OCR Text |
Show KAMAS, BRIEF REVIEN UF Henry Deslouvre charged at’ the nmturder tier-Delmar, A WEENG EVENTS he eloped From Ali and News Quarters Prepexed of cently for Men, _ INTERMOUNTAIN Movernor Oswald West closed the Milwaukee land on Monday and personally tavern at Portplaced the hos- telry under martial law. He was accompanied by Adjutant General W. E. Finzer and about fifty other officers and men, all armed. United States Judge Cornelius Hanford’s personal habits\‘were quired into house judiciary Saturday two witnesses the judge ence of at. Seattle H. in- by the sub-committee, testified apparently and they had seen under the influ- liquor. Mrs. Mabel Muir of Denver is dead and four others, among them Miss {da Logsdon ‘of Coloyado Springs, are more or less seriously hurt as the result of an automobile plunging over a hundred-foot embankment park, Los Angeles. in Griffin The Progressive party of was incorporated at Denver Colorado on Fri- mee eee day, its chief object being to further the candidacy of Theodore Roosevelt or some Other progressive for president of the United States. _ Mayor A. G. Rushlight, Chief of Police Slover, Captain of Police Batty and Detectives Maddux and Reid were indicted by the county grand “4 pick Grahant,} Tay friends. fear GISALpeuryd, she has They miet with district court, Evan- in meets which the to over bouvd was and in September. ston the first Monday bolted ‘A coroner’s recommended a loff be held jut bail for jury at. that to the the H. grand Lind- jury murder 15 years Schuerman, has Louise alleged 3on, Arthur Lindloff, L. Chicago Mrs. said to withof her old. be a United States Senator Newell Sanders, one of the Taft leaders in the preconyention campaign, gave out a statement Saturday night in which he denounced as untrue the story that a compromise Roosevelt had been people by laid the before Taft the force at Chicago. Billy Papke, the Illinois fighter, Saturday night in Paris won an easy victory from the Frenchman, Marcel Moreau, in the fifteenth round Papke twice floored .Moreau with left and right hooks. ie a “andais,- (2k DY ence from * liam J. Brya;ily at Balti hled away ment sidewalk. 56 4 tage. of the view home of mbers of his ore up and ot squares of b 2, who went Vice-President She intention of . Big Moose with. laying several wee. y returned to Hica Sunday because \\\ the altitude here did not agree wit him. | ‘Rourteen persons wen® injured Sunday, two probably a [nore in a subway cor more ;| was When } trotting aead ignited race from } driver in a Ferguso G.. T. at Santa his sulky juz, in the Cal., felt stretch, nished first Dot McKinney, his mare, and in the race, circled th »track { trotted to her stable. infour Three persons were kiked, Sunday, Jured, one possibly - fatalyy, Strope, when an automobile of G. W. a a retired merchant, collided with train at Kansas City. of er manufactur wealthy furniture Carroliton, wounded years of master Ky., shot and fatally 28 Morse, Miss Elizabeth age, daughter of the post- at Lyon, Mich. the lettei. Republican Wis., on Roosevelt Saturday, a “fakir.” called United New States naval station President Taft has sent to the in ® closed Mich., and taxicab at Grand Rapids, when pursued by the police he shot . himself, probably fatally “Pea? Watson of Los Angeles fought at San one arm four rounds with stopped Francisco before the referee the the fight in the eighth and gave on Last of Wil- breaking ords for the number at national a dential sen- ate the nomination of William Marshall Bullit of Louisville to be solici- convention for the senate Monday. bill passed The bill by the rec- taken a R. Marshall nominated The for of presi- Indiana to of for $10,000 gold medal for Captain tron. ‘ Senator Works of California, contributions and vy the fiscal with a Ros: pre- in its steel-ribbed government smear eat The has possessed federa] Saneoy WE Vi aGdin Ging : ancomplete. returns sources of revenue vo closs4 .tha | of . Joseph ever, troops . Ivonet, who, recently was wounded in the right arm, is fleeing with one other rebel before the Cuban troops. Lue Cheng Hsiang, minister of foreign affairs, has been appointed minister to succeed Tang Shao Yi. The latter’s resignation was accepted by President Yuan on Saturday. The as. sembly has endorsed the appointment by a vote of 74 to 10. Another severe battle at Tripoli on June 28 is described in an official dispatch received at Rome. The Turks left 200 dead and a large number’ oi wounded on the field. The Italian losses totaled ten dead and seventy: eight wounded. & Herr Schadt, a German aviator, wag killed at Mulhausen, Germany, Sun day while testing a military aero- plane. The airman, at a height of 250 yards, was thrown from his