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Show ' t" YhE SALINA SUM, SAUNA, UTAH - 4. only in the stores of this county, reads the ad, and then it tells how the fake salesmen collect a deposit in advance and never send the stockings. The same thing is also said to be practiced with other THE SALIMA SUM Issuei Every Friday at Salma, Sevier County, Utah. Subscription Rates One Year $2.00 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months IN ADVANCE PAYABLE -- u- -- L'lL Ask those who have our appli- The price is always goods offered for sale from house to house. But somewhere resist. housewife he cant so alluring that good there is a catch to it theres regret behind most every sale of this You can get what you need at your home stores, or your kind. home stores can get it for you. And if it isn t exactly what it should Did you ever try to be you can take it back and get your money. article for back some you bought from a peddler or get your money it agent that wasn't exactly as was originally represented to be? ances what kind of satisfaction they are giving. And perhaps after all no one is more interested in the drop in Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mail the price of gasoline than the undertakers. Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. When it takes a bushel of wheat to pay for a haircut, you cant blame the farmer much for growing less wheat and more hair. ADVERTISING RATES. inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c. Per Matter Display And he should Special position 25 per cent additional. The poet says "Only God can make a tree. line. egab Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to have added that only a fool will needlessly cut one down. ddcrs Ten cents per line each inseition. Count six words to line. Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion. Theyre alIts no wonder our politicians get Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Read- ways in hot water. ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. NowFor Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Each In the old days father wanted son to become president. Insertion. because it pays better. adays he encourages him to learn brick-layinNO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. There are some fellows so stubborn as to argue that it doesn t make any difference how loud they snore in church so long as they H. W. CHERRY, Publisher. dont wake anybody up. 1 ': hard-boile- d. g NEWSPAPER COURAGE In few lines of human endeavor is real courage so necessary that of running a small newspaper. Moral courage is required in deciding what to print, and sometimes it is equally necessary in deciding what not to print. Moral and physical courage, however, are characteristic of many newspaper men in whom the element of business courage appears to be wholly lacking. It is lack of such courage which has doomed many small publishers from time immemorial to a life of unrecompensed toil. We fear to charge a fair price; fear to offend an unreasonable customer, fear to maintain consistent business policies regardless of we sell the BEST electrical appliances Many a man, after he has been married awhile is convinced that they only thing he has been hugging is a delusion. Because as in immediate consequences. While other business men unhesitatingly raise prices whenever costs make such a course necessary, many publishers accept un' profitable rates for fear of losing a little gross business. There are but three reasons, ordinarily, for a newspaper failure incompetency, lack of courage or an impossible field. Marcy B. Darnall, Florence, Ala., Herald. Eddie Buescher, a Cincinnati office boy, saved his dimes and took his first train ride to New York, says Colliers. He looked over the tall buildings and big ships, bought a few sodas on Fifth Avenue, and announced to the world: "Im cornin back here, get me a job, and make this old burg take off its hat to me. Its not so much! We may smile at Eddie, but down" in our hearts we have a hunch hell get along. Perhaps in twenty-fiv- e years hell be smilthe of business at When some notions of and ing today. practices problems get too big we turn them over to the boys and girls, labeled "Opportunity." And so long as the newcomers are not scared safe. is by it, our future They have theirs to make. ANOTHER EXAMPLE There are still a few people who contend that newspaper adSo1 for their benefit we want to call vertsing values are overrated. attention to the fact that while the strike of printing pressmen in New York is about at an end, there was one whole week when the New York papers were cut down to four and eight pages, six and eight daily papers combining to make possible even an eight-page paper. But here is the point. During that week advertising was not And all in the accepted, space papers being devoted to news. if merchants of New York publicly announced that the strike was few for of be would a them weeks prolonged bankrupt. Stores many Clerks by off in saw the number of customers. a falling quickly the thousands were idle behind the counters, with only an occasional sale. The people who read the papers did not find advertising in them so they quit buying eerything except groceries and the Petitions were things they were forced to have from day to day. sent to the papers by the advertisers urging then to hurry and settle the strike, if they possibly could, so advertisingcould again be seM cured in their columns. It is the man who advertises that get the business, theres no sense in questioning that. As he generally doesnt miss the water until the well runs dry, neither does he notice a loss of customers until he ceases to advertise. The New York example was a line one to prove the power of printers ink. And just as advertising has made money for New York merchants in their territory, so it will s'make money for out merchants right here at home. - MAKE, SAVE AND INVEST With lots of money in The present is an age of