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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE SALINA SUN ADDITIONAL LOCALS second-clas- s mail matter under the of March 3, 1879. at the postoffice at Salina, as set of Congress Chrb-topherso- Mr. and Mrs. La veil Dastrup Richfield, were guests of friends Salina Monday. SUBSCRIPTION RATES On a Tear Six Months ... ........... ..,-J2-0- 0 1.00 Payable In' Advance Advertising Rates Given on Application. Editor and Publishes PROGRESS HINDERING PROGRESS. THROUGH DEPRESSION. ' " . . While the distressing economical A period of depression. farces men conditions which prevail are due to a to no be take account of stock, and this, not can number of causes, there which laws restrictive only in its literal commercial sense, doubt that have but in every relation of life, even and business, industry hamper been an important factor in the situ- mans .relation to the universe, and still more widely, the relation bf soation. . We An instance of how unwise legisla- ciety itself to its ultimate destiny. stock-takinall this sure that be. tion operate to retard progress is giv- may and en by Wright A. Patterson, veteran material and spiritual, individual much in discarding editor, in a recent issue of the Pub- social, will result lishers Auxiliary, a trade publication that .we once thought precious, even values for newspaper men. Mr. Patterson dis- vital, and also.-i- creating new new for the day. in enacted cusses the effects of laws Oklahoma and Kansas which prohibit "ftrus what we emotionally call de"a new asutility companies from selling elec pression may really mean achieve to the compulsion' .trie and gas appliances, and the agi- cent, or of two . knows Science one. states. types tation for similar laws in other conand in conformation the He says: change inlmbi-- . The enactment of such a law in dition- of the earth and of its secular changtants slaw, insensible, any state means slowing up of the inthe stallation of these modern comfort and es, and cataclysms. Of the former and of continents and sinking convenience producing appliances in rising withdrawal of ice the home ; it means depriving the peo- the approach and 'are examples. At this moment is ple of the community of securing them ages e an going or coming? Nobody on easy payment terms and at the knows. lowest possible cost; it means fewer So in human society there are expeople employed in the community and who look upon our in the factories of the nation, and in treme .pessimists . g, ice-ag- the end it does more harm than good to the merchants of a community. It might be added that such laws tend to prevent the extension of electric service to the farms of the country. a movement which has made great progress in recent years owing to the enterprise of the utility companies in supplying the necessary appliances on most favorable terms. . HES THE WHOLE WORKS. An exchange prints a little story, clipped from an unknown source, which is very good and perhaps very old. Anyway, its worth repeating. It concerns an Omaha jobbing house and a customer merchant in a small Iowa town. A shipment of goods received by the customer was rejected as unsatisfactory. The jobber prepared to institute suit for collection, and wrote to the railroad agent at the village for information about the arrival of the merchandise; to the president of the bank for information concerning the financial standing of their customer; .to the mayor of the city asking him to recommend a good lawyer to handle their case; and to the merchant himself, threatening suit, if he did not make payment at once. All the desired information came in a single letter, as follows: I received your letter telling me I had better pay up. I am railroad agent here and received the letter you wrote the agent. "I am president and sole owner of the local bank and can assure you of my financial standing. As the mayor of the city,' I hesitate to refer you to a lawyer, since I am the only member of the bar in . . depression as the beginning of h toboggan slide for mankind. But- here history comes to our aid, and, besides, we know vastly more about the causes of economic depressions whether or not we can control them all than we know about the cause, or causes, of an except that, whatever these may be, we ake very sure that they are not under our control. We believe that when men bring on the next depression if they do it will be because they have in the main sinned against light. So man, Jn spite of his fatal tendency to relapse, not only is now making good resolutions, but will keep some of them. This is wlvat progress has always been not a full rising to the summons of the future, but even, at worst, a partial one. Man climbs the ladder of his destiny round by round, flattering himself .that he is about to emerge at the top of his ascent, but even another step challenges his powers. That bey is his. doorii as man tween dust ' and deity. Providence Journal. . - ice-ag- cloud-hangin- e, g half-wa- TURNING POINTS. . . First State Bank n, OF SALINA left Saturday morning for of her home at Los Angeles. ... in Miss MozeTIa Anderson visited Sun4th at the home of her Mr. and Mrs. Gail Wright bf Ricli-f- it day and July Mr. and Mrs. Carl Anderson. parents, Id, visited Monday with Mr. and She and Mrs. Gail Brooks, who has . . Mrs. E. C. Wright, been' a house guest at the Anderson home, returned to Salt Lake Thursday.' Milton Bird and lady friend, of Salt Lake, were