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Show THE. WEEKLY. REFLEX; KAYSVILLE UTAH - I 1 KILLED. tweiity-c::-e il imECK Ill 1 THE UTAH BUDGET Ori NEW HAVEN Weber .county canners estimate their tomato output this season at 800,000 cases, e'r nearly 20.000.000 cansr Into White Mountain Express-CrasheMrs. Elna Jensen, aged 75 years, Bar Harbor Limited Fog Cause was found dead at her home in Mu of Disaster. Pleasant by her daughter. Heart failPRESIDENT WILSON OPENS FIRST ure was the cause of death. BMHE PBIDEIIT s PRESIDENT WILSON ADVOCATES .POLICY OF' HANDS OFF AND NEUTRALITY IN MEXICO. EXHIBITION OF ITS KIND HELD IN UNITED STATES. Conn. Twenty-on- e New - Haven, were killed and nearly fifty persons some whom of may die, In a injured, rear-encollision shortly before T oclock Tuesday morning on the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, six miles north of here. White The first section of the Mountain express, bound for New YorlC speeding along at probably forty miles an hour In a thick fog, rushed by a danger signal. It is said, and crashed into the rear of the second secton of the Bar Harbor express, Standing 100 feet beyond the block signal. , The. White Mountain engine cleaned through two rear Pullman cay; both of wood, splitting them inLwo, and tossing their wreckage ana three score of mangled human beings, some alive, some dead, on either side of the d Peaceful Proposals to .Mexico and Thejr Rejection and Voices an Urgent Appeal for Alt Americans to Leave That Country. .Outlines. H . .high-powere- andne-chanlclan- - an.-ftialme- Con-seryatl- I ot I kill-an- e the-natur- - - Hard Coal Trust Attacked. Philadelphia. Attorney General first and most Important attack on the hard Coal trust was be. gun here Tuesday with the filing oi a civil suit - for the dissolution of the Reading company's control of coal mining and coal carrying railroad, the most potential combination in the an thracite fields. - The ReadlngH company, with its subsidiary and allied corporations, including the Centra! Railroad of New Jersey and certain of their officers and directors, is charged by the federal government with violating both the Sherman an titrust law and the commodities clause of the interstate commerce act, in an attempt to monopolize the production and transportation of anthracite. This combination, controlling at the present time 63 per cent of the entire unmined deposits of anthracite and marketing about 30 per cent of the annual supply will own or control is time, it not dissolved, the attorney general warns, every ton of commer dally available anthracite known tc exist -- The steady presure of moral force, he said, will before many days break the harries of pride and prejudice down and we shall triumph as Mexico's triend sooner than we could triumph as 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 tkis nation did in the situation confronting it must be rooted in patience 'and done with calm, deliberation, He had no word of rebuke for Mex-Jcand reached the determination- to tnainUin"'atrlct neutraIity After having presented the whole situation to the members of the foreign relations in congress. Not an essential detail did tke president withhold In lila preientatlon of the case for the p ubllcV' p ubll Bhi n g also to the world the reply of the Mexican government to Mr. Lind in which Senor Gamboa refers to the American proposals as humiliating. denies the represents lion by President Wilson that Mexico bad not made progress toward peace and though expressing appreciation of the avowed friendly Intent of the vntter states, 'declares that if such good offices are to be of the charnow tendered us, , we acter should have to decline them in the most categorical and definite manner. Everything that Mexico had' said to this government m response to the proposals was nude pubhe. including the -- Huerta alternative - that- - nothing cou'd be w elconied except unrestricted recognition of his government. ofi.-cial- s, The-flrs- o 1; The third car, also- of wood, and cupled byforty boy on their way from asummer camp at Monmouth, Me., was lifted Into the air and almost completely off the track. The car fell onltsslde, crumpled up; crushed two of thboys to death and Injured several others. Practically all the passengers on both trains were returning home from summer vacations, and all but two of a camping party of nine, guests of S. Crozer Fox of Elkins Park, Pa., returning from Maine, were wiped out. Fox was among those killed. No one was hurt in the White Mountain train. i distln-teresv?