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Show THE BAHT HAKE M'itlHUJNE, I IN UTAH GROWING Report of State .Commis- sioner Shows Many Additional Plants During Year i Benefits of Inspection Service to Public and Pro- ducers Are Explained. industries n the The state of Utah have shown a steady increase from year to year," says Walter M. Boyden, state dairy and food commissioner, in his biennial report, filed In Adthe office of Governor Bamberger. ditional. .plants, , representing nearly aU lines have beef? established, and numerous improvements have been made in those plants already In existence. This Is especially trus of vegetable and fruit canning plants for which Utah is noted, in other lines Improvements are apparent, and I have every reason to believe will be of. a permanent nature and Without doubt Utah will, In the near future, be recognised as one of the principal states In the western country. The value of maintaining a careful and adequate Inspection service cannot And this la without be overestimated. ooubt one of the most essential branches of public service. A rigid Inspection causes the careless man to do his work in a more careful manner. It prevents the unscrupulous person from perpetrating frauds upon the publlo because of the r, fear of detection. j Adulteration Passing. "It also protects from unfair competition the careful, conscientious and honest dealer. When we consider the vast improvement which even the layman may notice In conditions of today, as compared with conditions which prevailed In former years, one cannot bs other than gratified at the results which have been obtalnd." Mr. Boyden finds that excepting in a few food products, such as milk, edible oils, etc., food adulterations are almost of tbs past. A large number of the samples which failed to pass the state ehem-1were mislabeled, or of short weight, and comparatively the few, outside classes noted. Showed any adulteration. Persistent nation-wid- e campaigns by stats and national officials are given the credit for such conditions. Mr. Boyden refers to the system ot records now installed in his office, under which duplicates are made of records of conditions found by Inspectors and ot orders Issued. In this manner It la sn easy matter at any time to check up on progress or lack of progress made by any business establishment dealing In foodstuffs. - st - Shorter Storage Advocated. With regard to the cold storage law, the commissioner recommended that the time limit which goods should remain in storage before becoming subject to the cold storage goods label should be reduced. At present foodstuffs may be held In cold storage for three months before It Is required that they be labeled on being offered for sale subsequently to tha public. Tbs National Canners association incanforms Mr, Boyden that thirty-tw- o ning factories operated in the state this year, end the total paok In esses was 1.288,422. The pea pack wan the largest in number of cases, bslng (02,142, though this was surpassed by tomatoes when tomato products were also added, the paok of tomatoes being (21,118 cases and of tomato products, 109,842. Other packs in cases wars: '.Asparagus, 82$; beans, IS, 439; corn, 100; hominy, 1500; pork and beans, 18,891; pumpkin, 2391; apples, 1487; apricots, 282; peaches, 527; pears, 1050; plums, (0; henries, 8833, More Money Needed. The state cooperated with the national association in Inspection of the tomato paok; the association inspected dally at each cannery during the entire canning season. The commissioner renews his state-,memade two years ago, that, In order to carry out the provisions of ths law relative to meat Inspection, competent and experienced veterinarians must be employed. The appropriation made for this work has been too limited to carry out the law, improvement is noted ln the manner In whioh meat la being sold retail in Utah. Mr. Boyden recommends the community abattoir' system. Conditions among slaughter-househe says, are improved, but still very far from satisfactory, This department has been compelled .to close a number of these places became. of the filthy conditions surround-bi- g them. Any old shed or outbuilding In many cases has bsen converted Into a slaughter-hous- e and has been used for the purpose of preparing food for human consumption, to be Disced on the market. 