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Show Jd ' ' ,, liiitoffifiiiriTiWfiilifTiTfriillliiililiiiiiililiiriiiiii A - s a mrtili irtill- l- fffliiifaiiril f - ri V 4 - ' vt ' r f j f ; - f, fi if iMHiffiWw ,jm iiiiMi 'in nimnwiinTirr muni - I PROBLEM FACING CITY CHURCH B REV. C. H SEARS, General Secretary Baptist Missions Society. task of supplying a therapeutic for the degenerative diseases soul of the city man is big enough to require the all religious faiths. It has been assumed that the problem of News Notes I ' Its a Privilege to Live In $ UTAH j LOGAN Logan city water Is ol end organicgood quality bacterially received here work to ally, according from L. H Male, sanitary engineer The of the state board of health. analysis was made on the request of William Ewer, superintendent of the who sent city water department, to Mr. Male. water of city samples MYTON According to the record of rainfall as compiled at the govern- THE the city church has grown out of the rapid community changes of the last few years. The problem is much deeper; the problem of the city church grows out of the changes in the city man who has to do with things and people not known and with forces not understood. In his daily quest for the utilities, values and thrills which the city has to oiler, he joins the daily rhythm of city life, a tidal movement of the crowds. Under such conditions an individual tends to sink into anonymity and to cease to feel himself a person. Moral restraints are seriously weakened when contacts become thus impersonal and conflicting. The city man lives in a social whirlpool. Stimulation has gone beyond the danger point, both for health and for morals. Neither physical proximity nor the mechanics of communication makes for sympathy. The city man lives in isolation within a multitude of contacts; a city is where men die of loneliness in the crowd. Aggressiveness on the part of one person or group is met by a defensive attitude on the part of others. is a characteristic sin of the city man. Nor is there a compensating moral control for the city man. It is doubtful if religion, with its tendency toward other worldliness and the church, with its traditional aloofness, have helped to make available spiritual forces released by the discoveries and inventions of a scientific age. The task of supplying a therapeutic for the degenerative diseases of the ment station of the Uintah irrigation project in Myton, the precipitation for July was 1.14 of an inch, while for the same period in 1928 it was .10 of an inch. According to Cache LOGAN County Agricultural Inspector Harry C. Parker, already this season 10,000 pounds of weed destroying chemicals have been placed on noxious weed beds in the county. Six thousand more pounds of chemical will be sprayed on noxious weeds before the close of the years campaign, Mr. Parker said. -A terrific freak windRIVERTON trees with y havoc along m stoi placed the paved highway between Riverton and South Jordan at 2:30 a. m. Wednesday, completely blocking the Self-asserti- - road for some time. Two poles weTe also torn down and indications were that Riverton would be without telephone and light connections Wednes- soul of the city man is big enough for the of all religious faiths. It is even bigger than Protestantism. day night. KAYSVILLE Utah's onions, tomatoes, cauliflower and green peas were all farther below normal in July than at the same time last year, according By LEONARD W. DE GAST, Y. M C A General Secretary. to the truck crop report issued by Frank Andrews, agricultural statistiOnions were reported 71 per cian. tomatoes 76 per cent norcent normal, The boy who believed in Santa Claus, had lofty ideals mal, cauliflower SS per cent normal and thrived on hard work, is having quite a struggle to survive the com and green peas 71 per cent normal. A decidedly optimistic life, with its sophistication and pleasures. These VERNAL plex swirl of modern-da- y outlook for the sheep industry as a were the findings made hv Y. M. C. A. secretaries at their annual con vliulb was expressed by R. H. vention in Columbus recently. district, in addressing the But this does not mean that boys are going to the dogs. It indih ledge, district forester for the Ravin Industrial convention, cates that youth is adjusting itself to changing times and is developing held recently. However, he said that a propensity for taking care of itself. on the basis of Utah conditions, exThere is less contact now between boys and their parents. I recompansion in range sheep is not desirable either from the standpoint of the inmend more comradeship between boys and their fathers. dividual operator or the industry 3' Six trends which the Y. M. C. A. has noted in boys are: a whole. HEEER CITY Utahs prod Rw Boys are a sophisticated crowd. They are a different article from ot green peas for canning in 1929 Is those of other days, hut