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Show WILL NOT INTERFERE ...THE NEPHI RECORD... CWIHe COOK, FnblUWr POWERS WILL TAKE NO ACTION rrprt.io TO AVERT WAR. UTAH. NBPHi. Decision Leaves Turkey a Free Hand In Ruthless Supprestion of In- UTAH STATE NEWS. surrection In the Balkans. Lester Taylor, a well known ranch- man of Moab, died In Salt Lake City last Sunday of heart failure. The valuation of the several classes, of property assessed in Sanpete cowhttj for the year 1903 is $4,003,971. ; The Woodmen of Salt Lake City are of a perfecting plans for the erection m that city. $25,000 Woodmen hall miner, was Italian an Angelo Bema, killed in a mine at Castle Gate on the 8th, being crushed by falling rock. It is claimed that a number of the : - to saklng Christianity and returning the belief of Confucius. Jeremiah Dennis of Marys vale last week married Josephine Ilesllngton, is over 40 Dpnis 1119 18 years of age, while the girl Is Just The biennial convention of the Elec trical Workers of the United States is being held In Salt Lake City this week, 235 delegates being In at tendance. A representative of the American Federation of Labor is In Salt Lake City for the purpose of organizing all tradesmen who do not now belong to the anions. Th National Woman's Christian Temperance Union has begun a cam' nnim fnr thfi exDulsIon of Senator Reed Smoot from the senate of the United States. The proposition to unite the mines of Stockton, equip them with mills and smelter and to operate them un der one management Is again under serious consideration. ' A number of horses amicted with glanders have been killed in the vicin ity of Green River during the past few eeks, under Instructions from the state board of health. A npUt "frog" caused a wreck on ,tbe Rio Grande in the depot yards In Salt Lake on Friday. Engineer Baker trainbeing injured snd a number of men badly shaken up. 1 Charles Chase, an old time citizen of Sprlngville. while driving a load of vegetables to market, fell under the wheels of the wagon and was so badly crushed that death ensued a few houra later. The residents of BY STRUCK Beyond making urgent representa tions to Bulgaria, it is learned from a diplomatic source that take no action to will the powers Balkans until the the avert war in conference between the czar and Em peror Francis Joseph at Vienna dur ing the latter part of the montn. The result of this decision win te to continue to leave Turkey a free hand in the ruthless suppression of the insurrection, unless Bulgaria, unmindful of the warning of the powers that 6he will reap nothing from interven tion, Bhould act. an eventuality which the diplomats fear cannot long be postponed. Interest is taken In 'the suggestion of the Novoe Vremya of St. Peters burg as a solution of the difficulties, that officers of the foreign powers be attached to all Turkish repressive ex peditions, with authority to prevent unnecessary cruelty. well-informe- d FIElkCE FIuliT CYCLONE. Final Appeal Has Been Made to the Powera. The Bulgarian government, through Its foreign representatives, has ad dressed a note to the great powers de claring that the porte is systematical mas- l v devastating Macedonia and sacrelng the Christian population Further, it says Turkey has mobilized her whole army, which cannot possl bly be for the sole purpose of sup pressing the revolution. Therefore, the Bulgarian government appeals to the humane sentiment of Europe to prevent the continuance of the massacre and devastation and to stop the mobilization of the Turkish army The memorandum concludes with the that unless tho plain statement be will intervene Bulgaria powers forced to take such measures aa she may deem necessary. n While it is possible that a war may even yet be averted, the probabilities of such an encounter were never greater than at the present moment A Turko-Bulgarla- HALF OF CROP BURIED. Fifty Per Cent of Grain In Minnesota Under Snow and Water. Snow and rain has greatly damaged crops in the northwest the past week, says a St. Paul. Minn., dispatch. Near ly all the grain in shock, estimated at F0 per cent, and all the standing grain. much of it flax. Is burled under snow and water. The rainfall has been t hours. Rain, eight Inches In over the all sleet and snow prevail are tracks Railroad northwest abandoned. are washed out and trains The trains from the Pacific coast have been pushing slowly through deep snow for two days and are from ten to twenty hours late. BATTLE BUTTE MINERS THOUSAND FEET According to a special from' Butte, Mont, at a depth of nearly two thou- sand feet underground a force of about thirty of F, Augustus Heinze'a miners from the Rarus mine had an exciting encounter with a force of Amalgamated miners frcm the Pennsylvania mine, an adjoining property, in a portion of ground the ownership of which is now being determined by the courts. the Superintendent - Treeriz of Rarus led his men, and breaking down the bulkhead, invaded the workings of the Pennsylvania. The Intruders were met by