OCR Text |
Show CRIMES OF CHINESE. COALVILLE TIMES. ILOILO HAS FALLEN. TIMES M. riBUtHIti - COALVILLE. - ; UTAH, road (II; ( th Pbillpptnm KmII; bp Oar farraa- - miptnoa Flrad lb Tew a aad Kraaaatad- - Cap-tura- Terrorizing A Mmnf Offenses, Bat no Offender Mile end Ml Surgeon t'MIpl. Port Tow nsend itb. 18. Mail from the orient say that the province of Newchwang is in a state of terror occasioned by the appearance of 1.000 mount"! bandits. Numerous of DEWEYS PART GINS DROPPINQ ad-ric- d UTAH NEWS. outrage have k t u committed on real dent, who sri powerless. The merchants have mtvid their good to a miles south of the treaty port t tnive fears are invaded distr rrm template 'Tertairred Thir iilaee which is be- - j a raid on tin forti fled ix reported from ii A serious u the province ' I!, ih4i against conlioiitiex are ren vert. The ' jiioteetTon to the tiering all it.ng the arrival of troops I, n government ha Iloilo has fallen. Manila. Feb. The Filipinos have fled from the town and the ulars and stripes float proudly over the second city of the Philippine. The United Stale gunlioat Ictrel hits arrived with diiqiatehe from M P. Miller to l Otis, announcing that Iloilo had been taken by the combined milie tary and naval force Saturday mornFrom preaent indication the Great ing Salt lake will be higher the coming (icner.il Miller, on receip( of hi in-anuimer than it ha been for a de mc ruction from Manila, neut native comm lx oners ashore f rtqn the United past. Stall tiauxport St. Paul, with a com-i- n Some of the farmer of Grantsville unit atiou for tha rebel government commenced bowing grain last week, but auddenlv atopped after six indie of lloi.o calling ujHiii him to surrender w it hiu a time stated, and w arning him of know had fallen. The Brooks Loemnot i ve works i to not to make a lie mon t ration in the build the ten engine for t'ie Iienver & interval 'I In ubcl immediately moved their j Rio Grande, and the fifty-- ' wo t nginea gun nnd prepared to defend their for the Union Pacific. Thereupon the Pet el fired The Cooke Locomotive A Machine position two w arning guns, the rebel immediWork lib secured the con trad to build ately opening lira upon her. twenty of the rngme for the Oregon The Petrel aud .the Baltimore than (short One referred to lust week. Immbarded the town, whub the rebels, The city council of Irovo ba defeat-e- d having set it on fire, immediately evacthe anti-prizfight uroiuauce by a uated voteof nrn to three. Look out ' for The American troop were promptly acme lively bout in the near future. landed and extinguished tha fire in Considerable anxiety is evinced by all cases of foreign property, but not Iliahop lreton fo the safety of stock before considerable damage h(jdbeen "bi lodging to the ehu rcli, which iiT be- done. It is believed the enemy loss during ing wintered in vartou part of the the bombardment was heavy, but no state, Several more valuable dog hTe American casualties are reported. - met death by poison in Salt Lake City. The fellow who ha been doing the work la a yet unknown, hut one man la suspected. London, Feb. 13. Reuter s Telegram An icicle eight feet long, ala tnchea fol- In circumference at the top, tapering company, limited, has received the low lug dispatch from Manila, dated to the size of a lead pencil at the end, was a curiosity seen on the eaves of a Feb, 13, 3'45 p. m.: After the capture of Caloocan, a Spaniard w ho had been Salt Lake building last week. a prisoner there came to the Americans The house has taken favorable conholding up his hands, and said that sideration of the bill for a public the Filipino hd offered to release the building at Salt Laky City. The limit Spaniards, especially the artillerymen, of the cost will be fixed at $ 100,000, if they would undertake to fight and it is thought the bill will be passed the Americans at St a day. against in the near future. Most of the Spaniards refused, and Tbe entlre Sanpete county claim for even those who accepted the Offer did bounties paid fordbe past ala months, so In the hope of effecting an escape-Thone-ha- lf of which is paid by the state, rebels, according to this informla 3fil.tf5. The Items include bounties ant, are discontented, unpaid, unfed on seven bears, two mountain lion, and thoroughly disillusionized, the 118 coyotes, 38 wildcat. 