OCR Text |
Show TO ARM. ADVISES NEGROES TO T IFF Colored IE MAP WON FROM I If Churches and 8chools Art the Only Army and Navy W Need, 8aya Senator Knuts Nelson. THE LEGAL In a Battle Between Abdel Azlxs Soldiers and Mulal Haflds Troopers, ths Latter Were Defeated. Overturned Lamp Starts Fire That Almost Completely Destroys ' reand the Tangier. A wireless dispatch Chicago. The churches Montana. Taft, schools of ths United States were held ceived from Abdel Aziz, the sultar ot up as "the only army and navy that of record, announces the victory can protect us In the future," by bis troops over the troops under MuIinute Nelson of Minnesota on Frilal Hafid, tbe usurping sultan, In an On Grocery Store and a Saloon Left . engagement recently fought during day night Standing When the Conflagration He delivered an address at ths the march toward Morocco City, statWae Gotten Under Control rally that marked the close of the ing that the defeat of the enemy was Operatlone Rebuilding eighth convention of the Luther complete. The losses of the adherStart at Once. ents of Mulai Halid are estimated at League of America at the AuditorK , Fully 3,000 persona were pres- ium. ent Missoula, Mont. Tba entire town the exception of the t Taft, with a poatofflce, one grocery store and aaloon. was destroyed by lire Thursday morning. The warehouses of the construction companies which are located on the opposite side of the railroad tracks escaped. The loss Is estimated at between C0, 000 and 75,000, A message with little Insurance. from Mayor Dennison of Taft la to exthe effect that the fire loss willtrasl-ticss ceed 180,000. A total of fifteen dewere and saloons, buildings stroyed and nothing of the contents Rebuilding operations was saved. have already started. It Is learned that the lire was not the result of a forest blaze. The origin of the conflagration Is somewhat of a mystery and the officials of the town are now ' attempting to discover who was It Is thought that an overturned lamp In the Anheuser building next to the postofflce caused the disastrous lire. CHINA ENTERS PROTESTS. Objects te Japanese Execution! Severed by two vast oceans from the other great powers of the world," he said, "with our hundred' millions of people end our almost limitless resources, ws have no occasion to fear any attack or Invasion from abroad. The enemy that will attack us, and the danger that will threaten us, against which we must constantly be on our guard, will come from within; will come when we are untrue and unfaithful to our great trust and duty; will come when we cease to pass good laws and when we cease to enforce the laws without fear or favor against the rich and poor, the high and the low; will come when we grant Immunity to transgressors and law violators; will come when we allow the mammon of pelf and unrighteousness to rule and dominate; will come when we stifle or permit to be stifled the conscience of the masses of the nation. "Against this enemy and this danger the only standing army and the only navy that can protect us and guide us in the future, as In the past, ere our schools and our churches. These, rather than brute force, will be our solace, our hope, and our salvation." on SCIENCES TOLL OF DEATH. Chinese Soil. killing In this city early this month of a Japanese army officer, supposed to be a spy and traitor, by Japanese soldiers attached to the Pekin legation, will result In the presentation by China of a for mat protest against the doing of police duty by legation guards outside of the legation precincts. The officer In question was Captain Ka He was In the artillery waklta. branch of the Hiroshima division and l e was formerly an instructor In the Chinese military college at Pao Ting Fu. He was charged with selling Japanese military secrets to a for, ctgn power and dlsapepared from Japan In June. On August 1 be was discovered disguised as a Chinaman, biding near the war office In Pekin. This knowledge was communicated to the legation guards and a detachment waa sent to capture him. He the resisted arrest, whereupon guards shot and wounded the spy and he died two days later In the hospital of the legation guard. Pekin. . The Killed and 8ix Injured In Balloon Accident. London. Two