OCR Text |
Show THE SAX JUAN RECORD Thursday, April Page 2 19, that whenever Congress has seen fit to enact legislation in a given area, state laws dealing with the same subject may be invalidated by the courts on the assumption that Congress intended to federal law' to supersede state law. Identical measures introduced The Carter Oil Company in the House by Rep. Smith Summary of Drilling ) and in the Senate by Sen. Week Ending April 10, 1956 11 McClellan and others, would protect all state laws from Wyoming Ridge WC NW NW 17 .Cyclone being overturned by the federal Ralph E. Murphy et al courts under this doctrine. No. 1: Drilling at 7620. Under the Smith - McClellan Twin Rocks Unit SV SW sOIL FIELD NEWS JbCwimtafW By James W. Douthat W SHINGTON. Republican THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF SAN JUAN COUNTY, UTAH Published Every Thursday at Monticello, Utah Entered at the Post Office at Monticello, Utah, as second class matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 NATIONAL EDITORlAw lsS0C5,5H tMJJHMifr.ifiHa r Larry M. Roe, Betty L. Roe, Business Manager Cornelia Perkins, Society Editor Editor-Publishe- Mechanical Alex Hopkins Dale Hopkins . ... .... .... Department Monticello 111-11- 2 Monticello 111-11- 2 Monticello 27R2 Monticello 111 - 112 . Monticello 111 - 112 False Teeth Are Often Disconcerting! Im amazed at publisher Browns (Montezuma Valley Journal, Cortez, Colorado) insatiable appetite to misquote. Again in an attempt to vindicate a charge that is not even now denied by the Navajo Trails Association. Had you taken the trouble to attend a meeting of the group aptmmM TwA( Ama&m, fct proximately two blocks from your newspaper office in Cortez, (as compared to approximately 60 miles from this newspaper office to the same meeting) you might have listened to Wayne Denny, President of the Association, admit the group had been pushing the short-cu- t route in question for several years. I might add, the group has agreed to eliminate the short-cu- t route from future publications and to devote its By Albert energies to developing Highway 160 to Monticello and Highway 47 My dear San Juaners: I have written a number of south to Flagstaff. All this with no thanks to the Montezuma Valley Journal Publish- books, and more long serials. er who has twisted our issue with the association, comprised of repre- With some of them I was accu-piefor many months, with some sentatives from several states, into a personal issue between this newsof them for years. I wrote them paper and the Montezuma Valley Journal w ith the hope y It would seem you might have at least attended the meeting of the that they w'ouldi ' group you so admirably defended, inasmuch as the charges issued by be read, and that s 6 be would they This newspaper against the organization, and in part admitted by the profitable to "J 5 those who read,'.'!, ! group, yere one of the main topics of discussion. I agree on one point, though. That is the necessity them. But the f work on which of the entire area cooperating for the common good of all. However, I have spent the I this could never be accomplished as long as discrepencies exist in most time, ant any in which I am alliance intra-statnow writing the twenty-sixtvolume, is never going to be published, never offered for publication. I would feel terrible if I had any fear that it was to appear in print. Yet so far as I am concerned personally, its 25,000 pages and 2,000,000 words are mdre important than all the things that I have published, Dear Fellow Citizens: and others I wrould like to pubBecause the nations medical schools have made unprecedented lish. That is the record I began in progress in the past six years, we in Utah and throughout the country 1892, the record of what I had are saluting them 'during Medical Education Week, April been doing since I was weaned in During 1955 the 81 medical schools in the United States enrolled 1880, and which I brought up to more students, graduated more physicians, and made greater strides in date in 1892, and began making a record which I have kept medical research than at any previous time in history. Equally auspic- fordaily every day since that August of 1893. At present 1 am a third ious is the fact that this p, egress has been steady and each upcoming of the way through the twenty-sixtyear through I960 promises to surpass all existing records. volume. These advances are reassuring nor only to the medical profession Let it be clearly understood but to the entire American public because these schools are the key to this is not told to create a little the nations health. On them depends the future physical and mental sensation, or get a little cheap fame; it is with another purpose well-bein- g of 165 million people. From their laboratories come 'the entirely that I have alighted on medical discoveries that help make