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Show . A. V -- COALVILLE TIMES. Tim ei rcnuiMZxa COALVILLE. ' oo- - - NATION MOURNS DEATH OF PRESIDENT MKINLEY UTAH OTAn STATE NEWS. 8flr i in Citizens of after eonnty (sugar factory. Tbe ' formers promise 1,000 icm of boot. Tbo bcillb officer, report tbit smallpox bM disappeared from Kingston end bo yellow flag are flying. Tbe Elba Fair at Halt Lake buboes postponed till the lttb, on account of tbe death of President McKinley. Beetbsllmay form a portion of tbe aporteattbe fair inatead of racing. Negotiation! are now on looking to that end. Prominent pbyeiclane bare decided that the death of Michael Quealy, who died in Salt Lake recently, waa due to bed bug bitea. Treacle Hermann, the alleged murderer of two women in a Scendinarlan church In Salt Lake City els yearn ago, baa, it le eaid, been located la Sweden. . Trank Ballard, aerrlng a term in tbe onaty jell at Farmington, made ble aeoepe by burrowing bis way through hie oell end the outer walla of tbe jaiL. Derid Joba Carle, tried at Mention a charge of polygamy, baring n wlfn living nt Brigham City and marrying S woman at Quonlaon a abort timo ago, wu found guilty. Baber Neileoo of Holliday met hie death in1 Mill Creek canyon Saturday by falling under the wheels of e wagon hnnrlly loaded! with wood, the wheels SORROW Midst Scenes of Profound Sorrow, to Thee," and Expressed Wish to Die Shortly Before He Lost Consciousness Profound Sorrow of. Official Pamily Washington Overcome by Unexpected Grief Excited Throngs at Buffalo Move on Jail Containing Assassin with Threats of Vengeance but are Dispersed Threats oj Uprising Against Chicago Anarchists. God passing orerhie chest- .Kaufmen A Saaadera, cattlemen nf Wublogton, lent week purchased n Deseret parties, . train load of steers of and will ship them to their ranch to he placed on the range. The Gnrdo house. Salt Lake, wu re cently purchased by Mrs. Holmea, Is aow in the hands of an army of artis-aand Is receiring a thorough orer hauling from top to bottom, both in nt aide and out, The members of tbs Salt Lake choir are talking of making a ,trlp In March pest with 200 singers, for a tour of lea or fifteen days con carting nt San Francisco and other California eiliee. , a Tbn Twenty-secon- d better, recently ordered to FOrt Douglas, Is to be re eroded aod organised at this poet. Orders issued under date of September 3rd, direct that the organisation be prxjed4 wrlUi. at, ouee. .1 7 The asoual vnoampmeat of the National Guard of Utah came to an end Tuesday of last week, aod tbe men lerted for their homes after having spent a plenum od pro(5tb!e period of tight days under canvas . President Loreneo Snow wired .the following to Sirs.' McKinley: Tbe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Salute moat sincerely coo doles with you and our nation In tbu sore bereave-- ' meet and in tbn grtat loss sustained Ip tbe death of our belovsd friend and their dead. another, TOUCHING EVENTS. d -- - -- Ernest Lylia, a Taylor vllle boy, le under arrest, charged with Mrs. John Byron of tho Mme place. Tho trouble la tha result of a refusal by Mrs. By ran to giva up a borne belonging to Lyllaa father which her husband bad Imborse-whlppio- g pounded, It teeald that the California Eastern, alerting at Blake, on tbe Santa Fa. I. to connect with the proposed Oregon Short Lines railway to Loo Thin - Angles, being true, tho 8bort Lina will have' only too mttea more of road to build la order to finish , the proposed line. Authentic authority baa been received In Proto that the farmers In tbe nearby vicinity may bate rural free delivery If they so desire It, and they are now preparing a petition to tbe government for two roral free de- livery routea Emil Johnacu, while on hie way from Pocatello to Salt Lake, fell through' a vestibule window while paMlng from one coach to another. Buffering from sever cuts about i"be face and neck. Ho la now In a Salt , : ... Lake boepiteL . Froaoaamd, The first disquieting news concern log tbn tbn president's condition eu given out late Thursday. About noon of that day the president complained of great fatigue, which waa followed by n lower temperature aod higher pulM. During thn afternoon and early evening heart complications Increased, and at S oclock Friday mom-Ing- a collapse came that brought the distinguish I sufferer near t