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Show "' SPANIARDS WITHDRAWING. ORDKHEJ) TO MANILA. UTAH NEWS. Now i Rid fur furnishing supplies forth SEVERAL REGIMENTS WILL SAIL AT ONCE. llale prison are lieing asked for. (ache county this year produced a at Hm Tranrlara Will Troup iiillion iirnl a half bushels of wheat. bu Hunt to the Thllippln I land of the I 'tali suf'itr comThe dim-toltelt:rahiM Oregon and Iowa Mar Ai-- i oiupaoy TUeiu. pany have declared a dividend for the past si months of 5 per cent. The contract for the construction of Washington, Sept 20. Five regi-icnnow at San Francisco have been .he Utah A 1aciiie road has licen let, ordered to Manila. Arrangements for rod work will be begun at once. The annual convention of the Epis-top- their transportation will be made at church in I'tah and Nevada was once. The regiments ordered to Ma jeld in Salt Lake during the past nila are the following: Fifty-firs- t Iowa, Twentieth Kansas. week. First Tennessee, First Washington and The report from Leaver is that the a detachment of tbe Second Oregon. lay crop is the heaviest by several It was stated at the war department housund tons that has ever liecn r ts al mown. Oneday last week seven carloads of Jtah honey was shipped to Huston, jour carloads were shipped from ono the Springville bank is vbbtr, busily engaged writing a look, telling of his many thrilling experiences iu the west. State Treasurer Chipinao'a report for tngust allows: Receipts, 97,48)1.70; 924,307.00; balance on hand 31, 978,045.19. August old son of Charley Trice, a lames Price of Springville, accidently hot himself through ,the foot with rifle while hunting. The meinbera of battery C received iheir pay at San Francisco on the 19th, ;lii making two pay days they have lad since entering the service of Uncle ts ar Sam. stock-grower- associations s' Ibia state, including the intend making application to the wool-grower- of s, Na- tional association for qembership. At Mitiersville the grain crop is the nest yield per acre and quantity ever harvested there and below Milford on the best farms 75,000 bushels of grain will be threshed. stock-grower- s' Judge John V. Judd, late United States district attorney, has decided to leave Utah and return to his old Tennessee home, where he will rcauina the practice of law. burglars entered the postoffice at Eureka and carried away some letter but did not disturb anything elae. A due has been obtained and the enl prits will probably be captured. At the regular monthly meeting of the directors of the Z. U. 1. I., Iresi-len- t Lorenzo Snow was chosen president of that instiution for the balance ftf the term, made vacant by the deutli f President Woodruff. Utah's naval cadet, Hubert Morris, la in Salt Lake for a few days before etnruing to Aunupolis. He has been teeing active service and bas just returned from Honolulu, where he saw die flag raised August 12. Mrs. Mary Warner Sprague, who lied at Suit Lake on the l.Mh Inst., was 05 your 8, 9 months and 4 days old. She was the widow of l)r. & I Sprague, who was Hrighnin Young's physician for many years. The I'tah lleekeepers association will hold its meeting ut .he joint city anil county building, Salt Lake City, on Thursday, October I. An effort ia being made to make I display at the Omaha exposition. lao S. Whitehead of Salt Lake is the .nventor of an electric, automatic vol-egun which will tin shots ut the rate of 4,,n!i per minute. Mr. White-aca- d has a uuiulier of capitalists interfiled with him and will endeavor to apply the nations of the world with a few of liia " Mrs. Maria Mickleson, of Spring City, while riding in a buggy with her husband and two granddaughters, fell from the vehicle and received injuries which resulted in death. The supposition is that she must have fallen ftslecp. A child sitting in her lap wax hIso throw-out, but escaped uninjured. A limning club bus been organized in Salt Lake City, with a membership af twenty-fouDecker's Lake, five miles soul Invest of the city, and 120C seres of laud surrounding it has been A deputy will be employed Wfurcd. to keep off intruders. Ducks are the Imuses have liceu principal game. taken on the grounds for five years. Mrs. Margaret 1'daine Salisbury o' Salt Lake was elected ( the George Wushington association, the object of which is to found a National university at Washington, at the recent session held on the 15th inst. tjuong Wuh, a Chinese resident oi Sait Lake, wants to wed with lora Harris, a girl, but the county clerk has refused to issue a license ' Quong vow he will carry the luattei to the courts, to direct the way foi bin to secure hia bride. 