ma- and The battleships of the third fourth divisions of the Atlantic fleet, now in Cuban waters, have been or: dered north to their home stations. The gunboats, however, will remain about Cuba. Five prisoners were killed and twenty wounded in a battle following Turres oners jail delivery Nuvass, reached Sunday Portugal. the roof The at pris of the prison before the were apprehended by the troops. Fifty to 100 persons were killed and $10,000,000 damage done by a tornado which struck Regina, Saskat: chewan Sunday afternoon. Several pusiness and A blocks, residences. were apartment was and of North not when much two and Dakota. of a fight, by week, the liam long realized all He the consultation climbed to the with Speaker stage and, when who for had been nrissUurry pledged U0 Weyer,” to ne -wau ballots Governor the houses -wrecked. general campaign of destruction in the postoffices throughout the country was begun in England by suf. fragists. They smashed the windows of the central postoffice and of. the Reform elub at ec 4 Some ol Oak-| of the London branch offices and those Burns Frankie to decision our put was at Hitchin and Letchworth were arm Watson’s left land. round. raided. of commission in the third Wilson afternoon sixth ballot, was session disclosed and his nominated on the to the to a statement Governor Jennings The pledging Wilson Bryan, speaker fected and to whom seems of his over his a foregone gtate after cast 5 conclusion state followed for the nominee. 84 and Harmon what suit. . Missouri, joined with in the had been Clark 12; Two her received were 36, last ballot absent. had for been Clark 24 of California’s 26 votes; by delegates from Florida, two Louisiana, all six from Nevada, at by five from four like that ef Governor Marshall, was quickly made unanimous. The best of feel‘Ing pervaded both sessions and both delegations seemed to. be in a not mad,” vice-presidency he does said, not Missouri but the nation, wwr Burke yes ae FUT the W. after which Hurst G. Ind., homies of Governor. of nominated Rock V. El- Island, Mensies presented of the I11., Mount name of Marshall. Mayor James H. Preston of Baltimore was nominated by Alonzo L. Miles of Baltimore. The first ballot on the _ vice-presidential nomination gave Marshall 389; Preston, ‘77; 58; Burke, zer, 46 3; Chamberlain, 305 2-3; Wade, 26; 157; Hurst, McCombs, Osborne, 18; 8; Sul- absent, 1-3. make the nomination The result of the second ballot was: Burke, The plajrm hewn tee severadays ago, praised byMr. Bryan, with a whp. out in and was Many of 1@ delegates went from (rains, The final the pnvention | Dencratic sessii it. 't was to convention Tuesday many.respts almost posite of e sessions ceeded hall night commitwarmly adopted directly special : at its was in the direct opthat had pro- marked by the ac- complishmit of much business, without very neh noise. In one respect it was likerany of its predecessors— William Jimings Bryan made a speecli be made 387%; one heard motion Staunton, up his spent time -of the Governor nomination unanimous. the motion was put the the inent MARSHALL. carried at 28, 1856. He practice in that atfer eighteen city. in Georgia He however, months improved by his securing of Miss Louise Axson to The Axsons were a prom- Georgia lowlands family. The young couple were married in 1875. from New Jersey, the home state of in the fall of 1885 Mr. Wilson began Governor Wilson; ‘six from the Dis- teaching political eocnomy to the girls of Bryn Mawr. From this. institution trict of Columbia and one from Ohio. went to Wesleyan university, This little handful readily joined in he where he remained .until called to the chorus of acclamation when SenPrinceton in 1890 to occupy the chair i : ae Se ator Stone moved that the nomination In 1902 ,of jurisprudence and politics. be made unanimous. | he was elected president of Princeton. } It-was 3:35 o’clock when Chairman} In May, i916, the Graduate College James officially declared the nominee of his party. an but keep attempt at another the delegates. were it up Mr.- Wil:on|of There was| demonstration,| too tired long. Princeton university became the legatee of a $38,000,000 estate which could not be accepted without sacrific- to|ing Wilson’s policies. The money was lwas accepted. The president’s resig- The dove of peace played a con-| nation did not come, however, until after the New Jersey state Democratic spicuous party in the finai session oi convention on September 15, 1910, had the Democratic convention—the thir-, nominated him for the governorship. teenth session. In the following November New JerThe rollcall of states for nomination isey went for vice-president H. H. Deane was ordered of Georgia at in him Champ _ Clark absolutely in: life is all these to be down above on re- years any side that was not the side of this banner upon the sassin,” people.