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Show Southern Utah News and Page Two SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS r And Continuing the Kane County Standard t- -i i. i. Lcd i THE AMERICAN WAY OFFICIAL PAPER OF KANE COUNTY, UTAH G. Brown, Editor and Errol COMMUNITY NOTICE "" " " Vonda CORRESPONDENTS A. Talt, You McKinney, second-clas- s matter October 6, 1914 at the post office In Kanab, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. All communications and Items for publication must be signed by the whiter, whose name need not appear in print. Write on one side of paper only. Use no abbreviations. All communications subject to acceptance as the Judgement of 4 MEMBER T may not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death, your right to say it." Voltaire Stenisrd 38-1-1- 2, 1953. It has long been illegal for corporations to make contribu tions to candidates for political office. Tliis legal restriction, obviously, is based on the theory that corporations otherwise would use their economic power to elect men who would serve special interests. Whether or not such laws are wise is debatable. What is not debatable, however, is that similar restrictions do not apply to organizations which also have great economic power the unions. The head of a major union, the International Ladies Garment Workers, has said that his union will have more than $50C thousand available for contributions to candidates in this years national election campaigns. He said also that the combined AFL CIO political fund may reach $3 million. What conceivable justification can there be in forbidding corporations from financing political candidacies and at the same time permitting powerful unions to spend money on a huge scale for political purposes and political ends? Dated Ycsr Ikr.3 in ihn Paper go continued, will have to back to Washington to convince Congress that Southern California has serious problems and that it has abandoned previous policies and tactics that are now bankrupt anyway. For too long Southern California has been labeled as selfish and dictatorial onwater. We must face the political facts of life in getting this new approach adopted by Congress." This on the part of our Southern California neighbors Is not only commendable; it also is something which some of us have been avdising them to do for years and years. Southern California, it appears now is Waking up to the political fact of life" that a large amount of Federal participation Is necessary to make feasible a $13,000,000,000 state water plan to deliver water from Northern to Southern California. Aa part of this vast project, California is requesting $100,000,000 (twice the 1954 recommendations of the Corps of Engineers) in a grant, and a loan for the proposed Feather River project IN ADDITION, the Federal Government is being asked to build the San Luis Reservior as a Reclamation project, with permission for the State of California to double its size in the future as a State project which will be part of the extensive Feather River program. These vast plans demand friends In Congress and Southern California t Is apparently all set to go as a friend and beneficiary a proof Federal Reclamation gram that its lobbies have earnestly labored to discredit during the last six years. . . It will be Interesting to see just what happens In this transformation attempt. A recent Invitation to me to present the of the Colorado River Storage Project in a telephone interview with a commentator for one of The Southlands major radio stations may have been part of this new propaganda effort I was pleased to comply with this surprising Invitation. because I felt that press and radio coverage on this project In Los Angels had been defIn the past initely (R-Uta- Reports From Washington", and with California finally realizing that there are other states In the west, believe that perhaps closer cooperation between the states will benefit all, the letter Dear Fellow Utahns: Your attention, please, abused of the upper Colorado River basin Get ready for a change In character somewhat resembling that which has taken place In recent months in Moscow. THE BIG BAO water wolves In Southern California, who pent millions In their attack upon reclamation and. the Colorado River Storage Project, are now about to be transformed into benign good neighbors. The first drums In the new public relations campaign to transform the Angelenos into good friends and "water angels were sounded by Encios Congressman Joseph F. Holt