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Show COALVILLE TIMES "CLOUDY AND UNSETTLED N. JACOB PETERSON, Editor and Manager. UTAH COALVILLE UTAH STATE NEWS la still considerable talk of a mill being established in the paper Pish Lake national forest. In Sevier ind Sanpete counties. Half a hundred members of the An drus family held a reunion last week In Halllday ward meeting bouse. Members of the family wera present from all over the county. The reclamation service Is rushing work on the Strawberry valley Irrigation project In Utah. Iturlng September a force of 00 men and 125 teams was kept busy. 0. FNigl. age thirty, a Japanese la Dorer employed by the Union Portland Cement company, was run over tnd Instantly killed at Devil's Slide, where the cement plant Is located. The county commissioners of Utah county are Investigating a proixwitlon for the Improvement of the stale road from tlie point of the mountain on the north to the Juab county line on the south. A big party of Utah dry farmers and dry farm experts will go to Colorado Springs for the meeting of the International Dry Farming congress. A special Pullman car has been char-trefor the trip. Mrs. Anna Jteckstrom Snow, years old, widow of Apostle Eraatus Snow, reputed to be the first woman baptized to the Mormon faith In' Denmark, died at her home in Salt Lake last week. After three trials for selling liquor without a license, J. A. Mathias of gpanlsh Fork was found guilty by s Jury in the district court at Provo. The Jury recommended the defendants to the mercy of the courL While trying to prevent one of his second year students form being cut by a bandsaw, Asa S. Klenke, teaca-a- r of woodwork In the L. D. S. university at Salt Lake, severely cut the first three fingers of his left hand In line with the policy of the state board of education to Increase ths Standard of requirements for teachers certificates in Utah, a resolution has been adopted by the board raising the standard for normal grad- Thera elgh-ty-al- uates. Salt Lake has actively entered the list of candidates as a starting place for ths 1912 national balloon race. Borne three score balloons start In the preliminaries of , thin annual event, and It attracts 'thousands oi gectatorj, ! Hans Hansen, one o t iprlnfivtllei pioneer citizens, died Ootober 11, of general debility and old Age after a lingering lllnees of several months. Mr. Hansen was born In Norway eighty-two years ago and came to Utah and settled In Sprtngvllle In 1866. Ths recent heavy rains have caused great damage to the roads of Carbon county, everywhere bridges and grades 4eing washed out, which will sooner or later have to be replaced. A conservative estimate of ths damage done places the amount - at 120,000. TIES TO ENDEAVORING GOVERNMENT ISOLATE PROVINCES AFFECTED BY REVOLUTION. V Restrictions on Telegraph Places Lines and Refuses to Reveal the Number or Destmstion of Troops Being Sent Out from Pekin, government Pekin The Chinese has placed several restrictions on the telegraph lines, evidently for the purpose of preventing communication between the rebels The telegraph administration refuses to transmit mes sages either to or from the provinces of Hu Peh, Hunan, Kiang SI, Sze Chtjen, Ksal Chow and Yunan On this account, Hankow where the revolution Is at its height, Is cut off. ft is not considered possible that the wires have been cut throughout these six provinces. Until lulely the revolutionaries, having free use of the wires, received and disseminated information (concerning the progiess of their plans In jail Quarters. JThe government refuses to reveal tbf number or the destination of the troops who are being sent southward. Only a single first class train will be run daily between Pekin and Tientsin Fht, about seventy miles to the southeast of the capital. This is due to heavy troop traffic and for the purpose of preventing any great number of rebels from coming into Pekin. Passenger and freight traffic has been enlfl suspended between Pekin and Hqnko So far the government has refused to accomto permit correspondents pany "the army. Both eldes are anxious to favor foreigners, and it is 'believed that the government will 'reconsider this refusal It the, Imperialists mA with Initial success , received" from T,he last" dispatch Haakow said that the revolutionaries bad organized a Red Cross society of and bd Invited the tha African