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Show "THE WEEKLY REFLEX ' W. P. & Epperson ROOSEVELT BRIDAL 111 boKBSS ATTIRE Son, Leases - KAYSVILLE ETHEL - UTAH SCUTARI ATTACK THE UTAH BUDGET PENDING SIGNING OF ARMISTICE RENEWED EFFORTS ARE MADE TO CAPTUREjClTY. Ogdens new ctty directory shows an Increase In population of approximately 1.000. The six girls who made their escape front the state Industrial school at Ogden last week, are again back In the .institution , Report is That Owing to Egheuetioq of Food the Commander of Scu- tari it Endeavoring to Negotiate for Its Surrender. a resident of Salt Lake and a well known clothing merchant, died Sunday at a hospital from peritonitis. Kush of emigrants from the east to the Pacific coast has reached great proportions 300'persons going through ytah to a day over one railroad sys ' tern. Robert D. Coates. 42 years of age and & resident of Utah since he was 2 yeariTof age, died Sunday at (.ranger of. tumor of the brain and llrlghts disease. Congressman Jacob Johnson Is the author of a bill compelling manufac-- i turers of fabrics to label on each piece of cloth manufactured exactly what It is composed of. Under. a P t a e 1 a w t h e o it yd aides arc compelled to deliver their product in clospd bottles. The largest dalrv in Salt take uses from 6.500 to bottles constantly. with the public schools of the slate lu the observance of Utah development week. May 12 to 17, will be sought by governors of the Utah , Development league.1 The Commercial Boosters club of s5laogan has decided to give a celebration for the Fourth of July, and committees have been appointed to arrange for the event. Axell Britton, postofflce Inspector for the Rio Grande district In Utah, died at the Provo general hospltat Saturday of blood poisoning, caused by a slight scratch on the leg. Salt take county may appropriate $5,000 this year toward the construction of a permanent building at the state fair grounds for the housing of all future county exhibit there. Jack Perelval, charged with murder of Adolph Tujltto, pleaded guilty to a charge of voluntary manslaughter at Salt Iake last week, and was sentenced to one year in the penitentiary. Six Cretans and Greeks, arrested on .a charge of firing" upon the United States mine at Bingham last November, when Mike Spinbon was killed, will have their preliminary examination this week. The body of llenry Rutherford, who was shot and killed by Thomas Clements at a rooming house In Salt take, following a drunken row In which a woman took part, has been shipped east for burial. , Onlylt part of, the cream produced in Utah goes Into the making of butter. It Is estimated that about 300, 000 gallons of sweet cream are used annually In this state In the manufacture of candies and Ice cream. After a suspension of work for sev eral months, macadam road building fh Weber county was begun agalu'Moii-damorning and will continue until all the roads of the county are placed in first class Conditio, To stop the ravages of the deadly phytonomus vartabilis otherwise the alfalfa weevil in Utah. George L Reeves-Jieaof the Salt Lake Df entomology, has received a shipment of arsenlte sine. Tired of life, Mrs. Ethel Alexandot of Salt take soaked doughnuts In car bolic acid, but was prevented from .eating enouga to causa fatal result The near tragedy too place in a cafe in the presence of her husband. The fruit outlook In Box Elder county for the Coming season is getting .more encouraging each day to the growers. There are but a - few that took for a Tcpetltion'of the condltronf that existed throughout the state last w t'l r J A.- ijttp ?f r . s k) !. London Rending the signing of a formal armistice covering, the operations of all the "allies, the Montenegrins are renewing their desperate efforts to capture Scutari, the fall of which, according to an official report V ij M Two netfc bills Sacramento. dealing-witthe question of laid ownVrsjhip by aliens la California, each representing the, view of a considerable factlonTn the legislature, will be offered and voted on by the senate this week. Through an agreement, Reached by leaders of the majority party a drastic law directed .solely against the Japanese and Chinese will be proposed as a substitute for the Thbiupson-Bird-sal- l measure and probably will be passed. If not, an end will have come to the landlegislanon at this session, leaders declare The plan of the majority party is in direct -- opposition .to govern-mennurea- d rear. - -- . from ' Brussels Owing In great part tc the advice of the king, the govern meot accepted on Tuesday Jhe com promise proposed 1y the liberal lead er, F.