Superintendent J. C. Ad ams of the Boston & Montana com pany. Rocks and loose dirt were fly ing when the Helnze men secured a sack of lime, and directing a stream of compressed air from a hose through the mass hurled the fine lime and gas into the ranks of the Amalgamated men, causing them to retreat to prevent being suffocated. Several HURRICANE IN BAHAMAS. of the men became unconscious and Much Damage to Property, But No bad to be dragged away by their comrades. Their conditions is crit Lives Lost. ical. A severe hurricane began at Bahamas, on Wednesday night BODY OF INDIAN CHIEF STOLEN. and has Just ended. The lowest point Sensational Story From the Blackfoot reached by the barometer waa 29.9 Reservation In Montana. and the velocity of the wind, which A 6trango and sensational story came from the northeast, was ninety resIndian Blackfoct comes from the miles. Great damage has been done tn veeetation and farm products, ervation In Montana regarding tho while the fruit crops have been mysterious disappearance of the body ruined. Many houses were damaged, of the great chief White Calf, which but no loss of life has been reportea has been stolen from its. grave. The shipping around this island was White Calf died in Washington, D, badlv damaged. No news from the other islands has yet been received. C last February, where hetowent as a member of a delegation pretest Killed in Auto Race. against the leasing of the reservation Frank M. Day, formerly of Call lands. White Calf's tomb was sealed up in fornla, was killed in an automobile acat fair State grounds his house, located on a lofty cliff, cident at the while Barney When the Indians went to prepare driving Milwaukee machine in a tho tomb for the winter against the race sgalnst time. Day had attacks of wild animals, they found four miles of the dis- the door burst open and the body of about covered tance when, upon reaching the head the dead chief, together with his posmissing. of the borne stretch the powerful ma sessions, or Wulte Calf's delegation Members chine swerved, ran into the fence and declare his body was stclen for the upInstitute Indignation is toppled over. As the machine on Smithsonian knock terrific a. received and the t ucks are becoming ugly set Day high the back of the head which rendered over tho situation. him unconscious, and be died without POWERS TRY TO AVERT WAR. regaining consciousness. Old-field- record-breakin- - bn t a v.ss'jva VnlTa rim. GOE3 TO GALLOWS. Montana Court Saves Mob Trouble o Lynching Murderer. Mont, A special from Hamilton, murder on Jackson the the Jury Bays case brought in a verdict of murder in the first degree, being out one boor and fifteen minutes. The case is that in which Walter Jackson is charged with assaulting Fonnle Buck at Stevensville year-old the child dying from knife 13, August wounds inflicted. The defense waa weak and took up but little over aa hour. Jackson sat unmoved during the entire trial and 6howed no comprehension of the verdict He ignored hla father and mother, who sat beside him. Judge Webster will pass sentenee Saturday afternoon at 5 o'clock. The penalty for the crime Is hanging. A mob has been organized quietly during the trial with the Intention of taking Jackson from the Jail In case the verdict did not meet with their expectations, and lynching him. When It became known that hanging would result from the verdict the armed men withdrew to let the law take its course. -- g Pot-s.-.T-m- n d JACKSON five-mil- e Kills Partner In a Mine. In a fierce battle in one of the drifts of the Waescka gold mine, sev eral hundred feet under the ground, nays a Virginia City, Mont, dispatch, Morris Gallor ran the sharp point of hit candle stick through the heart al-of liud Brown, his working partner, most Instantly killing him. The trail 's aroso over a triue, mo iwo men they disputing as to the positions ehould take In the stopo. Brown, it Is said Etruck Gailor In the face, who then made a terrific lunga at nis op aimon ponent, sending the tspiii through him. n tions in connection with the Balkaa question, "and no one can tell but that tomorrow may see Turkey and Bulgaria plunged in war In spite of all the efforts made to prevent it and though the powers separately have made strong representations to Bulgaria to desist from aiding the iasurgents, and are on the eve of making a Joint demand for the observance of a policy of strict neutrality. In the meantime Turkey is becoming encourtoaged by the attitude of the powers ward Bulgaria, and there Is a strong feeling among the Mohammedans that the opportunity is at hand to take summary vengeance on the Bolgariaa people. The porte haB been warned against engaging in war and we believe hesitates to embark oa a move which may result in the armed Inter vention of Europe, The only encour aging sign in the situation ia the un derstanding between the powers, aH el which we are sure are upholding Rus sia and Austria in their efforts U maintain peace." 