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Show LOGAN VCTJIIE XXVIH CITY, UTAH, 1006. SATURDAY, DECEMBER.!, NUMBER 33. ' THAT: Mt. STERLING CASE ' i - t ' ' . C. Parkinson And A. M. " Israelsen Are The U. of Piles U. Up a Score of . , Exonerated 35 The action brought against W. year old boy. It was marked for White-cottoC. Parkinson and A. M- - Israelsen, Barber, Nebeker, Owen, J W. Hendricks, Evans, for tampering with .the official ballots .of Mt. Stirling precinct, and Petersen, of the Democratic n, . DEFEATED BADLY - W. AGGIES f f was dismissed ' by Justice en in the city court yesterday. The case occupied the greater part of the day." County" Attor-ne- y Walters prosecuted the action and A. A.. Law appeared as counThe sel for both defendants. prosecutions witnesses were Da-'ri- d Murray, Robert Baxter and 'Deputy. Clerk' Joseph S. Larsen. as to The latter merely-testifiethe receipt of the package of unused ballots returned .to him from ,Mt. Stirling, and which were exhibited in court. Mr. Murray testified that Parkinson and Israelsen were at his the rest Republican. Attorney Law nAoved for a nonsuit after the prosecution had put in ita side of thecasebutitwas denied, and then the two defendants testified.' The arguments side," and, occupied considerable time. Mr. d , I , . . LAKE TOWNS LOCAL NEWS - musi-calartis- ts . , . - - cT ed . Tbe football game on Thursday ponents and when their line could $ resulted in a decisive victory hold Nelson, Jameson and nansoa fbr the University of Utah, the long enough to get the play in final score being 35 to 0 in favor action, jt generally meant, good, of the U. From all accounts it was gains. This trio of farmers especl-pretty good game however, the ally Nelson and Jameson, played Aggies playing, ball. all. thejime. great ball for the Loganites. seems was practically son-uo- t only was the man - who invulverable, but in tbe backfield caused the east benchers the most the U. excelled. The surprising trouble on the latters offense, size the was from his but' the about game position in running thing of the score, for while those who the line, gained more distance knew from -scrimmage than all the other had followed the game . . - -here, - f the Aggies offense was weak, they Aggies combined, thought their defense was very fair. The Herald In telling of the - , game says:f When the two teams run out on act the field, single file, every member on of each aggregation holding' his I head aloft with an air of victory, Thursday evening, drew a good the crowds on the Sideline Canndt1 sized house, a great many of our help but tbink that today is the j country cousins coming in. The day for the farmers. They look play, is one of those exciting melo-Iik- e winners, and as they receive dramas that appeal to the popular that roar of applause from tbe taste and there was abundant ap- train load of Logan rooters,-th-e 'plause throughout its action. The company comprises some-verconfidence in the home team is good actors and actresses, for a moment shaken. Shaken in and their work was deserving of the army of red and white, but not in those who follow football. To the hearty support it received.The the latter the Aggies system is specialties rendered were very wrong and until that system is good. changed there is no need of fear ' t of defeat as long as the teams are FRANCE SENDS ' anywhere near evenly matched. STRONG FLEET. On the line A. C. excelled.They had better men and heavier men. The Trouble in Morocco Has. Their new style pf some half a Reached a Cllma. dozen centers and a like number of quarter-back- s Toulon, Nov. 27. played only at the Agricultural College did not squadron, commanded by Admirgain the yards. This style did not al Toulehard, left here at 12:30 leave any players for interfer- this morning for Tangier, Moroo- ence, and the splendid run ofFrvw go, upon the receipt of structions from the ministry of marine. around right end would have surely resulted inj Jouchdown jf this The fleet is composed of the batcrack A. C. runner had been given tleships Suffern, Saint Louis and Charlemagne, and is accompanied any help. While the Aggies hs 1 by far th s by the transport Tanive.' . Tangier, Nov. 27. A number of betteiLJine,itii-halsolI-to-4h- ii made Utah back field. It was again this Anghera tribesmen toda attack au on the house dntside bunch were, too fast for their op this city formerly occupied by ing Mrs. Read and her sou drag- Walter B. Harris, the newspaper achicken house correspondent."" A force of govged the body some distance away, where they ernment troops is engaged in the placed a pillow under his head. defense of the building and it is They. then. drove to a neighbor! reported that some men have been house and sent for an officer, who killed and others wounded. arrested Mrs. Read. She will be - Mr, Harris has pot lived in the honse for two years, in conseheld until after the inquest. quence of frequent attacks made f . FIGHT