Episcopal mission. This Inmtatm was accepted provisionally. (ConrrlabL n JOINS THE HARLAN . MAJORITY AMERICAN GIRL MAY BE QUEEN Eldest Chief Justice, Who Had Trouble in Portugal May Result Former New York Girl Being Served Hit Country for Thirty-thre- e Elevated to the Throne. Years, Succumbs to Grim Reaper. p e . x with-ou- e , In Lisbon. It has been ascertained that Captain Couclere, leader of .. o royalists, has made another appeal to the Brazilian monarchists for $2,500,-00for the purpose of additional arms, 0 ammunition and The provisions. newspapers print the following copy of s letter said to have been written by Captain Couclere: I have received from the monarchist committee in Brazil 500,000 pounds sterling ($2,50 0,000) which I shall repay on a monarchy In Portugal or with my life. It Is known that a secret arrangement exists between former King Manuel and tne pretender" to the throne, Dom Miguel of Rragnza, whereby If the monarchists are victorious, general elections will be held to decide whether Manuel or Dom Miguel shall be king. If Manuel is chosen the decree banishing Dom Miguel's family will be revoked and his entire family will return to Portugal as royal princes and receive an aggregate of $100,000 annually. Moreover, iu case of the death of Manuel, It has been agreed that his uncle, the Duke of Oporto, .being jJiiidUis, the eldest son of Dom Miguel, Prince Miguel of Braganza, who married Anita Stewart of New York, shall succeed to the throne. A further provision is that If Dom Miguel Is elected king, a heavy Indemnity shall be paid Manuel. HONOR CARDINAL GIBBON9. Over Prelates and Laymen From'-AIthe World Present at Double widely-heralde- ENTIRE FAMILY FAMINE IN CHINA. Thousands Dying in the Flooded Dis-t- r ct Along the Yangtse. News was brought yptoria. IT ( ty the Kiuprcr-- j of Japan that thousand s were djlug of starvation ,n Klin; Su. a'ong lh Yangtse, following the floods, and the situation was expected to augment greatly the spread of the rebellion Refugees paint a black picture of dire distress, The whole of the country was under water, the Yangtse having risen to such an extent that it was virtually than bounded only ly the ranges of hills some distance from the banks; corpses were floating everywhere, and famlne-striikerefugees were lying dally from d'sease. In places the Yangtse was th'rtv-fivmiles wide and floating bodl 's uronj which starving dogs were feeding.! An officer of were seen in numbers one of the river gunboats tells of se trg a number of mutilated corpses n uniform. Indicat ng the fate of some Imperial sodiers at the hands of th CARDINAL JAMES GIBBONS. . i an archbishop, and twn years alter his ordination received the red beret ta of a cardinal, .. ij . rHe James, Cardinal Gibbons, archbishop of Baltimore, on Sunday received ni illustrious prelates and horaae laymen from both thls country and foreign lands, the occasion being the ecclesiastical celebration of the cardinals dual Jubilee. In the procession, which for impressiveness probably never has been surpassed in this country, were nine of Americas twelve archbishops and about thirty bishops. i ' e s I i i ; of-t- - n Spanish-America- . Ul-lo- d BUTCHERED. Man and Wife and Three Small Children Brutally Murdered. twe-'ty-sl- n WILL LEAD INSURGENTS. Jubilee. LaFollette Indorsed for President by Baltimore. In (he cathedral here, Republican Progressive League. where fifty years ago hp was 'ordainChicago. An endorsement of Robed a priest, then successively conse- ert Marion LaFollette of Wisconsin crated a bishop. Invested witjj the. tor president of the United States was the net result of the meeting of the National Republican Progressive league held at the Hotel Lasalle on Monday. Three hundred insurgents from thirty states were present. The resolutions adopted set forth, not a Republican platform, but the personal platform of Senator LaFollette. They contain a plank for the control of corporations by the government with an inferential attack upon the president for prosecuting (he trestsi flank (the Bourne suggese tlon) for A popular vote on the candidates for president, whether compelled by law or not, and the endorsement of Senator LaFollette. j stink-holder- 800-fo- ' Italian Soldiers Act Like Veteran. News of the attack of the Rome. pump designed cre. ' Turkish infantry upon the Italian to Increase the supply of water that is