Show 10 Sunday Morning -- The Herald-Republica- November 25 1917 n Salt Lake City Utah n Is Now Fact Beet Harvester AM G M AIKEN W 4 4 4 4 TEACHERS URGED MACEEEN All Sizes Pulls and Tops 4 4 Means End of Labor Worries RAISE FOR LDS -- fr 4 0 worth too ithejobu Fsed and ire i V t “Instructors in the Church 41 Schools Need More Money Says Supt Cummings An Increase In the salaries of teach to era In the Mormon church school was meet the Increased cost of living urged in the annual reportII submitted II CumSuperintendent recentlytobythe educaof board church mings ie tion During the pastbeen yvrIojSOOOsaid had the salary total find themselves facing “Our teachers dafficulties in declared meeting their living he “Wages of expenses” land and of teachother workers in theschools have risen ers In the public board will find and I hope the our general teachers by an Ina way to aid Otherwise many crease in their 'pay Posiwill feel obliged to seek other lose tions whom we cannot afford toshowed ‘The superintendent’s report the school year ending that during in June 30 S4s3000 hail beenof expended the schools maintenance the regular In new buildings and equipand 962000 school ment The buildings and equipof outlay rnent he said represented an of pupus The enrollment was SiMSi new structures he recAmong the new buildings at the were ommended L J S university a new school plam Lr the Weber acadrniv a gymnasium for the Gila academy in Arizona and a new seminary it ’ John Devey inventor of the sugar beet harvester and one of the model machines Herald-Republica- Photo n ‘ -- Hsus Laying with BY DAVID M CHURCH (Written for the International New Service) RAILROADER DIES IN S L HOSPITAL OLD-TIME railroad lames laitlmer an oM-tihos man of Salt Lake died at a a of cotnpumorning yesterday pital cation of diseases Clarow Mr Utirnur was born in He UL0 Scotland InSeptember ISS and was with I rest to L’taU dent Young when he drove of tne cencompletion upon the Pacific spikeand railroad tralHe wasUnion marriede twice father of twenty-threhim enteen of whom survive with his widow and sixteen grandchtltlrFuneral services will be hed at the K Takr tuts Joseph Tomorrow funeral chapel3 of tlie o’clock at fune-- bodV wilV be sent to Nephl where ral services and Interment will take place Tuesday Washington Nov 3 — The Council of National Defense as a war machine reminds one of the British "tanks" From all outward appearances it is cumbersome and clumsy At thaame time tho Council “goes over the top’’ and accomplishes a great deal Just as the tank does Experts and more experts make up the council In the most modern office building In tbe city the council offices resemble a great workshop overseen by experts There are some 500 specialists who are members of the organization A devote but a large majority of these part of their time to theonwork They are called into session short noFor Instance tice Secretary of War Baker desires to place large contracts for shoes for the armies He informs the Council of National Defense of his desire and asks for some ‘information Immediately a call is sent out offor a the meeting of the shoe committee counail Then there assembles a group of men who have made sjioes their life work They go over the situation thorforward through the oughly and finallymass of Information council head a the shoe Indealing with conditions in recommend dustry possible costs and ations as to style and probable ability for placing contracts This Is but one of the sixty or more committees operating In the same manner The council has had for its part in the war work the of the resources of the most resourceful of all nations —America Every industry which in any way attends war needs has been taken under the sheltering wing of the Council of National 'Defense It is virtually a great clearing house for war work All of the work of this war machine has not been material however Much of it has been sentimental Through its state branches and through its Woman’s committee the council has done a great deal to arouse the war spirit in the breasts of America When it was formed last March the Council of Defense was hardly more than a committee of seven meeting to discuss war needs Today this organization employs nearly as large an office staff as does the navy department There is very little war work carried on in the United States that has not at some time or other gone through the mill of the Council of Defense The work of the council is “starting things" It has no power to execute but it lays hundreds of war plans and these plans are the basis for the great war preparations of the nation me 25 PICKETERS SENT GREAT PADEREWSKI BACK