OCR Text |
Show NORTHWEST NOTES. The National Live Stork association will holJ a convention in Denver. Jan- uary S3. Charles The manufacturers of galvanised iron wire have increased the price on the products 91 per ton. lluburt narrow';1 iu a runaway killed escaped being accident in Philadelphia. Isaac Stetson, a hermit, was found dead in the woods near liishuiue in the vicinity of Springfield, Mass., having probably been murdered. There does not seem to be the slightest ground for the report that the British cabinet had decided to declare a British protectorate over Kg.vpt. Ilia said a letter of welcome and congratulation from the queen in her majesty's handwriting was handed to General Kitchener on his arrival at Dover. General Kitchener, whose elevation to the peerage was announced Sept '.'6, takes the title of Lord Kitchener of Khartoum, and as Pull in the county of Suffolk. The auxiliary cruiser Nero, whose coal recently caught fire when slic went into Chinese waters, is of no use on the Asiatic station and will be sent to San Francisco. A petition signed by 377 of the L ech Luke (Pillager) Indians in Minnessota, Vicc-lrehide- of l'uehlo, Colo., and Robert Lawson of Cheyenne, Wyo., have been apiiointed mail clerks. The V'uion l'acifie now owns 1,854 miles of road, of which it operates all but five miles, which is leased by the M. McCormick Southern lacifie. A special courier from Xye county, Nevada, the scene of the recent Indian scare, reports that all danger of an uprising of the Shoshones is past. Fifty mounted ioliceinen are still on duty, and it is believed that these men can quell any disturbance that may arise, are highly improbable. Mrs. Clara Kluge, of San Francisco, who claims to have been the contract wife of the late Adolph Sutro, has commenced a legal fight for some of the Sutro millions by filing an application for letters of guardianship over her two children who are named in the application, Adolph Newton Sutro and Adolphine Charlotte Sutro. Dr. fid ward Bovctt, a veterinarian of Denver, and R. Girard, cook at the clubhouse of the Standard Shooting club, at Bowles lake, ten miles south of Denver, were drowned while fishing in the lake one day last week. The cause of the accident is .unknown, the first knowledge of it be. ing the discovery of their overturned boat by other fishermen. s well-know- n nt asking fur continuance of authority for catting dead and down timber has been received by Secretary Bliss. The torpedo boat Farragut made an. other speed trial Saturday on Kan Francisco bay. She made several short but very fast races against time, and at taiued better than a speed. Messrs. Keefe Bradley, contrac1b of Chimovement There a general tors of the work of building the public nese the towards of the coast troops library foundations at Cheyenne, is of Golf to It understood Wyo., liuve been granted an enlargeatto be due an an of apprehension ment of their contract on account of extra work required to overcome ob- tempt by foreign power to sieze the stacles encountered by marshy ground. railway. The Peruvian Government is preparThe original contract was for 931,000. Under the 'enlurged contract, they will ing a special book, giving the history of the Maeord claim, with a view of receive upwards of 933,000. action of the United Mrs. Jesse Comvay, of Meeteetse, showing that the is unjust and unStates government Wyo., is under arrest, charged with poisoning her husband. Conway was friendly. Sir Julian 1'uunceforte, British Emsuffering from an attack of typhoid Postmaster-Genera- l and bassador, was malaria and died. The physician Smith have affixed their signatures to not satisfied that the disease was the cause of death and asked for an inves- the parcel post treaty between the tigation by a coroner's jury. The jury United States and the British colony decided that Conway had been poi- of Trinidad. Private Walter Rosser of the soned, and the woman was immediatenessee under arrest. regiment was arraigned before ly placed Wallace at San Francisco for George Crawford of Denver has left Judge murder of the lfenry Hildebrand. He for New York, to conclude the sale of and his trial was not pleaded guilty, 1,000 acres of rich mineral land on 31. Nov. set for South mountain. Rio Grande county, to In Omaha, Neb., John Belick, a brickan finglish syndicate for 92,500,000. This property includes mincaat Sum-- layer, shot and killed A1 Sargent, a tville, formerly owned by Senator barber. Sargent had gone to Belick's Bowen, which have produced 93,000,000 house for the pnrpose of eloping with in gold. A railroad will he built to the Mrs. Belick, and had the woman's mines. Mr. Crawford is also just clos- trunk in a wagon. D. B. Davidson, the wealthy Klon-diking a sale of mines at the Twin Lakes, who was arrested in Seattle sevnear Leadville, for 9500,000. weeks eral ago on the charge of emA large number of transactions have from the Klondyke mining been made in sheep during the past bezzling of Colorado Springs, Cola, week by Carbon