OCR Text |
Show V. . THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH THE S ALINA' SUN GAINS GREATER ATTENTION. matter, under, Entered at the postoffice at Salina as second-clas- s the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year.- -, Six Months I 1.00 I Payable in Advance. in making change of address, give old address as well Advertising Rales Given as-- the new. .on. Application. Editor and Publisher H. W. CHERRY PRIVATE ENTERPRISE SCORES AGAIN. DEATH ON THE RADIATOR. About one out. of every ten of the' The Union Pacific. Railroad started automobiles 'that use the" public .something new in transportation with train. Always streets and highways should wear as, its streamline, three-caa pioneer, this railroad has set-- pace deaths! an emblem a. large staring ' " . . . that will . revolutionize passenger . head. " It wouldnt :be a pretty sight. But transportation in the United States. The fastest trains 'now take 76 It would be an accurate symbol. Ten per cent of motorists are- responsible hours from coast to coast. This new for our gigantic death and injury type of train can probably cover the toll. Not all of them, of course, ha.ve' distance in 28 hours, or less, as joad . .an accident every year. But they all beds are improved. . . take chances. They are irresponsible From, the standpoint of comfort, .or .incompetent or congenitally .care- - these new trains will surpass any less. They drive cars with .defective thing ever before offered to the tra- brakes and steering mechanisms and veier. prom the standpoint of. safety, poor lights. . They- cut in and out of (hy are following modem automotive traffic, missing oncoming oars by an meth0ds. Center of gravity will be 20 wer than in old railroad eyelash and feeling a thrill of achieve- - per cent ' ment while doing it. They pass bn. carSi putting the weight nearer to the hills and curves, and regard even the ground where it ought to be. This will most basic and sensible traffic laws pjve jitter balance, less sway when as being "inimical obstacles which taking the curves and cause the cqrs? should be avoided whenever possible. t ;hug. tjje . They drive at high speeds when road ag "thetnod.rn aiUDnub;ie'com and traffic conditions make it exceed. ingly dangerous. And every year they leave be- railroad transportation. hlid them 30,000 corpses and hun-- j , j . dreds- of thous'ands of injured person's whose sole offense was that they hap; pened to be present when the reckless .driver was taking one of the chances he didnt get away with. Yes, there should be the emblem of. A. P. . Ramstedt, president of the death on a long line of 'automobiles Wallace (Idaho) board of trade, otherwise look ho different ccn;iy drafted on silver s than any other cars, of their kind, which said in part: The only suggestion may make some of tical and safe monetary .policy is the reckless drivers think twice before tnore hard money under our crumbling credit, structure, and silver is the only suitable metal available: Government DISCUSSION AFTER purchases of domestic silver at 64 Vi THE BATTLE. cents will not .suffice. We must have free silver coinage at definite ratio World-Wathe into we did Just why1 go to gold to provide stable currency and anyhow? The declaration itself, commercial relations with as passed by congress, indicated that improve silver-using pedple. foreign Gerwe went into the fight against The of silveror any other 1 price many because the imperial govern-metal-me- ans fto- meat was violating our rights on th- when related to price liigh seas by attacking our shipping, thing except silver and committing other unfriendly acts of gold. Thats why The idealists at the time told us we' is actually cheaper, with gold at silver were fighting to preserve civilization, $33.00 an ounce, than stabilized when was was at $22. gold tq make the world safe for democracy, A economists that fear" many great and last but not least were waging a will'. do little to war to end all wars. The objective set silver stabilization so ve it. is intended to problems -, out by congress was accomplishedunless its relationship with gold Germany no longer attacks our ship- - flv 3 ping, but the program' of the idealists As a money, silver has unique adwas' pot realized. It is second only to gold in But now comes Father Coughlin, vantages. esteem and it has been' used as a the noted Detroit radio priest, with token for centuries. It has a psycho another theory of why we went into . comes from cus- that logical appeal the great struggle. In one of tom. And it is the sole money metal cent Sunday radio addresses, Father of half the world s population. Those Coughlin blamed the financiers for who ratio propose to fix a getting us into the war. He declared deserve a very attentive hearing. that we entered the war to save the allied nations from financial collapse! jg jjjg' DEATH and to protect credits extended by . ' tar. to the .tile, American tapped . He stated that at the time of our thft al idea is that the safe re. n Brita war the Great entering had"turn of the n is the first cori overdrawn her. account with J- - 'P- - sideration. For that reaHOn the police Morgan and Co., m the' sum of $400,- - often stand aside while family &f 000,000, and that this overdraft wasjthe kidnappod maIl or woman geek9 later paid by the American govern- - contact with the outlaws and attempt ment out of the proceeds of the first ,lo secure a qui"k release. Liberty Loan. jj