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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTA THE S ALINA SUN BRITISH-RUSSIA- TRADE. Entered at the postoffice at Salina as second-clas- under the Act of Congress of March Member It ' . s 3, 1879. h State Press Association ,, National Editorial Association matter . - 12.00 , $1.00 Payable In Advance . . Economic , Advertising Rates Given on Application . , .Complete Banking Service Highlights. First State Bank. oif Salina " -- ..... ! at -- . -- WESLEY CHERRY Asst. Editor - Business Mgr. hostili-terial- , -' NOT A VALID REASON. . SALES TO PORTUGAL. . I upai In the intense fight which has been An example of the shifting of trade in of on session the special going already caused by the war in Europe congress over the lifting of the. cm- - is seen in 'the recent authorization by bargo on war munitions, both sides in .the government of Portugal of.a pur-th- e controversy have claimed tlfat! chase of $5,000,000 worth of'rarlroad their method is the. better to Veep us euipTiieiit in the United States; . out of war. Just why selling arms and j)P f j,.t order is for staitjess steel munitions to Europe will keep us out to Ke followe.r by p.issvnfri.r of war is a bit difficult to see. .Those llul.tha,SP8 (,f locomotives and rails, favoring embargo repeal frankly tW, outbreak- - of the war Iorr mit they are not neutral and appur- tuguls iinjiorts came .largely ffom ntly act on the belief that the and England. ping of arms to England and France )SWl transactions will Whi!,- - thp will bring about a defeat of llitlep so , t.ash a (i it is unU,.stoo(1 1)U,is. oj quickly that there wdl not be enough ;lhat effoVta will be lnade to dispose time to drag us in. This, however, m of ua, Vlflue in KOoda of port view of the situation, would seem tq,. State- These goods wi, be taking long chances. consist (f cork pr;served fish port Those proposing repeal of the em- - wjne and olive oil from Portugal, and . bargo state too that there is no dif- - P(,ffPP from her colonies. ference between sending food or Van-- , . N i)liaUoIia for this werc (,.a non to the allies, that both help to b c;hauk.s H MclJ;init.f an Perthe field. m the arm.es sustain Anl,l ican now livil,K j.f Paris, who has haps this U true in a sense, hut there formed a trading corporation to pro- is a big psychological difference. Senator McNary, minority leader, who sj eJa,,s opposing the lifting of the embargo, recently called attention to this fact: Those of us who remember the years from 1911 to 1917 know the part which the American export of arms and munitions to the allies played in arousing the hatred of the German nation against us. So bitter di the Germans become as they learned that American guns and shells were1 ,,, killing their men that actually they, ,,"e un a"1'1- Uastus- - ,lats what She(8 attacked this country in the submar- 8 e 8- Ine warfare. They brought the war to Boy, you sho is lucky. Mines still our shores through sabotage of our livin. . to stir ad-jr,l- ti ship-GeVma- 1 - munitions plants. They sought up one of our neighboring nations against us. In their desperation the Germans determined to stop the ex- ports of American munitions at all costs. There was nothing for IVesi-- j dent Wilson to do but acknowledge these attacks on us and ask congress to formally declare the war which already existed." There may be reasons why the em- - . 9 Another indication of the bof iness t of the present war in Europe comes with the announcement of the lact Industrial News Review. have that Great Britain on a. friendly exchange lf Happenings that Affect agreed tip;' Dinner commodities. Great Britain professed-l- y I'ails, Dividend Checks and Tax Bills f Every Individual. National needs Russian timber and m preand International Problems Insep.of to for it supplies exchange pared arable fym Local Welfare.. . w can hich the Jjwiets tin aijd rubber , oOo .. i use. . . It should be renulnbered tliat busi-ireBritain is at war wun nesa wa3 improving in this .countiy Germany, and Rufsiajs nJw cjosely before CcmSny invaded Trfland, and connectedwith Germany in a commer- plitajn and Fiance, declared war. cial Ivay. And Geimany Aadly needs Therefore, late jumpj in She business tin and aubber which are two raw nja- - Cyt1e cannot be entirely laid jto s very essential for the prosecy. tipH a4,.ad. War was a bp. ri.'- factor, tion of wpr. To the neutial obseivei but jtVlulnt chanjje a downward trend would seem that., tin . and rubber i fr(.nd. lt sinlplyac-sen- t ;(o an to Russia by Great Britain have celcrated immense extent in (to.n.n a pretty .good cBanee of being sent Hues) the bettej n.ent thafhad turn toJJitler. Of course the Ru'W.ians gp time before. not so to dispose of it, may . promise tveeks of. the wai saw first . .Una V but just how reliable- - will Stalins frenzied and manufatturmg buvmg . promise be jn a case. of this kind: eveijbody seemed to he trying to gtf't Moreover, the shipping will have in.,n th( grounil.fo.nc fit oflrl, cl'ore done principally through, the Baltic, s()t s, yw.,h That first, rawhidr is controlled ly .the ; Germsfn ilw ,v;u k.al ph;fS(, t.ff tin? current improvement apparently has passed, flie upimnl jn t!ie Jiarortieters-eon- , . tinu'es, but tifa slow. pace. J he oyt- . t sfcipping rubber and tin. to Great Ili - look js betterment will is now But our earnestly aso- be slow, but it is a fact which tain. country endeavoring to store up quantities. of y()U can take foj- whaVit isNvorth that tin and rubber, in the Lpited Estate's all of the eerpomist feel for our own defensive needs. So dam- it will continue aging to. us is the export oftin and business is better than, most of us rubber apt to.be that our war depart- realize. Industrial is production ment the other day issued a public ap- close to the 1929 level some today baromepeal to American business, men to ters show it efren slightly above that cease shipping these two commodity's point. A- number of industries have out, of our country. Under the British- actually passed fhe Russian agreement it.is possible that. Qf thp th. most important some of our exports of precious tin is which Recently .touched g steel, find their and rubber new; high. Othef industries which are way into nazi Germany. So much for doing .better now than in 1929 from the general goofiness of international the production standpoint .