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Show 1010 4 L. XXVI.-N- O. 150 -- E-IEMA-LID- The Herald as ant I Musing advertising medium, you are 'PROVO, UTAH; THJJRSDAY, FEBRUARY 8; ROYLANCEDODGESREBEES BI6 COIWS ID IN MEXICAN REVOL UT10N BE. HELD Njnyrronnfl ID pnuivic rnuivi WHEAT DEMAND IS III -- 1885; OOIlGnESSMIl JOSEPH TACGflriT TEE III S GRATEFUL HI BY THE The L0 .ESTABLISHED 1912." able to speak to more than .five thousand reader? every issue The Herald adver-- " tiaers get results because the readers get all the local news. 1312 -- con Success of Last Week's Affair Brings Notice : pl congress will ba held In Salt Lake City September 3, 4 and 5 next This was definitely decided ait a conference last night at According to reports recelve'd .by the Commercial club between Presi the local flour trade, Utah and south dent A. C. Trumbo, Secretary Edwin ern Idaho farmers nave planted a Richard J, Becker and large acreageto Turkey Red wheat W. and allele Young While there may not be a sufficient gation of local business men. " quantity of this wheat to grind Among the many important topics straight, it is believed there will be that will be considered at the con enough the coming seasoaJor blend gress to be held in this city will be: ing purposes. Some ' bakers assert Monetary reform. that flour from Turkey Red - wheat Panama-Pacifiexposition. makes the best bread of any flour "See American First." ; obtained in the northwest. Good roads. It is said that the demand for hard Government reclamation of lands by wheat for flour making purposes in irrigation and drainage. creases each year -- while juthe. soft speakers expected to- be wheat becomes correspondingly a drug present are Andrew Carnegie, 'former on the market and that Turkey Red United States Senator Aldrich, the wheat solves the milling question; presidential nominees of the two na that home bakers would patronize tional parties, govtrnor3 of states and home made fjour if the mills would a number of leaders of thought on furnish good stock and that the mills the lines in which the congress is would raise sufficient. Turkey Red interested. Wheat.'. The milling industry in Utah It is expected that the convention has ..been urged to organize as it is will bring not less than 2000 delegates organized.in other states in order to to Salt Lake City The national 1m realize a broader market, and better porjtance of the congress means that profits. the city will be kept constantly In Henry HBlood'ofTCa'ysville said the eye of the nation until the con yesterday: "It may be that some sec- gress is over. tions mafy not be adapted to the sucSecretary Becker w ill commence the cessful raising of Turkey Red wheat. campaign work of the congress within Consequently we cannot consistently a week. For the first two months he will direct the campaign from Kanplant this class of wheat when will bring better returns. It sas City and he will then move his is quite necessary to have the headquarters to Salt Lake City. in our, endeavors and it is the intention to invite several practical farmery to our next millers' PAYSON and grain dealers convention that we mayaxa thek.ppsiyon. and if of some assistance to them." commercial MILLERS of Appreciation - 1 - m 1--,. - ,:Lz ;,." American Property in Mexico Unsafe Under ... ..Conditions After being .entertained by United "States ambassadors and consuls in old Mexico, after being held up by bands of rebellious natives say nothing of per I fectlng a business roundup In a half dozen A V'- -r-- M it m n V , eastern states and . bask- - ing a few days in the .warm sun shine of Californ M v .fir William ifl M. Roylance of this city returned last night after an ab sence of five weeks. The trip was ;one of business, but was not without Its adventures. Mr. Roylance returns to Utah with the usual expression of pride for the stale and especially for this city Mr. Roylance viewed the unsettled -- conditions In Mexico and Is of the opinion that' the people of the United States are "hot fully informed as to the real situation confronting the people of the "republic. Only: a meagre portion of Jhe real trouble is" carried by the press dispatches, much of the Actual distress first-hande- d : being Surpressed. n There Is" a noticeable expression, among the Mexicans and while this is alleged to have its anti-foreig- 1 I ! anoth-ervariet- y PIEER e possi-bleTb- 1 "ralsIhgandTioTerbusi-hes'at"'Tbompsonr"each---ow-nin- DIES AT RIPE AGE Mrs. Alttieda McClellan, a Utah pio neer of 1847 and a Payson pioneer of 1851, died there yesterday morning at COiUEDS -- - if '- I! 1 - CIS BLE DISPUTE tep !fiThe -- 'f.f claliniownership. and'iof ., A .6 - ?ur T f ;::: .i.:.