OCR Text |
Show f " CiLL FC3 UTJLH cf tee - - the beaVer county weekly press, beaver, utaii STATE CAUCUS ncn ie:::i It isn't necessary to know any other jewelry store. - Meeting of Members of National SoU Nera' Organization to bo Held In Salt Lake on 4un 4 and 8.. - .. . - .- JiilygT-'-- x -. . .- BOYD PARK : Oa March" 15 of this year., a caucus of nearly 1000 offlcers and men who MAKERS represented all the combat division nd aU sections of the S. S was convened la Purls under the direction of the temporary committee oftbe American Legion which had been in r nmec. On May 8. 0, and 10 a caucus of more than 1500 officers and men, each state In .the United States, was eonvened.Jn.St-Louis- , and there performed the same functions as the Paris caucus for the men who were retained In, and had , returned to America. 1 "A a result of this caucus In St Louis a plan of organization was adopted which provides for the estab lishment' of state organizations, and retains In office the temporary state fficer 'and executive committee. ". By irtue of the authority thus. Invested this call Is Issued. "All persons who were loathe mili tary" or naval service of the United States daring the period between April 6, 1917, and November 11, 1918, both dates Inclusive, and all. persons who served In the military or naval service of any of the governments associated with the United States, Jng the world war, provided that they were clt'ans at the time of their en listment except those persons sepa rated from the service under terms amounting to dishonorable discharge. and except also those persons who re fused to perform their military duties on the ground of conscientious or political objection, are urged to. attend the state, caucus to' be held in. Salt Lake City, Jane 4 and 5, In the Tab ernacle beglnnlhg at 2:30 on' The af ternoon of the 4th. It Is suggested by the executive committee, In order to provide for representation for every county In the tate, that voting be by counties and that each county shall have three votes for every one hundred men ,wha entered the servlee from that county. Every man eligible for. mem- bershlp'jn the American Legfoo shall have1 a voice in the caucus. ' Th ffut'les of the5 caucus will be to hear' t ft 'action taken by the St Louis caucus and determine our course there under.; ito appoint temporary state of ficers jwd an executive committee, to act. notice state convention of the .American! Legion, which will be held in, October, and which said committee shall have authority to Incorporate the American Legion In the state of Utah and Issue charters to posts hav ing fifteen or more applicants ; to provide for a convention to be held in October, whereby all offlcers and enlisted men eligible to membership in the Lesion wIH participate in the election of representatives to a National Conven- Hon to be convened on November 11 at Minneapolis; to hear and determine matters presented by the Utah Soldier Settlement commission ttor pass" upon ' other important questions effecting Americanism ; and to ' perform such other duties as may properly come be a' K4 d,r i. Mmmlvi ....... Or JEWEL! MJ INti MAIN STRICT CTTV SPECIAUST HUGHES StkLmteCKr imi,, BMf.. K,rvtM4 contend. tpvcutm, LI(km4 by Fiv iut Comfort the Baby Ooaot M tha baby wiffar from rsptur. W ghra your baby spacial attratioa. Cmh la at ones. S. H Sowmar Co., Trust Fittei i Salt Laka Chy 220 Brook Arcada KFI P WflSTFa 1' Fos want bit aMltam loinw tnd bartvr; (tux! ipportuiniia open Banters m irar bin lor men over drH anfut a olfloer oommiwtoa- - Met irpar4 In l wreka. Call or will. Motor Barbor Collect til S. West Temple St.. bait Laka City. (. I By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN. iT 18 now a, truism to say that America is the wealthiest and ' f , f - f I i&A?A. lif? OF DEAD RETURN TO LIFE most powerful nation of earth. All Countries Have Their Blttsr-SwtWe Americans,. with oil our InLegends on Restoring Those dividual and collective faults, Who Had Passed. are truly a great people. Sometimes we are so great that we For It Is the most bitter sweet of astonish even ourselves. We til dreams, this of the restoring of the have astonished ourselves, for dead ; the core of fire that makes lumi example, by the way we ha've behaved about food nous the hurlnl rites of the Egyptians ' : ; during the last two years1. the grain la the mummy a hand. - When we entered the war we were the best fed Women received their dead raised to people on earth and had been for generations. An life agafh, and ethers were tortured.. Incidental proof of this Is that the American solnot