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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA, UTAH THE SALMA SUM The Genie Use Electrical Appliances Issued Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. Subscription Rates One Year . . $2.00 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months PAYABLE IN ADVANCE and Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. ADVERTISING RATES. Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c Special position 25 per cent additional. Legals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Readers Ten cents per line each inseition. Count six words to line Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Read ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Eacl Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. Smile Display Matter H. W. CHERRY, Publisher. We have a com- plete line and stand behind ed by $204,000,000 the 1922 receipts which established the pre-iou- t s customs record. These figures are interesting when one realizes that the total revenue of the government in 1914, including customs, was only ,734,673, 67. This increased revenue and reduced governmental expendi-ure- s resulted in a net surplus for the year of $309,65 7,460. 1 The treasury announces that it was possible to pay off the under of our national debt out of ordinary receipts lations policy, and still have the surplus shown. total debt June 30 was $22,350,000,000 as against Our gross 26,596,000,000, August 31, 1919. These figures indicate that the burden of war debt is gradually eing reduced and if we maintain a sound financial policy and do not Jrain the government treasury for schemes of various kinds requir-n- g large government expenditures, further relief for the taxpayers o some extent may be possible. If they insist on The outcome is in the hands of the people. If they bill. the to pay xtravagant expenditures, they may expect ecognize efficient service by public officials and reward business idministration in city, county, state and national affairs, they may xpect increasing relief from burdensome taxation. Let every voter remember that he is responsible for good or aad government and cannot pass the buck to some one else. everything we sell. 1 COES IT PAY Most of the newspapers in this country have printed the very interesting bit of social news which we are going to print here, bu Now we are going to tell i ve have held back for want of space. to readers around here just as it has been told to hundreds of thous ur:ds of others. According to a recent press dispatch and it ha. be been found to true in every respect Henry Webb, of Auburn New York, says that 61 years ago he advertised in a newspaper foi I le secured one, and now he and that wife are a wife. getting For 61 ready to celebrate their sixtieth wedding anniversary. years they have lived together without a serious domestic shake It is a great up, and they are still happy in each others company. But the point we want thing to live as man and wife for 60 years. If you doubt it, write anc to bring out is that advertising pays. ask this man who got his wife through a little ad. two-inc- h Telluride Power Co. $402,-350,49- the 100 Electrical Store pay-as-it-go- WE BELIEVE IT Premier Baldwin, of Great Britain, declares that affairs ir Europe could have been straightened out and peace and quiet would THE NATIONAL BONFIRE be the rule over there today if the entire matter of adjustments had Fire loss in Kansas City for 1922 was $9.1 7 per capita, nearly been in the btnds of business men instead of politicians and private Great Britain s loss interests whose sole object in keeping nations stirred up is to reap wice national average of $4.75 per capita. a harvest from war materials. We believe it. Weve seen enough per capita was 72 cents. The question is often raised as to the reason for higher or lower s partisan legislation in our own country to know that about of the muddles this country encounters could be quickly and satis ire insurance rates in different cities and in the foregoing figures ve have the answer. tactorily settled if their settlement was in the hands of business mer, The National Board of File Underwriters has for years been instead of professional politician. And we are also firm in the be ollecting data on every fire loss reported by a stock fire insurance lief that every time a critical situation comes up and the people be ompany in the United States. come more and more acquainted with the cheap tactics of thes The National Board h's nothing to do with making rates or in professional politicians the nearer it is bringing us to the point where It simply my way operating the affairs of insurance companies. r the chronic will be forever condemned and busines: fires this and makes facts on irrefutable ;ollects and compiles and administrative branches of our men put in the available for any person in the country. The result is that the making of fire insurance rates is not a matIf Kansas City permits greater fire hazards er of guess work. SAFE INVESTMENTS HELP BUSINESS vithin its borders than does Omaha or Chicago, its insurance rates Every investment banker, bond dealer or bank has a selfish vill be higher than cities which eliminate to the greatest extent the interest in preventing the sale of unsound securities. While theii rossibilities of fires. interest is selfish, it is at the same time directly in the public interest No fire is too small to escape the records of the National Board Financial institutions are desirous of building up the wealth of t The result is that every office if an insurance loss is paid on it. The more wealth the people have, the more securitie: community. Nbt only own in the United States has its fire history recorded. they can buy, the better financial condition they are in, and the mou makes of Board National size, any hat, but the surveys every city business there is for bond dealer