1 Kcmi-nnnn- al y I'caiv-makers.- r. vice-preside- nt nu.-idroo- 1.4mm 1 lisa Ous-Tlilr- tbe l'iiuldr-jrraM to III (inrat liqimd. Narragansett Tier, K. I., SepL 19. Mis Winnie Davis, daughter of Mrs. Jefferson Davis, is dead at the Rockingham hotel. Miss Winnie Davis, the Dauglitei )f the Confederacy," was mrn in the sonfederate executive mansion at Richmond, Ya., in ls91. She was educated principally ut home, owing to tlie trouble surrounding hei father and tbe publicity which attended all the Miss movements of the Davis family. Davis attained her maturity at Iteuu-roiMiss. Here she assisted her mother in various ways, and took her place in the many' social functions of the place. She was her father's companion. She assisted him in til hia work, aud much of the information which was required by Mr. Davis n his writings was secured from hit of I'll tl 1urto Itiro. San Juan, Porto Sept. 21. Tbe than now Spaniards ocm.'y The Kpuni.-.of Porto Rico. troops from the abandoned portions are being concentrated at Aricoho, whence they will ivi.eli Kan .luan by railroad as soon as transportation is available. They could not enter tlie eity before owing to its crowded con, lo-o- I" one-thir- DAVIS DEAD. d dition. IlaiiKhti-ru- will evacuate here k comof American dispatched troops, pany from General Grant's brigade, has been landed. The Spanish troops from the island of Vieques, will remain at llumaceo the Spaniards fall hack that no exigency had arisen which on the lineuntil of the military road. Spanmade it necessary to send the troops is now confined to within a ish control now at San Francisco to Manila, but line drawn from Iliiiuaeao to A bon i to, the order issued was in accordance to Aricobo, less than from anil there with the general plan of the departof island. the laughter. Her strong character wan ment regarding a garrison for the narked from youth. She wasengaged SICKNESS AT MANILA. Philippines. That plan of garrison to Mr. Wickerson, of Syracuse, N. Y., duty included 20,000 men for the Phil- IlitMM Is Out shortly after lier father's death tbe Among Kpanixli Prison!ippines; 12.500 for Porto Rico, and I Kapitlljr ingagement was broken off. While no 90,000 for Cuba. The troops to be sent conpublic explanation of the rupture waa Manila, Septemlicr 21. The to Manila uuder order will till the is ditions of the Spanish prisoners jiven, it is well known that it was for complement for that station. The :he purpose of maintaining her father's the to excite anxiety among troops would have hern sent before, it thoulame. She received the name DaughEleven was said, except that the department military officers here. ter of Confederacy" in 1886, when her are sand of these quartered prisoners was awaiting the return of tlie transin churches ami other public buildings father made his famous trip through ports. of the the south. Mr. Davis being unable to It is not expected that troops now at within the narrow confines of most the appear, Miss Winnie was brought bewalled where eity. Honolulu will accompany those to be where the fore the thousands at the different emlwrkeil at Kan Francisco, but tiiat Spanish people also live, and points along the route, and introduced is American quartered garrison more troops will be sent to Honolulu where General Otis has located tlie ia the Daughter of Confederacy." in the ncur future. army headquarters. LIVE STOCK SHOW AT OMAHA. The following is the order directing Members of the sanitary corps are Kan the movement of troops from kept constantly ut work clearing out Fro pact of on I'niiMutllj lll( Kxhlbit at Francisco: tho Kxpunltlun. filth that constantly accumulates, the Adjutant General's Office, Washing19. knowlis at thii There least not the Omaha, Sept. ton, b. C., Sept. 19. 