid Political Ad i per cent of your income War Bonds will help to tTen the planes and tanks will insure defeat of and his Axis partners. MILE OifTY BOUSES !! ; i Alfred Sorenson Progressive Jeweler 75 East Second South Jewelry, Watch. Kodak Repairing Over 40 Years In SALT LAKiS CITY, |