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Show The We know we know SALIMA SUM, sALiMA, Mitual Satisfaction FORDS trrH. Women Who Are Heads of Large Enterprises Auto Parly Guaranteed ELECTRICAL WE FIX IT . ' Square Deal Battery The ELECTRIC SHOP Hal Felt, Mgr. REPAIR MAIN j CAFE Announcing the opening of one of the most Cafes this side of up-to-da- te Salt Lake City. Prompt service, Courteous treatment SPECIAL SUNDAY Dr. F. DINNERS 0. Bullock Dentist At Gunnison:- - Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. At Salina:- Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. About $2 is received by the grower for the wool that goes into a $60 suit of clothes. all-wo- ol at present about 1,200,-00kept by people in cities of the United States, while the country cows number more than 25 million. There are cows Abount 15 million is. the average number of bananas consumed daily in Che United States. Georgia raised and marketed 30 million pounds of tobacco during the season just closed, which brought an average of 21.82 cents, putting more than six million dollars into the pockets of the farmers. STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC REQUIRED BY BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912, Of The Salina Sun published weekly at Salina, Utah for October, State of Utah ) 1924. Characteristic of its policy to lead in everything in the way of modernizing its plant and with a view to aiding in handling the immense beet tonnage that will be harvested during the next forty days, the Gunnison Sugar company has just completed the installation of a Weller Piling and Reclaiming station. The company has the distinction of ad- During the coming week the transcontinental Lincoln caravan, which is touring the western country, will visit Salina. Dispatches say that the caravan is headed for Utah and it is likely that moit energy will be spent in this state, than in any other state on the 5, tiip. The trip began at Coolidges birthplace in Vermont, the opting the first plant of this kind early part of September and it will ever installed in the United States. end at Seattle the latter part of this The new plant is located on the month. Christensen farm just west of the The tour, a caravan of ten automocity. biles, equipped with speakers, ampliThe plant has attracted considerfying devices for open air speaking, able attention and many from the replicas of the Coolidge birthplace, city have visited the site since the and literature and buttons eomemo-rativinstallation. It consists of machinof the trip, is in t'ffert, a digery which is intended to rid the beets nified and enlaiged modern version of of the tare, later and by conveyors, the old political torchlight procession. carrying the beets to a point where Instead of covering a town, or city, they are piled. The load is automat- this procession will cover a continically dumped into a bin and the con- ent, and instead of Main street, will veyor carries the beets to a large traverse a main transcontinental drum where the dirt is sifted into a thoroughfare. The beets are then dishopper. It will arrive in Utah next Monday, on a boom belt, being carried charged reaching Ogden at 12 oclock noon, o the piling device. The machinery and Salt Lake at 7 oclock in the eveis so arranged that the piles can be ning of the same day. regulated to any heighth up to about From Salt Lake it will leave Tues12 feet. The entire plant is portable, day morning at 8 oclock, stopping at and can easily be moved as desired. Murray, Midvale, Sandy, Junction, Six thousand feet of 40- - pound steel Lehi, American Pleasant Fork, rails were required for the installaGrove, Provo, Springville, Spanish tion and working of the plant. On the Folk, Payson, Santaquin, Nephi, part where the beets are first raised Fountain Green, Moroni, Ephraim, ihe plant is operated by a Fordson Manti, Gunnison and Salina. tractor assufmhjy, while Jthe piling The exact hour or the arrival of device is controlled and operated by caravan in this city next Tuesa 10 .h p. Cushman gas engine. The the, is not known as yet, but the day mtire installation cost the sugar of the local precinct will chairman company approximately $16,000. The main feature in the piling and arrange for the reception of the reclaiming device is to insure clean visitors. beets and avoid sweating in piles. In addition to the new plant just Myth About the Diamond installed the company has placed two )ss. County of Sevier ) Before me, a Notary Public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared H. W. Cherry, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the publisher of the Salina Sun and that the folowing is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management, etc., oi .he aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse ol this form, 1. That the name and address of the publisher, editor, manageing editor, and business manager is, H. W. Cherry, Gunnison, Utah. 2. That the owner is: H. W. Cherry, Gunnison, Utah. 3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: Gunnison Valley Bank, Gunnison, Utah. H. W. CHERRY, Sworn to an subscribed