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Show 2 seamee BLOODY REVOLT IN PARAGUAY PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY P. SIORIS. SALT LAKE CITY... . UTAH CAREER LIKE A ROCKET UTAH STATE NEWS When a deputy sheriff, armed with a writ ol attachment issued from the supreme court, the other day served copies of that paper upon John Brandt Walker, wizard of Wall street, and on other brokers with whom Walker has accounts, what may be the final chapter was written in the romantic story of Brandt Walker's kaleidoscopic advent, rise and crash “on the street.” The at- Ix fs announced that the smelter pear Ogden is to resume operations at once, after a close down of sev eral months. An effort is being made to bring the winner of the Gans-Nelson fight to Ogden for a match with Cyclone Thompson on July 24. tachment The sugar beet crop of Utah never wooked better at this season of the year and a bumper crop is expected sspecially in Utah county. Mrs. Alice Hook, 96 years old, who crossed the plains to Great Salt Lak« valley in a hand cart brigade in 1860 died in Salt Lake City last week. the ankle, George Carlson, a Salt Lake youth, was accidentally shot in the forehead with a target rifle in the hands of a playmate, and is in a hospital in a tritica] condition Brigham City is enjoying a build {ng boom, many handsome business buildings and residences being now mnder construction, as well as a $40, 000 High schoo! building. The Fruit Growers’ State bank of Green River filed articles of incorpor ation with the secretary of state last week. The capital stock is $25,000, with shares at $100 each A “boosters” excursion is to be run from Salt Lake City to Nephi on June 10, the Manufacturers’ and Merchants’ association of Salt Lake hay ing charge of the excursion. = ZZ,ag <4 After a long fight, it is expected that the Ogden police force will go on the 8-hour a day system again. The — have recently been forced o be on duty ten to twelve hours. A. Feinberg, charged with stealing from a ago, has will be for trial. “Ἢ i} entire state. enough friends on the jury panel to protect their interests, saw that a revolw| tion of the system was imminent, and got very busy. So did the political machines. Again did Mrs. Dodson go to the people. So great was her influence that the Civic league, which iabored for pure government, joined in exists in all the mines of the state. the movement. The contest reached the courts. Mrs, Dodson personally | presented her side of the jury situation to the judges. The fight was bitter -~ The big new tabernacle at Wells» She explained to the court that the jury boxes were tied with pieces of thin | ville, erected at a cost of about $55,wire, whereas the law required that they should be securely sealed. The | 000, was dedicated last week. A trecourt ordered the boxes securely sealed and directed that no juries be drawn mendoms throng of people from all parts of the county assembled there. in secret. Then Mrs. Dodson went farther, She appealed to the legislature, and after days and days of indefatigable labor, opposed by the politicians There are 433 barbers and 60 ap at every step, she brought about the passage of a new jury law that put an prentices in 302 shops in 121 towns in end to the selection of the jury lists by election officers. Utah, according to the annual report Mrs. Dodson announces that she is a candidate for re-election on her pi of the Utah state board of examiners litical record. of barbers, filed with Governor Cutler. MINISTER TO PANAMA The beautiful new meeting house at Spring City is nearing completion. It is one of the finest houses in the state, being built of the white oolite stone which abounds in Sanpete county. Balt Lake, whose two children died from diphtheria, he having failed to | call in a physician, has been arrested on a charge of involuntary manPanama over the fight for ihe presideney, which slaughter. is quite likely to result in serious-siitbreaks on Norman Hopper, a professional bielection day, July 11. cycle rider, fell while training at Refore being sent 49 Panama he was the first Balt Lake City, a large splinter peneIninister this-ountry had at Havana, a post trating his abdomen, inflicting inwhich he resigned in December, 1905. His prejuries from which it is feared he can vious diplomatic experience included service as not recover. FaLil secretary of the American embassy at Berlin in An extensive experiment in farm1894 and secretary of legation at Pekin in 1898. ing the arid lands of the Escalante During the boxer troubles in the latter year he served as chief of staff to valley is about to be made. A monSir Charles Macdonald, the British minister. ster steam engine will be used as Thediplomatic life appeals particularly to Squiers on account of its inthe motive