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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH S ALINA THE Issued SUN In making change ofalches . " - -- . ANOTHER UR PtctCP5 T 'NOMOTrtfcP. Vff.i HONTflO HAS rEASOM irLOf,ENEP if, ,..$? . 00 1 "':i ; eM'5 sf'.l 1.90 give old address as well as the new. " Advertising Rates Given on Application. Editor and Publisher H. W. CHERRY Five billions of dollars in cash are used to carry on business in the United States and the share of each man, woman and child in is $45, according to President Chapline, of La Salle Extension University. , "Total stock money in the United States is about $9,000,000, he said. About $4,000,000,000 is kept in reserve and the re000, sw. mainder flows, or rather whizzes, around the country at a rgjte of speed not equalled by the Niagra Rapids. At the rate of earned in- come last year the entire flood of money must swish fourteen times a year through the pockets of all the gainfully employed persons in the United States. The golden flood must hurl itself from place to place fast enough to furnish working capital for industry and agriculture capitalized at $125,000,000,000. Every dollar in the United States has to do the work of $40 at high speed. "This is why such a thing as a buyers strike would paralyze industry and business. It is why the science of business "management, accountancy and sales promotion has such tremendous importance," Keeping the money flood moving and directing its course is the most vital function in modern business life. The United States, is so rich and successful because money moves faster here than it does any. where else on earth. the-countr- earfl JOHN, MS THtKE "WHV mail matter under the 3, 1879. . SUBSCRIPTION RATES . One Year '..I Six Months. . '.v. .. .Payable. In Advance. . In the Danger Zone Every Friday at Salina, Utah. Entered at the postoffice at Salma, as second-clas- s act of Congress of Mirth . HAVE YOU GOT YOUR 45 DOLLARS IN CASH ? . WHY WE PROSPER Following the prediction of the Department of Agriculture that the farmer would find himself in a better financial condition "this year than for some time, with a consequent increase in business generally, from the Department of Labor 'to the effect there is comesjuj-epora general increase in employment this fall in many of the big industries of the country. Gains have been especially noticeable in October and are said to piesage a prosperous winter. Especial emphasis is given to the automobile industry where another increase has been noted during the past thirty dayg, and the report of the department declares that if increased employment in this industry is any indication the peak of employment and production has not yet been attained, and. it would seem that the overworked word saturation has . lost its meaning in the automobile industry. . "and so traffic increased has . The report says further that freight stimulated the employment in railway circles, the iron artd steel industry shows additional gains, the textile industry is in a more favor-able position and in the cotton and sugar beet states there-i- a persistent demand for workers. Holiday lines are under way and the radio and radio accessory manufacturers are busy as never before. There is, of course, a reason for this prosperity and it cannot all be due to the favored position of the United States and the contention that we were first to recover from the shoik of the war. There is little wonder that the people of less favored lands are anxious to come to America. As one middle western writer recently explainedit: . . "The wisdom of our laws, our freedom from the malign and disruptive influences of communism, our deliverancfe from the burdens imposed by vast military establishments and armament these things have their important bearing on the general situation. Peace and the untrammeled pursuit of her arts, is Europes need. Europes divestment of her military burdens should put her countries in the way of a progress and happiness comparable with our own." t , s sufficient attention to detecting and punishing the more serious Itis said that they are row finding a lof of crimes. Mr. Gilliom says: "This is.a condition which has come about . didnt know they had before. that they as the result of the !ver increasing tendency to regulate almost every. T ...' ROADS AS AMERICANIZERS .. ' .' ' . '.. ... ... . ' ' Quality determines the pride you take iri your carof . ftg design and finish makes you proud . its fine appearance. ' chassis In its construction gives.you a brilQuality liant performance'of which you may well be proud. Because of the lasting pride to be found in its appearance and