-:-' ..;.:., .;.,.'..;..'.; r V- - A "f each' compaby past representatives tb ground to work, have attempted In controvcrly at the.OTie. J.imel- and a sbort'.tinle agS- it'" was .Heessary Jo eall the cottnfy'- Blierifr.nd aUoriiey to prevent,,what ibmaot. tKb citizens In the aorth "end-- f shed.. might result - Tnq state board being received cltylind sections " difficult to estimate. The was" good and enthusiasm pre-- " .......... s vailed in all the meetings. One fea- - , ture which will be a factor for good was the fact that the meetings were bo Hi " gen- abape. j Some little complaint delegates but ' stu- - by the students. Committee Is Grateful. -- The following message -- haa beea handed in .by the committee in charge " the affair: of "Wo desire to extend our thanks ito , all who : assisted 1a retaking; tha of Joseph Taggart Is the new congressman, Trom the second district convention, week in Prove of late Reprethe fill out Una to the been unexpired elected Kansas, having We feel thai t people of the city sentative A. C. MltcheU. did their utmost .to entertain -t- he-vi do we extend sitors. Especially thanks and appreclaNon to' the Brig-haL Young university for the .use ol . AND THREE College hall and other courtesies, the stake presidency for the use of. .the tabernacle, Prof. J. H. Boshard and, school children of the city, the Vineyard band, the drum corp, the business men of the city whose donations FIFTY-FI- VE DEATHS IK CITY made the, affair a success, and all who THE COMMITTEE. aided." . tLEVEH HUNDRED BIRTHS: TJHEH1INDBED AID board of health sbould be made ur this effect. "Too much cannot be said against r the closet, It is filthy, a menaee to public health, a disease producer, snd no community .sewer Lsystemas with an Provo jjas ought to tolerate It longer; ,"At lhl spwlal time-th- e city ought to have a sanitary inspector, whose duty should. be, to Inspect all the back yards In Provo City strict observance should be taken of thoso places s closets, maintaining out-docoudl-tion- s The exact manure and heaps. should be noted and reported to the' board of health for Immediate- - ac The back yards of business Mon. In ftwiea, the north part of the city, ought to be Inspected, first on account of more con j t'M ed To'iiS i IT o ns ob fa h ea"' IrTYrie' 38 All rented houses should quarters. to be forced connect, with the! sewer limit should immediately. bo given to have all manure heaps rempjed .beyond the city limits. Pigsties found in a filthy condition should beabated, and owner denied prlvi-leges Jo maintain jajne-iclty limits. "The Improper disposal of f lowing-voil creates a nuisances detrimental to public' health. It not only causes out-doo- "Tlie result is, that we have fewer cases of contaglous atidlnrecndusr diseases than any other city In the stale. Typhoid fever Is practically unknown, except for a case occasionally on the Jre.j-erej3iouUkixtSj births In Provo City limits, and 155 deaths.. - This Included deaths from the State Mental hospital and Utah County Infirmary, also, a number" of TJbdies shipped into Provo for burial. there are speaking, Comparatively death. In one to about - three iirths of number Tho Provo City. greater the after deaths occuring jnlddlejer-ioof life.- - .Each' summer and fall seemingly ha Its crop. This statistical comparison argues well for Provo's streets, spjmmtgooiTlieaTth and santtalton:""""" Sl;i,Iaria "We have not, however, reached Uu: 'wKroUie diseasf-prodiicin- g Irrigfting Thi.1 will Uo'.iiI.j'K'?, " ideal sanitary condition, u. "with ditches vigrtatlon profuse we have not be accomplished' until f:iur.d only where this llowirig-wei- l expelled the outdoor closet .and 1? improperly water disposed f. makU'ci'1' eessjioo! beycanl ing It necessary for these- ditches to limits, "We" still have these soveaI-tJm.ejnore a with and stricter regulation con- tp clcnnicd of Owners ditches. than other trolling same, ought , ia- - be Imposed year to bo flowing-wellahould compiled on this' nuisance, j A ramnaicn to- eonnnct with- th icwer f'onncct. JWH with sewer, - .. "ine gutters, aiongAcaaemy aven- as rapialy:a3 .possible.. should bo nip and Center-street,-ithe business ue Business rled on. houses, public y lntan,unsainl-taroften tiUHld, timesget churches and