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Show 3 THE SALIMA SUM, SALIMA'. UTAH encouraged people to start a buying movement for fear the price would rise higher. If there has actually been a conspiracy to rob the consumer the perpetrators should be promptly punished, but if the public would Issued Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. not allow itself to be buncoed into racing to buy sugar at the first cry of shortage it would soon let the wind out of any speculative Rates bubble that spectators tried to force upon them. Subscription As a matter of fact the whole agitation at present looks like a One Year .. $2.00 1.00 Six Months deliberate attempt to create sentiment against the slight protective .75 Months Three sugar tariff that enables our domestic beet sugar industry to exist. If foreign interests and our own politicians who play into their PAYABLE IN ADVANCE hands should be successful in crippling our beet sugar industry it is 'he consumer who would pay higher prh es in the long run through Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mai the elimination of our home grown product which now serves as a Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. ;heck to unrestrained foreign price making. The great game seems to be to fool the people one way or the ADVERTISING RATES. jther and to keep the actual facts of the tariff question from them 25c issue, Per inch Matter $1.00; month, single per Display MAYDAY SET FOR WOBBLY WAR Special position 25 per cent additional. Legals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Western lumber camps are said to be systematically invaded Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line with importations of 1. W. W. agitators coming in on the brakebeam Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion oute from eastern centers and concentrating on the timber industry. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Read In one sawmill center as high as fifteen organizers with red ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. and printed matter are making a house to house canvass of ards For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Eacl .he workers, inciting them to undertake a general strike and shutInsertion. down. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. In the Coos Bay region busines men, employers and citizens generally are forming an organization quietly to combat breaking H. W. CHERRY, Publisher. jp and tieing up of the logging and sawmill industries and may ject wobblies bodily. On one logging railroad operating trains on heavy grades the MANUFACTURERS EXPORTS GROW engines were found without sand the past week, and a sabboteering Increased activity on the part of American manufacturers i.' wobbly was found sleeping in the sand house seeing that none got evidenced by the latest foreign trade figures. They show an in .nto supply boxes. He was arrested and deported, as his efforts seemed directed of manufactures and 30 pei crease of 20 per cent in exportations cent in importation of manufacturing material when comparing tlv it wrecking trains and endangering lives of men who were members the Four L brotherhood, besides innocent common laborers not These figures, says th )f figures with those of one year earlier. union. Trade Record of The National City Bank of New York, relate oi n any The lumber industry seems on an assured basis of profitable the export side to the month of January, 1923, and on the impori High wages and good operation for the next four or five years. side) to the month of December, 1922. They indicate that the ex hours and are rule are the vieing with each other in employers ports of manufactures in the fiscal year which ends with the montl their labor. of June will exceed by nearly $150,000,000 the total for the im Sousing Sane public sentiment will settle the wobblies. mediately preceding year, and will be 60 per cent greater than tin value of manufactures exported in the year preceding the war. Th wearing of popies on May 30. total exports of manufactures in the fiscal year 1923 will approxi Every poppy sold by the Amerimate $1,750,000,000 against a little more than $1,000,000,000 i: can Legion and the American LeOHIO The continuation sinc 1914, and less than a half billion in 900. gion Auxiliary will have the emblem the close of the war in the growth of exportation of manufacture of the American Legion on the unwhich was apparent in the pre-wperiod suggests that the close) derside of one of the petals of the acquaintance which the world obtained during the war of the pro plowers which will be a guarantee to duct of the American factory is giving further assurance of the per the public that the funds derived from the sales will be devoted to manence of exports of manufactures. the benefit of the perpetual graves Not only is there a steady increase in the total value of manu endowment fund of the American factures exported from the country, but manufactures form a stead Legion and to service and relief ily increasing share in the grand total of our exports, since oui work. Salt Lake City, April 18. Regrowing population demands aj steadily increasing proportion of the have been received from MorFoodstuffs and manufacturing ma quests output of our fields and mines. HELP IMPROVE TIIE LOCAL gan, Scipio, and Holden asking for terial combined formed 84 per cent of our domestic exports it information PAPER which will enable the 78 54 in in and 64 cent cen 1880, 1900, 1890, men of those cities to organper per per cent 1. Lay aside your fears that the in 1922. On the other hand, manufactures which formed but 1' ize posts of the American Legion, editor will get rich faster than his per cent of our exports in 1880 were 21 per cent in 1890, 35 pei tccording to Kirke M. Decker, de- neighbors. We have never heard of partment adjutant for Utah. a man making much more than a cent in 1900, and 46 per cent in 1922. Clifford S. Wilson, formerly com- decent living by the publication of This big growth in the exportation of manufactures and th( mander of the American Legion at a country newspaper-ihe had