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Show , .... t v V PRINTING PUBLISHING VOL. b', NO. 20. David Keith Bldg., Dial SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, June 12, 1942 Published by C. N. Lund $1.50 PER YEAR. EeoimTOic EqmafliityNedwofeWflroa. ' In as much as we are for more and greater economic eq-uality we cannot help taking note of some of the awful and unequal conditions among some, or all of the peoples of the earth. Down in Mexico there is a population of some 15,000,000 people, the vast majority of whom live in wretched poverty and misety from the cradle to the grave, while the natural re-sources of the country are such that it could support in com-fort more than 50,000,000. It has mineral wealth virtually untouched. It has one-four- th of the wordl's oil and inexhaus-tabl-e coal deposits. Also rubber. Its agricultural and live stock possibilities are not developed to th of their possibilities. And yet the average per capita wealth is about as little as it is among the savages of Borneo. Its primitive system of education Leaves about nine-tent- of its sons and daughters illiterate. What a burning shame that a country so wealthy is held in the clutches of a few capitalists while the masses starve through life in filth poverty and misery. These despoiling to own and control the nat ura capitalists bel eve that they are recources and grow rich on them, and that their fellows are to be kept in poverty and ignorance. We promise that the day will come when this condition will be looked upon as b-elonging a barbarian age. God meant the natural wealth for all edually for all, and those who make it otherwise are traitors to Him in every sense of the word. Because Fish Smells Fishy Thomas Dewey, who is running for the New York gover-norship, and perhaps for president later on, has given out that; the ticket He believes he does not want Hamilton Fish on that Fish smellsfishy and should be counted a dead he,rnng. Do You Claim Relationship? Darwin's first book, The Origin of Species, proved conclusi-vely animals a process of evolution from that there was among type to type. But when he came out with his later book, his whole theory in these vords The Descent of Man he put which have caused.all the talk and argument: "An extint ani-mal called the Simida, branched off into two great stems, the New World monkey i arid the Old World ' rWceys, and from the wonder and the latter, at a remote period Man, glory of the universe, proceeded.' Nothing could be plainer than Darwin does leave God out of the this, and thus we see th t picture in the matter of creation, and holds conclusively that .man is the offspring of remote Old World monkeys. Look for Beauty and Goodness of the beauty, the good-ness, We should learn to see and speak the heroism in humanity. It should not be necessary for th' p ople to be separated from the common ideals of our common life in order for us to If one sets out to find appreciate them for what they are. touiai.s (CONTINUED) "We Shall Win or We Shall Die." Said General McArthur in one of his fine bursts of elo-quence as he stood out there on the far flung battle line fight, ins for the very life or human liberty: "We shall win or we shall die. Only those who are willing to die(for freedom)are fit to live." These are noblo words. To lose in the present cause would be far worse than death all men in slavery ,all children starved and all women subject to barbarian lust. Come Out and Hear Them The Faith Council wiil meet at the Art Center Sunday an 3 P. M. Mr. Gorodetsky will speak on Evolutki of the Woj-'.d- . Pannel discussion to follow. Ruth Harward, artist, will lecture on Unity of the World at 244 East 4 So Saturday at 3:30 P. M. Illustrations in poetry and pictures. the good in human nauiro ne wm ....v need, only the tolerance which made Joaquin Miller sing: "In men whom men condemn as ill I find so much of goodness still; In men whom men have called divine I find so much of sin and b'ot, I do not care to draw a line Between the two, where God has not." No, Mr. Arneld, Not. As You say Assistant Attorney General Arnold says: "There will be such a revival after the war of economic plenty under the cap-italistic system such