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Show ft? THREE SECTION NEWS SATURDAY MAY THE DESERET 2U - 1922 A dieted they will go higher as there Is ly 2d per cent of the solids in aolu- still en Immense amount of anow lion are salt. The water acts as aj back In the mountains, especially In preservative to wood. Timber that if) Weber canyon. known to have been In constant oon- Utah lake Is now within a few tact with the watere of the lake for hundredths of en inch of the highest over thirty years Is declared today, pofnt known In the history of the by experts to be in a better condition; lake, the highest, - according to old than It was when It was placed in the residents of Utah county, that It has lake. The water seema to petrify the ever been at this time of, the year wood without making It brittle. Thfa 89 years-.- The highest point Is ths principal reason why railroad BY ROBERT S. LEWIS, PROFESSOR OF MINING, UNIVERSITY OF reached In Utah lake, as far as there officers do not fear for ths timber I - , " UTAH. le any official reeprd, was a little un- part of any work which they may put der three feet above compromise point. In ths lake, at least as far as ths IHE coal strike, now a month and of thousands of tons of rock wets Early this week the lake was two and rotting of the timber la concerned. his particular VoAlng LAJUE?REOOHI8 FOR SEVEN-- f dSmpeT in a a protection tp , the sixty-five Where timber Is used In the Atlantic hundredths above comproA half old. Is not' simply the place In the mine. No one Is to b put O TEARS. roadbed. At tfce time the Western mise end stU rising." The principal or Pacific- - oceana, and especially In result of a difference of opin- in his place, consequently this part Pacific was built It was Prd'ct?thU supplies of uuh lake are tha Provo the Gulf of Mexico, it Is necessary to ths mins is not worked during his : By W. J. 8. , ion between the mine opera- of but a few yeaiw It wquld treat It with a absence. rlVera coat or Fork It Is estimated that this of aJd gpan,8h tar, together pitch' lalcb would be a white, glittering area, with the return flow from the Irriga- other substance, or to treat it by a tors Snd the coal miners over the voluntary absenteeism" accounts for Highest level of lake 14.1 the aero In 1818. feet above as are- - the great saline beds to tion waters which - come from the process - knowp as creosotlng to pre question of wages. Ths causes of nearly 10 per cent of the lost time Precipitation for the preceding west of the lake. Strawberry valley. The only outlet to vent It- from being destroyed by a the strike lie d eeper OlaST CTaere of the mines during the year. Though 71.80 rachei. yean. that at the time the Utah lake Is the Jprdan river, which small Insect known as thrf" teredo. mine may be working, a number of In It id Slab true ' Br Second highest level of lake 14 Lucin controversy, and though they aminers cutoff wee built the lake wee Is now running full at Its source atfd some parts of the Gulf of Mexico wag may be absent. Thus It Is Im- What Men Admire' Most fc' out feet above aero In 1877. be with can considerable pointed lower that It had been for many years its volume being added to by the vari- this Insect will so far destroy timber accuracy, the mitigation of the evils possible to secure the fuB dally outPrecipitation for the preceding Women is Perfect Health and the engineers, depending largely ous mountain streams of Saif laky that It is practically useless after six in. the coal Industry will necessitate put of which the mine Is capable. four years, 68.87 Inches. men, de- valley. i or seven years. As far as science has a change of viewpoint on the part of About 80 per cent of the possible outLowest level of the lake 8.4 upon the advice of scientific the Sign of Strength it be would cided that the grade selected been able to learn, there is no life In the miners, the operators and the put Is all that can be expected. below aero In 1808. No Banger to Railroad.' from high all above danger Salt Great possible with the Lake, be coal fluctuates for the The called demand revoluthat Precipitation .for might preceding Bakersfield, Cal It "Dr., llercqs Officers Of ths Southern Pacifle and of a minute member of theexception publio , ' waters. four years. 63.6s lnchea shrimp tionary, through the year. In general, the Favorite Prescription has been ; A majority of the scientists baaed the Western Pacific report that there family. Second lowest level of the lake, industrial The comes In demand November great greatest development tonic aad j great help to me as Immediate danger of either of 2.8 feet below sero In 1806. their opinions largely on the fact that Is norailroads Is to due of this the country In This Is the demand least and unparalnervine and I am glad to, give It April. Readings Blffer. being put out of commuch of the water that had hereto- the lelled of Precipitation for the preceding mechanical development apamounts to seasonal from variation health my recommendation. My Since July I, 1903 the United States four years, 82.27 Inches. fore run into the lake was being used mission. Both declare that the lake pliances which have entered into ev- 35 to 40 per cent of the maximum had become very poor! I was stuLevel of lake Hay 1. 