OCR Text |
Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX W. P. If perse ft loa, GREEM APPLES Af!D Lmmi - KiTSTILU NOTED EDUCATORS UTILE BOYS ESTIN6 Upwards of 500 articles of everyday me are manufactured la Utah. There are twelve banks lq Salt Lake City, with a combined capital of - tactically every school teacher In Utah county vent to Salt Lake to attend the meetings of the N. E. A. According to William Craig, veteran canning man, the tomato crop of Weber county 'thla year will likely break all records. Julius N. Anderson, one of the. victims of the street car collision In Ogden canyon .on July 4, suocumbed ' to his injuries Sunday, : Utahs population la 373,351; Salt Lake county, 131, 436; Salt Lake.City, at last census, 92,777; Ogden, 25,580; Provo, 8,925; Logan, 7,522. William K. Wright, plonW of 1847 and one of the first house builders la - Utah,- - d led ' of old -- age- at C0 July 7,r at the age of 9L The principal industries of tje-tatare fanning in all Its branches, min lng, smelting and reduction of ores wool, live stock and manufacturing-Thtotal mileage of steam roads la Utah Ms 1,987; electric lines, 230; with 200 miles contemplated for the Immediate future or under constroo ter-"vil- le, e e ' tlon. There are 22,000,000 acres under cultivation ad subject bo the plow In Utah. Land now under irrigation totals 1,000,000 acres; dry farms ; - broken up, 825,000 acres. More than thirty miles of paving, curb and guttering and sewer work Is under way In Salt Lake now, according to report of the commissioner of streets and public Improvements. Peter If. GJordlng, who was shot on June 18 as the result of the explosion of a cartridge which he had put Irf a stove - while burninguptrash, died July 4 at a Salt Lake hospital. S. L. Wilson aged 45, miner of Bingham, is in a serious condition at a Salt Lake hospital suffering from burns ranging almost from bad to foot, caused by smoking a cigarette . -- In bed. A county highway extending from the Summit county line down Parleys r&nypn and across the valley to. the Tooele county line'.around the southern end of the lake, has been dsriUcd upon.. Screaming .in agony, Raymond Darla, 12 years of age, was saved from being burned to death near hlshome In Sait Lake when bis blazing clothing, Ignited by firecrackers, was cut from him by a neighbor. John Bowlin of Sublett, an expert powder man, was killed by an explosion of giant powder at the Construction company camp, July 4.- - He was testing a short fuse when the accident occurred. Frank Hugos, aged 15, of Spanish Fork, had the finger of his right hand cut off while he was mowing hay. The sickle had become clogged w'TtlT sheep grass and he was removing the . grass .w hen the horses . started Construction crews will begin work this week on the new private telephone line that is to displace the telegraph in the dispatching of all trains on the Denver & Rio Grande between Grand Junction, Colo., and Salt Lake. T hererp-- $ 4 ,990-sq- a rem ileswit lr la the state of Utah; extreme length north and south. 345 miles: breadth, 275 miles; area in acres, 54 593,600; acres In lakes and mountain, 20,0o0,-000- ; Corey-Johnsto- -- forest resenes In acres 7,436,-32X ' Monte E. Core who has had charge of the uptown office of the Ameri- can Express company at OgdenrTmh been aTrested and is in the county Jail on a charge of misappropriating the fuiids of the company. It Is said that Core used $39.50 of- the companys money. The Ind.ianapolis motorists, now on their way to Utah from the east, will find good roods through this state according to IV R, Morgan, state road While the Midland Trail engineer is not "Completed, assurances that the motorists will get through - .Pioneer.., day 'LJ uly .2 4 I s , t he n ex t day to be celebrated by citizens of Weber county and already the com mittee in charge of the program has announced the attractions for the day. 4 he cele'orat kn of which Is to be held in connection with the third annual session of the Utah Chautauqua assembly. Bids will be calle-- for Immediately for the erection of a central school building at South Weber, the lnten tion being to have the new structure ready for occupancy when school -opens in September. The completion of this building will enable the education to abandon the last ungraded school In the county. Saloons at Tooele.' deeded upon at the. recent election, will open July 15, according to decision of the city council. It wllU-cos- t all prospective licenses $1,200 a year for their liquor privileges and Jlhey must also give a $3,000 bonds. Georg 1. Reeves.