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Show AttrertUtmmt Mm iom where I sit ... li Joe Marsh Fastest "Naws Service in Town! Had a frantic wire from Washington Wash-ington yesterday saying that the local Congressman was making a surprise visit and a short speech. Could I get the word around fat? No time for a special edition of the Clarion, so I turned to the fastest "news service" in town . . . Windy Taylor. He spent an hour mobilizing his Lode and Court House croniea-all pretty fair talkers and the rest is history. Biggest turnout ever. As a newspaperman, I hate to admit it-but facts are facts. The Windys of this world aren't only quicker news spreaders than our paper . . . they've even got better circulation. From where I sit, some of us would rather talk than eat, while others are close-mouthed . . . just as some of us like coffee and others prefer a glass of beer. There's a lot to be said for both attitudes. Cut if you go in for gab don't talk against someone just because you don't happen to agree with him on some question of personal per-sonal choice. Use your own "good censorship." 40 YEARS i no m AGO THE who is not bound by party lines, lost to him. Such people have no You vote according to your com- reason, no Incentive, to put forth mnn atica nnH vnlir nlrti iilHornpnt fhtMr Kct offnrte TVia finnl rocnlt after hearing each party set forth is that production, in sufficient P M Mj E S a its program. To you I say that the volume to provide a high standard t independent of living can never be achieved . . . under communism. . mat part or the state Koaa strength of this thought is the great contribution of the American political system." i Franklin D. Roosevelt. Copyright, 1956, United States Brewers Foundation OKCE OVER "Continued from Preceeding page" ways to scratch to vote a split ticket; and there are sure to be a large number of voters follow them. There is an old election-year slogan which says, "Vote. Vote as you please, but vote." For this election it should be changed to read, "Scratch. Scratch as you please, but scratch". "Men in a party have liberty only for their motto; in reality they are greater slaves than anybody else would care to make them." J. F. Saville. Recapitulation It occurs to me that my windy discussion above may, in spite of my best efforts, have left some room for confusion. To clear this up, let me reiterate the scratching procedure here in simplest terms: You may vote for each candidate separately by marking a cross in the square by one name for each office. Or you may vote a party ticket, draw a line through any name you don t want, and mark a cross in the square for another candidate i"or the same office. "There is an opinion that parties "n free countries are useful checks upon the administration of the government, and serve to keep 'Mvo t'.ie spirit or liberty. This, vithin certain limits, is probably e. ;'.!' it' governments of a pop-'rr pop-'rr character, and purely elective, 1 : it "..it !" be encouraged. From their natural tendency, there will always be enough of that spirit for every salutary purpose. And there being constant danger of xcess, the effort ought to be, by "orce of public opinion, to mitigate ;nd assuage it. A fire not to be luenehed, it demands a uniform igilanee to prevent it bursting into a flame, lest, instead of warming, warm-ing, it should consume." George Washington. "There is among you the man X i I - : ; I Vote for the Forward Look! BUILO UTAH'S FUTURE For 109 years, since the pioneers first settled in Utah, a fabulous treasure house of Utah resources has Iain dormant . . . Men knew they were there, but lacked essential tools for their development. During that time, Utah has been a feeder state, sending its raw materials to other states for processing . . . Sending its young people to other states to find suitable jobs and careers. Since 1920, more than 100,000 Utah young people, our most precious resource, have left the state for outside jobs. NOW there is an opportunity to build a different Utah than we have ever known ... A Utah of opportunity. oppor-tunity. With the power and water from the Colorado River Storage Project, we can develop our, own resources, re-sources, build our industries . . . create new jobs and opportunities to five our young' people a bright future here at home. In this hour of destiny, Utah has a man of destiny, whose lifelong career has trained him especially for this vital job . . ."GEORGE D. CLYDE has the training, the know-how, and the plan to build the future of which Utahns have always dreamed. lect GEO&GE D. 4 Governor of Utah VOTE REPUBLICAN VOTE FOR UTAH'S FUTURE! Ssviet Dzeak-up Under Way Some of the biggest news in the world today is that coming from satellites in eastern Europe; from Poland and Hungary. The revolts, the uprisings appinst the Soviet regime come from a human spirit that may never finally be suppressed. So far. thi'sa revo .3 may be regarded re-garded p.