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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS 1 FAVOII LOCAL OPT Blsha Warner, Publisher SPANISH FORK . . . UTAH ' CF FORCE , HABIT UNIONS IN POLITICS ' ;'' : THE UTAH BUDGET Three hundred boxes of premium apples are to 1b divided among patrons of the' state fair at "the' close ol " ! "1 j the fair. f ?;;. was thrown 9, Frank' Anderson, aged from a horse at Richmond, his skull feting crushed. Ho is In ' a precarlouj ' ' condition." Over 6,000 people attendod the funeral services at the. Tabernacle In Salt Lake City on Sunday of Mrs, Bathsheba Wilson Smith. , Thomas Reedor was run down by an automobile on the main street ol Ogden and badly Injured. The Joyriders made their escape. Ducks and other water fowls In the atate of Idaho are not affected with the disease that has been raging among the game birds of Utah. The body of the man who was killed on the railroad track near Colton on September 17, was burled on Sunday without having been identified. Rev. Elmer I. Goshen, pastor of the First Congregational church In Salt Lake City, is planning to conduct a free employment bureau In his church. A site has been selected for Salt Lake City's proposed $SOO,000 high achool building, a tract of eleven acres on the east side of the city, having been purchased While waiting for a street car In Salt Lake City, Edward Harlow, aged 6, was stricken by heart failure and died while being taken to the emergency hospital. To stimulate the smaller industries throughout California and Nevada, the Salt Lake Route has made a voluntary reduction In its freight tariffs, la effect October 1. Mrs. Mary L. Dillingham, aged 69, fell from a street car In 8alt Lake City, in attempting to alight from the car while It was In motion, sustaining Injuries which resulted in her death. ' Mike McKlnley Is In an Ogden hospital suffering from Innumerable cuts and abrasions as a result of being assaulted while passing through the railroad yards, presumably by highwaymen. A complete yeggman's outfit for blowing safes has been found by a farmer at Kaysvllle in his barn. It Is believed the outfit was left there while the owners located a safe to be robbed. ' ' With the end in view of trying to settlers to locate In Utah, tb Salt Lake Route will issue within a few week sone of. the handsomest booklets ever published by a railroad In this part of the country. , The "Boy Scout" movement, started In England some years ago by Sir Baden-Powella ot have a Salt Lake an chapter, , , The Boy Scouta have 1 Art AAA In A m n UL nr. tVian v t Mil BUlUlllUVUb luvtv iwuvju .u ana are dvu.uuu neany strong England In America. The first sample records recently taken of the famous Salt Lake tabernacle organ and choir by the Columbia Phonograph company, have been completed and people In every clime will soon be able to Judge of the merits I of that eicellent organization. whosus-talne19 Carl Esivls, aged years, a slight injury to the left toot t tha Murratf smelters, developing 'Into peritonitis, la dead., , The . infection of the Injured foot is said to have been accompanied by a general break flown Of hU physical condition. ' ; Governor William 8pry Is quoted as Being neartuy in lavor 01 a proposition made by Governor M. E. Hay of Washington to call another conservation congress to discuss the movement, as it applies particularly to the western, mountain and coast states. On Monday the delegates to the . Good. Roads convention, at Ogden constructed, with their own hands and the aid of picks and shovels, half a mile of macadam road, the "first stretch of the new road connecting Cheyenue, Salt Lake and Boise City. rate from Lot The regular first-clas- s Angeles to Salt Lake will be reduced October 1. from 30 to 125. Between T aha t h a rata Quit Cm cvAKnirtA .mv. M MH.i. riNUllDbU an,f Dull will fall from $30 to. 123.58, The new of complaints schedule Is the result " made by tne Salt Lake Commercial ' Club.' A wave of prosperity Is spreading over the hamlet of Union, about three miles southeast of Murray. Progres sive citizens there ot late have been going about among the property ownera, and ways and means are being planned , for a water distributing " , , Decide Against the Direct Primary and ' Renominate Joseph Howell for Congress and O. N. 8traup for Justice of the Supreme Court ' ' in-lu- l, .? u against the direct primary. Joseph Howell was renominated by congress, and D, N. Straup will again be the party's cundldate for Justice ot the supreme court, to succeed hlmsei.. Senator Reed Smoot was chairman n FORCED DEFEAT OF REGULARS CROSSES ALPS IN AEROPLANE "Progressive" Movement Has Brought Daring Peruvian Aviator Accomplishes Most Wonderful Feat, But Meets