accepting deliverance, that they dier astonished Europe with a new physlcaTtype, might, obtain a better resurrection the result of favorable conditions of life and adeone remembers on'a childish ponder- quate food. And this new physical type "proved " Ing over the strange refusal of the Initself a little huskier and hardier and deadlier' at timate sure sweetness of return to, the business of killing than 'any previous type of this world of sunlight and trees. And -man. v,y even yet It is "to the sentiment of the But when we entereQ 'the'war, at the mere sug Then there Is the social as well as the domestic body, the flesh of whose force and , gestion of the necessity that faced us, the 110,000,- -' side. Community gardening, for Instance, Is prac eolor that wandering platonlc soul was 00Q of us curbed, our appetites, denied ourselves tically the only method by which all available to frail an abstract," that we cling. goodies, put ourselves on rations, and started In garden space may be put to work, by which labor Flesh and blood cannot inherit the pon honor to conserve food and stuck to It tin may be most efficiently, employed, by which econ Kingdom of God; but the craving that the necessity was post It was a roost astonishing omy in purchasing power may be best exercisea It might be so still shelters in the, '" ,; and by which It Is possible to secure expert super wording of the creed. St Paul, fought spectacle, ' Not only that, but millions of ns voluntarily vision. But these things are" material. There is a It his metaphors breaking and strainstarted In to make gardens fin J'ralse" fool Many " .value beyond tljeru, which one finds recorded here, ing with too much way, sublimating the of these voluntary gardeners hardly Ithew a spade ' the value of the community spirit as It marks the flesh by the Intolerable radiance of the from a hoe; some probably thought that potatoes u Increasing solidarity of society. spirit "mortality swallowed up Ufa." . 1 A like value is also recorded In this volume In Buddhism fought It with less grew In the grocery store, . Certainly lots of these :; Its description of the gardens established by many gardeners had no Jaod..But it made no difference, weapon: "neither doth cor--, The American people went to gardening. From .large corporations and Industrial and transportsInherit Incorruptlon." It Is ruptlon in a death, not In Its priestlike task of cold the Atlantic to the Pacific the war gardens of the . ilr. Pack wishing to do-- a which war -- tlon concerns for their employees, resulting warwork workers stretched In almost unbroken line, . The of fellowship not previously existing be ablution, but death the revealer of the actually necessary, which was essentially practical . feeling cotton mills of the East the lumber camps of Oretween secret taint the sickening flavor of :( capital and labor. and which, would certainly aid In. making the waf The mortality, that velna the illusion of text the Illustrate , The Illustrations gon, the mining towns of Arizona, the' great fac- -' really ; 181T. of iflea In the conceived March, successful, torles of the middle West the shipyards of Texas " series of striking posters uued In the publicity. the sensuous world. "Spirit must,' Inspiring the people of the United States to plant all saw the upspringlng of innumerable war garof campaign are reproduced. In color. . There are 61 brand the flesh, that It may live." tocrease the war In order to supply gardens, e . dens. The second summer saw the first redoubled. I ' food without the use of lan4 Illustrations In half tone, many of wnicn of We receive ourselves better In the already cultivated, It's too soon for us to begin to appreciate what are exceedingly Interesting. :The small home gar- West than la the East Persephone labor already engaged In agricultural work, of this war rationing and this war gardening has done den In Marion, which is shown herewith, Is not comes back with no shadow on her rlmo flavnrari in other niwisn rr nocnnatlons. and In winning the wa, feeding the," world and bene--'b- f especially pictorial, but was selected because It Is face.' Oarimonde, carrying the small 'iransportatWracyiOes which were already war garden typical of hundred of thousands uuiiR mo i rtuiern.nn them. anyone. jnter- made demands upon epulchral lamp that Is left In tombs, Inadequate to the first a seen T this nt the country over and, let ns hope, long to Is unchanged, only for the fainter scar-le- t what gargetting glimpse He thereupon organised the national war garden .X-w,.