OCR Text |
Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN Cheap Some By RENE NOVEMBER 4, 1 906. Nominees for the Legislature. of Free Alcohol Possibilities BACHE SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH, SUNDAY, Republican er for All Pow REPUBLICAN, Tn the Saturday Paening Post mt NCLEE | the which is issued, seems most cation SAM's~ On the popular of the immense tions for Alcohol Book:| point of being destined to prove government year-judging rofitable. The agriculturist should be ler yntent to produce the raw materials Pout of whieh others will make the alcohol; and he will have the privilege of purchasing it at a cheap rate. |P publi- from : the Many number of advance applicait already received. The 100,- 000 cepies will go off like ginning to satisfy is printed to as hot be a first cakes, the At edition} scarce be- as a Agents fifty Suggested. dens are suggested one "farmers' | @ ee agents N erkes | considers ation, ¢ among demand. issued least bec een the acid, hea m, so have for his turpentine, "capetiae {sone attractive " bulletin''-presumably | because the Henne "hail 2 yas naturally farmers are more keenly Interested | AA Se eR im Ne eonsiferct ne in the matter than Sgbdiiie else. And COIL ORG -COMCS tO "Con t ; sources of industrial alcohol, no wonder, oT inasmuch as free alcohol, | available ; ' : though of eemuch prospective useful- | }gin 0Ne with, finds that. they is arethe legion. To heeh) Ok I there potato-the ness for various mechanical cities, and likely couragement to purposes in (6 yery-day. to give important ae many arts, promt white potato. other materials lighting are ave ene difficult for to fuel of- | It contaths, ordinarily, leent of starch, which and | a obtain, which, half at quarts the commerce about 15. directly: is to be a veritable, blessing in parts of) vaytinie into alcoho the country where coal, kerosene, and | g¢ yang will yield 100 per con- average acre Susie of pota- rate of of alcohol three and te the-bushel Free aleohol, however, is eee Fana that just about the output), hot only to warm the farmer's dw "|should represent a little over éightying in winter and make his evenings | geyen gallons ae the fluid : cheerful by the illumination it affords, | There arvé, however. certain varleties but also to-relieve him from ten or} of the white no ato. whieh conts ecg t hich italn his labor by furnishing power | or more ner cent of starch and are his house and his barn will be Wee oon aro ately more productive. of ally and Inéxpensively supplied with | aleohol These have been. developed running water by a small motor actu- | chiefiy in Germany, where the agy o ulating «a pump; and another ttle en-! tral exneriment stations for a 0d gine, likewrse driven by alcohol, will} many years past have been fon to operate a machine for chopping and: evolve tubers as rieh as possible in grinding his cattle-food. in various) the respéct mentioned, without regard other minor ways aleohol will make | to their edible quality Indeed the itself useful as a source of ‘readily- | pOlatees thus grown for alcohol. are available energy on the farm; and, not| Mot very palatable, being rather coarse improbably, to milk it may thé problem be cows, of employed inasmuch performing mechanical means torily sely In Europe even 11 and as_ that has task been flavorless. the | huge BLES by a of 30 Some and, it per al is cent of them said, fall are not of starch Cassava of far Root. | mowing machines, plows Vhatever and reapers and binders, run by alco- | terial hel motors, have proved conspicuously la yen suecéssful; and it seems not unlikely| ne sue In the way of plant ma- will furnish starch, o1 gar, or cellulose (whieh is the woody of plants), is available stuff for that before long similar contrivances aciee. produc tong eae it is sugWill be utilized on farms in the Unit- | 8ested in the cohol Book that the ed States. Indeed, all sorts of wheel| reot of the cassava, which holds" a ed vehicles may be economically propelled by this kind of fluid: fuel, special contrivances for burning it being al ¢ provided A point upon which the jool avs ‘etross' Issthet: alco: Alcohol Book lays considerably larger percentage of stareh than the potato, might be profitably used in this way The cassava is grown large\ areas of 3 : over the South Atlantic and Gulf states, and a yield of only four tons to the hol, however it may be employed for) heating, for illumination, er for the production of power, demands peculiar mechanical A For Blow to example, one can volatilize the made Gasoline, not hol.imto the tank of a mobjle and expect the To aan. yay furnish one ton of fermentabn matter representing about 143 Falions of alcohol. The output can be arrangements pour aleo-) rapidly tn of gasoline eta: car to travel.