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Show COALVILLE TIMES. tiij ruiuiuJis ra UTAH. COALVILLE. MORE SOLDIERS NEEDED. Volunteer OOlrer Sev. Ooe Itoadred Tbe-anMe are Keeded la f'hllipplve. Ttu It dipol finished. it Park City Aa officer of San Francisco. Aug. now ia ooe of the volunteer rrgimi-nt- V summer hotel at Silver Aa lake la talked of. " ' Thera ia a plan on loot to build an athletic clubhouse in Salt Lake City to . ..... te Cost tts.ooo. The farmer of Deaeret declare the prospect were sever brighter for a big crop ot alfalfa aead. Last week crop bulletin reporta growing crop throughout the atate io eaoelleot eonditlon. A 13,000 city ball ia being erected in Eureka, besides many other bualneaa structure and reaideoee. Traveling salesman report buaiaaaa throughout the atate from 23 to I! per eeat better than laat year. One Salt Lake City eon tractor aaya ha baa over half a million brick a to lay within the neat few week a Early applee are ripe, aad are of better quality thl year. Ofrlng to th obeervanee of the a praying law. 8alt la being ahlpped from the bade to the eeatern market at the rate of about loo tone per week. Ralph Guthrie of Salt Lake City baa beea appelated deputy revenue collector for Utah, suoceadlng 8. D. Chaae. fiyra-eUa- BRAVE 2 : pay regard. ug the situation season of the arrival rainy vybe find the inMirreitioo as vigorous at It has been sny tune since the outbreak. The insurgents armies are well reUn-re- bu Wo I4h d the Philippines has the following to UTAH NEWS. cruited notwithstanding heavy losses and sre well fed and clothed. tl-e- They have profited by their five months of warfare against the Americana. They are fast adopting A inert-ca- n Lactlos aud are becoming better disciplined and inure skillful iu tbe use of their weapon every day 'One hundred thousand soldier should be here ready for busine-- s 1 the beginning of the dry season ia November. Garrisons could then be stationed at atrategic points. A continuous warfare cannot be carried on la tbi enervating climate by tbe same troops. Frequent relief are necessary. Troop should not be kept here longer than a yean i The a.000,000 peopl of the Philippines are a highly civilized as the 17,000,000 of Mexico. If the American people will imagine the United Ktate to have acquired Mexico against her wilt and. to be engaged in an attempt to put down a universal rebellion of the Mexicans with 20,000 troops, they will have n duplicate picture at close range of the situation in the Philippines, with the sceptloD that the climate of the i from 10 to 13 degree more Phlli-ippin- VOLUNTEERS SAN FBANClSCb. It w u lard be Tab or Three Weeks Yrf. Hever, lie tore They Ar Must-ri- al lh and Allowed so Kvtora u, t ish. -. Fan Francisco, July 81. The transport Hancock haa arrived at ss Francisco with tbe members of tiie I tab batteries on board, and was welcomed by 10.000 patriotic Californians. At 9 o'clock this morning the Lalterjuwu willleave the Hancock and inrh the l'residio, Where they will probably remain in camp iwo weeks, before being mustered out That march l!1 he a triumphal entry. . It will be made between line of madly entbniiasGc people, citizen who are antiousto Py every honor to the men who fought so gallantly and o unstably for their country. The men bad rather herd trip across, and one member of battery A, Richard Ralph, died in Nagtwki of fever. A number of tbe members f the batteries remained in Manila, those who elected to remain being F. C. Peters, Frank Bailey, John B. Roger, Charles 8. Hill, P. B, Frvdvrmka, George Brantban, Elmer Johnson, Sergeant Morris, Sergeant Charles Asplune', George Fimmoos, Charles I. Fox, Thomas Fchull, August A Rans-eouiBert Austin. Two of the men in tha foregoing list the service. The other have remained in tba islands to accept civilian positions or to go into business. Major Grant, Who waa with the gunboats which did such dam age to tha rebels in the lakes and rivers, ia in command of the returned batteries. Major Young was detained rein Manila, as bis presence quired lu tha organization of the civil courts of the island. He hM been promised that be may return home io in a few weeks, however. The Utah command was oueof the most fortunate as well as on of the bravest among tbe Americas volunteers in the islands. Its . death lit. is small .compared with that of the Nebraskans, Kansans and Oregonians, though the men from the neuest commonwealth, in the United States did more than their share of fighting, add ther was no braver body of men ia none did heavier the Philippines, fighting. Of those who were killed or died frwn other causes. Dr. Harry A. Young of battery A was the first victim. He pot beyond bis line, was taken prisoner by the 'natives. 