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Show mm' ' -. w A V- STANDING A WIXOM, Proprietor. three 91 2 f .3 Mourns fcntored at tb su fclAMUMJ txUU.iv i l, ;j j,Vt 'O'.' The electrical workers who were formerly in the employ of the Utah Power company .aredhfa Light Strike demanding that the company recognize their union. J. T. Cfokons, a rough rider, was thpown from hts horse during- the parade In honoy of the preslden In Salt Lake, alighting on his 'head, sustain' Ing serious Injuries. 4,000 Was secured j W Pick visit the during presidents pockets to Salt Lake, they having, availed themselves of the opportunities afforded by the dense crowds. In a runaway accident at Mt. Pleas tot, John W. and Brig Farnsworth (were both injured, both bein kaockri down, the wagon running bvoc jthejn, leach sustaining serious bruises. t , r ' A number of Mt. Pleasant sheepmen find that the recent storms were not ao disastrous to their flocks as was at first (imported, a number f escaping wih bud, 0' pet euVOpncsj As the Tesult of a drunken brawl In a saloon In Salt' Lake 'City, Walter Russell, an electrician. Is in the hospital with a fractured, skull and his .assailant, John Abernathy,' a soldier, 4s in Jail. . J. B. McVey, a carpenter of Salt Lake City, was run oyer by a Rio Grande train last week and killed. He Was carrying an umbrella which .obscured his sight until the train was Upon him. Morris Morrison a "ladof 'efght J pears, living in Salt Lake City, wag arrested last weep on a Charge of horse stealing, and admitted hts guilt, hut was released upon promise of good behavior in the future. t Samuel W, Davis fell from a root ' Which he was shingling In Spanish Fork, and was badly Injured, his elbow being dislocated, his thigh bone slipped from lt socket, and his. head 1 1 badly cut and bruised. Bmll 0." Nelson, an employe efthe South Swansea mine at Silver (Sty, yell down a shaRonthe 30th, hid dead body being found later. It la not fcnown how the accident occurred, aa ; at the time.. Jt he waa aloe . J j At the 115th general assembly of the Presbyterian church, held in Loa - resolutions were adopted Angeles,palling Upon the United States senate to expel Senator Smoot and declaring that polygamy waa still practiced by the Latter day Salnts. ; The dead body of Thomas P, Murphy of Price was found In the rear ol the Wilson hotel, in Salt Lake City, The deSunday morning . last ceased was a great sufferer from con gumption, and it is thought that he tnay have been attacked with a fata) winstroke while standing near the ' dow and fell out The Intercollegiate debate between Nevada and Utah, which took place a ' Reno. Nev., on the subject, 'Resolved, That Municipalities should Own and Operate Street Railways, Light and Telephones," was won by NevAiil, Who had the affirmative. made an attempt to, crack the safe of the Cudahy Packing company In Salt Lake City Sunday morning. They failed to secure any1 money, but succeeded In demolishing the safe and leaving a pile of ruins as evidence of the desperate attempt It ia said that almost every orchard m Sevier county la infested .worse than ever before known with the tent Caterpillar. They can be found on pearly every tree la from one to twenty dusters. - They are devouring the move and young mult rapidly. Five cases of smallpox were report ed during the week In Salt Lake City, cases tod one case was imported; Were discharged as cured, leaving IT eases in quarantine, as compared with 18 for the previous week and 10 for the same week of last year. About 100 linemen, trimmers; and other employes of ths Utah Light & Power company, which supplies light to Salt Lake City and power, for the street car lines, hart' struck for recognition of their union, an eight-houwork day and an inJ " crease in wages. Mrs. The little daughter of Mri and My rum Hand was drowned at Benjamin last week, by falling Into a canal. The child was playing along the .bank of the canal, when it lost its balance and fell into 'the water. Before assistance arrived it was drowned. Over , z Vf Safe-blowe- t n r, W!'Mftim' x The tion In the resident e distiUt BY FLOOD work of restulng an caring for !be flood survivors Is being carried for, Contributions OVER TWO HUNDRED, LIVES LOST ward systematically was given to me to sign and there ot er the state The prisidents two It UTAH GRFETS PRESIDENT. IN