OCR Text |
Show r To indicate good business sense in the way ypu adver- tise for work is a strong commendation, of itself. VOLUME re- n r? If you have some real , estate to sell, you have some classified advertising to do H J ft A in this paper. LOGAN CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1912. XXXIII. ORGANIZING WILSON CLUBS IN THE COUNTY AGENTS FOR CACHE-COUNT- Y The work of organizing Wilson The following have been apfor is meeting'great success,and clubs pointed registration agents The feels highly encourthe committee days the November election. of registration will be posteddn aged. Everywhere they go they find mucK Wilson enthusiasm; I each precinct. f not only among Democrats, but Logan 1. Ellen Smith alo among that class of RepubLogan 2. 'Mrs. M. J. Burnham licans tired of class; legislation Logan 3. D. L Hoopes and machine domination. Logan 4. Caroline Watterson Thficommittee is divided into Lo gan75 Cyrtsr Jones. so that organiza Logan 6. Charles Peterson in- - several effected be tions may Smith Logan 7. Robert M. Logan 8. H.J7NeIson Nice programs are prepared for Logan 9. Mary H. Johnson these meetings, which will be Logan 10. Ann McCulloch found of interest, and which all 7 North Logan Sadie, II. Nyman are to attend. invited Hyde Park Reuben Pefkes Last evening organizations Smithfield 'No. 1. Yarda and were effected at Hyrum Smithfield N. 2. Martha MAKE MILLIONS ON Blackhurst. SMALL INVESTMENT Richmond No. 1, W. K. Bum-La- Wellsville. Following is the itinerary for next week: Smithfield, Monday evening Providence and Millville. . ' . Paradise Tuesday evening . aqd Mendon. Logan. Wednesday evening This meeting will be held in the Court House at 8 p m., and all, without regard to regular politi-ca- l affiliations, are invited to attend. The meeting wHTbe worth while. . Riverside Thursday .Ilir, evening and Benson Friday evening North Logan and nyde Park. On Monday, August 12th, Newton, Cache Junction and Peterboro will be visited. San Francisco, Aug. .1. Ownof the common ership of one-hastock of the W estern Sugar company, the John D. and A. B. Spreckles concern of San Francisco, has netted the Have-- , meyer interests in the American Sugar Refining company in dividends in the past twenty-on- e years. - For all but two years of that time these payments were made on an investment that represented hut $500,-00More than $12,000,000 of the amonnt has been paid since 1892; The "first payment of $50,-00- 0 was made on October 21, 1891, when the Havemeyers had $1,000,000 sunk in the' concern. Washington, Aug1-- I. Presi-den- t Taft was formally notified today of his nomination by the national Republican convention -- Gus-taveso- u. Webb George 0. lf Coveville Mt. Home J.' C.'Allen Re-finin- g. - John" Christian Jacobsen Lewiston H. C. Kent Mrs. Wheeler T. S. Karren Mrs.' Stephenseir Cornish Geo. E. Pope Trenton James Briggs Newton John Larsen Mrs. Jos. GodClarkston frey Peterboro No. 1. James Cunningham Peterboro No, 2. Wm. H. Gril-fi- n gs Jr. $12,-950,0- 00 0. Benson Mrs. H. W. Ballard Riverside Mrs. Maggie Reese Mrs. Wn. I. Sorent Mendon ' f sen , These facts were developed to1. Wellsville Brigham Mau-gha- n day during the hearing of the governments 'suit to dissolve the Wellsville 2. James R. Coop- American. Sugar Refining comer under the Sherman law as a pany College Walter Jensen combination in restraint of trade. Hyrura No. 1, Jos. C, . Ander- Au official statement of the Westson. ern Sugar Refining company was RasmusHyrum No. 2. Mads produced and identified by W. H. J sen Ifannam, secretary of the conParadise Jos Norris cern. 'For every dollar that the Avon Mrs. V. C. Davis and their associates Havemeyers (Millville Estella Johnson the got, Spreckles and their asProvidence Josephine Jensen sistants got a dollar. Mt. Sterling John Redford. In the time elapsing between GOVERNORS 21 and December 17, October WESTS MEET IN BOISE 1891, dividends to the amount of $1,150,000 were declared and Boise, Ida. Aug. 1. Political divided. In 1892 the amount of the stock was reduced activity in western states pre- from-capital to $1,000,000. In $2,000,000 a vented number 'of governors accordance this action $500,-00with from attending the first annual or halftbeir investment, was conference of the western refunded to the 'Havemeyers. which opened here this In the year 1898, on three dates morning for a four days session. 