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Show TH SAUNA SUN, SALINA, UTAH m pation and cultivation, the products to be also divided up in common use for the people. The farmers were to acquire no title but only the right of posIssued Every Friday at Salina, Utah. session and use. Large communistic farms were established which as a rule nearly all failed. The cities being the centers of political power, sent out armed Entered at the postoffice at Salina, as second-clas- a mail matter under the commissioners to seize the grain crops and divide then equally act of Congress of March 3, 1879. among the people. There was rioting about distribution of about dividing the crops, and despotic rule, SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year (2.00 regime, followed commune rule. The result was the farmers hid whatever they could, and refus1.00 Six Months ed to produce more than just enough for each farm to supply the Payable In Advance family with bread. To accomplish land and crop divisions a large number of govIn making change of address, give old address as well'as the new. ernment employees were required who were mostly lazy, incompetent and corrupt. Advertising Rates Given on Application. Force had to be used by the Red Guards to get any results, but the general result was terrorism, oppression, anarchy, corrupH. W. CHERRY Editor and Publisher tion and debauchery. THE S ALIN A SUN ST Jfirsittateank O SALINA SALINA-UTAMember H Federal Reserve System JAMES FARRELL, Pres. H. S. GATES, H. B. CRANDALL, Cashier 'ffi OSTRACIZE RECKLESS DRIVERS. An authority on traffic problems says: "Every traffic acciSalina Sun Platform dent is symptom of something wrong. Something wrong with the NEW HIGH SCHOOL BUILDING. driver, the pedestrian, the street or highway, the control system, the vehicle, the ordinance, the police department, or the communAN IMPROVED HIGHWAY THROUGH SALINA CANof the victims of fatal motor vehicle acity. In cities, YON. cidents are pedestrians. Our greatest problem is to define clearly A MODERN HOTEL TO ACCOMMODATE THE TRAVELthe proper use of streets by vehicles and by pedestrians and the ING PUBLIC. obligations of each to the other. He urges an organized campaign of ostracism of the motorMORE RESIDENCE BUILDINGS TO MEET THE DEof ist who endangers self and every one through MANDS OF HOMESEEKERS HERE.. trffic signals, boulevard stop signs and the like, and who is generOF SALINA. ally the same fellow that pulls across the crosswalk, rrfakes elderly .w people jump out of his way, splashes mud on pedestrians and generally behaves himself like a hog.". He says public officials promote violation of traffic signals, PEACE OR WAR? when they put signals at places where they are not needed, run We are hearing a great deal from the pacifists professional and them at times when they are not needed or run them on too long a otherwise, in the United States about the horrors of war. Everyone cycle." agrees that war is horrible and nobody in America, we believe, wants another experience with it if it can be honorably avoided. TRIBUTE TO COUNTRY PRESS. ' There is no war spirit in America. There never has been a militant The smaller newspapers of the country are the most imporspirit and into no great conflicct in which we have been engaged have we entered until ajl reasonable means of continuing peace had tant newspapers, and incidentally, in. proportion to their circulabeen exhausted. tion, their advertising res'ults are the biggest, and their advertising The pacifists and all other Americans are of course within rates are( the smallest in the country. They are read through from their rights in denouncing war. The trouble is that the pacifist drive end to end. Every copy of circulation means an entire family, does not stop here;' but goes on in an effort not only to increase not a family that lives in one room with a can opener, but a famthe sentiment for peace.; already overwhelming, but to lay aside all ily that owns its own house, end land around it, at least ninety a policy times out of a hundred; a family that buys everything, from the weapons of defense, to adopt a policy of which has always been ,fatal and which will never work until human roof on the house, to the cement on the cellar floor; from the nature has .been changod to such a beatific condition that no rules hat on mothers head to the shoes on the boys feet. The service that their publishers render to the public is, in my opinion, against war will longer He necessary. . All Americans waint peace; but most of them are practical the jnost important service rendered by any class of citizens in the enough to know that in order to assure peace we must be prepared United States. The country editor are distributors oP informa to defend ourselves aga inst attack. The United States is now the richest nation in the world. Suppose, then,' we sink our navy, 3E abolish our army orgp nization and teach the youngsters it is I . I . . wrorig not only to want to fight, but even to want to take any milifill your Grocery f Let tary training or wear aiay uniform that smacks of soldiery. In a o 4 few years wo would jet into a decidedly lamlike condition, and Our Goods are Supply. T when we have arrived at that state with all our wealth and 4 First Class and we can pack we would fall prey to the first desigin nation which saw an 4 4 . . . . , f opportunity to gain plunder by attacking Uncle Sam. And would them for. you. 4 . f any other nation come to our rescue) Not at all. The nation 4 loses worldof caste in 4 . unprepared 4 politics. (he game We have made several gestures toward disarmament and . Salina Meat & Supply what has been the result 5' only to forfeit for the United Statesthe chance it had to secure the biggest and best navy in the world. Is here any immediate chance for disarlament? Ask the leaders NOTICE TO WATER