-beaof the Salt lake branch of the United States bureau of entomology, is of the opinion tkat the parasites which were Imported to attack the alfalfa weevil have become acclimated to the alti- and are thriving n the dewtruu - v" -- toun-ty.iboard.- t d live weevlL CHILDS APTITUDE Finding Out What Work He is Best Fitted for as well as Training Him Advocated by Speakers. HUGH MAN BELIEVED TO BE WHITNEY GETS 8,000 FROM OF CLOSED BY COMPTROLLER CURRENCY ON ACCOUNT OF IMPAIRED RESERVES. IDAHO 0 .. -T- LT UTAJi THE UTAH BUDGET -- JUJUBE. Banking House Was Largely Interested in Carey Act Projects In Idaho, Over Eleven Million Dollars Been Spent in Gem State. Hav--ln- g Pittsburg, Pa. The Fi.rst Second National bank of Pittsburg, the First National bank of McKeesport, a neighboring city, the American Waterworks and Guarantee company and the banking house of J. S. and W. S. Kuhn, incorporated, of this city, were forced into the hands of receivers on Monday. through the failure of the institution to open its doors. The closing of the bank-waordered by the deputy comptroller of the currency, T. P. Kne.after every effort . had ben made to meet the government requirements as to the legal reserve. The Kuhn banking bouse has extensive interests in irrigation projects throughout the wAst, and, mines and street traction systems through wert-erbesides being a Pennsylvania, dominant factor in the American Waterworks and Guarantee company. The Kuhn Itnerests are operating in Idaho to a large extent under the Carey act. The acreage under seven of the Kuhn projects amounts to 1,. 242.532 acres and the projected cost of putting the land under water for cultivation, according to figures supplied by the Idaho state land department will amount to $30,850,000. . The amount the Kuhns have expended to date aggregates $11,716,906. The Carey act projects of the Kuhns are located at Twin Falls and Milner, along the Snake river. The Kuhns have construction work now under way at Ujiper Salmon Falls, Malad and other places, and have been greatly enlarging the capacity of the Shoshone Falls power plant. The Twin Falls North Side project of 26,400 acres was recently completed. The Oakley dam, the largest dirt dam in the world, was also completed recently and the water turned on 60,000 acres. The Twin Falls Salmon river project was- finished two years ago and the water turn. ed on 80,000 acres. first-name- First-Secon- d a HUNDRED BEN KILLED IN FIGHT ON THE RIND Troops Raked Streets With Rifle Fire and Striking Mlners Ars Mowed Down. e - X Demo- Forty-seve- n -- effec-tuall- . The strike which Johannesburg. Involved practically all of the gold mines on.-thRand ended Sunday night During its brief existence anarchy reigned In the city; there was much bloodshed and the casualties are estimated at more than 100. The authorities were finally compelled to declare martial law, and during several hours Sunday the troops raked the streets with rifle fire. " The "negotiations '" which brought about the settlement were opened Sunday afternoon and brought to a successful conclusion after several hours discussion, the strike leaders agreeing to the terms proposed. Before a settlement was reached, there occurred the fiercest and moat sanguinary conflicts between the police and the troops and the mobs that had yet taken place. Early In the afternoon' crowds gathered In front of the Rand club and began to stone it They disregarded orders to disperse, and tbe troops fired with deadly effect. Near the Union club another PLEDGED TO TARIFF MEASURE. mob was scattered by the dragoons, Forty-nin- e Senators Declare Intention who charged fiercely. of Voting for Underwood-SImmon- s DURAND W. SPRINGER. , Bill. Washington. cratic senators stood up in the party caucus, one by one, late Monday and declared their intention to vote for tariff revision the Underwood-SImmonbill as finally approved by the caucus a few minutes previously. Two senators. Ransdell and ThorutorX of LouibianaBtated that they would not s pjgjje guch promise because of "The proposal to place sugaXon the free of Nebraska and ptflberson of Texas wer6 absent, but both are known to be In favop of the bill. This gives the , Democrats votes for the ' bill, ..or a slender majority of one., to with the vote of the faii barlconMrr arr cmprgencjr An ab- solutely binding resolution was not adopted, the. poll by individuals being substituted and that poll was put only on the ground of personal promise and was not made binding. A resolution was adopted, however, declaring the Underwood Simmons bill a party measure and urging its undivided supSecretary of the NationaF Kduca-tioAssociation, who was one of the port without amendment, uuless such busiest men at the Salt Lake conshould be submitted by the committee. vention. of Nevvlands Nevada cast Senator the only vote. against this resolution, but Senators Sbafroth of Colorado,.Rans' TOLL OF CELEBRATION. dell and Thornton did not 'Vote. Fireworks Cause Eight Deaths ' and Victim of Peculiar Accident... 365 Injuries on the Fourth. Ixmisville. Ky. Unconscious and Chicago The celebration of the a with his skull crushed. Alrred Fourth of July with fifeworks-th- is Louisv illegrooer, is in a local in only eight deaths and resulted yeqjr hospital, the victlm of a peculiar ac; 365 in country, acinjuries cident. Attebury was sitting in front to the compilation up to midcording of his store when the wheels of an night. None of the deaths reported automobile, running swiftly along the came from the larger cities. The fire i'MceL.i'aughl up a sioneabout five loss much smaller than has 1m lies- in diameter and hurled it been on Independence day on reported auaiust his head. previous years. Of the deaths reported, three, wer Two Meet Awful Fate. from fireworks, three from firearms, tank containing Olney111 moten glass burst at the Olney Bottle one by pemature explosion of guncompanys plant and Aaron Steffy and powder and one from a runaway. James Moore, foremen, were burned Delay In Government Suit to death, being caught under the molWashington. The trial of the govten mass. , ernments suit at Los Angeles Cal., Many Celebrants Meet Death. for the recovery of $o0u.000,000 worth New Yor. The triple holiday of of oil lands by the Southern Pacific Jul-- 4. railroad probably will be delayed un5 and 6 brought twenty-fou- r seekers to their death by til the supreme court of the United pleasure drowning in local wafers. Seven per- - States has decided the suit of Edprivate litijpns lost their lives in this vicinity, mund Burke and other railroad. rand several may yet die. gants against the forty-nine- vice-preside- n semi-officia- - .X hair-raisin- the-entir- fifty-mil- e drow-ned- Spilled From Biplane. Epernay, France. Captain Rey of the French army was killed and his pamon, a private of the engineer corps, probably fatally injured when the military biplane in which they were flying above tbe village of capsized on Wednesday. A Be-tho- uge n GRACE M. SHEPHERD. "VWashingtdnXMissXSsfeWoodrow Wilson, second daughter of the president, has divulged to her intimate friends the information that the date of her wedding to Francis B. Sayre, the young lawyer on the staff of District Attorney Whitman of New York, will be either tbe second or the third Saturday of November. CARROL G. PEARSE. Two Kritled In, Duel. Champalgn, ' 111. Two men - were killed and two others seriously wounded in a duel here between the pujlce and bootleggers. The dead are James Williams, bootlegger, and Thomas Dods worth, a policeman. , - X Highest compliment to progressive- ness in modern lines of education in the school system of Salt Lak e, th e; excellent equipment in the line of V XV - TV t X X W v?s,- - 3 A x; 'X - !- V.- - v .'rx,xi XV V'x : a t. be --Lx Treasurer of the National Education Association, and one of the leading educators at the Salt Lake convention. Royal Wedding in September. Sigm&ringen, Germany. The mar- riage of former King Manuel of Por tugal and Princes Augustine Victoria, daughter qf Prince Wilhelm ol Hofcenzollem, has been efet for Sep, tember. X Lad Falle on Hay Fork. Utah. While hla mother was uptown securing medical aid in having a cherry atone removed from the nose of her son. Guy Thomas, aged J9, fell from haystack and was severely Injured. - Spanish-For- k, modern buildings and the energetic efforts board of education, was paid by itev. Edward E. Eaton," D. D ,' LL. , president of Beloit, college, Wisconsin, in a brief but pointed address to the board of education at its regular meeting. The Utah Agricultural college