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Show .OGDEN DAILY COMMERCIAL. VOIXME IV. NUMBER 13. with a baby V ' L GLLAI -- t rUu rr 'I th in hrt ara:, help LIVLS S4tKIKU I BY THE FLAXES. l were glh-rti- j 11 TK-TV-HV- IL--r Tbi Morning. tiitil r.ufij d Wiadva Oct What to of the tire says he eye-witne- putative that at least twenty U five person k4 their lives and niany mure injured. kered being lv the aid if a rope. She hud reached a point opposite the third story, when the roie became bruited from the burning sill. Hie ro jtarted and the woinsu fell to the pavement. lLr brains were dashed out ami the body flattened into a shapeless niHMS. 80 great in the confusion and excitement that the iileutity of those killed and injured is wholly unknown. Undertakers and ambulances are flying in all directions and the streets in the neighborhood of the hotel are thronged witu excited crowds of people. Frank Carey, of Glen FuIIh, New York, has been identified as one of those burned to death. Many people rrazed with fright lost their lives by jumping from the window. One mail savs he saw six iiooplo jump from different windows on the Fayette street side of the building in the space of 'rut minutes and the sight sickened him with its horrors so he was compelled One from inHn was the window d tTHeave the sot The building was provided with both iron lire escaiieson the outside and ropes on the inside which were the moans of ' Burnet Forties, a saving many lives. stock broker of this city, esc:ipod into the street almost entirely naked. One woman was found with a babe in her arms, crouched in a stairway, whoro she hud been overcome by smoke. Sho was removed by the firemen, but has ' uot yet regained consciousness. It is , iniKnible to say what her name was. The tire is said to have starUl in the kitchen. The building will be a total loss. It was built two years ago at a cost oi 8500.0it0. It is sis stories high ami contained 400 rooms. It is impossible jto learn how many of the guests were in the hotel at the time the tire broke out. The total loss will not fall short of half a million of dollars. Among those injured is Cora Tanner, the actress, who is Beverly burned was play-nijbout the head and feet. She an engagement at the Grand Opera house and had a room iu the hotel. Every physician in Syracsue is 011 tho ground. Most of those killed were on the fourth and fifth lloors. 3 a. ni. the hotel is still burning. YTague rumors are afloat that the list of killed will number fifty person, but this fact cannot be substantiated and it is believed the number will be less than The the first 'estimate. twenty-five- , guard lines stretched across the street are inadequate to keep back the surging crowds of people that are packed on the streets leading to the hotel, and the pilice are stationed all around the building. The scenes and incidents connected with the rescue of the inmates were heartrending in the extreme. The cries of women standing in the upier windows and of the excited crowd below were deafening, and, added to the constant roar of. the many tire engines, created a babel of confusion and panicky excitement in and around the hotel. Newspaper representatives are endeavoring with all the energy at their com mand to obtain substantial lists of those who have lost their lives, but have met with little success. At 1:12 a. m. a man and woman were locked in each others' arms iu the vhi'dw on the fifth fioor at the north- . .ist corner of of the building. Below il em was a perfect sea of flames. There was no possibility 01 escape except by the window which was open to them. The No assistance could reach them. woman seemed to be anxious to jump,but her husband was earnestly entreatThe crowd her to desist. ing waited with baited breath below The woman made one last effort to -- 1 g n and the cry of the crowd signalled the awful end that must have befallen them aa they fell backward into the room into the mass of Names. At a window on the fourth floor, almost directly under this a woman was surrounded on all sides from the in: teriof of the room bv the fierce flames. She seemed irresolute as to whether to jump to the pavement or to face . the faery toe that was fast encroaching on and life. She stepped her, liberty upon the sill of the window and placed her hands above her head. The people in the street below shuddered and turned their faces to shut out the horri ble sight that must meet their gaze