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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH the power to restrict strikes in essential industries. It has all the other powers it had before, with regard to the general operation of the court." Chief Justice Talft in his decision says the law curtails the Issued Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. right of the employer on the one hand, and of the employee on the other, to contract about their affairs. This is part of the liberty of the individual protecter by the guarantee of the Due Process Clause Subscription Rates One Year $2.00 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Six Months 1.00 The decision is extremely valuable in defining the limitations 75 Three Months of a state's power toecontrol private business, and is a warning to PAYABLE IN ADVANCE those who seek by law and regulatio na remedy for all things, and that they can not go much farther in their indiscriminate regulaEntered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mai tion of business. The big thing about the Courts decision is in drawing the Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. line on state legislatures declaring that this business of that business affects the public interest and is therefore subject to state reguADVERTISING RATES. lation. Display Matter Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c The question "What is public interest must be determined Special position 25 per cent additional. by the courts and cannot be declared by the legislature. Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Legals Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU INVEST Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion It is estimated by the Department of Commerce that in the past Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, F.tc., at Half Local Read five years three billion dollars were taken from Americans by the ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. fake stock route. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Eacl From present prospects there will be an enormus wheat crop Insertion. in the Pacifia Northwest this fall. Those persons who are in the NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. habit of selling fake mining and oil stocks, as well as other questionable investments, are preparing to swoop down upon the farmers H. W. CHERRY, Publisher. and separate them from some of the proceeds of this crop. History has shown that farmers, like every other class of business men, should set up a reserve of some kind against lean years IT HELPS EVERYBODY and financial disruptions. Acutal payments, as It is said that in one Idaho county enough worthless stocks Agreements to pay are one thing. Americans have found to their cost, are quite another thing, espcial were sold during the years 1918 and 1919 to pay of all the obligations of all of the borrowing zanks in that county . It is pleasing, therefore ly in the matter of international debts. It quite apparent that had the funds invested in worthless to find that the biggest foreign debt owed to this country is in actua. itocks been set up as reserves, the financial tability of the farmers Great Britain the other day sent our Secre ivould process of payment. Banks are not be suffering as they are at the present time. tary of the Treasury $70,000,000, an installment on the debt sh able to render financial assistance in such all would and matters, owes us. And she didn't send it in gold of which the U. S. do well to consult a banker before buying securities. now has a surplus but in Victory bonds which she bought on the And the best part of it is that when she boughi open market. A TELEPHONE NATION those bonds she did something to help every Salina man whc In 1877 the number of telephones per hundred population owns any of the same kinds of bonds, for she did much to stabilize In 899 the in both the United States and Europe was none. the price of them and helped to put them nearer to par. Thu; less had hundred States than United one population telephone per we see that even in the payment of international debts, things sc In 1921 of had fraction and a a Europe telephone. Europe barely work around as to help us right here at home. had a little better than one telephone per hundred poulation while the United States had risen to more than thirteen telephones per THE PEOPLE MUST HELP hundred population and now has a total of 14,500,000 in use, Senator Reed Smoot of Utah, in an address in Los Angeles, which is of all the telephones in the whole world. warns the Aemrican people that never again will federal taxes b In this country there is about one telephone to every two farm less than $3,000,000,000 a year, and says that probably in a few This dwellings, a convennience unheard of in other countries. years they will be more than that. wonderful telephone development is due to efficient organization, With such and annual overhead staring us in the face, it woulc to the cumulative effect and importance of investments great and seem the height of folly for either states or nation to burden the imall in all the