this assumption is correct the In support of his contention that emotional demand for laws placing we entered the war to avert a world- death-- penalty upon kidnapping is .wide financial panic. Father Cough-- t to do more harm than' good. The Lin read a letter written by the Am-jj- p a man or' woman, erican Ambassador to England on knowing that death will follow 5, 1917, about a month before ture( ill resist to the end and, if we entered the war, to President Vil- necessary for its own safety, will not son, in which the ambassador told of hesitate to slay the hostage, the. impending world-wid- e financial while no punishment is too' heavy panic and stated that sufficient credit (for kidnapping, which is one of the could not be extended to Great Bri- most horrible crimes, it seems to us tain and France without declaring war that life imprisonment for- kidnap against Germany. In summarizing up pingi with the death penalty added if the after effects of the war, Father the hostage is slain, would have a tenCoughlin said: dency to protect the person of those First our factories closed as a re- who are kidnapped and secure their sult; second the financial structure of safe return. Europe was changed; third we reaped the profit of trade stagnation, and THE WORLD IN A. fourth we failed to avert a panic. But LIGHT GLOBE. we did finance the allies the same When you switch on an electric allies are now welching on their lamp, youre using materials that debts. .came originally from almo.t- every If the historians dispute the cause country in the world. little of our entry into the war, there can j globe that cost you 20 or 30 cents, be no question of the after effects, theres antimony from Mexico, thoria They are well summed up in the above from Brazil, niter and silica from paragraph. Chile, cobalt and nickel from New Caledonia, bismuth from Australia, Frau Augusta Gurvosch of Ham- tin from the Malay Peninsu'a, manburg, who died at the age of 87, had ganese from India, potash from Rusoutlived eight husbands. sia, sodium carbonate from East Africa, arsenic from Greenland nnd so Now that the Eighteenth amend- it goes down a long similar list of ment is repealed let us hope there will items. be a recession in the number of proAs has been said, the electric lamp hibition jokes. is literally the light of the world. T " - , - j " - prac-Thi- thendary 50-ce- nt hi3-re- - gold-silv- er SCE fin, j . jg . cap-Mar- - - ln-th- j - First State Bank nation-wid- e The following Nautical Novelties are furnished by the U. S. Navy Recruiting Station at Salt Lake City: Each navy recruit receives ree $92.80 worth of clothing and bedding, which includes uniforms, underwear, shoes, socks, towels, blankets and a mattress. The mattresses used by the navy are manufactured at the navy yards at Philadelphia and Mare Island, and are made up of equal parts by weight of horse ta.il hair and horse mane hair. freLife jackets and ring quently are made of Kapok. Some are made from cork which comes from Spain. Kapok comes, from the Philippines, Mexico and the West Indies. It is a fibrous substance from a woody capsule of a tall evergreen tree. The entrained air in the fibres provides the flotation property. Torpedoes are driven by propellors, which are operated by small reciprocating engines or steam turbines contained in the torpedo. The steam is made from water, which is also carried in the torpedo, a9 is fuel. The United States fleet is scheduled to leave California in early" April, transit to the Panama Canal, visit Cuba and Haiti, and be reviewed by President Roosevelt on the Hudson river in June. In October, all or part of the fleet Will return to (he Pacific new building. It is generally known that there is a tremendous unfulfilled demand for new housing, in city as well as in rural areas, due to the lack of building for five or six years, and to the high rate of depreciation of existing .$2.00 1 s- NOVELTIES farm housing survey to ascertain the potential demand fo, improved home facilities, the cost of providing them, the development of standard specifications adapted to the needs of various areas, and practical plans for financing improvements and Published Every Friday at $alina, Utah. ' NAUTICAL The federal government has started a m PROBLEM CONSTRUCTION structures. One of the great stumbling blocks to building now is that banks are unable to loan funds because of inelastic laws, and the interest rates charged by other agencies are often so high as to discourage the prospective builder. Both private and public agencies are now working on ' the financing problem to develop some plan whereby money can be made available for construction at reasonable interest rates, and still earn a fair profit. There is also hope that there will be the banking situsufficient change-ia ation .to permit leeway on the basis in making building-loanof an applicant's general character arid reputation, instead of. on his liquid assets only.. . If a major building wave ckn be started, on the farms and in cities, one of.