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Show Sauna sun, sauna, utah TH The League of Nations assembly is now barred from deliberating on disarmament or security, but there is always the cross-wor- d puzzle Boston Transcript. to fall back on. countries. This is undoubtedly true, and it follows logically that our immense home market has been built up and preserved for home in' Issued Every Friday at Salina, Utah. dustries by the protective tariff. It is the belief of the protectionist second-class under matter as at mail the that the home market, that is, the American market, is the best and Entered at the postoffice Salina, . act .of Congress of March 3, 1879. richest in the world, and that in saving it so far as possible for our local producers, we promote the welfare of all our people, capitalist, SUBSCRIPTION RATES . worker, business man and farmer. Then with the big home market . $2.00 ...7. One Year as a foundation our producers are able to compete with the rest of the 1.00 Six Months world in foreign markets where competition is practicable. Payable In Advance ....... If there were an American rubber producing industry we would In making change of address, give old address as well as the new. . not be at the mercy of the British rubber combination today. THE S ALINA SUN Judgin.gthe efficient way in which they threw mud bombs those defeated New York mayoralty candidates could get good jobs in the airplane controversy. - .. ...... Advertising Kates Given on Application. - H. W. CHERRY - THE POWER OF ADVERTISING Editor and Publisher . were laid in 1924 One of the best recent statements on the power of advertising of the Guaranty was one by Mr. Francis H. Sisson, Trust (!o.. New York. In a speech at the first convention of the allied advertising interests of the U. S. held in New York, Mr. Sisson said, in part: Advertising is on.the threshold of its golden age. Its possibilities for service challenges the most imagination. That day is long past, if indetd it ever existd, when advertising under proper conditions, can be Considered as an experiment or a speculation. Advertising has long since become a demonstrated factor as. a business builder and a clearly proved educational force. That advertising rnay not always, in all hands, operate 1 0L per-ceefficiency, is no more proof of its failure than an unsuccessful operation on the humbn body by a horse doctor would be a proof of a failure of surgery. Vice-Preside- ALMSHOUSE POPULATION STEADILY DECREASING Some of the measure of the ge'neral improvement of the people of the United States during the past ten years can be gained from the figures on pauperism in America. In the year 1914 therwere 91.5 almshouse inmates for each one hundred thousand people in the United States. In the year 1923 there wereonly 71.5 inmates for each 100,000 inhabitants. ' The improvement was gepera in nearly all of the states and the evidence bears out the statement that conditions are still improving. The fact that the number of public dependants is decreasing each year also indicates that hundreds of thousands of dollars are being saved in lessened public ependitures for the almshouses. This, of course, tends to reduce taxes. Several reasons are given for the improving conditions in the United States. Perhaps the most important cause cited is the increased general prosperity of the country and the fact that wealth is more generally diffused than ever before. Living costs are of course higher than in 1914 but they have not advanced as rapidly as wages. People are faying more money each year, the savings banks statistics show, and money-pr- at in life insurance is said to be lessening the amount of dependency in old age. Improved sanitary conditions andjthe lengthening of the average of active life, of course, enables more people to support themselves than formerly. In addition to the fewer number of paupers, another important improvement cited, is the manner in which they are taken care of. Formerly conditions in the almshouses were bad from a sanitary and other standpoints. Conditions common a generation ago would not be tolerated now, showing that the ethics of the public has increased with its prosperity. The country in general has recently terminated one of the hottest summers in several years and this seems to have led more predictions than usual about the coming winter and the summer of 1926. According to most unofficial prophets we are in for a cold winter. The principal rfeason given for this prophecy is the allegation that one extreme is usually followed by another. If this statement Were true, however, and the seasons ran to this form each succeeding summer would be hotter and each succeeding winter would be colder, until finally the climate would" become unbearable. Several weather prophets who delve into the musty almanacs and weather records qfJongagc, predict that in 1926 we will not have any summer at all that it will be cool and cloudy during the usual summer months, in fact just like a certain summer which we had 200 years or so ago. All prophets do not agree with this prediction, however. Prof. John A. Curtin, a Buffalo scientist says that the summer of 1926 will be hotter than that of the present year. He bases his prediction on the study of sun spots which he has been observing since 1871. As the spots increase the summers get warmer, he says, and as they decrease the summers are milder. Prof. Curtin is sure the country will not have a heatless summer because the sun spots are now approaching their maximum, which will be reached about June, 927. That should mean that it will be 1930 before the average temperature becomes lower than it was this summer. So you can pay your money and take your choice of these weather predictions. . ! 