before me this 10th day of October, 1924 Fairbanks-Mors- e n new scale3 F. A. BECK, (Seal) which are to used in weighing the beets. Residing at Gunnison, tUah. Digging orders have been issued in An average of nearly 600,000 doz- many of the fields on the west side en eggs are consumed in New York and real work will begin tomorrow, city every day, or about one for each and next Monday when hauling starts oughly tested out. Gunnison (News. person. es 000-mil- e e -- to-wi- t: Man bequeaths his business to a girl secretary because she Is the only one who knows how to run It properly." Business women are no rare things these days, the Philadelphia Inquirer r If Its 10-to- Diamond was the name of a handsome youth of the Island of Crete, who Was one of the attendants of the infant Jupiter in his cradle. It was decreed tha Diamond should not be subjected to the ills that flesh Is heir to, so lie was transformed into the hardest and most brilliant substance In nature. observes. A conspicuous example . of one Is Mrs. Mountz who was a delegate to the 1924 Republican national convention. Mrs. Mountz has successfully managed an extensive coal business. For years the great steel mill at Coatesvllle was operated by a woman whose energy and enterprise equaled that of any man. A young woman Is a leading factor In one of Philadelphias largest milk companies. One bf the largest orchardists In Montgomery county Is a woman. After William Welghtman died his daughter, now Mrs. Penfield, carried on the business and was capable of managing Mg as well as snail details. What was for many years Philadelphias largest drug store was long managed by a granddaughter of Chris . I topher Marshall, Its founder; Women were In successful control, here of a large hospital and a medical college. A Trip to Healthland was one of the main features of the exhibit of the Utah Public Health Association at the State Fair. It was electrically controlled, and with the aid of colored globes, made a most attractive Another drawing feature display. was the colored illustrated lectures shown by means of the One of these lectures is entitled Mother Nature, M. D and it is devoted to nutrition; the other stresses the value of annual health examinations. Then there was the whch automatically (lashes out a good health message of forty words in a veiy emphatic manner. Toilet soap, toothpaste, toothbrushes, and other essential health aids were distributed to the school Altract-o-scop- Rolo-sig- e. n children on school day. This is becoming quite an annual event with the Utah Public Health Association. water-colore- d A set of paneled charts, on easels, showing the causes of tuberculosis, its symptoms and Rome Also Knew Strikes Officials of the American Federation of Labor, among whom are some students of the classics, have discovered that ancient Rome was no more immune to strikes than modern New York or Chicago. They have discovered that Livy and Ovid described a strike of musicians In Rome. The strikers, who belonged to the guild of musicians (tlblclnes) refused to work because the banquet which wrs traditionally accorded them every year at the expense of the state was omitted In 311 B. G The musicians all left Rome and went to Tlbur to await overtures from the state. The situation created by the walkout was very embarrassing to the authorities, for the sacrifices could not be carried out without music. The men were finally lured back by strategy. They were served freely with' wine and taken to Rome dead to the The men won their strike, world. however, for the authorities decided that a privilege so long accorded had become a right and the banquet was rcstnrwt treatment, graphically told the visitor how this dread disease spreads. Considerable space was given to the work of the Modern Health Crusade, which is taught in the public schools. Pennants, banners, uniforms and insignia of knighthood are shown, also the national trophies won this year. Mrs. Ruth Ward Mumford, Miss Florence Gilmore and Miss Lydia Alder, public health nurses in the employ of the Utah Public Health Association were in daily attendance at the exhibit to give information to the public. M. S. Parker, field representative of the association, was in We feel that charge of the exhibit. we have assembled the best exhibit we have had at the state fair during the past five years, said James H. Wallis, executive secretary of the Utah Public Health Association, and every part of it is devoted to the prevention and cure of tuberculosis and to the need of a state sanatorium for those unfortunate people who are afWe anticiflicted with the disease. pate a good response from all over r i the state when the Christmas Seals are placed on Bale in Decembe.. as these furnish the only funds we receive to carry on our work. . . m- - s ADVERTISERS, through the of this paper, can get a big bite of the business that is going out of col-um- town. i SUBSCRIBERS, by patronizing the advertisers who use these columns, can get a big bite at the bargains they have to offer. Moral Subscribe for this paper and use the ads and get your bite. When n its Printing . you want cal-l- ( ' v . |