OCR Text |
Show 8 BRITISH GILL! FRENCH AEROPLANE WINS IN BATTLE WITH GERMAN OBSERVATION BALLOON . I SEES TO AVE RT TRAFFIC EXECUTION OF : - . , CME FRY ATT '': V:-::- '.- : - ! .. . ' - : ; ., - ... ' ' , '... ' " . - ' ' - i s ; i ; f - v ' :- ' : . Employees to Agree on ; ; s ' ' . V: Foreign Office Seeks Full Account of Facts in Case of British Mariner From If the U. S. Embassy at Berlin GERMANS REFUSED TO POSTPONE TRIAL - "x IT " . : ; Los Angeles, July 29. Resolutions urfrincr arbitration in the threatened strike cf 350.000 trainmen, adopted by the Arizona corporation commission, the state corporation commission of New Mexico and the railroad commission of Nevada, were made public here assistant to the tctlay by It. J. Clancey, manager of the i?outhern Pa general cific company. Similar action, it was said, will be to the railroad commissions suggested of California. Washington and Oregon next week hy representatives of the bodies already on record so as to have uniform action by all state railroad- controlllnsr bodies in the west. Death Sentence Imposed by Court-martiWas Held Just and Confirmed by War Council, Including Kaiser vV2. BAKERS OF AMERICA flames. According to advance Information received by the local committee, consistof Ge-rMueller. Frank Erath. M. ing Martinov and Charles Tyng, the men who are comlns to Salt Lake to attend the National Association of Master Bakers. August will more than 0 per cent of all therepresent bakers' bread In the United States. Headquarters for the convention will be at the Hotel Utah. Practically the major portion of the hotel has been reserved An interesting air duel occurred front. It recently on the was participated in- - by a French e aeroplane and a German observation lagoon. Another' Frenchman was nearby to take photographs of the event. The balloon was of course at n tremendous disadvantage and the The "sausage" duel was was soon in flames. Its Germon occupant, however, made good use of hs parachute and returned in safety to the German lines. 1 ve-el- sorl--rv1itl'- 7-- J p 'TROUBLESOME GERMANS' HOUSE SENDS ARMY ri BILL TO CONFERENCE ARE PLACED UNDER GUARD re'i't iri 'o.-tuii- r then?. -- omrc, jlt,y 29..ronnicv rpnrmr r t of Trial Iterated. Th roatmiinleation Ad l that Amfta. .vlr Inr'ascf .nt to Foreign Minister 18 to hU notes of . Or-'-t.. .0. ,i'wer fotlowlns; July paraphrase of a th- - telrrrj, Ir!n: "July "7. from Ambassador Gerard at to your telesrrams. referring 1 brcujrht th case of Fryatt to the attention of th imperial foreign office In writing on the roth and the ZZd and reunited an opportunity to enprago counsel. A verbal reply was made yesterday, statin the trial hd been fixed for today at I5rure. It added that the forelcn offire had renuested a If possible-- I have today received a written reply statin? It wm Impossible to crant a postponement as (ierrran submarine witnesses could not le detained further. "Major Neumann has been appointed the German authorities to defend an attorFryatt, He. In rlvll life. ney and Justlzrat (queen's counsel)." .According to a report from Maastricht. Holland, forwarded by The Hague correspondent of th Kxchanga Telesrraph company, the- o.uestlon of t'apt.-ilFryatt's execution was discussed at th Imperial German In reply to a telegram from the Duke cf "tVurttemberjr announcing the sentence and asking for its confirv mation. This was telegraphed bv the War council which cluded Kmperor William and General von Falkenhayn and other staff officers, eleven of whom are said to have heen In agreement on the justice of the post-roneme- nt . tr - head-quarte- rn lmme-diatel- rentnce. Execution Defended fit Ilerlln. July 2?. The execution at TlruKre on July 27 of Capt. Charles Fryatt cf the .British steamship Brussels, nfter trial ty court-martifor attempting- to ram a German submarine. denotes a new phase in the controversy over the sea rights of merchantmen. The German government prize regu lations Issued before the beginning of the war, adopted the principle that trerchantmen were not entitled to commit nets of war and tt threatened to treat as pirate those attempting1 to do f o. The execution of Captain Fryatt. German officials contend, is in accord with that principle, which, according to the German view, merely extends to tea warfare the rrinrlolea already controlltlreur activity on land. ing franc It Is hoped In official circle- - here that this cas