persons were killed and six Injured by the explosion at exthe grounds of the Franco-Britlahibition of the envelope of the balk-on owned by Captain Lovelace of the New York Aero club. Preparations for an ascent were being made when the accident occurred. The cause Is supposed to have been the throwing down of a lighted match. Mlsa Hill, aged 18, secretary to Captain Lovelace, was one of the persons killed. She was burned to a cinder. Tbe other person killed,' a man, and the six who sustained Injuries also were employed by Captain Lvoelace. Two h An Immense amount of booty was cap tured. Abdel Aziz, at the head of a column, defeated the Pehama tribe, Mulal llatld, who were suportlng and killing fifty of tbe tribesmen taking 200 prisoners, 500 killed and 600 wounded. BANDIT8 TRICKED BY CLERKS. Train Robbers Overlooked Mall Sack and Are Poorly Paid for Trouble. Spokane. One of the most daring bold-up- s ever attempted on a transcontinental train befell Northern Pacific No. 3 almost within the city limits of Spokane after midnight Saturday night Two masked highwaymen stopped the train at Otis and boarded the engine. 'After a brief encounter with the engineer and fireman the mall car, next to the engine, was detached and one of the highwaymen, taking charge of the engine, the party came on west to Trent where the trainmen were dismissed by the robbers. The bandits then proceeded to within a mile of Yardley, where they proceeded to rob the mall car. The baggage car and the express car were untouched and none, of the passengers was molested. Tricked by the quick wit of mall clerks, little plunder is believed to have been captured by the two men. Warned that the robbers were coming, tbe clerks took advantage of tbe time after the train had been cut in two and threw the local registered sack, packages into a newspaper where they were not noticed. SOLDIERS JOIN SAVAGES. w,r Pastor Fers Hostility to Pope" and Priesthood Among Lower Classes. , are Wts. ' There Milwaukee, places in Rome where It Is not safe for a priest to go, especially at night, and If the Holy Father were to go outside the Vatican Into the streets there is no doubt that his life would be In danger," said the Most Rev. Sebastian G. Messmer. archbishop of Milwaukee, speaking of his recent visit to Rome. "There Is the utmost hostility to the pope and the priesthood among the lower classes, concluded the archbishop. "It Is not political, but Is due to the contemptible, .miserable sheets published there. These attack the pope and all to the Catholic church. They are obscene and degrading and endeavoring to drag everything to their own level." Rooeevelt or Bryan 8tarted Fight, Sayt LaFollette. Lincoln, Neb. Uefore an audience of 0,000 at the Epworth assembly Thursday night. Senator Robert M. La Follette expressed great admiration and friendship for V. J. Bryan, but Inals' ed that he himself wts a The fight against the Republican. railroads to secure lower rates and r.o discrimination, he said, bad been started bnck in the 70s by Wisconsin, Illinois. Iowa and Minnesota. These polieies were not the product of the minds of either Bryan or Roosevelt, be said. Neither member hundred Chicago. Five of Quinn .he's'ln of the congregation one of the leading negro their pastor. city, were told by Re!. D P. Roberts, on Sunday, o be prepared to 6rm themselves and In tbe event homes defend their to that at similar an outbreak here and be men, he surrounds If raging mob raid. household, your home, protect your would ruin and when the man who your family and destroy your threshold, let rrty steps across tbe a dead him step across the, body of S'yourselve. man. He declared y that America Is a to with power which, nation, grant prodefy the world, refuses to defenseless tection to Innocent and removed from people forty years Tams tlavery, because of their color. that vlth the congregation IndicateIn Chithe negroes fear an outbreak cago and are preparing for It. The chief of police, however, declared that the chance of a race war here Is i emote. cow-nrdl- NAVY COSTS NAST SUM. to England May Borrow $500,000,000 Build Mors Ships. London. The British government, according to the Dally Telegraph, contemplates raising a large