's tt..i ill-a- TWO Heinze's Men Have an Exciting Encounter With Amalgamated Forces, .Using Slacked Lime as Ammunition. and Situation More Alarming. Becoming The powers are evidently still exerting pressure both at Constantinople and Sofia to avert a war. nnnarently with some temporary sucess, but meantime an increasingly terrible tale cf atrocities, rommlttf 1 in Macedonia, shows that the situation Is daily Drroir.ing ag gravated. The news that a French squadron Is going to the Levant la also' considered ominous, and this step by the French government pichah'y will be followed by similar action ra the p&rt of other powers. The Turkish embassy in ivcnoon. in it. dorsal tustied dally of Turkin atrocities, declares it to be "ab'clutei fnUf that the Ottoman troops are burning villages, the truth being It is the Bulgarians, who. at tac approacn ufo expsonivcs io num cf tho trrtps. nia- hfTr.rp leaving them and thon accuse tie Turklsa troops oi such abcmlaablc deels." Outlook Still Gloomy Rlverton have petitioned the county commissioners to have a portion of Draper annexed to their precinct, and the residents of Draper are vigorously opposing the change. Albert Grander, a steamfltter. was killed by a street car In Salt Lake City, Saturday night It Is thought hen fell asleep on the track, the motor-isn not seeing him until the car truck him. The typhoid epldiuic has stirred op a veritable crusade against filtb Id Salt Lake City, and when the auCLUBBED TO DEATH. Illinois Jurist After Lynchers. thorities get through it Is safe to say The lynching of David Wyatt the Zion will be one of the cleanest cities Father of North Carolina Senator no pro school teacher in Belleville, In the United States. Killed by a Negro The state supreme court baa denied Ills, Juno Cth, claimed special atten C. F. Simmons, father the petition of the attorneys of "Nick tlon In the charge of Circuit Judge F. M. Simmons, of la worth for a rehearing In bis case burroughs to the St Clair grand Jury. States Senator was killed Sunday on and now nothing stands between the Judge Burroughs says that the crime North Carolina, miles from few a his plantation, condemned man and the executioner was "unfortunate, illegal and He had Carolina. Knrih en vised. He urges that the utmost but the board of pardons. since Saturday morn Feter Thygersen, postmaster of deavor to be made to discover. Indict been missing been shot sev had Mr. Inir Simmons those who were guilty of Levari, and one of the most respected and convict Ho Bruises a with shotgun.times rral that warned Jurors the crime. citizens of that place, It dead at the the be was that indicated head be not the must about their business Interests age of 75. Mr. Thygersen had been allowed to Interfere with their beliefs clubbed also. A negro named namcia has been arretted. enesged In the mercantile business in as grand Jurors. Lcvan for twenty years. Massacre Ordered by Sultan. Adopt Guerilla Tactics. Dr. William T. Dalby, one of the Courier dispatches received In Sofia Warned by previous disastrous ex most prominent physicians of Salt the Autonomic say me Al Lake City, Is dead from cancer of the periences, the Bulgarian revolutionary by decided to only banians, acting under direct ordera stomach at the age of 45. Dr. Dalby leaders have In eastern adopt Macedonia. from tho sultan, have been engaged in will be sorely missed by many a guerilla tactics of occupying towns and a general massacre of Bulgarians In family of plunder means, as he was The po'lcy as It the districts of Okhrida and Leren. especially kind to the poorer classes. villages has proved a mlrtake, In Turkey reoe- - Alarming rurr.ors are current of fur A the result of the premature ex- has usually resulted the destroying every- ther wholesale massacres of Bulgar plosion of a blaft In the Elephant cupylcgand villages, killing the Inhabitant, the ians In the vilayet of Monastlr. One mine In Marysvale district, Edward thing being hampered m meir report says that C.000 perfons have Dalton and John Dietrich wore In- Insurgents Klaiiirhtrrivl in me oisinci ui operations by the women and chil expected Icrcn alone, which Is purely Bulgar jured, Dalton's Injuries being serious, dren. A guerilla warrare issooner. ian. a rock striking him In the side, mak- to exhaust the Turks much ing a fearful wound. Wisconsin Suffering From Continued r.fra Setilen of Conarese Will Not A Justice of the peace baa been apConvene Before November 0. Wet Weather. be of town Calicntes, the for and pointed Attfr mature consideration A terrific thunder and rainstorm mall and ing the first justice the town has had In wet by person consultation has added to the dletresHnglr since the days of the legal fight be- conditions prevailing la the vicinity with members of both the senate and tween the San Pedro and the Short of President Wis. Etreots were flooded tiouce of representatives, Line for the possession of the Mead andSparta, the abandoned sugges has and r.ooevelt much damage done to bridges ow Valley Wash. extra- In called be been that tion congress prac highways. Farm