7 lynxes, 30 taliktnanie wafers being, of no avail foxes, 53 muskrat, 11 minks and 3,078 gainst wound, .hunger aud- - fatiguc-O- n gophers,- - - Friday Aguinaldo visited 1olof Frank McBride, formerly assistant A lew miles north west of Caloocan, and postmaster of Salt Lake, who was con- addressed the Filipino troops there, victed of embe' iling postoffice funds, claiming that he had won a victory, and ximtU m g that a.fioo Aww1m sad bsew nerving a term Is lb ot tuooo. had bean kUled. b executed a oa an application for ball until the HAD COAL FOR SPANIARDS. of the appeal now pending before the United States circuit court Ihwun Company Refuse to Pay for a Ship Captured bp I'nele Sam. An extensive deposit of sulphate of London, Feb. IS. An interesting magnesia, familiarly known as epsotn salt, has just been discovered at the question pertaining to Insurance in month of Maotl canyon. The finder time of war came before the court of aaye he bae known of the existence of queens bench when the owners of the the deposit since he was a boy of 14, steamer Reatormel, coal laden for the - bnt had been under the impression Spaniards In Cuba, and which waa capthat it was saltpetre until reeent testa tured by the United States auxiliary cruiser SL Paul at she was attempting were applied. Two young men of Provo were held to enter the harbor at Santiago, sought to recover 4,000 of insurance. The up one day last week. One of them made a break for liberty and escaped, company defendants claimed that the waa illegal, and but the other one waa leas fortunate Bestormel's adventure ahe- - waa engaged in an tha fact that and lost one dollar and a new neck tie, to supply coal to the Spanish - lie didat care for the dollar, hut tha attempt was aoppreased at the time the navy loss of the necktie, a present from his insurance waa taken out sweetheart, caused the young man to Smokeless powder put forth every effort to capture the 15. Provo bad fifteen Inches of acow tha latter part of the week. The seminar; at Huntington 4s H1 running sttuit Want, wrth an attendance of about sixty-fivLoejtljLpurUrttFn of Spring City. on day butt vveek. killed and captured .loo rabbita and twenty-fivwolves. ' Meeeted Hawllu AMERICANS CAPTURE THE CITY WITHOUT LOSING A MAN. e Major-(corra- I i - i i , j vv 1 ordered trooj to the eoium J uprising. severe penal , , g By t 1 ' emperor of .1 waseaused lo investigati e scene with ordert oilieer to crush the ase of failure a follow of ice on a rivei i ' i the bn leading to precipitated in dred and six A report h.i- at Pekin th patched to d.i, , .on n water I,, ned. lull urtioial circles i, ill i , people were One hun- - .! vv assassin was dls-- i ike the life of the i.reat excitement hi , n, in ii and a thorough ,, mi cii ordered. ,n bd i t m OF ATTmjDt I HE During-th past week the Oregon Short Line placed an order with the Pullman car works for forty-fou- r passenger care, and another order waa plaowd with the Uaruey Jfc Sinltb company for five . more passenger cere. These, with 300 steel cars, recently ordered, make a total of 349 so far arranged for ''of tha large number for which the company has been figuring for so long. A meteor U believed to have passed over the city of Manti on the 8th Inst At about OitO p. m.j there appeared In the heavens a light similar to that of a strong are light, which lasted for about one- minute. It lighted the streets of tha city aa the noonday sun and made the surrounding mountains visible. Then darkness came, and lo three or four minutes a loud report waa heard, accompanied by a rumbling sound. Many of the citizens heard the -- - 4 - r v " their homes tremble sod the windows shake The Manila correspondent of the Ban Francisco Chronicle, la hit report The of the battle at MaBilaTsays! .Ttsh battery men were seasoned by pelr experience at Malate, late in In gust, and conducted themselves like 7"TepVrV ahd witnessed Wane." , 1' Plan la to Keep the Inaor-gwkManila and Iloilo oa tbo Ku If PomMvIo. to I Annevsih'ii '( flilllpplne or of liilisliti ml to t liiscnsliljp. l- -k in Ure.McKivc-- . Waslvuigt-Lvwax vvhi'h adopted by the resolution, a vote of lu to 33. is aa folsenate lows of the treaty of peace with Sji.,ui it is not Intended of the to incorporate the inhabitant the of into citizenship Philippines United States nor lx it intended to aiitu said islands as an integral part of the territory of the United States hut it is the intention of the United Mutex to establish on fcald islands a government suitable to the wants and mnditions of the iuhab- Hants of the said islands; to prepare them for local and, iti due time, make sin h disposition of said island a vv ill best promote the interests of the eitlzens of the United States and the inhabitants, of said islands. , i , it PREPARES FOR FRANCE Expect to . 