school,' taberrjacles condition, on'account-f-iprope- r should be connected "without delay. An ordinance should ba "created for- attention''" froni th'clfy." Heretofore has had no jiower the "brtard r bidding the' maintenance of CofreK tao old form of Bame to under The closets "within the fire limits. and.the,--iUjidenjUquarter- 'astear RESERVOIR FOR SANTAQUlN. By a vote of 6 to 1, in a special meeting at San'aquin last night In the . schoolhouse, the construction ot reservoir was made sure. The reser-vn- ir sforn anrplna water during the winter. The cost will be approxi mately: The board of ' dire J7Q00. tors of the Irrigation & Canal company has already bargained . for Jthe purchase of the, land for, thes!te, about forty acres. - Tonight the Commercial club will have a meeting to make arrangements for- - pig-stye- almost perfect drainage. ir.g l 1 -- alread y been obtained. MORE STATE" - MONEY"- - -""-- The attorney general yesterday re-eeiyed $2 M'AM 4a. Inhe'ritaner; taitea 1 The estate of AHncenta MFen8leynt York AntrlbutedJ $19,717175 on 100 shares orUnlon PacTfic preferred stock, and 2,500 shares of Union commonT The estateof John S. McLean sent a-- check for" $1,375.75 covering 410 'shares of, Uniorr Pacific preferred." fuis money will be added to Jjief and for the erection' of the New Pa-cll- ic state capitol. new .. , PCK ; s those-maintainin- s g I n. out-doo- ' j ought l!ilJ-tt- proyldrTofT -- bt had-t- o 'depend the mayor tQ, flushed-oue the t the-sew- - fife-traps- er 3 v- J. DOCTORS '$' TO CHANGE " - dean-up-en- ineollege hall so that the wents were able to attend, Theedii--.- .. pationar Ideas will be carried to all parts of the state not only by the Jie corrected, was by ordinarfce, wherein those' creatlnxi ihis.conaiuon ougnt healtliwherein should the 'board of t nVadfe of some rcfusefthe" merchants saldgarbagel ete., eral health state. Jhe' reports show against' If have,,cohtroC ; and, give necessary, who not thelrback tbat Ciere..jiaa.been 'dp Every yards pay fofits. proper disposal. keep notable., ln contagious disease cases'lrt cleatp.These were 'gi.ven1 ordert; to residence in the oltx ought to be con- orders' tothe Toad Buperviaof to clean d no eomplaintt will-b- e within! one same if it becomes necessary, to re-nected with comparison -- with' the record ;of the issued." corresponding dates last , year. year" and ft general order j from the .....f (Continued on. Page Five.) .''. of-th- attend--anco- held tVes'e-'lJralf- " - The good in com- - fire- - Umits ought to be. extended and j cjty'jiffvernment .'DiiT.;':.l,.lteaUyfU;iutw:ii-.-JPorUthe i. reports mission that they had made a canvass tfie" proper disposal of garbage wWdupt an order 'frdm cnto of the from various foundlhlhgsTnTood" tp be state indicate ' that the I J to-th- of - ..!.. tary conditions surrounding It. J'ro7 Vo compares well wltli any city in the United States from a sanitary landing in Salt Lake valley during the taking into consideration summer of 1847. After living on Cot already established to pertonwood creek for a few years she fect our sanitary needs. Besides this came south with her father," arriving Provo has an ideal location pVovld- - g ' .,v:v,. Polly Stewart, she bore all the hardships of the Journey across the plains, and-Willia- f "t Pro-c- o 1851. hquse was ransacked and the good" destroy"She was tnarrfed "to Samuel W. Mced. Other foreign shops were robbe! one half interest; that on account of Clellan in December, 1856. To this . has ben-bo-rn a family jana piunaereo. inis was accompusn plaintlf.g xe5idence...in England ed at the instigation of about thret " thirteen whom nine " are of childFen, the affairs "of the" parthershTp""were hundred former government employes are Wilburn S. McClel-tao- f living. They w.the haada, of . JWa. iro' h erk jtfjth a t Provo, Jame'rneClfellaTi" of terest of economy In the handling of in 1909 the defendant, then having Provo, Jasper-C- . McClellan of Pay in his possession all the property son, George E. McClellan of tie affairs of the government Udaho, TheseeutTage8 -- necessarily jort-- of the 'partnership, denied that the Harrison W. AicCle'lan of Idaho, were Partners or ever hod been, ed jojGermany has brought a hopei Johnson of Canada, Mrs. Nina that that nation will consider ways) The' complaint alleges that up to the O'Conneil of Payson, Mrs. Iva Stark contined of "La Grande, Ore., and means"tor the protection- of for- - year 1909 the C. or; without disagreement. M