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Show 7 V t THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH ( t CONGRESS REBELS EXECUTE ' THE UTAH BUDGET RECESS PLAN OPPOSED PRESIDENT BY The receipts from the charity tap St Ogden totaled $1,400. There were 264 male patients n- -j 22s female patients in tal hospital at Provo on October The' Utah State Sunday School sociation convention held 1U FEDERAL OFFICERS 'Special Session Likely-- to Merge Into Regular Seeaion on December "1, if Present Plane Prevail. " FIFTEEN HUNDRED NAVAJOS RALLY IN DEFENSE OF BAND OF EIGHT RENEGADES. PRISONERS TAKEN BY GENERAL VILLAS MEN AT JUAREZ FACE FIRING SQUAD. Are Fortified on High Table Mountain and Defy Officer toGome and Take Them. Troop Have Been Asked For. Santa Pe, N. M. Fifteen hundred Navajo Indians rallied jn defense of eight renegades anq gre rejiorted In armed' encampment on I.eautiful mountain, thirty-fivmiles southwest of the Shiprork United agency, defying States Marshal Hudspeth to take prisoner the renegades, who are wanted on federal warrants horse eharg'ng stealing, assault and tilgamy. (Copyright.) Two troojis xof on v airy have been Flv Weeks to Christmas. asked forjy- - the marshal and'the request has been referred by the war HALE CARRIES ANOTHER rjdeiiflrtmenUia Major General In command of the border patrol. MESSAGE TO CARRANZA It is feared that before the cavalry arrives the renegades will bo Joined by many more at the command of the GAME OUT medicine men and of the plural wife men who are reported to be stirring Brave Desert Storm to Take Message of President Wilson to Constituthe Xavajos to rebellion. The Indians are fortifying on a h'gh tionalist Chief. DECLARES THAT IT IS A CASE OF table mountain, the summit of which LIFE OR DEATH WITH HIM, AND Is aproachable by only one tortuous HE WILL NOT RESIGN. Nogales, Sonora, Mexico. Braving toad. a winter rainstorm which turned the MEXICAN CONGRESS ORGANIZED. surrounding desert Into a vast mesa of mud seamed with racing freshets, Drives From His Cabinet One of the Huerta Intimates That He Wilt Now William Bayard Hale crossed Into Ministers Who Advised Hit AbdiBe Ready to Reait Intervention."' Mexico again on Sunday, to present ancation and Advocated AbandonMexico City. Organization of Prev other communication to the Mexican ment of Power. Ident Huerta's new congress was revolutionists from 'his chief, Presicompleted"'Monday when enough sen- dent Wilson at Washington. Hale did ators were gathered' to form a quor- not meet General Carranza, the conMexico City. What doubt remained um In the upper house. General stitutionalist chief, but exchanged regarding General Huertas Intentions Francisco Proneg was chosen tem- views with Francisco Eseudero, Car- with respeet to compliance with the porary chairman of the senate and a ranza's minister of exterior relations, American demands for his own ellml-committee on credentials was api The storm was thp worst of the cur- nation was- removed from the minds out of most Mexicans and foreign resipointed. A similar committee of the rent wet season and the chamber of deputies also began the besides Hale were the poncho-cladents by his peremptory dismissal on work of revision of the deputies cre- soldiers of the United States border Sunday of Manuel Garza Aldape, the dentials, and there, is, nothing- to In- patrol on the American side, and on minister of the Interior, who was lookdicate that the yrmal opening of the Mexican, the sentries of the ed upon as the head of Huertas congress will be postponed. army, their brown faces President Huertsf. talked Informally out of brilliantly colored Manuel Garza Aldape led that group to the members of nis staff and a few peeping blankets that hid their drab uniforms. of the cabinet which held the conersonal friends on Monday regardHale met Minister Escudero at the viction that It would be best to acing the possibilities of Intervention house of Ygnaclo BonTllas, also a cab- cede to that portion at least of Washby the United States. lie intimated inet minister, who acted as official inwhich meant the todemands ington's that he would be ready to resist such translator at the two re- tal abandonment of power by the proterpreter and, a step. conferences between the Amerl visional president, and he Is said to The opinion Is expressed in var- cent can envoy and General Carranza. have been the only one with sufficient ious circles here that the United was understood that the meeting courage to discuss the International It States soon will Inaugurate a block- was the result of a message from Pres- situation