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Show THE SAUNA SUM r f iwttt n ii m ri" iwagacCTuip1 tvWWtHOOWOOftOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO LOCAL ITEMS OF H Medicinal Tabets Put Up In Handy Packages We carry a complete line of INTEREST. V E. W. Pettey, the garage man, returned Sunday evening from a trip to Provo. Mr. Petty delivered the U. S. Geological Survey truck that has been in storage here for the past year. medicinal tablets which are put up in a convenient form. Frank Herbert and Dan Freece, who returned from Salt Lake where A Keep an assortment of these little medicinal aids on hand. They are valuable etc. Lewis Drug Co X Read our Ad this week. CASH STORE A good office room tor rent. reasonable, apply MAX COHEN Terms J22tf. attraction, playing high-cla- ss farce eornedies interspread with Heaters may bring comfort these frosty and DOUGLAS McLEAN in JAILBIRDS Round Four of The Leather Pushers Door opens at 7:10, Leather Pushers 7:15, Feature 7:40, Vaudeville 9:15, Leather Pushers ' White lo 2-pa- motorec First door cast of White House hotel. We are here to give the public satisfaction GIVE US A CALL UTAH -- Twenty friends of Miss Qeo Crane invaded her home last Thursday evening giving her a complete surprise. The was Cleos fifteenth birthday. After enjoying the evening in playing oct-casi- i games, ice cream and cantaloupe were served. Farmers Equity Milling and Elevator Company Miss Cless Mortensen returned from Monday. She has spent the summer with her aunt Mrs. M. M. Olson. MANUFACTURERS OF FLOUR and FEED The Misses Edra, Hazel and Ruby All kinds of Mill Staffs. Murphy have entertained their friends at melon parties this week. C. LORENTZEN, Manager, - Salina, - - - , Miss Lily Nielson has been a Sa Lake visiior for several days. She return- Utah ed Tuesday. The Lois Beehive Swarm listen are all gone, lost to you, bePAPER DAY AT THE GOOD cause you are too far away you OLD VILLAGE POST OFFICE cant hear them now of Things are just about the same in By William Brogan, the old town, however there are The American Press Association more folks there, of course, but the weekly paper is the same enjoyable You who were raised in the institution, and theres the same in the scene you recollect the for it on paper day, and eagerness on paper day? village postoffice cover to cover, ads and from read its disDo you recall the postmaster was in the old days. it a3 all, just intributing copies of the local paper moved Youve thats all, and away, to almost every glass faced postoffice all about it. Think forgotten youve box to be pulled out at the other end old town the back visualize good by the waiting throng as quickly as a folks it up. at and the way paper key could be inserted by each lessee business You believ your message of a post office box? when you rdvtv-ti- s the reaches people Johnface Remember how freckled in the cities. Man alive! There are ny grabbed his copy and made a bee more folks in the country than Iheie Ime for home with it tightly clutched in he ctiies, and they think more are in his good right hand? of their papers than they ever did, Think of the bustle, hustle and for the If you papers are better. commorjtion, the busy hour and all have something to sell, dont spend the excitement the bunch in the your entire appropriation in magapost office and outside the door zines and city papers. See that a awaiting' their turn at the free de- reasonable percentage goes for counlivery window! Or the same scene try newspaper advertising get back out in the country with rows of let- into touch with the old home town tered tin boxes spiked to posts all reget the benefit of the intimate volving horizontally on the rims of Bill, the publisher has old wagon wheels at every cross road. with Jack, the local dealer. The For the farmer folks are there, too, publisher will ask the dealer to push when the rural free delivery man the sales of your goods if you adver-tereshows up, waiting eagerly for their tones to which you were once copies of the nearby village papers. so close and to which you loved to Ah those were the happy days! tise in his columns, and the local You, who are now in the big city, dealer will help the publisher to show can never, never experience the you that it pays you to advertise in thrills in reading the city journal the local paper. with its staff of highly paid writers If your advertising manager is a that you got from the little old eight-pag- e born and bred city man perhaps he weekly at home. may not see anything in the little Every thing worth reading was country paper compared with the big there. You knew most everybody the city papers. You can, however, if editor wrote about, and he made it