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Show THE KAS VOLUME IV. KAMAS, BRIEF REVIEW OF federal officials. From All from and News Gathered of World, Quarters Prepared the for Busy Quebec that the to Jerome Men Unusua] interest which England, INTERMOUNTAIN is annual Monday, of delegates blazing turpentine by a playmate in Balt Lake City, is dead. Track laying on the Denver & Salt record, as ship 2,250,000 Lake railroad from Steamboat springs to Hayden and Craig was begun Au- be pushed rapidly and the line will be completed and trains running into Craig on or before December 15. Dr. D. D. Cairnes, Canadian government geologist who has just returned to Seattle from the Shushanna, Alaska, gold district, issued a signed statement warning stampeding to Foxhall Keene the persons against district. of the American polo team in its recent contest with England,. was seriously. injured at the polo tournament of the Cheyenne Mountain Country club at- Colorado Springs. He was thrown during the play. Madison, Wis., was selected as the next convention city for the conference of governors of the United States at the Wednesday session of the confernce at Colorado Springs. A gigantic opium smuggler’s plot in which federal officials, steamship employees and Chinese are all involved, developed here with nearly a score The opium unrest of ring has been operated at this port since August, 1910, and Surveyor of the Port Jus. tus §. Wardell-estimates their profits ‘at close upon $500,900. in the they to labor to represent the hall, the 9 6 6 exThe making workmen road, Representative J. T. a member: of various McDermott of Illinois, before the house lobby committee, made a categorical denial of the charges againsts him Mulhall, former lobbyist. by M. M. Secretary of Commerce W. C. Redfield is given the family Bible and the stand upon which it rests as his legacy. in the will of his:mother, Mrs. Mary A. Redfield, which was filed Friday. Four billion postal cards will be required by the postoffice department during the next four years and Postmaster General Burleson has asked for sealed proposals ee furnishing that number. ; The mittee ral Republican congressional comorganized and outlined its gen- plans for the Representative coming Frank campaigns. P. Woods of He an-lowa was elected chairman. nounced that the committee’s work from now on would not “be in the line aid to individual candidates. An insurgent movement among Democratic’ senators that threatened to break party lines on the income tax was headed off by the leaders by an agreement to revise the tariff bill so as to levy a heavier tax on the incomes from large fortunes. FOREIGN - A band of 150 sypsies attacked | the j inhabitants of the -towia-<+of-! ty. ‘nel, From a cell in the Raymond “street France, with guns and revolvers. Gen: jail in New York, Elizabeth Trendle, darmes engaged the gypsies and a a Brooklyn girl, appealed, by letter, pitched battle ensued in which one to President permit Mrs. dent Wilson to dress B. of bright, A. New N. to issue her gendarme as a Man. McGough, York, J. was on an aged a visit scared to resi- at Sea- death by a clap of thunder during a severe electrical storm which swept the nor- .thern Wew day. Jersey coasts early Satur- Death claimed a heavy toll in the Labor day auto races at the state fair grounds when four of the six high-powered cars entered in_ the twenty-five-mile free-for-all race were wrecked at the far side of track in sight of the 5,000 killing four racing men. Train No. 444, the mile spectators, southbound, on the Decorah branch of the Chicago & Rock Island, was wrecked within two miles ef Maynard at 3:45 Monday. The engine was derailed, rolling down a tenfoot embankment. Three were instantly killed and thirty-five others were more or less seriously injured. With the ending of the 1912-13 cotton season, Galveston established what local records showed to he a world’s cotton receipts. The International School. Hygiene Buffalo to a meet ended in Congress of| Saturday, at Brussels in 1905, Fritzi Scheff of foot-light fame filed valuntary petition in bankruptcy at New York Saturday. ,; badly was killed and Both houses parliament, der arrest, in of the Chinese Americans and state that two in Mexico Wilson’s department weks hence a thousand troubled are Thirty-five the platform who were awaiting coming of a passenger train. the Three men were killed and several others injured in the Santa Rita mining camp in the Mogoilon mountains in New Mexico, by the explosion of a blast. Walter Scoott, popularly