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Show r sauna The sauna, utaH suN, the beginning of the building will able receiver. This type, with its six vacuum tubes, is so sensative that the motorist at Niagara Falls canr tune in New York and Boston one ., moment, and Chicago and Minneapolis the next, any summers evening, the employment of approximately while the receiver is resting on the eight hundred more men. Over twelve running board! With everything this receiver which is avahundred men are now employed. For the past three years, the May- ilable in two types, is ready for in. tag company has held the position stant operation. An extra piece of luggage smaller of the Worlds leadership in the manufacture b washing (machines, in than a suit case, weighing less than spite of the fact that there are over forty pounds, strapped to the runof means a' world a hundred other companies making ning board, on your vacation tour. The washers. They make approximately of all the electric washers dance music, talks, 'comedy, plays, travelouges, sportlsi, news, sold. stock reports who can The Maytag company was founded forecasts, leave to radio at home. afford over a third of a century ago by directis who Mr. Maytag, actively ing the organization and has associated with him, his two sons, Lewis IF YOU HAVE 'B. Maytag, President and E. H. MayPiles, Sick Headache, Costfo. Milcri, Dumb Bowels, Ague, Sour Stomach, tag, Secretary and treasurer. and Belching; your food downelh assimilate, you have no appetite, SAID LAMP ALLADINS "WHp The' portable is Die' highest development of the port- will remedy these troubles- ies cannot escape. Our chief concern should be to make regulations more eflicic-nt- , by electing men qualified by education and experience as well1 ha- - do justice beas by charaoti-r-r tween public utilities and the public. ilh such men, the size of the companies which sene the public will be of small, consequence, for the eommis siuhs will tame any that tries to be w ill elephants Portland Oregonian a cash balance of $890, increased in- Secretary of Commerce Hoover, in ventory of $130 and produced food lhe following paragraph from an arand fuel worth $265 .on capital that ticle in the ITiiladelphia Chamber News Rulletin: amounted to $17,490. Published etry I'riday at Salina, Interconnection does not imply Utah SMOKELESS NATION capital consolidation or the building IS FORECASTED a great, trust.. It implies, the Member Utah State Press Association It is predicted that America will sale and release .of power from one be the first natiun to outlaw smoke, utility distributing system to another ooot and ashes by using gas fuel in- arid' it implies cooperative action Editor stead of solid luel for heating proH. W. CHERRY, stations. It must cesses in shops and. factories. It wild municipal plants as well a? eorpora-Jobe f ii si to have its homes heated plants. It Implies mo gigantic ex Advertising Kates. by gas, thermostatically controled. pioitation, for that is impossible - 23c per inch The me i easing use of gas is in inthe state .regulation of pates and D.piay U jJ.rs 10c. per line evitable result of modern demands pj of its. . for comfort .arid efficiency, to which Ttegulatioji i3 effective, for it has must be added the growing convici ven the consumer the .full benefit" Uttered at the postoftice at Salina life human and that tion property under economies made. in the last I tah, as second class matter are suffered incaeluabfe' damage from years. Though Mr. Pinchot die smoke evil. There is little or no reduction add, AMERICANS AI.U! The progress of fuel conservation ,'iom rates,- - the United 1 nat the public school are truly dt pends upon the progress of gas .Slates, bureau of labor statistics says t:e uniting put of this natioir, wherein .uiuzutiun. Tne public is beginning hat lates for electric service are a;l new races are being used to to see this truth and act accordingly sow 8 per cent. less than in 1913, lhe gas industry has grown because !uce a new and wiser type o na-p hile tiie price of: commodities enter vas strikingly exemplified .t has saved coal, labor', and' money n A into the cost "of living is 61 per i,e commencement of the Jioosvelt i'ur the public'. ;ent higher. That wide difference ii chool of Los Angeles, Califor-i presents the progress of the elec-ii- c on which occasion the tllNlNG IKODl'CING INDUSTRY a, h industry and the cash vaTue of The idea seems to be prevalent-.ha.uiuution address was" delivered by .