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Show r i' 7 VOLUME IT J1A ; - JV .. LOGAN CITY, UTAH, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1910. XXXI.' DECIDED TO KEEP UP TBE EIGHT A -- There was a meeting of the anti consolidation committee of the I couniy-atth- e Boosters Club rooms ! on Tuesday afternoon and the question of continuing or abandoning the fight against the consoli dation of the county schools was discussed, the final decision being that the fight will be kept up in one way or another. The motions passed were: That the organization be retainand also that the matter of the ed; law suij; be left where it now is pending further consideration of it. The attendance at the meeting was very small, only five members voting on these motions. There was' a prolonged discussion which some ratbtr ments were made by some members of the committee, one of them charging, fraud and deception from start to finish and others influences undue intimating that bad been at work to secure the recent decision in the ease.Chair-ma- n Wiser of the committee said that he was not in favor of making ah appeal to the supreme court for he was convinced that the decision there would be the same as that rendered by Judge Morse, but other members of the committee while not expressing an opinion oh this part of the question, said that they had been advised by the attorneys employed by the committee that if the desired county commissioners districts the they might segregate and restore the old order of Vthings. and they favored a delay ' until the question could be decided at the next election, and an- commis- other si oner elected, henc& the motion to leave the matter just where it i V. anti-consolidat- now is. Mft Griffin of the County Board of Education was present and stat ed to- - the committee that the board desired to erect new school houses in several parts of the county and had considered the question of bonding in order to obtain the necessary means but did not desire to call an election if the committee felt like continuing the fight in the courts. 'This brought up the bonding question and those pi esent expressed very positive opinions against issuing bonds, Mr. Price of Wellsville asserting that the entire south end ."of the county would - be against the proposition. lie thought that if the bonding proposal were defeated it wouldindicate that the people were still against consofida tion while if it carried it would convince him that the public was satisfied with the new order of things. He said he would fight to : down the -- bonding proposition. Mr. Griffin pointed out that the matter of bonding could not possibly 'be a test of the peoples opinions to "consolidate, and urged that that matter be left out of the election. The county board of education met at Hyrum last evening and de spite the adverse action of the committee to call a special elpctjon for the purpose of voting on the proposal to issue $150,000 worth of bonds. This elction is to be held on March 28. de-cid- on ed J . HELD UP AND ROBBED. M. Batton, residing at 728 W.S. Tem pie St.SaltLake was held J. V" NUMBER os; tive but even they"wiH he' secondary compared to" the singing, dancing, and comedy which prevails throughout the entire That a capacity house will greet this attraction, theie is no doubt, and therefore it is advisable to arrange for tickets early, they. will he on sale attho Opera "House box office on Monday, March 14th. searched his pockets. - Yhehigli-wayme- n secured $11.20 and escap ed in the darkness. The robbery was reported to the police add plain cothes men were detailedon FANNING FLAMES IN PHILADELPHIA Six Persons, One a. Young Girl Al- Co-o- ix perPhiladelphia.Miareh 8. a sons, including young girl, were wounded tonight by bullets fired by a party of alleged strike break CVs who rode wildly up and down Irankfort avenue in a trolley car and shot into the crowds that lined the sidewalks. After one of the most uneventful days since the beginning of the strike, the stoningof cars was renewed tonight along Frankfort avenue, the principal thoroughfare in the mill district. A stone thrown by one of the crowd injured a strike breaking motorman. Infuriated at this,, fifteen of his comrades took out a car, all of the windows of which they broke' with their clubs. As the car, loaded with armed strike breakers, sped down the avenue, bullets were rained at the jeering crowd. , Helen May, aged 14, was struck in the leg by a bullet, John Maloney, aged 18, and Michael Osburn, aged 24, were also shot in the legs, and Frank Bromiley, aged 23, .received a bullet in the .foot. v, I The woufrded were removed to the Frankfort hospital, wo others injured were taken 4o their " homes.' J , j. 4. -- was coming back, jt had sped past them and into the bam. The shooting of inoffensive bystanders worked the crowd to a high pitch of excitement and as other cars came down the street the mob wrecked several, leaving only the trucks on the rails.About a dozen arrests were made. There were u few mnor outbreaks in the downtowA district late tonight. Announcement that plants' representing 75 j)er centof the 'hosof Philadeliery amnufacturers phia would close, down until next Monday, was the lpost important development in tjie strike situation today. announcement was coupled with the intimation that, if the employees in the hosiery plants did not return to work by that time, the mills might remain .closed downntil fall. .. One