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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE SALINA SUN Issued Every Friday at Salina, Utah. Entered at the postoffice at Salina, as second-clasact of Congress of March One Year Six Months 3, 1879. Hugs Relief Work After Midwest RATES -.-.SUBSCRIPTION RELIEFRECORD A mail matter under the si pose, the Rad Cross naa expended from its regular reserves $124,000. In all these disasters. Red Cross workers have been impressed by the spirit of determination and hopefulness shown by the people. Once they 'recovered from their grief and bewilderment. they began at once to rebuild. materially and otherwise, an 1 fclway3 oil a better scale where possi-- " hie. Another significant feature of these occurrences, as noted In the report of the Red Cross, was the promptness with which the local chapters organized emergency relief before help could be received from outside sources. A direct effect of their example has been to stimulate disaster relief preparedness among chapters ell over the country. The services of the American Red Cross are performed invariably in the name of the American people. On the effectiveness of this representation during the past year, it will launclj the ninth annual roll call this year on November 11, to continue until Thanksgiving, hovember 26, during which support through membersHijr will be invited for 1926. RED CROSS YEAR' Tornado the Greatest in American Annals. $2.00 1.00 '. . Payable In Advance DISASTERS In making change of address give old address as well as the new. Advertising Rates Given on Application. TEACH FIRE PREVENTION IN SCHOOLS Virtual completion The Insurance Age Journal of Marblehead, Massachusetts, says: Certain national tendencies which seem to be inherent within the hearts of young and irresponsible people in this country make them too fond of fires to seek their prevention, seriously. They love to see the engines and other apparatus dashing madly through the streets; to thrill at the sound of the sirens and gongs; and to fall in with the group hurrying in the indicated direction asking, "Where's the fire? Once at the conflagaration, with the possible exception of dwelling houses, hope against hope is expressed that the fire wilT riot be extinguished too soon, that it shall continue to amuse. Everyone wants to see a big fire. If its a business or commercial building, they think, The owners carrying insurance, so wheres the loss? Physical culture is a part of school and college work in order to benefit individuals physically and prolong life. When one considers that last year some 5,000 persons were killed in fires, not to mention those injured, and that over $500,000,000 worth' of property went up in smoke, it would seem that one of the greatest services that our public; schools and colleges could render to the coming gerteration would be regular and systematic instruction in fire prevention work. Every single person in the land is of necessity forced to use fire in some form or other. Then why should they go uninstructed as to proper methods in safeguarding its use? ever-increasi- 1 IN 1925 Ranged From Fire to Earthquake and Covered Wide Area at Home and Abroad. Editor and Publisher H. W. CHERRY DROP of the largest reproject of habilitation 'ever known has been acRed by the American complished as a a than less in part Cross year, of its relief work in the more than 90 disasters In which It served in the past year. This great program was undertaken following the tornado which struck five States last Spring, killing 796. people, injuring 2,239 more, and causing inestimable property loss. It left a huge area of devastation In its wake, presenting a real problem. The Red Cross, however, went to work on the heels of the storm, caring for the Injured, sheltering and feeding whole communities, and help lug every individual sufferer from the destruction back to normal The magnitude of the problem Is Indicated by comparison of its huge caa nalty list with that of the entire preceding year, whose combined losses were 735 dead and not quite 2,000 injured, as a result of the record number of 192 catastrophies. The story of the Red Cross service in the past year, recounted by the reiV. u fiiA.ii w f port, ranges from fires heading the list of destructive forces with 29 disasters, to mine explosions, tornadoes, floods and earthquakes. , ! J 4 4 j The Santa Barbara earthquake was among the outstanding events record-ThRed Cross had ?..ed in tlie report. v completed its relief organization oa the scene within a few hours of the $ disaster, and in addition had launched a program designed to permanently (For Wedded Bliss) restore every .person affected by it, By Mr. and Mrs. John Demarest (Married happily for 75 yrs.) to his former status once more. The Red Cross service in the period following the wreck of the Navy airwas typical of its ship Shenandoah promptness and effectiveness. Service in this instance was afforded by ltcd Cross chapters in the vicinity of the wreck, and by representatives of the national organization. It demonstrates graphically the value of each of the more than 3,000 chapters of the society which are at work in virtually every part of the country, In the facility they afford the national organization in emergencies. There were 61 domestic disaster op eratlons reported In which the Red j, Cross rendered service either through chapter or national staff personnel during the year. In 34 of these the ; rational organization appropriated a fbfal of $3,047,256.49, the greater por-- 9 tion of which was received as direct contributions for the relief of Speci- fied disasters. The relief operations 1 following the northern Ohio tornado of June, 1924, were brought to a close in May, 1925, after an arrangement been made with the Lorain chap when had they steps marry. ter to provide expert services to the families of any tornado sufferers who t $$ 4r v .v : v $$ 2 4 4 4 4 4 required such assistance in the next two years. In this single disaster the relief work, as finally accounted, WORTH THINKING AEOUT reached a total of $1,019,751.23. tornado of this The Time was when Americans said: Taxation without representaa strip of territory 400 covering year, tion is tyranny, and fought the Revolutionary War to gain their miles long involved an expenditure point. Today all American citizens, directly or indirectly, are taxed. up to June 30 of $774,000, while the But fifty per cent of them are too lazy or too indifferent to see to total amount turned In to the fund the agency of the Red Cross it that