(hut. not trade and international war. from t tie profit standpoint) are elecOf course there is an ethical and trie lower, shoes, textiles, oil refining sentimental angle which might he and tolmeeo manufacturing. mentioned. Britons, like most AmeriAs this column has pointed out be hortified were by the invasion fore, the very sharp increase in in cans, of Poland by the nazis and John Bull vpnb)rj(,s occasioned by the war har refuses to have anything to do with nob as yej been met by a comparable" Germany until the nazi government is jncrease jn consumer purchasing. And overthrown. But recently Russia has jb s(,pms improbable that foreign half of Poland and is taking n)ty,di aeKt in the more or less over in one way or another the Baltic v;sible future, will be adequate to and even threatening the peace Korb the supplies all Europe is short. and quiet of the Scandinavian coun- of cash, and her nations will use their tries. But instead of being horrified own resources to the utmost before at Stalin the British government calm- s'jiending any of their slender gold ly arranges a trade pact with the hoards. As a result, it is to the .docountry whfch only a few weeks ago mestic market that vc must princirise in demand that gave it the cofnpletest double crossing pally .look for-But why mention this. jwj in justify the rise in, product ion After all sentiment and ethics are. not That .the country is all set to go used in international polities unless ahead is obvious from even a cursory they happen to fit in. This is all the glance at the basic statistics.'. Busi- more reason why Uncle ,Sam , should PSSWPl.k, for instance, 'thinks that 'it fs rea-'- j keep his shirt on and stay at home. wpbout being sonable to anticipate a push upward . , The man on the street who con- - tha't will bring us ahead of 1929 eco-- j the magazine.) lemns the submarine and poison gas nomically. the loudest and longest is. liable' to points out that hank deposits are at ' high and that excess jump into his car feeling so mad ablmt their Euin also of at .on banks are reserves record) the heartless warfare going levels. The cash is on hand when.) rope that he will step on the gas celerator and kill somebody before he our people are ready to use it. ' All the temporary influences seem gets out of town. -- t H. W. CHERRY Editor and Publisher ' and-Russi- a Subscription RateS: , One Year Six Months N ' Published Every Friday .at Salina, Utah' . On the road to war, there are no service or rest stations at which decan gain a breathing spell. niocra-c1 : bargo should he lifted, but certainly the contention that such action will keep us out of war is not one of them. The exact opposite is more apt to he true. nc Member . . Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation . s Deposits In This Bank Are Insured In Accordance With the Bank- 1933 Maximum Insurance for bfach Depositer, $5000 Capital and .Surplus' -- to be fdr the Ifl ttef.At ttte spme time, 'worn and exhausfed, step d ja- -. the spoils. it pays to be aautious time and 0ltr , jigani Als0 5f great i"P1larice is the efts, .n th? last ten yqY we Jlave seen the attitude of Italy. Xo longer does stage set for recovery,, only to have a: the contaolled Italian "press Heif Hitler at every opportunity, and revile the French and .British. Mussolini hates Communistji, apparently, far mbre tharf he loves the Nazis. And the Ger-pact seems to have blast-todaing. They" are jractically- - all bullish Ronie-B. . pxis to bits. , . oOo -- lh-J- -- - man-Russia- y. ei , One school of. thought holds that he war in Europe must inevitably be-oa stalemate that 'British and German airpower will just bout offset each other in effective- less, and that neither Germans noi; llies will be able to make important ; -ains through the great. lines of fior-'- k ifications on the JVestern Front. FYom this it is argued that both sides' will finally be foroeed to eonplude onie kjnd of peace, if hnly to prevent Communism from engulfing, Europe-- . It lias lqpg been said tfcat the only vinner .in a protracted European war will be Russia. And during the brief time this war has been fought, it is apparent that Stalin has achieved the only major victories. The ominous 'shadow- of the U. S. S.-- R. blankets the Ialtfc completely . aftd extends far into the Balkans. Many an expert argues that Hitler gave away far niorQ his deal thaihe gained when . . Soviets. with the . Today it seems certain- that Russia holds the balance of- - sea power. She can stop Hitler, cold in' his northern; her she holds Germany-a- t advance mercy when it comes "to many qssen-tial supplies. On the other hand, if she threw in with Hitler and actually sent her vast army 'to. fight with the Germans, few believe France and England could long survive. The probabilities seem "to be that Stalin has definitely decided not to take the latter step sea-low- er ly ab-stat- no even to please anybody. ,We don t war, we don t like fellows iyho wai, we hate war and everything ,m,ecte w' sjart-- l'ttle one of ur ow" if some PeoPle. on t "keep still. Maj, Ben Hudson. To alibi err as .is invented-t- o over-sanguin- e, all-.ti- v I CARRY. ANTI-WORR- INSURANCE-- j it is to Russias interest, most experts are convinced, that she stay neutral play one side against the other, and finally, when the two sides are DR. H. CRANDALL denVist SALINA' UTAH Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. ni. - 1:30 to 5 p. m. 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