1822, for Irrigation purposes and that the would have to raise considerably weather bureau has maintained a ery phase of our national existence winter production. As a this of was with result Inward ttering weakness, feet above aero. waters flowing Into the lake would higher than it is at the present time guage station at Saltalr, where read- and have elevated the plane of our condition a mine equipped and man nervous, could not sleep, and Jqst before any great amount of damage ings are taken on the first and ftf domestic life above that of practically Precipitation for. the preceding be leas and less each year- - as more was ned to meet the winter demand could my appetlteu I was weak and sufdone from the high water. The teenth of each month. The result of all other nations. four years, 74.87 inches. The mechanical be was taken from the streams to Irrisnd paths . operated only at about half its fered with backaches only damage, they report, would be these readings Is made known to the, power used In th gate lends, end that as a result the from TQMJblacapadty-m-AprUr-yet-botn ray aid ft. and my limbs ached. th or waves Ha the be the estimated to valent baatLng against press lake publicwork heavy either EAT-BALT equi entlrely would, through was dry LAKE jip, was a physical wreck when I began I higher The "readings at the government of over three billion hard working operator and miner receive the great I a email pond fed only the tills during the time of high winds. on Hay 1, 1822, than It has would be but water the Favorite Prescription but Both railroad companies are taking gage at Saltalr, however, are not Iden- slaves. To supply this power, we con- est benefit only when the mine Is taking the what tittle lrrlgatlonlsts by it completely cured me of all my been for S3 years. . . did not want or could not get from every precaution to prevent any damtical with those made by the Southern sume nearly half of the world's out- working at full capacity. weakness and built me up Into a goad Car Situation not to age to their road beds. Pacific at Midlake. JThls difference, put of oal It is expected It will go at the streams. Mrs. f, I hesithy, strong condition. mention derived natths One from of power of the Most mines ars worked six days a Stlngley, least one foot higher before the high Interesting features according to J. Cecil Alter, in charge ural Need of a Prophet. 2X28 Q St. St and water. Great flowing gas Salt railroad is week, but railroads operate seven of the local weather bureau, due Lake, at least to Go now to your nearest drug store record for 1822 is reached. Several years after the cutoff had men and retort We so been told have often that a on week. surIs action this reason owners. For to wind waves. Midlake is situated a days ths snd obtain this wonderful Prescrip'- - " If one were to judge the preclplta- - been built, William Hood, chief en- of ths water on. piling -- and -- other the middleof the west arm of the our resources of energy were almost plus of available cars is likely to acof Dr. Pierces in tablets or liquid tlon the Southern we have gone mer- cumulate over Sunday, and by SatPacific, - tlon of the last four-yeaas com- gineer for the timber which the water comee In north part of the lake where ft Is without limit that 10c for trial Pkg. to Be, ; and superintended contact. with our urday a car shortage may devdtop. or send Invalids As Is well known the waters subject to the winds from all direc- rily along riotously dissipating pared with the four years preceding men who designed Hotel, in Buffalo, N. the highest mark of the lake of which the building of the cutoff, viewed the of the lake carry about 21 per cent tions.' At Saltalr the wind 'waves do energy resources, apparently not real Considering the country as a whole, Pierces Y and write for free medical advice. there is any record, the lake this damage done by the waves against of solids In solution, the proportion not have the opportunity of raising or izlng thatourwith the exception of water there is a noticeable dropping off In Adv. , . , il store of energy was mine production toward the end of fills aa the result of a rise in the power year would come near setting a new the varying with the amount of fresh. lowering the water as they do at the being depleted, and, realizing contemIs lake. said the that week. It after that mean railroad Moreover, equip- railroad station. water high water mark, which would