| Nuid mueh i zed greater, Eee In the aleohol,though quantities of the purpose, enough ceplionally howeve es hited in never states the them are producing fine quality been as a uti- source Azores large employed a fluid of which is for ex- used a for motdér purposes there ts rae te fortify port wine. hey are richer nearly twice the heat demandec YY | in stareh than white potatoes, averaggasoline; and, consequently, a modipe about twenty-four per cent, and fication is needed in the construction | experiments made at the South Caroof the engine. But it is not of much Nie agricultural station haveshown importance, involving only a change! that an acre of land can be made to in the form of the explosion chamber. ,P roduce 11,900 pounds of them. One "Alcohol," says the forthcoming bulbushel of swet potatoes will yield over Jetin, "burns with a pale blue flame la gallon of alcohol, against six-seythat is intensely hot. There is no enths of a gallon for white potatoes, smoke, and what odor there is can Molasses, of which we produce 25,not be termed offensive. To give the | 0 60,000 gallons per annum, Is another flame illuminating power a mantlej|a vailable source-three gallons yieldmust be used. s for heating stoves, | ir ig one gallon of aleohol. The prein which alcohol is employed, there }c lous fluld might also be manufactured are several different kinds already in in large quantities from the refuse of the use, including apparatus for roasting wine-making, fruit evaporation coffee or peanuts ae ea heating | and canning industvies-especlally erimping-irons." One y buy ehtue from the waste of factories devoted to in hardware sane: ae ie? heating | the canning of tomatoes and Indian fatirom which contains a small hol Jamp. When certain earths, "thoria;"" are reduced to a cr andSubjected to high glow brillfantly with an alco-| corn. intense white | five light. Taking advantage of this fact, resort is had to the expedient of depositing the thoria in such a way upon white cloth that, when the cloth has been burned away, the mantle made of it preserves its shape. If placed but the of ie tek oe ee impossible tain important wood a eeol for eneee niet is utilization arts. For chosen, now thrown away, Recently the Department nas been found that such refuse can be made to yield not exceeding In if the "high three Juice of wines' cents a sweet at a cost gallon corn stalks is from four to fourteen per cent of sugar. The cobs, also , are rich in starch and sugar containing from six to ten per cent of the latter and from eight to thirteen per cent of the former. Ordinnhary corneobs, fresh from the fleld, will yield from six:to nine per cent of , there question would render the emthe free article out of for is-ether, such which purposes. is also Then largely utilized in surgery and nh Various mical processes. It is made from alcohol; but almost any imaginable ‘‘de- naturing' spoil it. agent would be likely to As to Flavoring Extracts. As for the tinctures, ft y be that the methods adopted in malate. rae a are-essentially denaturing proce inasmuch ag they are not aubéeniss~4 tor consumption as beverages, and that It will be forty cents. This seems rather cheap, but, in fact, it is too high. At such a price alco hol can hardly compete with kerosene and gasolitie, save to a limited extent. There is reason to believe, however, that m cans will be found whereby the cost will be reduced considerably beow this m fee For one thing, agricultural me ods bearing upon. this particular erociom will be improved, so that an acre of Jand will be made to yield a greater quantity of starch, whether in the shape of potatoes or some other product. Then, too, seems not unlikely that the problem of arene cornstalks will be solved, or hat the puzzle will be woiled out