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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH DAVIES ON RED MORALS THE SAUNA SUN Published Every Friday At Salina, Utah matter Entered at the postoffice at Salina as second-clas- s under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879, We would like to give Mr. Joseph E. Davies the benefit of the doubt, and assume that, on reflection the morning after, he regretted his glorification of a Russian spy system here. But he seems to be letting his reported statement stand, that: has in Russia, every moral right to seek atomic bomb secrets through military espionage if excluded from such information by her former fighting Allies. Such exclusion is by inference hostile. Mr. Davies will not be shot for such a crack, as he would be if he were a Russian inviting American action against his country. Fortunately, all that will happen is that his in the future will not be apt to trust him where Russia in concerned. $ For a man who once dabbled in diplomacy, Mr. Davies is somewhat rusty. If he had been reading the newspapers, he would have known that the Moscow government which he has accepted never challenges the United Nations atom bomb control plan. Under that plan, the Security Council, of which Russia is a part, is to have the bomb information as soon as the United Nations is strong enough to control it, and as soon as the international organization can provide effective inspection of armaments in all countries. But even a person as ignorant as Mr. Davies knows that it is Russia which refuses to permit foreign inspection. Mr. Davies knows that the United States has given Russia scores of military secrets, and received from Russia in kind virtually nothing. Mr. Davies knows that, while Russians roam our country at will, our correspondents, and even our diplomats, in Russia cannot move about freely. And yet, he has the gall to talk to Americans about excluding Russians from information. But the most shameful part of his statement is that Russia is acting in against Americas allegedly hostile policy. We cannot believe that Mr. Davies, deep as he is in his propaganda wallow, understands the seriousness of that charge. Any inference that Russia must prepare to defend herself against American aggression is a monstrous untruth. It is poisonously vicious at the very moment Russia is breaking her pledges to the United States, and in eastern Europe, the Near East and the self-defens- e, fellow-America- Coal was among the first major industries of Great Britain to be converted to government ownership under the new socialist British government. People in this country should observe the result closely. British coal miners live in tragic poverty. The mines are Few obsolete and dangerous. mechanical aids exist to lighten the drudgery. Pay is low. For technical reasons, improvement in conditions will be difficult. The miners apparently turned blindly to socialism for help. Now they are beginning to find that such help as they receive will probably be of very dubious benefit, especially to their labor unions. An observer in Times London office, declares that, Government power and nationalization bring a great threat to . . trade union membership, Alroady-thanionrank and file are uneasily alive to the will progressively bring to them and their unions. It is as simple as this; the government is their new boss, the unions are partners in the government, so Morewhat good is a union? over, the miners have been told that if necessary, troops will be called out to break a strike because a strike in a socialized industry is in fact sabotage of the d an act against government, The Minister of the people. Fuel and Power, Emanuel says: "Nationalization is not intended primarily to benefit the miner. There is the coal consumer to be considered, the interests of the nation, our export trade and all that. , The ruthless side of socialism is beginning to strike the British people full in the face. Shin-wel- l, - j.ijiHA 9 m a n SALINA COAL MINING CO. i ' i Producers ; R Of Sevier Valley Coal self-defen- se I Announce that their production iI is now up, so there is NO WAITING to get loaded. miles east of Salina, I Location:-1- 7 9 on main canyon road. I MARCH Far East, sowing the seeds of more war. Mr. Davies is right in fearing the drift in relations. He is wrong in encouraging Russia in her lawlessness. That is the road to deIf he is as good a struction. friend of Russia as he professes to be, he will warn her to go slow. Washington, D. C., News. Russian-America- n OUR insist- board that a should ascertain a corporations ability to pay, before coming to a conclusion as to whether or not wages could and should be increased. The biggest business in the world is the United States Government. Many patriotic observers may fairly raise the question: Should not the governments ability to pay be taken into consideration, before constantly committing itself to policies of increased expenditures? If the General Motors Corporation had operated in the red for the past 13 years; if the corporations necessary expenses had vastly exceeded its income; if it had piled deficit upon deficit, until it had rolled up the greatest debt in its history as the administration in Washunder such ington has done circumstances, not even the most unreasonable of union agitators would insist that huge wage increases were in order. g No board is required to reveal the condition of Uncle Sams finances, but the national debt, including obligations issued on the credit of the United States, is officially $636,898,145,000. Estimates vary but the best authority, National Industrial Conference Board, using U. S, A. Treasury facts, gives the total assets of the American nation at about half the total debt, or $209,430,000,-00In 1932, when the national