OCR Text |
Show THE SALINA SUN, SALINA. UTAH - h. 2 THE SAUNA SUN ! .fr : j. 2- - 2 2- - :v 2 . a .;. .j. .. .j ; i; H. W. CHERRY, Editor ? WAITE, Secretary Shawnee, Okla., Board cf Trade .? L1 f THAT all modern cities are dependent upon the helpful cooperation of men with visions of bigger and better things. r J EjJ ? ? 5 5? THAT master minds must epneeive the plans and direct the energies which result in the realization or that vision. iu ,lli ii I, E Fancy Groceries, fresh vegetables and cured meats are our specialties. Call on us and look over our line of groceries and the fresh meats in our recently installed F FF THAT no corporation or inlerets, however strong and powerful, have any control over the newspapers. E3 THAT they always work to nuke a better feeling between F t--- ? F3 take the place of greed and to citizens and to have and busy city. beautiful have your city a more with them. Storage Plant Cold fair-pla- y t Co-opera- te Fresh and Cured Meats are our Specialty. THAT they always do those things that tend to make a city better industrially, commercially and morally. CALL ON US Co-opera- te ! WIPI hi- -! ,, r!2? THAT newspapers are the natural leaders in every community. They should have the cooperation of every citizen. Cooperation is necessary in all commercial and civic activities. ADVERTISING RATES. Display Matter Per inch per month, $1.00; single issue, 25c Special position 25 per tent additional. Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line. Legals Readers Ten cents per line each insertion. Count six words to line Blackface type Fifteen Cents per line for each insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Reading Rates, Count Six Words to the line. For Sale. For Rent, Found, Lost. Etc., Ten Cents per line for Eacl Insertion. NO CHARGE ACCOUNTS. Ifl'Hl iu il, i. We Treat Y ou Right It?j By Entered at the Postoffice at Salina, Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3. 1879. j L E. R. Subscription Rates i" r mull , Issoei Every Friday at Salina, Sevier Coonty, Utah. $2.00 One Year 1.00 Six Months 75 Three Months PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ,1 ! Did You Ever Stop 'to Think? r n' nH .; with them. and Publisher. THAT they are always earnestly and unselfishly working in your interests. WHO IS THE HOME MERCHANT .: Who is he? He is the chap who gives you credit when you are financially broke, and carries your account until you are able to pay. He is the chap who gives you back your money or makes exchanges when you are not satisfied with what you have bought. He is the chap who meets you at the door with a handshake, rnd lets you out with a message to the kids and a rel "come again, goodby." He is the chap whose clerks live in the home town! and spend their money with you and other local people. He is the chap who helps support our churches and charitable organizations and talks for the home town and boosts for it every ciay in the year. He is the chap who visits you when you are sick .sends! flow-tr- s to your family when you die, and follows your body out among the trees as far as human feet may travel. He is the home merchant your neighbor your friend your need. in time of a helper Dont you think you ought to trade with him, and be his trined and his helper in time of need? Dont you know that the growth and prosperity of this town depend very largely upon the success and prosperity of the home Out of town people judge our town by the appearence merchant? of our streets and the degree of enterprise shown by our merchants. And our home merchants succed when home folks give them loya support. The home merchant. with them. Co-opera- te Salina Meat & Supply Co. ; : 2 the home roost. But while making their first foray as Wolves, the renegade Dogs were discovered by the Farmer and his sons, who with clubs - 1 n: md guns dispersed the Pack and drove them back to the Forest. On the following morning the renegade Dogs, being cold and uingry, appete.Jt the Farmers house, demanding their breakGood Farmer, we are fast and a wsif.lace to sleep, saying: this home we demand the and but wolves our ,o longer Dogs being ight to occupy it once moie and receive our daily ration of choice $. 'll "It i, ilia ih. Vl'MI'l 'J ,iitli! $$$ .$$. ; tl,lMlt ill ,i! mm MltMjlM '1j iii!l!! iiini 'll ill .id ill lllcilliiiilmJliiil ii $$$$$ $ $ dm j I,! ill $$ $$$$ $$ iii ii.ii Ji jiiiiLLiiii ui ij . $ jr. V not something you get for nothing But doing what you want done intelligently, Promptly and Cheerfully Thats Our Ideal. Is who-iu- d secretly wished to join the Wolves, but had not been brave enough to do so, choosing to remain behind to suck eggs on the Sly and secretly help the Wolves do any Dirt to their benefactor hey might be able to accomplish without publicly revealing their awn Cussedness. But the good Farmer, taking down his trusty Shotgun, I mid to the- Dogs who had deserted him: Begone, hounds. for a regular wolf but not for an animal who rave some respect ,vants to be a dog when it served his purpose and a wolf when he Kinks there is more meat in it. As for you Dogs who come here who o intercede for your friends joined the Wolves in trying to ob my fieri roost, the next time I catch you sucking Eggs, there National Republican. s going to be something Doing. I"II'M lil.iiiliuii Grocery Store in Salina. up-to-da- te SERVICE Bones. In this demand they were seconded by other of the Dogs, . The most me Eieciric s ; 21 ; ; 2 ; 2-- : ;2 ; 2 --t- -- 2 tj -- -- 2" 2-- ; ; ; 2 J 2 2-- 2" 2 -- Work of Farm Women Spoken Word Best Those who speak in public are better heard wneu they discourse by a lively genius and ready memory than when they read all they would communicate to their hearers. Exchange. records prove that farm ni'ce'sary household and a htilf hours duties more a day than the hired men do. Washington Star. Four-yea- women r in on about one put JUNIOR AMERICAN RED THE RIGHT KIND OF BOYS .11 Two boys recently ran away from their homes. They were picked up by police in another town and sent back home to their parents. When found they carried an agreement they had made before starting out it pledged them as follows: 1st once we leave we stay together. 