OCR Text |
Show T -- t - 1 ! COALVILLE TIMES. times rrsutfiitia co. COALVILLE. UTAH. AGULYAhbOS APPEAL ASKS THE POWERS TO RECOGNIZE FILIPINO INDEPENDENCE. Dacians Ika HU raepte 11 ton-- am . tba Nat.r!futj of tha l.taaila Treat Sysla Hafora tire Klfsls ef tka T roily of Faria. n UTAH NEWS. Considerable interest t being manifested la the coming state fair. Major Grant declare it M bis opln-o- s that General Oils h&i managed the ampaiga la the Philippine sxtremly welL tbe plan And ipeeiflcation university buddings going forward with commendable Work fthe o'o fun ratals peed. Manila. Aug. Agpinaldo has to the power for recognition of Filipino independence, In s document dated from Tsrisc, July 27, sud signed by liueucsinibio. It has been received by all the foreign consols in Manila, with the request thy t they forward it to their, respective govern-lueu- t. The Filipinos use their old argument had conquered the sovereignUtah apple are now on the market, that they ty of these islands from Spain before r bey are superior in size and quality that have yet been im to any of those ported. The Utah A Pacific ha finished work , the tension to the Utah line the. last apike being driven at noon on luly 31, The (laughter of Alfred flatea of American Fork drank aqnaB' tiiy of lye and is dead after eight month' suffering, A cloudburst at Ferron on the 29tb alt, did considerable damage to grow Ing crops and the light bridges serosa the email streams. The city council of Gnndiaoa baa let a contract for tba construction of a city hall to cost 11,000, and to be completed by November 20. The school enumerators of Provo here finished their labors add find In that city 2.173 children of school age, 1,094 boys and 1,079 girls Yonng dueju are pientlfnl in the kloughs along the lake, and tba game warden 1 having a hard tima keeping the lad front slaughtering and trap-pin- g ld the little felloe a The seventeen month drought in Dixie baa been broken by one of tba finest rainfall known in years, an4 everyone feels jubilant a the outlook la now Indeed promising. Complaint come from portion of lieever. Iron, Garfield and Sevier counties that potatoes doing well; the plants teem to be going to tope at the expense of the tubers. A Salt Lake cattle buyer last week purchased 1,000 bead of cattle from Oregon parties, the bovine, representing a cash value of about 920,000, being shipped to Salt Lake City. Extensive preparations era being "made for the reception of. the volunteer at every town and hamlet la the. state. The dsy of their return will be holiday aod day of rejoicing generally. August 2nd was observed as Iceland day at Spanish Fork by about 600 Icelanders, who sang Iceland songs and made IcCLnd speeches to their heart eonteaLTl'he day eloaed with a banquet and balk Tba Black Hawk Veterans will hold their annual camp-fir- e at the Provo lake resort, August 24, 33 aod 20. Inwill vitations to attend the camp-fir- e ware now In TTlab. State Auditor Richard has made the discovery that for the past year an illegal method hae been pursued la the certification to tba auditor of the amounts to be paid by the state for juror and witness fees and mileage. Some miscreants recently stole 1,500 feet of eopper wire from the Salt Lake City Street Railway company, which la valued at 9132. The cars had been discontinued on the line lu question, bet. the poles and wire had not been taken down. the signing of the treaty of Paris, and therefore Spain was in no position to cede them to the United States. They argue that the possession of the 7.000 Spanish prisoners, captured with their arms fighting against the Filipinos is eloquent proof of the nullity of the (Spanish sovereignty, uj when they surrendered .Spain a hold was Irrevocably lost The document says "Replying to the Spanish commissions request to release the prisoners because hpsin no longer has poll tied I interests in the islands, nr asked for s treaty of peace and friendship between Spain and the Filipinos, whereby the prisoners would be released, but the commissioners refused, because it would mean recognition of our independence. This is equiveiept to saying that the prisoners must stay. in our hands indefinitely, because their possession is our most efficacious method to adjust our account with Spain and obtain from here recognition of independence. The Filipinos .claim that they conquered alt the country except Manila, and that they in aecuring the latters capitulation by surrounding it at the cost of thousands of lives. They also claim they conquered the country unassisted except for sixty guns that Admiral Dewey gave Agui. naldo, and that Aduilma! Dewey and the Rritisb and