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Show THE COALVILLE TlMfi. COALVILLE, UTAH SURVIVOR FALL DECORATING UTAH STATE- - PlbVVS REUTES STORY OF DISATSER MO-OCEA- N Eddie Ives, accused of bolding up of a saloon in $alt Lake on May 5, has been acquitted by Jury. Ogden la likely to be made for a government repair shop, where mail pouches may be made and repaired. Arrangements have been1 made for bolding the next annual state poultry show In Logan during tbe last week in January, 1914. Gasoline driven motor cara are to be used by the Salt Lake & Utah Railroad company pending the electrification of the road. Mike Georgia was fined $90 In the Justice's court at Bingham after he had been found guilty of cutting air hose at the Utah Copper company's plant on October 5. The Brigham Young university at Provo opened lta thirty-eight- h year on October 7, with a large attendance, and with the prospects for the largest opening week attendance In ita history. J. Wesley Brpwning, a Utah pioneer and a member of the well known Browning family of Ogden, waa found dead in bed by bis son, J. W. Browning, Jr., October 7, death being due to apoplexy. Perry 8. Newcombe, a traveling salesman of Provo, was found dead lying in a pool of blood at his borne. It has not been determined whether be committed suicide or the shooting was accidental. Judge Jacob S. Boreman, pioneer Utah jurist, died at his home in Ogden, October 7, at the age of 83, He was one of the first four judges appointed by the government for the territory of Utah. George Darla and Edward J. Dunn, who were being held In tbe jail at Nephi to await trial before the district court of Juab county upon a charge of burglary in the second degree, broke jail on tbe 8th. An expert chemist from the United States bureau of roads and highways is to come to Salt Lake to aid the city In arriving at eome proper method of laying pavements with Utah rock asphalt instead of bltulitic pave- tbe occupant Tolls of th Terrible Scene Aboard CowardShip Wrapped In Flam ly Crew Added te Panic. 'i. LAST BARRIER TO' COMMUNICATION BETWEEN ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC IS DESTROYED. VESSEL OUT All th Heads of Canal Department and Members of President Parras Present for Cabinet Were Wireless Calls Ten Lines to AJd of Doomed Ship, But Lifeboats Epoch-Makin-g COES DOWN AFTER 52t OF SSI PASSENGERS HAVE BEEN RESCUEO. Are-Beate- n Back by Waves and Passengers 'Are Drowned.' Event London. A graphic ' story by the solitary survivor aboard the Carman-l- a was received by wireless and presents a terrible picture of tbe horror, the panic and confusion aboard the burning liner. 'Walter Trtntepohl, a German, who tells the story, however, Is clearly suffering from the stress ot illness and awful experiences, and his story Is too Incoherent to be accepted in every detail. All went well said Trintepohl "until 6 oclock Thursday morning, when the fire alarm sounded. We were aroused and told to go on deck, as fire had broken out In the hold. On assembling, life belts were handed around, and mqch time was occupied in fastening them. We were told that the fire might soon be quenched, but the captain thought it wise for all to have belts a a precaution. The fire frightened tbe captain, who cried 'bitterly. There were many babies In arms. The fire grew worse. We saw things blazing down below.. About 10 oclock there was a cry to lower the boats. 6 "The captain behaved splendidly. So did the officers, whwere English I sns sorry to say that tho crew, who are Germans and Belgians, ' behaved very badly ThF people rushed about wildly and the crew seemed to think they ought to have first place. of quieting the passengers they made the panic worse. "The first officer took charge of the first boat, but although he wanted the women and children saved Aral a majority of those who entered the boat were members of the crew. This boat was smashed against the ships side. Just as It reached the water it broke In two and all were drowned. "Meanwhile attempts were made to lower the second boat. I cannot say who waa in Charge of this, but I do know that after the chief steward had thrown provisions in ho Jumped In himself. There were more men than women and children in this boat, which waa broken against the ship. All were drowned. "These two boats were amidships. Three others were put afL The fourth officer was in one of them, but I cannot say which one. All was confusion. The ropes