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Show Page 2 Jily 13. 1ISS THE UTAH STATESMAN THE UTAH STATESMAN A Weekly Your Congressman Newspaper Devoted to Good Government" Harry B. Miller, Publisher Gail F. Critchlow, by HENRY ALDOUS DIXON Editor Phone EH 421 Church Street 4-3- Magazine Predicts Entered as 2nd Class matter at the Post Oifice at Salt Lake City. Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879t The we are as the history Single copy 10c Subscription 93.00 per year. Published weekly at 421 Church Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION, Fortune Magazine made this flat assertion in predicting the economic future on the basis of an business roundup. It also forecast a further, vigorous upturn in 1957." The magazine reported that industrial production would start rising in later part of 1956 and show a two er cent gain over the record 1956 July 13, 1956 Yol. 10; No. 27 unprecedented prosperity enjoying will see 1956 end best business year in the of the United States. Editorial boom year of 1955. Common Man ? ? Farm Prices The Senate Republican Policy Committee, in a 32 page pamphlet, has put to rest for all time the fallacy that the Democrats consitute the Party of the Common Man. The document makes the very old point that there is no common man. that there are great diversities in our Nation. The Democrats play upon these diversities in the country to make demagogic appeals to group prejudices. Democrat Senators After listing half a dozen and four very wealthy Democrat presidential hopefuls, the Senators group points out that Democrats passed the first Federal income tax law in 1915, have voted 14 of 15 tax increases since that time, while Republican Congresses voted seven tax cuts out of 10 reductions since 1913. common man) If they (the Democrats) loved him (the less vocally at election time and remembered him more often as they dipped into his tax purse, John Q. Taxpayer would be a lot better off today, it concludes. Prices of farm products have gone up for the past five months for a increase since according to True D. of AgriculMorse, under-secretar- y 19-poi- nt What Mokes Productive mid-Decemb- ture. Groups Is U Study The parity ratio is up five per cent to 85, only nine points below the level reached in January, What makes a small igroup of Utah, the program has been 1953, the official declared in a worked out in cooperation with speech at the University of Marytick? Some of the answers to this 10 other western institutions. land on June 22. disbe will problem pressing We think this program will The decline in farm prices and cussed by nationally recognized as make the groups productive help parity ratio not only has been pressing problem will be dis- as possible," said Dr. Don A. stopped, Morse said, but has tain Laboratory in Group Develof the U. College of definitely turned up." dean Orton, opment scheduled for the Alpine Education and head of the laborRose Lodge in Brighton, Utah, The most difficult part of the atory staff. from Aug. 12 to 24. adjustment for agriculture apDean Orton said the curricu- parently is behind us." Sponsored by the University lum has been designed to appeal A major factor in making this to the upper executive echelon of a wide variety of organizations possible has been three years of Re-electi- on prosperity under including industry, business, la- unparalleled the Eisenhower Administration, s bor, the military services, educa- Morse said. Nato Include Zion National Park recreational facilities on the tion, religion and community Zion National Monument; tional forest; Full employment at record service. inhigh wages has increased the deWater Research Laboratory Predatory Animal Control sessions be devoted will for products from the farm. mand Daily f possible to be located in Utah creased appropriations; Most of the high-levto training in group skills, theory diet items for the investigation of water concatBrucellosis eradication in like meat, milk, fruit and and eggs, conutilization storage veyance, and application. Individual tle; are used. which solutions to vegetables being They problems, sultation with group leaders and mean more water and its more efForest Reseeding and range a recreation program also wil are the high income items produced by the farmers. fective use; improvement work; mark the sessions. National Seed Storage Facility Surplus Drive Economy Hoover budget and se have been members Staff to make parent seed and plant account! ng recommendations The intensive drive of Secrestocks more readily available to which could save as much as four lected for their skills and