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Show -j MOTHERS ARE LEARNING USES OF MAGNESIA rroin the banning until baby is weaned, PhUtR? of Magnesia performs Fanners of Logan TAo Future made school the South Cache high the In production of good records of ProStauffer Marion pork recently. of 2179 pork pounds vidence produced - pig the largestwith 144 In day smallest the and 203 pounds weighing of 154 pounds. This waa from a Utter a made Mcndon of 12. Fred Sorenson 8 from of 1739 pork pounds record of were proThese pigs days. pigs duced on a self feeder. Beaver Little Peggy Myrl Barton Bar4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alma died at Beater ton of Grwnvllle, swallowing kerosene. Logan Recently 12 carloads of potatoes left Cache county, making a of 177 cars of both early and lata of potatoes that have been shipped out this year the county. The potato crop is very good. Salt Lake More stringent in-1- movement P!f lpf, Mllk ofMacnIauw lime, water for neutriJJt' milk for infant feeding An drugstore have Phillip,. v of Magnesia In generous 25cVJ bottles. Always Insist on the endorsed by physicians for 50 ow 80 One Emancipation Few Are in Hurry to after h feet on the kinds of work can he SCOTT WATSON By ELMO Armistice day. ktqdles emotions memories In ,t$,e mln'ls of of the nations which pnrilclimted such In ths great .onlllil of as no other day In. (hi year has at present the power to do. says the British military historian. . Capt. B. ''.rv.vxk II. la IJddell. Hart, In the epilogue of AF his book. "The Ileal tVar." published recently by Ml He, Itrowit and coro- pany. "For those who' shared In the experiences of those. fonrand a qunr. ter years of struggle the commemoration does tot stale with repetition." he corit'jmies. "Hut the mood In which It Is commemorated has under gone subtle changes On the original' Armistice Itself the dominant note waa n nigh qf relief, of Infinite volume, most restrained fmong those who, had the most direct cause for relief, most exuberant perhaps, among those who least appreciated the relief. I "The earlier anniversaries were dominated by two opposite emotions. On the one. hand grief keener sense, now that the storm had passed, of the vacant places In our midst; On ths other band, triumph flamboyant only- ln rare cases, bnt nevertheless a heightened' sense of victory, that the enemy had been laid low. Thai mood again has been modified; "Armistice day bat become' more a commemoration than a celebration. The. passage of time has refined and blended the earlier .emotions, so that, without losing sense of. the persona! loss and of quiet thankfulness that as a nation wa ur continued power to meet a crisis proved graver than any In past annals, we are today conscious, above all, of the general effects on the world and on civilisation.' n this mood of reflection we are more ready to recognize both the achievements and the point of view of our late enemies, and perhaps all the more because we realise that both the rnnsoa and. the course of war are determined by the folly and the frailty .rather than by the deliberate evil of human Datura. "The war has become hlstoyy, and can be tewed In the perspective of .history. For 'good It has deepened our sense of fellowship and community of Interest whether Inside the nation or between nations. But, for good or-- bad. It has shattered our faith In Idols, out belief that great men are. different clay..froniom ALII . Emd vow. The pacifists will gain no comfort from "The Real War." For It shows all too clearly that, unless they can change human nature, their recipe 11)14-1- . 1 - " - , g mon "men. .Leaders-sre-atlU-necessa- perhaps-mo- ry r awakened realization of necessary, but their 'common humanity Is a 'safeguard against either expecting from them, or trusting In them, latee-so-essl- -- -- , - re too much. It has been for the benefit of both history and of future generations that the past decade has seen such a flood of evidence and of documents and memoirs. That most of the actors are still alive provhles an Invaluable check In sifting the evidence, .vfhlle the hla torlans themselves have been po .Immersed In the atmosphere of war that they have a certain Immunity from the abstract theorizing which a hi torisn ln his cloistered study fifty years contracts. We know nearly all' that Is to be known. The one drawback Is tbit the flood has been so huge that only the student has been, able to tope with Its Investigation.' the' kplrlt of Arml- Thai excellent statement Stlce day, as It ts'ohservcd'obwhnd as It will be observed In the years to come 'Is' a fitting climax to an excellent history of tfie World war which gives the reader, as probably no other, alngle book has yet done, a clear idea, of that how It came to be, bow Jt.jwvi fought and and bow why It resulted as it, did., The reading of It might well be a singularly Suing part of the observance of Armistice day. For