| OCR Text |
Show ' ATCH WAV XXV. VOL 1IEKE11 CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, JANUARY , i 191 1. 43 NO i OPERATORS WILL REFUSE FROM OLD TO NEW TO RECOGNIZE ISLAND SAYS REBEL LEADER White Mine Managers District in billion DOLLARS WORTH of PRODUCTS, FIVE BILLION DOLLARS CASH INCOME, FOR COMPROMISE TO be Treated with contempt EY CENERAL Still King, With Cotton Next, Wheat, Oats and Potatots Following No Prospect of Lower Food Prices, y Nothing Less Than the Fall of Huerta and His Banishment From the Coun.ry Will be Considered by Rebel Leader. Hay, Ten billion dollars products, $5,000,000 000 of jsh income a bumper year in spite (droughts and other setbacks is the Washington ChiliUi'lm.i, forth of record (13 of 6,000,000 most successful year of husban-the United States brought forth l!l 1)100,000,000 worth of crops, of which was 00 11396,000,0 represented by treals and $3,650,000,000 worth of CopyriKht i sold and slaghtered and animal roducts. The value of the 1913 crop FECERflS FLEE IS PMC twice as great as that of 1899; more DEMANDS INQUIRY INTO .urn a billion dollars over 1909 and FROM PURSUING P.ECELS THE MC82INS CF MOYER ibstantially greater than 1912. Of all je crops, however, it is estimated that farms per cent will remain on there they were produced and that 20 Closely Pressed Federals Cross the Attorney For Western Federation of jj cent of the animal production will American Line, Only to be Driven aia. On that basis the cash income Miners to Appear Before Grand Back by Soldiers. estimated by the department of Jury. Moyer Shot in Back. y aui-oil- a & at $5,847,000,000. despite a record year of crop although the record of products has fallen and the fact that the But slue farms has increased 11 per 1910 until there are esti-ateto be 6,600,000 farms in the wntry, the department in a discussion the subject made public Monday lies not take the view that a lower ns! of living will follow as a consciumber of since d ence with a value of $1,692,000,000, per cent of the value of crops, although the volume was un-the record. The other principal :ops, with values, are given in the which they come: Cotton, hay, $787,000,000; wheat the ugest crop ever raised In this coun-i- j Com, umprised 28 or-wi-n $798,-0,00- $610,000,000; oats, , $440,000,000; $228,000 000; tobacco, $122,-00- 0; ratoes, barley, $96,000,000; sweet sugar beets, Louisiana cane Sugar, rye, $26,000,000; rice, $22,000,-B- , $43,009,000; nh $26,-,00- flax seed, $21,000,000; hops, buckwheat, $10,000,000. Woman Blackmailer Captured. A five-yesearch for alleged to have writ-- J hundreds of letters to profession-people of this city defaming the aracters of prominent women and ading letters to others demanding irious sums of money on pain of Mth in the event of refusal, ended Way when detectives arrested Mrs. I Christman, wife of a plumber. She d to have made a complete con-Oakland, Cal. woman who is u of Mad "Magician, Cincinnati, Ohio. Robert Maloney, magician, who registered at a lead-ihotel under his stage name of J. Willard, shot and killed his wife, Mo, and Frances, his lighter, while they slept early Mon-Maloney then rushed from the in his and ran Peking down the street to the bridge, where he was Crime ? 1 under-garment- Presidio, Tex. The northern of the Mexican federal army apparently was utterly demoralised Monday night. With its dead and wounded stretched over the hills and some of its soldiers fleeing In a panic across the United States border, only to bo pushed back again, the 4,000 federals w ho had made a dramatic retreat from Chihuahua to Ojinaga, the little Mexican village opposite here, were scattered in all directions as a result of their first battle with the rebels. Forty-twhundred rebels sent by Gen. Francisco Villa from Chihuahua literally sent terror through the fedur al ranks. Their flight was preceded by a three hours battle, begun after dark, in which the rebels, marching through the deep canyons south ot Ojinaga, completely wiped out the federal outposts. The news of defeat at La Mula pass and La Mulato, giving the rebels an unobstructed pass to within firing distance of Ojinaga itself, caused a frenzied retreat among the federals. About four hundred of them plunged into the liver to seek pafety on the American side. They were forced back again by Major McNamee, commander of the American forces. In the A mutiny also developed Ojinaga forts. General Salazar and General Orozco, believing their men were about to desert, stood with drawn revolvers, threatening to shoot those who did not obey. A number of tbs federals fell at the feet of their generals. divi-sio- o Suffrage Leader Dying. New York. As the result of a fall two weeks ago and complications that followed, Mrs. Lillie Devereux Blake, for many years a leader of the woman's suffrage movement, is dy- ing at a sanitarium. Sterling, state department agents, went to San Domingo to observe ' fecent elections, have made a re-which generally seems to show d the voting was