OCR Text |
Show If You Read It In The Sun, If Its News, We Want It A AA Its True $ CnW..l''ro,a1?-5- . Corpora Box v0 THIRTY-THIR- S ALIN A, UTAH, YEAR D FRIDAY, 2 (3) NO. 52 AVGUST 1, 1952 Harold Peterson Named 1953 Farmers Urged To Observe Safety Make It Yourself Vacation Measures And Cut Tractor Accidents With Wool Edition July 4th Chairman This is the edition have been priming you for. It was Harold Peterson was named by Contest Underway July brings farmers every the Salina City Council to head printed last week, and while where an urgent need to Utah Sees Seven Old Traffic Records Fall During First Half Of 1952 wTe Seven Utah traffic records have been broken during the first six months of 1952. Highest total of deaths, 88 in 1951, was surpassed by 113 kill- ed at the end of June, 1952. Highest property damage acci- dent in the states history was recorded in February, when a mail train was destroyed, as flames from a burning truck to an adjacent railroad track. Pre- vious monthly death totals were exceeded as follows (with pre- us. blgb .ln1nF1axrelheS1oo J0rnacJ0 RpS Roofs T TGGS the 1953 July 4th central com mittee, replacing Howard, who has held the position the past two years. Mr. Peterson will be a tearing, ripping wind of assisted by Sammy Jorgensen, tornado velocity, hit Salina at goth are members of the City noon Friday, uprooting trees, Council tearing off roof coverings, and The two new leaders met inflicting damage to many areas Thursday night with the retirin' jn the city. Reports from other central committee listening to areas indicate the high wind only tbe 1952 financial report and struck the one community in nninters on nroredure any proportions. Most dollar Waynf Peterson, finance chair- damage was rePrted at the Sa years cele- arCh 2 lina Processing Plant, where the brationPsuccessful . rom every inT1951):y. )19 m 1948); June, 26 21 in roof was blown off, with re- and indicated the new apgle PlaCement C,timatCd 81 $7000committee would receive some 1934 whe traffic records were first kept Mr. Brandt stated the cooper- by the state. Highest number I ICTEfl ation' of the entire county was killed in any Utah automobile g appeciated, and felt everyone at six-mon- th ,,. KaysvUlel Mrs. Panguitch Hatch, President of the Utah Wool Growers Association Auxiliary, has sent letters to all local presi dents of her organization, ask- ing them to get in touch with local auxiliary members and Club leaders to start immediately with the 1952 Make It Yourself With Wool contest in their communities and districts. The Utah contest for Make It Yourself With Wool will be, held this year in conjunction with the Utah State Fair and ..PfF She.by N.oland lcft for ExposiUon. The 6th 4-- - SKT.. pu Tv- - cent public announcement: Utah will kill between 229 and 305 persons in traffic by the end of 1952, according to a sta- tistical analysis completed this week by the Utah Safety Coun- Cil. Even an average second' six months will bring a final tally of 260 deaths for the year. Any of these final totals for 1952 would surpass the former record of 220, killed in 1948. Statistics may be a boring, repetitious word to many of you. To safety workers, statistics means human lives, lives of fathers, mothers and children perhaps your life during the next months. Utah has already broken the previous record for highest slaughter in the first six months of any year, with (113) killed date. In one respect, these 113 dead are the fortunate ones; the really unfortunate ones are the 'per- manently injured people, who we seldom mention. What is needed? First, a rigid and unabating enforce- program on all levels. Sec- considerate and thought- the ond, ful driving of every motorist on When Whittaker Chambers broke away from Communism in 1938, he predicted to his wife that in time America would be conquered, freedom smothered, and the world overrun by Com- munism. In his book, Witness, the functionary, wh exposed the work of Alger Hiss inside our Federal govern- ment, stands by his prediction. Almost nothing that I have observed, or that has happened to me since (the break with Com- munism), has made me think that I was wrong about that forecast, he writes, Our nations effort to secure world peace occupies the prom-si- x inent position on the 1952 political stage. Communism, on the other hand, is dedicated to war. But many American citi- zens and an astonishing number of political leaders do not yet recognize the major factors gov- erning Russias planning for world domination. Communist Russia will launch an attack only when two conditions prevail in America: 1. when it is certain that Amer-mejCan industrial production can ba crippled for a considerable time through ... Fifth , Column ..... , , ivi les, s ri es, sa 0 a2e e and 2. when the people of Amer- all-o- .nd trants are assured of thousands onlookers, and prominent women s clothing de- of appreciative STUKAtlS' " AMFRICAIIS! executive manager