OCR Text |
Show Tit a Moi-nlfl-Onmihlinn- m mm mm w Pnihr and Sondnu.j for FifloGn Oonfs a- UggIi.j fho s n. a m m w mum m m mm m m npiEnBf Salt Lake Smelter Settlements ( TTTP ft METALS ead. $7.00. Silver, 65c oz. ) Copper Zinc Inter-Movintal- n Vol. IT. so. -- 5 5. (St - - iroofosi NoussoGr . Gorrzaln in lucurf jfc utjum hmttcvTT TT Saturday and Sunday generally fair; not much change in temperature. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1916. Republican. ii ' . V si . 7 i i i f I i I d b ' 1 ii i a 1 r! la l J SI S 1 the Orerit Ucsi The Weather Louis), $11.62. It ? - (Cath.), $26.30. f i - w jp Salt Lake Herald. If PRICE FIVE CENTS ft Vol. 175, No. 6. nil) Mm; liiixi 'Ujo mM!I 'in jO UJ Mj ii 4f of Lying to Obregon t in Have American No Mexico Accuses General Funston Says Troops Right 4444444444444 4444.4.44.4444444. 444f44 Hfc44-f4-4n 7 A i n Mi is IMS i ff iHu I (I iTT. 1 V ' UJ' iM l 1 a wj m wCA w Wm km 44-4444- 4 f 3 ! I Is 1 ! Ml I y i a M i nrn ) i i I 1 --1 1 IJj V I M V Ml M V iiiiwvuJiLMj; ;!M WILL NOT PERMIT ' I1. O m VI tf T JI 4 ? B BOURBONPLAN & 1 DIRECTS G. O. P. FIGHT 1 Mill PflM SELECTED BY HUGHES BY ALLIES ON THREE FRONTS IN EMERGENCY invlXljii) u S GAINS SCORED BOND ISSUE IS Al&MY TO REM AM 17. So v Li ACCEPTABLE ALL TO Leaders Decide Russians Capture Kolomea, Declares Carelessness on DE FACTO Democratic to Obtain From Congress Railway Center in Galicia Part of, Washington Has CABINET IS Authority to Meet Possible and Now Threaten Flank Deficiency in This Manner of Von Bohmer's Army Caused All Bandit Raids TAXES THIAUMONT RETAKEN BELLICOSE ADDITIONAL ALSO TO BE LEVIED AND HELD BY FRENCH CHARGES MUROER,TOO . Declares That If U. S. Will Keep Order On Its Own Side of Border, All Trouble Will Be Over - MEXICO I wk. . - CITY, June , limilHMilUUUIlI III ,1 oU. z L-- 1 mi n X rt Cnnnfort' m W "; l1 1 - 1 frpr Hie loreign oinco iouay imuuu u. rortPiit. notr T.nncinfr,! in which the correctness of assertions in the communication Agreement Said to Have Revenue Bill to Be Rushed British Keep Up Terrific Been Reached Reaffirming Through House; Treasury .Bombardment of German Orders to Attack American Surplus for Year May Defenses, Using More Than Amount to $200,000,000 Million Shells Every Day Southward Troops Moving ADVANCING June 30. While SUPPLY BILLS DELAYED ITALIANS :u officials manifested impatience today over the delay of the Carranza government in replying to the American demand ior an explanation of its purposes, private advices from Mexico City indicated that a defiant answer was being there. prepared kI.tI.- had lias Th lpnartment no direct information as-t- o when the Mexican response would be sent or how It would toe transmitted. Secretary Lansing called this fact to the attention of liliseo Arredondo. Mexican ambassador designate, during ttie day and indicated that he. did not understand the delay In view of the statement In the American note of last Sunday that an early answer was expected. Mr. Arredondo. who had called announce formally the release of io the Carrizal prisoners, said he had not heard from his government on the sub- situation at the time he ceived it. KTforts at arranging on Page 7.) or. the SIIIFrS BLAME FOR MASSACRE. so-call- ed after the Glenn Springs raid. re- media-(Contlnu- - Blame for the Santa Ysabel massacrp is placed on the impulsive and irascible disposition of Charles Watson, general manager of the Cusihuiriachic company; and General Scott and General Funston are accused of bad faith and lack of honor in misleading General Obregon in an alleged evasive reMexico ply regarding the crossing of American troops into ed Submarine to Carry Money to Germany The memorandum asserts while it is true the United States arrested General Huerta. the motive which prompted this act was not a purp.ose of aiding the constitutionalists, but because Arrival of German U Boat the United States feared that General Huerta was plotting with at Baltimore Advertised by Trust Company. Germany. . Amerof The note concludes by declaring that the presence ican troops in Mexico invites rather than prevents bandit raids NEW, YORK, June 30. The Trust company of this along the border. been recognized here which has The memorandum was issued at the same time that the city, as an unofficial financial agent of the re- Austrian and German governments, anforeign office authorized publication of Secretary Lansing's advernounced today in a note tisement in the Hungarian Daily Amer-Ikthe In note. says: cent part . half-pag- e ai ilpnartment of state of the United States should be dipleael with the tone of the note of this government of May 22. which it terms discourteous, when the same department has addressed to 'the corrititutiunalit jrovernuient not one but many notes in tones not only discourteous but threatening. Mexican citizens have been "Dunns the period alluded to in this note 148citizens and even by the murdered in American territory by American authorities of the T'nited State, this despite the fact that both nations were in nmp of these cases, despite, repeated at Washington, have any of the Mexican ambaador the remonstrances by jruitty been exemplarily punished. that iht-- DENIES PROTECTING CRIMINALS. untrue that the Mexican government ha irotected in any. instance criminals attacking American territory. The Mexican government "It h has done all in its power to protect foreign subjects. The fault lies with foreigners, especially American, who insisted on remaining in disturbed district despite the repeated warnings of the Mexican government. As our own citizens have suffered severely on account of the condition of affairs, it is hardly just that foreigners should expect to be immune." The note cites the case of Charles Watson, one of the victims of the Santa Ysabel mas;iere. who. it state?, insisted on making the fatal journey from Ceneral Trevino. the military governor of Chihuahua. despite a waminir It is a ract." the note states, "which the American military authorities cannot der.y, that ti March 6 OJencrat (lavira advised the latter that he had trustworthy intelligence that Villa. and his bandits were on the way to the frontier. Z alo warnil them that Villa wan froinjr by way of L.as Palomas. thus pivIttK the American authorities ample time in which to prepare to rneft-- the dnnzer. the news of the The con.itltuliona!i.?t government also on receipt movements of Villa ami risarht after t!e attack on Columbus sent 1300 men under General Gultie'rrcz as raj.iuly as possible to the northern part of the utate f Chihuahua wit! orders to pursue the bandits relentlessly. It is well l;oown that the pursuit lircan immediately and that the bandits were "Tic Imputation of the American government that the constitutionalist (Continued on Page 0.) o-- dis-p.i-e- J. 9 AUDIENCE APPLAUDS PRESIDENT'S POSITION WASHINGTON, from Washington were repeatedly denied. The memorandum declares that the United States had no right to maintain its armed forces 011 Mexican soil. The memorandum contains thirty-.of a direct reply, to counts. Although not in the-forfive the Washington note, it is considered equivalent to an answer to that document. It expresses surprise that the Washington government should have been pained at the tone and the contents of the Carranza document, since it maintains that the United States has sent to the constitutional government not only one but manv discourteous and even overbearing notes. the Mexican government's . reiterating Emphatically ject. r .1 T?TiHr1 yfntn in topn armed rtf t?. Although Special Agent Kodgers at Mexico City was informed two days that he might expect to be handed bodies iii exico, the memorandum denies energetically that ago note that day, he has Mexican the commade no mention of it in later disthe. Mexican government has protected bandits who had patches. Some officials believed it posmitted depredations in the United States and defies Washing- - sible the communication .would come through Mr. Arredondo, and that Its ton to pruduce proot 01 tne assertion. actual delivery would be "conditioned m Tells New York Press Club' He Will Not Countenance Hostilities With Mexico iUntil There Is No Other Way to Settle Trouble Magyar Nepszava that the German submarine so frequently reported as being on the way here from Hamburg reached Baltimore Thursday morning and is now concealed somewhere nearby, presumably under the waters of ; Chesapeake bay. The directorate of the trust company n includes the name of the consul general, Alexander Xu-bvon Pereked. Officials of the trust company refused to make known the exact whereabouts of the mysterious Austro-IIun-garia- er craft. The advertisement reads: "Wonder of wonders. Money forwarded to Hungary by a German submarine. One hundred krona for $14. Only Thursday morning there arrived at Baltimore a German submarine and it leaves for Kurope In a few days. c The Trust company announces with pride that from now on It will send money orders by this way and will manage to get receipts by