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Show THE TRLWEEKLY, JOURNAL, LOGAN. UTAH ilSB I Aceve- - gITg6110 J OUT GOMEZ AGAJNST Veteran, revolutionary Issues Manifesto. Au7I1ab uprising government, apparent- - occurred serious nature, of Regia, a suburb har- - situated across the Guillermo Aceye- when Gen. veteran, with ?, revolutionary companions, armed f 'It took the field. that the party was Runted, f reported men. Acevedo Before leaving Regia, denouncing .,tfda manifesto administration of President scandalous and corrupt gomes as all partriotie Cub- md adjuring rise and overthrow it. He jng to he would ' give glared that in which to gomez 15 days which, if the warning Vasnot obeyed, he intended to forced later by 4pplv 200 151-fo- y and destroy indiscriminately until the the torf-- pro-pert- was island whole reduced to Setting forth from Regia, the seem-ingl- y insurgents skirted Havana, bound for Plaar del Rio. suburb of Luy-jn- , where they seized a citizen named Naranjo, demanding that he act as their guide. Upon his dead. refusal, Naranjo was shot They The Hempstead, L. I., Aug 1. Miss Harriet Quimby was awarded a pilots license today by the Aero Club of America, the governing body of aeronautics in this country. This is the first license that has ever been awarded a woman aviator in America. Miss Quimby flew in a Moisant monoplane. Miss Quimby and the aero officials, G. Campben Wood1 and Baron dOroy,. and a large number of aviation enthusiasts were on the field shortly before 5 oclock this morning, but a dense fog made flying impossible untiL nearly 7 oclock. Conditions could not have been more perfect. Thoroughly composed, Miss Quimby rose gracefully in the air, completing fiye figure eights about 150 feet in the air and then landed nofonly within the mark .designated by the conditions, but also made a' worlds record for landing. Her mark was 7 feet 9 inches. After a brief rest to cool off the motor. Miss Quimby again rose in the air and again completed all the remaining eights in the air, turning first to right and left with all the skill of an experienced aviator and landing on the desmark. cent at the 124-foMiss Quimby then started for the altitude, which calls for a height of 164 feet. She reached over 200 feet and soared about in a large circle before coming to the ground, where she was enthusiastically greeted. Miss Quimby is a native of California, Miss Matilda Moisant and probably Miss Blanche Scott will shortly apply for their pilots halted at the party then rode on. today strong detachments of rurales and regulars were dispatched in pursuit of the rebels. The country where they are operating is thickly settleEarly ot ot probable that the rurales will have no .difficulty in There are following the trail. license. rumors that a fight has already d and it is ' Ferdinand De Murias of Havana, Cuba, today tried for his pilots license and succeeded. Dur ing the first round he obtained his altitude while making his first five figure eights. 7 occurred. headed an uprising in Rio province a. year . He was ago. captured, tried and life imprisonment. J sentenced to Last October he was pardoned. His followers are believed to inMOTHER POISONS HERSELF clude some of the desperadoes AND TWO CHILDREN. vho attacked the rurales in their Acevedo Pinar del barracks at Guanabacoa in i906, massacreing the garrison, which vas the first overt act of the revolution which overthrew President Palma. Geraldo ' Marado, secretary of the interior, in an official statement to the Association Press, said that Acevedo was accompanied by only four men sad was believed to be surround-- d now by rurales twenty miles vest of the capital. News of his capture was momentarily expecteBrig. Gen. d. 011 . leavinS Regia last night, the the near-- insurgents proceeded to town of Guanabacoa Remits, failing which y td obtain they start-westward- skirting this city. active partisan given crise to the rnmor at the uprising was fomented by leaders of the eonserv-tvepart- v to make an impression enn L. Xtinison, the America secretary of war, on his Acevedo is an n this has Indiahoma, Okla., July 30. Despondent because of ill health, Mrs. M. Gore, 40 years old, wife of a farmer living six miles southwest of here, today administered strychnine to her two daughters. 