TO D C JAIL MAY BE AN UNCLE OF Alexandria Nov 24 — Twenty-fiv- e POOR WOMAN SUICIDE militants of the Woman's party were h' ' MOOSE WILL START DRIVE FOR MEMBERS greatest Plans forIn the Salt the history ofat the campaign a meet launched were "Lake Moose of the lodge Thursday J"1" the speaker n K M Guai Among were F IL AChristens C Albauh W Dr trough Hon L K cmr ner C C Hoffman and for rle Arrangements night have been dance Thanksgiving 1 an C°Sati?rday evening December of the members the nnen meeting for and friends will families Initiation lodge theirThe of the next be held 6 December be Thursday will lodge of Hnifn Motion picture by a lecture will be companled in a local theatre soon Pad-erevs- nr JAMK4 tv JONES States Department wf Agrl- -' culture McCormick gave to Cyrus world a successful grain the grain It Wheat field throughoutenlarged the world and other grain crop took on a new to the hungry millions significance the world that called regthroughout The for bread and porridge ularly United State never exported wheat that was harvested with the cradle Millions of acres that are now- - devoted to wheat would still be mere of the land were it not for the adventgrazing grain binder and later the other improved harvesting machineryhas had a The sugar beet moderate expansionIndustry but with the mechanical beet harvester the fields for and much of beets will be the backachlng enlarged Job of topping the crop by hand in the late autumn will dis-no The change will bring appear The cold tears as achas wellmornings meant stinging fingersfrosty The’ crop seemed ing 1acks It seemed to not allow the earning averageas farmer to expand his had been possible with most power other crops through the development farm machinery of labor-savin- g Had Hail Labor Heritage The sugar beet crop was Inherited from European countries where hand labor has extensively used always tobeen throw off the yoke It was difficult of habit and the beet seemed to baffle the skill of Inventive American instances the crop genius In most the expanded ofby virtue of enlarging on different number beetgrowers farms but the average acreage for each grower has not greatly changed due to the limiting factor of labor at harvest time Here In the Intermountain country because the lack of beetgrowers chafed for the beet crop power machinery was denying them the privilege of exEach season found some of pansion these growers either reducing their or abandoning the crop even acreage in the face of fair profits because it still demanded laborious handwork Machine Arrives The mechanical topper and digger has arrived tbe gong now It has been but it never made a for several yearsringing noise loud enough to awaken people until It had the stern war necessity to help A sugar famine now exists The famine was seen to Impend some months ago and the very great need of relief this spurred against ever on the efforts of every one who a with sugar had "the inventive bug” fields beet tendency The sugar beet farmcould not he expanded unless the ers were offered relief from the limiting factor in growing the crop— namely hand labor particularly at harvest time soon The famine must have relief lose no must therefore inventive skill had to come time The harvester Therefore It has arrived Inventors Worked Long The Deveys and Francomeswhowere unInventors among the pioneer beet harvester solve the to dertook years They have labored formoney problem and have spent large sums of the ason their inventions They had from sistance of cash and other help Up in Cache val-le- v the sugar companies no less than three machines have been under way for several years This season they too have felt spurred on to greater efforts Down in the lower end of Utah county llulsh and McClellan have been laboring away and the inwar situation gave them renewedSam relief to Uncle centive to bringmen have succeeded In All of these or less degree greater Their achievement have been echoed even into Europe There grim war has sugar factories and devasdestroyed of thousands of acres tated hundreds but now In France of beet fields where the French have recovered this 1‘alted WHEN sat LIBRARY HAS BOOKS ON FOOD CONSERVING has JKSartI The public library issued by th® pamphlets ing tnent of agriculture for t'‘®fe?hlltu!e dealing housewives and Its conservation: of food andselect and fresh faults sta food How to as conservers of vegetables In economical use of meatand pie foods foods nutritive value the home a food and ways cost corn meal asmilk as food other of using it use of cottase to how bread of kinds - use of corn kafirmake cow peas and cheesehome care ottood In the home in the homebread