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Show THE -- HERALD-REPUBLICA- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 20, 19f6. N, C MOW BROADENS ITS ACTIVITIES SEVERAL CHANGES IN FACULTY LIST U. A. r fi- " - - ; : ;- i if '. . -- 5i . -- to' i - ' ... J I - - I . . p --- J Jiv '4i V? ' ... .... :'W- " ' I''-- . . .. ; A ie . I I . " 5 ..:; i t - 9 - i . x... V . A p.. tti PX i f . - :as V ! ' ! )m ipisiw vvHa 11 ' lilllW 1? lit it1 .r rd : " j3 y7. I - 1 ; .Jul, - . , ,'. - f--- 1- - r: r;----' i.ii.Tuini .Jr N. win u - - ' i .in in k - ;; ; ,- i Whichthe. - ISustfuns.i h -- v. X . : On Thursday of last week we received our first f "- , - if i New Heads of Utah' Agrlcaltnral College, pride in her agricultural experiment Knglinh history, economics, literature chans:'f In ami station." o officials, reorganization It and returned has WITH Important languages. Several new members have been and work Iookin;- - toward jrcat-- r will continue to return to the state J. TV. Watson many hundredfold the invest- added to the faculty. efftclir.cy. Utand many r..w faculty nation IVllnols of the succeeda c. of In ment It.'' ih University roll' the .Kricultural merabrj, T. as of Teetzel director athletics. looklnsr forward to an exrrptiorially Caine'a Work. I'rof O. Porter becomes professor of Kalph loors open ye.nr. when it 'Hceful T. as I'rof. assistant Caine John and medical advisor of the psychology for fall registration, Septfinber l'J, director of extension, III, achas become conUidents. K. I'. Tnyen will have charge 13 IK. with the varied problems com- cf the work in horticulture. The folThe nr !ilm!ni.trat ve changes quainted assistant professors have been people of theof rural fronting the S . pt nitT 1. 'n that tluto munities. tike C.effi-cconditions lowing D. C Kobinson In G. now !!rei tor of ex- and his His knowledge appointed: l)r. Orson YV Israelson in Irrigation experience! In modern agritension at the I. A. "., succeeds Ir. .1. cultural methods fit him particularly and Mark Green In farm management, .A. V.'iiltso aa president of the Instiinwell for his work as director. Speaking (ieorge D. Casto has been appointed tution. iThf vacaney createil 1j- - the of dethe extension the work In of in of structor division, economics charge will filled of jroriiotion .loluiIr T.l'ft"r?on Professor Caine paid: been bating, and Mrs.of Johnson has aine III. now ly I'rof.dlrtw tor of extension. education "Founded with the idsa. of service In placed physical Inicharpo li. J. Ir. women. active, direct way, the extension forAlma Kvans, state lader of farm manage- an Ksplln, William Owen and ment work, s'. I'rof )or falne as division is aiming tr be a factor in imLindsay have inbeen appointed dlrerf fr. The reslicnatlon of proving rural conditions. It has theo Clyde W.demonstrators r.sitant Iron, Sevier Its county Utah and of for State campus as of the 3 director Jr. Iiall laststation ryrlr. and head of the and Utah counties, women men respoetively. Its and student fcr experiment of asrrleulture. left two vacan-rif- f. body. This gives eome Idea of the I Dr. J. S. Harris will magnitude of its opportunity to render Heptejn'-- r as director enduring service. K.."niriie Ir. 12 a lis d;tiethe srhool of uurifulttire. of Th-"No Job Is too big- nor Is any detail too small to command the attention of administrativea officials of the are now follows: Ir. n. tho worker. Aid has been Klven in V. Ienr; I'r. .1. S. Harris. problems as varied as the field of agivtcr.mn, prf! f!tref tfr of th e station and riculture. Some of thes are of airrienltiiral as follows: Draining- land, problems director of th experiment sick treating arts; I'rof. John animals, improving sanitary conditions npiiieer and T. Caine HI. dire-toof extension; Dr. on the farm and In the rural communOeorwra R. Hill, director f the school ity, building weirs, introducing- labor of an rlculttrre : Dr. C. V. I'orter. direc- saving devices into the home, construc-In- g a. fly trap, managing a farm, or the tor of the school of hnrao economics; 1 r. Jeors?9 Trionia, llrector of th of a boy's plot of potatoes. Prospects of Roiv Over Veto growing school of commerce and business If the problem has to do with life, and and Ir. T. I AVest, needs educational aid. then It belongs of Army