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Show TI1F. SALWA SUN, SAUNA, UTA S ALINA THE This Week SUN ty Every Friday at Salina, Utah. Issued Germs The Old Age of Women Who Made the Revolution s mail m attar under th Entered at the postoffice at Salina, as act of Congress of March 3, 1879. ....$2.00 Payable In Advance In making change of address, give old address as well as the new on Application. ELIMINATE UNFIT ENLIST THE HOME EUR SAFETY. BUILDINGS. Civic improvement and fire prevention often go hand in hand Aged and dilapidated buildings, such as can be seen in most centers of population, are detrimental to property values and retard new construction and they are, as well, breeders of conflagrations. A number of cities are making efforts to do away with these eyesores. Harrisburg, Pa., has made conspicuous progress in th:s direction. During 100 broken-dow1931 more than buildings were removed. One block of 24 structures was cleared up, elimm-atin- The Federal, State and municipal governments may legislate for accident prevention, the police may seek unremittingly to enforce it, schools may teach safety, and associations may advocate it, but really effective results can never be obtained until the American home is enlisted wholeheartedly in the cause. The home is the keystone of the nation9 safety arch. It is -- the -- first line of offense against an enemy which kills annually 100,000 persons, Injures 3,000,000 or more and produces an economic loss running into millions. d of the 600,000 Nearly accident fatalities of the last decade actually happened in the homes, says Dr. Herbert J. Stack, safety supervisor of the National Bureau of Cas- - zation. "Accidents are a serious menace to in our national life and their effects. Surely, something is wrong when in a Bingle ten years the lives of more than a half million perof whom are children, sons, can be snuffed out. As bad as wars are, if we add together all the deaths of American soldiers on the battle fields during the combats of the last two hundred years of our history, the total wfll not he that of the loss through accidents during the same , . j OF THE DEPRESSION. H. S. GATES President E. CRANDALL H. B. Cashier Vice-Preside- nt V. JOHNSON Assistant Cashier JUNIOR HIGH NOTES ELSIE Notary Public Contest Assembly. The Washington assembly was given by the 7th B, which concluded the series of contest pograms. 7B scored 7G points, 7A scored 81 points, thus they will be awarded the prize, which goes to the winners of the assembly contest. 2-- Salina, Utah Piute Offices 3 New Books. The Junior high library has been greatly increased by the addition of twenty-fiv- e popular new books on truth and fiction by the worlds best authors. The books were purchased with the money received from proceeds of the faculty play. School Term. The junior h'gh school students rejoice with many others on the fact that school will continue in session until April 29th. They will now put increased effort and be very zealous in their work, so that they may be -- romoted at the close of school. Pep-U- n ;n REX vour F. O. BULLOCK DENTIST 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Hours In Gunnison Each Wethesday. - - - Ufa Salina BOND VJeuseltwheri' PRINTING GOOD JOBS Give Us Yours. your business with an ad home-tow- n paper. even Cutting down immigration more severely is urged in Congress. Mrs. F.U.lIobart, head of the Daught- - nt 0 ... e 1 WHY In a recent copyright article appearing in the San Francisco Chronicle, Leonard P. Ayres, of the Cleveland Trust company, held that rigid economy is the only cure period named. for the depression. He pointed out that the war cost ALL IN THE SAME BOAT. the participating nations $200,000,-000,00a sum equal to about $200 Farmers who are already in the cofrom the time of Julius minute a movement in their should, operative own interest, make .an effort to enlist Ceasor to that of Herbert Hoover! Most of this money was raised by farmers. This is emphasized by Fred Sexauer borrowing against the future. After the war, all nations decided of the Dairymens League Cooperative association, in a letter to members. to make the modern improvements After commenting on low dairy the war had made them desire. This prices, and the economic conditions was accomplished by borrowing more that forced them down, he says: We billions. The result was a period of which prohad better talk it over with our non- expanding indebtedness artificial kind of a duced prosperity. pool neighbor.. His head is under water just the same as ours. If we work1 Now the trend is the other way. We together, maybe we will come up with have been forced into debt contracthe rest of the world. If we do not, tion, and our economic troubles have we may all stay down until we drown resulted. In past years we mortgaged , . . You can help by bolstering up our future income and the time for your neighbor whose vision is not as paying the piper has come. Individuals, families, businesses and broad as yours This is sound advice. The only way governments' must balance their budthe cooperative movement can make gets in order to bring order out of real progress is through united sup- chaos. Waste and extravagance must port, and loyal backing. It should have be eliminated. The depression will behind it every farmer in the coun- pass but we cannot do away with it try, no matter what his individual by a policy of spending that will problem may be. In the long run, as merely duplicate the period of inflaMr. Sexauer points out, farmers will tion we have just left behind us. sink or swim together. The cooperative movement is being severely test- TOSSING IN TIIE ed now and if it comes out with col- BROWN DERBY. ors flying it will be the greatest thing One of the chief political assets of that has happened to agriculture in former Governor Alfred E. Smith has many generations. been his ability to arouse enthusiasm. Those who attended his 1928 camREVIVING MINING paign rallies will remember them as IMPORTANT. lively if not noisy affairs. Such ento however, seems strangely thusiasm, the restore various the If plans value of silver succeed, the nation absent from the reception given by will be benefited in two ways by re- Democratic party leaders in Washnewed opportunities for foreign trade ington to Mr. Smiths announcement which will result in stimulated indus- of his receptiveness toward the presitrial activity at home, and by a re- dential nomination. And yet, perhaps not so strangely, either, for Demovival of mining operations. In the western states mining is one cratic members of Congress from the of the largest industries in some various quarters of the Union immestates it normally employs more men diately picture an added vehemence than any other industry, pays more given to the struggle back home over in taxes to the state, and is the larg- the selection tr instruction of deleest purchaser of supplies. 