The government of Australia Walsh Granted Parole. outposts at Tripoli has been received will be taken from the lake and now offering handsome prizes for the with great Interest here because it turned Into the canals. Leavenworth, Kan. An order from best to be usid in making a w as the Italian .soldiers baptism of rtarving jvasantrv Beginning December 11. a farmers Washington, paroling John It Walsh, new series id postage stamps. fire after flfteeif years of peace. Oftrain' will be run the former Chicago banker and raildemonstration ficials 8a y thegyeung soldiers behaved Idaho under the direction of Lewis A way president, was receited at tho BERBER ENCAMPMENI NEAR IKIP0LI veterans. like here federal Saturday southern and Utah northern penitentiary through It.ls expected the last twenty transIdaho under the direction of Lewis morning. The prisoner lminrdi.it' ly force ports with the expeditionary the Agriqul began preparall'us for the start Merrill, . director of arrive at at will aboard any to of the Tripoli tune Mr, Walsh, up home. tural college extension work, and Pro moment now. This expedition e.r, fessor W. H. Olin of the University ot his parole, hud saved one "' of 15,000 men and members g, days of eight months and Idaho. five years' sentence. his Seven aeroplanes the general staff were sent last week students Thirty are Included in the equipment. to their homes from the Lake View Capital of Moffat Road Doubled. district school by the county physicDenver, Colo The capital stock of HATS OFF TO KANSAS. ian, all suffering with an acute and of the Denver, Northwestern & Pavery contagious eye disease. It Is cific railway, the Moffat road, was "Wheat Cut, Fiour Made and Biscuit feared all of the scholar of that pap Increased from 920,000,000 . ter Eaten in Half an Hour. tlcular school have been exposed and at a special meeting of Beloit, Kan. Wl.at is believed" to A held Saturday forenoon. If such Is the case It will be necesa world's record in transforming be bond Issue of $40,000,000 was also au sary to close the school. standing grain into bread was estabsame to In be the secured There Is a movement on foot to thorized, lished by V. s. Gabel, a far-recently . reservoir the surplus water of Cot a deed of trust mortgage upon aif mer living near .here. within the of the holding property tonwood creek and thereby provide Ju-- t thirty minutes elapsed i sufficient water to Irrigate about 2, company. time when the wheat was the (tween 000 acres of land situated in the ImMcManlgal's Wife Sues for Divorce. cut and when Mr. Gabel took the first mediate vicinity of St 0orge. bite of d biscuit which had been made Chicago. Ortie E. McManljal. alEvery bridge In San Juan coun leged dynamiter and safe blower, from it. As soon as the Igrain was ty, including the new steel bridge whose confession led to the arrest j thirshed It was rushed a 'mile and a across Ssn Juan river, built by the McNamara brothers on the i half to a mUl and made Into flour and stats and county two years ago, have chsrgs of having blown up the Tunes then taken to a baker, who made the been swwpt away by the unprecedent- building In Los Angeles, w ag sued for biscuits. The previous record is id ! . ed floods of the last few days. , K .y T : to be one hour. divorce Friday by Emma McManiga! At the semi annual convention of Fiend Beaten by Mob. , Earthquake in Sicily. Puts Down Rebellion. ths Utah Beekeepers' association, held Bandltt by . An Calanla. of Louisville, Ky. Within two squares earthqnake An incipient revoluprief In 8alt Lake last week, a commit New Orleans a Santiago, Cifl Pedro Aguiler. of police headquarters here . a mob H-headed Jesus limns in tee was appointed to draft a law for duration occurred Jn Sicily" Sunday. mining by tion owner and, engsi.' art shiogke. were who had seized a two The felt negro attacked at strongest 'consular fo 'mer representative presentation to ths next session ot Iron member of tb In New 0rtean, girls and their mother and he was re- of that government the legislature governing the apiary Clsrre, at the east base of - Mount company, report t0 Etna, Macchia, Guardla. Roudfnclli ceived was effectively crushed last week, ac- beaten ko badly-i- t is believed be can Industry In the state. here, u -- eiied bY bandits not recover. and Santa Veneriva. to late advices. cording and is held $20,000. of a ransom Step are being taken to insure