1 am convinced that there Is no sure means of remedying the slaughter-hous- e conditions in the state other than by the enactment of a stringent law definitely fixing the manner of their construction and operation. If the community abattoir plan were adopted, i butchers in certain localities could combine to establish a slaughter house whleh would meet with the state's expense than requirements at much leas is required to maintain an adequate one for each individual dealer." The commissioner says that Some te In the state are propslaughter-house- s the erly located and are well adapted to The purpose fpr which they are Intended. aphowever, above conditions mentioned, ply. in his opinion,s to a majority of the slaughter-houseThe department Is preparing a list of s Slaughter-housegiving a definite and accurate description ot each, says the report. The report goes into detail with regard to the commercial feeding etuffs on the Utah market, control and regulation of which were placed under the office by the 1119 legislature. Analyses made by chemists for tha department of samples from each such product sold In Utah are given to the report, and ehouidU bs tn every Mr. Boyden's opinion, of value dairyman in the stats The commissionof the law er finds that the enforcement dequiree considerable attention, and he recommends a small registration fee, to be paid by the manufacturer, to meet r. . guch cost, Hotel Record Kept. ' 14: o ; o xfoSafd Sign on COTYS PERFUMES, ORIGINAL BOTTLES When you buy foods in glass tumblers and jars, look 'for the above trade-mar- k on the Cap. Its your most . A SF DJer 53X0 to 5 5.C3 m. 21.60 te packages $1.60 t - Bishop Moulton Speaks at Business Club Luncheon fteorge A. Goff presided at hte Progressive Business club luncheon at the Hotel Utah yesterday. W. Moulton of the Bishop Arthur Episcopal church addressed the dub on Business and the chrlatmas Spirit." He defined the Christmas spirit x a .matter of brothershlp, good will and service., Joseph Kennedy entertained the club with violin solos and was accompanied by Mrs. Dels Beesley Dahiqulst. The club adopted a memorial to congress urging stricter regulation of immi- gration. account i of the holidays the club On will not hold another luncheon until December II. , ,1 NEW SWEDEN COUPLE-WED- Special to Tbe Trlbuae. IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, Deo. 18. Mis Mamie Fast and Thure Anderson were married yesterday evening at the home ot tho former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Fast, In New Sweden. Th Rev. O. T. Peterson, psor of ths Swedish mission, officiated. was Mist The bridesmaid Nora Fast, sister of the bride, and tha beet man was HU mar Anderson, brother of the bridegroom. te 9 $4.25 'Rlgauda Perfume with original glass stopper bottle $140 to $2.$S Mary Garden . We have prepared a faadnadng booklet that tells you what you ought to know about this vital subject. We sand it free. Ask for The 8tory Preserving." j)t HOUBIjG ANTS Co. The Queen of Perfumes 2X44 West 16th Street, Chicago the reign of Louis XV, perfumes so in favor that etiquette prescribed a different odor for each day.. The house of Houbigant was the Royal Perfumer to Louis brilliant court, known to the world as la cour parfumee. UNDER And now from the suns flower fields of southern France, marvelously developed alnce Louis' time, comeg the master product of the same Houee of Houbigant the equialt Ideal, tha one perfume that etiquette In our time prescribes for every occasion. . e, Water $2X0 to $3.75 $140 to. $6.75 . ; - Rlgauds M.f y Garden Toilet Set to $1$ - $6.50 t Rl gaud's Mary Garden Toilet Water from. each. T. L. Irvine of Salt Bake Writes in part: Relative to tho bread situation, I feel that the only relief from the present difficulty, relative to labeling the weight, la to Standardise by adequate legislation, 1 therefore take taw liberty to recommend that you give this matter your careful consideration." The commissioner recommends a law standardising food packages. , Toilet $1.76 r ed ic DJer Kies Melba Toilet Melba Perfumes In the e r 1 I aa) Orig- $2.C0to$2.