broke and the people were thrown into the water and drowned or killed." - Panama.' The Gamboa dike, the last artificial barrier to actual communication between the Atlantic and Pacific eceans by way of the Panama canal, was rent In twain at 2:01 o'clock Friday afternoon, October 10. Between 2,000 and 4,000 persons from the citlea of Panama and Colon and the various sections of the canal tone witnessed the demolition of the barrier, and, while the destroying of the icnrnaau dike was spectacular and successful, some disappointment was evinced because the entire dike was not deUtter demolition Friday stroyed. was not followed because of fear that the concussion might damage the railroad trestle crossing the cut near . San Miguel locka Two remaining sections will be dynamited at some future date. As the hour approached when Pres- DECLARE THE GLA8B-OWEBILL ident Wilson in the White House In TO BE SOCIALISTIC AS Washington would press the button WELL AS UNWISE. and send the electric spark over the wires to explode the numerous charges of dynamite la the dike, a American Bankera Association Rat hush of expectancy fell over alL Then Iflss Action of Conference of suddenly came the muffled rodr of the Bankers In Demanding Amend-sixteen-hundr- ed of .discharge pounds ments to Reserve Act. of dynamite, which sent a shower of water, mud and rock high Into the air, spreading out as It went upward, the of the Boston, Mass. whole heavily veiled la a cloud of United States on Wednesday Again smoko. It was considered among declared their opposition to the prolocal dynamite experts as a remark posed federal reserve plan of reform ably dean explosion. A section of In the currency and banking system. the dike sixty feet wide was "lifted With only one dissenting voice on bodily from Its bed and its compo-sen- t the final vote, more than two thousand bankers from all sections of tbs parts soattered far and wide As water began tQ pour through the country gathered at the first days rent made by the explosion, whistles sessions of the annual convention of were tied down and the crowd sent the American Bankers association up a great cheer,- - Not an obstruc- ratified the action of the conference tion was left In the opening except of bankera In demanding amendment! some Iron pipes which stuck op here to the federal reserve act, now pendand there. ing In congress. The financiers also At the hour that President Wilson approved the work of their own cur set off the blast the water is the cut rency commission, which earlier in was exactly six feet below the level the day had reported the system of of Lake Gatun, and the Inflow of governmental control proposed In the water afterward was In such volume Qlaaa-Owe- n bill to be socialistic and that the cut was filled to lake level Imposing "unwise hardships upon ' within an hour and a half. the banks, and equally unwise hardAll the heads of .the canal depart- ships on' tho general public. ments were present for the epoch-makin- g The resolutions In which this ratlll- event, as ala? were the mem- cation and approval were contained bers of the cabinet of President For-ra-a also Included oommendstlon of the The president was unable to be president to crest in this counPy an Tbs-banker- s H Coioavj GoethaTs day and the chairman of the canal commission was the recipient of a shower of congratulations. Half an hour before the blast was set off Colonel Ooethali took hta stand well -- up toward the dike, but as the time neared for the explosion he drew hack a short distance, but still well out In front and In an unprotected position. There he was when the mass of earth and water shot skyward. who Was Philippe Bunau-Varillengineer of the Panama Canal company when the French were trying to dig the great dlteu, was an interested spectator of the event. - . . LOUIS A. SARECKY ,. auMMnea p, edged their "hearty support enactment of proper feglalatlq .