'tortured and 'then mur- - he -- e, fso-tor- fr Rear-Admir- al 1 -- IT, is r?'" rK' ,et Miner Couriered f Murder DEATHS IX ARMY. holdBombay reports the raius-Atioff and th crops withering. ing TIES IN Arrivals at San Francisco from Cape Nome declare that district rich in gold, Total Number of Fatalltl Cp to Jan t According to ail account the experins, J ul Tbit Nmulwr S3 4r ment of using native troops in Porto OtUrerv, 99 IVivele an 14 C Rico has been successful. AiLat bed to she Arm j. Severe storms raged off the Australian coast during .June ud the early Seattle, Wash. ..July 30. The Times days of the present month. No more cases of reliow fever are prints what purport to be a full and uucensored list of fatalities In tbe reported amoug the troops or governAmerican army in the Philippines up ment employees at Santiago. to June 2. The list was furnished by Upon one scaffold and simultaneousFred J. Kite!, a representative of the ly. four negroes were hanged iu the .Manila Freedom, who claims to have Baltimore, Md., city jail yard. obtained it from the records in the surThere were 253 case and 121 deaths geon general's office at Manila. The total number of fatalities is 736 23 from the plague at Poona, lnd,a, on the 26th ulL The cases include four officers, G99 privates aud 14 civilians Europeans. attached to the army. Officials of organized labor in ChiA remarkable feature of the record ia found in the statement that the cago state that the bnckmakers strike number of officers killed in battle ia is likely to precipitate a general walk"out of all proportion to the number of out in the city. The secretary of agriculture haa deprivates killed. On tbe other hand, fewer office in died from disease, procided to change regulations recently issued for the free admission of cattl portionately, than privates. Out of the twenty-thre- e officers dead into Cuba next year. sixteen were killed in action, two were At Bratnwell, W. Va. Howard R. drowned and five died of disease, as Sanson, an emissary seeking miner follows: Typhoid, one; meningitis, two; for Missouri and Indian Territory coal rheumatism of heart, one; paralysis, fields, was fatally slabbed in tha coal ll UNCENSORED Wallaee, Idaho, July 29. Paul Corcoran has been found guilty of murder in the second degree by a jury in the district eourt for the killing of James Cheyne at YVardiier ou April & last, during the riots .when a mob of 1,000 miners blew up tnu Bunker Hill and Sullivan concentrator, and the trial judge baa imposed a sentence of seventeen years in tbe penitentiary. Corcoran's waa considered a test case, and had he been acquitted iLis improhable that any of the other 300 men who are nnder arrest would have been tried for participation in the riots aud murders at YVardoer. The trial of Corcoran consumed about ooe mouth and at traded wide attention in the United States, especially among union laborers. Tba jurymen were from adistant portion of tha country and consisted of farmers and miners. Hundreds of witnesses were examined and both the state and the defence were represented by able counsel.. Judge Stewart ha act the trials of Graddock and Inman on a charge of murdering Fchmidt and Cheyne, for September 4. KILLED BY COMRADES. Aaaarica' Oaljr Traitor la tbs Thlllpplaaa a Tragi Death. Mt Kansas City, July 29. The tragio scene which attended the death of Corporal Leonard F. Hayes, America's only traitor in tha Philippines, wan witnessed by Sergeant George A. Lamarsh of company II, Twentieth Kansas volunteers, now in this city. Sergeant Lamarsh went to the Philippines with the Second Oregon regiment fourteen month ago. Corporal Hayes, he says, became enamored of a Filipino beauty and, deserting his comrades, waa placed in charge of a Filipino battery, He met with the rank of lieutenant. his death in almost the first engagement in which bu fought against his country: Speaking Of this battle, Sergeant Lamarsh said: We had charged the Filipinos, driving theip buck and killing and wounding many. Among the wounded on the field was Hayes. He was recognized by several of the boys. One of the soldiers of the Second Oregon drove bis bayonet through the body of the traitor and lifted him up above hie head and held him there while the The body was soldiers shot him. thrown into a trench and buried with We would have several Filipinos. treated him worse if we had known him. Cblcag " NEWS SUMMARY. la th Wtwd REACH Utah honey recently ahlpped to the tropical than that of Mexioo. astern market brought A cent per WAR IS EXPENSIVE. pound in advance of the market price, Utah haabcea favored with continuFor July Was 10.SOO.OOt, ous warm weather thia month aad the F.ipsndUars This Mouth. Which Will be different resorts are reaping a harvest. 