you will just stop and think a minute h's business to get in as many names youll know that your old town as he could. It was a faithful chron- paper carries inuuence and human inicle of everything that goes to make terest qualities in its eight pages, up life its joys and its sorrows that are, by the vety nature of births marriages, deaths, all faithhings, forever beyond the reach of fully recorded and all bearing on the big city publieatoins. existence of everybody you knew and The advertiser who overlooks coun-trloved. papers fails to get properly in You dont get that any more, city foueh with half the purchasing power man youre lost in the mass. Youve of the United States. If you hav forbecome a sort of impersonal thing gotten the home town paper, Mr. City a tooth in a gear, spoke in a wheel. Man who came from the country, Through the whir and noise of the stop and think and you will see to it big business machinery the human in- - that your next advertising campaign Vice-preside- coun-tryd- o st 4 y entertain- ed themselves at a chicken roast Wednesday. Miss Elvada Ivie acted as hostess Mrs. Chester A. Myers entertained a a progressive 500 party Thursday. Mrs. C. E. West was awarded first prize anc Mrs. Jack McMillan the Consolation. Luncheon was served to twenty-on- e Wyomings Mineral Wealth. Among the undeveloped resources of Wyoxning are bituminous shale, volcanic ash, graphite, asphaltum, mat gancse ores, bentonite, tin, salt, bismuth, and, perhaps most Important, phosphate rock, on which the future of American agriculture may largely depend. It is estimated that more than 1, 230,000,000 acres In Wyoming are underlain by workable phosphate depos- its, a phosphate area greater than that of any other state. Fighting the Chestnut Blight. The chestnut blight has already done damage estimated ss close to $30,000,000. The disease attacks both American and European species, but does little damage to those from Japan and China. Plant breeders by cross-- I Ing Japanese chestnut and native chinquapin have produced resistant trees. Some of the Chinese chestnuts are said to grow 100 feet high in their home forests Idle to Borrow Trouble. Sorrow comes soon enough without despondency. It does n ni.m no good to carrv around u llir'iti.ing rod to attract trouble Aughey. Oct. 15th HallrcomBoys comedy Passing the Buck, rt Prices-lO- TUESDAY, Oct. c ?! and 25c 17th Chapter Thirteen of TARZAN Shirley Mason in VERY TRULY YOURS At home at the Kinema, Tuesday, Oct. 17th. Call and see me. I will be there at the Matinee at 4 oclock, and in the evening at 7:15. 1 have arranged with the Kinema management to present my latest photoplay, VERY TRULY YOURS, at reduced prices. Matinee, Children 5c, Adults 10c Evening, Children 10c, Adults 15c CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, Del. 18th and 19th MAN TO MAN NEWS NOTES FROM him because of his family. She loathed him because of his jail record YET SHE LOVED HIM. She hated him because ot his degenerate past YET SHE LOVED HIM and d The strange story of Steve Packaad, South Sea outcast, who won the most wonderful girl in the West in spite of his reputation and his enemies, is portrayed in vivid scenes by She detested redmoNd jail-bir- The home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jensen was the scene of merriment on Monday evening when Mrs. Jensen very leasantly entertained in honor of her brother, Orrin Peterson. The evening was spent in games and music, after which a dainty luncheon was served to about thirty-fou- r Mr. Peterson leaves next guests. week for a mission to the northwestern states. Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Nelson motored to Delta Saturday, returning home on Monday. While away they were guests of Mr. and Mars. L. S. Dorius. Our county commissioner, Jos. F. Peterson and Mr. G. A. Christensen returned home from Salt Lake on Monday. Mrs. J. A. Christensen very pleasantly entertained Tuesday evening in honor of her husbands birthday an- Dinner was served to niversary. nearly a score of invited guests. The evening was spent in social chats and music. On Tuesday evening the officers of the Y. L. M. I. A. gave a shower in honor of Miss Iva Anderson, whose guests. marriage to Mitchell Andreason will take place in the very near future. carries a reasonable appropriation A very pleasant evening was spent in for country newspaper space. music and games, after which reIt will pay you to advertise locally freshments were served. The bride-to-b- e wherever you have dealers and disreceived beautiful tribution. Your city sales may have been pushed to the limit, but you havent scratched the surface of the small town field. The same sort of intensive advertising cultivation