Belgian eonsula recog. nized the Filipino sovereign ty by asking for passes to visit the country, They claim that they have letters from American consuls and generals recognizing their sovereignty and promising that the Americans would which recognise their independence, was at the disposition of the power. Tha Filipino attempt to make capital of the atatemeot that Admiral Dewey had confidence that Agninalda would observe and fulttMthe rates 'of war, that he gave him loo Spanish prisoners which the American navy had captured. Finally, the Filipinos appeal to the power to Influence Washington to bring to a termination the unjust war which la devastating the country. BAN JUAN HERO SLAIN. Two Fort Douglas Trooper Deoil o tho Result of quarrel. Fait Lake City, Utah, Aug. 9. Private William II. Carter, the mao who killed desperado Jack Thomas at the Duchesne strip, last evening between TTiudir'imoekkbot tuiTfe tiled First HIS WISH GRATIFIED, Da wy WtH FaN l(lain A Maalls a. BZAR TO ABDICATE. 'YAQUI INDIANS ARE PREPARED FOR A DESPERATE CONFLICT. Fraoehmaas ZUilUif Story Besatdlng th Eutixaror of K u,i. London. Ang. 6. M. de Biowitz, the Paris correspondent of the Times, gives an extraordinary explanation of M. dei He asserts Cease's present mission that it was decided upon quite sudden' ly for a reason which admitted of no delay. and then gives the story, which say ha has it from a source to which I am bound to attach importance. This I the explanation: Emperor Nicholas is disappointed and tired of the throne The absence of an heir excites his superstitious feeling end he eutrtiects h i uisei t with Russian itgend, according to which aa heirlesa Czar is to be succeeded by a Czar Michael, predestined to occupy The death of the Constantinople. Czarowitch and the failure of the conference at The Hague led hint to de cide to abdicate, and on the occasion of his coming visit to Darmstadt. On this becoming known in Parti. M. del Casse was sent in hot haste to dissuade him from carrying out this intention. Washington. Aog. 9. Anjntrtlng historical fact dated back to 1)73 has come to light in which Admiral pewey A Dotonataod u Ktnm Tbetr Uat Coos try, d Will lUU Everybody wa the central figure.- - Deweyy then Fused la the Umltaof Their a commander, was in command f the Old United States steamer Narragaaett on the Asiatic station, having taken Austin, Texas, Aug. 8. A special 1873. charge of the vessel on March from Terrazas, Chihuahua, Mexico, Tha vessei waa ou surveying duty when the Virginue trouble we preciptated says:It is going to take the Mexican govand a war with paip seemed immiernment a long time and a big force of nent. to quell the rebellion. Tbe Commander Dewey wrote to le navy troops are better now than Yaquia department requesting. h 6, ease everbefore for a prepared longattu bloody camwar was declaredhe should be Jsigned to th duty of capturing Manila; The paign. They are all well fixed financially, nearly all of them having saved peace settlement of the contmversy tha 3 ,00 per head which the Mexican with Spain avoided the necessity for a government paid them when they hostile demonstration, but the interthe treaty of peace two year signed la feet that the esting doughty officer had hia eye on Manila orer a Quarter ago. They have been making money since then, too, and it is known to be of a century ago. j a fact that have been laying in A search will be made for the letter big suppliesthey of arms and. ammunition file in the of the navy department and if found it is expected an affort will be for some time past. It has been common talk among mac by the citizen's eotpmlttee to have it reproduced aa a souvenir of tha the American prospectors in the Yaqu that the Indians were preparing reception to be tendered Admiral valley for another outbreak, but as the braves Dowry upon hi arrival here, i have always shown a friendly spirit KILLED IN RACE RIOT. toward the Americans, it was thought that they would not molest them when Pitched Haiti Betwma Mtnw ssd Whll they did go on the warpath. Maa la Bvath Carolina. t "They are determined to recover all Greenville. S. C.. Aug. 9.A nice riot lost country, however, and will their occurred at the Poe cotton mill, near kill anybody they find within the thi place, in which one white man limits of their old possessions. and five negroes were wounded. The special also reports that a numEarly in the evening several aegroe ber of miners and ranchers in and near fired Into the home of Mr. Gteenberg, Cocorl had been slain and their propa mill operator, while he and his famlaid waste. erly ily were at supper. No one waastruck OVER A SCORE DROWNED." by the ahoCs, but Greenberg