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Show OUTLOOK (VIXOM, Froprl.tor. CONGRESS. SUNK TORPEDO the House and Measure In the Senate. The anti-trubill, which was ached, tied for early consideration In the house this week, will not come up until late in (he week, if at all, and possibly may be postponed until next week. The friends of the currency bill are exceedingly anxious to get consideration tor it. r.nd a rule has been prepared. If it finally should be decided to allow the currency bill to come in after the post-offiappropriation bill is disposed of, bill will be shut out this the anti-tru- st week. The Democrats and Republicans have been conferring about the limit of the anti trust bill debate, and a tentative agreement has been reported to allow two days general debate on the measure. The omnibus statehood bill will continue for the present to hold its place as the unfinished business on the senate calendar, but it seems quite probable that the discussion of the statehood bill will come up in connection with the appropriation bills. Senator Quay has entirely changed his tactics during the past week, and after trying in vain to secure a quorum for night sessions oh two different occasions, has abandoned all efforts in that direction, leaving the senators who oppose the statehood bill to take the responsibility for delay. Statehood STANDING IN Anti-Tru- Qua Year, In Six Months ..I1J5 .66 Si Three Month. w.1 n.i. Entered ai'the Post 0(11 oe at Brigham City aa second class matter. HYBCM STANDING, Editor. InstraetTOna to Correspondents. Items of news are solicited from all pans of the country. Write upon one side of the paper only. Write proper names plainly. In order to protect the publli positions from Irres name of the author should be signed to all com mumcationa. The identity of correspondents will be withheld whenever desired. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. UTAH STATE NEWS. There is talk of another bank being rganized in Lehi. The third week of the Utah legislature ended with 136 hills nerore that V)dy. Eighteen new cases of smallpox de weloped in Salt Lake City during the past week. A move is on foot to have the electric light company at Fountain Green install electric lights in Ephraim. No game or game fish may be sold in Utah after next summer, if a bill Introduced in the legislature becomes a law. The report of the weather bureau shows that the past month has been the wettest January for the past thir teen years. The daughter of Chariton was severely Richfield of Seegmiller burned last week, her clothing catch ing fire from the stove. William McKenorick, a street car motorman, was seriously injured in Salt Lake City Sunday, being crushed be tween the car and a building. Thomas H. Mendenhall, who was one of the first settlers of Springville died last week. Mr. Mendenhall was past 70 years old, and was a bachelor. A decided epidemic of pneumonia is prevalent in Wellsvllle and vicinity there having been upwards of thirty cases and five deaths in the past four weeks. A couple of masked men held up the conductor and motorman or a street car in Salt Lake City, Sunday night, securing about $35 and the meni watches. Four miners at Sunnyside, who recently beat and kicked a fellow work man almost to death, have been summarily discharged from the employ of the company. Hattie 'Woodbury, aged 17, of Salt Lake City, may loee her eyesight as the result of the explosion of a toy pistol in the hands of a younger brother, the powder striking her in the eye. Several families in Mantl were last week quarantined for what was be Sieved to be diphtheria, but after Xew days time it was learned that only a little sore throat was the trouble. The recent heavy rains at Wells-Till- e were the most severe known within the recollection of the oldest inhabitants. The road supervisor re ports the damage to streets as over , $1,500. The Denver & Rio Grande railroad has voluntarily Increased the wages of all of its machinists, boiler makers, blacksmiths, tin workers, inspectors, car repairers and their helpers, 2 to 5 pqr cent The Utah Jobbers association of Salt Lake City will make a twelve days trip to southern California, starting on Feb. 7. They have hired a special sleeping car for the trip, and expect a Jolly outing. Ray Livingston of Fountain Green accidentally shot himself last week while handling a revolver which be thought was not loaded. The ball went through the palm of the hand, inflicting a painful wound. Word comes from Eager, Aria., of the sudden death of Thomas Love, a former resident of Mantl, who was killed by a kick in th chest from a young colt, causing death wtlhln thirty minutes after the accident Canute Peterson of Ephraim, while swinging head downward from a rope, struck his bead on the sharp corner of a square upright, cutting an ugly gash five Inches long on the top of his head. He will be laid up for a time. Judge