after one has read what Is written thereof' there jlnevltably comes to the mind of the retdec that cry, wrung ry asthma first from the hearts of the rev-.elatio- one-volum- e -- waV-we- n " I ly for avoiding war can never be made to work. Nor will the militarists find In Its pages any nrgo-- ' hients to support their theories as to the heat way to ward off the danger of war. On the contrary, the history of the World war constitutes the most damning Indictment that can be brought, agalnat the extremists on both aides. But somewhere In between lies the answer In the common sense of the masses of the people of all nations, who have to fight the wars which are brought to them by their blundering peace leaders and who auffer most In those want through the mistakes of their blundering war leaders. It la from out that common tense wit Its Increased recognition of "the folly and frailty rather than the deliberate evil of human nature" and Its "deepened sense of fellowship and community Interest, whether Inside the nation or between nations" that there cornea the sorrowing cry and the solemn vow of "It must not happen again The fundamental causes of the World war can be epitomised In three words, according to Captain Liddell Hart- - They are fear, hunger and pride fear of one nation by another, whether there waa any real Justification for It or not; hanger for more territory and more prestige In the family of nations; r I pride which would not allow the leadera and diplomats of the various nations to recede from stands they had taken even thnngh their stano could gain them no real advantage and was onl another threat at the' peace of Europe. Although Allied propaganda during the war, and even after It. fixed the blame for the war ujon the Central Powers, the evidence which this llrltlah historian brings forth shows that all the nat lor a Fra nee, England. Ru sla, Germany, Austria Hungary. Italy and the Balkan stales had their share In the fear, the hunger and the pride which brought on the war. The origins of the war went hack nnre than 40 years and by 1014 the surface of the Continent whs strewn with" powder." . The fatal spark was struck at Serajevu. the Bosnian capital; on June 2S, 1914 However, even this spark might not have set off the explosion had It not been for . fhe fact that In Germany. Austria and Russia, the Immediately preretting, the assassination, had gained- hand over their governments and were determined ujan war, all Inspired hy a common fear of being caught off guard In fact Ihe blunders n .military technique Is one of Ihe main themes f this book. In It Mottke, the German chief of still. is shown as a blundering war leader. He paints lllndeuhurg and l.udendorff as having grown great only In legend and adulation. Allied military Idols are ua ruthlessly existed. Foch Is shown as a much overrated general, especially during the eiirty part of the war. Joffre fails to rise to the heights commander In chief because" of Initiative. Liddell Hart condemns his "unquenchable optimism divorced from reason," and. showa that, popular o4nlon to the contrary notwithstanding, joffre was not the hero of the Marne." as' big name bus rome down jn nor n truly great military lender. In the four year ntruggte on the western front on stroke? Napoleonic genius Is noted and thnt waa suiplled by that most unmllitary of military mem- General GatltenU safely shelved when the waf began lu the Job of( military governor of Pafls. It was this professorial officer. In eyeglasses and yellow falters. who saw'tbe pprrtnnlty that JoflTre did not see and Sir Jol n French did not see, who succeeded In opening. Jeffrc's eyes, with the result' thnt qn army was sent around Paris to strik the on their exposed flank, stopping Ihelr the-upp- -- er -- of-lac- O-iua- ns built frsc ask: ."Emancipation from Probably the doctor never that. Ask anybody, br thought man or worn, If he wants to be emancipated, ud It Is dollars he vffl say yes. Ask him what he want n be emancipated from, and It Is t $100 to $1 shot he wont answer. Work? Not. a chance. Man, vht has been putting his feet on the dest since desks were invented,' nets worked harder. He Is still hound to the wheel. Why should women, hy Imitating him In this respect, bap to achieve whnt he obviously hi not achieved? They could not do I even by standing on their heads. Emancipation? Vain word. The Is do such thing. It Is a wlUe'-thwisp which It is folly to puntt Work, worries, cures, respowM-ltiessorrow and adversity then b 'no .escaping them. Some stand the better than others, but only by of superipr spiritual and moral n sources certainly not by being emancipated from them. Only w thing can do thnt and, while It k often spoken of ns turning up eort toes, it is n t putting one's feet the desk. New Bedford Standard e , p last years. Thompson A $93,394 contract for who, though having had ample advance warning laying nine miles of gravel highway