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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH There was no more excuse for that is there than the for price present price. In Canada, which has no Fordney-McCumbtariff, sugar is I In the Liverpool market cents a pound. wholesaling at 0 and cane sugar is quoted at 12 cents a pound, and in London, 12.59 cents. It is the sugar gamblers that are doing the dirty work, not the tariff, whiich is merely high enough to save our domestic beet sugar industry from destruction by foreign competition which prices go below cost of production in this nation. as high as 35 cents a pound. THE SALMA SUM er I Isstiei Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. Subscription Rates One Year $2.00 Six Months 1.00 75 Three Months PAYABLE IN ADVANCE LEFT-HANDIN- Entered at the Postoffire at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Mail ADVERTISING RATES. inch per month, $1.00; single issue. 25c Per Display Special position 25 per cent additional. Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Ten cents per lire each inseition. Count six words to line Blackface type I ifteen Cents per hue for each insertion Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Lrrcal Read ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Each Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. M alter- - -- 1 THE FARMER G 1. W. Cl IERRY, Publisher. Iron Press reports indicate that the League idea of d banks, grain elevators, cold storage plants and other utilities, has been adopted by the strange of some states. If a state ownership program could be tacked onto the Oregon state income tax and loaded onto the people, any program for strengthening the state industrially would be successfully blocked. An overdone of socialism and an overdose of taxation is the surest method known for driving capital into hiding and discouraging the man who would otherwise make investments which would result in payrolls, employment, and production. In the long run the farmer suffers most by any agitation which reduces the home market for his products, and stops investment in industries. Exempting public utilities from taxation by public ownership, md Urge issues of securities, heap up burdens on inSocialistic The theories finally all come dustries and producers. blow to the tiller of the soil. home with a Non-Partisa- n state-owne- rion-tarnh- 1 the new electric left-hande- There is the national flag. He must be cold indeed who can look upon its folds, rippling in the breeze, without pride of country. If he be in a foreign land, the flag is companionship and country itself, with all its endearments. Whose eyes, Who, as he sees it, can think of a state merely? once fastened upon its radiant trophies, can fail to recognize the It has been called a floating piece of image of the whole nation? I know not if it has an intrinsic and beauty beyond other poetry, yet Its It is because ensigns. highest beauty is in what it symbolizes. it represents all, that all gaze at it with delight and reverence. It is a piece of bunting lifted in the air; but it speaks sublimely, and every part has a voice. Its stripes of alternate red and white of the thirteen states to maintain the Deunion proclaim original Its stars of white on a field of blue, claration of Independence. proclaim that union of states constituting our national constellation, which receives a new star with every new state. The two together signify union past and present. The very colors have a language which was officially recognized fathers. White is for purity, red for valor, blue for justice; our by and all together bunting, stripes, stars and colors, blazing in the sky make the flag of our country to be cherished by all our hearts, to be upheld by all our hands. I have said enough, and more than enough, to manifest the spirit in which this flag is now committed to your charge. It is the national ensign, pure and simple, dearer to all hearts at this moment, as we lift it to the gale and see no other sign of hope upon the storm cloud which rolls and rattles above it, save that which is its own radiant hues dearer, a thousandfold dearer to us all than ever it was before, while gilded by the sunshine of prosperity and playing with the zephyrs of peace. It will speak for itself far more eloI than for it. can quently speak Behold itl Listen to it Every star has a tongue; every stripe is articulate. There is no speech nor language where their voices There is magic in the web of it. It has an answer are not heard. for every question of duty. It has a word of good cheer for every hour of gloom or of despondency. It speaks of earlier and of later Behold it! Listen to it! struggles . It speaks of victories and sometimes of reverses, on the It speaks of patriots and heroes among the sea and on the land. the living and, among dead; and of him, the first and greatest of them all, around whose consecrated ashes this unnatural and abhorrent strife has been so long raging. But, before all pther associations and memories whether of glorious