Marshall of the federal court holds that the regulation excluding aheep from forest reserves is unconstitutional. The effect of the decision will be to throw open for pasturage more than a million acres of reserves In Utah. The Cauoon liquor bill is having a hard road in the legislature. It is being fought by the breweries and wholesale liquor men on one side, the drug, gists on another, while the Ministerial association Is against it from another .point of view. In a drunken row at Orangeville, Robert Neilson, a youth of 22 years, was hit over the head with a beer "bottle by Teddy Peacock, aged 18, from the effects of which he died a few minutes later. The coroners verdict was acute alcoholism. The saloon men of Provo are making war against the drug stores, and have petitioned the council that the com. pulsory imprisonment clause for keeping open on Sundays and after 12 p. m. be made applicable to drug stores as well as saloons. Harry Harvey, aged 6, of Schofield, discovered a bottle of alcohol and drank about half a pint, during his mothers absence. Upon her return she found the little one in a stupor, all efforts to revive mm being futile, the liquor killing the child. IS OTIS TALKS OF PHILIPPINES. A PEACE -- MAKER. Bill Before st st of Subscription! advance....... Term BOAT .DEATH IN SNOWSLIDE ce BEATS WIFE DURING PRAYER. FIFTEEN PEOPLE LOSE THEIR LIVES IN ACCCIDENT. Cruiser Pioneer Runs the Tor. Three Were Killed Outright, But Six pedo Boat Destroyer Near Channel Were Rescued, All Being More or of Corfu Down Only Two Bodies Recovered. The British cruiser Pioneer ran Into a. torpedo boat destroyer near the channel of Corfu Saturday, and fifteen persons are believed to have been drowned. The torpedo boat destroyer run down by the Pioneer was the Orwell. She was cut through at the conning tower during night naval operations and her forepart sank in deep water .taking down fifteen men. Only Iwo bodies have been recovered. The ifter part of the Orwell has been towed to Corfu. FRANCE MAY INTERFERE. Has a Little Bill Against Venezuela Which She is Anxious to Collect. The French legation has notified the Venezuelan government that, in view of the convention in 1867, France wa$ allowed to collect directly a part of the revenues of several customs nouses in Venezuela as a guarantee for her diplomatic claims arising out of the previous revolutions. France, It is said, renounced forever by the conven, tlon of 1885 the exercise of this right on condition that the interest on this debt be regularly paid. As this pay. ment has not been made since, without asking the authorization of Germany, England and Italy, France Intends to revive her right of direct collection. The French charge daffaires paid visits to the foreign ministers and twice called on President Castro during forty-eighours. This activity on the part of France evidently is in connection with her intention to revive her rights and is considered as an answer to the attitude adopted by the allied powers. Had Her Hands in Dough, and Could not Join in Devotion. For whipping his wife because she failed to join in prayer, John Newdick was fined $40 in Mayor Brouses court In Kokomo, Ind. Mrs. Newdick, who appeared in court with two black eyes, said she intended to join, in worship, but had her bands In the dough making bread, and could not stop. She said her husband stopped in the middle of his extempore prayer, arose from his knees and beat her unmercifully, one of his blows knocking her down. Mrs. Newdick denied that she showed lack HOBSON RESIGNS. of devotion but explains that her household needed part of her attention Captain of Merrimac Fame Has Tendered His Resignation. and she never could tell at what moment her husband might not suddenly Captain Richmond P. Hobson of Mer. Insist on holding a prayer service in rimac fame has tendered his resigna-tio- n as a naval constructor in the navy. L,e bouse. For some time Captain Hobson has RENOUNCED HIS RIGHT8. sought to be relieved, but the board before which he was examined proCrown Has 8axon Prince Story That nounced him fit for duty, and he was Abdicated. ordered to duty in charge of the conA curious story widely told In the struction work at the Bremerton, provincial and Berlin papers is that the Wash., naval station. It is well known crown prince of Saxony is determined that for some time Captain Hobson has to renounce his succession to the suffered from an affection of the eyes friends have declared throne in favor of his son, George, who which he and his Incapacitated him from active duty. is 10 years of age. The reason given DUEL TO THE DEATH. is that the military code of honor does not permit a husband wronged as he Two Californians Settle Quarrel With has been to remain in the service. The Pistols. Rhenish Courier of Wieshausn says Two Lee Barnes and George men, without reservation that the crown a duel to the death Silverthorn, fought prince