and hia friends followed the negroes, capturing Two Hititrrt Eirnralnnlits Tarawa Into the leader. Ile was taken to JalL ths Wator by tfeaklug of (tan Flank. Reports were circulated among the Bar Harbor, Me., Aug. 8. A score of negroea tbit he had been lynched, and persons were killed by the collapse of 300 of them appeared at the mills. tbe gang plank of the Mount Deseret Messengers summoned white men ferry. Seventeen were drowned and from Greenville, and a pitched three died from the terrible experience battle ensued. Ben Odom was the only of immersion in the water and injuries white man wounded. The names of the five negroes are unknown, aa tlier whfle struggling for life. The Maine were immediately taken off by friends. Central railroad had run an excursion Quiet prevails today. to Bar Harbor. At Mount Deseret WOMAN AT THE BOl fOM OF IT. ferry, the terminus of the line, the train is left for the boat, for an eighteeA Self-Prnano Salat Believed to Ht n-mile sail to Bar Harbor. Stirred Ip Yequl Indiana, From the wharf a slip or gang plank, El Paso, Tex., Aug. 9. Santa Teresa, forty feet long and ten feet wide ran a Mexican woman who has long been out to the boat; tbe slip was hinged at revered aa a saint by the natives of the inner end and was raised or lowChihuahua and Sonora, and who it be- ered to suit the tide. lieved to possess the power of healing When the excursion train from Banthe sick by th laying on of lands. Is gor arrived at tba ferry there was a believed to be responsible for to Hk lar tba stwamer Sappho. Th first break atneng the Vaqm India. few passenger bad crossed, tbe Santa Teresa was implicaud In tha plank safely and it ia estimated 'gang that outbreak when the custon house at 20 people were massed on the plank. Palomas, Chihuahua, was raided, a few The long timbers supporting tbe plank year ago. Every rebel captured had a broke in the middle. The hinges held of woman in the picture blspoaresalon, up one end and the chain the other, and on the back of the picture was while the broken ends of the plank one of her prayers The government made every effort to capture dropped and a struggling, screaming her, but ahe escaped and lias since been mass of humanity was plunged into living with and under the protection of the water fifteen feet below the wharf. the Yaqui. She is described aa frail Many were taken from the water unand delicate looking, but possessing conscious and were revived with diffigreat magnetic power. culty. FOUGHT A SABER DUEL. FORTY PEOPLE KILLED. Hfrr Wolf, Notorious (torinai Rtdleal, v a. jrujjy 11 Vienna, Au 9 A aensatfoQaltftber duel was fought between Herr 'Wolf, the notorious German radical member of the Keiehsrath, and Iierr Krzekep, a German Liberal deputy It was A furious encounter. Iierr Wolf received a wound in the heed, severing an artery. The doctors declared him incapable of continuing the duel, but be persisted though his face was bathed in blood. Ultimately he sustained a second wound in the head and was carried home in adaugerouscondition. The duel arose from Herr Krzekep accusing Iierr Wolf of alnays answering political attacks by fighting duels against incapable antagonists Twrutynlne Killed t Hrldftport. Bridgeport. Conn , Aug y Twenty-nin- e persons were killed in the trolley car accident at Oronoque Sunday. Of the dozen iujured only three are in A aerious condition Examination of tha trestle and the wrecked car by tbe coroner jury and engineering experts showed that the strut ture was perfectly sound, but that t lie n ovdrostxlngttrA ,JBnnunlLCnity and encountered and outside W the rail were too low to serve N, J. Lindsey defeated a Forest Stillman, and Filipino force of fi.ohffmen. aa guard rails that the flanges of th has come into possession of 7,000 acres The enemy retreated, leaving many car wheels were unbroken and the la Davis county. dead aod wounded. The American loss brake set. The crank was turned to shut off the current An action ha been brought in Halt In killed and wounded was twenty Lake Cltv to declare Thomas Madden Twriitv klllfHl at ltr llsrhtr. . Boers Freporlag for W r. dead. Madden disappeared In 18tr Ur. Me , Aug -- A earrful Bar.Ilai leaving 31,000 In tha hands of a friend London, Ang. 1L The Daily Mall for investment, and now his relatives bv divers in the' examination the vicinity following dispatch from want tha money distributed among publishes Mount of Desor. t f, rry slip, themselves. According to the statutes Johannesburg: By a special article Of Sunday nec'dent, and investigation Madden is dead, having absented himadded to the grondwe (the constitution self for seven years. of the Transvaal) the president Is