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Show TIIK HERALD-TJEPUBLICA- SALT LAKE C1TA, UTAH, TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1916 N, . PIT FARM WORKERS IN 'PORK BARREL' URGED TO ARM Increase of Rabies C WE DEVELOP ANY SIZE ROLL WE DEVELOP ANY SIZE FILM PMKZt Three Counties Leads to Warning in PRINTS MACE fROM WE by State Official. I ATTACKS COYOTE Shows It Had Hydrophobia. HEADQUARTERS (Continued From Page 1.) I.V THIS HA.Jv Even if they amount to orfly a little at a time. It will provo a loyal friend 6 you in times of need. STAItT THIS WKRK. (Continued From Page 1.) pays high praise to the French defense at Verdun. "The efforts made by the enemy have caused him heavy losses, both In men and in prestige and he has made these sacrifices without gaining any advantage to counterbalance them," (Jeenral Halg says.. While no action comparable with that at Verdun has been fought on the British front. General Haig says the Hritlsh struggle has been continuous and that there have been many sharp local actions. The maintenance and repair of the trenches nlone entailed constant and heavy work. General Haig mentions the arrival of the Anzacs and South Africans and additional Canadian forces In France find says that this made possible the taking over of a greater extent of front. "Rome. May 29. The official statement issued by the war office tonight Indicates that the desperate efforts of to force an advance have (he Austrlans checked by the stubborn resistance of the Italian troops, who have repulsed the enemy forces at all points except one, the battle being still undecided only around Asiago basin. The minister of war has made a detailed report on the military situation In the council of ministers, supporting the opinion of the high command that the present state of affairs need cause no anxiety. -. in-Me.- vd -- -- u PENS With Many !eT Attractions ttpen I II t Scnsun TotLny; RADUATfS 1 t'onrfrt Feature. point of order, after Senator Stone had made a similar objection to an amendment by Senator Kenyon, proposing- a permanent commission to deal with the . r77 mmmmm 835 Repulse Attacks in Largarina Valley Breach Made in French Line. d Ilftnd KODAK Italians -- jf Bjetle Will ing $43,000,000 Passed , by Vote of 35 to 32. PAY POSTAGE DRIVE CHECKED farmhand in a district known to "Every with rallies should not infected le n to liiH work unless he is armed to . protect himself apainst possible a t , tacks from rabid coyote?, livery home in the infected portion of Utah should be similarly protected," was the warning issued yesterday by Dr. T. 15. , J'.eatty, sfcretiry of the state board of after he had received a report bealth, an attack marie by a rabid coyote of on a horse owiifd by J. C. Poulson of Promontory Point, JJox KIder county. This ij the firtt time the disease has in that locality. appeared Poiilsor. wrote the state health authorities that he was at work in the field when the coyote attacked the horse. ran to the house- and secured aPoulpon sun. He killed the animal and sent the brain to I. I Daine?, state An examination showed bacteriologist. the animal had rabies. that Dr. Iieatty has advis-ePoulson- - to kill the horfe which was bitten by the Poulson considers himself coyote. fortunate. He thinks it only by chance that the coyote attacked liethe horse of him and he says would have to have defended himben powerless self. in the state there have 'Already cases in which rabid coyotes have been li u man tteeket'"and beings." naid Dr. there Is little doubt that iieatty. there will be others. Itesidents of the Infected area. JJox Klder, Tooele and Vtah counties, should take every pre-c- a ution.' Dr. ISeatty said response" are being received by the state board of health from a number or communities which "wre advised several months ago to ordinances the pass a number of muzzling of d ?. He saidrequiring such ordinances are being passed throughout the state and from N'ephi and Provo he has recelred word that they are bdnfr enforced, larpre numbers of stray dogs having been killed. nil U0LWL1 Vmii Rivers and Harbors Bill Carry- NE5ATIVIS AUSTRIAN TYROL in Box Elder vLWMTDAD ONLY COOD HORSE Test of Animal's Brain Killed AM MAIM SENATE CLEARS WAY FOR POLiTCAL CONVENTONS Resolution Adopted Providing for Three-da- y Recesses From June 3 to June 19. .l Sv.