work has of the inmate an Knowlton. William The ex tically at a standstill for threo wcois. trdinary session In October. Etate Industrial school, was attacked An Ean Claire dispatch says: Much (ranrdlnarr be an fi!on which months sgo would be Yr a bull one day last week and but of Eau Claire county Is under water nounced many been had be called, according animal will fall this the held that for the fact si a result of the heavy rains which to meet on Novem-tc- r to have plans, present would will surely lad rstill The continue. damage dishorned, the S 9th. killed. An It was he was badly amount to 149,000. forty-eigh- War May Come li to Prevent It. Efforts of Spite "Europe Is standing on the edge of a precipice," declared in Ixmdon oa Thursday, a diplomat who la partici pating in the international negotia- Turkish-Bulgaria- Coast of Florida Swept by a Terrlflo Tornado. morning on the Friday Beginning east coast and Saturday on the west, hours, south and lasting twenty-fou- r Florida has been swept by the strong est hurricane ever known in that part of the state. The wires went down at the beginning and railroad service was delayed. On account of that few details have been received. At Mia mi the wind attained a velocity of sixty miles an hour. TJie car sneu of the East Coast railway was lifted clear from Its foundations. Several small boats were sunk In the bay. Passengers on the East Coast train say that they saw many wrecks along the shoe from Miami 10 nuue8 Oil comrauy sound. A Standard Bteamer with two barges is on tne beach near Boynton. The crew of fifteen men was saved. The bodies of two unknown white men arnica on the beach near Boynton. At Strake many acres or pmeappie heads were blown down. At Juoiter the wind blew seveniy- flve miles an hour with the rain falling in torrents. Other places on the west coast ana in the interior have not been heard from, and it Is feared that when re ports come in the damage will De great Orange and grape fruit crops have been greatly damaged. BULGARIA READY FOR WAR. ON EDGE OF A PRECIPICE. llN MIJN.U Turko-Bul-i-nrin- n MUSSULMANS THIRST FCR BLOOD THE PENSION ROLL. Flve Pensioners on the Poll Account of the Revolutionary War. The annual report of Commissioner of Pensions Ware places the total number of pens.oners now on the rolls at 99G.D45, of which 725,330 arc soldiers and 2G7.189 widows and dependents. Mr. Ware announces that It Is not probablo that the pension roll will again cross the million line, the high water mark having been rriched a year ago. Five of tho pensioners are on the roll on account of the war of the revolution, 1.1K. on account of the war of 1812, 4,734 on account of the Indian wars and 13,874 cm account of the Mexican war. The average annual value of each The total as-n,iai valne 0f thc Spanish war peasloa i Is now 1133. tn-in- n roU haa reached $1,7C.,310 MISSING LINK FOUND. Tribe in British New Guinea Lives In Trees and Lote Ute of Legs. A Melbourne I spa ten to the la- flon Dally Chronicle says: The nd mlnlrtrator of British New Guinea reports the discovery of an extraordinary tribe of marshland dwellers la the Island of Papua. Owing to the under 6wampy. ground and tanglf-growth, walking and canoeing are almost impossible. The native dwcV J lings are built In trees, and as a te-fult of the conditions existing tho niv lives are gradually losing t.ic of their lower limbs and ara naibl . to walk on hard ground without their fet bleeding. Their bodies nave developed enormously while their legs snd thighs have become atrophia In figure and carriage they are sp Feared That They May Attack Chris tians In Cor star tir.ople. of- Reports received by the foreign flco In Paris from Constantinople cay there Is renewed agnaiicn sroims m-the city, and va i unnuiii." imsni within a pcseM " of are fears expressed sulman attack on the Christian pnpu lation. This agitation followed the In the Turkish papers of accounts cf the P,ul?arians dynamo steam Ing trains and blowing up the boat Vaskapu. The government considered that official r auction of the ir t i.m nf the news was the oet means to avoid exasperated stories of Pinto-lon- s. As the government h men had rlroronsly suppressed atiy like. v tion of explosions flunnir, m publications the rwnl Retotutlon Failed to Pass. twenty years, caused wldespreaa senaiiuii. At the convention of the Evangel Biieoii wants FURTHER TIME. ical Lutheran synod of New York and Park, N. New Jersey, held at of Evacuation was In Proposed Pottponement J., on Thursday, a resolution of Manchuria. troduced by Kev. C. W. Helsier or AlYo In received movement A Poking telegram bany, In eymiilhy with the con Is semiofficially kohama, which to oust Iteed Smoot from his seat in firmed at Toklo. says th? Husrian the United S'ates senate. Aftrr ten minister has propped th r"BtPony minutes' beat?d discussion the motion mT)t of the evacuation of the Kinnt was laid on he table by a vote of 13 and Amur districts of Manchuria, to 13. for October 8. s - annr-aranc- e f "Jf Antl-Smo- A-b- |