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Show Speelel t Tribune. The WASHINGTON, D. C July IS. Stock-me- n should learn to becognie and avojd the whofled milkweed. lt.la a plant very poisonous to cattle, horses and sheep. It grows abundantly In certalrtsectlons of southwestern Colorado, southern Utah, and.the northern counties of Arizona and according to the United artment of agriculture, which has made bn investigation of the effects of this plant on stock. Hdrds should not be glven lhe o; glderable quantity 'Of this plant The whorled milkweed Is a foothill plant, not being found above an altitude of 7500 feet, and sometimes grows with great luxuriance about ditehee and In abandoned fields' As small a quantity as ounces of the green two and lf plant, will kill a sheep, and-- two and steer. pounds may kill a eat if Horses are not likely to it, but thy do they are as easily poisoned as sheep. Frequent cases of poisoning occur when animals are confined to areasjwhere the plant grows, and have little eise to eat, and under such circumstances heavy losses result. Many animals also havs been killed by eating hay .containing the plant dried. No antidote for the poison has been found. The whorled milkweed la exceedingly difficult to eradicate, but by cutting It down before the beads are formed much oan be accomplished In pastures and along trails Ordinarily it stands from one' to three feet Iri height. Persons Interested. In securing Information regarding this menace to live stock should writs the United States department of agriculture, Washington, D, C,, for a bulletin "The entitled, department Whorled Milkweed." one-ha- lf one-ha- Recruiting Records Are Brdken Monday Major Walter it. Gilbert of the adjutant generals office of the U. 8. A., Washington, (X C., visited the Salt Lake army recruiting station yesterday on an official inspection tour of recruiting dis- tricts Captain A. R. Emery, commanding officer of the local station, has been promoted' to JulyL About 7000 service men have mode application for Victory medals according 4o Lieutenant R. V. Laughlin, who has charge of the distribution. Sergeant William E. Campbell of the recruiting force yesterday received his medal, the first to arrive at ths Salt Lake station. Monday was a record day for enlistments. leading any since March 17. Fol.t lowing are the enlistments; Lloyd Cardwell, Caldwell. Idaho: Mel- vln Bruner, Bloomington, 111.; Louie . man. Bloomington, IU.t CJood- rich. Bloomington, 111.; Irvin Endtcott. Boise, Idaho; Frank Blackman,. Dayton, Ohio; Charles F; Yeamon, ..Caldwell, o Idaho; Wallace Wright, Salt lake: DlteUlo, Joliet, 111.; Edward Chaves, Monte Vista, Colo.; Anselmd Chaves. Monte Vista, Colo.; Henry DIM, Long Island, New York; Aaron Herts. Carteret, N. J.; George Huston, Twin Falla, Idaho; Carl Daugherty, Farmland. Ind.; Gordon Tice, St. , Bhaffer, Paul, Idahd; John Louis, Mo.; Hubert Walling, Jerome, Idaho; George H Alford. Spokane. Wash. th Die-tlri- . Funeral J)f Murray Citizen . Will Be Held Thursday Special rte The Tribune. MURRAY, July 19. The funeral of Andrew A. Blorn, who died at hla homa In Mbrray on Sunday, will be held at noon Thursday at the Murray First ward meet ing house. Blorn was born In Denmark on He came to the November, 22, 1852. United States in 17. He was city judge at Murray for two terms and was justice of the peace for. Murray precinct. Salt Lake county, for four terms, being in this office at the time of hla death. He served on two foreign missions for the L. D. 8. r church. . He la survived by three brothers, living in Idaho; three sisters at Smlthfleld, Utah; a sister In American Falls, Idaho, and by his widow and ten children, thirty-on- e grandchildren and two great-gran- d , children. . . s Bedouin Tribes Combine Against French Troops BEIRUT, Syria, July 17 (By the Associated Press.) The Bedouin tribes of Northern Mesopotamia havs formed i coalition against the French, while Fel sal, head of the Syrian state, Is endeavoring to organise the bandits west of Aleppo Into a movement against ths French. Clashes between the Arabs and French are expeoted soon and the situa. i , tion is tense. The Lebanon executive assembly is reported to have agreed secretly with sal that autonomous Lebanon shall be jar of ths Syrian kingdom. BUTCHERS ARE ENJOINED. SIOUX CITY, July 19. Union butchers were permanently enjoined, by District Judge J. W. Anderson today from picket- Ing' meat markets which the anion men consider unfair, to organised labor. Ths markets obtained a temporary Injunction a month ago. The union men will appeal to ths state supreme court. r THOR seventeen years motorists have been buying cord tires since one of the factories of the pen to run across one in a tire shop. ( United States Rubber Company built the first cord tire. Ask the average motorist today why he buys cord tires and he will tell you because they give him more miles for his dollar on the average. You will probably see hintxfeeling the tire the .... dealer hands him not One of the reasons the biggest reason why' the -- consciously; perhaps, but as if from force United States Rubber of habit Company began its enlarged production of cord ask 'Sometimes to see another tire of the Htires was because it realized that cord tires could be same make. made to deliver more miles Experience has taught r not only on the average him that even tires of the but all the time. heill Experienced motorists have come to expect Something more from cord tires than merely more mile r n the average. money than any other tire concern on earthin' making its Cord Tires uniform. And by uniformity is meant not taking the exceptional tire and trying to find out what made o Watch an experienced