has renounced his right to succession to the throne and the Berlin in a small cabin near Redding, CaL Silverthorn is dead and Barnes cannot Morgen Posts Dresden correspondent live. The men were gambling for says he has already appealed to the small atakes and quarreled, both reemperor to relieve him of all military sorting to their knives, weapons with nine-inc- h blades. They fought desperpositions. both numerous ately, receiving wounds. Silverthorn finally fell to the SUCIDED ON WEDDING DAY. floor of the cabin, mortally wounded. Butte Man Takes His Life Because There was only one witness, and he saw but the ending of the affray. of Broken Engagement TERROR-STRICKEMEXICANS. Willard H. Winters, one of the most men in Butte and former prominent People of Guazapares Badly Frightcounty auditor, shot himself through ened by Earthquake Shocks. the head with a Smith & Wesson re. Reports from Urique, Mexico, regardrevolver Saturday, dying Instantly. the earthquakes in that district ing It is said Winterss fiance broke their state that there were four shocks engagement, after having learned that that section, one occurring he had been drinking, and this led to throughout on the 22nd, one on the 25th, one on his suicide. On the table by the side the 26th, and one on the 27th. All were of the bed, and almost within reach of followed by loud explosions, but only the corpse were piled heaps of wed- slight damage resulted. Eighteen ding presents, which had been sent houses were destroyed at Guazapares. for the ceremony, which was to hava The people of the district are panic, stricken and fear a volcano. been performed that night DROWNED LIKE RATS. Top of Policemans Head Cut Off by Fall of Immetnse Icicle. Peculiar Accident Which Befell William Daniels, a police officer, bas an Alabama Family. been killed at Cassopolis, Mich., by an Two cars from a westbound freight Icicle. The upper half of his head was train broke away at the incline of the cut off completely by the Immense Queen & Crescent railroad at VicksIcicle, which had evidently fallen from burg, Miss., and, rushing down the the root of C. L, Smiths general store, grade, plunged into the river. One was a distance of fifty feet. Just as Daniels a combination freight and immigration stepped up to try the door. Daniels car and it is stated that it contained was 25 years old and unmarried. He a family of six persons bound from served three years as a soldier in the a point in eastern Alabama for Arkansas, all of whom were drowned. Philippines, returning a year ago. Dowle and His Followers Will Invade Its Evident That Prayer Didnt Avail in This Case. New York City. Mrs. Jennie Deppert, a Christian John Alexander Dowle, founder of Zion City, announced at Kenosha, Wis., Scientist of Indianapolis, Ind., has died Sunday, to a crowd of 7,000 of his fol- of smallpox without receiving medical lowers that he would next month take attention. She was attended by a numhis restoration host," 3,000 strong, to ber of women, who conducted religious New York, where he has engaged Car- services and depended upon restoranegie hall and Madison Square, he tion to prayer. The coroner began an says, for three months. He announced official inquiry with a view to canning that street meetings would be held in warrants to be issued against the faith New York daily. More than 5,000 of healers attending the woman, accusing his followers volunteered to go on the them of manslaughter and criminal neglect mission. Tried to Burn Reform 8chool. Fiend Throws Scalding Water A desperate attempt was made SunSteeping Newsboya Three newsboys, Fred White, 14; day evening to burn the main building of the state Industrial school in Ogden. Fred D. Reck, 12, and Harry Hess, Some of the inmates had entered Into 13, were seriously scalded shortly a conspiracy to set fire to different after midnight Sunday, at Pittsburg, parts of the building. Ihe plan was Pa., that White and Reck will die! partially carried out. Two of the beds They were Bleeping in an areaway be- In the girls dormitory were simultanelonging to the First National bank ously ignited about 7 oclock. The when some unknown person threw two beds were burning brisky when the buckets of scalding water upon them. flames were discovered, but "the fire Hess is the only one who can talk, but be is unable to give the name of the was extinguished before much damage was done. person who threw the water. Want Free Sugar. Lord Milner Resigns His Post. The Mazatlin government has in Lord Milner has asked to be relieved of his posts of governor of the Trans- contemplation the admission of sugar vaal and Orange River colonies and from Cuba free of duty( in order to high commissioner of South Africa, forestall the operations of the combine but at the desire expressed by the gov- that recently purchased the entire ernment he has consented to remain product of three of the leading sugar in South Africa until