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Show C1ASTLK DALE EMERY COUNTY p I t News Notes 4, It's a Privilege to Livs in I Utah By JUDGE JAMES H. WILKERSON, U. S. District HoweAbout-- Court Sr M "Near where I live," a man writes) me, "there are three small children so ill behaved that they are the terror of thtir parents and (tie neighborvhood. l'roKrty in the immediate icinity has become almost worthless; the father arid mother of (lie bad children have become almost crazy. It 13 really a serious and disturbing situabeing tion ; two worthy parents ruined, three children going to the devil, and a dozen neighbors preparing to fell their homes ut a loss." Under the direction of J. Meyer, supervisor of the Midi view and Arcadia districts of Duchesng county, work is in progress on the. Lake Fork bridge. Mr. Meyer has a firce of men making tho necessary Improvements as rapidly as possible. The foundation on the east side of the bridge was wash-aout by the re. cent flood caused by the breaking of the dam In the upper country a few weeks ugo. The bridge will be raised and a cement foundation put In. The road has b?en graded from the Upalcn flour mill west for several miles and a bridge constructed over a bad draw, y REV. DR. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK, New York. W. OGDKN Webur county dairy farm- ers are planning to take a trip to ("aeho courty early this mouth, under the direction of the Weber County Farm bureau. Equipment and of Cache county dairy barns will be studied, and in addition the matter of feed for dairy cows as. carried out by Cache dairymen will looked Into. The Weber county bureau also has decided to organize cow testing associations to test herds over definite periods to increase butterfat production. A survey uf all cows in tho county also is to be made. HRIGIIAM the northwest part CITY Noose Creek mountains. In of lioxeltler county, boast a lake that i'in't a lake. The summit ol the range U covered In summer for miles with r.ky blue lilies. The wind, blowing , gives the Illusion of a huge lke. Value ot Utah livestock InOgdcn creased during 1927 about $6,000,000, or 11 t er cent, over the preceding year, according to the annual livestock report Issued Tuesda by George A. Scctt, statistician for the United States The !s; department of agriculture. In values Is due largely to a sharp increase in the per head value of cattl, the report stys MYTON One of the Industries th it 1; rup'd'y increasing in the Uintah n Is ths cream and dairy business. Ono creamery company has receiving stations established at Vernal, FSonita, AHonch, Mt. Emmons, Roosevelt and My ton. Several ot the farmers are i;icreasln.; their hards of milch cows, while others are beginning to engage In dairying. MOA II Approval of a continuation f the three-yea- r contract on the prica to I):1 paid for sugar beets dt ring 192-- i was made Wednesday a a meeting of the special committee of the Utah Sural' Heet Cooperative association and representatives of six of the largest beet sugar concerns operating in this territory at a session held In Farm Bureau headquarters in the Donley bf'lding. Hit 1G II AM City With a flow of inure than 2000 gallons per minute, the t t well recently sunk by tha First National bank of this city on the former J. C. Knudsen farm south of this c ty has proven more successful than vast expected by the company, and v.'ill probably be the means of solving the problem of Increased irrigation water for the dry lots in and around Krigham City. SAN JUAN' Construeiton of a highway betweeu Big Wash and Peters' hill, in San Juan county, will not be undertaken at the present, time of lack of funds, it was announced by the highway commission. Tho proposed road is seventeen miles long. The estimated cost of the work th.-ni- -- ha-s'- - U $81,000. HEUEi: The iinam-i;;- ' report of Wasatch county for the year ending December 31, as ruhlisired by Alfred Sharp, county clerk, shows the county and the various funds In a healthy condition, with no I ondod indehtc-n-ress- . The report follov.s: Fixed assets. $24,S00; to credit of various twit, '8.0i6.64; due county from M3, 1150; half Salaries and other $712; total resources, 93.2IS. U. vM liabilities, $15,747.93. The Vnc r'.x'.piB tor the year were $395, the total disbursements, ti t It' , cannot trust God to bring everything off all right if you let the earth's population double every sixty years. If we do so we will reap starvation, unemployment and physical and moral decay. Dean Inge of St. Paul's cathedral, London, has taken his share of obloquy because he has said in hi3 straightforward fashion that "there is no hope for the basic social problem of population except in the scientific control of birth." All honor to him. lie is not a sentimentalist, lie is facing the facts. We should take the shackles off the physicians, and let them tell the nation that there is no hope for the solution of the population piob-leexcept in the scientific control of the birth