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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTa9. THE SALINA SUN AT LAST MfCKIE SAY- SWHUPt EXCUSE ME FEZ u Issued Every Friday at Salina, Sevier County, Utah. -- ruts .Fates, FWWTIU but a feller. jest SAlO he thought' WOX DOlU' we BETTER: with PAPER. THAW Vg GOULD HtKASELP! Subscription Rates th' A WASHER FOR A DOLLOR EITHER WOOD or COPPER 00 . One Year $2.00 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months IN ADVANCE PAYABLE Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Worlds best washing machine in easy reach of all Mail ADVERTISING RATES. Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c Display Matter Special position 25 per cent additional. Legals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line 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 Eact Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. H. W. CHERRY, Editor and Publisher. ' HUMAN LIVES CHEAP The finding of the tody of a woman in a trunk at Ogden last week, and the developments since, has revealed more blood thirsty wretches abroad in the land. The innocent woman, while at prayer, was brutally murdered at her home in Colorado and for the sum of $150. Later her body was stuffed in to trunk and was being shipped to California. When will law and society raise their hands and put a check to such dastardly crimes. Murder, which a few years ago, particularly in the west, was a rare occurance is fast becoming a daily program and the high crime committed and for a price or for any cause should be stopped. The perpetrators of such dastardly murders that last revaled as week should pay the penalty and the government or state should not be involved in any expense whatever in carrying out the executions. A PROFITABLE FARM CROP The story of sugar beets and their advantages to a farming community has been told so often that it seems like repetition to farm problems it is repeat the facts but in these days of well to bring to public attention an industry such as sugar beet growing which assures the farmer a guranteed return on his crop plus a chance for increased profit with a rise in the price of sugar. The production of sugar not only brings a good money return but so enriches the soil where they are grown that other crop yields are practically doubled if grown in rotation with beets. It is generally admitted that diversified farming is the remedy for many of the price troubles of the farmer today. Growing beets primarily furnishes the farmer a cash crop, prevents sending hundreds of millions of dollars abroad for foreign grown sugar, increases expansion of beet sugar factories with increasIt furnishes food ing supplies of domestic sugar and lower prices. for the cattle industry which in turn builds up dairying and returns fertilizer to the soil. No farm crop in the West can be grown to greater advantage than sugar beets on lands suitable for their production. so-call- OUR PUBLIC LANDS POLICY Recent disclosures of improper handling of public affairs have been a shock to the nation. How much of the procedure is purely for political effect and how much of it is hard cold facts, the public has as yet been unable to ascertain. For many years the West was hampered by a conservation polwhich icy prevented development or' utilization of oil lands, wasting water powers and other public resources. A fight was waged in Congress for legislation which would permit the leasing of properties and their operation for the benefit of the people, title to remain with the government and proper return Public officials and or compensation to be made for the lease. business men in the West fought hard for this measure in order that stagantion policies carried on in the name of conservation,, might be removed from a dozen states and natural resources be utilized Great for the benefit of the present, as well as future generations. which of bill the leasing development has taken place as the result was eventually passed. So far as the public has been advised, np one yet knows whether the leases made by Secretary Fall were not in the best interest of the government or whether the present scandal regarding oil is due solely to the fact that money was paid a public servant of the government by private interests to secure leases. Dishonest or incompetent administration does not change the It simply proves principle involved in the leasing of public lands. the apparent farilty of human nature in some instances when a money consideration can cause one to forget his duty in administering a public trust. It is to be hoped that years of hard worjc in evolving and adopta ing leasing policy of public lands and resources in this nation will Let this national policy be not, for politcal effect, be nullified. continued under honest and efficient administration which will protect the government interest and at the same time permit much needed development. SCURRILOUS ORATORY VS. PUBLIC BUSINESS Congress has wasted three months and has not yet given the people what they demand, namely, a tax reduction measure. Congress seems to figure not only that some of the people can be fooled all the time and all the people some o fine time', but that all the people can be fooled all the time. This Congress may be condemned as it should be for its own reckless condemnation of many when a few are