$5 $9.64 When buying, be constantly on the lookout for this trade-mar- k. foods Accept no. glass-packwithout ii. to $3.50 Perfume Kiss bottics v - DJer Klee Toilet KerkofFs Melba Per. fume Toilet Sets ed Orig- $4.25 to $15. CO ounce, Water $1X0 to Phoenix-Hermet- ' inal Houbigenta Ideal Perfume Baccarat Bottles . gi$3.C0 Glass, with this It Cap, la the best container. leaves no opportunity for deterioration all the original Savor and purity are retained. . . Cetya Perf greet, bulk, at, Tjl ftnatt Jacqueminot, L'Origan. - LEfhiurt.' Jas Cor Violetta dependable safety sign. It means that the packer has provided the most reliable seal possible to procure. trade-mark- .. $7.35 La Jacqueminot.. Rose,' LOrtgan, LEffleurt, Jasmin de Cores and La Violetta Fourpre. glass-packe- d foods Scales in Good Condition. Preparations for an extensive cam Paigq to increase Jts membership were made at a meeting of the Lieutenant Clarence E. Allen post No. 402, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United Ktates, held on Thursday, December 18, In the armory building. All men who have seen service in any foreign aountry with tho United States army, navy or marines are eligible to membership tn this , organization. Officers for the ensuing year swore elected as follows! Commander, Sli Engilman; senior vice commander, Leslie Broberg; ' Junior vice commander, U B. Fltt; quartermaster, C. B. Ellerbecki chaplain, N, 8. Dewson; officer of the dap. Jack H, Davis; true-tei eighteen months, Georgs Baldwin; adiutant, George E. Cosgrove; sergeant major, Elmer- McGhan; quartermaster sergeant, Thomas Anderson; patriotle Instructor. C. P. M. Hansen; post historian, Hors oe Smith; guard, Thomas Gunn; sentinel, W. C. Mason; bugler, A, Q. -- Roberts; color bearers, Tom Gllligan and Clyde Bradshaw. . Regular meetings of the post win be held on the first and third Thursday of each month, ths next meeting to take place on January 8. Communications regarding post affairs should be addressed to the post adjutant, George E. Cosgrove, 328 Wilson avenue. ttV - Dainty individual pieces or sets, full of the very charm of the Xmas Holiday,' bringing the loveliest odors of the worlds most fragrant flowers to miladys toilette and dressing table, ' Surely a gift appropriate. Information as to the sanitary of hotels their location, equipment and other accommodations is kept on file in the office aa a result of the record system adopted In connection with Mr. Boyden says that hotel 'Inspection. traveling public takes adquite often the tha vantage of the opportunity to learn from facte concerning hotelsMu the state this record. The commissioner remarks that there are probably several hundred places in for the state where accommodations travelers may be had which cannot be classed as hotels under tne present law. He urges that, for the protection of ths eo traveling public, the law be amended that Buch places holding out to the public that accommodations may be had there, may be Inspected. AH Inspectors for the department have inspected hotels while traveling In the discharge of other work, and the hotels are thus inspected several times each year. Borne 848 hotels are listed In the stats paying a total In of 81804. , . . nt s, Ww No Gift More Acceptable to the Fastidious Woman Than eondl-tfonti- Foreign Wars Veterans' Post Elects Officers XX SUsSSietitj ' In the weights and measures depart' meat, there has been a heavy increase In the number of scales tested, but a falling off in the number of scales con- demned or confiscated, or in the adThis is taken by iuetments necessary. to Indicate that the incorrect or crooked scale la gradually being weed-- e dout. Of 4800 scales tested during the past biennium, fifty were condemned, four confiscated, and 128 were ordered adjusted. tnBimilar experience haa been met