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Show THE BULLETIN Europe Uses Most Fertilizer Consumption of fertilizer In the United States la at the rate of fire pounds per acre per farm. Nations of Europe rank far ahead of this country In fertiliser use. Holland uses 99 pounds of chemical plant food per acre annually, Belgium SO and Germany C7. Then comes Denmark with 40. Norway with 20 and Sweden with 22 pounds. France nses 21 pounds per acre, Italy 17 and Great Britain 12. Cant Count on Satan I "You never know when Satan Is jgwinter do his best singinV said Uncle Eben, "wif de most evil ur Youth to far ? Shall We Send B y HERBERT HOOVE The Former President of United States Answers a Question That Is on Everybody's Lips. (Caadenaed Frees Auiast laaaa at tha American Mafasias by Special Arraaga-aaaat- .) American people today tense with Typhoid Vaccination anxiety lest they be led Vaccination another fever into f against typhoid great war. gives protection against the disease And some of our people 'for at least two or two and seem to be accepting glib years. talk of war as if it were Something more good than HOTELS evil. Truly many years have Plandome Salt Lake already gone by since we , Hotel . It State St. Bates SI to II 4th ceased to feed boys to the When la UNO. NEVADA, stop at Ike cannon. It seems difficult to HOTEL GOLDEN Bone's larteat aaa hotel. believe that only about one-thibmm pepnlar of the living American APARTMENT HOTEL t people are old enough to reJ Black frees Tea a. la. BeasaasMa Raton amy member the World war well. week ar auuia. Coletel faraiahea BICHMOND, 7S B. Na. Taaipla. Bait Lake, We have urgent need today to recall the realities of modWEATHER STRIP & INSULATION ern war. And we have desNow b tKt tlma to inanlate and weather atrip with Rock Wool and Pmtex perate need to take into our Kr homo Strip, Write for complete Information. national thinking the giganIatarssaantalB Weather Strip Co. ITtk Santa Bait Lake Cite. VL tic yet invisible forces behind ' W Baat war which are again moving PHOTOGRAPHY in Europe. 16 PRINTS 25c I am perhaps one of the Bod Dev. and If print! SSe. It Reprints tie. who BBX PHOTO OGUEN. UTAH few living Americans had full opportunity to see inVENETIAN BLINDS timately the moving tragedy Ordar roar Venetian Bliada aiada to order of the World war from its Finaat quality S and shipped within S days. aad finish. Write for information and order beginnings down through the Dealer blanks wanted Utah Venetian Blind Factory. HT W. Sd Bo. Bait Laka long years which have not yet ended. I saw it not only LAWRENCE CLINIC in its visible ghastliness, but Tha nost modern and completely aq nipped I lived with the invisible ellnia la tha internumntaia territory spa cialiiina la tha injection traatmant of forces which moved in its Hsmorrboidi and electro therapy for Hay ever and Asthma. THB LAWBENCB CLINIC 144 B. Be. Temple-S- alt Lake City causes and its consequences. HERBERT HOOVER Dr. Chaa. 8. Lawrence. Director. I am perhaps justified in re(From the drawing by Clarence Mattel.) calling that experience. WELL DRILLING Before the war I knew Europe and our American boys who justice or tolerance. H. K. Behiaas Jt Saw. Well DrlUinf THE one-ha- lf rd I ... Co, tractors. Water, Mine and O0 Wells. Any. whan la tha West. 1M0 Booth 11th Baat. Salt Lake City. Ut Was. 1147: Hy. T18i. INEXPENSIVE MEALS Tha beat food la Salt Laka U at I set-re- d by The HATFLOWKR CAFE 114 South Main POPULAB PRICED Luncheons. Dinners and Sandwiches PACKARD AUTOMOBILES The New Packard Deliver! 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Main Bait Lake City Wasatch TIM PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTO-KRAF- T ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Any Roll Deva loped with 25c Quality Prints --Extra Friajls 3c Wrsp coin and film artfully I SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- DRUGS N fox 749 Bah Lake City. Uteh PHOTO-KRAF- , T SAN FRANCISCO HOTELS GRAND HOTEL 57 Taylor St SmI Fraadsco, Calif. Where the mast Faatidieai ealey ear World Benewaed Service at Papular Price. (2.M with Bath aad Up. Write far ear Coldea Gate Iateraa-tiaaEipssittea Book FREE. WJf.U Week No. la SALT Stop IIU SALT LAKB LAKE CITY at the BELVEDERE APARTMENT HOTEL B it)! Attractive, Rates bt Month, Week. M. 1 Sa. State St.. Salt Lake CM 170 Calvin O Jack Met Waa France, Germany, Russia, Italy, and England fairly intimately, not as a tourist but as a part of their workaday life. I was drafted in 1914 to preserve the lives of ten millions of people in Belgium and northern France who had been overrun by the German armies. Here