TOPEKA KANSAS. j aio being rushed into the rtlitf com law the act of the na mam stops weie at Pocatello and by make lmo Citizens ate opening their nuUee to my mmd one lional government, Taber at s in bitef Soeech Delive-stops Poise but there ne'P and every ind na- President to homes survivors of to Roofs Tftelr the Driven the cf mist People important acts ever made nacl r Whicn Wai the Longest of American Fal s. Kimarid, Shoshone. vill bo .veil able b the national legislature, aw . irto Housesby HijA Water, Many of - tion is that the ulvalio feavi and I rt Home tPe-iv- s I Houma p to care tie those !ys. thclt Them Drcfoing Into the RagD y lti jihe national irrigation act of a year Pr - ' hr a a, din. at a'l ot thf-- e places ITid i pii, Mihiii'g in the homes pubUr Jdvery BecomAfter Torrent ing , ago Already experimertal work has brief ot made o the1 c he UaTls f r An f i Put Utah ami the p'mii city Is sheltering scores of homeless Jn'gg'X(,aUSeJ. begun h u in join own state hj l .u'oii waa a w i a k . ,u wi i aU , s, , ib visit to the capital cltv, people ini""g I Roc-t( was T i I on at oa h f Pucatillo ii tfu i Ot in the yo mei t cr elt plaited a tree m v jPi.su-c- t Thf ooiidit'iir,', ol ToHikSj tIe v lake' e urdu ic" gi Mil a riven President tkc state house grounds, declaring as prcbidcntiai ir"i rar if d Number cf Dead. of ilie etu'c of Kansas, on by jn,' Ad.dirio was taken of 'he bad finished his labors' That is City at 8 'o and was, The number of dead Is merey a of the I..1 st vhat I have been pit aching ' at Pifuriio is located juht jccoimt of Jh fiqtcl In the Kansas i i the 'i"Sn Mer, a- - uyijj appatyng. Over two matter of estimaic Twentv members gated in the s a1 otz of Foit the t r li 'vtn andary gi ra,i. 'U( Is Greeted by the Greatest Crowd Ever bandied lives. have thus far la on loRt, uf rescuing panics tell of bov they hall i cvaooi and arrangi meats j paiartc started, ami tbe pe i.lirl in Copper City. to houfis fiom savf only loss the at lowest the of , people drop i,fe placing ghen a continuous cnatun dunng hi-- fraie perfected .In lnunn Agent Cald j President Roosevelt arrived in Butte estimate, atifl the (lea dal 'loss will run tyegvvepf away by the flood, and oth ride to tbe was city and eoniitj building, Well, vheioby the picsidpnt vf "; 8 '52 Wednesday afternoon. He was Into- GteinrtllfafV ers toll of men who, terrified at tho where he made an alress to me sc bool his car to tine reviewing ,ct into the met at the B A. & P. depot by Mayor Itb8 situaof the fire, dropped To add 'to horror of'tbe approach children. At 10.05 ho arnved at the stand b a body guard of 200 Bannock Mullins, escorted by a company of mition; fire broke out til the northern water, where they sank and did not tabernacle, and at 1U.20 began his and Shoshone Indiana , part of the city ahd about' four hun- reappear. The estimated number of address. At 11 30 be was entertained The president spoke thirty minutes litia, a platoon of police and the Spannum dead does not indude the large dred houses have been burned. at breakfast by Senator Kearns, leav- to the people of Pocatello from a pa- ish war veterans, who are holding Several hundred people are on the her 'classed as missing, who cannot ing at 1.35 for Ogden, where he spoke vilion erected for the purpose, his talk their state convention in Butte. United States Senator Clark of Montana was roofs of their houses, the buildings be- otherwise be accounted for. Neither at the city hall at 3.15, leaving at being mostly for the railroad men, one of the first to are who , Many of does It Include the number water. greet the president. surrounded ing "by 4:45 for the east. he also aoknow lodging the presence Mr. Roosevelt then entered a cat- The longestB peech made by Presl of the Indian guards of honor. them, becoming exhausted after hours supposed to have lost their lives in the of imprisonment, have dropped into fire. In the latter class there is abthe waters and h owned. . The flooded solutely no means of arriving at even district Is in the northern part of the an approximate number of victims. PRESIDENT VISITS UTAH IDAHO AND MONTANA 1 ItoM'i - 'V Sevier countys public school grad nates are more numerous this year ; (han ever before. The San Pedro road has already Sixteen engines of the latest type, and pnore are coming from the shops. one of