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Show - . v' 7 ' V r -- 1 the weekly reflex P. Epperson it KAYSVILLE , - PAY LAST HONORS TO EMPRESS OF CHINA' zn, Loise W.- - UTA9 THE UTAH POWDERPLAIIT BUDGET The epidemic of measles at Ogden MOUNTAIN TOPS OVERLOOKING DU PONT WORKS SAID TO BE continues, six deaths occurring the O WNED BY BROWN MEN ' week. past A petition lias been filed with the city recorder at American Fork to call an election on the liquor quesQuietly Bought Up Land on Which tion In June. be Mounted a Few Guns The state and the county of Salt Could,, Could Which Easily Put Plant Lake together expect to spend $7,200 of Business With Few Shot. Out on state road Improvement, work. In the county this year'; r &A - Vernon Clauson, whose home is In Ban Francisco, fell from a train'on which he was stealing a ride near Tucker and was killed. Robert. Morris, a prominent business matn of Salt Lake and a bishop of the eleventh word, died April 23, the cause of death of the atom New York A Japanese syndicate which Iff said to represent the Japanese government, has been 8e. cretly purchasing a number of moun-tain tops overlooking the great Du Pont smokeless powder plant at Haskell, N. J The powder of this factory iamanufactured almost - exclusively for the United States government. It Is this powedr which is used bv the big guns e army and,f navy. With such caution have the Japa nese taken titles to the hills' to the northward of the Haskell plant that the ersldents of the neighborhood did not become aroused until the present agitation In California against alien ownership of landSbegan to develop its proportions, p HWhy-Xhe- y quietly settled here beside us Is a puzzle, said one of the officials of the Du Pont Powder comIf they pany late Tuesday night. wanted to they could mounta few guns there and throw a few shells Into our midst and would pretty nearly put us out of business Of course I am not saying that they have tny such thing in mind. I have always been of-- he opinion that Japan is one. of our best friends, on ac h i Bird day was appropriately observed hwstate .rla,.tho.publir,.:bis-.-of- ' April 25, in accordance with the terms Of a law passed by the last legislat- - of-th- ' ure.-A lone highwayman held up the oo cupants of a saloon in the heart of Salt Lake City, .Monday night, securing about (50 In cash and a diamond ring valued at $150 Wesley Davis, I r :r r years old, 135 of- - either drow neJlirTtflleiT by a blow on the head while fast in a sixteen inch pipe,' down which he was descending into a well. Will Cunningham, aged 50, of Park City, Is dead as the result of Injuries received when an ore wagon carrying a 'load of 19,000 pounds passed over .his toot and leg. Four girls who attempted to walk from Park City to Salt Lake In eight! hours on a wager, lost their wager after, getting on tk wrong road and landing In Ilenefer. Mrs. Mamie Davis of Salt Lake has disappeared and it Is believed her body Is In the Jordan river, although several days search has resulted In failure to find any trace ofher body. Jim Roumpas, a Greek, has confessed to setting fire to a Greek lodging house at Bingham, the building being destroyed, iloumpas has agreed to pay all damages'ifaused by the conflagration. Calm and complacent, Caleb A. Inflow formerly principal of the schools at fllngham, Is on trial. at Salt Lake for the murder of Thomas E. (Eddie) White, a chauffeur, on the night of October 4, 1912. Bam Gelsling, while In company with Jhe wife of Edward Chrlstopher-eon- , the two being engaged In an elopement via the sheep wagon route, was shot and Instantly killed by the womans husband, near Garrison- .May 9 is the date set for the stAte Irrigation convention at Salt Lake, at which efforts will btj made to have present two representatives from every water company In the state, as well as many more persons Interested. Rector Rowland, aged 17,. while playing In the streets of Salt Lake, fell under a street car and was fatally The child tripped over a Injured. dog with wnlch he was playing and landed under the wheels of the car. The Moslda Land Irrigation company has announced plans for the im-- 4 NEW WAR IN BALKANS. ( - 1 JAPANESE DECURE THEY WILL NOT REGEOE CHINESE PRESIDENT GHAR6ED STEP A Ambassador Chlnda Washlngton. Informed the United States through the state department on Saturday that lhe Japanese government would not recede one whit from the demand that the California' legislature enact