OCR Text |
Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA,' CORRAL COLDS EARLY; THEY ARE DANGEROUS RED CROSS HELPS SCHOOL NOTES WAR'S SUFFERERS Aids and Veterans 200,000 .Their Families 27,000 Dis- abled Still in Hospitals. SPENDS Individual All $5,866,255 IN YEAR Attention Assured to Physically Ailing or f in SO The common cold is a contagious disease, and should be treated at once, according to Miss Charlotte E. Dancy, dean of women and assistant professor or nursing at the tUah Agricultural College, Logan. If we could corral the germs of common colds, we could do away with most of the other diseases mankind suffers from, says Miss Dancy. Nearly all the disease germs enter the body If through the nose and throat. these cavities are in a perfectly healthy condition the germs will in alomst every case destroyed there. In a community where contagiou1 disease is prevalent, it is probihle that every child receives some of the germs in his or her noe and throat. Some children have sufficient health to resist infection and to cast off the disease without manifesting any signs of invasion. The worst enemy of nose and throat health is the common cold. It lowers the vitality and destroys the protective power of these regions and so prepares the way for the successful invasion of the other germs. Common colds never turn into other diseases, as people sometimes think, but they do make the attacks of other germs successful. Tonsilitus and resulting heart lesions, rheumatism, and St. Vitus dance can be traced to the devitalizing effects of the cold. Infections of the nose tonsils, and ears, etc., follow the b-- Distress. i NORTH SEVIER HIGH The Charm School Entertaining The Charm 0 ce Life Saving Work Of Red Cross Corps Wars on Drownings life-savin- g water-safet- y 26,-00- 7 Red Cross Field Of Action Covers All the World iim-ru- i. well-doin- is was edy, a most encomt School, tertain and humoious sucees.-- . fully the Social hull, Eiiday thiee-ac- at proM-ntc- nip, i.i by the Richfield high school, under the direction of Miss Alta Redd. The clever plot and laughable situations kept the audience intensely interested throughout the peifoiniance. The cast showed unusual trailing and tlu-- did excellent woik in representing the different chaiacteis; Elton Pace, as Austin Levans; ome drunk. llaivcy Dastrup, represented Ilcdmer Johns; Sadie Elsie llcnedotti; Anna llowarth, a OGDEN LIVESTOCK MARKET Neill, as Miss Cuitis; and Maxine (Quotations furnished by Ilunsaker Erickson, as Sally Iloyd; however, Livestock Commission Company). did exceptionally well in their parts Cattle Receipts 294, market steady Miss Redd is to he complimented upGood to choice fat steers, $6.50 to on her excellent There $8.50. Fair to good killers, $5.50 to coaching. was not a dull moment; moreover 80.50. Feeder steers, $4.50 to $7.00. every performer knew his lines and Good to choice fat cows, $5.00 to action perfectly. $0.00. Straight fat heifers, $5.00 to Feeder cows, $2.50 to $4.00. $0.00. The Boys Are The Financiers Gunners, $1.00 to $2.00. Cutters, One thing was pioved by the pres- $225 to $3.00. Butcher bulls, $2.50 entation of the ( harm School, is to $3.50. Choice light veals, $6.00 that the boys are financially more to $7.50. Heavy and plain kinds, successful than are the girls. An $3.75 to $5.00. interesting contest was staged beHogs: Market 5c higher. tween the hoys and girls. The group Good to choice handy weights, 150 having the smallest percent present to 200 lbs., $6.50 to $6.95. Heavies, to the play was to pay the expenses $5.50 to $5.95. Stockers and feedof a dance, while the winners claim ers, $1.00 to $5.00. , all the piocc-edfrom the dance. The Sheep: Market steady. boys won by three heads. Goo dto choice fat lambs, $10.00 to Choice yearlin gwethers, $11.25. Freshmen Eaiertain at Skating Fat ewes and aged $6.00 to $7.00. Party Feeder wethers, $3.75 to $5.00. The freshmen entertained the fac- lambs, $10.00 to $10.50. ulty at a very unusual skating party party Saturday evening at Redmond Try a want ad in the opportunity Lake. The teachers laid aside all column. They are result getters. work and worry and clad themselves in their sporting apparel and with their hosts and hostesses motored to Redmond Lake at 6:30 P. M.. Cheery bonfires were soon blazing along the bank, while the merry makers skated on the shining ice Later in the evening the hungry crowd was treated to the most delicious weinnies, sizzling hot, and cakes like nobody other than the freshmen girls can bake. It is unnecessary to state how much they enjoyed themselves for everyone knows what exceptional entertainers the freshmen are, and especially when advised by Miss Bates and Mr War service live Washington. which on after the armistice, years November 11 the American Red Cross marks with the opening of the annual membership canvass, shows that during the past year assistance was extended by the Red Cross to some men or their families. To 130 hospitals throughout the country approximately 75,000 men were admitted for treatment, and to 63,290 of these men definite and specialized service was extended, the Red Cross annual report discloses. In all hospitals under government operation a total of nearly 27,000 disabled veterans were reported