this this as an illustration of a vital country the most advanced and principle which I want to offer. disease-free the most in the world. From their classrooms and teaching And again, let no one imagne I hospitals come the family doctor, the specialist, the health officer and am referring to this as a virtue the industrial physician who translate new medical knowledge into com- which others should emulate; I am suggesting no such thing. munity service. I figure that my life should be Consequently, all of us have a very important stake in these to me, and every mans life should schools. Their faculties, students, and everyone in the field of health be to him, what the five centuries have been to1 the world since and medical care hope you will accept our invitation during this Med- careful records have been preical Week to become better acquainted with the schools and their served. Especially since the time that printing was discovered, the services performed in your behalf. important things that men have Sincerely, discovered, the inventions they have made, the blunders from , (Signed) T. V. Colombo, which they have suffered, havei Chairman, Committee on become the cumulous of our civil Medical Education Week ization. If these important things SAFE Vehicle The Old Settler whole-heartedl- y h LETTERS TO TIIE EDITOR 22-2- R. . noyed than pleased, is in a way encouraging, for in it there is assurance that I have made some progress. O how crude, how naive and ignorant are the early volumes of that history I keep them out 'of sight, yet they are mine, and I must see them and be mortified with the record of discreditable tendencies which have not even yet been overcome. I threaten to burn the whole pile of them, or order them burned when I finish the record, for however valuable they are to me as the cumulous of what progress I have made and hope yet to make, they will provoke laughwith my surter, and s vivors. INVESTMENT . COMPANY Name Apache Big Horn Blue Tiyard Calamity Creek .. Col-U-Me- x Mid-We- Mt Peale Ol Jato The column 1 L CONSERVATION V. a 12:00 Nooa Thursday 1!4 23 l i34 Phone Monticello 118, orders cuted on all issues. Your NEWSPAPER ! The Medium with the.. exe-4V- 4 at 633. Colorado Mansfield WC SW SE d No. 1: Ran 1034 at 510 with 350 sax. Drilling at 1608. Govt.-McDonal- should not be regarded as necessarily reflective of NAM position or policy, for it is a reporting of incidents and conversations which its author thinks might be of general interest. IN MONTICELLO (Old Church Bldg) EACH FRIDAY OFFICE PHONE 73R4 or Call Mrs. Helen Redd 103-Rfor appointments. Will be in Blanding each Thursday. At Gateway Motel. Call Mrs. Opal Black PHONE 2462 FOR APPOINTMENTS YOUR year. Tax cuts are affected vitally by the budget situation for Mr. Eisenhower has said that taxes cannot be reduced until a balanced budget is in sight and a modest payment has been made on the $276 billion national debt. Barring unexpected tax revenue, that date now seems to have moved farther into the future. FEDERAL ENCROACHMENT The campaign to protect state laws against federal encroachment has received a GUIDEPOST Tour Check is as good as Cash! By Gordon L. Heaton Youll discover Its safer, more ALL TO I have had quite a number of convenient and saves time to pay inquiries concerning Topar Wheat EY bills by check. grass. This is just an improved Open an account strain of Stiffhair Wheatgrass. It is a close relative to Intermediate MATTERS Today! Wheatgrass. Topar or Stiffhair is a grass ideally suited for this I area. It spreads and by roots seed. Livestock stimulant. A Supreme Court decision, by prefer it to any a 6 to 3 vote, on April 2 denied of the other states the right to enforce their wheatgrass such as Intermediate, own law's against sedition and subversion holding the federal Tall, or Crested. act preempted the field. This deTests have provMEMBER FJ1XC. en that it will cision provides a compelling argustand some alkali. Recommend- ment for enactment of the bill to protect state ed seeding rate is 5 lbs. per acre. Dove Creek, Colorado Phone 13121 It is a larger seed than Crested laws. The Wheat and can be planted with theory holds an ordinary grain drill. Even though the President vetoed the farm bill I am confident that another will bS enacted that will put the soil bank plan in effect. This will create a big demand for grass seed. If you plan to participate in this and had1 not been preserved and passthere is an opportunity to get ed down from generation to gen- some seed, I would not hesitate eration, we would be right where (o get it. The prices are increasor we were four five centuries ing in every new seed notice. ,ap?Every mans life should be the important cumulous of his experiences, not that he must write them every day, but he should by all means cherish and presene them in a way to avail of what they were