loan In Mew of the growing naval competition abroad. It Is stated that financiers of the highest standing have undertaken to find $500,000,000 on nominal terms to meet the necessities of the fleet for the next few years without disorganizing the annual budgets or casting a heavy burden upon the present generation. If such & plan Is attempted it will be because It is Impossible to forecast the future requirements of the navy until foreign shipbuilding programmes have crystallised, and the setting aside of this fund would be a declaration translated Into terms ot cash, of the country's Intention to r standard at all maintain & costs. two-powe- KEPT UNDER HEAVY GUARD. Men Under Arrest for the Blocton Shooting. prisCenterville, Ala. Thirty-ononers, arrested n connection with the firing Into a train Sunday at Bloc-toIn which three men were killed and eleven injured, have been lodged in jail and are being kept under heavy guard. Robert Hayes, the only American in the number, who Is president of the Blocton local Miners union, was placed In a cell and heavily guarded. The circuit court will take up the cases two weeks from date. Thirty-on- e e Mutinous Chinese Murder Command"-e- r and Take to the Mountains. Hong Kong. The soldiers stationed at Konghau, near Wuchow, who mutinied and killed their commander because a comrade had been arrested for gambling, have joined the Yaus, a rebellious tribe of aborigines, fierce and warlike, living In the southwest portion of the province of Their home is In a reKilled Woman Who Refuted to Loan Kwangtung. mountains and Inaccessible of gion Loeb on Fishing Trip. Him Two Dollars. have never been subjected to they St. Paul. William Loeb, Jr., secre8L Louis. Thomas DeWttt, 24 governmental control. to President Roosevelt, was ln years old, In an alleged confession Admiral LI has arrived here In his tary St. Paul ca Saturday, the guest of Mr. made to the police, told how he killed flagship, accompanied by gunboats, bis former landlady, Mrs. Adeline torpedo boats and launches. Troops George Thompson, editor of the DisMuller, aged 49 years, at her home. have also been summoned and the patch. Mr. Loeb will return with Mr. 1 did tt not mean to kill her." country is in a turmoil. The muti- Thompson to Camp Koblkana, near Is alleged to have told the po- neers are 1,000 In number, and after International falls, where Mr. Loeb lice. "I stuffed a stocking In her murdering their commander pillaged has been a member of a fishing and mouth because she was trying to the village, In hunting camp with Secretary Oscar $100, ooo securing scream. I was arrald that 1 would money, and withdrew to the Talking Straus for several weeks. Mr. Loeb arrested for disturbing the peace mountains. said he was entirely Ignorant of the if she made a noise." Tbe cause of trend of public affairs, but waxed enthe struggle resulting In Mrs. Muthusiastic about the big fish In the Owes Thirteen Millions. llers death was her refusal to loan lakes ln that region. He declared that Pa. The Scranton, Pennsylvania DeWltt 1 2. he had the time of his life." Coal & Coke company, one of the biggest mining concerns ln the bitumiRevives Story of Massacre. 8uccess of Wireless Telephone. nous fields of western Pennsylvania, The skeleton Jean of' Paris. Winnipeg. The naval lieutenants, Colin, went Into the bands of a receiver on Jeance and Mercer, the Inventors ol Baptiste De La Verandyre and Father of this Edwards city a wireless Aulneau, a Jesuit missionary, and the Saturday. Judge telephone apparatus which skulls of nineteen French voyagers, appointed Thomas H. Watkins as re- recent tests have shown to be superior Scranof on the tbe ceiver, application all of whom were killed by Sioux Into anything existing, achieved remarkbondton for trustee Trust company, diana on the Island In the northwest able success with their new Instrucon angle of the lake woods in 1736, were holders, which alleges that the ment on Sunday, communicating with Its lessee, the Pennsyldiscovered last week 'by a pan of p&ny, through the wireless station at Raz de Seine, priests of St. Boniface college, of vania, Beach Creek & Western Coal department of Flnistere, a distance of renmeet was unable Its to