Show Id MOONSTRUCK GREAT COUNTRY LIFE AND TION AS VIEWED ROOSEVELT ISSUES CONSERVABY COL m WATER FARMER’S WELFARE IS Doll Servants of Corpse BASIC to Better Nation Mutt Economic Condition— Resources Land 8hould Be Conserved for Average Man and Woman of the far as possible the use of certain of great natural resources for benefit of the people as a whole The publio should not alienate Its fes In the water power which will be ol as a source Incalculable consequence of power In the immediate future The nation and the states within their several spheres should by Immediate legislation keep the fee of the water power leasing Its use only for a reasonable length of time on terms that will secure the Interests of the public Just as the nation has gone Into the work of Irrigation In the west bo It should go into the work of helping re claim the swamp lands of the south We should undertake the complete deand control of the Missisvelopment sippi as a national work just as we have undertaken the work of building the Panama canal We can use the plant and we can use the human exleft free by the completion perience of the Panama canal in so developing the Mississippi as to make It a mighty and a source of commerce highroad of fructification and not of death to the rich and fertile lands lying along its lower length In the west the forests the grazing lands the reserves of every kind should be so handled as to be In the Interests of the actual settler the He should be encouraged to use them at once but In such a way as to preserve and not exhaust them We do not Intend that shall be exour natural resources ploited by the few against the Interests of the many nor do we Intend to to turn them over any man who will use them by destruction wastefully and leave to those who come after us a heritage damaged by Just so much The man In whose interests we are working is the small farmer and settler the man who works with hl own who Is working not only for hands and who himself but for his children wishes to leave to them the fruits of His permanent welfare Is his labor the prime factor for consideration in developing the policy of conservation for our aim Is to preserve our natural resources for the public as a whole for the average man and the average woman who make up the body of the American people types the activities with their so lng to the city man of business long will the foundations of wealth and the comforts of be undermined In the be impossible enlightenment communities In every recountry spect this nation has to learn the les in and sons of efficiency production and of avoidance of waste distribution we must develop and and destruction our reImprove Instead of exhausting sources It Is entirely possible by lm In the In production provements of waste and In business avoidance methods on the part of the farmer to give him an increased Income from his farm while at the same time reducing to the consumer the price of the art! des raised on the farm Important alIt education is everywhere though has a special Importance in the coun try The country school must fit the as elseIn life the country country must be hitched up where education with life The country church and the country Young Men’s and Young Christian associations have great parts to play The farmers must own and work their own land stepsmust be taken at once to put a stop to the towards absentee landlord tendency Ism and tenant farming this Is one of the most imperative duties confrontThe question of rural ing the nation banking and rural credits Is also of Immediate importance There can be no greater Issue than that of conservation In this country Just as we must conserve our men women and children so we must conserve the resources of the land on which they live We must conserve the soil so that our children shall have a land that Is more and not less fertile than that our fathers dwelt In We must conserve the forests not by disuse but by use making them more at the same time that we valuable the We must conserve use them we must Insure so Moreover mines SECRET OF So rapidly Is the far east being westernized that there can be no doubt as that here Illusvery few years to come such Oriental ceremonies was taken on the will be merely things of memory The photograph occasion of the recent burial of Princess Teln sister of one of the most funeral procession The Chlneee of members the family Imperial Important The an was extraordinary' sight passing through the Tartar City Pekin r body In a heavy coffin under a silken canopy was borne by whose duty It was to discoolies and accompanied by tribute “cash” that the dead princess’ passage to the other world might Also In the procession were the “servants” shown In the be fittingly paid large dolls of paper and bamboo holding the tea bowl tea photograph These were burnt at the cemetery during pot and pipe of their mistress the final ceremony that In trated LONDON’S It Seems Fate to Settle of Taft ANALYZED Beyond Doubt November the In and deeply One of the facts revealed by the Versignificant mont returns Is this: many tho Wilson Woodrow prefer to William H Taft the canDemocrat didate of their own party There Is no other rational Interpretation of the returns Beyond any there were Democrats who question voted for the Roosevelt ticket These converts from Democracy surely outIf any there numbered the Democrats were who voted for the Taft candidates Yet the Democratic vote was far exaltogether extraordinary It vote of ceeded the usual and natural the minority party In Vermont even in years favorable to the Democratic side in national campaigns ReThis means that many to the publicans went all the way over and party they had fought against went beaten for many years They to Wilson in many cases it is safe to say because they felt more certain of hitting the president hard by that use of their ballots The Progressive party was new Its strength had never Its future seemed uncerbeen tested must have tain Many Republicans reasoned that the entirely certain way to make their anger against their old party count was to vote the Democratic ticket They knew that there