power to plow up. the finite variety and tinge of adventure. His has been an unusual career to end ground, which will be sown to wheat. in such a service. Born in Canada in 1859, he was educated in a Minnesota It is reported that on account of military academy, a Maryland agricultural school and the United States Ar lack of tinity, the efforts of certain tillery school. He entered the army andserved as a lieutenant in the westerr physicians and pharmacists of Ogden Indian wars, leaving the service to be detailed as teacher of military science to eliminate the Independent telein a New York college. He gave this up to get into active service once more phone has failed, and that the movein the Pine Ridge agency Indian trouble in 1891, and then gave up the army ment has been practically abandoned. altogether and turned his attention toward politics The sheriff of Weber county has isgued instructions to arrest all resort | managers who permit the selling of liquor on Sunday. Formerly all the resorts outside the city were perChief Engineer Edward Dunham Robie, U. mitted to sell liquors on the Sabbath | S. N., ranking as a rear admiral on the retired day. | list, and who celebrated his golden wedding an By the premature explosion of a niversary at Washington the other day, is an in giant cracker, Eugene Knowles, a teresting figure in one of the most memorable six-year-old Salt Lake boy, will lose naval expeditions that ever set out from this | a portion of his right hand. While country. He is one of the five surviving officers| the lad was celebrating the Fourth of the 200 who accompanied Commodore M. C. | at his home the explosion occurred Perry in the famous expedition which opened up | which wil) leave him a cripple for cs WITH PERRY IN JAPAN trailing | halter, to when catch the the horse kicked her. The city council of Logan has under consideration an ordinance which, if passed, will compel candy kitchens, restaurants, bowling alleys and shooting galleries to close at 11 p. m. The masiuum penalty imposed is a fine of $50 and thirty davs’ im prisonment. Five Hundred Lives Being Lost as Result of Revolt. cratic party from time to time he has managed to strike a happy me dium, and now represents a united party in Nebraska. Unassuming and cf a quiet disposition, Dunn {s neverheless considered equal to the occasion for which he has been select- ed. He has a well rounded, clear voice and will be able to make himself heard in all parts of the big auditorium. SOCIALIST CANDIDATES. Standard Bearer Now in the Nevada State Prison, New York.—Candidates for president and vice-president of the United States were nominated and a platform was adopted by the national Labor convention of the Socialist Herbert C, Squiers, United States minister to Panama, who has just passed successfully through a critical interview with Secretary of party here on Sunday. The ticket State Root touching the diplomat’s reported lack vamed is as follows: For president, of political neutrality in the Panama election Martin R. Preston of Nevada. For eampaign, will return at once to his post. His vice-president, Donald Munroe of Virreport to the state department gave the secreεἰπία. The platform is identical with tary an excellent idea of the ruffled situation ind ~one adopted by the party four years Charles §, Titus, a faith healer of Mrs. Rowland tried the She is known as the shrewdest poli J. B. Pettit, state coal mine inspector, last week filed with the government his quarterly report, which sirows that a satisfactory condition As the result of being kicked by a frightened horse, Mrs. George E. Rowland of Ogden was badly injured. Fearing that the brute would injure itself by rearing and plunging, In -Ignatius J. Dunn has = eh ~ Omaha, Neb been selected by the Nebraska dele Five years ago she was the wife of Attorney Democratic gation to the national Frank W. Dodson, a candidate for district judge convention at Denver to nominate To his wife he confided his hopes and ambitions. Bryan for president of He also confided to her the little ins and outs of William J. politics. Dodson died suddenly and his widow the United States. Mr. Dunn is one was left with a little son to support. Mrs. Dod: o? the four delegates-at-large selectHe son turned her attention to politics and ran for ed by the Nebraska convention. of Omaha county recorder. The politicians fought her, but | is assistant city attorney she went direct to the people with convincing | and has been identified with Demo arguments, laying bare tfe secrets of the corrupt cratic politics in his home state for He is a strong suptwelve years. ward heelers, and she won. The Iowa statute at that time placed the drawing of jurors in the hands| porter of Mr. Bryan, a brilliant orator of the clerk, auditor and recorder, and