as the world has never seen." Not so, Mr.Arnnld, not and never under the capitalistic system. There will be plenty and abundance, in time, but not through capitalism because its doom is sealed. St. John's vision tells the story of its end, and this war is its death knell and funer-al dirge. It has been weighed in the balance and found so very inadequate for the Age of Man and the Day of God. As We Think So We Are "As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he." If we realize the truth of this then how necessary it is for us all to hold the right kind of thought-harm- ony thoughts, health thoughts, kindness thouehts. love thoughts. We should forgive people who have wronged us and wronged themselves. Of all things social or racial hatred or we should never indulge in political, contempt. We should not let our mindsdwell on our mistakes. This is poison to the mind and the body. Personal and pro-fessional jealousy is an odious thing and should not be indulged in. If we desire health, peace, happiness and contentment we should think health, peace, happiness-an- d contment. In ( nr snirlk unfold and develop them, we must U1UC1 1V ' Vyv - , give attention to the sdiritual and think spiritual thoughts. COOPERATION. research calling for an A five year program of cooperative expenditure of $10,000 a year was voted unanimously by dis ectors of Consumers Cooperative Association at a meeting in Scottsbluff, Nebraska, May 26-2- Directors voted at the ame meeting to build a plant for making alcohol from farm products, the alcohol to be used in the manufacture of synthe-tic rubber and for other war purposes. Of Our Making By Christie Lund Coles "Utah's Sarah Teasdale. R. Merrill. . Say that we lost in the battle we fought, Say that we failed but we did not rot In a world full of filth of our own making Classes and creeds and money-takin- g, Sin and sorrow and war's dark killing, Kidnappings, poverty. We were not willing To die until we had written aline Out of our heart's blood yours and mine, Decrying the wrongs, urging the day Of the common good and the. better way. We know what man's injustice has cost, We have not accepted it We are not lost To the suffering of our hungry brothers, We must awaken pity in these others. We must tell them the world is of our making! It is time the God in us was awaking And building a world less cruelly heart-breakin- g, A better world that must be OF OUR MAKING! The Flag's Birthday Sunday, June 14, is the birth anniversary of the American Flag- - When it first streamed out on the breeze it was one of 1 the most beautiful sights ever looked upon by the eyes of men snd represented one of the sublimest sentiments that human I hearts can contain. It waves for a world today that all men b may be free; that every soul may have sufficient food and I clothing and shelter. Let us stand in salute and say with T. F. MacManus, i 0 flag-- of my heart, I love you! O beautiful field of blue, ! 0 shining stars and glorious bars, I pledge my soul to you! I wrap my love in your fluttering folds, and fling it to the wind To the South and North I send it forth, to the East and West in kind; ! To the lands that live in darkness, to the people sick with fear, J prom thy heart unfurled, to all the world, I make my message clear i Nq better I than my brother; no better this land than thine; But under the stars and rippling bars, a gleam of hope divine. a' As China Entered Lend -- Lease Fold Ai , :- -- - - i r it- - 4 , r 4 t - s ' , - , - , Li, ( iBrnrWnr mm ft""-- " " Dr T V. Soong. foreign minister of China, is shown (left) with V. & ' Secretary of State Cordell Hull t Washington as they signed the agree-- ment that brings China into the master lend-leas- e setup. The agreemen exists between the United States and Greal is the same as that which Britain. IpP.' Personall Items. 