With Bulgarians (4orth of Menaatlr, London. A Bucharest dispatch to the Telegraph, expresses the firm conviction that, immediately - peace is signed between the allies and Turkey a new war will commence between Bervia, Bulgaria and Greece. ,A Bulgarian correspondent says tfca large concentrations of opposing troops are in readiness for these new campaigns, and adds,, that he has heard from reliable sources that considerable fighting has already occurred, and that three important eia gagements were fought In the last week, concerning, which the greatest secrecy has been maintained. He describes fighting, with heavy losses on both 'sides, between the Bulgarians and Servians to the northeast of r on April 10, and fightings between the Greeks and Bulgarians for a week In the vicinity of Nigrlta, Seres and Balonlkl. Mon-asti- 1 8AWS W'aY'OUT OF PRISON. Watchman Killed, by Woman. Mash. Carl A. Westman, Seattle, 48 years old, night watchman at a shipyard and formerly' butler In the home of Chauncey Depew, the Vanderbilts and other wealthy New York families was found dead, with a bullet his head, at Winslow,, Kitsap coun- In ty Sunday. After a brief examlna tion Sheriff Shattuck ofKltsap coun-t- Condemned Murderer Aided to Escape separated by Hie WifeF Tampa, Fa Anna Forte. - ROBERT B. GORDON. E. F. Andrews, under inner given here in his honor by the BilgrirnssocTetyof the 1'nlteJ States, After six years as British ambassadcrtothis xountry Mr. Bryce will sail for home from San Francisco May V v Xt V' k Vv - VAltVv -- ; I ' vl 16, - - 'A : ' - f 'I d 5 by incubator is ' S Three, incubators have department of the building The state livestock fn specter ' is for a meeting of the governor and .other officials to ascertain just how far can be secured 4n the intended state-wid, work- - of examining dairy herds and enforcing The rulesas to examination before the purchase of, new cattle. e In a statement SunWashington day night. Secretary Garrison, pointing to the army, scattered In small units throughout the country, impossible . of coalescence for practical Instruction in the larger tactical measures of battle, urges the importance of assembling brigades and divisions periodically in times of peace, pending the adoptlon'of a governmental policy for the adequate distribution of the army. Epitomizing his idea, the said: I hope that war may never come, but in the present stage of civilization we must recognize the possibility; and it is with this Idea in mind that I say I believe It would be well for the country. if oiir legislators would make provision for the annual assembling of at least one division, as a school wherein our officers might be given that practical training which is so necessary to develop educated generals and staff lifflcers. We may not need a large army, but it should be one which in organization apd training is as nearly perfect as it is possible to make it. Otherwise, whatever is Bpent is not bringing Its full efficient return, . and this applies to thought, skill and training, as well as to money. Discussing the question of. a future military policy for the United States, Secretary Garrison said It seemed to be agreed that there were entirely too many posts at thepresent time and that many of them were not where they were useful or desirable under existing eonditions.- - E6SAD PASHA SEIZES THRONE. Tukish General Springs Coup, Appar-entlWith Consent of Montenegro. London jrEssad Pasha, the hero ol Scutari, who had a picturesque and adventurous career, made a dramatic move in proclaiming himself king of Albania, and is said to be marching Into the Interior of Albania with 40,000 men. He waB received with enthusiasm at .Alessio and is proceeding to Tlranta to be proclaimed and to take possession. Essad Pasha Is an Albanian chieftain of the typewhich earned for the Albanians a reputation for barbaric simplicity approaching savagery. He was always opposed to the Young Turks repressive measures in Albania. In Vienna and Paris his surrender of Scutari is regarded as having been an arranged matter with King Nich-olhapproved his plan to proclaim himself independent prince of Albania. The whole scheme of the alleged storming of Scutari and the marching out of Essad Pashas army with their arms is now regarded as a coup dthe-ate-r to deceive Europe y HENRY C. BRECKINRIDGE he the legislators At the close of the secret meeting Governor Johnson' and a number ol the administration leaders declare their