WM A THE OGDEN STANDARD, OGDEN, UTAH. MONDAY. JUNE 29, 1914. j ' a! l iM I mm IS KILLED Sarajevo, June 28 Xrrhduko Kran tile Kerdinann. heir to the Austro Hungarian throne, Mid his morganatic wife flie DucheSfl of Hohc-nberg. were Hssasplnatcd today while driving through the streets of Sarajevo, the Bpsnian capitnl A youthful Serlan student fired the shots which added Another to the long list of tragedies that has darkened the reign of Em peror Francis Joseph. The archduke and his wife were vie- ; tims of the second attempt in the 1 same day against fh!r lives First I a bomb was thrown at the automobile li which they were driving to the town hall Forewarned. howeer, of ; possible attempt against his life, the archduke was watchful and struck the missile aside with his arm. It fell under an automobile which car ried members of his suite, wounding Count von Boos Walcleck and ( olonel M erizzo Assassin a Servian. On their return from the town hall the archduke and duchess were driv ing to the hospital when the Servian GavTio Prlnzlp. darted at the car and fired a volley at the occupants. His aim was true, for the archduke and his wife were mortally wounded With them at the time wa the governor of the city, who escaped Injury The bodies of his murdered companions collapsed across him and protected him from stray bullets. The governor shouted to the chauf feur to rush to the palace at top speed. Physicians were in prompt I attendance, but their services were j useless as the archduke and his wife were dead before the palace was reached. I Bodies Lie In State. Until the emperor's wlshe are kixown the bodies will lie in state at the palace here. They will doubtless be interred in the Hapsburg vaults in the Capuchin church at Vienna In Sarajevo there is mourning ev erywhere, with black-draped flags and ntreamers on all public buildings The president has sent a message to the emperor. expressing the grief Jnd horror of the whole population at the ruthless crime and assuring his ma jesty of the people's devotion to the ruling house. Throughout the day weeping worn en were to be seen in groups while great crowds biirrounded the spots where the bomb exploded and where the fatal shots were fired The bomb was filled with nails and lead filings and the explosion was violent The iron shutters on many shops were pierced by flying fragments and Iron railings were shattered. About a score of persons were inured, several of theio being women and children. This final tragedy which has come to the house of Hapsburg Is the culmination of the personal sorrows that have o ershadow ed the life of I the emperor. In 1863 the list of tragic Incidents began with an attempt upon his own life, when a Hungarian wounded him with a knife Fourteen years later his brother. Archduke Maximilian, emperor of Mexico, was condemned to death by court-martial and executed. Then 1 followed the burning to death of i niece in Vienna, a sister in Paris and the daih by suicide in Stahren berg lake of a cousin In 1898 the emperor's wife, who was the daughter of Maximilian Jo-1 sef. duke of Bavaria, was stabbed to 1 death at Geneva by a mad Italian anarchist. I Mysterious Death. Less than ten years before the em peror's only son, the Crown Prince Rudolph, met death in a mysterj .vhich to this day has not been clear ed On January 30, 1889, his bod was found in a hunting lodge at Meyerling, not far from Vienna. Be side hie bod lay that of the Baron est? Marie Vetsera rchduke CharleB Francis, known popularly as Carl who becomes heir apparent to the Austrian throne, ow ing to the morganaric birth of Arch duke Francis Ferdinand' children debarring their sucesj1on. has been carefully educated with a view to fitting him for the position for em peror. Att tude of Public Schools He ditfTs from all other members of the Imperial famih inasmuch as he is the first member of the imperial house to have been educated in the i-ublic g-hools of Vienna, where he mixed with pupils representing every iais',T society. He associated with working men and tradespeople and jo.aed them in their games, thus I getting into closer touch with the ' aspirattonfl and ideals of the people than' an of the othr HapeburgS He ! is a first lieutenant in the Austrian navy. The murders occurred with BUCB rapidity that many person- near the scene did not even hear the shot? The street is very narrow and the j assassin was able to fire at close r.mce LntMServian demonstration began tonight. The crowds knelt in the streets and sang the national an them. Tlx- mayor issued a prochv mation to the residents of the city denouncing the crime ami declaring that by the confessions of the assas- j sins it was shown beyond nil doubt, thai the bomb thrown at the arch fluke's car came from Belgrade It is said that after the attempt with ihe bomb near the girls' high; srhool the duchess tried to dissuade the archduke from venturing in the, motorcar again To allay her fears M Potlorek. governor