Nearwhich runs Into the lake. with- the exception of water pow- ment Is not adequate to supply all sired to continue the scale, and also that the Southern Pacific and the plating the scene for several minutes er our store of energy inr this of the goal mines What a railroad needs that with cars. Two that the working time Western Padtlo would be out qf com- he said: not the energy used places years ago it was estimated that more stipulated country ; should be reduced to a mission, at least as far as crossing ia going to build across this lake is the more loss a dolat billion than than three billion dollars worth of week, with time and a half for overthe lake is concerned. There Is, how- not an engineer, but a prophet." An lars a new The year. our exploitation of equipment was needed bythe time and double time for BundAy-wor- k." ever, little likelihood that it will officials of the Western Paclflo ex- The union also Insisted that energy resources has been left to the railroads to adequately .handle-the . reach anywhere near the high levels pressed a similar opinion after viewstimulus acof Industrial of the country (of which the "check-off- ", competitive freight . of 1868 or 1877. - . ing the damage done by the lake rissystem be maintained. tivity, but, unfortunately, the pres- about one third Is coal.) In time Under this system the mine operators The rise and fall of the waters of ing. sure of of not Has demand resulted competition for great small coal, many 15 lake rise of In spme .states must collect union the end fall That; the Great Balt Lake, together with the By J. H. Pal, University of Utah. in highly efficient use of power. are mines, closed, usually is to due amount thereopened of precipitation the miners and turn ths precipitation each year are graphicand a call Is sent in for cars. As a dues from -Source of Energy, over to the union. About"20 money ally shown In a cvhart kept on file at there can be no doubt- - It Is true that result coal not cars human rights. are so scattered ,that million dollars a year is collected jn Fourth and man, thatare The three sources of energy the headquarters of the Oregon Short the rise or fall does not always fot-lothese rights in things are clear-l- y are coal, oil great In. the succeeding year, a heavy . and Line In Salt Lake City this way. The operators claim that I When understood by the average man. the present we can dismiss the conThis Is probThis chart which is about two feet or light precipitation. this system gives the union absolute tically to are easy safeguard by leglsla sideration of water-powthey with the control over all miners, and that wide and over six feet long, tells ably due to the fact that .while there or never have of munlty, nation, tlon and comment that this resource is likely police activity. Security when the lake was the highest and might be a heavy precipitation during money so collected is Used to confinu Is of to therefore cost one a remain undeveloped for a long time single dollar. They repre- property rights when it was the lowest, together with a given winter, winter and the union fight against the operators. ; most conditions because of prosthe of the legal requirements and Important Because of differences In local conall of the Intermediate stages, for the spring, the summer might be cooler sent money invested In a paying busi-les- s, of cause a chief the and the rising than normal, or there might be lees large capital outlay which attend last 72 years ditions, the operators wish to deal more permanent than any oth- perity for real estate. the hydro-electrof market promotlng rainfall during the summer months, er form of enterprise, and more necpowwith the union branches In their own Chart Highly Prised. Wherever-yo- ji find property rights er companies. In regard to coal and more of essary to the states, but the union leaders Insist, g resulting in the farmers of man than both oil, these industries of the chart to near the waters of the varioususing suffer from Iom onend Hardeclares Carver of Streams for any other business. So well known respected, that negotiationa be made only with wasteful-utilizatiosnd the other end, are zigzag lines In red, irrigation purposes. condiyou-finbetter the general union. About 40 per cent and so generally eonceded are these vard, there Both coal snd oil are used to blue and yellow, with many figures; The level of the lake is also Influ- propositions that the recital of them tions, other things equal, than you of the coal comes from non-uniyet so simple is the chart that even enced to a certain extent by .the seems trite and commonplace. But I find In communities where property generate power, to produce heat, to . The union leaders have tried mines. furnish to light and a novice could understand It. It might amount of precipitation which falls on propose here, at the risk of