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Show THE flTT After nerbert Delaney, man of Caledonia, Mich., had shot and killed a deputy sheriff who was trying to arrest him, American Legion men of the city formed a posse and Captured the man. ht Supplied Service.) nllnneapplls Entrusts Entire Munlcl-- pal Control to Veterans, With ( ,'. George Leach as Mayor, f With the tates service men of the United unwillingly beginning to be lieve that the people thereof have entirely forgotten thejn, the city of Minneapolis is a oasis flourishing In the alleged des-- . ert of dried-u- p s memory. The enhave cltl-een- . trusted their A survey of land settlement jects throughout the state has ORLD WAR MEN GOVERN CITY com- plete city government to the young t. ...... ...w.....,,! World war vet-bru.ua ami ure lilting the experiment Heading the municipal machinery S Mayor George E. Leach, who never lad taken part In politics until after le had commanded the One Hundred fcnd Fifty-firField artillery of the forty-secon- d division. His city attorney Is Neil M. Cranln, who had a company of Infantry In the One Hundred tnd Fiftieth regiment. Eightieth diviA. C. Jensen, his chief of posion. lice, commanded a battalion In a The mayor's secreflepot brigade. tary Is Frank It. Cullen, who led a platoon of engineers, Mayor Leach was elected after a bitter contest, a fight In which his supporters declared disloyalists and lukewarm Americans lined up solidly kgalnst him. His platform was straight Bauerlcanism and straight-busines- s, f Bringing home his artillerymen of the Rainbow division after the armistice, Mr. Leach made a successful attempt to get every man of them a Job, tie and his staff are members of the (Lmerlcan Legion In posts In Minneapolis and vicinity. probeen begun by the American Legion of Washington. Under the law, men have a preference right in filing on all public lands. The retirement of 8,000 sick and wounded emergency officers of the World war with pay on the same status as officers of tne regular army are retired, Is being urged on congress by the American Legion. President Harding has been Invited to accompany the Hood River, Ore., post of the American Legion on Its annual climb of Mount Hood next summer. Governor Olcott of Oregon led the Legion party to the summit in the climb this year. Demonstrating the use of the airplane as a busy man's time saver, Theodore Roosevelt, assistant secretary of the navy, flew from Washington, D. C, to Asbury Tark, N. J., to address the annual convention of the state American Legion. The trip was made In two hours. st Believing that the man still Is suffering from the effects of a severe wound received while In action In France, the American Legion of Hastings, Mich., Is seeking to have determined the sanity of Frank Soules, former service man, serving a life term In the Michigan state prison for murder. The sale for taxes of the estate of John J. Pershing, father of the general of the armies, In Tangipahoa Parish, La., has been prevented by the American Legion and the General has been requested to make the estate available for colonization by his wounded com rndes now taking vocational training In agriculture. Plans for a $10,000 war memorial at Duluth, Minn., to honor the men and women who served during the World were abandoned recently at the MAKES HIKE OF 4,000 MILES war, request of the American Legion representatives who contended that It was Marine Corps Fellow Travels From no time to erect a monument The San Francisco to New York memorial committee sought to honor " Pack. Carrying Jobless" and hungry. f After facing death from thirst on th.e great American desert, being mis taken for a bandit hnd looked upon frith suspicion In the communities Where the marine uniform never had been seen, Charles E. .Gilbert, United States marine The recent establishment In Constantinople of a post carries the American Legion into the second country aligned against the allies in the World war, Ttt post was formed of American naval and embassy attaches and representatives of several American flrma commercially engaged In Turkey. There Is a large post of the Legion at Coblenz, Germany. . corps, arrived In reNew Tork Although he could not swim, Martin J. Maloney, New York policeman and a color sergeant of the Seventy-sevent- h cently,and hale, tired. hearty division in France, plunged Into the : Ordered trans surf at Rockaway Beach to save a ferred from his station at San Fran- young woman with whom he hod cisco to a new post at New York, 1'rl-ra- been keeping company. He lost bit Gilbert sought permission to hike life, but the girl was pulled to safety. the distance. He was given a fur- Maloney was a member of the police lough and sent upon his way. He cnr-he- d department post of the American a pack during the en- Legion. te