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Show THe saUMa I A WASHER FOR DOLLAR A Again we offer every house wife a chance to own the best machine in the world. sAUHa, uyaR I 4 $5 P s S .5. e A Message For Every Merchant and Business Man i r M o n t h WOODROW THE WASHER t t A Few if Its Special Features: Tilting Tub. Washes Faster. Drains Quickly. Soft Rolls. Areo Disc. Rust Proof Frame. Will not Break Buttons. guaranteed forever Ask A Woodrow Owner Advertising is an improved and modern way of distributing You Are The Sole Judge . past. If this washer does not clean your clothes to YOUR satisfaction you are not obliged to buy it! A Trial Is All We Ask In the olden days it was necessary to depend upon personal solicitation or gosip and hearsay M ,,t ic.. Department of the Interior, U. S. Lafid Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, February 27, 1925. NOTICE is hereby given that John A. Anderson, of Axtel, Utah, who on December 21, 1921, made Homestead entry, No. 030927 and on August 15, 1924, made Homestead entry, adN. No. for y2 SE V N 033036, ditional, SWtt, EMsNW, Township NEy Sec. 20 South, Range 1 t By MILDR2D MARSHALL Fact about oup nama I It History I meanings wffence it was derived; significance; yeur lvcky day, lucky jewel 27 East, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to. make three-yea- r proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before the Clerk of the District Court, at Manti, Utah, on the 15th day of April, 1925. Claimant names as witnesses: Chris Folster, George Johanson, C. L. Thorpe, jr., Henry Jensen, all of Axtel, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOR. Register. Date of first publication March 6, ARABELLA ARABELLA, which Is bestowed In faith by fond parents, to be Out down directly to the convenient Bella, Is a name of It comes power and dignity. the "emgle series of Icelandic only more great from names, whlh Is responsible for many of the appellatives popular in English speaking bnuntrles. Arabella: signifies eagle heroine. The first Xady to bear the name was the granddaughter of William the Lion of Scotland, who married Robert 1925. de Quine;. Another Arabella was she, Date of last publication April 3, 1925. who, wlti her huaband John de held the manor of Magdalen Laver the reign of Henry IIL who made radical The Normans, California's Boast In all names that did not changes Sixty per cent of the flower-see- d sound like French, cut Arabella down crop of the entire world Is raised In to, 'Arpell. My LoWy ctf Arbella" was California; more than a hundred tons tfie title of the unfortunate Arabella of nasturtium seed alone are grown Stuart, whose hlstcv.v Is familiar to every year. If all the sweetpea seeds nil of us. It lg chiefly due to this raised there were distributed to every poor that Arabella gained such lady man, woman and child In the coun- vogue and had suciLwldespread usage try, each one would have a flfteen-foo- t In Englanid. row In the garden, and there Arabellals taltemanlcAgem Is the diawould still be several hundred tons mond. It promises h.tr fearlessness, for export purpose. success, and, If set In ivld and worn on the left hand, true and abiding love. Thursday Is her lux&y day and No Scotch Trespass Law 6 her lucky number. Th.T violet Is Although Scotland Is known tor Its her flower. laws that and regumany regulations ( by Whseler Syndicate, Ihe f late human conduct. It has one distinction In the way of human liberty not shared by many other countries. Planes Higher Than Birds In Scotland there Is no law of trespass Birds have flown to a height of 2, 111 find indications are that there jv be 000 feet and airplanes have mounted none for many years. fully 3C.000 feet. Mont-pynco- : n, 3 A salesman In an Iowa town called on a storekeeper who had an store In a splendid location. The salesman was of the creative type and was urging the storekeeper to change his methods, and to adopt new selling Ideas. The reply of the storekeeper was: Oh, these old methods were good enough for my dad, and I guess theyre good enough for me. The salesman answered, and he could make this answer because of his experience and familiarity with the Your dad, when he es situation: tablished this store, was the most progressive merchant of his time thats why he won success. If he had been content with the methods of your grandfather he would never have established any business at all. Your dad, and I knew him well, never refused to consider new Ideas; he adopted the things that had proved successful with other merchants. If he were alive today he would be the first one to recognize that the community your store Is serving Is greatly changed, and that new methods must be adopted to take advantage of new conditions." Forbes Magazine. Also a Counter Irritant feminine newspaper writer says two people can live together In matrimony wltnout friction and without getting on each other's nerves. But people must marry, and some of them must live1' ngether, friction or no friction, nerves or no nerves. It seems to us that under such circumstances children are not only n great help, but necessary. Houston A no How to Open Sack wm know a Nebraska merchant who has built up a business of $300,000 time and still doesnt own it and doesnt want to own it.. All he wants is for Silly Old Saying "Whats ifl a Name? i a year in a small town, solely as a result of advertising, backed up by th goods and service. . He says he has bought the local newspaper time attest Salesman Had Answer NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION t u Read what Ole Buck has to say: ,r tJ now you can tell your trade, through tho columns of the SUN, timely, interesting news about your merchandise and store. I Telluride Power Co It takes the place of the old slow, costly and inefficient methods of tho V To open cloth sugar or salt sacks which are stitched, place the double stitching to the left and begin pulling gt the end away from you. This saves o much annoyance. the service. . It is not unusual for him to use three or four pages in one is This man started in business not so many years ago with a small capital . .SIB and most of that borrowed.. He says any merchant in any town can duplicate his success by following his methods.. I know other small( town gmwae-- w- w iauturw merchants who have done almost as well, and we all know how much, the city stores have to depend upon advertising for their' business. In 'spite of these successes a surprising large number of merchants do not advertising or so little that it doesnt amount to much.. And they give no special at- tention to what they do use.. They scratch off a little copy on any scrap paper that comes handy on any subject that comes to mind, and dont care how it is set in type or what kind of service they give iif backing It up in their stores. Advertising, good advertising, real advertising, is the backbone and mainspring of business. Country publishers and merchants should give a lot of thought to the subject and then to get greatest possible returns. The Salina Sun country co-oper- ate i , rl |