88 WAR. hip the Kngltxh 88lthln Two Irsra. Feb. 18. The Toulon dhe Daily Mail, remarkVxtra activity at the aring upon id generally In the French senal the! naVaFwbr sin, say at London, minItketMltvvU that M. uter of mathe, expects w ar w itli Great Britain witljm two years, and it is notorious that a war with England is being preaehed in official circles in Paris. Troops are beiag poured into Tunis, Corsica and Algeria, and war material ia being dispatched to all the colonies, French officers openly boast that they will sweep the British fleet out of the Mediterranean. FALL OF ILOILO. Dewey Advise Navy Depart-- " aaent of the Capture. Washington, Feb. 16. The Navy department baa received the following cablegram from Admiral Dewey: Sec- retary of the navy, Washington: Petrel just arrived from Iloilo. That place taken by our forces Saturday and now occupied. No prisoners. No easulties on our aide. lnsurgentsJoes not known DkwmH Thai Cormtalks Are Better but believed to lie slightn Insurgents tried U burn town, Than Cotton. propDkwkt. Penn Crove, N. J., Feb. 13. At the erty saved by our forces. Flllhuatrr 1 HuaxkoBff. big powder works of the Duponts, at Carneys Point, interesting experiment Port Townsend, Wash., Feb. 16. In smokelesa pbwder are being made The steamshipOlympia bring the news by experts in the employ of the gov- that since the adjournment of the Paris ernment One of the difficulties that peace commission the Filipincs have has attended the manufacture bo far is had agent :n Hongkong busily enthat the powder ia not wholly smoke- gaged in fitting out filibustering less, and that It apparently loses expeditions from that port The strength through storage. The ex- Hongkong government is using every periments, it ia said, led to the dia-- effort to prevent such expeditions from covery that cotton could not be ground leaving that pinev and English nava' fine enough Hr oflioera have received orders to search result and that the powdered pith all vessels suspected of having arms of cornstalks gave somewhat bette r and ammunition destined for the Philresults. ippines. GERMANIC COES DOWN. Preening to Death In Texas. Houston, Tex., Feb. 16. Reports to Riff Atlantic Liner Sink nt Her PI er nt the Post during the two days of intense New York. cold ahow that thirteen lives were lost New York, Feb. 15, The White Stnr in Texas by freezing: At Houston, 3; line steamer Gem.nle kaherjvle in Lamar coun'ly, e Nhriver MoudayThd 1. now ly - , Robertson county, 2; in Bexar lug there partially submerged. The 1; in Jefferson county, 1; and accideut waa due to the heavy coating county, 3 hildren In Coryell county. In the of ioe which formed on the steamer. ten days the Post has chronicled past The continued loading of coal, comthe cremation of twenty persons, of bi aed with the heavy weight of the ire, w horn sixteen were children, the macaused the steamer to list and' sink. jority having their clothing catch fire H la said that no one la injured. from open fireplaces. SHRUNK FOURTEEN FEET. ... Wreck at .th laxmc. . . brrng-abouttheb- . xl 1 - ly That by tin Feb. 13, Iloilo is now AS asbiu.ton, being bombarded by a portion of Pv' vy fleet unless the native have sum nlered on the demand made by General Miller, who is iu com in and the e bu.neral tis advised Secretary Alger tha1 he ba sent the First tenuessee infantry t reinforce General Miller and the vomniandiug officer of that org mlzsti u carried instructions to hun to den and the evacuation of Iloilo by u oclis. Friday morning. If tin demand was not complied with mum lately the instructions were to begin (he bombardment of Iloilo and contin ie it until the rebels rau up the white dug The aav vv ill, of course, with the a my, which vv ill simplify to a considci i Me degree the work now of tho laid, out loi the serve n it will cover the lauding of the troops. The Boston, Baltuilbre and Petrel are now at I'oilo and if the rebels aie f lndixtreet enough to refuse to lay down their arm1- the heavy guns of those ships vv ill lye I U rued on the mount a followed up by the troops who have beeu lying iu the harbor for sometime past In view of the success which attended the action of the American forces at .Manila last and hunday, General Otis desired to reduce Iloilo at once aud have the unpleasant duty s SENATE. tests. highwaymen, O BE- ' t i e pent-ienttwr- y, Otwnl FLEET SHELLS. v i over. ' Army ofliceis here say lie is pursuing the proper course in following up his victory at the beginuing of the week to keep the insurgents iu Manila and I Uulo on the