tedium, rights are disregarded. Where propn supply a numminers to to persuade the ber of this Important commodities or bybe said In passing, however, that the tnrrface of (he lake itself, as well to make sure that the demonstration erty rights are respected, you find Join with them, and In this way Oil us products. Is not gives chart gasoline and open to public Inspection: as what comes from the mountain given In the second article shall be conditions which attract people away kerosene a common wage scale for-al- l for driving mioters, fu el-It Is of too much value to be handled streams. TJm records of the Salt Lake admitted This would eliminate the miner from communities" where property (the residue after a once In and the gasoline while, light by I have said that the value of any n publlc. only City weather bureau show that when mines as competitors , of are not respected. Unless there fractions have been remaved from and then as a special favor is some- an lnchof precipitation falls in Salt mans property depends, In large rights the union mines, and the public would undeveloped re- cruda oil) and crude oil for one not connected with the office LakeEity, about a half Inch falls on part, upon whether It Is surrounded be free land dr great not be able to buy from the do not migrate --Into purposes: kerosene for lighting, power heatallowed to examine it. the lake. This would mean a raise of by an intelligent or by an Ignorant asources, peoplewhere Jnlnes at a less price. In doing this property rights ing and cooking and such While for the first few years the half an inch over the entire surface population. Thts argument came to arecommunity demand of 600,000,000 tons of now.the public Is working toward the disregarded. Communities which as lubricating oils, benzine, vaseline, yearly the chart Is not as accurate as the rail- of the lake regardless of what might an issue when It was proposed to escoal, capacity of the equipped elimination of union mine Of course, wax of are with and paraffine other approximately equal age, products. mines of the road people would wish to have It, It come from the various streams during tablish free schools In Utah. Under country Is approximate-- 1 the public will buy at the least price, The In coal may be transformenergy equal approximately opportunities, the period of the precipitation. the free school system, every man is approximately correct, ly 700,000,000 tons. ed into steam, electricity or coal-gaThere) Is during last winter the can be on almost basis classified the 1862 The idea that water once taken with property is taxed for the supthe datawas From I860 to Over a thousard competition In the coal In- - era of the middlewest burned millions deof are the of of the civil whethefficiency of of protection streams E. from schools. the n Jones, for irrigation pur- port Irrespective can-p- ro gathered by Marcus of tons of corn for fuel because It cost Among these are dustiy.coal for possiblymines rights. When property rights rived from coal 75 cents a ton less than .coal. engineer of Salt Lake City: From poses never reaches Its destination, the er he himself has or has not chil- property Moreover, there Is which are used as dues Thts fact was are not respected and safeguarded, ammonia and tar, 1862 to 1888 much of the Information Great Salt Lake in this Instance. Is dren to be educated. less the than union mines. In view much dissension, and fighting within points for the manufacture of Careful measurements pointed out by the opponents of free there Is little prosperity, and the peo- starting h was secured from the iTnlted States not correct. small Is made by profit that union Itself, and several branches drugs, dyes, perfumes, most mines -- less the wage earners, to say fertilizers, weather bureau and s' the rest was conducted by the government and oth- schools as an Injustice to the man of ple, even than 50 cents a ton the chemicals and explosives , have tried to make separate settle' the talkers must-leav- e agencies have proved that about property who has no children, and as nothing-- of gathered by the railroad company.- er ments wlth ih mine operaioraTh an especial burden upon railroad, such a community in order to find i Little attempt has been made to eo-- ! j From 1888 to thepresent date, prac- 80 per cent of the flow of water taken chief claim of the union is that- - ths y from a stream finally finds mining, and other corpora ti on union mines cannot with compete 9tohn: tically all of thaSnformation contained back " cTed""6'6 Prtl0n.f present wage is necessary if miners n to the bed of the stream through also are childless. Even a former on the charTiias been gathered by generation pf power, another to the chat the mines. IsIn spljte of the fact are, to receive a Jiving wage. - Howof schools Salt the of Is This railknown as Is superintendent the the the