debt was only its present size, Franklin D. Roosevelt maintained that Uncle Sam was on the road to national bankruptcy." The president has openly admitted that Uncle Sam will continue to operate in the red during the two years which lie ahead. Since the government is already committed to expenditures far beyond its income, its ability to pay additional outlays simply does not exist. Yet, the Administration has recommended a long list of increased costs to be imposed upon ed fact-findin- First State Bank Of Salina "The Livestock Bank of Utah Washington Snapshots By JAMES PRESTON 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 4 4 44 44 ABILITY TO PAY President Truman has the already impoverished treasFrom an article by Dr. ury. Dan W. Gilbert in the National Republic. g fact-findin- 0. one-tent- h 15, 1946 Capital $ 25,000.00 Surplus 250,000.00 A couple of monkey wrenches If have been tossed recently into the Administrations carefully-geare- d plans for the continuof ation without change the Price Control Act. The administration had handpicked a list of witnesses before the House Banking and Currency Committee, and they were expected to defend the OPA and urge the status quo. But something went wrong. Ralph Flanders, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, and member of the advisory committee to the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion, did not defend the price control agency. To the obvious astonishment of Committee Chairman Spence and New Deal members, Mr. Flanders attacked the agency, and proposed sweeping changes in the existing act. rYWi Member: Federal Reserve System Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Utah Eggs - Best In U. S. If it were not for ceiling prices, New York and West Coast buyers would pay from six to eight cents a dozen more for Utah eggs than eggs from any other part of the nation, Utah poultrymen have been told. Future marketing prospects for Utah eggs are very bright, egg producers have been notified and eastern and western markets have been totally unable to get enough Utah eggs because of armed forces priorities. Upset By Bankhead On the Senate side of the Capitol, another unexpected development perturbed the Administration. An investigation by of the Senate a into cotCommittee Agriculture ton textile experts, turned into a series of resounding attacks County, Utah, on or before the First day of May, 1946. JOHN NIELSEN, Administrator. CARVEL MATTSSON, Attorney for Administrator. 1st publication March 1, 1946. Last publication March 22, 1946. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of HANS C. NIELSEN, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers attached to the at undersigned Administrator his in home Sevier LEGAL PUBLICATIONS Salina, on OPA. County, Utah, on or before the One witness, Charles Cannon, PROBATE & GUARDIANSHIP First day of July, 1946. NOTICES chairman of the board of the JOHN NIELSEN, American Cotton Manufacturers For further information, consult Administrator. Assn., termed the OPA textile the County Clerk or Respective program a miserable failure, Signers. CARVEL MATTSSON, and recommended wide revision Attorney for Administrator. of existing price regulations. NOTICE TO CREDITORS 1st publication March 1, 1946. The development, which upset Estate of MARY NIELSEN, Last publication March 22, 1946. the Administration, was the attitude of Senator John Bankhead, deceased. Alabama Democrat, who headCreditors will present claims Things are not in very good ed the He criti- with vouchers attached to the shape, but they really would be cised OPA almost as sharply as undersigned Administrator at bad if mother were to go on Mr. Cannon did. his residence in Salina, Sevier strike. Advertising Pays ATTENTION FARMERS!! We Have Just Received Carloads of Seed Grains Cleaned and Treated, Ready For Planting. 2 We Also Received Some Alfalfa Seed. We Have A Carload Of 18 Super-Phosphat- Booked e, For Early March Shipment. Mom ' i Place Your Order Now At lb id.d bT For .wnnpU HERMANSEN ROLLER MILLS 9 Our new high octane gasoline .wont grow.wjngs on your jet teriaU thaMjj GUNNISON, $ UTAH - METAL MINING INDUSTRY OF UTA car butyoull m years; get the"-- finesT flashing quick starts,". . 1 performance pick-up- THE OLD JUDGE SAYS... , w fuil,smooth power -- thrifty Today at the Pep" 8 8. sign, tell them mileage to thrill er up (ct PEP highest quality products STATIONS AND DEALERS OO-VIC- O (PEI Pep 88 Ethyl Pep 88 ReguUr Gasoline Gasoline ! - :(IUV' ii ATLAS M, fe'v at UTAH Vico, Quaker State Motor Oils ' ' m.ouu ....... .... -- - - Atlas Products OWCO) OIL REFINING COMPANY M TED: "Clem and I were wonderin' what you thought of that new movie about the chronic alcoholic, Judge. Understand you saw it before we did. OLD JUDGE: Well ... its true most of us never see a case as extreme as that in real life because they are so few and far between. But it does point out one thing... chronic alcoholics are abnormal people and weve got to change our ideas about how to help them. CLEM: In what way, Judge? OLD JUDGE. Weve got to realize that excessive drinkers are suffering from more than a craving for alcohol. According to psychiatrists and madical men at one of our great universities, the alcoholic is a sick person. The study of hundreds of cases shows he is suffering from some physical, social or emotional condition ... just as in the case of that poor chap in the picture. Fortunately, they represent only a very small percentage of those who drink. TED. "Is anything being done to re&lly help these folks, Judge? Yes OLD JUDGE: a great deal in clinics throughout the country. And with the cooperation of the beverage distillers who sincerely want their product used only in moderation. ... This Gdftnisemtni sponsored by Conference of Akokolk B ever age Industries, Int |