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Show The Will Poinls The Way in that the industry was not under pressure to increase wages Details of the import plan remain to be worked out Satisfactory ceilings need to be put on principal individual types of long-rang- e fabric to avoid crippling coneen-tiation- s of imports in the future. Also to prevent home markets Among US null operators, fiom being flooded by a whole who have long sought relict in years deluge of foreign goods Congress, through the Agricul- at once, a method of distributing ture Department and the White the flow of imports more evenly House, reaction has been swift throughout the year will have Already, as President F E to be devised These specifics Grier of the American Cotton are vital to the success of the Assistant to the Pitsiduit of the United States, announced on September after months of eoner-eation- a 27th between Washington and an arrangement for Tokjo import restrictions on textile goods and Japanese , She rin.ui Ailain-- gai-men- ts Manufacturers Institute, told the Greenville (S C Kiwanis Club confidence has a week later, welled upward among tevtile people This, he said, reflected in action as null after mill announced across wage And, he added sigincreases nificantly, It was unique action ) the-boar- d whole arrangement. The sooner they are settled, the better Nevertheless, it took only a first positive step toward basing the impoit crisis to give the textile industry a new look of confidence. Besides increasing wages, mill men can be expected to dust off their plant expansion plans, Mr. Grier said, and he f s i LOOKING AHEAD by Dr. George S Benson Director - National Educat.on Pi ogram e Searcy, Arkansas WAY TO LOSE FREEDOM When people become careless ment becoming dictatorial, or neglectful of the privilege of and freedom being lost voting for the governmental principles and the candidates of their choice, they are creating a danger to the very existence of looks for vigorous new research aimed at better production and merchandising. In his announcement, Presidential Assistant Adams said This (Japanese) threat is no mere phantom It is real, and the Administration recognizes it And he went on to declare: we shall not permit the Government to stand idly by while industries wither, and job opportunities are destroyed The expression of these sentiments should be a comfort to millions of American workers outside of the textile industry in those many other enterprises that are similarly exposed to extinction by the General Agiee-men- t on Tariffs and Trade Producers of chemicals, plywood, ceramics, canned tuna and glassware, among others, have been in the same boat with textiles A few others, notably watchmaking and bicycles, were previously rescued by Executive order boosting their negligible e tariff protection against the But foreign producers textile arrangement with Japan marks the first significant admission by the Administration that GATT can be a lethal weapon against Americans. And it reveals also what an aroused industry can do low-wag- BACK TO NIPPON . . . Last of 25 Japanese girls who came to New York In May, 1955 for surgery for Hiroshima Injuries leave hospital for home. this basic freedom By not exerMy reason for doing so was cising this great freedom of fear fear of whdt consequences choice, in governmental affairs, oicing my disapproval might they are handing over to some- have on me, on my friends and one else one of the commanding relatives For the Communists of citizenship. were so determined to make the responsibilities And they must face this fact-Th- election a demonstration of their smaller the group that rises own they stopped superiority to dominant political power, the at nothing to accomplish this greater the danger of govern- aim Slogans in the building and where the election took place made this fact only too clear: A Czecholovakian ONLY A TRAITOR WILL VOTE wrote a letter to therefugee Christian AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT. Science Monitor, which said in WE WILL KNOW HOW TO You cant take freedom DEAL WITH THE ENEMIES pait for granted. W'e Czechs learned OF THE PEOPLE. that too late. We did not realize The election itself was a that with so many citizens who farce as far as any. secrecy was are indifferent, a small, concerned Each voter was minority can turn the given two ballots the governtables and seize power. ment one was yellow, listing the candidates in black print; the ACTFD TOO LATE other was white with a black X The average citizen of CzechNo. The electors oslovakia in Jan of 1948 felt signifying of putting one of consisted duty that his country was free free these of paper into an enpieces in the full meaning of the word and then into the ballot as understood in the Western de- velope box, and throwing the other mocracies They knew, of course, The different colored that the Communists held many away. made it paper extremely easy key positions m the government for at the other even anyone, but wasnt a new election end of to tell how one the room, coming up in March Theyd had voted. soon put an end to that' So what CAN HAPPEN ANYWHERE happened at the polls? There As the last vestige of former the voters were confronted with the lists of these coalition can- free elections, a screen was prodidates (Communists), and their vided at the far end of the room choice was limited to voting for for those who dared use It in order to vote secretly, but anor against them As one of the voters in other poster on the wall said ONLY THOSE Prague that day, who was not ominously: ASHAMED OF WAY THE blinded by Communist bluffs, I went to the polling booth de- THEY VOTE NEED TO HIDE termined to cast a white ballot BEHIND A SCREEN. But even the few who perhaps used (NO) to the government coalinot achieve their tion Like millions of others, I the screen did of aim because, as an secrecy, did not do as I had planned, and check, an official I returned home an hour later, additional stood at the door with a waste discouraged, miserable and very paper basket into which the dismuch ashamed having cast carded ballot had to be thrown. vote another for the hated Needless to say the waste basket contained only white paper. MINORITY RULE What can happen in one na- well-organiz- sEhios ifljae EcDD37, One of the big problems of the jet age is finding a metal that can withstand the searing and fatiguing temperatures that burn out ordinary engine materials at supersonic speeds. To crack this heat barrier engineers have now come up with a new TIIE Alert, the Canadian U S weathon noithern Ellesmeie Island, possesses dry land s Published every Friday at Salma, Utah. Entered at the Post Office at Salma, Utah, as second-clasmatter, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. s z UTAH STATE trrj Fr EDITORIAL AsTadFT0N er station noith-ernmo- air field. A mere 4 S ALIN A SUN NATIONAL TTTELHa st 518 miles fiom the North Pole, Alert houses the most noithernly post office on earth and the northernmost land based radio and weather station. In addition to being the world's Motor Capitdl, Detroit is also the salt center of the U. S It also has some of the countiys largest drug and rubber manufactuiuig plants. , - i IV r'' V v V4 - i v 'of' , -- 1: 4 o'oi O . 