of the country field which you have applied to the big cities will open up a btand new market and yield a harvest beyond your expectations. Remember this when you plan your next advertising campaign. Adults 35c sC1 thanks and appreciation' to all those who assisted us at the time of the Miss Merle Curtis and Dell Petersen fires last Friday, in saving our home were married at the County Court House and place of business. Also the sisat Richfield, Tuesday. Their many friends ters of the Relief society for their kind aid. serenaded them the same evening. MR. AND MRS. L.P. Mr. and Mrs. Foster Funk have been Provo visitors this week. Arty Edwarbs, Prop. SALINA, Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Burr Salt Lake last Saturday. SUNDAY, 15c, Elsie Ferguson in SACRED and PROFANE LOVE'' Have you seen the Heatrola at the furMrs. C. Ray Evans spent the first niture store? Its a first class furnace for part of the week in Richfield visiting her the home without a basement. sister, Mrs. C. A. Mattsson. Otitf. THE PEERLESS House Barker Shop Prices, children 10:30. HAL FELT Sep.29tf. Mesdames Hazel Allred and Jarvis Martin spent Saturday and Sunday in New honey for sale. Salt Lake visiting with their mother, Mrs S29tf. LOUIS JACOBS Henry Ivie. OOOOOQl) 6 Vaudeville Acts 6 ator Set. Rare bargain. day. ! A guaranteed big time 30-vo- m October 13th and 14th Famous Players Entertainment Deluxe apples already picked. First class, 50c bu. Mrs. D. G. Burgess accompanied her Second class, 35c a bushel. P. C. Scorup husband on hurried trip to Salina MonShe returned to Logan the same lt Motor GenerFOR SALE day. t&xaJUL Store OQVOVOVOCKVO FRIDAY and SATURDAY, m for aiding digestion, sweetning the breath COQQOO FOR SALE Baby carriage in good condition. $20 if taken at once. MRS. H. B. CRANDALL Inquire 15 tf. Sept. they visited the state fair festivities, mornings. For sale at THE PEERLESS leport a splendid time. The fair was 06tf. good, the races fine and the crowd was the best seen for many years. For Sale 20 acres improved farm land, all under fence with small home, Koosh-ureA1 Mr. and Mrs. Brown of good water right. Price reasonable. were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Apply Thos. Jensen, Redmond. J29tf P. C. Scorup Monday. Mrs. Brown Brown is a sister of Mrs. Scorup. Now is the tune to buy your winter Pefistn Tablets, Charcoal Tablets, Splint Tablets, Chlorate of Potash Tablets, Potash and Amonia TabBronchial lets, Lithia Tablets, Troches. ' The c Local News t ft Harry Carey in MAN TO MAN aaOQOSODSBOBOEIODOBOaOQODODO a Our StocK of o o Ladies Coats, Mens Suits and o g Overcoats, and Shoes o O of all kinds and descriptions is complete now o ao Never before have we had such wonder-tal- l varietes to offer to the public at such surprisingly low prices. Q May it be a suit for a man, a coat for a woman, or a shoe of any kind you will see day as something new nearly every-othe- r this is the way we keep our stock moving n o u ao and many useful presents. Mrs. Sorena Jones of Beaver, formerly of Redmond, visited relatives and friends here the early part of the week. m Mrs. Owen Jensen delightfully entertained Sunday afternoon at dinm ner. Covers were laid for the following: Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Nelson, Mr. and S3 Mrs. Ward Jensen and Mr. and Mrs. O Deloyd Christensen. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Nelson spent the latter part of the week in Salt Lake City. Friday afternoon Mrs. Erastus Christensen very pleasantly entertained a number of her friends. The occasion being in honor of her birthday. A dainty luncheon was served Mrs. Christensen by the hostess,. was assisted by her sister, Miss Iva Anderson. The primary ward conference was held Sunday afternoon in the Ward The children demonstrated chapel. primary work in a very creditable manner. A number of the Stake Primary board were in attendance. Mrs. John Jensen came home from Salt Lake Monday, after spending thrlatter part of the week there. Mr. Delbert Hansen returned home Tuesday. He has spent the past two and a half years laboring in the Central States mission. o Max Cohens House of Quality D O o o o o o o o o o OQOE3QE3GB0SO0ODODQDOQO13OQOD 4 4 vSalina 4 4 4 Deliveries at 10:30 a.m and 4:30 p.m 4 Burns and Scalds. In the treatment of superficial bume or scalds a serviceable remedy for red lieving the pain will be found in bicarbonate of sodium. Mols-eIt slightly with watrr and spread thickly over the fcy7. pow-tiere- n 4 4 4 4 Meat Supply Co. Our Grocery department and Meat department are filled with Choice Goods and our customers are pleased. we please tell others, if not tell us 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 |