should the woman jump to the ground She seemed to be withheld by either fear or feeling that escape would come from some other source, she stepped down from the sill into the room, but remained at the window but an instant when the whole room became enveloped in flames and she sank back from view The frightful shrieks of the guests and crackle of the flames could be heard for blocks away. The building burned eo rapidly that most of the people in the upper stories were obliged to use the tire escapes or jump for their lives. One woman appeared at the window in a room on the north side of the building .; g Uwtrraaiat TW Will Nut Mi ihr M at V.Jnl'tt a) to Hrr IlMbur TV a Frvm liarr-U sun, Ck--t 11-T- Ilabad. lie n "irrl pk-ke- "li-iya- l to-du- v out-tric- M K, well-know- n Con-dderc- . 's Seine-et-Ois- Hal-tnic- d n e .L-- - Fm-lam- O'ErWii United Ireland prints an airxHiut of the eacape of lil-ioand O'Brien, written by O'Brien Y rowed from himself. He aayt: Dulkey Yedueday at miduiht to a yacht lying two utiles off the lore. The next morning found us ninety miles away toward lha Wish oiat. Friday and Saturday we laid in a dead calm. On Sunday morning we lauded at Land's End, when the w iad again died away and we w r forced to lie all day in the brilliant suiishin withic two mile of shore. Trinity House cutter parsed piite closA to us, and the crew of the Adelaide" off Falmouth, actually exchanged greetings with our sailors. The fog buried ua from sight on Sunday night, four steamers blow ing fog horns around us during the night. We cleared the Lizard in the morning and darted across for the French coast to the British shipping. We were becalmed again 011 Monday and were ! obliged to beat up thechannel. A brisk While pass j gale sprang up 0.1 Monday. ing Guernsey alter midnight vte wero I A Drummer Drop ad. apparently pursued by a revenue cutter, which, howexer, was unable to weather The to fctpocwl ( omhi:iuial. the gale and abandoned the chase. In II01-A SUdesuian Idaho, Oct. the morning we were running free be sp'ial from Itcllevue says: lioorge fore the wind for C'herUuirg, where wo drummer for a landed ut 11 o'clock. We had reached Tliatcher, a San Francim-- wholeniile liquor house, our last day's supply if water. All tho arraegemetits worked perfectly, thank i dropied de:ul in McOrum's drug shire to prominent Dublin citizens who su)er ut Shoshone lust evening about "J o'clock. intended them, and wo had unparalleled He went into the store and akd for a good luck." bottle of medicine, ami while the clerk Mrs. O Bnen left Dublin this evening was tilling the order Thatcher sat down to join her husband. in a chair. Suddenly he fell over against the counter, dead. The cause of his THE LOST NATIONALISTS. death is supposed to be heart disease. the remains will hs embalmed and They are Thought to he in Paris. Hut shipped to Kan Francisco for intermeut. No One Knows. Pakih, Oct 13. La Presse says: DilFAITH CTKISTS. lon and O'Brien after their flight from a Dauber at Tipperary took a passage on a sailing Thev are veesel and landed! at Lac sur Mar on the Lai sre in the Tropics. coastfof STcf mandy lust Sunday. They The British Washinutom, Oct passed the Viight at the residence of minister has transmittetl to the depart- Raffalovic.hVHiiker whose daughter is ment of state a letter from the governor the wifa off JfiTeu. Monday Uiey camo ce they proceeded to of Sierra Leone, enclosing the rejnirt to Paris; y Viitry house ut Gif, in the Freetown ltoss Colonial at from Surgeon and returned regarding the case of the American mis- to Pari last night. Their address in If news is received sionaries, about whom various stories the city is a secret. from America favorable to the Irish mishave been told. to that country they will start for The party consisting of Mr. Kingman sion York New at the end of tho week. If it Messrs.. and wife. Miss Dick and becomes manifest that it is their intenJaderquist, Codding, Tryce, (col- tion to remain in Paris, tho government ored), (late Bud Harries, arrived lsie.t will request them to leave. They began at once to live February. Rumors are in circulat ion that Raffal-oviciu native fashion, Imping thus to gain and members of his family declare the confidence of the natives. In July, that Dillon and O'Brien have not boon Ross informed that Surgeon Kingmun Gates and Harries had died. No doctor in. France and assert that they have had been summoned becuuse the whole sailed for America. partv were strong believers in faith euro. Started for Paris. Dr. floss, on investigation, found that the deaths were caused by tropical fever, Cherbourg, Oct. 15. Dillon, O'Brien an extremely malignant disease. Mrs. and Clancy arrived at noon today and Kingman he found to be in the last started for Paris this evening. stages and sho died despite his efforts to save her. He removed Tryce to the hosSailed for India. pital where he eventually recovered. 