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Show 'f :r f COALVILLE TIMES. WIIKD OUT ltY FLOOD t hundreds driven from their R. 10MES, Zn1nt U ( Ih t ?. iLKHi and Many Farmer or iiMcnmoa. ..! w .! VMUI.an lot .M..II-- loo It now 190k & though Huber City 1 to have a waterworks ay stem. The labor union of Ogden bare decided to hold a grand reunion some tine In the near future. On Saturday of laist week the of Lehl turned out and ileared the cemetery of all brush, weed, etc. There were forty-twgraduate frwn the largest class the Ephraim school, from any one district In Sanpete twenty. Fred Gray anil Will Smith, two negroes residing in Ogden, were convicted of driving a home to death and fined $10(1 each. The smallpox situation at Mt. Pleasant is still causing much uneasiness, there being three new cases reported last week. Durtng a heavy thunderstorm, the Sanpete Valley railway depot at Ephraim was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. There are now 15,00 cattle grazing on the Uintah forest reserve. Permits have been granted for 125,000 sheep to enter the reserve on July 1. Mrs. Annie Leaker, 70 years old, was stricken with apoplexy while out for a drive in Sait Lake City, and died before a physician could reach her. Mrs. J. M. Doran of Ogden was struck In the eye with a baseball while on Dec oration day, watching and as a result may lose her eyesight.. Gross earnings for the Rio Grande system' for the second week of May were $238,600, a deerease of $26,000 compared with the same week last year. Work on the auxiliary plant of the Utah Sugar company at Leland Is well under way. Brick work will start In a few days and be completed within six weeks. , .The shipment of wool for the year from this atate Is expected to reach the IS, 000,000 pound mark, placing the woo) clip at about the same place as ma-rone- s o P-- --- -T , s a e last year."5 Ot- - ciri-ten- - in Region About Wyoming Sheriff Has Running Fight tawa, Kansas, Virtually Ruined, With Desperadoes. Crop Being Wiped Out and Sheriff Webb of Natrona feunty, Livestock Deatroyed. have fought a Wyoming, and ( battle with outlaw near the Putney Kan Flood ci mllnoi h at Ottawa, ranch In the Dig Horn mount!118water the sa. are fail improving, One of Lhe outlaw was wounded wry rapi t!y Communication and fell from bis horse. A cpanln where seveiai with North Ottawa lifted him from the ground nd e8" hundred persons were driven from with his human burden into was opened Tuesday raped their home The officers fcllowed the Bad with boats and provisions were taken and news of another battle Is looked Six men to the unfortunates for momentarily. A number of horses m the Santa Ke depot, who have been stolen from the Teasdale were without f d tdure Sunday, ranch recently, and Sheriff Vbb and Many were brought away Tuesday men his started In pursuit Of others were removed from the flood guilty parties about a week s$o- district, some of whom had been Senator Quay Laid to Rtforced to upper stories or to their bouse top For two hours Tuesday, dating the The country west of Ottawa for funeral services over the reais'nb'of everal mile has been swept clean, Senator Matthew Stanley QuJ. busicrops having been wiped out and ness was Buspended throughout the All bridges entire Beaver valley. In Beater. much stock drowned here have remained Intact, but train Senator Quay's old home, thstn-etservice Is still at a standstill, the were thronged with crowds fiam surtrack for miles betng under water rounding towns, anxious to psf labt tribute to the dead statesman. A priWARSHIPS AT TANGIER. vate service was held at ttys house, under a guard of honor bum the and American Citizen Seized by Insurgent G. A. R. post, the" remains Beaver Chief Must e Released. were removed to the Fourth PresbyThis cablegram has been received ter church, where for three hours the at the navy department from Rear public was given an opportunity to Admiral C'hadwDk. commanding the view the face of the dead senator. South Atlantic squadron at Tangier: There were floral tributes from all "Th. seizure of the American citi-e- parts of the country. A large silk waa by an insurgent chief, so as American flag wee draped across tho to bring pressure on the sultan of detoratitn casket and no other Morocco to secure the demands of the marked It. During the time the body tribe. Our sense of the gravity of the lay in state, several tbousaid percase ! shown by the presence of the sons viewed tho remains. American squadron, and will undoubtMADE BAD BREAK. edly cause the earlier yielding by the sultan of Morocco to the demands of the only safe' Attempt of Omaha Brokers .to Comer the rhief, which I Corn Prove Disastrous. , moan of relasing the captive" May corn on the Omaha grata exThere Is the highest authority for Tanon the statement that an attack change bad a range of 10 cents Tuesbrior an the day as a result of what is said to have expedition against gier immebeen at attempt by a leading member followed will be the by gands to corner that delivery. A numb of diate murder of the captives. who had sold short for lome of Instance At the Secretary Hay, brokers time were