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Show THE SEXI-WEEKL- R, T. NATION. Y DEADLY IN COLORADO. BOLD HOLD-U- P EXPLOSION IN PARK CITY MINE Train 1 .on I ad by Masksd Men Near Mar- Urott, FiMIAm UTAH LOOAN. THIRTY-CN- MINERS E DALY-WES- MEET DEATH IN THE AND ONTARIO. T UTAH STATE NEWS. Itah's I.rudlnc Minins ('imp Vliltedbraa Accident Which Bring harrow le A troop of cavalry aoon to ba Many Home- s- Cause of added to the garrison at Fort Duchesne. Is Mot Known. Two modern school houses are being erected at Willard at an aggregate coat lives ware lost as the reThirty-on- e of SI 3,000. In tbs Daly-Wean of sult accident Collins W. Clark, of I'arowan, le dead mine et Park Wedneaday morn-nCity aa the result of being kicked in the The cause of the accident is not atomach by a horse. known end probably never will be From 13,000 to 15,000 tons of augar known. The at the beets will be produced in the Bear 1300 level of powder magszinee the exploded, Hirer ralley this year. but just what caused the explosion is a Clarence Ramsey, aged 8, of Kays-rill- e, matter of conjecture. There were two fell from a building last week magazines at the ISOfl foot level, one at and sustained a broken arm. each side of the shaft, with a capacity Aval-de- nt st g. Daly-We- et Residents of Lewiston, Cache county, hare made application to the county court for a town incorporation. Ralph Droper, aged 13, was badly hurt while riding his wheel along the atreets of Salt Lake by briug run orer by a buggy. Measles are epidemic at Castle Gate, but the doctors believe that it will be only a short time until the disease is a thing of the past. Sevier county farmers are in the grip of a drought that threatens to destroy considerable grain if rain doea not come to relieve them. Joseph Maxwell, of Salt Lake, is near death's door as the result of being atruck by a water tank while hanging on the side of a Lagoon train. An organized band of bicycle thieves has been operating in Salt Lake City recently, a number of valuable wheels haring been gotten away with. The Utah Socialists hare opened tate headquarters in Lehi, having rented a large hall where it la proposed to hold weekly meetings. George W. Underwood was severely hurt at Kaysrille by falling on a pitch fork, which penetrated his arm, shoulder end back. lie will recover. Perk valley le making additions (0 the school house at Rosette, and the people of Dewey rille ere adding another room to their present building. shall Pas In Broad Daylight. A train on the Denver & Rio Orande narrow gusge system was held up and looted by masked men Monday morning. The robbery occurred at 8:30 a. m., when the train waa teven miles west of Marshall Pass, and while descending the hill et elow speed, by five masked men, who after the robbery, escaped into the mountains. The safee in the express ear were blown to pieces and tbe contents were gathered up by the robbers. There were a number of ladies on the train, and the most intenee excitement prevailed, one or two of them fainting. About an hour was consumed in holding np the train, blowing open tbe safee end robbing the passengers. The train was running in two sections and the first section was brought to a standstill by a pile of ties and rocks laid upon the trecka The sheriff of Sal ids and sheriffs of adjoining counties were notified of the robbery and a dozen poeaes are in pursuit of the robbers. One passenger, e young man whose name wee not learned, gave an interesting story. lie says that most of the passengers bad secreted the principal part of their money and valuables, one man 8300 before the robbers requested him to hand it over. About twelve watches were taken besides considerable cash. One passenger waa robbed of 8150, another of 835. Valuables were thrown in the grass and any place where they could be hidden. It ia said that one passenger hid e thousand dollars in the coal box of a coach, covering It with coal. Another attempted to run to the woods with Ilia grip, containing 840. lie was spied by one of the robbers, who requested him to turn over his cash, which he did. An old gentleman who had 843 made for a email house near the track. When about half way there he was halted and relieved of hie precious burden. Two women who handed over to the bandits 830 and 815 each managed to regain sufficient courage