-deulng has done for us should get hold of a book of her smile, and the withering of commission, It 'was fhot a federal government ... be seen. ! Just out Tha War Garden Victorious," by Charles Z body, though itrwos indorsed by the administrablue flowers in her hair. Orpheus the ; Fixture. Garden Victory Lalhrop .rack. It Is not for sale,' but it is being . tion, and the quartermaster general's office copaw Eurydice before she sank bsck now the , Mr, Pack predicts that the war garden v dtetribtfid to .libraries, and to-- organizations and and that recognition Has Into darkness, fore It f operated wlth.lt at soldiers' camps. The commisconditions food victory gnrdjen is fixture. The fcidW.Mnals Identified with war garden work.' Mr. the symbols for the. one of become Lathrop-PacCommit Executive Charles the sion consisted of of. border president By of the world will make It necessary for many Is I'ac the -and Is the of national organizer Infinite. P. That P. president why the Japanese of New Jersey j Luther Burbank, California; tee ,; years, b nd during that time the value of garden' war garden commission and his book Is a record of version the legend, Claxton. United States commissioner of education, ing will have become so apparent that the move- and craven-lighteseems at first a The constitution of the American of war garden activities and successes, dedicated WnshlngtonrD. C.; Dr. Charles W. Eliot Massa-chuet- t; ment will continue until It. bns become a fixed war the of "to the It Is' a long time States United and and Congardeners horrible .Dr. thing Isle held caucus Fishet was the university, at Irving adopted Legion habit and firmly Implanted In the lives of the peo- before ene sees the ' at St Louis, The preamble declares allied countries In admiration of their success In beauty in the hornecticut ; Trert H,. Goff. Ohio; John Hays Ham-- , ple. to the world's supply of food during the ror. Asia Msgszlne. mond. Massachusetts ; Fairfax Harrison,. Virginia; that: Tor God and country we osso-- adding neeln lies jhetremrndoua Importance, of the Mr. war." world' , Patk the 1111k, -Grler fittingly presented T. John presideht Herrick, Ohio; Myron late ourselves together for the follow, """United States school garden army, whlph already FAMOUS TREES IN CAPITAL Jlratxopy to an American woman who Is typical of ' In," Princeton university, New Jersey; Emerson nrn nomrko). I has a membership of nearly 4,000,000., For the war made the that the victorious Mrs. A. spirit W. New Shaw. garden McMillln. Illinois; York; To uphold and defend the constitu .Mrs. Thomas Edwards of mobilization of the school children' the logical Oberlln. O. She Is nine- - ' John' Dickinson Sherman, chairman of the conNational Botanloal Garden Has Many tion of the United 8tates of America ; agency was the United States bureau of education of but she the with enlisted years -age, Federation General of the servation That Were Planted by Nation's department to maintain law and order j. to foster war P. Claxton, of the department of the Interior. P. gnrdeners at the first call and showed she of Women's Clubs, Illinois j Copt J. B. White, MisDistinguished Men. and perpetuate a one hundred per cent was not United States commissioner of education, aptoo told to learn by changing her souri ; Hon. James Wilson, former secretary of agAmericanism ; to preserve the memo methods and vision and broad proached the undertaking with method of. adopting the cold-pac- k riculture, Iowa ; Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Including the modest salary granted ries and Incidents of our association keen foresight characteristic of his admlntstra- S. . x , : c,,. P. canning.. ; Vrooman 1917) Carl the Rldsdale, year (for Its in thf great war; to Inculcate a sense superintendent the national botangovern-mefederal affairs for the tlon of educational . i who was also executive secreexecutive Wins secretary, ical Victory. com the to garden at Washington hss always Individual of obligation Under his guidance there came Into betng Forestry, association, with Some people might think a book of record and been very economically supported by tary of the American school mobilized ' States munity state and nation J to ..combat the United garden army, department of which the comand deserves high credit for the autocracy of both the classes and reference on war gardens " must necessarily be dull ' the conservation with effective promptness and swung into action congress, C. McLoud, Norman and was mission affiliated, one This It has accomplished with a con- - x what It's Isn't good reading.' Any the masses to make right the master reading. director. as