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Show ! COALVILLE TIMES J. N. PETERSON, Ed lor Uritorod at I May rth, Matter. he Postoffir 1. 7. d In Tear U $1 Fix Month Tkree Mals ft LIS Oo.ililll. Second ha Ft Ovyla ARE JJ 71 Italian Steamship, With 800 if Souls on Board, Wrecked Off Hormigas Island Oreen River now ha a state bank With a capital ofJ15 000. Plain CHy Is to have a new canning fartorv, a $J0 0W company having bot-organized fur that purpose fhe Davis conmj fair will be a mu'" jo this fall, an awiatlon having hied articles of Incori oration last wed. The Oregon Short Line company will op, i ate the first Yellowstone pull, elusion of the reason on ngiisi .! The lgan huml consist lug of tweii ek lv-' n ( pieces, spt nt (wo iluys last in vlslling Salt Like pleasure ri.soiM Farmers In the Monroe Helds hav commenced cutting their grain and in dilations for a good harvest are ext I lent 1 he drug store of Provo will renia n o,n n for business on Sundavs in the fuiiire, but will not lie allow d to sell liquor foi any purpose State Treasurer Chilslians m ri polls that l.!5,rit) state funds weie collect el during the month- of July, while If, 4 40b was paid out Joseph McMahon, the aeronaut who fell a dlntai e of IhH) ffel while making a parachute Juntp'at Salt Lake City, t dead from lit injuries The encampmeat bf'the Indian war veteran at Ephraim last week wi an unqualified aucces, every county In the Ute being represented , The tax levy for Salt Lake county was Hxed at 4 I mill and the county acbool tax at 2 5 mills by the board of conity commissioners last week. eon of Joseph J.TIe little feel Jackson feir Intq a well, fifty-liv- e deep, at DraphK and .would have been dtowned but for the .timely arrival of u A , Number of Fishermen Who Attempt Pas- to Rescue' the Terror-Strickesengers- - Are Drowned, of Vessel Take His Own Ufa, n d Cartagena, Spain A terrible marine disaster occurred Saturday evening off The Italian steamship Cape Palos Slrlo, from Genoa for Baicelona, Cadis, Montevideo and Buenos Ayres, with about 800 persons aboard, was wreeked off Hormlgas Island Three hundred Immigrants, most of them Italians and Spaniards, were drowned. The captain of the steamship committed suicide. The bishop of San Pedro, Brazil, also was lost, and It Is reported that another bishop Is among the missing The remainder of the . passengers and the officers and crew got away In the ships boats or were rescued by means of boats sent to them from the shore. A number of fishermen who made attempts at rescue were drowned are Those rescued from the vessel now at Cape Palos In a pitiable condition, being without food or clothing The Slrlo struck s rocky reef known as Bajos Herjnlgas and sank soon afterward, 'ateril first Hormlgas Island Ilea about two and a half miles to ibe . east ward ef Cape Palos , The, Slrlo was owned by the Navigations Italians, of Genoa Before he committed aulclde, the had 64f captain declared the steamer her new passengers on board and that numbered 127 men. The Slrlo had 670 passengers when leaving Genoa, but additional Spanish passengers were taken aboard at Barcelona, where the vesael touched a few hours before the disaster. MURDEROUS COWARDS. Had No Regard for Women or Children. assistance. London The Madrto correspondent .Daiifei ;w. Elite, county recorder of of the Dally TeTertaph describes the Weber county for three consecutive iBtrlo disaster as one of the worst on terms, has tendersd his resignation, The Italian emigrants, with record. l juia private interests demand bis In knives thetr hands, and without reattention: women or children, fought for the gard James. .McDonald,. a with greatest brutality for the posses(Balt Lake boy, was seriously Injured sion of life buoys and boats. Many Immigrants per-eona- oOreeluJ) aeven-yeatvol- d engjikke!! surrey while be ua over by;1 U Ui tv t, "laying School census enumerators , of the In waa thirty-tl- x district of Salt . Lake have completed their labors for this year. The Increase shown In lha khlrty-eldistricts la III. , The company boarding house at Winder Quarters was destroyed by fire last meek. Had it not been for the exceflfty-tw- n x llent condition of the waterworks, the aatlro town would have, burned down. 8wpertntedeat Martin of the Park pity public schools has just completed the school census of Park City. The beaeua shows 676 girls and 