tire trip. Between marches the marine found Shelter and fod from American Legion posts along the way, and when he reached St. I'aul, his home, St. I'aul Tost, No. 8, turned out to greet him. The distance of 4,000 miles hiking Was covered in little more than a tnonth. He made the 2,200-mil- e walk from San Francisco to St I'aul In 12 Bays actual time. Automobiles along the way snaterinJly helped the marcher by frequent and long "lifts." Te A promise made on Flnnders field would take care of nnd protect the wife of a wounded "bnddy" If the latter should fall, was fulfilled at Manchester, N. II., recently when Mrs. married Letendre Adhemar Albert Thllieault whoso husband was killed In action. Tho returned soldier that he and his comrade's widow met In American Legion work and theli friendship grew Into love. Plans to make the national cemetery at Arlington the most beautiful Soldier memorial In the world, have fceen completed by ofTlelals f the 'American Legion, and will be presented to a congressional commute la the near future, according to Washington advices. Landscape gardeners bf International fame will submit designs to the memorial committee, and the one which best typifies the heroic pplrtt of the American dead, will be commissioned to complete the work. d EAST JUAB COUNTY invites the stranger within its gates to investigate the possibilities afforded here before going elsewhere. The famous Levan ridge is known throughout the world. railroads pass through Nephi. Two . : : then It has been a task of careful se lection and breeding. The new breed is not yet ready for; Introduction, and no specimens or eggs will be sold until the characteristics OF sought have been more firmly fixed. It Is as well or better developed than, were several of the breeds and varieties when they were Introduced by Government Experts their breeders, but the specialists of Poultry Have Produced New Breed the department believe that It Is not d sufficient to have a few specimens that MaJ. Gen. C. T. Menoher has Fine Qualities. Possessing measure up to the Ideal. They want his resignation as chief of the the characteristics so well fixed that army air service and requested transi fer to the command of troops In the) the fowls will produce a high percentWHITE-SHELLEEGGS age of progeny of the Ideal type. D CoL M. M. Patrick, who was LAYS field. General Pershing's flying chief tDj When- sufficient stock of such birds; has been obtained specimens will ba France, has been appointed In his Body Is Long and of Good Depth, sent to state ; place. agricultural colleges and and Has Large Capacity for Reexperiment stations to test their adaptGeneral Menoher's resignation Is; productive Organs Resistant ability to different sections and cona climax to months of discord and to Weather Changes. ditions. friction In the air service, which may or may not be ended by the change: United States The general has been at swords' (Prepared by the ot Agriculture.) Department DECREASE IN POTATO YIELD The country will soon have a new points with his aggressive and out-spoken assistant Brig. Gen. William breed of poultry, a white fowl with Weather So Unfavorable That Estl-maMitchell, for a long time, and It hoi red ear lobes, that lays a white egg, on August 1 Showed Drop of been regarded as Inevitable that soonef developed by the poultry experts of the . 61,079,000 Bushels. ( or later one or the other of them United States of AgriculDepartment ; would have to resign. ture at the government experimental (Prepared by the United States Department ot Agriculture.) General Menoher made a dei farm at Beltsville, Md. Heretofore, it Although the potato acreage Is estitermlned effort to force General Mltchj is said, all breeds with red ear lobes mated by the bureau of markets and ell out of the service. He wrote See have laid brown-shelle- d The crop estimates. eggs. United States Departcom M. was a of War of Weeks conceived letter project by Harry retary ment of Agriculture, to be 3,972.000 buplaint against his assistant and de Lamon, senior poultryman of the manded his removal. reau of animal Industry, and at the General Mitchell, Ujonly "flying general," was Indignant over the policy suggestion of the chief of that buof placing nnnflying r. T34n $ne air service and this caused him to take a reau Secretary Wallace named the i breed Lamona, for the originator. position which General Menoher described as Insubordination. The new fowl possesses characterSecretary Weeks undertook to act as mediator in that controversy and, istics of great merit It has sufficient succeeded In smoothing out the trouble temporarily. g, The experiments off the Virginia capes precipitated a size to fit the demands of the great new outbreak, however. In the differences of opinion regarding the result of; number of consumers who want a