a performance worthy of much costlier cars more than two million people have become . Chevrolet owners. . Come in and let us show you soma of jh'e quality ' features that make Chevrolet . preferred by millions. : Let us explain how inexpensive it is for you to become - the owner of a fine new Chevrolet. . Sedan- . Touring' - . $525 $775 Quality in ...... r 1 rs .Roadster Coupe. ' , ' 525 675 .' tehas... ' 425 550 ALL PRICES F. O. B. FLINT, MICHIGAN Burr Motor Company: ' I Utah Salina,. - ., '.. df pro-tfecle- . one and everthing by setting up moral standads and arbitrary conIt is. said that Robert Burns wrote that poem about mans and by attempting, to compel obedience thereto ceptions to man shortly after returning frpm a football game. by means of our police forces aad other enforcement offices. If this tendency continues, I fear that it will ultimately lead to a condition of Why'ddesnt some interprising Yankee put on a debate between poorly protected people against. real crime on the one hand, .and'a a bootlegger and a revenue officer on the question,. "Is Prohibition a. Jerrifying enforcement of tyrannous laws which invade the sphere of Success?. . ; ' . . , private conduct on the other. To me it seems plain that we must keep, such police forces as our peopje are willing to sustain,, sufficiently free to permit them to cope with those who are the real criminals, and we must stop demanding their protection primarily for a vague public instead of the interests. pf the public. The American' 9utom.6bilj.st is .seeing the 'country. There is no . doubt about that. He is enjoying life In the great outdoors where the air and the sunshine are healthful. Every family. In ymrici of moderate circumstances now hs some .sort of automobile. Speaking . of the situation in the West recentlyr Secretary Hoover said: :I found them camping out in. their "automobiles iq the hills "aqd valleys west of the Mississippi. It. re estimated that 5,000 are so en- ! . camped. Vest is true of the East and the South from of the is true jWhat : RECKLESS DRIVERS CAUSE DEATH TOLL 'Florida to New England and even into Canada, The people are learnThat the negligent-ancareless driver, and not the automobile, ing sqmething about the beauties of their country first hand, and is responsible for the toll of death at railroad crossings, iff the finding better than this, .they are learning something about their fellow coun' , . of S.. T. Bledsoe, General Counsel .of tbe Sante Fe, who based his trymen. . V.. , 'conclusions upon exhaustive reports yathered from every possible Secretary bf Agriculture Jardina recently sta'ted: "Communication is 9 .great. equalizer. As the peopla in.the East go Wet and the angle. . . It is shown that in a year 2268 and were killed . people from the West drive East,as the southerners whiz North and 6314 were injured. Automobiles were involved in 84 per cent of the northerners glide South over the perfect system of roads that is these accidents. . . rapidly being completed over the country, they are learning that most . life and Americans are pretty much the sarhe;.thata New Englander and a That the railroads are spending immense sums to protect property is shown by the fact that nearly 1,000 railway crossings' southerner,' a Hoosier.and.an Oregonian are a great deal alike under were removed in 1923, although at the same time 2500 were install- the surface, that all hav? tlife same emotions, the same good points, . ed, largely in obedience to public authoritity. The removal of the and the swine' (let us hope) very few weaknesses. . In short, we are rapidly leaving the localized srtage and becoming-actuallgrade crossings in the one year, the official states, cost the railroads Americanized. Hard Surfaced roads, are bringing this condi$75,000,000. In a startling statement. Counsel Bledsoe says it would cost almost as much to remove all the grade crossings on rail- tion about and if they break down sectional prejudices and cement us will b worth, all that they may roads in this country as it cost to build the lines. into one American community-the. . . Railroad crossings having the greatest traffic density are . times and ten over.. . post, of by crossing signs, bells, gates, flagmen and by the ringing locomotive bell and sounding of whistles. "Outlook of gold movement obscure, says a headline in the . . .A railroad track and a railroad crossing are danger signals," New York Times. That's the way it is fot.most of us most of the time. ' says the statement. "One New England railroad having only 230 crossing gates had 390 such gates demolished by automobiles crashing . ' Western newspapers say that automobile tramps are