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Show SAUNA. UTAH THE SALINA SUN. THE SALINA SUN rr i Issued Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. Subscription Rates ITS HERE!! One Year $2.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months .75 PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. the" new electric Mai ADVERTISING RATES. inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c Per Matter Display Special position 25 per cent additional. Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Legals Readers Ten cents per line each inseition. Count six words to line Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, 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 Eacl Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. CooksI Iotcakes, cake, omelets, coffee, eggs in fact anything you want to cook- -i H. W. Come in and seellt-- CHERRY. Publisher. li IF THEY ONLY KNEW Thousands of tourists from the eastern and northwestern states are flocking to the coast, to Utahs southern scenic gardens and to any place that offers attractions and recreation from the crpwded and hot cities. And it is natural that these very travelers are seeking highways that offer something out of the ordinary when making the y Usually the scenic part of the country, that trips. section which offers the best accommodations, is sought and ordinar ily the "advice givers are supposed to give this information wher routing the travelers from the headquarters in the larger cities. There is an exception, however, and this exception happens tc be at Salt Lake City, Hundreds of travelers coming from eastern states go into Salt Lake City and when ready to continue their west ern journey, naturally ask for the routing. Not invariably, but al. the time, the travelers wanting to see Bryce Canyon, Zion Nations' ParL Cedardireaks and other of the wonders of the southern part of This trail, while a few Utah, are sent over the Arrowhead Trail. miles shorter, carries the. travelers far from the objective points and to visit the scenic gardens it is necessary to do a great deal of "back traveling. Not only this but for miles and miles it is necessary to go ovei s Towns are few and far apart a bleak, barren and hot desert. Accomodations and service are lacking, and when the destination is reached the joy is "kinked." Sanpete, Sevier, Puite and Garfield counties offer much to th From the time the traveler enters Sanpete county on the travelers. north he passes through a well developed section. He finds farmr abundant with crops and dotted with homes. Less than ever) is mile of be in found abundance. Service staa to water quarter tions are to be found in every town, and touring through the broad and fertile valleys is always a pleasure. Not only are all these necessities for pleasure and comfort found by the road through the four counties, but many miles are saved and all the scenery car be seen by routing through Sanpete, Sevier, Piute and Garfield coun- HEAR YO CALLIN ME It Is Estimated that 100,000 Negroes Have Left the Farm Districts of the South for Industrial Plants In the North Journal of the American Bankerl Association. ties. If the "master minds will use some judgment and eliminate the selfish idea of catering to a "few" then, and then only, will they create the impression that is needed to invite a return of the visitors Bury that hammer and send the travelers through a section that will only not make an everlasting impression, but will take the travelers through one of the stable, solid and attractive sections of Utah. FIRE PREVENTION The National Fire Protection Association at its annual convention in Chicago recommends a number of ways to reduce fire losses. Most of those appeal to the common sense of all of us. On questions of damages for loss resulting to innocent persons from preventable fires it endorses a more general legal recognition of the common law principle of personal liability for damage resulting from fires due to carelessness or neglect, and the enactment of laws or ordainances fixing the cost of extinguishing preventable fires upon citizens disregarding fire prevention orders. This is strictly in accord with the law which allows damages to our injured party resulting from anothers carelessness in operating an automobile, elevator, railroad train, street car, amusement park, mechanical equipment, etc. Then why not some redress against the with is fire? careless who person The association also urged municipalities to adopt the standard construction may be enbuilding code in order that couraged. Also that states adopt building and fire protection requirements for public and private hospitals, schools, asylums and the like, and that an official investigation into the causes of all fires be erquired. Perhaps the wisest recommendation of all is that pleading for the education of the children and the public generally in careful habits regarding the use of fire. fire-resisti- ve dry-lan- SEEKERS OF SPACE WORKING OVERTIME HOURS Its a joy to open the mornings mail if for no other reason than to ascertain just what kind of a crop of