will lead to a definite clearing up of the question of the merchantmen acting at intermittent times r.m war vessels. TSerlln, al SCAN DI NAVANPROTESTS British Rules of Sea Arc for the persons attending the convention. The membership of the association is 100(. but this represents approximately but a fraction of those who attend the convention. The majority of the men will bring their wives and other members of their families, and In addition there are manufacturers of bakers' machinery and bakproducts, bakers' ers' supplies who will be oh hand and who will have elaborate exhibits of their wares. It will be, according to members of the committee, the largest display of and apparatus ever bakingIn machinery the Rocky mountain district made and will excel anything ever held west of the Mississippi river except the Panama-Pacifi- c exposition. One of the features of the convention will be a dally newspaper published by the Bakers' Weekly, which will move its staff to Salt Lake and publish all the news and gossip of the convention while It is in progrjss. Representative Gardner Dc' Editors of Newspaper and nounccs Munitions ProviSocialist Leaders Interned HUGHES TO DELIVER sions as Inadequate. in Military Camp. .- -- Surface, Columbus Circle. to; t-- f. .' '- - i it V- -' " the Washington, July 29.to When tn .House bill wnn returned army from the Senate today Representative Buchanan opposed letting It k immet conference for of diately on sending It differences and Insisted adjustment hack to committee In the ?ame way he blocked conslderatlc n of the navy bill a few days ago. Other congressmen, however, persuaded him to withdraw his objections and then bill went to conference. e Gardner denounced the bill as Inadequate and charged the war department and the Hay reorganization law with responsibility. At the rate the bill appropriated for artillery and ammunition, he said, it would take twelve years to prepare the country for. a few months cf war. "In a single day, on a single sector in said he, "a the battle of the Somme," one of the beliiKTents has used slnple up twice as much field artillery ammunition as our whole national sup- message received London, July here today by the Wireless Press from Bern, Switzerland, says: "The German military authorities have established a military camp for troublesome Germans. A decree proon Monday consigned to this mulgated the camp the entire editoriala staff of newsYolks Zeitung, dally to be inpaper. These Journalists arewar. terned until the end of the "Another decree interns in the same camp four prominent socialists who were arrested at Blbcrfeld, Rhenish Prussia.' The socialist newspaper Yolksmacht of Breslau, says a dispatch from Zurich to the Central News agency, declares that the reichsta? no longer reflects the true opinion of the German people, disand it demands a referendum to cover whether the people really desire peace. The Yolksmacht is quoted as saying: ply." "The people ought to be given an opto affirm whether they wish portunity an early peace without conquests or INTEW wish to continue the war till these are SCOUTS ORGANIZED assured." The newspaper further proposes the formation of a popular league In favor ' New York, July 29. For American of peace. boys residing in rural communities where no boy scouts of American LOCAL BUYERS GO EAST troops have been formed, a new class of scouts to be known as the Boy Pio- Walker Attache Off to Make Fall neers Is to be organized, it was an. Good Piireliowe-Nnounced at the national headquarters Two Goods Walker buycompany Dry here today. Heretofore, it was stated, ers, Mrs. J. J. McCann of the cloak and thousands of boys in sparsely settled suit department and Miss E. Bowman districts have been unable to enroll as of the corset and undermuslin departscouts because of insufficient numbers ments, left yesterday for New York on to make up troops. For the pioneers' their fall purchasing trips. With the scouts more than 1000 applicaticns have departure during the week of Mrs. 11 buyer cf juvenile wearables, and been received, which would bring the Gabel, jmiss it. huhler, Duyer of art goods. s to apup organization membership now Walker's have the of proximately 31,500. their buyers in the easternmajority markets. 20. A , Itenre.-entatlv- ' class of boy . 