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Show ! Tv;':';":'";:-- x ?' i.s 'f ,: s ,: v V ,:;;'. u , ' THF; PRFR3-BUUJ-7TT- v t.,'" V ' V " ' v' , V - (Courtesy of Life and Charles Dana Gibson.) Planting home gardens, producri-- j I re forV saving food are all war-tim- e efforts of this government in which the women of America h-i- loyally. We are all in the home army; the .home army here must help the fighting forces and home armies over there; 120 million Allies must eat. - Enlist by Going to the Utah Agricullitfai College Mow Opportunities at Logan for IHih ad Idaho Boys in Training; Corps to Train for Commissions in U. if. Army and for Technical Service Oh September wi. if th peasant Artn Hii become Government, all mtn quilifitd to attend college abound ' a law. all young men or America, between the :ges of register in the S, A. T C. AT ONCE. , ' J8 and !1. mutt rept lor some ormu military jervtca. New and former atudenra may register at the Utah It a tlie eKprewefi dean of the War Department and the Agricultural Colkw BY MAIL. Fill out and end the '. State Council of Delenst thnt all qualified attend toi'ege fo!lovinir card tn the Registrar, Utah ARrreultiiral Ccl-- r and aeeure a combination of military and academic tram- - lege. Logan, Utilr. It will eonetrcuM you, upon ecpt ' mg. To make this poibic. a Students' Army Trusnaiff.. ance by trie a student of the utah Agricultural Corns (S. A. T C.) tun orm established at ttie Utah College and a member of trie Student' Army Training - Agricultural Coner.t. Sh'iuid Coiiflrasa lower tre age of Corps. liability to unmetlutc miiitnry' men o! t;& new It you are over 21 but have not yet been called for " agea NOT ALREADY ENLISTED m;iy nt! A (iicihy milita. v actvica or have been given deferred clarification, ' m entering th aervice otherwise than tt,rouh t:ie Draft you may enter the Utah Agricultural College and enroll - Boards. Men who enlist in ti e S A. T C , when they m tht Keaervt Oflicera' Training Corpa, You will then come under the jurisdiction ofthe draft law. WILL BE rrcaive special military and academic training to prepare. PLACED IN CLASS 5D To meet the request ol the you tot a commieeioned ofiica in the United States Army. REGISTRATION CARD Agricultural College of Utah ' - Special Mail Rtgiilralion Form I, the undersigned, a fimfclstf foe sdmistlon ta in Agrleuhsral Cellsge ef Utsh sn4 u tht gtudenw' Army Ttsiiunf Cerea . ef thst lnniution, do bmby ftiedp mytelf, oa being sdmitted, to conform strictly and at aU times, to iu rules, and bt s proper mesBi to promote us beet latcrtsu. e g Nsms in fuU.''w --" ':'' '' . Horns sddrtst J... Bin Kpl.es ...r. , Date ef birtk Ll ..v..,... Former fttudentr (Answer Yes at Ho rstker-- name : Mether-- e aame. Loasliusn(ian.J.... ' . liumm' Address - . iCVTHtSU ill' The entrance fee of $3.00 should be enclosed. Check practical courses of the College without anamination or Post Office money order accaptad. (The student may The Utah Agricultural College is responding y payment of the $5.00 entrance fee until ha arrives at nifkently to the Crovemment s request that military and the School.) The aprrxant should report for work on technical experts be trained. It maintains, unimpaired. September 10th, or as soon thereafter aa poaaible. however, iu organiiation for college and vocational work Candidatea are admitted the Freshman data who In the all great Schools of Agriculture. Home Economke, i are graduates of high schools or who have 15 units of. high Agricultural Engineering. Mechanic Arts. Commerce and echoed work. In certain cases mature students or othera Buaincaa Administration, and General Science. Special " may be admitted conditionally to the collegiate work of opportunitiea offered to girla in Home Economic Child the Institution if they satisfy the committee on entrance Welfare and related work. Teachers trained, meeting of their ability to ancceaafully carry the work. Those I all e requirements. Fall term opens beptem- - yeara of ge or over, or those tinder v ho have had two ber 30th. For further information, address President's years of high school work, are admitted to the vocational Office. Utah Agricultural College, Logan, Utah. Sent Youmli ud Your Coontry by Rtgkterbf at the UTAH AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE I CA NDY Soft Drinks, Light Lunches and a delightful place to spend your leisure time. We are always pleased 1 to have you visit our place 1 and assure you the most I courteous treatment. The Chocolate Shop 1 OXFORD ' (Formerly Bodweiser) Pocket Billiards i x First Class Cafe, Modern Rooms in Connection. Tobaccos, Cigars, Drinks, 409 3IA1N STREET ' J W.' MATTHEWS, Manager. j USE STANDARD AND j SCOFIELD COAL ' IT MAKES THE BEST OF FIRES Quick Service. Order Today and the Coal will be delivered Tomorrow. Try it. 0 Copperiield Coal Co. PHONE 38 ' issammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmummmmmmmmmmmmmmm Bingham People Stop at THE BEST LITTLE HOTEL IN SALT LAKE The New Salt lake 372 South Main Street. Just South of Post Office. 