company, Winnipeg, accompanied by about 310 miles. The officers are conJudge Prudbomme. The St. Boniface party tal obligations. W. A. Lathrop, pres fident that they can make great Imintrinthe of the dent company, gives also found the site of Fort St. Charles, provements In the apparatus, enabmore than ling built in 1732 by the great explorer, sic value ot the property at the exchange of conversation up $26,000,000, against a total Indebted Sleur De La Verandyre. to 600 or 700 miles. ness of sep-prat- e l-- about Want Prohibition In Texas. San Antonio, Texas. The Demo-cratl- c prohibition plank Is as follows: We demand submission to the pe pie by tbe thlrty-flrs- t legislature of a constitutional amendment prohibiting Ithln tbe state of Texas the manufacture, sale, girt or exchange of any mterstate shipment of any spirituous, inous or malt liquors or medical bitters capable of producing Intoxication, except for medical and sacramental purposes; that amendment shall be In 1909, and that a vote for br against It shall not be considered a test of Democracy." Aged Rellgloua Maniac Slays His 8on Braved Death to 8ave Babe. and Daughter. Mo. With a mothers disreFulton, Los Angeles. Driven Insane by ot when her babe waa 60 regard H. danger J. mania, Duffy, years ligious old, attacked and killed bla son and In peril, and at the risk of her lire, cut Mrs. J. B. Stephenson, a frail little daughter with an axe, and then his own Ihroat with a razor, Inflict-lu- g woman who lives ten miles southwest fatal Injuries. The tragedy oc- it Fulton, on Friday' lowered herself curred early Thursday morning In nto a 100-fowell, saved her 2the extreme northwestern part of the ear-olchild from drowning and city. Duffy lived at the home of) his tlimbed to the top, the Inrant holding on been has He Fred Duffy. ron, In her teeth by Its dress. The babe the verge of violent Insanity, It is was playing near the top of the well enraid, for weeks from religious tnd stepped off backward, falling Into thusiasm. tcur feet of water at the bottom. Taylor May Return for Trial. Fighting the Tobacco Trust Louisville, Ky. It Is announced on New York. Advices received In friend of former a close of authority Governor W. 8. Taylor that Mr. Tay- this city are that a plant for the manlor will return to Kentucky from In- ufacture of snuff In the dark tobacco dianapolis for trial on a charge ot district has been planned by memcomplicity in the murder of Gov bers ot the Planters Protective assoernor Goebel. During bis canvass ciation, and that the tobacco truat Covernor A. F. Wilson stated that if will soon find Itself up against stiff he was elected Mr. Taylor would cer-- , competition from the farmers of that to for return Kentucky trial, section in a business way. Tbe tainly plant and that he would be given a fall will be erected a company with a trial. Information from Frankfort la capital stock of by 000. The estabthat Governor Wilson baa decided lishment will be3500, located in one ot rot to bring this matter up pendlni the more Important tobacco centers the campaign. In the dark tobacco district. -) d $13,000,000. Tried to Swim English Channel. Died In Quarantine Prison. London. Of the many attempts to Tombstone, Arlz. General D. K. swim the channel none has English afternoon Wardwell died Saturday come nearer resulting In success than while In quarantine with his leper that made by T. W. Burgess, the wife. Her sufferings from the comblacksmith swimmer. Burgess was bined effects of leprosy and the nerto give up his attempt vous strain following the attendant compelled within one mile of Cape Grlsnez, on notoriety of their case has dethroned coast of France, because of the her reason, and she Is totally un- the tide. He entered the water aware that her husband Is dead. adverse at Dover Monday morning, and In General Wardwell waa a veteran ot of the rough Bea and the cur the Mexican and civil wars. Efforts spite rents which carried him miles out of to deport Mrs. Wardwell to the leper his course, he remained In the water colony have brought out many comfor twenty hours and eleven minutes. rethe federal authorities plications, fusing aid. Tired of Llf Richard Croker Denies Having Slandered President Roosevelt Dublin. In