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Show BRIEF REVIEW OF 11 Era RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS IN ITEMIZED ITEM-IZED FORM Homo and Foreign News Gathered From All Quarters of the World, and Prepared for Busy Men INTER MOUNTAIN. OattlciiH'ii and sheepmen fought out the old fend of tin; plains until one man was killed and two were danger-j cualy wounded, near Grand Dalles, Wash. Reports of disaffection anioi g officers of-ficers of the Colorado national guard and pending resignations were revived reviv-ed with tin; convening of the annual infantry officers' schools at the state rille range at Denver. N. Marcott, 23 years of age, a prisoner pris-oner held In the receiving cell at the Seattle jail, went suddenly insane. He kicked to death Arthur Johnson, aged 20, a fellow prisoner, probably fatally injured another prisoner and seriously injured two others. The general committee of the general gen-eral conference of the Church of the Brethren, in session at Seattle, has decided to recommend that the gen eral conference of 1915 be held in Hershey, Pa. Seceders from the Western Federation Feder-ation of Miners launched an independent inde-pendent Miners' union at Butte on Sunday, rejecting peace overtures from President Charles H. Moyer and his associates. They elected as temporary' tem-porary' president M. McDonald. p. C. Jacking and a party of friends sailed; Saturday from .Seattlo for Alaska ot'.:t4ie Salt Lake million--aire's yacht "Cyprus, which recently has undergone extensive alterations. The party will he gone two weeks. Ouellermo Rodriguez . Aguinaldo, son of the famous Philippine, chief-lain, chief-lain, has enlisted at Salt Lake in the United States navy. Young Auguinaldo is 24 years old. Benjamine F. Wheeler, founder of the mining town of Aspen, Colo., and a wealthy mine owner of that state, died June 20 at Santa Monica, Cal., aged 65. An attack of ptomaine poisoning pois-oning two years ago caused complications complica-tions from which he never recovered. Change of venue from Huerfano county has been granted in the trials of nine Colorado coal mine strikers charged with the murder of three mine guards and a chauffeur on November No-vember 6, 1913. The county in which the trials will be held is to be determined de-termined later. . Afte.r being horsewhipped by a crowd of women and made the target of eggs thrown by a mob of men, XV. G. Smith, a former clergyman, was put on a northbound train at Wolf Creek, Ore., and told not to return. Smith was alleged to have made slanderous remarks against the morals mor-als of the women of Wolf Creek. DOMESTIC. Aviator Harry N. Atwood and bride, supposed to have been drowned in Lake Erie while flying in an airboat from Sandusky to Toledo during an electrical storm, escaped without injury. in-jury. Louis R. Eckhardt, president of the International Sheriffs' association, announces an-nounces that the annual convention of the organization will be held at Lincoln, Lin-coln, Neb., July 3 to 6. An amendment to the rules of the Chicago board of trade, making car lots of grain regular for delivery the last three days of the month, was passed by vote of the members by a majority of only 23. Nearly 600 ballots bal-lots were cast. Faster than an express train could make the journey, a carrier pigeon. Ben Bolt No. 21, owned by G. H. Skofield of Los Angeles, tlew the 1,800 miles from Reading, Okla., back to Los Angeles. Bird-eye, a shaggy roan horse that rattles around the streets of San Francisco in the shafts of a butcher cart on week days, won the silver trophy in the free-for-all trot of the San Francisco driving club's matinee races Sunday. Efforts to recover bodies from the hull of the sunken liner Empress of Ireland on Sunday cost the life of Diver Cossoboom of New York, in the employ of the Quebec Salvage company. Laboratories will be established m Chicago and San Francisco for analyzing an-alyzing drinking water served by railways. rail-ways. Race suicide is not prevalent among church members, according to i the statistics which will be present-1 ed at the triennial convention of the International Sunday School association associ-ation at Chicago. A number of big pearls, apparently all part of a string belonging to one of the women passengers in the Santa Fe limited wreck at Bagdad, Cal.. have been recovered by workmen from the debris of the smashed cars. It is reported re-ported that the total value of gems lost is $20,000. Eight persons, most of them women wo-men and children, were drowned in the Oswego canal near Onondaga lake, New Yorn, when a passenger launch plying between Mud Lock and Liverpool struck a stump and capsized. (Patrick Gilday and C. V.'