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Show JUAB COUNTY TIMES. NEPIII, UTAH NEUTRAL STAND BAN EXH B - R- R - R - R - R AFFAIRS .t ) (ctv looks c-- I C COLO!' Aw' THE IN b'Vl'h Vr M" TWENTY-ON- E T OF OPENED BY THE THE UTAH KILLED IN WRECK ON NEW HAVEN W-- PRESIDENT WILSON OPENS FIRST EXHIBITION OF ITS KIND HELD IN UNITED 8TATES. Whit Mountain Express Crashes Into Bar Harbor Limited Fog Cause of Disaster. New Haven, Conn. Twenty-on- e persons were killed and nearly fifty injured, some of wtoom may die, in a collision shortly before 7 o'clock Tuesday morning on the New at York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, six miles north of here. Health and Increasing taining White The first section of the Natural Resource Planned. Mountain express, bound for New York, speeding along at probably formes ty miles an hour in a thick fog, rushKnoxville, Tenn. A wireles sage from President Wilson waa the ed by a danger signal, it Js said, and Becond signal for the opening of the National crashed into the rear of the section of Harbor Bar the express, Conservation exposition, the first In standing 100 feet beyond the block the history of the country devoted to signal. the cause of conservation. The mesThe White Mountain engine cleaved sage waa received about 10 a. m. at through two rear Pullman cars, both the wireless station on the exposition of wood, splitting them in two, and grounds Monday. tossing their wreckage and three score Governor Hooper mangled human beings, some of Tennessee, of (Copyright) Mayor Helskell of Knoxville and T. A. alive, some dead, on either side of the Wright, president of the exposition, track. FRENCH TOWN ATTACKED FOUR KILLED IN LABOR DAY The third car, also of wood, and oc participated In the opening cerecupied by forty boys on their way The monies. will continue exposition BY BAND OF GYPSIES RACES AT NASHVILLE, TENN. summer camp at Monmouth, a from and October, through September and while designed prPmarlly to "teach Me., was lifted Into the air and almost the lesson of conservation," is intend- completely off the track. The car fell on its side, crumpled up, crushed two also to demonstrate the commerDifference of Opinion Between Towns- Car With Unlucky Number 13 Knock ed cial and industrial advance of the of the boys to death and injured sev Down Fence and Other Following people and Gypsies Result In eral others. south. a Pitched Battle. Plunge Into Wreckage. Practically all the passengers on The exposition gTounds with lake and drives embrace, more than 100 both trains were returning home from acreB on which have 'been erected summer vacations, and all but two of Nashvillefl Tenn. Death claimed a eleven Montpeller, France. A band of l'O S. buildings with a total of a camping party of nine, guests of regypsies on Friday attacked the Inhab- heavy toll in the Labor day auto 100,000 large Crozer Fox of Elkins Park, Pa., buildof floor feet The space. itants or the town of Lunel with guns races at the state fair grounds when are the Liberal Arts, the Land, turning from Maine, were wiped out. ana revolvers. Gendarmes engaged four of the six cars en- ings an auditorium annex seating Fox was among those killed. No one with enfree-fora e the gypsies and tered In the twenty-five-rallpitched battle the was hurt in the White Mountain train. 3,000 persons, the Woman's, was all race were wrecked on the far side sued in which one gendarme Child East the, Tennessee, Welfare, killed and three were badly wounded. of the mile track In sight of the 5,000 Hard Coal Trust Attacked. the the Mine and Minerals, The lighting of the gypsies was so spectator. Attorney General MoPhiladelphia. the the Livestock, the Poultry fierce that they even held out against Four of the racing men were killed and Art, "Reynolds' first and most Important the Negro. a company of soldiers for a time. and three received minor injuries. Two attack on the bard coal trust was be Exhibits have been furnlsherd by When they fled they left a large num- of the cars with their drivers and me ol federal government as well aa by gun here Tuesday with the filing of ber of wounded behind them. dissolution a chanicians flashed through the tangled the for civil the suit The attack had It origin in a dif- wreckage of broken cars and maimed all of the southern states and will dis- the Reading company's control of coal ference of opinion between the gyp- bodies at a speed of sixty miles an play many kinds of natural resource. mining and coal carrying railroad, tb The larger southern cities will be repsies and the townspeople of Lunel. most potential combination In the anhour, escaping Injury. resented by individual exhibits. ConThe Heading comPOISONED BY ENEMIES. servation of human life, health and thracite fields. Three Killed In Wreck. with its