of Bosnia said : "It a all over now We have not ' more than one murderer in Sarajevo Whereupon the archduke decided t" go on At a meeting of the provincial diet I tonight the president oi tin- cham ber expressed Bo-nia's profound nor I row and indignation over the outrage I and paid a glowing tribute to the archduke and the ducheSS. He also! declared his unshakable love and de votion to the emperor and the ruling house. With the death of Francis Joseph, his nrphew, the Archduke Francis Fer dinand, would have succeeded to the throne of Austria Hungary. It is a succession which political observers have discussed with much concern, but in popular interest, affairs of state were eclipsed by the case nf , a woman - the morganatic wife of the new ruler and their children By solemn oath, after the arch duke's marriage to the Bohemian , Countess Sophie Chotek. he swore in the presence of the Umperor Francis Joseph, all the princes of the house ! of ilansbure the cardinal of Vienna. f ard many other high dignitaries in I both the Austrian and Hungarian gov , ernmcnts that he would never at tempt to raise his wife to the posi tion of empress nor to establish rights of succession to the throne for any children which should be bom to them As' king, FYanels Ferdinand would have denied his wife a share oi the Imperial honors and cut off his chil dren from all hope of succeeding him. There bus been widespread specula tion over this question and no end of complications were foreseen in Ferdi nand s supposed secret wish to have this denial recked The new king to be (in 1914) was just over 60 years of age lli, full name is Francis Carl Ludwlg Joseph Maria His father, the txchdukt 1 rl rudwlg, was a brother of Finperor Francis Joseph, and his mother was Maria Annnnzlata, daughter of Ferdi nand H, of Sicily Francis Ferdinand was still a boy when his mother died In 1893 Ins father, then over fifty, married Princess Maria Thesera von Braganza, the 18-year-old daughter of King Mlgue of Portugal. The new stepmother established an exemplary home Ferdinand always held her in high esteem It is she, and her own 1 daughter, the Archduchess Maria An nunziata, who were the only ladles present as witnesses of Franc is Ferdi- nand s marriage to the countess of Chotek In Line for Throne. lTp to his twenty-sixth year Francis Ferdinand had no idea that he would become emperor of Austria. The Crown Prince Rudolph, the onlj son of Francis Joseph, was then heir, when to the consternation of the dual empire and to the surprise of the ' world the crown prince met a tragic death in what is know n as the Meyer ling traged the result of an uncoun-1 tenanced love for a youn; barones The mystery of the shooting at Meyer ling lodge, in which both the bare, ness and the crown prince were kill ed, has never been clear' With the crow n prince thus remov ed, the first choice as an heir to I Francis Joseph fell to his brother the i Archduke Carl Ludw ig. but he alreadj was an old man. and he declined the honors in favor of his eldest son Francis Ferdinand The title of heir wag never officially conferred upon Francis Ferdinand, hut from his twen-ty-sixth year his training for the throne was carried on. His escapades had been such as are so often ascribed to royal lads, but It is said that many of the criminal pranks related about him were really those of his wilder brother. Otto The fctor was ouce widely printed that In a drunken freak he stopped a peasant funeral near Frague and amused him self by leaping his horse half a dozen times over the bier This and many BUCh instances were officiallv Inves tigated by parliament and declared to b mendacious slander. Francis Ferdinand, according to his! Why Arc Nectar Brand (1 Hams & Bacon Superior 1 Arc you aware that the Danish Pork is all the time topping the London market, the largest market in the world? V' Yet there is no corn raised in Denmark, and still we are told by the corn-producing states that corn grows the best pork. jl Jm The facts are simply these: That the best and sweetest pork is produced by feeding peas, barley or wheat and dairy products, and this is the '0 way the Danish hog is raised. ;w For that very same reason our Nectar Brand Hams and Bacon excel in quality and flavor the corn-fed article, as all our hogs are fattened on 1jn peas, barley, wheat and dairy products in the in termountain country under the most favorable climate for hog raising purposes. H As a result of this, our hams and bacon are not all "smoke and grease," but they have that well balanced combination of fat and lean, evenly f M distributed, that has made our products the favorite in the Intermountain and Coast regions. sSl All dealers handle it. Insist on getting it. Youwill find the flavor and the quality there. Watch the display made by every store in town. Every piece is U. S. Inspected. IH j Ogden Packing & Provision Co. jl j WHOLESALERS OF MEATS THAT ARE SOUND, WHOLESOME, CLEAN AND FREE