OCR Text |
Show July 4, 1957 EMERY COUNTY (UTAH) PROGRESS Page Two THE AMERICAN WAY (bailie 4 Mrs. Glen Snow ESTABLISHED 1900 ' Published every Thursday at Castle Dale, Utah Castle in Dale, Postoffice in the Entered A First Class Publication 3, 1879 Utah, as Second Class Matter, under1 the Act of March 2 years, $5.50 Subscription, in Advance: Reece Wilberg graduated from Primary as a Second Class Scout year, $3.00; and will now continue his work in EDITORIAL nationalASSOCIATION the I vJ s&ution crmuT P1HMMU mi' i Editor and Publisher Associate Editor CLARIN D. ASHBY Nita Collett Castle Dqle, Emery, Cleveland, Orangeville, Ferron, 2895 4243 6486 3330 5755 Huntington, 4221 Clawson, 5538 Elmo, 6637. Green River, J04-343- 5 EPIOBXAL ' Mrs. Blanche Wayman left Tuesday for California. Her daughter Pauline and husband have been visiting here and took Mrs. Way-ma- n back with them. Mary Lou Ryan and fiance, Thomas Ott, spent a few days with the Wallace Ryans. They will proceed on to Missoula, Montana to visit th Otts before returning some time next week. Mr. and Mrs. John Jensen and children spent a few days in Salt Lake last week. Fremont. Mr and Mrs. Owen McClanahan and Shanna are vacationing ' in Yellowstone Park. Case Against Weeds The city of Fredericksburg, Virginia, has an ordinance making it unlawful for any landowner to permit weeds higher than 15 inches to grow on his premises. Recently Fredericksburgs city manager employed an k chfck ot the engineering student to conduct a the city with a yardstick. Citations are issued in cases where allowed. weeds exceed the maximum height If the city manager was trying to dramatize the ludicrousness of Fredericksburgs situation, he succeeded, for the story of the weed measurer has caused chuckles from coast to coast. deEmery County weed supervisor, Ray H. Humphrey, ordiclared that although the county does not have such an nance, the weed situation should he given attention. Killing of weeds now can prevent fire hazards that will develop later during the dry part of the summer and fall. It would also do away with much of the weed and seed eradication. The county doesnt need to have a law or a weed measurer to put under way a beautification project to do away with the weeds, merely a little civic pride. Citizens can obtain weed spray Mondays at the Emery County Road shop or at the Ray Humphrey home in block-by-bloc- To Better Management Labor-Manageme- nt er Io'w-incom- Taft-Hartle- st per-niciq- CANADA THISTLE GRASS proven, the rescinding of the unions charter must be undertaken, together with public prosecution of the individual found so guilty by the unions ovn tribunal. Full disciplinary measures must lie within reach of each unions membership and the higher echelons of organized labor must be held directly accountable to the public for imposing effective disciplines when necessary. And such disciplines should be made inescapable. No union or Judas-le- d drove of helpless sheep should be enabled to sidestep its responsibilities to the ethical practices code of a federation by simply resigning from that federation any more than a unions expulsion should be the end of its plight. In either case, the union in point should go or be brought to court and a full public investigation of be charges and counter-charge- s made, with every official under oath and subject to public prosecution if malfeasam in office is established. We simply rant afford to have suspicious-lookin- g unions running around loose. When their charters are in any way involved, the whole case should be brought to a head to determine whether or not the organization under suspicion is in legal truth still a union or not. Only by requiring as much responsibility of a union as we require of any otner type of corporate enterprise or service organization can we ever hope to have BETTER MANAGEMENT OF Mr. and Mrs. Win. Hedley (Mari-le- e Bell) are visiting with the Andrew Bells. Mr Hedley graduated June 15 from the University of Illinois with a Bachelor of Architecture degree. He was an honor student and was one of 2,734 graduates. For his terminal project he exhibited a model design for a U. S. Embassy for Bogota, Colombia. He has accepted a position in California and will go there to take over his work July 1. The Edward Larsen Family Reunion was held Saturday, June 22, at the Riverside Park in Salt Lake City. Those attending were Mrs. Alice Larsen and Myrtle Morten-se- n and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Larsen of Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. June Day of Castle Dale; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Larsen and grandson Craig of Whittier, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Elwqod I.arsen and boys of Salt Lake City; Mr. and Mrs. Clay Peterson and children of Granger; Mr. and Mrs. Keith Larsen & children of Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Miller and children of Price; Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Christensen