the making in for bread and the taof vegetables preparations ble ' WOMAN HIT BY AUTO TRUCK ASKS $3865 accident in the seciuel to a street and her horse which he was injured damaged by an automobile began Ada Barn m aaatnst Yrd ifarshall andE mMar- - driving along Whlle the woman wasThirteenth and between State streetSouth 5 September an Fourteenth she streets was struck by he alleged driven by 1 automobile truck The truck she states belonged shall to XL L MarshalL BAMBERGER RY ASKS FOR CROSSING PERMIT from Failing to receive any response electric the railroad the Bamberger railway yesterday appealed to the state commission for permispublictoutilities Install a crossing ofandthedouble sion Denswitch across the tracks railroad In north ver & Hie Grande Is desired in The crossingline Fait Lake the may have electric order that the of the Mountain access to plant Feeding company The appliSta cation to thea railroadagoIt but was year made direct ignored ap-int- ly BORAH AGREES TO RUN AGAIN REPORT fBy Isternstlosal News Strrlw WillWashington Nov 24— Senator Earned Borah of Idaho it wasand iam K- - has will his plans changed todayrefuse tn make the race to sucrot ceed himself next who Is a leadBorahipnnt term expire Senate said In the ing progressive In after ten year to summer th3twould be obliged he Washington I" orfler tor- political law It of to the practice Prevailed laid today that he had been mi Idaho to his supporters by upon hi decision alter - war-sugar-fam- ine THOUSANDS WILL AVOID reconstruction devastated territory must begin without delay for the French soldier now receives an allowance of only 176 ounces of sugar each of and the civil thirty receive much less population I'rance days That is less h as much as the average than rttizen of the United States is accustomed to receive France ('alls for Aid These field in X'rance must be again reclaimed With the shortage of man to power they are confidently looking Sam to aid them In their hour of licle trial and they are not going to be France gave the sugar disappointed now America to America and industry e is going to hand back to our friends a rejuvenated beet sugar indusand will aid them to not only retry build the factory smokestacks that were dynamited bv the Bodies but will furnish them with harvesting machinery to aid in producing the beet crop with their short labor supply 21 In Utah county on November there were made demonstrations of the Devey beet topper and the toppers Both werfe successful Beet five counties growers from Utah and factory agriculthroughout tural men and manufacturing experts pnd others were there to study the results A vote was taken in each of the fields and every man In the crowd of fourscore shot up his right hand in the vote attesting the success of the machine Tops Beets Successfully the beets as well as the It topped hand and It cut the average human cost in half a couple of harvesting times The Francomes found that It had cost them an average of about 30e cents a ton to harvest their thirty-fivacres this year as with more than $1 a ton costcompared for neighbors who hired their harvesting done in the usual way The fields where the trials occurred were not ideal for the final demonstration: rather there were unusual problems In one field the beets grew very one beet grew five Inches Irregularly above the surface and its neighboring beet only twelve inches away would be flush with the surface of the ground the next beet only twelve inches away would be three Inches above the surface: but the uncanny invention would cause the topping device to raise for beet and clip off the crown the and high with but little loss and then top in less than two seconds the next beet would be topped flush with the ground and the third beet would have just as accurate a gauge as either of the two first beets Entirely Automatic action The It was automatic in itsown machine had to do its thinking had to think quickly for and it also team proceeded at a the two-hornormal speed and the topper had to do its topping at the rate of about 100 beets in each length of row in less than two minutes No human hand could pace with it and there were nokeep creaking backs to complain These inventors had a great amount of confidence in their machine They remembered that about conference period which is about the beginning of the beet harvest time each autumn the equinoctial storms come on ana are often muddy for considthe fields erable periods of beet harvest season To demonstrate that sort of problem the FTancomes turned Irrigation water into several row of their beet fields and soaked the ground for their field demonstration Works In All