- d ' d track. Ait-Sout- end. I - twenty-flve-tnil- e te cam-matter- Exposition . n -- Aid Knoxville, Tenn. A wireless ' message from President Wilson was the signal for the opening of the National Conservation ..exposition. the '.first ,ln the history of the" country devoted to the cause of conservation. The message was received about 10 a. m. at the wireless station on the exposition grounds Mbnday. of Tennessee, Governor Hooper (Copyright) Mayor Heiskell of Knoxville and T. A. Wright, president 'of the exposition, FRENCH TOWN: ATTACKED: FOUR KILLED IN LABOR DAY participated in the opening i cerewill continue I , The exposition BY BAND OF GYPSIES RACES AT NASHVILLE, TENN; and October, through September and while designed primarily to .teach the lesson of conservation, is intended also to demonstrate the commerDifference' of Opinion Between Towns- CarlVJth Unlucky" Numberl3 Knocks cial and industrial advance of the Down Fence and Others Following people and Gypsies Results, In south. S' a Pitched Battle. Plunge Into Wreckage, The exposition grounds wHhx lakes and drives embrace morethan 100 acres on which have.,ben,' erected Nashville!! Tenn. Death claimed a eleven: Montpelier, France. A band of 10 buUdings Vlth a total of gypsies on Friday attacked the inhab- heavy toll In, the Labor day auto 100.000 large of flooyhpace, , The buildfeet itants of the town of Lunel, with guns races at the state fair grounds when are the Liberal Aits, the Land, and revolvers. Gendarmes engaged four of the. six .cars en- ings an audjt&rlum , annex seating with free-fo- r the gypsies and a pitched battle en- tered In the 3.000 persons, the Womans, the sued In which one gendarme was all race were wrecked on the far side East Child the Tennessee, Welfare, killed and three were badly wounded. of the jmlle track in sight of the 5,000 the the Mines and Minerals, The fighting of the gypsies was eo spectators. the Livestock, .the ' Poultry ttaeArt, fierce that they even held out against Four, of the racing men were killed and the Negro. a company of soldiers tor a time. and thyee received minor injuries. Twt) Exhibits have been furnisherd by When they fled they left a large num- of the cars with their drivers s federal government fcs well as by the ber of wounded behjnd them. flashed through the tangled of all the southern states and will disThe attack had Its origin In- a dif- wreckage of broken cars d kinds of natural resources. many play ference of opinion between the gyp- bodies: at a speed of slxty'.miles an The larger southern cities will be repsies and the townspeople of. LuneL hour, escaping injury. resented by individual exhlblts. POISONED BY ENEMIE8. of humap life, health and Three Kllledm Wreck. well as of the land, water as energy President of Chinese Republic Haa a Cedar Rapldsda. Train No. 444, and forests will be emphasized. southbound, on :he Decorah branch of Narrow Escape Seeeka Revenge. In its conception, in Its aims and the Chicago & Rock Island, was .London la a dispatch dealing with wreckedtvithln two miles of Maynard purposes, reads the official descripthe effect of tne Chinese rebellion on at 3:flT Monday. The entire train was tion, the National Conservation expoJapan, the Dally Telegraphs Toklo dejrhiled, rolling down a ten-foem- sition is unique; It Is unique In other correspondent makes the revealatlon bankment. Three were instantly respects. Expositions of ibe past d that the reason President Yuan Shi have always been held to commemorthirty-fivothers were more northern or Kal perolpitately-massed-tl- m ate and celebrate something that has cause less seriously Injured. The troops on the Yang Tse river and pre- of the accident was the been accomplished; the National Conof spreading pared for war wag because he was the rails. As soon as the engine left servation exposition, on the other souIn arsenic May by poisoned hy the rails the coaches turned over and hand, looks toward the future.- It will thern agents.