rate. Here in the United States we are sufficiently anxious over this situaI am a restrictionist because tion that we have checked immigration. I am not a A sentimentalist might say, "Let everybody sentipientalist. treely in," but on who faces the facts must see that from the standpoint of this country we cannot handle the problem either physically or morally if, with the pressure population, we let the teeming oveiflow of the world's peoples flow freely in, and, if we should, we would not You It is much easier and better to be a gentleman, a homeowner, a good mechanic, an agreeable neighbor, a good citizen, a good and successful farmer, foreman, superintendent, business man, or millionaire, than a pour man howling for help. The help the poor gel from the government and their neighbors is scanty. It is always easier to maUe a living titan it is to beg it. In a pretty play a woman has com promised herself with a man. A letter from that man is delivered to her before her husband. The lattei knows whom the letter is from. His wife hands it to him ami says she does not care to open it. "Very well," lie says, "then there is only one tiling (o do." And he throws it into the tire. All the women in tiie audience applaud. In real life under such circumstances, a man would have raised three or four different kinds of h I Childless Homes Largely to Blame for Divorces and Wrecked Lives That was a good tiling said the other day by a Frenchman: that France and Germany were in position to let bygones be bygones, each having won a great victory over the oilier. New York (Methodist). Childless homes cause more divorces and wrecked lives than does any other single thing. We are busier teaching people how to avoid parenthood than we are showing them "what they will lose if they shut children out of their homes. Growing little ones teach, inspire, and develop character, waken ideals and insure happiness as can no other substitute. Pleasures lost by the demands of children are mere soap bub hies compared with the glory, satisfaction and vital benefits derived from building men and women out of our own sons and daughters. Some parents actually excuse their childless homes by insisting that without the responsibility of a family they can do religious, charitable or reform work, which would otherwise be impossible. Some of them had bettei give their days to raising and training one Lincoln, one James J. Davis or one Michael Pupin than to spend fifty years in other fields for which they are unfitted, because they do not get the development which children would brin"- them. training nor the God-lik- e American dentists are said to he the best in the world; yet I have never seen a set of false teeth that looked natural. They are made too pretty, like wigs. Why does not a realist appear among wig makers' and make a wig with a bald spot on top? ; DR. DUNCAN 11. BROWNE. (Episcopal) once knew ti large, (ine looking man with excellent restraint If a tiling was not good for him. he let it alone, lie fell dead one night in a crowd of drunken men, although he hadn't taken drop. There wen; seven of the drunken .men, ami live of them lived to a fairly old age. I do not understand link, that 1 In encounters the and expression.-- for weeks, and suddvnly encounters something new. This is the reason we devote lime to reading, and drag through the mass of old stuff. Ueading is like hunting wild game: long periods of trumping through the fields in the sudden flight, and u shot hope of l.fmg ii go the c.untry was full of wild animals, hut, like new ideas they have become very scarce. Miltrv have ceased to hunt at all. there is so little Disestablishment of the Church of Kngland from the state would be decided gain rather than loss to the church. The prayer book which was rejected by the house of commons was a result of much stud v by the best minds of the Church of England. It seemed the best solution of the situation. Its rejection leads one to believe that disestablishment of the church from the state would be a good thing, a gain rather than a loss A to the church great many members of the church would welcome such a dissolution. The debate which accompanied the action on the prayer book is one of the healthiest signs of life possible. It shows an awakening interest in I he church. This renewed interest will be a decided advantage to the church. The church has been dead in many respects, and the debate and interest created in the present situation will serve to liven the church ail along the line. ?? ? 6 iS Bell-an-S Hot water Sure Relief 25 AND75 2 IIIIWPI1WI1 Balloon Stays PACKAGES EVERYWHERE in Air balloon thai, will stay for weeks at a time has been A rlitcn&II Eye Salve For claims that his new levies nro,!! the necessity of having to release a tne gas irom ine Dag In order torn-- ; late its altitude. Besides the hiiJ ordinary gas bug tided with hyiln not sufficient to support it alun proposed craft will carry an inniiJ compartment filled with air to supply? a ne Duoyuucy. pnoi can regulate htf altitude by heating or cooling the at thus obviating the necessity of ppiJ Ing any of the hydrogen.