WITH PULAJANES upon The troops defending Mr. Harris house were furiiished by i, as well as by the governManila, Nov. 28. Gov: Curry of the island of Samar, reports a ment commander here. Reinforcedesperate fight between Pnlajanes ments are being sen to them. The incident is not regarded as and volunteers near Albalate Nov. 26 Pedro de la Cruz, an outlaw being of any great importance, as similar outrages are almost chief, was killed and 20 of his y The-Frenc- -in- tf it.. Rai-sul- - . -- wounded.Th(rre-mainde- r A of Cruzs band was ,N rais-tria- ls . -- i At -- 0 & Law insisted that no criminal intent had been shown, k and Mr. Walters contended that sufficient intent had been shown by the circumstances of the case, that the tearing off-o- f the Humber slip indicated that the men must have MME. STLVIN0 GURGEL DO AMARAL i f t . known the ballots to ' be official One of the mont beautiful ladieo of tbo diplomatic corpo Is Washington la and that they were doing wrong. Mine. Sylrino Qurgef do Amaral, wlfo of tbo first secretary to tbo Brasilian - Justice Pedersen, however, ac- legation, lima, do Amaral la a native of Portugal Sbe la particularly noted for tbo richness and grace of her gowns, being accounted one of tbe beet home, eating dinner, bn the Sun-da- y cepted- Mr, .Law a , view of Z, the dressed women in .Washington, wbere she tales a 'prominent part In' Society. before election, and that just matter and dismissed the case. as they were about to leave for Wellsville, Mr. Parkinson began Sixth Ward Conjoint looking about for a paper with a sample ballot printed in it. He LakeT own Utah, Nov. 28. large enough to hold Malcolm. He The following program will be couldnt, fine one, so Murray Lake Valley enjoyed one of feels as though be owned the Bear walked over to the other side of rendered at the conjoint session as- its clearest moonlight nights on earth, as it were. the room, ripped open the pack- of the Mutual Improvement ' Joseph n. Pugmire, one of sociations, to be held in the Sixth Tuesday p.m. and Wednesday withofficial of and ballots, age early a. m. ; but, behold, and lo I Utahs 1847 and Bear Lake and out thinking of the real nature of ward meeting house two inches of snow befel us before Lake Towns earliest pioneers, at his act, gave each of his visitors evening: the- age of 75 years, died at hia Rasselas Prof. Deo. C. Jensen. breakfast time today. a ballot They took them, put Solo Edward JL Stone. Hyrum J. Smith and brother R. home at Salem, Idaho, last week. them in their pockets and he saw D. Our preachers last Sunday were Smith, with Coachman David (Gilbert Parker) Reading, nothing more of the ballots until Lo, passed through our burg on in the afternoon; Elders Joseph Ruth Evelyn Moench. they were returned on election Public generally invited. Friday last and called on Brer Jo. Hodges, Chas. n. Alley and Edday. lie denied that there was The first Smith was bidding a win G. Lamborn; and in the evf any talk over political matters fond adieu to his business friends, ening, Elder Joseph W eston. Big Jewelry Robbery thatr preceded the taking of the local duties requiring his remain- Prest. of Relief Society, Eliza R. ballots. New York, Nov. 29. Ten thou- - ing in bis home city; while the Johnson, Prest. of Y. L. M. I. A. Mr. Baxter told of coming to sand dollars worth of jewelry was latter Smith will succeed him as Mary Crowther, and Bishop G. Logan, of receiving the ballot orders for dry II. Robinson, and it need not he Pa'rkinson had, and being request- stolen last night from two board- general hustler for added that excellent counsels ers in the fashionable boarding- goods, etc., for Z. C. M. I. ed toreturn ; jt to Jhe election house" at" 33 "East Twenty-secon- d were Imparted. Mrs. LillieWebb-McKinnon- , judges, which he did. A loeal company has recently thieves who worked an one of Rich countys forme The two defendants told a story street, by been organized and purchased - a presented herJmsband identical in every detail with that entirelynewgameonthemanat with their first born, and a bonny $2,800 horse. ..Prosperity must be of Mr. Murray, except that they the door. It was dinner time and Miss girl at that, and Logan is scarcely afloat.. .. . , - : both, admitted that they saw the SSSW5F number slips on the top of the Marie Hudgins, who lives in the v 7'.'' Tong range, as200 weight of dynaand" Miss BODIES OFT3EADT ballots and tbrelhembf They place"withher"mother, to . BADLY MUTILATED the had Ehrman mite .was stored in thejp powder dining gone denied knowing that they were ofrooms. An eye witness of the disficial ballots orjthat Murray was room, when the hall boy, Julius x call r a Twenty-fouKilled, Ninety-siaster says that fire broke out in ajudge of election. Parkinson Henry, colored, .answered -- theRoburit waa he Hundreds at and aboutto Jhe.dodr.As Dangerously identified his ballot by the Markfactory at 7uiQ oclock tellast night, and that when the Slightly Wounded