run aud iu this way drive all thoughts of renewing the conflict from their heads. d - wagons 1- - ., Feb. 16. Two'life-boat- s Savannah,' laden ith men from tha wreck of the steamship William Lawrence are till missing, and it is fesred that the Washington, Frb. 14 Following it a y uoysis of the report of the w ar in vestigation commission, which ha been made public: There was lacking in the general administration of the war department during the continuance of the war with txpain, that complete grasp of the Situation which was essential to the highest efficiency and discipline of the army . The commission finds' that the in speetor general s department was not tta efficient as it ought to have laeii The condition of the railroad congestion during the early jiortiou of the time Tampa was occupied by troops seemed unparalleled, showing almost inexcusable lack of executive ability on the part of those charged with the loading, unloading and bundling of trains. The traoxpoi tutiou provided for the Shafter exja ditnm vvux insufficient, the Vessels were oven. row d d. poorly equipped and not loaded systematically. The army was painfully detic lent lu laud transportation General Miles was guilty of dereliction of duty iu failing-tteport to the war department Ills belief that the re- frigerated beef bad been elieuutauy treated. The commission is oF the opinion that no refrigerated bu--f furnished by coutraelors was subjected or treated with chemicals by the cou tractors or those inx their employ. s 'i Y X. The tiurbiug force during the mouths of May, June and July was neither ample or efficient, for which cougrexs was responsible. At Camp Wikoff there was some laek of proper attention to matters of sanitation, and to the sick, and with-in- t doubysases of distress, it may be neglected, but tlieie vvux much exagger-atto- u iu vv hat vv us vvrttteu aud said about Cauip lkotf. QUIET SUNDAY IN MANILA. Contrary to Expectation no 1 Iglitlng curred ou the Xaliliatli. Manila, Feb. 14. Oc- Contrury to gener- , thousands are held prisoners. All this has been achieved at the cost of 65 Americans killed and 276 wounded. There were twenty-fiv- e Americans unaccounted for. ADRIFT ON ICE FLOES. Skater Carried Oat lata Lake Michigan. Chicago, Feb. 14. Sixteen skaters, living in the suburbs of Rogers park and Lake Forest, were carried out into Lake Michigan on ice floes Sunday. WANT TO Ten of them were rescued, and during the entire evening searching parties Orlffxkgi Cowboy are Anxious to Go to made fruitless efforts to secure some Philippine. of the missing six. trace Slow Falla, 8. D., Feb. 12. GrigsAll of those who were rescued were otherwise the Third bys cowboys, carried out on the ice off Lake Forest, U ni ted States volunteer cavalry, who and two of the number who ventured Chlcka-maug- a in at time spent tome camp last summer, and who were on tffie frozen lake there are supposed disbanded a few months ago, want to to have been drowned. The remaining" three of the sixteen were carried sway and go to the Philippine Colonel Grigsby is absent from the city, on a floe off Rogers park, and the Chig crew spent the night in but telegrams are constantly being cago received for him from his officers re-- 1 searching for them. Most of the rescued were students at Lake Forest questing him to get the government to academy. The officers reorganize the regiment. assert that to a man the members of MONGOLIAN INCINERATED. the reghnrnt will enlist if wanted for Now Year in Sab Chtnffie of serv.ee. There is strong feeling here 0lbrttm f th at t hr fo ve rumen t will reorgam ze San Francisco, Feb. 14. The celebrathe regiment tion of the Chinese New Year in this city resulted In a tragedy. While fire(Signed. Tnaty jt Pa works were being exploded from a he of Feb. Wsxhington, treaty window of the employment agency of peace, as ratified by the senate, was Jue Bun at 734 Commercial street, a signed by the president and Secretary lot of fire erakers inside the house Hay at 3 o'clock Friday afternoon in were accidentally lighted and the room the library of the executive mansion. was soon in Barnes. A number of Chinese were smoking WbTlF sighing the document, tfie pres- opium in the place at the time. Five ident and secretary of state sat at the who were rescued told of others reround tabit in the center of the library. maining in a stupor and a vigorous The ceremony eeeu pied only a few search by the police resulted in the discovery of the drugged Mongolians, minutix, mg jt conclusion Secre- Quong Duck waa burned to death and tary Hay