death, and gays warning of approaching dissolution. Powerful heart stimulants were given, bat had little efTecL Following n week of steady ImprtgjwnyiL Threats f Lyachlaf Itwrhbu KshtbUtoa Profouad ftorrow. The news of the president's demiM waa everywhere received with evidence of profound sorrow. At Buffalo, great erowda thronged the streets from early morning until latent night, and when tbn conviction became settled that death waa imminent, those surrounding the bulletin boards were In a mood tbat meant no good to tbe asasMin. At n suggestion from some one that Czolgoaa should be lynched, the crowd with a common impulse started for the jail, and in a few minutes aix or eight thousand people surrounded the building .la which the asMssin is confined. Thn chief of police had been notified of the coining of the crowd, and bad all available force nut in front. As an additional precaution, Colonel Welch, commanding tbe Fourth brigade headquarters, was asked to be ready to give SMiatanee if it were needed. The crowd was kept at a respectful dlatancq by thn police, and In the course of an hour left thn vicinity of the jail and moved on the various bulletin boards, hungry for tha latest news from the sick chamber. At Washington, the newt of the presidents expected death came as a crushing blow. Work In all the depart men la was virtually suspended, so absorbed were tbe clerka in the chiefs condition. The beads of departments were generally absent, and the two cabinet officers In the city. Secretaries Hay and Gage, remained apart from tba throng as much as poMible. When they did appear, they were pictures of grief and despair. At Chicago there were many expressions of deep feeding against tbe murderer, and not a few were leveled at thn anarchists confined in the county jail there and toward Emma Goldman who la held In the Harrison street police eta tioo. There wern no speeches, but the crowds were in a dangerous temper, and had any of the anarchists, man or woman, been turned loose, a killing would have followed' as soon aa the erowd could have managed It. . Three men, one of them the eon of a Before 8 ocloek H waa clear to those at tbe President's bedside that be waa dying, and preperatloos were made for tbe lMt and offices of farewell from those who were nearest and deareat to kirn. Oxygen had been administered ntendlly, but with little effect In keeping beck the approach of death. The prealden! came out of one period of unoooaclouaneM only o relapse Into tear-ataine- ' Shock Prodseen by Tera foe Wstes, Art Days ( Isaproyomoal, Very rn Butin thlaperlojj, when hla mind waa The census office bulletin on Wvt partially clear, oocurred a aerlea of erenta of profoundly touching char, population shows that of the 376,741 population, the native born are 223, 97? acter, Downstairs, with atrained and faces, members of thn cabforeign born, 53,777? total white, 373, j 4flS. of whom 319,681 are natives) inet were grouped in anxious waiting. knew the e mV. wax near,, and that. foretgtt whttee; 82,864 reolared, of whom 673 are negroes, 673 are the time had come when they must Chinese, 457 Japanese, .1,151 Indiana aea him for the last time on earth, One by one they ascended, the stairtaxed and 1,473 Indiana not taxed. There was only a momentary way. Mr. N, C. Williamson, an aged wo- man who resides at Pleasant Grave, stay of tha cabinet at the threshold of the death chamber. Then , they with - received painful Injuries In a runaway tears streaming down their faces drew, In Salt Lake City, She waa thrown from tbe vehicle nad dragged half a and words of lotense gnef eboklog in , block by the lines, but fortunately ee-- their throats. eaped death. J- - M. Thomas, aged S3, of Overon, Nevada, visited Salt Lake City last week, It being the first time he ever rode on a train.' MrVThomaa waa one of the first white children bora la Balt Lake City. Mr Thomas reads tho newspapers noil keeps up with the times, hut fate bee always kept him where he bad no occasion to ese tho J Iron horse in hH traveling. FIRST DISQUIET1NQ NEWS, With the momentary excitement incident upon the announcement of the end, the entiie scene became one of Unmistakable sorrow and deep mourning As If nature lent tta aid to tbe driving crowds, a dense fog "nettled like a pall over tbe city. The Mil-buhouse became a tomb of alienee. The . lights were dimmed, visitors