of the state fair, $200 have been set aside as prizes in the junior and senior divisions of the contest. Rosettes and ribbons will also be given to the winning contestants. Girls winning top honors in each of the two classes of the state contest, Mrs. Hatch said, wiU be named state champions, and will be awarded an all- expense paid trip to the 1952 National Fashion Show, to be held in conjunction with the 88th Annual Convention of the National Wool Growers Associ- ation 0n December 7, in Chicago, Utah has always ranked at the top levels in the Make It Yourself With Wool contest and Fashion Show.' Last year, a Utah girl, Miss Elaine Holt, Clear- field, was grand prize winner in the senior class, and another Utahn Miss Loreen Johnson of erna won second Prize in the junior class, Mrs. Hatch said. Folders and rules may be had for the 6th Annual Make It Yourself With Wool contest by writing to the Utah State Fair, Box 2136, Salt Lake City, Utah. Miss Gay Lynn Herbert, dau- of and Mrs Vaun Her- ghtf Mr. a 1952 graduate of the North Sevier High School was recently granted a scholarship in Jur.nahs"? at.thG Universit .of utab0n1 f5olbog at the aoduplans , this fall. Gay Lynn is currently employ- ed donog jbe sum'nor vacation months in capitol city. - - ' T Mrs. Mr. and I Frank Martmes aod i"d gouests at the Foote Hotel in Fir W3rdll YYiCGTS W F Tanvren Utah ;tata Forester Fire Warden met Wed- F'sday .eveniag W1b members of tion 'of wlwse members are d;pm jrP miards Mr Tan Pren showed h' ailm on . the. fte firhtand lectured to thf KlOUP on the ' - LOOKING AHEAD By George S. Benson President of Harding College CONSPIRACY EXPOSED! It is not easy to accept the reality of an international con- - spiracy working secretly m America to capture all of us, and make us prisoners of an d and brutal dictator- ship. Even after the New York iron-fiste- ileVnLfiZl f0rly Alir'llLpoe T boks and con- viction and the recent series of lines: Us by eulfv Noland and 1. I daubteri still difficult for the average nders shall never permit extraI especially children. . Vick L , , , conspiracy inside second cause o J00 the base and has been in the rmmunift real, not fictional. tractor fatalities and 50,000 ac- service since January, this year. That s because most of us in cidents annually; sense bve ln a small world 2. I shall always keep in Wayne Hampton Airman 1st ?in tbe orbit ol our Personal ac- mind that tipping accidents cause Class stationed at San Antonio vitiea What we read anI yel of all tractor fatalities. Texas, brother to Thurlan Hamp- ton and Mrs Hampton are visit- - d not see and ,lee1' ls lar away: This means extra care with doesn toucb us- Our heavy loads. It means slow con- Simy ing this we;k at the Hampton llves not beon Personally trolled speeds to conform with have achome in Salina. They were touchod 80 far by thoeuv operating conditions, parUcular- companied from Price by Mrs. munst conspirators, ly on rough grounds and near Martha Hampton, mother to the aur has certainly been af- - ditches; brothers. The Air Force man is cted Pvn. Presldeo 3. Hitching to a solid object on a leave. While in Sa- labeled as a red or heavy load, I shall protect Fin),self Mrs. was taken lina, Hampton some of his against tipping by always hitch- charges by lng to the Salina Hospital for an PPpnents, that Com- ing to drawbar. I shall never emergency appendectomy, Sat- - polltfcal were work- - take up the slack with a heavy mnnist conspirators urday night. She is convalescing ns'd lmp"aot depa chain and nicely, and they will be back ing of the Federal government. Later 4. Proceeding along high- in Texas on the 31st. a"d !.derS Were exposed way with my tractor, I shaU all operating and Pvt. David W. Page has ar- - and driving precautions. rived for military duty in Korea, Hoodwinking The Public These and other tractor safety according to information re - . The Communists and their ceived by Mr. and Mrs. Charles dupeS( wish to recommendations are vividly as many keep A. Page, parents to the young Americans as a moving picture possible thinking Presented in man, in Salina. Pvt. Page left jbat the Communist forces in entitled Farm Tractor Safety, the United States on June 23rd, America are harmless. If all Prepared in cooperation with and reported at Camp Deaki, America should come to realize arm satety experts by the Agri- Japan, from which point he left jbe facts of the conspiracy, cuItural Committee of the or Korea. our country would become ex- - American Petroleum Institute. tremely unhealthy for Com- - Available at extension and oilMrs- Bryce Johnson and Mrs. munists and the company libraries for free showln - )og- tbis film recently received SalJt outReds chased would be lber. PoJs" out, Lake Clty Monday. They visited lawed So the Communists have the top award for farm films of rs' Fydia Mason- a sister to infiltrated many sections of the the American Society of Agri- YP1 rtinneau 01 Mrc Pm llcnn irVl