60 boys, a kotal of 1,156 children of the school gy migranu. - Saw the Slrlo Strike. Alicante, Spain Tbe captain of the French steamer Marie Ixsulse, which haa arrived here from Cartagena, relates having witnessed the foundering of the Slrlo from a point close to that vessel. He says he was remarking to his mate upon the dangerous course the Slrlo waa taking when the Italian steamer, going ahead at full speed, suddenly stopped and her bow was seen to lift. The Marie Louise changed her courae and went toward the Slrlo At thle moment there was heard a loud explosion as the boilers of ths Slrlo Henry C. Gale, aged II, was killed a a mine la Granite district, Beaver Bounty, he having entered the tunnel before all the shots had exploded and received the full force of the explosion. 'Ben Noble, n Salt Lake man who baa long been known to the police as burst B confirmed drunkard, was found dead ha bis cell in the city jail one morning Conflicting Reports. last week, death being due to alcoLondon. The reports reaching here holism. of the loes of the Slrlo show confusion Charles A. Carman, an electrical en- regarding the captain. Some declare gineer, fell down stairs, while starting that he committed suicide, while oth home from a resort on Commercial ers say that he and the crew were Street, Salt Lake City, receiving Inju- - saved, bdt were arrested on leading which resulted In death a fee The official account from Cartagena Ces does not mention the captain except to later. was The distillery to be built by the repeat the report that the wreck In venturing to his due imprudence (Utah Sugar company for the mauufao too close to I the ahoal In tut of denatured alcohol fiotu the mo- order to save time.Hormlgas It la said that the lasses made by the sugar companies panic on board caused more loss of fff this elate, will be established in Ilf thaa the tea Itself. SaltJLahe-o- r Ogden.-- Twenty Injured In Railroad Wreck. Mary Pattison, s Salt Iake girl, has St Genevteve. Mo Tweaty people sued the street car company for 15,000 collision were Injured In a head-endamage, alleging that she was forced between a passenger and freight train te stand on the footboard of a crowd on the Frisco road here. The engines ed street car, from which she fell, susWere demolished and the tracks torn taining permanent injuries. Th up for a considerable distance It Is probable that a son of the on a Injured were taken Jo St. Germany will CQuie to l'Uh special .train.,- Tbe passengor waa a to study minlug He Is now a student special from St. I xml bearing repreof the Knights of Columbus. at the University of Bone, and after sentatives bruises Cuts and comprised the injur bis graduation he will continue his les, and none of the passengers was study ef mining In this country. fatally hnrt. The Cambrian society of Salt Lake Hunger Drove Him Insane. at a recent meeting appointed a comYork While apparently crazed New mittee to inquire into the advisability of having an eisteddfod in Salt Lake In from hunger, John Carle, a homeless behind William C. PearJ807, during the fair, youth, crept wuch as were held in 1895 and 1898. son, a traveling salesman, who was , The newa that Governor CuUer had walking along the street, and plunged Pear-son- refused to call the legislature together a, long knife tnto bla back. As fell Carl sprang upon Him and in special session was received with but fled bunch satisfaction In Lagan, and the began rifling hta pockets, a dozen passersby rushed on when y people are now-verhopeful of success blm. He was captured by a policefar the college in the coming campaign man, to whom be surrendered ttm knife, saying:- - "Here's whata left of against the consolidation. It" Tbe blade had been broken -- later-Mouatai- n -- - When the captain aaw the vessel was lost and that the emigrants had captured the boat he committed suicide by shooting with a revolver. The other officers then lost their heads and there waa nobody to direct tbe work of reaoue. Eye witnesses gave awful picture of the brutal panic on board. For halt an hour tbe emigrants were masters of the situation. They completely overcame the crew by eheer force of numbers, and this. In spite of the effort of the officers, who tried to save the women and children first d NEW YORK'S KNOCKED LAW LABOR OUT BY DOUBT ilLT Of TOE LIST UTAH STATE NEWS . lit! HliSlISH sum imu it mi PEOFlf Mjr or itBiniimoti. tcui Ainaae. farakb Omt THREE HUN1RED From Present Indication th Rulan Government Ha th . Situation " Well In Hand and Will Win Out James H. Kennedy, Famous Air Over the West, Falls Under a Reaper. 