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Show , 4 fI t COALVILLE x TIMES N. JACOB PEI KliiipN. Editor and MkbageA I COALVILLE" - During Chief justice of "The TATES SUPREME CCURT SUM-- , MONED BY GRIM REAPER. O 1 At least fifty new btiln eons'ruc welling houses are und-tlon at Tooeje Trappers a few days ago taught s bear near Ephraim which weighed ever 300 pounds Stricken with heart failure, William Jar is. 69 years old, a resident of Salt Ijike City, died while seated oo the east steps of the temple The old folks of Weber county will he entertained at lagoon-oJuly 21 It Is expected that 1,000 perrons over K0 years of age will be present. The retail clerks of Ogden are fonts In labor organization, which will be Jibe largest union inJWeher county when the organization Is peifectd which combustion ''Spontaneous started In a pile of mould) straw was a fire which destroyed responsible-foa harp SDd four horses In Salt. ' ; es' AUSTRIAN STUDENTS Born of Racial Jealousy, Breaks Out Anew and Officers Are Forced to Take a Hand. Old Feud, COt,CNEl-ROOSEVEL- high-minde- d and Coalville. Surveying parties In the interest of Mines tc Oil comtbe Colorado-Uta- h pany have started out from Richfield to make a thorough study of the beat - vout.e.toLuw.Wa y na.ooun ty ,aa d -- as toon ss their reports are filed the oi-- v gan'.zatlon of tbe new railroad will he effected. The State Food commissioner has Issued a bulletin calllug attention to the law governing the sale of lmlta-tlo- n flavoring extracts and coloring matter m food products The btille tin declares that the regulations of the bulletin will be rigorously in forced. While digging a cesspool at American Fork, Walter Hunter. a married man. 23 years of age, was burled up to hts neck In falling gravel and dirt It took five hours for his rescuers to get hliu out. owing to the loose earth, which kept constantly caving The state botrd of equalization has completed Its final report on the assessment and adjustment ' of complaints for the year 191(1. The report show, thav. the total assessment made by the heard amounts to $12,263,519-2for the vear 1910. as compared with $38,893,526 51 for 1909. Three men believed to have been connected with tbe robbery of the train north of Ogden have been arrested and are now in the Ogden Jail, hut while the officials admit the men under suspicion are railroad era ployes, they will not divulge the names of the suspects. Four of thejhlrteen bodies of mem- 2 undertook the defense of Henrv on-- a charge of hetesy. He was a delegate to the national conventions of the Demootatle party in 1SC4. 1872, 1876 and 1890 Bit-ho- T AT ALYTTES - 0 F"T H E FOURTH.- Killed nd 1.294 Injured While Celebrating. Chicago The value of a sensible of the and restialned observance Fourth has again been defnnnstrated bv the casualty list of this year's celebration. In almost every city end town where the sale and explosion of fireworks wrc prohibited or restricted there has been a dt elded falling off in the number of dead and Injurud compared wiib previous years This years list of dead throughout the country so far as reported totals 21 Last year the same total was 44 The whole number of Injured Iasi was only yar was 2,361 This year It enormous These figures shew 1,291 conservation, not only of human life but of legs, arms ears ami eyes, which are so frequently the battered tan get of destructible explosives MISUNDERSTOOD ORDERS. Result Twenty Passenger Meet Terrible Death. s 0 Twenty Middletown Were killed outright three pi nimbly fatally hurt and half a dozen' were colliseriously Injured In a head-on sion between a freight and a ger train on the Cincinnati, Hamilton A- - Dwwtfu vstieead a er jnmrsTThe ton t)CmrwMovf were passengers, the o' lief Portland "Cement' company V plant of .the ymsara 1. Illej .by .an -- explosion of black pow- victims being member der at Devils Slide June 1 have been ger crew. of orders misunderstanding recovered by the- workmen who have the disaster. caused been ngaeed In removing the huge The engine rrewsUad time