-5 only half-revolutions. The peo-.'les concerned stand to jain na!io-i;,l indor-ic'ence. first, under independent communist governments. gov-ernments. The other half "of their fight for freVim wii come later,; as they throw off the oppressive ways of communism. There a:e articu'at? Americans who like the iea of independent ranu::i;sifl in such countries. They "oint to Tito's regime in Yugoslavia as a communist government inde--enc'o it of Most-ow. They expected Mao's regime in China to be of the saiui nati::o. They see in the current uprisings the establishment of more "independent" communist governments. These Americans lean toward communism, but they have 'ound the oppressive brutality of the Kremlin disillusioning. Mistak--niy. they have blamed the brutality brutal-ity of the regime on the Kremlin rulers, not on the nature of the .ystem itself. So they have welcomed wel-comed the advent of such governments govern-ments as Tito's as holding possible vindication of their communistic predelictions. These people are a confused lot. What they have failed to see is that communism, of itself, is the ;ource of the oppression and brutality bru-tality which they deplore in Soviet ule. There are solid reasons why vrmt-isrn can never work; why . .1. .c "cue.1. 'Jan people at y t 'o t-'vo it b eaking '' pi ::oc.lcn. poople may try "v'ectiv'sr.i in some forms, but he.- v.il! a'v.'p.ys revert to the 'Individualistic" ways of doing 'n.siness unless prevented from do-;ng do-;ng so by force. That is why maintenance main-tenance of a communist regime can only lead to oppression. Fundamentally, the reason communism com-munism can never succeed is this: it places a premium on indolence. Where all people receive like shares from the collective pile, the efforts of the superior workman, the naturally ambitious sort, are! It is only under a system of private property and individual that production is encouraged, and achieved. People, instinctively, will put forth their best efforts when they are free to reap the gain therefrom. That some 00 of American Am-erican high school students have indicated that they think individual incentive is not necessary in our which runs thru Delta and is to connect the road running from Fillmore Fill-more to the east end of Clark Street and continuing up the railroad rail-road to Lynndyl and Into Salt Lake, has been turned over by the county ; commissioners to the city officials to name, and they have designated the following and appropriated one i hundred dollars to put it in shape lleve me ask Mr. Britt. You must buy both shoes for the left foot and one a size larger than the other. That makes the best fit. Delta As a result of the fracus which MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah. Thurs. Nor. 1. 1938. brot before Justice of the Peace Faust, and fined $10 and cost. The law-abiding citizens of Delta wish it understood that no more of thia occurred at the dance last Tuesday kind of stuff goes. And if it does. J night, the young man who created the law will be called in to its full it was arrestea Wednesday morn- iorce. ing by Deputy Sheriff Cass Lewis, . 1 ftfrtn.imi evetom nntv shows hnw lartiv these students have been', The state roart thru Delta win ...!,..nM Thai, h.w run from the east end of Clark betraved them have made intel 'ectual hypocrites of them. Individual Indivi-dual incentive is the moving force in all human endeavor, and no fimour.t of brutality in enforcing 1 a system 01 collectivism win ever change that basic fact. So, in moving from a system of communism dominated by Russia r one administered by their own countrymen, these revolutionists in eastern Europe are moving half way to freedom, but, so far, only half way. Un'ess the "nationalist" regimes of communism in these c rtries ir'.opt the brutal methods oi the '.nvict. then the dissolution of the communist idea is sure to follow. And it is not likely that regimes idminise-ed in Poland and Hungary Hung-ary by Poles' and Hungarians win go so far in their doctrinaire sub- ".-;-T,e to the false communist '"c as to impose Russian type pression upon their countrymen. The American eggheads people I snv.r'ous intellectual pretensions "hi think they favor "independ--:t" co ' munist regimes are ignor-nt ignor-nt people, in regard to both their own motivations and human nature in general. O-c of the darkest chapters in ill human history is that in which 'hese people of eastern Europe were delivered into the hands of he Russian communists with the 'id of the American government. Tow these people are fighting their J vay out of it. In time they will become be-come free again. Eut they owe American nothing but a debt of bitterness. In time, too, the whole Russian communist regime is sure to break up. Its foundations are so rotten that the whole structure may crumble crum-ble rapidly. It is based on intellectual intellect-ual hypocrisy on econonfic fallacy. fall-acy. It can only be maintained by the methods of brutality. And the current unrest going on in the street to where it intersects Third West, the street running along in front of the Chronicle office (not the present one, Ed.) It will con- ' tinue down this street to the railroad rail-road track, from there it will either go up the track on the east