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Show I'AKOWAN i'AHOWAN PUD. Sbxll i r i J- I q.( h lot ff t f f or I. I) i U () 1 I A I. The la Bust I LIFE AUTOMOBILE I i . j jn : W. ,i BONDS CLAHi ROWLEY I .i- 1 i . NUE-OV- . - now-paper- s no progress. Dm. ng this National Newspaper Wi i k wo urge you to take time out h sro or uh.it your newspaper to on ari' to you and your community. If ou don't think that it is a very lo o pact of our life, try this simple ivpoiirnont: When your paper I'omo-- , juM sot it aside and see how long you can refrain from reading HERES YOUR f i'.lVi , O r- - 'In the caily Coloinal days, John Peter Zinger, the second editor in the coh nies, was forced to fight for Ins right to comment in his Weekly Journal upon the acts of the governor With Alexander Hamilton as his attorney, tho case was won, and the fieedom of the press established. English editors for more than a hundred years had attempted to gain that ground, but without success. Thus we see a new freedom establish! many years before the Constitution of the United States was At the End oi 3 Years written. This had its bearing in the wording of the First Amendment, This bonus is in addition to a good which provided for freedom of siilary during the entire three years. and Yes, that is what a three speeeh. tlie press, religion year enlistassembly. ment in the new regular Army of No time in history have the edthe United States gives you at the itors of the 11,000 weekly, scmi-wof your enlistment period. klv and small daily newspapers expiration been faced with so groat a responsIF YOU ACT NOW! ibility. Soeial upheavals, the result of the war, have brought to the sur- - Only those qualified men who enlist face many isms, few of which re- - before October 5th will get full adfleet the American wav of life. vantage under the provisions of the To combat these will require the educational benefits of the G.I. Bill united efforts of editors in tho small- of Rights which guarantees one er communities of these United months training in the college, trade or business school of your choice for States. Here we find the true foundations of our democracy, where each month of enlistment. Three straight thinking and the application years of Army life, then 48 months of horse sense arc in every day use. more than a full five year college of Government-paieduFalse doctrines and panaceas do not course square with sound government nor, cation and subsistence for you! the preservations of free entei prise. Dont Miss This Golden OpportunThe fcisk of continuing the fight ity! Act now before it is too late! for the .American way of life falls This is your chance of a lifetime. upon the country editor, Call at your local U. S. Army Reand with his communitv behind him cruiting Station at once before he can. and will, load this nation to October 5th! new and even ter heights. Our fore- - 93 North Main Cedar City, Utah fathers left the plow stand in the field to fight for the freedom we SUMMONS er.iov No such price is asked of us IN THE FIFTH JUDICAL DIST- only that we stand four square in COURT OF IRON COUNTY, RICT those of defense rights." EARN A BONUS vs J. ERIC DAHL.Defendant. CLINE, WIl.FGN AND CLINE, Attorneys for Plaintiff, P. O. Address Miifoid, Utah. (Sept. 13, 20, 27, Oct. 4, 11,1946) ose of the Publicity Department to see to it that roads are built into our scenic areas in Utah, into historical spots and scenic attractions so that they can adveitise to the world that here is the finest recreation area in Meeting. the nation and invite tourists to Notice is hereby further given .come here by automobile, that the proposition of ammending Right now, 2,000,000 tourists will the Articles of incorporation to have entered Utah this year. But comply with Title 2 of the Utah where do they go? They just make Code Annotated relating to Agr- - a e coming from the east to icultural Associations wall be con- - j Salt Lake City and the Temple it being specifically They spend t half day there, posed to ammend Articles I to III just long enough to hear the Organ inclusive: to ammend Article iV and they get into their cars and as ammendod on the 8th day of make a e to California. A September, 1942; to ammend Art- few go to Bryce and Zion Canyons. icles V to XII inclusive: to ammend One day is the aveage length of Article XIII as ammended on the 5th time they spend in Utah, never moday of October, 1936; to ammend re than two days. What would it Article XIV and Article XV and mean to the people of this State if to consider the adoption of such we could keep them one day more? other articles as may be proposed. The average automobile load is Such other business will be consid- about three persons. They spend on ered as may properly come before an average of $25.00 per day per car. the meeting. If we had roads through our scenic WARREN PENDLETON areas and provided places where Secretary they can go and stay a day, they could visit and enjoy the