they tax themselves. Fifty per cent of them fail to take the through In addition to this was $2,645,000. Cincinnati Enquirer. sum specifically collected for the pur trouble to elect their own representatives. peace-tun- e post-disast- What Becomes of Red Cross Sweaters What becomes of the sweaters which the American Red Cross has asked for? In the first place, they are needed for the 30,000 disabled veterans still In hospitals this winter, the garments being in great demand. The surplus left from the war has been exhausted since the Armistice, hence the new call for the sweater-knitterto resume their needles, a call already mid-weste- s being met. The American 'Red Cross ri?; The American Red Cross serves in you can make it more effective by adding your name to its membership during the Roll Call, Nov. your name; 11-2- Strcfng Membership Ajjoeal In Red Cross Disaster Relief a Asking themselves an $- The United States spends $2,00(1,000 a day for sugar, at the present low price. All its own sugar resources supply only one-haf this quantity. Great Britian, for centuries the patron saint of producers, is setting out to grow her own sugar. By 1930, it is planned that 50 sugar factories will be in operation in Great Britian. The friendship of Cuba and the United States alone made it1 possible to live in sUgarless Great Britian during the World War. It does not wish g to again be in such a position. Just now, would help relieve the unemployment situation in Great Britian, where 1,200,000 are jobless and drawing public dole, " Our own country never made a better investment than in its sugar factories that prevent foreign sugar monopoly and insure the nation against a sugar famine in case of internationl disturbances. It is well to encourage our own beet industry. lf raw-materi- al sugar-growin- THE BEET SUGAR INDUSTRY Final payments to beet growers, for a Southern California sugar factory, on their 1924-2- 5 crop have just been distributed. The shows that the company received an average of 6.269 accounting cents a pound for its sugar, which brings the payment to growers producing 20 per cent beets up to $12.53 a ton. This gives most of the farmers $140 to $160 an acre for their beets gives the growers good profits besides indirect benefits to the live stock industry from feeding like beet tops, beet pulp and molasses. The industry gives employment to a large amount of labor and guarantees a solid and certain prosperity in the field of agriculture. BREAKING THE COAL STRIKE Problems affecting the future fuel supply of the country will be discussed at the annual convention of the American Gas Associa- tion at Atlantic City, October 12. Recent developments in the oil and coal industries are responsible for much of the interest in the deliberations of the countrys gas men this year. It is recognized that with present high labor costs and rising prices for nearly all materials, manufacturers are demanding more economical as well as more efficient methods of heating. Gas engineers believe that manufactured gas is the logical means to this end. The use of gas in industry has increased more than ,000 per cent in the past ten years. The next step should be the development of the most efficient industrial appliances possible with special reference to particular uses, like metal melting, brick firing, vitreious enameling, glass hardening, varnish making and food drying. .'' As gas is used more extensively the menace of the periodical coal strike will become less, and coal will be used more efficiently in great plants which pipe the gas to the consumer. 1 non-ferro- RAISE POLITICS ABOVE JOB HUNTING Medicine, surgery, everything that is directed by the human brain and human ingenuity, in twenty years has progressed, except government, says Governor Al. E. Smith of New York. Commenting on this remark, Collier's says: The explanation is to be found in the fact that business and science have offered more attractive rewards than has politics. Thre are exceptions: AI Smith is a notable one, Andrew W. Mellon is another. His administration of of the Treasury has been incalculable value during thestf difficult years of funding the great war debt. But generally, the more gifted men and women have avoided public service. A hundred and fifty years ago politics offered the largest opportunities to ambitious men. Today the George Washingtons and Alexander Hamiltons are manag- ing business or conducting! experiments in laboratories. Progress will come when once more the public service gives first-rat- e men and women space to use their full powers." WE ARE ALL CAPITALISTS IF WE SAVE ANYTHING When people invest their savings in banks they acquire the banker's point of view. It they dont their banks wont last long. When they invest in stocks they acquire the stockholder's point of view. They want their stock to be worth something. They are Detroit Saturday Night. working to accumulate private property." e The Ten Commandments No appeal is so International as that to the humanity of every people. The sum of $1.50 from X Japanese boy in Tokio to the Santa Barbara relief fund bespeaks a world of friendship, engendered by the American Red Cros3. :--! Join the American Red Cross whose work expression of your human impulses. your FOR Sept. 24, 1925. Notice is hereby given that Axel Nielson of Richfield, Utah, who, on Jan. 17, 1920, made Homestead entry, No. 0231 15, for SliNEli, SK'i, Section 5, Township 21 South, Range 2 West, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make 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 Nov- ember, 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. 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Impressed by the frequency and the wide range of peace time calamities in their country, they have organized their communities with the thoroughness which normal conditions permit, against the possibility of a time when there will be no chance for thought or plan. Red Cross Chapters in many localities are similarly prepared. hoons, AMERICAS SUGAR SAFEGUARD What ter should visit our city? the leading Finger prints are hereditary, and each family lias a distinctive pattern which differs In a few details for the various members, says Mile. Nrlstiue Bonnevle of the Royal Frederlk university of Norway. She also believes there Is i. relation between the ringer prints of related races. (8 jrajftj? Save your strength your time and save yourself from drudgery, by deaniny with the Premier Duplex, quickly and effortlessly. S12.50 allowed for your old cleaner TELLURIDE POWER CO. 3 ' |