this is not a question of better or worse. estimated slightly smeller than iasL Their time is competed for not only by commercial amusements but year's crop in a report issued recently by a host of organizations. by the United States bureau of agriculture. The estimate for 1929 is a time all the life of today. plays a big part in Having goed at 24,307,000 pounds, while that quoted Boys are up against a definite and highly vocal opposition to Chris for last year was 26,035,000 pounds. The report also shows Utah's crop tianity and the church indeed to all forms of idealism. The world is more complex and many boys are confused as to their is surpassed only by those of Wisconsin and New York, which states place in the scheme of things. supply half the nations yield annually. There is less contact of men and boys than in the past generation. PROVO Dr. F. E. Stevens, slate inspector of the U. A. C. experiment station, was in Provo recently and in company with A. B. Call and H. V. Swenson asisted in cutting the grain in the different plots of Utah county to be taken back to the experiment station and compared with other RAY WILBUR. LYMAN SECRETARY OF INTERIOR THE By grains. The dots located in Manila and Mapleton were planted with different varieties of wheat, oats and barn The American medical profession, in science, is woeley on April 2, and 3. OGDEN A new state rearing pond in archaic economics. Medicine been to the has never fully adjusted in Weber county will be sought of strides of modern business. As a result the cost to the public of obtaining fish and game In Weber county, it was the benefit of medical care is exorbitant. The profession has progressed decided by the directors of the Weber County Fish and Game Protective asmightily in scientific discoveries, in combating disease and prolongins sociation in meeting with J. Arthur life. It has stood so far as adjusting its financial aspect is concerned. Mecham, state commissioner. A survey of the medical expenses of a group of government employees and State Hatchery SuperinWilliam Whitney will survey tendent showed that they had spent on the wide range from 0.7 per cent of then possible rearing locons, atartjffg annual salaries tc 33.0 per cent. This grossly uneven burden shows the next d wenk.Te 'vicinit? fit extreme hardship imposed on those families in the higher brackets. as a possibility. We have planned a t OGDEN The Utah crop of onions, program covering all angles of the medi tomatoes, cauliflower and peas are all cal cost problem. At the end of that time we expect to be able to make Vbelow normal, according to the July a definite recommendation to the profession and to the public which wff truck crop report released by Frank Andrews, federal agricultural statistiJ remedy the situation. cian. The pea crop, which is reported Medical men nUMt fare the problem, and can gain nothine gtllh-boras only 71 per cenv normal, is lowest unreasonable resistance. I have often told audienceir0j phySCjall-Eitheon the list, with a total crop forecast 8 do be to to to done or of 12,184 tons, as compared with are its it, going going you 76 at 1923. in Tomatoes, reported Meanwhile, all experiments and plans, many of whiV arp process per cent norma; onions at 81 per of being launched, can do no harm by being given tiVg should cent, and a cauliflower crop forecast at 88 per cent normal, are the chief all prove useful in arriving at the ultimate solution. deficiencies mentioned in the report. SALT LAKE Freshman registration at the University of Utah will onen September 20, with preliminary instruction for first year students continuing September 27 and 28, It was e. announced recently by Theron JOHNSON (Bl By REV GEORGE W ThomDr. to George secretary jptist), Detroit. Second, third and as, president fourth year students will register September 30, with regular classes Despised and criticized for frank disrega fd of conventionalities, the for all students starting October 1. youth of today is unsurpassed by the youth of on remodeling several of the vny other day. There never Work was a finer body of youngsters than the hoys t on the campus to provide adbuildings nd girls of our day. They for the anticipaclassrooms ditional simply are more honest and sincere and less sec retive than former geners ted Increase In freshman enrollment tions. is progressing at a rapid rate and The youth problem is not a new one. is expected to be completed In time or proof of this read the for the opening of the fall quarter. Book of Proverbs, written in 1,000 B. C, oneern for youth is well The Uintah County Fair VERNAL founded, always has been, for the years of adole cenee and young manhood association has announced September determine later character. Young people can ict afford to expose them 26, 27 and 28 as the dates for this selves to too much temptation, pay too nun called h for pleasure, refuse all years