1898: Command- Spaniard having time the live of indication California, sanitation. that ef laws of the General, every Department edge ing San Francisco With the approval of The result is a condition threaten- itock show at the the acting secretary of war, the Fifty-firof diseuse-aa any Exposition will rank among the Iowa, First Tennessee, First ing general outbreak inis demoment. fever and orgeat and finest ever given in the a Tennessee already Typhoid Washington, Fifth intachment of tbe Oregon volunteer at un alarming rate. muntry. The live stock exhibit is creasing into six classes. Of these the fantry, now at San Francisco, are hereAuthorities feel it absolutely essenby relieved from duty in the depart- tial to the health of the city to get the poultry exhibit comes first from ment of California, and will proceed to 301 On Manila, Philippine islands, reporting, Spanish prisoners out of Manila at the September 19 to September como to condithe exhibits October that the arrival Similar at 3, earliest possible date. point, Monday, upon manding general, Un'tcd States forces, tions are reported from Cavite, where tattle, horses (in which class are for duty. jacks, jennet and mules), sheep The quartermaster's department the Spanish in the hands of the reliels necrod will open, to continue un tlie of swine lack from are the will furnish the necessary transportasuffering dl October 20; and the fat stock will tion, especial care being taken to pro- essaries of life. vide sufficient space, and the subsiste shown from October 13 to 20, Inence and medical departments are THE EISTEDDFOD. ve. dus! charged with providing ample and suitable supplies furnished by their re- Manjr Nuti-i-l Art tutu lisv I Icon reared fur All animal mnst be on tbe ground tli Marling. lot later than the opening date of the spective departments, to insure the and health of the comfort, livision to which they belong, except two 21. is Salt It Lake, only Sept. troops en route. Ky command of Major weeks until the ocwhich ihat, in the general division of cattle, General Miles. psteddfod, curs Wednesday, October 5. at 2 p. in., logs, sheep and horses, animals which 11. C. Cuitnix, Adjutant General." The war department has amended and will last the balance of the week. lave been on exhibit at state or county the orders relative to the dispatch of Every preparation lias been made lairs and are detained in transit will reinforcements to the Philippines, so looking to the success of the festival, e admitted to the grounds as late a as to increase the number by 1,1C1 and the thousands who will be in at- 1:00 a. m. October O. privates and 20 officers. These are tendance are assured the treat of their CAVALRY COMES BACK. made up of four companies of tbe lives. In an address to the people of Twenty-thir- d infantry and recruit! for the interinountain country, the execu- finth Kegiinant to Kellrvo tho Seventh In tho Writ, the Tenth Pennsylvania, First Ne- tive beard of manager say: It is the intention of the promoters Washington, SepL 19. Orders will braska auri First Colorado. These troops made up the expedition under of the forthcoming tctoler Eisteddfod e issued from tbe war department for General King, which recently left San to make it surpass in excellence any he disposition of the five regiments of Franeiseoon the Arizona for the Phil- Eisteddfod ever held west of Chicago. egular cavalry now at Camp Wikoff ippines, but was stopped by the depart- The aim of the Cambria association, n command of Major General Wheeler. ment's orders when two days out, and niiib-- n ho-.- auspices this Eisteddfod Three of them arc to be sent to a camp to establish lereafter to be designated, within 100 is being given, has returned to port. Tlie unvy i'.eKirtnient is rushing a high mu a bird of competitions, and nilcsof Huntsville., Ala. The second preparations for the start of the big to that end have offered very liberal egiment is to go to South Dakota to battleships Oregon and Iowa to llono-lnl- prizes, which has resulted in l. Greeting elieve the Eighth at the headquarters and orders have been sent to the choirs, musicians, poets and literary it Fort Meade, and the Ninth is to be New York navy yard to have the eharueters from all parts of the United listribnted through Arizona and New Mexico to relieve the Seventh, now mechanics work overtime on these Stall s and Europe. There will lie four sessions of the tationed in these territories. The ships. The puriose is to have them in all, the first of which ieventli and Eighth, upon being start oil their long voyage by the end of the present month and according to will be held Wednesday afternoon, will join the three regiments at 2 o'clock. rum Moutank at the camp which may the department calculations, they October 5, comm.