known as *DPeath Valley Scotty,’ has brought suit for $50,000 against the Los Angeles Chamber of Mines and Oil, alleging that his character has been defamed. Scott bases his a recent bulletin issued by ber, in was mess made to his methods. which uniavorable property charge on the cham- reference and busi- Policeman E. E. Campbell was shot and killed at Los Angeles by William Brennon, who then turned his pistol on himself, inflicting a slight scalp wound. The steamship Imperator, the larg- est vessel afloat, was swept by fire as she lay at her dock in Hoboken with her crew and 1,131 steerage passengers aboard. Second Officer Herman Gobrecht and a seaman met death in fighting the fire. get officials out believe hardly left wWSUVIUS again active; subterranean rumblings and 2earthquakes have occurred; fresh devastating outbursts of lava may be expected any moment.” So ran the telegraphic rumors in the Roman and the foreign press shortly after my arrival in Naples, says a writer in the London Chronicle. From the window of my room, with its superb view of Vesuvius, at the Hotel de Geneve—the same room that { was wont to find each night thick strewn with volcanic ash during the terrific eruption of April, 1906—nothing out of the normal was to be seen. Vesuvius was simply indulging in those light, leisurely whiffs of light. smoke that have become a habit of period 1s about: ended; but nothing mementous has happened yet.” Prof. Alessandra Malladra, to whom his illustrious master introduced me, hundred men hers in was his her calmest, However, on girth a good invisible was far more explicit. He is a much younger man, full of zest and enthusiasm in his work. Before Mercalli brought him here as vice-director, Malladra had acquired fame at the geophysical observatory of Demodossola “Well, from the Naples side. View of the I tent Crater. visible to such great advantage as on the day of my latest visit. Just. after I last left, on March 12, 1911, a mass of the cone 130 feet high crashed into the crater over an area of 700 yards, forming a declivity that rose to within two-thirds the “ee of its inner walls. Th wn, on \Javmary. 21, 2912, camet”strong. earthquake with loud rumblings. For a space of twenty minutes. crater throat. was sucking of tons of rock and till the big central fissure down cinders. was de stroyed. Descending found. to the absorbed in observatory, his I mathematical calculations the venerable Prof. seppe Mercalli, the world-famed Giuvul- canologist and sci- ence. is He expert in a priest of seismic the trying reply, “for work,” constant Roman Catholic church whom the Vatican has let alone in his new government post, and he says mass in a tiny ora- and remained indefinitely while silent on the message I found the center of the crater The lowest parts reach down to 987 feet. In other words, I found that on the crater floor, which to the casual gazer from above appears almost perfectly level, I had Vio negotiate hillocks 126 feet high. Be‘sides, What seen from the verge of yae crater to be scattered lumps of stone, I. found to be monoliths measuring from 18 to 10 cubic meters. As regards temperature, a notable discovery I made was that since Doctor Chappello descended by 167 degrees centigrade. The most intense heat is con- centrated at the great yellow sulphur fissure.” - “Do you think, professor, that Ve suvius has entered upon her deatb agony?” I queried. “Oh, far from it! True, there are visible symptoms of creeping paraly- is grand cross ation of the of in San Chelsea home day, army hospital, of London, owing Henry failed Francisco of in to F. old _ went hungry the strike Sullivan his of attempt to in Tues. electric- swim Advices from China tell of the death of Father Francisco Bernat, a Fran. ciscan missionary, at the hands oj Chinese of north fanatics Shensi. in a remote region It is reported at Bucharest that the European powers have selected for the Albanian throne Prince William Fred. erick Hermann Otto Charles of Wied, German, head of the Wied family and a nephew of Carmen Sylva, queen oi He is 41 years old and -Roumania, married Princess Pauline of Wurttem burg in 1908. oc- their way Monmouth, and almost The car fell up, crushed two and injured sev- AS SEEN FROM tory on the voleano. the Royal has succeeded Matteucci, Vesuvian As director Hard Coal Trust Reynolds’ first important potential combination The fields. in the Reading an com- about controlling at the 380 per cent “every Go of into Utah from east, simple reason that it is Injured in the path held him of the oncoming