1 OUR GREAT HOME MARKET In spite of all dire predictions to the contrary, the foreign trade of the United States, is greater now in volume and in value than it ever has been in peace times. This in spite of the fact that it was believed in some quarters that cheap European competition, and the all the world, would fact that the United States is creditor seriously conflict with our international tTade. The Chicago News points out one fact,, in reference to our commerce which is frequently overlooked: "Another important factor in Americas foreign trade is, of course, the size of the home market. This country is so much more populous than are competing manufacturing countries and its power of consumption is so great that it can attain a vast volume of output, and consequntly cheapness of production, simply by supplying the domestic demand. American industry is not based on foreign markets, but on domestic consumption. On that alone it is able to build factories that produce goods on a scale not attained in competing to-nea- tion-wid- Riots and Rebellion would result immediately should Congress propose to tax Southern lapdoVvnern one dollar per acre every Fourth of July for fireworks, says H. II. Wefel, Jr., in the Manufacturers We landowners, however, submit to a tax at least as great Record. d collected by the Taxgatherer of the South the Forest Fird. Had we rebelled against this tax twenty or so years ago the accumulated values in the form of sturdy young forest and thriving industries would be in excess of $5,000,000,000 today. It is high time we rebel. If we do not, twenty years hence wifi find us not simply as we are today, but facing the. consequences in droughts, insect and fungus pests, reduced fertility of soil, eroding lands and insufficiency of industry based upon our own resources. If forest fires have cost the South $5,000,000,000, what! have the nation? Forest fire prevention and protection measures cost they cahnot be adopted too soon. Red-Tongue- " In I860. The Richardson mine at Mudoc. In Hastings county, was the first gold mine worked In Ontario. The precious metal was discovered by a mun named Powell In I860. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION McComick Building SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH A National Organization to Improve "and Extend the Uses of Concrete OFFICES IN 30 CJTIES FOR THE Parasites on Germs' f Famous Ball. Bearing Why use an old cleaner or buy a new one that requires oiling when you can buy this famous cleaner so reasonable and it requires y i : No Oiling - FIRST AMONG CLEANERS Human Intelligence asserted that human Intelligence reaches Its maximum at sixteen years. After that there is nothing left to do bu to learn bow to use. If. Cleveland Plain Dealer. And at sixty, one almost knows, we suspect. tt. Louis Our free booktetjConcrete Streets for Your Town, will tell you the whole story. Ask for your copy." AGAIN ONLY $28 e Gold-bearin- It ; irt4,i lit the bed of a small stream flowing Into the Clmudlere river, south of Levis, province of Quebec, in 1823, by a wotunr. named GIlbrt. In Novo Scotia gold found In 1858 by Captain .LKs-trangwhile moose hunting. pneumonia, typhoid fever, diphtheria, untlirux, chicken cholera and other disease germs have been discovered and are made into serums to kill all bacteria that prey on mau. or.heast. except the germ of tuberculosis. . t the gravel Parasites that live on bacteria, of. . and gives 'greater service value per dollar than any other type. l. discovered popularity ment money can buy, By passing 20,000 laws' eVery year the state legislature's are doing all they can to make the nation lawful but the people lawless. Louisville Courier-Journa- quartz was e df concrete, street pave merit is the fact that it is the finest looking pave- - Golt' in Canada American science is gradually overcoming the dread white plaand the death rate from tuberculosis is steadily falling, according gue to Dr. Allen J. Krause, of lobn Hopkins University. In twenty-fiv- e years the death rate from consumption in New York City alone has fallen from 280 per 00,00.0 population to less than 00 per 00,000 Other crowded cities, where the plague-i- s- always at its population. worst, have had corresponding decreases in the death rate. The great decline in the death rate continues, he said in an. interview. "The agency principally responsible is the organized combat through the many local associations affliliated with the National Tuberculosis association, financed largely by the sale of Christmas seals. t i4 There is no specified cure for the disease, but there are many special methods of treatment effective in individual cases. The one general method of treatment is based on rest to the patient, effective in several ways, some of which call for constitutional, or bodily rest and some for rest of the lungs through surgical means. 1 The reason lor this na? REFORESTATION BY FOREST FIRE PREVENTION Gold was found In vet? SMg ITeag One question which might be referred to the League of Natipns. is whether Miss Ederle really could have swum entirely across the English Channel if her trainer hadnt interferred. r 1 e Meo Lay Ssag ' . nt -- 1 WHITE PLAGUE SLOWLY RECEDING IN AMERICA nt far-reachi- ALL KINDS OF WEATHER PREDICTIONS 1 29,939,000 square yards of concrete street pavement Is now Globe-Democra- t. Rattler Need Not afterward. Supplanted Patriarch Tlie holy governing synod of tbe Russian church was Instituted by Peter the Great, In 1721, to take the place of the patriarchate of Moscow, the power of which Peter considered too great. y ALLOWED FOR YOUR OLD CLEANER e Jms CLINGING THREADS AND IMBEDDED DIRT p ARE EASILY REMOVED WITH ITS Double Action Method 1 May we demonstrate irr your home? . PUBLICATION FOR Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, Sept. 24, 1925. Notice is hereby given that Axel Nielson of Richfield, Utah, who, on Jan. 17, 1920, made Homestead entry, No. 023115, for SlaNEU, SE4, Section '5,- Township-2Soulhrlange 2 filed West, Salt Lake Meridian, has enotice of intention to mak- three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described,-- before the Clerk of the District Court, at Richfield, Utah, on the 10th day of November, 1925. Claimant names as witnesses: George Madsen, of Aurora, Utah. Peter Nielson, of Richfield, Utah. Ernest W. Herbert, of Salina, Utah. Victor Nielson, of Richfield, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. First publication, Oct. 2nd. Last publication, Oct. 30. - $12.50 y Coil The commonly accepted belief that a rattler will not strike until after t lias sounded its warning is false. If the reptile Is trodden on while asleep It will strike first and do its rattling NOTICE I ? . . . -- - (See a.d in Saturday Evening Post of Oct. 17, 1925 on pages 84 and 85) -- Telluride Power Co. wwm K n: |