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Show AMERfCAIIS Uppers UTAH KAYSVILLE HUT fiOl'EllTlLEtlT AFTER I PRESIDEIIT FAILS T173 WEEKS OF iIZST THE PHOilE TRUST Z THE UTAH BUDGET A railroad to Moab, either from strong Thompsons or Cisco, is now probability. It is predicted that between 400 and 00 carloads of peaches will be shipped from Utah county this year. Greek Nicholas Leodahs, aged 28, miner, was Instantly killed when he fell under a train at Bingham, being " ;ut to pieces. Salt Lake City has been chosen as the next meeting place of the Pacific Coast Freight Agents. association, which has Just closed Its convention at Seattle. A prize baseball game, & quartette singing contest and a good program 0! sports Will take place at the annual Labor ,day picnic of the Salt Lake Federation of Labor. The fire reports from the' southern forests is that they are having rain on the Fish lake and Powell forests,, and that there is. little danger of fire -- Within the next week. N Morris Fretwell, signal malntatner for the Southern Pacific at Ogden, was electrocuted by coming In contact with a high tension wire carrying 11,- 000 volts of electricity. T Three Salt Lake young men, with packs on their backs, have started on a walking tour to San Francisco. They will get there when they have had all the Jun along the line they can find. Deputy Sheiiff J. L. Hobson was shot, but not seriously wounded, and hla assailant, August Dodb, aged 28, a machinist, received a bullet wound in the arm in a pistol duel in Ogden. - Homesteaders on the South Myton bench may get water at last. After Beven years' waiting, contracts have been signed which assure raising sufficient capital to complete the project. The. farmers of Utah are much ahead of Californians ln the matter of adopting new reclamation to Ik A. Hart, supervisor of the United' States drainage investlga--t-on- . -- ' . J Ideas,4-accordin- g -- - -- Several cases of typhoid at . Devils Slide have been reported to Dr. T. B. Beattie, secretary of the state board or health, and an investigation Is being made by the btnte sanitary- - Inspectors. Because his monkey wrench broke and a piece of the metal struck him In the left eye, rendering It sightless, Martin F. Johnson wants $3,320 damages from James 'j. ' Farrell, a Salt Lake plumber. After an Illness of only a few days, Mrs. - Leola Celia, aged 22 years, known to the public as Dolleta, the doll woman, died suddenly at Ogden, where she was appearing with a company. William A. Miller, 60 years of age, a pioneer resident- of Sprlngville, died last week from blood poisoning. He was sick about three weeks. Mr. Miller came to Utah with a handcart company when a small boy. "A Salt Lakfs man Is In possession of a peculiar animal, which might be -- termed a Its front portion Is cat and rear 'portion rabbit. The forefeet are equipped with claws that A"" look like they might scratch." A. more for than Whitaker, George twenty year a prominent cigar man ufacturer of Salt Lake and once a member of the county commission and of the" slaie senaterdied suddenly on July 28 of leakage of the heart. The officers of the Oneida, Henson, Cache and Hyrum stake Mutual Improvement associations have announced that the annual field day of the four stake mutuals" will be held" in Preston this year on the first day of September. "John W. Hill, 80 years of age, a resident of Utah since 1874 and well known in railroad circles, died July iu Chicago, of apoplexy. Mr. Hill lormerly worked on the okl Utah Central' railroad'and helped build the road from Lebi to Provo. W. U. Bywater, chief of the Salt Lake fire department, has been reinstated after being suspended for some t.nie pending Investigation following the running down aud killing of a girl while he was,on'h6-wa- y to a file in an jmtbrTob.le. Afiother murder was committed in t ear-niv- - cat-rabbi- t. -- - , Salri.a ke-- City Z .a just-wee- k, atrordingter the verdict of a coroners jury summoned to investigate the cause of the death of the familiar police court character known as Johnnie Bull, who was beatetfto death by unknown person. --- Barricading himself in his room while deputy sheriffs were attempting to take him Into custody, pending a hearing as to bis sanity, T. II. a checker at the Denver &.R10 Grande freight depot In Salt Lake, commiatecf suicide by shooting himself through the head. Conrad Gutter, 61 years of age, and a resident of Providence, was found dead in his home last week. He is thought to haVe