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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH and others is knocked in the head by the report of farm conditions in Wisconsin, where political aggrarian agitation reaches the high water mark. A Chicago Tribune special from Janesville, shows milk prices Issazi Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. a third higher than last year which will mean a $70,, 000, 000 inWisconsin leads in diversicrease to Wisconsin milk producers. fied farming. Cattle, corn, opts and tame hay, show enormous Subscription Rates One Year total?. $2.00 Output hs such wide variety that ups and downs of prices 1.00 Six Months leave Wisconsin agriculture on an imp.oved basis over last year. 75 Three Months Similar conditions prevail in dairying sections of Iowa and Kansas. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE More bucines management on farms, diversity of crops and fewer political cure-al- l will solve the farmers problems which are the same in any other line of business. as Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mai! Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. BRIDES AND COOKBOOKS THE SALINA SUN ADVERTISING RATES. Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 23c Display Matter Special position 23 per cent additional. cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Ten Legals Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion Obituaries, Cards of 1 harks. Resolutions, F.tc., at Half Local Read ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Ead Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. H. WHO SAID POOR V. CHERRY. Publisher. A man was telling a few days ago that in a West Virginia county where he Ins relatives they have a practice at the court house of givThis idea is devised ing a conk hook with evety maniage license. in the hope that the book will prove helpful in promoting happiness While it is true that the w.iy to a mans heart often in marriage. his runs through stomach, it is rather a strain on the imagination to picture the average bride of tod ly as taking the cook book propoVHth car-- clubs, and aid societies and varisition very seriously. and politics to occupy her mind and atous womens organizat-ontention, how can the present day miss spend her time in kitchen If the contents of the cook book are a novelty, or if they study? "could lie gotten up with a racy little love .story running through hern then, maybe, a large number of new wives would thar.k the But until that time the cook court officials for their thoughtfulness. book scheme probably wont be much of a success. 1 SUGAR BEETS HELP FARMERS The beet sugar crop this year will be one crop on which the farmer makes money. Increased sugar prices saved the day for sugar beet growers and prevented complete demoralization of the industry after two years of starvation prices. With good crops and good prices, millions of dollars will be distributed among western sugar beet growers to the great advantage of several western states and the public at large will benefit greatly by this western industry ARE YOU ON THE SUCKER LIST? A great many promotion and stock selling organizations have asset for doing business, long lists of names in all parts of this and other countries. These concerns which are interested more in selling stocks than in actually developing the properties they advertise, pay large prices LIGHTS ON VEHICLES for lists of prospects. When a man buys a fake stock, he is immediately beseiged by Every few weeks you read a newspaper account of a man, woman, family or party in a buggy being struck by an auto and killed. salesmen from other companies and begins to receive literature The buggy had no lights and the oncoming motorist who killed them from different concerns. His name has been placed on the sucker list," and if one could not see the buggy until it was too late. Anyone, driving So any kind of a vehicle after dark, without lights, is taking his life in fake stock outfit cannot get him, they figure that another can. is his is with back and and he flooded literature. traded his hands. name forth Although there is no law compelling lights on vehicles schemes Dont let the alluring promises of these it is safer to go beyond the law1 and carry a light. fool you. Discusss the matter with a reputable investment banking house and thus protect your savings. HOW RAILROADS MANAGE TO LIVE That as their-chie- f Continually subjected to legislation STEERING BUSINESS SHIPS TO SUCCESS and regulations that are applied to no other business it is a wonder Fred P. Mann is a dry goods merchant in Devils Lake, North their stock is worth anything. I le sells a half million dollars worth of Dakota. goods every year Railroad employes and business men who are not in a town of five thousand population. his business He built has Socialists will all admit that railroads are better managed by practi He stands toIlls capital has been intelligence. cal railroad men than by politicians, but the delirium of political from nothing. seeks for small merchant who an to biuld town day any inspiration control continues. If the railroads could be let alone long enough by a score of i paying business on a sound foundation. There are thousands of merchants who flop along without any federal commissions and several hundred state boards and commisdefinite aim except an instinctive desire to accomplish. These are sions they would get on their feet. The chip that reaches port in time to The railroads have every interest to serve the public, get into he merchandising dedelfcts. is is the win that steered with a definite purpose and along one cargo harmonious public relations with communities, earn money and borr course thoroughly charted. row capital to improve their service and make extensions. Mr. Mann frankly says his success is one of two things sensNo bank could live under the assaults railroads are subject to. ible buying and virgorous newspaper advertising. He spends more in than in the small merchant money newspaper advertising any WRITING NEWS is United States. he does The answer more business than any small The sort of newspaper that would be published if everybody merchant in the United States. Half the local merchants in small towns see in advertising in Gunnison edited it would be something wonderful, but it wouldn t The lothing but typographical announcements. The money they waste be the kind of paper that very many would subscribe for. mail existdirect