frankly with his chief. ade of Mexican ports. Rumor has It which conveyed some asident Wilson, It was he who called at the Amerithat President Wilson would be conto surance the constitutionalists. can embassy recently and Induced tent with such an action and mlgut with Nelson OShaughnessy, the charge 'Ven permit the embassy to remain Hale 'ha been In close touch Washington' since his first Interview daffaires; to send Jo Washington his In Mexico City until an open Escudero keeps his appeal for the reopening of the nego- ruptuie with Carranza, occurred. chief fully Informed of the exchanges tiations. Senor Aldapes resignation with Hale. FERDINAND was demanded at a cabinet meeting MAY ABDICATE. at President Huerta's house early FlndsFilipino Progressive. Bulgarian King Residing Incognito In Sunday morning. Huerta Is said to M anila Clarence H. Miller, con- have Coburg During Crisis In His reiterated at this meeting the gressman from Minnesota, left for the statement that he would not resign, Country. United States Saturday. In an inter- with - hint it was aease- - ot'iife Bulgaria, TewTie sacThe" was InTavor of an that or who arrived Monday In Coburg, death, and he was deposed to play is elective senate for the rhlliplnes and out the game. passing through such a crisis, accord- added that he believed the Filipinos Certain intimate friends of General ing to well informed chains in had made more progress in the last Huerta have been to h m and Berlin, that his abdication fifteen years than any other nation in for some time, it is indicating of the throne in favor of his son u the world. said, that the minister of the interim was intriguing .probable. The king Is residing Incognito at for the presidency and that the cabiPrisoners Given Twenty Lashes. the palace in Coburg, He, spent Wilmington, Del. William Reason net had became "divided into camps. in the graves and J a rn es By n rd, n egroeg, who, were Those wbq o ppps ed, Aldape jn eluded at prayer morning ' ef i h aneofTOfT'" convicted of burglary, were whipped Querido Moheno, minister of foreign Austriun statesmen are doing their with twenty lashes each at the whip- affairs. General Itlanquet, minster of utmost to discourage his proposed ping post of the Newcastle county war, and Jose Mar.a Lozano, min ster oCT(jmcn-to.jm.surrender of t ho t h rone. bccausc iho r w'orkhousc::Saturilay::: oonsidet the young . Crown Prince NEWSPAPER MAN HAS PLAN, Boris likely to be influenced by the SIR WEETMAN D. PEARSON element friendly Uo Russia. Would Have Huerta Resign and Enter Race for Presidency, . Fined for Kllllwj Berlin The -- Mexican correspondHuntington, JV.ya. Letha Perd ue, ent of the Frankfort Gazette cables ftged 19. convicted of involuntary manthat "a remarkable change for the slaughter for having sbot and killed better would occur and the Mexican James Kendrick, brother-ilaw, problem probably could be solved paid a fine Monday of $23 and court without intervention or blockade on costs, a totajdt' $71, and Was released the following lines: The new Mex from cu&rpdy. Miss Perdue's defense --- was ican con gress ttrmeefpTovtsionatty eptmtemar Insanity'" and the and Immediately order new elections; law. General Huerta to resign at once and assume the post of commander-in-chieDeath Ends Controversy, of the northern army; then In Sioux Falls, S. D. Mrs. Emma Huerta is General cjae Kaufmann, principal in two sensaafter six months the United president tional trials for the piurder of Miss States to agree to accept him. Agnes Polreis, a HJjearoId servant In e TIE - only-one- s d - I ,revo-lut'onar- y cabi-net- . - - Berlln-KlngJ,erdina- n4f Co-bui- g . Mon-'da- vwWfW.W y eV- Brother-In-Law- i i hr Washington. Democratic senators know in positive terms on Tuesday that he was opposed to the movement now under of For the S'xth T.me in Past Three way to secure an adjournment openthe to GovYear Ciudad Juarez Changes congress for a week prior ing of the regular December session. '"ernments and ''Captors Condemn that the He told several senators Federal to Death. with congress country woull charge adjourning for the purpose of securEl Paso, Texas For the sixth time ing their mileage allowance. While In the last three year Ciudad Juarez adjournment talk continued, it was changed governments, when 2,000 reb- believed that the special session els led by General Pancho Villa at- would run through and merge in Ah tacked and captured the town Satur- regular session December 1. Taken completely by day morning. TRAMP AVERTS A WRECK. surprise, the federal garrison of-- approximately 500 men put up a weak Stops Passenger Train Within Few resistance. Feet of Broken Rail He Discovered. So unprepared for battle were the federal defenders that Villa's troops Jesup, Ga Scores of passengers left the coaches of a railway train town of center the reached actually sixteen.