'Toverty gates. Some of these spokesmen recall for metals have forced the prices industry to retrench, and the effects with difficulty they, as drys in dry of that have been felt throughoqt the constituencies, labored to keep their nation. Anything that will again make footing on the wet plank which Mr. mining profitable will do much to Smith four years ago added to the help the country at large to solve the party platform, and they have no desire to repeat the performance. problems brought on by depression. True, nearly all the aspirants thus far It seems to us that the depression prominently mentioned to head the might have held off hitting us until Democratic ticket are in varying deafter we had celebrated George Wash- grees either wet, damp, humid, or at least susceptible to moisture. But ingtons 200th birthday. Utah Salina the example of JLos Angeles and twelve surrounding cities. They appropriated two hundred and twenty million dol-- . lars for Hoover Dam development, fifty-fivmillion more than the national government will spend for the dam, power plant, and all. . one-fift- h . OF SALINA - g, among other fire hazards, 107 stovepipes which were carried through holes in unprotected lath and plaster! New York, Cleveland, Los Angeles end Chicago are among the larger cities which have rehabditated and 'mnroved dangerous sections. The benefits to the community from such act:on are obvious. The way is opened for the construction of new buildings, or for the development of parks. Property values rise in the surrounding territory, with resulting higher tax return to the city treasury, But, perhaps of greatest importance, the ehanee of f're has been lessened. All individuals and civ:c organizadetions should support movements signed to elinrnate unfit bu Tilings. It is easier and cheaper to prevent a fm than to try to put one out after it has started. And, if there were no question of property losses involved, the potential saving of life that results from a determined civic improvement campaign would alone make the w'ork more than worthwhile. First State Bank Important news for the West Coast, Is the overwhelming vote by which the Imperial Valley irrigation district showed its courage in assuming ah indebtedness of more than $30,000,000 to proide construction of an can canal lor waters from the Hoover Bam, at Boulder canyon. Imperial Valley, now getting Colorado River water precariously, from a cauul that runs tnrough Mexico, will be nereatter independent and follows Miss Ruth Nichols, three cheers for thousand, her, flew up twenty-on- e Here is news important to doctors ' three hundred feet, beating Clarence record In the same and their patients, especially the old I Cbamberlain's At twenty thousand feet two of that so often die of pneumonia. Dr. O. plane. blew out and she was her cylinders in at research T. Avery, engaged the. . use her oxygen tank, at a to obliged Rockefeller Institute, has discovered a' method of piercing the protective temperature fifteen degrees below armor of the pneumococcus, a germ zero. producing pneumonia. That germ and some others like the streptococcus ! The largest Diesel engine ever built mucosus, so deadly in- the blood in America, only tnree tnousand horsestream, are protected against the at- power at that, has been shipped from tacks of the phagocytes, your white St. Louis to Freeport, N. Y. It will blood cells that kill ordinary germs, work in a publicly owned power plant. as the turtle, armadillo or porcupine The shipment should interest the is protected against the bite of a dog. power companies, for the Diesel engIf Dr. Averys discovery saves you, ine, unless choked off or circumvented or a relative, bo grateful to the John in some way, may worry power comB. Rockefellers, father and son. Their panies presently, as much as automoconstructive philanthropy, and money biles and automobile trucks now worry generously given, make the Rockefel- railroads. One inexpensive Diesel engine will ler Institute possible. supply power and light to a small comA young authoress says women live munity at ridiculously low cost, and too long and writes a book to prove .one of the greatest engineers in this it. Some women, unhappily, do live too country predicts that within a short long wnen they outlive the gratitude time isolated farmers will produce of children, forgetful of a debt that their own power and light, for less never can be paid. But the later years than it costs to run poles at present, ought to he the best in a womans life, thanks to small Diesels. the happiest and, a part from creating the race, the most useful. An old Indian, Jackson Barnett, of Life insurance experts tell you that the Okmulgee reservation in Okla-- . a w oman s iue prouabilities are better honia, on wnose laud on was iouud, tnuu a man's alter the child bearing gave all to his wne, and the uupusi period. Providence would not have giv- mission. The govermneul piuiecteU en more of old age to woman than to him against himseif, and now, aner a man if these later years had not been long fight, the Indian, S3 years oid, will get nearly seven nundred thouinieuued