OCR Text |
Show V. Jf TAKEN PRISONERS. BY. GERMANS AT VERDUN MUST KEEP PROMISES iiTT jpjjji PRESIDENT COMPLETED HAS ' NOTE, WHICH IS LAST WORD ON SUBMARINE ISSUE. 40 ij r ' UTAH im.nwwwf 4 S& A. a . f w -- ? . STATE HEWS A postofftce has been established at Vivian Park In Prove canyon. Arbor day was observed at the (Japitol grounds Saturday afternoon by'lthe planting of trees. The olT police station building at Salt Lake will be the new home of the Charity organization and other so- cieties. Makes it Clear That Only immediate Change in German Policy Can Make Possible Continuance of. Friendly Relations. - The communication Washington. which he has drafted as the last wdhl of the United States to Germany on the submarine issue was completed by President WllsOnJOn Monday. The document reviews Germanys submarine activities since the Lusitania was sunk, almost a year ago, attd makes clear that only an immediate change in the German policy cair make possible the continuance of friendly relatiousbetweea the twm -f- -- .. . uations. - Wool-growe- As soon as the president had finished the communication to Germany, ho directed that Seuator Stone, chairman of the senate foreign relations committee, be invited to the White, This is the first photograph from the German side showing that many French were taken prisoners in the house, in order that he might be in $arly fighting at Verdun. The soldiers are shown here marching to the prison camp. formed of the intentions of the ministration. Mr. Wilson himself was the only of ficial familiar with all the 'details of the document, hut it was learned au thoritatively that It is the most emphatic and vigorous diplomatic paper the president ever has approved. Attacks without warning by submarines on merchants vessels Blnce Germany gave notice that ships carrying guns would be considered as vessels of war have been closely studied by the president, with the resulting conclusion that promises made by Germany have not been followed. When the' preparationof the case of the United States was begun it was found that sixty-fivvessels "have been reported otiiclally and unofficial ly as having been attacked without warning by German submarines within the past few weeks. Official reports have not Confirmed ail Hiese tn cldents, however, And, Iheretore, all will not bS included. NOON: CHOW THE CORRELITOS ON RANCH REVIVE8 DOROTHY ARNOLD CASE Convict Says He Helped Bury Body In Cellar. Providence, R. I. Octave Charles Ginoures, a - eonviet- - ia the - Rhode Sotire ofThelioys oTIheSixteenth Infantry, United States army, having their midday repast under the trees on Island state prison at Cranston, de- the famous Correlitoa ranch in Mexico. clared on Monday that he was present at the burial of Dorothy Arnold In the cellar of a magnificent house near AUTO TRUCK TRAIN OFF FOR WORK IN MEXICO West Point. He declared that he was in the party that took the young worn an from a doctors house near New Rochelle, N. Y,, to the West Point place. Ills story is one of the most remarkable ever published. He says for his part lu $250 the ghastly Job. MANY KILLED IN COLLISION. Express Train Runs Into Local Train in Rhode Islands Bradford, R. 1. Driving through a thick fog, the Gilt Edge express, on the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad smashed into the rear of a local passenger train that had come to a stop at the station here. , The rear coach was telescoped and aet on fire and at least seven of the An "passengers in it were killed. eighth victim, Mrs. Oscar Martell of Bouthhridge, Mass., died later from her Injuries. Thirty-fivothers received injuries, and in some cases it was feared that death would follow. 'rSmn: I - . E2SSE3. Auto truck train No. e - V. 2 f . S V ,'vvSv, - C , -- W v a V . V. V V s' A about to leave Columbus, N. M.. to carry supplies to the troops pursuing Villa. LIEUT. WALTER G. KILMER BULGARIAN KING VISITS HIS ALLIES More Land for Homesteaders, Washington. The house passed Representative Timberlakes bill liber alizing the enlarged homestead law by .permitting a person who has made a homestead entry to enter public lands not contiguous to the first entry making in the aggregate not more than 320 acres. Only Excuse for War. Washlngton,-l- n an address wel- coming the Daughters of the American Revolution gathered here for their annual congress, President Wilson de dared that the only excuse America Neutral Ship Sunk. London. The Pinking of a neutral Shfp and a British steamship was re ported by Lloyds Monday. The Norwegian ship Glendoon was sunk by The lost British steamship gunfire was the Harrovian, which was unarmed. Higher Wages Demanded. Boston. The trackmen of the Boston' & Maine "railroad system have voted to authorize their general office f; to declare a strike at any time in furtherance of the demands for reduced working hours and advanced wages. Batter After Actor. Ch cago. Prosecution of Joe Howard, actor husband of