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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX , W. P. Epperson ' ; KAYS TILLS Eon, ATr GETTYSBURG LEE JEALOUSY GRAZED INDIAN H'10 LADS SWEPT SHOOTS SQUAW AND SEIF Lhmi - - OF HEADQUARTERS OVER I1IA6ARA FALLS UTAH THE UTAH BUDGET i The Utah Dental society convention In Salt Lake, Monday and Tuesday, wai attended by dentists from all over : the state. m2 During 117.371.969.26 as against $16,323,055 69 '$15,122,566.76 In WU. Jn 1911, Salt-Lak- blade-grazin- i I g -- j Mat-thl- e citl-ten- s - ti I.!i tv ' ti 1 - 1 a. J ' ' , comfort That a deposit of sillcla which has ' i !L r formed in a wooden pipe which has carried water to Stockton for forty ybars. haa caused many caaea of appendicitis In Stockton, la the general bcllefof some of t tie heakh officials of the state. The streets of Salt Lake will he a Maze of light and color during the N. E.A. convention and a special effort will be made to make the deooratloa scheme better, than anything that has ever been attempted beforby any convention city. David Matheny was painfully burned about the back and shoulders at an early hour when fire of unknown origin destroyed the cabin In which he was sleeping at Fillmore. The cabin waln flames before he was aroused rom his slumbers. Lr. G. R. Guthrie, & former well known dentist of Salt' Ixike, who Is r largely Interested In a big land tu 'the tepUblfc of Panama, home for a visit, and Is enthusiastic concerning the outlook for Americans In the canal tone. Ogden's first ."Rose Sunday" waj observed June 22 In the First Presby teQan rhnrt-- with - itpActal .services. The church was decorated with a profusion of roses from Ogden gardens, and the day promises to be made as annual. affair hereafter, lloken Olsen, the Huntsville storekeeper who has been convicted twice In the past few years of the Illegal sale of liquor, will spend the next nine months of his life In county Jail, according to the sentence pronounced by Judge J. A Howell, at Og propo-kllioi- , f r f 5, b t , I , ? - I the-Web- if ,1s ' den. . t Washington. President Wilson telegraphed Tuesday night to United Stales District Attorney John L. Me Nab of San Francisco acceptance of the latter's resignation, the form of which the president characterized an inexcusable intimation oflnJus-tlcand wrongdoing on the part of In a Attorney General MeReynolds. letter to the attorney general the presldentexonerated him Tronf blame and- - adopted and gestlou that the Camlnettl-Dlggthe Western Fuel company's cases be prosecuted immediately by special counsel forthe government. iSpeclal prosecutors will be appointed, the president having In mind Francis J. Heney, Progressive, who prosecuted the famous San Francisco graft trials; Matt. J. Sullivan, Democrat, who assisted Mr. Heney in the Ruef trial, and Thomas Hayden, Dem" ocrat, a former assistant city attorney of San Francisco. It was said that at least two of these three men and possibly all, would be selected to take charge not only of the white slave cases, but the Western Fuel company Indictments. Camlnettl-DlggThe escapade, which haa W tp McNV resignation, started March ll, when Sacramento was Bhocked by the report that Maury Diggs, formerly - California state architect, and Drew Caminettl, son of the state senator from Amador county," had disappeared with two high school girls, Martha Warrington, daughter of the agent of the Santa Fe railroad at Sacramento, and Lola Sorrts, daughter of a real estate mas, all four being arrested at Reno. Caminettl had a wife and two children, one a baby only five weeks oldv while Diggs, also married, bad a mail daughter. John L. McNab had charge of the case since the federal government's work began, Caminettls father was appointed United .States commissioner general of Immigration under the WUsoa administration. e s Canal-nettl-Dtg- y -- Hundreds Swarmed to River Bank In Vain Endeavor to Rescue Boys Who Calmly Shook Hands Before Go- ing Down to DeatK -- ? i 4 "y 4 f f t - rS , ; , , ' - w, Y ; j - T wi v A . 