exhibit at the Keith building furnished informaton of a character calculated to make the N. E. A. visitors take notice. One table shows bow Utah leads In the number of those given agricultural training. In Utah, one person in every 533 of poulatkan has attended schools whose purpose is to give a higher agricultural training. MonMt. Pearse Is first of the National Education Association tana comes next with one in 1,125 popand superintendent of schools of Mil- ulation. Colorado follows with 1 in 1,865; Mlchgan, 1 in 2,117; Oregon 1 waukee, WTs. in 2,175, etc. John D. Celebrates Anniversary. Mrs. Emmeline B. Wells of Salt Cleveland, O. John D. Rockefeller Lake was probably the oldest school celebrated his 74th birthday anniver- teacher at the convention. Mrs. Wells sary Wednesday by playing more and taught school In Massachusetts in working less than usuaL He played 1843. golf w ith Dr. 1I. F.-pastor. Rev. W. W. Bustard. League of Treachers association made at the meeting of the league XX. . Youth TIred of Life held at Barrtatt hail 'on Wednesday; Englewood, N, J. The youth who Indicated that the the movement for took stow poison with suicidal intent the betterment of conditions surroundhis girl bride entering into n 'death ing the teachers of the United Btatfes pact with him, was Identified Wed- was gaining ""strength .and that - the nesday, ms John K. Simonevitz, son league ws gaining steadily in influof n Jersey City storekeeper. ence kbd membership. i of-th- e TV?. W.'' -- Pleads Not Guilty. Harrison ville. Mo. A plea ' of not guilty wau entered' by Mrs, Arthur Kellar here Monday when her trial on a charge of having slain her husband, I a railroad laborer, and her daughter, was called. president; Mrs. Cora G. Lewis and former Gov. E. W. Hoch, is attending the N. E. A. This is tha first board of .control for h:gher education of any state which has ever attended in a body a meeting of the ' ' " X. .E. A. Thousands of delegates to the N. E. X A. forgot all their convention work and drowned all their association troubles in the briny waters of the Great Sg'.t lake Wednesday afternoon and night. It was their day at Salt-aiand ihe delegates, evidently enjoyed the novelty of salt waten bathing. -- Ice Strike Settled. Cincinnati, O. Following a series of conferences between representatives of the unions affected and ice manufacturers. Ice employes , decided to return to work Monday, thus end- lng the ice strike. - -- e Negro Lynched. Pensacola, Fla An unidentified negro. who had attacked a young white girl at Bonlfay, was taken by a ibob from a train on w hlch county officers were hurrying him. and was banged. elgh.t.educalionaLlnstitutioxmQflhat consisting of' Ed"T. Hackney, state,- r, ulsms' A-h- g hand-to-han- d - Atte-bury- - "j Th-Hig- (CoprHfbU X n Balt Lake City. Our conception M education must he broadened to include testing as well as training anj the schools must be reorganized to Surprises Bank Officials and After afford an opportunity for each imh Looting Safe Locks Them Inside . vldual to test his aptitude in as witfe and Escapea Before Citizen a variety of work as possible, Are Aware of Robbery. sisted Clarence D. Kingsley, high school Inspector of tbe Massachusetts board of education, .In what proved Rigby, Idaho. Fleeing from a be the principal address of the morn mounted posse twenty miles southat the Wednesday session of ;h. east o i Rigby, a lone bandit, sup- lng National Education association in posed to be Hugh Whitney, who this city. There was no session in robbed the State Bank of Rigby on the Tabernacle In the afternoon, the Wednesday afternoon, after kicking delegates repairing to Saltair aflet two of the officials In the vault, is luncheon for & combined session and seeking to escape into the Jackson's outing. Hole country or its vicinity. Two Continuing the thread of - his adyears ago, following the holdup of dress, the topic of which was an Oregon Short Line train. and the - School Period as Testing killing - of -- the condueten-bew- an reviewed the chased into this difficult, region, but TrmeXDr'KihgsIey plan 'for vocational and, moral, guideec&ped. - Since that time " he has ance BITTER WARFARE LOW Oil through English composition made an occasional foray into Wyom- devised by Jessee B. Davis, principal BETWEEN FORMER ALLIES ing and Idaho towns and has car- of the Central High schoojXGrand