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Show History of Past Week MaimiBji.iu.UM i n . - mwu. IUI IIIIIIMI The News Happenings of Seven Days Paragraphed a INTER MOUNTAIN. Rolnriai.s from every section of I lie United Slates iire in Salt Lake for the tenlh annual convention of Hie International Inter-national Asoei;i i ion of Rotary Clubs. America's historic old battleship, the Oregon, went out of commission at the Iugoi Sound navy yard al I'.reiiiei'lon. v' ash., on .June I "Koch," n Russian wolf hound, which loi a leg in its i, Miliary service in Flanders, was Ihe first canine to he caught running about Rulle without a lb'eiise and was sentenced to death under a new city ordinance. Mayor Siodden has issued a pardon for Ihe dog hero. That. Kerry Corbet ta, returned soldier, sol-dier, killed as lie was running from a soft drink saloon at Denver, was shot by Detective George Klein, head of the liquor squad, while Ihe latter was in performance of his duly, was the verdict ver-dict of a coroner's jury. Resolutions Indorsing the league of nations were adopted by the Brotherhood Brother-hood of Locomotive Firemen and En-gtnemen, En-gtnemen, in session at Denver. Resolutions'urgiag full civilian pay to railroad men serving in the army in France were adopted at. the session ses-sion of Ihe Brotherhood of Railroad Firemen, at Denver. The Bank of lieaverton Ore., was robbed of a sum estimated at $4000 when an unmasked robber ordered Miss Lillian II. Evans, assistant cashier, cash-ier, who was alone In the bank, to put tip her hands and took the money from t lie counter. DOMESTIC. Plans for the formation of a national na-tional organization to bring about the Republican nomination for president of the United States of Hiram W. Johnson John-son were started at San Francisco at a conference of representatives of all branches of the party. Official notice that Postmaster General Gen-eral Burleson had granted the employes em-ployes of the telephone companies the light of bargain individually or collectively collec-tively and to organize or affiliate with organizations in order to serve their interests, has been received by Charles P. Ford, secretary of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. Frank P. Walsh, chairman of the Irish-American commission, is determined deter-mined to remain in Paris until Ireland's plea for independence is settled one way or the other, lie declares. A wild west holdup With modern metropolitan trimmings was witnessed Friday in New York City when six bandits, one of whom was shot in the abdomen, tried to capture from two aged messengers of the Colonial bank a leather bag which contained $100,-000 $100,-000 in cash and securities. To preserve a natural flow of wheat from the farm, periodical premium covering storage charges will be added to the basic price at various guarantee guar-antee murkefs, according to an an-lumnertnitAnt an-lumnertnitAnt bv .Tulins H Barnes. Unif- The sixty-foot pleasure launch Mary Francis with fifty-three persons, mostly most-ly children, on board, turned turtle late Sunday in the Warrior river, three miles above Tuscaloosa, Ala. Eighteen persons are known to have been drowned. In a battle between American troops and Villa bandits at Juarez early Monday Mon-day morning, the bandits were routed. "Xow that women have the ballot they should upset ihe world and build it. over according to their own ideas," E. A. Ross of llie University of Wisconsin Wis-consin told the luuo delegates to the Iowa convention of the .National I'ed- era t ion of Women's ( 'lulis. : A passenger train locomotive blew up near Fort Worth, Texas, killing the j engineer and injuring several other i persons. WASHINGTON. A reconst ruction program which ap-! ap-! preaches the labor problem in a more progressive spirit than any legislation I hitherto proposed, has been prepared by Senal r Kenyon of Iowa. ! Organized labor, bringing to congress con-gress in a public demonstration at Washington, on Jane 1 i, its protest I against prohibition of beer and wine, I gave warning that the tranquility of j the working classes might be seriously i menaced by enforcement of the wartime war-time prohibition law. .Mexico will not seek admission to the league of nations "for the present," Gen, Candido Aguilar, son-in-law of President Carranza and head of a special mission to the United States, said in replying to a question as to tile attitude of Mexico toward the Monroe doctrine. With a legislative rider for repeal of the daylight savings act, effective next October, the agricultural appropriation appro-priation bill was ordered favorably re-ported re-ported on June 13. More than $;;,000,000,0.00 of new funds must be provided by private initiative in-itiative in the next few months, if the United States is to continue its export trade at the present higli level, it is estimated by the federal reserve board. That the partition of Russia among the British, French and Japanese wtll eventually follow the recognition of the Kolchak government is the belief of a number of senators who have closely followed