13.- - The detachment of Oct. Loxdon, reKingman came down himself, but fused to receive medical aid until the the East Surrey regiment, recently doctor threatened to isolate the house ordered from Guernsey to India, and and send the rest of the party back to which at first refused to obey the order, America on the ground that they were a sailed from Portsmouth for India today. conthen He to the danger community. The embarkation was marked by no sented to be treated and recovered. Dr. disorder. The men stated they objected Ross is informed that the remainder of to service and wilfully misdoing foreign intend due east these missionaries going behaved, thinking they would bo into the interior, guided only by a compunished in England, and preferring to pass. In view of these facts and a stateserment in the Missionary Review that an- undergo punishment here than do other party of missionaries are expected, vice in India. the governor of Sierra Leone calls atHE MEANS BUSINESS. tention to the matter, as this climate is not suited to those who trust alone to '"faith hoaling" and ignore the means The New Portugese Prime Minister placed by Providence at their disposal Himself. Declares for the relief of suffering humanity, and as such is a danger to the community at 15. in In Cortes y Lishon, Oct large. the presence of all the ministers Sousa, the new prime minister read a statement Presidential Appointments. to the proposed policy. He said he as Washington, Oct. 15. The President was unable to recommend the sanction made the following appointments: D, of the convention with England, but did Geoghengen, Register Land office at not desire to prevent tho execution of Vancouver, Wash.; George Bryant, re clauses already sanctioned. The govceiver of public money, Los Angeles, ernment identified itself with the naCal.; Thos. M. Starr, receivei public tional sentiment on this question and money, Haily, Idaho; Charles C. Warner, Would willingly accept a modification agent for Indians of Nevada agency, Ne- which, while preserving the dignity invada; David Wade Matthews, agent for terests of the nation, would facilitate Indians, Klamoth agency, Oregon. the restoration of harmony with our old ally; but he feared, if Zambesi reThe Arizona Railroad Muddle. ports were true, it would be harder than ever to arrive at the equitable 15. W. Oct. James Chicago, Eddy, of agreement, which Portugal always sinAurora, 111., secured from Judge Tuthill cerely desired. Parliament, he said, today an injunction restraining J. L would be convoked when ever the arrived at decisions requiring its Beveridge, jr., Giving Pearce and J. B. cabinet assistance. The nations credit had been Hobbs, as arbitrators, from turning over attacked by private interests abroad, but to F. E. Hinckley the bonds, coupons was not shaken. The government would and records of the Arizonn Mineral Belt devote itself to economical measures in Railroad Company. Eddy in the bill order to reduce tha national expenses, stated it was a question as to the valid- and aeked Parliament to sink political ity of the claim that he held against the passions and give the government its road and to avoid . litigation he agreed support. with Hinckley to refer the matter to the The leaders of various parties made above-namegentlemen as arbitrators. short speeches, in which they gave asEddy turned over all bond,coupons and surances of an attitude of good will toother papers to them together with his ward the government. At a joint sitting resignation to a majority of the board of the two houses a special decree was of directors, to be used if the arbitrators road closing the session. decided against him. The arbitrators have had the case ovar ten months withWant to Kill the Governor. out making any disposition. Tuesday arbitra"-tioKansas the revoked contract of Eddy City, Ot. 15. A special from and so notified them. Learning Oklahoma City says: Governor Steele, that they proposed to hand everything en route to Kingfisher to attend the G. over to Hinckley he filed the bill w ith A. R. reunion, received warning that he the result as above. would be assussinated if he passed IK aa ; j wm ked AGAIN. I Ct car k'ft IN THE TOILS u Prwoon. AwaitittS ftrnnUf Xrm IL tonr tviiliiir-Hr- v. Thn covered in the LelanJ hotel, at IM u'clovk tLia morning. It is do '2 oVk k and the tire is still burning fiercely, ibe entire fir department, consisting uf tdue engines, are werkii.g hard to save further kw of life and limb. An trug-k'Sm- Vo PRICE, FIVE CENTS. 