could be no doubt as to what that chances and would do to Republican prestige In the national campaign this Is it necessary to inquire what in a sttae where Republldefection canism is arrogant and bred in the ticket bone means for the Republican the country as a whole? Can there be a question as to the fate of Mr Taft next November? Somewhat Contradictory The Republican campaign managers are asing for votes because President Taft will do something to reduce the high cost of living and also because caused the the Taft administration high prices which farmers are getting " said about It the better It Is not an We cannot be document inspiring for Instance lieve that a “progres give” man like Professor Wilson cares reading or talking very much for about the Immortal doctrine of stats rights He is not likely to be proud of the Democrat of the achievements lc house of representatives fulsomely in several long paragraphs vaunted And he must have seen that nearly all his favorite theories were either lg nored by the platform or disposed ol in empty platitudes — New York Mall 41 j Residents of London and visitors to Just how to city are wondering classify the two quaint beasts in stone that have been placed outside the entrance to the new King Edward VII They gallery at the British museum seem to be a cross between the British lion and the Sphinx and are admittedly not an artistic success that HORSE KICKS UP 148 COINS NO GRASS ON HIS GRAVE deed worth OASIS The opening of railway communica-tlofrom a point near Luxor Into ths easy ol Libyan desert has rendered oasis of Khar access the celebrated geh long regarded as a typical examlife of isolated centers ple of these time past certain scienFor som-residing actually tists have while there been studying the phenomena ol springs moving sands wells and so forth It appears from their investigation a that the Libyan oases are deep in a lofty plateau that depressions has a maximum elevation of nearly 2000 feet but that the bottom of tho oases are only from one hundred to three hundred feet above sea level They are underlaid by beds of of sand stone which are the sources of tho water supply man who has just died at Prague left instructions that his coffin would be found at a pawnshop A n “til fm f rrkn WfWsteiili? !$ ii GETS TEETH IN OIL Well Advertise ADVERTISE At Ouce In This Paper F 0 BULLOCK DENTIST Office ever Salina Meat anJ Sapply Company Store il IN OFFICE 15 TO 30 OF MONTH K Utah - Salina Emmett Rollins PROFESSIONAL BARBER nr get acquainted sTar ND BHINQ YODB LAUNBDY White House Baildta RXX2 N J BATES Lawyer Notary Public Oollteiiont RICHFIELD iE UTAH 'O&SgS Send Them sss $ $$ $ ad in this paper for any business whatever is a moneygram to the buying public from you your They appreciate belief in their financial standing They buy your goods A moneygram never was marked “collect” The currency pours into your cash box of its own free will An If your bargains are advertised “big” your sales are big People appreciate big strong forceful trade announcements Such ads inspire commercial confidence GET WISE ADVERTISING TIME IS luw MWN prCTTizaa3K who reads Everybody buys newsmagazines but everybody-wbpapers reads newspapers doesn't buy magazines Catch the Drift? Here’s tbe medium to reach the people of this coairjunily WELL an oil well on the near Sapulpa farm of Frank Engles looking Dkla specimens peculiar were brought up from a depth of 65 Were examined Small feet particles under a powerful glass which proved them to be bits of teeth It is believed who made the exby local physicians that the remains of a huamination man being were found by the drill and old an burying ground of that It Is A local geologist deman prehistoric clared it would have taken more than k thousand years to fill earth and rock to a depth of 65 feet at that particular spot ' Is "Bis” Advertise or Bust Advertise Long Advertising REVEALED Ills i te f 34 IF TOD Wants Cook Want a Clerk Want a Partner Waal a Situation Waal a Servant Girl Waal lo Sail a Piaao Want to Soil a Carriage Waal to Sell Town Property Want to Sell Tour Groceries Want to Sell Yosr Hardware for Anything Want Castomera Advertise Weekly ia Tbia Paper Advertising la the Way to Success Customers Brings Advertising Advertising Keeps Customers Advertising Insures Succsss Advertising Shown Energy Advertising Shows Pluck OF FLORIDA A strange story comes from Watauga county North Carolina just across the Blue Ridge from east Tennessee NOVEL HORSE CAR RAILWAY It is told by the editor aLa weekly who says that while atnewspaper tending a burlal in a cemetery recently his attention was called to a grave entirely bare of grass and apparently as hard packed on the surface as the dirt In a public highway He was told this grave contined the dust of man named Hatton who died forty or more years ago “Although all these years have elapsed” said the editor “not sprig of grass or a Bowfj of any He kind has grown upon the gr:(5e” Inquired the cause and the mountain folk explained that the man buried At Langeoog one of the string of there Ws extremely profane and died East Frisian Islands in the North sea with curses on his lips there Is a off the coast of Germany As visitors decidedly novel tramway KING OF THE LOBSTERS can only reach this Island from the water a at boats high mainland by The largest lobster sent to Fulton service has been eshorse market New York city In many years tablishedtramwaymeans of which tourists by fish stall In of John received the was distance are conveyed the Intervening Dias Weighing 31 pounds and meas- of about four miles when the tide Is uring 24 Inches in all with claws 13 low as shown in the view inches In length this titan crustacean — one of a family of three— was InHIS COFFIN WAS IN PAWN mate a sight seeing weighing 20 pounds and measureing A horse kicked a remarkable treasure trove Into view on John McEwen’s 18 inches carried oft second hqnors 11 pounds farm on the Canadian side of the St while the offspring weighed Lawrence river near Ogdensburg N and was 15 inches in length Y Six pieces of silver flow from the j horse’s hoof when the animal was The