-ncinshonlil arrive at their destination by T'ue Till eriiaclo. one of the largest e selected. in tlie vicinity of Jinnts-fillthe end of January. There is little and most beautiful structures in the MajorGeueral Wheeler will have for the occa- tommand of the cavalry, which is to effort now made to conceal the fact world, h is form part of the army of occupation that the department will have the ships sion. of Eisteddfod tlie met at Honolulu by a dispa tell boat, lor Cuba nml l'orto Rico. "Headquarters with orders to turn their prows west- have been at .19 South Main SAIL 3EAUE COMMISSIONERS ward to Manila. street, where any information respect-tuthe great festival can It: obtained." lr on Hoard tli Campania Steamer, m- Battleships this character nre not rnn'e ti Carl needed to keep the Filippino insurgents Dr. lurry. Judge Edwards aud the in order, ami their assembling at Ma- soloists mil harpists will arrive SatNew York, SepL 19. Tlie United nila, in conjunction with the dispatch urday. (Vtober 2. states commissioners to conclude the of heavy reinforcement of troops for Among tluMirlistx engaged are Frof. erms of peace with Spain have sailed the American laud forces, cannot bnt TteVin. tin great Italian harpist: Mrs. in board the Uunurd line steamer Cam-- 1 be regarded as .significant. In Ellis Woodward, tlie famous Welsh mnia, cn route to 1aris. Tliccommis-- ; ,T. Gordon Jones, circles it is seen that soprano of don consists of former Secretary of the real purpose id the president in the wonderful basso of Swansea, State William It Day, United States making these preparations is to insure Male. Negotiation with other re- Senators William 11. Frye, Cushman lv. the police commissioners ngninst any nowned artists urc in progress, among Davis and George Gray, and Whitelaw interference in their work or disHtsing whom are. Evan Williams, the great Seid. Each commissioner is aecom-of tin future of the Philippines accord, tenor: Dudley liuck, panied on his trip by his wife or other the famous cum ponor; and J. LI. Ham- nembers of the family. In the party ing to tlu-i- b- st judgment. lin. the sweet tenor of Chicago, aud ire also J. IS. Moore, secretary ami (InrrlMin fur Cutis. others. Tin- - absorbing talk in Salt tounsel to the commission; John R. McArthur, secretary, and Lake at present is the Eisteddfod. inIs ). It the Washington, SepL Frank disbursingclcrk iSruuigan. tention of Iheadministration to send to l Ilmm-liisolil. ind Mrs. ISranigati; Miss Atkinson and W. Saver Cuba as a garrison force of tlie. island New York, SepL 21. Tlireo liundrei Miss McNanghton: Edward confidential mes- ind Freeman, nlsiut 49,ioo troops, iu addition to tlie And live horses Henry that belonged toRoose- force now in Santiago under command Riders went under the lengers.Zola to velt's m lrlext. ofGeuernl Lawton. The organizations hammer at from prices 19. Loudon Life ranging London, Sept. which are to cniniirisp the t'uban gar- S3 to ?77, averaging about Si 9. Eight Maims to have information that M. rison have not all been designated yet, a Catho-i- c llitil ut least, loilf of hundred more of them will he sold Emile Zola is about to become but it is was vaetiean the It says priesL them will lie lolunteers. Within two this week. Tlie salesroom was crowded weeks orders will le issued for the when the sale began. There were ipproached on the subject a fortnight and that the pope hus given his movement to In ha of the firs! lO.rrt'i of d horse by hundreds, nearly all bron- igo, issent to the ordination of the the permanent L'lirrismi, and it is author six months hence. M. e'eil that they will sail from the cho. Many of them never had been United Mutes n boil' October in. These saddled and few of them hud been tola's conversion is said to have been nails by Fattier Gougon. the pastor of will tie followed quickly by ahol. The horses cost the government t small parish church, and an intimate others until the entire force ot lo.i'u.i i about FG5 cac1 Iricnil of the novelist Ihvii established on the island. Today the Spaniards the island of Yiuqui-, w NEWS SUMMARY. j r, con-ita- ut ng Cor-bet- The