subsidiary and allied pany as well of water as the land, Cedar Rapids, la. Train No.' 444. energy corporations, including the Centra! President of Chinese Republic Ha a and forests will be emphasized. southbound, on the Decorah branch of Railroad of New Jersey and certain Narrow Escape Beeeks Revenge. "In and Its ita alms in conception, the Chicago & Hock Island, waa of their officers and directors, It London la a dispatch dealing with wrecked within two miles of Maynard purposes," reads the official descripcharged by the federal government the effect of tne Chinese rebellion on at 3:45 Monday. The entire train waa tion, "the National Conservation expo- with violating both the Sherman an Japan, the Ihiily Telegraph's Toklo derailed, rolling down a sition Is unique; it is unique In other titrust law and the commodities claus t emcorrespondent makes the revealatlon bankment. Three were respects. Expositions of the past of the interstate commerce act, in an killinstantly that the reason Ircs1dent Yuan Ski ed and thirty-flvwere more have always been held to commemorothers attempt to monopolize the production Ka perclpltateiy massed the northern ate and celebrate something that baa and or cause The less seriously injured. transportation of anthracite. troopa on the Yang Tse river and pre of the accident was the of teen accomplished; the National ConThis combination, controlling at the pared for war was berauae be was the rails. As soon aa thespreading left servation exposition, on the other present time 63 per cent of tb entire poisoned by arsenic In May by sou the rails the coaches turnedengine over and hand, looks toward, the future It will unmlned deposits of anthracite and thorn agent. the embankment, A special stand out as the sign of something marketing about 30 por cent of the The correspondent state that only slid down Is to be done. was made annual supply will own or control le train up at Oelweln and left that the most violent medical methods aav exhibits of the United States time. If not dissolved, the attorney "The to the this injured ed Yuan Shi Kai'a life and that be wa Maynard. bringing; will be most complete and all will be general warns, "every ton of commer city. In a state of collapse for many days. The train waa running between designed to teach these conservation daily available) anthracite known tc REPUBLICANS OUTLINE PLANS. twenty-fivand thirty miles an hour, leaaons. In the good roads exhibit. exist. which Is an unusual epeeod for train the forestry, the mines, the land and To Go Over New Route. Organized on this branch. Congressional Committee In other exhibits the federal display and Will Extend Aid to Candidate. Salt Lake. A. I Weatgaard. path will be devoted entirely to the subBig Dope Plot Found. Washington. The Republican con jects of conservation In it different finder, representing the National High San Francisco. A g'gantlc opium branches. So. too. the different state ways association, left for the east gressionat committee on Friday or exhibits are designed not only to show Tuesday. He was accompanied by bit ganized and outlined its general plan smugglers plot in which federal wife, who makes nearly all bis tript for the coming campaigns. Represteamship employees and Chi- the progress made In material way sentative Frank I. Woods of Iowa nese are all Involved, developed here by these states, but also to bring out with him. was elected chairman. He announced with nearly a score of arrests. The the conservation Idea. Westgaard goes east into Colorado that the eommitteee's work from now opium ring baa "The child welfare exhibit, the flrfct by what Is known as the Vernal route operated at tbia on would not be In the line of direct port since August. 1910. and Survey- ever made In the south. Is under he While little has been said about thli aid to Individual candidates, but in or of the Port Justus S. Wardell es direction of Miss Julia C. Lothrop, touts Into I'tah from the east, man) furnishing Information tf the voters timates their profits at close upon bead of the children's bureau of the dalm it Is the best route of their j L'nlted States Attention will be f of the country. department of labor. all, as far as t'tah Is concerned, for given at once to the pending contests The first Intimation that Wardell re The Rnssell Sage Foundation of New the simple reason that It Is shorter In the Third Maine. Twentieth Nrw ceived came ben he assumed bis du York and other philanthropic institu the road li i.lrcady built and will York. First West Virginia and Third re two weeks ago. Deputy Surveyor tions are deeply interested in this de cut out all the desert land in the Maryland congressional district. Charles A .Stephen reported that partment It will be devoted to an cx eastern part of the state. custom guard position of