OCR Text |
Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE S ALINA SUN , Published Every Friday at Salma, Utah Entered at the postoffice at Saline . j snundilass matter under the Art uf (onjrfss of March 3, 1879. Member 'tee tab State Irrss Association National Kditur ial Association A First State Bank of Salina M mom ... ... Subscription Hates: Year Months Payable In Advance Jhe Livestock Bank of Utah" $2.0, odt 25.000.00 $ Capital $1.0'. 59 190,000.00 burplus Advertising Hates Given on Application WESLEY CHERRY ORSA B. CHERRY Publisher a PATRIOTS tYi Federal Reserve System Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 93 Proof National Ihslillr Produih ple lules of fire prevention. In the home, fue has many friends rcumulatinns of old paKr, clothing, and otlmr burnable materials stored inflammable liquids heating and lighting these are major sources equipment- of file. Eliminate them, and fires nppoi tunity to destroy is tiemendous-l- y i educed. In the business or the factory, similar hazaids often exist. Coupled with that, there may he a lack of equipment, lack pioper of education of w'orkeis, lack of attention to fire dangers. Here, too, the risks can easily and cheaply be i educed to the minimum. Fue must be fought in the interest of piotection of the individual, protection of propel ty and, in these Hys of national defense, protection of the nation. All of us must do our pai t in this battle. g NO KOI) TO RICHES MORALE IN THE MKJDCAL (OKIS Member: 9?cur6m Editor sacrifices are being made willingly in any kind of emergency, the doctor is the fiist to i os pond. Certainly, it is unfair and unwise to make promotion to high tanks impossible for these men. Medical reserve officers should be given promotions precisely as are regular army doctors on the basis of met it, age, etc. It is to be hoped that the war depaitment changes its Theie has been a gieat deal of cussiun concerning the morale problem of the American at my lately. Ilia government has taken steps designed to improve morale, ami a morale branch, headed by a brigadier general, has been established. In the medical corps, however, the war department has adopted a policy which would seem to he definitely policy. damaging to mm ale. This policy FIRE IS NOT provides that pi emotions above the I.W INC1BLK tank of major are suspended so fur as leseive officois aic concerned. Fire is the enemy of That means that no leseive coips doc- piopeity, of life, and of aecuiity. tor in the countrys militaiy sei vices, Fue is a dark shadow across every no matter what his abilities or ex- businohs and home, every place whoe pel ience, can advance beyond the giade people gather. No man knows when of major. it may st i ike. It rarely gives warnThe impoitance of the fitn-s- t posing. And when it goes it leaves ruin in a mil disaster in its wake. sible kind of medical soviet File menaces all the people and all gieat Rimy is clear to anyone. Ten thousand physicians now in active the people's piopeity. Each year it so vice have the job of keeping our tukes some ten thousand lives. Each and soldiers mentally year it destroys piopeity valued at physically healthy. Only 1,250 of these doctois hundicds of millions of dollais. Each aie regular at my men. All the lest vear it ilesti oys employment, oppor- lmve been drawn from the medical le- tunit.v, pingiess. Hut fue, fortunately, is not an in-- 1 ad ve. 'in iMe enemy. Fue can be licked, These icsovc off'ccrs, in many instances, have givi n lip prospeious h feeds on cat elessness, ignorance, piHctiees to entei militaiy so vice. tupidit. File can he staived by They ate definitely making sacrifices knowledge mid pi cpai edness and the on behalf of their country. And these .ft lligence npplication of a few sim NVw York to ot not. They f.ul to ku'io that his employer nius-- t flu bin and the union can blacklist him if for any ica-Mihis actions offind t he union Once him kliijtcd, he cant woik again in any union plaqt. , If all the shops in the countiy weie dosed diops, he couldnt work at all. What has the government done about this cunent wave of strikes? For one .thing, its discouiaged all attempts to amend the Wagner act or otherwise to impose any legal on unions. It has denied defense conti acts to the lowests bidder if he deals with the wrong union. Above all, it has failed to develop a sound labor policy that can deal with sti ikes. How much longer will Ameiica he forced to endure such a situation? How much longer will we be forced to lose valuable time and materials because of sti ikes in defense indus-tnes- ? Just as long as congress fails to pass legislation to gain control of the situation. Just as long as it fails to evolve an effective labor policy. The time has come for action once it hears from the folks back home. Write your senators and lepresenta-tive- s what you think should be done. They have a right to know your convictions, and you have an obligation to tell them what you think. i ri since Mr. Chamber-lai- n flew to Munich and Mama Ieikins I okayed a wasnt any too sure DR. H. CRANDALL DENTIST n. about AITEASE-MEN- SALINA - - - UTAH T, so got out ur Webster. is to! pacify, by satisfying 1 Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m - 1:30 to 5 u. m. the other guy. just i ight there Jo Serra alone, in the defini-- 1 stive which you can fall back on in tion, you can see appeasement tannot the peiiod of leadjustment after the woik. Anybody knows you cant sat- tmeigericy. To what very laige group of isfy eveijbody. Q. Sj in the fust place we should have ,met leans does the government look lx gun with a haymaker and forgot paiticulaily for extensive buying of about appeasement. Bullies savvy defense bonds and stamps? A. People in the middle and lower hamakeis. Nipped in the bud, we would not have the vvoi jam we income biackets, whcie many of the got now, am Mr. Hitler, and Mr. most lapid inci eases in national earnLewis, etc., would not be stiutting ings have taken place. This imaiouini and taking up the whole side- mense pait of our population can be walk. t specially effective m l educing naYou lame your offspiing via