FROM DISEASE, admirers, has an altogether different personality than such stories indicate He had a ery thorough military train ing, extending over twenty years, and j In 1S91 he w as made a general He reorganized tin- general staff of the Vnstro Hungarian army with such success as to excite the admiration of all Europe As a hobby he took up llocomothe engineering and received a diploma as a full fledged railroad engineer. He was said to enjoy noth j ing so much as running an engine. He I also became recognized as one of the I best shots in his country, and the walls of his great chateau at Kono pischt were rung with the antlers of some 2000 stags and chamois, as well as the heads of tigers killed In India, the tusks of elephants slain in Ceylon, and the pelts of bears shot In the Rocky mountains. Visited United States. i His visit to the United States wan nif.de in 1 892, at the time of the world's fair In Chicago He made a diary of the trip, which continued i around the world, nnd which is an in t re-ting piece of travel literature, displaying shrewd comments of ap preciation of things he saw and did. He thought this globe-touring would especially contribute to his education as a future monarch. He also wrote two volumes of Al pine poetry, and put on paper for the first time many of the old melodies of his native Styria. His admirers insist that his life ;'s singularly free irom scandal, with the exception of his infatuation for in former Bohemian countess and' therein hangs the interest in the pres ; ant situation. While she belongs to bn'e of the most ancient noble fain i lies of Bohemia, her birth rank is far below that of the imperial bouse of the A ustrian Hapsburgs. Under t the Hapsburg law no member ol the emperial family can be married with out the consent of the sovereign. Refused to Marry Princess As the emperor's nephew and bpir apparent Francis Ferdinand's love af fairs had been close watched. By lrrangement (if the Austrian cabinet he w as to become betrothed to a prin-':-- ot Saxony, but so uncompromis ing was his refusal that the matter iwas dropped. He had fallen in love with the former Bohemian countess, then maid of honor to the widowed Crown Princess Stephanie For nine years this attachment was a subject of gossip in Vienna, When his un Ch ihe emperor protested against plans for marriage, the archduke re minded him of his previous advice "I heard "i once say.' he repeat ed, that In choosing a wife an em peror should pay no attention to poli tics and should follow the impulse of his own heart " This was a chap ter out of Francis Joseph b own life. Francis Ferdinand stubbornly re sisted the nine years of opposition on the part of the emperor When he married he answered all arguments with the reply "The Austrlans would not like to! t ' g i an I It is only a Question of time until I you will wear I Scowcroffs I Never-Rip Overalls I WHY NOT START RIGHT NOW? j Ask the man who already wears them. He will tell vou I overTlls there couW be 9Uch 8 fltfwince in I BT MADE IN OGDEN UNION MADE I LJ0HN SCOWCROFT & SONS CO, Manufacturers 1 see an unhappy man on the throne " i There wras no question but that the two were deeply in love and, have ever since continued so. Francis Jo seph however, was neer pleased with his nephew's conduct. But ho n;ivf his Imperial consent to the mar riage upon condition that the arch duUe strictly observe the Hapsburg laws and never attempt to place his morganatic wife on the throne, or es tabllsh the right of succession for his children He also elevated the wife to the title of princess of Hohenberg. The terms of the archdukes oath were explicit and binding They set torth that the marriage was not "eben buertige." or to one highly born. Oath at Marriage. The oath concluded as follows. "We pledge our word that we recog nize for all time the present declara tion, of whose significance and scope we are fully conscious, both for us and our wife, and for our children bj this marriage and that we never will attempt to revoke this, our pres ent declaration, nor undertake any thing calculated to enfeeble or to abrogate the binding force thereof." oo W. R. Skeen & R. H. Baumunk, Lawyers, Suite 412 Eccles Bid. (Advertisement) BABY IS DROWNED 1 1 UGAI1 DITCH Carlos Eldon Shape, the infant son of .Mr and Mrs. Samuel B. Shupe of ! 