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Show THE SAUNA 5UN,SALXnA, UTAli THE SALIMA SUM Issu2i Every Friday at Salina, Sevier Coonty, Utah. Subscription Rates One Year $2.00 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months IN ADVANCE PAYABLE Entered at the Postoffice at Solina, Utah, as Second Class Mai Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Til The argusought to prohibit Sunday movies instead of baseball. ment was made, in favor of the bill, that running motion pictures on Sunday was a desecration of the Christian Sabbath, and out of Opposing thi3 measure, harmony with the teaching of the Bible. one or two senators raised the point that religion and morals were matters about which lawmakers could not legislate, and that to pass such a bill would be an invasion of the rights and liberties of the The bill was passed. people. In the minds of the thinking people of the State, the senate has stulified itsself completely, and the confidence of its constituents is gone. A lawmaking body which has no more conscience or than that, cannot continue to command the respect of a stability liberty-lovin- Ask those who have our appliances what kind of satis faction they are giving. people. g The next thought is: Where is this reform business going to blue law advocates to keep on till they end? Are the so-call- ADVERTISING RATES. Display Matter Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c Special position 25 per cent additional. Legals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line. Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line B1 ackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Read ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lo?t, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Each Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. H. W. CHERRY, Publisher. DEMANDS OF THE FARMERS DOUBLE we sell the BEST electrical appliances Because HARDING STAMP ORDER Postmaster General New las ordered the printing of an additional 300,000,000 Harding memorial postage stamps to supplement the original order of 300,000,00, making a total of 600,000,000 stamps of this design to be ordered during the last month. g Apportionment of $699,600 appropriated by Congress for the survey and resurvey of the public domain of the United States during the present fiscal year is announced by the General Land office of the. Department of the Interior. Deducting $169,600 necessary for supervisors office, purchasing equipment and other expenses, the remaining $530,000 is divided among the thirteen land districts as follows: Alaska, $48,00Q; Arizqija,-- $4 ,Q00; California, $4i,000; Colorado, $48,000; Idaho,' 37,000 ; Montana, $48,000; Nebraska and South Dakota, $37,OQO Nevada, $30,000; New Mexico, $43,-00Oregon, $48,000; lULifi?- $48,000; Washington, $20,000; Wyoming, $36,000. I . 0; - MANY FARMS HAVE RADIO' hicjf.ifayners have taken up radio for practical and social purposes is shown in a recent survey made by the United States Department of Agriculture. County agricultural there are approximately 40,000 radio sets on agents estimate that This is an average of 51 sets per county. farms in 780 counties. the to 2,850 agricultural counties a total of more average Applying han 145,000 sets on farms throughout the country is estimated. ' The speed with T7 - A The National Education Association, made up of school teach ers from all sections of the country, is calling upon the people tc join in observing the week of Nov. 18 to 24 as Education Week. Every community is requested to carry out a program during the entire week, beginning with Sunday, when ministers are called on tc For God and Country." preach on the subject: Monday would be Constitution Day, when the pupils would devote some time tc studying the constitution of the country. Tuesday would be Pan triotism Day, with a patriotic speech by a and fellow-townsma- Telluride Power Co. BIG SUM UTAH APPORTIONED THE SMALL SPACE EDUCATION WEEK we sell nothing but electrical appliances T cs price-fixin- q skin. A few weeks since the radicals rushed down to Washington and demanded that the President call an extra session to help the farm ers and among other things to fix the price of wheat. President Coolidge asked the Farm Bloc to submit a progran of relief for the American farmer before he issued a call for a speci session of Congress. The President has just had a conference with the legislative committee of the American Farm Bureau and following were principal demands made for farmers: Excess profits tax favored if the government must raise additional money and irrevocably opposed to general sales tax, consumption tax or expenditure tax. For wage increases for farm labor provided it can be shown labor efficiency has been increased by mechanical devices, but opposed to any wage advances unless cost of production can be decreased at same time. As the merchant marine indorsed between government and private shipping interests though criticising some rulings of the shipping board. For crop insurance but opposed