-CW- sJ uany news. remedy that brtngi comforting relief Is best. II all afr ummn by 51. .Lucien Bodin of France. 4,opp,I,1jj Viku I other irritation. AV0ID ,.r The old iluipl the D 25c, .all iruggutt antiet, lew Trk Cttr SORE EYES J HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh Wounds Since 1846 has healed and Sores on Man and Beast Afl Jealera art aatirariiea te refuJ tm Maty for tW raited. bottle il lot first heart lull ot grace is better ttiun a head full of notions. Many a man's hnnnchil been cooked in a jnck-pot- . goose has If you think a small boy in his affections, buy him a change your mind. Peace Cicero. Is in liberty g feebltf pup m tranquility This Winter Fit Keep Your Kidneys Must Function Properly For You to Be Well. is hard on the IV 71NTER All too often colds and chills kidneys. Yy set the action of the kidneys up-- and allow poisons to remain in the system. That's why winter finds so many folks achy and tired; with backache, headache, dizzy spells and scanty, burning kidney secretions. DoaWs Pills, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Are endorsed by users everywhere. AsVyour neighbor! Doan's Pills A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys At all dealers, 60c a box. Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, Foster-Milbu- N. Y. When a Man Mania Dog Saved Miners' Lives The dog at the Mohawk mine camp near New Hiuleton, recently saved the buildings there from destruction by fire. Tired after returning to camp through bitter cold, the men fell asleep after having kindied a fire. The stove became red hot and the floor began to burn. The pup jumped on one of the beds :nd arousal a man who extinguished the tlirentpnin" ..... ... n. ,..,:,. ri.iii'iij. i iuiemner i rovince i- "So vou want o marry my ter? Are you able to support a lly?" "I think so." "Now think again, young iMj There are seven of us." Pittsbnrffl Sunday Telegraph. n.,i p0!.i I. tern about twin H bies is to put them to sleep at same time. i,as in it. I have never been one ol those severe critics who expect the people , t'e without faults All recommend is reasonable effort in rid ot the worst ones, and siting .i,,,,, to hide the remainder. Certain of our kind show a skill iu ,,i,ins ,lr nakedness that has been called arthey have deceived so well as i, he credited with beauty tbev do not naturally possess. ,,,,,, - j : , j BUTLER, President Columbia University. He If charming, for one always feels In danger wh,. ,.ar ,, s.,'v. ing of a French woman from quoted " Atl,or: ".No votuon js ,,m,k; "" j Educational delinquencies of appalling significance are resulting in America from a lack of education on the part of school and college teachers. The elaborate training which teachers often receive is a sorry substitute for education. They are trained as specialists, but whatever purpose this trait may serve in other fields, it is futile as an instrument of education. Intensive training from childhood in gainful pursuits is not a sign of educational progress, it is a return to the Dark ages. What is lacking today is that background of good manners, cultivated speech and high standards of appreciation in art and letters which always has bound together those of genuine educational insight and competence. Normalizes Digestion and Sweeten the Breath one reading, same old a By NICHOLAS MURRAY Jf except its pranks are sometimes surprising Chicago. Ineffective Training of School and College Teachers Hampers Education ?; .The people laugh at many things in ivate. as laughter at them in public fi prohibited. Gain in 'the Disestablishment of Church and State in England By REV. 1 A solve anybody else's problem. By REV. C. F. REISNER. ty dizziheartburn, sick headache, ness, nausea and other digestivea. disorders. Not a laxative but tested Sure Relief for Indigestion. Perfectly harmless and pleasant to take. Send for free samples toi Bell 4 Co.. Inc., Orangeburg, N. Y. rvlc WNtf had saved him. Scientific Control of Birth Rate the Solution of the Population Problem jS and For correcting quickly relieving belching, gas, over-acidi- Syndic.. K after eating or drinking habits returned, suffered the pangs of je:iliuy. who was to I have often wondered row that terrible the for blame The woman saved the man for a year. Could she have continued her good work? What happened to sucInterfere with one of the most ever apparently, cessful marriage?, Was the known in that community? husband to hlame, or the wife? The woman still has her power to charm; after her husband committed suicide, she became so pleasing again I hat ami' her surly man married her. she and, the first year, people said $500. In MYTON ED HOWE BudoSiS through the Eljslan fleldalK winged cuplds. Ice "Take your choice of dr' Mrs. liar- - Whiteacre inVS the American Uome Health H fare league of St r.io regulated by diet Good even in