. Mills, appointed as conciliators by Secretary Wilson, visited the headquarters cl the 12,000 strikers of the Allegheny Congenial Industrial union at Pittsburg Pitts-burg on Monday. They were informed inform-ed that their services were not desired de-sired at this time. Later they were told if conditions changed the men would send for them. Delegates from practically even slate were in Memphis on Monday at the opening session of the International Interna-tional I'nion of .Journeymen Horse-si. Horse-si. oers. A forty year feud over timbc r land ended at North Reading, Mass., when Charles Samuel Harris, a farmer, farm-er, was instantly killed by a bullet fired from the revolver of his brother broth-er .James. The slayer gave himself up. He said his brother had attacked at-tacked him with an ax. Plans for a 200-mile suffrage hike from St. Louis to Springfield, Mo., have been announced by members o! the St. Louis Equal Suffrage league The hike will be undertaken early in the fall. WASHINGTON. Judge Advocate General E. J. Boughton of the Colorado nationa1 guard conferred with the president Monday over the strike situation. The president was told that slow progress was being made toward a settlement. The house on Monday again went on record for exempting labor unions from prosecution under the anti-trust laws. A proposal to renam. Culebra cut, Gaillard cut, in honor of the late Colonel Col-onel David Du B. Gaillard, the army engineer, who chained the foot of the mountain there and by his untiring devotion to duty contracted a malady which caused his death, has been laid before President Wilson. One billion dollars, to be raised by the sale of state bonds guaranteed by the federal government, will be spent for good roads if a bill which will be favorably reported to the senate by the postofnee and postroads committee com-mittee this week is passed. Landon Warner of the Smithsonian Smithson-ian institution, whose relatives feared fear-ed he was lost in a prairie fire in the heart of Mongolia, is safe, according to word received In Washington. An exchange of wireless messages mes-sages between President Wilson and Emperor William was made public Saturday at the White House. The messages sparked through 4,062 miles of air between Tuckerton, N. J., and Eilvese, Germany, near Hanover. Han-over. FOREIGN. The French government has issued regulations under which a tax of 5 per cent is to be collected on Incomes received in France from foreign stocks, bonds and securities of whatever what-ever form, including government bonds. The regulations go into effect on July 1. A.Russian military aviator, Lieutenant Lieuten-ant Borislawsky, 'and a passenger, were killed by the fall of a biplane near St. Petersburg. Advices received from Constantinople Constanti-nople state that Sultan 'Mohamet V. has conferred the order of the Shefa-kat Shefa-kat on Dr. Mary Mills Patrick, president presi-dent of the Constantinople college for women, in recognition of her services to the cause of higher education for women in the near east. The recent revolutionary movement by the anarchists in Italy was fomented fo-mented by Austria, according to a statement made by Deputy Vital, who has been investigating conditions in Romagna. "The Associated Advertising Clubs of the World," is the new title adopted adopt-ed by the Associatioted Advertising Clubs of America in convention at Toronto. The association will now embrace sister organizations in Great Britain and other countries. American corporations whose stocks are sold in Great Britain must comply com-ply with British laws in making public pub-lic reports of their business or be outlawed out-lawed from the protection of the courts, under the terms of a bill which Major Acher-Shee has introduced intro-duced in the house. Extensive areas in the provinces of Kwangsi and Kwangtung are inundated inundat-ed as a result of the flooding of the West river. Thousands of natives who at first took refuge on the roofs of houses finally were compelled to flee to the hills for safety. The number num-ber of persons drowned is not known. Baroness Bertha von Suttner, the Austrian writer, who bad devoted most of her life to the cause of peace, and to whom was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1905, died at Vienna, June 21. Fighting has been resumed at Za-catecas Za-catecas under the direct command of General Villa, according to dispatches dis-patches received at Saltillo. Several islands to the north 01 British New Guinea have been devastated devas-tated by earthquake and storms, ac-. cording to reports. Hundreds 0! houses have collapsed and a number of natives were drowned. General Venustiano Carranza has forwarded his reply to the two notes of June 2 and June 5, sent him by the mediation commissioners at Niagara Ni-agara Falls. The general declines to take part in the conference. According to the London Daily Mall John D. Rockefeller has sent Miss Eva Booth, commander of the Salvation Salva-tion army in America, ? 1 1,000 for the fund being raised for the sufferers ot the Empress of Ireland disaster. Miss Booth is in London attending the world's congress of the Salvation Army. |