OCR Text |
Show he ox MEET DEATH ON SABBATH. Ifcer BURTON SENTENCED TO PRI80N. Kansas Senator Must Serve Six ol Street Car Accident at BTaNOIXO Months in Jail and Pay $2,500. WHOM, rraprlftcn. Santa Barbara, Cal. Senator Burton of Kansas was senThree persons were instantly killed tenced TftftMt 09 SUBSCRIPTION: by Judge Adams, at St. Louis Oft Year U II and two so badly injured that they on StE Month to six months confineWedensday at Santa accident MoathA.... ........ S died, in a street tar ment in the Iron county jail and to Barbara, Cal., Sunday afternoon. BftiarW m tk Poat Odo it Brlfham CUj ta pay a fine of $2,500 Twenty other passengers were more MMld llMI ttftlfer. Attorney Judge Krum immediately or less injured, sustaining bruises and filed a bill of exceptions In the case YBUM STANDING Editor. broken bones and offered a bond of $10,000, which cars One of the Edison company's INSTRUCTIONS TO CORRESPONDENTS. was accepted. of iivi art eoUolud from U part of ran off the track, while going down a Itou The case will now be appealed to tfco eoaitrp on over its and turned steep grade, Wnu upon ece tide of tho popor only. the United States district court of apWrlift proper iidh plolDly side. The occupants were jammed Ib order to protoot the oubllther from Impeals, the highest tribunal In the reand it solid in a mass, full together positions from lrreepootlble persons, tbo matter should bo signed to all uni or tbe author quired great effort to get them out The Idem ty of eorrespondenia Senator Burton, who is renior senwill bo withhold whenever desired. of the wrecked car. ator from Kansas, was convicted after beare All the killed and injured an exhaustive trial, in which various PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. lieved to be residents of Santa Barto the Rialto Grain bara The accident was due to a de- Mteis from him & Securities the checks company, UTAH STATE NEWS. fect In the brake apparatus While whhh he received In payment for his the rear brakes were tightly set es in behalf of the concern be wheels, the forward iervi( Cedar City Is to have a Coop store against the ore the postoffice department and the of ice because no sen were brakes of within the next sixty days. estiniony of numerous agents of the The motorman discovthe gearing icernment were introduced Boys under 18 are not to be allowed ered that Senator Burtons defense was that something was wrong with to enter billiard halls or bowling al e was acting merely in the capacity the car several blocks above the point of an attorney, and did not employ leys at Springvjlle. where the accident occurred, and enD senatorial influence in the work Two carloads of wagons were re- deavored to set the brakes, but failed It Is a coni idence that the amount ceived at Modena one day last week to check the t.ie fine, $2 500, imposed upon Senspeed of the car. te r Bui ton, is for distribution in the Dixie country. Identical with the mount which, according to the evi QUEEN IS DEAD. The street car employes of Sait he received from the Rialto Lake City are organizing a union in Isabella of & Securities company. The Spain Summoned by the an endeavor to secure an equitable cn county jail, to which Senator Grim Reaper. 'linen wns sentenced for six months, wage scale. Ex Queen Isabella of Spain, grands Hated in the county seat at Iron J. M. Shockley, the street car ban- mother of m Mo a village of 1,400 popula-on- . King Alfonso, died In dit, Is on trial in Salt Lake City for Paris at 9.45 oclock eighty eight miles southeast of Saturday mornt I ouis. on the Iron Mountain rail the murder of Amasa Gleason and ing of influenza with complications. i a 1. brick The jail Is a Thomas Brighton. The Infantas Isabella, Eulalle and uc tore and iu a portion of it Sher-f- f Mrs. Isaac Sherwood of Ogden is at Marie, daughters of the late queen, Polk makes his home with his the point of death as the result of in- were at the bedside when she died. ami y Aeeoidirg to tho rule of the Jail, juries received while attempting to The queen had been afflicted with shot lens each years sentence get off a moving street car. the grip for two months, which gradu- vfhich a prisoner by three months for At the meeting of the Utah Dental ally affected the lungs. Senator Burtons end behavior. It is understood that King Alfonso of Incarceistlnn there may be association, held in Salt Lake City, educed to four aud one half months. the old officers were and will not come to France for the fuProvo was selected as the next meet- neral, as he did not come for the HEART TO BE SHIFTED. funeral of his grandfather. King Franing place. In 