bird the tests there is danger of more trouble. The weighing four to six pounds. body Is long and of good depth, giving a large amount of the highly desirable breast meat, and at the same time large capacity for the reproductive organs. The Lamona fowl Is larger than the John Bassett Moore of New Xork Leghorn, approaching In size fowls of has been elected a Judge of the Interthe American class. It Is white, which national court of Justice by the asIs most desirable from the market men's sembly of the League of Nations. This viewpoint It has a comb and watElihu Is the court worked out by tles of medium size which are not easRoot for the League of Nations. Mr. ily frosted, thereby checking developRoot some time ago, declined an elecment of egg production. tion. He gave his age, seventy-six- , Foundations of New Breed. as his reason for declining. The project resulting In the creation Mr. Moore has announced that be of the new Lamona was started In would accept election to the InternaPacking Potatoes for 1912, when the Idea was conceived of Grading and In Market bis He Is court of tional Justice. combining three varieties of fowls to sixty-firs- t year. produce a breed having the shape and or 1.6 per cent greater than last year, the market qualities of the Dorking, the weather Mr. Moore has been professor of during July was so unwith a yellow skin, white plumage, favorable International law and diplomacy at the estimated yield on that and four toes, and laying a white egg. Columbia university for twenty years. 1 showed a drop of 01,070,000 August A d He was a law clerk of the DepartWhite bushels from the Indicated yield on ment of State In 1885, third assistant Plymouth Rock male was mated to July 1. The figures for yield were a Silver-Gra- y secretary of state from 1880 to 1891, Dorking female; and a placed at 815,918,000 bushels, as com Single-ComWhite Leghorn male, hav- pared with 428,368,000 for 1920 and a assistant secretary of state In 1808, ing a rather small, low comb, was five-yesecretary and counsel of the Spanish-America- n average of 371,283,000. Prices mated to a Silver-Gra- y peace commission In 1898, Dorking fe- reflected the change In condition. Off male. counsellor of the State department In 10 the average of ten leading The second year the offspring of July 1014. He has been a member of the markets was $3 to $4.75 per barrel these crosses were court mated at The Hague since 1911 and Is vice chairman of the Interpermanent separately, for Virginia Eastern Shore Cobblers the femalea being financial-conferennational high commission organized at the and and $1.25 to $2.15 per 100 pounds for In 1915. He has written many books dealing with lntt rnatlonal relations. Kansas Early Ohlos. By August 12 Virginia Eastern Shore Cobblers had advanced frm $4.75 to $5.50, while Kansas Early Ohlos were selling at $2.40 to $3.25 ; Idaho Kurals were moving at $3.50 to $3.00 per 100 pounds. Aroused by the suffering of homeless Jews In the famine districts ot GIVE HENS VARIETY OF FEED eastern Europe, 200 prominent Jews from various parts of the country met When Weather Is Cold and Fowls Art for a conference at the Standard club, Just Beginning to Lay, Feed Them Liberally. Chicago, as guests of Julius Rosen-waland decided to raise $14,000,000 Do not fall to feed your hens a good for emergency relief work. The money will be spent for the variety of feed aod In liberal qunn titles when the weather Is cold on? Immediate succor of Jewish wnr victhey are Just commencing to product tims In the troubled districts of Europe, eggs. Heavy egg production require Including Russia, through correspondingly heavy feeding. with the Hoover relief organization and the Society of Friends. Lamona Males Have Abundant Length Good Stuff Plus Printer's Ink. A report of Jewish relief work and Depth. The same adjectives nnd enthuslasrt was the last by given year during use In describing those good Felix M. Warburg, chairman of the only tho high producers of the largest you to your neighbor, If put Into so calves American Joint distribution commit- and whitest eggs were used for breed- advertisement would probably sell tee, (portrait herewith) who has Just ers. Only males from them. returned from an bisection of human- females have been used at any time. itarian agencies abroad. The third year the results of the Seed. Imported 8ugar-Bee-t Much of the sugar-bee- t "Many thousands of Jews In Eu- crosses of the second year were mated, seed In rope are still In need of aid, because nnd In addition, care was taken to ported Into the United States comet they have been deprived of all means select white specimens with yellow from Germany, and Is received througl he said. of livelihood, have lost thtlr 'homes, their little farms, and skins having only four toes. Since the port of Ualveston. IAM0NA