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Show . .. ' '264 . : " ' 1 . - . ..J - , ,' ' ' ' , I ' ion and thi-collis- those - t . 0 - rates 50 per - cent lower than cents a gale -- s ' f.16--- 0.,1,--.-',,- la-- d..,, ..,,,,..t.; MP, , e4'' gstakilial ,- , ,...----- -, ;.,',---- - I - 7 '!'.':,- - .:.'" 0 s ...,...,ij '' - ;, !: - ' : :'''' .;, ,, .! :- . e ' 3 ' . 0).. , ii 0, - t- , ' . ' , , , , s, - ; I , ' ' so ;;;' - sa . .American youngsters are getting Weak flabby, we are told from time to time, and with some yeason. Jean Mar- 7But tell that to the of survival unimaginably getts. her frightld ordeal of being pinned for nine days tinder the wreckage of her car, 20 feet from the bOdy of her fiance, is an &dining testimony to the pluck,- stamina an4 spirit our youngster' can show when . . loved ones . - - 0, , i ' , of $13 million for the Colo-ratio River Storage Project in the $875 mil- iu public works appropriations bill signed into law by President Eisenhower Tuesday was more than a routine step toward con- - struction of the big reclamation ProJect-I.- t ' represents. signal victory for reclamation. :Opponents tried hard to hold the initial appropriation for the project to a bare min- trot and succeeded in keeping the figure down to $6 million in the original House Version of the appropriations bill. That would have restricted work to precon- struction plannpig, and would not have ' permitted starting actual work oti Glen Can- yon and Flaming Gorge Dams. Construction , work would have had to await another Con- gressional appropriation, and opponents were no doubt hoping to come up with some other delaying tactic before that time ar- - 4 -- - -- , , ' - ; - ' rivet. , - ' , Final acceptance of the fun. mended by the Senate showed that the dieo hard Congressional opponents of the been thorhave in Project Congress , ,oughlydelested,, Raising the current appropriation from 3Cmin1ott to $.13 million was in no sense a mark of government extravagance. It - , - Colo-red- , Your-tibrar- 0, - Unfortunately, despite the important work of these unpaid workers, the public has given very little attention to their activities. Undoubtedly this general lack of knowledge about the members of the Library Board and the 'perplexing problems lacing Them is- the chief reason for lack of public understanding in helping solve the troubles which beset the librarythe most ' glaring f all being the unsightly and inadequate main library building on South State Street. 'Ziow the answers to the above clues-- . tions: Jacob A. Kahn is president of the Library Board. There are nine members, terras by the appointed for three-yea- r mayor and City Commission; three appoint ments are Made each member, ship of the board on June 30th included: Mr, Kahn, Mrs.- H. C.' Means, secretary; Mrs. C P. Overfield. Mrs. C. L Jack, D. E. LAmWurne, J. man Hatch and John D. Rice. -Last Saturday the terms of Mrs. Nteang, Mrs. Jack and Mr. Lambourne expired. Mr. Laznbourne Nras reappointed, and Gad - e year.---Th- - - , - - ..,..,,, -- : .7 ' - c 4'. -; 'I, i ----- , ' , . .. .001.11111i,a, ---------- - ss.' ame , . " nwePgrtauhlbes - 0 - ' I - ' - , 0 ''".- , 1 s ,, .,,, , if' , il - . i Opposing Hell's Canyon From A Desk yyog c , i !near I t i i te gifp-t- d i ' it-- wd :a who-come- GO Route Down Things You See Town Most Any Summer Morning 1 i Iii-11- 1 work can proceed at a steady and efficient pace, which is as it should he. As Senator Watkins pointed out. the prime, contract for Glen Canyon en twk let next April, according to program. Dirt will soon be flying along the Colmrado, to Insure the future of the Mountain West. gosh-awfu- Board , . - does not affect the final cost of the project. ,The initial appropriation, whether $6 mu lion, $13 million or some other sum, is part of the $760 million total cost of the project which has already- been authorized. The amount of money appropriated this year determines only how fast work can proceed, The $13 million appropriation means that construction contracts can be let as soon as the Bureau of Reclamation is ready. It means also that work will not be entirely confined to the two big storage dams, Glen Canyon and Flaming Gorge, but can go ahead on the smaper Navajo unit and on several small participating projecta. In Ulntah Basin, for example, work will proceed on the Stanaker Draw project, a comparatively very small unit of the big Central Utah Project.