1 . - ? y, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Donald Roecoe, 10 years old, and Hubert Moore, 9 yearf old, of Niagara Falls, went to 9 1! 'ter- their death in a small boat late - Sun- day afternoon In the Whirlpool rapids, while hundreds of men watched helpless on the shore and two companies of fireunen used every endeavor to save the lads. The boys were play-inn ln ,a..flat.,bottomed scow, half- y mile above the rapids, when the rope holdlngTfie boaLbroke and they were carried out into, the stream and went down the river. Former Confederates who attend the Battle of Gettysburg celebration The. boys, realizing their fate, stood naturally will flock te the house sbo wn la the photograph, (or It was occu- up as the boat neared tbe edge of the pied me headquarters by General Lee during the great conflict It stands roaring whirlpool, and shook hands In oa the Chambersburg road. farewell. A second later they were erf gulfed by a great wave In the rapid a The boat shot out of sight. . One oi AVIATOR DROPS BOMBS EXPLORERS REACH HIGHEST ECKS the" boys 'war seen for a moment and OF MEXICAN SHIPS POINT OF NORTH AMERICA struggling in the rushing waters, then disappeared. Neither body ha been recovered, and it Is probable that the bodies never will be recovered. - -- y- g ON-D- French Airman ' Drives Federal Gurv Missionary and Three Companies Reboate From Harbor Forcing Them ported to Have Climbed to SumIn mit of Mount McKinley. to Tako Refugt Open 8a. FIFTY INJURED IN WRECK. - Douglas, Arizona- - Dldler Masson, the French aviator who smuggled an aeroplane from Los Angeles Into the Mexican rebels', lines, on Saturday drove tbe federal gunboats Guerrero and Tampico from Guaymaa harbor. Bombs 'dropped by Masson on tbe decks of the two Mexican warshtpt forced them to take refuge In tbe open sea. Complete victory for the constitutionalist rebels, after a six days battle at Oritz, Sonora, la claimed by the junta here. According to dispatches received from Governor Pasquerla over the wires from Ortix, all of which are In the hands of the rebels. Gem eral Obregon surrounded and completely routed the federal' army under General Pedro Ojeda. Tbe losses on both sides are reported to be nearly 2,000. Idasson and his aeroplane played a big part In the battle, dropping many bombs into the 'federal entrenchments at Ortiz. One of these Pelky Acquitted by Jury. bombs, dropped Friday, is claimed to on Arthur Alberta. Pelkey Calgary Monday was found not guilty of caus- have killed fifty two federal soldier a ing the death pf Luther McCarty. The Real Farmers Given the Benefit. Jury, however, declared the contest Washington.- Special consideration between Pelkey and McCarty was a for farmers who actually cultivate enactment the prize fight and urged of legislation to prevent the bolding land on government reclamation proof prize fights In Alberta. The Jury jects as against speculators, was anwas out one hour and fifteen minutes, nounced as an Interior department McCarty died on May 7, shortly after policy Monday by Secretary Lane. In collapsing In Tommy Burns arena Hue with this, the secretary ordered a of during the second round of his bout temporary Reduction to due amount from settlers the present with Pelkey. , on final building charges Installments, General Strike Threatened. provided no payment shall be less 50 cents an acre. than to of coast acoast Chicago. Threat strike iu sympathy with the Chicago Says McReyonlds Butted In. uulon men locked out by the Building San Francisco. Charging that UnitConstruction Employeraassoclatlon was made Saturday by Simon ODon ed States Attorney General McRey-noldhad ordered what he considered nell,"president of the" Building Trades to O'Donnell, "fatal delayaln the prosecution of Cornell. According union men In cities throughout the four men indicted" by - federalgrand country are awaiting his word to drop juries. United States District Attortheir tools and tie up the construction ney John L McNab of this city ten dered his resignation by telegraph to work of the nation. with President