was a service that by common consent was a sort of semiofficial state. It covered not alone food, but the economic life of these people. It operated within the lines of a hostile army and moved through the blockade of a hostile navy. In that service I moved constantly in and out behind the trenches on both sides of the conflict. I witnessed the misery and backwash from war in their most hideous forms. My duties required that I meet constantly with high military and civil officials in England, Germany, France, and the neutral countries in contact with the invisible forces behind the war. When America Joined in the war I was asked by President Wilson to return to America to become a member of our American war council and to administer the food supplies of our country and for our Allies. At the Armistice I was drafted back to Europe to direct activities of the Allied and associated governments to defeat unparalleled famine and pestilence, to restore economic life among both the victors and the vanquished. In this service I spread an organization of thousands of American men and women over 23 nationsmany of them boiling with Our job was not revolution. alone the extension of a hand of kindness. Its purpose was to secure order out of which peace could be made. Constant dealing with those many peoples and their officials brought a flood of knowledge of the political, economic, and social currents which sprang from the war. I did not participate in making the peace. I was daily called upon for advice and information. And I observed its disastrous course. Subsequently, during a period of eight years in cabinet position I dealt with the troubled seas of unceasing political and economic storms the world over. As President I dealt unceasingly to bring about reduction of arms, economic readjustment, and peace. A year ago I spent some months in Europe with unique opportunity to discuss its problems with leaders in 14 nations. That is 20 years of opportunity to observe European peoples and their leaders, with all the forces of good and evil in which they live, and to relate them to our American scene. The searchlight of this experience can well be turned upon some phases of the present scene. What War Really Is. First, let me say something from this experience of what war really is. Those who lived in it. , - fought in it, dislike to recall its terribleness. We dwell today upon its glories the courage, the heroism, the greatness of spirit in men. I myself, should like to forget all else. But today, with the world driving recklessly into it again, there is much we must not forget. Amid the afterglow of glory and legend we forget the filth, the stench, the death, of the trenches. We forget the dumb grief of mothers, wives and children. We forget the unending blight cast upon the world by the sacrifice of the flower of every race. I was one of but few civilians who saw something of the Battle of the Somme. In the distant view were the unending trenches filled with a million and a half mea. Here and there, like ants, they advanced under the thunder and belching volcanoes from Their lives were guns. thrown away until half a million had died. Passing close by were unending lines of men plodding along the right side of the road to the front, not with drums and bands, but with saddened resignation. Down the left side came the unending lines of wounded men, staggering among unending stretchers and ambulances. Do you think one can forget that? And it was but one battle of a hundred. ' Ten million men died or were maimed for life in that war. There were millions who died unknown and unmarked. Yet there are miles of unending crosses in a thousand cemeteries. The great monument to the dead at Ypres carries the names of 150,000 Englishmen who died on but a small segment of the front. Theirs was an inspiring heroism for all time. But how much greater a world it would be today if that heroism and that character could have lived. Humanity Suffers. And there was another side no less dreadful I hesitate to recall even to my own mind the nightmares of roads filled for long miles with old men, young women, and little children dropping of fatigue and hunger as they fled in terror from burning villages and oncoming armies. And over Europe these were not just a few thousands, but over the long years that scene was enacted in millions. And there was the ruthless killing of civilians, executed by firing squads who justified their acts, not by processes of justice, but on mere suspicion of transgression of the laws of war. Still worse was the killing of men, women, and even children to project terror