-- Masson, and th great strike for manhobd suffrage, which on. account of the remarkable discipline' maintained, the solidarity of those - It is supposed has government and " suspended service In order d BRYAN IN ADVISES CAUTION -- RICHES OF MESSAGE TO JOHNSON Oil THE BORDER MakesKnown Views of President Wllson Regarding Proposed Allen -Land Law Before Legislature. -- AMERICAN. SOLDIERS TO GUARD BORDER LINE UNTIL MEXICAN WAR IS ENDED. Washington. President Wilson and Secretary Bryan, following the of previous administrations, on Saturday made known their views on the international character of the legislation now pending' In California by which Japanese would be prevented from owning land in that state. In a telegram to Governor lliram Yy. Johnson, made public both at Sacramento and Washington, Secretary Bryan expressed the view of President WilsAn that the California assembly bill might be construed as a violation of treaty obligations with Japan, while the senate measure as drawn would not (objectionable, if alien land legislation Is to be enacted at all In this the federal government recognizes' the sovereign right of California 1o legislate according' to her own Judgment, Tiut the message counseled caution. The telegram and other Information from official circles indicated clearly that the provisions In the assembly bill by which aliens ineligible to citfrom izenship would be prohibited owning land were regarded here as & distinct discrimination against Japanese, who at present are denied the right of naturalization. pre-cede- Major General Wood,' After a Tour of Inspection of Campe, Declares Men Will be on Duty Until Caueee of Mobilization are Removed. Galveston, Texas. MaJ. Gen. Leon-snWood, chief of staff, declared Sunday night that the second division of the United States army will remain mobilized at Galveston and Texas City "until the causes of the moblll-zatloare removed, 4 I do not know Just how' Jong the division will remain mobilized, he saldJiior does any other pi an know-Thdivision will remain any length of time, from one week to one year. 1 am surejthe stay will be a long one-- six d n -- monchs'ordonger. General Wood, who Is on a tour of Inspection of border camps, vlstted Fort Crockett here Sunday and later Inspected the Texas City camp and Brownsville. Yaquis on Warpath. A band of 200 Empalme, Sonora Yaqul Indians have taken the warpath sixty miles below this point. They burned the - station house and WAR FEEUNG RAMPANT at Oroz TheTe railway equipmentwaa.no fighting here.Tueida. -- -- AMONG THE JAPANESE While Orators Incite Rabble the Newspapers Outline Plane for Seizure of the Philippines and Hawaii. Toklo. The Japanese government considers the present movement in California as most dangerous and is faced with the prospect of placing itself in a most unwelcome position owing to the unwillingness of the federal government at Washington to Intervene and the Impossibility of introducing counter measures nere In the event of the passage of the California alien land holding bill through both houses of the legislature Japan. will issue an imperiaJLor-dinancenforcing the Japanese foreign land ownership bill of 1910 and will appIjT"to the federal government at Washington for pejjnlssion for the citiJapanese to. hecome'naturalixed zens of the United States. ' Anonymous writers in the newspapers give an outline of plans for the seizure of the Philippines and Hawaii and at the same time denounce the Japanese government's submissive attitude. It Is said that the changed conditions, in Japan make it impossl-- ! ble for, the. government to restrain the newspapers and the lower classes. anti-Japanes- most-Importa- -- e e JAMES R. MANN. Csttgesssman from Second District el Illinois o Washington Discussing Iemocrts. past and present. Republican Leader Mann set off some political fireworks Monday on the floor of the house Thomas Jefferson, William R." Hearst, Speaker Clark and Secretary Bryan were' referred to by Mr. Mann in the course of a caustic criticism of, the house Democrat. Threaten to Attack Matamoras. Brow