with the case of gasoline pumps and the visible measuring device Is finding favor with the public, the report notes Of 811 measuring pumps tested were in the last two years thirty-fiv- e condemned, and 134 adjusted. The work in Ogden and Salt Bake is left largely to the local sealers of weights and measures. A report la appended JSlUltJNliMt, 'jJJ2AJEilUiic lif, J3UJNUAX -- . Houblgants Toilet Sets Quelque Fleur and Ideal Report of Federal Forester Urges Immediate Steps to Stop . Useless Devatation. $11.25 to $31.50 cut-ov- 1 to-d- v. Richard Hudnut Richard Hudnut Toilet to $3.50 Waters Richard Hudnut Perin original fumes, package. $1.00 to $7.50 V Teitet t Set- aSec, Rose of Acrasia, Wat-ea- u, and Du Barry odors, .$140 to $10.00 MANON PERFUME $8.19 HOUGAUDS Oriental odor, beautiful and frosted bottle in attraotiv HOUGAUDS PERFUME Flora! g2.60 odors Violet, Hose, Carnation, Lily of th I CE Valley, Lilac, Locust and W I Sweet Pea 11.60 HOUGAUDS TOILET WATERS Moral odors Violet, Rosa, Carnation, Lily of the Valley, Lilac, Locust and Sweet Pea RIGAUDB UN AIR EMBAUME TOILET SET Handsome leather case, can be used for jewel case SOg W$ vwvsfatJ when empty FLORAL-ODOR$1.50 HOUGAUD'S PERFUMES, Violet, Rose, Carnation, - Lily of the Valley. Lilaa, Locust and Sweet (8Ctj 114-- Pea; cut glass stopper bottle.. wUG 0. out-gla- ss S2.es box..,. $4.00 AURORA TOILET Slender cat-gla- ss tractive Christmas boa.. WATER Beautiful and frosted bottle In at-- 2 $2 65 t... All Ivory Toiletware Greatly Reduced Par. fume Violet Omar, SI-0- All Ivory Toiletware Greatly . - I Reduced USEFUL, PRACTICAL, BEAUTIFUL AND INEXPENSIVE Christmas Suggestions er prl-vs- ts $5.25 to $19.50 oW. WASHINGTON. Dec," 18. Forests east of the Rocky mountains are. being devastated so rapidly by cutting and burning 'that the nation soon Will be dependent for the bulk of its construction lumbar upon the forests of the Pacific coast, .William B, Greeley, United States forester, declares in his annual report made public today. The .situation, Mr. Oreftey says. Is one that affects ths public welfare of the entire couhtry and he urges a federal law to stop the devastation of the remaining forest and to put the idle forest land at work. 'Two-thirof the original forests of ths United States have been culled, cut over or burnt, and three-fiftof their merchantable timber is gone." said Mr. is "The country Greeley. taking about 28.000.- 005.000 cubic feet of wood .annually from its forests and is growing about 8.000.- 000.000 cublo feet. We are cutting timber of every class, even trees too (mail for the sawmill, much faster than they are being replaced in our forests. Thar ere still large quantities of timber in the United States, but they are not in the right place. Sixty-on- e per cent of what is left lies west of the Great Plains, far from the bulk of our popul. tion, egricuiture and manufactures. The exhaustion of one forested section after another In ths eastern states has been reflected In rising transportation costa. The distance between the average sawI mill and the average steadily increasing, and ws shall soon be denpendent for the bulk of our construction lumber upon the forests of the Pacific coast. These conditions have had a vital bearing upon the high cost of lumber, which, during the year reached a prohibitive figure for many usee and checked the building of homes, which is so urgently needed. t'We have used up our forests wfthout growing new one. At the bottom of the whole problem is idle forest land. Th United States contains 128.000.000 acres and denuded forests containof ing no saw timber; 81.000.000 acres of this have been completely devastated by forest fires and methods of cutting which destroy or prevent new timber growth. The area of Idle or largely idle land Is being Increased bv from 8,000, 000 to 8.000,000 acres annually as the cutting and burning of. forests continue. To stop the devastation and put idle lands te work th first step 'must be th enactment of a federal law whose two chief provisions are a comprehensive with the plan of federal cooperation states tn