H. of Francis J. under the leadership an. ,miiiiI,I,-,,- i utart Xfi-- Sherman alan ervative income. But men who culU- - . of might J to promote peace and good real American can get patriotic thrills out of It Js an educator of note who was of the Interior the special by -department flowers are usually willing to at " pointed beside a vate la not laboring learning lotMrFack will ooarth: tolsafeguard and transdrafted Into this Important work by Commissioner -assistant director. In charge of women's organk delusion the the maximum of beauty with the his under that war national tempt of Jus garden the mit Jqr posterity principles Claxton. and he brought to bear on the enterprise school States of the United army, garden xatlons, whole was of working capital. The gar commission minimum the knows It He was thing. tice,, freedom and democracy j to conperception and aggressiveness which achieved rewith which the commission was In close has of den the loyal" the many things that cannot be made the that people our In brief comradeship , secrate .and sanctify sults of national Importance comparatively ' ' a such war success. Ipterestlng Particularly duplicated. garden splendid time. President Wilson was keenly Interested In by our devotion to mutual helpfulness. "Put the slacker lad to work" was the first slo-trees are the to visitors Mn Pack also appreciates what the press of the by dis planted ' While requiring that every member cordial school the United Ststes garden army. Ills " - gan of the commission. , War gardens are essenA. Dana men. Charles did movement the He for knows ail tinguished, country that indorsement was expressed lu a letter to Secretary of the organization perform his full Institutions. But big business an acorn which he brought tially family-powe- r the purpose, all the enthusiasm, all of the ability which served as the corner stone of the struc planted Lane duty as a citizen according to his own of those la charge of the commission's activities and the hour the the of capitalized General Grant planted aa spirit caught from China; conscience" and tonderstandlng, the ortur and an Inspiration to the children of America. acacia ; Senators Hoar and Evarta each. " enthusiasm of numbers and the healthy rivalry of been have sweetness of the effort wasted on From the beginning the commission and the conization shall be' absolutely non- - might the desert air of Indifference had not the American ' teams by establishing community gardens financed planted a cedar of Lebanon, and Senaused not for the he school shall and garden army have worked In entire har railroads worked The "partisan and It its employeea. by by behind movement the with all Its power. got f mony. Ttvs commission has furnished the army Its tor Crittenden planted an oak. There dissemination of partisan principles or press Is devoted to an Illuminating , went big business one better; the children of the Is a tree planted by Edwin Booth, and The closing chapter Dubllcatlons, and has prepared special 1919 print for the promotion of the candidacy of account of the tremendous enthusiasm with which - nation put It over both of these; "daylight saving" another planted by Edwin Forrest. But ' Ings for Its exclusive use. Director Francis In the the most famous tree of all I the horn any person seeking public office or the Amerlaan dally and periodical press responded gave them all a chance to take time by the fore- Introduction says the mighty army of school chl beam Drefermeuf. . , lock; while preserving kettles, canning clubs and to the opportunity, and how the planted by President Lincoln.. material ': dren must h'P to get together the two factors of The annual convention shall be com- was prepared and distributed. publicity contributed several all their - " ' r now stands In tbe garden tne dehydration plants It As thousands of leisure" time and patriotism and of shares In the saving of tlae fruits of the national of this tree covers about one posed of, delegates and alternates from hade "The printed word, the most powerful force acres of uncultivated lands., Superintendents of esch state, the District of Columbia known to civilization, made war gardens possible. ' - eudeavor. . an' acre."' of tenth vital In schools force schools must make their . . Results Are Amszlng. and each territory and territorial pos- - In Tlo other way cot' Id they have been- made to giving more food to the world and In conserving .laesslori of the United States, each of multiply so rapidly In all parts of the land. From Goldsmith's Masterpiece. The results were amazing. The 1917 war