About the Retirement of Twenty-eigh- t Disaster at End of Flight Republican Stand-patter- d IRRIGATIONIST8 IN COLORADO. To date the Washington. movement has brought about the defeat or voluntary retirement of twenty-eigh- t Republican members of the bouse who were conspicuous as the defeat regulars and stand-patters- , of one Republican regular United ' States senator, the voluntary retirement of six senators, the nomination of candidates for governor in two Republican states, the elimination ot Jo seph G. Cannon as a serious candi as speaker, the date for nomination by primaries of two can- didates for United States senator in states regarded as safely Republican, Sherman the defeat of in his own ward and district as a candidate for delegate to the New York state convention, and the deieat ot Senator Gallinger of New Hampshire, one of the stand-pa- t leaders, as a candidate for delegate to his state conVice-Preside- . vention. National Irrigation Congress Opens at Pueblo "With Large Attendance. With the raising of the great headgate of the welcome arch at the entrance to the' exposition grounds.' through which the big Industrial parade passed, the Irrigation exposition was thrown open to the public and the boards were cleared for the convening of the eighteenth National Irrigation congress Monday afternoon. V ' Delegates are here from every state Interested In Irrigation. . .. i The only grain of comfort for states rights advocates In water distribution at Tuesday's sessions of the congress meeting was the'address of Frank C. Goudy of Denver, who advocated, larger private and state holdings in Irri- ' gation projects. Determined oposltion developed at the caucus to the proposed recommendation for an appropriation of $1,-0- ( 0,000 annually from the funds of the r clamatlon service for use in gauging . '.' streams. - The committee appointed at the Spokane congress to arrange a .Irrigation congress reported progress,' but advised the congress that circumstances made It Inadvisable to hold such a congress In 1911. The committee was instructed to con i tlnuelts work.. Pueblo, Colo. SENATOR DICK HAS FIGHT. His Opponents . Declare They Will , Ignore Verdict of Primary. O. Republican candCleveland, idates to the legislature from 7 Cuyahoga county (Cleveland). In a meeting here have passed resolutions pledging themselves to vote against Sena, . tor Charles Dick's reelection. Senator Dick was the only person who complied with the primary, law . n M Conservation and Pinchot Policy Discussed by Mining Men. Los Angeles, " Cal Conservation, Plnchot's policy, and Nevada silver as the aavlor of the natloa from the killing , Industrial competition of the Orient, all received an unexpected Introduction during a portion of the opening session on Monday of the American Mining congress, which was to have been devoted exclusively to laudatory platitudes by delegates In praise of their various states.:' , Governor J. N. Gillett of California ws not here to take his part ot welcoming, the visitors on behalf of the state, and Alden Anderson, state bank commissioner, officiated in his stead. President Buckley of the congress called the first session to order and Mayor George Alexander welcomed the delegates on behalf of the city of Loa Angeles. . , , plant Resolutions demanding the enactGeorge Simpson, a cement worker ment of employers' liability laws that a as result at Devil's Slide, is dead will have the effect of rendering mine of a blow over . the head with a .bil and heads of other indusoperatorsliard cue, and his slayer, Art Aldrich, tries more cautious and thus protect Is held by the sheriff of Morgan coun- the lives of their men, constituted one ty under a charge of first degree mur- of the main subjects for discussion in der. the resolutions committee on TuesThe Agricultural college at Logan day. x bpran the school year on September """ Crlppen Charged With Murder. It 20, with the brightest prospect "after has had In its history. More student . London. Thi. coroner's ,Jury, one hour's deliberation, brought in have presented themselves for regisCora that verdict the Mrs, ever tration u the opening day than s t Crlppen known on the stage as'lk-ll- Elmore, ' before. had been willfully murdered by her the Wilson Bathsheba Smith, Mrs, Dr. Hawley II. Crlppen, an Saint who huHbnnd, last surviving Latter-daAmerican dentist '1 1 took the endowment in the Nauvoo the of Return to Washington. temple, one of the pioneers church and the first president of the house The. cabinet Washington. Relief society, died at her rome in party at the 'White House Is In full Salt Lake City, September 20, at the swing. Eight of the nine members ot j age of 88. the president's official family moved