8t With a general Petersburg atrlke formally declared and the country apparently on the threshold of a gigantic struggle, minor issues fade in the background If the atrlke Inaugurated Saturday gathers sufficient headway to endanger the life of the state, It has virtually been decided that Grand Duke Nicholas Nlcholale-vltc- h will be nann d commander of all the troops In the empire where mar-Ttttvnxlsts,'' which would be tantamount to the dei reelng of a military It Is possible, however. dictatorship that he government will not be drlv-en to this extremity, as the showing made by the St Petersburg proletariat was not Impressive Although nearly 70. "00 workmen are reported to be out many of the men appear to be entering I he struggle With The spontaneity with heavy hearts which practically the entire nation arrayed Itself against the old regime last fall Is lacking, the endurance of th people has been sapped by the long strain, the sympathy of the more conservative liberals has been alienated by fear of involution, and the lowest elements of the population have been organized Into what are known aa "black hundreds. and are ready' to enter the fight on the side of the government If the signal Is given. Aicldent Was Discovered When the Herses Came to the Houee, Drag-gin- g in Their Wake the Body of the Aged Pioneer. ai SERIOUS Mont Bozeman James H. Ken- - years, one of the moat pioneers, not only of thla of the entire west, reaching Sidy, aged prture-iu- e 74 State, hut ,jlt p,,eiflc coast, met a violent Belgrade, near this place. II-- ' lia'l been assisting his son, Benjamin K unedy In a wheat field and hd bien left with a team and reaper while the son returned to the house for seme binding twine. The latter bad barely reached the house when be was followed by the horses and reaper, dragging In their wage the dead body of the aged pioneer. Tbe old man had evidently had a partial paralytic stroke while on the seat of the reaper and had foUen. hta foot catching In tbe Mr Kennedy was known as one ot the most unique characters In Montana He waa born In Grant county, Wisconsin, and was taken by hls father to Clayton county, Iowa, the following year, where he remained until At that time he started over 1853 laid for Oregon, walking the entire distance and swimming every river from the Mississippi. He arrived In Oregon the same year and joined the faces in the Rogue River war, for hla services In which the Oregon government still owes him $180. He carried the first Indian scalp tnto Treks. Csl, and received a bounty of $260. He went from California to South America, thence to New York and later to Kansas, where he served In the second battalion, Kansas volunteers, during the war. He came to ,(t RUNAWAY ACCIDENT. Othr Person Injured. Provo. A very serious runaway mew red on the boulevard west f the city 8unday night, which In the death of a baby and the lerlous Injury of several other people. A Mr Bodmer of Salt Lake, accompanied by two ladles, was driving a tingle buggy from the lake to town and collided with another baggy going In the opposite direction. Bodmers buggy was tipped over, throwing tbe ladies and Bodmer out, Injuring them all more or less. The horse then Montana in 1864. ran lip Center street and at the crossOUTLOOK IS BLACK. ing of Third West collided with a rig In which were Councilman John E. Bott, his wife and two children and Russian Revolutionist Boaat That Re-- Mrs. Herman Grlnn. volt Will Continue to 8pread. In this mix up Botts borse ran St. Petersburg. Although the mutl-fib- s away, throwing all the occupants to at Sveaborg have been ended and the ground. The baby, about four; months old, waa killed lnitantly. Mm one at Cronstadt has been pr&ctl-eB- y ! Grlnn sustained a broken arm and . put. down. .the. outlook , la. still etherwtMj injured. Lhlck. Tha revolutionists, whose tONDE- F AN AT 1C. Uknds were suddenly forcid by the ptem&turn rising at Sveaborg, apparPapa Isle Said to Be Alive and Fre- ently are undaunted at these initial paring For Trouble. reverses and Intend to persist in their Washington. Papa Isto, tha bandit programme of calling a general atrlke. and religious fanatic who caused