- slid down' the embankment. A special stand opt as the sign of something The correspondent states that only train was made up at Oelweln and left that is to be dose. the most violent medical methods savThe exhibits of the' United States ed Yuan Shi Kals life and that he was Maynard, bringing the Injured to this will be most complete and all will be city. In a state of collapse for many days. The train was running between designed to teach these conservation REPUBLICANS OUTLINE PLANS. twenty-fiv- e and thirty miles an hour, lessons. In, the good roady exhibit, which Is an unusual speeed for trains the forestry, the mines, the land and Organized on this branch. In othey Exhibits the federal display Congressional Committee and Will Extend Aid to Candidates. will be devoted entirely to the subPlot Found. conDope Big jects of conservation In Its different Washington. The Republican ' oron A Sam committees Francisco. Friday gigantic- opium branches. So, too, the different state gressional exhibits are designed not only to show ganized and outlined Its general plans smugglers plot In which federal for the coming campaigns. Represteamship employees and Chi- the progress made In material ways al involved, developed here by these states, but also to bring out Iowa P. Woods of nese are sentative Frank r was elected chairman. Ha announced with nearly a score of Arrests. The the conservation idea. The child welfare exhibit, the first that the committeee'a work from now opium ring has been operated at this on would not b in the line of .direct port since August, 1910, and Survey- ever made In the south, is uaderhe aid to individual candidates, but in or of the Port Justus S. WArdell es- direction of Miss Julia C. Lathrop, furnishing Information to the voters timates their profits at close upon head of the childrens bureau of the will be $300,000. United States department of labor. of the country. Attention Intimation that Wardell re The Russell Sage Foundation of New given at once to the pending contests New ceived came when he assumed his du- York and other philanthropic instituIn the Third Maine, Twentieth York. First West Virginia and Third ties two weeks ago, - Deputy Surveyor tions are deeply interested In this deMaryland congressional districts. Charles. A .Stephens reported that partment It will be devoted to an of the best and the most adMaaximllian Miller, a custom guard GEORGE W. VALLERY under suspension for opium smug- vanced methods of conserving the gling, had intimated that other guards health and the strength of the growbesides himself were In the opium ing child. ring. - - ! th at Knoxville. Tenn to Maintaining Health and Increasing. Natural Resource, Planned. Woodrow Washington.- - President Wilson appeared before congress on Wednesday, August 27, and revealed how the Huerta provisional govern ment in Mexico had rejected the friendship of the United States and Its efTorU to aid in the establishment which of peace and a government could be recognized by this nation and which would be obeyed and respected by Mexicos own people. In a statement which breathed sympathy la every phrase the president clung tenaciously to optimism as to the ultimate result, notthe pessimistic facts withstanding confronting the two nations. After picturing the hopelessneBB 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 Mexicos awakening. He also voiced an urgent appeal for 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 in 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 house chamber, and. the machinery of the government is in motion for making 'effective the policy of neutrality and hands off while warring. fac- tlons 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 been given the geenral moral support of foreign nations in the propos- als to the Huerta government which have been rejected. In his message, which was in 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 announcement of this government's policy would have, not only on the people of this country and the governments of other nations, but upon the people of Mexico themselves. Now that the' United States has exhausted the effort to bring about peace and a stable government In Mexico the president believes that this governments example to the world will avail great good In the - Sixty Days' Session of t -- s Eads' L1fby Bltlnga Dynamite CpT Melrose Mont Joseph Lablster, aged 88, a pioneer prospector, ARTHUR REGINALD DYER com- mitted. suicide in his cabin by biting of dynamite cap, the explosion ahich drove a piece of copper into his brin and broke his neck. For forty years Lablster has search editor preclous tnetalS and the" fact that he recently allowed a mining claim valued at $50,000 to slip through - - New York. Edith' KIlid7anaged2'. toddled to the .elevator cage in the apartment house where she lived and opened the door. Her brother. 