1902. April, turaeors Will Change Boys Heart The baseball league cis, who died The deceased queen had been one of From Right to Left Side. waa organized at Ogden last week. Ore of the rarest operations known Ogden and Park City, Utah, and Ev- the conspicuous figures of Paris since anston, Wyo., will have teams in the she left Spain. After her abdication o n e .ical science will be performed In 1870 she continued to live with n a few new league. Van Nordays on 6 year-olqueenly magnificence In Paris, giving ton Faunt of New York City, who Is The business men of Ogden will have the right In the future to con- largely to charitable and religious o have his hear" transplanted from ne right side ot its body to the usual struct electric signs in front of their works. vorking sphere of every well organ to a resolution places according Negro Madman Saves Childs Life. heart. passed by the council. A negro madman, looking from a zed All his life the little fellow has been The four silver loving cups award- window In the Wauwatosa, Wls., in- 'ahoiing with a beait that has been ed as prizes during the recent session sane asylum, saw winging from the right side of his Superintendent three-- y ear-olof the National Irrigation Congress at Beutlers son fall vreast to the left, like tne pendulum f a clock. He is ot ordinary height Ogden have arrived, and will be for- Into a pond near the Institution. veil develored. and healthy, but his The child was playing with a brother, warded to their owners. nother declares that he Is the mesi According to a Denver dispatch, who called for help, but was not excitable youngster In the world The sudden noise will cause the bov's contracts will be let the first of next heard. Before any one could inter- least heart to beat with almost lucredib'o the dashed from the him, cept negro month for the completion of the Mofrapidity. For some time past Dr E fat road from the west side of the building, rushed to the pond and P. Grausman has been studying the plunged in. The child was rising for case. main range to Salt Lake City. Van Nordens case," said Dr. Ira T. Wright of Ogden was found the second time when he was seized Grausman today, "Is one of the most the and out lifted of by negro the dead in a saloon In that town, death oeculiar I have ever had to deal with. water. Climbing the bank, the negro I cannot make any statement until being due to alcoholism. Wright reheld the hoy up by his heels, and have performed the operation. cently took to drinking heavily on account of an attack of melancholia. when the attendants reached them the MURDER MYSTERY. child was little the worse for his bath. Dennis Clay Eichnor, district attorney for the Third judicial district of Yaqut Leader Captured and Killed. Body of Missing Washington Rancher Found In Shallow Grave. Utah, chairman of the Republican city Manuel Guavest, who for five years and county committee, died suddenly has been at the head of the In the nelghborhod of AlPeople at his home In Salt Lake City on the rebels in Sonora, and who inYaqul mira, Wash., are wrought up over the that 8th. time has instigated' many uprisings, finding of the body of a man buried A Salt Lake woman whq had report- and one Maravilla, a lesser leader of In a Bhallow grave. The grewsomo ed to the police department the loss the savages, have been find was made by a couple of stockcaptured by of two valuable diamond rings, last The body was Identified later as Captain Barron and executed. They men. that of R E English, a young week found them where she had were discovered a number of among rancher, who disappeared in 1901 placed them for safe keeping and forprisoners taken In an engagement This is the fourth mysterious murgotten about it. with a band of Indians near Bamotote, der that has taken place in that comIt is stated that abbut two hundred and to munity In the past three years The Captain Barron, not other three were Judge Lewis and his strikers are yet camped near Scofield, take any chances, orderedprepared them shot wife, an aged couple who were bruwaiting for the spring to open, in the Immediately. They died beaten to death at their home bravely. The hope that the men now at work In execution of these two men. It Is be- tally In November, 1902, probably for the the mines will be called home for lieved, marks the and Charles robbery, end of the warring purpose of was their spring farming. killed in his saloon Thenls, who Yaquis. no motive for at Geneva, April, 1903, The conferees upon the Indian apthe crime having ever been found. Convention Signed. propriation bill have completed their work. Among the amendments added The