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Show Ynt SAUNA SUN. saLLna. u l AH. r lUiTC3 C5 X, 11 A TT m? A (CNff 7Ji? PICNIC SPECIALS Issue J Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. JUST THE DAINTY FOODS YOU WANT FOR YOUR PICNIC LUCH APPETIZING LIGHT. AND W'l lOLESOME. Subscription Rates $2.00 One Year 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months PAYABLE IN ADVANCE But before preparing you lunch, check over the list and come to our store or phone your order. Boiled Ham Canned Salmon Deviled Ham Tuna Cream Cheese Yacht Club Dressing Swiss Cheese Durkees Dressing Pimento Cheese Sardines Dill Pickles Sweet Pickles Sandwich Loaves, Cakes, Pies, Cookies, Crackers Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3. 1879. ADVERTISING RATES. 25c. Display Matter Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue. Special position 25 per cent additional. line. l.egals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line. to six words Count Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. insertion. Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each Read- Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at I lalf Local ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line, for Sale. For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc.. Ten Cents per line for Each Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. 1. 1 Our Full Line of Meats and Croceries are of the Highest Quality. Salina Meat and Supply Co. "The Most P W. Cl 1ERRY, Editor and Publisher. ii' the war began about the item of sugar. A number of Engare in favor of subsidizing the beet sugar industry1 in the British Isles to make that nation more independent of foreign sugar supfright Mhen lish people st (,.Ii hi TV MAINTAINED White the prices of most food products have been rising during the exception. Wholesale quotations p;t ft w months sugarrawremains aarenotable more than two cents a pound lower on both retined and sugar a than year ago. t'mli r i Ik se conditions, says Facts About Sugar, the genera public hu.-- , lost iiiuicst in the uttempl being made by those Interested in Cuban s.ngur pi eduction to bring about a reduction in the import duty, but this had the effect of intensifying the interest of uiy decline in prices lias in states who are paid for their crop in western armors licet growing and who assert that a further re-- u of to tiie market sugar price propoition action ill thill- net returns will make it impossible for them to grow sugar beets in competition with other farm crops. Various fanners organizations, including the American Farm Bureau Federation and the International Farm Congress, have adopted resolutions recently urging that no reduction lie made in the duty on sugar v liieh they point to as one of the few items in the tariff schedule that is c,i direct benefit to the farmers of the United States. They accuse those who have hem agitating for a reduction in the import of inconsistency, in claiming on the one hand that a, reduction in the tariff on sugar will lower its cost to the consumer while admitting on the other hand It Is tho competition of the larger crops grown in the United States during the past season that has been the main factor in the recent decline in prices. They quote from a market review by an association of eastern refiners and Cuban producers as recently as July 18 which referred to the pressure from American grown sugar as being the cause of the continued decline in market prices to show that consumers are receiving the benefit ,f a reduction within the past year amounting to more than the entire turitf on Cuban Sugar which is 1.76 cents a pound. Their argument is that to give the importers of sugar a further advantage over domestic producers by lowering the present tariff rate would reduce the competition which now exists by cutting down American production and so would injure consumers rather than benefit them. Representatives of farming interests particularly object to the course the Tariff Commission in its recent investigation of the relative costs of producing Sugar In the United States and Cuba becausei they assert that the Commission lias based its inquiry upon comparison of manufacturng costs instead of upon agricultural costs which they contend is the real measure of tile ability of the domestic and foreign industries to compete on equal terms and they are preparing to ak President Goolidge to return the report to the Commission with instructions to study this phase of t lie subject in case the Commission recommends a rate o.f duty which wiill endaugrr the ability of American farmers to continue their production in competition with the impoted product. They say that the tariff law authorizes the President to charge the duty on any imported commodity only when a change has taken plare in the relative cost of production at home and abroad and that no such change has occurred in the cost of growing sugar since the present law was enacted In Sept. 1922. - f g HELD The present sugar situation is not at all satisfactory to England v.ltich is too much dependent upon Cuba for its supplies. England had a US TAKE j . I i ii j all till 'll in ill KEEP COOL Pure Artificial Ice from Pure Water will be delivered in Salina jj Eve'rjr j3 Tuesday and Saturday jj Leave orders with Emmet Robins or PJ Address J3 Experts tell us that one in every 100 persons is a' criminal, every criminal costs society $10,000 annually, and that criminals and crime cost American people ten billion dollars a year. Astounding rs this is, you cant help but feel great if you are one of the 99 and can fully enjoy the blessed privileges accorded lawabiding American citizenship. Since the) fashion notes inform us that the women folks have substituted adhesive tape for the corset the man have an added precaution to keep in mind. A blonde halrj on the lapel was serious enough for the husband with a brunette wife or swieetheart, hut peeling adhesive tap off the sleeve isnt going to be an idle joke. Louisiana man has demonstrated that a rattle snake is no respecter of religion. He contended that the rattler would not bite a Holy Holer, ard gave a demonstration before a congregation of that Faith. The snake did. The man may die. Harry Bell Monroe, Utah 'ii,' ; H n;pii"i!;f ft A The Los Angeles cult leader and on religious subjects failed to rise from the dead(as she had so confidently prjrrnsed her followers. Faith of that sort is sublime, but a3 yet it has failed t) e,ver cheat the t undertaker. ft- - JftrstJtate2fomk 33 SALINA SALINA