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Show j COALVILLE TIMES WITH THE VETERANS AT 6ETTYSBUR& If. JACOB PETERSON Editor and Manager - COALVILLE UTAH UTAH .STATE NEWS A new hotel fo'feost 80,000 la to ba built at Price ground having teen broken last week. Mayor Park of Salt LakeNfused to aanction the Issuing of permit to persons desiring to observe the fourth of July by setting off fireworks Anti explosives The mtmbors of the Salt Commercial rlub have declared a voluntary assessment of from $ 1 fits to $25 a member In order to wipe out a debt of $.'.0.MJO. The fiist annual excursion of the Ogden Elks will be held at Yellow stone park In August according to a decision reached by a special commit tee of the lodge. Frank H Rowland. .15 years of age. who fell from the root of his house In Salt Lake while attempting to saw off the limb of a tree, died at the county hospital from hla Injuries ilefore the close of the week more than fifty convicts of the state penitentiary will be on their way to the convict camp at 8t. Joseph. Davis oounty, to assist In the construction of a cement state road. Patrick Horkln. a resident of Salt Lake for more than thirty years, passed awsy st his home'. July 1. The cause of death was general debility, He Mr. Horkln being (8 year old had been ill since January 1. James Quayle died at Logan, June I, at the' age of 83. There was probably not a man In all Cache valley more widely end favorably known than Mr. Quayle. He came to Logan In 1839, and made his home there since that time, . Paul C- - Anderson, the son of Mr. Ind Mrs James Anderson of Salt Lake City, was- - accidentally killed at Treraontoo by a runaway team. The boy, who was 1$ years old. wss working on the ranch of S. J- - Fell, where the accident occurred. A complaint charging Mra. Minnie Ekman with murder In the first degree for the killing of her daughter, whose body was found In a trunk at the Ogden union depot, has been issued t from tbe county attor-ney'office at Salt Lake. son of Clinton D. Sheen. B. H. Sheen or Salt Lake, was Instantly killed when a speeder under charge of hla father, who la foreman of a gang of Wsstertt Union linemen working at Onyx, seventeen mile west of Pocatello, was hit by a train. George I. Reevea. head of tbe Salt Lake branch of tho United- - 8tatea bureau of entomology. Is of thd opinion that the parasite which wf ti attack the alfattn wees 11 have become acclimated to the altitude and are thriving on the destroy .tV-- tive weevil. the - , reprbentMve - comrthA bterieea motion ilcturm 9k are meAm several nils of pictures V and peer Ogden, made a last rVver tw OfJea Lucll cot-of- f of taking pie- week for the VrP 1 s d C iy, ip X -- tores lh o$ "V i world-fame- railroad d " cf geatb I0vhlnnejr. under priekfB, v ''V'' sentence thurder of t Lke, hl C. t was denied ,a PP1 by the au-. peek fast week. Mewhtnney the pardon board to i mm m --i- y A on. He will he .reaentencod ly date. pea) has been made to tbe -ud board by water users un- I der the Delta Land A Water eom-I panya project, that the company be ompeted to furnleh two second-fee- t vvf water Instead of one and a half N w as per the present (cond-feetthe company. Salt Lake Tribune says: J. V. .Td radge, Jr., United States aasayer It charge of the local office, will r hla resignation within the next tew days and will go to Qgden, here he will assume the manage-Jmen- t of the Ogden "Examiner,.. In I which he la heavily Interested. CangSf by the descending weight ot the elevator at the Moxum hotel at f Balt Lake while he was In the abaft tightening cable bolts, Joseph Patrick 'Gavin, 17 years of age, son of Thomas V,Cvln. proprietor of the hotel, suf . ,'rred a fracture at the base of the , ten-fe- -- i hull, which may prove Utgi paid $34.11 per fatal capita of the ) pheol population la the school year making the total expenditure r elementary and secondary educe--- ' $3,702,363.63. In 1913 the per i!ia cost for teaching the young a how to shoot had rtaen to $33 88. 