Turko Bulgarian convention RUSSIAN CHIEF OF STAFF. Is one appropriating $5,000 to push the signed at Constantinople Friday, prowork necessary to enable the Uintah vides for amnesty to all Bulgarians reserve to be opened March 1st next. compromised in the Macedonian risAt the Republican judicial conven- ing In 1903, excepting persons guilty tion of the Seventh Judicial district, of using dynamite; the repatriation of held at Mt Pleasant, William D. Liv- refugees, the removal of frontier reingston of Mantl was nominated for strictions on Bulgarian trade and Judge over Judge Jacob Johnson, the travel, and the application of the present Incumbent, by a vote of 32 reform scheme to to 14. Macedonia. The annual report of the Zions CoBulgaria undertakes to suppress operative Mercantile Instiution shows revolutionary movements In her terthat the sales for the year amounted and to prtvert t' e smuggling to J4.096.278 93, or $175,000 more than ritory of arms and explosives across the for the previous year. The company frontier. has expended for repairs during the year the sum of $33,028 08. Adjournment of Congress. On June 6th the Normal Summer Adjournment is now the most imInstitute wil open Its first session in portant topic of private discussion Salt Lake City, and will run for a among members of congress. The litperiod of two weeks. This course is tle important business pending and being given by the State University Y JVZUU as the result of petitions from teach- the desire of the members to get home to look after their political Major General Pfiug, who Is chief ers throughout the state. fences, combine to urge an early ter- of the Russian military staff in ManRegardless of the varying reports churia, stands high the military that have been published as to the mination of the present session. No men of the empire among and has the conbeen decided upon, but April date has fidence of those present terminus of the San Pedro, 28th follow the afhas been discussed in committee fairs of the nation. who the facts are that the line is in operHe is a rooms and among senators and rep soldier of the modern Russian thorough ation and ready to receive passengers military and freight as far south as Moapa. resentatives as an acceptable date for type, and has proved his ability In . Closing up legislative business. many departments of the service. seventy five miles beyond Calientes. The Utah Bee Keepers association Dead Over a Week, She Smiled at Firemen Perish. met in regular sessions in Salt Lake Her Friends. Three firemen lost their lives, sevCity last week and elerted officers for at a window in her home, eral others were injured and a loss the ensuing twelve months. The meet- herSitting white face smiling at the hun of about $250,000 was caused by fire ing was well attended, representa- dreds that that way, Ljdia which destroyed the large plant of tives from all quarters of the state Parker of passed Somerville, Mass, thus the York, Pa , Carriage company. The being present. greeted her friends a week after she was consumed with its inflamPostmasters representing nearly one had died. Mr3. Parker was 7t years plant mable contents and much adjoining of and lived age alone. Unused to hundred Utah towns met in Salt Lake from her home sne often sat property was damaged. Shortly beCity on the 6th and organized the going at her window the whole day long fore 10 oclock a wall fell, burying beUtah Postmasters association, in the This fact occasioned no surprise when neath the hot bricks three firemen, membership of which it is hoped ulti- day after day she seemed to meet the of citizens to the who knew Harris Saltzgixer, Henry Streine and greetings Include mately every postmaster in Louis Strublinger. her a with and the state, placid smiling face. J A. W, Smith of Ogden, formerly Street Car Men's Wages In San FranIrrigation in New Mexico. president of the Young Mens RepubThe census bureau, in a prelimicisco Are Advanced. lican club of Weber county, has been on irrigation in New Mexnary to the demand of the report answer The appointed financial clerk of the bu- ico in 1902, shows 234 945 acres irriCarmen's union for increased wages reau of soils in the department of was given gated from all sources. The number and various concessions agriculture The place Is a respon- of farms out Wednesday by the officers of the represented was 9285, and United sible one and the salary $1,(00 Railroads of San Francisco. the average cost per irrigated acre While declining to grant the proposed At the Republican conven on hld $16 78 The 1246 irrigation systems cost initially for main canals and rates, the