opinions remain unchanged. LIFE AND PROPERTY NOT SAFE. Conditions In Mexican Capital Serious and Another Battle Expected. New Orleans. Life and property are not safe in Mexico City and battle there may be elpectert any time, according to Mexicans and Americans who fled from the capital and arrived here Tuesday on the steamer City of Tampico. Exchange is higher than it has been in a quarter of a century and business is demoralized, said many of the refugees. The boat Carried more than Its passenger capacity, and in their eager, ness to get out of the country a number of passengers paid fare with the knowledge that there was no sleeping accommodations for them. . r PRINCE RECEIVES OVATION. . Danito of Montenegro Handt Over Keys to Scutari. Cettinje. Crown Prince Danito ol Montenegro- - was welcomed ;withan ovation on his arrival here Tuesday to hand overto King -- Nicholas the keys to the fortress of Scutari. The formal ceremony was greeted with cheers from the excited crowd. The -- members- of - the- - royaJ - family 7 afterward marched In procession to the .cathedral,- - the queen and each of the women giving her arm to a wounded soldier. -- -- Gdzzman. Cvrleton Died Poor. New lork- - (,H Curleton. tluTpoet, who dod recent.' . It ft les-- - than nothing: it betaine known Saturday-througthe official appraisal his tate gross assets. inciiKiing the poets librarx ani the cojn light on 13 books,, ftll $,5 short of the amount which the appraiser foupd necessary to spare his aecoutns. ns n, Clark Drawn Jnto Debate. Washington Excited debate and many wrangles marked the beginning of the reading of the Democratic tariff bill in the house Progress in the perfecting of the measure was slow, but the talk was loud and vociferous and on one occasion brought Speaker Ca'rk on the floor with'a. yigorous.speech Southern Pacific Loses1 Cand. Portland. Ore. Landtipnlated to be wortj$30.(KKL0rand estimated by experts' to havea jyaluLOf $50,000,000 to $60,000,000, was taken from the Southern Pacific Railroad company and returned to the federal government Tuesday by orders of Judge C. W. Woiverton in the United States h e Henry C. Breckinridge was recent-lappointed ass.stant secretary of war. He is the 'son of Maj. Gen. J. C. Creckinndge of- Kentucky, and lr about thirty years old. He is a lawyer -- v. and a graduate of Princeton, y - district court ' Killed by Benzine Explosion. the Has two Days Vacation Two Perish In Prairie Fire. Troops Moving. prAustrian The pure food board Hamburg, Washington Two men Geimany. " an Rested two Washington. Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan after das TravelLondon According to a report has denied an application of import- - and a night of from the south country, ers quiet aboard theliJead ami three are dying out of eight published in Berlin, an where- Austrian naval ers, and distributors for a postpone- - qarhl Svlnh ver injured in au explosion of Tieanae Fn-- - division has left prairTe fires are raging, bring informaTrieste with teenrbeyond May t ot the order away, from the 'cares of day night on board the new Hamburg-Americawith the intentions of occupy- tion that two lives are known to have liner Iterator at Cuxbidding the interstate shlpnu'ffrrLbts jjttice President Wion-return- ed been lost and many persons have been " Dulcigno and Sam, Giot ing Antivari, vegetables greened, 1th copper salts- - to theJSVuite House Sunday night haven" Injured. vanni di .Mfdua.' . Cobb Scgns Contract. Denial by COutts BankStraphanger injured.- - ' Elsie Reasoner Dead. Retired Officer 'Dies. Perils of straphanging Chicago. Detroit Mich. After a-- conference London Coutts bank denied Satur-wer- e Leavenworth, , Pa. Kansas,- -! rs Lester Chester, Major General Henry illustrated here Tuesdays, when day thaKthas any connection with with President Nxn, Friday. Tyrqs known to Ralph, the newspaper world Clay'Uochrane, United States Miss taste Fuga, 17, was torn from the loan Wfe$7.3i0,0Cf0 Marino Cobs eestei fielder of the Detroit as Elsie Reasoner, war reported to haver correspondent her hold at a curve on the iterated been. floated by the Mexican govern American league baseball club, - at- corps, retired,"died at his home here jlied JTeusday at Lloyd, Forida. acSunday. At the time road and tbfown .partly through 'wln- - ment- for one year at 8S4 and to bear tached his name'lb a J91 contract cording to word received In Leaven- - V dow. asranking cfficer ,'5 per cent interest. The terms