forced to buy back such no Instructions will be sent to Rear of their Bhort corn at a price rnglng Admiral Chadwick for the present, from 4 to 8 cents above the price at pending the result of the representa- - which they sold It. UTAH STATU NKYYS. - I 1872 he was elected secretary of the commonwealth, a position which be held for six years He was recorder of Philadelphia and chairman of the Republican state committee during the following year and in 1879 was again elected secretary of the commonwealth, holding the office for three years. He was delegate to the national convention In ftepubllcan 1872 and 1876 and also from 1883 to 1892. The last state office which he held was that of state treasurer in 1885. He was elected United States senator from Pennsylvania by the Republican party and took bis seat March 4, 1887. He was chairman of the Republican national committee in EOGTUi) BY JAPANESE TWO THOUSAND COSSACKS ARE PUT TO FLIGHT. FIGHT WITH OUTLAWS- - 111 NtifiUll An BY HIGH WATERS. o rM I. (M HOMES Poow-IBr- IM. M 11 --"' the French government, requesting 'he exercise if if good olD e the release of the capuvcs. 10 1 Bxlnt Bangr. U CoolTlll. CX. So4-ClMouof. Editor e-1- $sJ Engagement Takes Place Northeast of Feng Wang Cheng, In Which Brown Men Seem to' Have Had Best, of Argument. detachment of Japanese troops attacked and defeated 2,000 Coesacks at A1 Yang Pien Men, east of Feng Wang Cheng, Saturday. The engageA ment at 10.30 and ended at The Japanese lost four men killed and twenty-eigh- t wounded. The Russian casualties are not known. General Oku. in command of the Japanese armies operating against Port Arthur, reports that the Russl&ns have abandoned Cheng Ko Chen Pau, Huang Sban and T.lu Shu Tun. No Russians have been seen east of Chen Ko Chen Pau General Nakamuras detachment, which occupied Liu Shu Lun Friday, captured four Russian guns. began 11:30 a. m. 1888 Quay was United States senator for two term from 1887 to 1899 In the latter year he was tried for misappropriation of the public funds and acquitted April 21, 1899, and on the same day he was appointed United States senator by Governor Stone of Pennsylvania. It Is announced by the family of Senator Quay that, carrying out the senators dying request, there would SENATOR QUAY DEAD. be no ostentation in connection with Ona of the Most Noted Public Men the funeral. This compels the refusal of the Day Passes Away. of a request by the Masons for a Colonel Matthew Stanley Quay, Masonic funeral. enlor senator from Pennsylvania, CRUSHED BY STREET CAR. died peacefully at Beaver, Pa, on after an Illness Friday afternoon which had been more or less persist- - Child Killed and Three Men Injured In Salt Lake City. ent for the last year, which took a Memorial turn for the worse ten days ago, and day in Salt Lake City wax marked street car accidents, three which by doctors the diagnosed aa one of whfch resulted fatally. Alonzo chronic gastritis. son of Mr. Matthew Stanley Quay was born at YVortben, the H. was C. and killed In Mrs. YVorthen, 1833. He Dillsbury. Pa., September 30, attended the public schools and Jef- the evening, while earlier In the day ferson college, graduating In 1850 and Andrew Godfrey, aged 18 years, susIn 1854 wa admitted to the bar. He tained a broken leg. In the morning was colonel of the One Hundred and Arthur Brown, a druggist, was renThirty-fourtPennsylvania volunteers dered unconscious by a fall from a and military secretary to the gov- moving ear. Shortly after 10 o'clock ernor of Pennsylvania during the civil Sunday night Hyrum S Gillies sufwar. From 1865 to 18G7 Quay was a fered the loss of his right foot falling member of the state legislature and In front of his own car while dizzy. j I d h JAPS DISPLAY GREAT BRAVERY. Successive Nine Chargee. Though Exposed to Galling Fire. The details of the fighting at Kla Chou emphasize the heroic tenacity of the Japanese In their conduct at Nan Shan hill Nine successive times the Japanese Infantry charged the fortified height In the face of a storm of missiles, and in their last effort they carried the forts and trenches, only after a bayonet to bayonet conflict with the Russians, who made a deaerate, despairing struggle to meet the oncoming hordes. The final assault of the Japanese, in which they at last succeeded In taking possession, was marked by the encounmost desperate ter that has thus far characterized the war The Japanese left, throughout the entire action until night, was exposed to an enfilaiUng fire from the Russian Infantry, a fnboat on Talienwan bay and four guns posted at Tafang Chen. At a critical moment the ammunition of the artillery ran low, and it was decided to cast the remaining ammunition Into one final desperate assault Fortunately, however, at the moment this decision was reached the Japanese squadron in Kin Chou bay, which had ceased bombarding when the Infantry had first moved forward, suddenly resumed the shelling of Nan Shan hill. Make death-dealin- g hand-to-han- Japan Sends Sharp Note to China.' The Japanese minister at Peking has demanded an immediate reply to the inquiry previously sent to the Wal Wu Pu, as to whether China