cerned: But "there are ever so many satistactorlly on some other line, In puzzles wrapped up in this new adWay or another, the price per galTalrteateeeh <6 problem, and a whole lot ion. is pretty sure to be brought doen of em FBesdur, be required: by solve 1 to thirty cents, erhaps to twentythe ntion another e ve cents, within in next dozen years. Suit, the favoring extra > _ com- will dismiss the matter consideration, so far as from further they are con- merce are mostly al@oholie corueiiriay and it is necessary for obvious reasons, that the alcohol used shall be as of pure these as Deb ie. extracts Are to manufacturers be allowed b special tadtilatnbe from theenssite Department, to dispense with the unpleasant ingredient (Whatever: it ee be) imposed upon ordinary folks It is the Treasury and not ine Department of Agriculture, that ‘controls all, affairs relating to industrial alcohol, The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Mr. Yerkes, is eee manager, whatever he sa on the subject is the law. He wiilis even determine what shall be the minimum size of the still employed; for it Is by facture his "moonshine" permitted supply of spirits, fashion as one might say, even though it be under federal surveillance. It would make too much trouble and, besides, the Government experts belleve that tt would not be STRAY Nothing curious is than BIRDS on the the fact AT face that SBA. of it tiny more birds] of comparatively feeble power of flight often light on the decks or in the rigging of ships hundreds of miles out from the shore in the heart of the stormy Atlantic or Pacific. "Why, they are migrants, of course" many Will no doubt say. this supposition will not at many such instances. pidked all account for Birds are often up quite off the lines of migra- tion. They generally appear one at a time, and in unsettled weather. Fours teen have been seen on a ship in one one. representing five different specles. An extraordinary fact one notices is that these birds seem, when no cat or dog Is aboard, S. JOSEPH, Rep. WILLIAM MUMILEAN, Q. CHRITCHLOW, Rep. HARRY absolutely fearless. have myseH picked up in my hand a small bird of the warbler tribe on the deck of a steamer when 200 miles from the coast of Newfoundland. And it S. JOSEPH, Se for Representative. Condidate Harry Joseph was born arry 5S. Joseph was bo Cincinnati, O. He was the University of Ohio at at engineer. to Utah, home. CITAS. Rep. EF. MARKS, Re; WW. N WIL M. MILLS, Rep JOHN veyor on mine, the and portation Mine in LIAMS, BRIGHAM SUES G,. Rep. 3 NNE IR X. SMITH, DANIEL a i. AB, Rep. Sen. | signed after two years. He came to;abhd the principal | Salt Lake and took a position in the ture concern. |office of the Oregon Short Line audMr. Williams' owner | itor mereantile 1866, | Pacific en | Cue civiljlow to Sa as a Later he went to the Utah & railroad, owned by A. W. McMr. McCune took Mr CritchPeru with him to open up the Twenty years ago he caitie |'seot of books in starting the mining) where he has since made 4is!| business there. After remaining in Was elected county sur-jcharge of the offMce for eighteen ever named present the first is Republican in the state. manager of chairman: of committee WILLIAM ticke:|months he He is at}take the the Carisa | sociation of SOC Operators'man? association. turned to account of pharmaceutical > the JOHN of Agriculture has been making experiments with a ew. to shedding light i pon this interesting problem, and. it } the great ‘class of rem edies known as|y equired to produce one gallon of alco"tinetures,"' which are made by soakhol costs about fifteen cents. If another ing various roots and herbs in spirits, | f ifteen cents be addéd to pay the exso that their active and valuable prinpense of manufacture, and ten cents ciples may be extracted. Obviously the more for the profit of distiller and addition of a poisonous ingredient like dealer, the selling price cf the article wood. alcohol ployment of f HARRY ; Sen. HARRY SENET eRe est , PRE ‘STON I Lis pNEEPUL U. Ss. C. JENSON, Rep. contain tax-free } ; heir weight in alcohol. Depends on Cost. w, he extent to which free inYét the manufacture of drug pro- dustrial alcohol is destined to prove ducts is one of the most important useful the people of this country uses to which