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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH Northwest Couple Braves Death to Help Armenia ODBRN ' Scientists Declare that Tremendous Advancements of the Future Will Come From the Chemical Laboratory r am In (Told Eight Sketches) self-suppor- t. ... No. VIII - LOOKING FORWARD Mankind, after passing through the stone age, the bronze age and the civilization now varying phases of Thomas faces the dawn of a new era. declared recent interview, in a Edison, of that we have entered into the Age Chemistry and the remarkable achievements of laboratory workers serve to because ; allindependentof ir- - regular seasons and all free from patho- genic microbes, the origin of epidemics and the enemies of life. On that day chemistry will have accomplished revolu- - that cannot be he will bv 1 creatures, earth will be cov ered with grass, flowers and and ' '' V ' man 1 and joy gold. n c;0 milch ' the the French . , for . . " nnt rrron j ? f A I ,K.ace ' army ?( ,u 7, nia rn J1 a S.nj ii-t"8- T . he Rass 01 can he condensed into compass and solidified d pf,lls ,ns Alrf3've ?.( - sma11 ' W1 , lc ab indance larv age of Now of General Debeney, of fi:srr,vnrrei'i -- , Alexan-dropo- cease to live carnage and struction of .r. -- d By JOHN RAYMOND substantiate this statement. It is difficult to prophesy how great will be the contribution of chemists to our present civilization, but so much has been accomplished and so is evi- great is the expectancy that it insist- men are dent why thoughtful be awak- mg that the public should ened to a full knowledge of the signifi- cance of the science of its national life, The synthetic chemist has been able to produce practically all necessary war materials and thousands of arti- cles invaluable in peace times, mostly from coal tar, but it has only touched the fringe of its ultimate development. Synthetic foods and substances so deadly as to make war impossible may be expected from the researchers. Edwin E. Slosson, in his splendid Creative Chemistry, book, quotes one of the greatest French chemists, Berthelot, as follows: The problem of food is a chemical problem. The day will come when each person will carry for his nour- ishment his little nitrogenoushis pat. of fatty butter, his package of starch or sugar, his vial of aromatic' spices, suited to his per sonal taste all manufactured eco- omically and in un- limited quantities; A. SOX o the NurmweSi Mr. Newman and American fund3 will has fallen one of the biggest, help Armenia solve her own food and most gratifying jobs connect- reconstruction problems. ed with America's greatAccording to advices received by hearted task of helping her Miss Z. Fay Fowler of Boise, South ally bleeding, valiant, but starving Armenia back to health, strength and ST, Samuel E. Newman of Middleton, Idaho, a graduate of the College of Idaho at Caldwell, an army chaplain during- the war, and last year in charge of West Washington headquarters of Near East Relief at Seattle, has been picke.1 by Near East Relief to superintend a huge educational and auxiliary relist farm at Armenia. Mrs. Newman, his wife, formerly Miss Ethel Long, a South Idaho girl, who is a graduate of the college at Caldwell, too, and a:so of the 0. A. C., with the class of lfi'.O, lias been placed in charge of the relief societys offices in the same cay. The Newmans lei; Seattle early last summer for the auual relief field. For the last few months they have been surrounded by maddening scenes of by all manner suffering and mena-.eof personal perils ui a big orphanage ft v" a center in huh of colo.sal human misery, where every day they see dozens die in the streets from starvation, cholera . ; A-,- , 4 and typhus for the- want of food and care. Here, Mr. Newman is witnessing the and funds he, actual relief which f Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Newman, helped gather, have personally, hotographed at Alexandropol with made possible, while his successor, S salvaged from ranks of hun- F. Hazzard, 339 Burke building, Seattle, with fellow directors of Neai ger. Twenty thousand orphans are East Relief in the Northwest are driv- cared for in this one city by Near ing hard for additional aid needed to East Relief, curb the harvest of death. Idahos director for Near East Relief, Just outside Alexandropol on a in getting seed, Ameri- Mr. Newman succeeded tract, with American ' of the .500 acres about and a of Alexandropol can machinery battery good, tough American mules for motive farm in winter wheat, and will select power, this big relief society, through seed for the remainder from spring O - may Scatter the boxes on the mStr11 Mky everything alaLt0 arcV Urad belts of PIsoncd for weeks 0R 3 drops of gases ut here and there a few drops ie' Against t!ie attacks of air- h!Ps barrages of gases which - will bring instant death to the pilot will be launched. The air will be filled am bi ashes and snares. On land ?asf tan,js twl ! he used m front .th? hidden gases gantry detecting with an an- Rround !?, tagonistc liquid. Organic chemical factories, dye plants and others, are truly arsenals In disguise. The will of man can lently convert these peaceful factories, where research is constantly going on, into gigantic bulwarks of national fense because of the deadly instru-tio- n