company proposes a new In Salt Lake City the follow e legates were selected to go t i na- diches and the necessary headgates, agreement, making an advance in the tional convention: George g no, ami fcservoirs, dams, pumping plants, etc., wages of many of the men. It claim! of Salt Lake, Willard F. p- -y , f The entire length of main that it has made as liberal conces$4,301,915. canals and ditches was 2646 miles, an sions as can be accorded, consistent ute, C. E. Loose of Utah, ,! Built jv n Jr., of Cache, L. W. Shurt'itf ot We- average length per system of over two with the best Interest of the corpofv ation. miles. ber, J. H. Anderson of Salt L, ! e Result A lint ' "re two-stor- y g RIOTING IN CHICAGO ONE OF THE MOB LAID LOW BY A BULLET. Greeks attacked at Can Companys Plant and Police Narrowly Prevent Battie. Non-Unio- n The strike rioting at the American Can company a plant in Chicago, Tuesday, was fiercer than it has been at any time, and one man, John Nichols, lost his life by a bullet, fired, it la said, from a train on which a number of nonunion men were being taken back to the city after the. conclusion of the day's work. The fighting began early in the morning, wnen 300 Greeks, who have been employed during the strike, attempted to come to the factory. They were met at the gates by a large number of union pickets, who attacked them with stones and clubs. A large detachment of police had their hands full to protect the Greeks, when a hot fired from the crowd aroused the Greeks to fury. Those of the number who had entered the factory came pouring out, armed with knives and revolvers and attempted to attack the union men and their sympathizers who were. assaulting those Greeks who had not reached the gateway. The police, after a desperate struggle, managed to keep the two bodies of men apart, diove the Greeks into the factory and dispersed those on the In this fight a number of outside. men were severely hurt. a have been reported to the sute charge States partment by the United deemeu at Panama The matter was warrant of sufficient importance to considerable discussion at the cabinet meeting, and the unanimous opinion was that everything should be done of the to avoid an entanglement United States with any labor controthat versy. But It was determined the government would not withhold in any degree the protection to the Panama railroad which it has assumed by treaty, and it was directed that the railroad property, rolling be stock, track and terminals should protected by torces fiom the United States warships at the isthmus if that became necessary. There will, however. be no compulsion exercised to against the strikers to compel them return to work PINCHES THE PUBLIC. Coal Miners Strike in Iowa Throws Many Men Out of Work. A special from Des Moines, Iowa, under date of April 5, says- On account of the coal strike the railways announced that at least 500 men will Seventeen be paid off at once switching crews and nineteen .full train crews running out of Des Moines and Valley Junction quit work today. Similar action by railways centering at Boone, Belle Plain, Oskaloosa, Ottumwa and Albia will mean the loss of work to about 1,000 men. Churches in Des Moines are closed on account of the strike, and the schools have been closed for a week until coal can be secured. Only one school room In the city Is open. A call reconvening LABOR TROUBLES AT PANAMA. the Joint conference at Des Moines United States Marines Must Act as in a few days, at which a settlement is looked for, will be Issued. Strike Breakers. - The labor troubles of the Isthmus of Panama Railroad company have taken a serious turn and the facts MIKADO RECEIVES HERO. CAPT. RONDNEFF PRAISED. d C4PT.WZ470TO For an officer of the Japanese army or navy to be received in audience by the emperor is so rare an honor that ' a special significance Is attached te COPT JPQNDEFF the summons received by Capt Yamaor iw vieno moto to himself at the royal Capt Rondneff, who commanded the palaca In present Toklo. Russian cruiser Variag in the first batCapt Yamamoto was one of the oftle with Japan, has received much ficers who covered himself with glory In SL praise Petersburg for the gal- at the naval battle off Chemulpo when lant fight he made against great oddi. the Russian ships of war, the Variag Feb. 8 the Japanese fleet found the and Koreitz, were sunk. He took with Variag and the gunboat Korietz in tha him to Choida castle for presentation harbor at Chemulpo and ordered them to the emperor the flags of the Rusto leave. The Russian ships made for sian vessels. pie open sea and were attacked. The Capt Yamamoto