and cringing subTo the winds went mission. every sense of justice. To the winds went every sense of decency. To the winds went every sense of tolerance. To the winds went every sense of mercy. The purpose of every army is to win. They are not put together for afternoon teas. They are not made up to bring good cheer or 10,-0- 00 n'linfff-il- f' lirWiOTiiirfffr R PERSONAL that war. We had been directly attacked. But, more important, I believed we could bring the endless slaughter to an end. I believed that with our singleness of purpose we could impose an enlightened peace; that we could make it a war to end war. I believed we could make the world safe for the spread of human liberty. If experience has any value to nations, there are in the wrecking of these hopes a thousand reasons why we should never attempt it again. Prayer for Real Peace. Work oa Steam Salsa. Full details send W cants. P. O. Bes M. Lea Aagelea, Call. PHOTOGRAPHY ROLLS DEVELOPED lt a pnaia ails anlaraonMia. or roar coulee of 1 anaie wiibuel oBlanraBMnia Sfto enla lUprinu Ssea. HOSIERY MENDING TAUGHT BOSYBV MENDHM COURSE Jjaarn hum anUKiiinuibutiiirui ai school, i na Ha vi aims TMJCNT BV SMB. nwinfonaauoei mma uaainv Identical Twins President Wilson arrived in Paris, the common people of the world were praying for a real peace. There were good men there, and there were high aspirations. But there were also concentrated there the invisible When Many cases where parents could not distinguish between their own twins are on record. Yet only 30 out of 100 pairs look, act and behave alike. Twins do suffer similar ailments. In a pair forces of age-ol-d hate and greed. had toothaches at England, same time, Mr. Wilson met a determination had identical teeth the extracted. Anto crush the enemy in a Carthag- other 100 miles apart, ' living pair, inian peace, lie met the sinister the demands for power. He met a suffered rheumatic attacks atidensame time. Twins often get greed for possession of world re- tical ideas. One visiting' Scotsources. Above all, he met with land a his for brother. gift bought the pressures of populations and to England, he found the unsolvable problems of Eu- Returning his twin had bought a duplicate ropean boundaries and economic gift for him. Washington Post life. He worked valiantly to combat the evil forces. He spread American idealism at the peace THE EXTRA table. He argued and cried out for reason and justice not because he felt that mankind must turn its face to the .future and its back on the past. When Germans blame him, little do they know what Germany would have looked like had it not been for COUNT SMOKES IN CAMELS Woodrow Wilson. To Mr. Wilson I criticized bit terly the provisions of the peace treaties before they were signed. I felt that instead of healing the wounds of the world they would spread disaster over a generation. I have before me a memorandum that I gave to Mr. Wilson two months before the treaties were signed, urging their lack of vision and the dangers to America. He won some victories for sanity. He helped some nations They are to freedom.' He hoped that, with made up of men sent out to kill time for hate and avarice to cool, or be killed. Whatever the the- the League of Nations could reory, the act that wins is justi construct the failures of the fied in war. treaty. And there were the terrors of Americans will yet be proud of the air. In a score of air raids I that American who fought a fight saw the terror of women and for righteousness although he parchildren flocking to the cellars, tially lost But he proved that frantically, to escape from an American idealism and American unseen enemy. ignorance of the invisible forces in Europe can only confuse the Starving Women and Children. grim necessities of European In another even more dreadful peace. sense I saw inhuman policies of What is happening today? Euwar. That was the deternuna is suffering repeated earthtion on both sides to bring sub- rope shocks from the fault of quake jection by starvation. The food the Treaty of Versailles. blockade by the Allied govern But, beyond all this which is ments on the one side, and the ruthless submarine warfare by obvious, something else is movthe Central powers on the other, ing. Europe is again engaged in had this as its major purpose. a hideous conflict for power. Both sides professed that it was Stripped to its bones, today the not their purpose to starve wom- quarrel is much the same. Dicand Italy rise en and children. But it is an idiot tators in Germany on opposition to Comwho thinks soldiers ever starve. to power launched into their peoIt was women and