to One of the leaders of the revolutionmuch trouble In Occidental Negros, is ists boasted that the word had gone the latest claimant for posthumous ex- forth and that the fire of revolt would istence. Reports have reached Wash- spread to the corners ot the empire. insurrecto Hls closing words were: "Now watch ington that the much-feareis still alive and has twelve followers, Reval, Riga and Llbau. Tbe newa ot tbe mutiny on board the who are assisting him In preparing for movements. cruiser Panyat Azova, off the Estho further revolutionary, fraught with enormous Army officers do not credit rumors of nlaa coast, la The crew of thla vessel Papa Islo's activity, and say he was possibilities. and killed the commander and unquestionably killed. At the time ot rose the famous bandits death hls head tour officers. was reported to have been put In brine CONDEMNED MAN FLEES. tor Identification. Babe i Killed and Six nt d - d of Death, Murderee Hla Escape. Newcastle, Pa. Thomas OToole, under sentence of death for fbw'mur-de- r of hla brother-in-law- , Leroy Barber, escaped from the county jail some time Thursday night. Hls flight w&a not discovered until noon Friday, and bloodhounds were put on hta track within half an hour. OToole la said to have unquestionably had outside aid in digging through the brick walls. Under Sentence Rebellion in Morocco. Ixmdon A dispatch from Tangier Highly sensational reports srs says: being received here, causing the utmost excitement. Dally, almost hourly, comes Information from the interh ior of the rapid spread of violent agitation The rebels are concentrating their military contingents around Marakesh (Morocco City), the southern capital, and there Is no doubt that a formidable coalition of vasals has been formed Make WILSON VAGRANT 8ETS FIRE TO JAIL. Unknown Man Meets Horrible Death In California Town. Oakland, Cal An unknown prisoner set fire to the town jail at Niles early Saturday morning. In an endeavor to escape, and before the blaze could be discovered or help arrive, was burned to death It is not known how the man started the fire, but It Is presumed that he had some matches concealed about hls person, which the officials In searching hls clothing overlooked. Attempt to Assault President of For- tugsls Council of Ministers. Lisbon An attempt was mnde to assault Senor Jean Franco, preMdmt of the council of ministers, as hi was leaving a political gathering at night Senor Franco had addressed the nowlv Inaugurated chib of electors after which a crowd of manifestants ,n the street stoned the numbers of th. lib and arte'fror Franco entered" h s car- riage a manifestos attempted to at- tack tjie minister Tin pelle hls assailant flight toSKf. The Earthquake Clause to Be Inserted In AM Imurance Policies. San Francisco It is stated on good authority that all insurance companies which have not previously had the earthquake clause In their policies will henceforth Insert B In all polities written on the Pacific coast It is said that within a short time there will be none but earthquake clause companies doing business here. The organized pol-Irholders sre making a fight for a atlll more simple form of policy than was used In the past. y Effort to Restrict Judge Declare Hour of Labor of Women and Children is Unconstitutional. New York The state law of New York restricting the labor of women and children to ten hours a day and sixty hours a week In a factory was declared on Friday by Justice Olmsted la a decision banded down In the court of special sessions to be an unwarrant ed Invasion of constitutional rights. The ruling was concurred in by Justices McKean and Deuel Judge Olmsted declared that the law was class legislation Justice Olmsted said in his decision1 To labor and employ labor are inherent and inalienable rights of our citizens and cannot be taken sway in wholb or in part unless upon the broad ground of public good, which must be apparent and cannot be pre dieted upon legislative dictum Attorney General Mayer announced that he would appeal from the decision of the court I will carry the caae, If need be, he said, to the supreme cofirt pf the United States, so long as the question of the ronatlutiunality of (he statute a as been raised JU8HED UPPER FLOOR. People of Hamburg, Penn., Narrowly Escape Death In Flood. Reading. Pa A terrific cloudburst struck the borough of Hamburg, this A