2. The monthly Washington, Aug. On the 22nd ult. a killing froat visstatement of the government receipts A snowstorm during ited Park City. and expenditure shows a deficit for this month would not Surprise e&oia of of about 88,518.000, which is July the Parkitea slightly in excess of the estimate made Winter wheat, rye and barley are by tbe officials one month ago. being harvested and threshing has comTh total receipt for the month will menced. Winter wheat ia making a be about 1411,054,250, as follows: From lighter yield than laat year. internal revenue, 9 .,322, 314; customs, The guano deposits on Gunnison Is- 110,071,434; miscellaneous, 22,700,220. land were inspected recently by the Tbe expenditures will amount to Internal revenue will representative of an English syndicate 930,573,000. which contemplates Investing. show an Increase of about Sl.ooo.ooo. ' Peter Kaudacn, aged 77, committed For July", 1898, the total receipts wera suicide at Frisco by hanging. He was' 43,847,108. The expeoditurvs during afflicted with a malignant cancer and theasme month were 874. 203. 475, showing a deficit of about 930,200,000, preferred death to his sufferings, . During that montkthe expenditure A number of valuable and handaoma on account of the War alone were of Utah minerals were last specimens week shipped toParia and will be ea about 8.33,000,000,' which amount haa Wen' reduced' to'aimut 819, joo,oo0 for exhibition at the great exposition, Aha month, Just dosing, .. , k4 expected that the ex eiidisures i alive of bu, amt both related) Major frellog JubiAxa wrr Sit Aararabia re- during the month of Angnat will be Y'ouog, who commanded MUtsb arports from Washington concerning the quite heavy on account of the payment tillery, waa killed at San&Mess. grating of sheep on the forest reserve. of returning volunteers and the cost of William Goodman of the attery waa Brlant Wetenkainp.aged IV w killed on the same day h that enTquiplog and sending out others. - - gagement. ' ' iaatantly killed by street eir la Salt Ford killed so wail! Fisher Sergeant Lake City while playing on the track, FIGHT WITH FILIPINOS. in an engagement at Fan Saeon. hia head being crashed, .The boy waa Four members of battery! died of Two Mm Killed aad Sis Sickness, Cororal George partially deaf and did not see or hear Americas Loee Larson, ' " Wounded. " the approaching car, Corporal John T. Kennedy and Prl vates Diaries Parson amlOA. Plain-ge- r. A sample of ora from the Martha Manlls.Aug. 3. After concentrating Washington mins will be seat to the their force for two days the Filipino Battery I! lost in killed k engageParis exposition that will make the Sunday morning attacked Calamba, ments Fritz llumiller, lorpoai 0. Jensen aud Max Mitiliiou Gere Hudson ayeajsthe Frenchtnemrnter, assaying the town on Laguna dc Jlay capture waa kllleiLdtiriug a riot if tavTte beaa it does (117.01 ounces silver, ft gold by General Uall Wednesday. The enfore actual hostilities had broken tfut nod I per cent lead to the ton. gagement last an hour and the Filipi- between the Americans aid insurThe new sugar factory so anxiously no were driven off, carrying away gents. ne was simply iniinkred during the row, without' cau-Richard looked for by the Gunnison people I an their dead and wounded. The AmeriRalph died at the hospital at SagaaakL assured fact. The San pete 'a od Sevier can force lost two men killed and six DENOUNCE OTIS. valley people will this Season ship ten wounded. A of Sixth the company carloads of anger beets to the Lehi infantry, y i ffurirr f tte commanded by Captain Simpson has Cth ItlnntBfri Hcore experimental purposes. Philippine hrr9. had ad encounter at Babalynos, the Fan Francisco, Aug i -- The enlisted The Industrial Home in Fait Lake west coast of the island of Negroa, with men of the Utah batteries, dqw in Fan City, erected by the government at a a rebel force. The latter loat eighteen Francisco, are not cost of 135,000 aa n borne for plural saying many wordk men killed. Thera were no casualties ' in praise of Gen Otis wives who were desirous of giving up on tha American aids. We used to he out on tiiering their j polygamous relation' and who Rnni. -ji 11 line and wish Otis would come had no meant of anbsiatence, la