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Show TINTAH BASIN RECORBAIARCH 3, 1030 Rubberized Roads Uieived As S3; The Uintah Basin Record PUBLISHED Fntercd as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Duchesne, Utah IRENE FRET WELL - C. L. FRETWELL, Publishers C. L. FRETWELL, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES $1.50 - 3 Months $2.00 - 6 Months $3,00 1 Year In Advance Payable EDITORIAL Christianity And Communism discussions of Communism in recent years was that delivered in St. Louis .recently, by the Rev. Dr. James W. Clarke. The Christianity and subject was Communism. The speaker defined what Communism is not and also what it is. He stated that, Communism is an unlimited power whose chief and final persuasive is violence and not law. Dr, Clarke listed six charcteristics of Communism as follows: its philosophy of man; its atheism; its philosophy of morals; its philosophy of State; its philosophy ot the class struggle ;its philosophy of persuasion. His words emphasised the fact that we cannot deal with the problems Communism raises unless we know both Its strength and its weakness. Its appeal is the Christian church, Dr. Clarke insisted that in spite of its past achievements Chrisianity, now confronted by Communism, must do something with itself. Fourteen years ago a distinguished Protestant misionary, E. Stanley Jones, predicted a showdown between materialistic atheistic Communisrrf and the Kingdom of God on earth. The will not be issue, he said, settled by argument, but by the actual production of a better BONUS BOY Here comes one order. This is a challenge to of those unpredictable balls Christianity and the culture of from the long arm of Lomita, the entire western world. Calif., high school athlete Paul Name calling is not the anwonder Pettit. The swer. Were it the correst answer, ' boy has signed with the Pittsthe millennium would have been burgh Pirates for $100,000 bonus, to be paid over a period of 10 here centuries ago. years in addition to his salary. Constructive thinking animat ed by a crusading, humanitarian four-folhe stated: psycho- urge might help. But it will logical; promises of a classless not accomplish the full job. society and material prosperity; In Before Christianity can face a genuine achievements; heroic the Communistic threat with demands. To one brought up with i full might of its philosophy, Christian background, an analy Christians everywhere must reThe Veterans Administration sis of its characteristics presents member first that they are estimates that it funnelled $6, a shuddering picture; its philoso- Christians rather than Protes- 552,063 282 in veterans benefits phy of man is that of an animal tant or Catholic. irfto the states in the last fiscal without a soul; its atheism year. teaches that religion is the opi The largest payment, the VA ate of the people; its philosophy aid in its annual report to Conof morals is that there is no fess, was $1,891,283,111, in the moral toabsdlute, everything is In IjaVlform of compensation or pension the immediate situarelative Utah sterilized a greater t, payments 0r retirement pay. tion. If it is advantageous to the I Other payments in the year in residents of its portion party to lie, then lie; if to steal, than June 30, 1949: in state the nationnaVfnded any then steal; if to decieve, then Subsistence allowance to vet- The Utah program for decieve; if to inform, then in- ilization in of the feeble mincfrtfTerans training or school un- form: if to murder, then murder. GI the der to this Bill, $1,865,804,493; and insane which led Dr. Clarke quotes Lenin as record is praised as an im- to training institutions for tuisaying, Our morality is wholly portant achievement in public tion, fees and equipment for subordinated to the interest of health in an article appearing GI Bill students, $834,379,091; the class struggle. in a recent issue of the unemployment allowances under The philosophy of Commun- Mountain Medical Journal,Rocky writ- the GI Bill, $443,531,993; , ism, summed up in the words ten by Dr, Clarence J. Gamble, allowances under of Lenin is embraced by same the Mass. of Milton, act, $66,060,357; death of the human race. claims for national service life Utah that The article says Reminding his audience that nation with a sterili- insurance, $310,855,814; subsishe was speaking as a Christian led therate of 9.1 per 100,000 tence payments to World War II zation clergyman who revered the ac population. The average for 27 disabled veterans in education states having sterilization laws or training, $262,196,010; mediwas 2.1 per 100,000. The year cal car e, hospitalization and 1947 was the last for which fig- drugs, and administration of 700 offices and field stations, ures are available. $939,594,945. He estimated that these are more than 6,370 or 12 persons in the state EYES EXAMINED times the 539 who have been sterilized since Utahs law became effective in 1925. Veteran Payments Top 6 Billion Last Fiscal Year d, Utah Tops Nation Sterilization , self-employme- nt one-thir- d Complete Optical Service feeble-minde- d Daynes Optical Gasoline Taxes Motorists paid more than 1.3 billion dollars in taxes to states on gasoline and motor fuel consumed last year. Roosevelt, Utah Make Appointments at SATHER JEWELRY An egg beater wontgetaboatvery: FAR USE AN ADVERTISEMENT BIG, ENOUGH TO PULL YOUR STORE UPSTREAM CHEVRON GASOLINE R P, M MOTOR TH And More Economical Thorough FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK One of the most enlightening complishments of M5, OIL European highway engineers have been experimenting with rubberized highway surfaces for a decade or more, but the United States is just beginning to take this use seriously. The hope is, that in addition to reducing the risk of skids on smooth asphalt, material savings can be made in federal, state, and local highway budgets, now totaling somewhe,re around $ 2,600,000, 000 annually. A short pamphlet on this subject has been prepared by Harry K. Fisher, rubber road consultant to the National Rubber Bureau with headquarters in Washington, D, C. . He points out that the rubberizing of roads also promises to s minimize the time and incidental to road repair; makes it simple to remove slick spots on highways at small cost; and produces a road which tends to resist the formation of ice. Such surfaces also materially reduce skidding in wet weather as well tie-up- A as dry, he says Engineers of a pr0ri, ber company recently. The most notable of rubber and one promise of utilizing 2 quantities of this con as an additive to road building. Although age is relatively small agewise, the total voi sible is large if adoD wide scale. D,r. r Dutch rubber techiiol! thusiastically reported, ber- - asphalt road befo terdam and Other potentialities II t oi ized asphalt include plat and tennis courts, city and industrial flooring s Business Without Advertise is a Perfect Set-U- In limes of for Troul p perhaps a business is able lo gel by without advertising although it is not a sound policy. easy-spendin- g As the public becomes more prl conscious the intelligent mer steers clear of the rocks of bfc ruptcy by systematic advertising It is not necessary for the small merchant to run large ads. in fact that extreme may end as disastrously as a nonadvertising policy, but. bear this in mini IF YOU WISH THE CUSTOM!; TO KEEP RETURNING TO Ytf STORE IT IS A GOOD POLICY KEEP YOUR STORE NAME C SISTENTLY BEFORE THEM . THE FORM OF WEEKLY Nfl' PAPER ATLAS ACCESSORIES Amsterdj withstood heavy Gen traffic. His visit to this duping the past year accelerate this activl since then many communities are build roads. Natural rubber' seems to have a defim nical edge in this develj SING. 0 tl D. H. TIMOTHY Phone Ytexm UoggD soaoeaQ n 741 ooewsooGBeato ed. (ten o GQoocogpQ be n C |