the best and the most l MaaxlmiUan a Miller, VALLERY GEORGE W. Fatally Injured In Fun. under suspension for opium smug- ianoel methods of contervlnj the Ohio. Ram Stan, a of the had health other and the Intimated jfVyoungtown. grow that gling, guards strength besides himself sere In the opium Ing child. Rumanian, was fatally Injured when he wa" ni down by a car on a swrn rtng. at the Strulhers plant on Friday. AcEnd Life by Biting a Dynamite Cap. ARTHUR REGINALD DYER to report, of company officording I Ablst er, Melrose MonC Joaeph cials, Ftajr and other employee were aged M. a pioneer prospector, skylarking about the railroad yard suicide in his cabin by biting Knd his ccnpsnlons. supposedly In of a dynamite cap, the explosion spirit of fun, held him on the track tn whirJi drove a plec of copper Into the path of the oncoming car. 'They his brin and broke his neck. held him too long. It Is declared, and For forty years l,blstoT has nearer when they finally released him It was ed for prerions metals and the fact car. for him to avoid th loJafe that he poeenfly allowed a mining which? kno ked him down and rlaim valued at t'0,0iQ to slip tb rough legs. jver h,s hands is believed to have unsettled his mind. American Cleared of Murder the Mndge, Washington. Ptnart Two Children Fall. American youth who wa tried la New York Edith Kllloran. aged 2. Vettefnela. upon a technical toddled to the elevator cage In the of murder, was acqnltted. actbaree apartment ho'tse where she lived and to a dispatch received at the cording opened the d'xir. Her brother. S years state department Tuesday. Mudre was oil. mining the baby, saw her peril rngaeed in an athletic game with a and ran to resvne ber. He was too Venezuelan youth when the latter ber clolhln?. l;i!e. but Int bed at received fatal Injuries. The American finth chi'dren plunsed dnti the ehaft legation at fararas appointed aa agent SeIity five feet lo dcnii. to see that Mide bad a fair and Impart a! trial, and his acquittal was exTrade Union In Annual Conger. pected by officials here. Manrhes'er. Fng'and. Fnnsual Is a'af hed to th forty ;fh ' 525,CX3 Necklace Stolen, Art George W. Valltry, chairman of annual Trade Fnion evnCTes which Irrdnn. Five men were arrested' the general committee of the triennial off ned in Milton ball, owing to fTie ex In Ixndon Tuesday on suspicion o conclave ef Knight Templar at Den- istlng unrest In the labor world. Tbn in the robbery of t Mr. Dyer, who Is deputy chief of the being (otK-emever, i being congratulated en the niimrr of oVlegnte i .S3, making a pearl nef klarfl stolen during trans! weeeet ef that big event. Mr. Val-er- y reer.rd. as they represent a member j London fre brigade, I now In thl Is president of the Colorado Mid- sMr of 2.20.00 workTnen of Various I country atudying American methede by p""t from Paris to a I ondon dealet ef fir fighting. on July IS It was valued at f52i,0OO land railroad. rear-en- d Peaceful Proposal to Mexico and Their Rejection and Voices an Urgent Appeal for All Americana to Leave That Country. Outline HI Sixty Woodrow Washingto. President Wilson appeared before congress on Wednesday, August 27, and revealed liow the litierta provisional government In Mexico had rejected the friendship of the United States and Its efforts to aid iu the establishment of peace and a government which could be recognized by this nation and which would- - be obeyed and respected by Mexico's own people. In a statement which breathed regret and sympathy In every phrase the president clung tenaciously to optimism as to the ultimate result, notwithstanding the pessimistic facts confronting the two nations. After picturing the hopelessness for Mexico if she maintained her present position, "Isolated and without friends who can effectually aid her," the president announced the necessity of a firm neutral stand by this government, a policy of "hands off" to await the time of Mexico's awakening. Jle also voiced an urgent appeal tor all Americans to leave Mexico and for the United States to aid them In every possible way, but In emphatic language served notice upon those who assume to exercise authority tn the revolution-torcountry that they would be held to a definite reckoning for losses and suffering of American citizens. The message of the president was received with enthusiastic applause by members of the house and senate, gathered In joint session In the bouse chamber, and the machinery of the government Is In motion for making effective the policy of neutrality and "hands off while the warring factions continue their struggle. Foreign powers have not been asked to place an embargo on the shipment of munitions of war or arms to Mexico, but the president In his message asserted that this government had ben given the geeural moral sup-joof foreign nations