ried off considerable plunder. The Rapids, Mich. robbery, if committed by him, is his The plan contemplates the followbiggest coup since the holdup of the " ing. For theJrsLyeir of hlgh school Estimated That Between Thirty and train. element oUsuccess in life; for Frank Ellsworth, cashier, and Clar- work, Forty Thousand Have Been Killed the second y ar, the worlds work; ence Hart, assistant cashier, were or Wounded During Past Week. Working In their shirt sleeves and JAMES M. GREENWOOD. chating idly when' the bandit, masked, walked in upon them. London. After ten days of fighting The two tneh were forced to e more severe and deadly than anyter the safe and give the bandit gld thing In the last Balkan war, a little and bills amounting to $8,090 ifter light begins to break upon the hith- which were locked inland the they erto obscure operations. In the first ' bandit departed. place, the Servians have lost more - A few minutes later the men than in the whole previous camson . of the cashie toddled Into the l statements Is- bank and called paign, and for "papa. The sued at Belgrade .have the appearance Officials heafd the boyish voice as e of an Intention to prepare the public ' faint whisper and began to shotit for news of a disaster. . . s ; .luBtlly. The child , dimly - understood Desperate fighting wlth"vary lng the situation and ran out of the bant fortunes Is proceeding along the Var-da- r for Soon a .number ol crying help. and Bregalinitza rivers, which citizens had entered the bank and seems to be in favor of the Bulgar.released the imprisoned men. ians. A conservative estimate, of the killSOLDIERS CONQUER MOROS. ed or wounded in last weeks fighting fixes the number at from 30000 to (Battle to Death .on Mountain Top 40,000. Thousands of destitute refuWith No Quarter Asked. gees from the scene of fighting are Washington. A story pouring into SalonikL of conflict with spear The Greeks have made wholesale charges against the Bulgarians of hurling More savages, of battle tc burning and pillaging all the Tillages the death on an isolated mountain they hve captured, of killing and mu- top, with no quarter given or expected, was cabled to the war departChairman of the board of trustees tilating prisoners and other horrors. ment from the Phllliplnes Wednes- of the National Education Associaday by Major General Bell. It was tion, who for twenty-nin- e years has Ranges Are Coming Back. been a member of national the the on commanding generals report Washington. The improved condi. . , , tion of the national forest range after the -- campaign of Brlgader General council. which exresulted in the regulated grazing is pointed to by ex- Pershing, for the third year, preparation for perts of the department of agriculture termination of the last considerable lifes work, and for the fourth year as a demonstration that areas which hand of rebellious Moros and the aocial ethics. He quoted the testihave been severely damaged through complete disarmament of this war- monials of students who have taken overstocking by sheep and cattle can like tribe. Ihis sort of work in Grand Rapids be brought back to their former caronder the direction of Mr. Davis., - Engine Drops Into River. rying power through a system of sub the testing thought, Continuing Denver, Colo. An overflowing irri- Thomas E.' Thompson, flciently intelligent use. superintendent gation ditch two miles east of New of schools of Leomister, Mass., read Four Pooplo Drowned. Castle, undermining the main track a paper on 'Teaching and Testing the Cleveland, O. More than a score of the Denver ft Rio Grande, caused Teaching of Essentials. of persons and eleven small boats are the wreck of the first section of pasTke Personal Elemena in OurEdU; senger train No. 5 Wednesday morn-lng- . cational Problems was the subject missing, following a sudden The first engine of the train of the address made by William H. gale which lashed Lake Erie into a fury late Saturday afternoon. One of left the' track and went into the Campbell, principal of D. S. Wentthe missing boats is a power launch, Grand river. The engineer and fire- worth school, Chicago. which was reported sunk about two man are missing. The entire board of administration miles west of Rocky River, four being of Kansas, having control of the . President Wiltons Daughter to Wed. . Na-tJeu- al d BANK. D-- vice-preside- nt v t ' 7 t |