5 years old, mining the baby, saw her peril and ran to rescue her. He was too late, but clutched al her - clothing. Both children plunged down the shaft feet to death. seventy-fiv- Im-atac- a. - e Trade Unions in Annual Cong re. Unusual In- terest Is attached to the forty-sixt5625, COO Necklace Stolen. Chinese Lawmakers In Trouble. W. Vallery, chairman of annual Trades Union congress which Georg - Five men were' arrested London.Pekin. Both houses of the Chinese the general committee of the triennial opened in Milton haL owing to the ex- - London- la -Tuesday - en --euepielevn T contiavsof- K rrtgtrts-- em ptai at Den- TsunFuhfeW'15thTTahbr' worldTTEe parliament have concerned in the robbery of Mr. Dyer, who It deputy chief of the onthe number requiring the government to try jhe ver, Is being congratulated is 563, making a members of parliament , who had been success of that big event Mr. Val- record, as they represent a member- "London fir brigade, is now in this pearl necklace stolen during transl placed under arrest before the su- ery Is president of the Colorado Mid- ship of 2.250, 000 workmen of various country studying American methods by post from Paris to a London dealei f fire fighting. on July 1$. It was valued at $625, bOO land railroad. preme court In Pekin. h ''psgsfd--Tcsohitt- qny trades Physician Wrongfully Convicted. Los Angeles, Cal.? Wrongfully convicted on perjury testimony, Dr. Ethel-4bert Duncanson. a graduate of the University of Michigan, is suing four of his neighbors, in Pomona, a suburb, for $10(H00 damages. Rescued Passengers Return. The steamship Seattle, Wash. Northwestern arrived - from Juneau Friday with fifteen, of the reseaed of the lost steamship, State of California, eight members of the ship's and ten passengers. t f 1 were'-complete- " d e v pas-senge- Langford Will Meet Johnson. Boston Sam r Langford, negro heavyweight, Is to meet Jaek Johnson heavyweight champion of the world in a bout for the title In Paris, Defor the cember 20. Arrangements match by cable Frl day, according to Langfords manager. Refugees Reach El Paso. El Paso, Tex Seventy-fivAmeri a - and ehlldreefroift Madera and other Chihuahua ' towns arrived here Friday on a special rs -- caa-mear-- vese to-fuge- Mexican Northwestern train. e - Aged Woman Scared to Death, Geabright, N. J. Mrs. B. A. t kn aged resident of New York, here on & visit, was scared to - death by a clap of thunder during a severe electrical storm which 'swept the northern New Jersey coast early Saturday. Prominent Physician Shot. Cairo, 111. Dr. E. . E. Gordon. prominent physician of this city, was shot and kHtfd here Monday night by Harvey R Fields, an insurance h, Ivy Rowland, aged 12r died at Salt Lake as the result of burns sustained when1 & can of turpentine caught fire and was spilled on her by a boy who threw the can from a garage. August 29 marked the golden wedding anniversary of Bishop George Thomas Romney and -- Margaret Romney, the couple haring been married In Salt Lake fifty years ago. Joseph Jeremy, aged 45, narrowly escaped death near Salt-La- ke City, when an automobile he was driving overturned ana pinned him In a pool, of water. . It required all his strength for two hoars to keep his head In a position to breathe, until help came. George Maynes, sheep owner, whose flocks have been grazing on the ranges of the Wasatch national forest, sold lambs last weeek weighing seventy-onpounds each. This 4s - considered - unusually good weight for lambs at this Bseason of the year. Lightning struck the barn of Hyrum Fuhrfrnan at Logan, the barn and contents being burned. All schools in Payson "will begin .active work September 8. The buildings are being renovated and repaired. , Brigham City will probably have a municipal telephone system to add to her already extensive public utilities. Crops in Box Elder cennty 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 Uinta county, according to the state 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 section of Box Elder county. The past week has been one of much anxiety to the people of Gunnison, as three case of smallpox have broEien oat. and the entire town haa been exposed. at machine The big ditching Corinne is helping to put the land into condition to bloom, 'since the ditches are being tiled and alkali Is being eradicated. Florence Thomas and Albert Osborne, narrowly escaped death for serious Injury at Murray when the rooming house in which they were sleeping 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. i Tim-panog- e 1 was-destroye- d Brigham City will probably be chosen as the distributing plant for eastern lumber companyt&at is Fatally Injured in Fun. Youngtowtf, Ohio Sam Stan, a contemplating, establlshlngytiholesale and Rumanian, was fatally injured when and retail lumber yards in Utah Idaho. he was run down by a car on a switch at the Strothers plant on .Friday. Ac- - Following an yUlness 'of threr cording to reports of company