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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE SALINA SUN r First State Bank of Salina Published Every Friday at Salina, Utah Kntered at the pustoffire at Salina under the Act of Congress of March Member tne . tah State Press Association '!i v aeeondtlasa matter , ... ... 2.(K . A WWW ffiSUHNYBROOK $1.0' Payable In Advance I KENTUCKY STRAICHT BOURBON Advertising Rates Given on Application ORSA B. CHERRY Publisher The Livestock Bank of Utah" OLD Hates: Subscription Year Months National Fditorial Association and enjoy the whiskey thatr. CHEERFUL AS ITS XU IT 3, 1879. Make yoom-l- dm WESLEY CHERRY f a cool drink with this grand, genial bonrbon. Savor iu mellowness and fine yflNY life Editor 210,000.00 Surplus BRAND WHISKEY ' old-tim- oUr flavor! e 25,000.00 $ Capital Member: Youll cheer up instantly rests the responsibility of THE PI MAC HEAL'III on whom IS AT STAKE canning on the business and If present high standuids of medical practice are to be maintained in this nation, and the public is to be protected from viitually uncontrolled quackery, it will be necessary for congress to pass new legislation. That is the inevitable deduction to be made from some recent events. , medical groups, inIn Apiil, cluding the principal officials of the Ametiean Medical association, were found guilty of a federal chaige of The conspiiacy to restrain trade. action was brought under the antitrust statutes. Last June, that decision was upheld by the United States Couit of Appeals at Washington, P. C. In effect, these court decisions hold that medicine is actually tiude and commerce. If these decisions are to maik the end of the matter, therefor, it is perfectly possible that the exclusive light of physicians to practice medicine, anil the light of physicians to determine educational and ethical standards for the profession, will be abrogated and made unlawful. And if that happens, the worst kind of quackery will be encouraged, at the expense of the public health. In the decision made by the Court of Appeals, it was said that it may be desirable feir professieinnl groups to be given enlai god powers. Put, the presiding juelgc continued, that is a matter for congress not for the courts. The courts, in short, can pass einly upon the legality of a congressional statute not upon its wisdom. Here is an issue that affects us all. If doctors cannot, through reputable organizatieins, enforce reasonable and necessary requirements on practitioners, a precedent will be established which will be extended to all oth19-11- er professional groups, lawyers, dentists, architects, engineers, etc. A protection which is absolutely essential to the public health and welfare will be destroyed. Congress should take swift remedial action. THROW YOllU SCRAP INTO THE FIGHT! of the nation. One of tiie gravest weaknesses in our tax structure, is the burden it imposes on businesses which have not benefited, and have in many cases suffered, from the war. Writing in Newsweek, Ralph Robey said of the new tax bill: Under this measure companies whose incomes are more or less fixed, such as public utilities, would be taxed disproportionately heavier than concerns engaged in war woik For many such companies, therefore, the additional taxes proposed in this bill would mean almost certain bankruptcy. And it is these companies on which we will have to depend for sustained employment and peacetime expansion after tin war. Any tax bill which undermines ba. sic industry will prove destructive in tin long run. Any tax bill which increases the difficulty of obtaining new capital for basic industry, is dangerous. The war effort depends upon vigorous, productive industry and upon individual and corporate purchasing of War Bonds. That is what congress scents to have forgotten. And congress must remember that before it is too late. .... HUY U. S. WAR STAMPS, BONDS! SUBSIDIZING THE CONSUMER Fred S. Sexauer, FOR BSIC INDUSTRIES? president of the Dairymens league Cooperative association of New York, recently made some illuminating observations on the farm price question. Farmers are not looking for subhe said. All that farmers sidies, want is a fair return for the cost of producing the volume of food they are being called upon to supply the United Nations The real purpose of the subsidy prices being talked about in Washington, is to prevent a rise in food prices to consumers. That certainly is not a subsidy to farmers. It is a subsidy to the consuming public. It is a subsidy to the already high paid workers of indusweek try, whose reward for a is lavish compared to a farmers' return for 12, 14 or days with no extra pay for Sundays or holidays. While labor is making big money and enjoying a high