conducted with dess on the first at least. a v i - 'i'' which a handed over to the keeping of french embassador at Rome, hed here Monday and was placed in the Breera gallery. Dies. Christiania, The Right Norway. ' Anton Christian Bang, bishop of istlania and of the Nor-clurc- primate died Monday. He'was Trial Set for January 12. of City. An agreement as been reached whereby the fcmf of Dr. B. Clarke Hyde, 2 trial with the murder of Thomas wope, a millionaire philanthro-wil- l begin here January 12. Slay J Apex Mine Searched But Mexican Murderer Not Found. Salt Lake City. The Tribune Sunday morning printed a story to the effect that a secret and fruitless search for the body of Lopez, the Mexican bandit, wag made in the Andy workings of the Apex mine, Sat urday night. The searchers are said to have spent three hours In the mine, searching the likely places for the body of the Mexican, afterward leaving as they had entered and replacing the bulkhead. Nothing was found changed, according to the two members of the party interviewed. No evidence that the Mexican bad been in the mine since the bulkheads were put there was found. It is said, except numerous candle ends that might have been left by him or by miners and S'ik '' J i A fr'i 6 . 's 111 Nairobi. Hurt in Trolley Collision, Los Angeles, Cal Two were fatalothers, all ly Injured and thirty-twmore Christmas merrymakers, were rear-ena In hurt or less seriously street car collision in Garvanza, a suburb, late Thursday night. Family Killed. New Yon. Henry Knell, his wife young children were and their found dead in their bods at Glendale, L. I. the mother with a bullet through her head, the father and children suffocated by gas. Water Famine at Montreal. Montreal Zero weather Sunday in creased the suffering caused by the water famine here. Many big build tags, including two hospitals, put out their fires because they could get no water for thpir steam boilers. Judge Shot by Tramp. To Separate Siamese Twin. St. Charles, Mo Henry C. Dartwin Siamese girls, a Paris. month old, who are joined face to ker, former county judge of St Charface by a strip of flesh more than les county, Missouri, was shot and an inch thick between their stomachs, dangerously wounded by a tramp to drive from a have been brought to Paris to be sep- whom he attempted nrhnnlhnitne near SL Charlea a operation. Canadian Author Dies. Brookville, OnL Dr, Henry J. Mor gan, an authority on Canadian biography and the author of Canadian Men and Women of the Time and nu merous works dealing with Canadian hftsonr died Saturday. francisco. Crackmen tunneled cet and pierced the concrete f the First National Bank of 6 vault some time between t time Saturday and Monday 8 They obtained $3,700. Fire at Prison. Fe, N. M. Fire in the New 1 8tate penitentiary, one mile -- anta Fe, Monday, destroyed 6 the main office building ae cellhouse. The damage U ,'ated at $15,000. is FOR LOPEZ. C- of Sweden, who la 01- - Tunnel Into Bank Vault. S? SEARCH o d ' arated by surgical - -5 h Washington. Ert;-- e to Calumet, Mich. Uncompromising adherence to tlieir determination titter by direct or indirect tueaus to recognize the Western Federation o, Mluers was pronounced Tuesday by mine managers of the copper strike district, who were willing to discuss the tislt here of John B. Deusinore, solicitor of the department of labor The fact that Mr. Deusinore had announced his mission as one of con- riliatlou, made most of the employers tlieir heads dubiously, e coud not treat with the fed eratiou even if we wished, said F W- manager ot the Copper Kungu Consolidated company. The ait?u at work would jiever consider employment underground with meiu-cus- s brs ot tl union, for there would al ways be lrouble- - aud h view of the fact that men are working for 1,10 companies, we cannot ignore tlieir interests. FEARFUL BLIZZARD IN EUROPE. Many Fatalities From Reported From Spain and Portugal. Paris. France and the greater part of Europe are experiencing the bitBlizIn a decade. terest year-enzards and floods have done great damage inland and gales of exceptional violence have ravaged the coasts. In Spain and Portugal cold has caused numerous deaths. In the south of France the temperature has registered some degrees below zero, Mount fahrenheit. in Vesuvius, Italy, Is covered with a mantle of d white. Germany is now In the grip of storms, and in many places, including Berlin, there have been heavy snowfalls. In France and southwest Europe the railroads are out in many places and this section practically Is isolated so far as telegyaphlo communication Is concerned. Conditions are at their worst In southern and central France, which usually are favored by mild winters. Scores of villages which ordinarily never see snow now are'eut off. The suffering of the poor is intense and deaths from exposure are common. Chicago. An appeal investigate conditions in the copper BANDITS TO BE SMOKED OUT. country of Michigan was made Sunday by the Chicago Federation of Labor, in