Weatkers Theirs was not merely a “fair weather” machine but also a stormy weather Invention The field was so soft that the horses had difficulty is not the machinegetting throughand However two medium weight horses heavy were able to pull it Now and then the wheels of the harvester would slide in the mud but so long as the drive wheels would furnish the small amount of traction needed to propel the working parts the topper worked satisfactorily In the discussion while In the fields some of the beet growers who were the one row more of present wanteda two-rothem wanted and a few wanted a four-ro- capacity capacity Mark Austin agriculturist with the Utah-Idah- o Sugar company told the growers something of his impressions He said: one-fift- old-tim- Hulsh-Mc-Clell- an se 100-fo- ot cent in moisture and that means an loss o the farmer of from outright 50 cents to 85 cents a ton Mesne Millions Sieved “The new order of harvesting means the beet will be gotten out in that Kood season and under far more favorable conditions and it will mean a savway ing in many "There are about 150000 acres devoted to beets in this Intermountain The beet harvester will effect region a saving of about 810 per acre upon acre beets that yield fifteen tons a saving on per the harand this indicates region of approxivesting alone in this $1500000 each year This savmately to the growers ing will come also be a saving to the and there will directly factories because the beets will sugar reach the beet dumps at the factory in so much better condition Waves w ANNOYING CATARRH THIS WINTER little Precaution Bight New Saves Intel Aanayaace You who have been afflicted with Ca- tarrh know that with the first signs of cold and damp weather the disease will promptly return and remain an unwelcome guest' as of yore Why not save yourself the suffering and inconvenience which your expeyou is in store for you rience - Avoidtells the folly of waiting until the disease has you within Its grasp again Proper treatment is worth a great deal more right now than later Catarrh cannot be permanently cured by local treatment with sprays douches ointment washes etc Science has prov that the disease is in the blood - That is why a thorough course of S S the unequaled blood remedy does so much good right now This remedy goes to the very source of the disease and by purifying and cleanseliminates the germs of ing the blooddrives them from the sysCktarrh and tem Begin this treatment today dnd you will be thankful for the wonderful relief you will enjoy this winter 8 & & is sold by druggists everywhere and has been on the market for more than Be sure and get the genufifty years ine 8 S S Our Medical Director will ‘advice gladly give you expert medical about the treatment of your own casa without charge Write today to Swift Swift Laboratory Specific Co 276-- C Atlanta Ga S - - Small Xachlsn First “Probably the first machines will be constructed to top and lift one or two rows at a time and deliver the beets into piles through the field After a time the most successful machine will be the largsr type that will top lift In the wagon four rows at and deliver a time and this will mean that the beets will be delivered dlrectlv from the ground into the wagons without hand work Beets that are delivany ered fresh and transported to tho sheds of the factory in firm crisp condition go through the knives more speedily and the cossetts in tho diffusion batteries yield their saccharine matter far more rapidly and thus permit a more economical recovery of sugar Then too some days when the sun is warm and the wind blowing boots left In small piles on dry ground In the &fields will shrink from 5 per coat to per kl given much-neede- Herald-Republic- an Dandruff Surely Destroys The Hair Girls — If you want plenty of thick beautiful glossy silky hair do by all means get rid of dandruff for it will starve your hair and ruin It if you don’t to It doesn't do much good to brush or wash it out The onlytrysure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve It then you destroy It entirely To do this get about four ounces of ordiarvon apply It at night nary use when liquid to moisten retiring in gently with the the scalp and rub it enough finger tips By morning most if not all of dandruff wlfl be gone and threeyour or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every and trace of it single You sign will find too that all itching and digging of the scalp will atop and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better You can get liquid arvon at any drug Aora It is Inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need no matter how much dandruff