1M0. of Lis; At th fnii.y and fr tends Im t the train at a j audi atatkio brfor rttwhing tkUtKua t'dy and ouctinued Lis journey by isstae. A PLKnolS PAIU OF EASi ALS The feeling against th giHvnor very XALL'ED IN i HH Atai. btttw and it M dnxrale ba-would hare carried out the threat bai hia route. not th fovemur Tborptta Murderer and (ieonra Shins Will go Brk to 6a Quae tin A PBOMlSlMi YOITH. to OcM&plet Their fiontatac. A TeIte-TW-i- d Ha a tioyttbo lilit) ia Uabe TV K.iwi af a fW af Bright Futnrr. Vnmrt La;uia a ike Hiuuil liutouaBcac, Pa, Oct. 15. Jail - Jrl M tafiftV irmu4 Lua mining tow in the lower end of Ibrttt fir f Ir4rr. zerne county, baa the distinction of pro Chhaoo, Oct 15. Two of the Dut duciiig th youngest forger in the cuai region. Tha prodigy is l'i yearoid Frank desperate criminals known to to Pacilic Feely. Ha haa the power of dtavptioo akpe were captured in CLkigo Uight t Lis by J a mm IL Hume. chkJ special oftWr to a remark degree. youth and untk ished education. Frank of Well. Fargo 1 tt. The captive I'.ks K 1C. becmuw- - of bavin' vetoed ti.e U rritorud ra4lal at U.e Ud Vucmtmc Waiting Tacht and T&eno CooTvd hh aae1 proved lie the most disastrous fire tint Las ru-itn- l S raruse for many yetrawaa disK aAcvwe, Bowed Prom tfc Irian Bhor o WiUILrara a HainiillioM. 13. UUIES TELLS THE SToEY HIS FLItiHT FfiOX M'BLIX. to lhruu'h bar mmi tiiev L-- r. tuvoM-trted ta rW the Uld ou thu ie viii lh 4.1 m buildup. The uUia a U to t h row out a mpeur fr.u the window. &be threw out rof- - aod mm etn rhiiibi&rf out of ttiudo. tlM IUum eciveio her and fcL fell b-into th buildup tnd perched. hrteo or eight xueii fend rhiklrva tork-.ufrom thw to a jumd LoU4. hd in the ivr of thU(ir At oti time pennut ere hod together OQ th WmkI m already raught tir from th Hui4 tium were half anked. parka. wveraJ of them were Seen to Ur off under giruieuts that had caught fire. On woman lay on the ground here idie had falien, Uring her hair from her head. Her huir had caught tire and it waw ith diflk-ultthat the fiatwe were que-hbh. together with oUit-r- s ho had jumped f rixii the windows, was oa a stretcher to up and a saloon in the neighborhood. ocka-k- . and It ut now four twentv-hvalthough the hotel is tiil burning, the tire deiartineiit have the flame under coiitroL There are four dead Uklie lying in different undertaking establishments and one dead at St. Joneph's hospital Tiiese bodies as yet are unidentified. It will tie utterlv inixi!ile to learn definitely how many were burnetl to death, and w hne UkIios will never be found. A remarkable xiincidcnce is the fact a meeting of the insurance that adjusters of this state was to have taken pla.v at the In it el. 1 fie proprietors of the hotel are Wurren J. Iceland and Van liuren Lt'land who are also proprietor of and are interwtM in various other large hotels in differentcities through out the United States. Ut n fright Jama Froa Ik ' pitiful Leurd jup Llan4 Hotel M Byrmcuee the &nt of a Terribj Conflagration Early MORNINU. OCTOBER OC.DEN, UTAH, THURSDAY L -- It-pi- can handle a pfro with reniarkiibio dexare ChurUw IL Thorpe, aha terity. Ilsia iow under bail to explain Dorsey and (ieorge IL M.inn. Their why ha used Mr. Coouahau' name to a note, and i tlentaJly ran awny from last eiploit in tVhforuia wan a daring home. The b& went over to llaxeltoa escape from the UU priau . t Sau a few days aff and after taking .lianer Queutia. was nerving a life Thorj at one of tho otels sauntered up the sentence for murder and robbery, and street leisure!. purling a cigarette. Ar- Shinn was in durance, for holding up an riving at the 'lokwale house of John- etdire train. Special Otticer son, Fry ft Co., ho inquired for Hume's railway clini led him to believe the Johnttai. Mr. Upon being told pair hail drifted to Chicago and with that that V'd!eiiian would not the HHMhtam-of ktd ollieera, the two return for an hour he concluded to wait