wonderful places we have. If we could get one NOTICE OF SALE million automobiles to remain in NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN our State one extra day, they would that the undersigned, as Adminis- leave $25,000,000.00 with our cities. tratrix of the Estate of Nathan C. Where do they spend their money? Benson, Deceased, proposes to sell It goes to hotel people, the restaur- to the highest bidder the various ants, service stations, merchants, etc. paicels of property belonging to pue aapiM si Xauoui tcqj pa;nquisip said Estate, consisting generally of further than most any money that the following property: Approxi is spent. We have been working on mately 1360 acres of mountain statistics and instead of a million grazing land, approximately 800 ac- automobiles, we should have no res of other grazing land, a Taylor less than five million if we get our Grazing Privilege for 800 head of proper share of the traveling, public sheep on the Mud Springs and Sum- - and they should never go in and out mit I nit of irgin Grazing District without spending an average of one No. 4 (10 year permit) and one 1939 week in Utah International Truck; f ton What The Publicity Department capacity. Has Done All persons interested in purchasHere is what the Publicity Depaing said property, or any part there- rtment has done in the last year and of, are requested to submit written, a half: They allocated $200,00U.ou sealed bids to Mrs. Gertrude W. for the Pioneer Trail road construe- Benson at Parowan, Utah, or to tion from Henfer. There is a pionee r Morris and Matheson, Attorneys for trail association that is willing to said Estate, at Bank of Southern spend tens of thousands of dollar.-Utah Building, Cedar City, Utah, on advertising if we will build the on or before the 10th day of Oct- road. Enough money will be spent ober, A. D, 1946. Bidders are re- by the national organization to pay quired to accompany their bids with for it within two or three years thra remittance of at least lOCc of the ough national advertising without amount bid and bids must provide our paying a dime on advertising that the remaining balance is to be if we will just build that road. paid in cash upon the confirmation In Weber County of the sale by the Court. Forms Up in Weber County there A a for use m making bids and further .basin east of Ogden called the Sn- information may be obtained by ow Basin.Why it is just the must nacalling on said Administratrix or tural basin in the world for reci,,;-said Attorneys for said Estate, ional activities. It can be cunve". GERTRUDE W. BENSON into a world recognized centey Administratrix, Nathan C. Benson no one ever use-- it for any rEm ate. until the Publicity Department i a road up there. Now it has l,m MORRIS & MATHESON, a tremendous recreational Aforneys fir Estate Bank of Southern Utah Bldg. year, some of the nut: n,.l events will take place the:e It Cedar City, Utah , uld not have been developed if , d, e. Motnl.iv evening Sept. 3'th, the of the P.iiuWan IJ. U. P l.i Id a meeting at the home of M.- - Luiiia R. Adams, President Eva W Hi i. nett, in chaige. Mrs Alter the opening exeicisi-- Fbuiulh Camp i - j I d J s Lin l!.i A !e vn mi Dalton gave an excellent) 'The Mm mens in .Arizona Cohn ado. was e? penally interesting as' m.,nv of the ladies present remem- In id well, the goodly number of j ill It their friends and acqu.iint.mces who we:e called from Parowan to help Colonize in these states. , Mis Dorothy C. Ward, gave several incidents m the useful life of her realtive Collins Hakes who was an important figure in the carlv history of Mes., City. Joseph W. Smith's Lfes hi ,tm y w as given by Mrs. Dalton. Among Ins numerous activities he w as mentioned st school as the-fteacher in Snowflakes, Aiizona. Many years later Mrs. Dalton taught at Moccasin, Arizona. She also mentioned one of our aged citizens, who still lives in Parowan. J. Logan Lowiler who with Ezra Thornton also of this place, spent two years helping to build up the town of St. Johns. In reviewing the families who left here and went to Colorado, she spoke of the late Wm. T. Morris who brought his family back to Parowan. He later moved to St, George, where he died recently, and is buried there. Above is a ii'iOsU-.m- n cf official L't.di (Yr.ici.rual with the front lllP and the at the bottom of th. iiiustrat- n EMBLEM bi-- t FOR CENTENNIAL Utah will have an official e.r.Ff-fthe Utah Centennial in David R. 1 or revithick, public director, announced this week Ta emblem will be um1 on coins, medals, trophies, or fur &i other purposes fur which it IS ii able. The emblem was cieatcd by Aisii noted artist and sculp:.?, Fairbanks, not had done Publicity Dcpaitment and a native f Utah. He is ,t. knmvn throughout the art cer.la Out In Uintah be woldd- and has recently bees Out in the Uintah Basin, the barher Asphalt Company built a big plant twenty miles from Vernal for The emblem v.as processing asphalt, employing a Arbir, Mieh'gan Centennial ris the f,r hundred men, and they were shipp- Mr. Fairbanks was while ing it into Colorado. The people in state ths in his native vacationing Colorado were getting the benefit of our industrial ore because there summer. There is great strength and depth was no road from the plant into Utof feeling in the simple, ah. We went out there and had a The front, pictured at t:p design. road built up to Highway 40 with in a prayerful pose, a deicts above, the Publicity Department funds. 