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Show 7HS saUMa North Sanpete County Fighting Road Change H e, Miss Ethel Jolley and Mr. Orvel Jensen and mother motored to Provo Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Jed Herbert are refrom their ceiving congratulations friends over the arrival of a son born to them Saturday. Mrs. F. P. Anderson entertained at a birthday party last Sunday. Thirty friends and relatives were present and partook of the delicacies. Miss Afton Nielson and Elder returned Adley Peterson, recently missonaries were speakers at the Mutual Conjoint Sunday night. Dr. Ernal Jensen of Ephraim and B. L. Jensen of Payson were Redmond visitors last week. Wide Last Tuesday night the Awake Girls gave one of the most successful dances given in Redmond for some time. After the dance all were the guests at the Ernest Frand-ge- n home where a delicious luncheon was served to about thirty guests. Guest of the Library A book, a pipe, a fire on a chilly night, with guests that come unbidden from realms of golden dreams to share your humble fireside what greater blessing could you ask, in perfect peace and measureless content? fis; Scons To PressM Play the distance shortened between the points and Salt Lake City, and to this end petitions were prepared and signed by thousands. When this became known the Mt. Pleasant Lions club took the initiative to forstall any action by adopting the following resolutions: Whereas it has been protested and an effoit is being made by certain of our southern neighbors to place the road extending from Gunnison to Levan through Levan canyon And Whereas tha said road is at present only a secondary county I NOTICE OF SALE i A rate treat awaits all boy scouts and those who are backing the Boy Scouts of America movement when Scout Troop Number One of the Maple Grove council of Sigard, will piesent Kids Awakening in Salina. The exact date for the show has not been definately set, but due announcement will be made. The presentation will be under the direction of Alma Knight, one of the most active Slate of Utah ) ac-w- ay - I A Message For Every Merchant and Business Man )hS. County of Se ic r ) In the Redmond precinct of said county. I have in my posession the following described animals which if not claimed and taken away, will be sold at public auction to the highest cash bidder, at my corral in Redmond precinct, on Thursday the 5th day of March, 1925, at the hour of 10 a.m.. One grey horse about 12 years old. No brand One sorrel horse 2 years old visible. no brand visible. Said animals are held by me to secure the payment of One dollar and twenty five cents ($1.25) damages done by said animals, upon the premises of Chris Larsen, on the 22nd day of February 1925. JAMES C. CHRISTENSEN Poundkeeper for Redmond precinct. scout masters in Southern Utah, and it is said that he has the scouts trained for the event. The play features nearly every phase of scout work and is considered one of the best of the scout plays. All the boys, some twenty, are seen in action, and cording to press reports from Rich-t- o the entirci Sanpete county and field, where the play was presented, would be an act of violence to that it is highly pleasing and entertain-par- t of the county lying north of lnf?Following is the cast of the boy Sterling. scouts callLater the mass meeting was appearing in the play: ed at Manti and the acts of the Harriman Melroy Broadbent 4 citizens who would seek a shorter Gyp Kid Harriman Royce Klight strongly condemned and an organization was immediately effected to Mr. Morrison (Scout Master) . . Jay Nebeker make the fight for Sanpete coun- Beaner . Merlwin Bradfield ty meaning of course, every town One Eyed Charlie Reed Anderson north of Sterling. The Messenger, ,. . . Ronald Nielson the Ephraim Enterprise and the Mt. Spider Lefty their last Pleasant Pyiamid, in v . . . Rulon Payne Vernal Nebeker weeks issues, in reporting the mass Red deand awful things Police Officer , meeting, say . . . Charles Gurr plore the attitude of . the outside Harold (Senior Patrol Bradfield Merlwin Leader) The resolution framinterference. Mr. Foster Scout Broadbent (Assistant Master) Melroy ed by the Mt. Pleasant Lions club, . . . Rulon Payne was indorsed at the mass meeting. Scotty Stone Hard thing were said about those Roy Sanders Royal Holdaway backing the movement and Gunnison Jim Ronald Nielson and the communities south were con- Joe Reed Anderson demned for starting the movement Jack Nebeker Vernal Little real argument, however, has ' i Sam ... . . .,. Jay Colby been advanced by the opponents of Haily the reinstatement of the highway. Tim Murphy Willis Gurr The main idea of those at the mass Harvey , Edward Payne meeting, was to force travel up Eddie Thonrton Ferris Bradfield (On Sentry Duty) the through the county, whether James Eckersley southern citizens wanted to or not. Constable of Mutton, Hollow Sambo Linden Iverson oi mentioned said (Scout or was Cook) Nothing the fact that fully 40,000 resident:, Knight of the Forest Alma Knight of the southern part of the state of Court James Judge Eckersley would be greatly benefitted if the Gurr Sam road was again made a state high- Prosecuting Attorney for Defense . . Floyd Gottfredson way and kept in condition for travel. Attorney Scouts 0 Von less than said Estray was and Worth Nielson that Nothing would be benefitted if the road was continued to be routed through the industry if a systematic rotation Sanpete, and nothing was said were not practiced. Salt about the highway through It has taken the sugar beet nemaCreek Canyon, which is now costing tode to convince some of our Utah R. Professor E. of the Vaughn about $100 a month to keep open. farmers of that beets should not be Wisconsin leein recent a versity the was said about ragged on the same land. ture before the Station grown continuously treatbeen Experiment Gunnison had Valley way Must we same the Staff