- the biggest steps toward recovery and- stability will have been ; . taken.. In the meantime, those who can build or repair now will be benefiting tkemsrdve-- and the nation by starting onst ruction dollars rolling, for k't us hope that never- again can. we. buy . or build as 'cheaply as today. life-buo- little-mor- s . - , s -- - TWO 'iX.AMPLESi ys H. S. Man. is the only human wher breeds consideration. vareltRsly and The science pf heredity 'Ls :studiedl by Jiose who produce rare horses, fine cattle,, chickens, dogs,, pigeons, and every other kind of animal, while society goes alosg its way without any emulations to protect, the human strain, jn a recent, article Dr. Arthur Dean giyes two contrasting Records, showing that blood .counts in human . breeding qs well as in animals;. Martin Kailikak . didnt, believe blood would tell. . His own 'ancestry was excellent. On (me wild night he forgot-himsel- f and his family. He H. B. Cashier Assistant Cashier .Japan says sHe-wil- in the navy: (a) Those who l - i ,w-- re - . ' . Frar.k Stephens cf Now York," when irrested. for two holdups, said he was trying to ret enough money, to get married. . With a surplus of almost thing, the supply of gossip never to equal the demand. JCetterheads F. O. BULLOCK Snvebpes f F-2- ); jw-h- COHO . are in service ' status (except hers of- Class(b) thoseWho have been discharged by special order for their own convenience; (c) those have teeri discharged by reason" of medical survey, and (d) those who have not been recommended for d. fr d met a pretty but d The result was a boy. This was about. 150 years ago. "Among the 480 descendants of Martin Kailikak there have been 143 and probably known-33 36 not known; illegitimates; . rr.Qre sexually immoral; 24 confirmed alcoholics, three epileptics, .three criminals, eight keepers of- brothels, and 83 d children so' they died in CRANDALL Vice-Preside- nt Vr JOHNSON. hours in actual operation,, another 2080 hours at masts, and. covered 213 000 land miles. The Class "A service schools at the naval training' station, San Diego, Calif., have been placed in an inoperative statjus, because of the need men at sea. The elementary training will be given on board ships while the schools are closed. All men in the following classes are not for enlistment eligible girl. feeble-minde- GATES President fame. The U. S. S. Los Angeles,, built as . ZR 3; will be dismantled by erder of the chief of naval operations signed on January 22. Since its. delivery to the United States in October, 1924, from Friedrichshaven, Germany,' the ship has made 339 flights, spent 4352 .. .' V . Utah Salina not .attack Ruswill if attack-jeherself defend but. sia, Russia says she will not attack Japan but will defend herself if at-- ! tacked. This Sounds like' they getting ready'to fight and is another indication of how difficult- - it. is to coast. . find the aggressor in case of war. No On Monday, January 15, 1934, 'the nation' ever claims to be the one which U. S. S. Farragut, our newest des- starts the trouble. troyer, was lauched at Fore river. President Roosevelts daughter-in-laMrs. James Roosevelt, acted as spoh-so- r and christened the vessel after Admiral David Farragut of Civil War ' . . OF SALINA $ill Heads Give Us Your j Orders for Printing ' - Eyes Examined . Uta Glasses Fitted DR. EARL LEWIS OPTOMETRIST 3rd door No. Richfield Com. Richfield, Utah 3C Largest Shippers of Rock Salt In the West . .. Richard Edwards married Elizabeth Tuthill.- Compare the d scend-aiit- s with those- of Martin Kallikak. There have descended Z college .presidents, 265 college graduates, 65 college' professors, 60 physicians, 100 clergymen, 75 army; graduates, 60 prominent authors; 100 la.wyers, 30 judges, 80 publie officers prominent state governors three congressmen, two ' United States senators and one of the United States, In both instances blood talked and big. The tale as told of Martin Ivallik'ak was a bloody and sinister one. The' Edwards story is a master' . piece of a blood tale. enact . Every modern state should laws providing for .the sterilization of mental defectives, those who are ahd habitual criminals. Physical tests should be exacted before marriage in. .order that, inheritable diseases may not be perpetuated. The 'proportion .of abormal people" is increasfng'Tn this modern world and it should be lowered. The aim. of society should be'the creation of ns nearly perfect as humanly possible to' attain." . - - R ED STAR B R A N D S A L 1' nt " Rockf Sheep and Hay Salt .. weak-minde- d, . of- - , , Calfoss Mineral Salt '. Every year furnishes a lot t Piaih and Sulphur Blocks BIG NEWS OF" 1933! v . , big news, and 1933 was no exception. Following an annual custom, managing editors of the large .news 'services have reviewed the grist which .went through the mill, and picked what they consider the 10 biggest stories of the year. All agreed upon the fipt five, which they" listed in the following order: 1. Repeal of prohibition. 2. Recognition of Russia. 3. The banking holiday. . 4. Wreck of the dirigible - ..6... Attempt to assassinate Franklin D. Roosevelt, resulting in the death of Mayor Cermak of Chicago. Others mentioned included the death of former president Coolidge; tne California earthquake; Wiley Posts around the world flight; Tammany's defeat; the San Jose lynchings, and Mrs. Lindberghs flight, The greatest volume of news was' made by stories concerning' President Roosevelts recovery program. Next to the president, the most publicized! individual was General Johnson, NRA administrator. j Available Mineral for Livestock " Aid-on- j Great Western Salt Co. SALINA REDMOND Distributed by . Sevier Valley Merc. Co., Salina, Utah t j Patronize Home Industry! 11 - . feeble-minde- Infancy.' .. - .Salina- ' feeble-minde- d seems DENTIST Hours 9 A.M. tp 5 P.M. In Gunnison Each- Wednesday feeble-minde- . every. Bk.' . |