Mother of Seven at Twenty-four- , a request that It be accepted by the Butte, Mont. Only 24 years of age same quick metnod of communication. snd yet the mother of seven children, Accused of Diabolical Crime. all boys, Mrs. Olga MacFarl&ne has been ordered committed to the Insane Vandalia. Mo. Mrs. John I. Nichol asylum for treatment.' She says that son and her adopted son, Howard, 10 d she Is unable to combat the morphine here Saturday from ' habit without aid. burns received when their clothing, saturated with gasoline, was set on Rejected Suitor Kilts Bride. fire. John T. Nicholson, husband of Philadelphia A rejected suitor shot the woman, was charged In the verand killed a young bride and a man dict of the coroner with causing the who attempted to save her Monday deaths. night, while three others, one woman snd two men, were probably fatally Drowns in Irrigation Ditch. Injured at a wedding celebration in Ogden, Utah. Left In care of two the northern part of the city, older children while hla mother went to town on a shopping errand, LawWilson Shatters Another Precedent. rence JB. Hunter, 15 months of age, Washington President Wilson shat- wandered from the Hunter yard of tered. anotherWhlteHousetraditkm home near Wilson, fiTe miles east of Bareheaded Wilson Mr. Monday. In an Irrigation walked out of the White House drive this city, and, tailing was drowned. ditch, almost to the gate to eay good-byA Popham Lobb, colonial secretary Commission Will Investigate Rate a tor Bermuda, one of his callers. Washington. An Inquiry' will be Killed by Lightning. made by the Interstate commerce Ogden, Utah. Frederick M. Harris, commission .on Its own Initiative into aged 12 years, son of Mr. and Mrs. the application of- the railroads east W. G. Harris., who reside one mile of the Mississippi and north of the north of the Utah Hot Springs, was Ohio and Potomac rivers for permis instahtly killed by a bolt of lightning sion to advance freight rates, both class and commodity. Monday afternoon. Aviator Falls Into Lake . Eight Injured In ,Autq Accident,-- ' Y. N. Fred JL Colorado Rochester, Gardiner, Springs, Colo. Eight peran aviator, was drowned In Lake sons, all residents of Denver, were Keuka Monday, according to "a dis- serlpusly Injured Saturday when an patch from Bath, when hla aeroplane automobile In which they were ridtell about 150 feet. Gardiner Is said ing was wrecked two miles south of to have lived In Portland, Me. Palmer Lake. -- - one-thir- d s Wilson-Saturdayil- ght, years-old.-die- e ' " " k. "A s Seattle, Wash. Archdeacon Hudson Stuck, the Episcopal missionary who set out from Falrbans, Alaska, sev eral months ago to climb Mount McKinley, reached the summit of the highest peak of the great mountain June 7, according to a private cable dispatch received here June 20. The message which was sent by Archdeacon Stuck from ' Fairbanks said: Accom successful. "Expedition plished first complete ascent of Mount McKinley June 7. H. P. Karstons, R. G. Tatum Walter Harper and I reached top of south (the highest 'of all) peak on a clear day, when It was possible to read all the angles of the mountains prominent points, and make certaln that the peak we had conquered was the highest of all. "We successfully carried a mercurial barometer fo the top and made complete readings and observations which, with simultaneous reading at Glbbem should permit a close approximation of the true altitude when proper corrections are applied. Water boiled.174.9 degrees. The present estimate of the summit's height is upward of 20,500 feet. We were able to read angles on all prominent points. - With field glasses we clearly saw the flagpole erected In 1910 by the .Thomas Lloyd expedition on the north peak (the lower of the two main peaks). After completing observations on the summit, we .hoisted the American flag on the upper basin, erected a cross and said "Te Deum on the highest point of North America. The northeast ridge Is the only passible , epproach,. .to ...the . summit. Due to tbe violent earthquakes of last July, the higher