resolutions, which directly Kentucky Officer'! Will Adopt Plan Tried fn Utah. charged owners of the mines and their agents with being responsible for the Ptaeville, Ky. Tom Hendrickson, tragedy of Christmas eve. when seven- father of Happy Jack Hendrickson, ty-two children and adults lost their leader of the mountaineers who sevlives. eral days ago sought refuge in an abandoned ral mine near here after Called. Editor Kentucky a battle with a sheriffs posse, enLouisville, Ky. Col. Robert Mor- tered the mine Tuesday In an effort row Kelly, for more than fifty years to induce his sons and their coma prominent member of the Kentucky panions to come out and surrender to bar and managing editor of the Louis- the military authorities. ville Dally Commercial from 1870 to Tom Hendrickson was taken from iS97, died Sunday. the Ptaeville jail, where be had been held on a charge of conspiracy in conWINFRED T. DENNISON nection- with the killing of J. W. Miller, If this step does not prove effective the authorities hope to smoke the men out will sulphur fumes. Prince Wilhelm to be divorced from Princes Marie, a farmer, shot and grand duchea of Ruaala, has gone to month near here. Africa to Hunt big game with Mr. arrest Mrs. Blades tha American ranch owner of have been due to jealousy, . FRUITLESS -- Would Aid Legislators. to Washington. By a vote of members 'of the 16 the constituent chamber of commerce of the nted States in a referendum have the proposition thi t cun, r- is is'a1-lisa bureau o- -, burreas of the reference and hi,! drafting m lcs. a young his bride of a is under years old. his arrival here, accompanied Bureau Youthful Bride. Mo. After a quarrel, Bladi On by Charles H. Tanner, a member of the federation, who was also roughly handled by the rtiob at Hancock, he was taken to a hotel where surgeons made a superfical examination of wound. He was then removed to the hospital. Apparently the only danger lies in the possibility of blood poisoning. Ella Flagg Young Wins. Chicago. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, superintendent of schools, took her old desk Saturday after a which two weeks absence during Mayor Harrison dropped from the school board four members who had opposed her, and she had been replaced as the result of popular demand. hyde , e - President Celebrates Birthday. of good Washington. Messages' will from rulers of many of the world's nations were received hero Sunday for President Wilson. The occasion was the fifty seventh birth anniversary of the president. The messages were forwarded to Pass Christian, Mass, where the president and family are spending a vacation. Masterpiece at Milan. The Mona Lisa, in 1840 Chicago. A grand jury investigation of the blobbing of Cbaries H. Moyer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, at Hancock, Mich., will be demanded at Houghton, county seat of Houghton county, by O. N. Hilton, attorney for the federation. Moyer claims that he was attacked by about twenty-fivmen, hit over the head with the butt of a revolver, shot in the back and dragged for several blocks, while the mob clamored for his life. He wag finally placed on a train and told that If he ever returned he would be lynched. 1 incline. day Primate of Norway ,.sa to the story told the According searchers visited the spot in the Andy incline where J. Douglas Hulsey and Thomas Manderich were killed; the seven store, where Lopezs bedding was found two weeks ago, and the eleven stope, where it was believed he was heard on the morning when the bulkhead was placed in the Andy Voting Was Fair. on. H. S. Gibson and F. Khibition x.vti.n.g PRINCE WILHELM OF SWEDEN guards. s n ifilan. .Mexico than me Kill of Huerta and his ban-ishment lrom the ci entry will ever be cons Uered as a preliminary toward peace in Mexico, '6aid General Fran-- i cisco la on Sunday. Any overtures! for a compromise would be treated with c. luempt uy the revolutionists General Villa was prompted to dis the subject because ot the repetition of a report lrom Mexico City that General lluorta might resign la favon of a member of his cabinet I!u as the report also stated that Gen eral Huerta was thinking' of taking the fitld against the rebels, it was not considered in any way as a possible peace move. The subject oi peace, however, came up In General Villas counsels and the rebel leader was moved to outline the rebels' views in case future events brought them into consideration. In substance the terms demanded by the rebels are The elimination of General Huerta and his supporters. The complete surrender of tbs constitutionalist cause of politicians now ' ; opposing It. The restoration of the constitution. The selection of a provisional president acceptable to the constitution alists, And provisions for a popular election. Guarantee of a change in the land laws, so that deeds to land would be more generally distributed. Ratification of the confiscation by the rebels of the vast Terrazas, Creel and other estates, valued at many millions of dollars. Nullification of all acts of the Huerta regime. V Urge Congress to Investigate. 