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Show 1 LEGAL g I PROCLAMATION Kit By the Mayor of Ogden, Utah. -M KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE -&W PRESENTS that I, William Glas- JH K mann, Mayor of the City of Ogden, M ' Utah, b3' virtue of the authority in U mc vested by the State of Utah, do ; hereby issue the result of the special S , election hold on June 27th, 1911, as I follows towlt: 1 For the sale of Intoxicating liquor, W I Against the sale of Intoxicating Igi I liquor, 3,056, Oltj Therefore, In accordance with Soc- g tion 62 Chapter 106 of the laws pass- '0 ! ed by the last legislature of" the (J)! i Stat of Utah, and approved by the 4Ll Honorable Governor of said ctate on m ' tho 20th day of March 1911 I do h'ere- fe by proclaim that, In accordance with $$ the will of the people of Ogden City 0tj as expressed at the said special elec- ,B tion, the sale of intoxicant liquor shall f1 bo permitted In Ogden City nftor the j date hereof, but only on compliance -jF( with the laws of the State of Utah 'ifSft' an-'" tne ordinances of Ogden Cltv. g! WM. GLASMANN, Mayor, 25 1 Done this 6th day of July 1911. 55 I CARL ALLISON, City Ro order. jgtf, (Seal of Ogden City, Utah.) ' ers, such as plans for the partition of ' Morocco, naturally, would have to be submitted to the signatories of the Algeclras act, including the United States, which country Is understood to bo interested in the disposition of the southwestern coast of Mbrocco on account ac-count of the nearness to South America. WASHINGTON, July 6. The principle princi-ple of arbitration of international disputes, dis-putes, Insofar as its application to the United States and Great Britain Is concerned, received a pronounced Impetus Im-petus today. Secretary Knox and Am-bassador Am-bassador Bryce signed th'e first schedule of certain pecuniary claims existing between the United States and Great Britain and the terms of their submission to arbitration In accordance ac-cordance with the special agreement signed August 18 last. Not satisfied with this accomplishment accomplish-ment for one day, the secretary and Ambassador Bryce then further lent their energies to the cause of international interna-tional peace by conferring on the proposed pro-posed general arbitration treaty which it Is to supplant by broadening broaden-ing Its scope, the very convention under un-der which the pecuniary claims will be arbitrated. This conference was devoted to questions relating primarily primari-ly to phraseology. It Is admitted that the treaty is all but completed, and the administration is confident that It will be finished in time for submission submis-sion to the senate for ratification at the present session. The pecuniary claims to be arbitrated arbi-trated aggregate several million dollars. dol-lars. Some of them are of long standing, stand-ing, even ante-dating the war of 1S12, while many grew out of the war In the Philippines. Others relate to fisheries and the Fiji islands. Both the special agreement and the schedule of claims will now be submitted sub-mitted to the senate for ratification The special agreement commits the two governments to arbitration of the cialms and provides he machinery of the arbitral convention which the schedule shows a list of claims to be legitimate and worthy of consideration considera-tion It is understood the question will bo arbitrated by a commission composed of representatives of the ' United States and Great Britain and disinterested umpires. This arbitration arbitra-tion will be second under tho general arbitration treaty of 1908 of America and England, the first subject undertaken under-taken under that convention being the North Atlantic fisheries dispute. ' which was settled by The Hague tribunal tri-bunal last summer. |