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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE S ALINA SUN Issued Every Friday at Salina, Utah. - a ...... .. Entered at the postoffice at Salina, as second-clas- s act of Congress of March 3, STRAUSS Overalls "Bras6 1879. RATES SUBSCRlpTI0N One Year ...... ...... mail matter under the , $2.00 Sx Months....'... 1.00 Payable In Advance In making change of address, give old address as well as the new. T of Ranchers, Riders of the Range men of all trades TreT If they Rip . Advertising Rates Given on Application. ANOTHER rORD FALLACY Editor and Publisher Old Man Necessity, rather than a coy demure ideal, has caused Henry Ford to inaugurate 'thedive day week in his factories. SUCCESS NOT ALWAYS MEASURED IN DOLLARS At least that is the impression one gains from inside informaSuccess cannot be measured by money standards according to tion filtering out of Detroit for severa ldays. John Hays Hammond, celebrated American engineer, who writes Two weeks ago the industrial world read that Henry Ford, of under in the National issue the escurrent Republic entertainingly promoter of the. minimum wage, had gone one step farther and Is have It? A man may the caption "Success in America What week with six dayspay. Once more Mr. Ford tablished a five-da- y d a very successful career without amassing a big fortune, Mr. was hailed by industrial idealists as the savior of the workingman. and he continues: declares, As a matter of fact, Henry Fords plants have been operating This is so because they have rendered great service in their a five-da- y week for six months in fact, practically since the early lifes work service to the community in which they have lived wqeks of the year. In recent weeks' there have been slight pay in fellow-beingis such s and now service in service to their general creases given to a small percentage of the Ford employes. This almost universally regarded as the criterion of a successful career. raise h&3 in no sense been general, but follows the line of the offiTo this class belong teachers, clergymen, and others- who de- cial statement that those considered worthy would receive additiong of al vote their time to the intellectual, moral and social compensation. Those favored with increases announce that the fellow-men. It is fortunate that this conception of success so increase their they received for the week is not equal to a full day s pay. noble is It a obtains. a most incentive, aspiration. generally week, it seems, is the The prime reason behind the five-da- y life. be of is To the This Bernard Shaw says: true joy of Ford automobiles sale retail The sales. in Ford present drop used by a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one; to be does not warrant a full weeks production. Statistics prove that the thrown on out before are scrap-heaout worn you thoroughly Ford production in the first six months in 1926 have not kept pace to be a force of nature instead of feverish, selfish little clod of ail- with sales in other years. Chevrolet, Dodge, Essex, other leading ments and grievances complaining that life will not devote itself d cars, show tremendous gains in the production and sales. to making you happy. Ford virtually quit advertising in country weekly newspapers No purpose is so mighty as service to ones fellowmen. some time ago. Other companies advertised more than ever. That First cf all, I would place among the essentials of a success- had much to do with the unprecedented Ford slump in producAn honest, clean-cuful career the possession of character. tion, profits and prestige. straightforward. conscientious, ambitious and last, but not least, Others, in times past, have also learned this lesson. in would d man or woman, my opinion, possess young seventy-fiv- e per cent of the essentials of success, while in relative per cent to SLANDERING YOUTH importance I would not attach more than twenty-fiv- e the possession of a higher education, and I say this without in any It has been A Fliiladelphia clergyman said on Wednesday: way depreciating the importance of education, for I realize as Dr. sixty-fou- r per cent of the young people of America are disFrank Crar.e says in one of his essays, from your chin proved He gave as authority for this indictment "tests made by down you are worth but a couple of dollars a day; from your chin honest. clerks in. different stores." Sixtw-- f our per cent? Why not seventy-one- ? up you arc worth anything there is no limit to your worth. The latter figure would be no more loose and reckless than former. the QUESTION THE PEDDLER Mjny are basing appraisals of youth on ephemeral fashions and The peddler that comes to your door is probably a man, or habits. Every age has its own. Censors find confirmation in auwoman, trying to make an honest living. As such they deserve thors whose output deals with "flaming youth," any one of whose courtesy and kind treatment, but not your patronage. life a few of the obvious features of present-da- y There is no reason for prejudice against the out of town lypewritci3, given country clubs, independent dress, short hair and motor cars houses that try to get our money. They are only pushing their busicould tod y almost do the job