from Thompson eastward has been of fit German plans for using gas. either the Idea or disregarded It entirely and awarded. The contract stipulates that It was the same men who delajed the adoption the construction must be completed in of tanka, which turned out to he such a formlda 130 days. Bids will be called within a Then and Now short time for a portion of winter In ble weapon, and then were only of my first active yeen "Fifteen adoption of the Idea. Sir John French, the field construction, consisting of a sixteen were spent In Kansas," said W. F. commander who began the war. la painted as mile project between Cisco and the Jensen, now residing In Chlcifk "endlessly vacillating and Sir Dougina Haig suf- Colorado state line. It will supplefer for hla hellef In his divine right to command ment n seven mile connecting project "and. like all Kansans, I hive tk fondest feelings for the deer ell and for hla needless sacrifice of men In the flrti now under contract A bridge 150 feet state. three year of the war. long over West water wash and anothThirty years ago Kansasto w In fact It la that last factor which lends a tone er of the same length over Cottonwood still hP happy but rated poor. It of bitterness to the cry of "It must not happen wash will be Included in Ihe contract 6 cantaloup now' Is eating py but again I The masses of people of the nations might A bridge 100 feet long to open Bitter-cree- k breakfast. read Captain Liddell Harts book and hare only a bridge wash will also be order"I recollect s business trip casual Interest In hla analysis of successful ant ed. I nected with the early creamery unsuccessful military technique, of why this stra Salt Lake Utah celery week, Nov, to 1900, In the year velopment. 16 to 22, will see a great Improvement teglc more won and that tactical error lost little town In western Kansas pawn In the great game of war. Nor would they In Utah celery crop and shipments, I stayed at the best hotel 0s .be Inclined to blame this general or that one for over last year. Last year 11,000 carbreifcM hla failure. tering the dining room for tody tons of Utah celery were shipped. At little I was wt by a prim But when they read how this general or that least 13,000 cartons are expected to be wt one gambled with the lives 'of thousands of men me where I wanted to naked thla year. shipped tho table or at when there waa no real advantage to he gained the Thistle The state road commission aroused my curiosity and there la borne upon them the hill horror of will soon Tills table. have a road project on be . the needles slaughter of the young manhood of tween Castilla I asked whnt the difference and Thistle in t Spanish It that, answer then la the nation that "ll must not happen Fork received the canyon. The work It Is estimated a orisp again I" takes on an ominous tone. Such cases are will cost cent table I would get would about two hundred thousand I alt too common In "The Real War." In It one table and st the read how In Seplemlmr. !H Joffre, "the un dollars. An overhead crossing at ThisI stl.l remember sitting down tle to serve Sanpele county will be Inquenchnhle optimist" planned a break through table and enjoying cluded in the project by the French and British In two sectors, tits bam and eSA oatmeal, of fast Provo Elementary students of the plan failed. True, he did gain a slight amount of ind coffee. Chicago Post. ground but Ihe cost was a casualty list of 242,000 Edgemont ward will not attend school until the Mountain school is reopened, In 1918 the world hailed Koch as the Doing the wrong thing u general llsslmo of all the Allied forces who at Iasi hai according to parents of the students. ally be condoned unless brought victory. But Captain Liddell Harts hook Earlier this season, parents and taxshipwreck. reminds us Ihnt In 191.1 It was Kwh who begged payers of the district portested against Sir John French to snpia.rt a French nffomdv to the Alpine school board closing the retake the Ijingemnrck region at nil costs. the Mountain school and hiring trucks to British general hurled hla troops Into the attack carry, the children to other schools of KUSOLA makes old kinrrf' and when hi subordinates, seeing (lie uselessness the Alpine district. The parents at of their effort, asked permission to withdraw thLs time signed a pledge that Sir John French, Influenced by Foch, overruled would not allow their children to they ride their wish ami they were compelled to stay there in the, trucks. ...They- -. reiterated this prepeel. -- to be to aid the French offensive stand at a recent meetlngMore than But that offensive never developed. Jbr finally 80 elementary students of the district Foch confessed that Joffre; so far from have remained away from school durtending Vlnforreraenta. was calling for troops tobe WD, ing the present semester and the defiW-Ypr- ea to strengthen hla forthcoming offen- cision of the parents Indicates that sive