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Show But Bet on Wilson. VOL. XXVII. NO. 45. PROVO, UTAH,' WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER omgnanrmwrs . If i .Wi-- I- - --L irt Springville. DEVOTED TO THE CIVIC AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF UTAH COUNTY M ym AwJMm MM 9 II 18, " . -- V ' ', ESTABLISHED 1912. S MO B TT- - iifnuiri nt isnnrn Mniinn to Resort to Violence FORCE POLICE EXTRA Four thousand three hundred and fifty miners quit work this morning in Bingham at 7 o'clock and are guarding the workings to keep any one from going to work in their places. At a mass meeting held last night in the opera house at that place the foreigners and bohuaks cried strike when Ch'as. W. Moyer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, tried to argue in favor settlement. of a peaceable The mine owners are ready to treat with the workers but re-and this seems to be the chief, point of difference as Secretary E: G. Locke and'Chas. V. Moyer insist on having the operators treat with the union instead of the workers. -- e Suit for divorce has been filed here by Joseph Armstrong against Minnie Armstrong, and H. S. Bruce of Tucker is named as in the case. It, Is charged in" the complaint made by the plaintiff that defendant "since August 10, 1912, has been living "with the said H. E. Bruce in a house rented by the said H. S. Bruce in Tucker, Utah," the complaint further charges the defendant with committing a stattutory offense wit hH. S. Bruce as the grounds for divorce. There is one child, a girl nine years old, of which the plaintiff asks the custody. The parties were married in Provo, September 24, 1902. Bruce, who is named as in the suit,Tsit: the present time confined in thecounty jail 'here on a charge of selling intoxicating liquor at Tucker without a license His premises were raided recently when his stock of from ten to twenty barrels of beer, or as it was labeled "Near Beer," .was confiscated , by g'ttgrift ceorgepaar, Mr.,:"ArgF strong who h the .defendant in the divorce suit came down Sunday to soe Bruce at the jail here. , . . o ; THREE YOUNG TRAVELERS deputy -- . ; . old-an- . d e - con-cersln- g 7 . , ? - e . " ( -- - , ' arrangeiBentsfortheAuto- - tmwk- ,.'': , committee local - .and everything: successful event. points to a The general chairman of the commit tee from the Commercial club is J. T. Farrer and E. A. Mitchell Is secmost sJ - Chairman Farrer yesterday retary. appointed a committee for the receiving and parking of the cars. These gentlemen will check the time of each car upon Its arrival in Provo. The city commissipn has granted exclusive rights of the south side of the streets between Academ"y'"venue and First West and the automobiles will be parked on .those streets. Speeches will be made from the cars at those points. The committee appointed to receive and park the cars includes P. L. Anderberg, G.. Peterson, Reed George Smoot, W. J. Stiehl, John Roundy, bore Schwab and R. E. Allen. Under the rules of the contest the run will Btart from Salt. Lake at 5. o'clock.' From lien" until 1 o'clock contest will close at Provo at 3:30 p The sealed time for the contest run from Salt Lake wilUbe left to a committee of three appointed by the This comProvo Commercial club. mittee will select the time at , 10 o'clock Saturday in Provo or one hour after the first car leaves for The scheduled time selected Provo. will be sealed and committee this by not opened until after the last car arrives in Provo when it will be made A prize for the winner will known. be given and a consolation prize awarded to the driver getting the EXERPTS FROM BRYAN'S SPEECHr farthest away from the time set by "I want to thank the Utah delegation for what they did at Baltimore." Bryan. officials. the "Taffs-greafault TslRaf ri"efialfn "contTdence'Tn'The'cornmon peoipTe Roosevelt has too much confidence car in the state Is allowed to Every in himself." start In, the contest without regard "The Democrats have advocated the election of Senators by direct vote for twenty years, Roosevelt to where the owner resides and as but two years." this Is a statewide, movement it la ex Bryan: "I agreed not to say anything worse about Taft and Roosevelt than they said about each other. ' pected that two or three hundred thought that would be bad enough." . cars will make the Wp.-.