by the Surgeon General of the Army. These facts of the aftermath of physical and metal disability five years cold. after the World War, and the burden Every common cold, therefore, resting upon the relatives and de- should be treated as the deadly enemen, show my it is. It spreads its germs quick pendents of the conclusively the great need of the ly. The child, or adult for that matRed Cross to act as a supplementary ter, who has a cold should remain arm of the government in service to at home until he is cured. Be careful these many thousands of men who of the pocket handkerchief and be wore the uniform of the United States. sure that eqch child has a clean one It should be emphasized that governNever wipe the babys owrn. of his ment assistance is necessarily standardized along specified lines affecting innocent nose with his mothers them as a whole. The Red Cross serv- handkerchief. Think of the common ice is to the individual man and the cold as a real disease, easy to catch solution of his problems. This ths hard to cure, and sometime affecting Red Cross designates home service" a life time with its results. for its aims to give the loving care and interest of the home to these men A philanthropist has given a milundergoing physical reconstitution lion dollars to the University of Kenfar from their actual home influences. be spent in studying how to tucky Years Expenditures $5, 866, 255 to make the Southern mountains proIn the year ended last June 30 ths for the people who Red Cross reports $3,92(8000 spent bj duce a good living Now the problem reinhabit them. its Chapters in (extending individual the crop: itself into solves and men to finding attention the and methods of production which will 51,946,255 spent by National Headquarters of the Red Cross, a total of suit the hill lands. 55,866,25.rj In behalf of the men called to duty in tha World War the Red Cross since July 1, 1917, has spent nearly $164,000,000. Today there art 2,608 Chapters in as many localities carrying on this work; aiding the individual veteran, assisting his family furnishing creature comfovts and funds to tide over troulflesome .periods The strong connecting link between The insignia of the American Red the Red Cross and the United States Cross Life Saving Corps on the bathVeterans Bureau takes the complica- ing apparel of men, women and tions out of difficult cases of claims. youths is seen everywhere at favorite The Red Cross in this work requiring bathing places along the coasts, rivpersonal representation 6 f the ers, lakes and ponds. In Its unrelentman has acted in appeal cases, ining campaign to reduce loss of life by surance matters, personal and family drowning the Red Cross is making problems, camp and hcmpital activi- constant headway. The demands for ties, and in cases of death. This serv- instruction from organizations in all ice handled nearly 12,0 00 compensaparts of the country were so numertion and insurance clai. jos, and 2,225 ous the past year that it was necesallotment and other clai ms. sary to more than double the staff of Solves Serious P roblem Red Cross instructors. This work or showed The financial problem of the training for water man when traveling to and from an enrollment of over 30,000 volunhospitals is a serious om and in meet- teers enlisted for duty on patrol, for ing this constant demand the Red rescue and resuscitation, all compe7 during the tent to instruct others in the standard Cross expended $13S,33-methods. The Red Cross extra For recreational equip year. ment in Veterans Fiumau training by request of the War Department centers $14,306 was spent, and for the gives water first aid training at the United States Military and Naval blinded veterans in tho government school funds were supplied to enable academies and in the military training some of these unfortunato men to en camps for reserve officers and civil ter business as storekeepi rs and poul- ians. The four cash prizes awarded by the Red Cross last year for heroic try raisers. In Veterans Bnreau hospitals the rescues were conferred upon two girls, record of a single montS. illustrates a boy and a man, indicating that the the large service rendered by the Red youths of the country stand well at the top in conserving life along our Cross. For example, 15,504 new case water courses. of a and total required attention, cases were acted upon; 49,363 let ters and 1,SS 3 telegraph .message written, and more than 1,600 entertainments given in recreation houees for the benefit of the patients. Authorities declare that the present is a critical time in the lives of men man of tho disabled who during the five j"ears since the Represented by 93,668 members, the armistice have developed misgiving American Red Cross penetrates to of recovery. nearly every part of the world. The Work Among the Regulars" insular and foreign roll call statistics Service to the enlistiwt men of the for the past year are a most concluArmy, Navy and Mariise Corps is a sive manifestation of the Red Cros3 charter obligation of the Red Cross, spirit carried into the most remote which in the last year recorded over lands. In Europe there are 4, OSS 200,000 cases of assistance extended in Turkey, and active in members; and S34.420 visits to the sick and dis- the Constantinople Chapter, 3,545. Chiabled. Inquiries by th- Red Cross at na has an enrollment of 2.252; Africa, the request of Government authori- 136; India, 224, and Australia, 29. ties into the home conditions of sol- Even Vladivostok, in frigid Siberia, diers, sailors p.nd marines aggregated has a live chapter with 100 members. 