2nd. Not to fight. 3rd. Not to smoke or steal 4th if dispute arises on any matter toss up to settle it; 5th Fifty-fifton everything; 6th to keep going south and not back; 7th play the game fair. Not such a bad agreement for two youngsters to make. It is no doubt best for them that they were found and returned to their homes. Education and a little more wise discipline should help rather than harm them. But if they retain their adventurous spirit along with their ideals of comradship, fair play, honesty and they should go far on their journey toardw success.' CROSS ARMY 5,595,683 y stick-to-it-tivene- ss CAMPAIGN OF EDUCATION A careful survey of the program for popular education and its broad implications discloses its wide scope. It includes the education of the entire nation and thei stamping out of illiteracy. It cannot be accomplished in a year, perhaps not in a decade. A generation may pass before its splendid objectives are attained. But even so, they are well worth the effort. What is a generation of labor compared to the glorious achievement of popular, dmocratic education, under which the poorest, and most lowly, may have an unlimited educational opportunity; an opportunity restricted only by his capacity and desire? Think o f what it will mean for the future of the nation, all the children of all the people, studying, playing, working together with one aim and with one spirit, not an arbitary purpose superimposed upon then by an government, but a cooperative, patriotic purpose entered into willingly and joyfully as the chilren of freedom. Class education, sectarian education, aristacratic education, will in time be as obsolete as the doctrine of the divine rights of kings. Class antagonisims, race antipathies, feligious intolerances, artificial distinctions based on wealth and family connections must vanish inevitably. A man is to be valued for his character, his intellect, his capacity for leadership. A citizen is to honored for his 7 lisintrires'ied public service, his patriotic, jdeajlipm. All the factitious .differences that separate men into warring groups shall be fused in the enthusiasm of common search for knowledge, a common love of truth. The New Age be-(om- AESOP DOWN TO DATE Service to Humanity. auxiliary during s war-time- Question? WHICH WASHER TO The American Junior Red Cross, which was organized as a children's SO BUY--I- F REMEMBER especially to help the young refugees in Europe, the and to exemplify in peace-timRed Cross ideal of service, has now a membership of 5,59fi,GG3 in the schools of the United States and the insular e We maintain possessions. This Junior movement gives opportunity for the children to share in Red Cross effort parallel to that of the parent organization. Juniors are therefore identified in varying degree with the health services, disaster relief work, salvage and other suitable activities of value to the operations of the Red Cross. It is a valiant host marching on under Its "I Serve banner in the cause of happier childhood everywhere and particularly wherever The enrollment flag flies. embraces 29,942 schools and 147, 4S6 school rooms, a gain over 1923 of service-me- n guarantee the 24 hours a day and we WOODROW forever. 15? tor . Double Tubs Wooden Tubs Single Copper 5.655 schools and 22,414 school rooms. The years gain in membership was children, or nearly 80,000 for each month of the school year. The educational and social values of the Junior Red Cross movement is thus evidencing the Arm and cordial ehdorsement of school authorities. The government has addd the weight of recognition by extending the Junior 769,402 Red Cross In the schools for American The American Red Indian children. Cross is also planning to develop the Junior program in 600 rural schools In isolated sections. There is no abatement of the ex between change of correspondence schools in the United States and schools in the insular possessions and foreign lands. During the year the Junior Red Cross in pert support ed operations In twelve European countries. It fs a potent influence for the cultivation of international good will and its example has been the means of stimulating the formation of Junior Red Cross societies in more than thirty countries. Once upon a time there was a farmer, who had upon his place a number of Dogs, which he fed with great Regularity, treated with Cets Reverse h'ndness and housed comfortably in a Kennel. Madame Allied Abdullah thought Certain of these 'dogs, groiwng Discontented with their lot, me women in (oiiMnntinople were and noticing that occasionally Packs of Wolves descended upon the Farm and made way with choice Hens which were not a part of the Dogs regular Diet, decided to join the wolves, and betaking themselves to the woods, they made a contract with th wolves tc make them leaders of the Pack, in consideration of their being the better able to direct the Marauders to the choicest Pullets on e You A Children of 29,942 Schools Nov; Enrolled in Movement of all fortune Tubs You are the sole judge as to whether it suits you tell us Tubs Try it a week 2 weeks, then what you think of it. - A 1 Phene our office riuVShQ " Lave one delivered.. Dont wait till next week. ONLY ONE DOLLAR PUTS IT IN YOUR HOME in love with her son. a fei So slio oonMiltei! teller, who gave her a eon coition of garlic, water, mud and boiled slmes to throw upon nil tin beautiful women in the city. Madam, Abdullah was arre-te- d nfter hurlint the magic mixture at one attrnctivf woman near her son's home. T elluride Power Co. r iMil li -- - JJ la |