observatory sis, since Monte he was the to the late Professor whose heroic duty throughout the break sent his name every civilized land. devotion to last fearful outringing through “Well, the fact is,” téear fsetedker Mercalli, as he showed me a well filled scrapbook of recent foreign press cuttings about Vesuvius, “most of these reports are inventive or exaggerated. The tourist season here has for one reason or another considerably slack- once Somma true over center of yonder Vesuvian energy, and is now, however, practical. ly extinct. The vapors arising there at the present time are due to the fact that, owing to the ordinary outleta of the volcano being temporarily smothered with accumulated debris the immensely high pressure beneath is finding vent by its more ancient apertures. But though Vesuvius is suffering severely from this restric tion I give her still from 1,000 to 1,50€ years of fairly vigorous old age of a volcano activity. The is a very indeft main crater have been active all along. nite period.” “One more question, professor. you apprehend some momentous velopment in the near future?” “Alas, I do. Never before, so Still, their activity creasing, and there is evidently inare not wanting back as slept so signs that Vesuvius her long slumber. is stirring from Yes, her repose Something critical is going to happen.” ened off in late years; but since these rumors have gone abroad the mountain has become unusually alive with visitors. The smoke funnels in the data long aid and us, sound has a far ag that from which she is now stirring. knocked both him down Cleared of a Venezuela, charge of cording state upon murder, to a dispatch department engaged in an a_ was athletic game and - $625,000 in Necklace acwas peari concerned necklace in the stolen by post from Paris to a London on ex- press them and July 16. It was valued at of transit dealei $625,000. pepper to hour longer. being careful a platter and curled on parsley and sugar, the rind of one the milk slightly. and mix the Shape Stir in whole it, and to a bake it Potato Omelet. freshly boiled potatoes on a hot Quick with robbery and are platter. German Pudding. One pint of flour, one cup of milk, two teaspoons of baking powder, salt, one egg. Put the batter into a flat tin, cut apples into thin slices and Stolen, during let ‘dt minutes. serve a London,—Five men were arrested London Tuesday on suspicion oi being and For Enamel Pans. When washing enamel pans never use soda to remove stains, but apply salt, rinsing the pan afterward with warm water. Venezuelan youth when the latter ‘received fatal injuries. The American legation at Caracas appointed an agent to see that Mudge had a fair and im- partial trial, and his acquittal was pected by officials here. a writer- needed for the omelet. Press them through a ricer or colander. Add salt and pepper and four well-beaten eggs, yolks and whites beaten separately. Cook in a well-buttered frying-pan, turning the browned side gently over, at the with 15 Four technical Mudge out with lemon. soda, for Charge. received .Tuesday. salt knuckle, smooth paste. and acquitted, skim one the warm the Washington.—Stuart Mudge, the American youth who was tried in Im- ataca, point, of loaf meg; passed. Murder | root fresh lemon, one ounce of new ground best ginger root, half a nutmeg grated, half a tef&spoonful of carbonate of soda, and a gill of milk. Rub the flour and butter together, add the powdered sugar, the lemoa rind minced very fine, ginger and nut- They and every do, declares of mace, turf pound legs. American De de Vesuviua slumber over boiled White Ginger Bread Recipe. This is a nice change from the brown variety most frequently made. Take a pound of dry, sifted flour, half a pound of good, fresh butter, half a will the too long, it is declared, when scrape Simmer garnish slices of shorter, car. 9 per foods to be cookeéxee over ! If we know that steam. out serve many Stan, cook to remove all bone. Place the meat in a square mold. Boil all the liquor until it measures a” quart, “strain and .add one gill of lemon juice and pour Let it stand over over the meat. night before using. When ready to Fun. Ohio—Sam cent. when we boiling _ taste. ta Route. the per as we a blade ton of commer: New we by boiling, outs il several burner. Take Over when simmer slowly for two hours, then whole add two bayleaves, twelve cloves, one onion, six peppercorns, onehalf teaspoonful of ground allspice, the known but to the or control in the attorney anthracite etc., Pressed Veal. Select a geod knuckle of veal or any bony piece which has a large proportion of gelatin. Wipe the knucle Cover with two.