were not given out. , corps worth, her former home. , Will Enforce Law. , 10.000-troop- n s, -' , - - of-hi- s - , V -l- Its disapproval. de es-Th- ing measure by unanimous viva voc vote. The bill will undoubtedly be approved, according to the prediction's of the administration eaders-Whet It comes to Governor Johnson it will be signed. The new bill is drawn In strict con formity with the treaty between Ja pan and the United States, but all ef forts to secure an opinion from Secretary Bryan or President Wilson failed, and the state leaders decided forth with to proceed with" their plans foi t enacting It Into law. Secretary Bryan brought into th final conference Tuesday nlghtfui ther messages from President Wilson, but they met with no response from Ey-to- 81 um at joitte headquarters nn hour after Lis as rest M ss Joy nor had reTv Vithin'rthreej"minTitesand""beforr most of the spectators knew what bac occurred. Senator A. E. Boynton, pres ident pro tem of the upper house, con vened the senate, and an amended land bill, which provides that no aiiei who is ineligible to citizenship under the lawa of the United States maj hold real property in California, was adopted, as a! substitute for the pend the challenger desperate twentieth round finish, In the opinion of Referee earned him a draw. The decision was unpopular and the crowd voiced w Ifo' 0o;um:rtr1- - sul-ciby swa lowing cyanide of potas-- , ni,-- i Sacramento, Cal If the purpose ol (he visit of Secretary of State Bryan was to check further action by the legislature on an alien land law directed against the Japanese, his mis sion has been a failure. The confer ences between Secretary Bryan and the legislators closed at 11:30 oclock Tuesday night. d Kills Girl Who Spurned HimIndianapolis, Ind Miss Nellie Joyner, 22 years old. daughter of a restaurant proprietor, was shot and Saturdav evenmg ly Dr. fused to : Match a Draw. Los Angeles. Johnny Dundee waa given a draw at the end of his twenty-rounfight Tuesday night with Johnny Kilbane, the featherweight champion. Kilbane apparently outpointed gen- Lharles Guzman, ' Kilbane-Dunde- e retired-ment.'bof-th- V y sec-fetar- - Debts-Mus- ' New Bill ! Drawn In Strict Conformity With the Treaty Between Japan and the United States and Will Probably Pass. - i tSalt Lake. Believes In Annual Aetembllng of at Least One Divleion at a School Wherein' Officers Might be Given Practical Training. Pleads for United Party. Tittsburg. Pa United States Senator Charles E JTownsend of Michigan,, addressing the Americas Republic club here Saturday night on the occasion of its annual. Grant day banquet, pleaded for a reunited Republican par- it in the last national campaign extended the ungloved hand of uine party fiiendship- Citizens of Deseret are grading their t "bs' PiTa.' street by a pro g r.e ve-- nr 0 ?i7' i a t i a in a decision of Washington method Fvery Saturdiy they meet especially- - asto at Ra m and work mil p mTwhen' mentous --importance, the railroads, supieme couit on Monthey, attend luruheon served by the laid down the general principle day Relief ,mh ioty bout one block per the creditor of a corporation, notjL the is rate of pro average Saturday party Tonitsreorgvniation, may hold pres. successor for jts debt its In a total of 192 towns and d stricts, 99 districts reported no deaths to tba Robert B Gordon, a former cen- Drowned in Bear River. state board of health in March, ac- ' from Ohio, is the new sergegreesman Montpelier, Idaho Grant Shields, ant-at-arms of the house of reprecording to the March bulletin of the 17 year-olson of Mr ana Mrs. Rob- - sentatives He is board Just Lsm'fby Dr. T R. Beatty, flftyeight years old. rl Shields of Tooele. . Ctaht was and since the. Fifty seventh consress the secretary. Total deaths drowned in Bear lake Tuesdav when has held the of superintendent position monrh fn the state from he and four others were thrower into - t)fthebou5.e of representatives doc . wcre-Cnthe water from a barge ument room chickens v via the Orient. Sir his successor, will arrive in New lork in a few days Many noted men sat at the guest table with Ambassador Bryce, who in a speh emphasized the relation of fiiend'ship existing between has coun- try and the United States 3, CecirSpring-Rice- , -- - ACCOMPLISH WILL MEASURE BY DESIRED PURPOSE EVERY CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE, s, RIGHT HONORABLE JAMES BRYCE Ambassador From Great Britain. 