died of heart trouble. Mr. Gutter was bachelor, who made a livelihood by peddling vegetables and fruits in Logan. - lo. Spite of a .prediction. hy.a.Sall. Lake woman that the Saltair pavilion would collapse Pioneer day, the resort did not fall in However, many persons who had piannel to spend the lay there were prevented from taking their outing at the lake, by the predie-- ' Pot-thof- f, -- Lon. DISSOLUTION OF ALLEGED TELEPHONE COMBINE ON PACIFIC COAST IS SOUGHT. OFFIATTACK ON IMMIGRATION CER CAUSES WASHINGTON OF FICIALS TO ENTER PROTEST,t AMBASSADOR WILSOM THINKS UNITED STATES SHOULD THE HUERTA REGIME. AID X-- Giant Cofporatlon Charged with Destroying Competition and Creating Monopoly In Oregon, Washington," Montana "and Idaho. Demand Is Made That Huerta Government Arreat and Punish Mexican Soldiers and Liberate impra- : Americana. Washington. Strong representations, the most drastic in phraseology that have been made since the present" American administration came Into power,. were made to the .Huerta government In Mexico on Sunday. The United "States government demanded not only the prompt arreBt, and punishment of the Mexican federal soldiers who shot Charles B. Dixon, an Amerlcan'immi-grattoofficial at Jugrez, but the immediate release of Charles Blssel and Bernard McDonald, mining managers, Imprisoned by federal soldiers at Chihuahua City and said to be threatened w.ith execution. So seriou were these Incident regarded In official circles that they overshadowed largely the policy which the visit of Ambassador Wilson had brought to a cllmai. The ambassador hfmself was so exercised over the developments In Mexico that he dictated two strong telegrariis, one to' the embassy at Mexico City and the other to the American consuLat Juare and while Secretary Bry&n slightly modified-their tonefrihey were approved anti-tru- n promptly'dlspatched. Charles' B. Dixon, Jr., the United States Immigration inspector, who was shot In the bnck at Juarez Saturday by Mexican soldiers, was released from the Juarez hospital and brought to El Paso at 1 oclock Sunday after American Consul T. D. Edward had made a demand for hi release and for the arrest of the men who shot him. Tourists In Wreck. Boulder, IC0I0. Twenty-sevepassengers injured, six probably fatally, when five coaches of the Denver, Boulder & WeBtern train overturned near Eldora, Colo., Sunday. In the five coaches were 125 passengers, mostly tourists from the east, who were viewing the scenery of the Switzerland trod. n e is (Copyright.) MEDIATION IN ROT, SAYS WILSON ALL May a MEXICO st WelJ Abandon -- Monroe trine Should We Consider Doc- Trl-parti- te iCommlseion, New York. Pausing here for a half day on Frlday'on his hurried trip in respbnse to a summons from President Wilson, Henry Lane Wilson, American embassador to Mexico, announced hiB emphatic opposition to several plans under consideration by the state department for bringing about peace to the troubled Mexican' republic. While declining to enter into an extended discussion of any plans or to offer any remedy of his own, Mr. Wilson characterized the mediation Mr. WHbou gave plan as all rot. his reasons why be considered the plan for a tripartite commission not a feasible one. If we are to consider such a plan we may as well abandon the Monroe doctrine entirely," he said. "The Monroe doctrine pledges the United States to take care of the Interests of the American governments without the help of any foreign country. Consequently under the Monroe doctrine we cannot attempt to Bettle Mexldos affairs through the service of such a body as the proposed tripartite commission, sines it involves calling in outside governments to help. Mexlco-to-Washingto- n - st Mul-hal- l, idt-a- " U-d- irst-advanced -- - jf be-Ue- Secretary of Treasury Issues Statement Regarding Drop in Bonds. Washington, Secretary McAdco issued a statement Monday night hUy charg.ng that the decline of got ema new inent 2 per cent bonds to 95 low record was due almost whollv to what appeared to' be a campaign waged with every indication oi ron certed action on the part of a number of lnfluentlariew York City banks to .cause apprehension and uneasinesi about these bonds in order to help to defeat the cur. them In their effort rency bH. LODGE DENIES CHARGE. Senator Insists That He Never Knew 5 yf. i v ' '"v - Martin Mulhall. Washington. Martin M. Mulhall sat on the witness stand before the senate lobby committee Monday and heard another senator deny his