in Monday. . i - . , For the first time In of railway unions, memthe history bers and deelgates, representing 308,-00- 0 men of the four great divisions ot railway employees In the east, voted meeting here on unanimously, at-action in concerted take to Sunday, nAtinnal and state politics. ', ' ' "The proper place to settle ques tions affecting labor Is at the uaiiot box," said Warren S. Stone of Cleveland, O., grand chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. "Whatever your political affiliations, do not Jet party lines blind you to your true interests or prevent you from doing what you think is best and right. See that the men you vote for stand for the right principles, regardless of party, and support those men who meet the requirements, and you will not only be doing the best thing for yourselves, but for the public. "This is not a political move at all, as Is generally understood, but a move to get away from the old lines of par' tisan politics." ' .. In pursuance of this plan, the meet ing voted to send out a series of eight questions to state and national candidates, oarticularly to candidates for the legislature and house of represent atives, asking for a definition or tneir attitude on the universal adoption of safety appliances and an employers' liability law where such does not already exist company pensions for superannuated employees, hours of labor, and other matters of kindred in- Domodossola, Italy. The great feat Alpine of crossing the barrier between Switzerland and Italy In a heavier than air machine was accomplished on Friday by George Chaviz, the young Peruvian aviator. The plucky hero of the exploit, however, lies in the Domodossola hospital badly injured as the result ot an accident that occurred Just as he had completed the most arduous and portion ot the task. Both his legs are broken, his left thigh Is fractured and his body Is badly contused, but physicians are of the opinion fbat these hurts will not prove fatal. The accident occurred as Chavez was trying to make a landing here. The Alps had been crossed success fully and the aviator was descending with the power of his machine cutoff. When about thirty feet above the ground, a sudden gust of wind seemed to catch the monoplane which turned over and felL When the crowds that had been watching the descent ran up they found Chavez lying bleeding and twisted beneath the unconscious wreckage. Willing hands lifted the aviator from the ground and bore him to the hospital. Fifty miles away and over country that has none of the hazards of the Alps lay Milan, the goal Chavez was seeking in an endeavor to win a prize of $20,000 offered by the Italian Avia tion society for the flight. Chavez had lost the race. Aviator Din From Injuries. Domodossola, Italy. George Chavez, the Peruvian aviator who was in jured In alighting after his flight over the Alps, died at 2:25 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. snow-cappe- nerve-rackin- d g terest , PLAN FOR BETTER ..'. ROADS. . ' Aec KAftMuaU W - . "A " delegates. Saratoga, ROOSevelt N. Y.-- fri,l, Jt """" Wnn another YC Tuesday when he defeated V Z. man of the Republican tlon,.by a vote of President . BG , Sherman accent orm . introduced Rooselvelt to the delees- t- . Twice, the state comn,; the old guard dominance, hail uo i "uiua tor trie floor on Tuesday. -.In control of the quickly named pojli on the uver-nuae- n convent commltteei 0t choosing, Including the come, resolutions, wnich will draft form, embodying the direct i,..n .v., rriucu me IlKHllIlK- - Defeat of the old guard li skirmish was followed h, from the Sixth Klnes mm, lyn) district turning agaioJ - , wiiRirraan woodruff and el. in his stead at at the committee. Tt Is said that another di, nlm. but as the pm will control the new comn, will be retired as chairman, still leader of Brooklyn. Ellhu Root. United State from this state, was celmef manent chairman of the con i lie vuii venuuu wag Dljl hoots and hisses as the Roosevelt addressed gates. ADranam Gruber, i v lawyer, made a particularly tvass re-eie- tack. Enthusiastic Convention of Intermoun-tai- n Colonel Roosevelt In I Good Roads Association. 