the same way." At the general offices of the Trn3t company It was said the advertisement had been prepared under the direction of President Julius Pimitzer. He was not at the office, and in his absence none of the officials would discuss the submarine. Secrecy, It waa said, was necessary to prevent a possible conflict with the American government on, the status of the boat a question of neutrality only. It was explained. According to this version the German embassy feared that the submarine might be regarded as a warship by the United States authorities and as such ordered out of American waters 'within twenty-fouhours. Trans-Atlanti- Trans-Atlant- r lc WASHINGTON June 30. which. An T ON DON, June 29. for Successes the entente allies on the three most important European fronts in France, in the Italian theatre and in East Galicia are chronicled in the latest official communications. The French and British continue their raids against the Germans in France, the French having captured the Thiaumont works northeast of Verdun and the British having kept up their bombardments of German trenches and their incursions into German positions by raiding parties. The Russians have taken Kolomea, an important railway junction leading to Lemberg, in Galicia, and the Italians continue to advance against the Austrians in the Trentino region. The struggle for the possession of the Thiaumont work, taken by the Con- gress is expected to authorize a federal' bond issue to meet the extraordinary expenses of the Mexican emergency was reached today by administration leaders. Under the plan such an issue actually would be made only in case the ordinary resources s of the treasury and the additional $210,000,000 expected from the administration revenue bill prove insufficient. What form the bonds would take, should an issue be found necessary, has not been determined. Some leaders favor issuance of some of the Panama canal 3s, of which a balance of $240,569,000 remains in the treasury, and others believe a special emergency bond should be put out. Treasury officials emphasized, however, that in view German crown forces, from the of a net balance, of close to $200,000,000 French a weekprince's most severe, was ago, on hand at the end of the fiscal year the several hands position changing tonight the authority asked of Con- times. gress might not have to be invoked. Violent IlombardniNits Continue. on Iloud Plan. Agree Violent bombardments have marked The whole revenue situation has been the fighting on the remainder cf the gone over minutely in a series of con- front around Verdun, particularly on ferences between Secretary McAdoo, the sector of Hill 304. Chairman Simmons of the Senate The British are keeping up their of destroying by artillery fire tactics finance committee. and Chairman German first and second", line trenches Kltcl.In of the House ways and, means from Ypres to the Somme,a expending committee. Mr. McAdoo is understood more than a million shells day. to have presented President Wilson's In addition to the capture of Kolothe Russians also have taken the view that the extraordinary expenses mea, town of Obertine, northeast of Koloof the Mexican crisis should not be and several other villages north met out of current revenues, and the mea, and south of that point. committee chairmen agreed that a On the front in Russia, from the bond issue might be advisable. An- Galician border to the region of Riga, other result ft the conferences was there have been battles at various a decision to put the new revenue points, but with no decisive results. bill through immediately. The occupation of Kolomea with its The exact amount of the treasury five railways and six high roads surplus for the fiscal year will not be threatens the rear of the Austrian viiu n wiii ii luinuiivn, uul at ine iiuse "army and constitutes a glowing mento! of business yesterday It was said to Lemberg from the south" and be $174,171,'" 15, and officials believed ace also places Gen. von Bothmer's army s 11 101 on iuua.v wvuia increase rrveipis in a precarious position. theStripa more than $200,000,000. The income The Italians have taken Griso and tax receipts up to today were $68,191,-- 1 several mountain positions southeast of 75, as compared with $43,52.1,149 a year Trent. Their advance against the Ausago. Internal revenue offices throughin the capture has resulted also trians out the country kept open until mid- of a thousand prisoners, as well nearly tax and the from total the yearly night, as stores of arms and munitions. was expected to amount to more than Vienna ' only the repulse of at$115,000,000. Nearly 30 per cent of the tacks inclaims sector. this came $83. 