men, or glorious deeds, or glorious places its voice is ever of Union and Liberty, of the Constitution and of the Laws. Robert C. Winthrop. Fifteen hundred bricklayers in New York struck and tied up $125,000,000 of construction work. They rejected a wage offer of $1.25 and hour up to January, 1927, and payment of a bonus to the end of this year, or arbitration proposals. A successful strike of bricklayers immediately throws out of workers, employment plumbers, painters, plasterers, sheet-metfall off and the Then orders for materials carpenters and lathers. ;teel mills, saw mills, manufacturing and transportation companies begin to slack up. With prosperity staring us in the face, it is a crime against the nation for either labor unions of manufacturers so to inflate their prices that further building and development are prohibited throng!! excessive costs. al 4. Come in and see 4 4. .5. 4. 4. 4. 4. .5. 4. .5. 4. 4. 4. . IRRIGATION DO NOT wait until the young beets begin to fer before giving them a DRINK. suf- Plant food i3 only used by the beet when it is disolved in water, so dont let the ground get dry. Water often and light. FIVE light irrigations are better than TWO or THREE heavy one9. Too much water will stop the growth of a beet. Dont flood them. A dry beet turns dark green; a healthy, growing condition is indicated by a iigF.ter green. Watch the beets closely during the hot dry weather. One big soaking is not They will need water often. so good as two or three light ones. Even if The beet feeds through the fibre-rootis in moist ground, that is not enough. the long tap-roIt is the fibre-root- s around the main part of the beet that need the moisture. Telluride Power Co. ; un-.o- Watering the road doesnt increase beet yields. Why waste valuable water? 1 GETTING TOGETHER The earth and the fullness thereis the primary source of capital. The farmer, therefore, is the nation's greatest producer of wealth. Farmof ing and banking tribution should The problems of "roblpms of the vitally concerned t Do not have the "runs" too long. Wasted and uneven watering will result. Shorter runs more "sets" will give better results. 'on to these problems is one of the ry encouraging signs of the times, d win resot in further advance at of t.c r mutual interests. Wal- By Maxwell Mattoon, Fieldman, Loveland in Through 4 : 4 : e. perience and who filed suit for di- The important thing for the saver to remember is to invest his vorce, has prepared the following Investment is defined as placing commandments for married men and money, not to speculate with. women. If lived up to, she declares ones money in productive channels. no divorce suits will be filed. The the pursurers ofthe sugar bandits stop to argue about the the thieves will get away. The present tariff on sugar, which tariff, is from?4 cent to Ya cents greater than the Underwood tariff, has no more to do with the sugar raid than it has to do with the price of bananas. Under the former tariff this country saw the greatest profiteerin ing sugar the world has ever known; sugar sold in some localities If 1 ly Factory, The Leaves. A problem that comes home to practically every individual is the problem of saving. How much to save? What proportion Ciiiiiiuamliiieiiis To of ones income to put by? A financial writer recently gave some startling facts about saving. Only ten persons out of every hundred in the United States 8 after reaching the age of sixty-fivare The total absence of any systematic saving is the reason. He cited the fact that an investment of $250 every half year, Mrs. Irene Sheffield, an authoress 6 at per cent interest, reaches a total of $18,500 a tthe end of 20 of New York, and a woman of ex- POOR TIME TO ARGUE water and ing. 4- - proper adjustment of transportation marketing costs. The increasing ndency toward a more sympathetic nderstanding 0? each others rela ind Watch the ditches at the lower end of the runs to see that they do not fill with loose dirt and cause flood- able-bodie- production and disgo hand in hand. the farmer are the Both are banker. in bringing about the irigation water covers the crown of the beets Keep the waste ditch open. they are very apt to scald. If Women are being employed extensively in some of the steel mills of Pennsylvania and the eastern states. ToLess than two years ago labor was a drug on the market. is it in unobtainable day many sections at any price. Employers are asking what has become of unskilled labor? In five years a constant stream has been returning to Europe. It is easy to find fault with immigration, but it is hard to see where the manpower to do the nations work is to come from. This country needs hundreds of thousands of d men to handle our lumber industry, mines, build highways, railroads, clear farms and erect millions of buildings. years. iy s. If they stand Keep the beets growing steadily. still for a week waiting for a drink, you lose tonnage. SAVINGS dfi i La 2. Thou shalt keep thy temper to by self. . Tliou shalt r.ot bore thyr husband. 