to JuinF pile of rock since the accident. and all escaped. Will Davis, a solfiier, attempted to ,ioramlt Suicide at a rooming housei In JndiansHavea Plan, Balt I.ake CRy.t a k In gl a u d a n in , but Oklahoma City, Okla. Indian chief? w as hurried to the emergency hospiwillow dantal, emetics administered and Is now attending the Big Sug. or at ces, Jakes to crossing near BlgJum torry for his action and determined Cfinton. Okla., announced that they live his alloted time. . William J. Anderson, the 15 year-ol- have dec'ded to build a number of son of Peter Anderson of Sandy. towns In which only Indians could be w ass moth c red--tpermitted to live. It Is planned that death by a c&ve-l- n In the sandhills about tw miles east these towns ehall be governed solely of Sandy. It appear that the boy by Indians, who shall have their own while endeavoring to escape tbe blind-Intja- stores and shops, doctors, lawyers and other professional and business mca of theJuacrawle4-tnt- o It ta believed that this will up tbe narrow-- cave. the rovlrr Le L?- - . pa-se- tk - d o j ak r p - Twenty-fou- r pec-ion- i insecure, what exchange of experiences during the Jast sixteen, month, than the no one on the v eianda-otlwThe knows two friends them.-elw- s public was notlaUm into their confl-dene- SHOT INTO POWDER HOUSE- - Montana Man Causes Ternble Trag-edWhile Practicing V.th Rifle. Boulder, Mont Three prisons were killed Thursday evinin-- shortly after 6 oclock by an explosion of dynamite In the warehouse of the Ctaves Mercantile couipanv, nod r injured, The d a I On ge Hart two fatally of Butte. Harts bain, l)u id Kirby. The Injured Mrs (b org- Hart and Mis 'Gladys Mifflin of llutte, sister of Mrs Mart, both of whom wnl probably die 4 William Robinson and V.bert Taylor were buried ur.dei the debris wtecked bui'tli m and inured, but i' rttowr. Hart both, it Is believed had been firing a 2c,ilhtr rifle in the direction of tin Gi m- - watehouse, and il is believed that hu h i off a quantity of the piw il,r. which was being stored In the hniMin; unknown to the neighhoi hood y ; i of-th- e Powder House Btovn Up. Tan-n.Wadi - I h m n were MU d oil Tliiii :.n I. ton at the Dupont yniwiU at Dupont, t and the main hu d ,s plant was seiimifily Th dead: ThomB.ii e lt i ' yman, - i ; W a uki isvul -- ha. W -, Wdwsv.il xSe i i NOT HINDER g Handed Radrgads a Lemon, r -- -- FeerUt- paiiy lernous Irom iioJut:nfc i1 i V Short lv afi.t ike, tl de J for in ttotl net a CttKoti't- - to -' blow-- . iKV da$ th-- ' evp o- ihe t.ave bren reduced I 'i , tlnspors I . 2 to Interstate commerce commissto i from ing the geUat.u m, .i uvi,;,, atlou $1.13 per lflA pounds to $1 The new that was foil in miles rates will become effective Septemdistant. ber ee: , i - si.i-tie- . j.-- A Lynching Bee Scheduled, Jefferson Citv, yio- - The body of Miss Aura V mil - of (v)a? city. ! Mo., wlio disjnp. .. Thu i',.iy, was hi the Misi,:i i (! i,v gsher-m- , found Frid iv night a point i.v mile west of Ounce C.'v ,f v ent In her foiehead. eudinlv .u j ,. jjy a blunt instrn-ii.ti. ions at, the opinion of the tounty off . u, 6he was uiurdcted .Miss Wendler U ft her home to visit neighbors an bad P narenUy siarte.i uil the ay hack when she mu death Her murderer wll be Ivnched If caught , t ( 1 Makes E'ghtday Speech-The Hague G( o.ge Turner, counsel for the United States, . Uie-.tttt- Resort to Guerrilla Tactic. Fla Five Pensacola. prominent business men of Falo, Via, have been arrested on a charge or atteinpl-into assassinate I P Givers, a wealthy banker, and thiee merchants The (livwho were Ins companions ens parfy were died on from ambush on June 3u, whie driving rear Kak-All weie wounded, and later when a posse pursued the assailants they walked into another ambuscade and three deputies wme shot None of the seven wound, d iret: will die. nwe-rw- h, - V RAILROADS. Law Not to Be Used as a Club Exys President. President Taft had a Mass Biverly, long talk on Friday"' with CL rman conmieic'' Knapp of th' interstate ci i. mission regarding the adnnnistra tlon of the