Appropriation of the school of fcjenco. to this division and will be dealt with The ahovtt toiistituts th directors' according to the best of modern teachBill Fade War. would apcouncil. ing. The extension division the opportunity to I r. preciate Peterson well and favorably In a definite way with every movement hl known throughout tlio- west through the betterment t f Utah homes and h. al of the extension work for Washington, Aug. 19. Prospects of ervlee at. the collesre. I'nder his direction the home life.' a congressional row over President extension divi.iin became one of the HnrrU' Activities lr. Wilson's veto cf the army appropriainot potent factors for agricultural S. Harris, director of the exDr. F. advancement in the state, carrying the tion bill went glimmering today and In agriculstation, is known the of the new and revitalized periment principles circles tural United the attitude of Chairman Hay of the throughout r to the remotest corners of through his text book "The PrinT'tah. rvi o" i. a word that looms States of of military comrclttee was one bill Agronomy," prepared in con- House lararw In Dr. I'eterson's vocabulary. To ciples the toward acquiescent passing, en organiio the work of the aKrleul-tura- l junction with Gecrge Stewart of the with such If revision of tho articles of agronomy of the Utah collet that it will result in the department of college. Dr. Harris Is also war as tho President and the war deii.o.-:- t good to the people on the farms agricultural author of "The Young Man and say Is necessary. Mr. Hay, lr the Industri" and commercial the His Vacation." a book soon to be pub- partment it became aim. When inter- lished. known, will not oppose the Institutions if his The school of agricultural viewed recently h made the following bill when it comes back from the Senwill also be under the di- ate containing the new articles of war, rection of the new head of the experijtatement: Dr. Vrtrrnon'm Statement. ment station. In an interview Dr. Har- but not the exemption to retirod officers, which caused the President to veto "Thi College of T'tah ris said: r presents.Kricultur;l the rnoilern Idea of educa"The primary object of the experi- the bill. tion. Its entire hLstory has been a his- ment station is to serve the agricultural Chairman Hay, who will retire from constructive interests of the state, particularly by Congress next tory of innovationoM.and to take a place worn-ouchancre from the new principles In agricul- on the icourt ofmonth educat discovering claims, today denied tional ideas of th pnt, to the modem ture and better ways of conducting the that his objection to the exemption arconception of education as being1 not various farm enterprises. The education but service. farmer does not have time, ncr ticle was inspired by former Adjutant "It organized, first !n T'tah, courses the money necessary to carry on exten- General Alnsworth, or any other reIn engineering, closely related to our sive experiments: he must confine him- tired officer. The congressman himIndustries, r" In home economic, self to the best known methods of self Identified the officers whose name commerce lirieultural and farming. engineering, has been used In this connection as t u:'ines.4 administration and mechanic "The Utah experiment station expects General Alnsworth. to arts. The toilet-- has always devote its energies largely to the regu-litChairman Hay say hlg advocacy of it and its courses problems that are peculiar to the state. t. suit the of T'tah. Its doors The methods used In humid climates the exemption article resulted from inav.. alvvavs n wi-o;..r.. that any do not apply to arid conditions: hence stances of injustice to retired officers who wishes might enter it is necessary to develon a farm prac he had observed. citizen of T'tth All the end t.irtak- - of Use benefits of the in- tlce Fuited to local conditions. stitution. Its i:rad'iat-have trrn' out departments are keeidnn: ' th is fact In i.i g iiundr.