1j9he cashing a check does so at and where a check Ya risk,secured and passed the Jdulently reoa accepting It cannot recover L ni tbe Innocent party to the transit an, according to a ruling handed 13 t n last week by the auprein court eo Gardner ot Salem, who was sert ' ly Injured at Spanish Fork when struck him oa the head, aypol during the skull and causing of the brain. Is now so much roved that he baa been taken to 911-1- 1 -- con-no- bom at Salem. of plans for a state-wid-e Iga to aroueo more Interest in oproeut work through tho Com-dubs of tho etato was the I pal business at a meeting of the 1 t governors of tho Utah hold at Salt Lake KcumUra ?k NEBRASKAN WILL MAKE FIGHT IN SENATE FOR GRADUATED INCOME TAX ON TOBACCO. Senator Declares That Hit Action Does Not Mean That He Hae With drawn From Party or That He WKI Not Support Party .Measure. hen genator Hitch Washington cock of Nebraska withdrew from the Democrutis tariff taucug Wednesday because the body voted down his amendment that would put a graduated income tax on tobaco productmn he precipitated the liveliest time that senate Demotrat have had since they began consideration of the tariff measure Senator Hithock's revolt, which he later declared did uot mean that he had withdrawn from the party or that he would sot support the party measure, served to determine that there will be a binding resolution adopted by the caucus pledging the senators to support the bill as ratified, to refrain from introducing any The upper photograph shows quarters of tbe veterans on Gettysburg jgltfleld during the sem amendments not proposed by the In the lower Is seen tbe hospital established by the ponasVltola state department of health. celebration finance committee majority and not to support any amendments offered from the Republican side VETERANS UNDER PICKETT It was because he anticipated such TO VETERANS MEET a resolution that the Nebraska senRECROSS GETTYSBURG FIELD ator announced that he could not remain In the caucus because he Intended to Introduce his tobacco tax amendment in the senate and to lead in Place of At the End of March a fight there for Its adoption. When Wounds or Prison or Death Were in the course of hls talk to the caucus the senator announced hls deHandshakes, Speeches and Cheers. R! BAT-WRKA8LE SCENE ON FIFTEEN THOUSAND OLD SOL cision and the reasons tnerefor, many LFIELD AT GETTYSBURG ON OIERS CELEBRATE of his colleagues who had supported INDEPENDENCE DAY. OF BATTLE. him in the vote on hls amendment Gettysburg, Pa A handful of men In gray on Thursday pleaded with him to remain in the the mom, but Senator Hitchcock turned a charge of Pickett across the field of ear to their appeals. deaf Cemeof the slope Fol osrvg Address to Old 8oldire by Garrison and Govtrnor Gettysburg. Ip Secretary ' death where Ridge, step tery kept f Tener the Orators at Opening rodent Wilton. Old Glory la .TOLL OF CELEBRATION. itk them in '63, some 130 veterans of Veterans Confederate J id Masted by Regulars White tbe Immorof that Virginia regiments Fireworks Cause Eight Deaths and Greeting Speakers With FaVeterans Stand Silent. tal brigade made their slow parade. mous Rebel Yell. 365 Injuries on th Fourth. I'nder the brow of the ridge In the The celebration of the Chicago Bloody Angle, where the Philadelphia G ttsburg, Pa. The regular army Fourth of July with fireworks this a stood was handful that day. Pa. In the pitiless brigade pal Ibute on Independence day to year resulted In Gettysburg In blue only eight deaths and waiting to the tteaanda who glare of a sun that sent the mercury meet thescarcely larger, sleep under the 363 Injuries in the entire country, aconslaught of peace. There hill, 6 Gettysburg. Somewhere down bubbling over the hundred mark, the cording to the up to midarmies of tbe north and tbe south on wereTto Hashing sabers, no guns roar- In t eieart of the tented city a bugle night. None ofcompilation the deaths reported with dimmed that ing only shell, eyes sea; It In silver .sweet call, that came from began the forma ex&rclrr' the of fast and kindly faces behind the stone waaead over the field .where Lee loss also was larger cities. The fire et to maik tbe much smaller than has wall the marks tha that At end. angle. ' and had mad history.' The big been reported on Gettysburg. Veterans to the number In ot or Independence day on or wounds death flag bre the place prison nf 16,000, the army officers estimated, headquarters ot previous year were and handshakes, mingspeeches filed Into the big tent set apart for eral flashing in sudden Of the death three .were the exercises, sat in the base of heat ling cheers. curt ttl red, white and blue, glor-- , from fireworks, reported, three from firearms; The veterans in gray marched tot a, immlsuaahlae of a perfect for two hours and . ghook . the camp July one by pe (nature explosion of gunlifrUr Of amlleuw- -' with their cheers whan tho speakers VJn slowly half way down the powder and one