- that tho v end- to ATHELTICB WIN CHAMPIONSHIP. London. Not since the sinking of the Titanic has there been recorded such a tragedy at sea as the burning the steamship Volturno In on October 11, with a loss, so rA.at present known, of 136 Uvea n tin .rescue of 62L The aurvlvora wefe placed aboard a fleet of steam-r- f awnmoned by tbe Voiturnos calls hplp, some of which are bound ward and others westward. Tfte Volturno sailed from . Rotter dam on October 8 for New York. According to the official statement, of HUERTA IMPRISONS DEPUTIES AND BECOMES DICTATOR laeuee Proclamation Declaring Dtp flea Had Shown Implacable Hostility to All of Hta Art. I because of tbe storm to the agonized men, women and children crowding tho after part ot the ship and within a stones throw. Mexico City. President Huertaj dr All night Thursday tbe lifeboats fens of bis action In causing ISf made a desperate effort to get alongrest of. 130 members of tho chanter side the Volturno, but the waves of deputies, on Friday, and caii beat them back and not until the members to be thrown Into prfeai, the storm abated again, at dayUght Friday Is that th deputies were revolted-lots- . bid the rescuers succeed 'In receiving It Is his belief, as he ftat , the survivor from the doomed ship. that they represented Camnxa SentThe Volturno was well equipped iment in the capital. In a proriamttlm with boats, sufficient, the agents say, dissolving the chamber At Is trinity for a thosuand people, but the boisstated that their threat to reaw terous aea or lack of boat drUI or themselves from the capital and hU panic among the passengers preventsessions where they would enjo the ing the successful ' employment of protection which they alleged was 4c them. The reecue ships were able nied them here, meant that they fouM to lower lifeboats, but transfer their sessions to territorf cos most of the boats launched apparently from the trolled by the rebels. , , Volturno were smashed or upset and In a separate proclamation adfre the occupants drowned. Two of the ed to the Mexican people the boats, crowded with passengers, are declared that the deputlef hid reported to have got away from tbe shown systematic and hnplacabli h has ship, but a search for them tlllty to each and all of his acta proved fruitless and they have pracThe establishment of a virtual dicta tically been given up as lost. Tbe torshlp by Huerta through th tse t occupants of these boats are includmilitary fore la interpreted as ed in the death roll. Ions to have the moat , The steamer Carmanla, bound for alii New York from Liverpool was quencea to th Huerta regime, was held as vindication ot the statute miles away when the call of the Washington administrate thfi for help sounded. Captain Barr, ormilitary assumption of power should dering full steam. In aplte of tbe TIMOTHY WOODRUFF CALLED. not be recognised, and there U hop gale, drove through the seas at twennow among high ofTlcals that frria ty knots an hour and waa first of the Held Lieutenant Governorship of Now governments which hitherto had sAcof Beet to reach th burning vesaeL She York for Thrss Succosslv Terms. nixed the Hnerta regime would with waa follow! by La Touralne, ,...,New York, Tlmptbr L. .Woodruff, :. y .,-Bohnrtqfc'-Oaiformer lieutenant governor of New ' Devonian, Kroonland, EXPECT SPLIT IN ARhfr. Grosser Kurfuerst and fieydlitz at York state, died at 9:15 oclock Sunvarious hours the day. day night. Ha had lain In a critical Huertas Latest Mevs May Rsiult Is But try aa theythroughout might, the rescuing condition for nearly two weeks after . Division of His Supporters, vessels conld hot set either line or Mexico City. There has be end lifeboat to the Volturno. The burning steamer lay in the less speculation here regarding the effect of Provisional President Hsertai trough of the seas, pounding help coup detat Many appear to lelleve lessly, with her propellers fouled .by that the logical result will be a split in tb boats tackle. The terrified pasthe army, which, they assert, has only sengers were huddled together as been held together by General Hunts's tar as it was possible to get from the personality. They argue that ftert the flames, while throughout has been dissatisfaction over Hutrta'i day the officers and crew toughtdes-peratelimpotent In-ste- , red-den- t - Mln-naaoll- i. v O- tinent Th expedition landed with difficulty on th new land, raising the Russian flag on it and took possession In the name of the exar. Commander y christened the new land, Nicholas Second Land- WO-kitxk- Jack Johnson, French Cltixcn. Chicago, Johnson, negro Louis A. Barecky, for years confi- champion heavyweight fighter, has bedential man to Governor Suiter, took come a naturalised cltlxen of France the etand In the Impeachment trial according to letter received her Sunday by a negro-friend.testifying for the defense. 111.