tenfoot flood county, late Friday the main swept through portion of the town, leaving (n Its wake ruin and de vasts tion There are vyashouts In the streets to the depth of ten feet Allan J. Romig, who was wgrklng in a tin smith shop, was drowned The shop More than fifty was swept away. dwellings were damaged. Many per sons escaped drowning by rushing te the upper floors of their residences The total loss will amount to more than $5u,000 SITUATION GROW8 WORSE. Emperor May Order Rule of Military Dictator Soon. SL Petersburg On the heels of the other bad news comes the startling statement that the emperor has flatly refused to accept the conditions to which Premier Stolypln agreed in his negotiations with Count Heyden, Alexander Gurhkoff, Prince Nicholas Lvoff, Paul Vlnogradoff and Senator Konl for the reorganization of the cabinet There Is an Increasing apprehension that the emperor purposes to take the final step of turning the country over to the military dictatorship of Grand Duke Nicholas The streets of St, Petersburg again are filled with patrols. VALET Police PLAYS COUNT, Arrt Couple Who Worked a Smooth Scheme. Uherboug Extensive frauds perpetrated upon tradesmen and hotel keeper here have led to the arreat of a man and a wym&n who were formerly In the service of Count Wittgenstein as valet and parlor maid Count Wittgenstein la said to ba at present tn the United States The prisoners had In their posseesion the counts marriage certificate They had recently traveled on board the steamship Kalsertn Auguste Vlotorla. They registered in hotels here as Coant and Countess Wittgenstein. KILLED STILL SILENT. TO BIGAMOUS WIFE. Secretary Visits Packing Plant, But Says Nothing. Philadelphia. Secretary Wilson of the Department of Agriculture, accompanied by Dr. G. A. Schaufler, chief Federal meat and cattle Inspector of thla city, on Thursday visited a number of abbattolra, - slaughter houses, packing houses and sausage factories here. Mr. .Wilson also declined to give hig impression of the establishments be bad Inspected. William Marcus Executed for Awful Crime at Charleston, 8. C. Charleston, 8. C. William Marcus, the first white man to be executed In Charleston county since the civil war, waa hanged Friday for the murder of hls blgamons wife on Sullivan Island last April. Tha victim was stabbed forty times with an ice pick. It was not learned until within the last few days that Marcus had a wife and five children living tn Cincinnati. LUMBER TRUST CHECKED. Bad Fire at Milan, Milan, Italy. Fire which broke out here Friday morning In tha international exposition did $2,400,000 damage. The sections devoted to the decorative arts of Italy and Hungary were totally destroyed, as also waa the pavilion In which were Installed th exhibits of Italian and Hungarian architecture - The origin" of the "fire Is attributed to an electric short circuit. The aethorttles reject the theory that the conflagration was of Incendiary origin. j Investigation Causes Manufacturer to Lay Low for a Tima. It Is stated on good Francisco. San will be no further there that authority raise In lumber prices until the Inlumber vestigation tnto the tro t has been completed by United j States, District Attorney Devlin. The advance schedule of price for August canceled by the Lumber ' nn'tocinreraassoclatlon.nd price. remain as they were last month. 111 Colorado Miners' Bodies Ar Found In . An Old Tunnel. I A. Thompson, genColo. Ouray, eral manager, and V. W. Mather, fore-ma- n, of the Mickey Breen mine of the company, who disapTempest-Apeweek ago, were fouad dead a peared Thursday under a mass of debris la a smalt tunnel bait a mile from the Mickey Breen mine. They evidently sought refuge In tbe tunnel fraaa a Cloudburst and were overwhelmed by the rocks stiff dirt that washed Into from the mountain side. the x Rear Admiral Train Dead. Chefo Rear Admiral Charley J. of Train, commanderl-n-chle- f the United State Asiatic fleet, died op of the Friday. As commander-in-chie- f Asiatic station the Important duty of maintaining strict neutrality In Philippine waters during the Russian-Jap-aneswar devolved upon Admiral Train. He was 61 years old affd would hav retired from active service in. May of next year. During his service of almost a score of years at sea h? served on many stations. e Gigantic Conspiracy to Seize Russia's Three Great Sea Fortresses Uncovered