ever ability of the manufacturers to fill the gap in the export trade caused Driggs, Idaho and now living at Mor- so good a business. men by increased domestic consumption of the natural products, is co gan, stated that the 2. Do not tell the editor to send incidental with the increase in capital devoted to manufacturing of this city were more than anxious to establish a post there, and were you the paper without paying, and This growth in the capital devoted to the production of manufac only waiting for someone to tell them when you get to owing two or three Th how to go about it. turers has been especially rapid during the present century. dollars tell your friends that the census of 1900 showed the total capital of the factories of tfu In Scipio and Holden there are paper wil burst up one of these days. county at $9,000,000,000, while the 1920 census put the total a just enough men in the two towns The way, under such a state of the o meet the charter requirements of case, to keep a paper from burstTh $45,000,000,000, or five times as much as 20 years earlier. .lie organization, but according to ing up is for each subscriber to growth of capital engaged in manufacturing has been quitei as rapid Henry Miller of Scipio and Thad keep the editors books free from the of the factories. The total capital invest fohnson of Holden, they are ready to charges against them. This thing as the increased ed in manufacturing is set down by the census of 1920 at $44,688. nganize the biggest small posts of of applying the credit system to the 000,000 against $8,975,000,000 as recorded by the census of 1900 lie state. Information received in newspaper business may be likened to a farmer selling out his crop, a lopaitment headquarters is to the while the outturn of manufactures reported by the 1920 census i that one of the first activities bushel to a man. The sum each $62,418,000,000 against $11,406,000,000 according to the censu if the new posts would be organ. would owe would seem of little acof 1900. ze baseball teams and play for the count, but the make THE SALMA SUM 1 ar , f out-tur- n ef-e- ct aggregate might or break the farmer. ounty Legion championship. WHY BE A SUCKER The newspapers have recently been filled with numberless ac The old saying that a suck counts of stock swindling operations. is born every minute seems to be more than borne out. er The average man knows nothing about investments and to often seems adverse to securing advice. c If the uninformed citizen before giving up his money for a scheme about which he really knows nothing would consult a bond house or banker and learn the actual facts in the case, the fake stock seller would soon disappear. hard-earne- TOO MANY LAWS On ol the strongest political tendencies of our time is the sud denly increased faith of legislators in the power of laws to enforce No belief has beer themselves once they are reduced to writing. so continuously and thoroughly discredited, yet none is so alarmEvery political philosopher from Montaigne's day ingly alive. kas recognized that the best government is that conto this hour ducted with the least law and machinery. A multitude of evils attend the naive faith of legislatures in the capacity of law as represented by words on a of paper. One is an inevitable weakening of respect for all piece' government bom of a disregard for its more outlandish aspects. Another is the uninterrupted encroachment of government on the A third and most distressing evil is the appalling exgoverned. pense atteding the creation of multitudinous new bureaus and offices provided for. The time may come when a candidate pledging himself to nothing but the repeal of two laws for every one created will be generally supported. auto-enforceme- nt LET THE PEOPLE KNOW The politicians have succeeded in stirring up a small word c clone over the sugar price. The price and shortage scare rea I North Seniors Have Completed Graduation Themes Along with their other worries in completing four years of high school work, the seniors have now finished their graduation themes. Although they have had their subjects for some time, they did not definitely aim to complete these papers until this week. They have done much research, they have conversed with everyone within reach, and the electric lights have been on in some twenty homes until the we sma houis of the morning. Today informal essays, formal essays, declamations, argumentations, and valedictory speeches on What Do You Think, Tending to Business, Good Growing or Just Going, Your Money and Your Manners, Life, and The Biggest Man in My are in the hands of the Community The seniors say, despite the faculty. sternuous effort they have had to put forth the time, they have had to sacrifice to write these papers, that they are well paid in the returns the themes have brought to them. A great deal of interest is now being shown regarding the valedictorian. Miss Scorup says she is wholly unable to determine which theme is the best. She reports that all show good effort and thought. On Monday the seniors will chose the judges, and in all prbability the valedictorian will be selected next week. In addition to the valedictorian the class wishes the second best writer to be class historian. Mr. Evans has agreed that The they may have a historian. judges will also decide upon this honored person next week. La Moscot Notes Sevier High of enthusiasm in fact, it is dangerous to permit him to acquire any more than his natural abundance of optimism and life. However, he went, but he didnt forget his duties at home, much as the students desired him to do so. It was 'rumored early Friday morning that he would be gone all day, and some at least smiled happily. However, Ronald Jensen turned pedagogue and gave each of Mr. Evans classes a severe examination. Still it didnt seem like the same old return just chuck full school. In Old Louisiana Presented at Under the auspices of N. S. II. S. Mr. G. L. Hanson presented the in Richopera In Old Louisiana field Saturday, and in Redmond on Wednesday of last week. In Redmond, especially, the opera was well presented and was highly