UTAH 53 O F ft ft - ft Member Federal Reserve System 53 ft ft 33 ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft SK23 '"SKXEKSKKSKK 4 Communities, like individuals, only prosper through barter and exchange of commodities with other communities or individuals. The West, essentially an agricultural region, is far from its markets and sources of supply. Transportation is the life blood of its existence; lacking this the western farmer Mould turn to the primitive status of past centuries and live the life of a peasant- - What is of real and vital moment to the West and to the Mhole country is the maintenance of a policy toward the railroads Mhich shall keep them etticient for service and insure their extension and improvement step by step with the growth of the population, enterprises and needs of the communities served. THE DENVER & RIO GRANDE WESTERN RAILROAD is earnestly endeavoring to supply the territory served by its lines Mith an adequate and dependable transportation service. 4 The Sevier Valley Mercan. tile Company has taken over the agency for the Internationt al Harvester Company line of t Farm Implements. 4 4 4 WHEN YOU SHIP OR TRAVEL Patronize The 4 4 Rio Grande 4. 4 4 4 For Freight and Passenger Rates anyMhere East or West, or locally, call on or address any Rio Grande Agent. 44 FRANK A. WADLEIGH Complete line of extras for all l.H.C. Implements in stock at all times. Passenger Traffic Manager SEVIER VALLEY MERCANTILE CO. 4 g, MIT j tj nt What the Railroads Means to You pro-xi-i- Grocery Store in Salina j j j j Here la a bit of newn that will make you hark hack to the days when the automobile was just making an occasional appearance, and will give the youngsters an idea of how they were dreaded and feared at that time, especially by equine life. The city of Denison, Iowa, repealed and The traveling ordinance which read as follows: motorist is ordered to telephone ahead to next town, notifying of his arrival; of the probable route through town, and of the length of his intended stay. Sounds like a message unearthed from King Tilts tomb, doesnt it? e fire protection. Fire precautions ought to be an integral! part of the original plan of a farmstead. Its various buildings should be so separated that if a fire ctcurs in one the rest wull not almost inevitably be doomed. In common with dwellings everywhere, there are several interior features of rural home construction which, although higher in first cost than ordinary work, cartv with them increased safety to life and property. Among ii cse ate the employment of roofing material; the of two stairways in different parts of the house; the inclosure of : t airways, particularly a rear one that enters the kitchen, and the Installation of All these items, with the excep-t.o- n between floors. of are features that can be Introduced even in structures of long standing." J Nothing would do more to remedy agricultural unemployment, Lord Bearsted, than the cultivation of bct sugar. It employs says more people per acre than almost any other crop. Why pay doles to a million people for not doing any work at all, he asks, when they might be set to work growing btets and working in sugar factories. .Taking the whole world over, the proportion of beet to cane isugar Is now as four to nine. Is not this situation in England an object lesson for the United States? Should we not encourage our own sugar beet industry by every legitimate meains? During the war it saved us from being absolutely dependent upon foreign sources of supply. We should lead the world in development ot beet sugar Industry. With wheat and cotton advancing, Thanksgiving time will see the American farmer farther along toward normal conditions than the manufacturer or wholesaler or retailer. The Burlington, Iowa Post says: In Memory of Sailors While vie do not accept statements as to deplorable farming conWhalebone The black scarf worn by sailors in should basic our ditions unreservedly the fact that agriculture, industry, Baleen, commonly called whalebone, tlie United States navy is in memory grows In the mouths of certain whales. often be suspected of insolvency, is sufficient to excite wonder. There wn,s an unconscious vHsdom in the failure of congress to of the seumen who died In previous It grows in dependent plates, ranging wars. The four woven In the from two to twelve feet In length, atlegislate for the relief of the farmer; for, if the fanner is in such a fix edge of the scarf stripes tached to the upper jaw, and forms a represent that legislation only can save him, then there is little use for the Amer- wars In which the American four great has fringe-liksieve for collecting and navy ican people to make any further efforts toward National greatness. participated. food. retaining The farmer has his period of fat and lean, but there never has been a time when he was justified in being discouraged. He may need, new r a access new in or to methods, markets, but he organization, change cannot be placed in the way of prosperity by legislation or by government starts from the bottom can rely upon himself; leans. The farmer j his industry thrift and frugality are proof against all sinister circumstances; the farm is a steady mine of production in excess of all normal requirements; for it to be otherwise would moan that civilization itself is a failure! GOOD ADVICE FOU FARM BUS In a booklet just published entitled Safeguarding the Farm Against Fire, the National Board of Fire Underwriters says: Tlie fanner, tjtove all others, needs to give special attention to the l eduction of fire hazards and the adoption of protective methods. Tilts - true for several reasons. In the first place, his house and barn and outbuildings usually are constructed of combustible materials; being more or less isolated, they are peculiarly, subject to lightning strokes; kerosene and gasoline are likely to be stored about thej premises and usi d for light and power; thd farmer crams his barn with hay, straw and Rod, all of which are subject to spontaneous combustion; and last but h.v no means least, he is nearly always beyond the reaRh of organized J ate plies. Fashion sure takes lots of liberty. The old Dame has no right to make a human being look like a freak but she gets buy her stuff right along and adds something to the freakishness as the seasons come and go. farming our national greatness fire-resista- nt h i44,4,4,44,4,4Ml,4,4,4,4,4,44,4,4,4,4,4,4,4'4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4';4 QJ'U'iLN!! Denver, Colorado. 4 H .:. 4 :. -- :4-:- 44 4 4 4 4 4 i |