Mrs. William Roylance,1 Sprlngvilles oldest residents, Is dead. setjMrs. Roylance came to Utah and tled In Springvllle In 1853. t At a meeting held In Salt Lake City last week, resolutions were passed condemning the brutal atrocities perpetrated upon the Jewish people of j "steies i UTAH STATE NEWS. Russl.;j ' - (ii EVHV THURSDAY . W" hwC ja.fC-' J rru 1 - ex-fi- Instruction to Crwtini atm. t Items of news aro solicited fiotu ail X the country W rite up n one side of tne pupi r only W me pioier urw pla ulv In otler to pnuu tu pubiisber from m 7 i position Crum irn mm ns ld pe risf name of tbe author show 0 be s gm d tr t lc u of ul naimeatioris Jtieidfnnty anil be ltbh 1U wbrnocr dsirtd PUBLISHED "'- er-y- at KrLlam City a mail mauar Prvstoffhe mUM vj. AFIJIE hc gtox (lfrcv Hcuk . Trnia of Bubfteriptfoat Ono Year la advance Six Louihs P . ' "" Millions of Dollars Lost by Flood In Latest reports1 from the stricken f , Kansas City. town of Topeka, Kahsaa, State that The greatest flood In the history of the present condition of the flood Is: Between 170 and 250 people dead; Kansas City, Kan., and the bottoms of prevails, and City, Mo., 8,000 people without houses; $4,000,-00- 0 Kansas will loss dollars of worth of property destroyed mllllqns of water A great body five dead bodies have been found result. from the west swelled and Identified; twenty floating bodies coming at Kansas Kansas river have beefl srf. The number of peo- the ple missing Is placed at 200. Houses City, Kan., Sunday morning, causing a most alarming rise. Waters rushed lo the number of 200 have been by fife, two banks have col- with terrific force over the outlying tracks and the crowded lapsed,' a number of Wholesale grocery railroad eterehaVd been flooded, while at wholesale districts of the west botleast twenty-fivbig' business blocks toms and finally Into the union depot The losses In the wholesale district are liable to lall at any minute.' A more conservative estimate places will aggregate well Into the millions, the number of dead at 175, hut the and tbs losses to the various packing higher numbei Is aa likely to be cor- houses nearer the river will be tre1,1 mendous. ' rect' at the loWerr A Special from Topeka sftyB: BurnFlood at Des Moines. ing houses- 'are floating 'about, setSo far as Is known, but seven auting Are to others. The lower stories been repf the burning buildings' contain ten thenticated xatalities have feet of water. The current Is so strong ported as a result of the flood at Des score or iat no' boat can approach any of the Moines, Iowa. Reports of afrom that burning bulldlpgs. people arg gather- more have been received of1 off from is cut of the that section on houses will and the' city tops ing neet communication, but canot be verified. The Northwestern operated one train lug Sunday, tlnpihy VoaM fcmifc'iiWSf.' file fire out from the city limits boat. to mail It by live being conveyed Btarte by flvire, .vjas a,, and at'least l50" litres have been lost The other lines are tied up. The water arid electric light and power plants as V result 6f thfe ftfeT When it Is stated that North' To- hre btlll running, but It Is only by the peka. has 10,000 inhabitants the extent employment of several hundred men to man the pumps and work on the dan 'fi4,kl8lizedi city. j The Irreverent Caddie, Lieut. Gen. Miles ha3 taken to golf. The other day he was going the round of Chevy Chase at Washington, a critical young person as caddie. The general, vho as yet is far from being an expert, rolled the ball into a depression from which he seemed unable to drive It He struck the District of Columbia three or four mighty whacks, but only succeeded in moung the tall a few fict. The fourth pro. d gious effort was a humiliating failure and the caddie said. See here, old chap, you 11 have to do hotter or quit. hav-In- g HE MIGHT LOSE. millionaire Could Not See Why H Burial Lot. r Should Buy Not long ago a prominent financier, '.hose most prominent cha.acteribtic, ai,"ording to the popular opinion. Is was the recipient of a visit from an agent whose line it is to solicit orders for burial lots. On emerging from the private office of the moneyed man the agent was met by a colleague who had been waiting for him, and who inquired inanxiously as to the success of his terview. The agent shook his head regretfulNe go, said he; "he was