industrial alcohol ig ex- must depend primarily upon the cost pected to put. Take, for instance, of It. THe Alcohol Book says that corn material can not be in the compounding preparations the: are distiller. in cer- example, per cent of the whole, Indian Corn Greatest Sourec. hich twenty cents a gallon from alcohol used for industrial and domestic purposes, goes into effect on the first day of the coming , the government authorities, oddly enough, have not yet been able to dec ide what substance net be employed to "denaturize"' the -that is to say, to render it unarinmeble It is a difficult question, indéed, because many ingredients that might be added would render the pro- duct imperfect a preat dea 1 of starch and sugar; and, it they could be utilized, an almost inexhaustible supply of raw material would be placed at the disposal of the Denaturing, wean compar account fav the greatest available souree of industrial alcohol in this country, h owever, is Indian corn, which is our principal cereal crop b maize wil produce about two and j aes Taine gallons of alcohol. But he stalks and cobs, nearly all of the same thing hapflame is furnished by Process into By over a gas flame in the famillar manner, the mantle ‘becomes brightly ineandescent; pens when alcohol Taking apples and peaches, cores, seeds and What-not, it is reekoned that the refuse Incidental to the preparation of fruits for canning Is about twenty- such as/ fine powd-| heat, they the trans-;he the Tintic) t returned resigned.a to give his >< iness. short entire for : Representative. . ; nar Charles Lake to the Utah As-)| ‘This position ago, in order private bus- a MARIS, Bane Re E. Salt to EF. : ee the time time eS ae CHARLES M'MILLAN, 15 Candidate to management of of Credit Men. ema ya Tare epee Marks, was s born in Ml»- niet -Carliae . ae cases i sour, in 1672,.and 16 a graduate. of eanengland,a Aug. dae 1, 1852 5" , the state, that normal schoolHe-became at Warrens-a Scotland, He lburg.of state 6raduated in 1870 from the High} posident of Utah in 1893. and is. 9 enloras at ea tae as Soren i = country in 1879,' arriving. Sa Lake Co uly 16 of the same In year. graduate of the In 1901, he was j,\, department Until the: spring of this year, 1906, he has held many a ace railroud e positions of aes . trust from meri cashier, general | agent and secretary and treasurer, the Uni practice of Salt He is (rane a on eas Seen staunch Republican, declared for party that lines, Mck STO Lae te district voted ay " party and 0 for . MTT at having ae having} the . ihe Lom voted for J. Brya Fourth sos Candidate eee William. . N. for aes Mv. endnote s c \evan Ps, Williams, Williams ey lived . as was ee , to be In an was ieee organization' inter- elected a pen to the), eae Inine thestate fall: to Salt I ice ofof N professton a leaving now - was-born ‘Illinois, college, L890, hte etto Pic coe suerenain mitted ce oF the Canina gourt or ene Bote eee Fae in May, ¥UlY. ind He has ove 9 ning ‘ = erate er He was of his health, he-took up n paper : receiving | Work in Denver, serving in ror He then, editorial positions on Pa pr ehone 1892 York Mr. Smith came began the practice of Republican, the pubiie|o7"°™ ost ite , a4 taking at the University of a young man of sterl: vm eT FAT enjoys the friendship of people always been of he went years he that. city aa oe to Montana w acre a was assoefated with = our : u- moved to Salt )ycars secures rat ie Lake three Soa INE NE ag and iia , a Wo cient ' the most progressive weeklies in the State. Since then he has been going rapid 3 the top: in the pon ae Candidate Dec., est son tne age Teen eee graduated ie Brigham z almost teaching for re of was 1876, Henry Young born and and Pe from the 16,-spent at at Clegg. Hijomch ols public 100 two years at and 18, . which PRESTON ran A ee M'RAE, Illinois, and came to Pr 7 a, . aa weit a ies seen ted fie fivcasini negalt Lake sale Heber| is the young- Ann acade school 1852, in ee ee CY Pi Representative. Clegg 30, of Bs . DANIBNL he pan He;t00% tear built Gily3 ual: A a home Ce UP a river. at there NUR He began | ye adan EAV to build ena director TontTconipany oo er a of the "the eounty the the) Or as ae 1 Tratieae | of oe 86Sintaie RICHALDS, consol rie versity Mr. Ps, ep 905-06 Ne,» sae WE ASURLOG: supervisors schools, During an nae) of art Richards es' eo be 0 of and principal o | the the at the Lake intervals is the chairman. mimittee * the Candidate for Representative John Q. Critchlow was born Dec.