- but one that will bring immediate benefits to the people of the Basin. It means, most of all, that there should y How many Salt Lake residents know who is president of their Library Board? Who knows how many board members are How many person,s can name there ,, one or more of them? NN'ho can name-thô- se who were appointed by Mayor Adiel Stewart this week? , ', leave emotional wounds too deep to healed. And we also point out that here is one more stark reminder that never can it be lightly assumed that the disappearance of young people means they have run off. Sometimes that turns out to be the ease. But to assume so at the beginning can mean the delay of search and rescue operations that might othenvise mean the difference between life and death. InCIUSIOR - ;I . Dirt'INill Soon Be Flying , .,, i.:!.., 4 , be mWe Join all Mahns in gratitude for her survival. In deepest sympathy for the 4, - . erful hope that the experience will not . -- . 0 pray-an- s - , stated that ono reason why the faltering White House is now asking an Eisenhower unusually hig:t foreign aid ,fig. In that ure is that it has been using ' It is Congress gimmicks to bring about a fat a mutual !budget surplus in this election as aid process of year. And one way this has been done has been by cutting !oreign being passed. In large part the credit be- laid commitments to the extent have been unlongs to the patriotic good sense that the .pipelines of Sens. Lyndon Johnson and wisely depleted. The bill may who did still suffer for this shortsighted .Walter F. George more for the President's cause action. It always seemed to me .a misthan any Republicanand to the votes of Democratic mem- take That Mr. Ergenhower, and the other officials of the adminbers. of in cuts foreigil istration with the exception Emasculating so were !Harold Stassen, chary aid funds were avoided, the fight will come all of giving clear credit to the over again when the appropria- Marshall Plan for the tremendous dividends it paid the U.S. in tions are finally made. and in Eu, end The proposal to peremp- security and savings wast rope.an solidarity. aid to all Yugoslavia torily defeated. 1ALTHOUGH Mr. Eisenhower Other crippling amendments has briefly spoken cOntrari A trade and 'wise affecting East-W'esi .. at one or two press confer.. aid to India were lost. oak... he let the fallacy that ii44....:40117 !. eilkAPP.4 , adverse: efonret:isgn aid is a "give-away' ' I pro iZi moves ALL IN THESE ., wog widely accepted in an almost to the President, . 'IPA, .. the past three years en,. evenly divided Senate, there Iduring , 1 without vigorously countering 10 g pk Is why his own mutual l,,''ehilareniteRaeHlowouaub)sl'iescaamnnsols7pmopoDreermtRi e .,41(11, I) aiti.dThis a .r.Pf came within an "za . .7,,,,zo.,,!. 4..,:--o the drain in down of inch ss, is going !beans than Democrats opposing ssoss ess,s,-,s, Assss,r1, is a . ' '.' 4c..1 7:;.; ". N4the 4 -Congress past few during askMr. !what Eisenhower was serss ,S s. 4'"- st A - .&.;44ar, . weeks. ss ,Ssss. U ,. -..,,,'--N ,: if -ing. .... ,.,, 4,, ell-;:- 4 , There is no justification for t , ss, I think it has to be Ss toss s'.1- - 4, ,,,,s ,,,,syeses' -its give-awaof the American sass sdr; lany eenognised .ktort,;:s.;',IwtaiSat:r: b ..610...., sisirE'R es saSic. eadfrministthre taxpayers' money. If economic is blame for the near defeat it has land military aid to nations 'Now, Who Did You Say Should Have Spoken Up?' !struggling to The iisnista osnt apeded own nci rityis,s1 to be serve our oNs' it ithoer should not be eaudneotryo.attheeinmenxtoinouoinndginneeedto The Marshall i an effective mutual aid program billion to $12 to counter new Soviet tacties from lEurope of the bosses, pockets? Has the ark! woefully in bringing Foes Of Dam Lock tardy s It was a investrebeen gration. the leaders of Congress to an employer's paycheck osti had duced to pay the wage increases acrossthetable bipartisan con-)- ment. If Let Firsthand Knowledge of under the !come s,,:.ulnequences. a workers? the for Only ference at the White House, . it was the Kremlin in Of ail leaders in the public.. D to