4- - MME. Block I Y V N . "J- - Plat-a- , fV7 IUnion Station. : Creosoted wood blocks, already extensively used as paving material for city streets, have been coming into use as flooring for the last four or Its durability, noiseless-nes- s under heavy traffic, and sanitary properties are its chief advantages five years. suggested by the United States Forest Service for paving. It is said to have special value for making floors, especially for use where heavy trucking, the moving of heavy machinery, or other severe use makes the maintenance of floors a serious problem. Wood block. the Forest Service authorities say, is now widely used for flooring in factories, warehouses, machine shops, foundries, various types of platforms, wharves, end docks, ana for ' such miscellaneaus hotel kitchens, hospitals, Jmrposes as and slaughter houses. Possibly one of the oddest of these uses is for the floor of wild animal cages and runways. Notwithstanding thn recent increase in the use of wafor't block for these purposes, they bslievc that the growth of this industry vri'I be even more rapid in the tfufcure. These floors are well liked by 1iie workmen, they, say, because they are easy on the feet. A statement from the Forest Service says: "Most of the blocks for these floors are now made of. southern yellow pine. Hemlock, larch, Douglas far. , black gum, beech and maple are also used. The blocks are sawed from long sticks of timber and are treated in huge steel cylinders from six to seven feet in diameter and one hundred feet or more in length. Crcosota oil is run into the' cylinders and pressure is then' applied to force it into the wood. The oil is a product obtained in the manufacture cf coke and its purpose is to prevent decay of the wood, and also to prevent shrinking and swelling of the floor after it is laid. The blocks are laid with the grain vertical, so that the nost . badly-bruise- d 200-fo- ot rid-ln- 1 I v ," - v.v v. A . .:.-''- ' - r. v- " n . ......v. If you want plenty of Monday. $300,-00- 0 TriTTfTT n r Wiiu.l - V V t':. j -jL it- u y i Iff 2i r t. I! V il jl K J SPF.CIAL KQTE Dr. E. Sauer, a well known physlcl.m, who haa studied widely in both this country and Europe, has been specially employed to make a thorough investigation into strength, power and the real secret of the endurance of Jss Willard. and the marvelous value of nusated iron as a strength builder. SEW YORK Upon being interviewed at hla apartment in the Colonial hotel. Mr. Willard said: "Yes, I have a chemist with me to study the value of different foods and products as.' to their power to produce great strength and endurance, both of which are eo necessary in the prise ring. On his recommendation I have often taken nuxated Iron and 1 have particularly advocated the free use of iron by all. those wljo wish to obtain great physical and mental tower. Without it I am sure that I should never have been able to whip Jack Johnson ao completely and easily as I did, and while training for my bout with Frank Moran, I regularly took nux- ated iron and I am certain that it was a most Important factor la my winning so easily." Continuing, Ir. Sauer said, "Mr. Willard's case is only one of hundreds which I could cite from my own personal experience which proves conclusively the astonishing power of nuxated iron to strength and vitality even in most complicated chronic' conditions." Not lonsr ago a man came to me who was nearly half a century old, and asked me to give blm a preliminary examination for life Insurance. I was astonished to find him with the f blood pressure of a boy of 20 and as full vigor, vim and vitality as a young man; In fact a young man ho really was, notwithstanding his age. The secret, be said, was taking Iron nuxated iron had filled him with renewed life. At 0 he was in bad health; at 46 careworn and jn-ea- ' I - " I1 - . b J . j m wounded at Molfetta. There twenty some slight damage to buildings di Bari. wak. at Mola TRACKMEN'S WAGES RAISED. 