offi- months, Isaac LT Clark, head of the cials. Stan and other employees were I. L. Clark Jt Son company and skylarking .about the railroad yards pioneer merchant of Ogden, died Auand his companions, supposedly in a gust 26; Mr. Clark was born in spirit of fun, held him on the track in Ogdenin 1853. the path of the oncoming car. They Joseph Gurr wag seriously wounded held him too long, It Is declared, and and F. A. Wade and Miss Patsy Mease when they .finally Released him it was '1 wounded In' a' shooting affray slightly too late for him to avoid ,th.e car. the which knocked him down and passed which took place in the lobby of beVernaL Gurr theater at Orpheus jver both legs American Cleared of Murder Charge. - Washington. Stuart Mqdge, the American- youth- who was tried la Venezuela, upon a technical charge of murder, was acquitted, according to a dispatch received at the state department Tuesday. Mudgewas engaged in an athletic game with a Venezuelan youth when the latter received fatal Injuries. The American legation at Caracas appointed an agent to see that Mudge had a fair and Impartial trial, and his acquittal was expected by officials here. Twe Children Fall. Manchester, England. .To Go Over New Rout. Salt Lake. A. L. Westgaard, pathfinder, representing the National High ways association, left for the east Tuesday. He was accompanied by hit wife, yvho makes nearly all his trlpt with him. Westgaard goes east into Coloradc by what is known as the Vernal route While Jittle has been said about thU route into Utah from the east, many claim it Is the best route of them all, as far as Utah is concerned, for the simple "reason that-i- t is shorter tberoad is already built and will cut out all the desert land in the eastern part of the state. thestate. a-la- rge -- h:s hands is believed to have unsettled his mind. Australians Win Again. Chicago The Australian cricketers made it three straight from the picked Chicago squad Fridiy, taking the third game. 312 to 103. The Chicago men were first at bat, but made poor resistance against the bowling of McCartney, Down and Mayne. . , Mrs. AgneB Miller Moore, 86 years--' age, and one of the pioneers who walked across the plains, died at den last week of general debilit Leonard Sheppard,-age- d T&: of Sit Lawe, was accidentally shbt through the right lung by a x)tbpanlon while hunting. It Is belifvbd he will recover. , celebration by the . The three dkys Wards of the Wizard of the Wasatch e last week was attended usanda of people from all over of ' Serious Offense Is Charged. Sworn In as Philippine Ruler. atan alleged Reso, Nev. Fololwlng Washington. Francis Burton Har19, at rison, who resigned Tuesday as Repretack on Mar.tha (Silve, a girl-othe point of a rifle. George W. Riley, sentative from New York, was sworn 23 years old, son of an old and re In as governor general of the Philipf pected famlly of Huraboldt county, narrowly escaped lynching. ' The' outrage .occurred in Paradise valley on the ranch of Frank R. Burge. Alone on the ranch ,the girl was attacked bv the.y Q Ut haJ IS jld. iQ h av n bc an drinking. .She is in a critical condL tlon. Riley was taken to Winnemocpa forty miles distant, because of the a Ivnohlns -- oi Brigadlef pines- im General McIntyre, head of So bureau of insular affairs. tbe-office-- here Major Wig mors Diet. Toklo. Maj, Herbert L, Wlgmore military attache to the American m bassy, died suddenly Monday night a Ghuzenjl, Island of Hondo, of acut appendicitis. , f gan the shooting. Nick Foco, & bartender In a took four- shots at Percy Comford as the latter ran from the saloon. None of the bullets did any damage. It is said Corn ford attacked Foco, who then fired at him. - - John Sp&rchevich, resident of Bing- ham for only three months, was shot and mortally wounded In the Copper King saloon Thursday. Ell Churvich, owner of a boarding house at Highland Boy, is in jail, charged with crime. Lewis Marango, Mexican miner, was probably fatally stabbed in a JU&L bouse t Bingham The name of his assailant is not known. He escaped, although it Is said that he was also severely wounded, Norman Wold of Morgan county was fined $100 on a charge of dynamiting fish by Samuel Francis, Justice of the peace, last week. Wold was arrested Yy a warden In Morgan county. This is the first sentence under the new flsh and game law. The Uintah basin fair this fall, to be held at Fort Duchesne September 18, 19 'and 20, will excel the extensive exhibits . of Jast jewv and JhLsports and other attractions will be bigger ind better than eyer before in connection with a fair In that basin. , - |