for him, first introducing hiuiwlf as a were kated here. Tonight at the op eon of a-- well kuown customer there. port u ne moment Hume quietly nahlied This at once ingratiated him into the the astonished fugutives, taking them confidence of the clerks, who gave him separately, and under precautions by authorities that made resistance the privilege of sitting at the denk with Chicago or em ape impossible. tho bokkeeier. Evidently this was Thome and Shinn seemed to have no what he wanted, and he soon began particular occupation in Chicago, but amusing himself by scribbling, as the ure not known to have juirticiputcd in clerk thought, w hile in fact he was copycrime here. They w ill lie conveyed any Mr. Inch of the Johnson, signature ing he found among old paiers. He soon back to the old abode in Sau (juentin ut once. got tired of his high chair and, after prison wandering about the storeroom, siipod Nobility Iu Limho. out. His next move w as in the direction of the Citizens' bank, w here he presented Nr.w Vokk, Oct 15. Frank Deverne a check, signed ll. C Johnson, for fJ.i. is in the Brooklyn jail, being detained He wits not susevlcd, as he frequently of a warrant charging accompanied his father, w ho was a large there by virtue dciositor, to the bank, lie then re- him w ith grand larceny. The Bronklyn turned to the storo, w here he found Mr. jail, since its erection, has held many Johnson, and introduced himself as primors, but few have lss-- so notable Theodore O. Connahan. ut the samel as Dcvcrnc. He rcfusiw to talk about time producing a note addressed to Mr. his family history, but it was Ic.irncd I Johnson, reading: from an intimate friend of his, who is a "i he bearer is my son, I heo. In eAse ho reputable citi.en of New York, in tho calls on you please let him have 10 and groat lodging house over big bridge, that enter in my accou.it. Dcverno is of noble birth, lie is a rela"Josr.rii Co.l.VUUK." tive of America's distingiiishisl guest, Mr. Johnson was a littie suspicious of Comte. de Paris. 1 is fat her is a wealthy the boy's demeanor, but knowing Mr. nobleman now in Paris. I speaks Connahun'a reliability, and hImo his band English fluently, but with a decided The left the was in He accent French U;rn writing, paid monjv. P;,riv lxy the store and wento-aiiwiud hi'-- tcvn in America luioutr twenty-fivIliiliin for ticket Ho is an accomplished linwhuh pnrchRHed years. On Friday Morning, when Mr. guist Some vears ago ho held a lucra deil Jo! f gutting his account Imlanocd tive 1 mi turn with a large Now York lite I he was Ftirprised to find a nsiirilnce company, but of late has given Btt . frank ntian entirely --V teaching the 'i siimwAme, Joseph r ooty, lHnguge. It is not believed by the father or the boyajoeompanied by a de- lirooklyn police ollleers that the charge tective, dropped into the store in search BgaiiiBt Deverne is well founded. Ho is of tlio boy. Mr. Foely redeemed it. Th- - accused of disposing of a widow's drug detective then went hi Philadelphia and store during her absence from the ritv returned last night with hischargo. Thi and not giving to the owner all the hay evidenced very little cmbarr.iss-nien-t money ho received for tho sale. Deverne when token homo, and in reply to is 4.) years old ami takes Ins arrest very the question why he did such a thing, much to heart ''I wanted to see the only remarked: town." Arrested 011 Suspicion. Nkw Vokk, Oct. 15. Jack McAuliffo, As Befits a Soldier. the prize fighter, was arrested today and Washington, Oct 15. -- There will be to tho coroner's brought charged soldierly ceremonies over the grave of with the death of his wife office, Kate. Ho was General Belknap and he will Ik laid to paroled in charge of a detective to await rest among his comrades nt Arlington. tho result of tho autopsy. On his breast will lie the honorable The autopsy showed that Mrs. M badges of the Loyal Logion of the Army Aulffe died from heart disease. of Tennessee, Grand Army of tho Republic and Crocker's Iowa Brigade. The On the Turf. American fl;ig long owned bv the Gen15.