29. The announceSedalia, Mo.,section ment that all July hands of the Mis- souri Pacific railroad would receive increased wages of 184 cents an hour, effective for the last week of this month, was made at the company offices hero today. The former wage was 16 cents an hour. is Z0. Denmark. N'orwar Perlln. July have derided to protect itnd fcwerien .cr.i!nt the British order In council of dUrontsnuln the partial enforceJuly ment of the declaration of Lcndon. says tha Oviffas News agency. thes counV-. Vrv.'new t British ruUs tries considering the t,t n. law to b? at variance with the of interna tion.u law. principles Tin- - Journal da Geneve Is quoted n? i sutfsrc.mtiK a union of Switzerland. I : I Dn?nark. Spain and the Unite-o State?. The Nlenvve Kotterdxmitche t ursrea 'i.'uran the lutrh government V, to "rtttim to the principle 'j In Wafhiosrton tn November.expressed 1911, in TtsnrO tn tiic rljcbtn of neutrals." -3UMrTJOK 'MOVING It will cost Australia n f to open the Murray river to arsd to an Irrigation This piotorraih tliows the moving of mortar ammunition up to the trenches, vstem that willtor;tru:t l.SOO.CO') acres Cevflcy a trench where the men Lave "Ju in." over Hi iar.i. - V 1. e i ij umvi-:itr- A bridge ha. been built f: ' I ( (' 1 ntJfJw-""'"- ' :: ;: 4 i . ' . V': '.mi- - Sixty ministers of the ppent some time in jail in Devil'sgospel Lake, N. D.. owing to the fact that the committee of the North. Dakota housing Sunday school convention and the purity conwere of both held which gress, there, was unable to provide other accommodations for the clergymen. untold A hitherto secret of his great victory over .Jack Johnson and Frank Moran. nearly all In. Now at 59 a miracle of vitality and his face beaming with the buoyancy of youth. As I have said a hundred times over, iron la the greatest of all strength builders. If people would only throw away patent medicines and nauseous concoction and take simple nuxated iron, I am convinced that the lives of thousands of persons might be saved, who now die every year from pneumonia, grippe, consumption, kidney, liver and heart trouble, etc. The real and true cause which started their diseases was nothing more or less than a weakened condition brought on by lack of Iron In the blood. Iron, is absolutely necessary to enable your blood to change food Into lHinp tissue. Without It, no matter how much or what you eat, yonr food merely passes through you without doing you any good. You don't get the strength out of it and as a consequence yon become weak, pal and sickly looking, just like a plant trying to grow in a soil deficient in iron. It you are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to mak the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk wituout becomtablets of ing tired. Next, take two ordinary nuxated iron three times per day aftpr m?als for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, rundown people who wore ailing all the while, double thpir strength and endurance and entirely get rid of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days time simAn! ply by taking Iron in the proper form. this after they had in somevcases been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced Iron, Iron acetate or tincture of Iron 6imply to save a few cents. You must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated l!k nuxated iron If you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete or prize fighter has won th day simply because he knew the secret of great and endurance and filled his blood with strength Iron before he went Into the affray, while many another has gone to inglorious defeat simply for the lack of iron E. Sauer, M. D. NOTE Nuxated iron, recommended above by Dr. Sauer, is not a patent medicine nor secret remedy, but one which i well known to druggists and whose Iron constituents are widely prescribed by eminent physicians everywhere. Unlike the older Inorganic iron products. It Is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the con trary,, it is a nwt potent remedy, in nearly all forms of Indigestion, as well as for nervous, The manufacturers have rundown conditions. such prpat confidence in nuxated Iron thnt they offer to forfeit $1CO.(0 to any charitable institution if they cannot take any man or woman under 5) who lacks iron and increase their strength 200 per cent or over in four weeks' time, provided they have no porious organic trouble. Tliey also offer to refund your money If it does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days' time. It is dispensed by Schramia-Johnso- u drug stores or all good druggists. five-grai- n t . OTAl.' UX m . completed floor." pr t v ex- the cost of creosoted wood- Eerts, floors averagesmmabout S1.50 persquare yara ior tne DiocKs alone and about $2.40 per square yard for the ; v.