an Interview on Sunday, Richard Croker complained of misrepresentations that have been published recently respecting his views of President Roosevelt, and especially a comparison between the president and King Edward and an assertion that President Roosevelt was only at home with his books. Mr. Croker denied David having made arch criticism. Bennett Hill, the former governor ol New York, is on a week's quiet holiday with Mr. Croker. Pitiful Tale of Girl Wife. New York. Mrs. Rose Grazlano, aged 19, walked Into the police station ln Brooklyn, presented a loaded rcovlver to the detective at the court and annltinncd that she had shot Dominick and killed her husband, I killed him Grazlano, a laborer. because ho wanted me to become an Immoral woman," she said. Do you think 1 did wrong?" She then began to weep. She said that her husband tad refused to work, had spent $600 of her money and then requested hei u get more. VWGMliY Chicago. De-Wi- STREETS OP ROME UNSAFE. VISITS WITH ln Louisville, Ky. Alfred T. Wimberly, state manager of the Rankers Life association of Dea Moines, la., and a Insurance man, was found dead In bed at his home Tuesday afternoon. Death was caused by a pistol wound, according to the coroner. A letter found on a table In the room read as follows: 1 am neither drunk nor Insane I have no domestic troubles or bust-nes- s troubles. 1 have committed no crime. I am simply tired of life. I have always had despondent spells, for which my creator Is responsible. " Writer of Short Stories for Children well-know- d Dead. Roston. Mrs. Moulton the well Iniise Lightning. HE simple life la not so simple when a forked streak of lightning plays promiscuously about your domicile, cracking ominously In your ears, blinding your blinking eyes and vowing to get you next time or I bust a tug! wears know that lightning dont really a tug, but Inasmuch as we speak of harnessing it occasionally, I presume the expression Is legitimate. Anyhow, I sat on my front porch for an hour and watched the storm phenomenon. First, there were low mutterlngs In the west, and across the lake, between and froth-cloud- s the trees, nigger-headTbe thunder InIn unison. arose creased and the western sky was torn by chain lightning almost perpendicular In effect. After a while the lightning Increased, the rain fell In torrents and the wind blew. As I watched I saw another storm approaching from the southeast When they met I knew there would be a clash worth witnessing. When they did meet I forgot all about the phenomenon! Crash after crash rent the sky, and then came a smashing clap of thunder preceded by the lightnings stroke! There was a rending noise and every chandelier The electric In the house rattled. lights winked ominously and my wife came running down stairs to tell me the house had been struck! We looked for fire while the hall battered and the wind blew but there was no fire, and after the storm we found the roof was uninjured. Next Mike, the gardener, dismorning, covered the lightnings mark. A huge elm was struck 30 feet from tbe ground and a slab completely ripped from the trunk. Tbe flying bolt missed the house by such a narrow chance that it prompted Mike to remark: If yez think thot was cluss yes oughta bin with me wanct! It was rainin cats and dogs and Ol crawled under a box car-- r and sat there sniekln me, pipe, I did. All to wanct there was a turrlble crash. Th light-nistruck th rail, b gorry, runned along th steel and clipped me pipe outen me mouth, as slick as yes breakin ut In three pieces! But It never burted me a tall, a tall Now what d yez think o that?" I remained undemonstrative. continued Michael, taAn, king a hard brace, an th suspenders on me was all tored off, me pants but tons was melted right where they sth-ooan b Harry, me shirt was turned wrong side out!" I coughed slightly. , , An me here Mike paused, stunned at his inability to impress roe an th silt ln th back, ye know, was on me breast, an th tails, taking a sly glance at me from the corner of one eye, was clean up around me neck, while th but Ol was standln on me head though!" as he caught me grinning. "That was a bad storm, Mike. I commented, dryly. Urn. yls," coincided Mike, suspiciously, as I