you This simple remedy never falls—have This crest rrtuvenator and en producer supplies the exact chemical ingredients that a hen must have if she is to be a real esx producer Cleans the blood tones up the system and promotes good and sets winter eggs Good wss for goosg ducks: We miss m te“d0e- ROUP REMEDY CORRirS can 5700 Jort Mr Sl30 -- COc 5-- lb it in th drinking water— put chicken doctor fbnssiilris Ask ywir dealer ATTORNEY RETURNS FROM EASTERN TRIP Attorney W R Hutchinson returned home last night from a trip to New York Cits to attend the funeral of his Everett Harmon Reed Mr Reed married Mis Gladys Hutchinson June 25 After a trip to the coast the young couple started for Bloomfield N J where the groom -Eg resided Mr Reed died in Milparents waukee en route Mrs Reed will remain In the east for a time with her dead husband's famson-in-la- w ily Cued His RUPTURE I was a while work-hous- Nov 24 —Permission been granted by President Wilson hasWashington for an inspection of the district work-houwhere militants of at Occouquan are Dr confined the Woman's party Welsh Howard A Kelly and Dr Lillian by of Baltimore Dr Kelly is a brother of Mrs Lawrence Lewis of Philadelphia one of the prisoners se SHIPYARDS WAGES RAISED Washington Nov 24—The shipbuilding wage Angeles adjustment board today extended scale recently shipbuilding plants the wage pnt Into force for the Pacific coast Los Angeles workers are nonunion men and are paid mnch lesa than workers elsewhere on theSO coast The to 50 per increases granted will add from cent to their pay to-Lo- a Pullen M 412 I Eugene avenue Carpenter Marcellus Manasquan N J it out cut this notice and show Better to any others who are ruptured — yo-- i a life or at least stop the may save of rupture and the worry and misery of an operation danger Rheumatism Here is where chiropractic Is so wonderful where the results are Do you know that astonishing rheumatism pains have vanished after one adjustment? Do you know that constipation has often been done away with after one adjustment? can out of Stop making—a garbage your system get back to nature— try CHIROPRACT I C D JUSTMENTS A and see the difference Feed Values fifteen tons that amounts to $45 or $50 per acre whereas under present wasteful methods of4 feeding the tops are valued at to 86 per acre they “I feel that the harvester is a demonstrated success and with its further it means the greatest era development of progress for the beet crop that has ever happened" Quinney chief agriculturist Joseph with the Amalgamated company was who also present Sugar was equally as enthusiastic in his comments on the new Invention The gsowers however who have not yet gotten the kinks out of their backs since the fall harvest season has closed were the most enthusiastic Growers Enthusiastic of Box Elder J TI Ward said: “It has made a real field county out of crop beets Instead of a garden crop The harvesterIn has demonstrated that we are safe our present beet increasing relief on hand acreage next year If labor has not come we should have been compelled to reduce our acreage for lack of hand labor" Joseph I a neighbor was of much the Dewey same opinion The development of a successful beet is the most important event harvester that I have ever witnessed in my sixteen years in the sugar Industry It has brought relief from a hand labor that shortage threatened the existence actually of the beet Industry in very some districts The government is concerned that beet acregreatly shall be maintained the age and where at all possible to do so the acreage be increased to bring the factoriesmust up to full son runslicing capacity for a full seaWe must the sugar famine ana now thatrelieve the growers have relief in for the harvest period there is no sight reason why the growers good will not be able to fully sustain the indushave a patriotic desire to do try so andThey the new inventions will it for them to respond make possible it may be necessary to get a priority order from the national council of defense in order to get the machines made in goodly quantities but if necessary I believe that the order can be promptly had The men who have labored so pad imdevelop this tiently todeserve the highest praise and plement support WATCH THE “WANTS” AND WHEN there’s a vacancy in the kind of a house you’ve always hoped boarding to find an unmistakable clew to its whereabouts will be found in one of the “want” ads Use The want ad phone Main 767 m lifting badly ruptured Doctors said trunk several years ago' an was cure of my only hopeme operation no good I got Trusses did and hold of something that Finally quickly me Years have passed completely