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Show NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah. July 16, 1917. Notice is hereby given that Dagmar C. Williams, of Castle Dale, Utah, who, on May 31, 1913, made Desert Land Application, Serial No. 011514, for NW 4NW, Section 21, Township 19 South, Range 8 East, Salt Lake Meridian, Meri-dian, has filed notice of intention to make final proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before the clerk of the district court, at Castle Cast-le Dale, Utah, on the 31st day of August, Aug-ust, 1917. Claimant names as witnesses: Hy-rum Hy-rum Rasmussen, Erastus P. Rasmus-Ben, Rasmus-Ben, Richard C. Miller, Nephi L. Williams, Wil-liams, all of Castle Dale, Utah. GOULD B. BLAKELY, Register First pub. July 21 last Aug. 18, 1917. "There should be an organized effort ef-fort made by all the upright citizens of a community, to instill into the minds of the men called under the draft, the magnificence of a clean, upright up-right manhood, and the determination to fight against anything that would destroy it," asserts Dr. James Nai-smith, Nai-smith, originator of the game of basket ball and just now on the Pacific Coas speaking under the auspices au-spices of the National War Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. to the enlisted en-listed men at the army and navy training train-ing camps. "The loss of limbs, or eyes and other disabling wounds made by the challenged chal-lenged foe are honorable scars," Dr. Naismith declares, "and the effect dies with the individual, but the wounds made by Immorality affect the and leave future generations to reap the harvest sowed by the sins of the fathers. I believe that we should remove re-move every immoral temptation from his surroundings with as much vigor and faithfulness as his surgeon removes re-moves flies, mosquitoes, parasites and death dealing germs of every other kind." It is the work which the National War Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. is doing by furnishing equipment for recreation and entertainment to the soldiers, places where they may find reading material and note paper so they can write to the folkes at home. Its importance is realized when it is considered that some. boy or boys are taken from every community to be sent to the front. "If we can help the soldier in times of homesickness and nerve fatigue," said F. A. McCarl, executive secretary of the National War Work Council, Western Department Depart-ment , "and keep his mind occupied with helpful recreation, we will be Our every effort is to .eetaoinetaoi able to do a great work in his behalf able to do a great work in his behalf. Our effort is to keep him pure in mind and body. That is the work of the Y. M. C. A." |