94 f 1, viewing theur.en',.:.j This company has now established P'nnoer its general offices in Salt Lake City trck of the Peers. In the panel Wi!i said. We will a minimum of a ,IW is the Pionwr molher m the who chlkJren million chillers of buving here jn rand adventure. The feeling which the state of Utah, nojv that we have inspired and pioneers and their our headquarters here. the told in We never could have obtained this pendants today is srnpj 0ur hintaRe: Gainri road if the Publicity Department inscriP,ion: Brawn and Toll: Guldd by TtA had not utilized their funds. and Vision and Courage. has Copyiight for the emblem been applied for by the Centennial will Fire sog-.er- j - coin-lk- e 1 Paitu-ipate- ' de- b-- v is a treacherous Comission. permission use. Special be required for its and costly tool! Japanese BeFe The cx..ct d;..e Jujuiiese beet.ei armed in the V. S. is not knuwu The Japanese beetle was not recountil gnized as an introduced species Burhng-te1916 when it wah found in ex county, N. J.. by inspectors of agrthe New Jersey dcpaitment iculture during the course I Fires set for the purpose of clearing land if carelessly handled can cost one a considerable amount of money, according to J. Whitney Floyd, Chief Forester-Firewarde- n for Utah . One man in Wasatch annual summer inspection bee County intended to burn only a pile In Pennsylvania the of brush. He set it afire and watched was first found in l!'2i) in the vie considers it burn down to gray ashes. Thinking ity of Philadelphia. It is it safe, he left it. The wind came up. probable that it was introduced It took 150 men two days and one cidontally in the grub stage in or ornametn night to bring the fire under control. surrounding bulbs from JaPa The suppression costs paid by the plants shipped here land owner who set the fire came to Food Saving food $1400. Besides this amount he has A new method of preserving experl- several miles of fence to rebuild for is suggested by German his neighbors. ments involving the applicaj10 WO hrpad Another fire, started accidentally plastic coatings to "cheese. as a result of lighting a cigarette, cost the smoker $175 in suppression These three incidents, states a costs and he woiked hard from the which occurred within , minute the fire started until it was radius of twenty five miles, aw shou- brought under control by himself within a three-week- s period desires and a group of volunteers. remind everyone who A fire in Summit county burn that fire is a treacherous a. jumped the plowed fire line previou-l- y and results can cost more than built around the area intended to possible value from burldn'nl.1 is be bui ned. Suppression costs paid by careful with fire! A fire the land owner who set fire came to safe until it is dead out! n $400. h -- , e. Town of funds. MAY NEVER GET ROADS TO SCENIC AREAS The legislature will bo worked on very hard to take the money away from the Publicity Department. If so will never get roads into these isolated scenic areas. Now that is the situation, yet you read where some of the organized groups do not want money spent on highways to scenic areas. It is the purp- CORRECTION one-hak- y to-wi- t- d. j THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to ap - HiitG bee-lin- DAHLPlaintiff -- lax toll' it ion - 1 pro-ar- STATE OF UTAH i I.he Squ-sidere- j : 'Il-- I ales bee-lm- d pear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought: otherwise MALE HELP WANTED Oppor-laniwitnm thirty days after service, and of lifetime supplying DDT and defend the above entitled action; o'.h"r piofitable products to farmers and in case of your failure so to do. m County. No experience or judgment will be rendered against ...1'it.d eqaired. Must have auto and you according to the demand of the fcionce.'. Permanent Write complaint, which has been filed good v.ee McN ESS COMPANY. Dept, with the Clerk of said Court. This action is brought to recover I). 