and banker. r chart of the city showing the possibilities for fire, provisions for Bond houses and banks know that if a customer is going to inighting fire, including water system, fire departments, etc. But if, by giving vest money, nothing they can say will stop him. This work is done gratis to the city and every assistance offered him good advice, they can get him to invest it properly, he will ire departments or city officials in pointing out how to better protect have more money to deposit in a bank and more money with whicl he city with the idea of eliminating fires and reducing rates. to buy more securities. With such assistance offered, it is a marvel that so many cities Contrary to erroneous public opinion that has been formed, re- rail to avail themselves of it and continue year after year to pile putable investment bankers are not interested in, and fight againsi fire losses. ip staggering soiling any class of securities which are not absolutely safe and sound The wise man will avail himself of the information of experts He must Grover Bergdoll wants to come back to the U. S. especially when it is free, before parting with his cash. hink theres going to be a new war over there. : : J. Bread Knife . Return 35 Wrappers From Our Bread and Receive this Excellent Knife ! 5 A X X two-third- . SOLD BY office-seeke- law-makin- LABOR IS BECOME CONSERVATIVE As Nielson & Prows g labor unions employ and develop voluntary arbitration of differences with employers they must necessarily become more conservative. Using their funds for organizing banks is a growing idea. The idea has merit and there are labor union banks in operation. facilities. They all offer the members "banking-by-maGrand Chief of Locomotive Engineers, Warren S. Stone orbank a great success. ganized the first labor union Labor union banks are becoming an epidemic and everv few days the organization of a new link in the chain is announced. The resources of the labor banks total forty millions. The Cleveland Engine.ts bank has bought into the Empire Trust Co. bank of New York and Chief Stone sits on the Board of Directors. The chief of the Locomotive Engineers has broken into Wall Street. In addition, chief Stone has a magazine, a coal mine, a Washington, D. C., legislative and publicity bureau, and a political 1 Louis Jacobs Salina Meat & Supply Sorenson's Grocery and Confectionery ELITE BAKERY & CAFE Gunnison M Utah ; ; ; ; ; $; The man who falls off the water wagon never expects to land an a "soft'' drink. A scientist claims to have discovered how to make lightning. The bottleggers have been bottling and selling it for years. 1 il A good woman is too good for any man he doesnt know it. but, wnfortunately, Nothing shakes our faith in religion as much as to run across the A cellar that is not damp can be than nine oclock in the morning in well who .nan gets mad when he starts in to argue the Bible. sprinkled with water, but this Loafing done. is a hard job. takes too long to get enough of it It the summer time. They take any eggs that may be under the laying hens, for several hens lay in the same nest and the eggs may remain under these hens for several hours. They may have been kept most of that time at the best temperature for bacterial growth and hree hours of such treatment will cause an egg to be such that it can not be sold as a fancy quality egg. Another cause for deterioration is fertility. Thousands of dollars worth of fertile eggs are unfit for food because the embryo has started to grow, possibly- - only very slightly, and then due to lowered temperature dies. It is important to get rid of the roosters when the hatching seasw-i- Along about this time of the year thoughts of an empty coal bin turn a midsummer night's dream into a nightmare. The average man got his start as a liar by telling his mother he has picked all the cherries on the tree that he could reach. Now that autos have largely replaced the horse, Henry Ford DEDUCING THE TAX LOAD ants the flivver to replace the Democratic donkey. One question that affects every person is taxation. The tim. of our legislative bodies is largely taken up figuring ways to rais CITY MARKETS WANT MORE (ggs and insures the quality which Too little time more money to foot bills for public expenditures. e "FANCY EGGS irg glutted, is the opinion of a reduce been to to figuring is trade demands. expenditures. ways gi.en The first important move is to get on is over. The July Theres an unlimited market and announcement of the United States Treasury has c The farmers we buy from are reThe revenue of the nations big premium for "fancy eggs and the eggs from the nest as soon as personal interest to every taxpayer. who supply quired to place their eggs in the celThe no likehhood of the market farmers possible. government for the year ending June 30 totaled $4,007,135,480 market man. In The Farm the best eggs gather their eggs three lar as soon as gathered. These celCustoms receipts contributed $561,928,866 to this total and exceed Journal lie tells how he gels fancy times a clay and especially not later lars should be 60 degrees F. or less. suc-th- 1 high-price- 1 becom-cessf- ul d dampness must be continued as it will evaporate rapidly, especially if the cellar has a wood floor. A dirt floor is better. The egg container must not get wet and there must be no bad o'rdors. We pay- - the local price plus the premium of difference of the higher markets, reaching a premium during the summer of ten cents a dozen, and sometimes as high as twelve cents a dozen. You say, Will I get more money If we find farmers that persistent-whatevyour specialty is. ly neglect the care of their eggs, we do not buy from them, as it costs considerable to collect eggs by truck, and such eggs, if I wanted them, can he purchased without the expense of going after them. I do not handle er eggs from country stores, or hucksters who take anything with a shell on. any- - |