the tional pui chasing power by buying Fieud system of appeasement versus timps and Bonds, thus aiding the via the wood shed, and some day he c mnt ys delense program, while is gonna embaiiass you. helping to keep down the cost of BrSo 1 No profession jieifoims a greater service for the Ameiican people than medicine Upon the doctor falls the great task of keeping us physically and mentally healthy. And the typiYours with the low down, cal doctor does that job without reJo Serra. gard to his own comfort, his own -- o pleasure or his own purse. To become a doctor takes ten years BOND QUIZ DEFENSE of rigorous education. And after graduation many more years must go Q. 1 am a machinist in an airplane the before medico can by young hope factoi y. When the war is over I may from to develop a sizeable practice. Yet be laid off. How can 1 prepate fori the financial rewards that como to that time? the doctor ate extremely moderate in i .Make systematic and regular A. the light of the long and costly trainWe been reading lots about ap- puiilames of Defense Savings Binds. ing he must undergo. peasement. We been leading ap- - They will give you a substantial re "Medical Economics recently pub- lisheil a survey of the gross Income of some 7,500 icpresentative men of Slightly more than 50 jHr cent of theso doctors had incomes ranging from $1,500 to $6,500 a year. Less thnn 5 per cent had incomes of more than $6,500. And only seven-tenth- s of one per cent enjoyed incomes in excess of $30,500. These incomes, loniember, aie gross incomes. Out of them must he paid all the doctors heavy expenses office, supplies, nirses, transportation, etc. before ho has anything left for himself. Medicine, in shoit, is no road to i iches, and all doctors know it. Doctois of great reputation, with veiy large practices, are often modest earners because of so much of their woik is done without pay. The poor man who can pay little or nothing gets the same attention from the doctor as does the rich man who can pay Enough revenue to build five battleships of the "U S S. much. The goal of medicine is servNorth Carolina type was paid the Federal GovernRussell R ment by. the distilling irdustry in 1939-4ice to all. Brown, President of The American Distilling Company, shows graphically what the total taxes of $356 477,000 TIME FOR paid that year would buy in battleships Since the UTION founding of this company fifty years ago in 1892 the industry has Ameiican defense is being attackpaid over six billion dollars m ed by inou than Nazi submaiincs totaxes We n me threatened by aggres-:ioday. at home as well as abroad. The "strikes as usual policy of a few stubborn labor leaders, who seem to I laee personal victoiy above the national interest, Continues to lob us of materials vitally needed for our THE LOW DOWN HICKORY GROVE - ing. Note To buy Defense Bonds tad Stamps, go to the nearest post office, bank, or savings and loan association; or write to the Tieasurer of the United States, Washington, D. C. Also Stamps now are on sale at retail storm. When an old man starts walking spiyly again we know either he is in love or doesnt care about qualifying for an old age pension. THE KJElT ever-prese- -- Corporation, SNAPSHOTS ' j "j ' 3 2000 the l)-- YEARS 9 C. E&yPTiANS CARITNTFR TOOLS FAMILIAR I si IME 1RAPE TOWAy, All 1VIE TAPER FROtXJCEP in ENGLAnP POPO'G Tug 17 CENTury WOUIP NOT PE PUCKjM FUR. ONE SUNPAy rpTOH OF AMOPLPN J PAliy SiS.PRllS Pitots AAMMfVS stoPPtuEH eioe avp WO riLlER. THCOOGd research ONE COM PAN HAS PEVELOPEP A A $20,000,000 BUSINESS, IN By- - PROPOCT5 T HAT l)MT TO BE WAS IE P a IN CN61AND DC . THE ERA OF LAIMPRIEV PfO St NT THEIR. CLOTHES Fit io ee pYEPAEwexn SHAPE WHFN THty BtCAME SOUTD than t.SOO Pifterent - YU memorating Well-groome- d id-- 1 Pig San Francisco, Calif A facial, manicure and ear spruce-u- p workout prepare this cute pig lor the Grand National y four-wee- k Beauteous Exposition Milo Kimmerle and Marion Thompson are in charge Livestock the 100th anniversary ol the birth of Dr B F Goodnch, founder of the rubber company at Akron Ohio, beanng his name Above John L. Collyer, president of the company, left Col David M Goodrich, chairman of the board, and Clifford JL. Lord, director of the New York State Historical Association, right, are shown before the huge stone, which was dedicated at ceremonies held under the auspices of the association beauticians man-day- s. M-- ytAR MOPERN AUT&MOBUES USE MORE I protection. A lecent labor department repot t showed an almost unbroken rise in strikes since we began to produce on a major scale for aid to Britain and national defense in m Dur940. the month of of that ing year July strikes cost us 585.651 man-daof lost woik. For the period ending last November 21 that figure had risen to 1,252,168 The first strike in the captive coal mines cost a daily loss of potential coal to make steel upwards of 16,000 railroad freight cars or 32,000 3 tanks. During the second such strike we lost enough steel to build 30 destroyers. The fart that many of these strikes have been called to force a closed shop suggests that the unions are using national defense to create a labor monopoly with themselves in control of all American employees. Many people fail to understand the threat to our tiaditional fredoms that such a situation implies. They fail to realize that in a closed shop every employee niut be a member of the union and pay dues to it, whether he wants A three and a half ton polished granite block is the centerpiece of the memorial dedicated November 4 at Ripley, New York, m ceremonies com- Page Omar, the speed housing for 33,000 Baltimore workers building Martin B 26 bombers, 600 houses cl an entirely new type have been built, another 1200 planned Five men erect foundation, walls and roof in 7 hours, using walls of Cerresto board new product of The Celotex Corporation Chicago To help The Tent-Mak- waist line and 272 pound weight ol PiVt Joseph Cavalier of Baltimore (right) are a'MAiiormg problem to Prvt Wilbert Scheunn Cavalier will have to wait three h weeks for a outfit that is tl the Priorities Board approves T79 made-to-ord- |