county, Wyo., sheep- syndicate Miller sold and deliv- has been discharged. men. Carson It is said that 33,006 men forming wethers ered 5,000 head of at 93.50 a head. 11. Brackenbury the voluntary battalions in the province shipped 1,000 head of sheep to the Den- of Havana, will next week manifest to ver market. I. C. Miller shipped twenty-- General Blanco, through their chief, two cars of feeders from Rock their desire to deliver up their arms Creek to his feeding pens in Nebraska. before the 13tli of November. Shippers arc experiencing difficulty in Secretary Alger, in his annual report to congress, will recommend the engetting cars for stock shipments The abstract of the report made to actment of legislation and appropriathe comptroller of the currency, indi- tions for the maintenance of the army to be kept in the several new colonial cating the condition of the eleven national banks in Wyoming, as of date possessions for the next fiscal year. Affidavit for registration has been September :.0th, shows un increase in from President McKinley by received with as 14tli, totals, Jnly compared from 93,573,000, to 91,112,000. Loans Thoiuus F. Turner of the Canton, O. The president and discounts have increased 910.000. board of elections. Amounts due from approved reserve swears it is impossible for him to be agents increased 9325.000, and individ- in Canton on any registration day. ual deposits nearly 9100,000. The avGeneral Blanco will probably sail erage reserve lins increased from 33.95 for Spain on the Yillaverde Ik tween to 34.53 per cent. the 15th and 20th of November. The Yillaverde is the vessel which carried TradesIn the recent failure of the Martinez Campos to Spain General men's National hank of New York City, home from Cuba. lie returned when the Rock Springs, Wyo., National of amount bank was interested to the Captain Brooks has been assigned by 930,530,76, having that amount on de- the United States military commission-er- a to make a detailed inventory of posit at the time of the collapse of the eastern bank. The amount involved every gnn mounted on the fortificaof the capital tions at Havana as agreed to at the is more than of the Rock Springs bank, and is a joint meeting of the commissioners. severe blow to that young financial inJames Mullen of Geneva, X. V., was stitution. The stockholders will make killed and James Ryan of New York good any impairment of the capitul wai liadly wounded in a saloon row stock of the bank. among horse jockeys at Newark. The The Indians unlawfully killing game shooting was dune liy Charles Moon of in Wyoming were able to elude the Newark, who became implicated in deputies and reach their reservation. the quarrel. Had the deputies reached their cuinp The Union Pacific engineers who before they left it, there would unbeen engaged for several months have doubtedly have been n great many in running various lines over Sherman killed, as the lndiuus had three trcpcs from Laramie to Cheyenne, have hill as a blind in the open and ten more found a route whieh. it is unfinally eshid in thick timber near by. It is lias been accepted by the derstood, timated that this band of Indians, and over whieh theeonipnny company, 300 aliout thirty bucks, 'killed over a new line between construct will weeks in the three head of cow elk cities. these they made their cuinp on Fish creek. if 30-kn- ot er two-year-o- ld two-thir- OUR SICK FROM PORTO RICO. NEWS SUMMARY. Hospital Ship Mlwuiurl Arrive at Nw May-ague- s, i i Hrlllah Warship Will Ha Glbralta. llpatrliad to There has licen the greatest activity at Davenport, the site of the largest arsenal in Great Britain and two of the finest dry docks in the world. The government is assembling London, Oct. j 31. an emergency squadron, which, it is understood, will go to Gibralta. Despite that the wind has lutm blowing battlealmost a gale, the second-clas- s from arrived Holyhead, ship Colossus s a battleship from Queenstown and the first-clabattleship Ben- bolt from Greenock. The third-clas- s cruiser Calliope, which was on the way to the Canaries, was intercepted and j first-clas- ss J ; has returned unexpectedly to Plymouth. Other warships are coming to join the squadron and to coal. The government has ordered 300,000 tons o coal. DEWEY Tim j 1 With III Patient. New York, Oct. 31. The United States army hospital ship Missouri, arrived from Porto Rico ports, with 271 sick or wounded patients, most of whom are suffering with malarial feTwo ver, typhoid and dysentery. Bradish. B. L. Barton died, company A, Third Illinois, and Henry M. Morrison, private company II, Fourth Ohio. The former was buried at the latter at sea. of the most seriously sick Forty-fiv- e were sent to the St. Peter's hospital and the Long Island College hospital in Brooklyn. Forty others, who had to be carried from the litters, but who are not so seriously ill, were taken to Bedloe'a island. About fifty of the 14o convalescents on board the Missouri were sent to Brooklyn hospitals for a few days' treatment, preparatory