to ask for e part back, stating that it wae all they had. The bandits politely returned to one 810 end the other 83. of one to two cars of powder each. A car of powder was added to the supply within the past few days. The accident extended to the Ontario also, where six men were killed and fifteen were overcome by the noxioua gasses, but will recover. The presence of these gasses Icuds many miners to believe that the powder wae burned, and that the explosion was not the chief cause of the disaster. The explosion occurred at about 1 o'clock Wednesday morning, at an hour when every person in town was either asleep or at work. The shock was so tremendous that it awakened everyone within a radius of miles. As an example of its awful force, it is told that two horses in the ore tunnel one aud a half miles awuy were killed by it. Those who tnct death in the Ontario were George Garvin, William Swevell, Chris Saderrupo, Steve Hsratti. Two other names not yet known. The list of dead at the st includes Thomas A. Kelly, married; R. Jackman, married; .1. It. Kindeil, married; John Fcsthcrstone, married; John Gill, single; William Lane, single; Abandon Hop of Recovering Kidnaped C. E. Kelson, single; John Usblin, Hoy. single; Harry Gablin, single; William On the anniversary of the disappearSims, single; John Maloney, single; ance of Frank Ely Rogers from hie Ike Crowley, single; John McAuliff, home in Evanston, Ills., the parenta of single; John Lively, single; John he boy have abandoned hope of being single; Chris Collen, single; able to find him through the agencies John Itnrgy, single; W. A. Wigland, that they have employed. Their only S married; James Mnrnin, single; Richhope now is that the boy will return The Oregon Short Line depot at ard Dillon, single; Pat O'Neil, single; some timCJijap)(5prd. KayevUle waa broken into by tramps Peier Haran, single: Charley McLiP-de- n, Kogeni then 13 one night last week and a niunber of years old, and his aunt, Mies Florence aingleA ' left, and nothing has been beard but no John McLaughlin, one of the res- Ely, petty depredations of him since. Frank CL Rogers, the were taken. valuables cuers, who went down the second time boy's father, has kept np a continuous Onson Poulaon, aged 10, wee drowned to help, died on being brought to the search since that time. He has spent a fortune, it is eaid, in payment for In a fish pond seven miles from Sal surface. He was asphyxiated. tbe work of police and private detecLake while bathing, lie got into deep Eight miners escaped through the tives. Hie latest plan wae the circulawater and could not swim, drowning Anchor tunnel, unhurt. tion of endless chain letters. Seventy Not to exceed three of the dead thousand of these were seat out. before assistance came. minera are left in the mine. At an election last week the truateea MAN KIDNAPPED. fumes from the explosion ware The at the Eighth school district of Davie Parsons Raid His Hoasa and county, at Keysville, were authorized overpowering, and caused most of the Unknown Bara Ills Farnltars. deaths. to borrow 03,500 to complete the school a Hazleton, Fa., disto ia there excitement According Although house begun lest year. great unknown iu Park is persons at 1 o'clock patch, City, every possible help Charles H. Reynolds, a sailor, was Monday morning raided tbe home of run down by sn engine in Salt Lake being extended by the citizens. n William Ilussman, a man, lsbt week and instantly killed. He was and after at Lehigli Upper Heliree Found Mount getting that Business. thief Ilussman and his wife out of bed atwalking on the track and evidently Some of the leading chiefs of Manna did not hear the approaching train. tempted to burn the house. During who resolved to resist the decision of the melee the stove upset and all the John Armstrong of Ephraim, was the high court, defining the custom of furniture waa destroyed. Neighbors the fire. Ilussman was seriously injured last week, being out ksvs, the Samoan national extinguished led sway by the marauders, and is still kicked in the stomach by a mule. He serving drink, have been taken into custody by lay out in the field two hours before order of Captain Sebree, of the United missing. being discovered by members of the Stales gunboat Wheeling, and will be Girl Throws Hsrsalf In Front of Moving Train. family. One of