4 and 6 years old, after which she .swallowed a large dose of the The instantly. poison, dying while 'short a youngest child) died later and the other cannot live. Mrs.Gore had beem ill for si time and today became worse. Her husband came to town for medicine. Asaoon as he waaout of sight she called the children into the house . and gave them the poisons A'man passing along the road saw the oldcst child rolling in a spasm. As he picked her up and started with her to the house, he approached the other little girl, who staggered from the door and fell dead at his feet. Stepping inside he found the mother stretched across the bed dead. hero. SAVED HER MONEY Ridgefield, Conn., Aug. 1. One Philippine Independence. thousand dollars saved by Mrs. AU" of or!r Trk The first John Spadion during a tr! i111 In,,Ve,npnt in this coun- .of rigid economy, was tKa im" t0 dependence spent yesterday, in accordance h; islands will be with her dying wishes, in provid:n Brooklyn V" next week. ing the most elaborate funeral Tl, at er of the movement is procession ever witnessed inRidge A. Manibo. 25 years old, son field. A undened band of 40 pieces pa,thy merchant of Bauea, led ;the procession, followed by( a he leaders of the Nation rT party of children loaded down VTOyiM with costly floral oeffrings. Then BatanlrS youngeri Man- came 200 men, marching four of Greens col-o- f abreast and finally 400 - friends m,duate ila l ,on?kon2- the and acquaintances in carriages. fduatWTn univepsity aad the When the cavalcade reached the Ohio the e church, the parish university. scolded the participants, de priest Senor Manibo will be backed daring such an ostentatious dispf 3 whi play out of place. He chided the the funds Prided for fitting up people because they did not at but Vhich "iH tend his regular services, ke g ' vmmZT? teaartOT of waited for a deathto occur to make a great show and pageant. life-time 80-year- s, ' t - lia - law-schoo- Washington, July 31. Investigation of the sugar trust was resumed by the house committee here today. Chairman Hardwick announced thht he was mistaken in his r recent statement that the estate owned stock in the California-IIawaiiasugar company. . Truman G. Palmer, secretary of the American Beet Sugar association, gave a history of the beet sugar industry. He said that while only 4.35 per cent of the worlds supply of sugar came from beets in 1840, the industry developed so rapidly that in 1900 beets furnished 62 per cent. In 1910 the' percentage had dropped to 504 per cent, he said, as a result of the action of European countries at the Brussels conference in 1902 to stop bounties on beet growing. Running as far back as Napoleons time, Mr. Palmer recalled the French edict of 1811. requiring French farmers to plant acres o,f beets because of the benefit of beet growing to the soil, but Chairman Hardwick had some recollection along that line and said Napoleon forced beet production because cane countries were blockaded against him. Mr. Palmer then suggested Cato wrote a book 150 years before Christ, that American farmers today could make money by following. .so-call- Have-meye- J is SHOTJND KILLED Goggles? i ' Pueblo, Colo., July 30.- - An unidentified highwayman was shot and instantly killed early this morning when he and a companion attempted to hold up Steven ' , We have them Gregor in front of the latters residence here. The other hold-uescaped. When Gregor sought to elude the men, one of the highwaymen fired, Gregor being slightly wounded in the back of the neck. Gregor returned the fire. The hold-uwas shot below the heart and in the head. -f- or- p beer?, Autoists and The United States Brewers association, represented by Louis B Schramm of New York, offered a long statement in reply to the set of questions as to what ingredients were contained in beer. It was claimed that the process-aningredients .used in making-be- er were substantially the same now Get into the habit of EXECUTCardon as before the pure food law was ING your best and biggest plans 41 N. Main S- tpassed. eoneerning your'store advertising In giving detailed information those of your plans that, a little as to their methods, the brewers declared their willingness to cooperate with the department in investigating rhe manufacture of malt liquors. The brewers declared, however, that the government eye supervised the manufacture of beer through the United States internal act. Furthermore, they suggested that inasmuch as the principal difference in beers was in the densities before and after fermentation, there would seem