000,000 it yielded last year in during the last day of the fiscal year. Hritfsh Striking Hard. The total ordinary receipts for Britisli Headquarters in France, the year, including June 29, were June 30. The fourth day of the. Brit$712,634,574. ish bombardment of the German posiTo !Sej;resitte Kipeiises. Senator Simmons and Representative tions sees no diminution of the volume Kltchln emphasized tonight "that they of fire, which continues along the cessation day and were In hearty accord wtih.the treas- whole line without to segregate the ex- night, cutting barbed wire entangleury's proposal Mexican and second situation from ments, demolishing- first and penses of the trendies, placing the ordinary government expenditures. lines of German Senator Simmons said the proposed curtains of fire on the roads and combond Issue would he restricted to pay municating trenches. Considerably more than a million of only this one class of extraordinary ex- shells a day are beiiiK expended, and penses. seems to be no limit to the supthere The revenue bill which Mr. Kltchln of British Infantry actions them. ply next House the to will try put through limited been have thus far to raids Unweek proposes to raise $100,000,000 ad- der cover of and trench morartillery on a incomes. surtax ditional from which ascertain the state of $30,000,000 from an inheritance tax and tar fire, German wire and trenches. The about $60,000,000 from a tax on net re- the new type of British mortar is capable concerns. war of It munitions, ceipts fire that it can place six such of tomorrow and prob- shots in rapid win be Introduced which proved the at air ably reported from committee Wednes- highly serviceable, once, in both cutting of are to begin debate day. Present p!?ns of trenches. on it Thursday under a special rule wire and the smashingfrom Last night the sky twenty to providing' for a final vote before admiles in the rear toward the thirty journment Saturday. .east 'was brilliant, as if with the glare from dusk to of the aurora the only Illumination PRESS SHIPPING BILL dawn. This wasborealis, along the roads for the movement, of Menaare Under Dally Consideration by trucks and automobiles, none of which carried lights. From a point near a Senate Committee. of batteries, the correspondent June 30. Unable to group Washington, witnessed a scene of grrandeur under on any of the proposed amendagree ments to the government shipping bill, the canopy of a cloudless and moonthe Senate subcommittee considering It less night, with a broad sheet of flame to report it to the full and ugly flashes and darts of fire over decided commercetoday in the form it the area of action. Today the sun is comm'ttee next 'Beginning passed thethe liouive. the overcast sky for commerce committee will breaking through Thursday in time three days, and is the first hold dally se?f'o?3 until it ha3 agreed welcome to the artillery observers. ou a report to ?):e Senate. , : 11 i J WIL.LIAM R. WILI.COX. a personal R. WILLCOX; WILLIAM friend of Charles Hughes, ; lawyer, former postmaster of New Yprk and until 1913 . chairman of the public . service commission of New iork, has been selected as chairman of the Republican national committee and as such will, manage Hughes'-- ' race for the presidency. Air. Willcox has not been identified with any faction of the party and is acceptable .o Republicans and1 Progressives . .", ., , alike. K. ; , . -- , , ' He Dwells on His Efforts to Serve Whole People and Says He Would Sacrifice Re-electi- Rather Than on Not Act on His Convictions EULOGIZED BY COLBY -- ' .. T a f t and Hughes Ha ve Long Chat , Former President and Re publican Nominee Discuss Campaign Plans. 4- What Wilson Said I "I have constantly to remind my- self that I am. not tlie sen-an- t of I those who fvlch to enhance the value of their Mexican Investments, but that I am the servant of the! rank and file of the people of the United States." "Of course It Is our dutr to pre-- J pare this nation to take care of Its honor and of its Institutions. Why debate) any part of that, except the detail, except the plan Itself, which 4 Is always debatable. "The easiest thing- Is to strike. J The brutal tblngr Is the Impulsive ! No man has to Ihlnlc be--1 thing-fore he take action, but! before a man really conserves the ' honor by realizing: th Ideals of the nation he has to think exactly what I he will do and how he will do ft." 