Btate, ments. Senator, Lodge, mentioned as one of the many with whom the former lobbyist for the National Asso ciation of Manufacturers had held political conferences, declared he did not know the witnesb and never had heard of him until the present investigation began. "'r! - Bloomers Barred. swimming In bloomers, without a skirt Dr. Rosalie M. L&dova w'as arrested st the Jackson park Biunicipal beach here Sunday, and .taken to a police station, after she had " put "ott her street "clothes. ' ' T v Vi matic of Suffragets End Pilgrimage. London. The long pilgrimage to London of women suffragets culminated Saturday evening in a monster gathering r Hyde park, attended by fully 100,000 women, seventy speakers taking part. Jackling as Oil Director. Boston, Mass. Colonel D.' C. Jack-linof Sat L&fce wMl be elected a director of the General Petroleum company at a meeting to be held in San Francisgo next week. He will represent Hayden, Stone & Co. of Boston. Train Wreck in Georgia. lacon, Ga. Two. fast passenger Georgs E. Gorman, who now repre- trains on the Southern railway "Collidsents a Chicago district In congress, ed head on at Holton, eight ' miles attended Georgetown university In northaf Macon early Saturday. A neWashington, Is a lawyer and Is forty gro potter was killed and a number of years old. passengers are reported injured. Bausko Burned ay Greeks. Sixteen Killed In Train Wreck. t Sofia, Bulgaria. The Important Copenhagen. A train bearing a town of Bausko In Macedonia, where large number of emigrants bound for American missionaries have estate the United States was derailed Saturiished a large settlement has been day. Sixteen person Including M. burned by the Greek troops, accord- Sabroe, a membe of the lower house ing to reports. of the Danish" parliament, were, killed. serious. -- . International tennis 8-- 6, Earl Roger Takes Case. Los Angeles Earl Rogers, .who was chief counsel to Clarence Darrow in the latters court appearances here, has practically been retained as. chief SJunsel for thellelense of Drew Cam- lnetti and Maury Diggs. 6-- 6-- g non-milita- Lay Clatpv on Cabinet Deputy Sheriff Shot. Some of the leading newsOgden. While attempting to stop a papers accuse the Japanese cabinet o! street fight Friday night Lou Hobson, lark df diplomatic adroitness in the chief deputy sheriff, was shot in the nesot'ations connected with the Cali- right side by August Bodh. The of- fornia alien :ded its tina the championship, ended Monday on the Wimbledon courts' In a victory for the United States,' when Maurice E. the American singles champion, defeated Charles F. Dixon, the veteran English' player, at 1 Tokki. upon the part of the interior department in making the work of the reclamation' service a success was promised by Secretary Lane Monday night at a meeting of the settlero of the Shoshone project at Garland, Wyo. The secretary declared that he was now in a position to go to congress to ask for favorable treatment for the settlers. working hours of women from sixty r to a week with "not more than ten hours a day. No female under 21 years of age is permitted to estabish-men- t work in a manufacturing at night,. -- -- Lane Visits Shoshone Project. Billings, Mont. Cordial Americans Defeat Britons. suWimbledon, England. World premacy In dawn tennis rests with the' United States., The struggle for the Dwight F. Davis trophy, emble- fifty-fou- Murder and Suicide. Robinson Rumsey, Alta. George and his wife and their two children, Alice and Matthew, both aged 12, were found dead at the Robinson farm home here. Authorities believe It a case of murder and suicide. The postoffices ' at Washington Delta, Garfield, Hyrum and Lehl. Utah, and E!k River, Plummer and Kimberly, Idaho, have been designat ed postal savings depositaries, effec tive September 2. - 4 t Tener Signs Reform Bill. Harrisburg,. Pa. Governor Tener Irasspproved the bill reducing the Mon-clov- a, Made Postal Savings Depositories. if d BLAMES NEW YORK BANKS. s Federal Driven Back, Eagle Pass, Texas. Five hundred federate, who made a sortie from were driven back by constitutionalists. according to .reports to Piedras Negras Saturday. Considerable losses on both Bides were reported. -- a 8, non-suppo- rt Cbicago-F- dr e de-v- Galli-poIl- n n-- st previous affairs of the sort In the With Him In 1910. rioting which followed Miss Pank-hurWashington. One more denial of was rearrested and taken to the allegations of Martin M. Holloway Jail. former for the "lobbyist National Association of ManufacturTwo