Is prepared to hold and administer the territory the Japanese have conquered. adding that otherwise Japan must appeal to other powers to undertake the responsibility at the expense of China It is reported there that Minister Vchida ha notified the Chinese goiernment at Peking that Port Arthur wil sixtn he captured and has asked whether China Is ready to resume posse-- n in of the district or If Japan shall hold- it. ' - Memorial Day Accident at Salida, Colo. While the memonal exercises were at their height at Sadda. Colo., and the veterans were casting fit wers on the waters of the Arkansas river In memory of the heroic dead, four people were suddenly plunged to death by the breaking of a foot bridge spanning the river at the lower edge of Riverside park. A number of others were, thrown Into the stream, several of whom are missing. The rest narrowly escaped with their Uvea, llie accident wa witnessed by a thousand persons, powerless to render assistance. ' Car RoMar Kill h Folio. While being pursued by a detective-twmen, thought to be freight car robbers. Jumped "Into ' the river at Cleveland, O., and were drowned or killed. Special Detective Wilson discovered four men In the railway yard acting in a suspicious manner. Two of them pursued by Wilson ran toward the river and jumped Into stream. Wilson fired a dozen shots at them, when finally one of them cried out, Pm shot, and disappeared under the surface. The other man reached a bridge abutment. Ashe clung there the detective fired three shots at him. one of which, struck, and he sank into the water. THE NEWS REACHES 8T. PETERSBURG. ,. who-seeme- . VtibUe4e blhg swindled each of more than $300, owing to out day abort measure and short weight' men la Salt Lake City, according to City Sealer II. P. Richards.' There hare been 60,000 sheep sheared at the Water Hollow shearing cornorth of Fountain ral, five mile Green. The clip has averaged about even pounds per sheep. Lehl feels quite Tumorcd that two of her boys are the valedictorians st the two leading universities of the etate Fred Warlton at the U. of U., and r. W. Klrkham at the B. T. U. , The third annef7ommencement exercises of the Sanpete county public schools were held In Ephraim Saturday. There were 183 graduates, forty-twcoming from the Ephraim school. A burglar entered the Branch Co-oat LehLand appropriated half a dozen watches and tome other Jewelry, fitting himself out with new clothlng. leavtng 'Ms old clothes behind. There Is some agitation of the question of removing the county seat from Mantl to Ephraim. It being claimed by tome that Mt Pleasant, Fountain Green and Ephraim have formed a combine looking to that end. After terrorizing a erowd near the postoffice building In Salt Lake City fof nearly an hour, biting a bey and chasing the employees out of the basement of the postofflee. an apparently mad dog was killed by a policeman. The United Presbyterian general assembly, In session at Greenville, Pa., decided to operate with the Utah gos-- . pel mission and to eqiup and maintain a gospel wagon. Rev. J. E. Milligan was elected to represent the church. The report come from Kama tha for once In the history of the valley the fanner are crying enough rain, a recent torm causing Beaver creek to overflow, some portion of the town betng turned into lakes. John Kane and William Moore, prisoner at the county jail at Ogden, made their escape Sunday, and are tilt at large. The men outwitted the Jailer while he was serving lunch to the occupants of the jail. Frederick Bagshaw, aged 69, em ployed a night watchman at the Dooly block in Salt Lake City, met death In an elevator accident on Sunday. It wa to have been Bagshaw last shift before removing AO his farm. E. F. Lynch, an epiployee of the Utah Independent Telephone company, wa fatally Injured at Ogden, A pole which a gang of men were attempting to raise, fell and struck Lynch upon the head and fractured his skulk o o pointed four years ago to bring the various branches of Methodism closer In Most Remarkable Gathering together in the use of common Churchs History at an End. prayer book, hymnal and catechism; It wa after midnight on Sunday a referendum of the when the general conference of the question of a colored bishop, and Methodist Episcopal church closed many other matters of smaller ImIt session at Los Angeles. port Mice. The conference Just closed ha acWanamaker to Succeed Quay. complished much for the interest of A Washington special says: Pres the . Methodist church and will go down in church history as one of the ident Roosevelt lost a great leader In most important In the point of legis- Senator Matthew S. Quay, and now there Is wondering who will become lative action. The action of the general confer the real spokesman for the adminis Few doubt trace In retiring five bishop and elect- tratlon In Pennsylvania. postmaster-genera- l that John former, others eleven probably attracted ing the wildest attention of any other YYanamaker will step to the front and but there were make every possible effort to organsingle happening; In the Keystone other many subjects that affected the ize s dominant party Hi