1 American The in at VILLA. I ;0rn the Copper Strike Michigan Issue an of Ultimatum. OVERTURES Winfred T. Dennison, appointed on of the American members of the Philippine commission, is a Bull Mooser las he m an assistant to the general. He was born in Portland, Me-- , forty years ago and Is a of the Harvard university lew school. fi OF FEDERATION TAHITI Men Rare in This South tenT The scrub of any line of stock we find on testing the eggs that 20 eggs nnprofltable. are infertile, which leaves us o - Wedding and Divorce Regulations? Among Burmese Trifle Loose Ao- cording to Our Ideas. sabUlL ! , ; ! t i New York. Marriage and divorce regulations among the Burmese strike even a Westerner as loose, according! to a recently published book by Sit Is Today the Same Paradise Which Herbert T. White, called A Civil SeW Cook Found It, When a Century vant in Burma. The sole essential and a Half Ago Ho Put Into of a marriage hi mutual consent, andj Pao-Pato Water Ships. no court need intervene in divorce But the test of a thing is the way it New York. To the average traveler works, Tahiti remains the lie lnconnu. The men liveand many, probably tourist Is not expected there; he is their lives.happily with one wife No ceremony is nee regarded uith suspicion. He demands o 3 i a bath tub article undreamed of in the island philosophy he demands a reasonable degree of promptness in the every-daaffairs of life, he makes other and extraordinary demands. When he realizes that nothing whatever has been done for his amusement or edification, that to the islanders the outer world from which he comes exists only in the Imagination; when he realizes these things as soon he does it is then that he learns to content himself with things as they are, and to admire the beauties ot the place as nature made and has left them. There are no towns upon Moorea. White men are a rarity. It Is today the Island paradise which Cook found it when, a century and a half ago, he to water his ships. put lntov Pao-PaToday, also, the native livea the life he did then the native Ignorant, uncivilized, if you please, but with a voice and manners, a gift of hospitality, which put the white man to shame. Here, more than elsewhere, he seems himself a part of that haunting beauty which surrounds him on every hand. Here, when the day is done, under the cocoanuts and the bananas, "betwixt the sun and moon upon the shore," the traveler If he is fortunate enough to have the entree sits him down, as honored guest, among the Burmese Mother and Child. retainers of the native chief. Mounted upon a native pony, and In the cool of the morning, he has coursed the wild aary In marriage, and, among the mast the people, none is usual. pig In the shadows of the great crater- - of Divorce Is so easy that it Is commonly accepted that, even without fault on either side, one party can ink sist upon divorce against the wish of the other. In this respect, men and women are upon equal terms. But a safeguard against capricious dlvorc is found In the strict rule that the one who, under the circumstances indicate, insists upon divorce must aban--' don all property to the reluctant partner. It Is not unusual for divorced persons to come together again In fact, aa appreciable proportion of the fn, crimes of violence is due to the refusal of a woman to rejoin her divorced husband" , y y ? . DUB BLOND ESQUIMAUX IRISH l Summer Visitors to Tahiti. ! Descendants of Band of Monks Who Cam to America In Sixth Cen- i tury, Priest Declares. valley. g St. Louis. Rev. C, F. OLeary, pasof the Catholic church of Notre Dame, who recently returned from a visit to Ireland, is convinced that tho blond Esquimaux discovered by VllhJ-alm- tor Steffansson are in reality descendants of early Irish settlers. It Is my belief, said Father OLeary, that St. Brendan and hla monks settled in America in the sixth century. Many historians believe this. Brendan was a great mariner, as welj as a great student, and with him missionaries were going out by the scores from Ireland to Germany, Italy, France, and other countries. 1 The Norwegians formerly called America tbe Lesser Ireland, and we have the evidence of Brendans discoveries in the sea which long was named for him Mare Brendanlcum." Father O'Leary when abroad visited the famous St. Brendan's Mount, on which the monastery stood, and studied the old records. The expenses of bis trip to Europe were paid in part with a fund which bis parish presented to him on the occasion of his fortieth jubilee last spring. MOURNS AT HIS OWN COFFIN On Recognition of Supposed Dead Son. Mother Faints and Is Seriously III. Hamilton, OnL While relatives and friends surrounded the coffin in which lay the body of a young man Identified as John Thompson, a victim of a recent storm on the great lakes, the real John Thompson rapped at the door and was admitted to the house. His mother collapsed, seriously