fire prevention and the develof extenand opment forestry practice, sion of the national forests through purchases.' through the inclusion of oilier now In federal ownership, tlmberland . and through exchange." Speaking of a national forestry policy, Mr. Greeley said the program laid down by Colonel Graves had been further developed. This program," he said, is based on the conviction that the problem of halting forest devastation Is fundamentally a national, not a local, problem, and must be faced and handled as such. At the sam time It is fe't that th speediest, surest and most equttsble action cun k secured through dependence on the police powers of the stale for the enforcement of such reasonable requirements ss should b mad of hrivate ownlor ers and on the state government providing organised protection of privet land against fir. Because ths problem Itself Is essentially national that is, one affecting ths publlo welfare of the entire country and requiring to be attacked as a whole, not leadership and a Clecemoal bothoffederal federal aid are obligabe should it upon obligatory tory. owners to apply the safeguards necThere Is essary to prevent devastation. a praetlcal unanimity of agreement that the first and most essential step Is a natton-wl- d protection from forest fires, epptlcahla to all classes of forest land I and born Jointly by the landowner and tho public. tCHOONER IN DISTRESS. NEW YORK. Deo. 18. The American schooner Jano Palmer, Newport News to Bueno Aire. Is In dlntiess about (ug miles Oast of rape llatteras, according to a wireless dispatch received here The dispatch was. sent by the ssemeer-Vwtpt- l, which reported ehe any needed assiststandingA by to lend ance. heay storm was raging and ths disabled steamer was leaking cadlyl the message said. home-build- Houblganta Quelque Fleurs Perfume Original bottles of the famous Baccarat cutting HERE A HP THERE FROM You'll find hundreds her for men, time to assist you in selecting th , help you find IL Auto-Stro- p Safety Rasore Gillette Safety Rasore Enders Safety Razor EverReady Safety Razors Gem Damaskeens Safety Razor Durham Duplex Safsty Razor Shaving Brushes t Star Vibrator Star Shower Bath Sprays Knickerbocker Bath 'Spray Sterno Heating Appliances Waterman's Ideal Fountain ' Pena Everaharp Pencils De VIlblB Perfumlters . D Vilblss Perfume Droppers women, children fer all the faml ly. Th correci gift. Somewhere a SCH Ivory style f, roli-up- Hi rose Double Vanity with compact rouge and powder ' Toilet Waters In beautiful Christmas boxes Mens Shaving Mugs Oriental Inoenss Burner Orlentgl Incense lngersoll Watches Hyglo Manlcur 8ots 11 r Military Brushes In ebony, coca bota and French Ivory - a, Manicure Set. In vanity bag and band bag ABOUT THE STORE Schramm-Johnso- Stores are oreoered at this JUST THE RIGHT THING. Were her to n le In dainty, original Perfume bottles. . All the imported end domestlo numbers. Cutex Boudoir Manicure Seta Face Powders Hand Creams and Lotions Cold Creams and Vanishing Cream ' , ' Shaving Craani . Tooth Paata and Powder Mon'a Roll-U- p Traveling Case . well-kno- For the Kiddies Xma$ A Brownie Kodak ' Xmas $n f Ladles' Pullman Aprons Rubberized 8ponge Bags Msnlcur Implements Manicure Emery Boards Orangewood Sticks Poker Chip Celluloid Floating Toy Celluloid Balls and Rattles Celluloid Kewple Dolls ' Baby Character Doll Dressed Dolls, a large variety Plain and Beautifully Colored Rubber Balls Playing Cards. ebony, satin Hair Brushes eocabola. Cloth Brushes Iln pyralln or Whisk Brooms tyory. Hat Brushes r Chocolates Where Else Such a Variety?. Sweets, McDonalds, Ostler a, Whitman!, Huyleri, Lowney$ and Loi Anrele3 Chocolate Shop. Fresh Shipmenti Daily. Mail orders receive prompt attention. We will deliver anywhere ) anytime.,.. No. 0 Erownie Price, $2.$8 Picture 14X2'4 Inohe."'" "Bilk 1 got a Brownie. Cant you hear Lddl yelling the Joyful nan a to friend Bill 7 The le In. the box tint's the reason thatexperience you or your hl.dren can get rood picture wlih tha No. 0 Brownie from the start. OTHER BROWNIES UP TO $1885 KODAKS FROM $9.41 UP Jv r |