—Wil1910.” they Nebraska marched delegation, all pitched in an extremely , Be vere key, and all coming finm m m whose best friend they charge™ wee Bryan had been striving for a week to destroy. Result of the Forty-six Ballots Q Be] Se eB] a 3 5 Ballots. PORE j. ° 3 ee 8 B B : : ee; cae eG 44016 |82412/11714/148 SECONM ids U5 446 16/3395 |111%4|141 ine ese ee 441 |3845 |114144/140% So: 443 |34914/112 9:40.| since nominated! large Democratic 1892, and majority. for the first time elected Wilson Highteenth 315385. Seventeenth . by a (361. ./545 Bighteenth WOOO 2 Nineteenth . (5382. Twentieth . .../512 . Twenty-first 1508 Twenty-second to adjourn declared Va., December the promise be his wife. R. Never I knewn of a question is his [136% Cham- is the son of Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, a Presbyterian minister, and the grandson of Judge James Wilson, an Irishman of Scotch descent, who migrated from County Down to Philadelphia in 1807. Wilson began life as a lawyer, opening an office -at Atlanta, Ga., but gave THOMAS and PUPCM s rote 443 (351 |119144/141% Cee airy kas 445 (854 |121 |135 Seventh .1449181385216 /12314 12914 Representative Hughes of New JerBPR CDS vs gece 5 cose |44816/35814/123 1130 sey moved that Marshall be nominated Mee yo 452 |35244/12214/127 8 es 556 j850%%|117%| 31° by acclamation, but a chorus of dis-| MOU a) OS Eleventh . ....1554 (35414/118%4! 29 sent followed. Pweltth ie ¢oe.5 549 (354 {123 29 Chairman James ordered the roll Thirteenth . ..155414/356 |(115%4! 29 called. Before the rolleall could be Fourteenth . ../550 {862 {1138 29 | begun, the North Dakota delegation Fifteenth . ...|552 |36234/11014| 29 Marshall, 46544; berlain, 13%, The of known He POOR 1:56 and the Democratic convention was over. Dr. Woodrow Wilson was born at moved.0 ruled chairman, x4 eS ioe move that night have stirred up strife, he mide a little speech which he termed “‘aledictory,” and in happy vein turned over the mantle of his former lea@rship as a presidential sandidate toGovernor Wilson. Marshall uanimous, Mr. Bryan started for the tage to make a statement. The motioywas withdrawn before he could spea) When the motion was renewed aer the second ballot, Mr. Bryan did dt protest. the for and soon Mr. Bryan was encircled by a crowd of angry delegates—a circle or James’ announcement that the convention was adjourned sine dic. | one unfeelingly the representatives of the liam Jennings Bryan in conventi Dakota. Alscheller more Vernon, Sry name of North Samuel No The Nebrskan was understood particularly tofavor Burke as a type of the. moder: progressive. When, aer the first ballot. some- was by And then, just about to tell it and appeal not accept the nomi- son to appoint his own campaign manager. He was dissuaded from. this courses and, instead of making a | proach. With Before the motion could be there was a chorus of “Ayes,” and delegates began to crowd out of hall. ; Senator Getge Chamberlain of Oregon be nonmmated for vice-president. he order have have I am of Marshall He pledgd his faithful support to the presidenial nominee and ended by urging that tither Governor Burke or of eighteen years. corruptible and 14 frame of mind. ‘ Mr. Bryan had announced hisintention of introducing a resolution in effect discharging the national committee from conducting the coming campaign and allowing Governor Wil- |: New of angry faces, each behind a pair of” rose 5 Re, aber: na, 1 ©1e Clemtspert of Giingrate-2> rattor seade. kota was recognized for the purpese of. \famer,” “slanderer,” “character 4 sthat Clark would Withdrew the name Burke and moved that good John the sheiter of his own Nebraska delegation. The Missouri delegates had prepared a white banner which bore the legend: ; Governor mae He informed conven- by for sent back under a police escort to the eee Clark; the told Ollie James. sympathy, rather be a member of that body than Champ he delegation, that he was a selfish, ” out the tied down in a chamber in which powerless to participate.” left was speaking as Mr. Bryan was delegates all about af- me. Nebraskan supper chairman, cred- “but Missourians. money-grabbing, publicity-hunting, favor-seeking marplot, and had been so actively threatened with personal violence by the Missouri friends of Speaker Clark that he took the platform under the wing of the gigantic am a rough and tumble debater. [I am more at home in the house. I would of for Stanchfield, York defeat. suit Mr. Bryan is Attacked Enraged the tion B. “fT stances. ‘T am Money-Grabbing, Office-Seeking Monday afternoon, with the result that when his least a Baltimore.