the artried for conspiracy. Miss Lena Rohwer, 83 years of age, The Salt Lake public library has rested chiefs is the district judge who on a leaving Burlington train from the The Story of placed the ban upon gave the minority opinion in the origiat the union depot in Denver, ran east Mary MacLane" on the ground that it nal proceedings. The alleged conspirof a Union Pacific train which in front has not a good moral tone, and is not acy to defy the decision of the court was coming in on another track, with calculated to elevate or improve the wee encouraged by Pulmenua, the gov- the evident intention of committing readers. ernor end king. Aasoon as Both were uicide. cut off her lega acres of wheat north he learned that Captain Sebree meant About forty-fiv- e die. will and ahe is said It probably of Layton, belonging to J. G. M. business he apologized and stated that had in was she She that health. poor Barnes, and four and a half stacks, he acted only according to the wiahea from come waa and Gretna, Neb., gotogether with e header, were burned of Manna people. Glen wood Springs, Colo. to ing last week, sparks from a passing train Tragedy la Balt Lake City. Chlcaga Merchants Loss .000,000 a Day. atarting the fire. a discharged soldier, R. E. While the wholesale business ef ChiRobbers antered a saloon In 8alt was shotBrown, through the head and InLake one night last week and relieved stantly killed bv a companion, J. Ford cago is almost completely paralyzed, the bartender of 810 after a bard fight, Hamilton, in Salt Lake City, Tuesday and while its business men are standThe tragedy occurred in a loss of 81 ,000,000 a day, the strikthe mixologist attempting to save liie afternoon. room of au employment ing rear the hie beer glasses at ing freight handlers and the railroads money by throwing agency, and there were no eye witare in a deadlock aid announce their nesses. Hamilton attempted to esassailants, but to uo avail. and wee arrested but determination to fight to a finish over promptly Salvador He Maria, a young Italian cape, He claims lie shot the in placed jail. lf a cent per question of waa last week discharged from a Salt Brown in eelf defense. The men had hour a or 8500 for of total man, neck. per Lake hospital cured of a broken secured positions through the employr twenty-fouthis over in a was were the and ment Maria room hours, bit back every being agency During a fight bead with the flat side of a spade and changing their clothes when the divided on one side between twenty-fou- r Hamilton ia a trsgdey occurred. railroads and on the other besuffered a fracture of the spinel colminer, about S3 years of age, and tween 10,000 men. umn. claims that liia home is in Indiana. A horse race at Circleville last week, Hey Leaps ISO Feet Into Rlvsr. WATER WAR AT HELENA. GerIn full view of several hundred peobetween Sammie Henrie'e horse, man, from Pangultch, and the Thomae Company and City at lagforhoads Over ple, Theodore McGrane, a messenger Hill for Jane. mare of Circleville. drew upward of hoy, lias jumped from the suspension caused the Waterworke company bridge over the Ohio river at Wheeling, and Helena The 3,000 people exchange of as many dollars iu money, the notified the city Tuesday that its bill W. Vs., a distance of 150 feet, for a horse losiug. for June nothaving been paid, it wonld paltry sum. A professional high diver hut off the water for fire and sewer- had failed to appear, whereupon young asof The county auditor's report sessed valuations in Davis county age purposes, at noon July 34 th. The McGrane, who was one of the assemeity served the company with notice bled spectators, quietly announced he shows: Real estate, 8l,'.fi3,'i.,i5; im that should it attempt to shut off the would make the leap, mounted the rail provements. f.V.'