continued to smoke my pipe ln silence. s n pie-eas- an" -- - Calling. Mn ai WU.W No. For nokth-bouHT'-'- SS Provo, PLOrov i... Palatial train ar qov ren Salt Uk tnd UTAH COUNTY th, great elites. Beet I.,? tnTufL N- - I, lui PsTasx, Depot Q iftrfwM Arrival sad leperture ot tr!a. For No. f-- tut No. N VS ierrcftTi!..M.0lh N er Chy'' NemJniTi; j OPTER3 CHOICK OF H FIST THROUGH AND mijIStm DISTINCT SCENIC low Putman Polar tnd ordinary Denver, Otnebs, Kanass city. Sl lL?!. Chicago without chania Free Reclining Chair Cam: iw,,., J vioi4 ,Esurhm'i Perfect For rates, folder, etc , Inquire of 11. T MATTBIWi, Tick or write L A. BENTON, I 1 O.A. P.D.,SaltUkiQ? DR. N. C. SPALI VETERINARY RHYSICU AND SVRGEON Office al Palace Drvj Store, Both Phcni. Make regular call to Spanish Office at World Thursday. . HORSE Tot Drui INFIRMAf $ At the eld Oran Lewi corner, cq V villa read. Spanish Fork, Utah, X Sg Boca Spavin and Pipe ei Festal tta or no pay. X Crippled tnd lame km specialty. X All I .irnal examined n charge. Look well to your berm' ttctk from them come many diaeaaca "Lin 1st live" la my motto J. A BK Thoutanda of acre of lui beeu reclaimed to cnltlTatfre I irrigation in that Sum iii the put 10 year. Tkow more will bo reclaimed M the neit lOyeare. TUiaa an openlug for of many tbouu hornet. Havb You Investigated IDAHO! It baa been truthfully termed i Land of Opportunity A Land of Homes The Oregon Short Line Railroad will be pleased to irndoracriptif F 1 ter regarding Idaho's resource. to D. E. Burley, G. P. - or D. E V cer. A. G. P. A., Salt take City, f4 And the river babbles, tmhtdeg On Its way acroas the land Where the hook of plenty In the sturdy gleaner's hand:glistens And the harvest fields are Kar as human eye can see.golden With the sky above me And the cattle on the lea. Spanish And the lord who rules ttie acres From a eottHge on the erest, la a stalwart knight of labor, Itorn and nurtured of the West. Ah. his creed Is pure and simple-Ji- mt the honeet of toll, h8 hal,h snd humble V'2!h That are garnered of the soil. blessing Institution ( A- Go-Opera- Fork tivs blue-dom- General Merchandise! Flour, Grain and Produce. O tfsanfeotureri of Harness, Ah, tt call me loftly, aoftly, A a mother croons her song 0- -- 'j Dealers la I Calls me always and forever Calls me eoftly, calls me Ion. Oh, ye great unwieldy city, your coW ,n'1 moiling mart. You hava won my blood and slnew ' But the country ha my heart) C Boots tad Shoes. JOHN JONES, Spanish Fork Supt- - No Utopia Yet. never be an alsolute country until a young bachelor can buy a pair of variegated socks on Saturday night and secure a truthful warrantee that the big toe on the forward foot will not break through the end thereof before the following Sunday evening. 0-- Smoke Up. Uopla W!l?, Id Chandler known authoress, Ye editor to v her,homo h(r Monday after Mt thanks wishes to Mr. Truce 't mJ.i, " .f n?rly nlnp n,onths. Mrs our leading grocers, Caleb for three n.'mndt f was duo to amta butter Uir" kindly sent to hla oil had been ovlr jono the butte? born at Inmfret, Conn.. In 1835. she neeU.y pr:v''n,ln'' " ..lc, but w, are married VMlIlnm IT. Mnlton In 1835 worrying along with It and tryln to tm Her husband died ten years ago. She arR n"mh,'r of Kll,,rt stories i fWfcn en, as well ns a novels and poems. She number of years of her life In London. whw5h! became well known In literary cycles I I . BDrlnfTtlle.Prove.Sdt end an punts J, I or H prlngrllle Prove Saute'S 1 I Mots east end vil, I can hear the plover piping Over all the city din. I can aee the turtle running Ere he allpa and splutter In: And the meadowlark In calling Where the ehade In ntill and deep In the land of Where the world Is iiuir asleep! 0,1 J1" rlv,,r lrown the cable And the clash of wheels. And the nectar of cogging the woodland Through the fetid osone steals T ,,h..hart ha !on for freedom fret at stones-call- ing tTfel to the country Where the limpid water drone. " t The . Best Bargain la r sad log tter money can buy ii y01 per. It keep you poateo doings of th community. E This Paper will tell yon th thing yoji to know In an entertain1! will give you 11 th 0,w,i, fm community; it prove a pleasure; it g F than full vlut fox th asked for it '"7' |