driver lng driven across a field jumped Into the horse’s tracks and digging with his hands turned up 148 coins — three Spanish pieces one Britand 143 ish one piece United States half dollars By English law treasure trove goes to the crown so the coins have been turned over to the police They date from 1805 to 1828 und they were found buried in straight rows standing on edge only three inches under ground who built the Rideau Workmen nal were paid in American silver It being part of the indemnity paid by J i'i ' J the United States to Great Britain This money was sent to the canal district in kegs some of w hich were stoL I It Is been and never recovered lieved the money found is some of that lost eighty years ago while Difficulties Governor Wilson’s Governor Wilson Is so busy that he has no chance- to read evidently the Baltimore platform In his speech he did not address of acceptance himself to the platform of his party at all Baying that he really had not to read It had time We are afraid that there Is a slight ‘touch of Insincerity In Governor Wilson’s pies of want of time In thla matter It Is quite probable that he haa read the Democratic platform But doubtless he feels that the less BEAST WONDERFUL J IN VERMONT VOTE TURKEY m In the Indian river region of Florida are to be seen Islands green with mangrove bushes down to the water’s edge The scene Is animated by the presence of many water fowls — pelicans water turkeys cormorants and fish crows— feeding on the Island to getber with smaller numbers of gulls terns vultures ospreys and hawks swooping skimming and sail-- : In all this array ing In the air above of bird life there is no more curious and Interesting creature than the war called ter turkey which Is sometimes the snake bird As the stranger gazes upon this scene he Is sometimes apt to think ha out of sees a queer snake wriggling the water several feet into the air If he grabs his gun and fires It la probable that a part of the supposed snake will drop upon the water while the other part takes wing and files sway The stranger wonder whether ths snake dropped the bird or the bird the snake The explanation Is quite simple A snake bird or water turkey (Plotua anhlnga) swimming with it long neck only out of the water had the snake in Its bill and the snake was dropped when the gun was fired The water turkey has been called the most preposterous bird within ths “He Is not a range of ornithology “he Is a bird” says one authority neck with such subordinate rights members appurtenances and hereditaaa seem ments thereunto appertaining to that end He haa just necessary enough stomach to arrange nourishment for his neck just enough wings to fly painfully along with his neck and Just enough legs to keep his neck and hla from dragging on the ground neck is light colored while the rest of him Is black” Hit The following editorial by Theodore DemRoosevelt entitled “Progressive Country Life and Conservaocracy Is from the Outlook for Seption ' tember 7: There Is no body of our people whose Interests are more inextricably with the interests of all Interwoven the people than Is the case with the termers The country life commission Inwith greatly should be revived Its abandonment was creased powers a severe blow to the interests of our is the farmer of The welfare people It Is the a basic need of this nation men from the farm who In the past have taken the lead In every great movement within this nation whether In time of war or In time of peace It Is well to have our cities prosper but It Is not well If they prosper at the expense of the country I am glad to say that In many sections of our country there has been revival of recent an extraordinary years In Intelligent interest In and work for those who live In the open the dead In this movement country must be taken by the farmers thembut our people as a whole selves through their governmental agencies should back the farmers Everything possible should be done to better the economic condition of the fanner add value of social increase the Iso to the life of the farmer the farmer's The burdens wife and their children of labor and loneliness bear heavily their on the women in the country welfare should be the especial concern of all of us Everything possible should be done to make life In the so as to be attraccountry profitable tive from the economic standpoint and also to give an outlet among farming people for those forms of activity which now tend to make life In the cities especially desirable for ambitious men and women There should be Just the same chance to live as full and as highly useful as Hyps In the country as In the city Z The government must with the framer to make the farm There must be no more productive skinning of the soil The farm should be left to the farmer’s son in better condition because of and not worse Moreover every lnven Us cultivation every discovery tion and Improvement and economy should be at the service of the farmer In the work of proand In addition he should be duction In business fashhelped to ion with his fellows so that the money paid by the consumer for the product of the soil shall to as large a degree as possible go Into the pockets of the man who raised that product from the soil So long as the farmer leaves Advertise QutOpTheQimm drilling memorial than that erected Rarely hae there been a more appropriate In honor of Cecil Rhodee on his favorite epot on the elopes of Table mountain The temple carries out a dream of Rhodes’ own and In Its maealve status of “Physical aa Watts’ Ideal hie of power simplicity emphasizes great deeds dons Energy” erected at ths bottom of ths steps symbolize till to be achieved Ths sight lions are the work of the and great deed Swan R A The temple Is of the granite of Table mountain and late J The Illustration shows ths there Is a bust of Rhodes Inside the structure dedication of the memorial by Lord Grey The Advertised Article is one in which the merchant himself haa Implicit faith— elae be would not ad vert Us it Yon are safe in patronizing the merchants whose ads appear la this paper because their and never goods are shopworn |