In the propos als to the Muerta government which have been rejected. In his message, which was tn the nature of an appeal to the moral forces of this and foreign nations, the President made It clear that he based high hopes upon the effect the announce-jien- t of this government policjr would have, not only on the people of this country and the governments of other nations, bnt upon the people of MexNow that the United ico themselves. States has exhausted the effort to bring about peace and a stable government in Mexico the president believes that this government's example to the world will avail great good In the rt "The steady presure of moral force, he said, "will before many days break the barrie of pride and prejudice town and we shall triumph aa Mexico's friend sooner than we could triumph aa her enemy and how much more handsomely, with how much higher and finer satisfaction of conscience and of honor." The president told congress that everything this nation did in the situ-atlnconfronting It must be "rooted In patience and done with calm, dlstln- deliberation." trret.-He had no word of rebuke for Mexico and reached the determination to maintain trlct neutrality after having presented the whole situation to the members of the forelpn relations Not an essential In congress. detail did the president withhold la for the Ms presentation of the r public, publishing also to the world the reply of the Mexican government to Mr. Llnd In which Kenor Gamboa refer to the American proposal aa "humiliating." denies the representation by President Wilson that Mexico toward peace had not made proer-sand though expressing appreciation of the avowed friendly Intent of the tnlte State declares that "if stirh chargood off!es are to be of th we tendered now us, acter ehoii'd have to rfervne them in the most cateroriral and rt Ante manner." had stI1 to Kverjthine that Meti this FTivernmi nf In rettrie tn the was maile public, infixing the Muerta alternative that tV'fiine Welcomed euro ft unrestricted rrvi VI recognition of bis frovernment. n d com-matte- s e Australians Win Again. Crtiraeo The Anstrat-acrikeef made It three straiM from (tie puked, the ("trirato S')D!'I Pridsr. taVin third eofne. 312 to H't- The CVcaro s Jaaq r. of the Exposition Knoxville, Tenn. Aid to Main- ten-foo- I e e ofi.-clal- s, tx-e- n j ; a-- com-miHe- d pad Itn-stac- f,tt at tat. hut made rrof apainsf the Tw.nj of McCartney, Iivn and Mat tie Chinese Liwmakjfi in Trouble, t'ekin Ito'h houses of the Chinese parliament have passed reol-itinnreiiiring the government to try the ho tad bee;i members of parliament placed nnder arrest before the supreme court In Pekin. Laegferd Wl'l Meet Johnson. Physician Wrongfully Convicted, Kam Iios'on ttesro toa Aozelea, Tat. Wrongfully con-If ted on petj'rry test imony. Ir. Ft beiearyfiertt. is to met Jak Johnson, tter t fmnranson. a gradiate of the heavyweight champion of the world, University of Mi'hiran, is suing fo'if in a loiit20. for the title In Farls, Iefor the Arranreroents In a hi Pomona, suburb, fxte neighbor of tnatfh were competed by cable Frifor t ' OO.fHici jjamaEes. day, avrd;iT to lnscford s marsaeef. Rescued Passengers Return. Reach tl Paso. Re'ug Seattle, Wash. - The steamship F1 Te Pevenfy flvn Amerl- Northwestern arrired from women men. r,4 eh idren from resrie'4 of fifteen with the jfsifi Friday of tfce lost ateamsh'p. Rsfe ef Madera arid othee f'h.b'iiih'ia towns on a special r- f'alifcrrii. eigM members of the ship arrived here Friday Mfhi Northwestern train. j flee and ten rasseneers. fi en mere fexianr e Day' Session high-powere- d n f'a, trades Aged Woman Scared to Death, eat,rlM, N. J Mrs. R. A. an aged resident of New Tork, here on a visit, was wared to dath bf a clap of 'hunder during a severe. eletrial storm which swept the northern New Jersey coast early Sat-nrda- Prominent Physician Shot. F,. K. Cairr.. lil.-I- tr. Cordon, a prominent physician of thi city, wa-lift an kil'ed h'-rMonday nipht by Harref H Fields, an Insurance s BUDGET cannera estimate this season at 20,000,000 cans. or nearly cases, 800,000 Mrs. Elua Jensen, aged 75 years, was found dead at ber home in Mt Pleasant by her daughter. Heart failure was the cause of death. Mrs. Agnes Miller Moore, 86 years of age, and one of the pioneers who walked across the plains, died at last week of generul debility. Leonard Sneppard, aged 15. of Sit Lawe, was accidentally shot through, the right lung by a companion white hunting. It is bolleved he will recover. The three days' celebration by the Wards of the Wizard of the Wasatch at Salt Lake last week was attended by thousands of people from all over the Btate. Ivy Rowland, age 12, died at Salt Lake as the result of burns sustained when a can of turpentine caught fire and was eplllod on her by a boy who