Soldiers at Sveaborg Revolt on Ao count of Mitreatmnt of a Comrade, Only Four Companle ef th Infantry Remaining Loyal Bloody Conflict Follow. K g'gaaUc..,.,. military Helsingfors conspiracy aiming at the simultaneous capture of Russia s three great sea fortresses, Cronstradt, Sebastopol and Sveaborg, arranged by the revolutionary m'litary league, was prematurely night by. an ah rprung here of a commembers to arrest tempt pany of sappers who had mutinied on account of the death of one of their comrades, alleged to have been due to Tm-nda- y The entire garrison of the fortres flamed out Instantly in revolt. All the artillery men and sappers garrisoning the place were Involved. Only four companies of Infantrymen remained loyal. The mutineers seiztd forty machine guns and practically all the quick flrers and light artillery In the fortress, but even were unable to hold with this aid t. the main fort against the loyal Infantry. The fighting continued all night long. Wednesday morning a detachment of civilian revolut.onariee entered the marine barracks on Skatuden-Island- , hoisted the red flag and wer joined by all the marines Nine cruiser, torpedo boats and destroyers lying In the harbor opened fire on the barracks. This fire was answered from the third atory windows of the barracks with machine guns and rifles The torpedo boats and destro'es which were lying closer to the shine were subjected to such a hot fire fr mi the Inriacks that their crews wc-- dmen below decks., They finally steamed out and joined In the bombardment v!th the cruiser. This sea attack was In with attacks by cossacks and infantry from the land side, which at $ o clock to the- - morning andbegan continued throughout the whole day. Finally, toward the evening, the firing ceaaed and the authorities announced that th barracks had been captured. Various rumors are heard th fate of the officers who regarding were at Sveaborg and in the Skatunda According to one rumor almost all the officers, and according to another almost all the Junior officers, aided with the mutineers. The marines at Skatnnden are said to have aonvened an elective court martial which condemred eeral officer to Instant execution. The red guard. who were cognisant of the plot, dispatched an expedition by a special train as soon as th revolt broke out. to cut the railroad track outside of the city In order to prevent the arrival of reinforcements. A general strike was declared Wednesday afternoon and was obeyed by the workmen of all the factories. at Sveaborg e bar-rack- s. NO EXTRA SESSION. Governor Cutler Refute to Convene Legislature on School Matter. Salt Lake City Governor John C. Cutler haa made the announcement that no special session of the legislature will be called to consider th question of consolidating the University of Utah and the State Agricultural college. The decision of the governor puts the whole matter up to the regular session of the legislature next winter, when It will undoubtedly be the principal bone of contention throughout the entire session. It means that, even should tile legislature decide to submit the question of consolidation to the people. It cannot be voted upon until two years from next November. and for three years longer at least the agricultural college will have a separate existence, even should consolidation come In the long run. Legal Hanging In Record Tim. - MayfieldrKr The hSfiginf 6TAl- len Matthls, the negro who criminally assaulted Miss Ethel McClain on the 25th. took place Tuesday la a legal manner In the yard of the county jail. Fully 10 000 people were on the ecene, but only a few hundred could see the execution, although almost the eutlse fence surrounding the. scaffold had been torn down by the enraged citizens while the trial was going on. It was only fifty minutes after the time the Jury was sworn in until the negro was pronounced dead. Esther Mitchell Arraigned. Seattle. Wash Esther Mitchell pleaded not guilty In the superior court to an information charging her with murder in the first degree for the of her brother, killing George Mitchell. The girl demanded that she be given a trial separate from, Mra. Creffleld, jointly charged with her. The court ordered that ah be given such a trial. Perry and Fretf Sfltchell, who were with their brother Georg at the time their slater killed him, have fo liven her nnd will aid In her defense. J |