in a recent article in the Influential "Watchman" column of the Los Angeles Times. Representative Holt proposed the formation of a Southern California Citizens Water Council which, in addition to planning and policy formation, Hfcal would the breach with Northern and Central California and evolve a good neighbor with our neighboring policy states." COUNCIL SPOKESMEN, he hard-heade- two-lin- Prci!::n cl Disgncsis long-rang- Dr. Salvatore B. Cutolo has written a fascinating book, which first appeared serially in the Saturday Evening Post, concerning the famous hospital he serves-N- ew Yorks Bellevue. One of the incidents described is of interest not only in itself, but because of its implicatios. A man walked into the hospital and said, 1 feel sick. But doctors of broad experience were puzzled as to what the was. The symptoms were strange to them. Finally the correct diagnosis was made smallpox. Why should doctors have encountered any difficulty in diagnosing this once common disease? The reason Is that smallpox is virtually unknown. At the time of the Bellevue incident. Dr. Cutolo writes, there had been only three reported cases in New York during the previous 25 yean and the last death from smallpox had occurred in 1912. Here, by inference, is a great testimonial to medical progress. Smallpox is but one of the diseases which has been conquered. The list is long. And long, too, is the chronicle of progress in treating and minimizing the effects of disease which still strike us. This progress and these achievements, which have saved numberless lives and prevented indescribable amounts of human misery, were brought about by free men working volutarily in a free society. SUMMER FESTIVAL presents The King end I -- starring PATRICIA MORISON JULY 2 through 7 ' and f.fedsmD Butterfly JULY 11, 13 and 14 SEASON PRICES iWnl con-sider- d Insurance Corporation Deposit Surplus $500,000 Capital $100,000 0 FIRST STATE BANK OF SAUNA - - , . Tick-tac- k. Av- - 0 SAUNA, UTAH v Holt-propose- d one-side- $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.50 above-describe- Member of Federal Reserve System . . tick-tac- . k. . the whiskey that didnt watch the clock . . . water-developme- The University of Utah 28, g d flood-contr- e hereby given that 1956 W-NE- Member of Federal seven long years! all-ou- ill-ne- ss Gross Cssls Cpir.i:n long-deferre- Is in the County School Office at Kanab, Utah, a public hearing will be held on the pro1956-5- 7 budget for Kane Land Office Salt Lake City, Utah posed School District. County June 6, 1956 the following Immediately hearing, business schedulUnder provisions of section budget ed for the regular July 1956 2455, R.S., as amended by section will be conducted. 14 of the act of June 28, 1934 meeting Rachel S. Findlay U.S.C. 1171) 43 (48 Stat., 1274; Clerk, Board of Education and pursuant to the application Kane County School District of Don R. Riggs of Kanab, Utah June 11, 1956 Serial No. Utah 017775, there Published June 14 and 21, 1956 will be offered to the highest bidder, hut at not less than $2.00 The highest bidder will be reper acre, as a public sale to be held at 10 oclock a.m., on the quired to pay Immediately the 30th day of July 1956 next, at amount thereof. this office, the following tracts Any adverse claimants to the d land should file of land: SEKSWV Sec. 3, NEUSWVt, their claims, or objections, on or EHNWU, NWiSE44 Sec. 10, T. 43 S., R. 7 before the time designated for W SIJM, Utah, containing 280 sale. The Bureau of Land Manacres.. This parcel of land, as agement has not searched the Indicated, will be offered for files of Kane County to ascersale as a unit. No bid will be re- tain evidence of any adverse ceived for less than all of an claims. offered parcel of land. Any contiguous owner claimBids may be made by the prin- ing a preference right must ascipal or his agent, either person- sert such right and substantiate the claim by submitting the evially at the sale or by mail. dence required by 43 CFR 250.11 Bids sent by mail will be only if received at this within 30 days from the above office prior to the hour fixed for sale date. the sale. Bids must be in sealed Ernest E. House envelopes accompanied by certManager t monified checks or post-offic- e to Publication June 14, 1956 the First orders made ey payable Treasurer of the United States Last Publication July 12, 1956 for the amounts of the bids. The envelopes must be marked in Dick Von Hake who has been comer "Pubthe lower the U of U in Salt attending lic sale bid. Serial