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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE SAUNA areas, Charles AN OLD RACKET sun M. Upham, the American Road Builders Association, ap- peajs fop action to release gov. ernmenV funds "for" road "prefects now war t,mergency fiag keen relieved. He says: "We do not daim that highway con limitation gruction without should start now, but we find an u nemploy ment problem in the number of returning service men and the cancelling of war contracts. Highway construction can be extremely flexible, as new roads are required everywhere. It can be gauged to fit those areas where demobilization and cancellation of government contracts develop a local unemployment situation. With few exceptions, materials for highway no construction are longer critical, according to Mr. Upham. He finds no shortage exists for such basic materials as cement, asphalt, tar, crushed stone, sand and gravel. The WPB has modified its controls over construc- Director-En- JULY . ONLY TIIE FREE EAT WELL of gineer Some of our more advanced The farmer has always been in- thinkers, says the Wall Street picked as the dividual by politicians when Journal, have had the effront- Published Every Friday At Salina, Utah ery to put into so many words they wish to bring tears to the a statement to the effect that eyes of the public, and pu second-clas- s matter cal bills freedom is all right but you as at Salina through appropriation Entered at the postoffice cant eat it. for the expenditure of count- ing under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. less millions of dollars of tax Well, perhaps you cant eat freedom. But note one thing. funds to finance excursions by People who do not have freedom government into socialistic are likely not to eat. periments in rural areas. Proof of the latter statement We have watched this racket becomes more evident in the carried on successfully in the United States each day. Due Federal program to socialize to wartime restrictions, Now we the the power industry. see the same political forces at people of- our country have work to get a given up many of their freedoms, a principal one being the initial appropriation for As right to produce and sell. rural expansion. telephone WESLEY CHERRY ORSA B. CHERRY is old farmer We have accepted wartime usual, the poor Editor Publisher dragged in. It seems there isnt rationing and price control as a telephone on every farm. essential to the distribution of a must be there Therefore, existing supplies. But as we three large and another for PLANS EXPANSION Federal Rural Telephone Adhave given up our freedom to tour for probuses streamlined PROGRAM ministration to see that every produce, supplies have dwindled grams. one. has farmer until United States today the Rio Grande the of of construction Application Immediate War restrictions have pre faces acute shortages of' the Motorway to issue new stock new terminal facilities at Salt essentials of life. All the alibis valued at $807,300, has revealed Lake at a cost of $175,000 also vented telephone installations exfor an for companies, Telephone of years. the company yfandsuch'equip- that are offered in the name of is proposed. plans .will not supply tensive program for improving The petition also reveals that like electnc companies, kept far ment wm soon cease to be normal in of demand needs ahead when freethe nations at the facilities and equipment voiume 0f passenger traffic problem. im- notion is gone. to the dom this and and sell tmes. in gave the and time produce present on the Rio Grande Motorway service in r greatest telephone mediate years. 241 since cent increased per jjag POISENED VOTE BAIT The petition for authority to 1939, and tons of freight handled the world without governmental ax expenditures, cent. 186 issue the new stock, just filed has increased per The plain, unadulterated bunk The question of tax reduction Some 12,000 cities and towns In order to handle this tre- with the Interstate Commerce is being peddled today by that in telerests the hands of entirely Commission, sets up a proposed mcndous volume, Rio Grande in the United States receive responsible men in of equipment pur- - officials have imposed a heavy phone service from more than the people. The National City program to the effect that government Bank of New York sums the chases and terminal construc- drain on earnings and tax 6,000 separate, privately-ownepasa legislation Congress mus.t tion, which envisions a heavy accruals in order to acquire all independent telephone compan- situation up accurately when it W1 Jbs for all 18 Vat reextent proYlde of the the is ies. that for business the It says good increase in traffic, particularly available equipment. p ylckening. Congress may Even so, additional large pur- - promoters of industrial social- - duction in the tax rates will farm products, and an influx of aif Pass emergency measure that how far the people chases of modern passenger ization to weep for the poor depend on tourists into this area. to onein are soon ask when as go willing reducing fe moeXorTvear farmer, they Principal item involved in the equipment will be made hundred-milliodollars in Fed- - government spending after the 1 rZ t The proposed expenditures is $137,- - as such equipment is available, The Trustees of the Rio Gande eral taxes that could be used to war. The Bank says: dJme toem u 500 fo the purchase of 14 trucks and 15 large trailers, primarily Railroad have obtained court change such a network of pri- - American people need to get p lov anvbodv untii It first for use in the San Juan Basin authority to purchase the Motor- - vate business into a political out of the habit of trying to it away from the people in taxes, solve every economic problem and San Luis Valley. Another way stock if ICC permission for patronage machine. e is to the by running to government for ,If obs government item calls for the purchase of 16 its sale is granted. All presently a or nsb continuously, kind of subsidy or financial new trucks for the improvement outstanding stock of the Motor- - PRACTICAL must confiscate all property the sum totals of UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF Rio Grande guarantee, is held the by and delivery service, way of pick-uand industry and go in busi- to run which staggerup easily Railroad. to earn the money to pay ness on who has driven Anyone ing amunts. it couldnt the highways of the country is public employes Taxes will go higher if in- tax to provide aware of the fact that they have people enough REGULAR BLOODI dividuals and communities pertaken a beating during the last jobs for all and leave anything hand-out- s HOUNDS News dispatches from Paris several years, and have been sist in asking public for the taxpayer to conduct from government, instead of