to leaving for their homes. EMERGENCY SQUADRON. with tit Connert I allierlaml. To war against Germany would ho to war aeainst our own flesh nad blood. No European country, with the exception of Great Britain, has so large a representation iu our citizenship as the fatherland. In the decade ending with 1890, over 1,400,000 Immigrants came to us from Germany, more than a fourth of the total immigration from ail Europe in that period. Several of our large cities, including Cincinnati and Milwaukee, have a larger percentage of German-bor- n citizens than of all other foreigners put together. And these people are among our moBt loyal, substantial and valuable citizens. They are not wanting In love for the land of their birth, but they love the laud of their adoption still more. They are true Americans. A common love of learning Is another strand In the bond uniting us with the German people. Nowhere in the world is the leadership of Germany in various fields of scholarship so fully and frankly recognized aa In the United States. We send many of our brightest? young men to sit at the feet of her great teachers and to drink deep at her springs of learning. We glory in her unparalleled achievements in the domains of science and philosophy. Toward the country of Goethe and Schiller, of Luther and Humboldt, we can never he set in hostile array. But than any othstronger, perhaps, er strand in the bond that unites us with Germany is our common trade Interest. The shuttles of commerce, flying swift and fast across the Beas for a hundred years, have woven us together by golden threads that may not easily be severed. Last year we sent manufactured Germany breadstuils, products and other articles to the value of 9123,784,453. Germany sent us back In exchange chemicals, cloth and other needful things to the value of 9111,210,614. With no other country except Great Britain does our volume of trade reach such proportions as this. We export to Germany more than twice as much as we do to France, and more than twelve times as much as we do to Spain. And the volume of trade between America and Germany is more evenly balanced than between us and any other country in the world; We take nearly as much as we give. A friendship based on such considerations as these will not be lightly broken. Islie's Weekly. Honda t urk FRIILNDS. THE GERMANS RESPONDS- - Thank Mayor Warwick of I'hllailrlplila for Kind Manas. Philadelphia, Oct. 31. Mayor Warwick is in receipt of the following ca-blegram from Admiral Dewey in respouse to the one extending to him Philadelphia's congratulations on the occasion of the citys pea'e jubilee and regretting his inability to take part in St, along with the other heroes of the WASN'T AWED campaign: Accomplishment By the Engineer Manila, Oct. 28. Hon. Charles F. On Thing rallied Him. The Warwick, Mayor, Philadelphia: One of the delegates attending the officers and men of the squadron under recent convention of civil engineers my command join me in thanking you in Detroit left this story, says the Defor your kind message, and we con- troit Free Press: Just as was stated gratulate you and the city of Philadel- by the president In his opening adphia on the great success of the jubilee, dress, the Importance and accomplish- GkokiiK Dkwky, Rear Admiral. ments of civil engineering are not held in the popular appreciation they deSpOKE TO DEAF MUTES. serve. It Is simply because the great majority do not understand. They apCnlqua l'olltiral Sleeting Where l)lok prove of our works, but do not comCruker W'a tli Attraction. in proNew York, Oct. 31. One of the most prehend the knowledge required When them. considerably ducing unique meetings of the campaign was younger I was up In the northern part held of at Webster of our state surveying the route of that the deaf mates hall. About 300 deaf mutes and a railway. An old farmer with sprinkling of others gathered to listen whom I had stopped for a time adto political issues as expounded by the mitted one day when he saw me figDemocrats. Richard Crocker was the uring in the field that mathematics alattraction and his speech to the mutes ways seemed a wonderful thing to him, was translated by President Carriel, Being young and enthusiastic, I began on Its wonders, telling him principal of the New York Deaf and to enlarge we measure the distances how could Dumb institute. to different planets and even weigh Alaakan Miner Ketnm. them, how we could accurately foretell San Francisco, Oct 31. All the the coming of a comet or an eclipse In advance of its actual occurtreasure in sight on the steamer Port- years determine the velocity of tho rence, land, which has reached this port, nine- fiercest projectile, ascertain the height teen days from SL Michaels, was one of mountains without scaling them and box of gold dust and nuggets, con- many other things which I meant signed to the Alaska Commercial com- should astonish him. You can Imagine pany. Its value was not made known, how he set me back when he. replied but is