Mrs, Dodson discovered that the draw: | and an attorney of high standing in During the internal dissening of jurors was a farce. She set to work to correct the abuse. She stirred Omaha. Demoup such a fuss as the state had never seen. Corporations which always had sions which have rent the in the state prison last week, where he was serving a twelve-year term for robbing a tobacco store. The eighteenth triennial convention of the American Instructors of the Deaf opened in Ogden on Saturday. On the opening day there were 128 delegates from all parts of the United States and Canada registered at the Utah State School for the Deaf and Blind. Battle οκ in Iowa, Sam Grice, who boasted that in his life. Forces Streets for Several Days, at Least SHREWD WOMAN POLITICIAN youth he won the Victoria Cross, died diamonds some time Texas and Salt Lake Contending Bvenos Ayres.—Advices received here state that the revolutionists have been victorious in Paraguay and that a ew government has been established. These advices have been conirmed by a dispatch received by the minister of foreign affairs of the Ar gentina legation at Asuncion officially notifying the minister that the revolutionary party had succeeded in overthrowing the Paraguayan government his winnings at the close of his big bear campaign, which closed only last De- at that several of the Paraguayan cember, His office desk had six phones, connected with various brokerage ministers of state had taken refuge in houses, and at his country residence he kept tickers, blackboards, clerks, tele the legation. The revolutionists have graph operators and his secretary to carry on his audacious fight with for 1] nted as president Dr. Emilio Gontune ΄ gales Naviro. He held the office of Walker is 40 years old, son of Edwin Walker, a famous Chicago railroad vice-president in the government lawyer, and came to New York from the former city a few years ago with which has just been ousted $15,000. This he promptly lost, and he repeated the performance several] Fighting has been proceeding in the times, as often as he could get enough cash or backing to make a newstart. s of Asuncion for some days past Then, last summer, he began the bear campaign which beat down the market and nm iny of the public buildings have and rolled gold into his pockets in a swelling stream. seriously damaged Previous been έ nates of the killed and wounded, however, have been exaggerated, and itis now believed that the number will not exceed five hundred. Mrs. Frank W. Dodson, who is seeking a sec ond election to the office of county recorder of WILL NOMIANTE BRYAN. Polk county, Iowa, put to rout a bold band οἱ jury fixers in Des Moines and completely revolu Ignatius Dunn, Omaha Orator, Is the D> [.. ς tionized the drawing of jurors threvghout the Man Chosen. mj In future witnesses in federal court cases in this state will receive $3 per flay for their services, In the past they have been paid but $1.50 per day. While riding on a merry-go-round at Ogden, Marie McMillan, aged 18, fell from the contrivance while it was In motion, breaking her left leg near €1,350 worth of Balt Lake dealer been arrested in brought back to was issued on a $23,500 claim of a brokerage firm which asserts a balance due op a series of wheat and stock deals, That Walker did not find it convenient to settle so compara tively trivial a bill is taken to mean that he has struck the bottom of the financial toboggan chute, and this idea is borne out by his recent sale of his expensive garage, stable and team of bigbred trotters at figures said to be far lower than the prices he paid in their purchase. Only a year ago John Brandt Walker was the sensation of the stock brokers’ world. His plunging methods—or lack of method—on the board of trade attracted the attention of veteran speculators who had seen scores of men tempt fortune by bold or bizarre campaigns. Walker's campaign was unique, in that it went farther than most others had dared, and also in that it was successful. A million dollars a month for 90 days was the measure of New Government Has Been Established, Former Vice-President Being at the Head. | Japan to the civilized world in 1852-1854, and thus did more toward the rapid advancement of that | progressive uation to the first rank of powers and to cement its people in friendship to the | people of the United States of America than all | | the rest of the world combined. Admiral Robie was born in Burlington, Vt., | September 11, 1831, and is a son of Jacob Carter | and: Louisa Dunham Robie. He was educated at the Binghamton academy, | Binghamton, N. Y., where he won the scholarship prize, and was subsequently | warranted an assistant engineer in the United States navy. He was one of | the naval engineering class of 19, in 1852, which, after competitive examina.