guilty, and for its waste of time on scrrilous oratory while the public business waits, says the Portland, Oregonian. i sTuCrHFee KEEPLV AT IT constant drop of water. Wears away the toughest stone The constant gnawing Towser Masticates the toughest bone. The constant wooing lover Carries off the blushing maid And the constant advertiser Is the man who gets the trade. The above lines were read by a most successful business man ovei thirty ydirs ago in a street car advertisement some where in the east This man attributes his business success to the,applieation of constant advertising. Advertising is no new idea. Indeed, it has been proven that even before Tie days of the again famous King Tut, an advertisment written on sheets of papyrus, offering a reward for the return of a runaway slave has been found. Being human, we like to believe with Ida Clyde Clark, associate editor of the Pictorial Review, that advertising originated' with woman and goes back to the beginning of man. For Mrs. Clark maintains that Eve was the first advertiser. She oversold Adam on an article which be did not want. And in this day most advertisements are written with the thought in mind that they arc to be read by the women, it is to Benjamin Franklin that credit of the fiist effective advertising in this country is due. The results of advertising have Seen proven to such an extent that it 's rarely, nowadays, that one has to ise argumentative points to convince he wideawake business man that advertising is as necessary as the of his goods or the paying of his rent, or that the local newspaper ;s the straight-lin- e medium. Adveis a great selling machine but rting ts economy is in direct proportion to the merit behind the ad and the veracity in it. An advertisement is a message about what the merchant has o sell and the reader is interested in hree things a few leading facts ibout the goods, the price, and the dace. All advertisements are built iround these points. If the merchant will put the same careful thought his advertising that he puts into lis personal salesmanship effort behind the counter, then his ad will .will bring the desired results. White space is the newspapers commodity And when the merchant buys this pace the News likes to feel that the nerehant is getting not only the vorth of the money expended hut an ndiiect good to his business for many lays to come. But it is the constant advertiser that gets and keeps the Campaign Now On Ends April 15th A pur-hasin- in-"- g We need not talk about these wonderful washers because they speak for themselves. Telephone our office for particulars or have our salesman call on you T elluride Power Company f Try a Want Ad M1CKIE SAYS 10,000 NEWSPAPER LET NO NEWS-ESCAPE- 53 ! "EV'KT READER A REPORTERl" TUEVA'S OUR VAOTTER J 53 53 33 o 33 33 33 33 53 33 WHICH CROP TO MANURE? 39 SOME EPITAPHS Jones has gone to heavenly heights. He tried to drive without his lights. Jack Hayes this busy life forsakes; He never would reline his brakes. Heres all thats left of Amos Bossing; He tried to heat it to the crossing. No more for Brown are earthly smiles; He took the curve at forty miles. Ted Small has gone to his abode; He kept the middle of the road. Here lies our friend, poor Tony Dix; For booze and gasoline wont mix. Jim Henrys friends are all bereft; He made a short turn to the left. Ben Gray is free from earthly pains; A rainy day he had no chains. Poor Bills beneath the sod alas; He speeded up and tried to pass. Now Tom has joined the heavenly band; He tried to drive it with one hand. Tom And Get Results REPORTERS WANTED 1 TO SEND tkl KEVAG tO 'TUtS GREAT EAMlOf Hade. . - coating of manure will increase the yield of nearly all of our crops but there is considerable difference in its value to the different crops, according to Professor D. W. Pittman of the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station. Experiments at the station farm located north of Logan on what is generally considered good land, except that it will not produce good yields of sugar beets without manure, show that a good coating of manure (about 10 tons per acre) on previously unmanured land, will produce an increased yield of 10 tons of sugar beets, 100 bushels of potatoes, 1 bushel of wheat or l1 bushels of oats. The residual effect of previous manuring increased the yield of alfalfa half a ton and nearly doubled the yield of Early Alaska peas. A good 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4-- 4 44 ; 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4-- 4 444 44444444 444 44 41 1 4 . X 4 4 4 I Business men would like to have a campaign year without any campaign Fame fades and money vanishes, in it. x hut reputation remains until it is 4 A man may not know when hes investigated by a Senate committee. v well off, but the revenue collector 4 4 In all life there is only one great does. 4 success. Its name is Youth. 4 The reason physical exercise is not X A good many of those who marry more popular is because it doesnt 4 4 in haste repent with even more haste. cost anything. f 4444 4 4 4 4 The Sevier Valley Mercan- tile Company has taken oyer the agency for the International Harvester Company line of Farm Implements. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Complete line of extras for all l.H.C. Implements in stock at all times. 4 4 SEVIER VALLEY MERCANTILE CO. 4 4 4 4 4 |