afraid ly. he might not get the full value of his investment. What .could he mean by saying that? . Confound it a man must die some time, even though he Is a millionaire. Thats what I told him, replied the agent "but he only answered, Suppose I should be lost at sea? New Machine Gun. The Cleveland machine gun, firing projectiles at twenty-fivone pull of the trigger, has been tested. The gun weighs 450 pounds. It fired 800 shots In a minute without heating the barrel. d e The Author Of "Have you noticed, said the tall girl, that in several new books the writer is described as the outhor of and then follows a list of books beginning with the one immediately preceding the present production and running back to the earliest period? I cave in mind now the case of Mrs. Ward in particular. Lady Roses Daughter is by the outhor of Eleanor, Tressady and Robert Elsemere. A year or so ago tbe previous books have been enumerated in chronological order, Elsmere heading the list Eleanor ending it I wonder if that way of putting the cart before the horse Is a fad among publishers these dajs, or is It merely a coincidence that I have noticed several cases ot the kind within the last few weeks? e " Feet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes, Allens a powder for the feet It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Swollen, Hot Sweating Feet, Corns At all Druggists and and Bunions Shoe Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y, Do Your Foot-Eas- e, r .iP.tbc! roofs b( levees. , " houses- pnd the lirrhs of tpes,-.ant Site of Town Marked by Tope of Build-Infl- . manyahe giving tip Vh. despair and dropping intd thi WatersAielow to be ' : carripft away by the. swift currant It A Kansas City dispatch says with a population of 16,000 la death by fire or drowning to 400 people' unless means can be found for people, Is deserted, and its site marked A- otily by the tops of buildings and a theiypcv Jbdf of Nbrth. tfepf4ca, ,iihab. fnmber of fires. Seven fires, believed water. to be chiefly box cars burning, can be lted hy ,4.(U)00peaple,.Jaunder boat seen from the bluffs. There Is some no that Is so current swilt The can live lnjt'v.9eval thousand peo. danger that the flames will spread to to" buildings, side the partially submerged pie and are being cared for as well as pos- adding greatly to the already heavy Thai remaining large number loss. The fires started by the intrusible. have not yet been accounted for. They sion of the flood into a have been seen on tops of houses and Workmen Drowned. Twenty-sevewaiting for the water to subside or be A message has been received from so safe long are only They yescued. t Kansas City, saying that twenty-seveas the' houses stand. Below town scores of men are in men were engaged at work on the tree-topyelling for help. Thousands Union Pacific bridge when it suddenly of revolver .shots and screams have went down. Every one of the twenty been heard on the north side signals seven was drowned. It is stated that many persons saw the helpless men tor aid, u House kith the water 'below the drown, hut were unable to be of any second-story- windows are the, excep assistance to them. Poifle ' Not Too Healthy. Shopkeepers In Old Greenwich village have a quaint way of taking their customers Into their confidence In the signs they put In their windows. On the window of a little oookshop In that region Is inscribed in green paint Good things the following legend: to eat; healthy, but not too healthy. d nnoncSJ Halls Catarrh Cura Is taken internally. Price, 75c. the-'sout- b ft hsve-fscpe- d lime-hous- n that' Germanys attitude toward Canada is a blessing l disguise. Sir the libHenriy eral deader. Is the bouse of commons, has eclded to drop his amendment on the .Subject, aa the second reading Stags of , the .financial r hill will afford Sunple opportunity for further discussion of the matter. dent Roosevelt on his present trip was made at the tabernacle during the visit of the president to Salt Lake City. Ia his speeceh he spoke of the mining, agriculture and stock raising of Utah. He made a plea against the destruction of the ranges and the forests. The desirability of cultivating small farms well and of turning especial attention toward agriculture was dwelt upon. The Importance of IrriShot From Ambush. gation and the lessons in Utah were Promise