not believed to exceed 910, ouo. to this brilliant array of facts by saySeveral returning miners were on the ing: Yes, yes; them things does seem vessel, but they carried their wealth kinder cur'us. but what alius bothered in the form of drafts, and were reticent me was to understan why you have ter carry one fur evry ten. But if regarding the amount. you dont tne durneil thing won't ttme Murderer Clulm IU Was Dragged. out right.' " San Francisco, Oct 31. Before the A f'oollah Wsger, Tennessee regiment left for Manila, In a Paris rafe, as the story la rethe deposition of several witnesses in the Walter Rosser murder ease were lated in the London newspaper, a man taken. The testimony was all In Ros- had been astonishing his by drinking extraordinary ser's favor, the witnesses telling of his of water. One of them requantities anil good previous standing orderly that It must conduct. One or two of the soldiers marked, very sensibly, be had for the health to drink so who were with him on the day that lie much. Not a bit of it, was the remurdered Henry Hildebrand, said that ply, accompanied by the assertion that Rosser had been drinking anil that he twenty-fou- r pints of water was about appeared to have been drugged. needed to quench his man what a sueh weather. A bet was in thirst More MuimiiIiuiiii Hanged. offered and taken. It was arranged Can ilia, Crete. Oct. 31. Five more oi that the man ahouid lie on the floor the Mussulmans convicted of taking with a funnel between his lips. Into part in the massacre of British soldicrt this the liquid was to he poured until on September 6th have been executed. the limit of twenty-fou- r pints was In addition, four hart reached. An obliging but been sentenced to twenty year itnpria bystander agreed to pour the water in. on men t at hard lalmr. Since the de- The man on his back gulped down after pint with apparent ease. parture of the Turkish troops a num- pint a time, however, somebody noAfter ber of additional guilty Mussulmant motionless and drank he ticed that hare been discovered daily, it appears no more; andlayfor the very good reathat the Turkish officers appropriated son that he was dead. the valuables looted by their soldiers, j j fellow-workm- en ond How is this? Perhaps sleepless nights caused it, or grief, or sickness, or perhaps it was care. No matter wnat the cause, you cannot wish to look old at thirty. Gray hair is starved hair. The hair bulbs hive been deprived of proper food or proper nerve force. Incresses the circulation In the scalp, gives more power to the nerves, supplies missing elements to the hair bulbs. Used according to directions, gray hair begins to show color in s few days. Soon it has all the softness and richness of youth and the color of early lire returns. Would you like our book on the Hair? We will gladly sand it to you. Wrllo us I If you do net obtain all the benefits you expected from the Vigor, write the doctor about it. He may be able to suggest something of value to you. Address, Dr. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Strong Drink is Death I remedy for tb nnnMt and llelancbirfj eud mb aa paritiTMr Drink bit, Kervausnes by "truiif drink. WS ULARAXTKK POTR ROXIS war-t- o positive wrliir g r ntand It mamy, ud I dMtray lb lor Intastcatlng liquor. I our any cm with ppMit Tin TABLETS CAN OR GIVEN WITHOUT KNOWLEDGE OR THE PATIENT. DRIKt::?K,,rtv?3S STROKS of 110.00 wo will Mali n I lur 14 J Iww and mil. iu ji or refund tfv wrlffrw yuarnumer. Sipgi brae yifrt yuriBin F. C. SCHRAMM, Druggist, la. IAI.T LAKE CITY. LTAII. (l DR. G. W. SHORES EXr RT SPECIALIST OF MEN. IN ALL DISEA6ES ITBICTLT NltlAjli. "PAY ME 1 WHEN YOU CURED.... ARE Not One Dollar Required In Advance. IF YOU I SUFFER FROM rtCTI MAN-LU- d HOOD. Seminal Weakness, Vnrlcorels, Hydrocele, Syphilis, Gonorrlin-a- . Stricture, small or shrunken organ, premature old ass and all other private dlneaMta. whethe r'caiised by lg exeam nr contaglon.uo matter how severs, youeaaoonauliDr.U. W. SHoiiXK.thaphyslolaa who baa given hi life to curing chronic disease, and be examined, advised, treated and cured without paying him one dollar limit the cure la affected. The dor tor ree re the right, however, to refuse any incurable ease 1( he raa't un you he don't want your money. Such aa offer waa never before mail by a renponslbl yhjaielan. sad Dr. O. V. Shores la only able te make It because be positively cures these ill, cases. Don't waine another cent on questionable dootore, but consult the "Old Doctor" and he cured. BUSINESS SACREDLY CONFIca DENTIAL. Call at X1G llaraann Block (Ora. Shores A Shore' l)IRf or DR. G. W. SHORES, Lurk Bos 15SB, ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Bashi-Bazon- CURE YOURSELF! I'w Dig a for uuaataral diiuii irera, tndanimaliooi, irritatiuna or ulreratioa. mu Jfimu mauium. ofI'amK-iw- . rananil membrane. aid lalila. lTHlEMlOHEMICALO(h filter poiaunou. laid ' or will byltrwgglata. in plain wrapper, prepaid, fvl I inf lie! fj.it. aval oa raqaaab expreaa, fTlt i. nr 3 |