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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, The Salina Sun Published every Friday at Salina, Editor Advertising Kates 25c per "inch 10c per line Display headers , Entered at the postoffice at Salina, Utah, as second class 'matter . , DOMESTIC SCIENCE . Mrs. C.' J. II. Cowdroy, head mistress of one of the principal schools in London has advanced, the all too nyel .theory that girls who cannot cook, sew iron and wash clothing, are Veil" educated" even' hold the degrees of all the universi- t.es m..er the sun. . Some educators according "to Miss Cowdroy, want gM. to be. trained to their futiire bke boys with an'-eycUieers, 'but since ten out of every eleven women marry, this fact ought ty be .considered in' feminine edqca- - Uughey ' e . . ,tion. ' " .VI Member Utah State Press Association H. W. CHERRY, Year by year these added costs are During the period of publication The of this notice, or any time thereafter, being increased by the states. increase in total amout collected in and before final approval and certi1923 was 12 per cent over the preceed fication, under departmental regulations of April 25, 1907, protests or ing year. contests against the claim of the Originally, these taxes were impos ' ed for the purpose of paying the cost State to any of the tracts or subdivi- of operation of the various state insions hereinbefore, described on the surance departments hut now an aver ground that the same is age of' only one twentieth of all the able for mineral than for agricultur- al purposes, will be received and notmoney collected by' the various states in the form of special taxes is used ed for report to the General Land to maintain these departments. Office at Washington, D. C. Failure Here Are some of the uses made so to protest or contest, within the of the policyholders premium dollar: time specified, will . be considered Premium tax, license tax, lee for filsufficient evidence of ing annual statement, fire depart"character of the tracts and the selecment tax, fire marshal tax, agents tions thereof, being otherwise free license fees, publication fees, retaliafrom- - objections, will be approved to tory taxes, pension funds, school tax the State. ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. and all other taxes paid generally by moving .picture houses will gradually period since the record began in 1913, First. publication, August 14th. . . business. appear in . advantageous locations 75 million dollars. The sum, how- .st Plication, September llt.h. .it ia difficult to understand how which can he reached from, a five or ever, in' ljut a small proportion of the ten automobile. mile' radius "by value in of the in films view of the opinion of .the produced legislators, NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION re- Tbus, as electricity .takes light to. same period, for the Census Bureau public officials charged with-thad- - of 1923 sets down the value will it the the ofof mofilrm, insurance emphasize supervising sponsibility. of farm life over crowded . tion pictures produced in the United. LaoHkTat SaltLake'city, uiah,' ili,th.e. public 'welfare, advocate the. vantage upllectioni pf constantly iinireasitng city life pnd draw the people from the States in the single year 1Q93 of J 1925 'sum? from a special class, of people thickly' populated clia'tricts back to the $86418,900. Evidently the Notice is hereby given that Joseph with all that the word implies, is the v. who are ende8vorin? their rural districts. Colby, of Salina, Utah, who oi March affaira rom ' unforseen contingencies ruling factor in the popularity of . the motion picture, and the census re- 11,ereby Sieving the' state from the Vu.rden involved in' caring for persons or business. left destitute .or incapaci' at .sease'. There was 'a time when' the small nated as theatrical . , The man who dues not provide this taxpayer did not understand that the dollars, the educational group being himself or.his business eneral prosperity' of the country was slightly . more than one million and Pr0eetin should be subject to. ,lirhini.shed .ne - all other groups slightly less than by imposition of these. . additiohal taxes rather, than .the man cessiv surtaxes, and welcomed a stiff three millions. 'tv10 voluntarily pays the cost of pro- ;vy 0n incomes in the higher brack-- tecting himself and society. Makers of Two Horse more-valu- - . ' Utah. " . . . Edw. D. City Utah. ... - J . ELI F. TAYLOR . Register Dunn, Atty, .Salt Lake . ' First Publication July 24. 1925 Last Publication Aug. 21, 1925. r PREVENTION I Iwfter than 'core.' Tatt'a Pin taken In I time, are not only a remedy for but prevent SICK HEADACHE I diliotuactt, conitipjtioa ind kindled diieaut Tutts Pills X t . - fr O which starts off like this: Mon- key monkey, bottle of beer .how many monkeys have we here? jaj NOTICE- - ,fut - ItJ United States Land Office, Salt jr Uake City, Utah, August 7,. 1925. JL Whom It May Concern Yp Notlce bereby given that the Stata. ;t fj. s - ... I N A a i U - . T A H . -- r X: X" !&, X x- o - X: JAMES FARRELL, Prei H. S. GATES, Vres. H.B. CRANDALL Cashier C.E. PETERSON - E.V. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashier's X k o kk - 'Ser-awa- Fifty-ninth ex-w- ill com-The- re carri-remar- ks - At Last We the Public a f e board at a price so low it cannot -. - is-a- s life-lon- g mo-do- es 1 st Hotpoint Iron . $6.00 $5.00 Rigid Board . Total $11.00 : mar-sectio- ns SPECIAL re-vit- ness is becoming as indispensable In Starting August 15 Sept. 1st- - $795 Only 95c down Balance $1.00 per month. When the farmer can press a but- - number oT fe't of Tlm'sent' 0 and light his barn milk his cow Britain, Canada, New Zea- Australia, pohcholder3 ,n tbe United chop food for cattle, saw wood and land and British South Africa in the fhelThSfn"10"; tha as tn m thresh grain and do scores of other things which are now downright almost unknown indirect taxes; and drudgery, farm life will become more amount does not include special attractive for him and the boys. municipal taxes,, licenses or fees, all Electric road lights will begin to out of the pockets of the insured. appear at crossroads corners. The tel This $59,000,000 would pay nearly ephone and the radio will give the six billion dollars worth of fire insur same universal communication facili- aiice for a year. ties that are enjoyed in the city. The ?59-00J- y to the policyholder year just ending forms about per cent of the total exports to the world.-thiThe value of the film, exported from the United States since the record began in 1913 has advanced from 2 Vi million dollars in 1913 to 8 4 millions in the fiscal year 1925 and aggregates for the s 1 jJ Rec-pursui- a-- S A L A. ", Hember. Federal Reserve. System - her.tem F--' . - - M . ; x iFirsttateank L s n " . . . ... e filed-notic- fr -' ser- East, Salt Lake Meridian, has of intention to make final Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Sterling K. Heppler, U. S. Commissioner, at Richfield, Utah, on the 27th day of . August 1925. . Claimant names as witnesses: Roy Colby, Ernest Bird,. John Bird, and Claud D. Burgess, all of Salina, non-miner- al . desert land entry, ial No. 013704, for SWVi SW Section 8, Township 21 South, Range 1 . I depreciate the, view t.onalist3 hold that a woman can pos- SvV far higher .qualities that those wn.ch go to make a wise" wife and ' mother said the head mistress. . Some think .the clever girls too ' . LEPHOTOGRABHY . .that, the dullanls being good Ine first advertisement ever flash- - by driving productive business into though to cqntinue the race.' ' . .' . I understand that in some .British 'ed across the continent from the Pa- securities.. . to' Atlantic; coast by the newly ''Stools for girls the pupils .are divid- When capital is kept out of produc- cd nuo sectio.ns, the clever half study invented, telephotography process, ivk euterprise by excessive taxation in New was. York received sciences dead the 'recently .his unnatural diversion yields no re- ipg languages vf.iiile'the duller girls give their time.,wbe.n Ue complete layout aliid text venue . to the- government and is to cookery and Housewifery. I also ' ?n' advertisement for the Cali- - costly to industry.. A man is not in- fornia PearGrowers Association wag (crested 'in- - risking his money and second understand the' set refer to the first as th& brainy old maids .so wired fro San Francisco to'New York energy, in an enterprise where, if he seven. minutes. The transmission wins, the government takes a great perhaps they are not so dull , after-'was made over telephone lines from part o.f the profits in taxes, and" if all. . . . A 'girL should be .proud that She a phojyjiauhic. negative. he loses he stands the whole of the can cook- and sew, non nnd wash and '.This is just, another tributeto the loss. Irritative and new ventures are scientific progress constantly made penalized by 'such a policy. .. .that she can save some money wisel ' . and well. I hold that a girl who ca- n- by private 'industry in America,' in.not do all these things is. not well .e interest of. the public .service. MOTION PICTURE FILMS " educated, although 'she .may have While the rest of the. vtorli lis talking. Motion ilms 'exported icture getting telephones, there is one from the United State3 made their 6e! avv;arde,d the 'degrees, of.all the the world. umcersities ev.ery home in this land .for . hi(vhest'record in the year just, ended In America we hear a .great deal and . our own American telephone tKe fiscal 'ar 1925 The total en has progressed a step farther nowadays about the flapper and d q ,ejc filmg exported in th9 inefficiency m regard to domestic 'ami is actually reproducing photo- ended sa '3 the Trade' just Its telephone wires Despite popula belief, prapha !'