50 ROOMS Telephone, Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in Every Room. Accommodations with Private Bath if desired Rates 75c to $2.00 per day. No higher. Special by Week or Month. Centrally Located. All Depot Cars Pass the Door. I Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do Cstt! r j . One or two dvcs ft V i "JW ARMY & NAVY J ILJ DYSPEPSIA TABLETS f 1 j will make you feel ten year younger. Dest t i known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach & ' fca . and Dyspepsia. jj ; 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or f Ii . sent to any address postpaid, by the f U. S ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N.Y. irc .sa in ITS; - combes - : . '.. By JAMES V. WEOSN . The probloras of the war .to thinking . ? men have ceased to he local or Euro , pean and have become terrestrial or We must prgduce In Asia, Africa, South America, and "in.. . ; 'Australia tha same civilization that Europe and orth AmericH now en- - , joy. The United States, England and Western Europe have' been., over de- - veIoed at the expense and loss of these other continents and the flow -- j" Of energy should ba restored to them,. ' the bo cajled colonies. . , , When these other continents reach a civilization' similar and relatively equal to our own with boat communi-- , cation with the smaller islands, we' will literally have a United States of the world. r ' The Casnian Railroad opening up ( Central Asia with the West linking Pekin with Constantinople. with ' branches north'aud south, will begin ' to solve Asia's transportation problem. A proposed canal D3tvefon the Caspian and rilack Seas is a necessary part of , this system. Telegraph- communication has been established beUveen Cairo and the Af-rican Cape Town and it only remains to ebtablish railroads over Africa's great table lands north and south con-- . nectlng with the Congo River east 8fld wcstsi The South American lines will run from Buenos Aires rjprth to the head waters of the Amazon River thence northeast to the Atlantic coast and northwest to the Panama Canal. Transportation west from Buenos Aires to the iPacific has already been accomplished. " The Australian plan if smaller, la none the lest! interesting, being a line west through South Australia connecti-ng: Sydney ami Melbourne, with the i west coast gold fields and running, north and south through the center o the island. , iProgress and development .should be relatively the same on these conti- - ' nents as U has been in North Ameri- - a ca beginning with coal and steel and ending with the finer products of ft higher civilization. Selected represfn- - J tative men, those who have organized the industrial and political growth of ; Europe and the United States should be sent to these new lands to gtmle their progress. The largest percentage 'of civilians and soldiers that can be I spared should be Immediately trans- - I ferred to these less favored colonial lands to start this development. .And j as they get established their families ( ' S should accompany them. These men could be returned home on furloughs I at reasonable intervals as they were Y t I from Panama when the canal was I being constructed. Tubes or'undersea tunnels like those I under the ,Hudson River, New York. under th3 English and Irish Channels t the Straits of Gibraltar and the fios-phoro-at Constantinople are a nec-essary part of these undertakings. Other- - improvements dependent on fa the development and con.nlf tion of these pirns will ultimately be suggest-ed and made that cannot be foreseen until this, our world civilization has . grown to, these proposed proportions. Of course the growth of these iu w or undeveloped lands must te created from within, thus they can only grow as iabt as they can produce within thsmselves the means and material of civilization that may be exchanged with other continents, iThis physical' law is tne same relatively in the u.-ie-, creat.on, or distribution of mankind , or materials In large or world move-ments as it Is in small ways, depend-ing on the use and 'creation tr choice of available force, energy, and ma-terial. One of the most important and per-plexing parts, of the work of settling - v these new lands, Is the selection of names and the locality of towns and states. The age of Invention has passed and Is passing with the year 1920, and we of this generation are unavoidably going into the age of colonization and distribution. Improvements will be made in the use, adaptation and ap- - plication of science, but the prlncl- - : pies of mechanical power have prac-tically all been tried. Our present concern Is not with In- - vention, but is with th distribution of perfected Inventions to spread the 'higher civilization of Furope and the United States over these less favored continents ,and heir connecting Islands. The Personal inconvenience, suffer-ing, or sacrifice of this war should not cloud our view and realization of the world wide improvements that it will cause to be made In the.luture welfare of mankind, and help to bring about an