from a runaway. charge, traversed JurJfhe lal In Trout of the tent, shoulders made reference to a reunited sj$e h slop in cofhmns ot Fireworks played the chief part in was Wd, figure trim In summer Every Ml 365 injuries, causing 164 accidents. the but to Irregular, the responsive "before lelsew long Secretary of .War white, fac toward the flag, Toy cannons caused 21 ends of Major W. W. Bentley of accidents; gun end Oorvievr-lwTllPrisos tae clicked heels together powder, 65; firearms, 55; toy pistols, Although the Twenty-fqiirt- h Virginia, one of the day, arrived. tood at attention. tho mew In gray were far outnum- few officers of either Picketts or the Sotewher the guns of the Third 35; torpedoes, 10; runaways, 7, and bered by thoee In blue, there were Philadelphia brigade who was presbomb canes, 1. btti$ burst Into staccato salute. poeslbly 1,000 southerner! through ent ' Ritchie Defeats Rivers. tho - amphitheater' and wb.it they Ahead of them marched a bead and breaBofficer over the length and of that wide Held, every well San Francisco. Willie Ritchie relacked in number they made up In down tbe column was a faded turned away from the du- tained hls right to the title of lightconfederate flag. Its red field pierced ties lung power. When Governor Tener finished his with many holes. Its cross bars dim heel alike moment and faced the flag, weight champion by defeating Joe hgether, heads up and eyes Rivers here on Independence speech, General Bennett H. Young, and Its shaft colored with the sweat day, the light nth the Sentiment of the hour commander-tn-cble- f of the United Con- of many a man who died that It might Mexican being knocked out in the A th sent eleventh round of a scheduled twenty-rounfederate Veteran rose slowly and fly high In the last desperate effort the ech last gun of forty-eigabout eg clattering I can Cemetery bowed to him. someto battle. The battle was fought give you pierce the Union lines. Its prog- Ridge m Round Top there was sol- under perfect weather conditions in thing that no one else can give you ress wss slow and painful, for the emn nce, the hush of peace. Old the open and was witnessed he said. We will now give you the timothy In the field surface was not by 7.000 veterans did not rebel yell." world-weareasy for feet. Up to the exactly vhat was realize, perhaps persons. The receipts, It was said, going on, stood aggregated $30,000 Nine famous confederate generals very edge a stone wall covered now silent unfcr the spell of the universal and 1.000 veterans of tbe south gave wlta tangled vines, shaded by trees feeling t$ seemed to sweep the field. It so loudly that It was heard far back and Killed in Slide for Life. peaceful as a summer lane, they Even the flatter of In In the camp toward in marched Gettysburg. the hot sun while the the mestfcuta was pots and pans Chautauqua. N. Y. Osrar Williams hushed, and the a steeplejack When General Young stepped for- band played "Dixie. There was inby trade, stood yells of toki about to dish up the ward to deliver hla addreaa he was for half an hour while their they killed Friday at Mayvllle, stantly comrades midday lowered to whispers. while greeted with wild enthusiasm, the In blue peered across at them performing a slide for life, For fh union veterana led by Commander-In-Chie- f hanging by hls teeth to a pulley on a in notes Beers, giving him three lusty rope stretched from the courthouse The silken flag leaped dome to a tree about 350 feet distant. cheers and a "tiger, , UP he Behind !rm? ,U8t0 He took as his keynote tbe convicvery pinnacle, and He succeeded in making the slide, but f the lhe 40f000 men can make the buffer of r7he fat tion of each side In the great struggle .M grain sacks proved InFourth resumed their sway, the regular adequate and hls brains were dashed that It fought for a principle which United States army where s battery, army tribal to the dead and to the It believed was the truth. One of his General out against the tree. Arraistead died in the midst flag of a reunited nation. opening sttaements was that the of the guns, killed, the histories That say. Chavez Beats Dell. was probfivinute northern soldiers deserved more b a shot fired tbe dying com. ably the Taat formal silence, mark of the semifreditthsn the southerners for the mander, Cushing by Trinidad, Colo Renny Chavez of centennial celebration. Only a few Trinidad defeated promulgation and successful realisaHarry Bell of San The blue formed minutes before Wilson