the end of July, producing states of southern Mexico. when be will be offered a high posi- Since the deal was put through by the tion in connection with the govern- combine sugar has steadily advanced ment of India. Numerous rumors had in price. It Is believed that if the been current In South Africa that Lord price goes higher the government will Milner would or had resigned, but use Its power In behalf of the consumhitherto tht-reports nave always ers and put sugar on the free list been doried. ht N a NINE MINERS BURIED AT QUINCY MINE, PARK CITY. Less Injured Other Slides Feared. GERMANS SO REGARD THE MON. ROE DOCTRINE. New German Envoy to America Declares Germany Has No Ulterior Designs in Venezuela. The New York World prints an interview with Baron Speck Von SternNine miners were buried in a snow berg, whicn contains the following, slide at the Quincy mine in Park City, among other remarks cf the German Wednesday afternoon, three of them diplomat: being killed outright. The avalanche It has been said that the German of snow came down from the high emperor has ulterior designs and momountain that overhung the Quincy tives in Venezuela. That is absolute, shaft house, carrying the structure ly false. The emperor admires and down into the valley below, and in its understands the Monroe doctrine as course wrought untold other damage. well as anybody. John Gaffney, .engineer; E. J. Coller, The report that the emperor has station tender, and Charles D. Frink ulterior designs is false for two were killed. The injured were: Mike First His admiration for PresWynn, Con Shay, foreman for the ident Roosevelt and America and Quincy; George Burt, Peter Burt, Mike things American. Second He fully Wynn, shift boss; Con Shay, Bates approves the Monroe doctrine and Noble, David Coleman, serious; Robert would not think of trying to obtain Giles. even a coaling station there. As soon as the accident happened The German emperor would no the alarm spread rapidly, and in less more think of violating the Monroe than half an hour after the occurrence doctrine in that respect than he would there were more rescuers at work at think of colonizing the moon. the Quincy than were needed.. All The Monroe doctrine is a peace, work in the locality was suspended maker. It is the best safeguard for and the work of recuing the unfortupeace the United States ever had. nates was pushed energetically. It is Foreign powers recognize that the not thought that there are any more point beyond which they must not go persons covered by the slide. It is is the taking of territory in South feared, however, that more slides will America. take place soon, and excitment in the by Germany would only result in disaster to her. city is great There has been a lot of nasty This is the first accident of the smoke in the air, and I have come to kind that has occurred at Park City try and clear it away. I know that since March 10, 1896, when four men the kaiser is most anxious to show the were killed at the old Daly, which is American people that he is friendly him located close to the workings of the to them. Every time I have seen he has emphasized his desire to win Quincy. their approbation. The emperor absoOf the three men killed in the slide lutely appreciates that America is only one, E. J. Colter, was married. friendly to him. He leaves a widow and two small chilrea-son- s: Land-grabbi- dren. Charles D. Frink was a substitute fireman, and was working in the place of Charles Whitehead, the regular fireman. He had just secured employment at the mine, and was working his first shift It Is feared that David Coleman will not survive his injuries. OPERATOR NEGLECTED ORDERS. People Killed as Result of His Carelessness. The failure of Night Operator Geo. Clough at Vails station, Arizona, to deliver orders to a westbound train, collision fourteen caused a head-o- n miles west of Tucson. At last accounts fifteen bodies had been taken from the mass of burned and charred wreckage and it is believed this number will be swelled by the addition of at least ten more before the search of the mass of tangled and twisted iron and steel shall have been completed. Oil from the broken tanks of the engines caught fire, and the wreckage burned so fiercely that help for the In. jured was almost out of the question. Many of the bodies taken from the wreck could only be identified by watches, watch chains or some other article of a personal nature. Eleven cars were burned. Superintendent Stoufe of Tucson division ex. onerates Engineers Bruce Wilke, as well as Conductors Scriven and Parker, who, he says, did their duty. He places the entire responsibility on Operator Clough. Operator Clough has admitted his failure to deliver orders. Twenty-fiv- e CAN GET NATURALIZED. Courts Decide Filipinos May Become Citizens of United States. A Washington, D. C., dispatch says: Justice Clabaugh of the district supreme court decided that