railroad rate law At the conclusion of the interview it was made plain that the added lo the commission by authority- gtv-ethe "hew statute is not to be used arbitrarily to hinder the railroads inihe conduct of their legitimate business rates, The power to suspend new weapon probablv the most direct placed In the hands of the commission Is to be used only in excep tlonal cases. ,, Lake stock and mining exchange waa based on TurrtlTiiilning slock. Fifteen mileb east of Salmon, Idaho, on Bohannon creek, are Fume extensive placers that have, been operated for a number of years very profitably. During the last year an Independent eraclter has been built In the Spring mountain district, in Idaho. This plant has a capacity of eighty tons j.er day The annual report of tue Beck Tunnel company, operatuig In the Tintlo tbe district, is being received by btockholders, the report entering into satisfactory detail regarding tbe mine and treasury conditions A Salt Laker well in touch with the maiket conditions, and who has redoe turned recently lrom the ea-d- , not take seriously the clamor for a of curtailment ctppcr piodueiion heatd so oftfn in the laud says the Salt Lake Tribune A deal Is on, according to Rhynllte advices, for the purchase by Salt I.ake men .f tbe Death Valiev Big Bell pro-p- i rty adjoti ing the Keane Wonder mine, in Funetal range. .The Big BU is said to have a remarkable surface showing. The I'tah Mine of. Fish Springs, Utah, has just marketed another carload of its famous highgiade silver-lea- d ore, the consignment of 25 ton having shown average vaijies of 114 ounces of silver to 4he ton, about 2 in gold and 53 pef cent0 lead. Gold bullion to the amount of to Winncmucea under heavy guard1n ah automobile from the camp of National. The treasure was in 17 bars, weighing 833 pounds, and was the product of ore taken from the Stall brothees lease and the National. An option to purchase the old Keystone mine In Cortez district, Nevada, has been taken by S. F. Snyder, superintendent of the Ely Consolidated Copper company. The Keystone is well equipped with machinery and work Is to be resumed by Mr. Snyder at al sham" next fall. Serious charges agglpst Governor Clark and Committeeman Shackleford are ttlade in the ftloliuloft.-WILL h v d Immense damage is being done tbs alfalfa crop by the leaf weevil. The effect of the destructive worm are now apparent from the North "Davis county line to three miles below 11ro four-fift- on the Salt hi -- ta flames. ini d n Hanson of Ogden, la dead. Mrs. Hanson was found at bar borne, by members of tbe family, In an unconscious condition, with bar clothing enveloped practically Soldier for Reclamation Service. General Washington -- Brigadier tVilliaru L Marshall, who recently as chief or engineer .of the mny, was appointed on Saturday consulting engineer of the secretary of he interior in the reclamation serThe position was created by vice Secretary Ballinger to as.dst him in solving the engineering problems Involved in completing reclamation projects now under way It waS"sa1d at the Interior department thfct the new once. officer would not supplant F H NewThe population of Jarbidge has the ell, director of the reclamation service, whose fate has been, the sub last few days been well represented at the scene of. a new strike three jeet of much speculation miles east of the Bourne property, s Visit Roosevelt. just, beyond J a r b i d gep e a k ,wh ic Kansas insurgents seen have who Y N Kansans Three many by pronounced Bay, Oyster all Republican Insurgents of the it the best thing yet uncovered In tha deepest dye talked- with Theodore camp. Several sets of leasers have started Roosevelt for three hours at Sagamore Hill on Saturday and went away sat wotk in the new gold camp of Athens, When they had gone Colonel 25 miles from Mina, Nev., and several Isfled. Roosevelt called them fine fellows good discoveries have been made. A and said tney discussed the "work of man named Price broke into a ledge All which carries two feet of ore from the recent session of congress. conwhich .assay of $200 a ton were obagreed that the. Balllnger-Plncho- t visiTbe broached. tained. not was troversy coal mine Intors wave Senator Joseph L. Bristow J. E. Pettit, Utah and Representatives Victor Murdack spector, has just completed a tour of and E. H. Madison, all of whom fought the coal 'mining camps In th southhard for Roosevelt policies when he ern part of the state. Mr. Pettit conwas In the White house. ducted a training class at tue variou camplin the use of the Drager rescue Sad Ending of Reunion. apparatus, which has been adopted Chicago. While on a motor trip by the Utah Fuel company to celebrate a reconciliation which It is said that the caving system of had just taken place between him mining, now used so generally in the self and his wife. George E. Ingersoll, great camp of Bingham, Utah, was an automobile dealer of Joliet. Ill . first Introduced west of fhe Missouri was instantly killed, his wife, Hattie, river by Duncan McVicliie, now gen-ermanager of"the Nevada 'Dougia say she will die, and Charles Smith Copper company and the Nevada Copof Joliet suffered a fractur.ed Skull per Belt Railrpad company. Saturday afternoon, when IngersolTe Sixteen copper companies now payautomobile overturned on a hill three ing dividends 'arc dfetributjng freiflts mi Us out of Aurora. Ingersoll body At, of about $32,000, OOQ per bis annunk was found under the machine, Ibis large sum, Jwi'ever,. neck having bien broken Mrs Inger gFVen companies contribute $27,000,-soU'- s i tdtull was fractured dOO Anctmda Copper is the leader of the list, with its $8,lu0,00u; Utah Cop-- 1 per, with its $4 600.000 Is second. The Salt Lake stock and mining exthe son of Colontl Henty Vattersori"'j change reserves the ptivilege the well known Louisville. Kv. edijor, listing stocksr of removing the was arraigned uc Saturdav at Sau same from the board on ten days no- This right of removal .can' be tice. exercised in case of fiaud being shown, or when the dompiny behind the stock closes down development . s As a result of burns received la a & RIOTING g rather myeteriom manner, Mr. Henry other v the Culler fi To Chief Insure rank for leugh of honor of ihi-viie .is, irirhling Justice In the high est tilbuuai of the Aiiihicjii govern-meri- t For twir.tv two ve&rs he was chief Jusllce of the supreme court of the C tilled States, but Chief Justice three-cornere- ahftt,Jta aoelaot. dusptiadeaci.,, litre nts lo come with portat.l regard to the conservation policy of The pies. dent has j the administration summoned S etaty Ballinger for a conference Tuesday nhdiawal otders signed by The the president aie the first author red bv the new law Mr Roosevelt as pieslduit. lnaugti raed the polu ot wiihdiawing public lai.il- - utile- t lie gi tieral theory of the right of the executive to do anything in 'he interest ol the public Piesi-ilen- t domain not prohibited by law Taft also signed oideis of withlands and drawal covering public lands in national forests in Alaska in which workable coaj is known to occur, thus ratify in; and continuing in full effect the withdrawal made by former President Rosevelt on November 12, 190G. - d d'-st- hat spe-rll(a!I- ofi Mrs. 8usan Bryan, who lived In England, but who had been visiting in Wyoming, dropped deadat the lulon depot In Ogden while on her Was to Balt lAke City, being due to ' heart failure. Tom Glnls, a Greek, aged 82 years, employed in a Bingham mine, fell a distance of 200 feet down an ore chute and escaped with a broken leg and several bad contusions about the body and bend. Charles Dennis, nlghtwutchraan at the Highland Boy mine at Bingham, was shot by one of four foreigners who were on a drunken spree. The bullet struck Dennis In the spine, and his recovery Is doubtful. Miss Degny Ingelbretsen, a trained aurse, ended her own life In BaK Lake City, taking sulphate , of morphine. There is no known reason for the deed, sslde from the fact that she was' l unnoum-en- rou-t-tfo- eant. U $20,000,000 It is hinted PRESIDENT TAFT AND T r Marshall presided over the GREET EAjCH thii t Tour, year amt Chief Justice OTHER CORDIALLY, i Tanev for iwenlv eight years Austrta The two groupB f Jlefore Grover ('lev eland sent his of Kuthenian anil Po'lsh students of nsTUNo the senate on April 3b, 1988, clashed Cdetness the University of Lemburg for (orifirprianon as chief justice, ho Peraiatent Prophecy again on Friday and before the police Between the President and was practically unknown except to Iliad separated the combatants many Proven False bf niembeis of thO" legal profession. 