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Show 'TnL SALIMA THE SALINA SU 4 j. $ 4 -- .j 4. 4. 4.4. 4- - ui All SUM, SALiMA. H 4 4444 4 44 $ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4444 4 4 j- 4 Issued Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. 4 4 4 Subscription Rates One Year $2.00 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months PAYABLE IN ADVANCE v- 5 5 Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. 5 .J ADVERTISING RATES. inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c Per Matter Display Special position 25 per cent additional. I.egals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line. Readers Ten cents per line each inseition. Count six words to line. Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Reading Rates, Count Six Words to the line. Tor Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Each Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. f THAT they invite you to come and the newest offerings. SATURDAY THAT their stocks are the acme of peifection in quality goods. THAT advertisements of just right goods for right people at right prices, are time and money savers. 5 4 8:30 P. M. High School J THAT advertising offers suggestions as to how to buy more India despite Chinas large January purchases. This combined total is more than double that of the corresponding period of last year when it totaled $13,843,766 with cilver mound 67 cents against 64 cents at present. In the first three months cf 1922 combined exports were $1 6,375,344. The London market fails to reveal any incerased consumption I y Europe. Apparently new silver coinage is being taken care of old silver reserves although these do not amount to any apagainnst totals. preciable radio on the farm The radio, while generally regarded as belonging more to urban than to rural life, has become popular in the country The department of agriculture recently completed a survey showing that 145,-00farm families are now equipped with radio receiving sets. Based upon an estimate of five persons to a family, this would mean-tha- t there are now 750,000 rural radio fans capable of tunin and ing hearing the various programs put on at broadcasting stations. The radio may woik as a greater influence than the telephone, good roads, electricity and the motor car in keeping people on the farm, for these conveniences, in many cases, only increased the hunger for things urban. 0 PREVENTING HOSPITAL FIRES j Two recent rospital fires, one in Boston and the other in Syracuse, have drawn the attention of underwriters and fire department officials to a new and growing hazard which is threatening the safety e cf these institutions the storage of film and the of need recommend: measures. They great precautionary In all rooms where films are stocked, handled or filed, 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Auditorium THAT nothing which the most particular trade might desire is lacking in the stores tint are persistent advertisers. j J J J J j J iji J J j $ J J J J J ? .J. J J . j 4 . . j . j t4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 H. C. HICKS Secretary of the Stale Securities Commission and H. E. LEWIS General Manager for the Standard Coal Company and local speakers will make addresses. BE A BOOSTER Attend the Meeting 4 : 4 4:4 4 4 4 4 44444 4 4 4 1K3K3H w H k H- - H if SALINA SALINA UTAH M O Federal Member H HEN F - H Reserve System H H K E HOOKIES iffl J R R III II EO EgZ! JAMES FARRELL, Pres. H. S. GATES, V. Pres. H. B. CRANDALL, Cashier C. E. PETERSON - E. V. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashiers H ALL OF YOUR TROUBLES AWAY nitro-cellulos- 4 This mass meeting will be one of the most important ever held in this city. Matters pertaining to the welfare of the city and to the development of the vast coal deposits in Salina Canyon will be discussed. fertility lies at the very f asis of human life. As soil grows ooor the human race dies out. America is consuming and wasting ts soil fertility at a rapid rate. We h ave come to the point where our land must he fed if it .vould feed us. The question asks itself: Can soil be kept indefinite- The answer is found in land that has Leen cropped for y fertile? 