- | and cut into pieces. quarts of cold water, bring it slowly present time 63 per cent of the entire unmined deposits of anthracite and annual supply will own time, if not dissolved, more ing. jig more economical of the foods, and! of the! fue! aiso} why do we not. steam more and boil less? charged by the federal government with violating both the Sherman an marketing up, ‘mit one titrust law and the commodities clause of the interstate commerce act, in an attempt to monopolize the production and transportation of anthracite. combination, us iron, in the Chieago Inter Ocean. If steaming has been found to be the better way, we should try and steam as much as possible. Several improved. steamers are on the make \ per- with its subsidiary and allied. pany, the Pisa COPOC oratic’ “Ss, including. ss NeW. ‘JSersicy aud aivj/talt “Pauréad of their officers and directors, is This matter vegetable the Reading company’s control of coal mining and coal carrying railroad, the thracite consequently, timetaking attack on the hard coal trust was be gun here Tuesday with the filing of a civil suit for the dissolution of -most give extracts, ing. Besides these losses of nutrients there was found to be a decided loss in the waste made by peeling both the carrots and potatoes. Since then it has been found that our boiling methods are very wasteful. I know they are fueltaking and out. one General Me: most which are Potatoes showed a gain of 15 per cent, when boiled in their jackets, as compared to peeling — then boil- Attacked. and usual vegetables Carrots lost only 7 per cent. when whole. Philadelphia—Attorney that our vegetables The cent. when steamed. Cabbage lost 42 per cent. when boiled, only 11 per cent. by steaming. eut which POMPE of and, Practically all the passengers on poth trains were returning home from summer vacations, and all but two of a camping party of nine, guesis of S. Crozer Fox of Hikins Park, Pa., returning from Maine, were wiped Fox was among those killed. No foods mineral mineral when they finally released him it was too late for him to avoid the car, the it has been virtually decided, ac cording to the London Daily Graphic, : that Prince Arthur of Cannaught will succeed his father, the Duke of. Connaught, as governor general of Can. ada. to death and spirit of fun, held him on the track in Mass., English channel Tuesday. He entered the water near the South Foreland at 6:45 a. m., and left the water at 4:03 p. m. wood, Rumanian, was fatally injured when he was run down by a car on a switch at the Struthers plant on Friday. According to reports of company officials, Stan and other employees were skylarking about the railroad yards and his companions, supposedly in a department employment! the admir. Lowell, of side, erumpled Fatally soldiers’ of also seen bage and carrots were boiled and steamed and the various differences noted. Spinach lost about 50 per cent. of | Youngtown, in 1915. the some the road is already built and cut out ali the desert land in eastern pari. of the state. Pal- pensioners beings, be preparing wasteful. and eral others. the ace of Peace. Germany has no intention of changing her recent decision not to exhibit officially at the Panama-Pacific exHundreds block claim it is the best route of them all, as far as Utah is concerned, for of the its route in commemor- inauguration human car, To Orange-Nassau has been conferred on Andrew Carnegie by Queen Wilhelm- ina of the Netherlands ter dead, on either side of the ; third of our vegetables in a large quantity of water, and then throw it away, we lose much, if not most, of these valuable food materials. A recent investigation along this line has brought out these interesting facts: that a great deal of the most valuable part of the potato is lost by paring, or laying the pared potatoes in water for some time; spinach, cab- Mountain engine cleaved rear Pullman cars, both mangled alive, some track. The of than possibly any other kind of food. These extracts are dissolved in ywa- express, the it will those salts Salt Lake—A. L. Westgaard, path. finder, representing the National High ways association, left for the east Tuesday. He was accompanied by ‘his wife, who makes nearly a his trips with him. Westgaard goes east into Colorado by what is known as the Vernal route. While little has been said about this very Order of in President of the are it is said; and Harbor do, somewhat here. beyond cially available exist.” Wilson read before