1 that has been successfully taken up by puprfs of the Whittier "si hool of y declared it his belief that .West man was killed during a quarrel with his wife, from whonche (bad been because she refused hint. to marry Pasquale Forte, 19, a Much of the land along the shore-- . brother of the girl, is said to have of Ytah lake .planted last.ycarhas-.- . stfuck tll0 blow which rosuted in been flooded -and the fanners .... - will -Iom ' Marasco s death Pasqh.iTe Hod and hundreds of acres In crops this sea has not been captured eon. The 4ake is still rising and it is feared that the damage will run into Californian Suicides at Reno, many thousands of dollars Reno, Nev Thomas J Kirk, Jr., Stephen A Filler, serving a term in son of Thomas J Kirk, superintendent the state' penitentiary of throe years of public instruction of California, for indecent assault, attacked a committed suicide here Monday night. girliwho strayed near where He had been on an automobile ride he was working' Monday as a trusty with his wife and several friends. Ex-- ' The child escaped from the convict cusing himself fofi a minute he entered after her clothes had been nearly torn his apartment and shot himself. off - Kiang-S- u d n . The government of the has addressed to the government at Pekin provisional governors and members of parliament sensational which correspondence, seeks to show President Yuan Shi Kai sanctioned the assassination of General Sung, former minister of education General Sung was shot down at the rgil road station here March 20 and died several days later. .His assassin escaped, but later General Sung received a letter purporting to havu been written by the assailant., apologizing for his attack, and declaring that Sung had been mistaken by him for of General Using, commander-in-chie- f the troops in southern Shanghai. province of Fu-Kle- 8ervlne com-ran- i MURDER no alien land law which would be directed exclusively at the Japanese people j The Japanese embassador in person delivered the mikados message to John Bassett Moore, who is the acting secretary of state in the absence of Mr. Bryan, The recognized experts on International law say the contention of Japan that under the treaty agreement she Is being discriminated against by the California people is without foundation. To the contrary. It is being BRYCE SAYS FAREWELL. claimed that the actual discimination, If any exists. Is on the part of Japan Will Return to His Home in England After Six Years Service. against the United States. Senator ENhu Root, whose disinter-esteNew York. James Bryce said fareoplnlona are widely accepted as well to the American people Friday sound, holds that the treaty between this country and Japan does not give lh Japanese any rlghte to purchase or hold lands for agricultural purposes. He analyzed the proposed alien land law of California as a question only of property, which in no way repre-sent- s an Infringement. 4 Ilatph ng WITH SANCTIONING AmbassadoO Chinda Calls at State Charged That Yuas 8hl Waa Aware That Attempt Would be Made on Department With Another Meeeage From Imperial Government. Life of Minister of Education. e e new brarreh of industrial education - - -- - ; PRACTICALLY HAS GARRISON' SAME VIEWS ON SUBJECTS AS HELD BY PREDECESSOR- .- , The picture ahowa the Tai Ho Tien in the first courtyard of the For- City. It ahowa the altar,- arch of honor and the crowds of people whlng to bow three times before the picture of the late empress on the Mtar Inside the building. MM m -- ') i 1 -- ... f 1 fi sentence of death for murder, escaped Monday and his wife is held In the Jll from which he fled, charged with furnishing the saw wbleA released him. Mrs. Andrews was admitted to the jail Tuesday to tsit her husband during religious seriiceeMouday night ed la tecon st ruction of- - a new- gasoline launch seventy-fivfeet In length Andrews sawed out of the cell in mur,to take the place oMhe launch Mo-- derers row" - and then through the Ida recently destroyed by fire on the barred outer- window into the Jail ' yard He soaled'the prison wall withUtah lake out arousing the guard Crushed under fallen earth in the y Workings on the U tab. Copper Rejected Lover Killed. at Bingham, George Nassa a Marasco, Chicago Anthony Greek, was taken from beneath the was on struck the with bead a hatchet cave-iby fellow workmen, dead His and killed after he attacked Tuesday skull was" fractured and his body badly crushed, ::n n 1 being-ulcerati- -- BILL PROPOSED SBOLISHJSIS e e |