-dsnot afraid to mind in planning their experiments. "The chief problem befcrc the Utah BERNHARDT IN WW RUES work, and lent themselves eagerly to farmer Is the conservation of the limthrt serious purposes of the state and the west. They now occupy unusual ited water supply. Tills problem !n its to farmpositions of prominence aiid distinction relations fnd dry attenis beingg- irrigation ivtn considerable In the scientific, durational and n ing cliiMtrial world. The women have gone tion. The selection and breeding "of Will Use English in Her cut Imbued types of plants and aniwith a knowledge of home more desirable the m a k i n g. diseases and mals, ' The and liv stock, thepests best affecting methods Coming American Tour. agricultural college has. In very crops of handling various kinds of farm anii. dignified and ennobled the methods in vocations of the mals, improved cultural necrFsary numerous other simis siT,etimes thought thtt raising crops, and vorld..o!le--f- It Paris. Aupr. 19. Parah Pernhardt was are ilar ii.questions the constantly present- never pur ly an industrial more alive than she is today, and chord. It l" more than this; Its aim ing themselves to the experimenter. v. uder federal law is to not A although Infirmity prevents her from alone train Dcservlnsr College. roles the repertoire she ti e workt-certain and industrial leaders of playing"The the comprisingIs the nstinri: It" S'ire Includes the broad- staff of experimenters to to America will be extremetake Utah the are station by trainest tr. lining for citizenship. Its aim is ing and devotion to thetr work consistingcomprehensive, the ly mostly of tc- n..i!r- of ir students useful workers one-aof in staff the like any As equal Cathedrales." "Ies plays country. et.d leiders In the necessary work of a result the agricultural Interests of A symphony orchestra of forty muthnation, to srive breadth and the state will be taken care of Just oji sicians accompany her and An to It students by hroaJ and liberal well as the at the disposal of Americanwill actres3"of prominence will be In tho natural and physical the scientists meims of training the staff experimental n l n c. j s well a In mathematics. will permit. Utah ft hen Id feel a Just engaged to explain before the curtain the nature of each performed. Mme. Bernhardt 'will piece use English for the first time on tho eta go. shipment of the new EDISON DIAMOND-DISPHONOGRAPHS. They are now assembled in splendid our EDISON BOOTHS awaiting your examination. r i.--u C array in and your friends are cordially invited'to attend our DAILY YOU eor 1 a ill i : r- - r FREE EDISON' CONCERT 1 t Ve'-r'n- 1 For it as--tst.-- tnt i HAY WILL ACCEPT ARTICLES OF WAR - ni.-i-lwn- k Re Creation of Music -- r ill-rect- i ! ' ! co-opera- Numerous great artists singers and- instrumentalists have sung and played in direct comof their parison with EDISON'S work; and the musical critics of more than 100 of America's principal newspapers, in the columns of their own papers, admit that they cannot distinguish between an artist's voice or instrumental of it performance and EDISON'S - or 1 I Phonograph that you can appreciate its marvelous 3 -- Diam- ond-Disc f-ho- - by actually HEAR- ING The New EDISON 100,-0j- - is only te I RE-CREATI- SITEKATOX Model Mahograny, Golden, C-15- crrl-.ultnr- 0. Weathered and Fumed Oa.k. RE-CREATIO- Terms to suit you. moterxe Model Mahogany, Golden, A-10- 0. Weathered or Fumed Oak. Price $100. Terms to suit vou. N r-nd Jndl-vidu- n-- i al "OLR . J el rgnrii-..itlon 1 h-- " . ! - -- fund?"-tiu-nta- l, C- t - - r - GflMP ENSATION BILL WILL TEACH ART WHERE ct - vit-io- Astonishing Power of Iron AGE ON to Give Strength to Broken Down Nervous People Publishers Ordinary .uintrd Iron r"hjielatt Will lurrrair Mreniith of Hellenic I oik 20.1 ivr nt n Two Weeks' Ime In .Many "1 lntnnrr. New York, N". Y. In a recent disn course Dr. ii. Sauer. a Specialist who-ha- s studied widely both in and Uurope, sii'4: "If you tali were (OuiUrv to tnake an actual I loo 1 t?st on all who urn ill you would probaj"'o?i bly b at the greatly astonished lack ho number exceedingly lare Iron and who are 111 for no other reason th.tn the lick of iron. Ihe moment iron is supplied all their TTultitude of dangerous symptoms disappear. Wit!. out iron the blood at once loses the power to change food Into tissue and there-toryou living nothing eat does you any gead you don t get the etreng'th out of it. Your food merely passes through your system like corn a mill wlt't the rollers so wide throughthat the mill can't As a ttart Mooil atid result of th'.s continuous