—Some of ithe strategy that W. J. Bryan has employed with which to raid the Democratic convention, returned to plague its inventor voic- he the family presenting end.” 1088 votes in the convention forty- nomination, Clark It was just 3:15 o’clock when the solid 76 votes of Pennsylvania carried Wilson over, the winning line, making the total of 733 votes. The stampede did not end until 990 of the how- home. chine. an attempted support the result would be as the last call of the states began. Alabama, which had started every other call with 24 votes for Underwood, changed to Wilson, that the Bryanthe convention upon Governor vention had adjourned sine die. The delegates, worn, weary, made their way out of the big convention hall singing and happy to start for bodies. that in It was WILSON. Marshall easily in the lead, Governor Burke’s. name was withdrawn and Mar‘shall was proclaimed the nominee by acclamation. A minute later. the con- General Ivonet, the insurgent lead. er, has not been captured. \ Latest re: say E. Burke There opposing vanguards exchanged a few shots and withdrew to their respective ports ait Sy Lt. OW loting began it seemed Wilson contingent in had definitely settled moved into position within two miles of Bachimba, Mexico, the rebel stronghold, at 8 o’clock Monday night. The main later Mayor Fitzgerald of Boston withdrew the name of Governor Foss of Massachusetts. CIS woop of the 5,000 by Washington.—Defeated after a hard battle, but satisfied with the fortunes of war, Speaker Clark returned to the capital from the convention city Tues- issued Called Marplot, Defeat. ited his defeat. for Champ acting governor, M. Drew Carrel, confirm the findings of the insular physicians that true bubonic’ exists. army His Being Publicity-Hunting, flashed over was After Wilson purpose eg. “she will case her thirty-six votes the Porto Rican authorities in stamp- “The federal Governor ing his contempt for the tactics of Wil- whom they saw fit. The delegates, wearied Vat Ae on The American medical officers who arrived at San Juan June 27 to assist in a report his to for delegates from the various the country over, the plague, of Word that he could make himself heard, released, in the name of the speaker, all of the FOREIGN ing out purposé name. Support and Voices His Contempt for Tactics of Bryan, to Whom He Credits to withdraw Mr. Underwood from the race and release his delegates to vote Clark, the the ee the his way to the Senator Stone of Missouri, who had vaults courmates for great armory been for months. nt Pedges withdrawing necessary meaning of his remarks became clear and there were frequent interruptions of applause and noisy demonstration. The Missouri delegates accused the Underwood delegates of “faking.” a sur-| as a working balance. This is largest amount of available cash stage SMALL SIZED RIOT FOLLOWS FIERCE DENUNCIATION OF NEBRASKAN BY DELEGATES. FLATLY REFUSES TO THE NOMINATION FOR VICE-PRESIDENT. day night and repaired to his office to thunder his renunciation of the vicepresidency over the telephone as often as it was suggested to him. The speaker motored back from Baltimore, where he spent the day at the Baitimore club with Senator Bennet. He took dinner with his family, and votes was seen making \ Wil-. while before he could proceed. had uttered but few words when plus of $36,335,830, the federal treasury opened the new year July 1 with $99,360,000 7251-3 } at once that this was indeed the cli- “This was not near as hard a fight as max. There was a confusion of cheer- ‘I had to get my first. nomination to jing, applause and calls from one dele- congress,’ said the speaker, coOmgation to another. The galleries caught menting on the result. up the disorder and added to the din. Speaker Clark said he would not run Senator Bankhead stood for a long for vice-president under any circum- expenditures, 1912 the sessions of the past declared that President Taft’s renomination had been procured unjustly and illegally. Closing deadlock. SPEAKER ACCEPT to lose ground on the and Champ Clark had bama the senting in the senate on Monday a resolution to investigate recent cam- paign attain Underwood’s Mar- shall for vice-president came as something of a surprise, for when the bal- house provides ~ SECOND PLACE convention nominate. | The forty-sixth ballot had been ordered when Senator Bankhead of Ala- was Governor hopeless begun ballots } : acclamation the to vice-president. nomination all but had few | in On the first ballot on Tuesday—the forty-second—Wilson jumped from 494 votes to 602. -. Then came the forty-fifth. It was disappointing in a way, for Clark held his own and Wilson made a gain of only four. There were few in the hall at this time who did not believe Wilson would win, but they feared it would take a long, long while for him Democratic Thanks of congress are conveyed to Captain Arthur H. Rostron and the of. ficers of the liner Carpathia for their rescue of survivors. of the Titanic in the all of ballots candidate, Thomas tor general of the United States, to succeed Frederick W. Lehmann of St. Louis, resigned. i the carried, and ' : made a few temporary gains. flelegates finally settled upon a candidate on the forty-sixth ballot, Governor Wocdrow Wilson being the choice of the convention. The ticket was completed at 1:56, Governor. when after two ballots WASHINGTON after came, son last Baltimore.