ments of war they are able to produce.' .. an (Released by the, Institute of American Easiness, New York) ' ' ! . UTAH HYRUM, - . - 2000-acr- e Have You Seen Your Voice experiment- ing on the human voice, or the sounds of musical instruments. Experiments have already progressed so far that sound waves are shown upon the screen. One is able to see ;he sound of his own voice as he names over, for example, the vowals; or he may sound a violin and the wave is seen. Sing a song and the wave-forof the notes will be recorded in pitch, loudness, and quality hfiMoe?en I is a yvonderful thing to be able to see on o screen why, for Shoes, Gents Furnishings and Notions ALSO AGENTS EOR THE CELEBRATED ' ' Brunswick Phonograph and Records Dr. D. D. TEBBS dentist Office at Elite Hall, Hyrum Res. Phone 17. Office closed Office Phone 163. Wednesday afternoons. Advice to pugilists put on the gloves. when in doubt Teeth are like verbs ular and defective. regular, Irreg- k Sometimes an hard to get rid of. easy-goin- g ' ' person Is When one suspects, he Is right at least half the time. instance, vowels sound different and why instruments have characteristic tones. Even though the vowels are sounded at the same pitch, the record shows the difference between o and a or any other vowels. The explanation of this lies in the fact that although the sounds are at the sarpe pitch the vocal apparatus has been so adjusted a3 to give a different quality to the notes. To be of the same pitch two notes must give out the same fundamental vibration. To have a different quality and still be at the same pitch, two notes must not only have the same fundamental vibration, bat also must have overtones of different relative intensities. It would appear, therefore, that since instruments and persons have charaeteristic tone for qualities, that the wave-forThis each would be characteristic. Dr. Day-to- n is found to be the case. C. Miller, of Case school of Aphas made a careful All the disagreeable people do not plied Science, Dr. these live on cross streets. study of Dorsey, of Gloucester, Mass., has manufactured an apparautes simi-a- r to the one used by Dr. Miller. The B. Y. University, department of physics, has purchased one of these instruments and by its use is able to show the different wavewave-form- s. Subscribe For the south cache courier $1.50 a Year in Advance forms. In view of the foregoing it is certainly true that the human voice can be seen and photographed. blood-soake- -- CALL ON Smith Bros. Lumber the It surely t, YOUR old room that had a past now has a future. Change it now from a dusty, mysterious catchall into a sung winter play7 room, a bright bedroom or either of them, while the present price of lumber is within your reach.' This can be done at surprisingly low cost without litter or muss. Professor Carl F. Eyring of the 3righam Young University, physics upon and Ottoman vandalism, to be brought back into production next year by Americas aid through Near East Relief. Mile upon mile over this great expanse and littering millions of acres more, leading back into old Armenia, now a desolated country of blackened ruins, lay the unburied bones of countless victims grewsome relics of massacre, war, deportation and famine,, which have followed each other in a tragic procession during the last seven years. Nearly all labor upon the Alexandropol farm and the various others, is being done by boys from the orphanages of the Near East Relief, who are being carefully trained in all phases of successful farming, in order that they, with the thousands of others, being tutored in business and industry, good citizenship and may help salvage their country from ruin. Armenia's men were practically exterminated holding the eastern front in the World War against the Turks and saving Asia to America and her allies after. Russia had deserted. Most of the remnant that survived have since perished in massacres and deportations that followed the coming of peace to the rest of the world, and in Armenias final struggle against Bolshevism and Turkish invasion that continued till late last spring. their So, these orphanage wards sons and their brothers who are alive today only because of Americas care, with those thousands still outside pleading for help, which people of this district are helping to provide through their support of Near East Relief, must shoulder the burdens of men in building a new Near East over the ruins of old Asia Minor Bu ild That Extra Room Now . of tone and projected ' screen. General Merchandise G death-haunte- d m DEALERS IN A i l Alexan-.tropo- department, Allen Brothers l, grain donated by American farmers. This is but one of several vast patches comprising more than ISO, 000 acres of once fertile soil of Armenia and Southern Russia, laid waste by war a PHONE 19 HYRUM, UTAH $ Co. W GOOD WILL! No bank can boast a more valuable asset than the genuine good-wi- ll of its customers. It is the basis of that confidential and intimate business relationship on which the prosperity of both bank and customer " must depend. This bank has won the good-wiof it customers courteous and through prompt attention to their re quireraents and by coustant with them in the handling of their business problems. ll $1.00 Opens a Savings Account and Obtains a Liberty Bell Bank Hyrum State Ban k d |