ambition to go. to Washstate. great membership of the church and a as United States senator, ington which were watched with deep Inteso strong in other years, has not rest Among these were: lessened with age. and It is expected Tpe decision to stand byfitbe presMr. Wanamaker will 'soon be that ent attitude of the church on the sub his forces so as to take adplanting of Ject prohibited amusements; the of the loss, by the Quay fao-tlorefusal to return to the time limit vantage Its of leadership. He will atof pastoral servire; the exonerating of certain theological schools of the tempt to wrest the scepter from hi foemen and become the charge of heretical teachings; the political I am for the great party In that unification of the Methodist publishstate. the consolidation of the ing houses; A cyclone which passed about two boards of church benevolences; providing means of support for super- miles south of Guthrie, Oklahoma, did annuated bishops: creating a commis- much damage to growing crops, while sion to revise the commission ap- - five houses were demolished. METHODISTS ADJOURN. p be-sld- much-discusse- d Russia Victory! Vlctoryl Our Navy But They Were Our Own Battleships. Succeeds at Last. Minneapolis Journal Q .Ay? 0X stwSF:: j :: s , mm The Coal Mao "And before the Ice man. who plana to be in I go. Id like to pregent town for the season!'' Woman Select Her On Coffin. Dr. Anna E. Park, said to have been the first woman admitted to medical practice in New York. Is dead at the age of 74. Three weeks ago, when In perfect health, devoting herself to the care of a number of charity patients whom she had attended ever since her practical retirement several years ago, she visited an undertaking establishment and tild the" manager she wished to arrange for her ftineral, and selected her casket and robe. my frid, , Boskem, Cossacks Make v- g Ride The correspondent of the Btddfl Invalid (the Russian army A Wilkcshnrre Pa., t.ptch say that while knee! rg on a Plymouth gives a detailed aecouBt of bridge pray .ng for a relative who was destined to become classic In Died While Praying or drowned (He .an ago, George Shep la fell into the Suiquehama and was He was drowned foreigner, hut knowing the csdom of services for the dead on lUnirrlal day. he detiJt-r- i to m to (ip prlge and pray, thinking ft appropte to do so because tho body 0r hislative was never mmerod. and tie river was the only grate it knew Am-'rlos- Russky organ) a ride cavalry annals. The Trans-Baikcommand t rode 4.Q0 miles In a fortnight. They approached to within a days march of Seoul and were anxious to capture the town, which would have been an says, to exploit, the correspondent thrill Europe, but Imperative orders reached them to relt-- e, nod they reluctantly rode back to YY'iju. ' i - Record-Breakin- & Dalny Evacuated by Russians. Dalny has practically been evacuated. according to the statement of Sikh and Russian refugees arriving at Che-toby junk. All valuables, ammunition and most of the troops have been taken to Port Arthur. The only rivIHan. remaining are the electrical englneeri in charge of the mines laid In the harbor and also those set to destroy docks and piers. The junks just arrived here, on their way down, passed fourteen Japanese war vessels ine miles outside of Dalnv. o j Churches Decide to Unite. The Presbyterian general assembly of the United States in session at Buffalo. N. Y., declared In favor of union with the Cumberland Presbyterian church, by a voe so nearly unanimous that It was not counted. The resolution adopted included not only favorable action on the report, but recoin mends certain other steps to be taken to secure the union of the' churches and to make plain the position of the church. - MEN SLAIN BY THOUSANDS. Assault on Nan Shan Hill Bloodiest Affray of Modern Warfare. Japan paid dearly for her victory at Kin Chou, Nan Shan and Talienwan, losing three thousand men in killed and wounded In thd repeated assaults against these strongholds, but she scored a sweeping and valuable victory over the Russians, capturing fifty guns, clearing the way to Port Arthur and inflicting losses on the Russians, which, in the end, are expected to to- tal 2,000 men. Few Russians in Korea. Continuous and conflicting reports concerning the movements of the Russians are being received from Korean sources with wild guesses as to tho number of men seen. In reliable quarters in Seoul the present Russian strength In the province of Ham He-un- g Is estimated at about 1,000 men, with twelve guns. who. ft Is anticipated. will be reinforced In the near future. The Cpsaacks claim that 600 cavalry and 4,000 Infantry are now following In their rear. Bluejackets May Be Landed at Tangier Should American Interests In J&n-glor other places in Morocco be Imperiled In any way as a result of complications growing out of the capture of the American, Perdlcaris, by the Moorish bandits, It may become necessary to land marines from the American man of war now on the way there-Th- is contingency, however, has not been seriously considered by the administration, as there has been no dence that such a step will be ary. er r- t - |