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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA. UTAH THE S ALINA SUN The Worlds News Seen Through The Christian Science Monitor Published Every Friday at Salina, Utah tatter Entered at the postoffice at Salina iJ second-clas- s under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Mcr Year r'ix Months Jtah State Press Association Advertising Rates Given w How's your health? We hope its, good. Put your health, that of your relatives, living and as yet unborn, as well as that of your neighbors, isnt going to be so good, if by some catasrophic legislative blunder the is Congess should enact a law that session. before it this present This threat to the nations health, biJth physical and social, is Senate Pill 1161, introduced on June IS, ID Id, by Senator Robert F. Wagner, of N'ew York, for himself and Senator James Murray of Montana. Senator Wagner, already having placed the executives of private industry behind with his Wagner Labor the eight-ha- ll Relations Act, now plots to put the medical fraternity in the same un- j tenable position. In brief, the measure now under consideration by Congess proposes that the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service have full power and authority to (1) hire docors and establish rates of pay, possibly for all doctors; (2) establish fee schedules for services; (3) establish qualifications for socialists; (1) determine the number f individuals for whom any physician may provide service; and (5) determine arbitrarily what hospitals or clinics may provide services for patients. There is no public demand for soeiaistic pactices in the field of medicine, or in any other field in America. There can be no possible excuse for arbitrarily placing men of science engaged in basic human welfare work, under political domination. It would be but a mere step farther, to and hardly more inconceivable, all all all education, religion, place industry, all business activity, all art and culture in the hands of a few unbridled bureaucrats. Here Ls just another of those Utopian schemes to bamboozle the American people into believing that you can get something for nothing, a carefully calculated plot to plunge this xrlHrwwT Surplus 25,000.90 235,000.00 aaaaaaaaaaaa f m w nrxrrx - SAMII E COPY ON REQUEST Member: Editor I.y GEORGE lECK W $ Addrese RAIDER WORKING V Capital ... ..... Name W W WESLEY CHERRY health: further part of the very Jl.OL on Application ORSA B. CHFRRY Publisher K $2.0C Payable In Advance National Editorial Association HOW'S YOl ... The Livestock Dank of Utah The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price 12.00 Yearly, or 1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, 2.60 a Year, introductory Olfer, 6 Saturday Issue 25 Cent. Subscription Rates: Member First State Bank Of Salina An International Daily Neu spaper Unbiased Free from Sersatlonal-Un- i Conxtruuiie It Truthful Editorials Are Timtly and Instructive and It Daily I eatuies, Together v, i. h the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. CLEAN OWN HOUSE FIRST point program ito forestall as he recommends j IN U. S. The most popular wlitical pastime to day is planning a new postwar The people of the United States world. have again been warned that suicide Put before the United States can air raids by the Axis may still he take any great part in such a world, exjieeted. In the meantime another it will have to set its own house in raider, fire, is working daily in our order. midst destroying millions of dollars Large, continuing production is the worth of vital property. basis for financing our governWhether a factory or a home is only and maintaining adequate living ment burned or bombed, the loss is the and a feeling of personal standards same. With warehouses now full of In the United States, unsecurity. irreplaceable farm crops, and with a der enterprise system, livprivate vital war materials stored throughstandards reached a world peak out flie country, a warning should go ing and provided real imhjienilence and out for every citizen to be doubly security for a greater population alert to fire hazards. in other countries. than All over the nation, possibility of while planning the postwar So, fire has been increased by housing our planners may as well get world, developments of flamable character, ito earth and consider pracdown buildin by ar industries ojierating tical plans for encouraging expansion house them, to intended never ings of private enterprise at home. by storage of irreplaceable materials trash Only a policy of moderate taxation in warehouses where grass or and the war will encourage indimenace after by tihem, fires constantly water vidual initiative. Exorbitant taxes inaccessible or inadequate for add to the never of' goods, depress areas in price prepared supplies and investment deter or employment purposes production storage These are but a few of the fire risks and