OCR Text |
Show m once oyer "Continued lrom Preceeding page" penditures for prns purchases, too. Cut the cost of rational defense, so-ca'led. I'd- lucky those Germans, Ger-mans, to be in a position to say to the American government that the thing was not worth the cost they were not willing to pay for it. American taxpayers can't do that. Too much vested interest in what we call defense". News Item: "American Mining Congress Decided Taking Aid Better Bet-ter Than Coin- Broke'. That suie let the cat out of the bag! Good topic for comment. "The American Mining Congress, while expressing long-standing belief that the miner doesn't want subsidy, has finally "ccented the view that it is better H take a kundout than , to go oioke ', is the way trie report reaas, and it goes on to quote one Sam Williston. the veep of a mining 5ub of the Sun Oil O. as savins:, "In the long run, I think they'll Keep it under space i helmet! E1E 'S1 has a New SPAN-A-RARIIC WINDSHIELD 1 Best in view . . . inside and out! Oldsmobile's wider, higher windshield meant greater round-t he-corner and overhead vision! Come in Friday, Nov. 9! See all the smart styling accents on the '57 Olds! SEE IT FRIDAY, NOV. 9, AT OUR SHOWROOMI SUNSET CHEVROLET COMPANY it i : 'Jj T f .-; -i ; : A For UTAH'S Governor We Need a Man of ABILITY and A man who runs under the colors of a political party until he loses, then promptly deserts that party and tries to defeat it, is obviously not a man of principle. Nor is a man who has a long record of practicing "machine" politics, with all its undercover intrigues and "deals." GEORGE D. CLYDE is a man of principle, whose integrity has never been questioned, who has never made his way by political compromise. You can depend on him for honesty and integrity in government. govern-ment. GEORGE D. CLYDE is a man of exceptional ability, especially trained to do the vital job that Utah right now needs ... to lead Utah to a new era of prosperity through development of her resources. Elect George D. A man of proved ability and upright principle GOVERNOR OF UTAH Take the Straightforward Way To a Bright Fu.urc for Ulch take such a'd as a defense min-trals min-trals loan or anything else you want to call it, and we might as well be practical about the matter" h. i canUo;! Admitting, in eff-ee, eff-ee, that the mining boys would 'oe j!-. ct eal ' about accepting C ?mi.ienL money " as a defense mine, .i s loan or anything else you wa -t to call it", in the sweet guise of o.U.ibuling to the national de-!'i.:;e. de-!'i.:;e. Any bo iy want to say, now. Jiat "national defense" hasn't be-o; be-o; "c a g.-e.:..1 camouflage for a -iu titude of s.ieeia'.-pr'.viiege sifts ". subs ilies? Now I've said it o the wastebasket wii'i that ,;tper. Here's a letter from the "Citizens For Bennett" out'it Came last :no"th. Never opened. Stamped "bulk rate". Carries 1H cent post-TSe post-TSe i i.-on't ever be opened, either. ; V. 2. already. Shall I . ! Pennett? If so, why? To me, he seems to be wholly lacking in intellectual conviction. I'd like to see a Republican majority in the Senate. It would give more power to Knowland and McCarthy, among others. But even so, why vote for a rubber stamp who has gotten himself thoroughly fouled up by following the lead of the domineering, would-be political boss of Utah, Arthur Watkins? Lor Hopkins is the opposite number Maybe I'll vote for him. Another letter, this time from the Foundation For Economic Education. Educat-ion. No need to read it. I know that outfit from stem to stern. And I say they could stand a little educat ing themselves. Can't recall when they've come out with any ne v idea in a quarter century. Give them their way, and we'd go bacK I on the gold standard, pay the so- called federal debt, and tie every- Irng up in knots. They haven't learned, yet, that this nation uses debt for money, and if it pays its national debt, without switching over to something else to use for -lonev, the result would be disas-'er. disas-'er. There is as much of fallacy in their teachings as in those of the new-deal socialists. Both are partly right, and partly wrong, and nei-. ther group seems willing to learn anything new. An article by Stewart Alsop, quoting Senator Wiley of Wisconsin as saying of his opposition, "These people, they just don't realize that the world has shrunk, that Mil waukee is ringed with TCihes todny, and the Russians are only a fe.v hours away over the Great Circl route". That called' for e.r.:r..enl simply because it showed hivv sadly our "internatio .iaUbts" lu misjudged bath the issue.