Twelfth infantry, 670 officers and men, has arrived at Jefferson 1 tarrocks, near SL Louis, and will be stationed at that point until further orders. The British steamer Mount Tabor, from Iloilo for Liverpool, has been abandoned on fire off the island of Socotra. The British steamer Telena landed the crew. Edam lashan, the Turkish governor at Crete, has had a proclamation pnblicly read saying that by order of the sultan all arms must be snrren-dcre- d to the committee formed for that purpose. It has been recommended that mosquito bar head nets and buckskin gloves be made a part of the regular equipment of the men in the army who are to go to Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines. Excelsior The steam schooner reached Seattle from Copper River, Alaska, with 200 prospectors who failed to find gold. They report that the gunboat Wheeling will bring down 130 destitute men from Copper River. George Bartlett, who shot and killed James Moffat and mortally wounded Warren Richmond at Piltston, Pa., has surrendered to the officers. lie claims to have no recollection of the shooting, being drunk at tlie time. Buren R. Sherman, of Iowa, speaking of the Omaha exposition. said: I was much surprised. I must confess. It is a very much bigger show than I expected. One is must agreeably disillusioned when he compares the Exposition with the World's Fair. The Omaha fair compares extremely well." TmuN-MimlMiip- iil Trans-Mississip- pi st t di-rid- M g r or e ln-e- n u Mrs. Woodward, a wealthy woman of the laity of the M. E. conference, has signed a deed conveying property in the eity of Seattle, Wash., valued at over 7..n,)it, to 15il:nn lluiNt in trust for the California conference, i lie income from the property will, under certain conditions, he given to the University of tho Piiciii-:- d, e. b.-e- se.-ure- . Tlie London g e--f , well-inform- ed lu-r- e lio-to- u; Twelve hundred soldiers are sick st Santiago, according to the latest re pm ts. General Joe Wheeler will resign hia command early next month and return to emigres. n agreement Under the Itritalu to ceded was (treat Delagoa hay not and iolitically. commercially Two men were burned to death, and seven buildings, valued at S'.O.OOO. iu a fire at Elmwood, N. A . diaries H. Cadwallader, the Indians hank wrecker, haa been arrested in California, and will be taken back for triuL The Michigan M. E. conference, in session at Lansing, has adopted resolutions pledging the brethren to prohibition. Dr. Henry Otto Claus. 72 years of age, committed suicide at New York He had a large practice bv shooting. and was worth 9350,000. As a result of tlie Dritisli protest, the Tsung Li Yamen has authorized the conclusion of the Niu Chwang railway loan with a British syndicate. The yellow fever epidemic in the south is gaining headway. Over 100 cases are reported in Mississippi. The death rate is greater than last year. McCoy has refused to hold any further conference with Corbett and hia managers, relative to tlie change of L date and place of meeting with Anglo-Germa- - well-bein- - - r one-thir- d souiity. 0. L. Maxwell, The Ori-u-i WINNIE ' News, in nn editorial The Fhilinpincs are McKinley's old man of the sea and the mere cooling of the aunexution sentiment will nut shake him off. Aguin-ahlo- 's message to the Associated lress Is couched in the language of suspiciously tautological protestation, and come rather late in the day. Aguin-- a ldo himself could hardly expect his version to be preferred to that of Gen- article, says: eral Otis. : Welsh-America- r n - I Itc.oM-iei- llM-nm- e distin-ruishe- r-- p U'lptain Allvn ('apron. First Artillery, is dead. ':pt:iin Capron waslntrn in Florida and entered Inc military in istl.l. After academy as a graduating he was made a second lieutenant of t lie First artillery oil the 17th of Ir.ne. IStii, and was an officer of that He whs regiment until his death. commissioned as captain on Deccnitar 4. 18S4. He was in tins battle at Santiago. and during the first day's fighting li's son, Uupluiu Ally n K. Capron, of tl'is rough riders, whs killed. The Michigan conference of tlie M. E. church udoptvd without debate a .; .lion declaring for the eonstiln-th.niainendiui-u- t providing for equal l.iy aud uiinisL-ru- l representation in the conference. The vote waa lc-t- i'jy to 9. il |