guests Sunday and MonMits Porethy Murphy left Thursday at the home of Mrs. Etta Bird. day for Provo," Where she will visit with her sister, Mrs. C. Ellis Schurtz, a war- veterain, left Thursday for Salt Lake. He will unWayland Matfsson, who. is attenddergo a special physical examination ing the summer' session held' at the given for the' veterans of the. world University of Utah, visited with Mrs. war'. He was. Mattsson over the week-en. . a guest-- at the A'. C. Willardson home. Miss Vaundis Elmen and mother, of A- Persian cat belonging. to Mrs. Garfield, are visiting this - week returnL. St. of Stull . Louis, Kathryn ' '. ed' thin and footsore after being ab. Mr. and 'Mrs. Lawrence Durf-eof sent froth its home two '.years. . hotom, were guests last week of Mrs:-- ' E. A, Liston.". While here, Mr. Law John Marnd hasnt missed a meetrcnce underwent an operation for ing during his 65 years of sendee as at the Salina' hospital. .secretary of an East' Boston.- Masonic ' ' . lodge. Mr. and .Mrs, Walt Wilkinson spent' is being sought July 4ih in Salina. They, are guests A by J. 'C. Simpson of Kansas City, Mo., gt the home of Mrs--. Bell Sbrenson. ene. who charges that his pastor-anMr. and Mrs. Vigo Christophersqn mies in the church interfere with bis ' '.- In making change of address, give old address as well as the new. H. W. CHERRY j Mayor C. E. Peterson has returned Mrs. Parhn McKenna, who has from a business trip to the capital been visiting the past two wreeks with city. her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lars issued Every Friday at Salina, Utah. Entered derson of Los Angeles, Mrs. Ebbe Jessen and Mr. and Mrs. Alden Barton cf Manti Salina . . v Utah . : - H. S. GATES President- d. E.. - ". ... CRANDALL H. . B. Cashier Vice-Preside- - V.- - JOHNSON. Assistant Cashier , . y. . ..'. from the of 'Los Ange'les,-arrivecoast Sunday and. visited for a- few days .at the home of Mr., and 'Mrs. Lars Chrlstojiherson. The visitors left for Salt Lake Wednesday, where they will visit for a 'few days before .re' turning .to th'eir California home. ' court-injunction worship.-- . ' ' . ' - I'' Mrs. E. A. Moran was an arrival from' Washington D. C., Thursday of last week. She will join her husband at the Salina Experimental station fall.'and remain until-earj. . . Mrs. G. M. 'Burr, left Wednesday' for Emery, where spe will visit for a week or morq with relativos. Victors at the C.arl Anderson home Sunday and Monday included Mr. and-Mrs. Charles Gartat, Clifton fiartat, Miss Florence and Devon t 'Ga-ria- An- - ' Mrs. Newman Singer of Chicago, testified in her divorce suit thatthp honeymoon in .Europe Which her husband had promised' her was due, he took it alone. - n John L. Seaman of 'Mt. PJeas.anf, Two prisoners, in the ball and chaih has a clock that has ticked gang 'at the state .penitentiary at away 198 years and has not been in Canon .City, Colo., were required to the shop for repairo in 94 years-dresses for .three days a& punishment for violation of prison .' When he applied' for a .divprce in rules. Detroit, Ernest Beston.told the court, that his wife.talked so much he didnt F; O. BULLOCK get enough,.sleep and as a result lost DENTIST' .. ' . .' ' . weight. .flours- -. to 5 P.M.. Gunnison In Each Wednesday Gustav Farsoil, a barber in Mont- Utah Salina cusN. J., quit his job leaving clair, tomer half shaved when notified that an uncle-in- . Southern California had left him $50,000. SAUNA to Mich., wear-women- Estranged fromhis tehth wife and reported to be .wooing an eleventh, Paul Ellis of Chicago w$s. sentenced During 19$1, 282 manufacturers of to 'six months in jail for failure to all kinds and grades o.f hosiery in the United States made net shipments'to-t'allin. pay alimony to .his ninth. 50,541,210 dozen pairs. Though she asked $10,000 damages because a- dentist had extracted the When she leaped from the window hotel room in San wrongs tooth, Mrs. Vera Anunziatd of of an Chicago 'was awarded $1 by. a jury. Jose, Calif., Miss Irene Johnson alighted oh an automobile with only a slight While plowing' a' field, Harry Rhutz injury.. of Cedar Rapids, la., turned up a gold watch which his father lost 20 years .Because two prohibition agents ; . ; ago. each, had 9 drinks of the evidence, Judge Geo. Carpenter of Chicago, rulThe value of .the United States eap: ed out their testimony in the trial of .itol building and grounds is estimat- Ben Tiffany for violating the dry ' ed at $25,400,000! . . . laws.' s '- . BEAVER g eight-stor- 50 c y .After 8:30 P. M.Only . ... .' (Statio-n-to-station- EL T 3.5c rates) . - - Most '.'persons of middle age and beyond may look upon apparently trivial occurences which seem to have changed the entire course of their lives. A chance meeting, a fortuitous remark, a casual letter, or even an accident, may mark a turning point in ones course. Such ordinarily unimportant events which turn out to bo far reaching in their consequences most often have to do with matrimony. But in business and other relations of live these minor happenings also frequently have a weighty influence. It is related of Disraeli, the Jewish this vicinity. who became one of Englands boy "If I were not the pastor of the COUNTIES OF THE great prime ministers, that his turn- UNITED STATES. church here, I would tell you to go ing point came through a fist fight to hell! Some facts regarding the area, popat school, as a consequence of which his he and other statistics concerning of residence and ulation