USERS. in any European country and see what you lern. Of course they . . are all for reducing armament o they will tell you but there State Engineers Office, Salt Lake are so many comp lications in European politics at this time that City, Utah, May 1, 1928. Notice is heieby given that John Christeijsqn, it would not be politic. And 5t woirfdnt be politic either. Europe whose post office address is Rnjh-- ! has always had tLese complications, and there is no present prosfield, Utah, has made application in pect that thej will be ended. If at any future time the League of accordance with the requirements of 4 Nations can succeed in bringing abcvut a better spirit in Europe, the Compiled Laws of Utah, ' 1917, all well and goold. But as for Uncle Sam, if he hates war, and as amended by the Session Laws of 4 we all agree that he does, the best wtey to avoid it will lie in the Utah, 1919 and 1925 to appropiate .133 c. f. of water from an isolatWe will ed Spring in Denmark Wash, in plan which will make us able to reptel all invaders. 4 4 all hope that the invaders will never come, but to destroy our Sevier County, Utah, the point of issuance of which bears 2263 ft. S. and facilities for meeting (hem would only serve as an invitation. 4 F V.-Pre- s. C. E. PETERSON, E. V. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashiers two-thir- ce ... -- s. tion; they reach the minds of the boys that leave the farms, and they are the nations mental police force," says Arthur Brisbane. After half a century in the publication of newspapers, daily and weekly, the writer can indorse the opinion of Arthur Brisbane that the country paper is read from end to end. and the advertisements are of special interest. Where a hundred read all that, is in the home weekly, only one in that one hundred peruses all that is in the big city daily paper that comes to them. Large foreign advertisers are also becoming cognizant . of the fact that space in country weekly and smaller city daily papers is of real value to them; that they can gain more at less cost, at the' same time securing .as much combined circulation with a certainty that, their advertisements will be read by all. rWoodburn.Ore., Weekly . . Independent,. April 12. A chorus of fifty, voices and a' ten piece orchestra added to $he success G. of. the. production. Maynard Wright was the director and. Spencer Smith stage and advertising manage er. -- non-resistanc- e, -- The New .York .newspapers are now claiming that A1 Tsmithckn tar-f- y Iowa, in November. They havent got around to the poinWyet of claiming Vermont, But. the ' claiming season is still young. Ranchers and .Sheepmen . : . . - . . When you. buy from us We .Securely Pack Goods Safety Transportation. for . . Salina Meat & Supply TOURISTS '." -- t es . 4 4-4-- 4- 208 ft. E. of T. 21 S., R. the NW cor. of Sec. 20, W., S. L. B. & M. and HIS GOOD WILL COMES HIGH. conveyed in a p.ipe line a distance of -Shed a tear, if you will, for the harrassed statesmen of 3 miles where it will be used, from Nov. 30th of each year to Feb. 1st Europe, who must abase themselves now and then on the right side. of the year following for ' culinary Those of (us who go to the movies have witnessed lately news purposes for the town of Aurora in reels showing the turnouts of royalty and the populaces in- Eur- Sevier County, Utah.. This application is designated in ope to honor; Amanullah, the king of Afghanistan, and his wife. the State Engineers Office as File fifth-rate virtue of Yet Afghanistan is a Afghanistan, by Aman-ullah- s its strategic location on the- border of India, is important. good-wiis needed by the European powers. . So, when Amanullah visited Paris, London and Berlin, they had to be nice, to him. Amanullah made it hard for them. He bought things right and left in the shops and did not pay. Why should h e be bothered by money matters) French, British and German governments had to foot the bill. They had to cater to his whi ms, accord him high honors, palaver and kowtow to him. C heerfully would they have booted him back to his mountain Sad, was needed. fastnr ,8S. But they dared mot. His good-wil- l indeed, is the life of the European statesman. Dubuque .TeleA gram V kingdom. Ll No. 10276. ' State Engineer. first publication, Date of completion 1. May ' ! d, 4, of publication, 1928. 4 4 4-- 4--'. 4 4 4 4 V 4- - 4- - F. O. BULLOCK DENTIST Hours Saturdays Salina ... 9 A.M. ta S P.M. 9 A.M. to 12 M. Utah ERICKSON & ERICKSON Counselors at Law Richfield, - 4 4 4 4 4-- 4 4 4 4 4 4-- 4 4 4 4- - 4 4 4 4-- - - 4 4 4--4 4-- 4 s- - 4 .4 4 4- 4 4 4 4 4 4- - 4- - 4-- 4 . 4 V 4 - 4- 4 4 4-4 4 4 - t 4 4-- 4- 4- 4 4 4 J' 4 RA 97 White Mfcoig, Range $2.50 Down $1 - 44- 4 -4 4 4 4- - 4 4 4 4 4 4 4.4. 4. 4.4.4. 4 4 4 37.50 $6.00 per month No Interest Charges THE RUSSIAN EXPERIMENT. Seven Years, of Bolshevism furnishes a striking exmple of what will happen in any country from the application of the principles of Communism. A recent book on the working out of applied Communism to industries is written by M. L. Reqiua, showing effects of Soviet government on human life. In 1917, under the shrewd guidance of Lenin and Trotsky, the Soviet secured complete control and look possession of the government of Russia. The Assembly issued a proclamation confiscating in all property the boundaries of the Republic and abolished all private ownership of land. The land was to be apportiont d among the farmers fdr occu- - 4 4 4-- 4 1928. June - 4- 4- All .protests against the granting of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must be by affidavit in duplicate, with a accompanied fee of $1.00, and filed in this office within thirty (30) days after the completion of the publication of this notice. GEO. M. BACON, Date of 4 4 4 1 - 4 4 4 Utah 42 peice Commodore dinner set FREE! During' May Only-A- ct N ow Tdluridc Power Company |