OCR Text |
Show PERSONAL President Hardin wq speak in Salt Lake the-evening of Jua 20th. It la announce, by W. 0. Brown the President's personal representative Simplicity marked the wedding o( Amelia Egert the only daughter ot the president of Germany ti the son ot the former Kaiser's bottmaker Saturday. Satur-day. John McParland, president of the International Typographic; union and a well-known labor leader died of heart trouble, brought on by a severe attack of influenza. He was 56 Tears of age and hts home was In New Xork. The auction of Sarah Bernhardt'! effects netted 72,685 francs. The ar-tlcles ar-tlcles disposed of Included her collection col-lection of 115 paintings and water colors and three pieces of scupture by herself. The higher price was 7,500 francs, paid for a painting by Demnrseille La Croix. A little water color by Victor Hugo brought 4,100 francs. - A"" RESUME OF THE WEEK'S DOINGS IN THIS AND OTHER , .! COUNTRIES Important Events of the Last Sevtn v Days Reported by Wire and Prepared Pre-pared for the Benefit of the Busy Reader WE8TERN C. D. Kicher, who was vice president presi-dent of the defunct First National ; P.:mk of Myton, Utah from the time It was organized until it was closed by the federal examiner, was found - gull'y of misapplying funds of the bank in a verHct of a Jury in the federal court at Salt Lake City Although the calendar reads "June" - eiti.ens of Shasta and Siskiyou counties. coun-ties. California declared that from appearances ap-pearances bleak December had de-cended de-cended upon them. For the past several days the coldest June weather ever experienced here has driven residents into ovrcoats and has nipped nip-ped growing crops. Peace again reigns at Watsonville, Cr.l'f., b-tween two powerful Chinese ton:s the Hip Sing and the Bing A Kong tongs ns a result of the confession con-fession of eight American youths that they had circulated bogus lattery tickets tic-kets for which each of the tongs had blamed the other. With the caprnre of George Baldwin, at Salt Lake City, in the act of rob-I rob-I in:; n store, officers believe they have the one who is responsible for numerous numer-ous robberies and safe blowings in the . P "St few weeks, a complete set of bur..-lar"s tools was found lb. the store In which Baldwin was caught. ' Father Walter A. Grace, pastor of a Catholic church at Arvada, Colo., a suburb, Indicted by the recent federal grand jury at Pueblo on charges In connection with alleged violation of the prohibition laws, surrendered Sat- , urd:iy and was released on $2500 bond. s Warrants for the arrest of Mrs. Katherlne O'Connor, daughter of J. K. Mullen, millionaire Denver miller, and John It. Walsh, former Colorado , ranger and brother-in-law of Fatbei Grace, also named In connection with nlleged violation of the prohibition laws, were received at the office of the United States marshal. W. G. Hulbert, of Los Angeles, Is ' dead, the result of his heart being pierced by a sliver of glass from a shop window through which he wns hurled during a street fight, according ! . 'to the police, who arrested Tom Nyer-ges, Nyer-ges, 2., on a charge of suspicion of murder. James M. Wood, a mucker in the North Beck mine at Eureka, Utah was instantly killed when the cage in which he was riding was wrecked. : The wreckage and the man crashed down the shaft. Lady Mary Cambridge,, niece of Queen Mary and the Marquis of Wor-ecster, Wor-ecster, were married Thursday in St. Margaret's church, Westminister. The king and queen, Queen Alexandra and many other notables were present. Tom Mooney serving a life sentence sen-tence In San Quentin prison in connection con-nection with tlie San Francisco pre-paredenss pre-paredenss day bomb explosion in 1916, was notified Thursday ot his election by the San Francisco Mold-er's Mold-er's Union as a delegate from that body to the Union's national convention conven-tion In Cleveland next September. Father Walter A. Grace, Denver priest, was one of sixty-three persons against whom indictments were returned re-turned by a federal grand Jury at Pueblo. The Denver cleric was charged charg-ed with signing fraudulently a document docu-ment to obtain liquor, supposed to be used for medicinal purposes. Sugar prices whicn prevail at the present time are likely to continue until the advent of the new crop of beet sugar next October and Novffm-ber, Novffm-ber, Stephen H. Love of Salt Lake City, Utah, declared In his annual report as president of the United States Sugar Manufacturers" association associa-tion at the opening of the annual convention of the organization at Colorado springs. FOREIGN Submarine X-l, the largest and most powerful underwater craft In he world, was launched at Chatham, England. Eng-land. The" mystery ship" displaces 2780 tons on the surface and 3000 tons submerged, which Is greater by more than 1000 tons than any