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Show The saLMa sun, sauna, Utah THE SAUNA SUN 4 S' "i 4 fr'S1 fr'i1 5" 51 tl $ S 5 S' BE USEFUL. There is but one straight road to success, and that is merit. is successful is the man who is useful. Capacity never It can not remain undiscovered, because it is lacks opportunity. sought by too many anxious to use it. THAT newspapers guard their advertising columns in a way that assures you of the reliability of those concerns advertis- 4- - 4 The man who ing. 4 t THAT there much difference between cheap goods and good goods cheap imitations of good goods can easily be found. 4 4 4 4 is THAT stores that sell good goods cheap, advertise that WORSHIP LADY NICOTINE. 4 4 4 .;. 4 4 4 4 4-- THAT you will get what you want and not an imitation. 4- will find they buy right and sell right. - consumed in the United States the reports of T. L. Hughes, commerce department. And in instrumental increasing th billion cigarets were during the year 1923, according to chief of the tobacco section of the women, according to reports, were Sixty-thre- e inter- esting fact. Advertising is what has put them in the limelight. They ,are always ready to meet the demands of the busy shoppers. THAT they have put themselves in the public service by truthful advertising. THAT in the stores that advertise you will find that they not only sell good goods cheap, but you will experience the pleasure of receiving service with the goods, and you will find there courtesy and appreciation. 4 4 4 A MIRROR. Salina is just what you make it. If you dont like the town, you will probably find that the town doesnt like you. But if you have the right attitude, then you will find the community friendly. It is a mirror in which you will find a reflection of your own dis. position, are persistent advertisers. 4 4 4 4 and Publisher. 5 THAT it always pays to buy from the business concerns that 4 4 H. W. CHERRY, Editor S1 By E. R. WAITE, Secretary. Shawnee, Okla., Board of Commerce 4 4 4 ADVERTISING RATES. 25c. Display Matter Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, Special position 25 per cent additional. six words to line. Legals Ten cents per line each insertion. Count Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line. Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion. ReadObituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local ing Rates, Count Six Words to the line. For Sale, For Rent. Found, Lost, Etc., Ten Cents per line for Each Insertion. ' NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. "S' Did You Ever Stop To Think? 4 Mail Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class 1879. 3, March Matter under the Act of Congress of S1 consumption from 15,000,000,000 in 1913 to 63,000,000,000 ill 924. , jvk In the course of his regular statistical study of the consumption! Mr. Hughes has found that the use of cigarets in the United States, which was 15,000,000,000 in 1913, has gained four fold in ten years, amounting to 63,000,000,000 in 1923. There have been great gains in other countries of the world, but Japan, where ths late of increase came closest to matching that of the United States, has advanced from 1923 consumption of 7,000,000,000 cigarets to only 23,000,000,000 in 1923. 1 , You 4 FITTING PRETTY. 4-- The truck companies holding certificates of necessity and con- venience from the JJtah utilities commission are sitting by the fire these cold and snowy winter days, sucking their paws and waiting for the taxpayers, which includes the railroads, to clear the roads for them to resume freighting operations. The Bamberger Electric railroad company and the steam lines have kept their lines open and are doing everything in their power to serve the public, but we have not noted any effort whatever on the part of the monopoly truck line to open and keep open the state highway. It is certainly pretty soft for the truck company to have the taxpayer build the highway, maintain it and keep it free from snow and flood blockade, and have the exclusive use of the highway free of all cost, other than same charged when used by the individual. This is a matter for the incoming legislature to consider. There seems to be sufficient law to govern this matter but it seems the counties, cities and towns through which the truck line is operated, are loathe to take action in the matter. Kaysville Reflex. WELL WORTH TRYING. A cow, a sow, fifty hens, a few acres of beets, coupled with an The man or woman who knows good goods will find that it always pays to buy from the business concerns who invite their business through the advertising columns of the 4 4 4 4 Rebuke Courteous 4 4,4,4,4,44,4'.54,4,4'4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,,.4.4,4,44'4,4,4,4,4l4.4,4,44,4,4,4,,t4,li,t,4,4,4,44,4'4,1i'4, Eddie Bremer, manager of the Majestic theater, likes to tell this one: Some years ago, when Eddie was treasurer of the old Majestic, he was sitting In the back of the house watchA tired business ing the vaudeville. man, stopping one of the fair ushers, demanded In a tone: mens smoking Where in fc 1 ' room? Go right down tt.5 stairs, she replied sweetly, and turn to your left You will see a sign that reads Gentlemen. Dont pay any attention to tha Houston Post. sign. Go right in. hard-boile- WOULD INCREASE AUTO ACCIDENTS. At coming sessions of Legislatures attempts will be made to pass laws making automobile accident insurance complusory on automobile owners. In addition to this, laws will undoubtedly be proposed to establish monopolistic state automobile insurance or state automobile funds with commissions to collect and expend the same, similar to present state workingmens compensation commissions. . S , : , nJ d Evidence Enough Divorce Judge Wliat proof have you that it was always your husband who started these family rowg? Mrs. I.eatherneck lies a marine. American legion Weekly. All this agitation for new legislation and further extention of state activity into the field of private business will be carried on under the guise of accident prevention work. Here is one point to consider: At present, private automobile 7 companies exert a restraining influence upon reckless automobile drivers due to the fact that they reserve the right to refuse insurance to a man known to be a bad risk. Under state insurance, there would be no incentive on the of the state employes to turn down a poor risk. A compulsory part state insurance law or a monopolisitc state fund act would require tnat all carry insurance. The careful driver would be forcel to pay i rtes sufficietnly high to cover the reckless driver or else the deficit caused by reckless drivers would have to be made up out of general taxes assessed agaisnt all