changed place U. S. ARMY CAMELS. fell in with friends who aided him in counties in the United' States, may be Few persons know that once the getting started on his brilliant career. of interest. United States army employed camels Numberless similar instances may be There are 3,072 .counties in the 48 ns a means of transportation in the found in biographies of the great and states, of which Texas Has the greatin which chance or small est number, 254, and Delaware the Southwest. The story of the exper- near-grea- t, iment is interesting. led to fame and fortune. smallest number, 3. happenings With a view to overcoming the difSan Bernardino county, in CaliforSometimes, too, they lead in the opficulties of traversing the great Am- posite direction, as in the case of Na- nia, is the largest, with an area of erican desert before there were any poleon, who is said to have lost the 20,175 square miles. New York countranscontinental railroads or high- battle of Waterloo, which changed the ty is the smallest, with an area of ways, 75 camels were brought from whole history of Europe, because it only 22 square miles. Bristol county, Egypt and Asia Minor in 1856 by the rained just before the battle, causing in Rhode Island, is the next smallest, war department, while Jefferson Da- his cannon to' be mired in the mud. with 24 square miles. vis was secretary of war. Thus, while carefully planned efCiting another case of extremes, The camels performed satisfactorily, forts count most, a great deal often Armstrong county, in South Dakota, but the army mule skinners" did not depends on whether one gets the lucky with an area of 540 square miles, has like the beasts, besides they frighten- or unlucky breaks of life. no postoffice, while Allegheney couned the army horses and mules in a ty, in Pennsylvania, with 725 square BeBtampede on slight provocation. miles, has 150 postoffices. THE PARAMOUNT fore the experiment had progressed And, speaking of postoffices, Lead-villISSUE. 0 very far, the Civil War broke out and Colo., is the highest, being the project was. abandoned, some of In the midst of nil the political feet above sea level, while the animals being sold to circuses, jockeying which is inseparable from Calif., 175 feet below' sea level, while others were turned loose. Some a presidential campaign, the para- is the lowest. of these, grown wild, were seen in mount issue which interests the AmNorth Carolina and Virginia have Arizona as late as 1909, and some be- erican people as a whole is that of exactly 100 counties each. States havlieve that a herd still exists in the unemployment. When millions who are ing more than 100 counties are Illiuninhabited wastes of that region." begging for a chance to work are de- nois, 102; Kansas, 105; Georgia, 161; nied an honorable means of earning Texas, 254. , of was a awarded $10,000 Judgment One state, Louisiana, has no counlivelihood, all other problems seem to Samuel Wenk in Chicago, who insignificant. ties. But this does not mean that it The efforts of politicians to place has no political subdivisions as othpr charged that he went into a health club feeling fine, but came out af- the blame for the present conditions states have. In Louisiana these subter a massage on this party or that, or on this of- divisions are called parishes, of which with a broken ' ficial or that, are manifestly insincere the state has 64. 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 tp 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 teeth and normal bone structure, minerals must be fed. We know of no better, safer, or more econom- icalway .of supplying these minerals than by daily feeding of Red Star SUL . ' ' ' ' I. siL'i . Red Star Salt is Natures own containing as it does the- body building 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- ed 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. The lesson is plain! Feed Red Star Salt, that has Natures own balance of minerals. Feed it plentifully and regularly. health-impartin- g - . e, Great Western Salt Co. 10,-10- Cali-patri- a, SALINA a REDMOND Always on hand at Sevier Valley Merc . . Co. . EPHON-E- . - . . " Plus Federal tax' on amounts over 50e . - and futile. No political party, no .of; ficial or group of officials of the government, can be hetd responsible for the unhappy economic plight. of this nation and of the. world. The best brains of America and othe.r nations have long been devoted' to an earnest effort to find a solution to .'the worlds economic problems, but' without success-.- Here and there a remedial action hds given a sniall measure of relief. But, bfoadly speaking, the problem- Is' 'still far ' . from a solution. be we'11, therefore, for the It might mass of our citizenship to discount the claims and counter, claims of .politicians during-- the forthcoming campaign, and demand a fac'ing of these pressing problems on- tha basjs . of rir.lity rather. thaft theory. Whenever, either of., cur political parties can give any. convincing evidence of real accomplishment in the direction of restoring prosperity, that party should have the support arid applause of the general public. But untrl such a showing of concrete results can be made,- the average' citizen is justified in considering all the partisan ballyhoo as just so ijiuch political bunk. . If prosperity i.s to be restored, it must be through the cooperation of all parties and all the. people. This is not a patrisan question. by TELEPHONE' - . ' . |