show at Vernal, and has for bids on a number of improvements restraint. The years of vouth slip by quickly. ee to it that even at thirty to be made at the fair grounds, inor thirty-fiv- e you are not compelled to despise wasted of because yourself cluding the building of 80 feet of opportunities and a none too good name bleachers, an addition to the granda poultry exhibit room, 12 adPaul's ad ice to Timothy was good, for the good opinion of real stand, box stalls for race horses and ditional nd the advice mea people is worth having it: Common respect as a repairs to the main exhibit hall. Acyoung Christian minister, by your character a id ability. No better eoun cording to Piesident L. H. Allen, plans sel can be given to all present-daof the association are well under way vouth. ( ommand respect of others for the fair, which will be in every nnd self respect, because of what you are because of real ability. Fol way the most interesting and attraclow Christ sincerely and find in Him all ne tive fair ever held in Uintah county. ded aid and insoiration. YOUTH IN ADJUSTMENT PERIOD Inter-Uinta- 7 Dy ELMO SCOTT WATSON NCE upon a time a gov-- , Although Iowa boasts that she is the state where the tall corn grows not all of the "skyscraper stalks" are to be found there, as witness the above scene from California. The stalk which this western farmer is measuring is 13 feet, 5 Inches high. ernor of the state of Ml M Unols paid a tribute to one of the principal prod A. i ucts of his state and his eulogy upon this prlnol- - $. pal source of her wealth Majestic, fruitful, wondrous plant has heroine a classic III Thou greatest among the manifestaThe tions of the wisdom and love of God, American oratory. governor was Richard J. that may be seen in Inall the fields or the hillsides or the valleys. Oglesby, his subject was coin and th's upon is what he said about It : Almost anywhere In the United But now again my mind turns to the Slates at this time of the year one t on Its Look corn See glorious may look upon waving ripening, It See field how ripening, waving wears a crown, prouder than monnreh fields of "glorious corn." For It Is ever wore, sometimes Jauntily and grown In every state In the Union, alaometlmes, after the storm, the dignithough the eastern half of our conn fied survivors of the tempest seem to view a field of slaughter and to pity a try Is richest In this splendid product of Its fertile soil. No other form of And see the pendant fallen foe caskets of the cornfield, filled with the plant life Is so typical of tlje North wine of life, and eee the silken fringes American continent mid none is so that set a form for fashion and for art And now the evening comes and closely connected with American history as Is maize or Indian corn. The eomethlng of a time to rest and listen The scudding clouds conceal the half name Itself of its real Ameri and reveal the whole of the moonlit canlsm for speaks maize Is the Anglicized beauty of the night. And then the gentle winds make heavenly harmonies form of the Spanish "malz," which In on a thousand-thousan- d harps that turn was derived from the flayilan hang upon the borders and the edges mnlilz" or mahls. the name by and the middle of the field of ripening which the copper-skinneInhabitants seems to to until my heart beat corn, the rising and the falling of the long of the West Indies, who welcomed melodious The melancholy Columbus, knew this plant. refrain clouds sometimes make shadows and There Is every evidence that It was hide Its aureate wealth, and now they move, and slowly into sight there cultivated by the prehistoric races of comes the golden glow of promise for the New world long before Columbus an Industrious land. landed on Its shores and this daring Glorious corn, that more than all the navigator carried the first grains of sisters of the field weRrs tropic garments. Not on the shores of Nllus or corn to Europe on his return voyage of Ind does nature dress her forme It was n staple article of food for the more splendidly My God. to live again first English settlers In America uml that time when for me half the world every schoolboy is familiar with the whs good and the other half unknown how And now again the corn that in Its story of Massasoits people kernel holds the strength that shall taught the Pilgrims to plant coin man of the body refreshed) subdue (in when the leaves on the oak trees were the forest and compel response from every stubborn field, or shining in the the size of a mouse's tar and how eye of beauty make blossoms of her to fertilize it by planting a fish In Cheeks and Jewels of her lips and thus each hill with the grains of coin. make for men the greatest inspiration Aye. the corn, the royal corn the hope of companionto for Indeed "Corn Is King" In the United ship of that sacred, warm and soul, a woman States. From the beginning of our Aya, the corn, the