could money were ample danger signals on power group now striving to rehave would the it from customer.' the hill that the bill was in peril. dope collecting yive a federal dam in Hell's of Every cent in the paycheck is When one Democratic leader sated for the Canyon, not one seems to have four into the price of the prod asked at the spending SI2 of con. the inspected the site. As the only opening to avert be :ference.'"Why are we meeting ..years navigator of Snake River in the backing of big business. Thput or service sold. at billion for same The spending thing goes now?" there canyon stretch, operatinr, for six ,emotional appeal is that taxes only more every defend taxes. A corporation can't pay !answer. 1 Iyears from a dock at this gate- are too high, socialism is on the a tax unless it from it collects' Further it must he frankly ;against the way village, I am in a position march, and that by contesting fropyricht, 1956, customer. A wealthy man to know and goes. the payment of his income tax a tax income , doesn't big pay Senator Merse has never set !here is a- - man who will some-foot on the proposed federal 'how save the average citizen: unless he has first mollected It from some source. That sourer damsite. Best claim by his upon. from his tax burden. is the consumer. The argument LES !sors at Baker, Oregon, is that case has this lax In reality by ES GOATES he "flew low', over the- site in a been tried on several previous on taxes is not who should pay small airplane, 'because that .occasions More the courts andr,the taxes, Wit how shall we the only transportation the governoa knows that the, hide the taxes from the consum wkis avail,ble to the damsite at that approach to protesting the tax er7 Too bad there are so many En time." The fact is that the same burden is to protest as a citizen people who think like Mr. Loaand the thus envourage tranenortation usel by others through the elected represent& d.,er lhas boen available all the time. tives. It might be well for localIlgame of hide the taxes. If all the socialistic and coiSenator Neuberger. once a citizens to withhold taxes lectivist ideas urged by the THE LITTEHLEA VEILS had an- MOTORISTS BACK UP for half writer of sensational yarns lUtah because they disagree union leaders are adopted, the a block while a mama doggie other robust weekend, as you rode up- with the way the governor is worker will not find his burden !about Hell's Canyon .. and her four little doggies cross back out see can as you plainly stream from Lewiston on the f!expending them. the highway. She struts across, any lighter. and hetwill likely reeular mail boat. which never The second phase of the "big, find his freedoms a lot more of the driveway- - onto busy 3:3rd head up like a quern, utterly 's Can- lie" is that taxes have beeni did and cannot enter ;South Boulevard. Cruising up oblivious of the danger to her restricted. yon. And he ,"trekked" around ilowered under the governor's E. O. Spencer the highway en route to Mill and her little ones. She's teachthe CRTIVQT) rims. Ask him when ladministration and socialism them a wrong thingand !Creek Canyon, Alta, Brighton or ing and with whom he WP 5 ever at !prevented or curtailed. The only Wants Water Well maybe to the nearby picture starting plenty early the mouth of Deep Creek (the lcurtailment that has taken A youth with legs so long the Litterleavers tossed theater, certain Left Alone is to proposed damsite). prevent place Supply from of cars our in front their ' they all but touch the ground Congresswoman Gracie Pot, igroups to whom the governor The Vont roversy over the domicile the following items of aF7 he rides a shetland pony from gov175 receiving who lives at Nampa. miles is opposed Colorado River water refuse: one beer can, one ice along the highway. The "shet'' front the (lamsite, has never ernment assistance while re- brings to my mind a water rights carjogs cheerfully along under have lem much closer to home prob- creain carton, one cigarette been there. The "Record-Courier,,nuirements to business "fear--lesthan ton, two candy bar wrappers and his elongated burden. figuring of Baker, Oregon. edited by been liberalized through California or Arizona. This prob- three paper napkins. In Los An- perhaps that down the road a public power promoter, on administrators" sometimes' lem exists within our own state and some other cities. it away, the,big fellow will regeles November 17. 