were denied admittance, aod the ynourying fstiliy and their Intimate Yrieuds wern Speedily left alone with president . to die. About 8:30. tbe administration of oxygen censed and thn pulM grew Inter nod fainter. He was sinking gradually, Ilka n child, into the eternal slumber. By 10 oclock the pulse could no longer be felt In hla extremi ties, and they grew cold and at 3:13 ths and. which had momentarly been expected for hours, eame. be allowed withdraws. tab-ernac- ie . rUi Good bye All, Good-bye- , It is Gods Way. His Will Be Done, Were Last Words Spoken by the President in Taking Leave of Those Near and Dear to Him Chanted Words of Nearer My c INGLE IN PEOPLES MINOS. Sur-rounde- d by Family and Friends, Chief Magistrate Passed Away Saturday at 2:15 A. President McKinley died nt 3:15 SatHe had been unurday morning. 7:50 p. ra. Ills Inst conscious sim-conscious hour on earth was spent with Urn wife to whom he deroted n lifetime of cars. He died unattended by n min inter of the gospel, but bia last words were a bumble submission to the will of God, in whom he beliered. He was reconciled to tbs cruel fate to which an aasassio'a bullet had condemned him, and faced death la the name spirit of calmueM which baa marked his long nod honorable career. Tbs announcement of the death of tbs president waa made by Webb Da yea, who Mid: It la all over, ...The announcement of the news to those waiting below wu postpone until tbe members of the family bad .. " HIS WIFE SAYS GOOD-BYAfter they bad left tha sickroom the physicians rallied him to consetouo-eaa- , and the president asked almost Immedlately. Vhat hla wife be brought to him. The doctors fell,back into tbe shadows of tbo room aa Mrs. Mcklnley eame through tbe doorway. The strong faoe of tbe dying man was lighted up with a faint amileaa their bauds were clasped. - She sat beside blm and held bia hand. Despite her physical weakness she bore up bravely under tba orueal, PRESIDENTS LAST WORDS. The president. In hie last period of consciousness, which ended about 7:40, chanted the woods of the hymn Nearer My pod, toThee, and hla lMt audible words, as taken down by Dr. Maun, at the bedside, were: Good-byall, good-byIt Is God's way. Hla will be dona.? Then hla mind, began to wander and soon he completely lost consciousness, Hla life was prolonged for hours. by the administration of oxygen, and the president finally espresso t a desire to E. e, e. 1863. , la - 7. - . 1876. to eongreM la - 1878. safe-keepin- the-bnlle- TOUCHING PRIVATE FUNERAL AT MILBURN HOME, BUFFALO. : v ... ; . . . All Present, Including the New President, Greatly Affectedby Pathetic Incidents 80, ODD People Pay Respects i to Martyred President at Buffalo City Hall. -- touching private funeral was ield seemed longer, attended only by the family, close personal friends, diplomatic representatives who chanced to be in the city, government officials and representatives from the army and navy. It WM With few excepInexpressibly sad. tions those present were boubd to the dead president by ties of strong friendship. To them the loss was a personal one. About one hundred in all saw the body. Some were so overcome with grief at sight of the thin countenance, thetr frames Shook convulsively. Several clung to the side of tbe bier and with difficulty could be- - persuaded to leave. Almost every face waa The great love for this man choked all In the bouse. Senator Hanna, who had fairly worshiped hia dead friend for years, was a picture of despair. His face was set THE MARTYRED PRESIDENT. d man who could not like an ' let down the barrier of hia grief. The senator spoke to op 6ue. Hla eyes were vacant. He passed through the throng and seated himself beside Governor during-whictime' despondent resig- prominent hotel-keepe- r, visited' tbo Odell,' sitting far down into Tils chair nation had turned to faint hope, faint offices of tbo newspspers during the and retting bia head upon hla hand. hope to .expectation, expectation to early part of tbo evening with a call Daring alUhe service tbat followed he confident SMurance that tha assassin's writteaoat and signed by all three, did not etlr. bullet would not prove fatal, tha dis- stating that if there were definite news President Roosevelt came at 11 patches of Friday morning annooDciog by 10 oclock Saturday morning of the o'clock. He, too, like the man deep to