au- on shore up to to clot k this morning, Robert Cobley, aged 16, was kitled thorized, in event of war, rebellion or seem to indicate tli.it the twenty vicin a peculiar man uer on the 31sL lie other emergency, to proclaim martial tims repo i ted Just. night are ail who had gone to the station for the mail law and to compel every inhabitant of perished a a result of the catastrophe. and aat down under tha mall-ba- g and the republie to bear arms in its de- Mr Nuithard of Bangor who was sefell asleep. --The arm of tha car reached fense, Th Pretoria fort are being riously injured, i not likely to recover but for the bag, and in returning to its atrenglhened and Boer agents kre buy- and two other persons are (.offering I he olhef, jD;urci ing up all tba available draught oxen from pneumonia place struck him in tha head. are in a favoiaitle foutnuon It Is told that a Provo joker slipped in Beuhuanaland. Hot Keteptl,,,, a pair of Texas steer horns over tha Hbot Shipped to Japan. torjmJ,, Puerto Plata, S.iu Ihmnngo, tba horns of his neighbors Jersey cow 9.- 8an Francisco, Aug. 10. The City of Senor Alverez. the minister ofAug. one dsy last week, and when the neighPeking, which sailed on Saturday fur finance, bors wife wen tout to milk she gave Hongkong, by way of Honolulu and and Scnor ( ordero wh loosen, went Monte Crist,. jestgrOavv-Theaa exhibition of what awotoaa looked - Yokohama;-too- k y among her cargo 3I untte.1 there with Ton men' like with tha 440 pounds of shot, the first shipment who bad Richard H. Ralph, who died from of the kind ever mad to Japan. In been assembled in behalf of th, governtyphoid fever while e route home addition, there were 107,660 pounds o(f ment for the maintenance of order. from the Philippines, enlisted with plg lead and 34,758 pounds of sheet Armed steamers are watching the tha Utah battery from Eureka. Us lead. Just to what use thia rather un- coast to prevent the landing of Any was bora in Cornwall, England, Januusual shipment la going to be put ia Insurrectionary cx petit. Jo. ,honld ,ucb a thing be attempted. Th and had lived 1873, 1, in tba Tlotio ary noiknown, but it may be Intended to governor district for a number of years, whert smuggle it Into Manila for the use of of Monte ( risto has 3,tXK men under Arms for the he had an excellent record. .. preservation of pce, Agninaldo and bis army. s. ' ' I ' t Fla iir -- - " n Trmtlr, Falling Forty Feet. Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 8 Nearly forty persons were killed by an accident on the Stratford extension of the Shelton Street Railway company, when a loaded trolley car went off the trestle over Peeks mill pond at Oronoque about six miles north of Bridgeport, and sank in the flats forty feet helow Ttana far thirty-si- x persons are known to be dead. Only two persons are known to have escaped unharmed. It ia believed that there were forty-thre- e passengers on the car, but the indicator was removed by a conductor of another ear and spirited away, so that at present it ia impossible to state accurately the number aboard. The trestle i 440 feet long, made of iron, with stone foundations, and was not protected by guard rails. South of the trestle an incline, down which the car ran at a high rate of speed. After it ran on the trestle for about ten feet, the tracks left the rails, then tba ear continued oa ths ties About seventy-fivfeet, when it went off the trestle and dropped into the pond below,- overturning completely and upending. Special Train For Wyoming Boys. Laramie, IVyo., Aug. 8. The citizens-o- f this city have gathered together over 9000, which will be used for the benefit of the returning Wyoming volunteers. It baa been proposed to charter a apecial train and bringthe heroes borne from San Franciseo free. Tba soldiers have fongbt gallantly, and it seems a pity that they should be compelled to spend the laat of their money for railroad tickets to reach home. The fund ia rapidly growing and a apecial train will undoubtedly be chartered.- -. 