'Officials and students had been sen In Maine, where' he was born on Action of Two Men. been known ously wounded. 1H.1.1, 11. heia February The feud, born of racial jealousy, is as a well behaved, rather scholarly as old aa the university itself and lad He had gone to Howdnin college Beverly, Mass. For a full minute periodical fights have occurred For and Incidentally, there won most of President Taft some time the bitter Thursday afternoon teelings have and Colonel Roosevelt stood o the, been held In bounds pv the univerbroad veranda of tbe Evans cottage authorites, but Friday morning sity with hands upon each others ihoul-broke out wilh renewed fury and they ders, while delight shone In ever? line led to a fieice battle for the possescountenof their sion of llie camp ances. Hundreds of students were In was who Colonel Roosevelt, vliltltig volved. Many of them were armed had called to with Senator with revolvers and these weie used pay his respects to the president his When the firing bgan, a strong freely old frienn. of police was summoned and ihe force They patted each other aEection-atel- fight became a d affair on the shoulder. They toughed driv--insucceeded ttt officers The finally in a way that left not a singb linBroken to cover the students gering doubt as to the exuberince of heads were the rule, but lti numerous their feelings They seemed utterly Instances Injuries of a grave nature oblivion of the fact that others were were found to have been inflicted. present. INSURGENTS IN ALASKA. And so it went throughout the tfter-nooWhen Colonel Roosevelt was Candidate for Territorial Delepresident and Mr. Taft was secretary Select of the teotnen gate In Opposition to Nominee. of war. at Vtyking-toIn the executtve office Juneau, Alaska. The Insurgent Rewere always characterized bf the publican convention which met here am cordiality a wan h numbers bn -Friday and nominated James TWELVfLtE W." FULCEfc 4 White House attache whwit WIckersham as candidate to succeed day. Court. B. Chief- Juetiea U, Supreme nessed the meeting Thursday after himself aa territorial delegate to consaid it was just like the old separate gress, passed a resolution tbe prizes for elocution. He had gone There was a rapid fire of convefca-tion- . from the patform, demanding the redown to the Harvard law school for The meeting was everything moval of Governor Walter E. Clark oue year. Then- - he blossomed forth as that the friends of President Tajt and asking the Republican national a lawyer and politician of have claimed It would be, and th committee to depose 1,. H. Shackle-forsort in his native city persistent prophecies of those a from his position as Mr. Shackleford of Augusta. have Insisted all along tl al a 'man from Alaska between the two V the ' leader of the "regulars, who From D56 to 1888 he lived In Chi- ness had dev Utdd a convention at Douglas Wednescago. but attracted little attention men proved false. entered Into day and nominated Cd S. Orr of Val- But- what of politic outside hi immediate circle of ft lends William- jM Mel h..ms vr -Brlnghurst, I in- - power sites, phosphate and petroleum lands The piesident also appointed five engineer officers of the army who will constitute a board to pass on the reclamation ptojects to be completed un of der tbe recent a ppropi tat ion lie.lTt h - V Tri-bur- supreme couri, ilu-i- l of heart failure at his summer home In Sorrento at 6 o clock Monday mornir.z, lul' 1 was The dia'h of the elm f crunch unexpected, as h- had lain in latch and appuKti'lv good health Here had been no