to government entering the insurance business. For enactment for laws. on any agricultural comOpposed to government modities. Indorsed present federal program of highway construction. As to railroad wage increases the president was told it was time to call a halt on any further advances except on the condition of increased efficiency and decreased production costs. The committee included besides President O. E. Bradfute ol Xemia, Ohio, Gen. E. H. Wood, Bowling Green, Ky. ; Frank App, Trenton, N. J.; W. G. J amison, Laveta, Colo.; and E. B. Reid, assistant Washington representative. truth-infabri- Do they hope to make people have taken all the joy out of life? better by legislating morals down their throats, like giving a child If so, there is every reason to believe that the reaction castor oil? against this sort of thing is going to be quite different from what the reformers anticipate. "The fact that the church is not able to combat the Sunday It is the Amusements is not the fault cf the Sunday amusements. ' the The of churches. fault those who are running reason people go to baseball and movies on Sunday is because they enjoy those things; and the reason they do not go to church is because they dont feel the same urge. When the ministers and others who conduct the churches make the church as attractive to people as it should be, laws designed to make rnen and women and children go to Let the ministers and others who church will not be necessary. are now wasting their time on blue laws, work from within the hearts of their people, and quit working from the outside through the Yesterday we met a Merchant who declared his belief in advertising and who said he knows it pays, but that a fellow ought to s if he wants to get the best out use whole pages, or at least of printers ink. Of course the more space he uses the bigger the return he will get, but we explained to him that the smaller space often proves equally as rich in results. The advantage of the small space is that it enables the advertiser to hammer and hammer until he gets results and it doesnt cost so much a lick. Pick up small and ads bow see any magazine or paper you will many more Of course, eventually, the little advertisers see than full pages. will be using full pages, but right now they are content to get their And, message across by using small space but using it regularly. after all, that is the secret of good advertising. Regardless of whether you use a page or a few inches USE IT REGULARLY. Then if you fail of results you can be assured of one thing, either your prices or your goods are wrong. half-page- patriotic recitations by the pupils. Wednesday would be Teach er s Day," when the teacher could give some helpful talks abou. school work. Thursday would be Community Day," when everyone in th neighborhood gathered at the school house nearest them, and held a sort oL neighborhood rally. Friday would be Physical Education Day," with a program of sports, athletic games, etc. There is no reason why the schools here cannot join in observIt would be a fine chance for our citizen: ing Education Week. We dont want to step on anybodys toes, but we ll bet there to take a few hours off and visit the schools and show their interest are more trifling around than there are ttrifling mother-iin the educational system they are making possible by their tax laws. It would be a good way to encourage the pupils, too. money. All that is needed is to show the teachers and pupils of this comMost of the divorce courts could be turned into garages or fill. that in such a program, and it ing stations if husbands kept all the promises they made before munity you are willing to will go over big here, just as it promises to be a big thing in thousands marriage. of oter school districts throughout the land. Our idea of a waste of breath is to tell the average man not to TAKING THE SUN OUT OF SUNDAY let his religion interfere with his business. n son-in-la- te 0 Under the above caption the editor of the Hamilton County from than hate visit more The only thing some married Couples a Herald, of Chattanooga, Tenn., wrote the following interesting and is from the stork. visit relatives a instructive article, showing up the inconsistency of Sunday law ad- poor vocates: "After the legislature has passed the bill prohibiting Sunday ; t ; ; ;v ; ; ; j; ; ; ; . ...o ics, it seems usseless the argue the matter further, but there are thoughts in the minds of the people relative to the action of oui lawmakers which ought to be expressed by someboby. . : AT THE "A couple of weeks ago a bill was presented to the legislature, Baseball is a game played ir. seeking to prohibit Sunday baseball. and Nashville, Memphis, Chattanooga by Southern League teams, RIBBONS, FEATHERS, FLOWERS to which admission is charged. The argument was made when the bill came up for consideration in the state senate, that playing baseHOODS, CAPS and SWEATERS ball on Sunday was a desecration of the Christian Sabbath, and out All Go At of harmony with the teaching of the Bible. this a view, Opposing majority of the senators contended that religion and morals were I matters about which lawmakers could not legislate, and that to 4 ALL MILLINERY AT a bill as that proposed, would be an invasion of the rights and TO of bill the The liberties OFF. was defeated. people. A little later, another bill came before the legislature, passed the house, and reached the senate. This bill was exactly like the The only difference was that this one other bill in principle. 