of government discussed. John Fanner and a young . man aid was made, but especial stress was been killed laid on the necessity for individual efnamed Whitaker have near Bernstadt, Ky. A brother oi fort In the building up of the state Whitaker was slightly wounded. The and nation. During the course of his speeech the survivor stated that he was riding president said: "Here in this state the some distance behind the other two pioneers and those who came after men when he heard shots fired. As them took not the land that was ordihe came up to where his brother and narily to be chosen as a land that will yield return with a little effort; Fanner lay dead In the road, some you took a state which at the outset persons In the shrubbery near the was called after the desert (Deseret), roadside fired on him, wounding him and you literally, not figuratively in the arm. He fired lour shots at literally made the wilderness to blos-lothem and made his dldapS. as the rose, f believe in my countrymen In Utah here, and in Murdered and Robbed. this wide nafellows ' Word has reached KaUepeD. Mont, your because throughout I believe that you have tion, of the murder of an Italian railroad in you that combination of practical on the Great common sense and generous and lofty laborer ' The Italian, with enthusiasm which has made this na. Northern tion great in the past and which, withtwo fellow countrymen, went Into in the limits of the present century, saloon at Rexford on Thursday to gel will make it greater than any nation their checks cashed. A man named upon which the sun has yet shone. OBrien, who saw them get the money, PRESIDENT IN IDAHO. waited for them a few miles out of Thursday was presidential day in town and commanded them to throw up their hands. Two of them com. Idaho, the weather being perfect and plied. The third reached for his gun not an Incident marred the harmony and was shot dead. of the trip of the presidential party ; Flower on the- Waters. Memorial day was observed In 8an Francisco with more than usual impressiveness. At 7 a. m. the government tug Slocum left ' the transport dock with about 100 representatives of various patriotic organizations on board. After passing through the Golden Gate brief services were held on the opea Pacific' la memory of the country and Btn who died for jthelr whose tomb is the ocean. Flowers were then strewn on the waters, while minute gtms were fired by a detachment of the naval militia. Forty Poopi Injured. Overland passenger train Na S3 was derailed at a point about a mils south of Rincon, Cal, Saturday night Four ear plunged down an embank-men- t forty feet high, two of them partly submerged in the sea. About forty people were injured, some ot them seriously. sustained Many broken bones and were badly braised. A woman whose name was given as Mrs. J. C. Smith had both her arms crushed so badly that they will have to be amputated at tbe shoulder at once. n s, Hundred Forty-fiv- e " Homelese. a railroad and pjMUtfwtllPkt9WOOT ths Muth Bank of the Kansas river, aix miles from !KaiSaf City Is Inundated, by from ten to twenty feet, and probabW e 1500,000 damage has been done, Forty-fivhundred of the 6,500 inhabitants are homeless, and nearly 3,000 are in destitute circumstances. Five bridges have been swept away, all the railroad tracks and factories are under water, tod fill business is suspended. Two-third- of! Argentine, s - Stand by Chamberlal n. Among the-l- a teat to express full approval of Colonial Secretary Chamberlains Zollvereln plan is Premier 6ne tiden of- - New - Zealand,, .who ;V.(, Campbell-Bannerma- , i i tw. a Follower Kilted. of Glens Falls, N. follower the premier - motor-pac- e Of the United States, was killed, and jWill Stinson, almost as well known a bicyclist S;E!ke8, and F. A. Gately, a motor steersman,' waa seriously injured in an accident at the initial bicycle meeting 6n the New Charles rivar park track at Cambridge, Mass., Saturday, i The accident occurred In the first lap of the sixteenth mile of a motor-pacerace, and was due to the bursting of a rear tire on Elkess Premier Harry Motor-Pac- D. Elkes m d pbeeL e near-Rexfor- cut-off- The St Louis Teamster Strike. The teamsters strike In SL Louis has grown more serious as a result of the announcement that the Hostlers union, 400 members, Is to go out on a demand for more wages. As