- - Two-yeaOct. olds, four Latonia, bo be laid on the casket and eral will buried with him. The fi.ig of the third furlongs Little Midget won, Willow brigade, fourth division, 17th army corps, second, Caprice third. Time, 0:50. Six nonwill also rest on the casket. s and upward, milo commissioned officers from Washington Pick-Uwon, Argonta second, Robin barracks have been detailed "by the third. Time, l:4:i. war department to reiort at the s and upward, mile and residence and serve as body liearers twenty yards Polemus won, Aunt Kate officer of Fort second, Tenilke third. Time, 1:15;V and the commanding s and upward, mile and Myer has boon ordered to have six noncommissioned officers at the cemetery Carter B. won, Princess to serve as body bearersj there. Tho Annie second, Mondow Brook third. honorary pall bearers will bo Time, 1:50. master General Cresswell, General five furlongs -- Ma Two year-oldGrant assistant secretary of war, (en-era- l Belle won. Lmglexf second, Laura Agnes Bussey, assistant secretary of intethird. Time, l:fti'i. Kasson, Generals rior, four furlongs Wood-ben- a Batcholler, Vincent Senator Manderson, won, Lee S. second, Mattie Allen Halle Kilbourn, General Boynton, Gen- third. Time, 0:50. O. A. eral Veazey, commander-in-chie- f AT MOKKIS PAKK. R., Colonel Currell, commander departMorrih Park, Oct. 15.- - Closing day ment Palomac G. A. R, James Worth-ingtoof the New York jockey club's autumn Joseph K. McCannon and two members of the society Literary Order meeting. All ages, five furlongs Madstone won, of the Loyal Legion. Time, The family of General Belknap ib es- Eelipse second, Reilly third. 1:01?4'. pecially gratified at the many expresStone wall, Welter handicap, all ages, sions of sorrow constantly being sent to them by friends of the dead general. In six furlongs Annie won, Bradford Lukeview third. Time. l:l.Vy. addition to those already mentioned, mile and Echo restakes, been have condolence of messages James won, Punster, ceived from Postmaster General Wanna-makcr- , third. Time, 1:57. Secretary Noble, and from mem- Jr., second, Insightand upward, one mile bers of his regiment and brigade and Parnmetta won, Masterlode second, Iowa soldiers in general. Benedictine third. Time, 1:18. Fall best handicap, all ages, mile and The Governor Censured. a quarter Diablo won, My Fellow secColcmbus, Oct 15. In the legislature ond, Eurus third. Time, s six Farewell stakes, this morning a resolution was offered in - Kirkover Terririer second, won, which tone of censured the House, the third. Time, 1:16;V the governor for calling an extra session Monterey All ages, mile and sixteenth Cancan and providing an investigation commit- won from Eleve in 1:36. tee for Cincinnati AT LEXINGTON. The House caucus agreed to supKrt Ky., Oct 15. The decisive Lkxington, the bill giving the governor power of re- heat of the great $5(100 stake was trotted moval from boards at Cincinnati and for today, MeDix'l again winning after an an investigating committee. exciting finish in 2:15'. In the Senate a bill was introduced to 2:30 stallion trot, Semicolon won, Alaabolish the office of comptroller at Cin- baster second, l)oc third. Best time cinnati, and a resolution was offered for 2:194. a committee to prepare a plan for city 2:17 pacing, unfinished. Sprague government for that city, to report in Wilkes burst a blood vessel in the first All rule. went over under the heat and dropped dead. He was valued January. , v e 1 e s 1 r Three-year-old- Three-year-old- Three-year-old- ex-Po- - sec-on- three-year-old- Three-year-ol- fur-king- toc'ht by rucnic ii toa on Use track. ha n ki was killed and thirty mnurttif lea wrajUs y u.jure.1. Morrill For fcii Yraiv. M.oa ruji a, Vt Ot-- t IX la the It-lat ure kc.1 today. J tft in 8. Morrill was formally neWted Fnitod States Senator for wti years from March L next-Tal- e ir of Two Ad. New Yoaa, OrL fneht with romance is partly told in the f, illuming advertMtiuect which ai jered Saturday in a Brooklyn paper: Rinteln KtiuMa - At Camden, N. J, k IK January by the Ke. W. IL liurrtll, Anthony J. Umtoln to J.ie K. StiuHon, daughter of the Late Thomas StifMMi, both of liratklyn. Intoln Lint. In )a V tol-- r K, lot, et Camdeo, N. J, by K... W. IL Burrill, Ai.thiKiy K nlclu it J.ie E. lUnteln. both of IU..k!yu. The ILutriii divonv cmj wan one 44 tin' uioxt SetiNttioual ever tried in So strong was the Wtimouv rt of the husband, the plain00 the tiff, that the w ife did not put in any defense. At the hearing, which was of brief description, twenty orret.pocenU were present to swear against the wife. After the granting of the divorce Mrs. Rinteln and her mother took a eottaire at Sea Cliff, L I, where they pasHod tint summer. Lttle was hoard from Rinteln, out it is said that lie was in communication w ith his former wife tho week after the court