44 4 44 4444 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 4444 44 I- t- t- t- t- Close Out Sale -- BENCH MILLINERY Holf Price pas-suc- ONE-FOURT- ONE-THIR- H D Mrs. II. W. Bench 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 .4 4 4 4 44 the 100 Electrical Store . This same grower had thjree car-- i loads condemned because of transit or shipping rot, usualy called leak, which is as a rule caused by (Pythi-um- ), The first known concrete highway a fungus. This fungus is very was laid down by the Romans in abundant in almost all solids, and England, between Westchester and when the is injured the fungLondon. Excavations uncovered us enters potato and causes the very wet, several sections, in excelent condi- CONCRETE IS ANCIENT HIGHWAY MATERIAL rot. In its normal condition the potato tuber is well protected, from most decay organisms by its skin, but just as soon as the tuber is bruised or injured it is left to the mercies of s the numerous rots. brought in from the field on cut or bruised tubers often are the source of infection which decays a large part of the tubers stored in the bin. In grading potatoes all cut, bruised, and small tubers should be culled. They lower the selling price of Avoid all careless the remainder. handling of potatoes by those who dig and haul them. A bruised or decayed tuber infects others. Quarantine such potatoes by culling them. L. F. Nuffer, Botany Department, Utah Agricultural Experiment bad-smelli- tion. Apparently the material was a natural cement mixed with pebbles and worked into a roadbed, about twelve inches thick. The art seems to have been lost for nearly two thousand years, the next example being in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1872, when some concrete pavements, still in use and good condition, were made. In our own country, Bellefontaine, Ohio, gets credit for being the first municipality to experiment with cement streets, in 1893. But it is 'really Wayne County, Michigan, the Detroit automobile factory region, which made the concrete highway known to the nation. This early experiment was in 1907. In 1909 less than half a million square yards of concrete were laid (perhaps fifty miles), while in 1921 more than sixty million square yards were laid (more than 7,000 miles). One of the advantages of concrete is the low cost of hauling, its surface being less resistant to tractive effort than any we know. Dynamometer measurements show that tractive force required to move a wheeled ton of weight on a level road are, for concrete, 32.5 pounds; for asphalt, 77.7 pounds; for brick, 51.8 pounds, and for earth, 134.7 pounds. A taxi company so situated that it drove one set of cars almost entirely on dirt roads and another set almost entirely on concrete roads, reports that it costs 2.4 cents less per mile to operate the taxis on the cement road than on the dirt roads. There are 12,000,000 automobiles in the country. If they average the low amount of 3,000 miles each per year, the total miles driven is At two cents a mile of $720,000, 01)0 a year sum the sving, could go towards building hard surface roads, which income would build 24,000 miles of permanent highways every year! , PROTECT PROFITS Are you going to lose the profits and pay the freight on your potatoes this year? Farmers are informed yearly that their potatoes have rotted while in transit and that the freight is charged to them. If a shipper receives a carload of decaying tubers, the upxt year he is likely to avoid the district wheTe they were grown. Does it pay the farmer, shipper or buyer of potatoes to have these losses occur? Surely not! A large part of this trouble comes from improper handling of the potatoes before they are placed on the car. In one case known the grading machine had three nails protruding up just high enough to give many of the tuheis a gouge as they passed through the grader, inoculating the potatoes with decay germs which are always prevalent in the soil. Dry-rot- IVl'CKic GAYS W IS Ml . 'I BROADCASTING ALL VC7 A Of OUR. HAfT'd r VAILV WHOSE ? T-- SCRAPriCV f .7ETT4 EXPiAl , ; ARE COMMA RUM COOM OUT, MEAM1M7 WILL PLEASE COME VIM AM' REMEW 'EVA WITHOUT PER. A VJRVTYEM J f The Right of Way Printing Is the Salesman Who Has the Right of Way Your sales letter in the United States the right ot way straight toyoui customer's desk. Strengthen your appeal by using a Hammermill paper of known quantity Bond and good printing which wiP. attract your customer's attention, an sell your gooas. Thats the kind of printing we do an I the paper we use. Vee More Printed SaUtmanthip. Atk at. mml has |