apparatus and eqiupment required for the transsocialistic with the which involve undertakings taxpayers govern mission of speech, as well as to the foresight and business acumen ment in industrial activity in various forms, such as advocated by if those who have directed the policy of the Bell system from the best leaders. The progressive, political jeginning, and to the fact that in this country the policy of the Bell way to keep the tax bill down is to keep the government out oi system from the beginning, and to the fact that in this country telebusiness, reduce the official overhead at every point possible, dc phone development has been left to private enterprise under reasbonds which now offer t onable away with the issuance of government regulation. loophole for billions of dollars of wealth to escape taxation, and tc ifght for business administration in every department of govern- CUT OUT THE BUNK ment from the smallest school district up to the nation itself. While it has been a popular pastime to lambast the sugar inIf our taxes now are the lowest they will ever be, according tc Mr. Smoot, what figures will they mount to if the people fail tc dustry and blame the rise in price to the slight protective tariff which saves our sugar beet industry from destruction, precious g curb the desires of officialism? little has been said about the money which western farmers will revive as the result of advanced sugar prices. TAKING A VACATION It is very popular for a politician to howl about the necessity Now and then the average Salina mans nerves get all out for helping the farmer and in the next breath, or rather speech, of alignment, appetite becomes poor, a tired, worn-ofeeling show the iniquity of high sugar prices. tells his and he troubles doctor. him the over to family creeps A good price for sugar will not cost the average family $5 Nine times out of ten, in addition to the medicine he receives, he a year more than a low price which would mean starvation for the hears the doctor say; "What you need is a change." sugar beet farmer but this fact is never pointed out. And the doctor is right, for after all the human body is only Every user of sugar will profit ten fold as the result of farmers We have to oil up an auto every few hundred miles a machine. having money to spend as contrasted with their inability to buy and freshen up the batteries with a new supply of water. So with supplies and pay their bills if they were not receiving a good price the human body we have to rest it up every now and then, put ir. for sugar beets. a new kind of atmosphere and give the eyes and nerves a change of scenery, if we hope to make it wear and function as it should. THEY NEVER SLEEP The resident of the farm or the smaller town can secure that With the warm months merchants in practically every town the needed change by a little visit to a nearby city. The city man can get it by going to the farm. T he treatment acts the same in both size of Salina begin to nurse a severe case of tireditis that s One rests while enjoying sights that are strange to the eye, a new name for it, but a good one and they seem to be content cases. to drag along with whatever business that comes their way. They or even by halting awhile to watch some other fellow work. Vacations are expensive only when we figure them from a dol- apparently do not realize that they are throwing the gate wide open If we had any means of knowing how to the mail-ordlar and cent standpoint. catalogue man, and that he hits some of his hardIt is now that he is senda rest or even a week each year would reduce doctor bills and add est blows while the weather is hottest. a few days to our life, we would count that vacation the cheapest ing forth his literature, paving the way for his fall and winter harmerchant is apt to let down He knows that the home-tow- n So, no matter how important you mayfeel vest. thing in the world. your work to be, just remember that the old world, would get along on his advertising a little during the summer months and he capiHe is making hay, so to speak, while the sun somehow if you were called away from it altogether. Just re- talizes on the fact. merchants cool off And when the home-tow- n alize that a week away from it wont throw everything out of gear, is shining hottest. and that one week of rest may be the means of keeping you fit for and start in with renewed energy in the fall it is to find his territory business longer than you can hope to be if you keep right on with- already plastered with mail-ordcatalogues and many of his old man never The mail-ordout a little rest without the "change" that the doctor says is customers already catalogue buyers. tell the world that he is honest to And the better than medicine. enough job. sleeps on i3 in communities where merchants let up on their his richest field Think it over. RIGHT TO CONTRACT UPHELD advertising during the summer months. THE SAUNA SUN w ITS HERE!! the new electric 9 Waffle Iron Cooks Hotcakes, wadies, shortcake, omelets, coffee, eggs in fact anything you want to cook- - Come in and see It- - Telluride Power Co. Dandelions Uebcr Alles -- ! ' 1 A .AJ fYflti