of the manufacturers said that the hosiery association represented mills employing 20,000 handsi Many bf them were reported to have gone out on the first day of the general strike. . J-Th- e ( . IN A DRUNKEN FRENZY SHOOTS HIS FRIEND Nephi, March 8. A man lying at the point of death, and the one who fired the shot lying in the county jail, has the old, old story attached to it, Drink did it. Edwin Bigler, George Painter and Robert Chappell were herding cattle down on theSevier river at a little settlement called Mills, a few miles southwest of Juab. The young men all took a ride up toJuab.Chappell and Painter rode over to Stephenson's ranch, but Bigler remained at Juab, where he got hold .of some whiskey, which was the cause 6f his undo- - up and robbed shortly before 12 oclock Monday night near Sixth West and Second South streets by, a white man and1 a negro. The robbers were armed) with revolvers and! kept them pressed aga- mg- On their way hack they inst. Batt?nV head while tliey THE COUNCIL AGREES The Logan City Council or any other council that will take the trouble to investigate the matter will agree that much ickness could Mureseo Wall finish veie used instead' of wall paper in our houses. Its durable. Artistic and easy to apply. Everton & Sons are agents and will give any further infor-:- n desired. 1 r I. O. O. F. ATTENTION! of thr l. O. OrF. ..f the Lo't.i ledep are requested i i i!fet in fie xtge room at on' tYl ck p in n day, March AH-meto- frrs I 1 Iff,- - fr. Lundstrora is one of the stion younger business fraternity, a man, Who by industry and perseverance has worked his .way up from the ' bottom, and is now regarded as one of the most reputable.' and substantial men of the community. He was born April 21, 1868, in Sweden, and came to this country in 1886. For thirteen years he was engaged in sheep-raisinand be made a Miccess of it. In .1901 he entered the furniture busings in this' city and since that time has built up one of the largest enterprise? in this fact that pa it of the state. IBs success is due largely he possesses most genial and obliging manners and is absolutely honest and straightforward in all his dealings: He takes a lively, interest in all public matters pnd lis a booster of the ' " - ' , first rank, e of theJuab stated positively that the machine Development company. Here Big leffi seemed to become insanely drunk, and pulling out his gun, fired at the house. The bullet hit aknot and exploded; five of the pieces hitting a young man by the name of Orgill. Ivy, a man from Seipio, imrnedi ately jumped ontoBigler and beat him unmeicifully. Bigler did not recover consciousness till this and was almost inconsomorning, lable when told of his serious act in shooting a young irjan wTho had always been his friend. One of the pieces of the bullet has pierced the lung of Orgill, and doubts are entertained as to his recovery. Omaha Woman Dies at 101 Years was not a biplane glider, but a machine resembling the one used by Louis Paulhan at the fair grounds some weeks ago. The men watched the evolutions through binoculars and at times could distinctly see the man at the throttle. Several husine! men were taking a trip through the Capitol hill district early in the afternoon when one of the numbei saw the mammoth bird-lik- e thing far to the west, apparently not far from the eastern shore of Great Salt Lake and a short distance north of Haltair. The aeroplane hoadnl for the city and came a, near as the Jordan 'river. The machine circled feid headea in a southerly desdirectio) then cribed numerous dips and curves and was i.iriTy e to new behind' the t'fes afei g river not far from Ninth Vorih. Labor is vastly more tyrannical than capital ever has been. the police work on to man has a te Jr in 1 - THE DELLEOF JAPAN Salt Lake, March 7. Salt Lake has an aviator who made a flight Sunday afternoon on the flats west of this city equal to some of the be-- t ever made by Paulhan, the Wrights, Bleriot, Farman, or Glenn Curtis. For more than an hoitr Sunday afternoon, the aviator swept across the country between Great Salt Lake and the Jordan river, while a favored few of Salt Lake's residents stood Spellbound and watched the remarkable evolution of the man-bird. This ' is no aerodream. The flight was witnessed by a number of representative citizens of Salt Lake, ineluding a banker, public official and at least a score of others. Two of the party wh) watched the aviator reported, the ; stop- - .oecuirence to The Tribune and they the city will, at least in this phase of the rioting, take no part in zy. nine-nort- Flight in Either Event. , the-stat- e ( self-propell- Omaha, March 8. Mrs. Mary Svacina, aged 101, died at her home here last night. Although she had sevral children here Mrs. .. timed hv memThe flight Svacina refused to leave her own on Capi.ol hnf home and1 lived alone for 35 years, bers of tu na: fehewas bqrna serf in Bohemia. machine and the was in the air more than an hour. IMAGINATION OR . AIRSHIP, WHICH? A Notable attending week; st 1 pej at the ranch house -- - g, to-th- if -- the obsequies of our esteemed fellow member Thomas N. Rowland, TROOPS READY which will be held in the Second TO MARCH AT WORD ward meeting house at 2 p.,pi. of that day. Washington, March 7. Under By Ordei of the N G. arms and ready to entrain at a moments notice, the Forty-fift- h AMERICA LAWLESS. coast artillery, at Fort Dupont, Delawarp, is waiting the flashr New York, March 7. America from