ths world that ths president wm death of President McKinley, they down In hla seat against tbe wall who near death, caused a shock almost m wanted 10,000 men to meet .them In had forgotten to rise when the presigreat M tbat produced by the tragedy front of tba jell end take steps to lynch dent of tho United States entered, In Music Hall. Tbs world had gone ths anarchists con fined to the building. seemed to be restraining a great grief. to bed joyous In the belief that re- Their call met wlth bat little response, When President Roosevelt reached the covery wm certain and awoke startled although the general feeling wm with ' head of tbe line of cabinet officers, and amaaed to find the president hov- them. There were no crowds around I where a place had been reserved for ' ering ou tha brink. The world wm tbo jail or around tbe Harrison street him, he kept his face away from the unprepared for the sorrowful news, station, nor were there any indications CMkeL He appeared to be steeling but continued to hops, against reason, of any trouble. himself for s' look into the face of him tbat the advancing day would bring Tba hearing of tho application of whose death had made him the first Improvement. The tension habeas corpus in behalf of the eight raler of the world. Bat It was otherwise ordained and In the room wm great, everyone in held tbe wm Chicago jail tha greatest consolation to the stricken anarchists seemed to be waiting. The minister nation Is found in ths president's last postponed because of tbs fear of ths of tbe gospel stood with tbe Holy Rook words, It is God's way. Hi will bo police that It wm nnsafe to convey the in his band ready to begin.' Perhaps it dons. might, have been sixty seconds. It prisoners to and from jaiL JL tear-staine- tron-ville- h 1884,1836, ; Made captain July 35, 1864. Admitted to the bar in MsrcK 1867. Elected prosecuting attorney in 1869. Married January 35, 1871. Nominated for congress aod elected glad A , Born January 20, 1813. Succeeded President Garfield as chairEnlisted In Union army June 11, 188L man of way and, means committee Commissioned as lieutenant Septem- December, 18S0. to congress in 1$S0 u ber 34, 18G3. First lieutenant February. Uaagreaa Developod Aleef t onne ( Ballet- Wonuite IUS Not Healed. An sntopsv, which was held en tha president baturday uoon developed aa unexpected condition of affaire. Instead of there being no evidence of blood poisoning, as wm bnlletlned after an examination of tbe president's hours before hla blood twenty-fou- r two boise Men and waa developed death, gangrene PRESIDENT WAS DEAD. the immediate cause of death. The Bat They Ware Roughly Hudltd ay ISi result of tha autopsy is summed up aa Crowd sad hsrrwwly Kocspvd follows by the attending physicians: Bvlag Lyachod. The bullet which struck over tbe Two men came near being killed at breast bone did not pass through the Boise, Idaho, Friday night for assertskio aod did little harm. The other ing that they Were glad McKinley wm bullet passed hrough both walls of the dying. They were Alex Vaughan and stomach near its lower border. Both W. H. Cooper. The police late in the holes were found to be perfectly clornd evening smuggled the two men out of tissues around tbe but tbe stitches, by town and placed, them in the peniteneach hole had become gangrenous. tiary for After pasaiog through the stomach, Standing near the entrance to the t passed into the back walla street, Vaughan eaid be waa glad the of the sbdomen, hitting and tearing president was dying, and Cooper, his tbe upper end of the kidney. This partner, said, so am I. of the bullet's track wm alao Will Gibson, a commercial travaler portion the gangrene involving gangrenous, from Portland, waa standing doae by The bullet WM not tbe pancreas. Vaughan and struck tbe latter a blow found. tbat laid him out. An old aoldier There waa no sign of peritonitis or sprang on him and slashed him with disease of other organa The heart a knife. Tbe chief of police rescued walls were very thin. 14 Vaughan. There wm no evidence of any atA large crowd was chasing Cooper at repair on tbe part of nature when the officers canght him. With tempt resulted from the gangrene death and difficulty both men were landed in tbe which affected the stomscb around tho city jail. It wm later surrounded by bullet wounds, as well aa the tissues a great crowd