repbteed the document in it hi charred remains were taken to the criin-o- n velvet esse end took it to the morgue. Tn Mew, Jih Shu and Chan state department for transmission to Wo were Isall badly burned and their donbtfuL Very little damrecovery Madr d age was done t the building. ation. life-savin- (uncM awalalto. .. ... ... -chlef (vySWV888888A8888888A8W i Elder W. L. Worxenerolt. of iayson, has succeeded Elder K. J. IN ood as president of the Samoan mission. . M. M. I. A The members of the o' Grantsville are getting up a dram-- I atic entertainment to replenish tlieir treasury. At the eommeneeim nt of the present year there were tx eiders and fire sisters from ion lalioring iu and i. elders in Newiealaud M ha.mga. Klxlx r liiriiia the New a on now who lx mission Zealand chief to ins uatne country will probably return to Zion in the early summer hlilt rx F x llumpliiHs uud Lewi Uajter, who have been laboring in (lie Bristol eonlcience of the British mis-- l sion, left Glasgow for home on lebiu-ary 9. ixab-bat- th(j have upheld Malietoa Tanus, who hai been declared by Chief Justice Chinbera, an American, as rightfully entitled to the throne. While the announcement in the hotntof commons is open to various Interpretations, yet it seems to show quite clearly that the recognition of M a tufa, who waa upheld by the German, may be taken into consider- F TEMPLE AND TABEJTNAGLt. I Except al expectations, all was quiet along the liue Sunday, nothing having hapTROUBLE IN SAMOA. h pened to disturb the peace of the in Manila. The lubabitauts have It Hat, According to tVashlngton Diplogenerally recovered from the alarm mat, AmuoichI a New Ehaae. occasioned by the fear of a Dative upWashington, Feb. 12. The Samoan rising and are resuming their ordinary trouble is assuming a somewhat new business. The shipping interests are phase, according to the views of leadnaturally suffering, since there have ing diplomatic authorities, and one been no clearances for lhilippfne ports likely to bring about an adjustment for a week, but on the other hand foroe lines not heretofore contemplated eign bhipping has increased, especially This it in part foreshadowed in the for Hongkong, every steamer bound Official statement of the parliamentary thither being crowded with timid IcOreUry in the house of commons, to refugees. the ifeet that further information Last week there was not a single w04 be awaited before copsidering day without fighting, but the AmeriiSrepgnition of Mataafa as king of cans steadily advanced, carrying everySaaoa, thing before them. Iitxafa is not the claimant who has It is now known that the Filipino tha far received the support of the loss is fully 2,500 killed, with wounded Brsith aad American authorities, s vastly iu access of that number, and Managua, Fiosragu, Feh. 13 Gen044 W rather Csnee Co traction ot tbo eral Recx, nko ha rebelled against Groat Brooklyn Bridge the government of Freaident Zelsya, New York, Frb. 15. Ou Saturday and vi ho is n0 at Bluefields, prowhen the therm tffueter waa 3 degrees of Nicfourteen men who embarked In these claimed himwlf general below tero, measurements of the Brookon February 3rd. nd backed aragua been The have steamer Bats lot. lyn bridge Were Cakenfor the' trusses by the s.gnaturvi of several prominent 'And other parts to find out how much Lawrence, of the Merchants & Miners natives, has ded tred war against Presbetvellng through Provo canyon la the contraction had been. In compar- Tranaportatkm company, plying - Serous and almost impossible. ing these figures with those taken last tween Baltimore and Savannah, struck ident Zelsya. General Reye promises that in the vent of his success the e men from Provo were caught when the thermometer was 30 de- on the rocks off Hilton Head island, people of Nicaragua shall have free bat-da- y I ecu two snowslldes, Thursday, July K. Port near on C., the Royal bar, and fair election for national officers. grees above. It was fouod that the difI succeeded,-- with much difficulty, ference was fourteen feet and half morning, She is now a" total The president has sent in the direction of Rama. l.ooooidisrt and cannons. wreck kiting out with their horses, lear-Hbe- lr Allison of'Moab baa been oa a charge of passing yrfelt money. The southern part state has been flooded with 9 money of late, and the atsfrfeit c 1 made that Allison ia the SV8V888VtV888W8488V888V8 GUXS OPEN' ON ILOILO. WHATTHE COMMISSION POUND War. AfUHllle-Mv- Washington, Feh. 14. The following cablegram has been received at the war department: Manila, Feb. 