is n There is not a skilled of is in the business by most advertising astounding. perhaps any competitive newspaper whole in the of the United tSates who uses a direct Men who make up newspapers must have the mass of people xdvertsing man ence. No paper can live by catering to a chosen by mail advertising except as a supplement to the newspaper. in mind every minute. Without the newspaper the rest is useless. If we fail to learn by the few. There is not in any community enough business to support a experience of others who have succeeded then we fall behind in the large newspaper devoted wholly to what we commonly call "high- narch of progress. John Wanamaker, Marshal Field and Fred P. Mann are not brow class." The "highbrows" are a vague class, but are generally Hitch your wagon to a star, not to a doubting Thomas. supposed to be the type of citizens who take no interest in any sub- "ools. a discussed be would at that ject except one concerning things The Russians may belive there is no God, but they certainly meeting of a college faculty, or a fine arts convention or a meeting of clergymen of the larger churches of the nation. ought to know something about hell by tHis time. that A writer made himself unpopular sometime ago by saying as far as he had observed most of the criticism of his work had come from that class of people who never buy books, but who are keen It might be said for borrowing them and picking them to pieces. t some of those who are keenest in their criticism of the newspaper are the ones who do not pay their money for it, and do no! No, the newshelp the editor to meet his financial obligations. But it is be success. a would not edited by everybody paper of of in the a coma majority people passible, with the munity to get out a newspaper that will please a good many and And thats the kind be worth a great deal in building up a town. of a newspaper program we are seeking to carry out. is quite a mystery. hard-boile- l- d - WISCONSIN FARMS MAKE MOST MONEY Shall land owners of Our Country be made objects of political sympathy, and be patronized and pampered and pauperized into creatures that are objects of solicitude by state and nation along lines? Aided by state and federal loans, state and fed- marketjrg of their crops, and beneficiaries of special class all the dreams of socialism and communism leading on into quagmires of dependency, will they .,ce tillers of the, soil and economic backbone of the remain proud nation? The entire picture of gloom drawn about the wheat growers things people think they ought not to know. old-fashion- shoes any more. You dont see children wearing copper-toe- d y kids! such to a present-dathing Fancy suggesting Winking is said to be good for the eyesight. if her sweetheart doesnt happen to be nearby. Maybei it is, There are about 5,000 different We want our friends to understand that theres only one correct way to languages in the world and money talks in every one of diem. swat flies, and that is to keep on swatting until you run out of flies. Always the luckiest fellow at a ooker games is the man who doesnt play. feel sure that the world will get along all right, said a local man yesterday, provid Its always a pretty good idea to ing the men dont get to wearing remember that a divorce suit costs more than a wedding suit. I well-know- ear-ring- n s. Is Your House In Order? s INDIAN? The American Indian, who only a few years ago seemed doomed to extinction, not only has refused to become extinct but actually under the favorable conditions provided by the United States govThere ernment, has been able to make increases in his numbers. are about 341,000 of them in this country at the present, which And represents an increase of approximately 3,000 in ten years. their death rate has been growing smaller year by year. The Indian is no longer poor unless he cares to be. Government statistics show a number of them to be immensely rich, due to the fact that the lands with which they were endowed by the government have But even without oil the yielded oil in tremendous quantities. Indian has been able to accumulate and add to property year by year. Today they own $35,000,000 worth of live stock, including than more one million sheep, 250,000 head of cattle and about the same number of horses and mules. So, thinking it over, isnt it about time we ceased referring to him as the "poor Indian? Another thing, girls seem to know everything nowadays about I J Does the maid always do as she is told? Does the wife always obey? Do the children ever have tantrums? Does the furnace ever smoke? n Do the spigots ever leak? Does the newspaper boy ever fail to leave your paper? Does the dinner always suit you? Does every little thing always go just right at your house? Our System Is just A Great Big Wonderful House, Wonderful In That So Many Things Do Go Right Telluride Power Co. the 1009b Electrical Store jsrayEE Denver & Rio Grande Western Heaviest Taxpayer In Colorado and Utah The following statement shows taxes paid in 1922 by the Denver & Rio Grande Western in Colorado, Utah and New Mexico. COLORADO State Tax County Tax Highway and Road Tax School Tax City and Town Tax $ 73,755.26 239,175.47 198,364.74 597,148.93 33,864.5 7 Total Taxes Paid in Colorado UTAH State Tax County Tax Highway and Road Tax School Tax City and Town Tax $ $1,142,308.97 42,600.13 82,995.26 81,265.72 346,489.86 56,047.70 Total Taxes Paid in Utah NEW MEXICO $609,398.67 State Tax $ 8,480.07 16,818.51 County Tax and Road Tax 1,348.73 Highway School Tax 39,532.61 345.08 City and Town Tax Total Taxes Paid in New Mexico Grand Total Daily average of taxes paid in Colorado, Utah and New Mexico, year 1922 In 1922 Sevier County received from the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad $26,461.85, made up as follows: $ 2,108.67 State Tax 2,762.97 Tax County 4.543.84 Road Tax J School Tax 14,853.48 Tax Town and 2,192.89 City Total $26,461.85 1 Federal ownership of the railroads means the people would be deprived of the income now accruing from these taxes. The Alaskan Railroad, post office, forts, arsenals, etc., are not taxed, nor is any property used or controlled by the United States and state governments assessed for taxes. The income now derived from taxes paid by the railroads and which would and the experience of government control of the railroads during the war suggests a deficit instead of a profit. Ilow would the national, state and municipal governments make up this loss? (Advertisement) 0 |