special tary Benson to reduce the heavy agricultural scientists doing new billion dollars annually. background which includes con- drain on American taxpayers crop research; Representative Dixons recogni- siderable experience in human from farm surpluses this week. enactStations Experiment tions include: Outstanding alum- relations at the National TrainFarm exports during the pement of his bill, H.R. 5562, has nus by Brigham Young UniverLaboratories at Bethel, Me riod from ing facilitated the administration sity, Honorary Doctor of Law DeJuly, 1955, to April, Lab at the Western and Training Stawork of State Experiment 1956, for example, are estimated gree by Utah State Agricultural tions through consolidation of ap- College, and Distinguished Serv- oratories at Idylwild. at $2,785,000,000 an increase of ice Award by the Utah Academy propriation authorities. six per cent over the actual exRegistration fee, Membership on the House Ag- of Arts, Sciences and Letters and board and room for including k the port figures for a comparable periculture Committee," said Dr. the Utah Education Association. be will riod $225. fiscal period, Applications during the Dixon, affords me a cherished He was Execua of member the to with to should the work made be of the closely items showing opportunity laboratory year. Many Committee of Northwest AsUtahs own Secretary Benson. To tive o; Annex sizeable increases 205, are those in staff, University influence and, boldly support his sociation of High Schools and and President Trumans Utah, Salt Lake City, 12, Utah greatest surplus. program, as; I have done in most Colleges on Higher Education. Commission instances, has given me great satisfaction, Congressman Dixon A former bishop of the Provo said. Third Ward, Dr. Dixon has been Other measures of interest to for thirteen years and still is a Utahns supported by Congress- member of the Latter-daSaints man Dixon through speeches on General Sunday School Board. the floor, and in testimony before Representative Dixon was born committees and persuasion of inin Provo, where he became Subscribe bow to THE UTAH STATESMAN A weekly newspaper dividual House members are: managing vice president of the devoted to good government" end keep pace witk local state School Funds Increase adop- Farmers and Merchants Bank and and national govenunent news. tion of a more equitable formula Superintendent of Provo Schools. for distribution of school main- From 1937 to 1953, he was presSUBSCRIBE NOW! tenance funds in Federally im- ident of Weber College in Ogden. pacted areas. This will increase He then served as president of 3 years $2.00 estimated payments to Utah Utah State Agricultural College year $1.00 schools by nearly 40 per cent, or until he ran for Congress in 1954. CIRCULATION OFFICE more than $300,000 during fiscal multi-millionai- re so-call- ed Two Utah Solons Bid For Dixon, ' (Continued from Page 1) acreage allotments for Utah; el amendRural Development ment to 1956 Agricultural Appropriation Act providing runds for Rural Development Program low income studies; a bill enlarging Zion Park Dawson (Continued from Page 1) committees of the Interior Committee-very likely the reclamaThis would tion to me work effectively to enable see that our reclamation development proceeds on schedule. sub-committe- e. My program will be to con- two-wee- 1954-195- 5 tinue to fight for legislation that will promote the orderly development of Utah and the nation within the framework ;ot our free system of government." A Davis County resident, Rep. Dawson has a long list of legislative accomplishments to his credit. He played a major partin get- ting increased appropriations for national forests and parks, passage of the Dawson School Lands bill and passage of the Millikan-DawsoMultiple Land Use bill. n lie actively supported the new federal highway construction act. In civic and political centers in Utah, Mr. Dawson has taken a leading role. He graduated from the University of Utah College of Law in k GOOD GOVERNMENT IS EVERYBODY'S JOB! y 421 Ckuck Street - Salt Lake City, Utak 1957. Bring In New Industry sup- 1925. Later he served three terms ported industrial dispersal legisla as Davis County attorney, two terms as mayor of Layton and as a state senator. He is a former member of the State Welfare Commission, a post he resigned to become a Congressional candidate in 1952. er, tion; Parks Improvement Mission developmental pro gram for National Parks; Forest Recreational Areas Mission 64, to expand and Improve 66, ten-yea- r NAME Keep Up With ADDRESS j. Utah GOP Activities Weekly CITY Remittance STATE Bill mo later |