Antonio M. Oposio de Yease, the young Filipino who some months ago Instituted mandamus proceedings to compel Clerk John R. Young of the supreme court to receive his citizenship declaration, is still an alien and is entitled to be come a citizen of the United States. His declaration, therefore, was or. dered to be received, but an appeal was taken to the district court of appeals. The clerks refusal to accept the declaration was on the ground that a Filipino is not an alien, and, consequently, cannot renounce the allegiance he seeks to relinquish. The Filipino alleged that he was born of Spanish parents in Manila in 1880, and lived at Manila until several years ago. The court held that in the chan td UTAH'S. Says Natives Advised Drastic Measures in Putting Down Rebellion. Major General Elwood S. Otis, in a lecture before the students of the college of commerce and administration at the University of Chicago Thursday night, declared that prominent Filipinos urged him to put down the rebellion in the Philippines by devastation and murder. The advice given me was that civilized warfare would not terminate the rebellion, said the speaker. It was urged that the Insurgents would attribute humane treatment to cowj ardlce and would be encouraged. Devastation and murder were advocated. Instances where Filipinos , were buried alive, beheaded and murdered by "Amigos who did not countenance the rebellion were cited. What the islands need, continued General Otis, is a reformed currency, practical land laws, limited government concessions for the upbuilding of natural Industries and sufficient capital for the development of their resources. The desire of the majority of the inhabitans of th islands is for peace and protection which will enable them to enjoy the fruits of their labor. lutioo?to congress Passed senate bllETlo bounties on grasshoppers, kxmsuSN Defeated senate hills Nos Joto for the abolishing of the om tomey, after warm debate. Committee on mines and Ssnate American Sailor Outrageously Treated by Nicaraguan Officials. With his flesh cut and bruised by the beatings he had received at the hands of his Nicaraguan jailors. Geo. Williams, an American miner at Co. rinto, Bought refuge on board the Pacific Majl steamship City of Panama, which has arrived in San Francisco, and was carried by her to La Union, Salvador. Willaims had been aprisoner in the hands of the Nicaraguans for three months, and was released at the instance om the United States consul general at Managua, the i capital of Nicaragua. His arrest, he declared, was a pretext to enable the Nicaraguan government to reclaim a valuable gold mine he discovered near San Fernando, and to which he secured title before the Nicaraguans were aware of the value of the property. Williams, when he left the city of Panama, declared that within a week he would be on his way to Guatemala City to lay his case before United States Minister Hunter or his representatives. He said he would push the matter and demand heavy indemnity from the Nicaraguan government. ' j ' February S- - ' ( k j Skit at House bill No,. lL.bjJa !,. make grand larceny punishable by a let I from 50 to $1,000, iu addition to impftasaak ; j from one to ten years, was passed. Senate bill No. 61, the Ih, amended and passed by unanimous voto. j Senator Lawrence introduced bill No.- I enable the attorney in the case to fieetgaii the paper In which notices shall be prihud j Senator Lawrence Introduced bill No a, I provide another judge for the thlrd.jMBi district and enable the governor to ipptuli Judge to serve till the next election. , , . Senator Williams introduced bill Nd. $1 duplicate for the house bill, niakthg at typn prlation of $6,000 for the" igrigatloq eoa$na ( text-boo- k - j ' Ogden. de-ne- A Sympathetic Strike. The freight traffic on the ' Dutch Railroad company's lines Is suspended in consequence tof .a strike of 30Q enginemen in sympathy with the employees of several transportation companies at Amsterdam, who have been on strike for some time past'Theem-ploye-s of the state railroads threaten to join the strike. , There was a conflict between strikers and in the suburb of Durgerdam this morning. Several men were, seriously in. jured. Senator Bennlon Introduced bl!!No. , j Tiding for amending the corporation but '' several particulars. f New bills introduce were 'B I Hops E. Johnson, for experimental farm is KT' county ; by Brink, Incorporation of cUI,,!! qulrlng that the 100 signers of a petlfim k Incorporation shall be property owDeremof aa qualified electors); Brink, examiittlwC powder men in mines; a measure looliaj 1 the safety of miners; Brink, prohibits yapM Of wages in board; Smith, allowing stock ts k driven througp Emigration' canyon;'(k5sa abolishing capital punishment Mr aw MoKtnnon, advertising and sale of ewqf Haslam, regulating practice of barber Iftfc Joint resolution No. 8, providing fjrk m mission to negotiate tor