| tion, was evolved from 100 contestants. He won his way to the head of that | class and became its ranking officer. substitucommon- ago, and declares for the tion of the co-operative wealth “for the- present state of war plantless production, industrial and social disorder.” Preston is serv in ing a twenty-five year sentence the Nevada penitentiary for shooting a restaurant keeped in Goldfield, during the strike three years ago. For Better Health in Montana. Helena.—The state board of health has made sweeping orders for the } preservation of conditions | sanitary throughout the commonwealth. The | first provides that each pupil, teacher | and janitor of all schools shail be vac| cinated forthwith, and the second thar sewage farms shall be acquired byall cities. Streams must not longer be contaminated. will follow. Nominal prosecution The board decided to take no action in the smallpox situa: tion at Bozeman so long as the local authorities are able to cope with the situation. Struck Down From Behind.° Reno, Nev.—Ed Hall, who was struck from the gambler behind and knocked to the sidewalk by an unknown man, who escaped, nowlies in a local hospital suffering from concussion of the brain. The attending physicians state that there is no hope The erroneous refor his recovery. port sent out, in which a woman was Hall named, is without foundation. men of party had trouble with a about a Fourth of July joke and was struck from behind. The police made no effort to arrest Hall’s assailant, Fighting in Korea. Tokio.—Advices from Seoul, Korea, say that the campaign against fnsur- gents continues unabated throughout the disturbed region. Reports of At the early age of 30 he was commissioned by President Lincoln chief | minor engagements received dally at engineer of the United States navy, his commission being one of the very few army headquarters show that the which President Lincoln signed with his full name, Abraham Lincoln, instead | | losses of the insurgents approximate of with the familiar signature, “A. Lincoln.” There have been After an eventful life, rich in accomplishment and full of exciting inci dents, he was retired for age September 11, 1893, with the rank of commodore,| being the only one of his class to attain that rank; and in 1906, by act of congress, his rank was raised to that of rear admiral for hig creditable record in the civil war. thirty every ‘day. gome six or eight engagements in different sections. The reports, how ever, indicate that the Imsurgent ac tivity is diminishing since the arrest of a number of leaders. It is belleved that the insurrection will be practcal ly quelled within thirty days, Truth and | HEALTH BRINGS HAPPINESS. |” Once, a Happy Woman Now. Quality | appeal to the Well-Informed in every Mrs. C. R. Shelton, Pleasant Street, | Covington, Tenn, says: “Once I seemed a helpless inwalk of life and are essential to permanent| valid, but now I enjoy the best of health. success and creditable standing. Accordisease Kidney ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs | brought me down: terand Elixir of Senna is the only remedyof Rheumatie ribly. known value, but one of many reasons aches and pains made why it is the best of personal and family | move painful. evéry The secretions were laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, | sweetens and relieves the internal organs disordered and my head ached todistraction. I was in a bad condition, but on which it acts without any debilitating medicines failed to help. I lost ground after effects and without having to increase daily until I began with Doan’s Kidney the quantity from time to time. They helped me at once and Pills. soon made me strong and well.” It acts pleasantly and naturally and Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. truly as a laxative, and its component Foster-Mi lburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. parts are known to and approved by physicians, asit is free fromall objectionable substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine— manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. SOMEWHAT SUSPICIOUS. naan - -τ- Up to His Tricks. Lord Rosslyn, at a dinner in New of a notorious London York, said spendthrift: .°xford he wired “When he was at once to his uncle, whose heir he was: “If you don’t send me a hundred by Saturday, I'll blow mybrains out.’ “His uncle wired back: | “*You telegraphed me that before, and when I forwarded you mybest revolver, you went and pawned it.’” Pg Of course, it may beall right —still, you don't feel inclined to eat sau-| sages when you find your butcher has removed to a shop next door to the! Home for Lost Dogs, do you? An Undeterminable Temperature. It was not in his public address that Senator Beveridge related this story, but at an informal] gathering of congenial spirits. “When I was a boy in Adams county,” he said, “Judge Blank was taken very ill. The doctor called regularly; but the judge kept getting worse. Finally the crisis came. The morning after the doctor called at the judge’s house. ‘J hope your master’s temperature is lower than it was last evening,’ said he to the butler ““T’h not so sure about that,’ replied the man; ‘he died, sir, in the night.’” -San Francisco Call. Proof is inexhaustible that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound earries women safely through the Changeof Life. Read the letter Mrs. E. Hanson, 304 E. Long St., Columbus, Ohio, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “T was passing through the Change of Life, and suffered from nervous- ness, headaches, and other annoying syaaptoms. My doctor told me that Coming Events. Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable ComLet no one say that the mind has pound was good for me, and since taking it I feel so much better, and I can again do my own work, I never forget no power over the body. If it can cause such effects as in the case taken from Ulk, how much morecanit influence the physical conditions of the now and here? “You look pale and thin. What’s got you?” “Work! From morning till night, and only a one-hourrest.” “How long have you been at it?” “T begin to-morrow.’—Youth's Companion. to tell my friends what Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Compound did for me during this trying period.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills. andhaspositively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation,ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-downfeeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don’t youtry it? Mrs. Pinkhaminvites all sick women to write her for advice. Unobtainable. The Doctor's Wife—Well, Jane, sc your poor husband's gone at last! Didn't you give him his medicine prop. erly? Jane—Ah, poor dear, how could I! | | | | Doctor said as how it was to be took | \She has broke! So Sketch. it were no guided thousands to Address, Lynn, Mass, [11] LIFE AN in a recumbent position, an’ I ’adn'l | health. one. I asked Mrs. Green to lend me one. She said she ‘ad one, but it was good.—The WIFE WON — Husband Finally Convinced, Some men are wise enough to try new foods and beverages and then generous enough tg give others the benefit of their experience. A very “conservative” Ills. man, however, let his good wife find out for herself what a blessing Postum is to those who are distressed in many ways, by drinking coffee. The wife writes: “No slave in chains, it seemed to me, was more helpless than I, a coffee captive. Yet there were innumerable warnings—waking from a_ troubled sleep with a feeling of suffocation, at | times dizzy and out of breath, attacks of palpitation of the heart that frightened me. “Common sense, reason, and my better judgment told me that coffee drinking was the trouble. At last my nervous system was so disarranged that my physician ordered ‘no more coffee,’ “He knew he was right and he knew I knew it, too. I capitulated. Prior to this é6ur family had tried Postum, but disliked it, because, as we learned later, it was not made right. “Determined this time to give Postum a fair trial, I prepared it accord- CUTICURA ing to directions on the pkg.—that is, boiled it 15 minutes after boiling commenced, obtaining a dark brown liquid with a rich snappy flavor similar to coffee. When cream and sugar were added, it was not only good but delicious, “Noting its beneficial effects in me the rest of the family adopted it—all except ™y husband, who would not ad- mit that coffee hurt him. Should be inseparable. For summer eczemas, Several weeks elapsed during which I drank Postum two or three times a day, when, to my surprise. my husband said: ‘I have decided to drink Postum. Your improvement is so apparent—you have such fine color—that I propose to give credit where credit is due.’ And now we are coffee-slaves no longer.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” In pkgs. “There's a Reason.’ Ever read the above letter? A new '| one appears from time totime. They | ΙΓ are genuine, true, and full of human } interest, | rashes, itchings, irritations, inflammations, chafings, sunburn, pimples, blackheads, red, rough, and sore hands, and antiseptic cleansing as well as forall the purposes of thetoilet, bath, and nursery, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are invaluable. Sold throughout the world. Depots: London, 27, riethouse Sq.; Paris, 5, Rue de ta Paix; Austra ita, R. Towns & Co., Sy ο ‘ Lennon, Ltd, Cape & Chem. κ ο; Town,ete., U.8. A. Potter Drug Corp., Sole Props., Boston. am Posi-free, Culicura Beok on Care of Bia, seep, ERGATIS | |