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Show SailcBinni jOspanptlinniBinitl VOLUME ONE SALEM, position as clerk for Salem Mews the UTAH, FRIDAY, SEPTEM SER 5, 1919. NUMBER THREE .Tenkins JEWISH RELIEF WORK Cash Store. Conflicting Thoughts Miss Alva Hanks is teaching school nesday to take charge of the shcool at Mr. and Hsr. Geo. Carson entertain- fit Benjiman. ed at a Sunday dinner in honor of the ill leave Mr. Lyman Gurber foUowing guests: Mrs. Benjamin Gardner and Mrs. Brown of Monroe. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Brown and family of Blackfoot, Idaho, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Vernee Iverson will leave for Frisco to assume the principal-shiFloyd Whiting and baby, Mrs. of the Frisco district 'school. Hillman, Mrs. Boyer and son, Morse, of Silver City. The afternoon was spent visitin'; and feasting on Mr. K. T. Curtis is in Idaho runUpr melons. Mr. and Mrs. Whiting ning his threshing machine. i Mr. ing to Tremonton where Wlii Mrs. Leo Sutherland of Ptovo was wil have charge of the con-strthe guest of her parents, Bishop and t,n of grain elevators. Mrs. C. O. Christensen, Sunday. Miss Preal Sabin has returned to Salem after an extended visit with - Friday night a crowd of young IS NOW WORLDWIDE Christian as Well as Jewish Sufferers Are Aided by Organization That Covers Many Countries in Europe and the Orient. p Lu-cret- and practically without Quietly, publicity of any sort, the Jews of America have built up, through the American Jewish Relief Committee and other official agencies, a machine for ' relatives and friends in Salt I.ake city and Ogden. Miss Sabin will not teach school in Salem as was anticipated, Ihe school board having seen fit to transfer her to the Thurber school in Spanish Fork, the transfer making it possible for her to teach a class in art at the Spanish Fork high school. Miss Sabins ability in this line is pronounced, and we are sure this will lead to greater ones in the future. Mrs. Minnie Hodapp entertained a few friends at an informal musical program Thursday evening, the' guests being Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Merkley. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jenkins, Miss Hazel Unmv ami Mr. Lyman Gurber. and were the guests of Mr. Joseph people from Provo motored to Salem Peterson at a watefr melon feast. The party included thirty-siguests. x Mrs. Annie Soren who has been very iU is reported improving. s Several of potatoes have been shipped out of Salem to eastern points. car-load- Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Cox and family of Provo were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis on Sunday. the organization and distribution of relief to war sufferers of their own and other races that Is now practiThe headquarters of cally worldwide. the Committee are at 15 East 40th Street, New York. Expenditures for this work now aggregate more than !f2,000,000 a month, and by means of campaigns to be held this fall a total of $35,000,000 Is to be sought to finance the work through the coming months. An enumeration of the countries in which relief efforts are being made! Is Indicative of the scope of the work.! Representatives of these Jewish agen-- 1 cies are to be found in Poland, Czeclio- -' Slovakia, Jugoslavia, Galicia, Serbia, Rumania, and other Balkan states, Greece, Turkey, Palestine and Siberia. Small groups of refugees, cast up by the backwash of war, are being assisted In Holland, Japan, China and other Isolated parts of the globe. All told, many million Christians and more than 6,000,000 Jews in countries other than the United States are being directly aided by American Jewish relief funds. The major portion ef tliis humanitarian work is of course carried on In Eastern Europe. It is there that the bulk of the worlds Jewish population lives. The fact that these same nations have been perhaps hardest hit by the late war, explains why World Jewry Is at the greatest (Orem Line) In Its history. For the past five years Utah seed selection, methods of cul- FIRST PREFERRED STOCK crisis But though the Jews of America have set out to save their race from has produced a yearly average tivation, diseases and their conDividends payable quardestruction, they are not forgetting of 3.369.400 bushels of potatoes trol, harvesting, storage, and 7 than better terly yields that their own people are not the only Prof. Stewart per cent, annually on preson 20.600 acres at a value of $2, marketing. sufferers In these lands. The signifiof the whole undertaking becomes cance ent An free of states that to a circular price. opportunity 635,000 according copies when It is knovn that the apparent for local safe investment in a just issued by the Experiment his circular will be ready for relief supplies which have been purchased and shipped largely with JewStation of the Utah Agricultural distribution within the next day company. ish funds are distributed without dison circular apDescriptive obtained and be two or Prof. College. may George Stewart, crimination to Christians as well as plication. Address Jews. Barriers of race and creed author of the circular, states from the Utah Experiment Stahave been submerged In the flood tide R. that Utah ranks second in the tion, Logan, Utah. of suffering throughout much of the Assistant Secretary, United States in average yield effort. of - American earth, and - th to aid In the great crisis of Jewry & R. R. 165 SALT LAKE UTAH Maine CO. bushels, Affira&l Convention per acre with have become as broad as humanSalt Lake Oitv - - - Utah. today being the only state with a highity Itself. j state-by-stat- e Mrs. Eliza Davis, who recently underwent and operation at the Provo General Hospital returned to Salem Wednesday. It is reported she is reCondor MLs Lillie of American covering rapidly. . Fork is the guest of Mrs. Robert Davis for a few days.' Rol MeQuirey has returned