-enso- n o-fl- ate vz Senator Kenyon predicted the bill would be the last of Its kind to pass an American Congress. "You ar voting at least $20,000,000 Into this bill that is absolutely unjus"You tifiable," said Senator are dumping thousands Kenyon. of dollars into streams where commerce i rapidly disand Into streams with less appearing than a foot of water In them. "You have had an o correct some of these opportunity abuses. but you would not. Your motto is 'Let the people squeal.' I have done my best and I want to say that if the price of holding my seat in the Senate Is to vote for bills of this kind, the seat may go. Some day a Congress will be here which will not consider that the greatest statesman is the man who can get the greatest amount of money out of the( federal treasury. "It is a pity that the whole blame for this extravagance must not rest upon the democratic party, because the bill never could be passed without Republican votes. ' The to the people are fact that votes areawakening cast in Congress very largely in order that reciprocity may follow fawning. We have lost the fight here, but It is not ended. We appeal now from Congress drunk with extravagance to a people sober, meditative and very discriminatory." SECU IlKI'OHTS COM1XG. Reports have now been- received by the state board of "equalization from every county In the state, except Wasatch, and it is anticipated that this report will be filed this week. With all the reports In. the board will be in a position to determine" how thf valuation for 1916 compares with 1915 for the state a a whole. With that information at hand some preliminary work toward equalizing the values will be attempted but no definite action taken until after the county boards have done their equalization rork in July. " " f And aS soon as you smoke it, you'll at once know that it's sensible: (1) It will please your taste. That goes without saying, otherwise it would not be sensible for you. (2) It will be comfortable to your throat and tongue not hot or bity as some cigarettes are. (3) And it will not leave you feeling "oversmoked" even after a day. li long-smoki- ng We would like to have you match Fatima each one of against those three points for a sensible cigarette. Then any other cigatry rette made on thoso same points. So many other men havd found Fatimas life. io tionat Exposition, 12 Ireland's t . Distinctively Individual 20 For 15 &ZBsr A-- . Mr- -- w H Poet-Patrio- ts A Splendid Presentation of Striking Illustrations May 27tli Number on Sale Hi To-da- 10 Cents y s News-cfeale- fs plant 1 ORDINANCE Proposal to Limit IIotitM to Six Hounds Await Kurther t'onftidci-atton- . Consideration of the ordinance limiting the number of rounds of all boxing bouts to six was indefinitely postFUfiX & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers cf the Famous NEW Standard Dicticairy), NEW YORK poned yesterday by the city commisW. sion. Mayor Mont Ferry reported irm ' in 'that he had not had time " to look into the matter as he desired. t The commission directed the recorder to notiry 1. F. Smith of the ports would indicate," said Mr. Taylor. makes it Impossible to make an acGrowers' TROUT LAKE FOR F1SH t ha Hxchange "When the crop is large there ts always curate estimate of a light crop and producers who do not peddle are not required to pay the SI a considerable amount of iruit that is the ultimate output would undoubtedly fee. as to be unsalable. The re exceed any estimate based on figures registration soKmall AVardeu Came Draws 25,000 Deputy The commission denied the petition verse is true of a short crop. This now at hand Vounsf Trout to Itepleuish .Vupply. of property owners for construction of a steel bridge over the Jordan river on Byron Hanchett, statt district depFourth South for lack of funds. uty game warden for the Fifth district, will leave today for Fish lake, PIUTE FLOW ADEQUATE Sevier county, with 25,00') mackiaaw Uout from tho Murray hatchery, to be Farmer Assured Plenty of Wnterj Crop planted ".there. The state ' fish and game department is also holding 12.000 ProNpeets Are Excellent. Farmers adjacent to the Piute canal to 15,000 niackinaw trout for planting illl will have plenty of water tliis year ac- in the Cottonwood streams. 1 C. to J. Ullrich, assistant state cording, who has In Fish lake Air. Hanchett said fisli-inengineer, to be unusually good this returned from just Sevier county, where has supervised the year.is poinpr 15y the opening of the fishing There is better taste a zest to food installation of 100 concrete weirs for season. June 15, he said the fish- will the flow. in the lake and the sport will measuring be back cooked with Cottolene. In a few cuses he said the sugar be excellent. Fi.h weighing from three beets were damaged by late frost to to twenty pounds will be plentiful, he such an extent that was said. Used as shortening, it blends with the flour easily necessary, but he added that a large crop is assured. Some of the first cutand the result shows in the fine baking. Used for alfalfa, he said, was blighted