for useful happiness. Women past middle age find happi- sand dollars In cash, to use as he ness in guiding and encouraging those chooses. What will tnat money uo tor ' that are younger, in setting a good ex-- . : die old man? How unnapyy will it ample and in studying the strange van- intake him, what swincUers will it ity of man, whose conceit outlives hi3 ;; years. (.1911, hr Idas Fntun Syadiutt, lac.) m one-thir- ualty and Surety Underwriters. That in itself should awaken every household to the necessity of better house- keeping, better care of young children and better safeguards. There is an inescapable duty resting upon the heads of the nations families. In the last analysis they have the responsibility of teaching safety habits and attitudes to the children. What the child absorbs in and if the home colors its after-lif- e lessons there are lax, the child will be found deficient when it comes to safety problems of our modern civili- s Editor and Publish H. W. CHERRY Conquer-Turtl- Uncle Sam must raise hundreds of millions more in taxes, unless he economizes, and that he will not do, to any extent. Some said Tax the heavily taxed big incomes more heavily. But that would discourage enterprises that give work to the idle. A general manu-tacturetax of one per cent, was sugand expected to yield six hungested dred million dollars. The drop in manufacturing would now cut that sum to four hundred millions, and the tax would discourage employment. Income tax, customs receipts, are off, but thirteen hundred million extra dollars must be found somewhere. Where to hit a tired horse to make him go faster Is the problem. Some say a general sales tax, hitting the horse gently, everywhere at once, would be the best plan. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Advertising Rates Given Arthur Brisbane Where to Hit the Horse To second-clas- One Year. Six Months ers of the American Revolution, say: "Our children are rubbing shoulders with children of those who are bring ing a bad influence into this country. A terrible thought, but whence came the fathers of the American Revolution? Were they red Indians or were they the immigrant4 from Europe? j I none, unless it be Gov. '.Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, aroupes the expectations of the liquor camp as being such a splashing wet standard bearer as Mr. Smith. In fact, many will bePeye that the present development arises from the inability of the faction to force Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt thus far the leading contender for the nomination into a position aggressively wet enough to suit them. Mr. Roosevelt tied a few strings to the amendment with which he proposes to displace the Eighteemh amendment, but Mr. Smith is eager to dump the whole question back into the hands of the states, to be as wet as they wish or as dry as they can be under the circumstances. If the Smith announcement is an effort to stop Roosevelt, there is some question whether it can effect even that purpose. And there is serious question whether it can really put Mr. Smith into the runnrng as a prospective nominee. The Roosevelt forces claim 678 delegates of the 770 necessary to nominate under the majority rule. Political observers, surveying the Smith strength in Massachusetts, Illinois, New Jersey, and elsewhere, estimate his support at not more than 200 delegates, or barely more than half enough to block the nominat:on, while 2C0 are pledged to favorite sons, including 22 for Governor Ritchie. The Smith supporters may, of course, count on winning some of the favorite son delegations after the first few ballots. In any event, they believe they candidate offers a rallying center for forces. But it is not impossible that the shadow of the brown derby may serve equally well in southern and western states to drive hitherto unattached Democrats into the Roosevelt fold. However this may turn out, the contest will be no mild one. Southern newspapers such as the Louisville Red Star Salt Is a Better Salt for Animals We live in a modern age of fast production. Competition is spurring Stock Growers as well as farmers to bigger and quicker yields of meat, lambs, wool and milk. Just as the elements taken ' from the soil must be put back in the form of fertilizer, so the animals body, sapped of its strength, must be rebuilt. To preserve their strength and insure sound tð and normal bone structure, minerals must be fed. We know of no better, safer, or more economical way of supplying these minerals than by daily feeding of Red Star Salt two-thir- Red Star Salt is Natures own containing as it does the bodybuilding elements of Calcium, Iodine, Phosphorous and Iron elements that promote good digestion, stimulate blood circulation, build bone, and tone the system generally. If you want your animals to put on weight, have a healthy appetite, produce big yields and to be against ravages of disease feed them Red Star Salt. safe-guard- Wild animals are driven by necessity to find their own salt. They take it from natural Mineral Salt licks. They are rugged ; the growth of their young is normal; the female grows almost to the full size of the male; they are peculiarly free from the maladies that afflict domesticated animals. anti-Roosev- The lesson is plain! Feed Red Star Salt, that has Natures own balance of minerals. Feed it plentifully and health-impartin- g Courrier-Journa- l, consider the announcement unfortunate and conducive to brighter prospects for President Hoover. The Birmingham believes the tide of affairs has made Mr. Smiths ava:lab;lity highly Age-IIera- Great Western Salt Co. ld questionable. Whether this sentiment extends to other sections of the country may soon be known in the results of the North Dakota preferential primary, where Governor Roosevelt first authorized his name to be used, and in that of New Hampshire, where former Smith men are the backbone of the Roosevelt support. Christian Science Monitor. .. -' ed SALINA REDMOND Always on hand at m Sevier Valley Merc. Co. Jt |