OCR Text |
Show iL THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE S ALINA SUN Prize-fighti- Entered at the postoffice at Salina as second-clas- s matter, unde'r the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 1.00 in Advance. Payable In making change .of address, - give- old address as well as the new. Advert'ising Rates Given on Application." votees, even among persons of high! NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. official and social position. Ladies of unquestioned standing are Department of the Interior, Genboxing bouts' in large num- eral Land Office at Salt Lake City, bers. Utah, June 10th, 1936. Considering the unsatisfactory exNOTICE is hereby given that El-rhibitions, which have, been staged of( M. Simonsen of Emery, Utah, late, even among fighters who have on January 7, 1930, made stock-raisin- g who, held or aspired to world champion! homestead entry, No. 047876, sions, .it. is remarkable that the bqx- for NW14SW14 Sec. 29, Lots 2, 3, 4, ing game has .been able to hold its SWV4NEV4. NViSEK Sec. 30, Lots 1, customers so well. It is . natural, 2, 3, Sec. 31, Township 23 South, therefore,, that comparisons are be5 East, E1,, "Section 25, TownRange ing made between modern pugilists 23 South, Range 4 East, Salt ship . and the' . Lake Meridian, has filed notice of Many have speculated, for exam- intention to make final proof, to esple, .on what would have happened tablish claim to the land above desif John L. Sullivan, in'his prime, had cribed, before the clerk of the dismet a fighter like Jack Dempsey. trict court, at Richfield, Utah, on the' No one' ever know, but when 5th day of August, 1936. . it is remembered that Sullivan and Claimant names as witnesses: ElKilrain fought 75 rounds with bare mer Addley, D. Homer Jensen, Laknuckles in the ' last championship mar Olsen and C. K. Olsen, all of, contest under London prize ring Utah. . ' Emery, rules,, the stamina of those THOMAS F. THOMAS, cannot be discounted. That' was in ' . . . Jnl2JylO Register. 1889, since which time gloves have been used, and no. championship bat-- 1 SHARP STOMACH PAINS tie has lasted more than 26 rounds MY WHOLE SYSTEM UPSET under the new rules." Under .the 6ld.Londom.bare kftuckle rules a round did not end until one Says E. Hentges: I tried a $1 botof the fighters was on the ground. tle (3 weeks treatment) of Dr. Then, after only 30 seconds rest, Emils Adla Tablets under your guar-- ' antee. Now the paihs are gone and J they went at it again. As Jack Dempsey has pointed, out, eat anything. Lewis Drug' Company. while Sullivan in his decline was defeated by Jim Corbett in a glove Ruy from Our Advertisers. contest, Suljivan went-- ' to his grave as the undefeated bare knuckle' van, most of our modern fighters i champion. In comparison with Sulli- - seem like mollycoddles. In Banking History Federal Deposit Insurance. Corporation has ushered new era of security for funds deposited with insured banks up to and including $5,00(Mpr each depositor. THE ie $2.00 .......... de- fre-qenti- . . .v All customers of this bank enjoy the benefits made possible by Deposit Insurance. It is provided in accordance with our unvarying policy of adopting all justified precautionary measures to safeguard the funds entrusted to our care.- - s. H. W. CHERRY' -- ' - - - - Editor arid Publisher - FARMERS '' QUESTIONS. . . . ' southern newspaper prints' an elaborate set' of questions and answers issued by the county .conserva-law- , fieri office of its gounty, jn which to detract are already seeking 'decision the questions are asked of the force moral from the ed opin-the courts out that by officials in- charge of the new pointing ion was a divided opinion, and that soil conservation . and soil building . three of 'the court3 justices 'dis- - program. There are 41 questions propoOnd- agreed with the other six in holding ed and answered, of which the fol- the act unconstitutional. . The contention of the critics of lowing is a" sample: . Question. What are the popular the decision, however, will not bear ' the" practice's in this, coun- light of. careful examination. In and what is. the, maximum pay-trthe first place, in every free coun-.ton. each?we have the principle of major-- . Answer: Planting lespedeza on ity rule. This is as true' in the enact$1.50 if land, crop as , per, acre. Planting ing of legislation by congress is in opinions of the' supreme court.. kudzu .on crop, land, $2 per acre. The Guffey act was invalidated by Planting vetch' and crimson clover a two to one majority in the court. on cr0P land, $1 per acre. "leaving peas, beans and erot'a-.i- s No president