itself. But the picture is not true. g ness as they have a right to do, and are to be commended for For every boy or girl whose exuberances attract attention there are it. a dozen going their real ways with real purposes in life, with ambiThe reason the peddlers visit this town, and the mail order tion, with determination. They seldom figure, however, in popucatalogs come, is because there are a number of suckers living in lar fiction, nor are they often themes of utterances from pulpits. this vicinity. Most of them think they are doing the wise thing in Nine millions of women and girls are working in this country; getting a bargain," but that is because they1 do not think. They the great majority from necessity, of course, but their ranks condo not accept a community of interest that will eventually leaed to tain thousands who are working simply because they wish to do a community of progress and success. stuThe next time a peddler raps at your door greet him with a something." The great summer schools never have had more dents than they have today. Our great industrial armies never have . smile, and these questions: the .Does yoflr company pay any taxes to support our schools?" had more keen, ambitious youngsters, willing to begin at New York Times. Do you, or your company, contribute to the churches of this city or county? Have you ever contributed to help a neighbor of ours when stricken by disaster? What, if anything, have you, or your company, ever done to RE-ELECT help make this city a better place for our children to live? Do you offer any opportunity to them when they grow older and seek places to work?" If any of them get by these four let us know about it and we will suggest a few others. If, after interrogating the visiting brother, Smocfeand Colton have kept faith with the voters of Utah. you think it to your own best interest to ignore local merchants and They have advanced Utahs interests and have won new home enterprises, without giving them a hearing, let your conscience prestige for the state by membership on the most be your guide. important Congressional Committees. We now urge all who have the welfare of Utah at heart to retain their services and the advantages THE MIDDLEBROW they have gained for all of us. He used to be the man in the street." Now he is the middlebrow." He doesnt trouble his negatives nor eat with a knife, but The State of Utah is more dependent upon neither does hft care much for Ibsen or rush from his business to the protective than any other spend the hour before dinner in the Metropolitan museum. He factor for its prosperity. creates a demand for best sellers by buying and reading them and asking when the next one will be out. He is not a snappy dresser SENATOR SMOOT is ChairCONGRESSMAN COLTON man of the Senate Finance is ranking member of the nor a slovenly one. He wears what they are wearing and pays Committee. This is the most Public Lands Committee, good money for it. which now has in hand pubpowerful committee in Con-- f ress. It deals with all matlic land grazing legislation. Now and then a politician probes his innermost thoughts and ters relating to tariff rates, He is a member of the Roads gets elected four or five times handrunning in consequence. Once custom duties, income tax Committee, which enacted and revenue, public and nathe Federal Road Aid Law, or twice in a season a theatrical manager gives him what he wants tional debts, government emitting construction of and the ticket speculators do a thriving business for a year or so afbudget, Veterans Bureau legighways into every section islation and public health terward. Outspoken enough as an individual, he is singularly inof Utah. service. Both Smoot and Colton have articulate in the mass. You must poll a million or two of him beHe is a member of other imkept faith with the voters fore you can find out what he really thinks about legislation or rewho sent them to Washingportant committees in addition to being a member of ton. Ask the war veterans, ligion or the Volstead act, and then he may be dissembling. the American Debt Funding the wcolgrowers, the miners Commission. His claim to his title is not based on education nor heredity. and farmers. He may have begun as a newsboy and progressed by keeping his These two men have d the interests of the workeyes and ears open. He may be a college graduate. He may have ingman as well as the industrialists. At all times they a mortgage on his own house or a far bigger mortgage on somehave been vigilant in the interest of Utah; they have been efficient; they have beer, loyal. else He is s house. be his not to body distinguished by speech nor his by appearance, save that his neck is not abraded and that he If he has any rule of life ' pronounces no words with a broad "a. VOTES FOR SMOOT AND COLTON ARE it is expressed in the phrase, Til try anything once." VOTES FOR COOLIDGE He is the customer of the merchant, the patron of the politician, the director of the destinies of the nation. Occasionally he REPUBLICAN STATE COMMITTEE is wrong, but he is quic kto set himself right again. The car of lib-- 1 will never go far off the road while he is at the steering wheel. erty New York Herald-Tribun. (Political Advertisement - H. W. CHERRY - I 1 1am-mon- REPORT Made to the Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah of the Condition of The First State Bank of Salina, Located at Salina, in the County of Sevier, State of Utah, at the close of business on the 5th day of October, 1926: well-bein- RESOURCES Loans and Discounts .