the late Irma Kilgallen Howard, on a charge of violating the Mann act was demanded Monday by Oscar Battling Nelson the pugilist Another Clash With Mexicans. Juarez. General Gavira, the garri-w- a commander here, received a mes sage Monday which said there had een trouble between" United States troops and Mexican civilians 3 ran des. at Casas -- Henry Seeger, of Tremonton, has received a letter from Germany telling that his nephew, Alford Seeger, has been awarded a silver service medallion for bravery In the service of the emperor. Estimate of the enrollment for active attendance at tbe Citizens' Military Training camp, to be established at Fort Douglas from August 21 to September 16, Is placed at a minimum of 500 and a maximum of 1,500, -.- Jack-lLarbertso a, t he Ogden GOOD CULVERTS ARE NEEDED Crossroads and Byroads Are Put Off With Old Wooden Contraptions Accidents Result. There is a good deal being said and written about good roads. I fear that the main thing is overlooked in their haste by a good many .people. They want to do it all at once. I fear the culvert proposition is overlooked by the automobile main road association, writes J. W. Edwards of Dawson county, Nebraska, in Independent Farmer. They forget that much travel and heavy traffic is done on side roads, especially threshing outfits. It is & lamentable fact that the crossroads and byroads are put off with old wooden culverts, thereby causing innumerable accidents while if some attention was given to building solid concrete culverts, something that would be everlasting and cheaper in the long run, there would he less accidents and threshermen would not need to travel three to five ihiles to get one mile. The automobill also has to travel these crossroads and byroads frequently. A wooden culvert soon rots out and becomes dangerous inside of a few years. This is caused by floods and different kinds of weather. While concrete is desirable water and floods may come and wash over them but they are left where put and it is safe ta cross over the ordinary wooden bridge may be washed out and float off or become dangerous to cross. How many wood en structures do we see or hear of after each large flood, being washed downstream, and oftentimes' teams or autos are driven on to the supposed culvert thinking it is there, only covered with a foot or two of water, to 9g5j; l. -- wrest-ler, his wife and son and two other people were slightly Injured near Lay-to- n when a automobile crashed into their machine, putting the machine out of commission. The big sheep shearing plant at Bonanza, seventeen miles from Watson, the terminus of the Uintah railway, Is in full swing, and it is estimated hat at least 90,000 head of sheep will be shorn at the plants After a brave struggle for life during and illness extending over a period of niore than eighteen months, Josephine Chambers, one of the best known and most beloved teachers In tbe Salt Lake city schools, died April 16. The huge U on the hill behind the University of Utah campus wras cleaned of its winter collection of debris by the men students of the institution last week, and the eleventh annual coating of whitewash was administered. Preparations have been completed by the Salt Lake Route for surveying a line from Provo to tbe Uintah basin and W. A. Maguire, chief engineer of the road, will arrive from Los Angeles this week to start the engineers to work. Losses of livestock from disease and exposure during the past year were somtwhat smaller than the of such losses, andthe condition as to health and flesh jot anihigh-pow- If rf . y Substantial StonsCulvert. find X it entirely gone or with two oi three planks gone,' with the result that some person and probably a horse oi two are drowned. Then another death trap will be built The' writer knows whereof h speaks. He knows of one case where three men drov on to what they thought was a culvert The water had backed np from the main creek and covered the culvert and it looked all mals on April 1 was slight' better right but it was partly washed away. than average, according toreports. The outcome was one man nearly Resolutions calling upbn the county drowned, and both horses drowned commissioners to see to it that the or- and floated down stream. Anothei dinances designed to prevent the case under my own observation was spread of obnoxious veeds " 1e en- that of a threshing engine which forced were adopted unanimously by went through a culvert eight or tea the directors of the Weber county feet wide and about that deep. What farm bureau at a meeting at Ogden. happened? A fireman was scalded to During an Intense moment of the death. ball game at Salt Lake Gerald KinNow If our good roads boosters will ney, aged 8, lost his balance in the have more to say for good cement 4top ofa hightree on the south side culverts, and on the byroads, they of the ball park and wTent crashing will have less opposition. Yours tot through the limbs to