-- u. ."Mississippi has four thousand five hundred Republicans and was represented at Chicago by 20 deleComthe . The General committee of gates while my district In Nebraska has over 18,000 Republicans and had less than three delegates." niercial club also appointed a publicity committee at their meeting yesOne of the grandest receptions that might take them up In this way; can make up your mind there is some terdaycompqsed of A,Mitchell I, ftas ever "tendered "a political leader speak of Mr. Wilson as' a one term good reason for it.'' C. Hicks and I. H. Masters. Mr. Bryan then . scored the Stand-pat- . was given William Jennings Bryan president because his platform pledges here .today whenhe arrived on train him to but one term; then of Mr.'Taft Republican convention at Chicago No. 1. A large parade of automobiles as a two term president and then of and his keen witty and humorous reRELIEF SOCIETY M EMBERS headed by the Epperson band led the Mr. Roosevelt as jathTrd term presi marks of it were received with deaf "I asked the man in Commoner from the station to "Uncle dent If he is elected this fall.' How- ening applause. LEARN ART OF CANNING at the press table, Mr. a sear for I to residence he of Taft where' ever, charge speak prefer Jesse"KnIghts had a light lunch and a short, rest. first, as the president who Is; Mr. and In order to secure one I promised W. Chairman before Roosevelt second as the president him that I would not say anything County Long F. Giles and State Chairman Si H. who was and then of Mr. W)lson third worse about Roosevelt or Taft than People of Morgan. Utah, telegraphed. what they said about each otbr." I Mrs. Caroline Thurman reached the opera house It as the president who will be." Seymour, today that was packed to the limit Hundreds Mr. Bryan stated that while he be- thought that would be bad enough." to the $300,000 corpora subscriptions were turned "away. Judge". S. R. lieved Taft was an honest and well Mr. Bryan then told some of the disvarious factories there to Thurman of Salt Lake City, in a few meaning man yet iie bad one great graceful Incidents of the convention tion for of the vegetables and fruits care well chosen words introduced the fault and that Is that Taft wa.3 dis- and proved by figures how votes were take toseason,-- has amounted silvery tongued orator, who .was greet- trustful of the common people Mr. counted that Jiadjia right - beHe for In Nebraska to $60,000 in less than a week. The- ed with a demonstration which lasted Taft's greatest fault Is that he has not declared that his district over seven minutes. Judge Thurman faith In the common people. I do not had 18,000 Republicans and had a reptelegram also Invited Mrs. Seymour to said in part: "I take pleasure this think it Is all his fault; I think he resentation of only three In the ChicaMorgan next Sunday night to deliver afternoon in the fact that the opening inherited part of it. 1 think It was go convention while Mississippi had a talk in the stake house at that city. . gun on behalf of the Democrats for fostered In him and made steadfast 4.500 Republicans yet had 20 repreMrs. Seymour Is at present at the the campaign of 1912 will; be fired in with interest His Interest la not sentatives. "A ratio of 25 to 1, said home of Mrs. J. E. Booth of. this city Provo and the speaker on this occas-sio- with the common people." Mr. Bryan Mr. Bryan," is too much. I would not the members of the Relief will be, the gentleman who, I be- declared that Taft's lack of Interest consent to any more than 16 to 1. teaching to get the most of the how Societies d lieve, Is today as he always has been, and lack of faith in the common peo- There are only "9,000 Republicans-ansecond and third class fruit that has tbey had twelve representatives at the Idol of the Utah Democracy," ple was the real reason for the to been 'societies. Mrs. donated the In opening his address . Honorable spectacle of a man who came that convention. You see a Louisiana If she could get declares that Seymour W, J. Bryan stated that he was com- in with a majority of over a million Republican had twelve times more ins some fruit, the Relief Sopelled to- keep his watch before him rotes was going out by common co- fluence than a. Nebraska Republican. cieties take first prize at the would because there was outlined .' quite a nsent'; "There must .be a reason for Now, my friends, I would not brag states She fair this that fruit, to fall (Continued on page 4.) program for htm during the afternoon such a change and we want to know take the, prize, must be ripened on the and the committee had glven'hlm but the reason. I hare spent thirty years NEW BUILDING FOR trees and hand picked. Mr. of my life trying to change the people an hour to make his ' address, UNIVERSITY OF UTAH and I know how hard It la. And I also Bryan said: Impetus for the development for elected will men be know that It has been hard to change Next in Importance to the removal which the years since the establishi "One of three president of the United, States this tha people who supported me. As a of the university a dozen years ago ment of the university- in " pioneer "Bare will Mr. I bad g a Taft be to Its present spacious grounds candidate, for threc times fallj either preparation, and todays had been -elected or be will Mr. tho Roosevelt rotes of the rapidly derelbplng 4"d; practically the saae( number valley and wards .which again or Mr,. Wilson will be elected each. time. When you find a man go and the lake. Is the construction now