of Utah. the price to learn pay Agricultural ed when support was asked for the to That alfalfa? said rotated that rotation was the crop rotacrop of the county roads in this tion of all increases to essential first the actually yields And it wasnt mentioned canning pea valley. crops has been demonstrated in Utah if the residents of this valley dustry of this state. Half the The county to go into Millard county, nc(l peas of the United States are and Cache Counties. in Utah in Wisconsin. County has assisted Along with agent they would have to travel double the produced 54 in farmers such their rotation an enormous is it planning pea acreage distance by going up through your dis- - systems and keeping production recbut natural some that serious Sarpctc county. Their The Mt. Pleasant Pyramid says ease of the pea plant should develop, ords for the last six years. this increased from These diseases would yields resulting entirely destroy its a dam fool idea to even think , were follows: as practice reported of building roads in such places when beets, increase of 4.28 tons per acre, we cant even navigate in the mire alfalfa 1 ton per acre, wheat 12.8 heart of the the iji county vdry bushels per acre, oats 18.2 bushels and concludes with the statement acre, per barley 18.3 bushels, and that we had better spend our mon66.2 bushels per acre. In , potatoes ey for the home folks first. Cache County 21 farmers have coSome six years ago the Gunnison-Leva- n operated with the county agent for highway was redesignated as five years in a definate rotation praa county road. The kindly commisctice. Their acre yields last year ex sioners at once made a secondary ceeded average yields 2 tons for beets The of road it. leading county road 5 ,2 bushels for wheat, 1 ton for from Gunnison to Fayette which is alfalfa, 1141 pounds for canning peas. also a post road, is seldom mainSafety First for the Utah farmtained and no work is done on the er means crop rotation. north. road leading from Fayette The main idea, if there is any at all is to let the western route go any g Planet old way and by this force the thousis about ten times diameter Jupiter's ands living south of the 'line to that of our earth, but so quickly does travel the additional 15 miles up it spin that a day there lasts only nine hours and fifty minutes. through Sanpete. road. Now be it resolved that the Lions Club of Mt. Pleasant, Utah, in regular meeting assembled, is not in favor of the proposed change; that it is fully convinced that to place said road on the State High- System would be detrimental Utah. REDMOND te Cen-terfiel- d, SAUNa; NEWS NOTES FROM Nestling in one of the most productive sections of the whole United States, is a little valley. This little valley is now like the man without a country" for the simple reason that Mt. Pleasant, Ephraim, Manti, Fairview and other burgs in the northern end of the county, and at a recent mass meeting held at Manti, "read the valley off the map. And it happened this way. Gunnison, at the solicitation of thousands of residents south of the dividing road reline, started a movement to have the Gunnison-Leva- n instated as a state highway. The towns up in Sanpete county" endeavoring to frustrate any such movement called a meeting of the residents and failed for some leason to extend the invitation to Gunnison and Gunnison Valley. At this meeting held at Manti, the acts of Gunnison and others were strongly condemned and a movement was at once started to stay any attempt to have hte the Gunnison-Leva- n legislature enact a law that would road as a state highway. However a bill was framed by the state road, commission, it has been submitted to the proper committee, the committee has reported favorably and the matter now rests with the legislature and there is every reason to believe that the law will pass and the highway will again be designated as a state project. Gunnison, Sulina, Richfield, Redmond, Aurora, Monroe, Sevier, Marys vale, Junction, Circle-villPanguitch and hundreds of other towns south of Gunnison, have been clamoring for some time to have SUM. Advertising is an improved and modern way of distributing merchandise. . It take the place of the old slow, costly and inefficient method of the pait :. J In the olden days it was necessary to depend upon personal solicitation or gosip and hearsay now you can tell your trade, through the columns ) ....? - ...... 16,-00- Uni-Nothi- of the SUN, timely, interesting news about your merchandise and store. Read what Ole Buck has td say: I know a Nebraska merchant who has built up a business of $300,000 a year in a small town, solely as a result of advertising, backed up by the, goods and service.. He says he has bought the local newspaper tins aftt time and still, doesnt own it and doesnt want to own it. . All he wants is the service. . It is not unusual for him to use three or four pages in one issue This man started in business not so many years ago witfy a small capital and most of that borrowed.. He says any merchant in any town can duplicate his success by following his methods.. I know other small( town merchants who have done almost as well, and we all kndw how much the city stores have to depend upon advertising for their business. these successes a surprising large number of merchants do no advertising or so little that it doesnt amount to much.. And they give no special at- tention to what they do use.. They scratch off a little copy on any scrap paper that comes handy on any subject that comes to mind, and dont care how it is set in type or what kind of service they give iif backing it up in their stores. Advertising, good advertising, real advertising, is the backbone and mainspring of business. Country publishers and merchants should give a lot of thought to the subject and then to get greatest possible returns. in-th- at can-wish- ed j Fast-Movin- In 'spite of The Salina Sun co-oper- ate ( country |