.'i.47il; live stock, wetcr it would lie prosecuted for con- and off. He disdained a skiff dropped 830H.3I5; of under the order the iete total, persuuttl property, tempt hurried that to him. and swam the fifty it. in made Horace 1805, Buck, This is a gain of 8233.000 Judge f3.103.8lH), to shore, landing without a yards forbe to taken would and that steps over the assessment of I'.hm . bruise. feit its franchise. Daly-We- Me-Gurv- . NON-UNIO- N - non-unio- self-style- d LORD Isn-guitc- h 8337,-TO- RESIGNS. MAD DESIRE FOR VENQEANCE. Pertlaud Man hbuota Lour People. Killing PREMIER OF GREAT BRITAIN 8TEP8 DOWN Three. In a mad desire for vengeance in return for real or supposed wrongs, A. First Lord of.tlie Treasury and Government A. Belding, a bartender, shot and inLeader la Huusa of Coninions, A. J. stantly killed his wife, hia mother-in-laBalfour, Appointed lo Succeed and a male inmate of the house tbe Menials. and fatally wounded his father-in-laBeldlng's victims were Mra A. L. The Marquis of Salisbury has reBelding, hia wife. Mrs. L. McCroskey, signed the premiership of Great Brit- iis mother-in-laFrank Woodward, ain and Right Hon. A. J. Balfour, First an inmate of the McCroskey honse,and Lord of the Treasury and government L. McCroskey, his father-in-laleader in the house of commons, has Belding married the daughter of the been appointed to succeed him. McCroskeya eight years ago, but has The Marquis of Salisbury tendered lived with hia wife for some time. pot his resignation at an audience which He was jealous of Woodward, whom he had with King Edward last Friday. be suspected was on intimate terms Saturday Mr. Balfour visited ths with Mrs. Belding. king and accepted the premiership. Going to the McCroskey home at the While it was expected in nolitical and of Fifth and Flanders streets, corner commercial ' circles that Lord Salis- he demanded that his wife give him burys retirement would be coincident their little son, 7 years of age. Mrs. with the coronation of King Edward, informed her hnsbsud that it was scarcely looked for prior to that Belding the little boy was in bed, but Belding event Consequently, about tbe only insisted upon seeing the child. He surprise expressed as the news spread went with his wife to the room where through Loudon concerned the date, the child and after remaining rather than the fact of the resignation. there a shortlay, time, he kissed the boy The real interest was not so much in good-by- e and left tbe room. reference to Lord Salisbury's withIn tbe hallway he met Woodward, drawal as it was in the appointment of and, drawing a revolver in each hand, his successor. The liveliest AND OUT. w w. w. specula- tion is rife as (o the personnel of the new cabinet. The moat discussed feature of the pending changes is the position of Mr. Chamberlain, the colonial secretary, who in many quarters has been regarded as the most promising candidate for tbe premiership. His retirement wsb practically arranged at an audience of Lord Salisbury with the king a month ago, to be coincident with his majestys coronation, but the king's illness interfered with these plans and compelled Lord Salisbury to wait till his majesty was sufficiently recovered to attend to state business. Though alert mentally, the retiring Premier's physical condition, especially since the death of his wife, has not been satisfactory. It is said that Lord Salisbury, in resigning, expressed the desire that no additional honor or titles should be conferred upon him. Tue retirement of the last great statesman of tbe Victorian age is universally regarded aa the transition from one generation to another, as marking the close of an era of national life. 'FOUGHT DUEL 101 Colored Moo Ilea Desperate Owo Home. DARK. Fight la Ilta When Willis Bartlett, colored, went to his home in Wichita, Kans., Saturday night he saw a man under his d kitchen table with a Before he could hotgud. get away both triggers were pulled. Wounded, he called his wife to bring him his revolver, continuing in a struggle with his assailant. In the meantime Mrs. Bartlett handed the revolver to her husband, who shot the man through the heart When a light was brought the dead man was found to be Luther Cronswaite, Bartlett's brother-in-lawho had crawled into the house to kill Mrs. Crosswaite, who had separated from him and had gone to live with lier brolher-in-ladouble-barrele- hand-to-ha- nd w. HILL SEES THE SERPENT. Railway Maxiiafa'e Yacht Obliged to Heal Dot of the Way or Marine Monster. According to a dispatch from Halifax, N. 8., again the sea serpent has been It measures 300 feet in sighted. was observed by pilots off and length, head. It is alleged to have Cranberry come near the entrance to the harbor and then passed on to the north. The American steam yacht Wacouta, with J. J. IH11, president of the Great Northern railway, and his party, was coming latothe harbor at the time, and, it As said, was obliged to haul out of the serpen ta way. Drowned While Bathing. 