7, June 17, and SepJanuary In attendance at the tember 16 ;the- - Western Sugar were Govs. Spry of Utah, Oddie Refining company paid $6,000,000 of Nevada, Norris of 'Montana, the Havemeyers getting half the West of Oregon and Hawley of yield. The biggest dividend, was Idaho Govs Burke of North Da- declared on January 20, 1893, was passed kota and MIcDonald of New Mex- when $2,250,000 ico are expected today A tele- around. There were no dividends gram received last night from from 1904 to 1908. On NovemGov. Carey of Wyoming announc- ber 20, 1909, another item of was entered on the divied his inability to be present, on dend record. account of illness. - The visiting . executives - were - The inquiry here will close -- welcomed to Boise at the opening thengovernment atsession by Gov. Hawley and Maywill move to Salt Lake torneys or Hodges. Consideration of ques- to continue the hearing, begintions of interest to the west was Monday. ning taken up at the afternoon session. A feature of the conference will WILL BE HEARD be a reception of the executives IN BALT LAKE CITY in Idahos new two million-dolla- r capitol, whieh will be formally San Francisco, , July 31. The opened tomorrow. of the governments suit Gov. West of Oregon was the hearing first governor to arrive in Boise. in equity against the American e Sugar Refining 'company will be He made the trip across taken up in Salt Lake City Monthe state of Oregon on horseback, This announcement was good day preaching the gospel-o- f made today by Assistant United roads to the people of the interStates District Attorney C. H. He met was at ior of his state. Dorr, who is assisting in the the state line by and leaving his black mare Bess prosecution of the suit now beat Nyssa, made the balance of the ing heard here. .The San Francisco daily sestrip in an automobile. sions will be extended to enable the government examiners to finLEAPS FROM TRAIN ON MOJAVE DESERT ish the local hearing by the en4 0, gov-emor- s, first-sessio- $2,-000,0- 500-mil- Gov-Hawle- y, of Los Angeles, Aug. 1. According to a dispatch from San Bernardino John L. Perry, a wealthy negro from Chicago. leaped from a Salt Lake train fast night and "isnow-rovinabout the Mojave desert A' score of trained desert trailers are searching for him but 'owing to the intense heat there seems little likelihood that Perry will be found alive. He was being taken by his wife to Pasadena for his health. g- the week. ' It was said that a number "of witnesses would be examined in Salt Lake City, but the namf,s of only two were made publieThey are George A. Parkinson of Preston, -I- daho, formerly of the ldaho Sugar company, and II G. Whitney, of Salt Lake, seSugar cretary of the Utah-Idah- o company. Subpoenas have been sent to the United States marshal at Salt Lake for service on the prospective witnesses. MB. GATTY Auto Used In Murder of Gambler In New York Figures In the Case SELLA BS THE GREAT ENGLISH ORGANIST COMPOSER TO PLAY HERE. At the Tabernacle Wednesday,. August 7th, at 8 p. m. PRESIDENT TAFT he - 1 IS NOTIFIED " at Chicago. -- j Surrounded by his family and friends' in the historic, east room of the White House, the president received from.- - Senator. Elihu Root, chairman of the committee of notification, his first - official notification of the conventions . action. Your title to the nomination is as clear and unimpeachable as the title' 'of any candidate since began, political conventions said Mr Root at the notification. I accept the nomination which you tender,1 replied 'President Taft, beginning his speech of acI accept it as an exceptance. pression of confidence that in a second administration Iwill serve the public well. 1 and ths automobile by tho Anuvfctn Ften Association. murder of Berman Rosenthal, a New Yerfc gambler, stirred the big perhaps more than any other crime of recent years; not that the I of one member ef the nnderworld made any difference, bnt because of the sensational revelations that promise to develop from the manner of t;la taking off. Rosenthal bad been prevented from doing Ha business because ot what ha tsrmed oppression.' He finally squealed. told the district attorney that Police Lieutenant Charles A. Becker, head of the squad detailed to raid gambling houses, was his partner. A few hours before he was scheduled to tall his story to the grand Jury Rosenthal was killed by a party of four or five men who escaped In an automobile. Jack Rose, named by Rosenthal as Beckers man to see that the police officer got a square cut of the proceeds, admitted upon being arrested that he had hired the murder car on the night of the tragedy. The Investigation Is expected to result in an expose of the system" under which New York gambling baa existed la connivance with the police. The full length picture la of Rose; tbs rn other la of Lieutenant Becker. Ffcotoa