grind. gen-tralnrve starvation pecple become weakened, r.irvous and all run down and frequently develop all sorts One is too thin, another cf conditions. Is burdened with unhealthy fat, eome lire o wrk they can hardly walk, o:ne think have dyspepsia, kidney or liver thy trouble, some can't sleep at night, others are sleepy and tired all day, some fussy and irritable, some and bloodless, but all lack fkinry and ndui a:.c. in physical cases tt power is worse than foolishness to take stimulating medicines or narcotic which cruis. whip up your fagging for the vital powers only at moment, on. No the expense of your life latermaybe matter what anyone tells you. If you i.re not strong and well you owe It to to make the following te3t: yourself te how Ions you can work or how far -- well-know- ly you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grai- n tablets of or- nuxated iron thre times per dinary after meals for two weeks. day test your strength again and seeThen for I yourself how much you have n hav? fcten dozens of nervous, gained. people who were ailing all the time double and even triple their ati-endurance and entirely petstrength rid of their ympto:r.s Inof dyspepsia, liver and from ten to fourteen other troubles by taking iron in the days' time simply after they had in proper form, and some cases been this, for months ooctorlng ran without any benefit. Youwonobtaining as talk you please about nil the new ders wrought by remedies, but when you come down to hard facts there is nothing like good old Iron to cheeks and put color In ycnir flesh on your bones.good. It hound, healthy is also a great nerve and stomach the best blood builder Ktrengther.tr andThe lti the world. only trouble was that the old forms of inorganic Iron, like tincture of Iron, iron acetate, etc., often ruined people's teeth, upset their stomachs and were not assimilated and reasons they frequently for more harm than good. Hut with the of the newer forms of organic discovery iron all this has been overcome. Nuxated Iron, for example, is pleasant to take, does not Injure the teeth and Is almost immediately beneficial. run-dow- th-s- e NOTE. Tle mnnf.-birrof Nuvate.I In-u' h iinhnttnilfU conf lnc in its potency announcement tliat they '!,rr aaitiorizeto the wi.l forfeit ii any t haritub' if t!:ry canri"t take anr man tntmrni unl-ttu-lwirt lncka lro ami tncr-dtrensrtu ; pe- tent or in pr,,. time, ther hae no rious oririiiic tnble. AI.o wKI refnad yinjr tnuey in any ci.-la tv'.wcb Nuxale.l Iron does not at least double time, it la dispensed four ttrenKth In in this city Srhrs iJCiuc &tcre r . tit itr a i lTitittn r r otr thr aul all other u tn Ur' trdru.'U:. u Provides for Payment of IF ages to Disabled GovARBITRATION ernment Employees. and Printers Baltimore, Aug. 19. At dthe closing-sessioantho today of of nual convention the International Typographical union an arbitration aKreement with the American Publishers" association was ratified. The agreement Is to cover a period of five years May 1, l y 7. Under its beginning terms every' difference of the members of the union with their employers will be settled by arbitration along fixed lines. sixty-secon- 1 FEWER SCOTCH CROOKS In 1015 Attributed to Temperance Movement. London, Aug. 19. The report on e prisons in Scotland for '191.1. just is- sued, reveals a remarkable decrease in the number of criminals dealt with, the lowest since 1SGD. notwithstanding the fact that the population of the country has Increased since then by 43 per cent. The decrease Is attributed chiefly to tl.e growth of the temperance movement. Increased facility for finding employment and the recent mobilization. The number of criminals tabulated in 1915 was a decrease of 16,195, as compare with the total of the preceding year. Korea's sacred mountain, Kongo-San- , or Diamond moTmtaln. as it H more commonly called, carries. It is claimed, 12,o0t granite peaks, rugged and grotesque in form and almost ixnsosslble of bein scaled. 