the ground, good culverts. twenty five feet below. He will be in the hospital for some time. - J Register Tractive Force. Left alone and unguarded in his A dynamometer mounted on an or room at a hotel in Salt Lake, John dinary dray is used by the Unit W. Guymon, a farmer of Huntington, States department of agriculture tc who was to have been taken to a lo- register the tractive force required tc cal hospital to determine if an operadraw various weights over different tion on his skull would restore his kinds of roadways. health, threw himself from a fourth story window and was dashed to deatlx Make Finishing Touches." on the pavement For putting the finishing touches tc Lynh and Stanford Bobcock, 14 and concrete roads, a machine driven by 16 years old, respectively, sons of Rua gasoline engine has been invented fus Babcock of Vineyard, were hurt that can finish about 8,000 square feet in a runaway accident, being thrown a day. under a beet drill Walter Daley has confessed to WeShape for Country Roads. ber county officials that the stories he Country roads should be kept is has told to the effect he participated such condition that they will shed in the Roy train robbery were all un- every drop of water that falls os true. Instead of being one of a trie them. of bold bandits, the youth admitted Reasonable Proposition. with a grin that he better qualifies A good road between every fans as the champion liar of the interand market is s reasonable and worth mountain country, The Salt Lake board of education while proposition. has gone on record as being opposed Muddy Roads Cut Profits. , to the 'installation of telephones in the add to the die roads Muddy j'iblig school buildings of the city on tance to market always cut and the profits os die ground that the, price, asked by . produce. .oJ telephone company is excessive. , ever can hare for the assertion of aer physical force Is that she asserts it an behalf of humanity. "Vi rs opment. e that he received An unidentified man found on the streets of Salt Lake, supposedly In an Intoxicated condition, died 4n the emergency hospital. Blight- - free seed potatoes ordered from Colorado through the Weber County Farm Bureau for local armers, have arrived in Ogden. Nearly three hunted horses were purchased by a French veterinary board in the Ogden stockyards during sale last week. a three-day- s Mrs. Clara Treadway Weir, 61 years of age, wife of Thomas Weir, prominent mining man and capitalist, died at Salt Lake after a long illness. If Salt Lake Is able to raise $100,000 before qutuirn, the National association will hold its annual ram sale and sheep show iu the capital. 1 The city council at Farmington has practically granted a franchise to the Utah Light & Power company for fifty years to operate an electric lighting system in Farmington city. An unidentified man about 40 years of age was instantly killed seven miles north of Ogden, when his body was ground to pieces under an Oregon Short Line freight train. Old folks day was observed in Sandy on April 16. The ladies repfrom, all resenting a committee and orders, chprches prepared a hot dinner for more than 400 persons. Salt Lake capitalists have closed a deal,7for the" purchase of aboot 2,000 acres of land In Millard County; and will proceed at once to enter upon a campaign of improvement and devel- - mAwmmmmmwxmmmmi wwyywwwyMW' King of Bulgaria '(1), fus "prime minister. Radosiavow (4), Archduke Frederic r2. and General Jekow (31. on a visit to the Austrian headquarters This photograph. Just received in Atnerha. shows the Archduke Frederic meeting the king of Bulgaria at the train and escorting him to the One of the most expert of the aviators In Captain Foulols squadron In Mexico is First Lieutenant Walter G. Kllner. " - Knew What He Needed. "What joq want. 6ir," saiffthcton so rial artist, as he ran hia fingers through the few remaining hairs on the pate of a customer, Is a bottle of our hair grower." "What I need." rejoined the customer, "is a divorce. See?" And being a married man himself, the t. g. said no more. -- -- WORTH KNOWING On the basis of the last statistics, there are 78,900 deaths due to cancer annuallyin the United States. - The mortality rate has steadily Increased from 63 to 78.9 per 100,000 population in 1900 Tn 1913. wate and, n solids- - is the composition of the , body. Mankind "AU large uses in the neighborhood of 47.000,000.000 pounds of meat per year. Two-third- s one-thir- d hu-ina- Of 100,000 words used In personal and business letters the word the" heads the list in frequency, being used 0.933 times, according to a recent 7And" comes next investigation. Mother was used almost twice as frequently as father in these let ters. and "good" was used eight time - as often as pretty." I . In Germany there has been patented a process for converting water tnto hydrogen peroxide by the use of chemicals yhlch are recovered afterward for further use. t - , jn |