of Rob TlHE . PROSECUTION WILL been exacted by the police from QUESTIONS ASKED BY WOMEN VOTERS BE MOST CAREFUL. gamblers and others for protection is not considered extravaSan Francisco' Aug. 1. to Out New he Brought Yom. Truth in gant by many of those familiar en voters here do not intend to York Cases with conditions in the underworld of New York City, As a go to the polls unprepared, as is New York, Aug. 1. Steps to- matter of fact, the amount statshown by the aims and objects of the Womens Progressive of the ed is nearly $700,000 a year less club, ward the corroboration which was formed here last night. confessions - implicating Police than was collected some 12 years Lists of questions will be mailed Lieut, Becker, in the murder .of ago, according to an alleged exto each legislative and judicial the gambler, Herman Rosenthlal, pose of the gambling situation candidate at the primaries,- - who are to be taken carefully and published by a New York newswill be called on to give political slowly so that, as Dist. Atty. paper in March, 1900. . This artiviews Whitman says, the whole truth cle, which created a great sensaaffiliations, age, business, on woman suffrage, length of of the relations between the tion at the time, alleged that was the yearly tribute of residence, whether married or gamblers and the police will come single and views on the initiative, cut. ft Satisfactory progress is keepers of gambling houses to the r. Whitman in police' and other powers of the referendum, recall, public owners being- made ship, parcels post and govern- supplying the missing links in the city, ment life insurance. It is espec- confession of Bald Jack Rose, The article and its assertions desired to men high in the councils know and whether that Bridgie Wiebber, ially Harry the candidate represents a home. Vallon, who in their stories tq of Tammany Hall had been re- the public prosecutor, said' that ceiving money from the gambling Becker instigated them in the combine led to the appointment WIT OF FISHER of a committee of five of which SAVES THE DAY killing of Rosenthal. Lonis Nixon was chairman, to inobMr. Whitman says he has tained ome The important testimony vestigate the truth of the charges. Washington, Aug. 1. In his official report Mr. Nixon ready wit of Secretary of the In- confirming parts of Rose and said: Webbers met that ChiL. terior Walter story Fisher of they is of cago saved President Taft and his Lieut. Becker by appointment af- menThere asan organization the known combine that supporters from an embarrassing ter the murder. Two restaurant is organized for systematic black-ma- d employees, according to the dismoment at the White house and they, cloak their workinhave trict the attorney, given just after the conclusion of formation- that-- they ings by pretending to be paying the president that ho had talking with Rose and Webber on Tammany Hall the money they collect for the protection they been renominated. The guests had 42nd street after the killing. are supposed to furnish in its adMr. Whitman, who has been adjourned to the state dining name. , vised several court room for luncheon. Conspicuous by supreme who The wish men to to said open on the walls of the room were two justices go slow, today: to know whom and The see, places of court held has moose bull heads. appeals huge Someone broke a lull ifi the that .there must be some corro- having found that certain men boration of the testimony of ac- who act in defiance of the comconversation by - rem a rking, The establishment of bine orders are given short shrift Well, I see two bull moose are complices. a motive is There are naturally inclined to believe corroboration. gracing the feast. There was a is no doubt in mind the that these men do collect this that my strained silence for a moment, money' on account of Tammany and then Secretary Fisher drawl- motive has been established. Hall and that if matters reach a ed: Yes, but theyre dead. ne The grand jury probably will climax thitf organization will proresume not into its investigation was applauded. the case until the district attor- tect them. This accounts for the almost ney has more needed testimony PRISONER GLAD TO defiant attitude Of the gamblers. RETURN TO PENITENTIARY in hand. Whitman is investigat. ing stories that Becker is worth SUSPECTED OF HOLDUP. Berkeley, Cal., Aug. 1. Before nearly a million dollars. Salt Lake, Aug. 1 Last night The Sam of appearance leaving here in charge of a guard Patrolmen Frantz and FA., Smith is awaited-athe Sehepps kenly t to serve 16 months in the peniarrested Charles Mack "aged-2- 4 ac8 office. Sehepps, prosecutor