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Show fH6 sAUna sun, saLina, utaH everlasting misunderstanding and discord, are now in the main ironed out around a table in a friendly manner! The worker and 'his boss have found that they are simply two businessmen, who prosper best when they settle between them as business men should, all matters at issue between them. THE SALINA SUN Every Friday at Salina, Utah. Issued Entered at the postoffice at Salina, as second-clas- a act of Congress of March 3, mail matter under the SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year Six Months $2.00 . Payable In Advance Sheldon Clark Gets In making change of address, give old address as well as the new. Advertising Rates Given on Manslaughter Verdict Application. Editor and Publisher H. W. CHERRY S' (Continued Salina Sun Platform NEW HIGH SCHOOL BUILDING. THROUGH SALINA 'CAN- world YON. AMODERN HOTEL TO ACCOMMODATE THE TRAVELING PUBLIC. MORE RESIDENCE BUILDINGS TO MEET THE MANDS OF HOMESEEKERS HERE. DE- from page 1) aging evidence given throughout the trial. The slaying of Don Solovich is still fresh in the memory of the citizens of Gunnison and the entire county, it also became nationally known, as celebrities in the motion picture tfi AN IMPROVED HIGHWAY JftrSt Jtate2iank Hello, old man, where have you been? "Just got back from a camping trip. Roughing it, eh? , You bet I Why, one day our portable dynamo went on the bum and we had no hot water, heat, electric lights, ice or radio for almost two hours.- - Life. 1879. , THE ADVANCEMENT OF SAUNA. dfi at Hollywood, Cal., were fre- quently mentioned in the evidence during the trial. None of them, how- ever, were present as witnesses, refusing to appear and disclaiming any knowledge of the associations between Solovich and Clark. Clarks trial was the first in twenty years in Sanpete county, and naturally the intercitizens showed considerable est, the major portion believing that Clark committed the deed with a sole O SALINA SALINA-UTA- intent of committing robbery. Member The crime which dark will serve from one to ten years, was committed January 6 of this year. The spot selected was about a mile and a half north of Gunnison, and in a canyon frequently travelled. The horrible slaughter was committed in the early afternoon as the two men were supposedly on a trip from Pasadena, California, to Salt Lake. Edwin .Lar- sen, road worker for the state, discovered the body of Solovich in a wash about fifty feet from the highway and the man was yet alive. Larsen and Marshall Tollestrup carried the dying man to Gunnison and as soon as he was placed on the sidewalk preparatory to taking him to Dr. Hagans office, he expired. The head of Solovich was battered to a mass, a hammer having been used to beat the victim to death. Three gaping holes in the face and three on the back of the head, any one of which would have caused death, was the receipt given by Clark for the money, clothes and jewelry taken from the lifeless body. Clark, after committing the crime. F H Federal Reserve System JAMES FARRELL, Pres. H. S. GATES, made a hurried departure, going to Manti, where he displayed large sums of money. Later he left for Salt Lake. With the finding of the body of Solovich, County Attorney C. aM. Edwards, got in touch with county officers and the night of the murder Clark was placed under arrest at the home of his grandmother at Salt French experts have been sent to America to study mass production of automobiles with a view to using the same system in Europe. But mass production of autos in Europe will never be practical until Europe pays to the workingman the American standard of wages, so that the worker can afford to buy Lake. FRIGIDAIRE t I - . 1 IMPORTANCE OF AMERICAN SUGAR INDUSTRY- - Americans consume more sugar than any other nation making the American sugar market the most valuable and most coveted in the world. We produce only about two-fiftof our sugar supply, and import the rest. tThis two-fiftus independent of forkeeps domination. eign J To decrease or remove the present slight tariff duty on' sugar would shift the balance of power to foreign producers who, with an abundance of cheap labor, could flood Our Cound try with sugar and destroy our domestic industry, placing us eventually in position where we would be forced to pay for sugar whatever was demanded, in addition to losing the benefit of large taxpaying industries. hs hs price-regulati- low-price- - THIRTY YEARS AGO - - AND NOW. Thirty years ago now, American soldiers were going to Cuba singing of A Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight" as they made I ready to play their part in that international unpleasantness which War and out of which came the we know as the Spaniah-America- n freedom of Cuba On the first day of that May of 898, Dewey had won at Manila; and, before the Fourth of July, was to come the taking of San Juan Hill and the related fighting. On that hill, Cuba is now preparing to set up a monument in memory of those who there fell, both Cubans and Americans. Plans for this have been approved by Cubas president; funds have been provided- The design is to be by Giuseppe P. Collia, of New York- - The battlefield is to be modestly, but appropriately marked. On July 1, as an anniversary occasion, there will be dedica, tory ceremonies. And in two features thereof, there is impressive evidence of the degree to which peace has taken the place of war. Young girls, representing each of the provinces of Cuba, will strew flowers, thousands of them, ove the field of conflict, in remembrance, and intoken of the era of better feeling which has come. And the ambassadors of the United States and Spain, no longer are to attend by special invitation. Such is he t pi an of those responsible for the monument enterprise. : Thejr would have the occasion indicate the friendly ' relations now prevailing between Spain, Cuba and the United States as .members of the family of nations as well as provide fitting memorial of those who fell in the San Juan fighting. War leaves its scars; but fortunate are those people who can give national thought to something other than those reminders of strife; and in this the chief factor is the untiring hand of time. Syracuse 1 i - -- ! Post-Standar- MERITS OF INDUSTRIAL PEACE. We have never known a time when employer and employee worked together in such genuine partnership, said Secretary of Labor James J. Davis recently. Strikes and discords have never been fewer. The country has never been so filled with general contentment- times a day, three hundred and sixty-fiv- e days a year, Three electric refrigeration safeguards the health of your family. It maintains constant, low temperatures that keep foods fresh and wholesome a service that can not be reckoned in dollars and cents. Yet, it is a service that is well within the means of the average family. For General Motors production methods result in low prices and terms that make Frigidaire surprisingly easy to buy. Visit our showroom for a demonstration today or telephone for complete information. 1 This harniony, this smoothness of operation in most of our industries, has undoubtedly played a great part in bringing about the prosperity we now have enjoyed for several years. And because it is now pretty thoroughly understood to be responsible for much of our prosperity,1 I think that American industry means to preserve this new spirit of harmony and make it a permanent thing. Such its broad benefits to the country as a whole. In my estimation its benefit to the individual has been almost revolutionary. Questions once lsandled by committees and groups, with . has-bee- n FRIG IDAIRE PRODUCT OF G E s. H. B. CRANDALL, Cashier G E. PETERSON. E. V. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashiers IMPROVED HIGHWAYS PAY DIVIDENDS. It is expected that 1928 road building activities will exceed all yecords. Twenty thousand miles of surfaced roads are to be built, and about 8,000 miles graded and drained. Throughout the country a multitude of plans have been laid for improving the existing highway systems as well as extending them. A high degree of road service is assured, by the fact that about 240,000 miles of the total 288,000 in state highway systems are this year to be maintained under state highway departments supervisionEarly estimates give amounts available for road expenditures as being much greater than last year. From the various sources, it is expected that highway funds will be upwards of $1,300,000,000. These highway facta should please everyone. There is no such thing as road building expense, unless it be shortsightedness that constructs poor or inadequate roads. Every dollar put into a modern highway for building or widening is an economy and a dividend-paying investment. The United States highway system is the best in the world. V.-Pre- iT E R A L MOTORS J |