'Do you think the Rior-j- of Amer-Ic- u would be enhanced, by a war of! conquest In Mexico f Do you think that any act of violence a now-- 1 erful nation like this by njrainst a j and destructive neighbor! wak would reflect upon the annals of I the United States f" "Do you think that it Is our duty to carry to a of dictation Into the affairs of point another people f The Ideals of Americans are written plain on every page of American history." "I want you to know how I 1 do realise whose servant 1 am. fully not own the government of he r lilted States even for the time be ing;. I have no rlbt to express inr, own ambitions for the development or America if those ambitions are not coincident with the ambition of I the nation itself." 'force can sometimes hold things j steady until opinion has time to! form, but no force that was ever ex- rted except In response to that J uiyiulou was ever a predominant and j S - . J., June 30. X. BRIDGEIIAMPTOX, discussed the coming political campaign for two hours today with William H. Taft. Over a luncheon at the Republican presidential nominee's temporary summer honw here, the former President . and Mr. Hughes took up the chief Issues of the day and went over, the tentative campaign, plans. Mrs. Hughes, presided at the luncheon and participated in the discussion. Apparently che time was too short for a full exchange of opinions, for after the conference-waoyer and Mr. Tft stood waiting at' the railroad station for his train, Mr. .Hughes drew him aside for a final word. They .walked out of earshot of the..little group that had surrounded them and continued in confidential conversation emphasized by earnest gestures, until the train ; pulled in. r Mr. Taft appeared to be ihexcellent humor as he alighted from the .automobile in which the nominee had accompanied him to the station. "I am for Hughes,", he said."I want to see Judge .him elected,; and shall do all I can to assist .him." "Will 'ou take the, stump for him?" someone asked. "I shall oh y orders," he replied. "Monday I shall go to Murray Bay, Canada, for .three months. When I return I shall help-al- l I can. Perhaps, however, it "might be better for Mr. Hughes if I were to stuy quietly in Canada until election, day and then cross over ami vote, for him." Mr. Taft laughed. He was again asked if he would make, any speeches for Mr. Hughes. "Did you ever hear of my refusing to make a speech?" he asked. "Why, Brother Bryan and I are the champion long distance speakers of the world. We are in the, same class. I am willing to do anything that" will help." Mr. Taft was asked about the report that he would speak from the same platform as Mr. Hughes- and Colonel Roosevelt. sort of three-rincircus?" questioned the former President, his eyes "Don't you" think that twinkling. would be waiting- a lot' of oratorical ammunition on one audience?" Mr. Taft had nothing to say as to Ms views on political issues nor as to a report that he might soon meet Colonel Roosevelt. After Mr. Taft's train ad left Mr. Hughes dictated this statement: "I have wanted for some time to meet Judge Taft and have an opportunity of going over matters with him. He was kind enough to come down here and we enhave had' a very full talk orr1 much." it very joyed . , . , , s . , : - , .''.. ; r - , , , . , . ; - ",-V- ' g' ., l ag-gressi- r self-defen- se conquering force." f XTKW YOfJK, June 30. President "Wilson made it plain in his speech at the New York Prr ;w club banquet tonight that he will not countenance a war with Merico until there is no other alternative for settling the border troubles. Ag'ain he declared that he was ready to sacrifice his own political fortunes in order to carry out his convictions as to Avhat would be tbe just course to pursue in the situation. The President's audience, composted of newspaper men, state and municipal political leaders and others prominent in public life, signified their Indorsement of lils position by repeated outr bursts of applause. When he asked if the glory of America would be enhanced by a war of conquest in Mexico, shouts of "no" came from all parts of the banquet hall. A similar response was made to his, query whether it is America's duty to "carry to the point of dictation into the affairs of another people." Kndeavors to Serve Whole I'eopie. The President dwelt also on his ef- forts io serve the whole people, thou(Continued on Page 7.) self-defen- se |