1 & Neighbors. There's a man up in Ogden, a real man, Neighbor Karl J Edgling, who came on board our ship in the year one and one half, and has perhaps said as many good things about the paper as any other man, and he has received as much inspira-tion from it as any one. And we have had many a thrill frqm listening to his talks here in the office He is an A- -l carpenter and is always busy helping to build up Zion. He will be ready with his saw and ham mer to go and help buHd up the New Jerusalem. Good luck Pres. sevelt ma e a very good choice in the selection of W. J. Korth forCollector of In ternal revenue The commission made a perfect appointment in Alvin Keddington for county clerk. You co iidn't beat that unless you James H.Anderson and D. C. Dunbar Friends and Neighbors Mr and Mrs. Hyrum Hand called in Monday and bore a faithful testimony. They have latel returned from California when they spent the winter They took part iu three blackout and saw much of the. war ex I citenient. Our economic gos pel is their economic gospel and they are very firm in t'ne" faith. The automobile accident they were in two or three years ago has left them both crippled for life. Mi Hand was in the po t-- service for nearly twenty years and since tiis his Uncle Sam has been a 1'giit good daddy. Paul H. Allred was reelected president of the Utah Slate Old Age Pension ami Assistance Organization. Others nan.ed were Hyrum Felt, vice chair-man; James M. Parker, rec rd-- i ig secretary ; E Davis, finan-cial secretary; William R. Rook branch organizer; R. H. Siddo-wa- Henry W. Sanderson, A. W. Larsen, Mrs. Hyrum Felt, Arthur S. Keep, W. S. King, Hilma Sorenson, Mrs. W. and William T. Benn-ett, executive board members. The ad about wanting a wife got results alright but they were such that he will flee the world of women forever and for aye. "Delive me," he says A millionaire and his wife were at dinner, eating and lis-- I tening to the radio. Suddenly it was announced that the pres-ident advised that the rich should have salaries and ineom es cut to $25,000 a year. The woman threw up her hands and choked on a S5.00 piece of ' pheasant, and the man fell back ward and bumped his head on a $10,000 antique. When the (Continued on page fovr) Gas Mask Drill on Pacific Coast ; ki - :ri v,'v-'"vr- j T Above is a general view of a ga mask drill (ignore Hin tad, Calif., after civilian defense officials began P 20.000 gas masks to 10 Alameda county mm"""j,fe orkers spOi- - .r three other counties. Masks will go to l Be4 by the Office of Civilian Defense. The coast is gett.ng Japs in more ways than one. . . . ' DEFENSE rj j Linn R. Rock wood,freshman at the B. Y. TJ son of Mrs. El- - izabelh Rockwood, 2S0 E. 17 So., has enlisted in the Marine corps. Also Robert T. Forbes, son of Mrs. George Forbes of 58 So., 6 East. Both are out foa a commission. Plane production has reached nearly 5000 a month. Next year 10,000. 56 ships were delivered into service during May. The Red Cross has helped 750,000 war victims in the mid-ea- st and distributed $2,000 000 worth of relief material there. Commander Nimitz sure gave the Japs hell at Wake Island-th- ree .carriers, one destroyer sunk, 3 battleships, 6 cruissrs, 3 transports damaged. Gen. McArthur says 7, poss-ibly 8 enemy subs were sunk in six days. "Life is Just a Bowl of CHERRIES" Remember the song that was popular several years ago? Well, life wasn't always so happy for Utah cherry growers. Finally a group of about 14 Orem growers formed the Edgemont Cherry Associa-tion, and asked the chain stores to cooperate in mar-keting their crop. . The chain store policy of buying direct from the grow-er and selljng direct to the consumer, helped the grow-ers to net 8c or more per pound on the entire crop of 11 carloads. ' Cherry growers know that a net of 8c per pound is really something! This has encouraged more growers to raise quality cherries. Eventually they, too, can sing "Life is Just a Bowl of Cherries." UTAH CHAIN STORES afcm KMnrTHlfinTi tfaMil?fiT H lillW s Hitler and II Duce Talk It Over f wi - : - :(A 7" r $ y , is-- ' '-- 4 m. 2 . - the ' the II. S. s hows This historic picture just received in ns to Mussolini If I Salzburg, Austria. General Jodel, second el not ' presented. nd Hitler a difficult point on the map. Japan was Kimball-William- s Gospel Meeting In honor of Heber C. Kimball and Thomas S.Williams, a gos-pel meeting will be held at the home of Quincy K.Kimball,237 No. 1st West, Sunday June 14, at 4 P. M. People of any relig-ion or nationality welcome. Quince K. Kimball Oldest living grandson of the above named men. Adv |