. otd of The National City Bank ' of however, t is a gdod bet that the most nstantaneously Ybrk, was over 200 .million any wonder that other' coun- -' average girl of today is just as ca- seven times as much prcticaliy . pable of evolving into. a good h.ouse- - tres turn tp the- United SUtes for. jn j913 the wife and- becoming a good parent a's hdp in developing . their telephone films were considered of sufficient ' systems T . was her mother before her. to be Included in the 'ofimportance Modern invention has .taken 'tfway ficial tables of merchandise exported.. a great deal jof household drudgery REGULATORS NOT. In the year 1913 the total length of ' ' which was formerly regarded as in- - OWNERS films exported was 32 milexposed evitable. It has mot, however thkeil Thirteen years ago the public y lion in 1921, 155 million, in 1924 feet, the domestic and maternal in- - vice Commissioner of New York state 178 and in the fiscal year millions, sftinct of the' 'modern girl. If given ordered the electrical railway operat-th- e 1925, approximately 215 million feet, St. line to opportunity and treated right she ing .the or over 40,000 miles in lengtn, being perfprm her part of the' bargain, change transfers with several more than in any earlier year in our is, however, a great deal, of panics which crossed t3 line. . history, of catering 'to' thd demands The street railway coijipariy . food for thought in Miss Cowdroys of picture-lovin- g people the. world on some of tlie' theories of. ed'the matter to the courts arid now over. Exposed films,, which now after thirteen years of litigation, the form a very large share of our ex- .modrn education. Unitej States Supreme Court has- ports-othis class' of material,' are ' CLEAN. LITERATLRE . ruled, that the commission under the those which carry scenes photogra- ' 'g;uise of reKulat'on may not. compel phed' in the United States, in finish- ltUteS WC9t f . Mississippi the cowboy and prospect- use and operation of the company ed form ready for use in the projec-o- r ' still ride their bronchos and bur- - property without just compensation, ting apparatus in the motion picture' ros, ive ives of romance, adventure The court points out that the divi- - htfuses of the countries in which they and exploration the basitf of western sion of. the fare by agreement 'are .used, both at home and abroad, ' open, air literature. While it is 9 fact, adds the Trade . between the companies did not 'yield The western .literary product in- - sufficient revenue to cover the opera Recdrd,. that the foreign demand for eludes moving pictures, action stories' ing .expenses; that nothing, in the our films Is very great and constant-cowbo- y songs, and frontier ballads, c.harter of the carrier required an ex- ly increasing,' it does not follow that and thousands of story,- verse and change of. transfers; and that the the use of the motion picture abroad writers suppjy the world with state is without power to . demand song . as in the great proportionately this material thatjs read by .millions that' the' traffic be carried at a loss United .which has become the States, Two years ago Col. E. Hofer, of or without substantial compeifsatioft. greatest motion picture country of Salem, Oregon, a newspaper over actual cost. the world. A recent statement by manand publisher, established a In its decision the court says The high authorities in the motion picture .western literary monthly, The Lariat broad power to regulate; the state world sets down the number of to encourage western writers, set not enjoy the freedom of the tfon picture theatres in Germany as higher standards, .and fight degener- owner. 4,000, Great Britain 3,500, France ate products. 2,500, Italy 2,200, and Belgium 1,600 . In its third year, it is followed by GREAT CIVILIZER while the total number in the United The Lariat Story Magazne, publishFarm population was placed by. the States is estimated at about 17,000, ed by Real Adventures Publishing census authority at 31, 134, 000. Jan- or more than those in Great Britain, Co. New York, and the North-weuary L, compared with 31,316,000 a .France, Belgium, and Italy combined, ' Writers bureau at alem, Oregon', year earlier. . Where do these 200 million feet of . making- a market for literary proAtlantic coast states showed, net exported picture films go? Great ducts of the open air and adventure in'ereasees in farm population, other Britain is evidently the largest sjories in popular magazines. ' ket for them, or at least the largest leading' in decline. M hile thrilling wth the romance Young and old leave the farm be- - purchaser, though it is quite possible of a new and robust civilzation, west- - cause the think city life, is more that considerable quantities of those ein writers as a class turn out clean attractive but the same agency which which she imports l'rom us. are Wholesome literature singular- - has given, attractions tp the. city is shipped to other parts of the world, y free from all taint of degeneracy, now turning its energy toward the Our total exports of motion picture farm life just as it has the city. films in the eleven months ending Light is the great civilizer. When with May, 1925 were to Great Britain a fanners wife can press a button 40 million feet, Canada 20 millions, and flood her house with light, wash Australia 20 millions, Argentina 15 her dishes, pump and heat the water, millions, France 10Vi millions, Brazil run the churn, sewing machine, iron- - 9 millions, Japan 6 millions, Mexico and vacuu mcleaner 6 millions, and Germany, which is a ing' machine make ice in the refrigerator, curl her large producer of films, 54 millioa hair and do innumerable other lit- - fret. tie things with electricity, how much The American motion picture seems more aittracjtive willj be the farm to be especially popular with the sotne-educa- 11, 1921, made Reliable Merchandise Since 1855 Utah 1 UfAH Teliuride. Power Co. V- -i I |