bothering through them in front of approaching trains, in 1923. One Ohio rail- other tourists by stopping them and begging fox a gallon of gasoline:': ' , road had twenty collisions between its trains and autos in one year, If we are getting sp prosperous that the hoboes are running around in where the crossings were protected by bells that in eaih case were ' motor cars, no wonder that Europe is so envious. .. ringing." . . real estate in Florida . ' , A half dozen peace agreements were signed at Locarno and just SMALL TOWN PRESS IS BEST IN WORLD what a lot of fun the powers will have making scraps of paper American newspapeis excel those of foreign countries chiefly in think ' . whe-- the next war starts. . the scope of the news they present to their readers. In no other country do editors go to such expense, or take such pains to furnish the public with news of international importance, Prof. H. F. Harrington, IN HONOR OF A GREAT EVENT Bi thilays are always important, director of the Medill School of Journalism of Northwestern univers-sitespecially if one is very occasions, said in the opening of this season's series of lectures at the school. old. Before long The or very joung His talk was based on his recent tour of Europe. Youths Companion will be a hundred v--Jj "We have reduced journalism to the lowest common denominyears old,. an.d the event is going to . ator, Professor Harrington said "Our newspapers do not reflect be made a memorable one for The althe staid, solemn journalism that is extant in England because English Companions many friends. So, date is hot until April 16, -papers cater to one type of public, having common national traits, though the 1 will begin ..with 1027, preparations while in America the public is comprised of many races, each with its 1926. . own distinguishing features. We cannot afford to write for the seIn honor of its birthday .The Comlect few. panion will come to you next year at The policy of the average American newspaper jnap. abroad, to the new low price of $2. It will be measure foreign journalism by an American yardstick, is wrong, how- dressed in its party "clothes, with new cover illustrations, ever. Two things may be different yet neither be inferior. And so we new designs, enlarged brilliantly clear type, and over find in England a finished style, an accuracy, and absence of the sen- 200 pages more than last year. It will . timentalism and false glamor that taints our own product. h serial stories, contain 9 "In the small-tow- n editors that make up so large a portion of fascinating mystery stories, tales of the newspaper world of America we have the most typical expon- adventure on land and .sea, the new "Make-I- t and Do-Pages, radio, ents of American journalisin. They are truly provincial, whereas and puzzles, interestbooks, games, many foreign papers are narrowly national, political, classoninded. ing special articles, and the Childrens Fage. Dont miss Nothing across the sea can. compare with these representatives of our this great year of The Youths Comnewspaper world. y, SPEC IAL O FFER Tom'-- .THIS MO NTH -- ONLY $5.00 .Places a CHARMION Range m your kitchen. book-lengt- It ever-de-lightf- ul panion; subscribe now and receive: The Youths Companion 52 issues TOO MANY LAWS ARE IMPEDING JUSTICE in 1926, and The courts and police officials have been loaded down with too 2. The remaining issues pf 1925. All for only $2. much work by the multiplicity of laws according to the Attorney Geninclude McCalls Magazine, Or eral of Indiana, Arthur L Gilliom, who is quoted by the National Rethe monthly authority on fashpublic, which says: ions. Both publications, only $2.50. ' Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom, of Indiana, has put his THE YOUTHS COMPANION, .. 24 months to pay the balance 1. S N Dept., Boston, Mass. finger on one of the chief sources of lawlessness wlren he declares that by multiplying laws regulating conduct we have la aded down the Subscriptions Received at this Office. courts and police authorities with more work than it is possible for , Carp Five Feet Long therq to do. So many acts have been made wrong by .legislative fiat, A species of Siamese carp reaches a which heretofore were unknown or legal, that the work of our police length of over five feet. SiVnce Sex forces has been multiplied to the point where it is inapc ssible to give vice. . . . COME IN TODAY THIS IS FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY You are cordially invited to our office on Thursday and Friday, Nov. 2th and 3th to see Miss Crockett cook on the CHARMION" Range- - between the hours of 2 p. m. and 4 p. m. 1 1 ItKiiTEELURIDE POWER CO Jr |