space grafters the night has There are the fellows who think that a "country brought forth. newspaper man will fall for anything that may be hatched in the No. mind of the press agent. , Whats this? A check? Just one-cewith few find enclosed "Dear the note: a editor, stamps the scourage of ciickets. We were told to be as sparing of our food as possible, as famine was facing the people during the coming winter. Think of the feelings of those poor, Hundred dollars up to a thousand or more, signed by local farmers and their wives. Into one of the biggest New York banks comes in this way from the South each crop season a small note secured by a plough and a harrow and a mule named Molly an incident that has been aptly described as The Minting of Molly. It is one among many securing a large a short article for your next issue. Also find stamps for extra The editor then proceeds to look over the copies of your paper. ihort ? article and finds it will take about two columns and a half limed and hungry immiThen come several letters from the highway and argi to run it. grants, when they discovered they cultral departments, the United States bureau of health, the Metho- were going to a land of famine! And dist temperance board, the war department, the navy, the civil serv- yet we knew, says Mrs. Dilworth, credit. that God would deliver us. ice commissioners, the county agent, the internal revenue departThus is big banking in New York Now comes the of reward faith ment, three different movie outfits, two concerns trying to float radio close to the plain people of and for, while the people stood brought the soil thus does it finance their stock, some clipsheets from a university dispensing a coure in agri- with woik; stricken fighting for humble husbandry and thus has it culture and a request that space be given to an appeal for the down heir crops, out of the Great Salt felt the need of recruiting Its officers trodden people of Poland, not to mention the propaganda from the Lake came the gulls myriads of from among men familiar and sympae birds, with thetic with local conditions able to republican national committee and numerous other political organi- hose strange, wild cries their winging way. A visualize the needs of the people there zations. Each has but one object breathes but one prayer that new fear rose in the souls of the and pass sound judgment on the credit factors involved. may be summed up in these few words. cople as they saw the birds alight-nIt is due to the conditions thus pic"Give Us This Day Our Daily Graft of Free Space. This in the fields a fear that anothtured that among the officers of New The requests were modest as compared er foe had come to complete the de-- Yorks banks will be found mornings mail was light. represennet ion of the growing grain. If the Sun granted all that came with hose coming in at other times. tatives from all parts of the nation. What was their joy can hardly be They are the delegates of the people in yesterday, for instance, it would have cost only $1 12.50 worth of old when they saw the gulls pounce at the business capital. And as we look at the overflowing wastebasket we can ask ipace. upon the black crickets and begin Will there never be any letup to this run on the to Figures from the internal revenue out on question: gorge themselves. department show that in the United market for free publicity? Price Sun. States, every month, more than six billion cigarettes are smoked. Lady NATION REPRESENTED WHY PUBLIC SERVICE IS SLOWER ? Nicotine should be careful, lest some day she find herself paired with John Can any one tell why all government departments in all AT FINANCE CAPITAL Barleycorn. are, slow, wsateful and, incompetent? There must be some basic reason for this, as the individuals in The bootleggers seem to be getting along these departments cannot be all inferior to the individuals in private nicely without the raid of the H. SISSON FRANCIS By prohibition officials. firms. Chairman Public Relations CommisAlmost invariably an able man becomes 50 per cent less active sion, American Bankers Association. A medical convention at Atlantic Financial New in routine government work. York is peculiar- City adopted resolutions calling on In a government job there is little competition, no payment by ly representative doctors to write all prescriptions in of the whole na- English. Writing them in Chinese results, no piecework, no tion. All parts of may cease to be the fashion. A man gets as much for doing badly as he does for doing well, the country, the small towns a3 and there is no fear of discharge. Oculists say that as a rule the eyewell a3 the big If the department doesnt pay very well, the treasury has cities, have sup- sight of a woman is better than that plenty, and there is no danger of losing customers. plied the greater of a man. Many a woman has shown part of the man that she can see right through a A government employee has smiply nothing to do with success. power and brain man. misless The His aim is to avoid mistakes. he does the fewer power enabling it to function as the nations financial takes. idle