to ba along, 6UEB EOR PRIZE MONEY. but he never rime, said onei,Every sold. we got the niggers surrounded time Admiral Sampson luslltutss Actios orders would come from Otis to withSecretary Wright of the atate board Waahliigtoa Courts. draw. of horticulture says Utah can produce hy, tlie I tali batteries captured one town seven time. It could Washington, Aug. 2. very pound of every variety of grapes William T. Sampson haa filed in the have driven tbe Filipino into th required for local markets at every sea-eo-n but whenever we ?0t them court of the District of Co- ocean, where supreme of the year during which it la poswe wanted them Otis right lumbia a suit la hi own behalf and called us off. sible to obtain the supply from either also in behalf of th officer and enWe captured hio miles of California or Arisons. railroad, listed men of the ship of tha North and today the niggers are ia possesRumor has it that the Rio Grande Atlantio station who took a 140 sion of mile of It partin the a horsethief when he saidotisitedlike Western will build n magnificent sum- - naval tb volnn-ie.c- r off and engagement Santiago, anxious u. star ia Manila. Wef hotel la the heart of Provo the canyom subsequent capture for prize money. They did not waut to stay stall and Bridal Veil Falla ia Uhe stated as The suit la similar to that recently en- Oti knew it. 1 hope they will send the chosen site, and would prove so tered by Admiral Dewey la the same somebody out to take his nl, right Ideal spot for the summer tourists and court away. No matter n ho they hei bound to be an iuipnoe.neut send, on Otia. general public. ' An unusually large acreage of wheat HAVE JOINED JHE ARMY. l.loutenaat Wa Safe has been underbuilt ration thiayearon I Salt Lake tab Au? j. Relity Hem. the dry farms in Davis county, and Keatarky readlat Will Arrowplleh cent advices rented by Governor blag by righting Now. although the yield will not be so heavy London, Kyi, Aug. 2. Robert and Wells from bis lu other. aa laat year, the qnality la excellent Carl Baker, two well known characters Harvesting is about over and threshing who have figured prominently in the will Vagin in a few days. - Howard-llake- r feud iu Clay county, The country storekeepers cleaned out have enlisted in tbe United States their stocks early in the year and have army. They left here laat Uin of wunpant II. and now he is fill night for j been buying heavily recently on terms Fort Thomas. Robert Baker '"Ion-.b'- e was , post of regimental more favorable than heretofore a lack quart-riuast-w,ih hi encommand the paygjjowed to ofthe placed troops rasulting from th increased money in Bated here, acventy ia number, many cP,ail,s flic n.ilUnt tonng officer 1 destined to recede a circulation among the. farmers-an- d of whom ware Clay county boy promotion miners ofthe state. to regnlar 'DECLARE FOR REVOLUTION. Davi county is fortunate in the matOcen.1 I e, I .rikm ter of orchard product thi year, aa I'roetsasalle t be Made la Xante hew York, tug pomlng m j j y P- apples, I JtmlnmL. plums and grapes will litor of wealthy sggar of 'Honolulu, yield abundantly, and the peach crop, Cap Haitien, Haiti, Aug. 2. From la In the my According to Mr Egan, a failure in most sections, will be aldispatch just received from a reliable Gemral Eg,tt of the most as good a ever before. The May source, it la learned that b revolution United Slates army, w ho is visiting hi froat did but little damage. will be proclaimed today or tomorrow on in the Hawaiian wlaiui,. u Three young men while th republic oLBsito Domingo. lu of in rowing 'insioo Utah lake succeeded ia capsizing their favor of Don Juan Jaidor Jimiues. Aiv MvK,0f wlthU boat, and but for prompt assistance cording to thia dispatch the entire the next few weeks a,,,, to return t from th shore th entire party would western portion of the republic baa de- the head of the commissary departhave drowned. Aa it was clared in favor of h ment; and Ins la Jlininez, that they had a awsjviiMon is only Wm- close pall for their lives, and will row tha only candidate for the presidency iK' to t recalled of rest the the country. throughout recklessly in the future. t nited Mat t any minute. , CORCORAN eyiLTY. UTAH SOLDIERS HOME Sausage Maker Thu r Murdered "HlaWtftHDHit Joliet. 