approved by all who saw the production. Redmond gave its loyal support and the house was crowed to its capacity. The aduience was appreciative and responsive, and in return the chorus gave them their best. N. S. extends a vote of thanks to Redmond for her loyal support. It can hardly be said that the opera was presented as well at Richfield as at Redmond and Salina, but it was by no means a failure. The large audience was responsive and the chorus rallied to it. Considering it in all, it was really put over very well and the audience seemed to enjoy In Old Louisiana jn spite of a few mistakes that were made. Makes a Hit at Salina So strenuously has Glenn L. Hanson exerted himself in presenting In The Mascot, the comic opera preOld Louisiana at Salina, Richfield sented by J. L. Terry at the Opera he was compelled and that Redmond, House, Friday night, under the ausof this remain to home Thursday pices of Richfield high school, meas-use- d his illness was week. Fortunately up to all expectations, in fact, not severe, for he came back in fine it is not exaggerating to say that it spirit Friday and took charge of the happily surprised the audience. The school during Mr. Evans absence. music of the chorus and orchestra ' showed unexcelled training and a They say spring is the time for thorough knowledge of their indiviThe inhabitants of dual duties. The seventy-fiv- e good must understand this, for Miss Mars voices and the fifteen piece orchestra Johnstones message from that planmanaged by a capable director, was et was brought right to her by the well worth the price of a ticket. Howon Friday. sender ever, the music department of Richi field gave North Sevierians more The student-bod- y officers met with than their moneys worth, for in adthe faculty members Tuesday afterdition to the splendid chorus work, noon in the regular faculty meeting. the solos, duets, and quartets were Here plans for a clean-u- p day were exceptionally pleasing. Mrs. Nola discussed con. No definite and pro captivated the audi- decisions were made, except that ence with her voice and acting. North will be a clean-uthre day in the Severians are convinced that they student-bod- y near and that the future, need not send to the farthest ends will have charge of it. of the earth for high class entertainment for they can get them Sandy Loams Fl&ht Frost. right in their own county. All who The truck farmer who selects soil were present at La Mascot say which there Is a sandy component, is thanks to Mr. Terry and the music In less danger of damaging frosts than department of Richfield high school. If he has loam or clay soil, according Come again. to the United States weather bureau. Moreover, If he keeps his land well Mr. Evans Was Absent Friday drained of surplus moisture and free from weeds, he Is less liable to the It didnt seem like the same old damaging effects of severe temperaschool last Friday, for Principal C. tures. Ray Evans was absent. No, he haExperiments show there Is a relasnt either the numps of the flu, tion between the temperature of soil but he was callpd to Salt Lake on im. and the minimum temperature of the portant business pertaining to the air. In that sandy soils store up much Sevier Teachers Association in re- heat during the day and give this off lation to the Utah Teachers Associa- at night, raising the temperature of the air above It. Popular Science tion. Undoubtedly Mr. Evans will Monthly. i love-makin- g. Coons-Nilsso- n p 3. If you have a father, mother, Tt ovo, April IS. Legionaries of sister, or a friend at a distance, and Jtah county will come to Salt Lake are able to do so, subscribe, pay for "it y to hear Alvin M. Owsley, the and send them the paper. lational chief of the American Le4. If you and your partner both gion, in a special train, on the of his visit to Utah in June take the paper, don't stop yours beif present plans materialize, Mart cause your partner takes it and you V. Roylance, state can read his. Why not, on the same mid last night. principle, remain single and kis3 your Mr. Roylance stated that it is esti- partners wife when he is not wantmated that Fully 200 members of the ing to do so, or use your partners organization will attend the big mass toothbrush when he is through using neeting to be held in Salt Lake Ctiy. it? Most of the Utah county service 5. Because you know what hapmen have heard Mr. Owsley speak it does not and they recognize him as one of pens right around you, follow that all the country know$ the the greatest orators in the country, same thing. Therefore, send to your as well as being their chief, he add-country paper the news of local events, barn raisings, fires, deaths, accidents, accounts of wonderfully Salt Lake City, April 18. Fifty large animals, very fine fruit or thousand poppies have been ordered crops, and mention of public meetfrotp the national headquarters of ings, revivals, etc. If you will do the American Legion Auxiliary by this, your example will encourage Mrs. G. D. Rutledge, department others to do the same, and you will treasurer of the Utah department of soon get the benefits of your own the organization, according to an an- good works. nouncement from their headquarters. 6. Do not expect too much of the An appeal will be made to every citiwhen he is compelled to be editor zen in Utah to wear the scarlet popown his in compositor, proofreader, dehonor of pies on Memorial Day etc. vil, in France." fell who men the The Chamber of Commerce of the 7. Do not expect the editor to United States has endorsed the make a special mention of your busiwearing of the poppy in a request ness every few weeks for nothing. sent to the nation-wid- e membership 8. If you wish to sustain your loof the organization. In communica-ir- g the request, Eliot II. Goodwin, cal! paper properly, to live in peace and die happy, remember what we said: It is our hope that organizations have told you in this article. Rifle, of business men will promote the Colo., Telegram. oc-asi- er t, Red- mond and Richfield Come in and see our Sample line of Fixtures Up-to-Da- te When You Clean up and Paint up Light Up Telluride Power Co. |