Women Drowned. Montreal. Two women were drown- ers, and one more serious charge men close to the powers that ed In the St. Lawrence river Sunday against were in Washington In the days when when an automobile In which they were sluing ran off the deck of the Mulhall was working as a political 'ferry --steamer South and into the agent, marked the progress Thursriver. Miss Ruth Morrison of this city day of the senate investigating comand Mrs J.t Choyne, 26 years old, of mittee through his voluminous correspondence. St. Henry, were thev victims. Senator Cummins, a member of the Investigating committee, declared by Arrested In Pulpit. Mulhall tnhave taken him into priO. With blble a Dayton, MASSACRE POPULACE. conference ..about public busivate hands and in the act of delivering the Invocation at the evening services in ness .In. 1910, denied flatly that "he English and American Residents Said a local churl h, Rev. V. B. Slater of ever had held such a conference with to Have Been Among Victims. the lobbyist Youngstown, 0 was arrestel Sunday Paris. A telegram from Salontki, night by detectives on the charge of GEORGE E. GORMAN printed In the Paris edition of the of his wife and two chilNew York Herald, says the Grqek dren. army occupied Xantht on Saturday and' reported that the Inhabitants, inDedicated. Temple Americans and Englishmen, cluding Csrdston. Alberta President Jowere massacred by the Bulgarians. seph "F. Smith, with a party of notaare said to have Seventy foreigners bles from Salt Lake City, dedicated been put to death. of new the site the $1,000,000 temple Twenty thousand Greeks and many here as Canadian headquarters . on Mussulmans and Jews are reported Sunday. Over 2.000 adherents of the .to have perished in the town, which church' from all parts of Alberta were was pillaged by the Bulgars. present in-hi- aduna-Istratio- -- Pankhurst Again in Jail. Sylvia Pankhurst, the mil-If. ffragette who 'was out on under the "cat and mouse law, CUMMINS DENIES CHARGE. was the leader of a suffragette demonstration Sunday .which surpassed all Refutes Hulhall Story of Conference ai Ambassador Washington. Lane Wilson, summoned from Mexuo City to inform the Washington of conditions in the rebell on torn republic, talked for an tour with; President Wilson and Secretary Jirjan on Monday, submitting chiefly a t ornmendation that th& United . sta-use Its influence to establish the Jimr-tregime. No policy was evolved, at least none was announced, but It b came known that the presidents and those of Ambassador Wilson as to the course td be pursued are bo ral. eally different that the administration , officials Interpreted the days deveK)-ments as forecasting the acceptance of Ambassador Wilson s resignat.ou. President Wilson and the ambassa dor looked on the future Mexican sit uation, it was learned, from opposite viewpoint. The president is concerned over the morality of any policy ad ipt ed by the United States and the effect on other Latin American countries and is disinclined to strengthen a goven men came into power through the questionable evetats incident tT Maderos assassination. Ambassador Wilson, on the otTer hand. Is disposed'to look at the st.u.t lion, cot from past events, but vi n the practical idea of the future. He believeB it is the Tiusiness of goern ments to look to the future and his suggestions have been in the dire, tiou of extending recognition to the Huerta certain things to government if conserve American interests. jo-call- court-marsh- nd Portland.- - Ore. Dissolution of the alleged telephone monopoly on the Pacific coast by the American Telephone & Telegraph company the Bell telephone, trust is sought by Attorney General McReynolds Th the civil- suit filed here Thursday, The government charges the giant corporation and' its subsidiaries with absorbing Independent telephone companies to destroy competition and create a monopoly in Oregon, Washington,' Montana and TURKISH TROOPS MASSACRE Idaho, in violation of the Seraan law. This is the first attempt ever made THE CHRISTIANS IN THRACE to statute apply the federal anti-truto the telephone situation. Telephone companies have claimed that the telephone, like the railroad, is a naCountry Has Been Converted Into a tural monopoly and that a single sysHuman Slaughter House Turks tem . is conducive to the best interMurder Where Butgars Spared. ests of the public. The department of justice contends that it is a question of public policy for congress to Constantinople. Trustworthy