—After Orleans. this Withdrawal of Candidates Ballot Makes Nomination son Possible, While Marshall’s Opponents Quit After Second. at two had in an Theodore : or when DEADLOCK FINALLY BROKEN AND HONORS GO TO: NEW JERSEY . AND INDIANA. party Two thousand flood refugees, made homeless by the Hymelia crevasse waters, are being fed and housed at the adopted motion 1909. Cc. W. Smith, formerly connected with many of the largest railroad sysvice‘tems in the east, and latterly president of the Santa Fe, died at his residence in Pasadena, Cal., of acute trouble. a circular 3, 1912. was adjourned. Only four ballots were necessary on Tuesday to reach a nomination for president. When the convention adjourned Monday night it seemed to be Hmil Seidel, former Socialist mayor of Milwaukee and candidate for vice. president on the national Socialist ticket, in an address at Appleton, DOMESTIC stomach in been a minute The tariff board went out of exist ence Saturday, because congress haa refused further money for its work The board was formed in Octeber, hearing preliminary his had Wyo., Tuesday Cokeville, of Hansen Marshal City of slayer alleged the Dalton, Bert river. announced rpaz,vyrs JUV, play. hatin: f jury at Portland, Ore., for alleged conspiracy to bribe Deputy District Attorney Frank Collier. Between Wenver and Seattle Miss Emma Parker, 19 years old, traveling |. with her trousseau to be married to % the JULY The Democrats took two votes on the vice-president, and. were taking a third roll] cali when Governor Burke of North Dakota was withdrawn and Governor Marshall was named by acclamation.. The platform had already ME FTST whose in at a meeting in Ford hall, Boston, Saturday and formed “The Progress: ive Party of Massachusetts.” World, Busy and found Two. hundred Republicans whe were active for Roosevelt in the recent Gathered the was’ WEDNHSDAY, WILOUN formally) At a special meeting at Portland, Me., of the stockholders of the Ohic Copper company, it was voted to adopt the plan for reorganization re- campaign Foreign France, body Blackstone “RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS IN ITEMIZED FORM. ‘Home and been Woonsocket, R. I., with of Mrs. Angele Parmaz the woman with whoin from headless has UTAH, ie VOLUME IL. ener (125 29 29 29 29 29 |50016|39614]115 Twenty-third. Twenty-fourth Twenty-fifth |.....2 ./49714/399 |116%4|.... |496 |40714|11214] 29 [469 /40~. {108 24 Twenty-sixth .|46714/405 [11246 ['wenty-seventh |469 /40614|112 [wenty-eighth |46814|43714/11214| ITwenty-ninth ../468%4/486 (112 Thirtieth . 1455 {460 |12114| Thirty-first . ..[44614147414|116%4| Thirty-second . /4461%4/47714|119%4| Thirty third . .|44714%4147714|103%4| Thirty-fourth ../44714/47914|101%| Thirty-fifth . ..|4831%4147414/101%4| rhirty-sixth . 1438414149644) 98146] Thirty-seventh /|43214/49614/100%4/| Thirty-eighth ../425 {498141106 Thirty-ninth .../422 '50114/106 Montieth soe 423 |50114)106 Forty-first . .../424 [499141106 Forty-second 29 (36214/11214| Gilt mane 1358 1130 |3881411211%4| {89544111844} |480 1494 Porty-third . ../329 Forty-fourth . ./306 Forty-fifth . .../806 |602 (629 [6383 POrtvesieth 0 1900. Baldwin first ballot received 32 votes on the and 14 on the next three, after which . AB his |104 29 29 29 29 19 17 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 28 at | 98%| Soe 79 24 28 ee 25 12 supporters deserted him. Marshal] received 31 votes on every ballot until the eleventh, when he lost gne. He received no votes after the twenty-seventh. Kern and Bryan each received one vote on each ballot, until the fourteenth, when each received two. Kerns’ high mark was in the seventeenth ballot, when he received 4%. Bryan received 7 on tk. uaineteenth. Gaynor one on the eighth, and ninth James one on the eighth, and three on the:twentieth ‘and twenty-fifth, while Sulzer received two votes op the first and second ballot.Foss received 48 votes on the twenty-second ballot and 48 on the twenty-sixth. On the twenty-seventh he re- ceived 38, and on the forty-second, 23. |