- miles north of before- - a single, shot was fired o Allfi0O3h ah accurate' eoiint'has hot to shake the hand "of 'a' dramp-whbeen completed it is estimated that probably saved their lives. The train forty persons were killed in the fight- carrying four crowded sleepers and several day coaches was rushing toing. Many of the federal prisoners cap- wards a broken rail at a speed of fifty tured by General Villas men have been miles an hour when the tramp appeared in fronh of the locomotive, executed. The order for the execution of wildly waving his arms. When the train stopped it was withmany of the prisoners has been Issued a few feet of the bad rail. in difat directly by General Villa and ferent periods during the day the firWOULD EXCLUDE ASIATICS. ing squad took out men and shot them. Col. Enrique Portillo, commander Literacy Teat for Caucaslane Avr of the federal volunteer troops In the Indorsed by Labor Leaders. Juarez bastile, was executed at noon Seattle, Wash. With only five, disby a firing squad commanded by Mavotes the American Federajor Cornu. Portillo was brought be- senting on Tuesday passed resof Labor tion fore Villa and sentenced to death, olutions the exclusion of demanding which was he after shot , Among others who were executed all Asiatics and a literacy test for debate on during the day were Enrique Ziega, Caucasions. In a a customs officer; Captain Lopez Of the resolutions most of the leading the federal army, and Commander men of the federation spoke, making clear that they opposed the immigraBuenevides of the fiscal guards. - who All officers of the federal - army, tion of will be put to death, Major Cornu of would be the prey of exploiters and Villa's staff announced. The soldiers, whose coming would tend to lower he said, would be pardoned and given the American standard of living. an opportunity to join the rebel army. Utahns Celebrate Apple Day. Steamer Capsized. Salt Lake City. Tuesday was apPort Huron, Mich. One of the ple day in Utah trtui the idea proved strangest mysteries In connection with so popular that many of the Apple the destruction of vessels and men day speeches included mention of on the Great Lakes by last Sundays plans for a bigger and better observstorm was solved Saturday when Wil- ance of the event next year. Apples liam Baker, a diver, identified the were included in hotel, club and resoverturned vessel in Lake Huron thir- taurant menus to an extent previousteen. miles northeast of 4hls port as ly unheard of, while apples were disthe Charles S. Price of Cleveland. The played in the ebusiness places and Price said to have carried a crew many were given away. of eighteen. AH of the crew are beSixteen Killed Explosion. lieved to have been lost Acton, Ala. The bodies of sixteen men, killed in an explosion late Planter Offer Protection. afternoon in mine No. 2 if Monday St , Martinsville, La In a mass the Alabama Iron & Fuel company meeting here Sunday sugar planters and citizens of St. Martins parish bear here, have been found by rescue the parties up to 1 oclock Tuesday mornassuring adopted resolutions Southern Pacific,, railroad of protec- ing. Six of the miners who were ention for trains if the road would pro- tombed by the explosion had been vide equipment for the movement of rescued alive. wugarcanewhile Rioting at Ladysmith.' is on. Ladysmith, Natal. About a thousand East Indians started rioting Wilson and Bryan Confer. here Tuesday afternoon. Their lead'Washington. Secretary Bryan ers .claimed that they were entitled conferred at the White House to equal rights with w hite men. with-night President Wilsoh on appear to be dangerously inthe latest developments in the Mexi- They flamed. Armed townsmen are being can situation. They talked over mesand the police - have been sages received from Charge OShaugh enrolled, with revolvers. nessy and' dispatched 'cablegrams tc provided . him after their conference-Plans to Avert financial Stringency. Washington. Means, ef protecting GRAND DUKE MICHAEL the- country '"ffgainsr'finy financial stringency when the proposed new currency system goes Into effect were c considered Tuesday by both the and Republican wings of the penate banking and currency committee. . that-Ogd- - ! $435,-00- - "Pass Antl-Siaver- ore-ca- age. A e movement to promote increased efficiency in the Baptist' church and to