standard of living, fanners are still only a little better off than during the depression years. This year farm income will be between 12 to 15 per cent of total nation accounts for 36 per cent of the tion accounst for 36 per cent of the entire population. That certainly doesnt make agriculture look too prosperous. In creating a tax policy, we usually seem to overlook the fact that a very large part of the wealth and property of all the people is invested in corporations and that the great bulk of the owners of those corporations are persons of small and moderate means. As a result, when we soak the corporations, we simply soak and destroy the savings of the people. That, in turn, reduces the ability of the people to pay taxes and to buy government bonds and it likewise destroys the confidence of the people KEEP .... 16-ho- ur EM FIRING WITH JUNK! TOE 1POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE KS OjJS 6TFEL ID COMPANY ROLLED EN006H TEEl PI ATE'S IN OhiP VJFPii PROVIDE ARMOR PLATE FOR mope THM TANKS 7000 THE Wins OF Trie SI ANT tips 8-- i9 Bomber. APB AS MUCH AS 3 feet higher rr WHILE IN FXISHT THAN WHEN ON THE ROUND 6 w ft, v. National Distillers Prod. Corp., N. Y. oc I wisli Federal Reserve System Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 90.4 Proof ii jj h i li i u t tt t and it is up to the banks to see MINIMIZING try LIVING that the freeze goes quickly, efficient- DROP IN STANDARD You, as a consumer, can do something about that bogey, the high cost of living, by taking advantage of the information that is being distributed by retail stores in ever-prese- all fields. chain systems pioneered the kind of work, and thousands of independent stores have joined in. In the food field, retailers are coopeiating aggressively in the National Nutrition campaign. Through advertising, handbills, posters, store displays, etc., they are showing the housewife how she my prepare nutritious, d and apRtizing meals at minimum cost. As nutrition experts have long pointed out, a good diet need not be costly and many costly diets are inadequate in the minerals and vitamins the body needs for health. Some of the least expensive foods are richest in vitamin content and they may be prepared and served in a wide variety of forms to avoid monotony. In other fields, stores are doing a similar good work. Shortages of certain kinds of cloth, rubber and other items have made it necessary to produce and sell substitutes. The stores have cooperated with manufacturers and chemists in developing the best and the least expensive substitutes for scarce and costly commodities. As time goes on, more and more substitutes will appear and retailers can advise you on their merits. Retailers are doing a big job in minimizing the drop in our standard of living, to the benefit of both your health anil your pocketbook. The ly and completely into effect. Ho the story goes, in a hundred varied fields of financial activity. Banking is in the wart to the hilt. Men, machines and money make up the combination that is necessary to Washington By THROW YOUR SCRAP INTO TIIE FIGHT! y DR. H. CRANDALL ' DENTIST SALINA Snapshots eventual victory. - - - UTAH Office Hours: James Preston to 1:30 to 5 p. in. Official Washington considers the immediate future as the most criticW II T WE W ANT al of the war in terms of both milit IS TIRES tary and domestic activities. Armed raw materials in the W. P. Tiie charge that oil companies have w'ith almost unlimited war powers, and Navy Munitions Board realigndeliberately blocked thp production of as reaffirmed by the U. S. Supreme ment. Chairman Nelson will say how artificial rubber for mercenary rea- Courts military saboteur trial ruling, much material goes into civilin prosons is an example of political buck-passi- the President now stands ready to duction. ANMB continues to disof the worst type. tackle control of cost elements which charge basic duties outlined in the One of the largest oil companies re- include the regulation of prices and Army-Nav- y agreement and takes on others requested by WPB. WPB and cently stated categorically that it wages. The zero hour of the ANMB are not rival but complementsupports and will fight for just one program for the production of syn- drive may be at hand. Justice Rosen-ma- ary to each other and the latter rethe Presidents favorite thetic rubber. That is, whatever prois on ports to the President through Mr. and phrase-make- r, the to gram give government adopts our nation the most rubber in the the job and the stabilization plan is Nelson. shortest time, from any raw material reported drawn. BOMB THE JAFS WITH JUNK! whatsoever, and with the least posible W. P. B. emerges as the Czar of drain on vital construction materials. Buy From