1955, misinformed :selected by the group being regH and county. would coat a litterbug $25 if he ciprocate and carry him been rot have Taxes "We" the public that, (Mrs. !Witted. Many residents of .alt Lake were caught tossing garbage a nice gentleman Prost, two other congressmen. lowered but surpluses have': County have been using flowing from his car. There ought to be sitsDowntown, at the gate of the Temple the editor. and others) visited been utilized all in an attempt wells for their culinary water a law Grounds, and greets the tourists the damsite. The fart is that ,to reflect "economy." supply for 15. 25 or more years. l Mrs. Plost and the other two If this type of government is Certainly this should establish a More delightful dis- , that file through. lie is a cheerenntreks-TheTurned Wail( at allowed to continue in Utah:, legitimate water right for them covery: Driving onto two ful soul, and believes he has ,the best job in town. Like the psalmFacie Bar, from which the dam-sit- :then Utah deserves no more for the use of underground wa stretches of he would "rather be a gale ist cannot he Seen. beautiful to than the state dictator who con- ter. These same residents. highways, of the many wells driven These and other political engi- tinues in office after he has behold and smooth as a tennis keeper in the house of the Lord. ' than to dwell in the tents of l i nevus who want to sacrifice :previously worked to limit theA by private ritizens and municicourt. After those ." taxhave been forced to to Chuck and and holes. interests executive the rocks !Idaho's palities dust, wickedness buy stay of another pumps to make up for the de- resulting from the county payers money for their own ad- two terms. creased water supply. Now be- sewer construction, this reTEXT FOR TODAY: "Wh,oso Carl Rogers. vantage, are not enough intercause of the large wells that surfacing project is enough to imo'cketh the poor ested in the feasibility of their reproacheth monstrous proleet to take a look Believes Taxes, Wages have been drfqon by Salt Lake cause a motorist to forget all his Maker; and he that is glad Sall South Lake Murand City, at the ground they would approabout the additional federal at calamities shall not be um-- ray. many of the wells have road tax we must pay.... ,Paid By Consumers priate for it. 1,punished."Proverbs 17:5. gone dry and the citizens have Blaine Stubblefield, 1 been Stan to forced to letter recent column In a additional go Ilomestea,d. Oregon. said that :1...oader employers expense to pipe water in from Just Piciin Robb-er- y want to shove taxes on the the Deer Creek water supply. Compares Gov. It seems to me that as long common people. lie says that as the cities already have the of in stand the unions the With Herr Hitler path the employer's getting maxi- pipelines laid that they should It is interestIng to observe mum returns on their invest Use that wa(er and leave the She must permit her husband By INEZ ROBB the techniques being utiliied by ments. I wish that he could underground water for those I to do all the speaking in as service. a public Purely public, Gov. J. Iliacken Lee in his tell us how who certainly have priority thil is done. am publishing today .a pronun- and yet be articulate in private, This for would eliminate Mr. a letter rights. If be read. the 'campaign by riamento to be known hereafter 'ilest the rumor get around that corripaign is built upon the Palmer. he would read that great expense for those who as Robb's Handy Dandy Com she is a dumb cluck She must 'same methods as those em- profits were at an all time have their nwn water systems of Rules and Regula not discuss the issues beyond pendium installed. PloYed by Hiller. This conSists high. Gin be prove that uninn already firms for Wives of Political Can- saying fervently that she agrees - Mrs. ft D. Raker of An emotional Ft prvea I with thr hihor has taken any out didates with her husband and the party Woman and girlie. I have hPr rt platform. While it might be fatal for interviewing such badgered la idies for longer than any of us her to take a firm stand on labor 4 wish to acknowledge. for one or disarmamen t. she can trm the 'Neu I tits) for a while threatening the of the first laws is that eandi strongly endorse virtue. thrift 75 'roars Ago dates wives must always be and motherhood. And she can 25 Years Ago safety of nearby buildings. 