1 one-ha- SALISBURY A Seattle, Wash., dispatch says: C. H. Wardner was drowned while bathing in Lake Washington Saturday afternoon. Several other bathers were near Wardner, but he disappeared under the water without making a struggle or uttering a cry for help. It is supposed he was taken suddenly with cramps. Wardner was 38 years old, civil engineer, and had lived in Seattle about a year. Ills father is in Alaska and his two sisters live in Chicago. He was engaged to be married to a young lady in Chlcaga Mont False Again Active. Satusdsy Mont Fclee was again in eruption, the activity being as grsst as that of Saturday and Wednesday previous. Mrone Rouge, Ajupa Bouillon and Maconia were covered with stones and cinders and were rendered uninhabitable for several hours. The volcano emitted a dense column of flame and at the same time electrical phenomena were observed. The eruption waa accompnnied by a deep rumbling resembling continuous thunder. No fatalities are reported. On . You first, firing laid to Woodward: as he spoke. Woodward fell to the floor mortally wounded. Mrs. Belding rushed upon her husband and was shot down ly the noY infuriated man. Then the parents of Mrs. Belding came into the hallway' and were both shot by Belding, Mrs, McCroskey being almost instantly killed and Mr. McCroskey receiving a bullet through the body aud another through his right arm. He canaot recover. HORROR AT JOHNSTOWN. Victims la Mine Dlseater Number Oae Hundred and Forty-thre- e. Of the 300 men supposed to have en tered the mouth of the rolling mill mine of the Cambra Steel company Thursday morning, 143 are known ts be dead, and twenty-thrrescued. Fonr hundred, so the mine officiali claim, escaped when the explosion ocstill tobi curred, leaving thirty-fiv- e accounted for. Some of these, according to those in charge of tbe rescui work, are dead, but the majority, they claim, have escaped. From the physicians, heads of rescue parties and others who are familial with the different headinga in ths mine, it is learned that at least fifty-tw- o additional bodies will be brought to tbe temperary morgue at daylight, making the total dead 143. This, President Stackhouse of the Cambria Stsel company thought would be the extent of the dead, but until ail the checks by which the miners are known are presented at the office of the company, an accurate list of the dead will not b known. Some of the bodies, it is admitted by the officials, are entombed in closed headings or hurried beneath slate. Some may be recovered, but others may never be found. Some of tbe men that have been res- cued are found to have lost their reason and are raving maniacs. rl Fatal Duel Between Two Prominent ee Mls-ou- Men. At Mexico, Mo., Rhodes Clay, rep- resentstive in the Missouri assembly, and recently nominated for a second term, ia dead as a result of a pistol wound Inflicted by C. A. Barnes, a young attorney. Five shots were fired during the fight, which took place in in front ofi thcpostoffice. Clay being shot through the heart and Barnea having his wrist shattered by a ball from his opponents revolver. The shooting grew out of business transactions Involving the principals. Edward to be Crowaed August V. It la officially stated that the corona- tion of King Edward will take place between August 8th and 13th. Tha proposed procession has been abandoned. There will be no royal pro gram as originally plannsd, tha day after the cornation, there will be no procession apart from that in which their majesties will proceed from Buckingham palace to Westminster abbey and return. It is now considered practically certain, in view of this announcement, that King Edward will be erowned Saturday, August 0. Fell From Automobile. E. L. Bonner, one of Montana's most prominent citizens, fell from his automobile while riding in Bozeman, Mont, aod was instantly killed. Bonner's machine had gotten out of geur and lie was seen to rise in his seat and make an effort to regulate the machine, lie ucceeded, but at the same time fell to the ground. He was dead when aid reached him. Doctors are of the that heart disease killed him, sup-- ei induced by excitement. Mr. Bonner was Republican national committeeman for Montana. lie-l- ief |