0: spoke against political and Ogden, Utah. The convention ol corruption In characteristic the Intermountaln Good Roads associapraised the admlnlstra'loD dent Taft and Governor Hu tion held in this city was well attended and It is believed lasting arffl bene . William Barnes, Jr, o clal results were attained. Pocatello, leader of the old guard, Issn Idaho, secured the 1911 convention, ment Tuesday night, imm while the 1912 meeting will be at Lo- net Roosevelt, as he hu d ' gan, Utah. tofore, and praising those o E. R. Sherman of Buhl, Ida., was guard who stood firm. Hi unanimously president of RIOTING IN BERLIN fee the organization and William Wallia of Pocatello, Ida., was chosen to fill ' the office of secretary and treasurer. Clash Between Police and! an " Results In Many Broken The aelectrbn of wal left to the various state delegations, Berlin. Collisions belief which will report later. and rioters occurred in til evening. precinct Tuesday .1.1Unearthed a Tragedy. mJ -. I t .u J mjuieu uu uuiu Blues, mei Longmont Colo. A revolver and the u shoe, protruding from an old hay districts presented city. besieged stack which had been set on fire by Thousands of strikes and William Martin, a ranchman living near here, led to the discovery of a path leer's gathered in tne A skeleton believed to be that of A. H. soon aa darkness fell mounted and 500 foot pol Barker, Martin's stepson, with revolvers and swords, who disappeared In December, 1906. at various quarters. tioned It Is believed tne burrowed that Shot Man Instead of Deer. boy from the comic under orders into the haystack and committed suiUtica, N. Y. Dispatches received a exert Bevere repreashe cide. The on was which the stack, here tell of the death of Timothy and to use the sharp edg Martin place, had been set on fir Healy ot Utica. a wealthy business to swords instead of striking out .", of the , get it way. man who was shot by his guide while flat hunting near Racquette lake in the The police charged time Bryan Roasts Roosevelt Adlrondacks late Tuesday. and Healy Mo. William J. Bryan wounding many. Men wore a brown khaki hunting suit and In Springfield, a speech here Saturday, devoted windows hurled missiles it was mistaken for a deer. . much time to the speeches delivered who replied with reo! w by Colonel Theodore Roosevelt In Scorea of arrests were To Settle Labor Troubles. San Francisco. With a complete Europe. Referring to the Government Gets tht Ba utterance In regard to English understanding between employers and New York. Under a i union representatives labor differences rule in Egypt in his speech in Guild Hit on Tuesday by H dered Mr. Bryan said: "This in this city hereafter will be submit- hall, Lonaon, Uu and, com- the federal court, the ted to the San Francisco Industrial utterance is from the ing the government will gain vi of hi: conciliation board, a permanent places or la Plncl of the In people a country wrong the $20,000 deposited ganization, which was formed Friday. P. W. Neely. as cash ball ir.g n: The board consists of twelve emolov- - light, as no one stands with him." on t he was accused of embeizl ers and twelve labor delegates. Cholera in Naples. ore while he was In charge of the ci Rome. Official Dementia Caused by Overwork. announcement Is bureau of the postofflce i After a struEele with Ms made that one case of Asiatic cholera Havana during the first Atj 'onaps Chicago. Bnnaj. wife, who sought to save him, Archi- has been found In Naples. It Is said cupatlon. Jable bald J. McKillop, an official of the Illl- - all who were In contact with the dis Witl a. Thi ease have been Isolated Policeman and Charged further nois Central railroad, leaned from Colon trM second-storwindow of his home and orastic measures taken. Bristol. Tenn.-T- he he un was dashed to death on the pavement M. Walk, a former Bristol Six Victims of Wreck. below. Mr. Klllon had been III 'fnr with having nm Ind. Six bodies of victims charged 'rome some time. His illness was caused of Tipton, a fellow poi ton Childress, the Interurban wreck here were Altho overwork. by taken to their homes on Sunday for seven years ago, began ?fonie burial. It Is said all the Injured will ville on Tuesday. 'wife Show Closes Coal Mine. recover. Kansas Murdresi Terre Haute, Ind. A wild now Sultan of Sulu in Washington. show was the cause of closlne Pii.t Toiieka. Kan. Miss I Piratic coal mines In the Linton district, Washington, Janialul ckerla KIram II, eon, serving a twenty-Tuesday. Two thousand miners em- sultan of Sulu. with five members of tence for killing Mrs. " ber ployed In the mines Insisted on at- his suite, reached Washington Sunday Eldorado. Kan., June 22, ' stoei Gov tending the show, and the only course nlsht from New York. The sultan rolod on Tuesday by tolle( left was to close down. ThP minu will endeavor to make a White House r o l H are several weeks behind with orders. appointment for some day Nevada Still ftn, during 'the Mi ts u-- . . , Shermifl, Cin, the "Old Guard , f a MINING CONGRESS. Vice-Preside- -- (Copyright, 1110.) CHi, DECSIVEVoTr New York. , high-license- CHOSEN TEMPORARY OF STATE - Ogden, Utah. The Republicans ot the state of Utah, In convention in this city on Monday, went on record as being in favor ot local option, and of the convention. In his