A 0 i- r,nenle"perSo, - one-ha- lf - 30-da- he' y le - fellow-traveler- s; - llfuenl tonAl(o1 ut nt ac-Ut- ah Members of the Jaycettes entertained their husbands Friday Descendants of Christian C. night with an outing dinner and Scorup will hold their annual novel program at Maple Grove. meunion in salina August Over 60 were present A tasty " W3S ilSredAl- junal wheel, or just carlessiy crossing free enterprise nation stands unitedly against him. For in- Don t pass on a hiH or curve, stancej this nation produced or when there is any doubt II more armament than our ene- you can make it. Be dead right, mies and all our allies combjned ea may at the height of World War II. . , courteous ,and drive oe- Foregoing strikes and sabotage, ere ensive y. we can do it again. Therefore, so a ion you ins Stalins sole hope lies in his n rig o way ability to sabotage our produc- to enjoy . tion capacity and, with the aid Column and its bis s tt ri h nt BpHmnnrf to s0 destroy the confi- dupes nc u mg e coo Ui n and sew. dence of our people in our pre- sent that they wil1 offer of ttie 7nnni little system Fishlake last wee resistance. . eJ1G, Every citizen can do some- g. were chaperoned thing to combat Communists by DeUa Rae a,P1jjapd highly organized work seeking to to' !!ke". ton furnished 'transportation tion, our love of country, and the our suPPrt for the American union hdaturayrLiberty way of life. First, the citizen Park in Salt Lake City. must become informed by read- ing books such as Chambers the three revealing Witness, books by Louis Budenc, and others. But it is even more im- Dr. Louis Merrill, a graduate portant to understand Amer- of the school of dentistry at icanism, know the advantages of Washington University, of . St. the American system, and undertick. The makes it what stand an has received Louis, Missouri, assignment to the staff at the informed citizen must then pubunactivities all Lake Salt licly challenge Veterans Hospital in our City. Dr. Merrill recently passed dermining confidence in his Utah examination to prac- - basic American principles. Write tice in the state. The family is at me,- at Harding College, Searcy, of our present visiting at the home of Arkansas, for a free copy To A new Challenge booklet, in Salina, the doctors mother Americans. . Jtfrs. Inez Merrill. 1 adopt and observe a Declaration of In- dependence from tractor accidents. They will be working more power machinery than ever before, and their rate of exposure to accidents will ex- ceed that of any previous month. Farmers face this situation with an fll accident ffe. record three times t. qu er than tht o W0rker3 who manufacture tractors. industrial workers usually operate under hazardous conditionSi but bene- fit from programs enforcing safe operating and working habits farmers can put . 44.4.44 - c- highways. Speed is a killer, and often Caule. ut "remember, There are a other important causes as well. frcm their support of the basic 2 be Sabna American Legion For example, many accidents principles of private ownership I1. are caused by an auto simply be- - 0f property and the tools of pro- - PV1C Cenr lth pgqam to ing on the wrong, side of the duction that they will offer little 0f MosTis road, even though not speeding resistance to its destruction. vilda is vice Anderson, Salina, resu is cou excessive y. Its as simple as that. Stalin president and Olevia Thomell PonPhmrSdozL afthe knWS he cannot,win 50 long as Salina, is secretary. turnsor the full might of this -- you are reading it, we hope to be off someplace getting rested for the year ahead. There are some real money saving bargains advertised by merchants, who are trying everyday to make your dollar go further. We urge you to support them, and build a bigger and better North Sevier. M. V. -- 1? - ' Rpt TjJ jllnh j Uldll group singing, accompanied on the accordian by Mrs. Ken Bax- ter; impromptu and Panned old garden favorite attractive demonstrations. In charge of the colorful, beautiful; blooms in just between the evening were Mrs. Bryce John- blooms and the early son and Mrs. Karl Reichert. early faU flowers. jj Hollyhocks are excellent for V7 flffPII a background to dwarf plants, VnpDK for screening unsightly places, and planting along bare walls. cation, at the 1952 State Fair. They are of the easiest culture, It was with the thought in mind, a few seeds planted in a clump, Get To Know Utah that he in- - or in a continuous row in front augurated the exhibition, which of that old unsightly fence, barn will be housed under one roof, or outbuildings, will give a In the vicinity of North Sevier, bright and colorful spot with scenic attractions are numerous, their stately spikes of pretty and mining operations are blossoms. The range of colors is amaz- abundant. The beautiful Lions Trail that wends its way through ing in the single Soldier Canyon, past the Goose- - type, or the new double, with berry farms and Ranger Station, fringed