1834 Washington avenue. wa6 drown- ; ed yesterday afternoon in an irriga tion ditch near the Shupe home. The babe, only 1G months old, was just learning to walk He had toddled from the house unseen, but his ab sence was noticed by the mother a I few minutes later and she began to look lor him around tho house Not being able to find him there, she and one of her older sons went out of the house to continue the search and the boy going out to the ditch bank, saw the body of the babe in the ditch, lodged against the headgate The body was taken from the wa ter and a doctor was summoned, but all efforts to bring back the spark of life, were unavailing Carlos Eldon Shupe was born at Huntsvllle, February 17, 1913, and is survived by bis parents, Samuel B. and Zina Froer Shupe; a sister, Tem perance, and the following brothers: Jackson. Frederick Charles, Joseph. Junius and Royal. The body was taken to the Lind qul6t mortuary to be prepared for burial and the funeral announce-1 ments will be made later. DR. E, G. G0W1S WAS URGED TO BE A CANDIDATE Professep Milton Reunion and Hv rum Fingree of the educational com j mlttee appointed by the educational i convention of May 29 1914, disclaim all responsibility for the reports of I the nomination of u non-political can didate for state superintendent of pub I lie instruction. C. H. Skidnmre says that at the convention of educators a resolution was passed empowering the committee to act as an advisory com mittee jn case their advice was sougth by any or all parties as to who might serve best as state superintendent. Howard V. Alstou. secretary of the convention ot educators, says that the convention resolved that the nomina tion and election of a state superin tendent should be strictly nonparti san: that the convention elect a com mittee of five to meet with the state committees of the various political parties and prevail upon them to call a Joint committee meeting of the va rious parties for the purpose of agree ing upon a candidate and that the committee of five had the power to reconvene the convention if in its judgment such action was deemed necessary. Mr Bennion and Mr Pingree say that the Democratic and Progreslx e committees met with the educators' committee and asked that the name of a capable, nonpartisan educator be .mg6;eHted: stating that their parties would be pleased to support such a candidate; that the name of Dr. E G Gos.ons of Ogden was submitted and that his name was sent to the com mittee of the Republicans and to the Socialist party. They further state that Dr Gowans was not a candidate for the position, but upon the solicita tion of the chairman of the education al committee he had consented to act as a nonpartisan candidate. nr EMPEROR HEARS OF THEMGEDY Vienna. June -$. When news of the assassination of Archduke Fran cis Ferdinand was Imparted to the aged emperor he exclaimed; Terrible, terrible! I am spared nothing " Austrian opinion regards the trage dy the result of a well-prepared eon Bplraey, It is asserted that when it become known at the Servian le gation here that the archduke intend ed to go to Bosnia he was advised not to undertake the Journey as cer tain Servian desperadoes were plan ning an attempt against his life. The archduke disregarded the warning and proceeded to Bosnia last Wednesday He took up his resi dence at a watering place near the Bosnian capital and attended various fetes as well as army maneuvers which ended Saturda He issued an army order expressing great at traction at the maneuvers Immense Sensation. Telegrams are being received from all parts of the kingdom announcing the immense sensation caused by the crime. All public festivities have been canceled. Anti-Servian demonstrations oc curred tonight outside the Servian legation and stones were thrown at the residences of prominent Servians I Troops were ordered out to suppress the disorders It Is reported here that several Bas nlans and Serbs have been arrested at Sarajevo for complicity In the plot which is said to have wide rami fications The newspapers have 13 sued special editions with black bor ders, expressing abhorrence of the crime. The Wiener Zeitung pays warm tribute to the extraordinar zeal and devotion to the empire dis played b the archduke, to whose indefatigable care, it says, were due the great developments of recent years in the Austrian army and navy Ever since the publication of an Imperial rescript on uctouer r, i))b, proclaiming the annexation of Bos nia Herzegovina to Austria, strong opposition to Austrian rule has been displayed by the Serb and Moslem residents of those provinces. Bosnia and Herzegovina were formerly in cluded in European Turkey but the Ausf ro-Hungarian occupation was au thorized In 187S by the treaty of Ber lln. The treaty, however, contem plated the evaluation of the occupied provinces after the restoration of or der In 190S there was a reform move ment in Turkey which might mean the revival of Ottoman power and Russia after her war with Japan showed weakness. Events in the near east seemed propitious and with small formality the Austrian govern ment added the two provinces to its territory In this fact. Archduke I Francis Ferdinand is said to have I played an Important part. Servla Incemed. Servia is said to have been so In censed at Austria s action that she threatened war, but after several months of negotiations among the powers, capitulated and accepted the situation. It ts feared that the tragedy will still further embitter the relations I between Servla and Austria Both the youth who fired the fatal shots and the bomb thrower are Servians. 