ilL Young Thompson's father did not know on what boat his son was When he read of the finding of the body of a John Thompson, fireman on the lost steamer Carruthers. he went to Kettle Point and identified t as that of bis son. The body was shipped to the par--nhome in this city, and friends vere assembled for the funeral, when he young man suddenly returned. He yplained that he had been in Mon-erduring the great storm, and uad just heard of his reported death. ts ey Giraffe Hit by Switch Engine. Dupo, 111. A giraffe being shipped to axlrcus winter quarters stuck !tsv head out of the car, and was struck by a switch engine. The animal is being cared for in aa improvised hospital in the Y. M. C. A. building. Veter-'nar- y surgeons said it will live. Woman Mayor of Oregon Town. Troutdale, Ore. Mrs. Clara Latou-ell- e Larsson, daughter of an Oregon jioneer resident was elected mayor it this place by five votes. v U , BANS iN BURMA) Sea Country. The afternoon has found him In the inland lake. Now the shadows are falling, the magical afternoon mists are over the peaks which climb steeply upward before Mm, and the short twilight is at band. Presently, the tropic moon will rise to take its course directly overhead, making the weird viBtas about him light as day again. He hears the voices about him, prattling in the melodious Maori tongue, and, afar off, the thunder of the surf upon the disTRIBUTE PAID EDUCATOR. tant reefs. He closes his and dreams of a Leaders In Stats and Church TeH of tomorrow like eyeh and then of still today, Useful Life of A. C. Nelson. other tomorrows. He has eaten the Salt Lake City. Tributes such as fel the island Lotus and, If he have rarely been paid a resident of dreams of home. It Is as some place Utah were spoken Tuesday at fu- which perhaps will know him no neral services for A. C. Nelson, late more. superintendent of public Instruction. Every seat in the auditorium of the THE END TO A FAMOUS SCOUT Assembly ball was filled with mourners long before the opening of tho Oliver Wiggins, a Denver Pioneer, services. In the rostrum were asDead at Ninety Year Friend sembled men ot church, state and edof Kit Carson. ucational prominence who in eloDenver. Oliver (O10 Scout") Wigquent eulogies vied with one another to depict the useful life of Mr. Nel- gins, one of Denver's most famous son, his genius as an educator and early frontiersmen, died at his resithe marvelous tact he exhibited in re- dence here. He was ninety years old. organization of public graded and Wiggins came across the plains in 1838. For a number of years he was high schools of the state. a member of Kit Carsons famous comRestrict Monros Doctrine. pany of frontiersmen and served unAtlanta, Ga. Restriction of the der Carson In the Mexican war, where Monroe doctrine to Mexico and Cen- he was wounded at the Battle of tral America was advocated by John Monterey. His cabin was one of the firet built Hays Hammond Tuesday in an ad- In Denver. From 1848 to 1858 he was dress before the social and economic section of the American Association employed as scout, guide and hunter the for the Advancement of Science. Mr. for the Immigrant trains acrossfronHammond discussed development of plains and his knowledge of the the length and the foreign tnde of the United tier extended through mountains. of the Rocky breadth States, and characterized the subject as one affecting the welfare of the entire nation, not to be handled by TRY GIRL OF 13 FOR MURDER partisans. t A Canadian Child Accused of Beating Burns Self to Death. a Playmate to Death With an Iron Shovel. Overcome Wis. by religTomah, ious emotion, MrB. August Hess, 70 Prince Albert, Sask. Kathleen Olyears old, poured kerosene over herself, applied a match and burned to ka, thirteen years old, of Wakawa, nine-yea- r I was trying to make myself charged with the murder of her death. old Julia Jennings, playmate, a burnt offering, was her explanaWas put on trial here. The girl Is action. cused ot killing the other child by Landslides In Feather River. beating her on, the head with n Iron shovel while they were walking toWlthlif dis a Cal. Sacramento, mi ilea, four landgether about eight miles from Wakatance of twenty-twslides, caused by melting snow and wa last June. After the killing Kathleen returned rata, have blocked the Western Pariver to her home and told her mother that cific railroad in the Feather her companion had left her. Thu fob canyon. towing day the body of the child was found on an abandoned homestead. Schmidt Jury Fails to Agree. New York. The jury which held Diphtheria Traced to Pencils. in, Us hands the fate of Hans Suffield, Conn. Lead pencils, di Echmidt, who has been on trial for the murder of Anna Aumuller, after trlbuted and collected each day In a ' school here are blamed for an epb deliberating for more than thirty-twdemic of diphtheria among the pupil hours, was discharged. I o NO MARRIAGE I It la small bov rearranges himself during a any oblect by tapportlng Iaisb A11!' ; i ! I I? |