the dream world If 1"? er will avoid rid, foods ,t " ou6, ana a ir Ing drink at bedtime will the relentless Rudolph aJr,. ,.9 lestials. "Counting sheen one but a public accountant A warm drink before bedtime. m whiter and summer i. h. will I for nightmare and a J?l somnla. Babies dream happii.l.j bottle of warm milk. Ileal soothing to the stomach of anVd. It is, of course, not advisable to stimulating drinks at bedtime, a a beverage is the passport to the fields of sleep." No More Distress maronce Knew a surly man who a year For woman. a ried gentle a great people s;iid die had wrought cliee'" t Mm. l"f",ne in change many nud da) with life, ful, sutMied fcxcel'ent tilings. worse Hut in three years lie was hud former his all hefore: tt...n and, in addition, he co-jut- f. Lobster armed to dervishes, relentless 1 tr hal-muc- o Bell . l , SolJ Warm Drink Nation's Life Dependent on Proper Observance r and Execution of Law ORE important than any prolicm of finance or industry, or foreign relations, or agriculture h the graye question whether we shall enforce our laws. Upon that premise hinges the I'AMiUITCH trsent irosecti f )r question of whether the nation shall endure. Laws forced by aimndunt crops ne summer ar not promising, according to carerul check reformers and propagandtHts upon the country without any regard to of precipitation to late. Although tho the ability of the government to enforce them are one major cause of feet ion receive! us iruch early snow the breaking down of all laws. Big business has trampled upon laws as usual, many miJ winter storms tit otmr parts f the utat i have been which hampered or impeded the race for money. The attitude toward m ssed by Panguitch. Till fact, link- - law of leaders of industry and finance during almost a century of develwith the realily that this section li i.s hud lisht enowfall opment is only too well known. They sowed the winds and we're reapthree winters past, makes Ine adequacy of next ing the whirlwinds. rummer's water supply doubtful. A I would point out also as a contributing cause to our condition the pr ini.siriR feature of th outlook l.i too many 1!ihI heavy fall al..B eft the gfound inadequacy of the courts. There is too much delay. There are v.ell saturated and has insured good technicalities. Hurfns working conditions. Early Those who advocate the doctrine of nullifying laws merely because ran),':! in also very promising, due to they think they are unjust, are enemies of true republican government. t!ihenry Tall rains and thj snowfall t liutH. That doctrine has no place in this country. There was a time when respect for all laws was fundamental and COALVILLE Th? uanutl financial siati'iueiit of John E. WrlfchL county existed. Is that true today? We know it is not. People have come geni at Summit county, baa jfcen filed to believe that the law has been broken down in this country. erally v;th file rommigelottrs. The i p i t shows a balance un hand In the What can we do about it? We can be more careful in passage of tint county treasurer's hand on He laws. We can repeal those which clutter up the statute books, hiding in remher 31, 192'i, ol 293 COO, with the their maze the important laws. We can improve the condition of our net jt the county amounting t $ 100,000. courts, simplify procedure, remove delay. During the past year disbursements ere made from the var Life, property and prosperity are really dependent on the proper obImiK funds nis follows; General, $35,000 servance and execution of law, and it is time that Americans awake to read, 120.000; widowed mothers' fund, SrloOO; poor fund, JG500: and fair fund, the danger which is at their door. uddilion to the above disbursements $50,000 was expended from state road funds, irinclpnlly n federal aid work and at the flret of the year a or $44,000 was left In this account. ITAH 1 s only a t ; Women will ev satistied with (Heir rights until they have liberty to walk up to the best behaved and hit us over the head: In of us no lh Way CHn ""'J completely espr,.s, thelr general dU.pprova! of our sex " An old Saying s n,.., II Ulan s inn woman half his marry seven. ccorditiE to thu ... "i uiMij Miouio m;irry a woman'IIHII of ., twenty-tw- , SAY INSIST! "BAYER ASPIRIN" and are Unless you see the "Bayer Cross", on tablets you safe not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART 'Accept only "Bayer actions. j:. which contains proven uu-Handy "Bayer" boxes of. g - ,uetcll Also bottles 01 Z ana . Aspirin U the trade mark of Bayer Utnufactur Protect Your Skin Against The Weather of of UmoeeUcct4ester A PIITIPIIR U IU j) lj Soap and Ointment will hetpjr After motoring, golf or other u nan pastimes anoint the face and tow Cuticura Ointment. After five wash off with Cuticura Soap tef; or cow water, rinsing with tepid not ngjf dry thoroughly. There is for keeping the skin soft and der all conditions of exposure. ' 8oap S5c. Ointment 26 and 60t. Trom Sample enoh free. Addrcaa : "OuUoura Bt UaJdra. Hut' jSJ,,(n rtj |