00 ENGINEER AND FIREMAN KILLED Hopkinsvllle, Ky., June 28. Engl j neer James Webb and Fireman John 1 Hoaly, both of Bowling Green, were J killed and Pilot George Hampton was j probably fatally scalded when a Louis ville & Nashville train was wrecked ' near Trenton today. About a doen passengers were Injured, hut none seriously JAPAN AND THE UNITEDJTATES Tokio, June 28 With the alien hind ownership question still unsettled. Japanese statesmen are openly anxi ous concerning Japanese participation in the Panama-Pacific exposition Should new legislation be consid ered or adopted in California while Japan considers herself a guest of that state. It is feared in conserva live circles here that it would lead to a heightening of the feeling of the people of Japan and precipitate a crisis The decision of Japan to participate in the exposition was reached after al division of opinion nnd considerable! misgivings and it is understood the l exposition authorities promised to ex ert themselves to prevent legislation uich the Japanese might consider obnoxious. The presence in Japan of Congress -l man William B. Ainey of Pennsylva nia, as a congressional delegate, was 1 the oeeasion yesterday of a notable demonstration of friendship toward the United States. Mr Anus nrsfl the guest of honor at a spei ial s ssion of the house and delivered a mi sage of friendship from the American 1 congress. Secretary of State Bryafi and others, which was greeted with cheers Mr. Oooka, president of the churn-; ber, in an address declared that Ja-i pan was much indebted to the United i States for thing of the past and said I Mr. Ainey's visit would have a great ! bearing in securing peace and amitj , to the two nations A resolution was adopted calling for additional ef forts to strengthen the friendship be tween Japan and ihe I'nited States ! Count Okuma. the premier, gave a ! garden party today which was at I tended by Mr. Ainey and ti.e mem bers of the house. The premier in a speech said he believed that the , racial cry raised against the Japan ese in California would in the long! run find its solution in dissolution, as had former American movements against Germans and Italians He added, however, the present difficult) must be solved by negotiations. Baron Kato. the foreign minister, addressing the members of parlia-j ment yesterday, said he regretted! that racial prejudice jeopardized a smooth settlement of the alien laud j ownership question between the Uni ted States and Japan. The ministry, he added, had no definite idea for; a fundamental solution of the prob I lem. but would make constant efforts to reach an amicable settlement w VILLA IS GOING j BACKTOTORREON Niagara Falls. Out. Juno 28. Un-; less some definite word is received j from General Carranza by next Tues day as to when constitutTonalist rep-' I resentatlves are to confer with Huer La delegates, a formal recess of the J mediation will be declared, according! to plans revealed late tonight. El Paso, Texas, June 28 General Villa s campaigns apparently are post-J poned Indefinitely. Lack of ammu nition is given as the principal cause. However, some recent developments j yet concealed in the Carranza Villa estrangement, were believed bv par- I I tisans of both factions here today to I have much to do with the quiet situa Jl M tion below this point The battle of 1 Zacatecas. taken by Villa last week. 1 1 1 -isioned the expenditure of nearly J all his ammunition during the four r m days of almost continuous fighting. 1 V Since then Villa has been unable I m to get more ammunition from the I United States on account of the con- 1PSMM tinued strict embargo by United j.fl States troops along the frontier He ,m , has not been assisted in this regard v J by General Carranza. ho has ammu- 'f I nltion in the arsenals at Monterey J M land Saltlllo. Villa only has the little 1 jfl ammunition left after the four days' S righting at Zacatecas and an unstated iH quantity captured from the federals ( there. 1 General Villa returned today to iiim Torreon, according to telegi ams from jffl him dated ;it that place Some mat- ; ters connected with his strained re- Ij j lations with Carranza, it is stated, will I S be taken up by Villa as well as his tH problem in securing ammunition for I B his army. L :H UU ' H ftead the Classified Ads. fl1 Read the Classified Ads. Mi 50c and 75c Stationery H While It Lasts, 1 McBRIDE . tffl Drug Co. j . I Where the cars stop now. 11 2463 Wash. Ave. I I I I Keep Quiet II And You Will Not Be Dis- turbed bv Customers. ' iH ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER AND THEY WILL M KEEP YOU BUSY. FANS REPAIRED 1 M Motors Re-wound. Work Guaranteed. Electric Service Co. v .9 Phone 88. 425 24th St. j H This Is a Live Town. 1 ADVERTISE HERE and Get Busy! DAY Stocking Special 1 Guaranteed Phoenix Ladies' Silk Hosiery H $2.75 Per Box 4 Pairs. E Si UTAH KNITTING STORE S D 302 Twenty-fifth Sheet. iflr jl