nsville, Texas Const it utlonai-ist- J j Strike Extends to France. Lille. France any Belgla estimated 'to number between ployed in French border towns are 400 and 900 are reported to be pre- joining In the strike started .by their paring to attacx Matamoras, the Mex- comrades as a mark of sympathy with ican town opposite here.. Matamoras their fellow coutnrymen across the frontier. has a strong, gamson. -Cowboy Lands In Asylum. Japs Cheer War Threat. N. Y, Joseph Stefunsky, Buffalo, Tokio A demand that the Japan ese government resort to arms was the Montana cowboy whb "shot up hysterically cheered at & mass meet the office of Mayor, Louis P. Fuhr ng here' Thursday to protest against mann last month, injuring', an officer the alien land .bill now before the attendant, has been taken to Mattea- wan asylum. California -legislature. v , M s . -- i t- J - that the Montenegrin closed the frontier postal and telegraph to prevent any Inter- - . Woman Arrested After Finding Bodies of Her Mother and Sitter. St. Louis. The bodies of Mrs. Er- nestine Kommlchau, 79 years old, and her daughter, Selma Kommlchau,' SOT were found under a concrete slab In the basement of the' Kommlchau home on Tuesday.. A younger daugh-- i ter, Marie Kommlchau, 49, who was lwod measure. arrested at the city hospital in conSERIOUS SITUATION AT CANANEA nection with the finding o( (he bodies to.d the police her mother and sister had ' died from natural causes ana Manager of Copper Company Driven thdt she had buried (hem In the baseOut of District by Idle Miners. ment because they had a prejudice Cananea, Mex. J. S. Douglas, vice- - against burial In a cemetery. president and general manager of the APPEALS TO CALIFORNIANS. Cananea Consolidated Copper company, was driven out of Cananea MonWilson Asks Legislative Leaders' Not day by a mob of 2,000 idle miners and to Paso Land Laws. smeltermen The mob presented its demand that President Wilson, afWashington he leave for Douglas at 11 o'clock Mon- ter a conference with the Democratic He left by automobile delegation from California , in conday morning for the international border. gress on Tuesday, decided to teleThe mob was accompanied by J. N. graph Governor Johnson and legislaDuranzo, prefect of the Ariape dis- tive leaders In California appealing to trict and Colonel Alvardo, in command them not to enact any land of the Sonora state troops here. laws in contravention of treaty obliNeither offered to Interfere. gations ofthe United States with r H. W. JOHNSON Governor of California. MORGAN GO TO SON. Amount of Bequests and Trusts Under Twenty Millions, Residue Be- Ing Left to J. P. Morgan, Jr. New YorkThe wilt- - of the late John Plerpont Morgan does not give an accurate Idea of the value' of the estate left by the financier, and the executors declare that no announce-ment will be made on this yvoint until the appraisal has been made for determining the state Inheritance tak. The amount of bequests and trusts, named by specific sums, Is under but the entire residue of the estate Is left to J P. Morgan, Jr., who Is designated by his father to become the chief heir, not only to his fortune, but to his many charitable and artistic activities. WILL SEND FLEET OVER OCEAN. Secretary Daniels! Plans Voyage to the Mediterranean . . Bryan of the state department last week, and the Democrats have decided to offer, a.bilj w jijch. will .confine, the restriction to "aliens who have not declared their intention to become Citizens, according to law. Governor Johnson gave out a state- ment on Monday in which he resents iwhat he terms the interference of the national government in state affairs, and advocates the passage of the d -- - Public Tire of Militancy. London The. suffragottea had plenty of endenefe Sunday that the public has tired of militancy and only the protection afforded by lirge bodies of police saved tie women from the hands of angry mobs. Plotting' Against Servla. A Belgrade London dippatch to the Daily Mail says that tljo existence or a secret convention , providing for reciprocal assist-- , anco In conflicts with Sema has Been Austro-Hungaria- n revealed ' - BODIES FOUND IN CELLAR. anti-Japane- Next Winter. Washington. Secretary Daniels announced Sunday that next winter practically the entire Atlantic fleet would be sent on a three months cruise to the Mediterranean. This will be the near , secretarys first step in pursuance of his policy to make the navy, in times of peace, a great educational force for the enlisted men and to afford them opportunity to enjoy the CONCESSION MADE TO WEST. broadening advantages of knowledge of the great countries of the world. Wsstern Senators Will be Permitted to The secretary believes such a Present Arguments Against cruise will add greatly to the Bailors Free Wool. usefulness. Democratic forces In Washington TROUBLE WITH MOROS AVERTED charge of the- tariff revision In the senate, slightly- yielded Monday to the Belligerent Tribesmen Who Threat- demands for hearings upon the tariff schedules. In addition to the permisened American Soldiers Have sion given all interested parties to file Disbanded. with Washington. Trouble the further statements with the finance Moros in the Philippines, which has committee, Senator Simmons conceded threatened the peace of. mind. of,the Monday to a group of w estern "senawar department for several weeks has tors the right to appear and state their against the free wool and been averted Reports to the depart- arguments free sugar provisions that have been ment say the army of belligerent to the Democrats of the agreed by tribesmen, numbering 3,000, which house. laid to Jolo and practically siege dared the American guard to venture Titanic Owners Liable for $3,000,000 forth and do battle, has dispersed. New YoTk. The federal-distri- ct The Moros threatened to revolt because agitators from the province of court on Monday dismissed the petiLuzon had spread reports that the tion of the Oceanic Steam Navigation Americans planned to make them company, limited, as owner of the White Star liner Titanic, for a limitaabandon the 'Mohammedan religion. tion of liability resulting from the loss Recover Missing Child. of the Titanic, The court held that Columbia, Miss. A boy taken from company s liability is to be determined an itinerant peddler here several days by the law of Great Britain, which would make the owners of the Titanic ago suspected of being Robert Dunbar,- missing from' his liable for about $3,000,000. home In Opelousas, " La.7 since last Ultimatum Served en Montenegro. August, was identified Tuesday by Mr. C. P. Dunbar, the childs mother. Antivari, . Montenegro. An ' ultimatum was sent to Montenegro MonNoted Resort Burned. day .by the commander of the, interConn. Honest Greenwich, John national fleet blockading the coast. It Kellys inn at Rje Beach was de- declares that unless Montenegro imstroyed by fire. Sunday The resort mediately withdraws her troops from was threatened for several hours on Scutari 'the fleet will land troops at account of the high wind, but the Antivari and San Giovanni flames were confined to Kellys place. di Medua Dulcjgno first-han- "No government could yield to a strike of this nature. To yield would be to abdicated Nevertheless, the strike seems to have made sufficient Impression "on the government to, Induce it, to un.bend from its uncompromising attitude far enough to Insure the termination of a situation which already has-c- ost millions the -- country-many and dally is driving away from manufacturer customers they never may win back. The decision to accept the compromlse was reached Mondays by the cab- Inet and the premier announced in the chamber of deputies on Tuesday thqt the government had made M Massons motion its own. When the chamber met Tuesday the conciliatory motion of M. Masson, the. liberal leader, was taken up Immediately. ' ference on the part of the powers until Scutari falls. A report published at Bucharest says that under the settlement arranged at St, Petersburg Roumania will receive Sillstria with about two mifek'of tefritory around the down, and the right to erect fortifications. ' Ths picture shows Ethel Roosev elt with her father entering 8t Jekns Episcopal church for her wedding ceremony, 8he and her husband. Dr. Rich-arDerby, have gone to Europe for th elr honeymoon. - declared: Broquevl-le- , " . ,lnthe- - movementand its wJiQJoiDed Is unique in his Secretary skillful organization. called-of- f tory, wilpbe Onlya week ago the Belgian premier, Charles De , artillery, 1 ( telegram-received-by-Gove- . Reports from all over the northern part of Iavls county Indicate the fall barley crop, one of the ef the cereal productions of this violn-tty- , has not stood the prolonged