111., July ?9. Adolph L. Luetgert, the wealthy Chicago sausage maker, who was servings lifesentence the penitentiary here for tlie mur- v der of his wife, was found dead in Iiisi ceil yesterday. Drs, Werner and OMalley held a post mortem exaintna- tion. Dr. O'Malley says Luetgert died from fatty degeneration of the heart. Dr. OMalley found-tha- t the heart was surrounded by a great idbss of fat and that it was really surprising, consid-inthe condition of the heart, that death had not come long before tins The trial of Luetgert in Chicago attracted wide attention, and was one ofthe most sensational in the history of the state. Luetgert was charged with having murdered his wife in the basement of his factory and cooked the body in a vat. The prosecution had but a few small bones and two rings as evidence that their theory was correct, but secured conviction and a life sentence. g TO TUNNEL UNDER BUTTE. one. Of the LIST'OF FATALIPHILIPPNES. fields. 699 privates, died of wounds received in action, nine were killed accidentally and twenty-thre- e were drowned; seven committed 106 died of typhoid.eighty-nin- e of of dysentery, smallpox, forty-seve- n twenty-eigh- t of pneumonia, nineteen of malarial fever, and fourteen of meningitis. The remaining seventeen died from various diseases. Of the fourteen deaths among civilians seven were from smallpox and three from gunshot wounds received In action. 294 sui-sid- e; F. L. Stocking, assistant postmaster at Tacoma. Wash., has been appointed l of posts at assistant Manila. He will be next in Tank to director-genera- Direcjor-Gener- Vaille. mortgage for 817,000,009 given by the writing paper trust tequired internal revenue stamps to the amount of 88,500, which were placed upon it and, cancelled. Jeffords, the San Francisco heavyweight pugilist, who is now inPort-lanOr- e- has practically conolnded for a fight with Peter Jack negolation QUIET IN SAMOA. son, who ia now iu Victoria, B. C. r Both Htlsafs and Malietoa featleflad With The anthracite companies announce Present Arrangements. that all orders for coal at prices prior San Francisco, July 30. Chief Justo July 1, not filled on Jniy 31, will tice W. L. Chambers of Samoa arrived be filled at an advance of 25 cents per here on tbe steamer Moan a, accomton which will then go into effect. panied by bis famijy. He is on a four Twelve Spanish gunboats recently months leave of abs&me, but says that his business in tbe United States is of put on blockade duty have done resuch a nature that he will probably markably good service in cutting off not return to Apia. In an interview supplies for insurgents between the different islands of the Philippine tlie chief justice said: All is now quiet in Samoa, but I grou p. cannot answer for the future. Both It is the intention of the war departMataafa and Malietoa affect to be satment to aend all cavalry horses to the isfied wilh the present arrangement, Philippines by way ot Unalaska and wl ioh abolishes the office of king and Nagasaki so that they may be taken vests the responsibility of government off the 'ships at both these pTaiies 'and in the consult of the three powers. I given, rest. feel sure Malietoa is sincere in this, James M. Garlintoo, alias DarlingThough fairly elected, and after elec-i- n ton, was hanged at Fort Worth. Tex. Mon accepting the kingship, he never Qarlington was the leader of a band hati MinUitious in that direction. Aa i n as the commission arrived he who on the night of July 21, 1898, robbed a Santa Fe railroad train near proposed to resign, a spirit which later proved to lie in accord with the plans bawinaw. of the commissioners, and I have every By the assassination of President reason to believe he will live up to his Heanreux of San Domingo, Cuba may bargain. lose ona of Its central figures, as it ia Mataafa is ambitious. For many well known that General Maximo Goyears he lias thirsted for power and mez aspires to the presidency of the will not be so easily satisfied. At tbe black republic. same time he is a man of exceptional Albert Ballinger, whh is in the reability, is shrewd, and I have never hospital, San Fruogisco, awaitthought the interests of the natives ceiving as to his sanity, is unexamination ing would especially suffer in his hands. der confinement because fhis.wild BOYS HORRIBLY TORTURED. wooing of Blanche Bates, the S&a Francisco actress. Lads Kusper ted of Theft Treated With Incredible Brutality. At Westchester, Pa., a revolting murLondon, July 30. The Berlin corre- der has come to light. It is alleged spondent of the Daily News telegraphs Mrs. Fannie Stevenson, colored, a story taken from a Tiflis paper of rrushed her infants head with aa ax incredible brutality in the work of a and then threw the body to some h devoured it, Belgian iron company in the Caucas-suAccording to the story a number Charles Walfangle, of Brazil, Ind., of