bring a closer cooperation among the people of the church, is being conducted by Salt Lake Bap It now looks as If any person or persons who may succeed In causing the arrest and conviction of the blackmailers who have been operating at Ogden, will receive rewards aggregating $17,000. Mrs. Joseph R. Paine of Ogden was burned to death when a cloak zhich had been cleaned with gasoline caught fire. '$30,000,000. Strike. Milwaukee, Wis. Five hundred boot and shoe workers of the Inited Shoe Workers' union went on strike at a local shoe 'factory Monday because of a change in the piecework system, resulting in a decrease in wages. Shoe-Work- er -- a -- Sailors Charged With Mutiny. sailWilmington, DeL Twenty-on- e ors, members of the crew of the bark Manga Heva, were held in $2,000 bail each to answer charges of mutiny af-- , ter a' hearing here Tuesday before United States Commissioner Mehaf-fey- . ' J VI ' , f i if. i i f . - ' ! 1 s I t Limits Diamond Sbpply, Berlin. The German government on Monday placed a limit on the quantty of diamonds which German Africa anay put on the market The large production of the mines there had threatened to bring about a break in prices. " Denounces Mine Owner. Seattle, Wash. Fiery speeches were rfiade In the American Federation of Labor convention on Monday, jnttacking the Michigan coper mine owners whose employees are on strike tor Increased wages. ( Sir Weetman D. Pearson, Lord Cowdry, ie toe head of the great Peareen oil concern, whose Interests 'In Mexioe- are1 believed to have complicated the International situation there. Escape From Burning Building. Between 4bQ and 500 Chicago. men. women and children fled by fire escapes when fire attacked the Northwestern university building, at Labe and Dearborn streets. ' Collier Bridgeport Lost. MonireaL The steam collier Bridgeport, sailing from Sydney, Qape and Breton, with a crew of forty-tw- o a cargo of 10.000 tons of coal, has been lost and probably all aboard have perished. Former Grand Vizier Dead. Kiamil Home. Pasha, former grand vizier of Turkey, who has hetd many high positions in the Ottoman government, is dead at Larnaca, In the island of Cyprus, according to dispatches received here. Reduce Telephone Rates. San Francisco. Cal. Reductions on all California long distance telephone calls were announced here Saturday railroad commission by the state averaging 21 per cent and aggregating $326,000 annually. Hanging in Oregon. Salem, Ore. Oswald CLJIalsei was hanged at the state prison here Friday for the murder of Frank J. Taylor, an attorney of Astoria whom he shot for having drafted a divorce oom plaint for Mrs. Hansel , -- Tammany Asks McCoraba Aid. y ork. William , F:.McCombs, , chairman of the Democratic national committee, has been asked by a number - of prominent - Democrats - to the leadership of the fight to reorganize Tammany HalL President of Sugar Manufacturers. Chicago. John L. Howard of San Francisco was elected president of the Beet Sugar Manufacturers, who are meeting here. Truman G. Pal-taof Chicago was named secretary v and treasurer. , New as-su- the Imperial family ef Russia, haa established a reaidenca In England and will make hie heme there for a zoneiderahle part of each year He la the only surviving brother ef the uar. Employer Forming Union. London. The employers of the Unit ed Kingdom are forming a new union and purpose to raise a guarantee fund of $230.0t0,0t'0 in order to protect themselves against strike movements by the trade unions and other labor organizations. Hermit Brothers Burned. Mass. Two hermits, Whitman, George Frye, aged 57, and his brother Stephen, ten years older, were burned . to death In their shack in the woods near here Sunday night er Wrecks Marshals Home. Trinidad, Colo. An explosion of dynamite early Tuesday wrecked the home of Dominie Peffelo; camp mar ahal at Piedmont, and damaged several nearby buildings. Peffelo escaped injury. , Idaho Bad Man Captured. Boise, Idaho Clarence Roush, exconvict who shot and attempted to klU Deputy Sheriff Clawson of Ada county last week, has been captured and is now in the local jaiL Capture was made n Oregon. - r bling and are legally void,the state supreme court held in a case involving a Milwaukee commission firm and a customer. of ' -- Dealing in Futures is Gambling. Wis. Board of Madison, trade dealings in , futures constitute gam- Alexarv to . half-millio- n Dem-ocrati- several ether members her (mother. one-thir- d - The Grand Duka Michael e daughter was burned in endeavoring - George Shorten, city sanitary inspector, reports that to date more- - births have