| 1870, in Ogden, Utah. He attend-| of that period, developing a sturdy | lege paper body and a splendid character fe, tinguished for a I!ke himself period, as an and disFirth : ve ial earnest | 5; : i ee After leaying school he ae on the} Ogden Standard, as mpositor and | reporter. He left that prvi enter mer-} cantile lines, and was the first to pass | a civil service examination and his | celve an appointment In Utah This | was @ postoffice position, which he re- | is not that they are tired out. Most! of the birds that come aboard ard fairly fresh and can fly well, yet of | accord they will stay about their own a ship till in sight of Jand, Then sud- been offered, We all| a 4 Satiaty I HARRY J. ROBINSON ip Golo., in jthe,L. D. jand then following 1894. of Now, these birds ak ‘find of Later ho' attendig time hs adassociated John migrants must have flown out and 50 to too that these were tame from absolute} cae punch him in the nose-for not. going ignorance of and unfamillarity with ‘He a wireless message,' an-|'? Church?-Boston s human. beings Not only are small | nounced the Sher onsigy ee from ee ait G peecine a aeS birds seen out at sea, but insects eve N}a man who desir to take our enNeli-May doesn't seem-so quick to come aboard, and this particularly In| tire ‘Help Ww aated eparencut for todeny her age now as she'used to be, high | warm latitudes. {it seems These more. must likely | ists. certainly | day's Bobby-Well, issue now that some of the lower creatures |and been caught in tnese and carried | be carried out by the wind, for their} "Where is he?" possess sense which we human ‘béings|on and on, exerting just sufficient | own fesble powers of flight en ne laging editor have not. It is suggested that in birds strength to k ep themselves up. This|er serve unaided The whole subject } On a capsized the sense of the instinct of direction, /extpains their sudden appearance so!is a very interesting one, and the fur- jmiles ont in the Which. is. what) enables‘ them to find | fai from shore, and is the only seem-/ liner research wiich is now going Ou) Pittsburg' Post inquired the boat abut Atlantis man-' four ' Bell-No; lately can she's I got ‘ the ily but ‘ . Lighty-, > their way tame, | : -his > - Units gous S. University for two years became a school teacher, this line of work for Ave years, During his leisure read law, and In 1906 he mitted to practice, I is |/in the le gual business with 'Cannon. : he the public schools he went to Colo'|vrado, and was graduated in 1894 from the Hich school of Montezuma county, thelr way meee: migration, is so in-|ingly possible susebsting. to explain [into the curious. air currénts in the Bobby-Mother, can I go timately associated with that of self- | thelr remarkable tamene j higher regions of the atmosphere will, | play with the Jones boy prese ‘ryation that veer the former is Darwin found birds on ine Galapa- | doubtless, tend to throw more light on Mother-No he doesn't lost the latter goes alsc jos Islands, which were extraordinar-|this long-standing puzzie to natural-!chureh! their ‘old timidity assails them |onto the ships far out at sea-have, no! and they become as wild as ever doubt, lost their sense of direction. Altogether the matter has been very |Up in the higher regions of the atpuzzling to naturalists, and it is only |mosphere flerce currents of air con-)} lately that anything like a satisfactory ,;stantly stream along, and our little has on i . . es Utah. Im. 1888, with others, he or-| state election. Mr. Clegg devoted his . oe ganized the Co-operative Furniture | Spare hours for five years in reading | Candidate for Representative. cempany, which under his able man-|law, spent one year in study with Harry J. Robinson, nominated on z sgement has grown to be one of the) the firm of Dey & Stevens and was | ths Republican ticket for. the house! ott. business: institutions of the|/admitted ‘to the. bar in 1904, His|of representatives, is a native of New) city. or the past eighteen years Mr.