Francisco by a knockout in the elevtion of the present great reunion the President wall. spoke in the big tent to the veterans which be characterized as the greatenth sound of s scheduled twenty-rounblue and a and y only a short est movement or Its kind In the world. tneThe stars and bare and tbe flag of in bout at the Central Park arena Second srmy crops were croseed In time afterwenjg thousands of those afternoon. Chavez made the who Among the 200 guests on the plat- amity; the stars and Friday were left began their preparastripes were unform were Governors Mann, Virginia; furled and the greatest fight In his career. crowd that came to tions for departure. McCreary. Kentucky, and EberharL watch burst Into a cheer. CARS COLLIDE IN CANYON. Spilled From Biplane. Minnesota; Senator Penrose of PennRepresentative J Hampton Moore Janee. Captain Rey of Epernay, sylvania and the following confeder- of Twenty-eigh- t Injured a Result the French army was killed and hls ate generals; Robinson, Texas; West, and Pennsylvania made a long speech f Street Car Collision. answered him on Major panion, s private of the engineer Georgia; Thomas J Shaffer, Louie behalf of theBentley south. The In veterans Ogden. Utah Twenty-eigh- t D. men, corps, probably fatally injured when (ana; A. William. Florida; E. M gray were given medals provided by women and children. Salt Lake and the military biplane in which they Law, Florida, and Carr, Nortji Caro- John Wanamaker They crowded over lina The Invocation was delivered by the stone wall, shook hands and the Ogden resident 0CCUpy cots at a hos- were flying above the village of pital and two lives are the Rev. George Edward capsized on Wednesday. despaired of Lovejoy. charge was over. There was many ehaplaln-tn-chlef of the Grand Army of picturesque figures In the line that us the result of a head-ocollision on Gain in Cash on Hand. the OgderuJUpjj came up the slope. the Republic. 7rangn une near the W. H Turpin of the Fifty third Vir- mouth of Ogden Washington Reports to the compcanvon st 4.48 Wedenaday was military day at the on the condi of the troller o'clock ginia in currency the he uniform wore appeared Friday afternoon. big tent, but comparatively few veteron the day of the charge. His feet Traftii w crowded in the canyon, tlon of national banks on June 4 an appeared to listen to the speech were bound In he had an army due to the a p o. showed a big contraction o i loans and E. Purple day out- making and to hear the band play blanket strappedclot, to his back and ho Individual deposits, but gains in cash of Turkey In1 the Straw," "Old Black calmly smoked a- - longstemmed corn nii il'1Va' isi'nderstand1ng on band, as compared with April 4, j T I1 ac otier Joe" and airs. cus cob plpef. the date of the previous call. 8uffraget Takes a Husband. Policemen Convicted of Grafting. Over Three Royal Wedding in September. 811,0,, in circulation. Denver. Colo Miss Ellis Meredith, San Francisco. Arthur MacPhee Mash Germany. The mar Sigmaringen, amount of total author, prominent suffragist and mem- and Charles Twvlor, former policemen money ...ngtonThe th l King Manuel of Porber of the city elections commission, charged with conspiracy In connecnued gutM th, be-- riage ofandformer Princess Augustine Vic tugal new fiscal was wa married JVednesday to Henry H. tion with a $300,000 bunko graft, were $li.456,-ta- t toria, daughter of Prince Wilhelm oi 4n ClenrenL Mr. Clement is a Harvard convicted by a jury In the superior 000 over mnih Dcre has been set for Sep ago, according to a Hohenzollern, graduate, court on Thursday. tember. bo, the t.sury. Greek Will Fight Rand Strike Spreads. 8treet Sweeper Lad Fall on Hay Fork. 0 Strike. Berlin. -- The Greek foreign minister Johannesburg, South Africa. PracSpanish Fork, Utah. While bl Informed the correspondent st Athens tically all the mines In the Rand dis- h meR7Tfcf city administration 1011,0 securing medical Of the Frsnkfort Gazette that Greece trict are now Thur,day whn mother was uptown, involved In the etrlke. 