1 e Slaw Bln Wtfo nod Blmaotf. Dunsmuir, Cal., Aug. A This quiet village was the scene of a doable tragedy Saturday evening, when Henry Rrowtu A JnDl. sawyer. shot hiawife and then himself, both expiring immediately. Their dead bodies were found lying aide by aid on tbe road. Mrs Brown had left her husband A year ago, and since th separation they bad not met until tbe day of the tragedy, when Brown, meeting bit wife on the atreeta, after a few reproachful word, murdered her and himself. NEWS SUMMARY. A j Roth men Sergeant John Jackson. were colored soldiers stationed at Fort Jackson had given Carter an Douglas, order, which he refused to obey, whereupon the sergeant ordered Carter to the guard house. He stared for his bunk, presumably to get his blankets, but came back armed with a rifle and shot Jackson twice, the last shot passing through hla heart Carter then made a break for liberty, but was soon followed by twenty or thirty of his fellow soldiers, determined to avenge the death of the sergeant, and a pitched battle ensued, in which Carter redehas Putnam County Attorney rided to file a charge of murder la the ceived seven or eight wounds, one balfirst degree against llenbrook, the let passing through his neck sad killhim Instantly. slayer of Hurt Morris, despite the fact ing that the committing magistrate had BATTLE WITH FILIPINOS. held him for the leaver crime of manOaneral MaeArthar Fsreas Eng Largs slaughter. Body ef Rebels. The Union Pacific land department Manila, Aug. 10. General MacAr has recently sold Jjjho 11. White 3,337 thur'a forces, consisting of 4,000 men, scree near Salt Lake; 3.039 acres of advanced five miles beyond Rap laud. h.aa been sold to jim-jam- LONG WAR PREDICTED Governor Tanner of Illinois is Spending tbe week in Yellowatone Park. Two of the assassins of President neureaux haye bcen eaptured and abet-T- he yellow fever aitnation at the Soldiers' Home at Hampton ia much improved. Three yonng men and their team train on a crossing at Humboldt, Iowa; There ha been a general advance of from 15 to 25 per cent in the price of lumber since July 1. Charles Yager of Brandt, Pa., while temporarily insane," murdered his three children and suicided. Richard Crocker was among the passengers on the 8L Paul, bound from Southampton to New York. Miss Frankie George, an actress, shot herself, in Chicago, because she had been jilted by One of her profession. There were seventh-eigdeaths from yellow fever at Vera Cruz, Mexico, in the last week of Jqne, and only seventeen deaths in the last week of July. BEATEN BY STRIKERS. Among tbe bridge orders in the market are eight bridges for Japan. Frumlosut Cleveland Clllim Who Rod on They were designed by American conn Boycott wl Car. sulting engineers. Cleveland, 0 , Aug. 6. The fact has Tbe first and onlv national bank outMolcome to Lucius F, light that just side of the continental boundaries of of the city inten, the United States is about to be estabfirmary, and agent of the Cleveland Humane society, was terri- lished in Honolulu. A tornado with a velocity of eighty bly beaten by strike sympathizer last miles a and of three blocks passwidth ' Wednesday. Mr. Melien is 68 years of age, ami is ed through Elizabeth, N. J., doing in a precarious condition. His family damage conservatively estimated at did not report the matter to the police 985.000. for fear of further violence, Mr. MelFrom 2,000 to 3,000 men are under ien rode on a big Consolidated car arms in the Yaqui country, engaged Wednesday to H. G. Patton's sign in a bloody conflicL The entire country painting shop on Pearl street to order la in a state of terror and people are a sign. He was followed into tiie shop fleeing.tqthe larger settlements. by a boy, who called to two men within Louis Pullermau and Michael McDon that he had ridden on a scab car. aid were put to death in The two men seized Mr. Melien and Pullerman died in Sing Sing prison. threw him out of the door. The aged fifty-fiv- e seconds; current was turned man fell on the sidewalk and the two McDonald for eighty-fiv- e seconds. op men and boy, reinforced by two other Governor Geer has decided to present men who came along, kicked him brueach member of the Second Oregon tally. Mr. Melien later was assisted regiment with a bronze medal, to be to his home on F.ibrarv street. cast from one of the cannon captured in the Philippines, if it can be secured. TOWNS BLOWN AWAY. The state department fully approves Three Village In Florida Destroyed by a of the action taken by the United Cyclone, States Minister Powell at Port au River Junction, Fla., Ang. 6. Tbe Prince in enforcing respect for the most disastrous cyclone that ever visitsanctity of the United States. legation. ed this section of Florida completely The preliminary steps have been annihilated Car rebel le, McIntyre and taken toward the founding of an oil Lao ark Inn, south of here, Thursday. ia Ran Franoiooo. 