re- determine. a ports of appalling massacres and It is declared that the suit will not station by Turkish irregular troops interfere with the sweeping investicome from districts in Thrace which the interstate gation proposed by the Turks are reocoupying. The coun- commerce commission into the gentry about Malgara. northeast of eral telephone situation to 'determine according to reports, 'has been whether the Sherman law should be converted into a human slaughter Invoked generally with the purpose house. The Bulgarians pillaged and of competition or whether enforcing burned the Moslem villages and mas-sa- c should be permitted or enmonopoly ihelr Inhabitants, and now Jthe under regulation similar to Turks are wreaking dreadful ven- couraged of railways. This Btep was that geance on the Christian villages which taken In the west because the attorthe Bulgarians spared. ney general believed there existed a TheTurklsh-troops-wh- o peculiar situation demanding immecommitted only a few- - mur- diate attention to cure evils said to ders. The Turkish troops and their have been brought about by unfair however, regulars who followed and 'illegal combinations. worked their will on the Christians of practices Malgara and eighteen villages In the Farm Commission Back From Europe neighborhood. New York. Back from Europe, The Turkish government, realizing where it has been investigating agrithe need of the good opinion of the cultural conditions, the American European powers at this time. Issued commission strict orders to all officers to avoid agricultural announced that it has secured a reprisals by their troops, but they wealth of information which.- it beare unable to restrain the men, who lieves will enable it to prepare It rewere inflamed by the stories of Bulsubmit the document before and port garian savagery upon MuBselmen. the end tLejiresent year. RAILWAYS WITHDRAW DEMANDS Seventeen bees After Fortune. Disagreement Between Eastern Roads Chicago. Seventeen Lees who and Men to be Settled by Arbitration. they may prove relationship to New York. TheXea stern railroads Henry Lee, the wealthy publisher who on Saturday withdrew their demand died recently, leavin'; an estate valued that their grievances against the em- at $200,000, have communicated with ployes should be considered by tbe the publl administrator, who for sevfederal board appointed to arbitrate eral weeks has been searching for relthe demand for better wages ana atives of the decedent. working cpndltions made by conductCalls Conference of Governors. ors and trayimen. Topeka, Kan. Governor Hodges on This concession apparently removed wrote the governor of all Saturday the only remaining obstacle to arbitration nd averted a strike. With the states west of the Mississippi this issue disposed of, the railroad river asking them to meet in Wichita namanagers and the labor leairs ex- October 22, to discusB state and tional legislation. pected to reach a speedy agreement on the text of the questions to be laid COL MARTIN M.' MULHALL before the board of arbitration. Chief Executive Has Radically D.ffen ent Ideas and Acceptance of Rtig nation f Amhasaidor ta Mexico It Forcaat in Official Circles. -' Young Woman Murdered. Colonel Mulhalls revelations of tne relations between the National Association of Manufacturers and members of congress have aroused the entire , nation. - Headless Body . Found In Sea. Tbe discovery at sea oi the headless body of an expensively woman was reported by Cap , dressed aia Charles White of the kchoonei Jennie Gilbert upon his arrival trove a fishing trip. ' Boston. Dallas, Texas. With her throat cut, the body of Miss Florence Drown, 27 years old, was found iq the washroom of a local real estate office Monday and within two hours a number of suspect had been arrested.- Wild West Show on the Rbcks. . Trenton, N. J. An Involuntary Petition in bankruptcy was filed here .gainst the Buffalo Bill Wild.' West jad Pawnee Bill Great Far East show-s- . -- Four Charleston, Killed- - In W. - Vac Fight. Four Rtrlklng.miner8aolwatchinen- Body The met were killed and another fatally in jured In a short, sharp battle hetweei - em- ployed by the Wake Forest Coal coo pany at Wake Forest, Service "was made on Gordon of tbe coaipaqy1 WLillle, president -- Identified.-Chicag- o s body of a woman found on the lake shore In Rogers PAfk last Friday with a bullet wound -- A'tbr'liT5adwas'uTectiriedMbnilay"b her brother as that of Miss Alum Lees, 38 y'iars oil, of Alma,AYis. t -- |