2.000 years and more and is yet very fertile. But such land is not "o be found in stable civilization". Within the memory of men now living, commercial fertilizers :n America were hardly known. America now consumes over 6,- 300.000 tons of these every year. Of this, 80 per cent is from raw materials found in our own country, hut the 20 per cent we buy from abroad costs us more than $35, 0( 0,000 every year. This money goes mostly to Germany for potash and to Chile for nitrates. Potassium, nitrogen and phophorus are the three elements most needed for soil sustermce, and those are what we seek n commercial fertilizers. Raw phosphorus we have in abundance. Indeed, the world comes to us for it, because our deposits now open, are very rich and easily worked. One way to help the farmer besides lending him money and marketing his products, is to ensure him cheap feiliiizers as a national policy. m 4 4 Soil SPRING-TIM1 1ST THE 4 UNDER AUSPICES OF SALINA LIONS CLUB have passed since the war of arms in Europe ended. Its nations have wrangled ever since. They long ago demonstrated their incompetence to settle the financial difficulties inherited from the war and increased by the treaty of peace. Their fickleness and despair drove them to seek American advice as being the only counsel that could be trusted as competent and disinterested. It is given in the competent and courageous answer of General Dawes. I le and his fellow experts display even greater genius in cutting he Gordian knot of European finance than he demonstrated in demising a budget system for the United States. If this work of the best minds of financial America be not adopted in the main, then nothing can be done for the reconstruction of Europe. It remains for the nations to acquiesce and put into effect .hrough the reparations commission, what governmental machinery was powerless to put into operation. -ITS 4 SALINA J DNE WAY TO HELP THE FAFMER It is now generally admitted that England is in control of the Situation so as to be able to hold down the price of copper. India continues as a large silver consumer our exports totaling $25,352,6 39 in first three months of 1924. India still dominates the silver markets and prices are higher even against selling by China. Of the exports from this country dueling the first three months of this year the greater part has gone to 4 for less. PROTECT AMERICAN BEET FARMER INDIA CONSUMING MORE SILVER t4 EVENING THAT the advertisements offer you a splendid opportunity to find Wl I AT you want W1 1EN you want it. THAT everything needed for every member of the family should be found advertised. J 1 4 4 4 THAT advertised goods appeal to the eye and are as good as they look. H. W. CHERRY, Editor and Publisher. pre-wa- 4 4 4 44 4 v THE way to keep in touch w.th new and different kinds of money saving merchandise, is to read the advertisements. During and following the war, cane sugar production was rapidly increased to compensate for the decreased production of beet sugar in Central Europe. It is expected that European countries, notably Czechoslovakia and Germany, will attempt to regain their r position in sugar production, but there is no indication of any intention of cane sugar producers to give up the dominant position in the world sugar market which they have attained in the past ter. years. Consequently, sharp competition for markets is to be expected within the next few years between producers of cane and producers of beet sugar, says the United States Department of Agricul ture. This condition of affairs simply illustrates the necessity for reasonable protection for the American sugar beet grower to prevent is elimination by the cheaper produced foreign beet and cane p: oducts. 4 MEETING THAT the stores that advertise, are stores of better value. - 4 4 Big Mass 4 4 X-R- smoking should be strictly prohibited. A metal can and should be provided for all waste negatives and film scraps, and at no time should these be permitted to accumulate on tables, benches or floors. It is best that stock of unexposed films should be kept at a minimum and such stock should be kept in a cool, dry place out of way of ordinary room traffic, in a metal box or can. In rooms where films are filed or handled there should be no flames or any other than standard electrical fixtures. A hand should be in each room. Film negatives should be filed at soon as possible in heavy manila envelopes. Illuminators should be so designed that the diffusing glass is r.ct hot to the touch and there should be no unnecessary display of film negatives in lighted illuminators. j : : : - - $ $. t t jL er JTERNATIONAL RESTORATION VT,at statesmen and politicians, ministers plenipotentiary,' the League cf Nations and parliaments could not accomplish for world restoration, a committee of business experts has probably achieved. Alexander Hamilton's report in 790 upon the finances of the U.ited States rescued our nation from financial chaos and ranks ; rnong the classics of finance. The report of Charles Gates Dawes and his associates upon the reparations due from Germany will, if accepted, work out the economic redemption of Europe and be forever regarded as a maker of history and the originator of a new day for the world. Virtually five years of financial, industrial and political warfare 1 AY 1 1 t AT THE RECREATIONAL HALL Salina 2nd Ward - M. I. A. will show 4 - TOIT A GOOD TIME Ti diets 50c 4 Extra Ladies 25c t 4 4-- 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 4 44 44 j- . .5. .j .j. |