of the United S.tateslaria stalks and vines, on crop land ever elected by any such overRoopicked for seed), (included one Mr. (ced vote. whelming Tosay that d half credit for was not crops) decisively" president " sevelt, Pe" acre. Plowing under cow because he got a little less than" 00 beans and. erotalaria on crop per cent of the popular vote in 10.12 lan(l ."while would not get very far in the court green, $2 per acre. Plow vetch under and crimson clover, nK Me. of American public- opinion. Yet per acre. Plowing under green Roosevelts vote, on. a percentage basis, Was not so great as that by rye! wbeat, etc., after two "months which the supreme court knpeked out growth but before dough stage, $1 all the" crop per acre. Plowing-unde- r the Guffey coal law. 51 per acre So' It might be well said that if a'of' so.''ghum TV A of pastures t unanimous opinion of the supreme! "52. acre. an(b per Planting court is to be required to invalidate owners ex ree.s a a law passed by congress, a unani-- i a y per acre. Iiopeily Pense mous vote by congress should m IamI that needs ten'acing a"t 40c to enact "the' law in the first feet with a maximun of 52 . place. The experience of the country pir acieApplying ground lifnestone ptr is that congress is just as- apt to 52.80 per acre. Applying r(n su-'i make legislative mistakes as the CLint wpwphosphate (under p?r is to court make preme judicial rjain conditions) from 50c to $2.50 rors. The probability is that the leg- ' ' . islative body is even a little more, pe' are" so on and 30 And apt to err. The foregoing is only a fragment There is little more force to the of the rules and regulations .governargument that the supreme court ing the new . soil conservation proshould have no right to invalidate a The whole- scheme is compli- gram. law unless, at least seven or eight cated enough to drive a Philadelphia . members vote that the act is uncon- , carzy, but maybe the farmers stitutional. Let us say, for examp e, lawyer caif figure it out, with the aid of an . .that eight of the nine justices are army of government inspectors, and required to assent to the invalidating tj)e jje ' . of a law. Then if two justices declare. the is law .that sound, it becomes the rniRT law of the land despite the majority jpL.'s opinion. So we have the situation in which the opinion of two men is of To the intelligent layman the rules greater force than that of seven of procedure in American courts are others. Such an idea seems decidedly so antiquated as to be positively ri- preposterous in a land of democracy, diculous. As "the St. Louis Star. so. aptly says: Our absurd rules of evi " SCENES OF dence, our decisions on- technicali- CARNAGE. ties, slow "down and pervert justice, . and foster crime and lawlessness. recent issue of ie Consequently there is a growing American Mercury presented a new ilack f of respect for courts and for and interesting view of the automo- - law itself. Most people believe, and not without reason, that lawsuits na that, in the light of present day con- turally involve trickery and sharp ditions, it is not remarkable that on the part of many lawpractices persons are being killed in trafEven the bench is not always yers. fic accidents annually but that it is from suspicion that many remarkable that the number is not exempt cases are decided upon . technical! several times as great. . tics,- rather than upon facts and a In the aveiage state, almost any- - desire-tmete out e not completely crippled can ob- - tice. Continuing, the Star says: .tain a license to drive a. car, irrqs-- , What about these pleadings that pective of his ability, responsibility, ramble on for "thousands of words, intelligence or" judgment. "If he wherein every point must be' stated chooses, he can operate a car that .just so, or the case is thrown out of belongs by rights in the junk heap C0Urt.? Are they necessary? In Eng- a gar with an inaudible horn, feeble land, after the great law of reform -- or , glaring lights, .uncertain brakes, of. aruW-waadopted that no .and a steering gear affected with St. case should be thrown out of court Vitus dance. If he drives that car in for kny want of form in a alleged a dangerous manner", cutting curves, "pleading.. "The result was g that in and out of traffic, and lish pleadings, once' thousands 'of . glvlng 'her the gun" whenever pos- - words "long, now take up about a the chances are that he will en iines in th"e painest of pjain that" if he is ar--j escape arrest-a- nd English. Pleadings "as we know them rested, he will be assessed "a. ryla-- ; have disappeared from the practice tively small fine and