prepared to do violence the further course of the balaround to the prisoners, but the police manwm uuavoidpble by any Death let. aged to get them out finally and take or medical treatment, and surgical them to a place of safety. waa tha direct result of the bullet wound. The report of the autopsy has given rise to the theory hinted at a day or two after tbe president wm shot that Czolgosz, in order to insure the accomplishment cf hia purpose, poisoned bullets were fired. The gangreuo found in tbe path of tbe bullet la thought to be strong evidence in support of this view by Dr. Wasdin, one Dr. of the consulting physicians. Wasdin is considered an expert of high standing in the marine hospital service. Ao examination of the remaining bullets lu the revolver will bo made. DIAGRAM SHOWING WHERE THE Following the precedent la the Garfield case, no inquest was held. SHOTS TOOK EFFECT. ThenXhe president at tbe Milbnrn house st Buffalo, Sun- tnrned and at the same time advanced , day, where the president died. It wm one step. President McKinleys Life Told in Brief. Made AN0 VENGEANCE BLOOD POISONING PROVED IMMEDIATE CAUSE OF DEATH. , 1988- - ' Defeated for congress in 190. Nominated tor governor in June Elected in November, 1891. 1891 In Novemlx r, 1893. Nominated for president June 1, Elected president November 3 November 6, 1900. Shot September 6, 90. Died September 14, 1901. 1898. Outline o! Funeral Arrangements for President McKinley. The arrangements for President Me Body lies in state in rotunda of capiKlnley's funeral are as follows: tal building from 11 a. nt. Tuesday to Private fuiferal at Milbnrn home, 11 a. m. Wednesday. Buffalo, Sunday at It o'clock. National faueral in rotunda of capiJ Body lies In state at City HalL Buf- tal at 13 Wednesday. noon nntil Sunday midnight falo, from Body starts for Canton, Ohio, at 1 Funeral, train leavea Buffalo for Wednesday, arriving, about 11 a. m. Washington Monday morning at 1:39, arriving at WMhlngton at 9 oclock In Thursday. Interment at Canton Thursday aftertho evening, where body It taken direct noon. to White House. He bowed bis head and looked down upon the man whose burden and responsibilities be bad taken upon himself. Long he gazed, standing immovable save for a twitching of themuseleo of the chin as he labored with heavy breath to repress bis emotion. At lMt he stepped back. A signal was given and there welled out from tbe hall the beautiful words of Lead, Kindly Light, sung by a quartette. It was President McKinleys favorite hymn. Everyone ylthin sound of the music knew i t, aod half of those. in the room put their faces in their hands to hide their tears. Comptroller Dawes leaned against a book-cas- e and ' wept. President Roosevelt seemed to be awaying to and fro as if his footing were insecure. When the singing ended the clergyman read from the words of the fifteenth chapter of the First Corinthians. All bad risen m he began and remained atandiag throughout tbe remainder of the service. Again the voices rose with the words Nearer; My. God to Thee the vsry words President McKinley had repeated at intervals o consciousness daring the day of agony before be died. As the music died away, Rsv. Charles Edward Locke offered a very touching prayer. The services closed with the Lords prayer, all present joining in. Mrs. McKinley bore the strain remarkably well. She wm in n room adjoining that in which tbe casket lay, surrounded by a few relatives and attended by Dr. Rixey. At tbe close of the services at the Milbnrn home tbe CMket wm taken to the Buffalo city hall, where the body lay in state from 13 noon until midnight, where It wm viewed by 80,000 people who filed through tbe bplldlng in a continuous stream. When were finally elosed there were thousands yet in line, anxious for a last look at the features of the beloved i dead, tL-do- ors Secretary ee Bars McKinley So Alt Man. Secretary Gage, ed of tbe death of Mid: It seems tempt to eulogize wm Bopertov - upon being informPresident McKinley like mockery to athim. In an 'active i'i met tumorDOWmenOTerof a long period, superior pow era and manifold graces, hut after five nearly years of close association with this man and a constant atndy of hla mental and moral characteristics, I have come to regard hhn in ths combined qualities which make, a man truly great m the of all men I have ever known.superior- x |