risk taking. Mcslerate business taxes, common to every war congested area says hazards are Harley I Lutz, professor of public potential today. They finance, Princeton Univeisity, in The as deadly as any bombing raid. There is little excuse for the ex- Tax Review, that would release the istence of 6uch fire hazards. They full driving power of production at are generally controllable through adequate wages and profits, mean Evey indi- that as soon as the war is over the painstakng inspections. vidual in every plant and home should excess profits tax and the surtax be enlisted to help with such inspec- should be repealed, the normal rate tion and fire prevention work, just should be reduced to some point withas they are enlisted to sell war bonds. in the range applied from 1918 to It is as important to prevent a fire 1932. In no ease should the rate which destroys property or goods exceed 20 per cent. which the nation buys with the money from war bonds, as it is to sell the CLEARING THE TRACK bonds. It may not be as spectacular It has remained for Joseph II. to prevent fires as it is to fight them, Director of the Office of Eastman, but it certainly is a more effective Defense for the govTransportation means of conserving immediately to recognize officially the ernment, needed resources. fact that a lot of our manpower shortage is the roOflt of rules and regulations that were often devised MERCHANTS for the specific purpose of making WISE Advertise! liberty-lovin- g nation into a totalitarian the very thing we are services waging a costly war to stamp out friend to his patients. His are rendered to individuals as such abroad. DeWitt Emery, President of the whose ills and problems and needs National Small Business Mens As- are individual, distinct and confiden sociation, says of this abortive legis- tial. He works with his judgment lative proposal: It is another at and his years of specialized training or other- as well as with his hands. He watches intentional tempt, either American clocks only to bo on time and at hand to the alter wise, radically Way of Life, and make the people to repair broken bodies and save slaves of the government instead of human lives. He is entitled to just the government the servant of the and adequate rewards for his depeople. In its application to medical votion to humanitarian principles and care and hospitalization, it ignores practices. His fees have never been, the clear fact that for years under and cannot possibly be, regulated on basis. He cant go the free enterprise system, adequate a and efficient health, disability and on strike except against his own hospitalization insurance have been best interests and his conscience. available to the individual according Write your Congressman and Sento his own needs, his own will and ators that your health is good and his own prerogatives. that you wish to have it remain that The modern doctor practices pre- way tell them to give this Wagner-Murraventive as well as curative medicine, Bill an anesthetic from which and in addition, is a counselor and it will never awaken. Federal Reserve System Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation low-pric- 0 VFVn portal-to-port- al S' Yr--j' THE w y, Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m. - 1:30 to 5 p. m. is faced with the necessity of refunding, in order to put the'original cost theory into practice. As usual, it is the investor who suffers, and in this particular case it may be the war effort that will suffer also." What business today can stand a values turnback to as the basis of its financial horse-and-bug- Jf L i if LEADS ATTACK ON NAPLES Lieut. Gen. Mark W Clark, commander of the American 5th Army in the invasion of Italy, a captain in the lit). Infantry in the World War, was wounded during the German advance toward Paris in June, 1918. He was deputy commander-in-chiof the forces landing in Africa and was the hero of a submarine adventure m establishing contact with the Free French in Algiers preparatory to the landing of Allied troops in November, 1942. -- ef ANP ALKALIS AS WELL AS lOPlNE ANP SIMILAR COMPOUNDS A v k VNWN- V-',- fM.l 'ISLAND COM INS OP'! IN issq AFTCR LAnB ILOIANOO OVERFLOWED ITS BANNS. AN ISLAND 500 FEET IN OiAVfcl t ROSE OUT OF Tub CFNTf? e la-- 5 an ALTiraee RfA t of to 250 rtSTl QP J : I. !