of It of percolation. overstocked with ever. the greater security country officers and employees production of domestic heat, a third adequacy of a wags. seals flow" of a stream. Of Lake City was misled by this arguIn that makes fts real to mines, leases on coal lands can bs should road company by means of delicate "return where the manufacture of coke and still secured be determined by the group and" when the legislature pro- estate Edinburgh ment; takIs. water the course, from are j a the rank and which value placgovernment with the of in Instruments that scientific portion to the generation of from a stream at several points posed to enlarge the general state much larger city of Glasgow. It Is another mine may be opened at any that works steadily,- not by idlers or ed orr and near the lake. The level en city gas. Some oil Is burned In Its new coal below each other, less and less ofit fund for schools, he opposed the bill the higher In fact, since early In 1920 the by those who work only part of ths on the time; Midlake at taken for are crude Is some respect property state, readings partly refined, government has issued about 190 time. No Industry Is on an efficient the ground that this city, having Southern Pacific. In addition to re- - will finally reach the mouth of the on Salt Lake Cfty than In the and still another portion Is commore wealth In proportion to school rights ofinMexico basis If employees can gain a living leases on coal lands. river. over for esattention continued enables refined. that The real City pletely and qulrtng cheapest of the other than 1888 In 28 parts the wage by working only half or two1 was population no precipitation little The of effect workmost 7 yeara the chart has cost the tate to here In source convenient of Is irregular compare favorably energy thirds of ths time. inches, the - highest of which there is state, would be taxed for the educaof coal la the mines Instance. drawn in ing alike hurtful In labor and money. market value Is with upon much of Oil the that any own Its outside of . The following year the tion of children Though It Is not dlfflcdlt to point Is any record.used where coal might be used and to the miner, the mine operator and reMexican This Arthe present time the cnart educacity. of greater larger limits. Friends corporate twice lake reached Its highest recorded level tion the general public. The capital In- out the causes of the unrest in ths where water-powe- r should be enfor used. is of gard and kept up to date with readings defeated these property rights 14 strictly opponents feet six Inches. The smallest When bltumlnus coal Is burned the vested In bituminous coal mines is coal industry it Is far from easy to a month, the first' and fifteenth of amount of solely a matter of better education valuable unions wish precipitation recorded was larged revenues for schools. They are lost. What approximately two billion dollars. propose a solution. The but each month, In a strictly scientific in 1868, when mining com- here than there. six and but seventy-thre- e showed that railroads, the .naFixed changes for salaries, ventila- government ownership, Is worse, the damage done manned. the children and without by people panies, overhundredths fell. The School of Justice tional the Taxes. following carry cgnnot and treasury considerIs must be tion, an smoke nineties additional pumping repairs loss to the the pubearly During however, the lake fell but five are almost as much concerned in hav lic. In 19 IB' it was estimated that one paid whether the mines are produc-in- g load In the Industry, andgovernment-ownershlIn Utah Teachers the Association, able d.scusalon arose before scientific- yesT, and reliable an educated populainches. . In 1873 the precipitation was ing Is not likely to take ths coal or-- not. For mines. of the where the matter came up for dls ton of bituminous coal sold -the bodies, and a number of magazine ar- a little over IB lnchea the follow- tion as are the parents. The debate behalf ofimlnes foe 11.15, yet this coal contain-th- e country ."Idle a third of the year, this surplus of mines "and men' out of the tides were written predicting that the ing year the level of theyetlake fell two culminatedduring" a aeaslonof the cussiontheirgumenl-T- n business men of Salt Lake City ed 1,500 pounds of smokeless fuel and cost to the operators runs Into mil- Industry- - The storing of some 50 millake would be ""a thing of the past feet. In 1874 the precipitation was Utah Teachers association, the final lions of dollars. lion tons of coal near points of consulIt denied the enough coal-gaammonium, within a few years. Year after year less than 14 Inches, nearly an inch less arguments being made in the. As- was thorough-going- . Because of the uncertainty of his sumption would equalize the operaand tar to rhake an ag- the lake had receded