-Ja- .. Riddled With Bu'lets. Urban, UL Riddled "with bullets rta, of a wealthy Rawlins. Wyo fam- and believed to have been robbed of ily, must stand trial a third time for 22.400. th body of William M. Larry, having run down nad killed Michael a wealthy farmer and merchant of this Wecor. a schoolboy. In an automobile city, was found la a cornfield near his accident " home. l Tornado Kills Three. Miner Flred Striking Upon.' Norfolk, Neb. A tornado Friday Calumet. Mich. A parade of strikwtgbt killed tbe ton of ing copper miners wa fired on SunFred Beckwith, the son of day as It waa passing the Centennial Allnke Welch and the son mine. - No one was struck, the bul'ets of Walter Farewell, Several people J rasslng over the heads of the psrsd-- i wertf Lnlured era i Use-ragans- v-- . y with whatever appliances were at hand to hold the fire in 7 check. But night came on and the aeas abated only si ghtly, The circle of steamers kept - their searchlight playing and waited patiently within the danger xone for the first moment when they might again launch the lifeboats. When day broke the Volturno was still afloat The gale had moderated and the seas almost calmed down. From every one of the encircling steamers lifeboats were sent, out and to these women and children were lowered trips were necessary before the survivors were removed to a place of safety. ' L Uranium Agent Make Denials. New 'York. Paul C. Fourman, general passenger agent of the Uranium Une, said Sunday that published statement that the ship was certified to carry 1,600 persons were erroneous. He ald her carrying capacity was and her certified capacity 1,180. The capacity ot the lifeboats waa 1, "" l,-1- 240. Slugged and Robbed. Ogden, Utah. An unidentified man, apparently about 32 years of age. Is lying on a cot in the Dee hospital Incoherently muttering that his part-ae- r struck him on the head and, after robbing hta of 2200. Official Called by Grand Jury. Denver. EXhelbert Stewart, repredepart; Judge William B. Lamar of Montl-cell- sentative of tho United States who has been'investl-gatin- g Fla, wilt be th United State sent of labor, conditions in Colorado, strike eemmleelener to th exposition In San Franciac In 1915. Ho It a former ws summoned to appear before the federal district grand Jury at Pueblo- Member of congress from Florida. Yauns Wife Help to Receive. -- - Tornado In Kansas. pekln. President Ynsn Shi KaTs Lebanon, Kan. A tornado which passed within half a mile of Lebanon Principal wife and aeveral of hit late Thursday afternoon destroyed daughters received s number of diseverything In tta path, wnlch extended tinguished gueots. Including the ladies northeast Into southern Nebraska Nc ot th foreign diplomatic corps, at a lives were lost tea party In th winter palace. Attendance at Big Game. - Jealousy Cauaea Tragedy. New York. Thursday 36.883 fani Salt Lk City. Jealousy caused paid 273.7S3.60 to , pass the Pole Henry Georg Shields, 23 years of , ground turnstiles, exceeding by sev age to shoot to death Florence eral hundred the attendant at th her at home tn South 18, aged opening game. Every t ' eianf Jordan, Saturday after afternoon, . and bleacher w. -synd which he took his cwn Ilf. ryrPar-ruhn- ment Organization of all retail coal dealers In the athte is proposed for the purpose of securing state legislation compelling railroads and other cart rlera to' deliver at the local yards the exact weight of coal billed out of the mines. An unusually light registration waa recorded in Salt Lake on the 5th. Out of from 5,000 to 8,000 unregistered vptera In the city only 148 wer registered at that time. In several of the districts not a single voter waa registered. F$ed W. Taylor, president of the TinpAOogas Nature club of Provo, reports that there la a glacier one mile long and one mile wide on Mount Tlmpanogas, and that there Is growing on the mountain flora ot the species belonging to Greenland. LeRoy E. Harris, aged 13, son of Ezra Harris of Tremonton, died Oe tober 8 of cancer. This la believed to be one of the few cages known to medical science wherein cancer has proven fatal to a youth, as It generally attacks much older persona. The state road commission announced last week the completion of one mile of macadam road in the Wilson district In Weber county and its Intention to begin at once the building of another miles of macadam road In what la known as the Rlrerdale dis- r . trict ' flrst-iSevera- Russian Expedition Nome Country to tho North Nicholas Second Land. SL Michael, Alaska. The Russian flagship Taymyr and Its consort th Waygatch, which constitute