side, or, if the parties interested west of the track succeed in getting a right of way, up the west side of the railroad, the road will run past the lumber yard and then up the west side of the track. Oak City Mr and Mrs. LeRoy Walker and :oseph H. Christensen made a flying fly-ing trip to Fillmore last week. Our farmers are now busy gather ing their potato crops. There is a fine crop of good potatoes here this year. FOR SALE: Light top buggy, used but little, a bargain. Enquire A. L. Broderick. Sutherland Searchlights Last Monday evening there was a Republican rallv at the school house. Lawrence Abbott, the chairman, chair-man, introduced iMr. Taylor, candi date for Sheriff, Ed Bishop, candidate candi-date for county assessor, and T. Clark Callister of Fillmore, who is running for representative. M. M. Steele Jr. also gave a talk. Just before the light was lit Mr. Steele started to walk across the floor but finally decided to roll across instead, as he stepped i- the coal "bucket and had a mix-up with the coal. No siree, he hadn't had anything to drink he wasn't seeing things if he had been, he'd have seen the coal bucket. The best place to buy shoes Is at Walker's. The best clerk to fit you is Mr. Walker. If you don't be- i y I 1 1 1 I j 4 VI it-1 Ti V"V i . fill 1 . i 'i,t 5 - JSM- '"wn Tim-' Tastes so rich Swallows so smooth I satellites may contribute to it: full dissolution sooner than you think. a . . IT I ?' " ."V " ' KKDLnJlBi THE HILL & HILL COMPANY, DIVISION OF NATIONAL DISTILLERS, LOUISVILLE, KY. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY-86 PROOF Paid Political Advertisement by Carl AsTiby. Delta, Verdeil Uiihop. Hinckley and Ben Rob'ison, Delta Meet the man who will better represent you in in Congress . , ITS NCW 6OOY RiDES SitNT, SOUO ANO - - . ..1 ',A ' 9 1 n , 7k long, Uan, end packad with punch, the new Ford Fairlane 500 is oclually loiger thon many medium-priced car , .", and il l offered at low Ford prices I What's new in the new kind o r Ford LET'S ELECT CARLYLE F. GRONNING Democratic Candidate for Congress, Frsf District O He worked as a FARMER Worked early life as a farmer; member Committee on Agriculture Agricul-ture and Irrigation, Utah State Senate. He is a RAILROAD MAN Chief Yard Clerk for Union Poi;f!f of Miifnrrl- mpmher of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks since 1937. Ke has served es MAYOR As Mayor of Miiford City for two years, has had first-hand experience exper-ience in city administration. He was for six years COUNTY COMMISSIONER Served six years as County Commissioner Com-missioner of Beaver County; four years as chairman of that Board. He now represents you as STATE SENATOR Now serving as State Senator frora the Eighth Senatorial District Dis-trict Beaver and Millard Counties. He is an active CHURCHMAN & SCOUTER lias served as missionary, bishop, and on the stake high council; is District Commissioner of Beaver District, Boy Scouts of America. Young Vigorous Experienced in Government Vofe for GROla'iilG for CONGRESS! TtM Fo : rt Adwtnrnt tr STATE EEl-'GCKATIC C012HITTEK I I UltlOta. 4 WA.4I-. 4 N. In. CwtlMi and Ontom 300 choice of izM. Thes '57 Fordi moV"bi8" a low-priced word. Th new Ford Cuitom end the Culom 300 or lower, wider, thon ony Ford befor ond o 14 t or9. Th Foirlor ond Foirlon 500 or Oven lowor ond lonjer . . . or 17 fett fongl Ford il tti NMModrWMS00 only tor in low prico Held Ihot eomei in two lii':. You'll nd lhn oil only roof high to porking metor ... ond they'ro at oajy fo gel In ond oul of oi putting Hit coin in tho meter ilotl Tboro or 20 beoutiful new model! to choOM fron. 1 1 ; Hi ' V 111 NEW outtweep chattii deiign cradles pasiengers in a now kind of way for a leveler, mocther ride. It a compltlf new chaisis idea wherein the frame flarei oul 10 thai nVo floor of the rear eat compartrrent is inuVe tho fra girders. There's moro inside room than ever. And tbrl full road cleoronce under the heavier frame. r - : V J L- - "-w. f ' ' . : . ! ir t j CP xi- - ""A 1 ? ' - i 1 Ijnil bar trrtins. FoiriaM ana" Fair lone 500 IlLlI salons hex strong, u center p.llor coea!ed by window frames. With doors closed, yon coa nortfy teJt lhasa tadoM from hardtop. ! i HEW . nduronte and parformonce. In the mori xhaliw teil ever given on outomebne, o '57 Ford liqel? 53,000 miles in less thon 20 days ... on ovrog Ipaae) of 108.16 mph-HicudVng opi'l J'opt s Come in fochf and see tft n i - ' " "... ' ' i - - KEW KIND zA OF FORD It HI! f arwerd-hingef fcaaa'-ond new -m II 9 s K go under rt! Tht'e so ;8hty Annive-sory V-8 to tl every no'wrewer need. And r-e' mora fewer c-d ec3crry m f-,e new W..:a-ner W..:a-ner il HEW aw-twa alarlaii wagaa rod line. A Of Ford i mw ttatioa wogoas hova even t iv. kuutv and love-for-dity that hot Ford Aerka'l fowit wogon. Thar ora with four doors. Iwo with two dooi . . . ing roc for p to aina. mom mod thre teat- KEW If wider wrop-araaael reor epeng Acowp'e'elynewl.ft. gate provides greater vision, osier leading. In lerj'h ond width there ! enough room to load a 9-foot boat. Six or V-9, the going is greaf I -m T uV J war f fj( JJI r'utIiL ' Sm I i |