a Otsro Resign.. Steamer en the Rocks. Long Chase Ended. county fair at Provo next year. It Is Noted Author JDd- Santa Fe, N. M. Territorial TreasCal. After eluding arrest pointed out that a county fair in the Victoria, B. C. The Canadian PaFresno, VerrlH latter part of September, would aid cific steamship Princess Beatrice, Winnemucti, ser. PblUP Friday and for two years, J. P. Myers, former urer Miguel A. O'ero resigned Mighels,, the known author as g've-nn- r fed nine materially in gathering ' an exhibit running between Vancouver. Prince playwright, night cashier of a. bank at Kerman, Cal., After serving Thursday 4ioj for the state fair, and the prize Rupert and the northern canneries, as the result t,er6 years Otero was app.oi-- t 1 t r itorial gunshot and wanted here for the alleged of of $1250, is under arrest treasurer and reived iu tbet 'a;aeUy ocmining exhibits would be tgken at struck on Noble"" island Sunday, and wound self inateted. ,ccidental The accident five rears once to the state fair. la Kansas Citv. Mo. is held fast on the rocks. curred near Cofconda. i Santa Barbara, Cal. What is pronounced by Sherig Nat Stewart of SAnta Barbara county and W. F. Wines of San Francisco, special agent for the Southern Pacific railroad, to have been a deliberate atbridge tempt to dynamite an twenty-fiv- e miles north of here, over which President Tafts special train passed early Monday, was frustrated by the vigilance of a Mexican bridge watchman. It Is said that the evidence of the plot Is complete. Although the suspect has disappeared, the officers say they have certain clews, and already have several men on the case. Secret service men have been summoned from San Francisco and will be placed on the case. It has been ascertained the man has not left the mountains and a close watch is being kept on all passes. President Taft heard nothing of the alleged attempt to dynamite the bridge until late at night. The only Information then available was the press reports. The president's train followed the regular train from San Francisco, ten minutes behind, and if any trouble had been encountered there would have been plenty of time to flag the special. All of the railroads are handling the Taft train with the greatest care. - Berlin. The emperor, at his hunting lodge near Eberawald, Prussia, on Sunday Invited Signor Alberto Pansa, Italian ambassador, to , g conference on the political situation., Jhe German Imperial .chancellor also attended. The Italian ambassador had arranged to meet the German toreign liminister, Herr Von Kiderlen-AVae- t ter, at the foreign office, to discuss matters connected with the Turco-Italiawar, but hastily cancelled thJ.s engagement upon, receiving the em-- . perors message. The German emperor holds himself responsible in a great degree for the present armistice between Italy and Turky, and evidently hopes to successfully play the part of peacemaker between the warring ' nations. It is understood the transportation of the Italian military expedition will not be Interfered with, but that hostilities In all quarters will cease. This is considered In Berlin as equivalent to the ending of the war, or at least the warlike movements, which will now be succeeded by negotiations looking to a settlement. 1ML Associate Justice Washington. John M. Harlan of the supreme court of the United States, often acclaimed the greatest tonstitutional authority of the day, once a conspicuous figure In national ind Kentucky politics and long a leader In Presby-teriachurch, councils, died Saturday, aged 78 years. He has been 111 less than a week. Justice Harlan served on the suyears, ten preme court, thirty-thre- e months and twenty-fivd&ys, and had lie lived until next June would have eclipsed the record Of Justice Field, six who served thirty-fou- r years, months and ten days.'xnd Chief Justice Marshall, who served thirty-fou- r years, five months and five days. Justice Harlan was born In Boyle Republic Planned by Revolutionists. county, Ky., In 1833. Justice Harlan was above all things Am Francisco.