congress Wednesday, outlining the situation in this republic and the attitude of the United States government. The Bar feet general warns, the perished which of us methods was hurt in the White Mountain train. Before the 1906 eruption it stood 4,275 floor 861 feet deep. signal, of the of the boys there were other tracts, even close at hand across which I had to haste in imminent danger of asphyxiation. “I proved the highest point of the crater to be 3,851 feet above sea level. feet. of Method for ‘Table. If we stop to think about it, as many 7 of wood, splitting them. in two, and tossing their wreckage and three score on taking instrumenis, and my _ photographic apparatus. Once on the crater floor I found myself.in spots where I could with comfort have pitched a ad at from 2,033 feet to 2,275 feet deep, has been rising fast. Never was it thousands nerve with my mensuration and temperature Since the 1906. eruption the crater bottom which Matteucct then estimat- the it landslips are occurring on the inner walls and slopes of the crater, and there are steep precipces to scale. Then I had a good deal to carry, what would, therefore, go to see for myself, and hear, too, what account the men of science in yonder observatory on the heights had got to give of ‘the behavior of the fiery mount whereon they keep perpetual vigil. Fine was modest north cupied by forty boys on from a summer eamp at . Me., was lifted into the air completely off the track. “What a risky time you must have had,” I remarked, encouraging the professor to talk on his experiences. will in government die, in a before into the rear of the second section sand feet, into the crater of Vesuvius. laziest moments. miles. standing 100 signal. The White through two as the greatest living authority on the geology and seismology of the simplon. In his present position he has become famous for his daring descent last May deep down, nearly one thou- a volcano fifteen miles in deal may be taking place six crashed Torreon between July 17 and July 28, and since that time fever has become| an epidemic, food is scarce and no aid has been able to reach the city. Mexican may shortly York, speeding along at. probably forty miles an hour in a thick fog; rush- the seven constitutionalists attacks on The of whom collision ‘ed ‘by a danger republic. ians of the public works declared because of the of non-union painters sa alty. on to there of them southern heeding warning a passing a crowd the of who had been placed unbefore the supreme court position raked parlia- requiring members Mrs. John Kelly of Portland, Ore., was killed and a half dozen persons were serious! injured Monday night at Oswego, six miles south of here, when a load of slabwood fell from a car in train and were Pekin. President be three wounded. ment passed resolutions government te try the some Present General Preparation The. first section of the White Mountain express, bound fors New con- world. is 563, the o’clock Tuesday morning on the New York, New Haven -& Hartford:. rail- trades. of direct DOMESTIC ‘ of arrests. rear-end Milton owing number will injured, attor- Union in Considerable Food Value Retained, When Steaming Is Substituted for Disaster. New Haven, Conn.—Twenty-one persons were killed and nearly fifty Lomer. attached opened isting work Sir Trades Ivy Roland, 9 years of age, who was fatally burned when splashed with The of trip of William see QUALITIES LOST DURING PROCESS OF BOILING, White Mountain Express Crashes Into Bar Harbor Limited—Fog Cause WASHINGTON gress 28. GOOD was constitutional. seized as con- Gouin, provincial premier and ney general, had been in vain. forty-sixth gust currency NUMBER? WASTE IN VEGETABLES TWERTY-ONE KILLED IN WRECK ON NEW HAVER Harry K. Thaw’s lawyers, successful so far in keeping their client in jail safe from the immigration authorities, rejoiced when they received word Travers Foreign The intended for use of the ists in Mexico and was traband of war. RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS IN ITEMIZED FORM and WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1913. UTAH, A second seizure of paper currency, printed in the United States-and sent to the border by express, was made at Eagle Pass, Texas, on Thursday by A WEEKS EVENTS Home OURANT a them in into rows, sugar and bake until Not Their Parrots, the then batter, cinnamon, apples are them or nutmeg, are: well Exclusive however, placing ‘sprinkle done. Specialty. not the only ones who talk a good deal without furnishing a satisfactory excuse.— Atchison Globe, |