the Russian situation. FOREIGN. To Jack Alcock, a captain in the British Royal Air force, and his navigator, navi-gator, Lieut. Arthur Brown, an American, Ameri-can, goes the honor of having made the first nonstop flight across the Atlantic from Newfoundland to Ireland. The Daily Mail's $50,000 prize is theirs. "The allied armies are ready to move forward on an instant's notice, if Germany does not sign the treaty," the Temps says. During an attempt to put down a strike near Sombarheek, western Hungary, Hun-gary, 108 railway men were killed. The strike is continuing. The disorders which began in Speala, Italy, on Thursday, continue because of a lack of sufficient forces to check the crowds which are packing the shops and distributing hats, shoes and provisions. Former Emperor William "belongs in the pathological ward" and is not wanted in Germany, declared Herman Mueller, majority socialist leader and whip in the national assembly, in a speech delivered before the majority socialist convention at Berlin. President Carranza of Mexico will not be a candidate for re-election and under no circumstances will he een- ed States wheat director. I Following information that terrorists terror-ists planned a series of bomb outrages for July 4 in more than a score of cities, detectives and government agents In Chicago found nine bombs in a freight car. James H. Reardon, manager of a box manufacturing establishment at St. Louis, was shot and killed by Joseph Middendorf, an employe, who then turned the revolver to his head and killed himself. Police say they found literature of a radical nature on Middendorf. Mid-dendorf. Detroit's traction tie-up came to an end early Thursday evening, when the striking car men of the Detroit United Railways voted to accept an offer by the company of wage increases from 43, -1(3 and 4S to 50, 55 and 05 cents an hour. Fifty-two alleged anarchists and other alien undesirables have been gathered up in the United States for deportation through the port of New York. The Lithuanian convention at Clii-cago Clii-cago before its close Wednesday, voted to recruit an army in America to maintain main-tain Lithuanian independence, if the United States government will sanction sanc-tion the plan to transport such troops to Lithuania. An army captain sentenced to serve r. irtual life sentence for refusing to lea i his company over the top and a f irmer Y. M. C. A. worker accused of having embezzled $13,000 were among the thirty prisoners brought back on the Cape Finisterre, which rsfi'-hd New York June 11. John Colt Sjiooner, former United Stgtes senator from Wisconsin, died at his home in New York, June 10, t'rer an illness of several weeks. A call for a special session of the .Itausas legislature to consider the ratification rati-fication of the Susan B. Anthony woman suffrage amendment has been iatuicd by Governor Allen. The ses-!an ses-!an will open Monday, June 10. Dr. Karl A. Much, former conductor if the Boston Symphony orchestra, vho is under internment at Fort Oglethorpe, Ogle-thorpe, Ga., as an enemy alien, is to 1 deportee soon. tinue in office after the expiration of his present term, it is announced by General Aguilar. On the expiration of the ultimatum to the Hungarian soviet government, the entente immediately began military action, according to the Neue Freie Presse of Vienna. French troops have arrived at Pressburg, thirty-four miles southeast of Vienna. The German reply to the peace treaty submitted at Versailles on May 7 waintains that the enemies of Germany Ger-many have forsaken the peace of justice jus-tice to which they had pledged themselves them-selves in the armistice negotiations for a peace of might. President Wilson probably will remain re-main in Paris only three or four days after his return from Belgium. Ha will then embark at a French port for the United States. Anto-Semitic disturbances have broken out at Cracow. Several hundred hun-dred civilians and twenty soldiers were seriously wounded before the military restored order after a wholesale plundering plun-dering of Jewish shops. Advices received from China show that there lias been a serious spread of anti-Japanese agitation, especially in Shanghai, Hangkow, Nankin and Canton, with indications that it may develop into a general anti-foreign movement. Talaat Bey, the man who signed the famous order which sentenced 1,000,-000 1,000,-000 Armenians to death, is now living in an Ottoman colony near Potsdam, Germany. The peace couference is being be-ing urged to make him ttand trial for his crimes. A general strike went into effect at Genoa at noon Friday, as a protest against the high cost of living. Several Sev-eral violent clashes between strikers and police have occurred, resulting in one death and injuries to many. A British squadron is bombarding the Bolshevik base at Kronstadt with heavy guns, according to a report published pub-lished in Stockholm. On the northern end of the front west of the Urals the Siberian troops have captured Glazov and are advancing advanc-ing toward Yiatka, an official announcement an-nouncement says. |