a" Russian polar expedition under Commander Wllkitzky which left Vladivostok June 10 of this year, reached SL Michael stormbound October 9, and brought to the port new of the discovery north of Siberia in latitude 81 north, longitude 104 east, of a new uninhabited mountainous land, possibly a con- Ferric to be Tried Again. " Lot Angeles. Ralph Sterling For first-cla- s ahe carried twenty-tw- o cabin passengers, 638 steerage and a crew numbering 96. Tbe rescue ships reached th scene of the disaster in plenty of time to save all, but for hours stood by the blazing vessel, reach Phlladtlphfa Ttam Takoo Four out of Fivo In Worlds Series. Now York. The Philadelphia American league baseball team are now worlds champions having defeated the New York National League , team four out of five games In the world's series The deriding game, played Saturday, In which Mathewson was course In general and that this wlS pitted against Plank, resulted In a vic- test loyalty to the danger point' tory for the Philadelphian by score of 2 to 1. A summary of th WILLIAM B. UMAR receipts of the world's series shows that baaetcH fans paid nearly 2326,000 to see th contests. As a resutt of winning the world's serie the twenty-O- v members of the Athletic ellglbl to take part In the games will divide $34,064, th clubs share of the final game, In addition to th 23.300 each they will receive as their share of the first four game. VRGrNLANDJDISCQVERE- mid-Atlanti- c, bead-quarte- Lewis C. Shaw, 53 years of age, a contractor and builder, was fatally Injured when he fell twenty feet from a pear tree at his residence in Salt Lake. Mr. Shaw was Bitting on a limb picking pears when It broke and he pitched head first to the ground, , crushing his skull. There ts a 'propofiar to'erect a monument over the grave of the late Bea E. Rich by subscription from missionTIMOTHY L WOODRVIT. aries who have served under his In the southern and eastbeen stricken with paralysis. presidency having ern states missions of the Mormon He was 65 years old. Aa a delegate from New York In church. The estimate la that are the Republican national convention of about 3,600 of them. That death resulted from exposure 1908 he nominated James S. Sherand freezjng, rather than heart failman for He ran for lieutenant governor in 1896, was elect- ure, is now the belief of those who ed and renominated by acclamation have Investigated tne circumstances and In 1898 and again in surrounding the tragic death of Raymond T. O'Donnetl, the popular young 1900. man of Ogden who succumbed while Found Dead In Hole. on a hunting trip in South Fork canBingham, Utah. Victor Anderson, s yon. The Brigham City Civic Improveformer employee of the Utah Leasing company, well known about the camp, ment club is making extensive prepwas found near the Wall mill stand- arations for entertaining the visitor" ing on his head in a hole. Into which to the convention ot the Utah Federation of Womens club to be held in he had fallen. that city October' 14, 15 and 16. Does Not Remember Killing. That Utah outclasses every part of Chicago. Harry Spencer, accused the United States and Canada in th of murdering Mrs. Rexroat in a lonely matter of fruit . production la the suburb, who baa told ot committing opinion of Magnus Sinclair of many murders, said Saturday that he Canada, one of the delegates to could not recollect, whether, He killed the recent street car'employeea' con-'- " anyone In Des Moines In 1902. ventlon. . To-ront- o, All la in readiness for the Philippine Official Resign, opening season of th Manila. Ctfonel IL B. McCoy, dep- of th twenty-thir- d For months a uty collector ot customs at Manila, Lehl sugar factory. and Charles H. sleeper, director of the force of men has been st work makbureau of lands in the Philippines, re- ing changes In th building, oversigned Saturday and Manuel Tinlo hauling the old machinery. Installwaa appointed to th bureau of lands. ing new machinery and In every way getting ready tor the seasons run. ; Few Killed at Torreon. Beating their way from Idaho1 to Mexico City Tbe number of Span- Ogden-o- n an - Oregon Short Lin iard who lost their lives when Tor- freight train tor the novelty of the reon Waa taken front the federal Loop experience cost,E. O. Wyatt. Glen by the rebels has dwindled to nine in- Wilson and Julius Metthlas $20 .each or stead the sixty or seventy at first when they were arr singed In police ' court (n Ogden. Tjjottn!., L I -- T |