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Show He Now Belongs To The Ages1 ' When the people rise enmass' in behalf of the Union and the liberties of this country, truly it may be said, "The gates of hell cannot prevail against them." In all trying position in which I shall be placed, my reliance will be upon you and the people of the United States; and I wish you to remember, now and forever, that it is your business, and not mine; that if the union of these states and the liberties of this people shall be lost, it is but little to one man of fifty-tw-o years of age but a great deal to the SALT VdL 14; No. 7 thirty millions of people who inhabit these United States, and to. their posterity in all the coming time." It is your business to rise up and preserve the Union and liberty for yourselves, and not for me. I appeal to you again to constantly bear in mind that not with politicians, not with presidents, not with office seekers, but with you, is the question: Shall the Union and shall the liberties of this country be preserved to the latest generations. Abraham Lincoln. LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1960 15c per copy $5.00 per year Sen. Moss Uses Faulty Reasoning - m Moss Quotes Judge Guerreo 1313 Metropolitan Government Dade County, Florida What - is Metropolitan Government? It is a giant project that has been underway for some years to deprive American citizens of the and right of local Constitutionally-guarantee- d the to destroy rights of the individual states by merging parts Of several states into one urban region. It is government by EXPERTS. The headquarters of which is at 1313 East 60th Street, Chicago, Illinois. (See American Statesman Vol. 14, No. 6.) In this issue we will tell of the conditions in Dade County, Florida and what this EXPERTISM did there. The right to trial by jury is aborted by the Florida Metro charter which spates . . . any one in violation of any Metro ordinance, if the fine exceeds $500 or imprisonment in the county jail for more than 60 days, then, and only then, is a citizen of Dade County entitled to trial by jury. self-governm- weft If you are a cronic complainer about your government officials let me ask you a question or two . . . just voting isnt enough, have you ever attended a Mass Meeting? Have you ever worked as a volunteer for an office 'seeker? Have you ever contributed to a poli-M-r. Lee tical campaign? Publisher Have you ever let officials know how you your public feel? If you dont, answer yes to all of the above then stop complaining and do something about your government. The Charter. says elsewhere . All elections for the Board (Comand mission) shall be the power of the Commissioners is limited to purposes of inquiry only and that the Board and its members shall deal with the administrative service solely through the manager. The only home rule in a Home Rule Charter is that the home rule aspect of it is from the home of the city manager. Now when did all this start in Florida? On about August 15, 1956 Mr. Harry T. Toulmin was appointed Executive Secretary of the Dade County Research Foundation. Mr. Toulmin was appointed by Donald R. Larsen of the University of Miami. (More about Mr. parson in a moment) Speaking to Foundation members he said it was a quirk of fate; a couple of years ago, I was assigned to direct a study of metropolitan government in this area. Quirk of fate? Lets examine his Quirk of fate record. Staff member at 1313 East 60th Street, Chicago, Illinois; Headquarters by intent of government by EXPERTISM, plus 22 agencies call this their headquarters. (See American Statesman for list, Vol. 14, No. 6) As Staff member he studied, parr ticipated in, conducted or supervised studies for the States of: Alabama, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Main, Tennessee Prince George County, Maryland Winston-SaleNorth Carolina Bangor, Maine Barrington, Rhode Island Phoenix, Arizona Glendale, Sacramento, and Modesto, California Greenwich, Connecticut Dothan, Alabama This is a Quirk of fate? In order that we might not be judged unfair to Mr. Toulmin lets use his own words describing what Metro does. He wrote these words for the National Municipal Renon-partis- On Connally Amendment A reader of the American Statesman who lives in Salt Lake City wrote Senator Frank Moss about the Connally Amendment Below is Senator Moss reply and our comments on the Senators reply. Feb. 4, 1960 (D-Uta- h) tem of law if. each, .state reserves to itself the power to decide it' self what the law is. 1 am glad to have your opinion on S. Res. 94, which is undoubtedly : Dear Mrs.... one of the most important measures f acknowledge receipt of your before the Congress today. I assure an am studying it carefully. Sincerely, Frank E. Moss United States Senator I can think of no argument concerning justice that is more fallacious than seeking a solution of justice from a judge whom in your argument you are denying the right of his authority. Of course, Senator Moss, you are going to get an opinion favorable to the dissolution of the Connally Amendment when you ask a judge on the World Court, whether that judge thinks his court should be restricted by the Connally Amendment. If you reason the same way concerning other aspects of government the people of this country had better watch out (Cont on Page 4; Col. 2) communication which arrived while you I was in Utah, asking my opposition to Senate Resolution 94, which Conwould repeal the nally Reservation. This reservation Sen. Barry Goldwater (R., Ariz.) provides that the United States shall be its own judge of whether cases in which it is involved shall go to the International Court of 'Justice. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee held one day of hearings on the resolution on January By Barry Goldwater, 26. President Eisenhower has exU.S. Senator From Arizona pressed himself in favor of S. Res. Los Angeles limes 94, and both Secretary of State Tuesday Morning, February 2, 1960 Herter and Attorney General RogHOW DO YOU STAND, SIR? ers testified in behalf of it Addifor liberty or for slavery? tional hearings will be held. The history of mans attempts I know there is considerable conto liberate himself from bondage cern among people that the repeal economic, political and cultural of the Connally reservation will improvides one inescapable conclu- pair American sovereignty. On the sion liberty is indivisible. We cannot have liberty in any realm of our personal activities unless we are willing to accept liberty in all areas. We cannot have economic freedom and political dictation, nor can we have political freedom and economic dictation. Knowledge and understanding cannot be limited in a free society. And while conservatives are frequently pictured as mossed-backeNeanderthal types interested only One Million dollars is a stack in economic freedom conserva- of thousand dollar bills approxitives are, in fact, dedicated to free- mately 4 inches high. One Billion dom for the whole man. . . . 333 feet high . . . the national RADICAL LIBERALS in our cen- debt 18 miles high . . . give or libas behave if believe take a tury they mile, depending upon what erty could be divided. figure you use. Economic freedom is rapidly disappearing as a result of the radical Remember . . . Hoffas mark of liberal attempt to create a society in which one segment of the econ- extinction of Senators and Conomy is subsidized while another gressmen is really a mark of dissegment is controlled and a third tinction. ' view. segment asked to operate on the j The new government will be of market place values. Senator Moss wants a dike the commission-manage- r The difficult problem of farm across Great Salt Lake . . . Senatype . . . All department heads, except the surpluses was created by the radi-(Co- tor, please stick to the essentials ' . . . dam it, were spending enough on Page 4; Col. 5) (Cont on Page 4; Col. 1) m, other hand, Judge Guerreo of the World Court has held that . . .it is not possible to establish a sys- so-call- ed Liberty Is Indivisible 1 d. ... nt elsewhere without you cornin with a new one. up Hey, you Republicans . . . you thought Roosevelt spent a lot of Ike has spent more money? in eight years than Roosevelt spent in 20 years. ... How did Roosevelt and Truman do as far as collecting tax money from you? Well the two of them collected from 1932 to 1952, 536 bil- lion dollars . . . thats more than had been collected in the previous 145 years of our government . . . previously we ran this country on 91 billion for 145 years. |