('unqifiies, which is put in the the proceeds from mining are L.. :v.dd E. Plight, formerly editor pockets by the vigilance of me Masonic News. hicfly profits. As a matter of- fact, it.ite commissions. It is not added to ,c.' Am mg the ninety graduates, thf almost half the income of the minhe profits of the companies. , the ing industry goes for wages-tful..wing nationalities V'ere The terrible monopoly which Mr. English, Austrian, Koumani-i- i wuiknion.. A sees is a fiction of a ima- In Arizona last year where '.vedi' h, German, French, Greek, Hation fjvoted by many years' of goiii, silver, copper, zinc, 'Armenian, Japanese) Nor- of' water power "from a preju-e- d linly 45 and lead was mined, "v. g, m., Hungarian, Cyriap.,. Spanish per'cent wa. .The power compan ' Russian. paid put fur labor and 45 per ciyii .. a.i t 'he JUlfprent' religious affiliations npru 'fur supplies freight taxes ' were: Russian is why mining sliouhl have, ail' r p Oithodox, because ii J h, Mehoilist, Christian .Science, possible cncoyi'ngenieiit,- The Salina Sun up-o- f be started immediately and it is hoped that it will be possible to occupy all or at least a part of the new addition by the latter part of October. The new addition will necessitate self-contain- -. n un-ie- . d Department of the Interior, U. S. at Salt Lake City, Utah, ' July Hi, 1925. Notice is liereb'y given that Joseph Cofby, of Salina, Utah, who on March lH 1921, made desert? land entry, serial Nb. 013704,' for SW1 SWVi Section 8, Township 21 South, Range 1 East, 'Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Sterling K. - . war-t-im- e 2 t. He'ppler, . n . - - Utah. ' . . J; t F.dw. I). DtiTtn, . $100,-HiO.OO- O i 37--2 2--2 H Atty,' ' . . . 1925 1925. M (V - - i is one of our big producing, L..p i.A,' Komaii Catholic, Itesbyti-rand Unitarian. Ti.e class speeches weVe described v bran.t with intelligent American is and flaming with patriotic ml enthusiasm.' This class spoke for the new generation vjho love America, with passionate . devotion and may he depended upon to support st muchly- - American . ideals anj s. - 'll.; anil' taxpaying indudti employ- H it-s'-. IN THE. NAME OF THE FARMER It is pkedieted That the Farm Rloc in the coining session of Congress will include an attack on the tariff schedule? in its jirogram unless the Bloc can .secure- passage of a' measure to assure some form ;f price fixing on farm products by Young, peeoplo such as 'those are he fqderal government and establish of the American public school bent by the government of an a&encj the close .association in the study Lh.at shall buy the, farmers ' export room, social hall, ami athletic field surplus. The whole prqgranj is carried 'on they have learned tolerance, sympa'n the name of the farmer when, as thy and a strudy America'nism that a matter of fact, the. rank and file of t nnseend the' narrow prejudices of race- and "religion. Herein, lies the American farmers are not today askhope of the future., a hope and a chal ing for pelting and coddling at' the lence to which no private nor paro-- . hands of the government. The disgusting, part of the'situa-Y.oehinl school, by the very nature of cam js that .the farmer is used as a to. measure tb'ng.s, up AHu-.around which political schlummy before this long emes cooked up and fostered onto are. fact will, be recognized by the Amer- ican people? The way to destroy the m uninformed . public. . The tariff ' artipathic3 and misunderstandings question which should be considered that now divide this nation rirhj a purely from a scientific, business bundled antagonistic sects, classes, standpoint, is used as a political foot nationalities of' thought ball and tlTe'jiublrc -pays a trrifie is so utterly obvious that it needs p.i'ioe or Watching 'its- use in'the .poUu.. elaborate definition' or argument. litical game. .'the. solution of these social problems is found in the public schools, WILD ELEPHANTS ' Governors Iinchots warning 'dga-jis- t and such commencements as the one a coming gigantc power monop-lmentioned of it". will cause no tremors of eai well informed 'people. He deF'RM PROSTECTS . licts what is miscalled superpower ARE GOOD . u a wild elephant .which, witji its According to the latest reports of Bower of nationwide, concentrations ' tie Department of 'Agriculture on if capital, .will trample the people the farm, situation, "the farmers this under .its hoofs and in the shape of year, on the. whole, have better cxh'oibitant profits; will suck their than in 'any yea.r since 1919 lifeblood through i.ts huge, trunk. .The report declares that taken as a This. would.be awful if it were true s who'e the are promising i.' could become true, but the pnj'c-ffttrly YF11, except for winter wheat ice which he calls superpower, has in.certan localities? It is. said further. nready dispelled anj dread that it I1, t the present nice balnncee ir v ill havy such- - an effect, on. this h h . livestock, and crop production ' ' . oast. . . ; a tribute to the readjustments . Siqierpower is one of .the worst mJo by the American farmer since v.isnomers ever conceived, when the . the. fall of 1921. word is applied as. in the power indus The main fact .seen in the present ly. It is used to describe the c'on orm-pwas that. 