represented the was made a stubborn Variag fight, but navy In the naval procession Japanese testroyed by an overwhelming number at the funeral of the late Queen VicOf shells. toria. At Wednesdays session of the ference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints, the conference formally renewed adherence to the polygagainst Woodruff manifesto s amy, declared that all plural are prohibited, and announced that any member of the church authorizing, contracting or solemnizing such marriages would he liable to con- mar-riage- was IntroThe pronunclamento duced by President Joseph F. Smith and adopted unanimously by a resolution Introduced by Apostle Francis M. Lyman, president of the quorum of the twelve apostles. After this resolution was adopted, another followed the same course, introduced by President John R. Winder, and providing for the erection of a building or monument as a memorial to Joseph Smith. as IntroThe pronouneiamento, duced by President Smith, follows: Inasmuch as there are numerous reports In circulation that plural marriages hate been entered Into contrary to the official declaration of President Woodruff of September 26, 1890, commonly called the manifesto, which was issued by President Woodruff and adopted by the church at its general conference, October 6, 1890, which forbade any marriages violative of the law of the land, I, Joseph F. Smith, president of the Church of Saints, Jesus Christ of Latter-dahereby affirm and declare that no such solemnized with marriages have been the sanction, consent or knowledge of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints; and I hereby announce that all such marriages are prohibited, and if any officer or member of the church shall assume to solemnize or enter into any such marriage he will be deemed in transgression against the church and will be liable to be dealt with according to the rules and regulations thereof and excommunicated therefrom. JOSEPH F. SMITH, President of the Church of Jesur Latter-daof Saints. Christ The following resolution was presented by Apostle Lyman: "Resolved, that we, the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, in general conference assembled, hereby approve and endorse the statement and declaration of President Joseph F. Smith, Just made to this conference concerning plural marriages, and will support the courts of the church in the enforcement thereof. At the afternoon session the authorities sustained, as proposed by President Joseph F, Smith, were as follows: Joseph F. Smith, as prophet, seer and revelator and president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. John R. Winder, as first counselor In the first presidency; Anthon H. Lund, as second counselor In the first presidency. Francis M. Lyman as president of the twelve apostles. As members of the counsel of twelve apostles: Francis M. Lyman, John Henry Smith, George Teasdale, r Heber J. Grant, John W. Taylor, W. Merrill, Matthias F. Cowley, Abraham O. Woodruff, Rudger Clawson, Reed Smoot, Hyrum M. Smith and George A. Smith. John Smith as presiding patriarch of the church. CANAL CONSTRUCTION BONDS. To Be Used by National Banks as Basis for Circulation. The senate committee on finance has authorized Senator Aldrich to report an amendment to the bill for the government of the Panama canal zone, giving to the canal construction bonds all the rights and privileges of the outstanding 2 per cent government bonds. The effect is to allow national banks to use the bonds as a basis for circulation. AND nt rrvKDZ. Advices from various sources art that the Japanese landing in Korea continues and that the treopa ara cn th march Inland from and Gansan. Japan thua la repeating tha tactlca aha used In the Chemulpo e war, whan, by capturing the secured command of the road to tha Yalu, drove the Chlneee back, and crossed the stream Into Manchuria. The which Is regarded as the key to Northern Korea, capture of ended Chlneee operations In that country. The present plan of the Japarv-Oela tald to ba to march through defeating the Russians who may ba there, drive tha czare troops back across the Yalu river, and e en to Mukden, the capture of which will cut off Fort Arthur and Dalny from supplies and give the Japanese posteeslon of the capital of Chlno-Japanee- Ping-Yan- g Ping-Yan- Ping-Yan- con-tlnu- Maiden Speech of Idaho Congressman French of Idaho Representative made hla debut as a speaker in the house on Tuesday. He spoke against the proposed repeal of the land laws, but advocated a repeal of the scrip law absolutely. He said the scrip law should be repealed because it has been diverted