motorist buy ing a sometime when you tire hap- - r This company has spent more The cor owner who seeks United States standards in tubes is well paid in if exceptional, hut building every tire you build to the highest more mileage for his tires. U. S. Red Tubes. US. Grey Tubes. x standards of quality. u T WILL RUSH COAL SHIPMENT. WASHINGTON, July 1$. Coal operators and railroad executives presented to the Interstate commerce commission In executive session a plan, agreed to by them designed to facilitate the distribution of coal to the northwest, New England and Canadian territory. Details of the proposal were withheld until the commission has an opportunity to study It. POLICE FIND MISSING WHEEL. Peter Conde, 17 years of age, of the State Industrial school at Ogden, la said by ths police to have stolen, came to police to fils a report of the loss headquarters of his ma chins,, yesterday was happy, when told ths anti-vic- e squad had recovered the machine. Patrolmen Joseph W. Bringhurst and Reed Billings of the anti-vic- e squad, had arrested Conde while In Poe session of the wheel. Conde will be returned today to the State Industrial school, the . , police say. A lad whoaa bicycle INJUNCTION IS SUHPENDEO. ASHBVILDE, N. C.t July 19. The United States circuit court of appeals to night stayed and suspended the Injunction recently issued by Federal Judge Payton at Phlllippi. W, Va., restraining the Baltimore A Ohio and all other rail, roads east of the Mississippi affording preferential treatment to coal mines in the assignment of cars. Waak Stomach, Had I I had a weak stomach for years.. would havs more, or leas pain In my stomach and feel uncomfortable for nours after eating. 1 loat weight and became real miseraweak and debilitated. I ble when I began taking Chamberlain's Tablets. The promptness with which they benefited me surprised both myself and my family. They strengthened my digestion end In a short time I waa sound and well. writes Ernst Pharo. Beaver Dam, Ohio. (Advertisement.) u . Tire Division Branch, 342 South State Held on Charges bf Cheating Shipping Board KEr YORK, July 19. R. B. Bowman, chief engineer of the United 8tatea (hipping board vessel Dio, and a former fuel oil agent for tha Standard Oil Company of New Jersey whoae name la withheld, are being held here for the federal grand jury on a charge of conepirary to defraud the (hipping board of more than 99000 through a fuel oil transaction at Rio d( Janeiro, Braxll,' Assistant United States Attorney it. F. Kelly announced today. Bowman, according to the prosecutor, having (00 tons of unlogged'V oil In the Dlo'e fuel tanks, la alleged to have arranged with the Standard Oil agent for delivery tons of oil and presented a bill for 1000 tons, which was paid by F, M. Johnson A Co., shipping board agents. of 600 Mexicans Commandeering Horses on Yankee Ranch I.AREPO. Texas, July 19. Mexican troops commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Miguel Martlnej entered a ranch owned by Alfred Matthews, an American, and commandeered- eaveral horses, other equip-meand clothing, according to official Information United given out- - today. States Consul Robertson has reported the , Incident to Washington. Marlines Is said to have threatened to X St hang an American boy named Antonio Federal authorities here said they were Trevino, who lives on the Matthews prohibited from giving out any Informaranch, unless he confessed what ha knew tion regarding the party. about Ricardo Gonzales, leader of ths rebels who attacked Nuevo Laredo. The ' boy was released and Martlnea is reported to havq. departed lor caunpaioe. to Jugo-Sla- v regiments of ths Sassarl. brigade bad reached Trieste. Disorders at Trieste (gainst the Jugoslav population- - wers said to havs spread along the Istrian coast and to havs re- suited In considerable destruction of prop- ALIENS ARE ROUNDED UP. PORTLAND, Ore., July 19. A carload of sixty-- , five Russian radicals rounded un at Seattle joined a ' carload of mtxed aliens ' who' had been aesembled at Ban Francisco bers today for a farewell transcontinental tourney to New York, whence they will sal) for their native lands; The deportees received no reception tn Portland. Armed guarda watched each car and. the"Thovements of Its passengers. Huge and the balance for depreciation' of equipment and for supplies and cash taken over by ths government. railroad also have .Twenty filed claims, most of companies them for of their property during the war. at Pol. erty Max Thelen, head of ths liquidation dl vision of the railroad administration, has sent Bill I and other representatives to WASHINGTON, July 19. Ita.y e cities to check up on Chicago ths claims of the Pullman company and the railroads pretroops to the line of demarcation beCompany vious to effecting a settlement. ' tween and Italy, In antlclpa Practically all of the railroads In the tlon of fresh disorder on the Dalmatian WASHINGTON, July 19. Claims total- country claim ths government failed coast, says cablev dispatches nvelved to. ing 924.422.264 have been filed by the to return their that property In as good condl-tlo- n Pullman company .with the railroad adlegation from Laiday by the Jugo-Slaas when over. Under their taken bach via Belgrade. , ministration, . contracts It was obligatory unnn the re Arrival of a regiment' of Infantry and Of this amount 912.000,009 Is for comerr.ment to spend for maintenance each some artillery at Logatets waa reported, pensation for the rental of Its proper- Tear an amount equal to the uvnagu ul while It was said that the 161st and 162nd ties during ths period of federal oontrol, the three pre-wtest year. Italy Sending Troops Border v. . Jugo-Slav- la Is Presented Pullman ' by . ar r |