at Canon tentiary City, Colo., and A. McDonald and HarCharles Shrode, a fugitive from cording to the story told by Rose years, each 25 years of to the Crawford, ry district received justice, told Chief of Police Voll-m- $1,000 in bills attorney, from Rose-whiage, on suspicion of being the yesterday that he was glad Beckfr had handed him. Rose men who held np several men to return because during his to and robbed a saloon at Bingham had broken-doun- aaysJSchepps gave thi? money recently; The1 meu were arrested der the strain er narrowescapes Harry JIorowitz,otherwise known on "Main street and were pointed as Gib the Blood, and Louis fromidentification to T.lhe,police bya...deputy out. ' Rosenzweigr--Shrode- - escaped frorq thepeni-tentiar- y from Bingham. Tbey-we- re lockwith a fellow convict Annual . Tribute Paid For Pro-- . ed in the city jail and will be tection. and led p precarious existence as held until the arrival of an offa tramp. His arrest here was for - New York, Aug. 1. The state- icer from Bingham this evening, vagrancy and. while in. jail - his ment of Jack Rose, the informer and also the proprietor of the was established by in the Rosenthal case, that an an- saloon, in the hope the men can identity means of finger prints. nual tribute of $2,400,000 has be identified. , $3,-095,0- - by-M- -- to-da- y. saw-Bee- er wan-derings- wn Gatty Sellars, the Solo Organist of the Queens Hall and he Crystal Palace Musical Festivals, T London, will he heard here in Coronation Music, accompanied Cathedral byu.set--e- f chimes. After makingji successful tour of Canada last fall, he came-tcrtStates about Christ-ma- s time. He "has since- played in most of the large cities in the North, East and South and is now making a tour of theW est. He has appeared in the largest Auditoriums, Tabernacles, Cathedrals and Churches in America, since his arrival September 24th, at Halifax, Nova Scotia. unable to gain admission into the crowded ehurehes to hear him and the auditoriums and tabernacles have been filled to capacity in most of the cities where he has given recitals in them. Selections from the Masters, his own compositions, Coronation music, interspersed with Cathedral chimes (which imitate the chimes of Westminster Abbey during the Coronation Service) make his program unique in the annals of Musical history in America. ' He' kas'fippeared withpor" in'" the same series of concerts with Paderewski, Kubelik, Dr. Hans Richter, AlbaUi, Busoni, March esi and other noted artists. He is refitted to Sir Alfred Scott Gatty of musical faifte. Music lovers should turn out r en masse this celebrated artist, and there is no doubt of hh having a crowded house, r upon this occasion. ' ' -- ...... W. m ' Richmond No. 2. NUMBER 144. ker ch - tu-hea- : I BEET DISTRICTS ARE BENEFITED BY RAIN ! Salt Lake, August storm will be The rain 1. a great benefit to the beet growers, throughout the state, said T. R Cutler, president of the Utah-IdaSugar company, this mornIt came at the most opporing. tune time of the entire season, and the farmers in all parts of the state where the rain fell will have a great increase in tonnage, Especially in the districts where there were beet diseases, or where drought had affected the growth, will this storm prove a boon to the producers. The company will also be benefited, for the normal beet is always the most valuable, and the storm will do much to make the crops normal in places, where they would not otherwise have been because of water shortage. Reports have come from many parts of the states of Utah and Idaho, and every report contains assurance that the beet crop will be greatly helped. Only in districts where-haand" grain are down will there by any damage, and even in those districts the profit will more than offset ho . y- the loss. DEMOCRATIC-PROGRESSIV- E SENATORIAL ALLIANCE Washington, Aug. 1. ate today gave to the The sen- ' Democrat-- Republican tariff alliance complete control of the senate conference committee on the wool tariff, sugar tariff and excise tax hills. This was the first step in carrying out the program agreed to by the Detnocrats and insurgents. Regular Republican leaders offered no objection. CAUGHT THIEVES HIMSELF. - Salt Lake, Aug. 1. Martin E. Mulvey, former city councilman, encountered two, burglars in the dining room of hik home, 160 Seventh East street, yesterday after--noofought them out of the house, chased them nearly a"rnile d and captured them without a gun, which is something' of - achievement, considering the general ground plan upon whieh this popular former official is constructed. n, single-hande- |