ridges shattered and this added largely to the danger, difficulty and labor of tbe , -- six-fo- were-rterribl- ascent We spent three weeks in continuous bad weather hewing a passage three miles long through this side. This was the chief cause of delay, as we made rapid progress at all other stages of the Journey. The chief credit for our success Is due to Karstons good judgment, resourcefulness and caution. We did not have a single mishap. Cars Leave Track When Train is Running Forty Miles an Hour. Rochester, n! Y. Fifty person were Injured, some of them seriously, when a Pennsylvania railroad excur slon train was derailed near Sterling station Sunday morning. The train was filled with excursionists bound for Olean, Rock City, and Bradford,- - Pa. While the train was running at about forty miles an .hour three ol Jhe five coaches left the track, roll As if ing down an embankment rounded a curvrthe smoking car left the track, followed by all but twe rear coaches. The locomotive also re m&ined on tbe track, breaking away from tbe train after dragging the coaches about 200 feet. CINCINNATI WITHOUT ICE. City Officials Procure Limited Supply for Delivery on Order of Physicians. Cincinnati Only the drop in th temperature Sunday prevented actua.' suffering as a result of the strike ol the drivers, helpers,' engineers and firemen- - of the ice manufacturing plants. Both sides held conferences but no evidence of concessions wai forthcoming. The city officials succeeded In get ting in several carloads of ice from nearby cities which relieved the danger that threatened the Infants. It was delivered on physicians orders The general public went without ice. Vernal, Utah Crazed with jealousy while the sun dance, greatest or l'te -- -- fifty-hou- emand fcrty-eighli-ho- u week. X V XT -- -- s - . v 80LDIER3 s '4 EAT SNAKES- - Food Supplies Cut Off by Insurgent Troops and Federals Starving. soldiers Ariz. Federal Nogales, to are reduced eating above, Guaymaa snakes, so completely has the food supply been cut off by tbe Sonora in Burgent state troops, said advicei Smpllpoi reaching here Tuesday. epidemics in the constitutionalist camps partially equalize the situation Despite the demoralization caused by famine and disease on either was reported to have continued late Tuesday- The insurgents attacked Ojeda's column from both the front and rear. Many were reported killed, while the wounded lie unat tended on the field. State officials insist that the fed erals steadily are losing ground li the continued battle, while theii ranks are being depleted by desertions. side-fighti- - WILL ATTACK JUAREZ. Strong Band Ahu-mada- , e e Dot-so- -- - s. Would Bar Foreigners. The Jlrst of a Eunr-Wf'o- f Phoenix, Ariz to- initiate a law expetitions cluding all but English speaking workmen from the mines of Arizona was filed Saturday1 with, the secretary of state. Petitions are being' circulated In every mining camp. .Risks Life for Kittens. Denver, Colo. James G. Webster risked his life and was seriously burned Friday when he rushed into a blazing house to rescue an angora Sir Thomas Lipton will try for the cat and her kittens. He succeeded n sixth time to win back the America's saving the kittens. cup from American yachtsmen. " Drops Dead in Lodge Room. McNsb Denies Agreement. w Cumberland, Wis. Former state San Francisco. United States DisSenator Charles A. Taylor, 64 years trict Attorney McNab denied Sunday old, father of Lieutenant Governor that he had agreed with Attorney R. Taylor of Idaho, dropped dead of apo- T. Devlin to postpone the plexy in the installation of his son case, as he was reported In Archie Taylor as Master Mason. Washington, to have done. Hurt In Mortorcycle Accident Mr. Woodruff Exonerated; Seven Killed in Iowa.