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Show Tiit- lc.-tiri;a of tiaii'iis was ! n::t -'I ;i - .i- i.r t ivsi -Mi I HI f l,;,! ,.,;, I..V S. (I- I ii-..r J a ; A. lit-. .!. who r.--ii I .. MHfi.i. 'i!.v in .M..ii.;;i.v from S:i!i ; 1 i ; ! iit-: - -. . . !-, . .s ri-t'u-i"!, a scat ii-i ' 1 1 ' i i' ; i I i ' In he I -!;! MTa I ic li.i 1 iolia 1 i nil out :ull. .Mi--. -1 . -l.ii A!.-v:iiiil. i- I'i.h -. widow cil the riiiiinl nl' ion City, arrived ar inn City, Siiialay, from l.os Angeles, ami 1 1 -! 1 the first of a scries of meetings meet-ings announced to be ill opposition to lln- present administration of tin; 'liri-l ;a :i Catholic i-linrrh in .ion, of uhi'-li William (.ham 'olia is the o erseer. In a collision between three cat's oi 1 1 1 1- Liiiivauiuiua & Wyoming Valley railroad near Scrautuu, Pa., eighteen nelsons iiiv reported killed and 100 injnrcil. - WASHINGTON. Great Britain does not forget those who prove themselves, its friends in tin' hour of need, Sir Auckland Gcddos, British nml.assador to the I'niled Slates, told General Pershing in presenting pre-senting him a bejewelled sword us a fill of the city of London. A ruling defining new coiitli I ions under which lapsed or cancelled war risk insurance policies may be reinstated re-instated by former service men si ml women has been issued by the war risk Insurance bureau. The public debt decreased by more than a billion dollars during the fiscal year of 1919 just ended and by more than two billion dollars since August 31, when the war debt was at ils peak, according to the quarterly lebt statement Issued by the treasury. Following complaints that recruiting recruit-ing activities of the army and navy were tending to still further increase the existing shortage of farm labor. BRIEF REVIEW OF II WEEJTCEVEIITS RKCOnO OF THS IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS IN ITEMIZED ITEM-IZED FORM Horns and Foreign Nsvs Gathered From All Quarters of the WorI4, nd Prepared for Busy Msa INTERMOUNTAIN. Frank T. .Milner, veteran organ builder who reconstructed the famous Tabernacle organ at Salt Lake in WHO, died suddenly in Kvansvllle, Ind., July 6, at the age of TO. Flab slack wilh Mi Adoo throughout every ballot on the hist day of balloting ballot-ing al San Francisco, eight votes being be-ing last time after time for the former for-mer secretary of tire treasury. While spilling his fuse for the fecond bole of his round In the Daly West mine at 1'ark City, Utah, John llekela, 20, was killed by a premature explosion. Fred Bucknian was killed when an engine which he was al tempting to run Into the roundhouse at Bowdoin, Mont., collided with another engine, lie wits pinned beneath the wreckage mid before help arrived was fatally burned by escaping .steam. A female mountain lion, believed to have been partly responsible for the killing of eighty head of sheep In one flock, was been killed in Morgan Mor-gan county, Utah. Secretary Baker has announced that steps have been taken to reduce to a minimum recruiting work in rural comm unities. Representative Leblbach, Republican, Republi-can, of New Jersey, in a letter to I'resident Wilson, protested against Postmaster General Burleson's ruling that all employes In the postal service who have reached the age of 70 years must retire under the civil service retirement re-tirement act. FOREIGN Hundreds of Armenian families are being reunited monthly through the efforts of the members of the American Ameri-can committee for relief in the near east, who are scattered throughout the leading cities of Asia Minor with headquarters in Constantinople. Recruiting for the new army that is to replace the Volkswebr under the terms of the treaty of St. Germain has ceased, the allowed 30,000 men having been enlisted, says a dispatch from Vienna. Foreign influence is being brought to bear on the Spar-ish railroad policy and proper development Is thus prevented, pre-vented, It wtis chirked by Juan de la Cierva, former n.inister of war, in a speech urging nationalization of rail- Rev. Joseph N. Barrett is a fighter as well as pastor of St. Matthew's Kplscopnl church, :"t Grand Junction, Colo. At a recent athletic meet, a foreigner approached the clergyman und called him a slacker. Rev. Bar-nett Bar-nett knocked the man off his feet. A general fight resulted. DOMESTIC. Witnessing a fight between her son and three other boys resulted in death for Mrs. Grace Johnson, at Hannibal, Mo. While the battle was In progress, Mrs. Johnson fell to the ground and died of apoplexy before a physician could be summoned. Eight persons were killed, twelve seriously Injured, some painfully, and ten others suffered m'nor injuries when a Missouri, Kanr.ns & Texas freight smashed into the rear end of a carnival company's special near Atoka, Oklahoma. Americanism was made the keynote of an address by Frank Ii. Rain, grand exalted ruler of the Elks, at the opening open-ing meeting at Chicago, on July 5, of the six-day convention of the