from its original purpose, which was to aid settlers, and that now the railroads are the greatest beneficiaries. Owners of scrip and railroads are foremost in urging the repeal of the land laws. 3 mm Command Issued That No Such Ceremony Shall Be Solemnized by Any Officer or Member of the Church Under Pain of Excommunication. Mar-rine- n 1 PRESIDENT SMITH ISSUES MANIFESTO PROHIBITING PLURAL MARRIAGES. y Turko-Bulgaria- n VLT-GD- an on polygamy y d Austro-Hungaria- B Lone Robber Holds Up Stage. The mall stage running between Holt and Big Fork, Mont., was held up by a lone bandit Monday night. According to statements of the driver, he waa met at a lonely spot in the timber by a man commonly known as Joe Bush, who ordered him to hold up his bands and then helped himself to the mail and other valuables on the stage, and then made his disappearance in the timber. The sheriff s office was notified and the sheriff Is after the bandit. Bush has a bad reputation in that vicinity. Governor Prevented Lynching. The negro, Albert Baldwin, who killed Engineer Fogarty some tima ago, was started for TallahatchU county, Mississippi, for trial. When the train reached Tchula word waa sent to Governor Vardarm that a mob Intended to take the negro from tho train and lynch him. The governor Immediately telegraphed the officers In 'harge to take the negro to Greenwood and keep him there, later sending a detachment of militia to taka the negro to Sumner by special train. Cleveland for Parker. a dispatch from Princeton, N. J, former President Cleveland is quoted as finding in the movement looking to MILES FOR PRESIDENT. Boom Started by Prohibitionists of Indiana. At the state convention of Prohibitionists held in Indianapolis, Ind., on Tuesday, a boom was started for a national ticket composed of General Nelson A. Miles for president and Felix T. McWhorter of Indiana for vice president. As a finale to his speech, Mr. Rhoades launched tlie boom for General Nelson A Miles as the Prohibition candidate for president. Plague of Locusts In Africa. Swarms of locusts have devastated the valleys of Usumbara, in German East Africa. They were first noticed moBt ocuu umciauy stated that terrible snow-stor- would give any Idea of the numbers o locusts The trees on which the' tied have broken down, and ba and mulberry trees have been ped, even the bark of the mull trees being eaten Scarcely a blade or leaf has been left in tt ests or on the farms. In the nomination of Judge Alton B. Parker for the presidency the "greatest possible relief and satisfaction" 1 do not see how any one professing to be a real, intelligent Democrat, can hesitate to accept Mr Parker, if he should be nominated, as a tit representative of safe and conservative Democratic principles, entitled to hearty and unreserved Democratic support nd the bank of Buck Groi ford county, Iowa, have fal reported liabilties of half dollars, and assets of only and are in the hands of a Both are owned by O A Dow City. Mr. Green are between $75,000 sayr an,, greater than the direct lia depositors will be paid L says the direct liabilities only $200,000. Speculation u cattle la the cause of the i Kansas Fruit Crop Ruined Lost of Stock Expected, A special from Topeka, Kaa der date of April g, saj,8. " , I blizzard Is raging over thU of the state today. The air snow, with a northwest wind locity of thirty-similes. 1 x xh mometer registered 27 above oclock, and is falling rapidly, formed where water stood, j and the early vegetables are nJ 1 Ei j J CHAP edly killed. Lincoln, Neh , April 8 n wept by the worst blizzard of d year, and old residents say ft u most severe April storm known many years. A fine sheet of snow is driven by a wind that at tw reaches the velocity of a hnrri minor damage being reported several towns. Cattle on the ran turned out for spring grazing suffer, the temperature having (J! 20 degrees since last night Kansas City, April 8 -- A bib raged last night and today over notti. em Missouri and eastern and centm A light snow fell and Kansas. a wind blew at an average velocity temneratn! an miles hour The thirty fell rapidly and it is believed tS damage was done to fruit trees Z garden truck. St. Louis, April 8 The high that prevailed here today complete destroyed the partially completed bi zaar building in the Japanese resern tion at the worlds fair. The bullda, was a frame structure other building on the grounds damaged. Burlington, la., April 8. A hean snowstorm prevails throughout south eastern Iowa. The storm is acoow panied by cold, high winds. Instmctiv oward the n ipen, hut locking ar inly Visibl ous eyes lulling tht