'while production motion of adjoining power companies h ampe.. to meet consumption and the sale 'of surplus energy, by n agi 'culture' will not be in the me to 'tht other. By means of .this this fall with any large interconnexion the surplus' of one of the major products. Present .iisfriet' may be . passed on. until a i licies in the general business sit-- ihmtage in. a distant, district .is.re-ieve' wn ' were, ounll 'to' indicate little For example, between .the Co! rh n e in the prices of umbia river and the southern border commodities and consequently of California the country is covered -ii ' iiKirked change in the purchasing by about five companies, each indep. ver of farm products. pendent of the others as to owner-hip- , The outlook in the 'corn belt is operation and management. No amvirently go'od says the report, 1 company on the north has a Hogs are relatively higher priced and energy, which it cannot sell ' i go higher. The pig survey "shows n its own territory. No. 5 'on the s decline of eleven per cent in the south has a shortage on accoun.t of o? spring pigs compared with bought. It is inipractical 'la t year. Corn prices are not. so the surplus of No, 1 to No. 5 by h as to prohibit feeding and . hi every nterconnecsfion No. 1 passes it to t' mg paints to a profitable feeding 'o. '2 that does not need it but passes sun ahead. It is from conditions m equal amount of its own energy Pm this year, when price ratios fur-- . to No. 3, which uses replace the r'Ei a stimulus to feeding, that the lame, amount that it passes on to c"n ussnall.v hope for some To. 4, ami No. 4 thus enabled to .to t op pf prosperity. mke good the shortage of No. 5. . .' n Who is injured by this operation? average balance of $1,024, the of ca.-receipts over cash An the contrary, many are benefited. t rr.rditue, was returned to own-e- - Sale of its si plus energy reduces operators in 1924 and 15,103" farm the overhead costs of No. 1 and the sr vryed by the department. In nriee it must obtain among its own to this margin, these firms "onsumers in order to earn a fair, l inventoiies of crops, live eturn on its capital overhead conrVfd-- . machinery and supplies 1S1 stituting 75 or 80 per cent of total r"l.'eg nn average return of $1,205 f power. Indirect u e of $17, 260 of capital and ' urchase of that surplus by the U ' bo- - of the farmer and his fam-- v described, gives No. 5 opportuTlmse fams also produced food nity to supply a broad market and rr ' fuel consumed on the farm es-- 4 ;is customers reliable service. to be worth $266 on the ever-a'- c Interconnection of power systems dees not mean consolidation. One sells a somewhat better show-i'- g energy to the other, hnr each retains 4han in 1923 says the depart-r- v its distinct identity, just as do two nt. when a similar survey on connected railroads. The Pinchot the- farms averaged ory was demolished in advance by ,4 S r.- f lojr-toly- .i II U? Vril i)r ? f i pi tS it SSc""rr'.' I" f 'r'l ; till K K 3! I: S t: t: - 4: ' Jr Hbmbh - insti-t.u.ion- Im u 6 i rt sisisp; n ft IT ii i " L'-- - z- 3 . 'etc-Tha- . :-- Register Salt Lake City Utah. First Publication July 24. Last Publication Aug. 21, 1 o .' ELI F. TAYLOR uTotts Pillsa - , . nt . d super-heterody- - - con-Irne- rs "irepre-'M'.c- Commissioner;- August 1925. Claimant names- as witnesses:Roy Colby, Ernest . Bird, John JB,jrd, a:M Claud. D. Burgess, all of Salina, t I ,i U. S. one-thir- Utah, on the 27th day of . 1 enter--tainme- Laijd office wc-lv- e , NOTICE FOR, PUBLICATION C P r a " !l J Lw. tt ' i( f ( 1 .... - . . t fr . a" , r 55 , -U - " . K ' - . H'.v" - 5K n self-evide- nt O :-- 2 '. " -- and'-school- s y " pros-jw-c- ts inain-rtop- 1 ' . w-.