|place of business is now 410 and 411) York state and received his education Williams has been the superintende nt} Auerbac h" block. jat Columbia © University, graduating denly explanation ture 4 y district ras ara mailing Seoglal in ofa 2 Salt present Sugar therefore ‘has had the necessary | cighty-three years old, dying in Salt tds he eee on Pee | under General E. Connor, and Naame ae . canalitiitale ha one City in 1890. In 1861 'the fam-|5ix years. Mr. Clegg came to Sa BTA ber to build the log quarae Bikesmeny le iniceae oc 0 a wise and) came to America, crossing the| Lake in September; 1902. For three | fauled gn OGeae In Boies he NEPIO JENSON,7 ; ace plains from the Missouri river to Utah} years he attended the latter-day |i. strictly Republican, but his firs . ea eae = = |} by ox teams. William N. Williams; Saints Business college While ther re], = hhatnnas es rity of Utah ler Candidate for Representative, JOHN Q. CRITCHLOW, }erew to manhood under the same|4e was president of the Students so- Sie craieee oe iL her peo ae no »| Nephi Jenson was born in Salt Lake conditions that surrounded all youth | ciety one year, was editor of the coloe ! us Secamarat Cs edia a for the |Clt¥: July 4, 1876. After attending educated at the public schools,, worker and skillful debater ed the public schools of Ogden and) atWas Morgan's college and at the Des-| He stumped in southern Utah for| also the business college at that place. | evet University, now the Universily of| the Republican panty. during the last | 7 : Representative. Seas the Salt Lake High school two years, and then taught five years ete public schools of Salt Lake ae DBR OSOOR CNG dosert slate. St: Db. for aylor a ‘ DT gounty, 1871 Utah, ae es helped aK Cana AMA Gi Creek, 1878, een aC} canals. and reclaim the/|Sait Lake valley from S proftes- 1870. Mill eer Candidate Preston D. Richards was born af apicy Cache county, Sept. 16, 188 : ‘I r Jeaving the public schools he and 20, : Sagtus. Ree ee long iSlrenuous timesare of that cH . Apoeiiceal mining warfare Mr ee on and paeenete Candidate for Representative, . eee : Daniel McRae was born April Lz, 4 Ili oe Me ; eee -_- BRIGHAM CLEGG, Scere tvigham born Smith volunteer cavalry during the Spanish | development. o LS <Rleay ce JOHN M. MILLS, American war; member of the state | copper Mi Robinson is president of en es j (aaiRInN AER Athi: the sion commenc|the, Republican' Editorial -association; Candidate for Representative. ing in January, 1901, district attorney |seeretary of the Utah Press ne John M. Mills waseae: born : in, Meese Provo,|for the Third Judicial district for the | Gon, Salt and Lake a member of the Denver 3 unexpired term of the late Dennis C,/and Press clubs. /2@md attended. the B. Y. University at | pichnor City, Senator. ee X. filled y & al with " , 4 ving oshas. ‘ FEW € ae REE RETA TAse BRITS JeGaiicons nanon The ep wite aeeare OF Fuge. ate, re-clected at the end of his|,oq5. 4, . orney general-of (sah, first being term Reet eto oeeree oF hey Caen sd Since graduate work mine' | Chicago {e is the aeoe i cy. Ine worth, and Lake Sity of a wide cirele N. WILLIAMS. BEN a) EISae XGA. ; Candidate for Senator, Benner jy Congress, {) Whica he hus beeh greatly ested sinee its inception. erate ee ee WILLIAM division| enida wh etn ere his voting | William aon eaten the furninot pursuits Mississippi I BOOM aus i engaged in in are went to the Columbia Law school: the New York School of Law, and in| May, 1892, was. admitted tothe. bar) University of Utah. |that place after from the | schools. He is of the Washington |... ore law of this activittes to cne of the promoters and organizers of the Cambrian association He IS} iso the vice-pres ident of the ‘Trans- last named position he occupied Wwith| He has always been a Republican in the Salt Lake & Los Angeles railway | politics, ee neler a by that party and the Saltair Beach company, until;@5 @ member 0! the ower house wee Se ne eee ee cee % yer 4 = Lahoad: i bE Alanioken. es Metica contined graduated i ros TVETSILY - Ol t 1901, he has been tive alone but he is closely identified with the) ys¢g. at Galesburg, inining, agricultural and other busi-)}equcated at Knox. Mess interests of the state He was! the dagree of 4 3. ogo out. very and stout tcll-What has that to-do with a. Bell t takes al her time now deny het weight, - Phitadetphin Ledger 7 ' c i 4 |