cClellan of Payson. interruption "P" elgn:property and the "American , could not afford this so the invasions The plaintiff claims that the business if by the American seems almost neees- - has been very,profltable-.andJliat..lhe . sary. firm, accumulated real-- : estate - and . Mr.. to Accordlug Roylance it is gen- money very rapidly, until 1909, when the iart- he .egUmatei'. the"wortfr';bf on .iContJnued page8Ju ft" is 2Si,000. norship ,to have, been 1909 the charged that since the year defendant has carried on the business of the partnership, with the assets, property, etc., In his own name. The At the meeting of the mayor and present assets of ;1he firm are J:t50,-f)00- . comiuiosloners 'which - was held es- CAUSE the nlalntiff alleees.- rda -v orde" were iven that The relief asked by the" plaintiff be placed on , th corner of Fourth e that-thtwo brothers te ..declared Lj vl aim i- vjuiiii oouiu, .'The trial of the case c--f the .Utah partners,; that he partnership be d report from the auditor was : solved and an accounting taken of EIick Marble company against the aaa.waa heard Teterred J.o the mayor. of property,, assets and transactions Dr. E, G. Hughes presented his reAmerican Marble and Oynx company the firm, and that the property be -was - taken up' in the district court sold, all debts paid, and the surplus di- port? for the past year setting forth EBooth. vided equally-, between the 'plaintiff some of the sanitary needs of the city.' yesterday before Judge J. as The report Is ""published In full in a. of out The case' grew dispute and defendants the news columns of this Issue. Claims of marble the to the ownership 1 "Bothr HEALTH STATE' "COOD, Frank, Emery, state companies! lake. west of Utah favorable local-Fro- years. Mrs. At the recent meeting of the McClellan was a typical western piocommissioners the following, reneer woman, beloved by all who knew port was given by Dr. E. G. ' her. Hughes, former city physician. In She born 8, wag Iowa, February "The health of a community is mea 4 1841, and with her parents, B. F. and sured, to a great extend by the sani- the age of comment Jiaa beeji,madeQn.c$rnjgj:oa,ieifc.r,, tan week here last week that it 4r has been suggested that some like affair be pulled off again in the fr near future. The comment has not all been m all parts of th state are coming good re-ports concerning the treatment and entertainment afforded the 4 visitors while here. So mutJb. -- seventy-on- e Ar-thus- a I f c foundation' among the lower, classes Mr. Roylance states that at two antiforeign demonstrations held In Mexico city while he- was there, there was a good sprinkling of men who. showed every indication of the better type, representing the higher element. The feeling against the Americans is any SUIT AT MOAB thing but, encouraging and while there has been but little damage done to American property during the rebelA case Involving more than a third lion riots, it is the itching desire of a great multitude of Mexicans to show of a million dollars is set for trial in their puny hand in a skirmage with the district court, which convenes in American4nterests It will be necessary Moab in April. The action was brought" If the situation- - does, not improve to P. Mallard of Ardgay7 Box Arthur by bring about American, interference, Wilts, England, against his brother, the Americans are forced to take a Harry G. Ballard of Thompsons and forceable hand may be guessed by Salt Lake. .. """ 7T7-- ' any citizen. The complaint says that in 1895 the German Interference, S- two brothers engaged in the mercban- Iii the recent riot In Juarez, a ware owned by German interests disirigr stock - r Vice-Preside- nt Tiie state medical board Iiaa been-watehin- persooa practising" medicine 'itbout certificates from the' board. Tho evidence collected by- the co'nfl-.tfcntlal agenlii of tho board has 'been laid ie fore the attorneys. : The new .. -- - -- mt-dic- . examination;-la- .. ; j l?road! w enough to stop all 'such, practice. Unless holding a license, no person may diagnose, or give treatment for any bodily ailment,- v-- . " -- ThroughouJ tbe itHeJheroare. mid. wives who are licensed as sdeh, but ' carry on a 'general medical nurslns . business., in Addition.. law. Dr. v e come under, the ban G. Pr Harding, secretary "to the board, states that there pfohably'are fifteen men and .women in Salt Lake alone who""itte'iTicfo six ot -Warrants, have been Issued-fo1 them... Such-perso- 'of-th- ,f' r' ns -- |