the Arisoe At . , , passed unanimously. , Charles' Ward, ODe of the; Ward Bros., the famous world's et3 pion oarsmen, has just diedal Lc. Island. , i- - - The action of the natipnal ic:' committee on agriculture lq apse the house agrloqltural '' sppropn. bill will probably preserving the government irrt investigation office in Cheyremfe, t the principal office th located; alt! Prof. Meads headquarters Are Is V lnKU' V1 As a .,3wT' result of an investigate:. ttoe fight that oeourred' bete") ( bpot and shoe workers cuttc Hnights of. Labor sympathir fynn,. Mass'; the police' arrfist-- . men, while a third was dtocow ULhome suffering fronf m Ugly wuund. : : , , a 'ffee Oofitrovarsy which forest jjp'ir8 has beeh waged betweefl,i Telega an the Helena Coif er works company has city has not paid any w atari abv ut five year, and as a result t hae been a number of suits. .TU will pay half lot the bill $ ' , .Qeattt 'Resun of Careless Coal Operators to Be Tried.- - t The Indiana coal' men, against whom Indictments were voted by the special grand jury, haVe been unable to agree with States Attorney Dineen as to a statement of facts, which wafi scheduled for presentation to the court Thursday. The operators will now be asked to give bond so that their cases may come up for trial by within tat,n,CTme? stat- . Jnary house establishing experiment farms, aikk permanent Insanity the ground tor Bren prohibiting taxation of mortgages; ftprife for investment or state land funds. A resolution was adopted Instruct! secretary of state to keep the fiag of the USie States flying over the building while the . lature is in session. Messrs. Stewart, Donq and Roberta sen a pointed a committee to arrange for exenla In honor of the birthday anniversary ef Pita dent McKin ey. j S. B. No. 87, by Mr Lawrence, traufank the articles of incorporation. o railroad as panics from the office of state auditor to ma tary of state, was placed on third resit a j passed by a vote of 39 ayes, no nayo 'S ar-ln- . ,t,1, 30. Lewis hafi tire ww, . his mercy on the Barrett bin, regulati a amount of powder or other high bo stored in mines. There were only tre, tors present at the session, nine of xkoa rea for the bill, Lewis voting against it Theptfi dent declared the bill passed, fcfcei su Lewis arose to a point of order to tte eta that the constitution required t mtjoritj $ the entire senate on the final paassge of m whereupon'the chair announced that ths U bad failed of passage for lack of one vote, j The senate adjourned UU Monday at Wdt Senators C. P. Larsen, Gardner, Loom, Wiliams, Sherman, Johnson, Barnes sad la nlon were absent, being on a junket te Pnq . to inspect the insane asylum. Hocsk-Ne- w bills were Introduced ! ik Charged With Mutiny. The British steamer Brunswick ded five survivors of the British k Veronica in London, Thursd&y, o were picked up at sea before g at Funchal. The men reported t the Veronica was burned at sea bcember 20. The police have d four of them on suspicion of having mutinied and murdered Captain Shaw and seven of the crew of the Veronica, after which they are alleged to have set fire .to the ship. y,ljn,ihe 9, Sswats Senator iking-sounding- aa January officer: Stone, amends exemption In collection of statistics Cell annexation of part of counties, , enslve soundings in Havana har- near Santa Clara "battery, garri-le- d by American troops. It Is said y also took photographs of the In view of the attitude of rmany in Venezuela, this is as significant. The German ls aboard the Moltke were sent the cruise by the German govern-n- t, and, it is understood, have been s secretly ail over West Indies: . : 2. 1 A bill was passed fixing a-- of to assist Claim Made That it Is Cheaper and Better Than Oats. Between four thousand and five thousand horses in Brooklyn are being fed on molasses because it Is cheaper and better than oats. This statement made by a veterinary surgeon, who jis that horses in harness from jive to fourteen hours a day d6 not e time to masticate and properly pare dry oats and other fodder. The ult is that the animals receive little ritive value from their food. Jolasses, if properly diluted and xed with hay, bran and meal In per proportions, is a digestible idition and ready for assimilation j moment it enters the mouth. Its tritve value Is, therefore, quite ap-eIt Is not only better and re nutritious food than oats, but it much cheaper in the end. laws and not H j , s: HORSES EAT MOLASSES. trantions came IV ll of-ia- -- jtt W- -' justices of the supreme court it pl-- T Judges the district court at 13,500 Passed a bill making the salary w court stenographer $1,200 instead of Koo A lengthy discussion was hadot Banta-bill for the cure of drunkards and it wu J a special order for Monday . ,Hous a The-btJ exempting elan taxation until the title goes to the ' was passed. A resolution calling for information a gard to vaccination was laid on the taU, New bills were introduced as follows. rJ don, for initiative and referendum jT fixing minimum county school tax, lire (w ter, by request, leasing of mines; Hr, (W by request, expenses of judges tod eJ? attorneys; Mrs. Coulter, by request, cku practice in counter-claimCondon to nm, docking horses; Condon, for re-rd- !an-uth- er jr t BEATEN BY JAILORS. non-strike- rs 1 A biU was introduced by RenreJ White of Piute county, making the m!!