spending. circulation there is a resultant desire to spend more. High prices faster the jazz. the induce to high jinks. cost The greater the Multitudes are heading for the high spots giving little thought to "'hat the future holds. It is a period when the "slicker works fast and waxes fat. Thoughtless people, those who make, save and invest, fall for the alluring tales of added wealth from some sure shot." Thousands of people, not looking for "sure shots are bound to get them. It is always safer to consult your broker or responsible agent before .leaping into an investment and save yourself grief and money. WATCH OUT FOR TAKES We picked up fa Saturday Evening Post recently and saw a whole page ad anc we understand a single page ad in it costs $8,000 for one time an ad warning the women of this country to be on the lookout f or sharpers who are abroad in the land selling stockings represente d to be of the same make as those turned out "Our stockings are sold by the people who paid for the page ad. 1 we sell nothing but electrical appliances T well-manur- well-manur- LEAVE THE FUTURE TO THE BOYS ' ATTACKS ONLY ordinary way with one pint of crude WEAKER SUGAR BEETS carbolic acid to each gallon of whitewash; then paint the perches once a Once again, though not so bad as week with kerosene after adding in 1921, dry-ro- t (Ihoma Betae) is about 6 ounces of carbolic acid to a attacking a few of the weaker sugar gallon. Keep this mixture in a mabeets. On the Greenville Farm of chine oil can and soak thoroughly all the Utah Agricultural Experiment! cracks or corners that show an inStation there are plats of beets grow- dication of mites as often as they are ing side by side on soil that has been seen, and the building and fowls will maintained in good condition by rota- soon be free from one of the smalltion and manuring and other on soil est but without doubht one of the improverished by continuoous crop- worst of poultry pests. Lice live and breed on the bodies ping without manure. Also side by side are plats of beets that get plen- of the fowls and feed on the surface ty or irrigation water and others that scales around the base of the feathare suffering from lack of water. ers. If the fowls have a dust bath ,3n those plats that are or dust wallow there will be but a and are not suffering for water, few lice on their bodies. A.n occasionit is hard to find the slightest trace al dusting with some good lice powThe only of the dry-ro- t. der during which the fowl is held plats showing the disease ap- by the legs and the powder sifted preciably are those that have receiv- from a perforated can and rubbed ed only two small irrigations this well into the feathers with the hand, year and are notably wilted. On will aid greatly in freeing the bodies those plats that have been seriously of the chickens from this pests. A Arorn out by continuous cropping to good powder may be made by taking mgar beets without manure so that one part cresol to three gasoline. Mix the beets are very small, the leaves this thoroughly, then adding enough unfibered plaster, a little at a time, hardly yet interlacing, the dry-rhas a good hold, from 30 to 00 per stirring continually, to take up all cent being noticeably affected. the liquid. Blue ointment is also an An exhaustive rotation of peas, po- excellent remedy for lice. This is tatoes, wheat and beets, continued a poison and should be handled carefor 12 years, with no matnure and fully. Take a small piece about the no crop has failed to size of a pea and rub it well into the maintain enough strength in the soil base of the feathers on the abdomen to enable the beets to throw off the in the fluff just below the vent. disease, and about 50 per cent are Scaly leg, which is caused by a very affected. tiny insect getting under the scales This bears out the 1921 results in of the legs forcing them out and showing that where the soil is main- causing the legs to appear rough tained in good condition by sufli-e- and knotty, is very common among This manuring and the crop is not the general purpose fowls. allowed to suffer for water, the beets disease is not noticed by many unare able to resist successfully the til the legs are swollen so much that disease to which they would other- the fowls can hardly walk. It is wise succumb. D. W. Pittman. easily controlled by rubbing the legs in the early stages of the disease with lard and kerosene equal parts, KEEP CHICKENS FREE OF MITES AND LICE or by the application of vaseline or other oily mixtures Byron Alder, Chicken mites do not often kill a Poudtryman, Utah Agricultural Exfowl but they sap the vitality of a periment Station. hen and weaken her so that she lays few or no eggs and is readily over- WORLD DEMAND FOR AMERICAN MILK come by minor ailments. It is very chickens be that free kept important of this pest. The American cow retains her The mite has a gray color with popularity in the Orient despite the brown sopts on its back when not neglectful attitude of the Occident. filled with blood. It lives and breeds Exports of milk to the Orient in the in cracks and corners in and around 7 months ending with August show the perches and nests; going on the a marked increase while those Ito fowls usually at night only long other paits of the world show a demeasured enough to suck its body full of blood, cline of nearly one-thirthen crawling off to some secluded in quantities. In the single month place. The accumulation of dropping of July the milk exports to the Oriand filth in a poorly ventilated, damp ent increased GO per cent compared house affords very favorable condi- with July of last year, while those tions for thisyery numerous enemy. to Europe showed a fall off of 35 Keep the building well ventilated and per cent. While it was expected hoped in clean. Spray the entire inside twice a year with whitewash, made in the fact says the Trade Record of The DRY-KO- ot sod-formi- nt d, Telluride Power Co. the 100 National City Bank of New York, were equally eager to relinquish