- - Jr Ci - 'i A -I; ?ar!kTTP ? I 1 C'C'Vvtrra ANiD CAPE fLr n.flv Y 1U- - M. MOt-N- FL SALVADOR WILL BE TUE FIRST REPUBOC TO WAVE ITS PART OF THE FAN AMERICAN UOUWAV PAViO FROM END TO END. TUB LFMPA PV5R PRICwsp IS tJ " Tut LONGEST SUSPENSION SKI608 l hE WHOLE HIOHVwAV. ON i ... - :.'SSW - ' ' V Et Salvador, like its neighboring Middle American republics, it supplying its v.tal share of stra- tegic war crops to the United Nations' war effort. To its plentiful and choice coffee crop it ha added henequen and sisal (for twine, kapok, castor oil, Ealsam of Peru. and. experimentally, rubber, all important war mr. l. El Eivador'a produc- lion of tropical crops it primary evidence of the interdependence I. UTAH A NEW PLASTIC APRON FOR WAR WORKERS SUERS WATER, OIL. GASOLINE, AULP ACIPS Ct T - TOE IPOCKETBOOK of KRTOIYILEMSE Tp&s s:sv A - - r . y fcCA SALINA fair-mind- v? & SALVV'OS IS NORMALLY DENTIST ay r KAY FL DR. H. CRANDALL C 6 " -- 'rtr 2 in 0 series oh the tounlriei of Mi,!. lie Amen, in B 0, economy, ' a s, sug-ve-ti- two jobs where one was sufficient. Unless vigorous remedies are undertaken at once, the country is headed for a crisis in railroad manpower, cays Mr. Eastman. In a 13- - C such an imessential the suspension for portant the duration in certain circumstances of full crew laws and engine mileage limitations. Mr Eastman recognizes that the rairoads have gone the limit in expanding service under many restrictions, and that the time has come to a store to add a line of childrens remove any artificial barriers which dresses at $5.98 when the highest block the fullest use of availabe manline previously carried was priced power and equipment, in this critical $3.98 particularly if no more dressperiod. es are available at the $3.98 price, or This should be haled by both labor if the store wishes to sell a better and management as an opportunity dress for $5.98. to once more demonstrate that Regulation of this type has very Americas rail transportation system serious implications which go away ami its workers can and will conquer what effect it may have on beyond As a war problems as they arise. in question or other comthe btores to is he it the hoped emergency, which may later be cited. It of Mr. Eastman will be con- panies is an attempt to prohibit certain persidered in this light. fectly legitimate activities within specified lines of business, and to PRICE FIXING RUNS WILD. regulate the business itself instead The American people have read in of regulating prices. If this particurecent news reports that the OPA lar regulation is continued, it will has filed complaints against certain wipe out countless small merchants ef the nations large variety store whose volume comes primarily from companies, charging that they are in the sale of womens and which contains and childrens outer wear. Such adviolation of MPR-33a price line limitation provision that ministration makes mockery out of prohibits any concern from selling the real intent of laws passed by any goods at price lines higher than Congress to establish reasonable warthose carried in March, 1912. The time controls of civilian commodities. fact that the price lines handled back in March, 1942, may no longer be LIQUIDATING THE INVESTOR available from manufacturers, seems The Utah Power & Light Company to mean nothing to the OPA. offers a current example of how a Among companies that have been Federal commission destroys private cited are F. W. Woolworth Co., Mc-investments by demanding rory Stores, J. J. Newberry Co., valuations in an airL. II. Green Neisner Co., Murphy Co., Pros., W. T. Grant Co., and J. C. plane age. By the mere stroke of a pen, the Federal Tower Commission Penny Co. the Utah Power & Light whole-.-ale ordered OPA has failed to control to dispose of an alleged Company and manufacturing costs, and of write-up- s in its $27,000,000 woof lines for inexpensive prices mens and childrens clothing. Now property accounts. The Utah Public Service Commisit is trying to prevent stores from making those practical adjusments in sion passed its preferred dividend, 13 2 in price lines which must be made in the stock dropped points, order to supply customers with the whioh was terrific loss for the 14,000 best available values from obtainable preferred stockholders, and no one can tell how much of a blow it may be upplies today. to the 11,000 bondholders the It is impossible for any person to understand OPAs rea- courageols individuals who put up soning when it says it is illegal for the money to give a sparsely settled mountain state and great mining industry one of the bes electric services in the world. While the public is being asked to cooperate in every possible manner in the war effort, a Federal and state agency go out of their way to deal a body blow to a basic industry when not even the customers of the company in question were agitating for rate reductions, as rates were already FL SALVADOR CAN BE REACHED FROM TME US. BY SHIR PLANE, TRAIN, FIUS, low. Commenting on the situation, AUTOMOBILE AND TELEPHONE. he Boston Daily Globe says: What the Federal Power Commission seems to have done is to create an artificial crisis at a time when the company cri-i- between the United Statei and Middle America. After the war, that interdependence will con. tinue to be the cornerstone of hemispheric solidarity. rrY ft wV.xj-.'- - J , i BALS4M CF PBRlf A MFDtCNAl SRIP EXTRACTET BALSAM TR6BS IS FOUND ONLY IN EL MISNAMED BECAUSE IT WAS D FROM CAUAU PERU, TO SPAIN. FA1M SALVADOR. FIRE WOOD. COREP FOR A yERP, WILL PRODUCE OS MJCtj NS 3SN MORE neat thou green wood. |