17,714, and. there were nearly 6,000 The Philippine Islands can mobilize instances where the Red Cross locat- 58,747 under the Red Cross banner ed men f.or their families. and Hawaii 7,863. The total funds Ail these activities constituting raised through foreign and insular single responsibility of the American membership enrollment and sent to Red Ejross demonstrated during the national headquarters in Washington year that its war service in behalf mounted to $60,216.54, while an addiof t he veteran and the man enlisted tional $33,350 was forwarded for the in the nations defensive arms must endowment fund of the American Red and with-oi- Cross. The high seas roll call in 1922 C, forward unfalteringly stint of funds. The work of the was an inspiring success. The Navy .ast five years hits welded a close signed on 4,331 for the Red Cross and bond of regard beiiween the ncen who the merchant Bhips 4,141. Of the tosacrificed and the Red Cross, whose tal membership outside the United efforts are praised and indorsed by States 83,990 are registered with chapthe veterans organizations. Td do ters in foreign lands, the insular posail that can be done to soften the con sessions and dependencies. sequences of the hard blows of war is 'he supreme duly of the Red Crw. I want to; therefore I can! is the to which it is giving it best war's and that spurs the Red Cross workspirit l , moot service. in er J 200,-00- WHATS THE USE have enjoyed my visit here. You seem to be so happy; how do you manage it? inquired a mate guest who also was married. Its quite simple, replied his I make a fuss over my wife, friend. and kiss her quite often. The other husband, who was not at all demonstrative, decided to try this, to him, novel method. (In arriving home, his wife opened the door, lie grabbed and kissed like a regular movie sheik. His wife burst into tears. Whats the matter? he asked. sobbed the wife. dear! Oh, has gone wrong today. Everything 1 fell down and broke a lot of china, the dog has pulled all the clothes off the line, the cook has given notice that shes leaving and now you come 1 I NORTH SEVIER HIGH SCHOOL Presents the Annual School Play CHRISTOPHER, JUNIOR A delightful Comedy in Four Acts Under the direction of Miss Grace Cardon Assisted by Mr. Robert Bjorkman CAST OF CHARACTERS Kennard Larson Christopher Jedbury, Sr. An East Indian merchant Mrs. Jedbury, his wife, Josephine Nielsen Christopher Jedbury, Jr., their son, Paul Breinholt . . Edra Murphy Nelly, their daughter, . James Ivie man their servant, Whimper, . Allen Barnard Job, valet to Jedbury, Jr. Major lied way, retired soldier, Angus McDonald . Montess Christensen . Dora, his niece the Association for Mr. Glibb, president of Edward Martin Suppression of Juvenile (gambling . Ruth Scorup Mrs. Glibb, his fetter half. Tom Bellaby, a young lawyer, Gordon Monroe . . . Howard Mattson Mr. Simpson, Manager of the Bombay House Juniors apartments in ACT Gros-ven- or Terrace, London. ACT Seniors reception room in his house in Devonshire. ACT III The Majors quarters in Bombay. weeks later. ACT IV The same-s- ix Property Manager Costumes Othello Madsen Miss Dora Fuller Friday, Feb. 8, at 8 p.m. SALINA SOCIAL HALL care-fre- e Moody. During the past two weeks the seniors have taken charge of the study hall during the morning, the noon, and the night periods. A mark ed change has ben noticed in the eon duct of the students. Beginning with February the juniors will manag the discipline of the study hall. Wayne Taylor, for his accomplish ments in athletics timing the past year, was presented with a sweater in devotional Monday morning. The sweater is led, like the athlete wear, with a blue monogram of North Sevier on the fiont. J m k.ll r? ( For High Class Printing Wedding Invitations Society Stationery Show Cards Calling Cards Business Cerds Receipts Legal Blanks Butter Wrappers Letter Heals k Envelopes Invoices been respon- I I a si'oie for thousands of business successes T AS Cards Dodgers Checks Programs Labels throughout the country. Everybody in town may know you but they dont know what you have to sell Advertising Will Eel? Yea THE SAUNA SUN OFFICE Jj Legs! Notices DELINQUENT NOTICE Willow Bind Irrigation company, principal place of bu'iniss, Aurora, Utah.' are delinquent upNOTICE Th-r- e stock on on the f lowing (li st levied on the account (if 'Kth day of November, 1923, the sev-ramounts s' t opposite the names of the re- pectin- shareholders, as follows: Slirs Amt Name 02 - $77.81 J. Oscar Anderson 25.00 Alma A. Anile' son ....20 0.09 4.87 Vivian Burns and in aceot dance with law and an order of the board of directors, so many shares of each parcel of stock as may he note sary will be sold at the offices of the secretary, Aurora, Utah, at 2 oclock p. ni., January 26, 1924, to pay the delinquent assess- ) i al - ' 1) !:y - ment theieon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. L. P. CHRISTENSEN, t r |