business with. ''After Customers state that in a broadcast to the denied necessary upkeep, self supporting. nation, General Charles De in view of the fact that return-Gaull- e being Hitlers Germany would be a before promised that, ing soldiers and cutbacks in kindergarten compared with the the end of the year, the produc- - manufacturing have created n Help Bomb The Japs! tyranny that would develop in of coal and electricity and employment in certain local Buy More War Bonds any country that provided jobs Ads the distribution of credit would be placed organically under the control of the state. With luaxHinaiiiiBuiiaiiiaiiiBiiiiaiiBiiiBiiiat 1 these key controls in its hands, ii B For Service at Cemeteries a the state would be in a position l Many a toldior devotes hi furlough to to guide the whole national Mechanized operation on the home farm. This is CpL Delmar Van Horn, Jr. with hi dad at Jefferson, Iowa. SEE economy, De Gaulle said. Thus the totalitarian state is m promoted in France, not by Hit2 . ler, but by French leaders themselves. What a mockery of the GEGCJu1 jj For service on private ?! freedom and independence the g property, make arrange- to enjoy. There is people were no independence for the indig ments with Sexton Larsen,& who is interested in beautijj vidual when government conP? fying Salina Cemeteries. " trols the basic means of production. MWiiiBWivziKnMiusitiBaiBii.a . down-trodde- n hundred-million-doll- 6, 1945 First State Bank 07 Salina The Livestock Bank of Utah" Capital $ 25,000.00 Surplus 250,000.00 - anti-inflatio- n, post-wa- Member: Federal Reserve System Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation LEGAL PUBLICATIONS DR. H. CRANDALL PROBATE DENTIST . SAUNA . - UTAH Office Hours; 9 to 12 a. m. 1:30 to 6 p. m. & GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES For further information, consult the County Clerk or Respective Signers. NOTICE TO CREDITORS d n fur-som- " p un-tio- Our Want . j Alma Larsen, Optometrist OFFICE HOURS 9:30 to 12:00 1:30 to 5:30 to 1:00 9:00 Saturdays 68 N. Main 00 tUB i Dr. LaVcrne Phone doyond-nigh- 322-- Richfield, Utah G0Q0 Authorized Service MAYTAG GENERAL ELECTRIC WESTING II OUSE NORGE HORTON GIBSON KELVINATOR and others Blake Electric Co. Richfield for all. Only as Estate of Deceased. men and women fUStle 0Wn,3.bs' wiU they remaU1 independent STRANGE WAY TO BE FRIENDLY The United States Department of Justice has filed a test suit in the United States District Court in Los Angeles, asserting the Federal governments right to oil and other mineral deposits in coastal submerged lands lying between the low water line and the three-mil- e limit. In the present case, the United States Attorney General would enjoin operations of an oil company which is extracting oil off the California coast near Santa Barbara, under a lease issued by the state of California, although it has been long held in court decisions that the ownership and jurisdiction of lands in states bordering on the ocean extends in all cases at least one marine league or three geographis miles from the coast on the open sea. While the Attorney General says the suit is entirely friendly, nevertheless its purpose is to take away from the several states the ownership and control of land that has been recognized as under state jurisdiction ever since the creation of our Federal government. It would strip the states of income which has helped maintain local governments, as well as the Federal government, through income taxes. It is difficult to understand the reason for such attempts to limit state jurisdiction over natural resources within the boundaries of the states. OLIF JEPPSON, Creditors will present claims, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned Administratrix, at her residence at Salina, Sevier County, Utah, on or before the ICth day of August, 1945. HELEN J. JEPPSON, Administratrix. Henry D. Hayes, Atty. for Adrhin. 1st publication June 15, 1045. Last publication July 6, 1945. (HP mu To m 4thl - - - By Collier the People My Thinking My Money My Time will stay in this war to the finish. Ted R. Gamble, National director of the War volunteers who are sell- ing you the extra War Bonds need-ed to beat the war job in Europe, put the wartime credo of Americans in these 14 words. Its good advice to follow not only during war loans but every day. You can't help too much to win a war. Today's community and national war loan totals should reflect your personal determination to see the war through. Regardless of what the War Bond score is today, it is not high enough unless you have gone to bat and bought bonds to the actual limit of your buying power. THE EDITOR THEY CAN DO IT AGAIN With Farmall Tractor Power the Spring, from the Rockies to the worried farmers searched the skies for signs of clear weather, but the cold rains fell relentlessly. For more than a month the seed should have been germinating in the warm soil. Millions of acres lay unplanted because the ground was too wet for preparation of the seed bed and too cold ' for germination of the seed. from dark to dark, and longer. Many planted around the clock, working in two or three shifts. They made one of the greatest crops in history. world with hunger and In todays war-tor- n disease already stalking many peoples even one major crop failure could, bring famine. This is why the sound of tractors and planting machinery was heard, day and night, from the Plains states to the Eastern seaboard why headlights stabbed the darkness over the fields. . Only a generation ago there could have been but one outcome crop shortage and food scarAmericas farmers are doing it again, in spite city. Nature allows scant time for planting when of an unprecedented combination of adverse cirthe warm sun waits till late May or June before cumstances bad weather, shortages of machines drying the soggy soil. Horses are too slow and and shortages of manpower. For the second time tire too quickly to get the job done then. in three years, they are relying upon their But the fanners remember May of 1943 only machines to help rescue large areas two years ago when their fast, untiring of the world from catastrophe. More of these tractors averted crop failure. Then, too, rains tractors are products of International Harflooded the fields and the month was all but vester than of any other company. spent before they could go in on the land and plant International Harvester Company 130 N. Michigan Ave. In 1943, most farmers drove their tractors WTtRHATTOHAA Chicago 1, Illinois MAJIVUTIR tractor-p- owered evv afofti eoNoe INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER P, ffuSTNESS FI. nance Divl-- s i o n and leader of the millions of THEV DID IT BEFOR- E- Throughout ! of this Community "V STILL THE GLORIOUS THEM cm PROVIDE m JOBS JF WE ENQoujcsWimrmjSKP |