there is no freight to handle, because of the Inability to get teamsters to haul it, none of the freight bouses In East SL Louis are able to deliver goods. A large amount of freight Is said to be In the various yards awaiting conveyance. The sixty clerks In the freight houses walked out Van-dali- a Enthralled the Congregation. that a stranger once entered a cathedral in Sicily and begged to be allowed to try the organ, which was new and a very fine instrument that even the organist did not underriage In which the senator. Mayor stand. With some reluctance the orMullins and a secret service man were ganist allowed the stranger to play, with seated. The drive through the streets and soon the cathedral was filled sounds that Its walls had nevtr heard of Butte was one long ovation. Such before. As the stranger played, pulla crowd has never been seen In the ing out stops nevsr before combined, history of the city. The neighboring and working slowly up to the full towns for fifty miles had poured In organ, the eathedral filled, and It was their thousands, and the thorough- not until a large congregation had fares over which the line of march lay wondered at his gift that the stranger told his name. He was Dom Lorenzo were crowded to suffocation. From the depot the president was Perosl, the young priest composer, whose latest oratorio, Leo, was re driven to the court house. Veterans of the American civil war, militia and cently performed at the Vatican during the celebration ol the Popes Jubipolice formed the escort Carriages containing a hundred distinguished cit- lee. izens brought up the rear.. The Span- Governor Ssvet Boys Life. ish war veterans were the guard of It Is fortunate for one Georgia youth honor, and Colonel C. F. Lloyd of the that Gov, Garvin of Rholo Island is a First volunteers acted as marshal of and surgeon of standing. the parade. At the court house 2,000 physician northschool children appropriately dressed Tho governor and a number of to in th national colors saluted the pres- ern friends were at AndersonvlUe of dedication monument attend the He a ident few minutes and stopped In memory ot Rhode Island soldiers spoke kindly words to the little ones. As the guest ot the labor and trades who died in AndersonvlUe prison. Willie the exercises were in progress assembly of Silver Bow county. Presia carriage team took fright ran away dent Roosevelt at night adressed 0 people at the Columbia Gardens, and upset the vehicle. Edwin Calls-waSenator William A. Clarks resort In one cf the occupants, had bid the mountains, three miles east of leg broken, the Jagged bone severing Butte. At tbe conclusion of the banan artery. Gov. Garvin, on hearing of quet given by Mayor Mullins and the the boys plight, hurried to his help, citizens of Butte, the president, with tied the severed artery and cut the an escort of sixty rough riders and a broken bone. Just in time to save the number of mounted police left the sufferer from bleeding to death. banquet hall at 7:45 p. m., and left for the Columbia Gardens. With the presEXPERT TESTIMONY. a ident rode the leading labor men Of the V city, prominent citizens following it in Coffee Tried and Found Guilty. Frank A. Boyle, president carriages. No one who has studied lti effect of the Silver Bow labor and trades assembly. In a few word introduced on the human body can deny that coffee is a strong drag and Ilabl to cau the president all kinds of Uls, while Postum ia a food drink and a powerful rebuilder that Discrepancy cf Three Millions. Regarding the statement that there will correct the ills caused by coffee is a $3,000,000 discrepancy between when used steadily in place of coffee. An expert who haa studied the subthe reports of General Loonard Wood I have studied th value of ject and his secretary of finance of the to- food says: end th manufacture of food ut disbursements of the American product from personal Investigation miliUry government in Cuba, it Is and wish to boar tooUmony to tb stated on the highest authority, says wonderful quaUtio of Pooturn Coro si Coffee. . I was an coffee the New York Tribunes Havana a tlve, that the discrepancy will drinker, although I know it to bo low It D7 First affected poison. be accounted for before the national and then my heart but when I settlement between the war depart- nerve ment and Senor Quesada, Cuban