-- -Bridgeport. Conn. Coroner John 'J. "Colorado Springs. Glenn L. Weber U lie ton, la, Sevtamea were killed Phelan on Sa tnrday ..exonerated Mr. and Miss' Ruby Ross or this city were and probably-fatall- y Injured Isabel H- - Woodford of criminal re- seriously tf not fatally Injured when in another the wreck of a freight which colfor death oa the a of which William sponsibility, motorcycle they were rida gravel train on the ChiStelnbanster. who was killed by her ing ran Into a, rot and threw them lided with cago, Milwaukee S SL Paul railroad automobile on June-down an embankment ' near here. . . -- - , Bryan Favors jCtrrency Bill. Washington. Secretary Bryan announced Saturday that he was strongly In favor of the Glass currency bill, and let it be known that be would use what Influence be could In bringing about Its early enactment - by con-kres- festivals, was in progress Tuesday, Tim Inchwitch sSot and killed h.s squaw- and then fired a bullet tu;o ts own head. He died instantly. Inchwitch was one of the lyftq prominent f the Ul ITnconipahgr' tribe, which has been holding its annual sun dance near White Hoik, 2 o'clock TtiVsday Shortly before his squaw approadud (he afternoon, pole about which the dancers vere circling and placed a bundle of weat herbs at its foot Almost at om a joung brave, one of the Q.in'erg, bent over the herbs as if to .ake them. This act aroused the abo..y-nejealousy. sfr. The 8q u a w, frighje n ed at .the quenceVof her act, ran away. followed her, and when ahehad some distance, he shot her dead. gone He then fled to his tepee. His baby girl ran to meet him. The Indian picked her up and carried her into his tepee, then fired a bulelt into his brain. When news of the double .tragedy reached . the aun dance half a mile away, a hundred excited braves rushed to avenge the murder, but their purpose was halted when they found Inchwitch had already committed The brother of Inchsttcn, suicide. one of the dancers, asked for revenge upon the person of the young brave whose act In stooping to pick up the herbs bad caused the tragedy. A council of the chiefs was held, and medicine neh said special Incantations oyer the young brave and the murderer's brother, resulting in the settling of the blood feud, the szeet herbs being divided between the to. of Constitutionalist Toward Border Town. Marching El Paso, Texas. Strong bodies ol Prayers for Rain Are Answered, constitutionalists under Gen. Franciscc SL Louis, Mo. An hour after praycommander in the state of ers for 'rain had been ordered In th Villa, are by couriers U chuches of Belleville, I1L, a suburb have reached reported and Guzman Villa, near here, a heavy rain storm brokt and seventy-fivthe two months drought throughout eighty-thre- respectively miles south of Ciudad Missouri and southern Illinois on Juarex, Mexico, on the Northwestern A hailstorm - completely and Mexican National Sunday. oj blanketed the lawns of Forest park their overland march railways, to attack with Ice While streets. here were flood-- , ed for several hours. Lightning did Juarez. considerable damage to property. Five Days In Jail for Murder. Tenn. Five days in jail Nashville, Drink Carbolic Acid. for involuntary manslaughter was thi Ogden, Utah Despondent over fam- sentence passed upon Mrs. Anna ily troubles William Moran, 30 years wife of'Dr. Walter DotBon, a Gaold, ended hla life Sunday afternoon llatin physician, here Tuesday, Sht at his home, by drinking four ounces was charged with the murder ol of carbolic acid. Charles Cobb, & barber, whom she shot down in a barber shop here last SIR THOMAS UPTON March. - On the stand Mrs. Dotson admitted she hag had illicit relations with Cqbb. - Suffering from tuberculosis and without funds or friends. J. Rogers n Inmate of the Salvation- Army la Salt Lake, ended Iris life by Jumping "tom a second-storwindow at the rear of the hotel. ..Rogers skull was crushed and his neck was broken. Miss Mary Williams, an Ogden 'girl a lew daya ago ascended to the topStrikers Reject Offer. most point of Ben Lomond, the moun- , ta,In east Of North Ogden, which Irises Cincinnati. At -- the- joint - meeting to a height of 5,280 feet above the of 8,000 men and women garment Oevel ot Great Balt Laker-- 1 She ti the workers 'Mondayril "Was decided to first woman to reach the. top of the reject the offer of the manufacturpeak. ., r ers for