prcinoniton s' nip tn Sun loins of anv Kind of trouble ami as umij! utttndcd fliurrh he day when he retired at night he was to " ali appearances in Ills rutifutn.irj Gerald Johnson, the 4 year old son Johnson of tf Mr and Bapulpa, Okla , was killed Hjj an elerntor accident in "a Salt I.akvhotel, his body being badly crushed. Willard Thompson, who pleaded rullty to robbing a gambling house In Salt lake City, being assisted by ha been sentenced to twenty years Imprisonment. Because there was such a vigorous protest from the cttlsens of Tlaln City gainst allowing a billiard bait to be opened there, the county commission rs have denied a license to an appli . Pre- Was Bur Harbor, Me - Chi f .lust tllle W KulU-- r of tin- - United cuj 1 first step in his own conservation policy by signing orders of withdrawal covering 8,193,731 acres of (akin the siding Justice m the Higheet of the American Govern-rren-t, and Had Fine Record. and President Taft has Beverlv, Mas Fir destroyed the paint shops tl the new Tooele eoieher. canning For Twenty two Years He loss of $700. Mrs-Jam- Attitude by Withdrawal of Land and Aopoint-- ' ment of Reclamation Board. ' United 1909, of the business transacted President tndlcateeHi jTAH UTAH STATE NEWS i MINES AND MINING TIFT'S CONSERVATION POLICY of oncluded his argumentoq Fridaybe fore the arbitiation (tribunal that Is to decide the Newfoundland fisheries dispute between America and Great Britain. During the eight days on which Mr. Turner has spoken, he has that. the developed the contention U1ted States has an equal voice with Great Britain with lgislatlon involving the fisheries of the Newfoundland coast and in the enforcement Jf the relations arising therefrom. lof work. Confirming the forecast of the management that, the last of its debts hav- ing been paid vn May, the Moscow Mining company of Beaver county, Utah, would soon be in position to the paying of dividends. Is the report that during June the company marketed nine .cai loads of ore wh.ch yields close to 1,500 a load. Out of about fifty active and proof the ducing copper organizations country, the Boston Financial New .figures that just sixteen of them are This is now able to pay dividends. due to 1214 cent copper, as there are to thirty companies from twenty-fiviwhieh normally are iu .the dividend paying list when copper is located mark at thei Divorced Man Kill His Successor more" dividend paying are There East St Louis, til. One man and, i any of the e i rl were kilted, anothe man mines In Tin tic than -- i e lo-ce- y ' man seriously Injured, when Robert weekly output from tbe vamp is- about City, 15b carloads. Or about t 0i),Cfi0 Htgtr.boTham, aged 10, of Kan-- a J.OOO of ab( ut "I" . to ejM,. his pounds, a total About auuupi'd un1 2,3 U : uera year. poundsa . lor .of Trom Jhehoiue daughter. mer wife here Sunday. He killed the fare emp'oyed in the camp, and the mining companies pay in wages on latters husband and his. own daugh an, average of $200, wo per month. Earnings of the International Smelt United States is too Rich. tng & Refiping .campany fot The JirsL half of the current year will show A the conclusion1 that the trouble With pronounced increase over the corre w are 1(C the United States swuding half of 1303, according to rich' and are consequently too extrav- eastern advices, and the net Income It will be hard to convince for that year was at the. rate of 1214 agantthe man who is trying his hardest to cent on the outstanding stock. ' meet his bills that this is the case, per Bullion show a Increase shipments of the1 aggregate but statistics gradual in the per capita wealth of fhe coun value of $140,000, made v within the try from $300 In 1830 to $1,600 In last three weeks by the National Min1910. And yet those who have lived ing company of Nevada and the Stall during both periods tell us the average leaser upon that man was pretty nearly a welLoff fitty form evidence-tha- t companys property, (something 1 doyears ago a he 1 today, if not com- ing in National ' camp. gold paratively better off. is-4h- at |