12. Adjutant-Genera- l, Washington: Reported that Insurgent representative at Washington telegraphed Aguinaldo to 'drive oat the Americans before the arrival of reinforcements. The dispatches were received st Hongkong and mailed to which decided on the attack to be made about th 7th insL The eagerness of the insurgent troops to engage the Americans precipitated the battle. Ms-lolo- s, - - 44 . K tiller Alonzo I. Kesler, of the east--1 eru states mission, who has beeu visit- iug Great Bittiau, returned to New York by the steamship Anchoria, which ou January Jo left Gla-gutiller Arnold 11 Seliultlie-s- , of Salt Lake ( ity, lias succeeded Bishop ieter Loutcnsock, of Kuieka, as president of mission Brother Lon ten sock is expected home towards the latteF part of the present month. President K. J. iod of the Samoan mission left Apia, on January 34, for New Zealand, which mission he intends tovisit before lie returns home, rie Was accompanied by Elders Joseph Quinney jr. , of Logan ami William Jeppson, of Brigham City, who have n been laboring iu txamoa. The mail fgom Great liritian brings fuller particulars of the ripts at Bristol, first reported iu the n press dispatches, it appears was dime at the Sunday meetings, (Jan. 15.) the meintiers of the league confirming themselves to interrupting the elders. The riot occurred on the following Wednesday and Thursday evenings, when nearly every pane of glass in front of the meetinghouse wai?smablied so that no meeting was held on Thursday. The missionaries had to seek the protection of the police. Among those present from Utah were Mister Inez Knight, of Provo, and Liza Uhipman, of American Fork. The second of the series of lectures on events in the history of the Mormon church was given in the Thirteenth ward assembly rooms Salt Lake City, Friday , evening. The lecturer was Angus M. Cannon, and the subject, The Exodus from Nauvoo. There was a larger audience present than on the first lecture of the series a week ago, and much interest was manifested in the protrayal by Mr. Cannon of the troubles of the Saints at that momen. tous period of the history of the church. Done Professor Willard announced that the subject for the next meeting would be The Mormon Battalion. the story of which will be probably told by one of the of the organization. President George (J Cannon and five young missionaries recently returned from their fields of labor, were the speakers at the Tabernacle, Sunday, February 12. The musical services were most pleasing and were enjoyed by the many strangers and members of the legislature present besides the regular attendants. Elias Woodruff told of his travels in the southern states, paying a high tribute to the character of the people wjjlx whom he came in contact wnile away. Elders M. C. Stevenson, Frank Freeze, J. R. Barton and Brigham Perkins, whose lots had been castln Germany and Switzerland for a couple of years or more, brought reports from over the ocean encouraging to the church. President Cannon expressed sympathy for the young elders who had preceded him, saying that he remembered keenly bis return from a foreign mission and his appearance before a couple of thousand people, when for years he had been used to speaking to a few people only, and that in a foreign tongue. He then explalncd' for "the benefit of strangers and others some ef the cardinal points of the doctrine of the church, after which he branched off upon the necessity of the Saints maintaining strict' integrity if they desired to be of service to themselves and to the church. The necessity of being humble and prayerful, he said, must be apparent to ail who have the least knowledge of the doctrine of the church. The virtue of patience waa also dwelt noon. He closed his sermon with a strong exhortation to his hearers to practice that charity which is so often and so beautifully spoken of in the Bible a virtue that outshine many pthers that it is necessary men and women should possess if they dee sired that which God intended, they zhould be. During the past few days Elders 0, P. Fjeldsted, J. G. Kimball and Joseph W. MeMnrrin, of the First Council oi the Seventy, have visited Cache Valley and organized four quorums: Th 116th, with headquarters at Prestoni the 117th, at Lewiston; the 118th, comprising the Seventies in Paradise, and the 116th, those residing in the 6th and 7th wards of Logan, This action was taken by reason of the ' existing quorums in those neighborhoods having many members in excess of the alloted nambew. regular that uo damage n urvivors -- to-b- |