FOWL IS GREAT MERIT Menoher Out of Air Service ten-dere- - i te recent-bombin- Moore a World Court Judge close-featheie- b trap-neste- ce Aid for Jewish War Victims g 33 children, Manns Civil war veteran of Independence, Kan., could well organize war veterans' society of his own. Twelve of his sons served with the Holm O. Bursum has been chosen American army In France, one was too young to fight and the remainder ot by New Mexico to succeed Albert B. the 33 are girls who did their bit Fall, who resigned to become secre- The American Legion recently brought the family to light hut at thot there Is one larger In the Creek Indian nation of which Bruner Is a citizen. The corsage bouquet of the fashionably dressed young woman once may have been a flourishing tuft of rag" I weed on a corner lot. Disabled servlc Off and On. Settlement Worker Is your bus-tan- men In Kansas City hospitals hovt built up a good business of making a steady worker? j Mandy Well, It's dls way. When artificial flowers out of weeds and tin Legion of the city Is helppat man has nothln' to do, be shura American Am steady, but when he done got a ing them sell the colored posies t Job he am de most unsteadlest man florists and rift shops. War mother Ah knows. American Legion Weekly, of the city have taught the men to dya the weeds In natural colors. Nothing Is Secret For nothing Is secret, that shall not Nothing to Look Forward To. be made manifest; neither anything Lawson Have you had your vacaMd, that Khali not be known and come tion? Abroad. St. Luke 8 :17. Dawson Tea, darn It I ' TT Ji The father of C Bruner, Make Arlington Most Beautiful. TX V Suggestions for the Farmer and Housewife, prepared by specialists in the Department of Agriculture for the people of East Juab County. : : : Short stories about people of prominence in our country Carrying On With the American Legion Legion NEPHI, UTAH Eimiiesrews Home Page of Live Topics 1 ' tor ThU Department American Newi S, nn me NEPHI, county seat of Juab county, Utah, the greatest dry farming section of Utah, owns its own electric light plant, water worts and 8 miles paved sidewalks. Two banks, lumber yard, plaster mill, fine schools and a modern hotel, t t TIMES-NEW- Bursum Wins in New Mexico tary of the Interior. Three candidates were In the field Bursum. Republican t. candidate, was appointed by Governor Mechem to serve pending the election, Richard W. Hnnna, Democratic candidate. Is a former Supreme court '. ... Justice and candidate for governor at the last election. Apolonlo A. Zensa was the candidate of the Independents. Bursum's plurality over his Democratic opponent Is about 7.0IK). PresiV dent Harding carried New Mexico by 10,900 majority. The Republican candidate for governor at that election Four bad to be content with S.O-'years before. President Wilson carried the state by 2,875. Republican leaders are clnlmlng the victory as a vote of confidence In the Harding administration, which was made the leading Issue In the vigorous campaign that preceded the ele c(l'n. ftenkers of national Several weeks. tion from both parties toured the states ALL GARDEN TOOLS BARBERRY CUTS WHEAT YIELD Implements Should Not Be Carelessly Thrown Aside After Summer's Work Is Done. Scientific Investigation Has Proves That Ruet Get. Its Start In PROTECT i I : Wheelbarrows, hoes, rnkes, shovels, picks, cultivators, trowels, weeders forks are carelessly and spading thrown aside after their summer's Next spring they are found service. the worse for rust ; sometimes entirely ruined. Taint applied! to the metal as well as the wooden parts before putting them In winter storage would protect them from rust In the spring after a few days of use, the paint will have worn oft" the working parts leaving the metal bright and clean. Tools will Inst much longer If given this treatment O. reputn-fo- r Barberry Bushes. Tour barberry bush may be reduo Ing your whent yield or Increasing ttw cost of a loaf of bread. Wheat rust In some years causes loss of 200 000,000 burfNel wheat and sclentlfl Investigation but proved that the fun gus which Is responsible for this dla ease gets Its start In the spring frort the common barberry plant. Mor than 4.000.000 barberry bushes hsvi been located by federal workers nnd 3,500,000 plants destroyed. One bus mny Infect acres of wheat nnd It will be worth while to look around yout fnrm nnd adjoining country and sot that they do not hnrbor any of then wheat thieves. Building Up Live Stock. Fanners are slowly building tip Give Fowls Freeh Water. their herds of cattle and hogs, after Olve the fowls fresh water twice ( the heavy reductions of 1920 This Is day If possible, but be sure that It II Indicated by ttw spclal live stock re- lone nt once a dny and left 0 n cool place for the fowls to drink porters of U Department of el will. |