the war department to huris becoming the most lawless ry to Pbiladelphia to protect the country on the globe,, declared United States mint and other gov- the Rev. Dr, Robert S. MacAr-thu- r, ernmeot property. A train stands pastor of the Calvary ap-ti- ready tg convey the soldiers to church here, in an address on the scene of the disorders. the Philadelphia strike, before This preparatory action was tathe Current Event club of his ken at tle request of the secrechurch, yesterday.; tary of the treasury and so far as Every .striker., is potentially a can be gathered there has been lawbreaker and even a murder- no appeal from the iqunicipal au,Tlie thorities saida the minister. er, at Philadelphia or evil consequences of strikers acts officials of Pennsylvania for are far reaching and the innonational troops. cent must suffer with the guilty. Upon receipt from the treasStrikes are war. There ought to for troops ( Adjt. Gen. Ains- be no strikes in this twentieth ury worth, to whom the secretary of century under the American flag war referred the matter, promptStrikes are a reflection on the ly telegraphed to Maj. Gen. Leocommon sense of both capital and nard Wood, commanding the delabor. partment of the east, in New The police ought to deal York, to have troops ready to promptly and effectively with protect the mint. mobs. Firing blank cartridges inIt is distinctly understood these to a mob only increases its frenenter government troops if ' After reaching Allegheny avenue the ear was switched to the northbound. track by its crew and the dash back to the barn began. So swiftly was it driven that be fore the crowd realized that it v CLARKSTON, March 8. Lately webave had a plethora of good things in the dramatic line." Last week we had three theatrical. performances ; one by the Lewiston Dramatic company, and .two by. the 3V alters Stock company, and, all of them satirfaetory. p The Clarkston did a large business last year and the stock holders are congratulating Manadividend. ger Griffin on a 12 Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Bell are over from Lewiston. Mtt Wi 1 i e A n d er s mi d su sp en d ing a few' days with tbe Barsons while decorating the homes of some farmers. Burnham, the plumber, is finding plenty of work to do here repairing water jackets and waterworks systems. Mrs. William Dahle andfamiy took Saturday evening's train for St. Anthony. Idaho. Messrs. SergC Balkf and D. Crockett were visitors here last e. the case. Wounded by Volley From leged Strikebreakers. RK That there is a certain charm about everything, connected with Japan can not be denied and that that country lias fiot been used before in which to lay the action of a comedy Drama is rather strange, and the only conjecture is that authors have not made a study of that strange remained for Wm. land. It Wam.her to commission, that Well known American dramatist. II. Grattan Donnelly, to take up that country and present it to the theatregoers in its true light. To be accurate and to ga;n full knowledge of the Japanese. made a trip to Japan and his observations while there furnished him his plot for his comedy drama, that will be a revelation to all. The beautiful scenery a nd costumes will be especially attrac- ly beyond defendright go Every ing the mint and other governa strike, provided he violates no ment property, contract, but the man who throws , up a job and declares no one else BOSTON SPENDS MILLIONS shall take it, becomes a tyrant. FOR AMUSEMENTS lie interferes with his fellow workmen and becomes an anarBoston, Mass., March 7. In inchist pure and simple. , vestigating the high cost of livTV."- 'ing;" the Twentieth Century club KENNEDY SENTESCED has discovered that $2,730,155.50) , TI FIFTEEN YEARS ; was spent by patrons of theatrical, 7,Theodore and moving picture shows during-1I Ogden, March weeks of the winter season in, Kennedy, colored, who on .Friday entered a plea of guilty to the this city. It was found that and1 vaudeville ' charge of assault with intent to moving picture 85T commit murder, was today sen performances made up about amusement entertenced' by Judge Howell to 15 per cent of the qf the city and 'cost the years imprisonment in the state prises g public the penitentiary. His victim, Wallace general of $120,369.10 weekly grand total Lyon, a young white man,-vhof the season. the height through was shot in the neck, is in a preto the Turning legitimate theacarious condition and may not nv ters and grand opera, the total cover. . ' expenditure weekly was found to Wall Street Crowd Sees $10, he only slightly iotore, ' or 0 -- - -- - fun-lovin- $152,--646.4- 5. . 000,000 in Gold club The claims Boston has that New "York, March 8, The trans fer of $10,000,00 in gold . bars a greater number of performances of the cheaper class in proportion office to the from the assay vaults tlv's afternoon attracted a crowd that blocked Wall street. Clerks carried 1350 bars worth $8000 each from the assay office to a truck on the sidewalk, and then pushed the truck s the short distance to the in. The bars carried the ury and transfer was necessitated by alterations to be made ati,he assay sub-treasu- sub-trea- office. , ' ry to the population than any other Ameriean city. HIGH PRIESTS MEETING The regular monthly meeting of the High Priests quorum of the Cfflche Stake, will be held at 1(1 a. m. Sunday, March 13, 1910, in the Nib fey Ilall. Kindly note change of meeting place. E. W. SMITH, President, |