-dIn October health day. On owner or lessee of every occupied dW house, church, school house, 'htntm Jl house or dancing-hal- l shall ttoronguis feet the same, under the direction board of health, or be fined not to for-catlo- - " iK 7 H. B. No 26, by Brink,. hoiises in the act for the Including protecti keepers was passed steamer Moltke, which is on a ilse through the West Indies, made The Delaware Row. Edward Addicks, who has within six votes of the necessary majority In the Me deadlocked Delaware legislature for United States senator, has Issued a statement in which he says that the bolters or regular Republicans hav- giei Les ing broken faith with his faction, the ma at Union Republicans, and having vioaccni lated the agreement made before the Joint primary election on October 4th, lug whr It is impossible to consider any col is impossihlTo attack him, because operation with the bolters in the fu- Fez is a holy city, and calling on him ture. This is taken to mean that in battle outside the walls of that state, county and city elections In Del- to giveThe sultan in despair accepted city. aware there will hereafter be two the challenge, and has ordered th tickets. concentration of the troops. France Supports Morocco. Union Pacific 8hopmen Will Strike. Although the fact has not yet been President Burt of the Union. Pacific formally anounced. It was learned In Pari 8 Wednesday that orders had been railroad on Friday at Omaha, met sent to the Princes of Ouaczan, in representatives of the striking shopMorocco, to exert all their moral and men of that system, to continue the material influence In support of the conferences begun in New York three sultan of Morocco. This action gives weeks ago. The meeting resulted in the sultan the support of France at a the latters representatives leaving moment when his position is critical. without having reached a settlement Word has been received that the and they declare that the strike will princes are on their way to execute now bq pontipued indefinitely and .will be extended over the Southern Pacific the orders. system. 4 Went Into Lions Den. (Jooked Alivq in Steam. Raymond Bowman, aged 12 years, An accident in the engine Yoom of is dying at a hospital in Charleston, the United ' Stated steamer boston, S C., from wounds received In a lions now lying in San Francisco bay, 'cost cage. - He was admitted by Miss Hall, Edward Lee Baker hie life arid the trainer, against thq protests of the lies in victim, Sanford H; attendants. The largest of the four a critical condition at Tate, hosth nwal beasts Jumped over the woman and pital, Mare island, where he was seized Iowman in the left thigh. The transferred for treatnierit The two smell of blood excited the' lions mates men were machinists of the United and they all joined in the attack. Sev- States navy, attached to the Boston. eral men armed with pitchforks went While they were endeavoring to reto the boy's rescue, and ne was pair a leaky valve a plate blew out dragged out after a desperate struggle. and the escaping steam enveloped them. 1 V ' ay and naval officers, passengers on Parts of the boiler weighing several hundred pounds were blown a thou, sand feet from the place of the explosion. The cause of the explosion is not known. i I? la Germany Hunting TroubleT will die. 1 agahmefcewW bill No. 8 and in ful1 retts house bill No. 3, to prohiDl!' explosives In mines. Senator Lawrence introduced . M. 57. 58 and 59, modify ,lg gard to police and fire department, i! mayors' vetoes, the powers sat county commissioners relating to t,. Indigent poor In cities; to enable cities and towns to be made any thu, w. to define th, law relating to against cities and to fix the law anT ith reference to claims House Adopted unanimous! rnn congress asking the admission t is reported that several German Parts of Boiler Were Thrown a Thousand Feet A large boiler in the malleable foundry of the Southern Car & Foundry company at Anniston, Ala., blew up Wednesday, killing six persons and in. juring twenty others, several of whom 8.d,lS.s4 dwa, 5 nt EXPLOSION KILLS SIX. 4 rwuttWV .. . t) The coroner's the death vof J8sd L the Union Pacific, air brake to" cut to pieces. beneath a train .to Chifenne jrards, returned that Jeesen's .death 'wafentirelj to his own carelessness. .At tbs time the verdict severely censure Union Pacific for' not enforcin rules relative to the display on 1 Tbe rules provide that inKpeetpn n,ac blue ags or blue lights at of trajng on w'hcb they aw a |