min- once tried Postum I found It easy to give np the coffee, confirmed coffee ister at Washington. fiend tbongh I was. Princess Louise of Tuscany, formerPostum satisfied my craving for Postum ly crown princess of Saxony, haa coffee, and since drinking asked the emperor for permission to steadily In place ot ths coffe all my reside in Austria. His majesty has troubles have disappeared and I am again healthy and strong. given his consent on the condition I know that even wher coffee If that she shall reside in a convent not taken to excess it has bad effect The as well as the in- on the constitution in some form of dependent press of Germany takes other, and I am convinced by my inif pains to explain that Prince Henry of vestigation that the only thing to do health happiness ate of any valu Prussias visit to Spain Is without to one and Is to quit coffee and drink Po political significance and even casts turn. Name given by Postum Co ridicule- - on the Spanish papers for discussing a German Spanish alliance Battle Creek, Mich. In connection with the visit It INGENIOUS ROBBERS. Worked a 8ehm by Whloh They $7,000. Bennett Bibb and James Williamson are under arrest at Birmingham, Ala., charged with robbing the safe of the union passenger station ticket office of nearly $7,000. The arrests developed the most ingenious scheme known to the detectives who have been working on the case. A hole was bored through the ceiling of the office and from above the alleged burglars studied the combination through a magnifying glass. When the presidential train arrived at Boise a procession was formed, led by the band. In the carriage with the president rode Secretary Gov- Loeb, ernor Morrison and Mayor Alexander. The carriage was preceded by a detachment of mounted police and police rode behind 1L In addition a guard of honor marched, four on either side, between the carriage and the curb. Just behind the carriage of the president came a carriage with one lone occupant Seth Bullock, an old acquaintance of the presldenL He joined the party In Montana and waa taken under the presidents wing. The stand from which the president spoke faced Seventh street; and that street and Jefferson were packed for a block in each direction. A great array of flowers had been presented to the president At tne conclusion of the speaking the latter called up Bishop Funsten and presented the flowers to him for the patients In the two hospitals. During the course of his speech, speaking of Irrigation, the president said: I was greatly struck as I came up this beautiful and fertile valley by what has been done by the application of Industry, intelligence and water to the soil, and Inasmuch as for a number of years I myself passed a large proportion ot my life In the mountains and on the plains of this great western country, I feel a peculiar pride that 20,-00- y, V Monty For Exposition. Tho mebera of the Montana legislature before adjourning Thursday night inserted an amendment providing for the representation of Montana's products and resources at the Lewis and Clark exposition at Portland In 1805. It la the Intention to transfer bodily the exhibit from St Louis to Portland at the dose of the Louisiana Purchase exposition. The amounts carried by the bill are as follows: .St. Louis, $50,000; Portland, $10,000; capitol and grounds, $21,600. ELK KILL8 ITSELF. , 8poksn Strike Settled. The building laborers' strike at Teddy Roosevelt" Largest Animal of Spokane has been settled and work Its Species In Captivity. , has been resumed on buildings that "Teddy Roosevelt" the big elk in have been at a standstill for three ' weeks. Both sides refuse to give out captivity at Columbia gardens, Senthe terms of settlement It is under- ator W, A Clarks resort In the mourn stood, however, that the masons help- tains near Butte, butted Itself to death ers. who struck for $3 50 per day, return to work at practically the old against an icehouse Monday after-noonThe sight of a few cattle near s scale, with a minimum of $3, but mortar mixers are to get $3 50. the elks pen enraged the animal, and The plasterers helpers had already with a bellow it apparently attempted practically won their advance from to dash through the building. The animal was one ol the largest in captivity. 13.50 to $4 per day. , . first-clas- Is related ts semi-officia- l, xclv |