cured has alnever returned carthe Irupture returned to the District of Columbia and as a am hard work doing though under an order of Federal jail today There was no operation no lost Waddill who held that they hade penter Judge time no trouble I have nothing to sell been illegally transferred to the will give full information about at Occoquan Va on a verbal but how you may find a complete cur® order of the district commissioners without operation if you write to me “The a more economical usesaving of the through and crowns when tops fed probput into abesilo and properly will four times as great as is ably the direct in the harvesting The feeders saving who have practiced gaththe tops and crowns and putting ering them while yet fresh into a silo show a feeding value In the there is acre that in each of beets that yields tops w A Seattle Nov 24 — Coroner C C Tiffin today was conducting an in- vestlgatlon to determine if Ignace Paderewski the Polish pianist was an uncle of Mrs Eleonore Niemt-zinovl- ts a laundress who today to her death from a window leaped on the sixth floor of a hospital here where she was employed The woman left a note comthat news toofanher death beasking uncle Ignace municated of Chicago The coroner asserted the difference of one letter in the spelling may have been acridentaL Effects left by the woman conof music A sisted almost entirely card found printed in French announced a recital apparently somewhere on the European continent of tho “eminent Polls pianist Eleonore Nlemtzlnovits" The year was not season to It LET ME PROVE IT My Patients Get Well Ask Them Benj R Johnson D C The Man WKh a Principle F S G GRADUATE BOSTON BLDG 630 to 730 Hours: 9 to 11 1 to I 4338 Phone Wasatch Laboratory 310-31- 8 X-R- ay : Gmir Gift Shop Artistic as the gifts which it shelters our Gift Shop invites you to enter the portals of its new home and view the FREIGHT HANDLERS Wages 25c and 26o per hour “Gifts That Are Different” Is its motto It will shelter nothing Work under sheds not fleeted by weather Steady work all year ApO S L Freight Station First ply Houth and Fourth Wsst Stresta wonders spread before you there ’ commonplace or ordinarv UNIQUE yes— If that he your wish you will find Hula Hula girls ' Drs SHORES & SHORES cir- cled with incense ready to be burned at the stake — Ghoulish idols ugly and ’fat — An umbrella work bag which they tell me can be used as basket or what-no- t a parasol too only it would seem that the owner in such case would be showered with spools and yarn and needles THE KEIIXMLE SPECIALISTS FOB Hen and Women When you tail your troubles to you a doctor want to IS know and WHO HE hs is relithat able and will treat on rou absolutely tbe sauare ' Look at Dra 2$Shores’ record of years st continuous success as specialists In CHRONIC NERVOUS ANlh SPECIAL Health is your greatest as-rand ii—t well Urt bfi DIS-EAS- HANDSOME truly— ES et Are the exquisite work bags of velour silk gold or silver lace mirror top and satin lined — handsomer ones could not be— and live - ARTISTIC indeed— Lamps for which you would sell your soul if you could spend the rest of your days just looking at them Pottery to be possessed at any price — but come to fin’d out it is most reasonable Parchment dome or lamp shades to drive you mad with longing la affective Is treating nusatural dlaekargMi painless aoa poisonous sod will not stricture Relieves lu 1 to $ days 1 VMISTB SOU Parcel Post If desired— Price II or 8 hottlaa 8X7Sw IT SIB EVANS Theao tiny MPSULTS are superior to Balsam f Copaiba Cubcbs or — Injactlonsand PRACTICAL last— But not least for the Gift Shop this year has restrained all extravagance and is showing for the most part specialties that are useful as well as ornamental An Ironing Board even the same kind which were very popular last year— comes all ready for use in pressing out your finer blouses or handkerchiefs and enfolded in a nice looking case so it won’t “clutter up” your closet Smoking sets for men with every conceivable convenience some fold up foir convenience of the wife and can be hidden away when Mr Man is not about One made of guns ever so odd There’s just one trouble with the gifts— When you buy them you don’t want to give them away REDEYES In - 24 HOURS tho Vamt disuses with ant Incan vonlonoA ragdrsggfft QHICHESTER S PILLS iH attar try Ask far CHI C In PtaggUt BlAliUKB BBAHD PI1J Mmw -- u yeti knows Bat Safest Always kStxbla SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Strength Vignr to I For For batter health and bring back year waning vitality one HEM Ricord’s Restorative Wet New usd well-bein- I Jd 8100 g ator illat drag plats’ Schninm-Jotiua- e |