Intercontinental world civil-ization of closely related parts with no one section over developed nt the expense of any other. WORLD SHORTAGE IN BEET SUGAR Crops Are 40 Per Cent. Less Than Pre-W- ar AverageCen-tral Powers Hit Hardest. CANE SUGAR IS ISOLATED. Allied Beet Production Falls One-thir- d in Rigid War Economy Practiced. . i " The world todny is producing forty per cent, less beet sugar than the pre-war uvemire. . , Comtilng the American, Allied and ' crops, us well as the ii'.MitrnK the U. S. Fond AdniinNtra-- f timi tins estimated that the world shortage muted by the light crop of ' Hl'-l'.il- is at least three and a half million tons. k That the 191M01S crop of enne sug-ar was two million tons In excess of the previous year does not relieve the general shortage. Cuta and Java pr6duce one-hal-f of the world cane crop, and the Java sug-ar Is too far removed from America to trans,ort when shipping Is badly need-ed to transmit and maintain the mili-tary forces In France. In Javs a large part of the old sugar crop Is still awaiting shipment Since It requires l.r0 to 160 days for each bos', that Is sent to Java, the posslbill-- . of obtaining adequate shipments (ties sugar this season are remote. Allies' Production Falls. Taking the Allied nations as a group, official reports show that beet sugar production Is let by one-thir- d than the pre-w- ar average.' t French bwf sugar Industry has suf-fered most by the war. The French yield of beet stigar Is now only 20.1 per cent, of the pre-wa-r average. For the five years preceding the out-break of hostilities In rjitrope, France produced an average of 7.".2,.V2 tons of sugar ench year. For 1917-1- the .French production was 210,11(1 tons. With CI factories operating, as com-pared with more than 2W that were i In existence the war and before general cum; ak'n of Bthe lntyii'lieil by the Cermaii armies, nevertheless mannged to maim- - ' " facture more beet stuar In V.H7-1- than in l!Hi( l7, when the total output , was 202.-U."- . tons. j ImIv In 1U17 IS produced loo.soo i u,ns nf beet !!!.' r, which wns ."li.ooo ;,,ns . than the previous year and ' in :' o !, s than the nniiufil output of j ..iiuar for tin live year pre-wa- r pe- - line iif 'be ri'ent (lit!ici:l!les eperi-.ice- d P.ilv's lieef siuriir lltlv'ry u:is I'll"', te-- mil!':' ietit. b'-n- r to halelle !ie cinp. 'I'lii.v-.iU'- is of nun nsii;iiiv .ipb.yed in beet sti'ar product ion ,. e:r,!,-- l f..r i ..:'',' iry serv ice. The j ; per acre iuniru '. .I to i'pprol- - I ' ' i f of the usual uuuntity of - ,li;,.-,- .I. MORE FRUIT and LESS SUGAR How? More Less Cnnned fruit Jnm f rled Fniit . Jelly I'riiir P,iu;er Preserves Fresh Fruit Sweet Pickles w j I t ONE SPOON,' PLEASE. ! I Make one spoon of sugar I Do the work of two. , Keep the program going Until the war Is through. ' I nn rm n i t ''?"-- 1 haw a ?i,i7uUh V V: IV ,AfcV fUS OFJVBAH AM iMADtD p. AHt I) CA WTH 7XO HILLICfi ,V! l I Tons oFtV&AU EACH YIAH ' Si.fu .VfttaT V W.iar 'a?' , tl I 75 per cent, of the sugar used in the United OVER ia delivered by ships. There is produced about 800,000 tons pf beet sugar and 250,000 tons, of cane sugar in Louisiana. The total consumption of the United States is about 4,500,000 tolis of raw sugar, which makes about 4,250,000 tons of refinedjugar. If our coasts were blockaded as Germany's now are, we would have available for the use of the people of the United States oily one pound of sugar for every four we use. Under such circumstances there is no doubt that the Amorican people would get along on this limited supply without complaint. The United S.ates Food Administration is asking every American household to use not more than two pounds of sujjar per person each month for domestic use. Reducing our sugar consumption here means that wo will be able to help supply the needs of France, Eng-land and Italy. Sugar conservation on the American table also means conservation of .''hips. The Army and Navy have sent out an "S. O. S." call for ships. "Save Our Ships to Transport Troops and Munitions to France, in order that we may keep the fight-ing front where it now is and not allow it to extend to our own homes," is the message. There i.s ample sugar in the world for all require-ments in fact, there is a largo surplus, but on account of the ship shortage it is not available for use in this country. Java, which produces 15 per cent, of the world's cane crop, ;s too far removed. It requires 150 to 160 Cay for a 'Aj to tro to Java and return. COLLECTING UNITED STATES TAXES a 4 In the execution of the pol Iry o1 paying as large a pro- - portion of the expenses of th? war by taxation as possible th! Treasury is making every effoit to collect all Federal taxes dtiO to the Fnit.cd State, Tii" department has evidence aerainrt many who have wight t to evade tuxes. Some of these tax evader are American clti- - hi'Hh residing or so.lomning in CaiKi'la. A corps of pe ially,, train d revenue ugents will he sent to the '(!nuadiaii communi- - ties where many of these tax evaders r side to obtain tax returns i'rom them, I |