and children, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Mortensen and children of Bountiful; Mrs. Arvid Larsen and children of Ogden (Arvid is at Camp Roberts, Calif.); Mr and Mrs. William Merrill and hoys of Garland. Product of AMERICAN CHEMICAL PAINT COMPANY & Sons ROSEL ZEN JENSEN, also known as R. ZEN JENSEN, R. Z. JENSEN, end ZEN JENSEN, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers attached to the undersigned administratrix at her residence at Huntington, Utah, or to her Attorneys, Frandsen and SERVICE This sign identifies our TV service shop its your TV service sign of prompt, dependable, with genuine RCA Silverama Picture Tubes and top-quali- ty RCA Receiving Tubes. Your complete satisfaction is the cornerstone of our success. Thats why every television set we repair is handled by a skilled, competent technician using reliable test equipment. And thats why we use only the finest replacement tubes that money can buy RCA Tubes. No matter what make of set you owm, call us for TV service you can depend on. Ed's Radio and TV Service Authorized RCA Service Center Phone 2537 Orangeville Mr. and Mr3. Douglas Tucker and family of Wendover, Mr. and Mrs Clyde Lake and family of Dragerton, Mrs. Edith Tucker Winder and daughter of Moab, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Tucker and family of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Tucker and family of Price and Mr. and Mrs. Vardell Tucker and family of Gardena, Calif, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vance Tucker over rhe weekend. Participating in the talent show put on by the North Carbon Stake in Price were Agnes and Aretha Jensen, Ruth Litster, Lynette Thor-dersoEmma Litster, Jonnle Ward and Julia Thorderson. n, Don, Larrel, Dane and Billy Ron-noof Salt Lake City, grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs Andrew will remain here for six weeks while their parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Ronnow, have gone to Smith Africa to hunt elephants. w Eas-terbroo- k, SLEEP TIGHT, WAKE BRIGHT Electrically ! The Tucker reunion was held Saturday, June 22, in the Price park. There were 72 present. of the switch turns your simmering summer bedroom to canyon-coo- l . . . with an lectric room air conditioner. A flip Keller, at their office at 72 West Main, Price, Uth, on or before the Probate No. 1003 IN THE DISTRICT COURT IN 28th day of October, 1957. Paula Jensen AND FOR EMERY COUNTY, administratrix of the Estate of STATE OF UTAH Roscl Zen Jensen, deceased. In the Matter of the Estate of urn racE TV Mrs. Florence Jensen is out of the hospital and is staying with her son Wes Jensen in Price. NOTICE TO CREDITORS flTgKnnr3ncB3E for dependable by Lynn Ann Minchey Legal Notices POISOH IVY P. C. Jones . THE AMERICAN WAY Why Farm Programs Failed QUACK Mrs. Emma Guymon returned home Sunday after spending the past two weeks in Salt Lake visiting her son Don Lane and family and with other relatives and friends there. "Give" One Group Anything, Government Must First Take It Away From Others of Labor By Maurice R. Franks (EDITORS NOTE: Maurice R. Franks is President of the National Foundation and Editor of its official publication, PARTNERS.) In my last article, I traced the rise of the racketeer in the union labor movement and attributed the cause of this to our neglect in not having insisted that our legislators design laws requiring responsibility on the part of our unions and the men wno lead them. We have stood idly by while union leaders have herded their memberships like so many cattle have permitted them to use union funds and their power to move politicians into corners where they want them where laws are We have spent something like $12 billion on the federal to fit the need3 of union-lead- shaped farm-ai- d program over a period of 25 years points out Sec- perfidy. because of the exWhat retary of Agriculture Benson. These costs undoubtedly would posures today, of the Senate Committee, be borne willingly if the program solved the problems, but is so obvious in the case of labors is no less true of labors the problems have not been solved. Furthermore, all that racketeers radicals. The pity is that scheming spending has made little or no contribution to the problem these latter arent today under e equal public scrutiny, and that we farmers. of now find them scampering about on editorial based in a The Wall Street Journal lengthy in the somewhat grotesque role of the Secretarys statement, sums up the vaiied reasons why prosecutors of their racketeering federal intervention in agriculture has been a failure. The brothers. And where does all this leave most basic of these reasons, in its view, is tire assumption of us apart from the end of our own neglect? It leaves us face to face farm legislators and administrators over the years that they with the need for remedial could defy, indefinitely and with impunity, the laws of the lation and its up to us, the legisgenmarket place. The