been recorded in Ogden than during 1912. The births thus far number 716, while the total for 1912 was 516. S. Shinokara, a Japanese about 40 years old, was found dead in Salt Lake on Saturday. His throat had been cut with a sharp knife, ahd it is practically certain that he suicided while .despondent The largest pay day that has ever been-ha- d "inBoxElder county was had on November 15, when more than a dollars wras distributed among employees, beet, growers and school teachers. John Hudman, a pioneer of Utah, filed November" 17 at the home ef his son in Slaterville. He was born in England October 23, 1821, and im- migrated-- , to Utah, in. .1863,,.arriving with a handcart company. Delivery of $6,000,000 in bonds for the' construction of the new Ogden, Lewiston 'Northern railway, Utahs latest electric interurban railway, will be made this week to French capital-" ists who purchased ' the securities. At a meeting of the poultry men at Murray It was decided to hold a poultry show TromDecember 29 to Jan- oary 3, Inclusive. The premium com- mittee raised a considerable sum for prizes before the meeting adjourned. Thomas Henry Smart, a resident of Utah since 1853, died at'his'bome in Union last. week. General debility was the cause of death. He is survived by a' widow and several children. He came to Utah when a boy from England. Utah holds the record for the smallest number of federal appointments-undethe new administration. Thus far. President Wilson has made only for Utah, and four appointments these are all in the postofflee depart- , ment. The headquarters for the United States internal revenue collector for Utah, Idaho and Montana will ba moved from Salt Lake to Butte, or Helena, if the recommendation of W. C. Whaley, the new revenue collector prevails. With the assurance from, the hospital attendants that the man in all probability will recover, there seems to be little prospect at this time that Mrs. Phoebe Yoshikawa, otherwise known as Grace Murray, will be prosecuted for the shooting of her Japan-- " ese husband, at Ogden. The directors of the Salem irrig tion Canal system have rejected , the propositions submitted by the government in an effort to effect s settlement of the dispute arising over the distribution of waters under the Strawberry Valley Irrigation pro- Sunday- d pavttch. Ilka Her painfully -- . jState-wid- tist 1 y r. y those-Europeans-o- Manila An law was passed Saturday by the Philippine national assembly after a heated debate. The measure, wjvch was.fratned.by William H. Phipps, the insular auditor, reaffirms the old Spanish statutes against sla er.v 'and 'incorporates' the American aws. The vote in opposi tion was small !n spite of the warmth of the discussion. Plans War on Hog Cholera. Washington. Senator Pomerene has introduced a bill-t- o appropriate $300,0(0.XorjxvmbaUnglog cholera He declared that the loss from that disease this year would - aggregate Boot and Law. y anti-slaver- th pvj-mon- f her home, in liH'6, died Mondav. en , two-hou- r -- week with a fair attend The fifteenth annual exhibit of v ? Utah Art institute' opened m u Lake on the 19th and will conum.t until November 30. It is announced atn d is t antedate Tsto have a motion ; dure theater second only to the An.v ican in Salt Lake, and costing ap;.!.,.v imately .$200,000. Passenger, trains began over the new detour over Sol.;, r Summit on Sunday. Freight- ti.i have been operating over the (kt,),.r for several weeks. Serious burns "were susta'ned John Blaze, a fireman running oat : Ogden, when the torch he was ho f ing .exploded, carbide gas com from a disconnected hose. The Lehi sugar factory last Satu. day paid to sugar beet growers for ; beets ' delivered dentng of October. This is the tig. gest payday in the factory's historj The Henry B. Smith, an ship, owned by the Acme Tran,t 'company, a large part of the stock cf which is held by Salt Lake men, vas lost la the recent storm on Lake Superior. While on the way to the Oregon a Short Line depot in Salt Lake, hearse belonging to a local undertaker was struck by a switch engine and demolished. The driver escaped injury. J. W. Pearson, a pioneer of Park City and widely known throughout the west, died on a train while bound from Park City to Salt Lake on Mr. Pearson was 79 years of ere'-Tuesday - n lat Provo President Wilson let ance. ject A check for approximately $200,000, the largest single item of tax money J j ( ever paid Into the office of the trea nrer of Salt Lake county, was depo ited with that official last week by the Utah Copper company, which Its taxes under protest. jfx'd hat' " |