to Remember Past Lapses. nationalization is not capital. State of federal ownership, or Act up always to your convictions, A recent investigation as to the built across origin of one hundred leading execu- and when you have been unfaithful, only a destroyer of trade and commerce. It is a coral-ree- f tives in the New York financial dis- bear with yourself, and resume althe harbor of prosperity, says 1 lerbert N. Casson. trict, showed that no less than sixty ways with calm simplicity your little per cent were born outside New York task. Madame Guyon. DISTRIBUTION OF FARM LOANS State, that no less than twenty-eigh- t A town knocker, we note, never per cent were horn In towns of 5,000 Acording to the Federal census of 1920, there are 6,448,366 or less, and only twenty per cent were thinks of changing his place of resifarms in the United States, having a total value of land and buidings born in New York City. dence as a cure for the ills of wffiich The birthplaces of these men rep- he of $66,334,309,556. complains. resented Pennsylvania, Ohio, MassaThe Federal census shows 18.6 per cent of farms mortgaged, chusetts, Connecticut, Michigan, Mis... ... ... ... ; .j. souri, Illinois, Maryland, Delaware, .j. .j. ,j. but it is estimated 40 to 50 per cent are mortgaged. TenVermont, Mississippi, Kentucky, Many farms are operated by managers and 2,454,746 by nessee, Minnesota, Iowa, Florida,-RhodANNOUNCEMENT who do not report debt on record against farms. Island, North Carolina, IndiWisconsin, Georgia, California, January 1, 1922, total farm mortgage debt is estimated at ana, Montana, Maine, West Virginia, New Of this debt Jersey and the District of Columbia. ($8,000,000000), eight thousand millions dollars. The same situation is true of the 6 state and federal land banks hold per cent, insurance companies men, particularly in the younger and farm loan companies hold 5 Oper cent, farm mortgage banks banks. This reflects more than mere25 per cent, private loans, 39 per cent. ly the attraction of the big city for The $8,000,000,000 of farm mortgage indebtedness on a farm ambitious young men. It is the result of the definite purpose of New York land valuation of $66,334,309,556 equals about 12 per cent of the banking to equip itself to perform most effectively its work for all the 1920 valuation of all farms and farm buildings. lust-bo- g inter-ban- k , snow-whit- g dr profit-sharin- g. so-call- ed M ten-nan- ts ! I Big Reduction m nation. THE HOM ESUGAR INDUSTRY White House announcement says any statement that may have been made by President Harding that he would not lower duty on sugar has no reference to investigation being conducted by tariff commission as to relative costs of production here and in other counThis has not been completed. tries. As beet sugar saved the American people form war-tim- e prothis d farmin makes that intensive fiteering industry sugar, ing possible will not be slaughtered. Telluride Power Co. I cross-countr- nt waffles, short- WRITER TELLS HOW SEAGULLS peared by the millions, and the fields SAVED CROPS were in some place completely destroyed by th pest. Then came the How the gulls save dthe crops of gulls, thousands of them, from the the pioneers of Utah in 1848 and the islands of the Great Salt Lake, and, n on the fields, began struggles of the people when the sweeping-dowcrickets appeared in the valley of the dcvouiing the crickets, and within a Great Salt Lake and came near de- few days the awful pest was a thing stroying the wheat fields is graphic- of the past, and the crops were saved ally told by Professor Levi Edgar for the people. The gulls came as a Young in an article which appeared result of woik and prayer, Profesin the New York World of June 17. sor Young points out. In quoting Professor Young tells about the Mrs. Dilworth, one of the pioneers of planting o fthe wheat in the spring Utah who suffered and toiled to savy of that year, and how the people Ithe crops, Professor Young writes Elizabeth Dilworth, who was toiled to bring the sagebrush waste into subjection. When the fields were pioneer of that year, says A me. green nad everything looked propi. senger met our company at the moutli tious for good crops, the ciickets ap if Echo canyon and appraised us of ' A brief description of the mechanism of" the nations banking system will make this clear. Many qf the New York banks are bankers banks. They are great reservoirs of credit in which banks throughout the country deposit unemployed fund3 in New York. When crop needs in rural districts or industrial expansion in manufacturing centers increase local requirements for money these local banks call in their funds from New York and in addition may ask the big city banks for loans. Country banks frequently deposit as security the notes of their own customers, often secured, in turn, by farm capital such as ploughs, livestock and The fifty thousand 35 .possessions. dollar note, for instance, of a country ft b)g New York bank may bank have attached, as collateral security, small notes of a fifty, or. a hundr 1L -"S i . Goodyear Casing's and Tubes at The PEERLESS - Come Early |