- l . nv'-ket- sur-pb- :' te-- charge, to patrons, of the Union lines for conferences and other meetings. Tu give some Idea of the .Immensity of the ngw station. It iliay. be stated that the main buil.di.ng covers an area of ahputthree acres with a concourse covering (irt.lkX) square feet. The. entire terminal facilities cover more than 35 acres and will expedite the prompt and satisfactory handling of 50,000 passengers, 400 tons .of baggage and 300 trains dally with room for future ' expansion, fifteen acres of glass were used In the various coverings which extend over the train more than 1,200 feet heyond the main Structure. 'A total of 17,000 tons of structural steel, 175,01)0 cubic feet of Indiana limestone and 10,000 cubic feet of granite were used In the stan tion building and concourse. Tbe 'consists of 449 cylindrical conorote piers from four to ten feet In diameter, reaching to a depth of more than 00 feet below the level of the , . ChicagT) river! Those who. have had the privilege of insjiecting the new station pronounce it a marvel In terminal construction and 4ue urging their friends .to see if on their next visit to Chicago. e The station is used jointly by the dering this room are the Ait inno- - Pennsylvania Railroad; Chicago, Milterminal facilities. passenger ration In railway terminal" design Ms a waukee & St. Paul R'y. ; Chicago. Burconference rooin accommodating 125 lington Quincy'K. R., and the Chi-.caAlton R. It. people, .which Is available, without completion of the new Cfilcago Station ' marks . a noteworthy accomplishment in the history of Important engineering. undertakings, from which travelers 'from allparts of the United States will derive pleasure and benefit. . The station Is without doubt pne of the finest and most efficiently designed railroad terminals In the world. It forms a vital link In thb realization of the Chicago City Iteautiful Plan. Sim: pllcity, accessibility and convenience, for the traveling public are the essential virtues of the new terminal. Rest and. recreation rogms,. ticket .offices, barber shop,, dining rooms, .stores of various kinds, and almost every known to travelers, ar& to he found on the one .level, no steps. to climb. . The main statloh Is a low monumental type of building with a tow of massive coluntns of 'classic design' along the entire east front. Once Inside, the trnyeler finds himself, in a gigantic- - waiting room more than I0P foot .high and brilliantly lighted through skylights In the great aroh Colonnades Inclose the room, ool.llng. lhe walls of which are patterned "after the architecture of ancient. Rome. Bor- 2- -2 2--2 2--2 2-22 -22-2 2-2-2-2 2--2 2i--2 2.--2. Sta-U'--n THE sh-ed- ... I If y.ou saw this sign Coal $5.00 A Ton Delivered foun-dntio- You would buy a cellar full yet we can prove electric cooking to be cheaper than $5.00 coal. t ultra-complet- u Acldition to Maytag Factory , I -- sur-nlus'o- T v-- s- Mg- '.m kn .ir ' ' .ys;S 'i- - that fine Mother! Now Isn T have' to . I wont, . . a - it-t- b-.- t . nr-g:- ad-di'- -- hydro-electri- c f-- - M-- e me-4ko- d 16,-1- owner-operate- d 83 Maytag Grayfoam washing machine the of founder Maytag .vliich is easily distinguished from u Maytag, board .my other machines by having a east of the and. chairman ornpany directors, he recently announced aUiminum tub. aa-his company would increase the Mr. Maytag further states that the Newton, Jlaytag sales organization for1 the utput of their faetoty--- at ,uva, by building and equipping a pasTThirty days has been selling on an average of twohundred machines aetory. comes after a day more than the present plant This announcement everal .months of careful planning is producing. The, new addition will nd investigating, not only conditi--n- s be eighty-fou- r feet wide by two e hundred in the present factory, but feet long and will be six market conditions as well. Mr. tories high., ' The construction will ray tag reports that in the face of he of concrete through-nu!ie present shortage of machines and well lighted and wel equipped he rate at which the sales organiza-io- n in every feature. The total floor is developing, it would be unwise space of the new building will ex0 delay any longer or to consider ceed a hundred thousand square feet smaller addition than this to pre- which brings the' total factory floor set manupfaeturing faeiitieOs. The space up lo over half a million square ntire output of the plant is concen- feet or approximately twelve and a trated oa the manufacture of the half acres. Active preparations for Carry in coal In a recent interview with Mr. ,F. . carry out ashes chop kindling t ' V . ' . nor listen to yoii "complain about -- out-id- - black bottom pans fmokey walls, sooty -- curtains, so you can now THROW AWAY YOUR COAL HOD AND BUY A WASTE BASKET t, 1 T elluride Power Co. |