- - With 12,000,000 In an Independent In court be was ofteh subamount It an and Its ret&ury equal an minority of one. He ject to call, 35.000 troopi In the field was unflinching Hi his tastes. He became simple an$ 130,000'' Vserve n the Unlted constiStarts and Canada, and with a tution Mdoptbd and administrative Of flcjtra cnosen, the proposed Chung Hwa republic is declared to he making a determined effort to overthrow thejManchu dynasty and establish supreme In China. IHtalli ot the formation of the tentative republic were revealed herf Bungay by gun Fo, aon of Dr. 8un Yat Beni who Is to be president of the new government If the revolution now In' Years have progress Is successful. bee consumed In working out the different problems that have presented themselves to the revolution'sts and haste was guarded against lest there be some fatal slip. Today the lOlt.OOO and more revolutionary Chinese in the United States and .Canada feel that It is but a mat-te-r of days until the Manchu dynasty will succumb. north-bbund- Probable Tragedy Averted by the Vigilance of Bridge Watchman Suspect Believed to Have Fled to the Mountains. The 'War King Now Evidently Occupies the Position of Peacemaker Between the Warring Turk and ltatiana. .. per cent of the shares JOHN M. HARLAN. Misunderstood Orders. of. ths Union Pacific railroad weie were voted at the stockholders' meeting In Omaha, Neb Seven people a member ( the supreme court Injured, four Salt lake last week. It being the larg- killed and twenty-ona fortus and at his death he beIn collision a est percentage ever repreeented at an of them seriously, a very null estate. left Annual session. Of a tots of 3,162,145 tween a Missouri Pacific passenger With Julies Harlan's death the en route for this hares outstanding, 2,396,970 shares train kas fallen to President opportunity were voted. city, and a fast fretgnt train. The Taft to select during his single term Tbs Installation of a new pump at wreck, which occurred at Fort1 Crook, In office a aajorlty of the members o'clock at of the supreme court. Including the the Lehl pumping station on Utah ten miles south of1b here, believed to have chief Justice, morning,' thatfias devolved lake, by "the associated canal can Sunday resulted from a misunderstanding of upon no other duty since Wash president pan lea and the city of Salt Lake, is of on the freight Ington formed the court In 1790. ords the part is assured. The new Serenty-al- ATTEMPT MADE TO BLOW UP PRESIBRIDGE OVER WHICH DENTS TRAIN SHOULD PASS. INVITES AMBASSADOR TO A CONFERENCE ON THE"" POLITICAL SITUATION. - I mu Ellsworth, Kan. Slain as they slept Sunday night, the bodies of Will Showman, a chauffeur, his wife and three small children, were discovered Monday in the Showman home by a neighbor who chanced to call and who entered the house when no one responded to his knocks. The features of the victims were battered beyond recognition by the blows of an ax, which the slayer had used. The youngest member of the family, a baby, had been beaten until Its head was severed from the body. AH three children were under 5 year old. The authorities have failed to find anything pointing to a cause for the crime, or a clew to the guilty person. MARINES ORDERED TO CHINA. Situation Regarded at Grave and Power May Intervene. Washington. An order has been Issued by the navy department for-th- e immediate transfer of 100 marines from Manila to Pekin to guard the United States legation there. The situation in China is regarded aa exceedingly grave and It is feared that the powers may be forced to intern ne. In such an event the United States would probably be forced to take a leading part, as being the power most friendly to China. . ' Penn Yan Bill Is Dead. Helena, Mont. News was received In Helena Monday of the death in Spokane, Wash., of W. C. Buskett, one of the of Montana pioneers. Mr. Buskett was a close friend of the late Eugene Field and was the original Penn Yath Bill in Field's poem of that name. best-known- " well-know- tncreaee (n Gold Production. Washington. Utah's gold production in 1910 amounted to $4,312,700, against $4, 213,200 in 1909, according to report made Monday by the ot mtnt and geological survey. The state's silver production iq 1910 amounted to $10,445,900, against in 1909. bu-fe- au Omaha Land Show Opens. Omaha. Addresses by the governors of a dozen western states were Included on the program of the Western land show, which opened its second anfiual session here, on Monday to extend over two weeks. Woman's Assailant Lynched. Forest City, Ark. Nathan Lacey, a negro, who, Lt Is charged, attacked Mrs. Thomas Cox at her home, near Forest City, wasx taken from the local prison Monday night by a mob and lynched. A |