children who munism, the dictator of Russia. died of starvation. It was they ples bythe dictators are in conAgain who died of the disease which flict for power. Again France, a came from short food supplies, ties herself to the dicnot in hundreds of thousands, but democracy,in Russia. England betatorship in millions. comes endangered should the dicAnd after the Armistice came tators of Germany and Italy overfamine and pestilence, in which whelm France. And thus again millions perished and other mil- begins this dreadful treadmill. lions grew up stunted in mind What is proposed? That we join and body. That is war. Let us to stop inevitable movements and not forget. readjustments of peoples; that we We were actually at the front engage in ideological wars. Who in this war for only a few months, will pay for it in blood and treasbut it cost us the lives of 130,000 ure? Our children. men. It has placed 470,000 perThe time may come when we sons on the national pension list could arbitrate the quarrels already. It has cost us 40 bil- which arise in that game at some lions of dollars. And that reppoint before shooting begins. But resents more than just dollars. if we sit in the game we shall Today we have a quarter to a never be arbitrator and we may third of the American people be- be drawn into the shooting. low a decent standard of living. My sympathies are with the If that 40 billions of wealth had democracies. But the democraremained in America, these peo- cies of Western Europe have the ple would not be in this plight. A resources to defend themselves. large segment of our people have They comprise great empires of already been impoverished for a hundreds of millions of people quarter of a century. And the with all the resources needed to end is not yet. secure their defense. Whether We may need to go to war they preserve their democracies again. But that war should be is a question of their own will. on this hemisphere alone and in America's Service. the defense of our firesides or our America can be of service to honor. For that alone should we world. We can hold up the the pay the price. standards of decency in the world. The endless books tell us how s We should hold that the basis the Great War originated. They of international relations should do not agree. But some salient not be force, but should be law facts do stand out that are per- and free agreement tinent today. It began by a quarimmediate service The rel between three dictators the that wegreatest can render is to join in czar of Russia and the emperors economic with other of Germany and .Austria. They nations to relieve the economic were competing for "power." pressures which are driving the France, a democracy, was world constantly to instability. A dragged in because, out of fear part of these pressures for of the dictators of Germany and great war are economic. The greatest Austria, she, a democracy, had healing force that could come to made a military alliance with the world is prosperity. There is the czar. The British democracy a vast field for American action was drawn in partly out of ideal- which is free from political enism to defend liberty, but also tanglements. We should restate partly to save its trade and its the conferences which were startpossessions from too great a ed under such good auspices by concentration of "power" on the our country in 1932. continent. We finally joined in But, far beyond that, we can the war wholly out of idealism. hold the light of liberty alight on I dodge no responsibility. I this continent. That is the greatreluctantly joined in the almost est service we can give to civunanimous view of our country- ilization. men that America must go into (Released by Wratern Newspaper Union.) m 1i fif ff By burning 25 slower than the average off tha 15 other off the g brands tested slower than any off Largest-sellin- them CAMELS give smok- ers the equivalent off pgRFACK . big news fa cigarettes fpODAY'S JL means ml smoking jlitatm and mors of it for SMOKERSI Resd the results of scientific laboratory tests oa 16 of die lsxgesMelling brands: CAMELS were found to contain 1 MORE TOBACCO BY WEIGHT dun the avenge for the IS other of die largest-sellin- g brands. BURNED SLOWER 2 CAMELS THAN ANY OTHER BRAND TESTED 25 SLOWER THAN THE AVERAGE TIME OF THB IS OTHER OF TUB LARGEST-SELLINBRANDS I By Inning- - 25 slower, on the irerage, Camels give smokers the equivalent of S EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! G In the same tests, CAMELS HELD 3 THEIR ASH FAR LONGER thus 4he average for the other brands. 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