garwhat is produced. deleto four entitled be S,5OO;O00, shall and numbered tbelr which dens approximately at the time of publication, Goethe, tnk to and parsnips Is, loon ' printer's a, parsley Secretary Lane's special mesxnge to the school 'said that "The Vicar of Wakefield" gate and four alternates and to owe Jump; but the newsimpers and magazines mnde , focd. products are estimated at f550.000.00a The forceful paragraph: was one of the best novels ever writgarden army contains this 10IS reports show 5.285.000 gimWns and food prod-jc- ti additional delegate and alternate for thnt Jump along wlth lbe others which they mnde -- eason COO.000.000 - The "The boys and girls who have liberty gardens In ten, and called It a "prose-Idyll.- " It Is of $525,000,000. first, ach one thousand memberships paid for Liberty loan, the Bed ' other assist In keeptroe vegetables and fruits were canned; In ' 1919, the garden army offlcers who musical prose of the thirty, days prl to the date of the war-wor- k , ' certainly a debt of5 fi rmTts-o- f campaigns.. 1Iw much-o- f " the army efficient, and the teachers who direct to number 1.4,iO,000.000 quarts. Increased ing . the ,1913 Hill. , Julian owes , national convention. . nation to the It poet gratitude patriotic editors the work, will render a patriotic service to be com is but a small part of the story. probably will never be able to realise fully, but It ' - This, of course, won war, the who men of the to that nured show only how us Amendment to Prayer. many Joes know ..that without their wholehearted sup- - ' It ruMMls sqch a book as this to Import Bars Are Down. "In Ihe opinion of the 2.000,Sherman soys: Mrs. for to are there the as, Donald Frost 3 years o!it Instance, story, Announcement ws Little tother things Washington. port and, their loyal assistance It .would never of worn OOO members of the r.enernl Federation his prayers every night, and one the releasing of many kinds of labor and the ays made on May 20 t the British embas- - have been able to arouse the people of the United en's Club there Is no' other one subject that will evening after saying his recnlar lessening of railroad congestion. The book gives sy that Great Britain had Issued gen-r- - States as a whole to the strenuous efforts which mila give the physical, mental and moral development of immighty host many 'in interesting picture licenses authorising the free pmrer, finished up by saying: "Disr they exerted to back up the government and the tc the child that may come from learning to pro new and strength e lions gnmlng revlgorated strong; seventy-fivof Lord, please don't let Brother BUI put fighting" forces. No note" of appreciation to the v portatlon into England e soil. also believe thnt gar " duce food from the health by handling the hoe, and getting exercise as cold feet on me." Ktrlianj:. his articles Of commerce. editors of the crrtihtiy contd be overgederous In Its for children Is a part of the school educe more dening and as than profitable 1 tennis, golf good praise or too liberal 1n Irs expression of'heartfelt tlon of a child; that It ranks In Importance with His Christmas Present 'Ruth Accepts decision. gardens - i ; , - r either sjd more patriotic than both. The for XMr substantial aid." thaata and who 1 weed-niusWash.-r-Rut- b writing and arithmetic, and that the . An old fellow I know, a reading, from Garrison, neglected, Walla Walla, ranged tiyed they ' "' to f "" handle the ; i Wae Canlsi Cemmiaalon. schools are the only agency equipped vacant lot to a city park. all sort of roonejr, sys thnt whon I "tered. rubbhrb-litterepoisoner of Mrs. Douglas Stovrs, ar manner, and a on a fnrm fn lu adequate comprehensive over the went as subject top garThnt the world faced a deficit In food and that The boys at Cmp Dix rived here on Mar 20. on the 'way t ti boyall living Council of Women with 29 national National for Chriiwn he The their got deembafore could home got which be at an met she existed whether they emergency deners Asked there opportunity the asylum. t organizations Is unanimous In Its support of pur. the prlvilece of shooting a gin on-to go over the top as crusaders In the glorious ed herself sane, she replied: "Can't only by the raising of more food, was apparent children under school direction. for 11 W.'IIowe'a Monthly. mark. abroad. dcnlng WIT. of human months of cause V Ihe liberty for word enrly "on take their thatr flurlng . , . MX , - tran-ceoda- nt - . full-pag- t ipie.tJui estIff : Yj. ? t k, .. earth-staine- d d, . ty-fl- . -- life-lon- ' nt . a : , ' ... - Cross,-dndTarlo- . us -- if - ot , , d ls t |