protvediLgs. In of the notoriety gi.en to me case Uie friends oT Mr. and M r. n were start Id to learn that tle.y had been remurriol by Uie same nunu-tvi- who first united I hem. the couple were remarried on Wednesday and went at one to Philadelphia. Their present whereabouts is thought to lie Chicago. Mr. August Kinteln, father of the voung huslsiiid, is a wealthy retired luiuor deader. He is said to have heard frim his son, but ileclineit to rtate w hc'.lier h would receive him should he return home. "I have refused Ut iiiy son's wife, .Mr. Kinteln wud. a ldo not think she is a woman of good ch; racier. Ho has made his tied and must ho in it. Mrs. Kinteiii is a handsome blonde, she in just 20 mid dresses in the height of f and ion. Kinteln is hardly 23 and for live years has iiccii a clerk in his father h wholesale liquor store on Oortlund LL-At- (isiw-quenc- ory e Kiu-U-l- street The A ndo ver Case. , 1ovn, Oetjhy-T- he throng HkUrod. ing the hearing of the Amkiver case by the supreme court was greater hxlay than yesterday. Every sent wiw occupied mid ninny iieopln stoixl for hours jiafiently listening. Mr. Wulmiin his argument against Prof. Sniythe and tho trustees. Judge Ana French whs the next sfsvikcr 011 the samosido. Theixnirt.hesj.id, has nothing to do with tho lhologiui quistioria at issue. The question is whether or not the visitors acted ooulr,iry to tho statutes of the founders or exceeded tho limits of their jurisdiction. Judge Hoar made tho rWing iqieoch against Prof. Smj the. Tho cause to bo decided, ho argued, is simply une the proper management, of a charitable trust He dwelt ut length upon tho point that quest ions of theology wore for the visitors and not for tho supreme court. The closing address was made by Prof. Baldwin, who summed up fo Prof. Sniythe. In concluding, he said Prof. Smythe declines to yield his legal rights by consenting to lie condemned and removed for something of which 110 attempt even has lsn made to prove him guilty, namely, maintaining and inculcating certain doctrines. The court took tho case under udvise-mccon-cliid- g Pocafello Rejoiriiitr. Spncinl to Tub Commrrcial, Boise, Ida., Get 10. -- A special from Pocutello says: The Republicans of Brighton county are having n ifkirious ratification ut the opera house tonight Over 100 couples from Poeatello, Black-foo- t, Eagle Rock and Soda Springs are in The hall is beautifully attendance. decorated with the national colors. GoverorShoup was introduced to the company by Judge Morgan and made a stioech of congratulation that incurred the good opinion of his fellow cituena in this county. After the governor's address he lead the grand inarch, which was participated in bv the beauty and brains of the county. Dancing is going on and will bo kept up till morning, i Poeatello luis never witnessed a gayer occasion and it is a veritable jubuee. Western Freight. Chicago. Oct 13. At tho adjourned meeting of the Western Freight Association today a discussion of the uniform classification resulted in the adoption of a resolution that the association will receive the rejiort of the standing committee on uniform classification, to become effective on January 1st next provided it shall be made effective on ail other associations and lines and that the vu rious railrtftid commissions of states within the territory of the Western Freight Association approve it The code of rules prepared by the joint rate committee to govern the making of through rates on traffic interchanged letweon eastern and western lines was approved. These rules provide that the rates shall be made from time to time by uniform action in order that all lines may participate simultaneously. A atWOOtt Mine Cave-lu- . In today's heats Emma was first PickIpshkming, Mich., Oct 15. A cave-i- n Abdullah Grant's occurred at Luddington mine near third, 15. For away second, Best time hear Arlsie Medium fourth. Patrick burying five men. some t ime past Gager Showdash and 2:20 . Singes and Richard Dunn were rescued wife have quarreled violently because of alive, but John Fisher was dead when his jealousy. This morning she poisoned A Fatal Collision. rsached. W. R. Davis und A. Bailey are When Showdash herself and babe. Providence, R. L, Oct 15. A con- still under the mass of rock and uncame home and found their bodies he struction train on the old colony road questionably dead. suicidedVith a revolver. Triple Tragedy. Pkkth Am boy, N. J., Oct A to-da- |