4. Remember that thou keep Ins many sock;,. Six clays shalt 'hou iii' ol and do all the things that ;hou lovcst to do, but on the seventh, hir.k.. Renumlvr his linen to see hat it is spotless. 1iovide thou the xtra stud for the emcigeney that 'ill come, and watch lest the suit hat hath been pi esse d is not return-- d to its accustomed nail, as it will 0 the one lu askith for. 5. Honor thy husband and let him o c xne'Jv as h- - please, that thy ai.se may be in the land which the herd thy God g'voih thee. G. Thou shalt not ask him any ue.- - ions, im'i'hor in the morning nor it the noim-dahour, nor at night; 'or what s cver a man wanteth thee .0 know, that will he tell hoe and a question is a hook hat cau hot h who knows what? 7. Thou shalt not complain; verily, complaining woman is worse than i shoo that pine both. 8. Thou shalt not steel thy heart ".gainst Ids hobbies. 9. Thou .shalt obey him sometimes uncertainty hath its charms when nind.s 10. Thou shalt be fresh and sweet, and dainty as a shower bouquet. For ngeiie is more to be desired than ubies .and a good cook above gov- rnment bonds. ot THE PROBLEM OF COMMON LABOR It-- - d EXORBITANT DEMANDS 4. to cook- - le THE FLAG OF OUR COUNTRY a 4. 4. 4. Cooks Hotcakes, waffles, shortcake, omelets, coffee, eggs in fact anything ygu want commandments read as follows: For Men 1. Thou shalt keep thy past life into thyself. 2. Thou salt not scoff. 3. Thou salt be a careful kisser. 4. Remember that thou keep thy marriage vows. Six days shalt thou vaguely dream of but on the seventh wake. Remember thy wife to sing her praises." Give might-have-been- s, - 4- : her freely of thy time and wit, for a dull husband is a discouragement to the Gods, and a clever one almost human. 5. Honor thy wife and all her bills. G. Remember thy' mother-in-lato keep her guessing, for a wise mother-in-law loveth a cheerful liar and a good excuse is better than none. 7. Thou shalt not steal a march into thy club. 8. Thou shalt not toy with danger, though, verily, a live impulse has low domestic voltage boredom beaten to a fiazzle. 9. Thou shalt choose thy brand of tobacco, likewise thy experience, according to thine income. 10. Thou shalt he a man, dependable as thy best investment, thorough-bred as a racer, mellow as old wine, constant as thy cub due; thin, ef a surety, will favor cling to thee as lichen to an old oak. For Women 1. Thou shalt not nag. w ''t Why Group Fights Group America is suffering from a lack of economic understanding. It is, therefore, that we find group arrayed against group that we find the grower at variance with the producer, the producer with the consumer and both, with the carrier. It is because of a lack of economic understanding that w7e find capital and labor frequently striving against eaeh other. Yet each element is vitally interested in each other for the final succses of the entire endeavor in the farmer growing a prime crop and getting a fair return; in the canner packing a palatable crop and getting a fair return; in the carrier transporting without damage or deterioration and getting a fair return; in the wholesaler making a wide d'strihution and getting a fair return; in the retailer satisfying his customer and getting a fair return; in labor aiding each of the processes and getting a fair return; In capital supplying the money and credit to make each process possible and getting a fair return, and in the consumer receiving a pure, nourishing, dependable, wholesome health giving article at a fair price. There is this community of interest In the production and consumption of human requirements that should prohibit strife among the producing and consuming elements. J. H. Puelicher, President American Bankers Associ ation. Gorrpers on Socialism State socialism is repugnant to the American mind for a great many reasons. Americans generally prefer to carve out the future in freedom. They are unwdlling to accept the idea of an state. It is tho American idea that the people shall order the state and shape its course; not that the state shall order the lives of the people, fitting them into niches to suit a bureaucratic card index. Samuel Gompers. We read in an exchange that an explorer claims to have found where Noah's ark landed. A more timely job would be to find where the dove of peace went. The fashions have become so freakish and contrary it wouldnt surprise us much to see the dear (Pad. First Vice President girls wearing cowhide boots next It inkers Association. summer. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4.4, . - 4. 4- rr'w -- 4- - 4-- 4-- VV v 4- - 4-- V 4 v 4- - 4-- v -- 4- 4- - 4 03? 0Q1 HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE DiningR.oom Furniture Brass Bed and Springs Spring Cot Dishes and Cooking Utensils Small Heater Grafonola and Records Everything Sold at a very Low Price Must Sell as Soon as Possible 4 4 4 4. A 4 4 4 4 4. 4 4 - 4 Glenn L. lianson At His Residence 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4--4 - 4- 4- Sec 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 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. .;. 4. 4. 4 |