until 1908, when than It was In 1878. ' The following sembly hall of this city. fight of the State to tax the property phate. benzol of the commonwealth as a whole for Kregate value of about 816.00, If all working time, the miner becomes in- tion of the mines, through ths year, It recorded the lowest level It had been year the level of the lake rose a little Famous (Sties Compared but storage would not eliminate ths the education of "all the children 0f these Prducts were recovered. Under different to his work, and paradoxi- excess known to reach, at least since I860. over two feet. In 1875 the precipitadeof association A member the of mines and men, which Is ths these commodities, cal aa it may seem, loafing on the job tion was five Inches greater than it clared what had been pointed out to all the people." The reply of the pree"t Practice) According to some of the pioneers, soclety, are largely wasted. and absenteeism Is Increased. - Thus real cause of the trouble. however the lake was lower In the was In 1876, yet the lake was seven him in Europe --that the value of friends of education was that to ed-j- e is a limited market for these coal costs more and the public must, Aa Secretary Hoover says the task winter of 1867 than it has been at any inches higher in 1877 than it was In property does not depend upon the e man-- , Is one that calls for in the end, foot the bill. vCOal time since. In fact, more than one 1876, showing that in all likelihood a mere size of the population that sur- prosperity of all. They pointed out that Such for not agement so part of the politician was lake case in the said has of ' men war the of rhev Caoses that would 1875 did rounds It, but also upon the educaof the Strike, young pioneer precipitation eould work- - demands wen who wlthouL preshou,dr-tbeiJ-rlfl- jly low in 1847 and 1848. during the win- not reach the lakeunULJ877.. of On March 31st, the wage agreement judice one way or the other, can thmlc when there Is a sufficient demand tion, refinement, and steadiness andefemi1 the ter months, thanhey" drove cattle the More Recent Bates. that population. In Edinburgh busir the Products can this waste of between the union and the mine oper- - j definitely, quantitatively rather than men from the mainland to Antelope island. and were men Informed then ness propthat certain him, corporations national resource be lessened. down to more recent dates When ators expired. The operators refused 'qualitatively, .and yet .keep In mind In 1907 the lake commenced to rise, weComing In 1910 the precipitation erty was worth more than property objecting to the payment of the gen-- 1 coal is used ta generate power It has to continue "the scale, especially lAthe tremendous social and human 4n find and continued until 1910. The next was ten that GlasIn the situated eral was schoolOax. of but It e city fair, thebeen estimated on an average view "of the competition from non-- 1 portance of the work they are doing., and seventy-ninhundredths similarly or three years noticed a drop. Then a lnchea The following year the lake gow, though Glasgow had about three educationists argued, that thewealthlonly 1 6 pounds inthat I ton-o- f union mines. a Jh e engineer.". This Is" "the "wo rk-fIn 1914 with times as many people as Edinburgh. men might at any, verted into useful work. eoalls slight raise was noted. in"1911 the.young The the losses precipianother drop during the following tation was three and forty-tw- o The difference, they claimed, was due time be called upon to defend with in mining, transportation, hunmaking two years. . The years 1917 and 1918 dredths Inches steam m 2 CoL 4nto greater-than It was in . to the higher learning and cultural N0.I68IB A - boo and then a witnessed another-rl- se reputation eaueatldn sufficient to enable these mechanical power accdunt for the lake fell another four 2 "An duFlhg4hAext4vfoai'A-TBHlncHeg1nj1Eleven, Entitled Edinburgh drop ln which year the pre- young men to shoot straight, keep In other 1,924 pounds. This tremendous year 1921 showed a raise of one foot clpitation was sixteen and six hun gave the names and careers of ele- health, and win the war. No one loss Is not plainly evident to the pubever the preceding year; while the dredths inches, yet the lake fell an- ven oftthe native sons of that city imagined at the time that a wbrld lic. who must eventually pay for it. over for their war reading on May 1 of this year showed other three Inches In 1913. In 1920 men known the world was coming. None could foresee However, it Is easier to see that the mana raise of one foot four inches over the precipitation was twenty and sev- ability and their services to how much training each soldier must present strike Is a drain on the finana Scotland the high mark of last year. The high enteen hundredth Inches. Last year kind. Such facts caused If he