similar craft now afloat ' Plans to take control of the coal and coke and raw material supplies ot all the factories In the Ruhr were announced an-nounced at the French Headquarters. The authorities decided to adopt this method to enforce payment of the coal tax, which all except a few of the smallest plants have heretofore refused refus-ed to pay. Three hundred Chinese coal miners were drowned at Tsaochwang when meddlesome soldiers cut off the elec GENERAL Firemen and hundreds of volunteers after a desrate battle succeeded In extinguishing a spectacular oil fire at Pittsburg, Pa., over seventy five per-' per-' sons were injured in fighting the , flames which for a time threatened the city. The loss is estimated at over a million dollars. .;. The Key to the Lelghton Mount alleged al-leged murder mystery at Chicago is now believed found. B. H. Rouw of i Arizona has notified officials that he witnessed what Is declared to have been the death of the Northwestern University frishman. The Southern Illinois Coal company fias filed suit, for $175,000 against Williamson county for damage to their trie power, stopping the pumps, according ac-cording to advices. The scene of the wholesale fatality Is the second largest mine In China. It Is owned and operated oper-ated exclusively by Chinese, the only two foreigners at present In the plant being two Germans, who are installing install-ing new machinery. President LI Yuang-IIung, with a hostile army of his countrymen at the gates of his capital, ready to enter If he refused to vacate his office, yielded to the pressure of the militarists militar-ists Wednesday and left for Tientsin Wednesday on a special train. The flight of President LI Yuan Hung from Peking marks his second forced abdication as president at the hands of the Chinese military. He succeeded suc-ceeded to the presidency In 1916 property during tne iierrin Massacre of year ago. Three men were killed and at least . three others are believed to have been buried in the creek of a mixed train known as the Cannon-hall, which side-' side-' swiped a freight train la the Michigan Central yards at Grayling, Mich. With her decks a veritable shambles, sham-bles, the little sailing vessel Mary Beatrice arrived at New York with the story of a terrible fight at sea in which nine men were killed and numerous others wounded. The bodies ; of the slain were dumped overboard at the height of the battle. Two of the dead were white men, two negroes and five Chinese. The casualties resulted re-sulted In a flattie between coolies and the crew. Informal negotiations on the American Amer-ican proposal for a reciprocal treaty arrangement with the maritime powers pow-ers on the ship liquor and rum running problems of American prohibition en forcement, have so far as was learned Thursday brought no definite reaction from any of the powers. Wall street in tho midst of a many-sided many-sided "clean-up" campaign directed primarily at bueketshops, was hit Saturday Sat-urday by another failure, that of Knauth, Naehod & Ktihne, a member of the New York stock exchange and of the New York curb market. Boasting Boast-ing a record of seventy years In the street, twenty-eight of them f t members mem-bers of the etock exchange, the supposedly sup-posedly iwiwerfiil house with strong German connections was forced Into a receivership with Jll.ooo.OOO liabilities. when Presldnt Yuan Shlh-Kai died. Three thousand persons were killed, kill-ed, six villages were totally destroyed and twenty-five more were devastated by earthquake in Tonlak Khoras-san, Khoras-san, Persia, lr.st week, according, to official dispatches receive-! at Washington by the stake department The damage done is estimated at $10,000. The Belgian cabinet headed by Premier Theunis resigned In consequence conse-quence of the controversy over the legislation providing for the use of the Flemish language In Ghent Unl-varsity. Unl-varsity. The French authorities at Bochum seized 80 rifles and 60 pistols in the Bochum prison. The director of the institution claimed they were" used for guard purposes. The French assert as-sert there were more arms than legally permissible. Thirteen lives were lost and a large area was Inld waste by a typhoon on the Island of Samar, according to telegrams receiver at Manila from constabulary headquarters there. Tuesday was the twenty-fifth anniversary anni-versary of the Filipino deelnratlon of Independence at Cavlte. A big celebration cele-bration was attended by Aeuinaldo and other former revolutionary lenders. lend-ers. "Old timers" among the American Ameri-can residents were guests. The agrarian rabin'.'t, headed by Premier Stamboullsky, has been overthrown over-thrown tho plun being carried out by reserve oficers with tho assistance of the active army. Although there was no blooshed, the new regime proclaimed pro-claimed a state selge. |