their that Europe would regain her ability place around the egg to some other to supply her own people with this important foodstuff, it is interesting to note that the growth in our exports of milk to the Orient continues, for it is in that part of the world that the demand for condensed and evaporated milk is a permanent one. Density of population and the necessary use of the soil for the production of grain foods leave the Orient except India where the cow is considered a sacred animal, dependent upon the Occident for its milk supply. China with 400,000,000 people has but 22,000,000 cattle of all classes and a very small proportion utilized for dairy purposes; Japan with a population of over 50,000,000 has but 3 Vs million cattle of all classes; a French with 20,000,000 has less than a quarter of population a million cattle. India, where animal life and especially that of the cow is considered sacred by a large element of the population, has more cattle than any other country of the world despite density of population, the number of cattle in India, being, according to latest reports, 130,000,000 or nearly double the number in the United States and five times as many as in Argentina ( yet our exports of condensed and evaporation milk to India alone in the last five years aggregated over 00,000,000 pounds. The wonderful development in recent years in the exportation of milk from the United States, in form vailable for instant and satisfactory use in any part of the world is illustrated by the fact that the total value of exports of milk, condensed or sweetened, evoporated, unsweetened, or reduced to milk powder totaled about $17,000,000 in the decade proceeding the war and has exceeded $100,000,000 in the decade since the beginning of the war. The whole world made the acquaintance of American condensed milk during the war period and liked it, and today our exports in the various forms above noted go to 85 different countries, colonies and islands of the world, and continue especially popular in that section of the world which must always import its milk, the Orient. Indo-Chin- $4 4 4" " 4" 4" 4" "S" 4 4 4 -- 4" 44 4 444"4 4" 4,4" 4" 4 4,4 4 4 4" 4 4" 4" 4" 4 :AT THE:- - 4 4 RIBBONS, FEATHERS, FLOWERS HOODS, CAPS and SWEATERS All Go At 4 Half Price 4 4 4 4 ALL MILLINERY AT 4 4 ONE-THIR- 4 ONE-FOURT- TO H OFF. D i -- r 4 Mrs. H. W. Bench 4 4 4. 4 4 BENCH MILLINERY 4 4 4 4" Close Out Sale 4 4 4 44 4. 4. .j. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. .5. .5. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4 4" 44 4 4" 4 4- - 4 4 4 hen. Evidently the taste lingered, for when these hens were invited the next day to a banquet in exactly the same manner, but with an egg that was still warm from the nest and perfectly good, they one and all disdainfully refused the invitation, and never again have any of them showed signs of wanting to eat another egg. Farm and Ranch Review. IIOW TO NAG YOUR CHILDREN It takes for a mother is tired and overstarined to stop and think how she should address herself to a young miscreant who has just tipped over the catsup on a clean table-clotsays Elizabeth I told you that would hapIrwin. pen, snaps out most justifiably. On self-contr- ol who h, the other hand it doesnt prevent reaching at the next meal nearly so effectively as a little sympathy and kind feeling which any sensitive child knows she does not deserve. It somehow makes her r.ware that its her accident, hov.e or. She cant Im glad I possibly feel inside. h but spoiled you' o! I was clumsy. rather she rei.-cI must tene5 iber not to reach so far. With v.nigsters under six, games and rhymes and little impersonations will go further to make a child accept gaily the irksome routine of washing and buttoning and going and coming than almost anything else. These can be improvised to meet all d mothemergencies by a and the same little oftener the er, stories and rhymes are repeated the more welcome they become. In adolescence almost all youngsters are deeply interested in reforming their characters. They will listen respectfully to long discourses on their faults, bad manners, careless habits, anything you want them to improve if you will only take them seriously. They will turn over a new leaf every morning and forget it again, of course, but that is youth and we are all jealous of it. Its ,' beauty, its rollicking good times are hard to look upon without We are therefore prone to envy. A CURE FOR EGG EATING dwell upon its weakness, its cubbishOne of our neighbors told us that ness, its thoughlessness, and its habit had developed sloppiness. From The Designed. the to such an extent among his hens RADIO HELPS HIGHWAYS that he had almost despaired of bea last to able cure them. As ing A story is told of a farmer in resort he tried a method that gave northern results. Illinois, whose farm is lowonderfully satisfactory He took an egg and party remov- cated on a dirt road, which is imed the contents by making a small passable during the winter if a frost hole in both ends of the shell and comes when the road is in a rough Last fall, when the road blowing out the white, sealed one condition. hole with a little paste, and broke was at its worst, he got a radio warnthe yolk still remaining in the shell. ing of an immediate heavy frost. He then filled this with ammonia, Calling his neighbors by telephone, shaking the egg thoroughly to get they turned out and rolled the road. the two well mixed. After sealing When the freeze came, it proved to the remaining hole he took the egg be permanent, and the radio owner to the hen house, and laying it down and neighbors had a boulevard to on the littel, cracked the shell in town all winter. sight of the hens and openly invited Now that long skirts have come them to share in the feast. invitain style again, a girl once more will They eagerly accepted this to be taken at her face value. one have mouthful and after tion, they egg-eatin- 4 Electrical Store g table-clot- , quick-witte- care-free- |