$710,856.30 Less Notes and Bills of this Bank Redisr- counted . . 116,448.05 $594,408.25 Overdrafts 1,347.04 .240 . 98 . Lbierty Loan Bonds .... House 1.00 Banking Furniture and Fixtures.. 1.00 1.00 Other Real Estate Owned Due from Federal Reserve Bank 34,202.14 Due from Other Banks?. 54,244.77 Cash Items ...$ 232.48 p; low-price- t, level-heade- four-mind- te do-in- bot-tom- .t Smoot and Colton tariff safe-guarde- a I e. Gold 1,160.00 Silver 1,340.70 Don B. Colton Currency . . . . 2,926 . 00 Total Cash on Hand 5,659.18 DON B. COLTON, born in Juab county, September 15, 1876, .moved to Expenses .. ..$3,417.73 Vernal, 1879, with first settlers, edu- Interest Paid . 2,567.64 cated in the elementary schools and Was Uintah academy, of Vernal. Total .. graduated from the commercial deY. of B. of the Provo, U., Reserve Bank Stock 3,300.00 Federal partment, in 1895, and in the normal department in 1901. From 1901 to 1903, he was TOTAL $693,405.36 principal of the Uintah academy. Was elected to the state legislature in LIABILITIES 1903. Was graduated from the UniStock Paid in ..$ 25,000.00 in Ann of Capital Arbor, Michigan, versity 1905. Was receiver for the U. S. Surplus Fund 85,000.00 Land Office, at Vernal, from 1905 to Undivided ProWas a member of the state 1913. fits $21,434.00 senate in 1915-T. . . . Interest been has he 6,623 . 52 law Besides practicing 100.15 actively engaged in farming and stock Exchange . .. raising. He was elected to the 67th, Rents 379.50 68th and 69th congresses, by increasing majorities. Total .. ..$28,537.17 Accomplishments Less Expenses and Taxes Upon entering congress, he threw his whole energy into the solving of Paid, etc. .. 5,985.37 Western problems. After the passage Net Undivided Profits 22,551.80 , of the Emergency Tariff act, he gave close attention to reclamation of arid Reserved for Taxes and Interest 12,500.00 lands and assisted in gathering data, which will make possible the Echo Deposits of and Cache units of the Salt Lake basin Other Banks $ 18,480.97 project, and has gathered material Deposits Subshowing the feasibility of two other reclamation projects in Utah. He has ject to Check 252,060.51 been especially interested in the con- Cashiers Checks 5,741.57 servation and storage of the waters Dividends Unof Utah. Mr. Colton has worked for 215.00 paid measures for the regulation and conTotal Demand Deposits 276,498.05 trol of grazing on public lands, which has been and will be so advantageous Postal Savings to stock growers of this state. He 545.49 Deposits ..$ has actively participated in drafting DeSavings legislation which resulted in federal posits .. .. 271,310.02 aid for public roads; introduced the bill drawn by the attorney generals Total Time Deposits .. 271,855.51 office and the state land department for the perfecting of the states title TOTAL $693,405 to state school lands and conducted the hearings on the bill before the State of Utah, County of Sevier. Public Lands committee, which law, H. B. Crandall, being first duly when enacted, will do so much for the sworn according to law, deposes and 'schools of Utah. He has assisted In the forming of farm legislation and says that he is Cashier of the has actively supported the farm bu- above named bank; that the above reau program. He is the author of and foregoing report contains a full, a number of laws for the benefit of true and correct statement of the the settlers upon the public domain, condition of the said bank at the and has also assisted in important close business on of the 5th day of mining legislation. 1926. October, Committee Appointments H. B. CRANDALL. Ranking member Public Land com- Correct Attest mittee, member of Mines and Mining CHRIS JORGENSEN, committee, member of Roads comHYRUM S. GATES, mittee, and chairman of Election comP. C. SCORUP, mittee. Directors . . (Political Adveitisement) Subscribed and Sworn to before i ' me this 14th day of October, 1926. After all it wouldnt be much of a E. V. JOHNSON, Heaven if people who dont agree (Seal) Notary Public. d with you got there. Omaha Commission 19th day of My expires . 7. .6 -- , I I World-Heral- October, 1926. VThe wets have been having a referendum, but it seems doubtful if they will be able to put over a recall. Indianapolis Star. When Ananias came up before the tiaffic court he said he thought he was traveling about twenty miles an hour. Minneapolis Journal. You Conceited guests are best. need only sit and listen. St. Paul Pioneer Pi ess. One fellow who doesn't get melancholy when the melancholy days is the coal dealer. ar-.ri- ve State of Utah, Office of Bank Commissioner. I, Seth Pixton, Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of the statement of the above named company, filed m my office this 20th day of October, 1926. SETH PIXTON, Bank Commissioner. Queen Marie will learn about America when in traveling here in her own car she happens to be bawled out by a traffic officer. Pittsburg Gazette-Time- s. |