4 OViVrn.f.iirrtnl it ROCKET CARRIER . . . Navys McDonnell F3H-2Demon leaves shock wave trail from 27,640 thrust horsepower of Us AUlson 1 engine. SiV if "V K v 1 r f J. ' " v' j A I - o . V R DtiSGsi? i Salina, Sevier County, Utah Page Tri., Oct. 26, 1956 U 'JIT. QJJUGaEb'G CuHoE33y7 rivt't:-$aHnaVui- t.un can be riptuttd in anuf'cr and those who toda du not In el the democratic slogan, VOTE LIKE, BUT VOTE, n a be subjected to ones w hich tht will like much less You can Lest preserve jour democratic liberties, if, as an alert citizenry, jou regularly exercise jour democratic right to vote If jou don t, you may find yourself left, as we Czechs did, with only the hollow shell of this supposedly inalienable right . . Yes, voting, and voting intelligently, is our safeguard of freedom. r f ' vA ( and highly promising alloy of a metal long familiar to the mining industry of Utah molybdenum, or Molly as it is known among mining men. This vital metal could easily have been ignored in Utah, for Molly is hidden deep in the ores of Bingham Canyon. It takes more than a ton of the mines ore to produce one pound of Molly. And yet for years, long before Mollys promising new future as a jet age material, Kennecott has carefully guarded and recovered the sparse molybdenite ores from Utah soil. For years, Kennecott has turned the Bingham hillsides into an important national source of this metal which has furnished harder, corrosion-resistasteel for industry, lubricants for modern engines, and pigments and catalysts for the chemical industry. No one can say for sure what the future holds for Molly but in Utah one thing is certain: the story of Molly is one more example of untiring efforts to help conserve and to develop to the fullest extent the great natural resources which are so vital to Utah and its TYPICAL CARRIER . . . Pres. Elsenhower greets Andy Williams, 14, of Ames, la., who represented nation's 600,000 newsboys in his White House visit. RAINY DAY MARRIAGE nt Ken-necot- ts economy. Kennecott Copper Corporation A Good Neighbor Helping to Build a Better Utah By Allen Wishert vows were to be the following week. Walter Lawton, son and heir of J. Burke Lawton, millionaire, was the bridegroom. Lucy Johnson, daughter of Peter Johnson, day laborer, would be the bride. Lucy had been a waitress in an ordinary cafe. One rainy afternoon, entermg more for shelter than anything else, Walter sat at the counter and ordered a cup of coffee. Lucy served him. First he noticed her hands, glancing up he was gazing into an extra pretty face. Walter was considered a wonderful catch for any girl in his set. But somehow he never became interested in any one of them. They showered him with attentions to no avail. He had resigned himself to bachelorhood, that is, until the day he met Lucy. He didnt know her from Adam, but she recognized him, she had served at a banquet he attended. Nothing new had been attached to their courtship, wealthy men had married women of moderate means before, and vice versa. As the wedding day drew near Walter had thoughts; could be possible that Lucy was marrying him he only for the sake of the luxuries she would her; bestow upon could still be willing to marry him should he be penniless? Why not settle the question? He and Lucy had planned to drive into the country that afterhis noon. He could pvtend that made wrong had father unwisedly investments and had lost everyis now comthing. and, he, Walter labor for a common seek to pelled to livelihood. It would enable him afford him the and reaction her get if she loved opportunity of learning him for himself alone. Parked In their favorite spot, and after a few preliminaries, Walter broached the subject. ever Lucy, he said. Have you to how the majorgiven thought as ity of people live? Yes, I have, replied Lucy. For thera's Eloise McSwam. THE marriage she of your set, I have often wondered how she has managed to live as long as she has, the gait she travels would throw Swaps speed Into slow motion. I was referring to the poor, the needy, going along day after day with no hope of the future. Why bring up a depressing subject on such a beautiful afternoon, The depressing subject concerns you and I, Lucy, he replied, an inner perception troubling him. He felt that he was taking an unfair advantage in his pretense Afterward, when she had accepted his narrative as a fact and then informed him that her love was really true, even if he was as poor as Job's turkey, she would always love him, how then could he explain his infamous procedure. What is the subject, Walter? Er ah yes, the way was difficult Lucy, would you marry a poor man? If I loved him, I would, surely. If suddenly I became that poor man, would you still be willing? Well," there was merriment In her voice. You would do until another poor one came along. No need continuing, she had given him the answer he was seeking; she loved him for himself alone. Late that evening he walked into the family room. His father was there, hollow-eyehaggard, worried lines written boldly on his face. He decided then and there; when he came Into his fortune he wouldn't allow it to frustrate him. Thinking to bring cheer, he slapped his father on the back and heartily announced: Father, I'm a very happy man. Lucy has Informed me that she would become my wife, even if I didnt have wealthy parents. said his father. "The "Then, privilege is all hers. Son, I have been wiped out, everything lost, even to our home. We are penniless. What wonderful news for Lucy, Walter could now go Into business - with her father. |