would become efficient. cial resources of the country, though have were of Scotchmen the eyes water mark of the lake is usually the lake rose an even foot In 1921 thrill: suggested cost of a million dollars That demonstration came and It was the real and its turned Edinburgh, upon a day seems a large bill to pay. reached the latter part of June of the precipitation was sixteen and fortunate for America the was for and at a for homes estate premium. Run-Do- wn each year and the low mark during fifty-fou- r hundredlfh inches, a deLubor In Coal Mines. & preference shown to world that the opponents of free the month of December of, each year. crease of nearly four Inches over 1920, Nor was the Labor Is the largest single Item in schools of to mere and the school due tax, pride wholly general Edinburgh 7 8 In 1868 the water was feet Inch- yet to May 1 of this year the lake has the cost of coal. Approxihad not es higher than It Is at the present time, risen one foot four Inches over the In learning or other forms of fame. to nave been permitted, in America, mately 70 perproducing cent of the cost of minshould way. Valuable. Makes Why they What their, or at least was on May 1 of this year. high mark oflastyear. with, Property the in wages.- Statistical it now? The world was but "re- ing studies show still -- another "Should- - It reach ths -- high mark of proepects of more than 60 per JL Scotia acanny'Tn-divldua- l, have a The high-clasaved from military subjuga- cent of the coalthat cently of the country miners 1868 at any time in the future, the foot before the high water mark for pruand Good Firm What Do especially practical, to on Put to Fleah, tion the taxes Help by paid for free schools, are of foreign birth. In the last 25 water would he one inch from the 1922 is reached. This would indicate dent In financial matters. He had disrisk anew the fate of mankind at years mor than 10 million ImmWeight, and Obtain More Beautiful Form and-Figuregreat trestle of the Southern Pacific that a part of the precipitation of 1920 covered that not alone was civic rep- awhymoment when civilization itself Is igrants, harecome .into the Uniteddid not reach the Jake untfi this year. utation hlgher-- ln Edinburgh than-l- n across the Jake. c,ountrles where for cen.Tothis must be added the fact that Glasgow, but he preferred the form- trembling In the balance Why not;taes Get a FREE $1.00 Package Smell Banger To Trestle. .rry. the precipitation- - for the first four, life his a because as home er of city Genuine Yeast Vita mine During the years that have passed months of 1922 was above normal. ,Ti0Vlld foo,1h hundred thousand such people In the and property were safer there. He Lronoi!,, or since the Lucin cutoff was built, many Tablet The principal water supply sources learned whObituminous coal panicky of mines the Today as Explained country, a well it that requires wild rumors have gone forth .that it of the lake, other than the direct preUt f a t0Ul of 80 hllndred Below Try Them for Ten was In danger, and would have to be cipitation on the surface, are the Bar teperson to discern that the dlstlnc-- 1 sUnd what modr education Is? thousand coal do not miners. They abandoned. Unless the lake should river, the Weber river, In conjunction tlon which agitators draw between understand the meaning of justice, Days and Watch the Results they expect oppression and injustice rise five or six feet, or even seven feet with the Ogden river and the Jordan, property rights and human rights is Science ha at last shown bow we some and believe that the only uav to gain above the present level, there would river, carrying the waters of Utah lake false. This alleged distinction misleads intheir ends Is by fighting. They are times grow weak, thin, and emaciated be little danger to the trestle, except and the mountain streams of Salt Lake many a dissatisfied workingman easily, moved by appeals to their pas- . 00 an abundance of food (lacking in No streams of any conser- - to the mischievous belief that human as traffio might be delayed by waves valley. sions. They do not understand our devi famine) while with a ranch smaller washing over the trace. The real quencs enter the lake from,the west: rights may be defended without laws and our government, land onlv amount of food, rich in'vitamines, we trouble which the kallroad company from that-- source only a little flood fending property rights also. Propera small Such cent are citizens per has experienced from high waters In water qomea during the early spring. ty thus becomes a hateful thing, capimay quickly Uke on good firm flesh, people are- readily influenced by funThs principal water source of the tal an especially hateful thing, irt the increese in weight, and make a remarkthe past has not been with the trestle scrupulous agitators. OR PIPE PIPEI.KSS and unforIt Jias been stated