2a ia proAt Carrabelle only nine houses re- exchange posed to handle the entire oil business main of a'opce beautiful and' prosperous of the state through a system of certifitown. Communication from the Mayor cates ..... ; states that 200 families are without The first bale of the new crop of homes or shelter, and many are comTexas cotton was sold aUpublic auction pletely destitute. In front of the Cotton Exchange, New Of McIntyre, only two mill boilers York city, for the benefit, of tbe sufferers mark tbe place of the town. Lanark the floods in Texas It brought Inn, the famous summer resort was by 92.000. blown into the gulf. No information can be obtained in The Carrabelle, Tallahase & Georgia railroad ia washed away for a distance Washington regarding the story of of thirty miles. A passenger train was John Zachert of San Francisco, that tho blown from the track more than 100 Russiao government in 1833 established bound-ar- y yards Many passengers wero injured, monuments to mark the Alaskan " were killed by a -- ht , hut their nautea-unobtaleabl- - Buried at the Frealdto. San Franciseo, Cal., Aug. 6. The bodies of three volunteers who died on the hospital ship Relief, during the voyage from Manila, were removed from that vessel yesterday and buried at the Presidio, by order of General Shafter. Tbe post chaplain officiated and a firing squad was supplied from the regulars. -- The deceased are Frank Duvall, company F, First Colorado; Chria..K raua, company H, First Wyoming; and William R. Bartlett, company F, First Mouth Dakota. Bobm of John Brown's Men. Saranac Lake, N. Y., Aug. 6. The remains of the seven followers of John t Brown, theAbolitionist, and buried at Harper's Ferry forty year ago, passed through here yesterThe day, en route to Lake Placid. bodies were located by Dr. Thomas Feathers tonhaugh of Washington, as' sisted by Captain Hall of Washington and.O. G, Libbey of the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Libbey has charge of the remains The bodies are to be buried by the side of the old liberator in the little plot at North Elba, a tr lain After Dewey. Paris, Ang. A The Libre Parole correspondent at St. Pierre et Miquelon, says that the Austrian government asked Admiral Dewey to explain the statement said to have been made by him that the next war of the United States would be with Germany, and that the United States would be supported by England. - To thia request El Libre Parole say Admiral Dewey replied that be would deny nothing he said, and thereupon advanced the date of hi departure from Trieste. - L Root In Backing MaUrTa, Washington, Aug- - 6. Secretary Root has notified General Otis that six regiment are almost ready to come to hia assistance. It seems to be the policy of the new secretary of war to rush the raw volunteer regiments to Manila as soon as possible, and he will endeavor to get six regiment off from Frisco by the end of August. The new secretary seems to be bound to do something to show that he has taken hold of the department, even if he does that something wrong. H ae. Senator Jones will, it is said, resign the leadership of the Democratic com mittee by tbe the time the national convention meets, so as to give an opportunity for the choice of another chairman. Lewis Morrison will take a company of American players to Japan. It i Mr. Morrison's intention to leave San Francisco next May with a company of twenty-tw- o people, secnery, etc., and play a year in Japan. Acting Secretary of State Adee has received a cablegram from Minister Powell at Port au Prince, Haiti, con. firming the newspapaper report of the violation of his legation by officers who were making arrests.police The state department has succeeded In locating Senator Beveridge, of Indiana, over whose whereabouts soma anxiety was felt by his friends. He waa detained in quarantine at Nagasaki on steamship Empress of India. At Independence, Kan., a tramp aged 27 years, giving his name as R. C. Young, baa confessed to murdering A. -C. Bush and John Cooley, prominent farmers and stock-raiser- s from Shiota Indian reservation, lie killed them for 930. Fannie Goodwin, a milliner At Ky., shot and mortally wounded Bryan Allegro. She charged that he wrote scurrilous notes and cut offensive phrases in her window with a diamond. She was released without Miss Faii-vie- bond. Third Assistant Postmaster-Gener- Madden has issued an order al calling tbe attention of postmaster everywhere to the fact that packages cannot be mailed to tbe Yukon district. Only letters and postal cards can be sent to the Yukon territory. Dr. Thomas C, Mendenhall, president Worcester Polytechnic Institute, who made a survey of Alaska says: To accede to Canadas boundary claim would be io give her all of tbe value that th United States purchased from 'Russia in southeastern Alaska. -Lightning strnck the big brick power bona and carhonse of the South Orange avenne electric road on South Orange venne at Newark, N. J. The building caught fire end waa destroyed, with eighty-fiv- e ear. The railroad official claim a loss of 9300,000. ' |