to be no reason of for, compulsory adoption specific labelling. John R. Mauff, of Cranford, N. J., representing the Consumers league, read a statement charging -that since nursing mothers and tonic invalids use beer- - for properties, labels should designate the ingredients, so that users may know whether they are getCHURCHES ting grain extracts or chemical preservatives. That any chemical preservaCONFERENCE NOTICE tives were used in the making denied by the Quarterly conference of the of beer was quicklyv brewers; Cache Stake of Zion will 'i Sunin Logan Tabernacle WILL BE day, August 6th, 1911. Meetings TREATIES Ladies $3.50 and $4.00 Oxfords' Swell ' Styles. Now 2.00 SIGNED THURSDAY will be held at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. . , Misses- - $1.75 Heavytand Light Sole Shoes ... v. . In the evening at 8 p. m. meetWashington, Aug. 1. The gen22 ing will be held under the aus- eral arbitration treaties between . Satin Calf Shoes Gents Little $1.50 $1.00; pices of the Y. M. and Y. L. M. I. the United States, Great Britain Sandals A. Place will be 'especially allotWhile they last One lot of Barefoot 30 r and France will be signed at 3 ted to the quorums of the priestoclock Thursday afternoon in hood. Bishops, High Priests, SevPresident Tafts office at the enties and Elders. All of the peoWhite House. Ambassador Bryce ple in the Stake . are invited and will sign the British treaty jointly we trust that the tabernacle will of State Knox and the 1 be taxed to its fullest capacity. with Secy. is it Freneh after by signed treaty If necessary overflow meetings i will be dispatched by Knox, Secy. lawn. ; will be held out on the T&bern&cle The Opposite exspecial messenger to' Paris to Saturday evening, August 5th, f6t the one bearing the Priesthood meeting will be held change of Freneh Minister of . in the large room of the taber- signature tttfTTI1 VVVVV wWl Affairs Selves. Foreign 8 nacle at p. m. Every person the holding priesthood is expected to be. present without fail. REPRESENTS A YOUNG LADY Important business and instrucCLEANING HER HANDS WITH tions jwillbe givenriThe visiting will Te Jnuattendanee. brethren n 90,-00- 0 convene p d Threshers Good Line Justin jewelry Co. H O SI ER Y Shipment Delayed Special Postponed Indefinitely Howell Cardon Co. Shoe THE HUB: . -- T t AT --- t-- e THE OPEN AIR MEETINGS At the First National Bank cor- ner are still being continued with good interest. The subjects are always important, and the speakers make their points . interestingly and fiorcibly, while not controversial, the truths which have been held most dear by all Christendom in hundreds of years are presented so that any thinking person ean understand.The value of hearing a new voice present even the views which one has long believed often is very great, though, overlooked. The subject for Friday .night is announced as The True Church of Christ, what is it. The meetings are expected to continue up to and including Sunday evening next. Further notice Saturday. All are cordially invited. The Wagon Missionaries. -- At0ry-bmldin- MIS BEES? 31. Both Washington, July Secy. Wilson of the department of agriculture and Dr. Harvey W. Wiley of the board of food and drug inspection listened carefully today to the answer of brewers to the question : What seemed while ago, would have like dreams. . , TRYING Til FIND HISTORY OF BEET IN PAGE FIVE THIS PICTURE UNCLE SAMS CLEANSER AFTERIDOING HER HOUSE CLEANING with the SAME ARTICLE This can not be done with any other cleanser without injuring the hands. Referring to a Letter BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY. Provo, Utah, Feb. 21, 1911, Mr. Fred Turner, 361 SoutS 5th West, Salt Lake City, Utah. Dear Sir: You are at perfect liberty to make use of rify letter if you see flit. I did not write it simply because your article was a home productpatriotism merijs-mfeompe-titi- The classified ads would he the dullest possible reading matter for a person who might have no aim or purpose in mind. But to folks with purposes, aims, desires, quests they are the most interesting reading in town! before shopping is the womans habit. Ad-readi- thrift-practisin- g is not a part of the motive. Uncle Sams Cleanser stahds on its strictly with evejthing I have used in this line. ery truly yours. on GEO. H. BRLMHALL. Ask your Grocer . for Uncle Sam's Cleanser the best offerd to the public. It stands strictly on its Merit |