27,3-10- , SHE BEGAN AS PUPIL Florence Ware to Be PLAN PARK MEETINGS to Be Held by Service Superv&or of Art in Uni- IteliRloua Y. M, C. A. Sunday Afternoon. Park meetings will be held Sunday, versity Training School. August 20. under the auspices of the iMiss C. A. as follows: At the meeting will open Liberty at 2.45 park When Miss Florence Ware assumes her duties as supervisor of art In the training- school she will be University to the school in which she returnin-had her elementary education and in which her artistic ability first began to manifest itself. She will also be taking in & school of Ideas of which, up'duties as to art work she understands sympathetically. Miss Ware's training and since she left the training experience an as as to grade graduate have been sucheighth her adY. M. Renew Contract.' re-i-e- PASSED8Y SENATE teen district out of the thirty-nin- e in the state have reported. Nebo district of Utah county reported with a total of 2752 boys and yesterday 2602 girls, a decrease of 15 boys and 45 as compared to last year. girls Box Elder reported , an increase of 121 county and 92 girfs, or a boys total of 2S90 boys and 2748 girls. Washing-ton- , Aug. ID. The work- men's compensation bill to provide uniform compensation for government employees when disabled and adequate benefits for their families In case of death was passed today by the Senate in the same form as It practically House. ' passed the Kederal employees would receive wages through disability and provision Is made for adequate medical attendance of injured to effect economy in preventing: protracted compensation payments. A commission to administer the workmen compensation affairs will be composed of three members at $1000 a year each. The bill was drafted by the American Association for L.abor of which Irving: Fisher of Yale is president. President Wilson, Jane Addams and Justice Brandels are among the vice presidents. The bill will go to the President next week. two-thir- ds sharp, closing promptly at 3.30.be Th the at speaker park will Rev. George liberty F. Lowe, pastor of th First Baptist church, Opden. General Caster will preside, and W. W. Secretary Jones will lead the music, assisted by from all the Kpvrorth representatives of the city and members of leagues of Phillips oCngre-gationthe Y. P. S. C. K. church. At 4 o'clock there w?ill be a meeting in Pioneer park, presided over by W. A. .of the work Wight, chairman C. A. committee of the Y. M.religious R. P.. lead will the Quay singing, assisted by all the different, Y. P. S. C. K. and unions not named in the list Baptist for the meeting at Liberty park. Rev. 'iiiter Pnseli will be the speaker at Pioneer park. al - equip mirably for the position she Is now to cccupy. Miss Ware is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Ware and was born in Salt Lake. The first eight years of her school life were passed in the public schools of the city the last five of these at the University training school, where her growing interest in art received everv encouragement. In the fall of 1913 Miss Ware entered the Chicago Art Institute, Joining the advanced life class. She graduated from the art Institute in June, 1916, with honorable mention. the summer of 1910 ehe studDuring under Charles T. Woodbury, the INVENTS PLIABLE SOLE ied marine painter, in his summer school Me. The summers of 1912 at Idea of Hungarian Captain Promises andOgunquit, 1913 were passed at the Meyers School of Arts and Crafts at Berkeley, Aid to Leather Industry. She is a member of the Art StuBudapest, Au?. 19. Barna S. Kohl-ene- r, Cal. an Hungarian captain of cavalry dents' League of Chicago. " whose military usefulness was ended DILATORY when he lost an arm, has devoted him- DISTRICTS self eince his Incapacitation to inventing- a wooden soled shoe that shall have School Census Figures Slow In Reaching the virtue of flexibility. Ilia invention Capitol. Is a sole that, instead of being made of the school census have Reports of one solid piece of wood, is constructthus far been slow in coming into the ed of a number of layers joined to- office of the state department of eduand officials .of the department by heavy oils or fats that thick- cation, gether are urging the secretaries of the varien and grip the pieces of wood ous districts to send in their reports as soon as possible. So far only flf- - II" fl y, I 41 I I I I5 I J Jj ! p ' & II institution of re- strength, I f source and experi- ence, with the pur- pose to counsel and t support its clients as as j well J actions. to 1 I handle their financial trans- - I I $ ' , f |