Our Advertisers. That is the policy of the industry gen- soundly-balance- 9 12 a. m. anti-inflati- n, fact-assembl- er met-ial- s, 40-ho- BANKRUPTCY Sujy "T indus-ti- y erally. What has delayed the synthetic rubber program is inexcusable political manhandling. Bureu after has stuck its finger into the pie. The public has been fed one conflicting opinion after another. Only recently has any order come out of the chaos and only recently has any real start toward solving the problem been bu-be- au THE POCKETBOOK KNOWLEDGE TpPPS made. Whether synthetic rubber can best be made from petroleum, grain alcohol or anything else is a chemical BOMB THE JAPS WITH JUNK! problem. The oil industry, like the rest of the country, wants results. MEN MACHINES Its interest, like the interest of all of AND MONEY us, lies in getting tires in the shortest Most of us think of war exclusiveof the proly in terms of men and machines. But possible time, irrespective cess to used them. manufacture there is another essential to the prosecution of war money. GET IN THE SCRAP! The role played by banking in this PASTE THIS war, is, therefore, of the first impoit-ancMen must obtain money to ex- IN YOUR HAT If inflation Comes it will not be pand their plants anil they go to the the corporations that will be reduced banks. Men must receive advice on to and privation. It will be misery difficult financial problems and they the whose high wages will workers to the banks. Men seek undergo less and less the higher and buy fithe of standing many complicated The New York nancial restrictions laid down by the higher they go. Times. government and they go to banks. Billions of dollars worth of War THROW YOUR SCRAP Bonds must he sold to the public INTO THE FIGHT! and the banks do a large part of the Production of steel in the first half job. The treasury freezes the vast financial holdings of enemy govern- of 1912 set a new high record of ments and enemy nations in this coun 12,570,247 net tons. e. Ethel Clarks Radio Flashes . 4 With the completion of their recent series of Paramount short subjects, the Quiz Kids will be promoted to feature pictures. The full length pictures In which the Quiz Kids and Quiz Master Joe Kelley will be featured is now being planned by Paramounts flavor is EVJOUSH ALUMINUM TO BUILD 10 ftPW BOMBERS IS RECLAIMED EVFAy 10 Oft vs FROM MACHINE SHOP CHIPS AND SHAVINGS .IN ONE FACTORY 'P One "THE NAME DUNSAREE APPLIED TO FATI6UE CLOTHES, COMES FROM AN AREA !UN6RI NEAR BOMBAy, INDIA, WHERE A COARSE KIND OF BLUE COTTON CLOTH WAS FIRST MADE WHATS Hol- where several studios, lywood stories are under consideration. The radio program will also be moved to Hollywood during the filming of the picture. Yankee House Party New Englands biggest daytime radio show Is now being heard daily Mondays through Fridays at 9:30 a. m. over KLO and the Mutual network. The east of the dally musical variety show is composed of Ruth Owens, lovely young soprano: George Wheeler, tenor favorite of the concert stage: Ted Cole, romantic baritone: George and Dixie, guitar strumming yodelers; Frank Cronin, performing at the worlds largest radio organ and Bobbie Norris and his orchestra. Leo Egan and Nelson Churchill are masters of ceremonies. From time to time, prominent personalities from stage, screen and radio who are in Boston. where the program originates, will make guest appearances. Telephone operators are among the most anonymous persons In the country except on the air. One small-tow- n phone girl we know Is well on the way to being a household name wherever radio Is heard. She Is Mamie, the talkative operator on the Lum and Abner show The most prized possession of William Perry Bill Adams, announcer on the Earl Godw.n news "nsdeast "Watch the World Go By," is an original portrait of John Garlic DETECTABLE IN MILK EVEN TriOUSH A COri ONLY INHALES THE ODOR IN A SARLICKy PASTURE Blonde, Rhodes. ainger, Betty Dave Roses orchestra shares honors with Betty. Beside her radio work, Betty bolds the title of First Lady of Television. Shes been facing the radiocameras since 1931. Also able to act, Betty has appeared in many movies. Royal Arch Gunnison, former Mutual correspondent in Manila, and his wife, previously reported interned there since the Japanese occupation, have been reported safe in the official Ust of war prisoners released by the American Red Cross, according to word received by his mother, Mrs. Helena Gunnison of Seattle. Wash. During the Nipponese invasion, GunniBarrymore by Sargent, auto- son elected to stay In Manila with graphed by the painter and the hia wife rather than escape with subject. General MacArthura forces. SUN WHICH ORlSlNALLy COST 4 ISO is now BEINS MADE FOR LESS THAN SO By MASS PRODUCTION METH0PS, COOKIN? |