2uly 5. I K31The attempted !Youthful but never Young. vehemently denounce juvenile July 5. 1931J ulian Ilaw assassination of President Car100 Years Ago It is irnperatke that the cari-- delinquency and rnanre a t I it g ithoine, son of the famous Na- field still dominated the neNt..s. , 5 a page odun didate's wife be. on the one sharks, since so few j.ds. or :thaniel, announced on his 85th , As the scheduled display of ha1-1- 1y - 'idle856votedAt o t hand, an aer accomplished hostess sharks turn up at the polls. was he that :birthday today fireworks was being set Off on of the celebration of the Fourth u- -p to a wiener with She must at one and the same splitting working on an 'autobiography Fuller's Hill. a spark from a of Gov. Young's oration s.. Vanderbilt. July. on the time be her husbands home- and. would Incidents contain 'which fell into the box holding ; was given In full. It had been other hand, retain the common maker and his last,best InSpira- about the many noted authors ,rocket ;the supply of combustibles." applauded by nine rounds of touch at the box supper. i ton. She May suggest but never :he had known. 1"A FIVPly seene was the immedi- cannon shot. Among the toasts It is vital that she be keenly boss. love the but treasSo Years Ago ate result. Rockets; roman cand- given was one to the anticipated interested in public affairs and ure privac y. public be visible ahvays Gen- les bomhs, firecrackers, squibs. railroad. "May i yet just a housewife at heart on the back platform but invisJuly 5, ErMcrick- To ri.sn, "One .pinwheels and other explosive the iron horse with its gigantic Wh co has b e e n rooms. reluctantly ible in the smoke-filleof the big mon in San FranWhat she needs. in short. ls.a itoys of every descriptâon went power soon unite in one corn- i dragged from her stance over a oicons deOruction xnri restor!- off in dire confusion. scattering ,mercial bond the reciprocal in- hot stove by the insatiable de- split personality. - And what atinn.- was .in Salt ,I.Akc.,,City the crowd hither and thither. terests of the e a s t e r n 'arid-rnaontio pubtir that her hil'. she'll get. in all neohability. Is today, ;loci rranINI an exclulcie setting fire to a rativas sheet woRtern portioni of this conti- - hand run for sortirthing any- - Fchurphrenia. Inter joy to the 'News: near the camera obscura. and srlent," thing. Cooïncht 1934) , I 17 A , 4, of ') , James B. Hixon, and in of , i ): , j -0 th410,0,--- ,,b-- '..,'7,- i ,,, , Bless You, Jean 7,0 , '11 voloolt , 47:14441 . ,, 4t1' ' . , ol five-ma- , 141 -- - . ' sumo - Sad Help Aid Program i Principally --c "s.s. to --- ' . , - t')-"'- s - fr,,,' ....--., ....... IN i aassisss; s.''.,'- - : -- ...-- .1,...-':11- - , , 4.) biWASHINGTON ,114' li3-.., si . s weekend------woul- 1117-th- - f . ' . - , ,. - -: s.t:;;.i- v. -- - ,i - ,,,.4,---'.-f- - :'', '';'---- . 41.401,,s- 1D , - !,.. sl 'S'e. I. ) ,i, - s''ss.s-,--E-- -, 4,- .. t's, 0 ti, d ; -- !t , 1 ,- !,'....,,,-,,, - ' ,:-- -: ' - -- '' 460 ' - 411... ' , ii ' ., . 7,, ..- ',hile ' '5' sss , s 7za3 - ., r- ,,,i.,,,,-.. - , y r: - IN -.- yif - , , - - - - . , ,....,to .. , -f.,. , airlines It - ' ' - ,, k..., ,,,se gre - . - iti? - - ci,--" , ,,,t,,. r 0 - 111111 -- - ...- 140 Fes ', , , ' , $7141i . - 7,00 r .. , ,.' , - -,.- leas11110.N,A -- ,: - I i... - -- - , o IF '''', . . t wo,0....1400,1.41,01,.. tok .....,,,,,,411, . q I $1.11, , .i , rafts , k ,, St - ler I 000' 4.8 -- , - 11' . : 4 - - - ' '1 ' ' , . ' - , - now genera1-1- 23, , E ," . 