500 - aid la having a cherry stone removed lnper an . Intended to begin war against for struck a which Is bound to haver a serioiTs efson, to 12.54 a day. Fifty from th nose of her at one without any formal fect on the gold mining Industry of -- vere " to dec- - art ion. put 'SoutlrxfricL wort under holies haystack and was severely injure 1 THE IT 1 L See-eie- Gen-leget- t, talsawtani uni-fori- ,r - d y Phfii ZJ J ; T rr d ppt n n aig-clde- ,t Bui-gart- street' t jut. v -- V NOTED EDUCATORS FROM EVERY SECTION OF UNION MEET IN UTAH CAPITAL. Address by President Contains Outline of Plan of Reorganization in Order to Keep Abreast With the Times. Aey-not- e Salt Lake Educators of Ct national prominence and teachers from every section of the Uniou were in this city Monday, April 7, for the opening session of the National Education association, the visiting educator being given a characteristic welcome At the opening session Monday afternoon of the National Education association, held la the Tube rnai .e, President Edward T- - Kaiich.ld, In li.s address introducing tfce work of tbe convention, presented a scheme of reorganization of tbe assoentiou which he believes will add to its eil'c.cucy a sa body, tending to increase the standard of efficiency of public school teacher This address was regarded as the key note spee h of the convention. Addresses were also made at the opening session by M. P. Shawkey. state superintendent of public schools of Charleston, W. Va., who took for hia subject "What Shall We Do With the Single-rooSchool?" and by Henry Neumann, leader of the Brooklyn Society of Ethical Culture, who spoke on "The Moral Values in Public Self government" The delegats had been arriving for a week before the opening session, and cn Sunday welcome was voiced by Charles W. Penrose, in behalf of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y at services in thttaber-nacle- , Saints, ' following which Philander P. Claxton, United States commissioner of education, delivered an address on 'The School Teacher " "If a school teacher be unable to give all hls life and being, not negatively, but affirmatively and aggressively, for the sake of the child, for tbe sake of tbe home and for tbe sake of the nation, he should leave the profession." This Is the view expressed by Dr. P. P. Claxton In his address. "Educational Sunday was observed generally in Salt Lake churches and ward chapels, pastors of the various denominations delivering . sermon bearing on topics of Interest to tbe many teachers In the city, while the members of many-ward- s of the Mormon church listened to addresses from prominent members of the National Education association. Before an audience of approximately 5,500 persons In the tabernacle Sunday night, B. H. Roberts delivered an Interesting address on "Mormonism and Education, prefacing his talk by saying that he assumed that a large number of the congregation consisted ot visitors who are hee to attend the N. E. A. convention. Underpaid as they ar, the teachers of the United s are net only ma'ntaining, but Improving, the ttavi-arcf public schools of the country. This was practically th- - comlusioo resulting from discussion of the report on teachers salaries, tenure and pensions as presented to the national council by President Joseph Swain of Swarthmore college, Swartbmore, Pa. The sessions of the council yere held at Barratt hall. P P. Claxton, United States of education, attributed this maintenance and improvement of school work to the splendid character of the teachers, and not to the encouragement received by them la their labors. te St-'te- d er Lone Bandit Captured. Portland, Ore. A Jone robber, who entered the First State bank of Milwaukee, a suburb of Portland, shortly after noon Saturday and with a revolver Induced Cashier A. L. Bo;s;ead to permit him to scoop up all the gold within reach of the latter's wicket, was captured late Sunday in the woods some miles distant. He gave the name of Virgil Perr ne, and said he was from St. Louis He is 20 years old Short In His Accounts. Ogden, Utah. Charged with the embezzlement of about $400 from tbe American Express company, Mont E. Core, formerly manager of the companys downtown office, was taken Into custody Sunday by the sheriff. Fireman Killed in Wreck. North Vernon. Ind. A Baltimore A Ohio Southwestern passenger train was wrecked thirty-fiv- e miles south of here and F.reman Edward Boyer killed when Engineer Darling suddenly applied the emereency brake. Victim of Wreck Dies. Ogden, I tah The second death resulting from the head-o- n collision of two electric cars In Ogden canyon FYlday afternoon occurred Sunday evening, when Junius N. Anderson, aged 27 years, died. Jealousy Cruxes' Crime. Kansas City. Jealousy Frank Bailey, a vaudeville prompted actor at Atlanta, Ga., to slloot and kill hla and.J5am !,.. MazieJSdwarfi: olTSenver, Colo, as she slept, and te commit suicide, on Suudav |