N y A t:; I Pqhmer n RiTzenl.' L !7 3ht 3 two-thir- so-call- & I X y irldJ M untra-progressi- tav-exem- pt BANKERS AGAINST INFLATION By J. H. PUELICHER tax-eatin- ut er er er Kansas is the land of political experiments and it has taken three years to find the weak spot in the famous Industrial Court law of that state. As a result of a U. S. Supreme Court decision it seems not even Kansas can tell the employer how to run his industry, fix wages he is to pay his employees, or make the latter take what a benevolent and intelligent state thinks he should take. It seems that the paradise of industrial peace can only be reached through the straight gate and the narrow way of constitutionality. In the opinion of Allen, the Supreme Court decision "only denies the right to fix minimum wages in contemplaThe power of the Industrial Court to act tion of an emergency. is left intact." "The Industrial Court still has the power to fix wages in the business of transportation and the production of fuel. It still has or smartest men in America, men who know by experience that it pays to advertise. Readers of the largest magazines The page cost of a number of the if national circulation often wonder leading periodicals is given below: just what a page advertisement costs Delineator 58,000 and often the guesses run into fabu-ou- s .$7,000 figures. As a matter of fact, Saturday Evening Post the most expensive advertisement Womans Home Companion ...80,000 from the cost per page is the Delin- McCalls Magazine $0,000 eator at 58000 for a single page in American Magazine $1,200 Colored printed pages cost Literary Digest black. $4,000 The Saturday Cood Housekeeping $2,500 considerably more. cost at in second is Tost $2,000 Monthly Peoples Popular Evening These costs seem outrageous Hearsts $7000. $1,050 to some people, yet they are good American Legion Weekly $1,287 investments made by some of the Christian Herald $1,200 NO, THE LOWEST COST OF ALL EXPENSIVE? -- siniism, buf rather as the advice' or those whose business can prosper only as there is general prosperity. The banking situation in America is sound and can only be harmed by undue credit expansion. The backer should see that expansion does not again gain the headway that led us into trouble before, and the business man should do everything possible to support the banker, thus avoiding another period of costly deflation. CAUTION President the American Bankers Association recent meeting of the Executive Connell of the American Bankers Association, attended as it was by rep-- . resentatlve bank ers from every state in the UnA Vases. The vases which we now use for flowers are a survival of tue ancient days of Grecian conviviality, when the wealthier people had wine cups of every conceivable size and form. The original name of these cups was vied with one vase, and another to produce intricate designs. With the passing of the greut feasts, the vases were used for ornamental purposes. The flowers were added to decorate the vae. ion, afforded an excellent opportunity to get a composite view of the business situation in the nation as a wholo. Representatives of agriculture were present at the meeting. They made it dear that the upward trern of affairs in business had not yet reached the farmer and that his position of having to pay a relatively larger price for what he purchases a compared with that received for what he sells should be given the most thoughtful consideration. There were also- present r.ien fresh from observing and studying conditions in Eurbpe. While they lent encouragement to the belief that European affairs are slowly very slowly righting themselves, there Is in the pressed by Amerifeeling generaBy can bankers a distinct note of caution. Questions of the Hour One hears the questions everywhere asked: Are we going to permit American affairs to ride again into a situation of extreme Inflation, which will, as we all know, be followed by another period of depression? Had we not better keep business on a normal keel by not going too rapidly? Should not the hanker be sounding a note of warning to business men generally to keep their affairs well in hand? The charts indicating the Jrend of business show that we are approaching the high point which followed the war. This should be the signal to the conservative business man that expansion must be definitely controlled and that reasonable conservatism should be the order of the day. To many this may appear the pessimism of the banker, but let me say that the banker Is in a position to keep his linger on the pulse of our economic situation, and when there is such a consensus on the part of many bankers that we are passing the safety point and that w are riding into another period of Inflation such opin-- i on she u lrtn of h looked upon as p e s -- Story of Our Flag. Front 1770 to 1783 our flag had 13 stars. In 1S12 it bore 15, in the Mexican war 2!), in the Civil war 34, In the Spanish war 45 and at the present lime 18. - : 4. .5. .j. ANNOUNCEMENT Big' . Reduction in Goodyear Casings and Tubes at i i The PEERLESS 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A Come Early . ;c tt$4 4 4 4 - |