cold winter eo well as usual, and the crop will probably not be more than half what it was last year. Exchanging hla prison Mouse and hat for, the coat and cap of a grave digger. working in a Salt "Lake cemetery, John Stewart, private of L company Twentieth United States in; fantgy, recently sentenced to eighteen months for desertion, successfully es caped from Fort Douglas. . George Main,-whshot and fatally Injured his former wife. vMary Main Boyle, at Salt take, April 9, .and then attempted suicide, died from his When told of his April 21. wife's death. Main tore the .bandages from bis ground and secretly poisoned the wound by crowding dirt and de composed food Into It. The condehsed milk factories, of which there are five in Utah, are heavy ssers of butter fat. They hav e their own source of supply amopg the farmers, who haul their milk direct to the factories at Logan, Richmond anil gden. Excavation was begun on the temple ' grounds at Salt, take last week for the seagull monument that has been In contemplation by the churchy an thorltles for some time past ft U expected to have the monument completed and ready for dedication on 'Vsneer dav July 4.. Influenced by Advice of King, th Belgian Premier Backs' Down and Electoral Reform Compromise Adopted by Chamber. anti-alie- n , - UNIGUE MOVEMENT SUCCEEDS AIL C 0 STLOF-ILUQ MANUFACTURERS. v. Cal. Issued at Cettinje, Is Imminent. There is no confirmation of the storyfrom Trieste that owing to the containedin the exhaustion of food the commander of Johnson Scutari is endeavoring to negotiate for its surrengcr, but a Belgrade dispatch says the Montenegrins still have all the Servian heavy artillery before Scutari atd are using it In thelrprp8eot attack, although Ihe Servian troops either have left or are leaving that district. It is stated that Montenegro is endeavoring to arrange with servla"for'lhe purchase-o- r this -- - - Majority Party Leaders Agree on Allen Land BUI Aimed .Solely Against Japanese and Chineaa. h - Charles E. Madsen, long BELGIMI STRIKERS - Four Counties Flooded. Ylckstruf'Mlss; THetlrstserioui break in the main dikes In the lender Mississippi .valley occurred Monday, when the Woodlawn levee, just north of M aye rsville Miss, went out flooding four counties. --' From Celt to. Peerage. $rora a cell' m the Leavenworth federal prison hefe to a British peer-g- e will be the eipenence of Fred Greg, a convict, w hen he is released June 16. after serving ofie year using the mails to defraud. y Anti-Alie- n anti-alie- Japan. n f - Will Not Act on Currency Legislation. Washington. Currency reform legislation was taken up for the first time Tuesday by the full senate committee on banking and currency. As the result of a short session in which plans.for A financial bill were not discussed in detail, it is believed that unless President Wilson Insists there will be no final action upon currency legislation at the present session of ' congress. . Turk in Pitiable State. 16,000 TurkislT with whom are DJavid Pasha and all his generals, the remnants of the Vardar army. and refugees from the fortres of Janina, have arrived at Fiera on the coast .of the Adriatic The fugitives are said to be In a pitiable state. The troops are mostly iU and suffering from starvation. They are completely demoralized. - TViennaSome sol-dler- s Pope Impatient to Resume Work. Rome. The pope sat up for two hours Tuesday, afttr which Dr. Amici, by the Instruction of Professor forced him to retunT to bed which the pontiff did reluctantly. The pope is impatient to resume his ordl- anry life, but the physicians insist, upon absolute rest, at least for anMar-ebiafav- a, other fortnight i Passes Appropriation Bill. Washington. By an overwhelming-vo- te the house on Tuesday passed the, sundry civil appropriation bill,,' with provision the use of funds appropriated to carry out the antitrust law for theprosecution of labor'-unioand farmers organizations. n WM Ask Counties to Aid. Helena. Mont. Counties of Montana will be asked to appropriate money from their general funds assm Montana In. making a creditable state exhibit at the 1915 exposition in California. Valley Buried by Slide.1 Florae, France.-Tpe crest of Mount Rochefort, flomlnatin?' this .n enormous Tuesday. of rock. rolled for a mile 'and a ha,f into, the valley, destroyinz gardens and orchard. ' A 1 : , A' A A , ' |