2423 M ;nolia St, Oakland 7, ' . if. !a judgment dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore existing between 'OR SAFE Saddle hoive and plaintiff and defendant; for Foinf nation see custody of Kay Eric Dahl, Jan i p w agon Gertii.de VJ Benson Franklin Dahl and Alan Knell Dahl to be- awarded plumtiff; and to have et apart to plain'iff as her separWater Window Box ate property that land in Washing- ton County, Utah, moie particulailv described as follows, North 34 of Lot 5, Block 33, Washington muucd j et STOCKMEN t i seed Planning your range this fa!! The Arplane does a much fast- i and more efficient job. If interested in this type of seen planting contact Dick Batt, Parowan. Observing National Newspaper to 8, by visiting Week, October the newspapn boys of the Hollywood Citizen News is Dennis Day, on bike, former newsboy himself, who will star in his min NBC program, A Day In The Life Of Dennis Day every Thursday night, starting tonight, October 3. From 1935 to 1937, Day delivered papers afternoons after school to customers of the Bronx, N. Y. H ome News. He thinks it's particularly fitting that his new show should begin right in the middle of Newspaper Week. Parowan, Utah on Thursday the 14th day of November, 1946 at the hour of 8 Oclock P. M. The regular annual election of Officers of the Corporation will be held at said meeting and other bus iness transacted as usually and regularly done at said Annual $5000.00 ATTENTION : ncru that Lhe Publicity D p should not eceive money to build access roads into scenic a: cos. 'To hear the piopaganda on inversion of road funds, one bicmi.i Theic is no dive:-- . n of road funds for any puiposc, the only diversion IS the Uw of license platei money for the Opeiatlon of the Publicity Department, which in turn spends it on scenic roads like tins fight now, this license plate money is being spent to build a road over the oiiginal Mormon Pioneer Trail into Utah, a road that wil be part of the great Centennial celebiatiun. That is where the license plate money is going: that is the type of expenditure call diversion NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS of THE SOUTHERN UTAH DAIRY COMPANY. Notice is hereby given that the annual Meeting of the stockholders of the Southern Utah Dairy Company will be held in the Courtroom of the Iron County Courthouse at CHANCE TO VIRGINIA - i DATE it. FOR SALE: Can red fall wheat and i lul) fall barley seed. V. Scott Day it. !Us- - ! i PRESS-VOIC- D. l I , I all lt costs a! e ll.et, JJOll.nuO ('ll is 1. irib-Ute- d for to tile cities and too!.'. Use oil Class 11 ..ltd C lo.iil-- . tf.e remainder, vinuh .mount', to ..bout ' $300, (Mill OU goes to tile D p.c. tinent of Publicity and InduMn.il D When the next h g.d.iluie merit meets, it is going to be fied Irv an from d.lhient organized groups opposed to liaiing money spent on access highu.is.v Tim king organizations and clubs Mill he organized to convince the hgelature i ! Pul la and after 4 i Utah I fa 11. 'll' in this W a fur automobile heelise p!..h a fund goes to ll.e .V .' FIRE SURETY The INFLUENCE LEGISLATURE tnal iXAtLpo.et.i country with .vul without govcrn- t.i j m lountiy with a guv RHEUMATISM without hit and ARTHRITIS newspapers. .Mil,1 h.i tic Ir, ta that is worth re-- j I suf feted far years and am so o in.' .in lading. thankful that I found relief from the seventh annual this terrible affliction that I will Tiif ". m A N 'i.tn.il Week is: gladly answer anyone writing me OF FREE-I'! 'EE for information Mrs. Anna Pautz, i iM, GUARDIAN OF LIBERTY, PO. Box 825. Vancouver, Wash. t. tho th. mo is Tho Newspaper Laboratories Pd. Adv. Soivant." ,i Puhl NOTICE what tho ur vitirans hi tow ii moan while After many years service in practice I am on the global among the people of Parow an. t'o winto now continue practicing prepared lott'o punt-- Thrv notiMl that whore Dr. F. J. Burton t hi 'v wo o no noswpapors there was as usual. !..! i ; 1 i INSURANCE : THE NEWSPAPER AS A TUBLIC SERVANT ,T , ff. : ' ll unco said: , fv Kinda 01 All J f,l WOULD it.-U- , 1915 r 27, ' Mat-,- ( PIONEERS HOLD i P 3 Wuuli in tho slick or sawed, and COAL f r sale. See Clair Lister or ti l. phono 2'U h Parowan. i Kill SALK in ton or trurk-lit.o- l lots Ham II Dalton, phono 2546 at Parowan. u Parcells H. C. LICENSED ABSTRACTER Aff, bated with SECURITY TITLE CO. Office at Court House. Parowan AjvvlUiJ.I tT.isS Mall I'ti-- U T A II :Y 1 l.f til i CO cDITORI A ASSOCIATION ; t rrf--l . - riJ ji i I : PRINTING Publisher, Mgr. M. Norman, V.tlor I St 4. LG Spotlighting READER ADVS. WEEKLY br PA ROWAN, UTAH OcT jI K!t IVES. DAUGHTERS OF UTAH THE PAROWAN TIMES PUULISHCD I iV4'' From where I sit. ..I Joe Marsh Bert Childers and the Melon Patch Bert Childers put an ad in the Clarion the other day. Heres what it said: Tlanted more melons than I an eat this year. Stop by and pick as many as you want. All free. As you can guess, plenty of folks sent their kids over and plenty of tli parents came too. Stripped Bert s melon patch in no time. And as they went away, Rcrt treated the kids to lemonade, and offered the rr'ii'i!ps a sass of d spar!-linbeer. ice-col- some f Naturally it puzzled . . . but Bert explains: It glVS a kick to share things when 0 me afford to whether its the I or the lemonade, or beer. uesJ just like to indulge my From where I sit, if people who believe in share alike, live and let live, world would be a whole , whims. we like and 6 lot 8 r this , e off! Qcc tyUiL. . Brewer Copyright, 1946, Cruled Statet Ft1 |