-- . surface is nt . there' strength and 'stay Last year live stock valued at was killed on the national forest endurance and health and ranges by eating poisonous plants; 85 per cent of the losses of cattle were caused by tall larkspur. muscles like mine." Xuxat ed Iron I :x' Ordinary MORTAR AMMUNITION BEING MOVED UP TO THE TRENCHES j 4 will often increase V w ... strength and endurance r of the delicate nervous folks 200 per cent in two H weeks time. w. wear-resista- posed and usually or a concrete foundation. The joints or cracks between the blocks are then filled with hot paving pitch or asphalt 'whicii binds the many separate nieces into one continuous surface. According to ex-- ! HEM nounced as Illegal. al-o- Vi ' ment on the Canon City road, ten miles south of Colorado Springs, today. The TO DEATH car PLUNGE left the road at a sharp curve. Crushed Unde Automobile. Mont., July 29. Mrs. John 000-W- O DSAD ES S Texas Couple Killed While A. Billings, of Heal' of Hibbing, Minn.,waswife killed State Senator John A. Healy,1 driven yesterday when an automobileembankTouring in Colorado." an over went husband her by at Elbow creek, about thirty miles Senator Harding Will Be the Colorado Springs, July 29. Mr. and ment southwest of here and, turning a comH. J. Baehman of Wichita Falls, plete somersault, pinned the woman's Only Other Speaker at No- Mrs. body beneath it. Tex., were instantly killed, a daughter, tification Ceremony. Miss Stella Baehman, 18 years old, was AIRMEN ATTACK ITALIAN PORTS. Rome, July 29. Austrian aeroplanes seriously Injured, and a son, H. J. made yesterday on Bari, Mola when di Bari.attacks Jr., was Molfetta and Otranto, seaports Bridgehampton, July 29. Charles E. Baehman, the automobile In. which they were on the Adriatic. Two persons were Hughes, Republican presidential nomiover a embank wounded at Bari and five killed and plunged acnee, tonight completed his speech of 8000 ceptance. It Is approximately words in length and will require about an hour and a quarter for delivery. Mr. Hughes will not attempt to memorize it, but will read It at the notification ceremony in New York next Monday night. The only other speaker at the meeting will be Senator Warren G. Harding, chairman of the notification committee, and his remarks telling Mr. of rls nomination will Hughes formally bo brief. ' William B. Willcox, Republican chairman, was an overnight guest at the nominee's summer home and they went over together the tentative plans for the nominee's trip to the Pacific coast. In doing bo they curtailed appreciably the two weeks" vacation Mr. Hughes expected to spend in the Rocky mountains. Mr. Willcox said that he thought the itinerary would be made public De- JIol-I.U..- woooem -- one-side- d. ( n-n- 1 ' Sixty Per Cent of Breadmak' ers to Attend Convention Next Hlonth. Act 1 The "Sausage" is hit, and its occupant is descending in a parachute. Act 2 The aTion flies away, leafing its victim a mass of ri th.it a nmt oj affair? has srl3en. "TIi foreign erret.iry. therefore. Is c.t I t f . on t.ehnlf of the Kovfrnmsnl. t that an ur?cnt Inquiry may b mad hy theVtitilted States fmbjsi- ns m wnnner t:.e report or i'i f Captain Kryatt Is true, tie hi rr'ir ttkat tfie ftritlsh Kovcrntnr.l nay luve. v; ttho.it delay, a fnli and tn- !ouitet acrmint of tho facts before -- . :v COMING TO SALT LAKE '20 The foreign LONI)ON July published the conununi-rntioit sent to the American ambassador Walter Iline.s Pajre concerning the rase of Captain Fryatt. The communication states: Ll finds it majesty's fliffieult to believe that a master of a merchant vessel who, after German !nt - it BERLIN DEFENDS ACT thorn, tt Is evl 'J:. - V" , al submarines had. adopted the practice s of sinking merchant without warn in;: and without revmrd fur the lives of the passengers of crew, took the step which appeared to afford the only chance of saving not only his vessel, but the lives of all on hoard, can hne been shot deliberately in cold Mood fcr thi action. "If the Gorman Kovernment has In f.irt pc rjetr,i!e.l t:ch a crime in the faf' of a British subject helil prisoner r-- : ; 1 ) v --- A ,.. : . . - - . The resolutions call attention to the to business by such probable damage cf traffic service and ap interruption peal to the employees to reconsider their refusal to arbitrate their de mands. 1 - - :j Arbitration. . I TIE-U- P Com m issions Urge Railroad j .. : FOREST SERVICE URGES WOOD BLOCKS "' " : mm I consider that plenty of iron in my blood is the secret of my great strength, power and endurance. |