speech, Senator Smoot lauded the national administration, argued for local option, strict regulation and high license and denounce dprohlbl-tkas a farce, U . The platform, which consumed six hours of deliberation by the committee on platform and resolutions, provides that counties outside of Incorporated cities and towns shall vote aa units upon the liquor question; that cities and towns may exercise the right to vote npon the question of prohibition or and strictly-regulatesaloons. And the platform binds the Republican legislature to carry out such a law. The platform approves the administration of President Taft; congratulate the people upon the splendid record made by . the congressional delegation from .Utah J endorses the work ot the state administration; favors the ratification by the coming leglilature of the proposed Income tax amendment to the constitution; calls attention to the splendid good roads laws enacted by the last legislature, and favors national aid as provided by the Howell bill introduced In congress; favors the proposed amendment making It legal for this atate to appropriate a small portion of ' state taxes for the support of high schools; as well as favoring local option and opposing the direct primary. , - AN Declare It Is Not a Political Move, But a Move to Get Away From the old Lines of Partisan politics. )'... v . EMPLOYEES FORM ALLIANCE TO PROTECT THEIR INTERESTS. , RAILWAY UTAH REPUBLICANS BELIEVE IN EACH COMMUNITY HANDLING LIQUOR QUESTION. CHARLES DICK. United States Senator from Ohio. and therefore Is the sole senatorial candidate, but his opponents declare they will Ignore the primary. Senator Theodore Burton has already announced that he will take no part In the election. regulations "American" Party Names Candidates. Salt Lake City. Allen T. Sanford of Salt Lake City, for congressman, and John A. Street, of Salt Lake City, for Justice of the Supreme court were the candidates named at the "Ameri can" party convention, on Saturday. A complete county and precinct ticket was also placed In the field by the Salt Lake county "Americans." Frenchmen and Britons Objected. Paris. It is understood here that the English syndicate headed by Sir Ernest Cassel has abandoned the ne gotiations or a loan or f.lO.OOO.OOO to Turkey in deference to the objections of France and Great Britain. 1 y , J Carson, Nef.-lministration and W"! Town Narrowly Escaped Destruction. Death Due to Poison. Haltlniore. Charges of, Inc.mtpe-tencBisbee, Ariz. The tire at .Wo, nine Neb. The body of Kimer Omaha, and misconduct wore preferred miles from here, which raced fur H. Hrvson. RO vonro . ..i.i ., com" local board of police hours, threatening the complete de against the pninuuent was citizen, found In one of the city ot hers ou struction or trie place, was missioners by Governor finally ex- ' 1,1 18 ni)uted w po son, tinguished with a loss of only $:!o,ontr self Saturday. ad ministered. Domestic Trouble Costs Two Lives. Baltimore Loses Sixth Place. Child Accidentally Slain. Cleveland. O. Biuso' of efforts by Washington. Haltlniore, which was Colo. Rosin nu0r Denver, h. her mother to force her to abandon Blxth city in the United States in Muel-lt-r- , of Paul with daughter of a ranch- ber acquaintanceship point population In 19oo. h..a '" "ving on the outskirts of Denver, a friend of her husband, Mra. her position In the country's great was accidentally shot shot Distel and killed at and Instantly cities, according to census statistics, Iawrence m killed Mueller and then shot herself, aim now oeconies seventh city huv her parents' home bv Kurt Ing been outstripped by Cleveland, o! years old, a boarder. dying shortly afterward. Mrs. Sankey Dead. New Minister to Panama. Into Hands of Receiver. New Panama. Thomas C. Dawson, the ... Boston, Mass. The Kailnnoi Frances Victoria Jl new United States minister to Pan Ing Exploration company filed a vol- Sankey. w dow of ir n U8tl was who here n in arrived bankrunt untary ama, petition dl,d eary Sunday Friday, p.. celved Saturday afternoon by Acting day with liabilities ot $393,000 and asi seta of $23,800. President Mendoia. "ed to Mr. Sankey in 1863. Shake-u- p Due In Baltimore. y d i. seven-year-ol.- 1 ni nS eTf the "1 imSHHll by tiipriaiirrs were Indorsed Tuesday H llcan state convention tion of the Payne-Aldricwas not mentioned. Franklin, Blu h lH 1." hi Dent br eif te Dn collect Nomina' Pa.-r- etcr h has succeeded Josepn v. tot publican nominee 19" Ilia Ttuonlv-fllirhta statement announcing him $50 to obtain the h treat on. Firemen Seriously llmiutntv Texas. Whi'l lira In tha rtebr 18 Ol b Transfer company'! was. burned Tuesday firemen were serlousu scalded by an exploit r.ho oiaij Medal c era x at A Sf nun tiion hich |