Intended to teach him. "STOP ACTION TRIPLE TRACTION Any Every mans record is to him the . most valuable of records. Everv SAW TOOTH RIB EDGES or 12 artistic production, and every efT STOP NOTCHES IP. ficient labor has its antecedent of tall! some experience behind it. If that FLEXIBLE S GUARANTEE) experience had been forgotten beSAM'S PHOTO LAB fore it could be applied, it would 3-- T NYLON CORD have been in vain. P.O. llox 1115, Depu an ici,, oiy, uton There are peoplb who are none Super-Cushio- ns the better for having lived a long time; they have accumulated nothing towards the excellence of what should have been the sum of their years. t Only Goodyear has Here are two old men; let us Nylon for extra strength, better blowout and puncture protection, better say nothing about their mental or moral status, but one of them is performance, longer mileage. Only Goodyear has this three-wasafety-actio- n wealthy, the other has nothing tread design that gives you more The wealthy one saved something than 8,000 gripping edges for swifter, safer stops, plus from each occasion of income, the extra protection against dangerous skids. other saved nothing. One of the old poets said. " Tis R,DE 0N G00DYEAR TRES THAN ON ANY OTHeTkind greatly wise to talk with our past hours and ask them what renort they bore to heaven. What If THE SAN JUAN those hours have slipped awav without having been analyzed, and their values preserved When I look hark through the NEW BURROUGHS pages and pages of mv dinrv I see myself as I would see and DIRECTOR 200 some other man. That In ADDING MACHINE those pages I am more often nn- MON much-neede- d DOVE CREEK STATE BANK Smith-McClella- n n is iafeir CROSS-CUT- TUB DeLuxe y 334 Whiterocks WC No. 2 NE SW Whiterocks Unit No. NE 2: Spud Drilling 15 hole d A 02 Triple-Temper- $2.25 Utah OPTOMETRIST BYES EXAMINED by dn dD 19 12 11 Vi No Comment, Twin Rocks Unit No. 1: Ran logs. Present total depth. 4573. Taking DST. DR. B. A. BROUGHTON B-5- MONET-BAC- Rid 3 ivfc 14 10 3 No act of Congress should DEEP-CU- Coronado Empress Federal Gunsite Imperial Kane Creek Knapp Bill: be construed as indicating an intent on the part of Congress to occupy the field in which such act operates, to the exclusion of all state laws on the same subject matter, unless such act contains an express provision to that effect. No act of Congress shall be construed as invalidating a provision of state law which be valied in the absence of such act unless there is a direct and positive conflict between an express provision of suh act and such provision of the law so that the two cannot be reconciled or consistently stand together. 3Waysi URANIUM STOCK QUOTATION 26N-94- More important from a fiscal standpoint, Mr. Eisenhower has asked Congress for an additional for next year for $547,100,000 2 jet bombers, missiles and for other defense purposes. Of this amount $400 million would actually be spent next year. So, even if postal rates are increased, the $400 million surplus forecast by Mr. Eisenhower would still be exhausted. Also, Congress thus far has added to the Eisenhower budget rather than cutting it. Economy-mindemembers of Congress are alarmed at the prospects for the remainder of the session. Particularly are they concerned over the constant stream of witnesses appearing before the House public Appropriations - swat UG POUTS APPROXIMATE .) A mans greatest riches, if he saves and preserves thefn in the works time that they are put in his These witnesses are seeking aphands, are the years that he lives. propriations for pet projects in various congressional districts. If met to any appreciable degree, this would throw the budget further out of balance. Then there are many other pressures for additional spending in an election h potter a $50 million Lyman wise-crack- charges that this is a Congress could boomerang. Reaction of Democratic leaders may be to speed up to force action on a broad front And much pending legislation could be inflationary and could upset the atmosphere of confidence underlying the nations continuing growth and prosperity. From the business viewpoint the fewer new laws the better. If a strong push should come, conservative members of Congress in both parties will be sorely pressed to hold the line. And Congressmen returning from the Easter recess report that people back home politically. That means pressure groups could have a field day. THE EXPANDING BUDGET Even now prospects for balancing the federal budget and getting tax cuts are becoming gloomier and gloomier. The budget submitted by President Eisenhower last January called for a surplus next year of only $400 million if Congress should raise postal rates by $350 million. If Congress does not increase postal rates and more and more people believe this is unlikely in an election year the surplus forcast would be cut to 523il0m 4 koiMruml - 3-- T |