order. During tlie dinner hour, when the lower floors of the Fairmont hotel at San Francisco were thronged with ways, which lus been the subject of wide commend, and sharply divided opinion. Tlie Hungarian minis'.er of education educa-tion lias issued a ruling that only 25 per cent of the high -icliooi students may be Jews. At present 50 per cent of the students are Jews. Twenty thousand orphans of France, whose fathers gave up their lives in the great war, filed past Hugh C. Wallace, the American ambassador, in 'Jie Tuileries gardens, at Taris, clipping clip-ping miniature American tl,I1"to to the United States on Independence Inde-pendence clay. British warships attempted to land marines Friday at Mutiania, on the Sea of Marmora, but they were repulsed re-pulsed by rapidfire guns widely scattered scat-tered along the coast. Evidently the guns were placed since the British landing on June 26. Forty housemaids at Buckingham palace, all under 30, have quit their jobs because Queen Mary refused to increase their wages 10 per cent. Japan has decided to occupy such points of the province of Saglialien, Siberia, as it deems necessary pending pend-ing the establishment there of a legitimate legiti-mate government and a satisfactory settlement for the massacre of 700 Japanese at Nikolaievsk. Three-fourths of a battalion of Irish Connaught rangers stationed at Jull-under Jull-under in the Punjab, India, mutinied, following the arrival of news of recent re-cent events In Ireland, according to a dispatch from Simla, under date of July 2 to Reuter's, Ltd. General Chang Chlng Yao, military governor of Hunan, whose failure to combat troops of the southern Chinese republic caused the loss of the Chang Sha and To Chow, it is alleged, has been deprived of his military rank, shorn of his honors and ordered to Pekin to answer for his conduct of the campaign in Hunan. A dispatch from Sofia says that the Odeon theatre at Philippopolis, Bulgaria, Bul-garia, was blown up by a bomb and that about 150 bodies were buried under the debris. A bill granting suffrage to the women wo-men of Belgium was defeated by a vote of 80 to 74 in the chamber of deputies. Twenty-two thousand five hundred workers are striking in various parts of the republic of Mexico, according to El Universal. An official dispatch from Belgrade says it Is confirmed that Avalona, Albania, Al-bania, is entirely in Albanian hands. The majority of the Italian garrison was taken off by warships and a small contingent retreated to Saseno island. guests, Mrs. C. E. Moller, a wealthy New York widow, traveling wilh Mrs. John F. Hylan, wife of Mayor Hylan of New York, was robbed and left bound and gagged in her room on tlie third floor. United States Senator Robert M. LaFollette, Wisconsin, who was oper-. oper-. ated on at Rochester, Minn., recently, left Monday for Madison, having recovered re-covered sufficiently to travel. A committee representing the eight leading grain exchanges of tlie country coun-try v.lii If't I!1 Chicago. Jo formulate ' puis li,e 'l,Penug pf trudiua lu wheat futures. The longshoremen's strike at Philadelphia Phila-delphia has been settled by a decisive vote of the men who have been out more than a month. Nearly 4000 men voted on the question. They agreed to return to work at the old scale. James Spencer, a negro postal clerk, who was charged with having stabbed Otto Parker, a white clerk, was taken from the officers, who were taking him to Quitman, Miss., for trial, and lynched. Hearings will be held at New York - this month to be followed by others throughout the country by the United States senate special committee on reconstruction re-construction and production investigating investi-gating the nation's bousing shortage. Three deputy sheriffs were shot at Roderfleld, W. Va.. during a clash between be-tween the officers and miners. Chicago railroads on Friday received notice from the commerce commission that 27,750 empty grain cars had been ordered delivered to the western roads by the eastern lines. Alexander Howat, president of the Kansas miners, announced his candidacy candi-dacy for international vice president of the United Mine Workers of America. Prison sentences totalling fifty-nine months and fines aggregating $85,000 were given three officers of the Gra-matan Gra-matan Hair Tonic company and the Herba 1'roduct company by Federal Judge Grubb at New York for violation viola-tion of the Volstead and internal revenue acts. Charles B. Brierley, 46 years old, for twelve years district sales manager man-ager of the Upton Tea company, surrendered sur-rendered to the police at Chicago on a charge of embezzlement. Officers of the company place Brierley's alleged alleg-ed peculations at between $60,000 and ."FSO.OOO. Three men were killed when a scaffolding on which they were working collapsed in the interior of a concrete smokestack at the Iroquois j 1 1 : i ! 1 1 of the Steel & Tube Company of Aiaciica, on the south side at Chicago. The !:;!! fell 125 feet. |