permitted to go 0f law in' England. The result is that right on driving. When the inevitable all English lawsuits reach a final "finally occur?, and. someone is killed decision in from two weeks to four or injured because of his recklessness months. There is confidence in the "or incompetence, he may have . a" courts, and the have the time judges harder time getting out of the mess to attend to criminals in the same . tout that won t bring a dead person speedy fashion. to life. Anyone with a sense can' . If any progress is to be made in find quite a bit of "entertJnment by reducing the horrible toll of automo- -' spending an hour in an ..American bile deaths and injuries, stringent courtroom where pleadings are being methods must be adopted. Traffic bandied about. But if one stays too codes must be modernized and en- - long his amusement will twrn to with the utmost strictness and gust. impartiality. Much higher qualifica-- j ti9ns for the issuance of drivers licenses must be established. And the unsafe automobile, as well as the unsafe driver, must be banished from the road. Otherwise, Americas highways and streets will continue to be scenes of carnage.. j A " - 1 - " y- y - - New Chapter A LEGAL PUBLICATIONS is not a particularly ng elevating sport, yet it has many Published Every Friday at Salina, Utah. Oue Year Siz Months.. w WHEN FIGHTERS FOUGHT. First State Bank of Salina w-i- ll j Member Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit. lnsurar.ee Corporation Salina i Utah old-time- i Ernest C. Christiansen ABSTRACTOR "Subscribe ' ' Qualified by years of experience .to write ' Abstracts ACCURATELY. Work guaranteed by filing of Surety Bonds. " Phone 221-- dont borrow. DR..H. CRANDALL . DENTIST 4 salina Richfield, Utah . - - UTAH Office Hours: - 9 to J2 a: m. - 1:30 to 6 p. m Buy from our local merchants. -' .inter-plante- . 1?, - $1-5- " " . Kstab-Iihen- be-ne- 5- - terrac-"cessar- - Low costs mean Low costs mean greater savings greater pleasure - er-llf- l- . " - .;. ; ..." . j " " " 36,-"0(- j - o even-hande- 187-3- d jus-on- s Eng-weavm- doz-sibl- " i e, e our nvc8jmenIs teateft costs! In all your pleasures uatch costs! Keep them low . ron iconomical and you will keep savings and satisfaction hiehf TRANSPOftTATION ' Owners will tell you that the new Chevrolet for 1936 is the most economical of all motor cars. It costs less to buy.. It costs less to operate. It costs less to . . ' niaintain over a period of months or years. . And, .in addition to giving you economy without equal, this ' new Chevrolet will also give you enjoyment without equal, because its the only complete d car! alone It brings you. the safer, qu'cer smoother stopping-powe- r of New Perfected Hydraulic Brakes, anil the maximum lD aU . . ... j . " . $ J '. A JY AND C CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN the safest and smoothest brakes ever developed fortress a of safety IMPROVED GLIDING RIDE, NO DRAFT VENTILATION in New Turret Top Bodies, the most KNEE-ACTIO- car N HEAD ENGINE, giving SHOCKPROOF STEERING, making driving easier and safer than ever before low-price- d ALL THESE FEATURES AT , Valve-in-Hea- " " . - -- low-price- beautiful and comfortable bodies ever created for a even better performance with even less gas and oil e" Knee-Actio- . NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES (Doubls-Actin- g SOLID STEEL ONE-PIEC- E TURRET TOP, a crown of beauty, the smoothest, safest ride of all ' GENUINE FISHER overhead protection of .a Solid Steel Turret Top. It alone brings you .the unequaled gliding smoothness of the famous n Ride. It alone brings you the more healthful comfort of Genuine- Fisher No Draft Ventilation the greater driving comfort of Shockproof Steering. And it alone brings you the combined performance and economy advantages of a d High Compression Engine all "at Chevrolets .. . . remarkably low prices! Youll thank your own good judgment for buying a Chevrolet, because it gives more for less , and that i3 the secret of all wise investment and all wise pleasure. See your Chevrolet dealer today! one-piec- (ffUlrjSiF v . most economical car to own Ut HIGH-COMPRESSI- VALVE-I- N CHEVROLETS LOW PRICES.- List price of New Standard Coupe at Flint, Michigan. W ith bumpers, Bpar tir and tirr lark, on Masltr ModAt only, 1 20 additional. Privet quotrd in thU Ik, 1 Ml priori, tLV additional. Kner-Actiu- n adtertisement are list at Flint, Stichiftan, and subject to change notice. A General Muter t i'aJue. INERAl MOTORS INSTALLMENT PLAN " MONTHLY PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR PURSf dis-forc- .BURR MOTOR ' SAUNA, UTAH STR-iyft?- : ' |