a working week and - n Immediate 7 Prosecution of and Spe-Slavery Cases cial Prosecutor Will be Appointed to Try Caste. Orders and white - -- -- life InBur Absolute exclusion of- all flshermeD , atid sheep from Tarleya can you as a means of reducing the contamlnatloi of the stream to a minimum, will be at tempted by Salt Luke City. Standing beside his mother with hi father and two younger brothers In the dining room of their borne, near Ogden, Frederick M. Harris, aged 12, was struck by lightning and instantly killed. Claiming that her husband threat ened to shoot her, Edith Kargas ol stuck a knife la Frank Kar- e the lung gas back, the Kargas Is In the- - hospital and will re coyer. reservoir Work on the mtlllon-dolla- r on the South Fork of the Ogden river has been abandoned by tbs construe tlon company, which has filed a Hen gainst the Ogden River Reservoir company for $29,000; ' After buffering for almost a week from what he supposed to be s sprained snkle, Fitch Kenney 5f Ogden, consulted physician and learned that he had been dancing and walking with a fractured ankle bone. ,J The refusal of his wife to live with him after hla release from the city jail, where he served a short sentence for disorderly conduct, led to the suicide of William, J, Moran, aged 29 years, a machinist, at Ogden. Only nervousness oq the part of ihe In would-bsuicide, prevented J. A a prominent druggist of Spanish Fork, from blowing his brains out. The bullet passed upward, tearing off his ar.butnot' entering" hli'zkull. Killed instantly perhaps under the wheels of an Oregon Short Line train, the mangled body of a man believed to be Gunder Peterson, about 25 years pld, was found on the railroad tracks ' short distance north of Ogden. A Carnegie library, costing approximately $8 000, will be built In St. George In the' near future. The of St, George recently agreed to appropriate the neceesary maintenance tax of ten per cent of $a,000. Stricken with typhoid, Robert Lindsay McGhle, for seven years associate professor of Greek and Latin at the University of Utah and a member of the general board of the Deseret Sunday School union, died Sunday at Salt - Lake, Old ags was honored at Lagoon June 20,. when more than 1.000 persons of 70 years or older, attended by not less than 500 relatives or friends, were the guests of the three Weber county stakes at the annual Old Folks owing. More than 500 of the old folks of Nebo stake went to Spring Lake villa Friday of last week for their annual outing. Automobiles and carriages were provided for helr transportation and everything possible done for Jhelr k IN BOAT WHEN ROPE BROKE AND THEY WERE CARRIED DOWN RIVER. WERE PLAYING DISACCEPT 8AN FRANCISCO RESIGTRICT ATTORNEYS NATION, un Dance of th Tragedy Interrupts Dancer Indians, Shooting W.fc Whom He Believed Unfaithful. Wets snd Drys Divide Honors. Salt Lake City. Qquor forces son and lost In local option elections held, in various towns in Utah Tuesday. Tooele, the most important city where such an election was held, was carried by the license forces, 396 to 378. Tremonton went the other way, 95 to 9L,Ji,Jiid ..CoriBU.- - 69 to"45. The sets were snowed under at Gunnison, 200 to 140, but carried both Frisco and New house. ' Explosion In Grain Elevator. Buffalo. Four men k are known be dead, fifty were injured, some and four are unaccounted for to" the result of an explosion late Tuesday in the elevator and grain store house of the Husted Milling company here. (Ire followed the explosion and destroyed the wooden section of the elevator. The estimated loss la $500.000. -- Wigg-Cam-inet- ti . England Honors French Ruler. feeling, between Great Britain and France was manifested Tuesday on the 'arrival In London of President Raymond Poincare. The French president is the guest of King George. London- .- The friendly Ulyssee S. Grant to Wed. San Diego,. CaL The betrothal of Ulysses S. Grant, son of the. late f president, and Mrs. A. L Wills Marshalltown, Iowa, is , announced. The wedding will take place In San Jiego about th middle of July. Jr |