46 1,,.11Mi. ,,. stead of ' ' - - it36 . alfachedules increaset1 crash of two airliners .in Grand Canyon Iasi avekend doesn't represent the only critical examination being made of, the na- - - - ' $, cents for coach travel. One potent force behind this argument after taxes for the lis the fact that ' in Industry as a whole averaged 11.8 tiessi'l commercial airline industry. As. CAB 'Me 1955. figures 8.a.fair profit ....There is also a searching examination recently as 1948, the nation's stirlines were soon to get under way in respect to fares have gone end competition. Are fares too high?. Are oirrating in the red,. but profits up spectacular', since that time. present government poliCies unfairly' rethe Air Transport AssociatiOn stricting i representing the 13 scheduled to-b- e answered by the Civil Aeronautics can charge lower BOar'd in an investigation expected to take argues that 'fransAmerica rates because it flies only the profitable place in the next several roonths.,- carriers must also ' certified such , - wouldl seem to be about time for places. an investigation. One has never been made service unprofitable, more is competition It argues that there not since the CAB , belore, ' In than airlines certified any other and among' set up in 1938 to govern,- encourage scheduled currier of form Since transportation. protect the fledgling airline industry. And then there is a question that gets that time, the air transport business has back to the tragic crash over Arizona last intreased 40 fold, without any basic change Increasing the number of original palcies governing .cOmpiti-- , airlines competing for business multiply the tion, .,, It Is a tremendously complicated prob. difficulties of controlling air traffic for the public? Ina the CAB faces. On the face of it, the ' safety of the flying times- before the C A B has Three tà seem would reitrictineof competition launched such an investigation as it has voncevn now agreed to conduct. It has never yet in with mergers and lack of competition of other industries. This is one argument completed such a probe. The present one is expected to take nine to 10 months- -those favoring an easing of restrictions so ., which will take it, fortunately, beyond the that more coppanies ran get into thelield. politics. been range of election-yea- r business has while They point out that is completed this doui the Let of number hnpe the 40 study times, increasing tnt:stic trunk carriers has decreased from , time. There is no easy answer to the questions being raised. But certainly in a situa'14 to 13 because of CAB restrictions. n board has the power tion where a eau argue that the domestic trunk of life and death over a great, virile induslines can set the fares they want since try, it is time to study whether policies esthey monopolize the industry and control tablished in the industry's infancy are still TransOne carrier, the CAB. valid. on could that it operate Atnerica, argues . ' 1 Iv; - with ,. - , , PA-G- - - diiinely, inlpiiel.. , A're'Airiine.'..,,Fdie:-Joo:.H.dh?.T..- ,The, current outcry. for triale contra caused by - ' heels' , , , -- . i - . - , Utak Monday, Luke CO", , - - , -- - , WI -- , Enins es - , ' - - -- s ' , 1U-su- ' - . , 1r4t4tani for the. Constiation of the Vnitel States ; ' -- s . r.eau pac- ,' t'' s , BEsglagir , ' v . s - , 1 , , , - - , . i i - Plummer and Theodore L. Cannon were ap7 new Members. pointedThe Deseret News takes pleasure in expressing the community's appreciation to the retiring members who, without fanfare, publicity, or any nought of personal gain. have given many- years of unselfish and devoted service. Each of them merits the appreciation of every Salt Lake person interested in books, literature and all the Other' cultural pursuits for which a library - standc. We also are pleased to congratulate Mr. Lambourne on his reappointment and thr newly appointed members on the responsibilities given them. Mr. Plummer, whose sparkling and provocative talk last October was the ,highlightof the 50th anniversary of the Salt Lake Public Library. has long been one of the foremost friends of the library; Our own Ted Cannon is well known for his many SerVierS on Civic cultural cornin the tnittees. ills appointment-follohis of footsteps distinguished mother, Mrs. Annie Wells Cannon, who was for many year an influential member of ,the same board. As the Library Board continues to tackle the problems of the library, it constantly deserves and nevds the support And encouragement of its 58,006 patrons. the City Commission. the taxpayers and .everyone else who lovrs a book.'. piore of art or fact. ws card-carryi- Le Hints For Candidates' Wives - II-i- , Hawthorn' e's Son Planned Book? 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