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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH i rtBLIC The Salina Sun attention on taxes Ford Irriwater right in gation Company, also five shares of water right in the Redmond Irrigation Company. Terms of sale tobe 10 oo cash at time of sale, and the balance at time of confirmation of sale. Sealed bids for the same may be deposited with tbe undersigned personally or ed to him through the U. S.. mail. ,'b sales willbe madeland"subject to a and water higher bid for said of of at time the confirmation, light the-Rock- ReliaHe Merchandise Since Newspapers and public men are still devoting a great deal of time to blkhed every Friday at Salina, the consideration of the proposed Utah fedwral tax reduction which Is to come up at the regular session of in December. Member Utah State Press Association Congress Senator Smoot, one of the most in- fluen-tiamembers in the upper house Editor with the prediction that out now K. W. CHERRY, is all of the remaining nuisance taxes, tarried over from the war, will be it Kate . abolished. These taxes include the Advertising 25c per inch assessments on theatres apd other Display and on automobiles and KcaJers ; 10c per line amusements, automobile accessories. Senator Smoot predicted that the total tax Entered at the postoffice at Salina, put would bo about .$350,000,000. and Utqh, as second class matter that the surtaxes would be reduced to twenty per cent. IN I HE DISTRICT COURT OF Court comes the From White SEVIER COUNTY, , DECLINE OF HORSES statement that President .Coolidge is OF UTAH STATE .S.atistics seek to indicate that the e to Reprtisente-tivcareful study giving automobile, the factor and the..trucR Martin Maddens plan, for tax NOTICE OK SALE OF REAL aie. gradually bringing the.American Veduction.. . . PROPERTY hoise to the verge of race suicide. Mr. Madden would repeal all nuisAcpording to figure's compiled by, ance taxes, in which the tax on thea-.te- r ' IN. THE MATTER OF THE ES'thp Chicago Tribune tjiere are now are TATE OF. JOHANNAH K. PETE15tickets and club in the United incldded. He would membership 7,500,00(f horses lower the ' SCAN, BASTHOLM, ) DECEASED. States 'while jn 1918 there were as of taxpayers in all classes; the will sell at private The Undersigned many as- 21,500)000: Not .only this, rfian receiving less than $5,000 an- sale on or after Saturday" the 12th but the number of mules, has who now pays twa per di nually, y of September 1925 af 12 oclock, ten per cent, since 1920 and but one pt'r tent; taes no in of said day at hjs residence at pay .the average age of horses and mules $5,000 ami $8,000 R on. incomes dmond; Utah, the following des-c- i now jn existence .is greater than would be cut from- - four to three pep .bed tracts frf land with Vater right. icfinerly. Forty-thre- e per cent of all cent, and incomes-iexcess of $8,000 Commencing at .the South .East hoises farms are ten years of would a normal lax of five per cflrner of Block 5, Plat A Redmond pay age or older, while but eleven pdr cent instead of six, and the surtaxes thence. West 1.92 cent, are under four years of age. would be fixed .so as not tq. exceed Ti.wnsi.te Suivfcy;NortH 19 degrees thence chains', This shows tjiat colt, production has fifteen percent in tle highest 'brackNorth 19 thence 3.13 chains; dropped off, and it is said that only ets. .. thence East chains; degrees about one half as many were foaled-iAll of this is welcome news to the South 3.75. chains to the placfe of bog- 1924 as in 1918. 5 There is .ho dopbt that But the decline in number has not taxpayers.taxes under the wise lead- . irng and situated in lots 1. and federal A Ilat Redmond townsite 5. pock .increased the value per head. For the slmre ership of President CooliJge and the survey; together with , average value of horses has dropped of his administration will water-righ- t members in Ford IrrigationRocky 1 Ci a f97 five years ago to $03 at the s be pared to the bone. What the "people Co. . . . ; present time. In Missouri are only need next is a campaign, definitely' a as horses 793,000 against 906,000 organized, for a reduction .of .date .year ago and the average value per and local taxI head is but $4G. In Kansas four years ago there were a- million horses. Now WHAT LIBRARIANS DISCOVER the number has dropped to 850,000. WHEN BOOKS ARE RETURNED The general decline in the number and value of horses is blamed on the A gtoup of librarians were, once gasoline motor. All experts however, assorted . articles . . the discussing do not regard the situation as pessiPredictions made by advocates of which are returned with library mistic from the standpoint of the used free admission of foreign grown been the sometimes having horse. Some authorities believe that bbpks, as bookmarks, says The Outlook. sugar that fhe Presidents, decision, the country is on the verge of a horse Such commonplace and harmless r.ot to 'reduce the tariff would be shortage and that higher prices 'will objects as gloves., handkerchiefs, by an advance in the price to prevail within the next few years. have not been realized, ofisunlers medicine and .bottles letters love, . The automobile seems to have suput were too frequent to attract interest. .says Sugar, the trade planted old Dobbin to a considerable Next comes somewhat more deleter- authority on sugar. At the time when extent, but it i3 too early to say that ious substances