FRUIT UNUSUALLY LARGE tingtheof frost, but the outlook cm the by frying, it makes the foods better tasting and more diwhole is satisfactory. gestible. Try it realize the quality it gives to foods. Short t'ro in 1 tnh Partially Offset by SMOKK KXI'KUT- TKSTIFIKS. ItM l':xrptlonnl (u&lit.v. Your grocer will supply you regularly Cottolene is packed .1 V. Mitchell. expert on smelter While the Utah fruit crop will this m paus of various sizes. finished his , direct smoke, liss than 50 per cent of the year be on the case brought, testimony bv fannyesterday iu tho account of normal the late frosts, ers against United States Smelting the volume of the production will be HEnDsL FAI R B A N K company fc company and the American Smelting the fact increased that by considerably in the United States when a crop is company inwas Itefinlng of size the the district court, and ever to fruit is larger than usual, turned !WIW.W.. lWMBimWMUliWaMlJWmJ.AtlJJCT.,IJltW.ti.MIIl.liWliwl to win. i according: Judpe Tillman I). .Johnson for J. Edward state horticultural Judge Johnson had not J inspector. Taylor, ' finished questioning him when, court "This factor will make the ultimate'T!ii fTi JLiUiUUiiil liUlI'lilllHJMi'HIH it' adjourned. iethan production larger preliminary ..--. -- J J- --- Mitm i p- , ls rs 'S toCturi non-essentia- Refining Coal Two Kinds of Twins The Long Lives of Women All at Sea on the Shipping Bill ' , A Huge Parade for Preparedness The Artist's in His Works i Lutheran Indictments of German Ethics Urging the Church to Fight Divorce Allied Admiration for Wilson Doubling Qur Regular Army Help for Poland in Sight More Peace-Feele- li 2 BOXING keen-minde- d Life-Intere-st p. m. Lunch and rest hour. 2 p. m to 3 p. m. Signal and formation work. .3 p. m. to 5 p. m. Continuation of meet and games. ' track 5 p. m. Depart for home. , DELAY business, and occupation, requires 500,000 copies of the Digest each week. In a couple of hours' reading these people learn all rides of the war news, they keep in; touch with tho advances of science and invention the whirling changes in foreign and domestic politics are shown to them; the newest and best in Art and Literature are reviewed; Sports, the Opera, and the Drama, in fact, public opinion on every branch of world activity, is revealed graphically. All of the interest and all of the facts are there, the and the muck alone being absent. That's why Lawyers quote it in Court ; that's why clients; that's why one they recommend' it to theirmore than 40.000 in all three Lawyer in every read it weekly, attho it is not a law journal. "Whatever pour business, occupation, or profession, The LrrKaABY Digest will be of just as much service to you. Tb Leaders Who New Sleep in the Graves of R evolutionists or Martyrs, According As Toa Yisxr the Attitudes of These Irish InsnrrectioBnts, Were Nearly AH Men of Letters Poets, Sosie ei Them, Writers of Plays, and Teachers of Letters and cf Arts. This Article TtUs Wh They Were and Gives Excerpts from Their Writings SCOUTS WILL HIKE lecturing est Lawyers Advise T0U This disquieting question seems to be forcing itself with growing insistence on the press of the country. With virtually every available unit, of our mobile array on the Mexican border or in Mexico, with the Militia of Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico mobilized for patrol duty, with American citizens once more warned to leave Northern Mexico, and with Carranza's seeming inability to check banditry, some erf our most sober and responsible papers seem to be losing faith in Mexico's ability to work out her own salvatioa unassisted. In THE LITERARY DIGEST for May 27th, the leading feature is a complete summary of American newspaper opinion upon the entire Mexican situation. X' ry noon to nil,! i -- City Creek Canyon, AVhere They Will Strike Camp. This morning boy scouts 200 strong started on their Memorial day hike intO the niOllnlalnd tVlAlT nhlnntiva ing a. camping place in City Creek canyon. The route is bv way of Twin Peaks. Today's hike is one of a series of three that have been arranged for the boy scouts of Pioneer stake for the summer months. For today's hike pracevery ward in the stake is reptically resented with one or more patrols and s'out masters. A track meet has been for the afternoon arranged prizes are offered to the willing and On the trip both g6ing and troops. Professor Pack of the U D. returning. K. U. tal kto the boys on the subject will of to them the various botany, describing flowers or plants they call to his attention. The program for the dav follows: 7. SO a. m. Meet at Second South and Main streets, where the Ninth avenue car will be boarded, leaving the car at H street and walking north. 