that there art in but with the fills, two oh the Bear Bear river is Bear lake, fed by ths eyes ot the able gain In strength, energy and ea- and tunate toller. It is but a short step for this country more than 2.500 paid river arm of the Uke and the one streams in the Rear lake valley durance, provided your blooa conUms near Lakeside on the west side of the the streams of Cache county. At the him to reason that It would be well to lecturers who arethetools of the sufficient .quantity of oxygenated ora foot destroy property and to abolish capilake. - With high waters - and the preent time Bear lake enemies of organized government and ganic iron to enable your body to as-- : at and a water half of Its high mark, tal. It takes a trained mind no mere who devote their time to spreading waves' of the heavy - water dashing least for aimilate your food properly. , is It several expected to read, writs and cipher, against these fills, the company suf- that the lake willyears. propaganda among the foreign born. Without arganie farm bath food and vitaAre Installed exclusively by the Sugreach the old high ability to perceive that all propfers considerable loss by the embank-- - water mark Since 60 the 65 cent you from of to canare per mins abmlately welea u rear badr mark'eome time next month. erty rights are human rights, and that ar House Sheet Metal Works. ment being washed sway. miners to the United Mine not chans life loos inert food matter into present time 3,000 second things have no rights st 'all. Only 400 satisfied customers In Salt Lake Worker belong oafin) 2, When the Western Pacific was built feetAtofthe cel fs It of llrtna not tis.o. colon TOO bare plenty) Wtrange America, water Is flowing from the Bear human beings have rights, though' and vicinity. Longtat life furnace that--- there has been -- and across the south end of the lake, the lake Into wf&BiC 1ft JTQtir DtOOlii WtQ $f p on exthe fighting market, with the Bear river, thlshowever. ! vmnn n ror ceatarimocieiitiota tried la rain tomaU iMaffiauuMsaai aa .water did not come to. where the bloodshed In these- - strike Is not the total amount of Water some of these are rights In things j pense. Let us show jou thlawonder-fu- l onranic Iran. At hot the problem rrm rolrod I them of to and own, 1113 use, our laid, but to guard against dan- reaching Great furnace dispose 20 E. 'coal office. at the rights year During'the Vj f this past, Salt Lake from its that ran amy now obtain part organic iron mines of the country were Idle on an 1 ao ger the engineers built the road six or largest supply source. The various as the owners choose. Human rights! 31at South, or call Hy. 1272. tbo Ilka Mood fomi nay dtaaght lieu la year ssven feet abov the old level of the streams of Cache valley. 8mithfield. In things are usually termed property Wasted la Utah Tewaa. Ageata average about 30 per cent of the ondortho BMMof "Naaptod boo", - Write far Particulars. , lake. Latef It was found, due to a Logan, Blacksmith Fork, Paradise rights; but property Is Insensate and mines (lme. Last year the Union It baa ban armafod t girt to oeory par. own. we In was the not that the road When its lake, ylse did not operate half of the others .have haa po rights. of the probably snd creek, hooor of Nano tod beau who wtrhooooawth log c , . Muddy SUGAR HOUSE waves SHEET we The beat law the' against been running full' for the last week or say protects property, time. These figures refer io the full high enough to help Baton Seohoolaertomwolaht. q Iowa I In and for several It mean the that the grade ten days. All of these pour their days rights protects simply METALWORKS possible working, time in the year. 1916 traffic had to be. abandoned. waters Into the Bear river and thence pf the owner-I- n that property. PropUnder union rules a miner may work HU K. Slat Neath litre Thousands mf piles were driven along to the lake. The Weber and Ogden erty, rights are human rights, and one day, be absent (he next and reSALT LAKE CITY the north aids of the track and tens rivers are running high and it Is pre- - there are no rights, as between man turn to work the following day, with- - YtBtecfGreatSallLJie: Conditions in Coal Industry and Causes Leading Up to Big Strike Sitmtira Which Enghar Declares is Difficult to Foresee P1tks la-o- ver- ' out-losi- ng TY-TW- , -- & . 6-- l.' - 1 -- -- rs . f - Economizing in Education. ' article w 11, . I th' er or-fe- ll, ic well-bein- n. on d" non-unio- de-raa- nd - oll non-unio- ' non-uni- farm-restrict- ct. s. Non-unio- -- - -- onuy"! Its-wa- non-unio- - ' -at- s. . 1.!!' t j high-grad- con-whl- 4h-tea- -- 78lkva - Science Now Shows Why Thousand of People Are Always Weak,Thin, Do Matter and -- How Much They Eat ss Inmate a t: ' 5.sr,pr.'v;: I QUAKER STEEL HOT AIR j - half-educat- FURNACES W?n5&aA8Nt least-upkee- road-bedtw- W -- f h. '5' sjft hr ed |