like banana skins, the Presidents decision was announDobbins day has passed. He is still and sandwiches. One librar- ced sugar was selling wholesale in a pretty useful and reliable creature cookies, related the instance of a reproof Now York at 5.49 cents net. cash per ian to have around. administered to the mother of a. pound. On August 1st .it was selling family for the very buttery condition at 5.f0 cents, which was the lowest .A TEMPORARY REMEDY of a book returned by her, and the price it had reached since January, The coal crisis, which has hung like defense which she made. The libra- 1922., "On the futures market where a dark cloud over Great Britian for rians complaint was prepostero.us, she only raw sugar is dealt in the prices the past several weeks, has been said,' and she evidently experienced quoted for the remainder of the year averted temporarily, but by a plan .real sorrow as she said it. They al- are in no case more than a quarter of which is far wide of British tradi- ways took the greatest care of the n cen.t a pound above the present levtion. The coal operators declared library books at her house, and, to el so that it is evident that no great that because of European competi- keep them from the destructive fing- increase in prices is expected in the tion they could no longer sell coal un- ers of the baby, invariably kept the sugar trade during the remainder of less wages were reduced. The miners books in the ice box. As two or the year. countered with the statement that anIIow little relation the- tariff bears this claimed instantly they were- barely subsisting and that ecdote as having occurred in his or to the selling price of sugar is shown a reduction in their pay meant slow her own Library, the housewifes cus- by the fact that the highest prices . starvation. seen ill forty years, in May 1920 when tom is apparently general. The threatened strike would have bookmar.ks-betweeodd matter the ;aw sugar sold- for nearly 25 cents of. In. tied up industry in great Britian as under the low-ethe pages of a returned vol- .a pound-- were the other labor unions had decided ume, one librarian claimed the blue in effect since been has tariff that to support the miners and to refuse ribbon by in a score while lowest the of slice raw a 1897, price bacon, citing to transport or handle any coal after which one of his assistants had of. years was recorded in December the strike was declared. from a copy of. Mr. Services 1921 after the tariff had been advanAt the darkest hour Premier" poems. But his claim was instantly ced 60 per cent, from one cent to 1.60 Baldwin intervened with an offer by given second place when the chief of cents a pound. the government to make up the dif- a famous library in a . great manufacLike wheat, sugar is a world comferences to the operators in cash, if and its price is determined a with" modity. tbe men would continue work. In turingcrab, which turned up between by the economic law of supply and other words the government agreed the leaves of a book on engineering. demand. About the only effect of the to subsidize the coal mines. The tariff is to make it more expensive agreement is to last until May, 1926, CAIN OUTRIVALS MARS. for foreign growers put their, su. . and. in the meantime a gar on the United Statps markets and War is only commission is to try to find the remso keep American sugar producers evil. It happens- to us In this edy for the mining trouble. from being driven "out of Business The settlement, which is tempor. .country very seldom; say once in a. of low prices. ary at best, seems unsatisfactory. generation. But 'homicide goes on, The miners are going back to work every year, and every day jn the sullenly and rioting and raids on the year; with . a cumulative 'effect an abatement of retail as well as- of pits In the anthracite mines, continued threatening to outrival that of war. wholesale manslaughter. Ther j have York been more persons killed in this Note current records. Ne-aiter the peace pact was siguuttl. The .homicide a boasts of communists there are said to be using country in murders, brawls and acts havings .lower shot guns, and one of the miners, rate than at least any other large of criminal carelessness than in all bitterly disappointed when the order city. Yet it had last year no fower the wars we have fought. It is. weil homicides' to the to ghackle Mars, if possible, but we to stike was. cancelled said to a news-- . than sixty-fQrate the number in ean and should shackle Cain. Washmillion. At that pper correspondent that the miners would bather starve while not work- the whqle United States would have ington Post. ing and at the same time make a been 7,040. Chicago, on the other ,S.CALE UP AND DOWN fight for it, than to nearly starve hand, had a rate of 175. to the njilr is be by President would Wether have meant which 19,250 while working,--witno hope of relief. lion, The secretary of the Miners Fed- in the- whole country. And the. city by any other public official eration stated: An armistice has erf Jacksonville, Florida, had no few- or agency, efforts for tax reduction been declared, but the issues of the er than 5588 to the million, which will fneet with popular approval. For the tax burden is real. It bears next nine months will be far greater would have rolled up a national total than the mere wage issue. Last of 64,680 homicides a year. heavily on everyone. The farmer sells