from Grove after speuding a week Pleasant workare Salem The following girls as the guest of Mrs. Willard Holman. ing at the Springville canning factory: Miss Lucile Grant, Miss Bernice Nut-talMiss Lucy Peterson, Miss MarMuch of Canada Unexplored. tha Peterson, Miss Ella Sheen, and Boy, page Christopher Columbus the Miss Alweuie Second ! There Is still nearly Miss Jennie Flvgare. of Canada that is still undiscovered, 'Peterson and Miss El da Jackman.' and if Indian reports are to he beMr. and Mrs. Thelma Morbey are lieved, there is In the basin of the Mackenzie river one of the largest areas moving to McGill, Nevada to make of possible country and oil their home. fields, since the recent enormous developments In the use of oil fuel, nre Miss Julia Peterson has accepted a as great a national asset as rich gold deposits. Indians also report the existence of lakes a hundred miles long In the Yukon that no white man has ever seen, while even the Indians' apparently know nothing of the undiscovered Mackenzie mountains, about which the chief information obtainable Irri- at present Is that they exist. 10,066 Here is a chance for some adventurof ous spirit whose ardor for new-anLegion er acre yield. The average strange experiences is not dampened farm price received for potatoes by too much participation in the late in Utah during the last ten years A delegation representing the war, to win fame and riches by t is cents a bushel. Grand seventy-eighsoil All good alfalfa and sugar beet discovering unexplored Canada and Army of the republic to Prot. Stewart will attend the first annual conwith an unquestionable water right opening up a vast new area with unAccording predictable resources to the service of selling at $05.00 aa aere oae year paypotatoes do best in a cool vention of The American Legcivilization. eent 0 interest ments with per with a fairly long grow- ion, the national organization of Thought It Strange. season. Morgan County American veterans of the War For furthur information writ or aae What" the matter, Mr. Green, ing in with has the highest acre-yiel- d dont you drink? Germany, to be held in No. But why do you ask? Utah with 196 bushels. The Minneapolis or November 10, Commercial HoteL "Youre the first visitor weve had warmer counties fall much be- 11 and 12. Marshal Foch of lit some time that pa hasnt Insisted low this, the average acre-yiel- d on showing the cellar to. Oasis, Utah France is expected to be pre- Utah Producing Over 3000,000 Bushels of Potatoes Annually l, one-thir- d OPEN FOR SETTLEMENT Acres Jof gated Land on the Salt Lake & Utah Railroad Co. JOE BROWN, American SevierRiver REVERSED. When we were first married I gave mjr wife a regular allow- cli-ma- te ance!. And nowT Now, H. S. BEALS AND GET It makes no difference what you want in Clothing, Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Drugs, or anything you use, you can depend on us to give you come-bac- k satisfaction A corps of good-lookin- g, busy, courteous clerks to wait on you. in Washington County being sent to address the convention only 127 bushels while the other on November 11th, American warm counties are much below this. Potatoes are shown to Legion Day. In a letter made public today make most oi their growth late National Headquarters in at in the season, growth continuNew of York, C. E. Adams of ing until over 90 per cent the In dead. is an experi- Omaha, Nebraska, Commander-in-chie- f foliage ment cited the production of of the G. A. R., accepts marketable potatoes was shown invitation extended by Henry to increaae over seven bushels D. Lindsley, chairman of the a day from August 7 to August 30, the marketable yield being National Executive Committee, twenty times aa great- - the last and adds: I am fully in accord with day of August as it was on the first day. On August 30, in .the sentiments set forth in your this experiment, growth was considered complete as 99 per letter. is in the right directcent of the vines were found to ion. In my opinion the time has be dead. The size of the potato come for all army men and all set, seed selection, and irrigation all patriotic socities to strengthhave almost equal influences on en their a federation the total production of market- of their position by organizations. This acable potatoes. In substantiation not the cheap kind but the good kind done here. Important Sermons, j Speeches and Legal j Transactions Should I j f j be Reported j Jt of this statement Prof. Stewart has cited conclusive experimental data from various experiment stations showing the best practice to follow in each case Prof. Stewart, who says that estimates place the loss from disease in the State at about $300,000 yearly of which is due to Rhizoctona and Fusarinm wilt, and the remainder miscelleanous to diseases, has given a thoro discussion of the control measures which have been found most successful. The circular which is well illistrated contains 54 pages which are devoted to a discussion of numerous other vital factors in potato production, among which are such subjects as climate and soil, two-third- s SALEM she takes all my alary and lets me have the PRINTING tion cannot come any too soon; the disorganization that is so rife today must be curbed. And it will take the united force of us all to make the proper American construction that is so urgently needed. I have visited twenty-sevestates in the last ten weeks and have addressed more than half a million people and the demand is for a settled American policy. The whole country is looking to the patriotic socities to take the lead. Chairman Lindsley and other members of the National Executive Committee will attend the national encampment of the G. A. R. Columbus, Ohio, September 7th. n Mrs. Joseph Jenkins, Treasurer of this Store, is an Expert and can do Expert Reporting. 5 We Do Notary Public Work i The PUCE of NEW, CLEAN GOODS 1 (CASH STORE! INI Salem, Utah |