hanical bi Times sun there jin a dry! rough, h ther mare us like! thet s pioi peoial It was c Pated bre fell upon yaze of t waiting ii must con An tl a great f' der 'bout str Eoice In a i o' iteddy tc an getti Stprove th Dolore ing now Big ed some in a sudi special ear They day, an en route to see President Roosevelt were smashed into by a mail train tvo miles west of Maywood, Ills, during a fog. Three of the Indians were killed, three were fatally fo. Jured and twenty others were more less seriously hurt. The Indians who were not pinned down in the wreck fled in panic across the prairie. Chief White Horse, in charge of tho Indians on the tram, was fatally Injured. The bodies of the Indians who had been killed outright were laid oa the prairie beside the track. Chid White Horse was carried with then He said he knew that death was near, and requested that he be placed near his dead companions. The chief wit propped up and sat stoically while physicians worked over bis injunet He smoked a pipe quietly and showed no signs of the pain he must hare been suffering. After the bodies of tho dead had been removed from the wreckage and placed In a row on the prairie beside the tracks an Incident in railway probably unprecedented wrecks took place. The uninjured among the Indians gathered about and led by Chief Iron Tail solemnly chaaV ed the Indian "death song. RUSSIANS BOW BEFORE say person Collision Cuts Short Lives of Chiefs on Eastern Railway, Indians wen! she RED MEN IN WRECK. Sixty-thre- tl et, eiv two-stor- y e the jie some gi gone lai in with thars n though sartin v theys there's tin the; prov tb It wa turned nor spo from tt fingers ing th though and sh The prove go thi ther Her ed ari long la a grea from t tain ui the wi Ing ey The the ta She h thank' CROSS. Millions Are Reminded of the of the Savior. A hundred million of the emperor1! subjects revived the tragedy of Golgotha on Friday. The Russian capital seemed plunged in grief. The busy hum of the metropolis was gone. Tha streets were deserted. All night and morning the church bells tolled mournfully, reminding the faithful of the betrayal of Gethsemane, Peters denial the trial before Pilate, the burden of the cross, and finally the crucifixion. The scourging and mocking of the Sal avior were impressively the Alexander Nevsky cathedral, An tonious, the metropolitan of SL Petersburg, officiating. In the afternoon the interior of the great cathedral presented a wonderfulon scene, when at last a silver cross which was painted a picture of Christ crucified was borne out through the Inher golden gates on the shoulders of black garbed clergy to a magnificent i sarcophagus erected in the center the church. The vast congregation, was consisting of over 10,000 persons, on its knees, each one holding a light ed candle. Thrice the officiating and deacons circled the bier and all the lights were extinguished, and for horns throngs of people passed sothe catafalque, most of them bbing and weeping a sho1 Th in thy as d thyari things Dol gaunt her p scant the c flappi she the s put f on b It road, I, 5 s Mrs. Botkin to Be Tried Again. In view of the notice giv en by Awould ttorney Knight that an appeal be taken from the conviction of Mrs. who was found Cordelia Botkin, of Mrs. John of murder the guilty District Attorney Boyington has notified the witnesses for the pro1 t ecution who came from Dover, Del., remain in San Francisco temporarily-I- t of is understood to be the intention warrant the district attorney to have a issued for the arrest of Airs. Botkin, charging her with the murder of 7 Deane a sister of Mrs Dunning. evidence in both cases is virtually tn same. am am bri ke ab liv WI Tornado Strikes Texas. The tornado which passed over tha town of Mexica, Texas, killed thro three persons and Injured nine others, of whom, It is feared, fatally- Th dead: John Ballard, Mrs. Ballaf , child of the Ballard-Thfourteen year-olnames of Borne of the injured at not known. Those known to be ln Jured are: George Parsons, Grace Fatrie Livingston, Lemuel Hobby, ou Killed were Lucey. The Ballards . right. Many houses were demolishe on ed Threw Babies From the Window. serf Kirk Anderson, a lodger, was a Pearsall, ously Injured; John rj man, received dangerous wounds, were the two babies of Mrs. Anderson fir n badly hurt in a lodging house tM Omaha. Several families occupied caus fire of building and the alarm a small panic. Anderson jumped from era third story window, ana Mrs. An son threw her babes from th floor. Fireman Pearsall was tbr h(1f down a stairway. All the ers were rescued in their night clot t e w - - tu oi tb ta a h f i |