and waved petals, re- into Seven Mile, past Johnson sembling a carnation, extremely Reservoir, and into Fishlake, is double and of every hue and one of the outstanding scenic color. Hollyhocks are in bloom mid-summ- .. Get to knQW utah and peak of it often, is a new folder issued by the Utah State Board of Vo- cational Education, the Utah State Press Association, the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce and the Adult Education Department of Salt Lake City Schools. This is a big order. At least it is at the present time unless w start teaching children and aJults o the state what utah really has to offer the world in tourist attractions, livestock, ag- riculture, mining and education, Lfl. y h." observed for many years) our schools are not stressing our home state enough. Adults and children do not know enough of their own area and its possi- bilities. There should be more geography, history and study of our tremendous tourist possi- bilities than there has been in the past. This year, J. A. Theobald, ex- ecutive manager of Utah State 'Fjtfr, and for many years a booster of Utah coal and tourist possibilities, is inaugurating an exhibition at the State Fair. Mr. Theobald is paying special attention to tourist attractions, culture of the different sections, mining, agriculture and edu- - r (If If "If. 2fl: ff" JPZ.Ol' If?." Picnic grounds Maple Grove and the Range Station, are cool retreats, with plenty of fresh, clear mountain water. Willow Creek and Salina Canyons, are well worth seeing. And then there is always Fishlake, a tour- ist haven. For those who are interested mining, there are the Salt mines near Redmond, and the coal mines, only a short distance up Salina Canyon. The two gypsum mills at Sigurd. The farm lands near any Se- vier County community are al- ways interesting, for an early morning or late evening drive, We have plenty lets speak of it often. ripe, and plant them somewhere on the home grounds, in a corner for a pretty background; a single plant shows up beautifully, when planted among a group of perennials that have bloomed earlier in the year. Wouldnt it brighten the in- terest of travelers, if tall spikes of blossoming hollyhocks could be seen all along the highway North and South, on entering our city? If once planted, with very little care, a hollyhock will perpetuate itself for years to come. And remember, the hoi- lyhock was among the first flowers planted by the Mormon Pioneers. They have succeeded in getting widely circulated publications and commentators to denounce individuals and organizations who are working to expose the conspirators and their dupes. The clearest set of documented by the Senate Judiciary Corn- wbo fes'de a ReR California, are visiting this week with Mr. and Mrs. Thorvald Andreason, parents I Mrs. Blood, Elsinore Man - mittee, an utterly responsible Senators drawn from body both political parties. The re- Prt shows, with indisputable documentation, how the Com- munists worked their spies and dupes into strategic positions in our Federal government, and a result, America suf- how. fered the loss of China as an ally against world Communism. Carl Anglin, 19, Illinois, and two companions, are being held for the alleged theft of a light green sedan from the garage of Niels F. Nielson in Elsinore, Fri- day night, according to deputy Sevier County Sheriff, Rex Huntsman. The trio were picked up in Flagstaff, Arizona, Satur-rr,day afternoon at 3 p.m. Mr. Nielson left for the southern city identify his car, on Sunday, proof rarefullv "be The Judiciarv Committee rnn. to case bas been urned overtba Federal Bureau of Investiduced exhaustive hearing ex- stated deputy Huntsman, amjnpfi on nnn rWnmpntc tnnV gabn for allegedly transporting a (Continued On Page 4) stolen car across a state line, U rahrii DeH CrOSS BloorlmnhilA bCHeflUleS Second Visit To North Sevier Salina Auction Sales Report Blood-mobi- extron?e top of 33 65 or heifers, and 33.40 for steers, was recorded at the Salina Auction al duly ota boad we sod at ao overage top 32, 2 25 ,ogs ,W11 orty haad Ior 8 2 bead offered. ewes were 501(1 14-0- Mrs. Lyda Duggins, relative of Mrs. A. C. and Mrs. Arthur Martin, Sunday evening at the Mrs. Harold Crandall, chairman of the North Sevier Chapter Red Cross, received information Monday, that the is scheduled to be in Sa- lina, August 6th. The mobile unjt visjted Salina December 14, 195 when 329 residents from North Sevier turned out for typing. According to medical authorities, the policy of the Red Cross is not to accept blood more than three times a year. The intervals are approximately 4 weeks longer than is considered safe by the National Institute of Health, Arrangements for all old donors, and many new ones, will be published time, place and hours prior to the date announced. three-mont- h a near Folster visited Folster home. Mrs. Duggins, a former resident of Gunnison, now makes her home in San Francisco. le |