No. Utah Lake City is home for the sum017775, Sale, July 30, 1956," mer months. left-han- Published June 7, 14, 21, 28, 1956 Gives Interesting Slant On Changing Views of California Some interesting reports came out this week with the release of Senator Arthur V. Watkins newsletter, weekly this 2nd day of June, LLOYD DEERING and WILLIAM E. DODSON Watkins' Letter From Washington fellow-citizen- s IIow valuable is local newspaper advertising to local business people? Heres what the American Bankers magazine, a d publication which represents a traditionally profession has to sayj No busines man or woman in any town should allow a newspaper to go to press without his or her name and business being mentioned somewhere in its columns. This does not mean you should have a whole, half, or even a quarter page advertisement In each issue of the paper but your name and address should be mentiond if you do not use more than e a space. "A stranger pickipg up a newspaper should be able to tell what business is represented in a town . . . Its the best possible town advertiser. The man or woman who does not advertise does an injustice to himself or herself and definitely to the town. 1956. It Can Happen Here - And Does! follows: A are hereby notified that to-wi-t: UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION Subscriptions $3.00 Year, $1.75 Six Months la NOTICE at 7:00 p.m. Thursday, June BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT amount of $4,777.96 against the following described property, Mining Claims, InclusAdams Claims No. ive, located in Sections 7, 8, 9, 17, and 18. Township 42 South, Range 3 West, SecBirthday Claims No. tion 8, Township 42 South, Range 3 West, Kane County, Utah. All persons claiming liens or Interest in said Claims are hereby notified to appear before the Sixth Judicial District Court in and for the County of Kane, Kanab, Utah on the 7th day of August, 1956, the regular term of said Court, and exhibit and there present proof of their claim or lien. This notice is given in pursuance to the Utah Code the publishers may determine. Dc-i- OF FORECLOSURE OF LIEN Lloyd Deering and William E. Dodson have filed a lien claim in the office of the County Recorder, Entry No. 3790, on March 14, 1956 at 10:30 A.M., Book No. 28, page 61, of the records of in the Kane County, Utah, Allen Cox, Alton Entered as OF THE DEPARTMENT To all claimants claiming a lien and to all persons interested in the property hereinafter described: Publisher Mt Carmel Fredonla Norene Porter, Orderville Berneete NOTICE UNITED STATES notices INTERIOR Published Every Thursday at Kanab and St. George, Utah " Thursday, June 14, 1956 and County Standard d THUS IT MAY be, that just as the good people of Russia learn some hitherto-hidde- n facts about their previous regime, so too the good people of Los Angeles may be exposed to some truth about a program largely discredited in that area by South- . irAn hi ern California propaganda and SUMMfl WASHINGTON, IOWA, EVENING JOURNAL. Fanners information media. KSTIVA1 are unhappy, yes, but not rabidly indignant as some politicians In any event more power to University ti this sudden surge of good will have tried to make out. It was predicted by many that a politiUtah. Salt in our neighbors on the West taka CJty cal volcano would erupt if President Eisenhower vetoed the Coast farm bill. He did, and the eruption didnt happen. Farmers, by the very nature of their business, are accustomed to the ups GAINSVILLE, TEXAS, DAILY REGISTER: If we are to and downs of weather conditions and markets. They are taking continue to maintain the balance between the states and federa the present situation in stride. government that has been made possible tlie development o DOVER, DEL, STATE NEWS: The misbehavior of some the various states must be preserved and the trend of ever in of our Amerioan young men especially in their contacts with creasing power of the federal government must be reversed." people who are not natives of this country has always been a CLAREMONT, MINN., NEWS: The blacksmith has not It seems strangq. in our democracy where been eliminated. He has just changed his name and is now call mystery to us we have always emphasized human rights that we do not show ed a mechanic and there are far more of them . . . than there ever were." . greater respect for the rights of others. Void I ... Kentuckys Finest STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY N 86 PROOF () 7 YEARS 0L0 Straight BOURBON OLD CHARTER DISTILLERY CO., LOUISVILLE, KY. |