his. chop and in The average rate for seventy-seveFriday was Good Friday not the crucifixion of the workers but the of the largest cities of the country turn gives more to the tax collector to the million. than he keeps for himself. crucifixion of those who have been was ninety-nin- e Last year the railroads paid in as the presumptive that them. Adopting exploiting On the other hands the business rate for the whole country, we have taxes in the amount of $340,000,000 interests of the country are dissatis- .a total homicide roll of 10,8.90 a or $30,000,000 more than was paid fied too. They object to the promise year. We may reckon- our wars as the stockholders. Merchants may, and 'usually do, to extend financial aid to the mine at the average of thirty years apart. owners and wonder what it is going Then in the thirty years of peace add their taxes to the selling price to cost the already heavily burdened intervening between the last war of their goods and wares, thus pasa and the next there will be 326,700 sing the tax burden on to the contaxpayers. The next few months will be peri- homicides; equal to the death roll of sumer, but as taxes raise, prices allous ones for the British commonseveral years of war. Not the least so soar, sales lessen and profits wealth, but the nation has travelled ominous feature of the case is that dwindle. The rairoald like the merperilous roads before and will probab-l- v the homicide rate throughout the chant, obtains its revenue from the come safely through this one. country shows a general inclination merchandise) hence it too passes its With the government, however, to increase that of last year being tax burden on to the consumer. The ax burden cannot be shifted paying out millions in the way of the highest on record. is all to use desirable legitiIt to the unemployed, and preDirectly or indirectly it falls on the of war mate avoidance means the for to millions to general more public. The only way to repay paring the coal industry, the outlook But it is equally certain that there duce it is to Scale up economy and is no less urgent need of effecting scale down extravagance. is not an encouraging one. Sill LEVS. Makers of Two Horse l .?! y x.il- NIELS - A new Pair FREE it Thqy Kp " . ' - pay-men- ts , - ed cent,-Vtoul- l0 . n Address, L. PETERSON, Administrator. Redmond, Utah. NOTICE" bit- - 2 . . and 3 of Block 6, Salt United States Land Office, P. J Townsite Survey to .ether wib uv shaies of water Lake City, Utah, August 7, 1925. To Whom It May Concern Ford Irrigation ir hi in the Notice is given that the State hereby Cunpany. mm--ihiv .tia-lOchains feouth of Utah has filed in this office lists West of the North of lands, selected by the .said State, :n i 19 IX i t Comer of the South East Quar-o- f under section 6 of the Act of ConNo-tl- i tQuaitcr of Section gress, approved July 16, 1894, as InSerial 'ft. Airship 21 South, Range One demnity School lands, viz: Section 6, A S. L.M.; In, nee "South 4.71 No. 035354. SEH4NWK West 13.00 chains; 12.50 Degrees West 4,83 l: me ALL of P ..t non-miner- al ", i 'i thence tliui-;A nee ; t. t.. ning 0. T- 11.1-0- chains; ' jeon- - 33 at t!? ' Sufh West CVmrm-nciii. I'.st place of begining and b) at tv s. on-th- e E.-.s- t ' sale in open court. ' nor of Norjh East .Quarter of Set! ion Eleven ut,. IVe-- Qua.-t.-ro21 South, Range One West wn.-.bi- S. L. M ; thenc-iNortt nee . 10 09 15.00 cliauv; S.jth 15,0rt. chains; chains; tjience 10.00 thence-Wes- t H- - 54 c3 O dams to the pace.of begining area 1'i.acios Township 22 South, Range 4 East, Salt Lake Meridian. Copies of said lists, so far as they relate to said tracts by descriptive subdivisions, have been conspicuously posted in this office for inspection by any person interested and by. the public generally. During the period of publication of this notice, or anytime thereafter, and before final approval and certification, under departmental regular tions of April 25, 1907, protests or contests against the claim of the State to any. of the tracts or subdivisions hereinbefore, described on. the ground that the same is more valuable for mineral than for agricultural purposes, will be received and noted for report to the General Land Office at Washington, D. C. Failure so to protest or contest, within the time specified, will be considered sufficient evidence of character of the tracts and the selections thereof, being otherwise free from objections, will be approved to the State. ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. First publication, August 14th. Last publication, September 11th. with tog'-tle;- - 16 F S A SALINA shares of one-ha- lf Member - LINA UTAH Federal Reserve "System . Snsar - Prta Ijh r 33- P0LLY-ANN- A - 33' .Kcep Watching 33 3f 53 ollowed 33 . Facts-Abo- Fr . . Pr. H. S. GATES, JAMES FARRELL, H.B. CRANDALL, Cashier . . C. E. PETERSON - E. V. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashiers . . Daylight Your Kitchen three-librarian- - - - , soft-she- ll city-counte- red fact-findin- st g not-th- e - -- We will install in your kitchen for .TRIAL one. of our f ur Cool-idge-- ' ; . . . if yon like it pay us 75c down and $1.00 per month for 6 months. If it doesn't banish all shadows If it doesn't make your kitchen more cheerful and work will take it out.. more pleasanh-W- e. . - . - per-sio-ns sub-s:di- ze .. Daylight Kitchen Units or - n 15 days FREE Please give it a trial: Telluride Power Co. |