ings on it. He said those marks ask the caller for his card, the in which is another room, were placed upon it by his 13- - ephone, Krupps fire brigade from the Dortmund, Germany, Nov. 29. neighboring Jo wn of Annen arrang. The boy excused himself to telerushed far as can be ascertained this rived at the scene at 8 p. m., tbe to the thecallerand When he returned, having morning, 24 persons were killed, firemen bad to retire as other ex Fourth Ward Conjoint phone. answered an inquiry for some one 96 were dangerously wounded plosions threatened to follow tbe who was not known to the house, and several hundred were slightly one which occurred shortly after At the conjoint meeting of the the caller was gone. Later Miss injured,' as a result of tbe explos- the'flameg broke out. The neigh Y. L. and Y.M. M. L A., of the ion lastnight of the roburit fac- boring Krupp works were slightly and Miss Ehrman Fourth ward on Sunday evening, Hudgins that their rooms had been tory near Annen. damaged by the first explosion. the following program will be ren600 entered and jewelry valued at $10, At the time of the explosiBi Experts declare that considerdered : . ' 000 stolen. 80 each boxes, pounds ing the great precautions with containing Address Frank K. Nebeker. 1 of roburit, were stored in the fac- which the explosives were stored, Violin Solo Miss , Phyllis - Recommended to Mercy. tory. The great force of the ex- the disaster could only have reThatcher. plosion .was felt, as far as Dort- sulted from some outrage. Reading Miss Zella Smart. Vas Vegas,. N, M., Nov. 29. Jim mund, 10 miles from the scene of Emperor William has directed Meeting begins promptly at the disaster, where-- large number Gen.-vo- n Seholl to visitAnnen: and All are invited. who have been on trial for of windows were broken. On the Witten and has subscribed $6,255 ... several days charged with holding main road to Annen all the bouses for the relief of the sufferers. - SUES THE KEELEY up a train at Logan, New Mexico, were razed to the ground, the bodin July, 1904, were found gilty yes- ies of the killed being terribly HUSBANdT KILLED HER George W. Morehouse, who at- terday, but clemency was recom- mutilated.,. ... tempted to commit suicide at the mended.. The robbery was com- Surviving parents dragged their Burlington, Kas. Nov. 27. CapKeeley institute in Salt Lake on mitted by three men and the two sleeping children from their beds, tain Moratio N.Read was shot and Oct. 17th, by cutting his throat Black boys and Murphy were cap- collected their portable possesinstantly killed by his' wife at th a raorv and who very nearly tured in Oklahoma and returned sions and fled from the collapsing their home four miles southeast of re- houses. succeeded in killing himself, has here for trial.. Two A second explosion oc- Burlington today. There were no entered suit against the institu- sulted.' The theory of the' pro- curred at 6 o'clock this morning, witnesses to the sbootingj but Mrs. tion for $10,900; the nine hund-Te- d secution was Jhat Jim Black, John Among the killed .were the burgo- .Read alleges that - her - husband beifig what tho operation and Murphy and Tom -- Bos well' who master and police inspector of the threatened to kill her With a con? attendance cost him. His claim was later shot in ' attempting to town of Witten, in the vicinity of knife and that she shot in self deis that knowing hun to be delir- - break jail, committed the robbery the roburit factory. The manager fense. She shot her husband five . ' ions from excessive drink, the and that John BlAck conspired of the factory was wounded, but times, four of the bullets entering management should not have left with. them. Train robbery is a was able to direct the work of res- his body and the other . passing the razor within his reach. . capital offense in New Mexico. cue, which was only possible at through his head. After the shoot. 'dis-cover- to dis- persed. Cruz was second in command of the Samar bandits, ne was recognized as a desperate character and had been fighting since 1896. He refused to surrender to the Americans. nis followers believed him to be invulnerable. Gov. Curry says that the dnd of outlawry in Samar is near. -- Thanksgiving.day g quietly observed ini Manila.There was a meeting of Americans at the Ayuntameinto, presided over by Gen. Leonard Wood. The baseball season was also opened. - I , i TT dailyoccurringherei Later reports show that the Anghera tribesmen had two men killed during the . fighting this morning, and that the defenders suffered no losses. London, Nov. 28 In a dispatch from Tangier, the correspondent of the Times describes the attack on his home. He says the fighting occurred in full view of the French and Spanish warships, but no assistance was given, or offer- -' ed. Owning to the manner in which the French officers have been insulted by natives, when ashore in uniform, they have been ordered always to land iu civilian dress. -- . |