-' a'.rl t'aeif opposition. Whv it v.-as: sue.; 'in V.-' nationalists as V;lby'fhat":.yeu d. -ing everythi.-ig ;.j.-,s.b:.-"to bui'.J u the strength if I.usaia 'only a shj.i time ago. A"d they i'i-' i; .v. e'r V.-. protests of tl.ese who. Y'.'cy sa ; now, just don't rr'1 3e t!i '.t the world ha., s r When Herbeit iljjver war.ud u.;t-i..st growin,; Russian sire.. t''i. he was' s'.oj'.e.i down, called. wrongiU1.'. ir. a i isolationist, isola-tionist, and !?"0!C by 'he rr.;ei-y that were! Same with Lindbergh. Same with Taft. Same with MeCnr-thy. MeCnr-thy. Those men who, Senptor Wi'p now says, don't realize the wo. 11 has shrunk, happened to be well aware of the fact before 7iiy ;"v', his kind caught up with it. an.' they wanted to put an end to aid to Russia at a time when the e was still a chance to save the fro? world. ': But why dig deeper? I've hardly touched the pile of papers to frr. This is no vyto c!ea- a desk Cot to get rid of fie stuff. The e ave always enough new thoug.i-.-p o-vokers o-vokers coming in. Let the old b? gone. Will the was'ebas'.er h?.H it all? Whoosh! Thre it i; all gone, and good riddance. I "ever should have saved it anyway. Now to start a new stack just like the old one. -.0 CCU::Ti' CIIIIONICLE Delta. Utah. Thurs. Oct. 25. 195S. I' : (h t iTfWYAYAl F, fn.WVAWU VWU"-1 u ' "I ' 1 ' , ' (- i f.; ..s j ffftl fiJ feln:....u hSnouj . 1 t I i ?i'r ' i Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Pete and three children, a-d tV:. T Evans, from Silt Lake Ci ; ' and Mrs. Raymond Peterson p Mr. Arland Peterson, from Pleasr Grove, spent the weekend in De' for the deer hunt, with Mr. a Mrs. John Peterson. -.d Lilt d.. . whiskey AiGirr boukb t, Whiskey Mrs. Scott Christensen and c-'i'ld- ren and a friend and two ch;i:'rc; of Salt Lake City, were Delta' h -, tors Sunday with Mrs. Madge Cris-; tensen, Mrs. Barbara Chris er.s .i and Mrs. Delia Deei.i. t Sr8AlGirr BOirRB0?i t,. VIilSK.EY -SU" "HnuiN?; ".rTwW . Mr. and Mrs. Arlo Broderick an ; children, from Sncramcn'o : , visited their parents, Mr nnd Mi ; Leonard Broderick in Delta during the week, and Arlo joined the family fam-ily deer hunt. ittv straiR"1 ' : . h-- 0lc bourbon to luy MGIIT BOURBO' llr... - . I ..J.'ri2ai-r - UARSOIO STRA1SHI BOUIfON WHlSKt . 90.4 PROOF BtLMONT DISTILLING COMPANY, LAWRtNCEBU R6, INDIA! I! m L-a. r? 4 One of the big problems of the jet age is finding a metal that can withstand with-stand the searing and fatiguing temperatures that bum out ordinary engine materials at supersonic speeds. To crack this heat barrier engineers have now come up with a new and highly promising alloy of a mctd long familiar to the mining industry of Utah-molybdenum, or "Molly" as it is known among mining men. This vital metal could easily have been ignored in Utah, for Molly is hidden deep in the ores of Bingham Canyon. It takes more than a ton of the mine's ore to produce one pound of Molly. And yet for years, long before Molly's promising new future as a jet age material, Kennecott has carefully guarded and recovered the sparse molybdenite ores from Utah scil. For years, Kennecott has turned the Bingham hillsides into an important national source of this metal which has furnished harder, corrosion-resistant steel for industry, lubricants for modern engines, and pigments and catalysts for the chemical industry. . No one can say for sure what the future holds for Molly but in Utah one thing is certain: the story of Molly is one more example of Ken-necott's Ken-necott's untiring efforts to help conserve and to develop to the fullest extent the great natural resources which are so vital to Utah and its economy. tft.tiittrtiltti' V 1 ifiLn JSeanecott Cej&sr Corporation 'A Good Neighbor Helping to Build a Better Utah' 1 Vote Ilcpubllcan I'otr for Vlt'.Ss 7i'Aure |