8.30 a. m. Arrive at the foothills. S.30 a. m. to 12 noon Hiking, games, etc.. Professor Pack on rrm tfi9 Only Cigmrette Awarded the Grind Prize, tho u'j-e- sf rrd given to mnj cigarette mt the Fmnmma-PecifInterna w,,,,, Is intervention in Mexico Now Imminent ? Two II n ud red Leave This Morning for FATIMA . !; Pi 1 ... - - , liabilities. the most sensible cigarette for them that Fatimas now outsell every other cigarette costing over 5a Doesn't it seem reasonable that you will like Fatimas best too? "-- NEWS-FEATURE- London, May 29. In the house of commons Reginald McKenna, chancellor of the exchequer, moved the resolution he gave notice of last week, the purpose of which is to compel sale to the government under the mobilization plan of American securities hitherto withheld by their owners. Mr. McKen-na'- a "measure Imposes an additional income tax of two shillings in the pound on American' securities, 'exempting those which are deposited with the ,' treasury. Harold J. Ten n ant. parliamentary for war. explained as the balance of trade was against Kng-lanthere was a limit to the exportation of gold. A loan already having been raised in America, the government had resorted to the of securities to meet, the mobilization balance of BOY in S IN SOME OF THE BIG THE LITERARY DIGEST FOR MAY 27th d. m3 "3ay? you'll' ts.It!aTa Sensible cigarette - d Income Tax to Be Increased on Those Held by Public in Great Britain. under-secreta- ........l--'-- "The more you know of the other tide, the morewchance yon hare of winning your case," argnei the lawyer. No shrewd lawyer trusts to lcck alone to win a suit. He knw that a judge and jury suspect that somewhere between his claims and his opponent's contentious refts the truth. So he fortifies himself with a knowledge of all of the law and the facts, and thus armed, he ie prepared to shed such a light upon the truth at the proper time as will prove irresistibly f arorable to his client. In political and civic discussion the broad-garemolder of public opinion, for, lawyer is a potent applying the same keen regard for all of the facts he naturally turns to THE LITERARY DIGEST to get them. And to supply men and women of the same standard of mental alertness 'in every profession, mm TIES nil Let the SALE OF AMERICAN post-offic- KQl AM7.ATION fIll Just before the final vote was taken BTaKCT "Washington, May 29. The way was cleared in the Senate today for the national political conventions by ,the of a resolution providing: for adoption three-da- y recesses from June 3 to June 19. Nothing: but the introduction of bills and resolutions and the reception of communications from the President will be In order on meeting; days. An understanding was entered Into when the recess agreement was made that the Senate should dispose of the & California - railroad land Oregon srrant legislation before June 30. Senator Shafrcth .sought, unsuccessfully, to have his Philippine bill made the unfinished business, but the Senatee voted to take up in preference the bill. House leaders plan to keep their The appropriation in branch session throughout the conon appropriavention period, working ON HONOR ROLL tion bills. Herald-Bep'iMlfn- ds Keuyon'tr Kinnl Appeal. Ict'ornlek, Prest. . Antbon II. l.und. Vice Prest. Cieo. Albert Smith. Vice Prest. K. l. Mlehelen. Cashier. J waterways problem. Senator Stcne refused to withdraw his point of)ider at the request of Senator Gallinger, and the latter then Insisted on his point against the New-lanamendment. V. S. T, '? Majestic park at Main ttr.il Ninth I.) man K. ntiiMii of I tnh Among The Sout. !l reopens at 1 o'clock today. HlKbent Hated Iid(lie. has expend-- .! many new management to Th umU new of attracfor dollars t,iou The cleaned have beea Annapolis. Mil, IsMay 29. Lyman K. tions. premisesno of Utah and amonp the highest effort lias been, and pi tinted, to to of th rated afford Lake midshipmen graduate from people spared States Naval academy this an up-- t rt of amusementA pari, in the the United out of a class of 178 future adspecial pro year city. Memirial very he& mirals. for gram is arranged conAUhoueh h was not one of the nine will Kive evenJnK day. I!elds band da?-timen to receive the "star grade." which also music furnish for and certs in th danclnp: paviHon dining t"he requires a mark ofof?5 per cent or betthe whole course, ter for the work fc'pecial minstrel and vaudeevniiT. will be presented dur- Swenson was on the honor role anville attractions nounced today. ing the rvftei noon. i j SENATE VOTES YOIU j m t ifii i pp mi iip jMiiiaa I l i ng 11 tt ili! - lig-h- I t kij cross-examinatio- n. 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