lads who were suspected of theft became suddenly violently insane, and were horribly tortured by the Belgian with a hatchet chopped his two daughtdirector and six Belgian foremen, with er and wife to death while hey were view of forcing a confession. The He then took a knife and lads eyelids were pierced with needles, sleeping. cut hi own throat. their bodies were savagely belabored General Roy Stone, director of road until they lost consciousness their teeth were extracted, large stones inquiry of the department of Agriculwei forced into their mouths and ture at Washington, who is in New their foreheads were hammered with York, says that moreactivitr la being the butts of revolvers. The public displayed in road improvement than baa been shown for years. prosecutor is now making an investiThe Privy council of England gation into the affair. in the case of Briden vs. the decided UNCLE SAM MAY INTERFERE. Union Colliery company that the province of British Columbia hai not tbe Likely to Have Io Aid Seeurloc Peace I KBlo)l)omlQ0. power to prohibit Chinese working New Y ork, July 30. General Aber-lai- d underground in coal minea. A. Moaoosco, an exiled leader of A gooJ deal of surprfse haa been tha Liberal party of Santo Domingo, caused in official circles in Washington now living in Naw York says: The oy the unexpected opposition devalop-in- g ilfath of President Heureaux will, I in Franc to the ratification of tbe think, be followed by a long atate of reciprocity disorder and revolution. 1 want to em- Mr. K asson treaty just negotiated by and it. Gambon. phasise thia prophecy, that the United Notice haa been given in tbe state States will be compelled eventually to interfere to reestablish peace in the department at Harrisburg, Pa., that an application for a charter for the Amer island, just aa thia country did in Cuba. lean Iron and Steel Manufacturing AMERICAN BRITISH ALLIANCE. company will be made on August X6. " The capital will be 930,000,000. Bsilev CosfldM On Hat Cwi(n The fifth liTennial convention ofthe Lntertd iuto, World Woman's Christian TemperHouston, Tex .July 30. Congretsmxn ance union, it ia announced, will meet J. W. Bailey aaya: I am fully that th national administra- In Edinburg, Scotland, Monday, Jon The executive committee tion baa entered into a full and com- 25. 1900. will be beld on Friday, June plete agreement for an alliance between meeting ; Great Britian and tha United States. 22. Thia alliance, in my opinion, ia to be cabl Major Max field has laid both offensive and defensive. I think across Lagan de Bay from Tagnig to the reason it ha not been published Calamba, the last town to be captured to the world is that for political rea- from tbe ioanrganta. , This insure unson tbe president is afraid to do aa interrupted telegraph communications between Manila and the advanced posts. A d, j hogs-whic- Blf Company Organized to Dig For Copper t oiler Montana'a Mining Center. Butte, Mont., July 29 A mining company under the same of the Smokehouse Copper Mining company has been organized here for the purpose of tunneling nnder the entire city for copper ore. Tbe organization of the company was brought about through a settlement of a litigation which has been going on for many years and involving the Smokehouse, destroying Angel and Copper Bottom mining claims which cover the principal parts of tlie city of Butte. The importance of the new company is regarded as second only to that of the Amalgamated Copper company-'-. James A. Murray, the millionaire tit banker, and other capitalists are head of tbe company, which starti mt with a capital stock of 81,500.000. 1 1 HELP FROM JAPAN. ssd lurul-he- d to Filipino Jinuirgrnt, Manila, July 25. It is reported in MafiU that the insurgents recently received consignments of saltpetre and lead from Japan. The insurgents had been experiencing many difficulties in the manufacture of good powder, that which they produced lacking power of penetration aod range. Saltpetre Lend - Mormon Koleta MatolteiL Covington, ba., July 29, Three Mor inuu elders w hose names are at .this timo unknown, were mobbed by thirty whitecappers in Newton county and were taken away by the mob and bav not been seen or htfard from since. The supposition is that the elders were iyiu.hed,'hut this bus 'hot' been confirmed because of the remoteness of the Tha scene from a telegraph office. elders were stopping at the homu of illihin Cunnard w hen the mob callecF fnr thero.Tbe elder resisted and 1 tight ensoed, during which Mr. Cun 'teid was fatally wounded. -- Y a. hs 1 -- Ba per-auad- -- |