resources' of the' state, la business, la fof tbe .first time. Now you know. It ing la as president with one million under way of the new $300,000 ad- the Industries, and la the condition Is quite important to have these candi majority, and then find that man re ministration building. i - ot living, became at once an impelling , dates in their proper, "order, so. I pudiated by more than one half, you room and force. t The' new site provided m. -- " .. . nt ULn urday were made yesterday, by the ARE SENSATIONAL PICKED UP BY POLICE sheriffs were rushed to Bingham last night at 12 o'clock on a special train over the three boys . Yesterday morning, Salt Lake and B. & G. Ry. Probably were picked up by Chief of Police a part of the state militia will be W. F. Giles at the jungles near the - .sent there today toact as a speeial depot, and were brought to the city police for the camp. Deputy Sheriff iail where two of the "boys were Schweitzer and Whitbeck are in charge turned over to Probation Officer B. of affairs at Bingham but Sheriff F. Roper. The youngest of the boys said that Sharp will probably go to the camp name was John Blackwell and his today and take charge personally. Several men attempted to go to that he had ran away from his home work this morning but were sent back in Colorado. He claims that he is One man was sixteen years of age, and says he has by armed miners. thrown from one of the; upper levels property left him rby( his father in of the Utah Copper this morning Kentucky. The boy also said that when he attempted to go to work his guardian, Dr. J. W. Aldridge, Against the protests of the union men lived at Clay, Kentucky, w and was thrown down t steep emHayden Sheppard, the other boy bankment and badly bruised about the turned over to the probation officer head 'and shoulders. Another young claims that he is 17 years old today ""man was forced at. the point of a re- and that his home is in Lamar. Mo. The third and oldest of the trio volver to stay away' from the work' "Ajga. claims to be Arthur Zieffle, and that also that his . . The men are demanding a fifty cent he 13 19 years He was raise per day and the owners granted home is in Toledo, O. ' cent raise about charged by Chief Giles with vagrancy them a twenty-firalx weeks ago. They are not satisfied and was sentenced to five days In with this hut insist on: tha fifty cent the city jail. raise and the recognition of the union. The parents of the boys will be They hare had a great manyo'rgan-Izer- s notified at once by Officer Roper and In camp' recently and these men Blackwell and Sheppard hare been have agitated conditions greatly and given a Job picking" fruit on- the farm Here is ofTAladrewNielsoii on Provo Bench thus hastened the strike. v what R. C. Gemmel assistant general "until w6fd; is received. These two - manager of the Utah Copper said boys appear to foe" of - respectable the situation: families, and Chief Giles said that he ."We do not treat with the officers took them Into" custody to get them of the .anion regarding any matters away from the bad influence of the connected with the mines. We do not tramps along the road. None of the recognize the federation. We are al boys bad committed any crime. ... o ways willing to confer with our emcommitBONNEVILLE TUNNEL 18 ployees or properly appointed PROGRESSING FAVORABLY tees. If this is done the mine operaWork is progressing favorably on tors or the directors of the companies affected, would take the issues under the Bonneville tunneL whlcby Jesse consideration and all controversies Knight Is driving into the' mountain south ot Provo. The tunnel is now. in could be adjusted." 3,010 feet with about ,1,500 feet Will Bring In Men. D. C. Jackling, general manager of depth, and for the last thirty feet has the" Utah Copper, says' he will have been driven In mineralized"slate and three thousand" morewn- In Bingham white quartz which. is considered a In less than three days and that the favorable, change from the hard quart-rit' 'through .which .the tunnel - has ;wofk will be resumed ,at the Utah Is at once. been Jackling drjven for 1,600 feet The twp Copper company unions nowJmake' about thirteen' feet the shifts with In much sympathy not has a and this company day until recently the; lime quartz . contact and - where ore may be workon the men union expected to form few had very in 100 eet. be entered about may ingTwenty-fiv- - : mobile meet to be field in Provo Sat-- -- uau aa mc ForeigrrEIemerit are Likely ' Final MJUK. liOnaiUOUS ' Here Next Saturday DIVORCE CHARGES MEN WILL TAKE PLACES I flUL ' Arrangements are Completed For State Automobile Meet Smelter Men May fee Involved Which Will Mean Several Thousand More to Walk Out JACKUNG SAYS NEW U UH flU 1 , 1885. - The Commoner Scores Taft and Roosevelt . Parade of Automobiles Meets Bryan's Train - I - J -- . . - , the-coml- ng . n - huralll-tatln- . g , ( first-clas- - - ; - over-loooln- clty-and-it- , he - : 'A' |