threw the can from a garage. August 29 marked the golden wedding anniversary of Bishop George Romney and Margaret A. Thomas Roraney, the couple having been married in Salt Lake fifty years ago. Joseph Jeremy, aged 45, narrowly escaped death near Suit Lake City, when an automobile he was driving overturned ana pinned him in a pool of water. It required all his strength, for two hours to keep his bead In a position to breathe, until help came. George May ties, sheep owner, whoBe flocks have been grazing on the ranges of the Wasatch national forest. Bold lumbs last weeek weighing seventy-on- e pounds each. This is considered unusually good weight for lambs at this sseason ot the year. Lightning struck the barn of Hyrum, Fuhri'man at Ixgan, the barn and contents being burned. All schools in Payson will begin ao tive work September 8. The buildings are being renovated and reialred. BrJgham City will probably have a municipal telephone system to add to her already extensive public utilities. Crops in Box Elder county never were better, except for one cutting of hay that was spoiled by an untimely ; rain. A new fish hatchery, the fourth under state supervision, will be established in I'lnta county, according to the slate fish and game commissioner. The people of Park valley are planning to hold a big fair on September 20 and 21 for the purpose of exploiting that rich suction of Lox Elder county. The past week ha been one of much anxiety to the people of Gunnison, as three case of smallpox have) broken out and the entire town ba been exposed. The big ditching machine at Corlnne ts helping to put the land into condition to bloom, since the ditches are being tiled and alkali 1 being eradicated. Florence Thomas and Albert Os-borne, narrowly escaped death for serious .Injury at Murray when the rooming house In 'they wer sleeping was destroyed by fire. Members of the Mormon church la Mexico are no longer molested, according to a message received at the) first presidency from Ray L. Pratt, president of the Mexican mission. Rrlsham City will probably bo chosen a the distributing plant for a large eastern lumber company that U contemplating establishing wholesale and retail lumber yards In I'tah and Idaho. Illness of three) Following an months. Isaac L Clark, head of the I. L. Clatk St Son company and pioneer merchant of Ocden, died Aubora gust 2i. Mr. Clark w la Ogdcn in lr..1. Joseph Giirr wa seriously wounded and F. A. Wade and Miss Patsy Mess slightly wounded In a shooting affray whkjj took place In the lobby of tho Orpheus theater at Vernal. Gurr began the shooting. Ntfk Poen. H bartender In n tllne-hasaloon, look four ehots at Percy Comford aa the latter ran from tb aaJoon. None of the bullet did anv damage. It Is said Comford attafked Foeo. who then fired at hint. John Pparrhevlf h, resident of P.ltrw. bam for only three mon'hs. was shot and mortally wounded in the 'o per King saloon Thursday. Ell ChtirvHlj, owner of a boarding bouse at Highland Hoy, Is in Jail, charged with tb crime. Weber county their tomato output PRESIDENT V e A' S T PRESIDENT WILSON ADVOCATES . POLICY OF HANDS OFF AND NEUTRALITY IN MEXICO. c 6 Og-de- n Tlin-panog- m Iw?s Marango. a Mexican miner, was probably fata ly scabbed In a f ebt at the letin boarding bouse at IHnirbam. The name of bis assailant is not known. He esrajwd. aHhoii?h It is said that ke wx also severely wounded. Norman Wold of Morgan rosjnty Serious Offense Is Charged. Sworn In a Philippine Ruler. was fined $K"i on a charge of drnawiit-In- g fteno. Nev Fokilwlng an alleged atWashington. Francis Rurtnn Har fish by ftamnel Francis. Justice of tack on Martha Hilve, a girl of 19. at rlson. who resigned Tuesday as the peace, (art week. Wold was arfrom New Tork, was sworn rested by a warden In Morean the point of a rifle, Oorge W. Riley, cotinty, In as governor general of the Philip23 years old. son of an old and "This Is the first sentence under tb In 01 Humboldt of offlre the her Itr'eadtef new flh and eine law. county, pine family Pn narrowly escaped lynching. The out- General Mdntjre. head of The t'intah bas-fair tMn fat), to rage ocrnrred In Paradise valley on reau of Insular affair. be held at Fort lirbeene JJejemt-e- r the ranch of Frank It. Hurge, Alone more Die. Major Wig IS. i and 2', will exeel the ettnlvs on the ranch, the g'.rl was attacked Tr.klo M0. Herbert I Wlgmor-mill'a- ry xbibits of last year, and the rris by the yeu'h. ho Is said to hate been attafAe to the American m nd other attraffion win be bieger drinkine. She is In a cr.firal condi. nd better than eer before in conneo tion. Itiiey waa taken to Winnemucca bassy, died suddenly Monday nieht a Intend of Hondo, of ain't lion b a fair in that bisin. forty miles distant, because of the Cbuzeni, appendicitis. wl rf tvftehltt repre-sentaMv- e |