classic example of this was the continua- eral public, after the present circus has lowered its tents, to see tion of rigid 90 per cent of parity price supports for basic that such legislation is enacted. crops long after the emergency conditions brought on by Indeed, y the time has come for World War II had passed, with the vast surpluses that re- the amended law to be rugbut this time so gedly sulted. Summing up, the Journal says, the goal must he a as not to give the leaders of labor power and prestige. This gradual return to a free market in agriculture. No other con- greater time, the law must be amended so is clusion possible. as to give them far less and the Even in this period of arbitrary and unrealistic price union members far more. And the Labor Act and every state supports for the basic field crops, other major crops have Railway labor law must likewise be so moved in the free market to Hie advantage of all concerned. strengthened. Compulsory unionism meaning The outstanding example is livestock. There have been seaunion dues must go. compulsory sons and years when livestock prices were tower than pro- And in the very name of union ducers liked just as there have been seasons and years security! Industry-wid- e that bargaining, when meat prices were higher than consumers thought rea- other weapon of manpower mosonable. But the prices, whether high or low, were deter- nopoly must also be dumped for of all concerned. mined by the natural law of supply and demand not by theIn good the place of each must come fallible human beings. The meat moved into the channels of the wholesome effects of union the competition of consumption and was eaten instead of moving into stor- competition union with union on the basis of is meat basis. sound and And on a the healthy age. industry services offered and services rendered. The merit system must be restored by law to unionism. If the whole labor movement is not to founder beneath a crushing load of demerits. Further, the unions must be brought under the direct control of the anti-trulaws. For a manpower monopoly is the most of any type yet developed. Finally, an utterly new basis for the issuance of union charters must be devised and shaped into law. Union constitutions must be made to meet, a basic standard of democracy and be held to an standard of internal acceptable service and public responsibility. Union officials must be bound by their constitutions and by the democratic processes defined therein and to the extent that any defections on their part shall be CASTLE DALE MIA. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Collins dnd two daughters of Salt Lake are visiting with Mrs. Collins mother, Mrs. Christina Hansen, and the Mrs. Reuei Jones was thrown Clyde Koffords and Pat Winters. from a horse Sunday while in the mountains. She has a back injury Captain and Mrs. Dali Jewkes and bad bruises but is improving. and children of Fort Sill, Oklahoma visited at the A. G. Jewkes Mrs. Koleen Malman is home afhome Sunday. Dali has been trans- ter spending the past nine weeks ferred to Fort Hood, Texas until in the Price hospital. She is much January when he will have an as- improved.' signment in Cermany. His wife will spend the summer in Midvale Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Childs of with her parents. Dillon, Montana are visiting at the Fred Larsen home. Mrs. Childs and Mr. and Mrs. Hal Jewkes and Mrs. Larsen are sisters. children of Kenilworth spent the Mr. and Mrs. Perry Oveson re weekend at the Lyle Stilson home. The men spent Sunday fishing at in Printer Printer Ray E. Hassinger Don Wayman Correspondents : Mrs. Glen Snow Mrs. Rose Olsen Lynn Ann Minchey Mrs. Cristy Humphrey .... Mrs. Deborah Huntsman Mrs. Flora Jensen Mrs. Bessie Wright Mrs. Sarah Pulsipher Mrs. E. B. Simonsen bae from California. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Larsen were turned Saturday their grandchildren, brought They elected as chairman and secretary Peggy Ann and Kenny Witbeck, for the next two years. of Anaheim with them for a monf ths visit. of Ashton, Mrs. Carrie Humphrey Idaho has been visiting her broMr. and Mrs. Bunnell Young and ther, Boyd Reynolds, and wife the two children are at the home of week. past Bunnells mother, Nellie Young, for weeks while he is doing Pamella Stilson has been helping a couple of in the court house. with kindergarten the past three abstract work social a afternoon weeks. Thursday Mr and Mrs. E S. Larsen are in will be held for the children and Salt Lake where Mrs. Larsen is last the be will Friday parents. receiving medical treatment. day for this season. FRANDSEN AND KELLER By Dan C. Keller Attorneys for Administratrix 72 West Main Price, Utah Date of First Publication June 27, Date of last Publication 18, 1957 1957 July There a smartly styled model for any room in your home. Filters out dirt, pollen, outis side noises. Sleep better, live better BUY NOW FROM YOUR DEALER ; . . . electrically UTAH POWER A ! IIGHT CO. 4 |