near Arras." Even aHer that the British mill In all probability miss they commander kept his troops In the salient where school the entire year if the school they were "one huge artillery target, there to h hoard does not change its decision. . pounded and gassed Incessantly, with their scanty Spanish of the ammunition running out. until relief came at last American Legion Auxiliary are sponIn the fourth week of May. through the Germans soring a movement made by exhausting their own .comparative aupertlulty of toward securing a soldiers memshells." The author of The Real War" eaks volumea orial for Spanish Fork. A resolntlon these words; To thn w good money after had to set aside a ium 'eachyear for the Pc-vestablishing of auch a monument waa Is findlsh But to throw awuy mens lives where adopted. there Is no reasonable chance of advantage la Tbs Great Engine criminal In the heat of battle, mistakes In the Richfield Annie Kestine Jensen of ths We$ command are Inevitable, and amply excusable. Rat' 64, died in American Fork.of .nl,lc,n'ent leaderships arise when fMflf 1 She Was the' first white child ISvks Hwt are Inherently vain are ordered born iir Richfield- -' merely wow An because If they could succeed th would be us Delta Contracts have been let tut. For such manslaughter whether It ' for three springs arcbHwl," bridges between Silver City and from Ignorance, s raise conception of war, or a Lynndyl on the Delta route want of moral courage, commanders should at a cost be of $8002.25. , held a'Younfsble to Ihe nation," , Cedar A Sham V11, e City But lest one Idea that this British hit' cooperative agree-wwas signed by the board of courtorian Is protesting against the slaughter of his commissioners of iron countrymen through the mistakes of the military ts county for a foe cral aid ieadcr of another nation, let It be recorded project nine d and one half Studrptl that t0 Cnnect Bp the wOC he Is no less strong In his denunciation of British; eowr. Writ f-W. B- GTBSOH generals, too. project with the Cedar paring project. ?Vtra Nwtpapr CaJoa.) pooh-poohe- half-henrle- d Easti Btd B d - -- 25-ce- 25-ce- nt 25-ce- nt WHITE SICItj kffle ith SSafassMSgs. JSSBSE&SB&Ssg Fork-Memb- ers 1 bs . Za-brlsk- ie, y. nisiury,..;.' - below 1 rrtn the stance voeli violate all efficiency rules. As for emancipation, we can nl; - exrravu. CAizuCTfi done in ft business woman cojU lead her mail with her feet hi than her head ; could dictate letter might even take dictation If the were not reduced to speechless by the novel spectacle. But for nd Joba as cooking, minding the baby, doing the family wash, and to forth A position. drug administrator in the western district. The federal government of 1iclal advises that shipments of Utah apples are found to bear excesses arsenic. Beover Plans are well under way for a big celebration here on Armistice day. The entertainment wIU feature a parade, program, sports and a grand tall in the Legion ball In the evening. In the afternoon there will be a base ball game In Milford " between the Beaver and Milford teams. Wellnille An election was held recently for the purpose of bonding the cltjrno purchase water' fronTtte Hawbush Irrigation company to be need as city water. Ninety per cent of the citizens voted In favor of the project. are beet The factories sugar Igan working two 12 hour shifts. About 100 carloads qf beets a day are being handled. The yield per acre U much more than was expected during the summer. The reason for pessimism thenywas the dry weather and the white fly, but, accordnlg to Indicadetions, this pest was practically stroyed by the late heavy summer rains. The beet industry is one of the mainstays of Cache county. Last year 31,000,000 was approximately paid farmers for their beets. It Is estimated that beet checks this year'wiU drop Nor does this British expert spare the military leaders of hla own nation. It was blunders hy high British officlalr "at home" which brought about the Dardanelles and Gallipoli fiasco when they refused to heed the recommendations of their suhordl nates who were on the ground and knew best what waa needed to make the campaign's success. It was thesf same "arin chair warriors" 1 It Is an easy way to achieve rtpatidnnndihere is no doubt tot -- when at Ihsi the hideous nightmare of four years of slaughter was ended, the cry which haa become n solemn vow "It must not happen agulnl" And Armlatlce day Is day for repeating that desk-j- ust man. San Francisco market Is requested rom J. I IlarTey, assistant food and the first battle of the Maine. Med The emancipation of women cording to one Ir. Olga Stash, can be attained simply by tnZ JT In their chair, to-tot- al advance and then forcing their retreat This was 5 the ervlce for many women. It relieves nausea, "morning sickness," tccUtT1' Tomu ; help, digestion, tlve action assures regulw t- tr. ... get-th- nt Kw'-te- Barowan-Binnllollo- w - .Ob, 1 ft!!3 w kb |