the people. Any way it can be figured, wholesale automobile insurance v.ould open a wide field for fraud and the encouragment of carelessness. The present check of personal liability and responsibility could be largely removed and the unprincipled driver would simply say, "Let the insurance company or the state pay the bill. What do I care? Automobile accidents will not be prevented by making it easier for drivers to escape responsibility for their own carelessness. , equal portion of ambition and a determination to win, would be mighty good medicine for the farmers of the Southern section during the coming summer. Not for many years has the outlook been so favorable as it does for the coming year. Press dispatches from all over the country indicate the restoration of big business manufacturing concerns are building fires in preparation for doing big business, the banks are bulging with money and the general trend is for a bumper" business in all departments. And the farmer is to be is seldom that a drought hits two years in succession in inciuc the same place. In Southern Utah everyone got a wallop and the crop productions were far below the average. But that was in 1924. Prices have been fairly good, but the unfortunate farmer had not the produce to sell and for this reason he got a double dose. But 1924 has gone and we are now in the beginning of the new year and it holds good for everyone. Get the idea of spreading out on your crops. rM. aFrmer, and instead of giving all attention to one crop on a big scale, do more things on a smaller scale. Forty BEET SUGAR A LABOR PROBLEM. acres of land, with a cow, sow, fifty hens and a little alfalfa, ten or A number of western states are planning to encourage more twelve acres of beets and plenty of grit and determination will put this class of farmer away from the mortgage and fit him with a fine beet sugar production and find it is basically a labor problem. Small tracts will tax the labor supply of almost any neighborhome and independence within five years. Of course you wont hood adapted to the culture of beets. know until you try, but others have done the trick and you can do It is the one crop like truck farming that requires a great the same. deal of hand labor what might be called g labor. A large part of the work can be carried on with machinery, like RELIGION IN SCHOOLS. preparing the soil, sowing the seed, and plowing out the beets when the actuated that with the grown. io anyone acquainted purpose Cultivation of the crop is also machine cultivator work, after is necit not ul Uie ivepublic in formulating the Constitution the planting has been nursed to a size and thinned in the rows by essary to go over the argument that defends their action in making a clean break between church and state. This is one of the peculiar hand. But thinning the beets in the rows and the first few times they glories of our form of government and a principle that we must keep inviolate forever. ire cultivated, and topping the beets after they are grown, is hand The strict observance of this principle has saved us from many work. In many of the sugar beet states special labor is brought in, like of the social and political disturbances that have convulsed European Russian and Mexican labor, where the whole family works in the nations. Consistently we have refused to allow any ecclesiasticism to obtain a predominating influence in our government. Therefore, fields. Some states have labor conditions that oppose bringing in any it is essential that public education be kept free of all such demoraluch labor and might as well give up the idea of building sugar izing control. The teaching of religion is the duty of the church and the home. tefineries. It is the greatest crop in the class of mixed farming, as a n It cannot be the responsibility of the state. The widespread money that our clerical brethren so earnestly condemn will be over- crop and as a crop to promote stock raising, hogs and dairying. come not by religious instruction in public school rooms but by the activities of the churches in cooperation with the homes. THE WAY OF THE WORLD. It has been said that the public school system of education is The editor goes on week after week boosting the town and unsatisfactory because it denies to the children the moral and religious training which their parents believe they should have. ommunity and advocating the doctrine of trading at home. The The public school makes no such denial. It simply cannot local business man pats the editor on the back and says thats the concern itself with matters of religion and theologoy. But there is right idea; tell it to em. He then refuses to help support the paper nothing taught in the public schools, either specific or implied, that with his advertising and calmly sends an order to an runs counter to the "moral teachings of the church. The church print shop for a supply of stationery. Funny world, isnt it? supplements the' instruction of the public school. Scottish Rites News Bureau. Facts About Ant The brain of an ant is about tba size of the bead of a darning needle. These insects live from eight to te years as a general rule, althougl specimens In captivity have beeA known to reach the age of fifteen. rr !ii!i!,i!:uiii,li: l""l" .i; "HI"!" '! nmi. .i, Illi't!'.' !' JliJiil.iii.ji.J,,,.'! i. si A Big ill. liliiln, yi'iliiJttiilu.iiLiiilillli.lii.Li Treat! Nice and Juicy u BUFFALO MEAT Fresh From the Me ntana RangeIt s Fine Buy S ome m 4 back-breakin- Today Salina Meat & Supply Co. y f j 'I IHI 'Jl id ,1 M oi mi Uli fp l1"! .iLuLiti ,i!l.i!j.iill 'V'd! dijnliih iL.nl r 'j'pjpTTIjTiTIIlTilVS' I, ,i ill mLhi.Tini'U.i .Ih.diUil.lu! g n.in i ill .lillillii illiiLjiJ'M Mw , irre-ligio- out-of-to- Square Deal THE MISSING CYLINDER OF A COMMUNITY. The progressive town is like a fine six or eight cylinder car, purits passengers, the resdidents of the it carries ring along tevenly as community over the hills that stand in the way of prosperity. But sometimes a good looking town, like many beautiful cars, will roll along evenly while the roads are level, but upon reaching a hill of business adversity, will slow up, knock and jerk, and finally come to a dead stop before it reaches the crest. A "missing cylinder, you say? Yes, and that missing cylinder i3 the m an or woman who shows no interest in home town business EL or in thi welfare of the community. L ; 0 n- - lleptecements u echarging THE ELECTRIC SHOP 8 & 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 & SALINA SALINAUTAH O F - Member Federal Reserve System S' 8 8 JAMES FARRELL, Pres. H. & GATES, V. Pres. H. B. CRANDALL, Cashier C E. PETERSON - E. V. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashier 8 8 I JSCS ESCS3H |