royal corn, within history corn has been Its principal Is of heart there health whose yellow product, far exceeding In , agricultural and strength for all the nations The corn triumphant, that with the volume and value any one other. The aid of man hath made victorious proannual corn crop Is around two Hnd cession across the tufted plain and laid r billion bushels which foundation for the social excellence r that la and la to be. The glorious plant far exceeds the one and transmuted by the alchemy of God. billion bushels recotd of outs nnd less sustains the warrior In battle, the poet than a billion bushels wheat record everv where In eong and strengthens The value of this gigantic corn crop the thousand arms that work the pur1 had Is well over two billion dollais and the of life. voice that Oh, poses of eong or the skill to translate Into the only other crops which can tip tones and harmonies, the symphonies It In value are cotton with Its and pratorles that roll across m.v soul prouch value one and one quarter billions of when standing sometimes by night upon the borders of this verdant sea, I nnd hay with a value a little over that note a world of promise and then beOf cotton. the year is gone view fore Illinois gave to the nation Its full fruition and see Its heaped gold In Although the words of one of Its governors, await the need of man. 7 what Is considered the greatest tribute ever paid to corn, Illinois Is not the greatest state. She must bow to two others In that respect Iowa, who Is first, and Nebraska, who Is second. Every year Iowa plants nearly 11.000,000 acres to corn J nnd harvests a crop of nearly 400 bushels, valued at more than $275,. 000,-OiH- 000,000. And all loyal Ilavvkeyes know and sing this song composed by Ray W. Locknrd and George Hamilton and set to music by Edward Riley: coax iow SONG . Let- - sing of grand old yo-h- o, Our love is stronger ev'ry day, yo-h- o, So three-quarte- one-ha- lf 1 Sometimes Thrilling Who fancies cleaning the jaws and fangs of a highly annoyed king cobra or humadryad whose bite Is something very special In the way of death? This was one of the unpleasant tasks performed by keepers at the Loudon too. Snakes In captivity are frequently attacked by canker of the mouth, and the king cobra hnd to go through the Its medical examination. ordinary Yo-h- yo-h- come along and Join the throng, Sevrl hundred thousand strong, As you come Just sing this song, Yo-h- o, vo-h- o. yo-h- ultra-moder- Chorus Were from State of all the land, lov on ev'ry nand. Were from Thats where the tall corn grows. Our land Is full of ripening corn. yo-h- o, d well-doin- Yo-h- o, Weve watched It grow both night end morn, But now we rest, we've stood the test. Ail that'fc good we have the best. has reached the crest, Yo-h- o, yo-h- yo-h- yo-h- o. yo-h- o, five-ye- Chorus Nebraska, which plants more than acres nnd harvests nearly 3(M),000,tXX) bushels, celebrates her fame as the second state by proclaiming to all the world that her citizens tire "Oornhiiskers." Illinois takes third dace with an acreage of some 3(X),(XX) less than Nebraskas and a production of some 37.000, 000 bushels less. Fourth dace goes to Kansas nnd tills state has also produced, a great tribute to corn in the form of poetry Instead of prose. For the states most famous woman poet Is Mrs Ellen Fulmer Allerton, who moved from Wisconsin to a farm near Hamlin. Kan., just 50 years ago. There was no house yet built upon their homestead when Mrs. Allerton and her husband arrived there and they lived in a small granary (which still stands i n the Allerton farm) until a house wns built. All around them for miles stretched Helds of waving corn and this gave her the Inspiration for the tills of Corn," w hielt she wrote poem, m l'vS.'i and which has been reprinted many times ns a wonderful tribute to a wonderful "gift of a rich nnd fer tile land. S.OOO.OPO corn-growin- g meal. Not Family "English" The English WHlnnt Is not a native of England, but comes from the moun tains of Greece, from Persia and from . i ftunts-mentione- Yo-h- Friendship! Elements There are two elements that go to the composition of friendship each so sovereign that I can detect no gu 1'erlority In either, no reason why either should he first named One is truth The other Is tenderness. Eru erson. vr Me-cha- m yo-h- head was secured In a snake stick, a peculiar rod with a leather loop, and Its jaws were pried open and swabbed out with un antiseptic pad. The venom of a king cobra has been known to kill an elephant in five hours. A shortsighted cohiu probably mistook the elephants trunk for a black snake and started a four ton The hamadryad's cage at the zoo has a special gillie over the inspection window to prevent the creature leap log up six feet and biting Its keepers PROBLEM OF MEDICAL COST Yo-h- o, yo-h- Afghuniste- - r 'f 13,-01- PERIL MODERN YOU3fH FACES Par-mele- j j y 1 |